raw_content
stringlengths
2
977k
doc_id
stringlengths
30
36
meta
stringlengths
190
763
quality_signals
stringlengths
1.93k
2.26M
Animal advocates oppose horse slaughter in state — OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Animal lovers from across Oklahoma roamed the halls of the state Capitol on Thursday urging their local legislators to oppose legislation that would pave the way for a horse slaughtering facility in the state. Officials with three animal rights groups sponsored Humane Lobby Day and briefed about 50 participants on how to lobby their elected officials. “We certainly don’t want to be known as the place where horses are trucked in and slaughtered for meat that will be shipped to other countries,” said Cynthia Armstrong, Oklahoma director of the Humane Society of the United States. The House and Senate each passed bills designed to end Oklahoma’s 50-year ban on horse slaughtering and allow a facility to open that would package horse meat for export. The sale of horse meat for human consumption still would be prohibited within Oklahoma. Supporters say the bills would help curb an increase in the number of abandoned horses and prevent the animals from being shipped to Mexico for slaughter. “There’s a plant in New Mexico that’s about 60 days away from opening. There’s a plant behind that in Missouri, maybe two. We would not be the only plant. We would not be the first,” said Rep. Skye McNeil, R-Bristow, who is sponsoring one of the bills. McNeil added that the animal activists weren’t h
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1600
{"url": "http://www.muskogeephoenix.com/statenews/x273863370/Animal-advocates-oppose-horse-slaughter-in-state/print", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.muskogeephoenix.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:45:43Z", "digest": "sha1:EVDEELSLCI22STIWOCAUD2CBYBP2HKI2"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 1372, 1372.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1372, 1547.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1372, 8.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1372, 12.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1372, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1372, 315.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1372, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1372, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1372, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1372, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1372, 0.42910448]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1372, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1372, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1372, 0.02676182]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1372, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1372, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1372, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1372, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1372, 0.01784121]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1372, 0.02140946]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1372, 0.02140946]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1372, 0.01492537]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1372, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1372, 0.12686567]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1372, 0.59307359]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1372, 4.85281385]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1372, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1372, 4.61796764]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1372, 231.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 49, 0.0], [49, 282, 1.0], [282, 426, 1.0], [426, 657, 1.0], [657, 916, 1.0], [916, 1071, 1.0], [1071, 1324, 1.0], [1324, 1372, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 49, 0.0], [49, 282, 0.0], [282, 426, 0.0], [426, 657, 0.0], [657, 916, 0.0], [916, 1071, 0.0], [1071, 1324, 0.0], [1324, 1372, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 49, 7.0], [49, 282, 39.0], [282, 426, 22.0], [426, 657, 39.0], [657, 916, 43.0], [916, 1071, 26.0], [1071, 1324, 47.0], [1324, 1372, 8.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 49, 0.0], [49, 282, 0.0], [282, 426, 0.01408451], [426, 657, 0.0], [657, 916, 0.00784314], [916, 1071, 0.0], [1071, 1324, 0.00826446], [1324, 1372, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 49, 0.0], [49, 282, 0.0], [282, 426, 0.0], [426, 657, 0.0], [657, 916, 0.0], [916, 1071, 0.0], [1071, 1324, 0.0], [1324, 1372, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 49, 0.02040816], [49, 282, 0.07725322], [282, 426, 0.02777778], [426, 657, 0.03463203], [657, 916, 0.02316602], [916, 1071, 0.01290323], [1071, 1324, 0.0513834], [1324, 1372, 0.04166667]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1372, 0.89727402]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1372, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1372, 0.50872898]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1372, -69.40723824]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1372, 57.2746465]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1372, -47.77850617]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1372, 12.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
The Second Trimester Prenatal visits during the second trimester During the second and third trimester prenatal visits, your health care provider may check the following, depending on your current medical condition and the health of the fetus: Any current symptoms or discomforts Mother's weight Mother's blood pressure Urine test - to detect albumin (a protein) which may indicate preeclampsia or toxemia, and sugar (which may indicate hyperglycemia) Growth, size, and development of the fetus Size of the uterus - after approximately 12 weeks of gestation, the uterus can be felt through the abdominal wall Height of the fundus (top of the uterus) Fetal heartbeat What to expect during the second trimester The second trimester marks a turning point for mother and fetus. The mother usually begins to feel better and will start showing the pregnancy more. The fetus has now developed all its organs and systems and will now focus on growing in size and weight. During the second trimester, the umbilical cord continues to thicken as it carries nourishment to the fetus. However, harmful substances also pass through the umbilical cord to the fetus, so care should be taken to avoid alcohol, tobacco, and other known hazards. During the second trimester, both the mother's body and the fetus continue to grow. Fetal development during the second trimester Now that all the major organs and systems have formed in the fetus, the following six months will be spent growing. The weight of the fetus will multiply more than seven times over the next few months, as the fetus becomes a baby that can survive outside of the uterus. By the end of the second trimester, the fetus will be about 13 to 16 inches long and weighs about 2 to 3 pounds. Fetal development during the second trimester includes the following: The fetus kicks, moves, and can turn from side to side. The eyes have been gradually moving to the front of the face and the ears have moved from the neck to the sides of the head. The fetus can hear the mother's voice. A creamy white substance (called vernix caseosa, or simply vernix) begins to appear on the fetus and helps to protect the thin fetal skin. Vernix is gradually absorbed by the skin, but some may be seen on babies even after birth. The fetus is developing reflexes such as swallowing and sucking. The fetus can respond to certain stimuli. The placenta is fully developed. The brain will undergo its most important period of growth from the 5th month on. Fingernails have grown on the tips of the fingers and toes, and the fingers and toes are fully separated. The fetus goes through cycles of sleep and wakefulness. Skin is wrinkly and red, covered with soft, downy hair (called lanugo). Hair is growing on the head of the fetus. Fat begins to form on the fetus. Eyelids are beginning to open and the eyebrows and eyelashes are visible. Fingerprints and toeprints have formed. Rapid growth is continuing in fetal size and weight. The 20th week marks the halfway point of the pregnancy. A fetus born at the end of 24 weeks may survive in a neonatal intensive care unit. Changes in the mother's body The second trimester is the most physically enjoyable for most women. Morning sickness usually abates by this time and the extreme fatigue and breast tenderness usually subsides. These changes can be attributed to a decrease in levels of human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) hormone and an adjustment to the levels of estrogen and progesterone hormones. The following is a list of changes and symptoms that may occur during the second trimester: Appetite may increase. The mother may be able to feel the movement of the fetus for the first time - a phenomenon called quickening - by 20 weeks. The uterus has grown to the height of the belly button, making the pregnancy visible. The skin on the belly may itch as it grows and there may be pain down the sides of the body as the uterus stretches. The lower abdomen may ache as ligaments stretch to support the uterus. The need to frequently urinate may decrease as the uterus grows out of the pelvic cavity, relieving pressure on the bladder. A mother's nose may become congested and she may experience nosebleeds. This is due to the increase in hormones (estrogen and progesterone) that affect the mucous membranes in the nose. A woman's gums become more spongy and may bleed easily. This is due to the increase in hormones (estrogen and progesterone) that affect the mucous membranes in the mouth. Varicose veins and hemorrhoids may appear. A woman may have a white-colored vaginal discharge called leukorrhea. (A colored or bloody discharge may signal possible complications and should be examined immediately.) The increasing weight gain may cause backaches. Skin pigmentation may change on the face or abdomen due to the pregnancy hormones. Heart burn, indigestion, and constipation may continue.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1601
{"url": "http://www.mwmc.com/medical-services/women-children/health-library/women-children/the-second-trimester", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.mwmc.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:14:06Z", "digest": "sha1:5IZZ67M365P2ZDDBFGYI4XIJJ42BXZHJ"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 4874, 4874.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 4874, 6573.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 4874, 50.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 4874, 70.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 4874, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 4874, 240.9]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 4874, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 4874, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 4874, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 4874, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 4874, 0.42015005]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 4874, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 4874, 0.04462475]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 4874, 0.07860041]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 4874, 0.06490872]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 4874, 0.04462475]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 4874, 0.04462475]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 4874, 0.04462475]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 4874, 0.03853955]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 4874, 0.05020284]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 4874, 0.04259635]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 4874, 0.00643087]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 4874, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 4874, 0.11897106]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 4874, 0.41656516]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 4874, 4.80389769]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 4874, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 4874, 4.97863475]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 4874, 821.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 21, 0.0], [21, 65, 0.0], [65, 244, 0.0], [244, 280, 0.0], [280, 296, 0.0], [296, 320, 0.0], [320, 452, 0.0], [452, 495, 0.0], [495, 609, 0.0], [609, 650, 0.0], [650, 666, 0.0], [666, 709, 0.0], [709, 963, 1.0], [963, 1227, 1.0], [1227, 1311, 1.0], [1311, 1357, 0.0], [1357, 1627, 1.0], [1627, 1810, 0.0], [1810, 1866, 1.0], [1866, 2030, 1.0], [2030, 2260, 1.0], [2260, 2325, 1.0], [2325, 2367, 1.0], [2367, 2400, 1.0], [2400, 2482, 1.0], [2482, 2588, 1.0], [2588, 2644, 1.0], [2644, 2716, 1.0], [2716, 2758, 1.0], [2758, 2791, 1.0], [2791, 2865, 1.0], [2865, 2905, 1.0], [2905, 2958, 1.0], [2958, 3014, 1.0], [3014, 3097, 1.0], [3097, 3126, 0.0], [3126, 3478, 1.0], [3478, 3570, 0.0], [3570, 3593, 1.0], [3593, 3717, 1.0], [3717, 3803, 1.0], [3803, 3991, 1.0], [3991, 4116, 1.0], [4116, 4302, 1.0], [4302, 4473, 1.0], [4473, 4516, 1.0], [4516, 4688, 0.0], [4688, 4736, 1.0], [4736, 4819, 1.0], [4819, 4874, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 21, 0.0], [21, 65, 0.0], [65, 244, 0.0], [244, 280, 0.0], [280, 296, 0.0], [296, 320, 0.0], [320, 452, 0.0], [452, 495, 0.0], [495, 609, 0.0], [609, 650, 0.0], [650, 666, 0.0], [666, 709, 0.0], [709, 963, 0.0], [963, 1227, 0.0], [1227, 1311, 0.0], [1311, 1357, 0.0], [1357, 1627, 0.0], [1627, 1810, 0.0], [1810, 1866, 0.0], [1866, 2030, 0.0], [2030, 2260, 0.0], [2260, 2325, 0.0], [2325, 2367, 0.0], [2367, 2400, 0.0], [2400, 2482, 0.0], [2482, 2588, 0.0], [2588, 2644, 0.0], [2644, 2716, 0.0], [2716, 2758, 0.0], [2758, 2791, 0.0], [2791, 2865, 0.0], [2865, 2905, 0.0], [2905, 2958, 0.0], [2958, 3014, 0.0], [3014, 3097, 0.0], [3097, 3126, 0.0], [3126, 3478, 0.0], [3478, 3570, 0.0], [3570, 3593, 0.0], [3593, 3717, 0.0], [3717, 3803, 0.0], [3803, 3991, 0.0], [3991, 4116, 0.0], [4116, 4302, 0.0], [4302, 4473, 0.0], [4473, 4516, 0.0], [4516, 4688, 0.0], [4688, 4736, 0.0], [4736, 4819, 0.0], [4819, 4874, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 21, 3.0], [21, 65, 6.0], [65, 244, 28.0], [244, 280, 5.0], [280, 296, 2.0], [296, 320, 3.0], [320, 452, 19.0], [452, 495, 7.0], [495, 609, 19.0], [609, 650, 8.0], [650, 666, 2.0], [666, 709, 7.0], [709, 963, 45.0], [963, 1227, 42.0], [1227, 1311, 14.0], [1311, 1357, 6.0], [1357, 1627, 50.0], [1627, 1810, 33.0], [1810, 1866, 11.0], [1866, 2030, 33.0], [2030, 2260, 41.0], [2260, 2325, 10.0], [2325, 2367, 7.0], [2367, 2400, 5.0], [2400, 2482, 15.0], [2482, 2588, 19.0], [2588, 2644, 9.0], [2644, 2716, 12.0], [2716, 2758, 9.0], [2758, 2791, 7.0], [2791, 2865, 12.0], [2865, 2905, 5.0], [2905, 2958, 9.0], [2958, 3014, 10.0], [3014, 3097, 17.0], [3097, 3126, 5.0], [3126, 3478, 54.0], [3478, 3570, 16.0], [3570, 3593, 3.0], [3593, 3717, 23.0], [3717, 3803, 15.0], [3803, 3991, 37.0], [3991, 4116, 21.0], [4116, 4302, 30.0], [4302, 4473, 29.0], [4473, 4516, 6.0], [4516, 4688, 24.0], [4688, 4736, 7.0], [4736, 4819, 14.0], [4819, 4874, 7.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 21, 0.0], [21, 65, 0.0], [65, 244, 0.0], [244, 280, 0.0], [280, 296, 0.0], [296, 320, 0.0], [320, 452, 0.0], [452, 495, 0.0], [495, 609, 0.01818182], [609, 650, 0.0], [650, 666, 0.0], [666, 709, 0.0], [709, 963, 0.0], [963, 1227, 0.0], [1227, 1311, 0.0], [1311, 1357, 0.0], [1357, 1627, 0.0], [1627, 1810, 0.03351955], [1810, 1866, 0.0], [1866, 2030, 0.0], [2030, 2260, 0.0], [2260, 2325, 0.0], [2325, 2367, 0.0], [2367, 2400, 0.0], [2400, 2482, 0.0125], [2482, 2588, 0.0], [2588, 2644, 0.0], [2644, 2716, 0.0], [2716, 2758, 0.0], [2758, 2791, 0.0], [2791, 2865, 0.0], [2865, 2905, 0.0], [2905, 2958, 0.0], [2958, 3014, 0.03703704], [3014, 3097, 0.02469136], [3097, 3126, 0.0], [3126, 3478, 0.0], [3478, 3570, 0.0], [3570, 3593, 0.0], [3593, 3717, 0.01694915], [3717, 3803, 0.0], [3803, 3991, 0.0], [3991, 4116, 0.0], [4116, 4302, 0.0], [4302, 4473, 0.0], [4473, 4516, 0.0], [4516, 4688, 0.0], [4688, 4736, 0.0], [4736, 4819, 0.0], [4819, 4874, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 21, 0.0], [21, 65, 0.0], [65, 244, 0.0], [244, 280, 0.0], [280, 296, 0.0], [296, 320, 0.0], [320, 452, 0.0], [452, 495, 0.0], [495, 609, 0.0], [609, 650, 0.0], [650, 666, 0.0], [666, 709, 0.0], [709, 963, 0.0], [963, 1227, 0.0], [1227, 1311, 0.0], [1311, 1357, 0.0], [1357, 1627, 0.0], [1627, 1810, 0.0], [1810, 1866, 0.0], [1866, 2030, 0.0], [2030, 2260, 0.0], [2260, 2325, 0.0], [2325, 2367, 0.0], [2367, 2400, 0.0], [2400, 2482, 0.0], [2482, 2588, 0.0], [2588, 2644, 0.0], [2644, 2716, 0.0], [2716, 2758, 0.0], [2758, 2791, 0.0], [2791, 2865, 0.0], [2865, 2905, 0.0], [2905, 2958, 0.0], [2958, 3014, 0.0], [3014, 3097, 0.0], [3097, 3126, 0.0], [3126, 3478, 0.0], [3478, 3570, 0.0], [3570, 3593, 0.0], [3593, 3717, 0.0], [3717, 3803, 0.0], [3803, 3991, 0.0], [3991, 4116, 0.0], [4116, 4302, 0.0], [4302, 4473, 0.0], [4473, 4516, 0.0], [4516, 4688, 0.0], [4688, 4736, 0.0], [4736, 4819, 0.0], [4819, 4874, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 21, 0.14285714], [21, 65, 0.02272727], [65, 244, 0.00558659], [244, 280, 0.02777778], [280, 296, 0.0625], [296, 320, 0.04166667], [320, 452, 0.00757576], [452, 495, 0.02325581], [495, 609, 0.00877193], [609, 650, 0.02439024], [650, 666, 0.0625], [666, 709, 0.02325581], [709, 963, 0.01181102], [963, 1227, 0.00757576], [1227, 1311, 0.01190476], [1311, 1357, 0.02173913], [1357, 1627, 0.00740741], [1627, 1810, 0.01092896], [1810, 1866, 0.01785714], [1866, 2030, 0.01219512], [2030, 2260, 0.00869565], [2260, 2325, 0.01538462], [2325, 2367, 0.02380952], [2367, 2400, 0.03030303], [2400, 2482, 0.01219512], [2482, 2588, 0.00943396], [2588, 2644, 0.01785714], [2644, 2716, 0.01388889], [2716, 2758, 0.02380952], [2758, 2791, 0.03030303], [2791, 2865, 0.01351351], [2865, 2905, 0.025], [2905, 2958, 0.01886792], [2958, 3014, 0.01785714], [3014, 3097, 0.01204819], [3097, 3126, 0.03448276], [3126, 3478, 0.01420455], [3478, 3570, 0.01086957], [3570, 3593, 0.04347826], [3593, 3717, 0.00806452], [3717, 3803, 0.01162791], [3803, 3991, 0.0106383], [3991, 4116, 0.008], [4116, 4302, 0.01075269], [4302, 4473, 0.01169591], [4473, 4516, 0.02325581], [4516, 4688, 0.01162791], [4688, 4736, 0.02083333], [4736, 4819, 0.01204819], [4819, 4874, 0.01818182]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 4874, 0.78724152]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 4874, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 4874, 0.2290765]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 4874, -45.81856695]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 4874, 67.56847534]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 4874, 115.9984435]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 4874, 47.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Your browser does not support iframes. Read a digital copy of the latest edition of The News-Democrat online. Carroll County Public Library: Week of Oct. 10, 2012 -A A +A Wednesday, October 10, 2012 at 1:16 pm (Updated: October 10, 1:25 pm) Carroll County Public Library will display quilts during the month of October.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1602
{"url": "http://www.mycarrollnews.com/content/carroll-county-public-library-week-oct-10-2012", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.mycarrollnews.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:25:28Z", "digest": "sha1:EN4X7DTBHK3DVN5JLDUSBHSQRZ5IIGQS"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 319, 319.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 319, 3103.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 319, 3.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 319, 62.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 319, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 319, 143.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 319, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 319, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 319, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 319, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 319, 0.16216216]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 319, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 319, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 319, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 319, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 319, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 319, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 319, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 319, 0.04016064]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 319, 0.15261044]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 319, 0.20883534]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 319, 0.04054054]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 319, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 319, 0.35135135]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 319, 0.66666667]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 319, 4.61111111]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 319, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 319, 3.44647235]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 319, 54.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 163, 0.0], [163, 241, 0.0], [241, 319, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 163, 0.0], [163, 241, 0.0], [241, 319, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 163, 27.0], [163, 241, 15.0], [241, 319, 12.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 163, 0.03846154], [163, 241, 0.20895522], [241, 319, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 163, 0.0], [163, 241, 0.0], [241, 319, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 163, 0.06748466], [163, 241, 0.08974359], [241, 319, 0.06410256]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 319, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 319, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 319, -3.93e-06]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 319, -62.15267937]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 319, -24.75792468]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 319, -19.33981654]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 319, 4.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
FLORIDA CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER ALEX SINK'S NEWSLETTER Volume 6 Number 3 January 16, 2009 Next week, our country will join together to celebrate two remarkable journeys in our nation’s history. On Monday, January 19th, we celebrate civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr. As Coretta Scott King once proudly said, Martin Luther King Day commemorates the timeless values Dr. King taught us through his examples -- the values of courage, truth, justice, compassion, dignity, humility and service that so radiantly defined his character and empowered his leadership. And on Tuesday, January 20th, Barack Obama will be sworn-in as the 44th President of the United States of America. Nearly half a century has passed since Dr. King delivered his famous “I Have a Dream” speech, but as we watch part of his vision realized, we must also remember the many Floridians and Americans who have sacrificed their lives to advance civil rights in our country. If you are looking for a way to give back to your community on Monday, or any other day, visit www.usaservice.org. Statement by CFO Sink on Special Session Florida Chief Financial Officer Alex Sink offered the following statement: “Today’s budget bridges our state’s short-term budget shortfalls, but still fails to provide the type of long-term, fiscally-responsible approach that the people of Florida need from state government. I am encouraged that this debate will continue during regular session, and the Florida Legislature will identify more ways to reduce expenditures and make government more efficient. Our goal should be a state budget with a long-term, sustainable vision for Florida’s future.” CFO Sink addresses the Central Florida Development Council of Polk county The Central Florida Development Council (CFDC), Polk County's economic catalyst for growth representing 17 municipalities, hosted CFO Alex Sink for a discussion on Florida's financial future. CFO Sink told the audience that she was encouraged by President-elect Obama's stimulus package and the emphasis on green technologies that bode well for Polk County and its multiple growing seasons. She suggested that agriculture would be on the rebound as the nation focuses more on biofuels. She also congratulated the group on their work for diversifying Polk County's economic base following the 1980's downturn in the phosphate industry, a major Polk County employer. Since its inception, the CFDC has helped generate more than 19,000 new jobs in Polk County with $3.2 billion in capital investment. "Florida's current economic and budget issues are very similar to what Polk County experienced in the 1980s," said CFO Sink. "I encourage this group to engage collaboratively with your legislators to share your entrepreneurial ideas, experience and successes to help them make the best possible decisions for Florida's future." Florida Department of Financial Services Division of Insurance fraud anticipates accredited status Today, Colonel Vicki Cutcliffe announced that a team of assessors from the Commission for Florida Law Enforcement Accreditation (CFA) will arrive Wednesday, January 21, to examine all aspects of the Florida Department of Financial Services, Division of Insurance Fraud’s (FDFS/DIF) policies and procedures, management, operations, and support services, for the purpose of accreditation. The Division of Insurance Fraud has to comply with approximately 260 standards in order to receive accredited status. “Accreditation is a highly prized recognition of law enforcement professional excellence, and we are excited to achieve this noteworthy status,” said Colonel Cutcliffe. The Accreditation Manager for FDFS/DIF is Captain Robert Brongel. The assessment team is comprised of law enforcement practitioners from Florida law enforcement agencies: these assessors will review written materials, interview individuals, and visit offices and other places where compliance can be witnessed. The CFA Assessment Team Leader is Ms. Dianne Hill of the Hernando County Sheriff’s Office; other team members include Lt. Sheila Rowden of the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission and Lt. Marc Hayes of the Santa Rosa County Sheriff’s Office. Once the Commission’s assessors complete their review of the agency, they report back to the full Commission, which will then decide if the agency is to receive accredited status. The Division’s accreditation is for three years. Verification by the team that the Division of Insurance Fraud meets the Commission’s standards is part of a voluntary process to gain or maintain accreditation. As part of the on-site assessment, agency members and the general public are invited to offer comments to the assessment team. Comments must be in writing and must address the agency’s ability to comply with CFA standards. A copy of the standards is available through Florida Department of Financial Services Public Information Officer in Tallahassee at 850/413-2890. For more information regarding CFA or for persons wishing to offer written comments about the Division’s ability to meet the standards of accreditation, please write: CFA, 3504 Lake Lynda Drive, Suite 380, Orlando, Florida, 32817, or email to [email protected]. Hundreds in Cape Coral receive free advice at CFO Sink's Housing Help Workshop Fort Myers-Cape Coral Foreclosure Rates Among the Highest in Nation Florida Chief Financial Officer Alex Sink announced today that over 350 homeowners in Cape Coral received free advice from lenders and counselors on how to avoid foreclosure at her first Florida Housing Help Workshop held Saturday. Many homeowners reported walking out with an agreement, or a tentative new financial agreement, with their lenders and feeling optimistic that they would be able to keep their homes. Others not yet in foreclosure received information about financing options and how to better manage their budgets. “Thousands of families in southwest Florida need help,” Sink said. “These workshops are designed to get struggling homeowners in one-on-one meetings with lenders and counselors who could help them identify alternatives to foreclosure. The best way to begin turning our economy around is by making sure we are taking care of our families.” Representatives from nine banks and lending institutions, a dozen HUD-certified housing counselors, and officials from local housing organizations were available at the workshop for one-on-one-meetings with homeowners. In addition, small business owners had the opportunity to meet with advisors from the Florida Gulf Coast University Small Business Development Center. Ten programs on subjects ranging from foreclosure law to real estate options were available throughout the day. Sink oversees the Department of Financial Services, which assists consumers with insurance and financial matters and is available to conduct free outreach programs on a variety of subjects. The Florida Housing Help Workshop was produced by the department on behalf of the CFO’s Financial Action Team (FACT), a broad coalition of financial and housing stakeholders. Sink created the FACT Team last year to ensure Floridians get all of the benefits they may be entitled to under the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008. For more information on the FACT Team or to schedule an outreach program, please visit http://www.MyFloridaCFO.com or call 1-877-My-FL-CFO (1-877-693-5236). CFO Sink launches Jacksonville University inaugural Thought Leaders series CFO Alex Sink was the inaugural speaker in Jacksonville University Davis Leadership Center's Thought Leader Speaker Series, where she expressed ideas about how the state can get out of economic troubles. CFO Sink said that the state needs to create a more diverse economy and that Jacksonville has a more balanced economy than other parts of the state, citing Jacksonville's insurance industry, port, health care facilities, and military installations. Health care is going to be an increasingly important part of the economy and Florida should pursue high-wage jobs in biomedical research through more graduates in the medical and engineering fields. CFO Sink said the state should consider tax increases, fee hikes and spending cuts to balance the budget. and that Florida's cigarette tax is among the lowest in the nation. Read the letter from CFO Sink and U.S. Congresswoman Kathy Castor to President-Elect Obama CFO Sink & Congresswoman Castor advocate increased health insurance funding for Florida children As Congress works on renewing the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP), Florida Chief Financial Officer Alex Sink and U.S. Congresswoman Kathy Castor proposed a plan that will expand health insurance coverage to more of Florida’s and the nation’s children. The plan was outlined in a letter to President-Elect Obama (attached). Under existing rules, states must provide a match to the federal dollars they receive for children’s health insurance. But as states grapple with multi-billion dollar budget deficits, state officials are having a hard time finding the funding to provide the match. Sink and Castor are proposing a one-year waiver for states to provide the match if they meet both of the following criteria: The state’s number of insured children must fall in the lowest quartile nationwide; and Have a minimum of a 10 percent projected budget deficit in the upcoming fiscal year. Florida meets both criteria, with roughly 800,000 uninsured children in the state, or 18.8 percent. That is the second-highest percentage of uninsured children in the country. Likewise, Florida’s projected budget gap for fiscal year 2010 is nearly $6 billion, or about 25 percent of the general fund. For every 29 cents Florida contributes to the insurance program, the federal government provides 71 cents. As unemployment soars, forcing more people to turn toward food stamps, children, too, will bear the brunt of this economic crisis. Providing comprehensive and accessible health coverage for children is a priority and can go a long way toward helping families make ends meet. And, a newly released Families USA report found that unemployment benefits don’t even cover the cost of COBRA. CFO Sink is a strong advocate of Florida’s KidCare program, the state children’s health insurance program. During the first 20 months of her term, CFO Sink served as the Chair of the Healthy Kids Corporation, the Board that oversees the state’s Healthy Kids program. Healthy Kids allows eligible working families to purchase affordable health insurance for their children, emphasizing preventative care. My Family CFO Are you the chief financial officer of your family? Are you always looking out for the best deals, wise investments and smart moves for your family's financial security? As your family's fiscal watch dog, keep an eye on this column for money-smart ideas from the Chief Financial Officer of Florida, Alex Sink. If you have a creative way to be fiscally smart, share it with us for this column! [email protected] Idea: Useful job search strategies In today's economy, searching for a job is a challenging process. Getting the job is another topic altogether, but knowing more about job search methods and application techniques can get you started. Here are a few resources to consider as outlined by the U.S. Department of Labor. Personal contacts Many jobs are never advertised. People get them by talking to friends, family, neighbors, acquaintances, teachers, former coworkers, and others who know of an opening. Be sure to tell people that you are looking for a job because the people you know may be some of the most effective resources for your search. To develop new contacts, join student, community, or professional organizations. School career planning and placement offices High school and college placement offices help their students and alumni find jobs. Some invite recruiters to use their facilities for interviews or career fairs. They also may have lists of open jobs. Most also offer career counseling, career testing, and job search advice. Some have career resource libraries; host workshops on job search strategy, resume writing, letter writing, and effective interviewing; critique drafts of resumes; conduct mock interviews; and sponsor job fairs. Employers Directly contacting employers is one of the most successful means of job hunting. Through library and Internet research, develop a list of potential employers in your desired career field. Then call these employers and check their Web sites for job openings. Web sites and business directories can tell you how to apply for a position or whom to contact. Even if no open positions are posted, do not hesitate to contact the employer: You never know when a job might become available. Consider asking for an informational interview with people working in the career you want to learn more. Ask them how they got started, what they like and dislike about the work, what type of qualifications are necessary for the job, and what type of personality succeeds in that position. In addition to giving you career information, they may be able to put you in contact with other people who might hire you, and they can keep you in mind if a position opens up. Classified ads/Internet resources The "Help Wanted" ads in newspapers and the Internet list numerous jobs, and many people find work by responding to these ads. The Internet includes many job hunting Web sites with job listings. Some job boards provide national listings of all kinds; others are local. Some relate to a specific type of work; others are general. To find good prospects, begin with an Internet search using keywords related to the job you want. Also look for the sites of related professional associations. Florida employment service offices The Florida Agency for Workforce Innovation (AWI) helps job seekers find jobs and helps employers find qualified workers at no cost to either party. As Florida’s lead state workforce agency, AWI directly administers the state’s Labor Market Statistics program, Unemployment Compensation, Early Learning and various workforce development programs. Workforce development policy and guidance are provided by Workforce Florida, Inc. Workforce Florida and the Agency for Workforce Innovation are partners in the Employ Florida network which includes 24 Regional Workforce Boards who deliver services through nearly 100 One-Stop Career Centers around the state. Employ Florida Marketplace Employ Florida Marketplace is a new state-of-the-art Web site for matching Florida’s job seekers and employers. Get help selecting a new career, finding a new job, and locating suitable education or training at https://www.employflorida.com/ People First Search for government jobs throughout Florida. Florida School System Jobs Search for a job with Florida's school system Energy tips for Florida families - these actions represent ways to behave kindly toward Mother Earth, AND save money as well as energy. These tips are presented by CFO Alex Sink's science advisor Meg Lowman, Ph.D., on the faculty at New College of Florida. Dr. Lowman has written numerous award-winning books and is an expert on the rainforests of the world. Styrofoam versus paper cups A popular opinion in America is that Styrofoam (polystyrene) cups are bad for the environment. Chemically speaking, polystyrene is almost inert and will not naturally biodegrade, which creates this negative opinion. Polystyrene is also visibly persistent along roadsides, and so makes an easy target for environmentalists. But in the race to abolish polystyrene from our daily lives, we neglect its environmental benefits over paper cups in some cases. In a paper published in the peer-reviewed magazine, Science, Dr. Martin Hocking compared polystyrene versus paper: Uses less raw materials, including 20 percent lower fossil fuels, no wood pulp and three percent of the chemicals utilized in paper Cheaper and easier to manufacture, costing two and a half times less and producing more (one ton of polystyrene yields eight times more cups than one ton of paper) Less space in landfills, with paper taking up approximately eight times more mass Lower energy and water use, with paper cups requiring more steam, electricity and cooling water in their manufacturing process Both can be relatively non-biodegradable – Styrofoam is not easily composted, but paper cups with a wax or plastic lining are equally slow. Technology is moving ahead with more efficient ways to manufacture, to recycle and to minimize waste. But sometimes what seems obvious is not necessarily the most energy-efficient action. In the case of Styrofoam versus paper, the best solution is to re-use a ceramic mug! Chief Financial Officer Alex Sink's Consumer eViews 1-877-MY-FL-CFO
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1603
{"url": "http://www.myfloridacfo.com/pressoffice/newsletter/2009/011609/January_1609Text.htm", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.myfloridacfo.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:13:50Z", "digest": "sha1:3TGYE7F4KGE6H4HVUAPFKC2PF6LSPXNG"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 16806, 16806.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 16806, 16926.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 16806, 53.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 16806, 54.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 16806, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 16806, 294.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 16806, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 16806, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 16806, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 16806, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 16806, 0.34276527]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 16806, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 16806, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 16806, 0.04868697]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 16806, 0.02604355]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 16806, 0.00795775]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 16806, 0.00795775]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 16806, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 16806, 0.0068726]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 16806, 0.01063445]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 16806, 0.0090429]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 16806, 0.02025723]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 16806, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 16806, 0.14533762]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 16806, 0.38479352]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 16806, 5.33500579]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 16806, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 16806, 6.08512164]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 16806, 2591.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 55, 0.0], [55, 90, 0.0], [90, 1064, 1.0], [1064, 1180, 0.0], [1180, 1657, 1.0], [1657, 1731, 0.0], [1731, 2528, 1.0], [2528, 2856, 0.0], [2856, 2955, 0.0], [2955, 4195, 1.0], [4195, 5222, 1.0], [5222, 5301, 0.0], [5301, 5369, 0.0], [5369, 7401, 1.0], [7401, 7476, 0.0], [7476, 7543, 0.0], [7543, 7600, 0.0], [7600, 7680, 1.0], [7680, 7929, 1.0], [7929, 8128, 1.0], [8128, 8302, 1.0], [8302, 8393, 0.0], [8393, 8831, 1.0], [8831, 9096, 1.0], [9096, 9221, 0.0], [9221, 9394, 1.0], [9394, 9695, 1.0], [9695, 9802, 1.0], [9802, 10077, 1.0], [10077, 10188, 1.0], [10188, 10592, 1.0], [10592, 10916, 1.0], [10916, 10999, 1.0], [10999, 11028, 0.0], [11028, 11063, 0.0], [11063, 11346, 1.0], [11346, 11756, 1.0], [11756, 12289, 1.0], [12289, 13250, 1.0], [13250, 13773, 1.0], [13773, 13808, 0.0], [13808, 14702, 0.0], [14702, 14746, 0.0], [14746, 14820, 0.0], [14820, 15225, 1.0], [15225, 15253, 0.0], [15253, 15821, 0.0], [15821, 15953, 0.0], [15953, 16117, 0.0], [16117, 16199, 0.0], [16199, 16326, 0.0], [16326, 16466, 1.0], [16466, 16806, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 55, 0.0], [55, 90, 0.0], [90, 1064, 0.0], [1064, 1180, 0.0], [1180, 1657, 0.0], [1657, 1731, 0.0], [1731, 2528, 0.0], [2528, 2856, 0.0], [2856, 2955, 0.0], [2955, 4195, 0.0], [4195, 5222, 0.0], [5222, 5301, 0.0], [5301, 5369, 0.0], [5369, 7401, 0.0], [7401, 7476, 0.0], [7476, 7543, 0.0], [7543, 7600, 0.0], [7600, 7680, 0.0], [7680, 7929, 0.0], [7929, 8128, 0.0], [8128, 8302, 0.0], [8302, 8393, 0.0], [8393, 8831, 0.0], [8831, 9096, 0.0], [9096, 9221, 0.0], [9221, 9394, 0.0], [9394, 9695, 0.0], [9695, 9802, 0.0], [9802, 10077, 0.0], [10077, 10188, 0.0], [10188, 10592, 0.0], [10592, 10916, 0.0], [10916, 10999, 0.0], [10999, 11028, 0.0], [11028, 11063, 0.0], [11063, 11346, 0.0], [11346, 11756, 0.0], [11756, 12289, 0.0], [12289, 13250, 0.0], [13250, 13773, 0.0], [13773, 13808, 0.0], [13808, 14702, 0.0], [14702, 14746, 0.0], [14746, 14820, 0.0], [14820, 15225, 0.0], [15225, 15253, 0.0], [15253, 15821, 0.0], [15821, 15953, 0.0], [15953, 16117, 0.0], [16117, 16199, 0.0], [16199, 16326, 0.0], [16326, 16466, 0.0], [16466, 16806, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 55, 7.0], [55, 90, 7.0], [90, 1064, 160.0], [1064, 1180, 17.0], [1180, 1657, 70.0], [1657, 1731, 11.0], [1731, 2528, 122.0], [2528, 2856, 49.0], [2856, 2955, 12.0], [2955, 4195, 177.0], [4195, 5222, 157.0], [5222, 5301, 13.0], [5301, 5369, 10.0], [5369, 7401, 305.0], [7401, 7476, 9.0], [7476, 7543, 10.0], [7543, 7600, 7.0], [7600, 7680, 14.0], [7680, 7929, 38.0], [7929, 8128, 31.0], [8128, 8302, 30.0], [8302, 8393, 14.0], [8393, 8831, 63.0], [8831, 9096, 41.0], [9096, 9221, 22.0], [9221, 9394, 29.0], [9394, 9695, 47.0], [9695, 9802, 16.0], [9802, 10077, 44.0], [10077, 10188, 18.0], [10188, 10592, 61.0], [10592, 10916, 55.0], [10916, 10999, 17.0], [10999, 11028, 1.0], [11028, 11063, 5.0], [11063, 11346, 47.0], [11346, 11756, 65.0], [11756, 12289, 79.0], [12289, 13250, 167.0], [13250, 13773, 85.0], [13773, 13808, 4.0], [13808, 14702, 128.0], [14702, 14746, 3.0], [14746, 14820, 10.0], [14820, 15225, 68.0], [15225, 15253, 4.0], [15253, 15821, 84.0], [15821, 15953, 22.0], [15953, 16117, 29.0], [16117, 16199, 13.0], [16199, 16326, 19.0], [16326, 16466, 23.0], [16466, 16806, 52.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 55, 0.0], [55, 90, 0.24242424], [90, 1064, 0.00636267], [1064, 1180, 0.0], [1180, 1657, 0.0], [1657, 1731, 0.0], [1731, 2528, 0.01675258], [2528, 2856, 0.0126183], [2856, 2955, 0.0], [2955, 4195, 0.00413223], [4195, 5222, 0.0219342], [5222, 5301, 0.0], [5301, 5369, 0.0], [5369, 7401, 0.01107197], [7401, 7476, 0.0], [7476, 7543, 0.0], [7543, 7600, 0.0], [7600, 7680, 0.0], [7680, 7929, 0.0], [7929, 8128, 0.0], [8128, 8302, 0.0], [8302, 8393, 0.0], [8393, 8831, 0.0], [8831, 9096, 0.0], [9096, 9221, 0.0], [9221, 9394, 0.01176471], [9394, 9695, 0.05536332], [9695, 9802, 0.03846154], [9802, 10077, 0.0], [10077, 10188, 0.0], [10188, 10592, 0.00505051], [10592, 10916, 0.0], [10916, 10999, 0.0], [10999, 11028, 0.0], [11028, 11063, 0.0], [11063, 11346, 0.0], [11346, 11756, 0.0], [11756, 12289, 0.0], [12289, 13250, 0.0], [13250, 13773, 0.0], [13773, 13808, 0.0], [13808, 14702, 0.00570776], [14702, 14746, 0.0], [14746, 14820, 0.0], [14820, 15225, 0.0], [15225, 15253, 0.0], [15253, 15821, 0.0], [15821, 15953, 0.01550388], [15953, 16117, 0.0], [16117, 16199, 0.0], [16199, 16326, 0.0], [16326, 16466, 0.0], [16466, 16806, 0.01219512]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 55, 0.0], [55, 90, 0.0], [90, 1064, 0.0], [1064, 1180, 0.0], [1180, 1657, 0.0], [1657, 1731, 0.0], [1731, 2528, 0.0], [2528, 2856, 0.0], [2856, 2955, 0.0], [2955, 4195, 0.0], [4195, 5222, 0.0], [5222, 5301, 0.0], [5301, 5369, 0.0], [5369, 7401, 0.0], [7401, 7476, 0.0], [7476, 7543, 0.0], [7543, 7600, 0.0], [7600, 7680, 0.0], [7680, 7929, 0.0], [7929, 8128, 0.0], [8128, 8302, 0.0], [8302, 8393, 0.0], [8393, 8831, 0.0], [8831, 9096, 0.0], [9096, 9221, 0.0], [9221, 9394, 0.0], [9394, 9695, 0.0], [9695, 9802, 0.0], [9802, 10077, 0.0], [10077, 10188, 0.0], [10188, 10592, 0.0], [10592, 10916, 0.0], [10916, 10999, 0.0], [10999, 11028, 0.0], [11028, 11063, 0.0], [11063, 11346, 0.0], [11346, 11756, 0.0], [11756, 12289, 0.0], [12289, 13250, 0.0], [13250, 13773, 0.0], [13773, 13808, 0.0], [13808, 14702, 0.0], [14702, 14746, 0.0], [14746, 14820, 0.0], [14820, 15225, 0.0], [15225, 15253, 0.0], [15253, 15821, 0.0], [15821, 15953, 0.0], [15953, 16117, 0.0], [16117, 16199, 0.0], [16199, 16326, 0.0], [16326, 16466, 0.0], [16466, 16806, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 55, 0.85454545], [55, 90, 0.08571429], [90, 1064, 0.03798768], [1064, 1180, 0.11206897], [1180, 1657, 0.01467505], [1657, 1731, 0.12162162], [1731, 2528, 0.0476788], [2528, 2856, 0.02743902], [2856, 2955, 0.06060606], [2955, 4195, 0.06451613], [4195, 5222, 0.03700097], [5222, 5301, 0.12658228], [5301, 5369, 0.13235294], [5369, 7401, 0.0398622], [7401, 7476, 0.10666667], [7476, 7543, 0.10447761], [7543, 7600, 0.12280702], [7600, 7680, 0.0], [7680, 7929, 0.02409639], [7929, 8128, 0.01005025], [8128, 8302, 0.02873563], [8302, 8393, 0.14285714], [8393, 8831, 0.07990868], [8831, 9096, 0.00754717], [9096, 9221, 0.016], [9221, 9394, 0.01156069], [9394, 9695, 0.01328904], [9695, 9802, 0.01869159], [9802, 10077, 0.00727273], [10077, 10188, 0.09009009], [10188, 10592, 0.0519802], [10592, 10916, 0.04320988], [10916, 10999, 0.01204819], [10999, 11028, 0.34482759], [11028, 11063, 0.05714286], [11063, 11346, 0.02473498], [11346, 11756, 0.01219512], [11756, 12289, 0.01125704], [12289, 13250, 0.01248699], [13250, 13773, 0.02676864], [13773, 13808, 0.02857143], [13808, 14702, 0.05257271], [14702, 14746, 0.04545455], [14746, 14820, 0.08108108], [14820, 15225, 0.05925926], [15225, 15253, 0.03571429], [15253, 15821, 0.0193662], [15821, 15953, 0.00757576], [15953, 16117, 0.00609756], [16117, 16199, 0.01219512], [16199, 16326, 0.00787402], [16326, 16466, 0.01428571], [16466, 16806, 0.05294118]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 16806, 0.1021769]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 16806, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 16806, 0.16918218]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 16806, -918.20854704]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 16806, 76.30449119]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 16806, -405.9905071]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 16806, 135.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Home : News : Health News : Brain Cancer Dental X-rays Linked to Brain Tumors Images Dental X-rays Linked to Brain TumorsAnnual X-rays May Expose Patients to Unnecessary RiskWebMD Health News Sheryl Crow's Brain Tumor: FAQDo We Smell Our Age?Paralyzed Man's Hand Movement Partially RestoredConcussions: Girls Have Longer Recovery TimeApril 10, 2012 -- Getting frequent dental X-rays appears to increase the risk for a commonly diagnosed brain tumor, a new study finds.Exposure to ionizing radiation -- the kind found in X-rays -- is the biggest known environmental risk factor for largely non-malignant meningioma brain tumors. Routine dental X-rays are among the most common sources of radiation for most healthy people in the U.S.The new study suggests that performing frequent X-rays may expose patients to unnecessary risk."These findings should not prevent anyone from going to the dentist," says lead researcher and neurosurgeon Elizabeth B. Claus, MD, PhD, of Yale University School of Medicine and Boston's Brigham and Women's Hospital. "But it appears that a large percentage of patients receive annual X-rays instead of every two to three years, which is the recommendation for healthy adults."Dental X-ray, Benign Brain TumorsWhile the vast majority of meningiomas are non-malignant, they often grow to be very large and can cause a wide range of potentially serious symptoms, including vision and hearing loss, frequent headaches, memory loss, and even seizures.They are the most frequently diagnosed brain tumors among adults in the United States, accounting for about a third of all primary brain and central nervous system tumors.Several small studies have suggested a link between cumulative dental X-ray exposures and meningiomas, but the findings were inconclusive.In the newly published study -- the largest ever to examine the question -- people who reported having "bitewing" X-rays at least yearly were found to have a 40% to 90% greater risk of meningioma.The study shows an association but does not prove a cause-effect relationship.The study included about 1,400 meningioma patients between the ages of 20 and 79 when they were diagnosed between the spring of 2006 and the spring of 2011.When the patients' self-reported dental histories were compared to adults with similar characteristics who did not have the brain tumors, lifetime exposure to either bitewing or panoramic dental X-rays -- which include the upper and lower jaw -- was significantly associated with meningioma risk. This risk was higher in people who received panoramic X-rays when they were younger than 10.The meningioma patients were more than twice as likely as the adults without brain tumors to have had dental X-rays at some point during their lives, Claus tells WebMD.The study appears in the April 10 issue of the American Cancer Association journal Cancer.Annual Dental X-rays Not RecommendedThe American Dental Association responded to the study in a written statement, noting that the group has long called on its members to order dental X-rays only when necessary. To minimize radiation exposure, the group recommends using protective aprons and collars and the use the fastest film speeds available or a digital X-ray.“Many oral diseases can’t be detected on the basis of a visual and physical examination alone, and dental X-rays are valuable in providing information about a patient’s oral health such as early-stage cavities, gum diseases, infections or some types of tumors,” the statement reads.Claus tells WebMD that the American Dental Association recommends healthy adults receive routine mouth X-rays every two to three years. Dental X-rays are recommended every one to two years for children and every 1.5 to three years for teens. Children often require more X-rays than adults because of their developing teeth and jaws and increased likelihood for cavities.Neurosurgeon Michael Schulder, MD, agrees that the newly published findings make a good case for limiting the frequency of dental X-rays whenever possible.Schulder is vice chairman of the department of neurosurgery at the Cushing Neuroscience Institute, which is part of the North Shore-LIJ Health System in Manhasset, N.Y."The chance of these tumors arising in patients who were X-rayed yearly was low," he notes in a news release. "Nonetheless, dentists and their patients should strongly consider obtaining X-rays less often than yearly unless symptoms suggest the need for imaging."SOURCES:American Dental Association.Claus, E.B. Cancer, April 10, 2012.Elizabeth B. Claus, MD, PhD, professor, department of epidemiology and public health, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Conn; attending neurosurgeon, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston.Michael Schulder, MD, vice chairman, department of neurosurgery, Cushing Neuroscience Institute, North Shore-LIJ Health System, Manhasset, N.Y.News release, Cancer.© 2012 WebMD, LLC. All rights reserved.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1604
{"url": "http://www.myfoxlubbock.com/webmd/braincancer/story/Dental-X-rays-Linked-to-Brain-Tumors/vqXCZETsiE23Ub5n14ALfQ.cspx", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.myfoxlubbock.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:24:05Z", "digest": "sha1:MX3OOLYIS7SG73LEOQPOY3DMSJ4KVIYQ"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 4938, 4938.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 4938, 8749.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 4938, 4.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 4938, 52.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 4938, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 4938, 254.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 4938, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 4938, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 4938, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 4938, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 4938, 0.30954879]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 4938, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 4938, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 4938, 0.05404065]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 4938, 0.0173525]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 4938, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 4938, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 4938, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 4938, 0.02999504]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 4938, 0.0104115]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 4938, 0.00941993]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 4938, 0.04407135]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 4938, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 4938, 0.17733473]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 4938, 0.49180328]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 4938, 5.51092896]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 4938, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 4938, 5.37565456]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 4938, 732.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 41, 0.0], [41, 85, 0.0], [85, 192, 0.0], [192, 4938, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 41, 0.0], [41, 85, 0.0], [85, 192, 0.0], [192, 4938, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 41, 6.0], [41, 85, 7.0], [85, 192, 15.0], [192, 4938, 704.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 41, 0.0], [41, 85, 0.0], [85, 192, 0.0], [192, 4938, 0.0091663]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 41, 0.0], [41, 85, 0.0], [85, 192, 0.0], [192, 4938, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 41, 0.14634146], [41, 85, 0.13636364], [85, 192, 0.1588785], [192, 4938, 0.04066582]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 4938, 0.37894535]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 4938, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 4938, 0.44662476]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 4938, -223.31881133]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 4938, -14.28610555]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 4938, 26.08478169]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 4938, 42.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Monthly SpecialsND NewsEmployment Section Home Events ND Media Stores Contact Us You are here: Home ND News "In the news".....is a statement that is usually followed by some important information or breaking news story and this is no different at Nutrition Depot.....except we call it "ND News"! ND News is designed to make us a more educated and informed consumer, which will hopefully make us a HEALTHIER consumer. ND News will bring you general nutrition, health, and fitness information found in some of the leading publication and resources available NUTRITION DEPOT NEWSLETTER 1st Edition of ND News UNDERSTANDING THE BASICS OF NUTRITION Good nutrition is the foundation of good health. Everyone needs the four basic nutrients-water, carbohydrates, proteins, and fats-as well as vitamins, minerals, and other micronutrients. To be able to choose the proper foods, and to better understand why those foods should be supported with supplements, you need to have a clear idea of the components of a healthy diet. It is now a requirement in the United States that all packaged foods have a nutrition label that tells the consumer what is actually inside the package. This system may not be perfect, but it is a big improvement over no labeling at all, the situation that existed only a generation ago. Keep in mind that all fresh, minimally processed foods, such as grains purchased in bulk, meats, fruits, and vegetables, do not carry labels. However, they are inherently healthier than packaged foods because they have more beneficial nutrients and fewer harmful ones. For example, unlike processed items, these foods are naturally high in potassium and low in sodium. Let's look at one of these labels and see what it tells us. Look at Figure below, which happens to be a label for a package of macaroni and cheese: Supplement Facts Figure · The serving size is listed at the top of the label. All of the daily value percentages are based on this amount. It's good to keep in mind that the serving size listed on the label may not correspond with what many people consider a serving or portion of the product. · There are 250 calories in this product, and 110 calories (almost half the calories in the product) come from fat (panel 2). This is not a good sign. A rule of thumb is that fat should contribute no more than 30 percent of the total calories per serving. · Note the total fat, cholesterol, and sodium information (panel 3). The amount of total fat (bad) is shown, as are the amounts of saturated fat (bad). It's also important to pay attention to how much sodium the product contains and to maintain total intake below the suggested daily value. · Panel 3 also gives the amount of dietary fi ber (good), sugars (bad), and protein (you need some at each meal), and panel 4, selected vitamins and minerals (good). · The footnote panel (5) gives target information for various nutrients based on a diet containing a total of 2,000 or 2,500 calories per day. This may or may not be useful to you, depending on your particular situation and calorie goal. It is important to be aware also that the percentages given in the preceding are percentages of a 2,000-calorie diet and are not a percentage of the amount we actually recommend for good health or to maintain a healthy weight. There is still some question as to the benefits of the current food labeling system. Some are calling for a thorough assessment of whether the new labeling has actually enabled consumers to make healthier food choices. Some of the major food companies such as Kraft Foods and major grocery store chains such as Stop & Shop are already creating new labeling systems to help consumers make better choices. This section of the book will discuss the items shown on the nutrition label-and more-and also how they affect your health. (Information taken from the Prescription for Nutritional Healing 4th Edition.) 2nd Edition of ND News Nutrition, Diet, and Wellness ND News will generally be a monthly newsletter. With that being said, I apologize for the second edition coming sooner. I wanted to start these at the beginning of each month. The 2nd edition of ND News discusses our basic nutrients and will also introduce our in-store discussions of the newsletter starting on the 4th Thursday of every month at our flagship location: 5407 Louetta Rd. Ste. E. Spring, TX 77379. We will start these on Thursday May 26 at 4p.m, we will have Dr. Chase Banks & Cheryl Brown in attendance to discuss the ND newsletter and general topics. We look forward to seeing you here and as always we appreciate any and all feedback. THE FOUR BASIC NUTRIENTS Water, carbohydrates, proteins, and fats are the basic building blocks of a good diet. By choosing the healthiest forms of each of these nutrients and eating them in the proper balance, you enable your body to function at its optimal level. · Water The human body is two-thirds water. Water is an essential nutrient that is involved in every function of the body. It helps transport nutrients and waste products in and out of cells. It is necessary for all digestive, absorptive, circulatory, and excretory functions, as well as for the utilization of the water-soluble vitamins. It is also needed for the maintenance of proper body temperature. · Carbohydrates Carbohydrates supply the body with the energy it needs to function. They are found almost exclusively in plant foods, such as fruits, vegetables, peas, grains, and beans. Milk and milk products are the only foods derived from animals that contain carbohydrates. Carbohydrates are divided into two groups-simple carbohydrates and complex carbohydrates. Simple carbohydrates, sometimes called simple sugars, include fructose (fruit sugar), sucrose (table sugar), and lactose (milk sugar), as well as several other sugars. Fruits are one of the richest natural sources of simple carbohydrates. Complex carbohydrates are also made up of sugars, but the sugar molecules are strung together to form longer, more complex chains. Complex carbohydrates include fiber and starches. Foods rich in complex carbohydrates include vegetables, whole grains, peas, and beans. Newer classifications for carbohydrates are based on their glycemic indexes (GI). The index is a scoring system to show how much glucose appears in the blood after eating a carbohydrate containing food-the higher the number, the greater the blood sugar response. So a low GI food will cause a small rise, while a high GI food will trigger a dramatic spike. A GI of 70 or more is high, a GI of 56 to 69 is medium, and a GI of 55 or less is low. Most simple carbohydrates raise blood sugar levels more than complex ones, but not always. For example, white bread raises blood sugar more than table sugar because sugar has a lower GI. Eating foods with high glycemic indexes can lead to obesity, heart disease, and diabetes. (The glycemic index of foods can be found on www.mendosa.com/gilists.htm and glycemicindex.ca.) Simply put, adopting a low-glycemic index diet is healthier. Low-glycemic index foods include fruits, vegetables, meat, oils, and dairy products. Most grain-based foods, especially those that are highly processed, have high glycemic indexes. · Protein Protein is essential for growth and development. It provides the body with energy, and is needed for the manufacture of hormones, antibodies, enzymes, and tissues. It also helps maintain the proper acid-alkali balance in the body. When protein is consumed, the body breaks it down into amino acids, the building blocks of all proteins. Since protein is essential for life, other foods such as fruits and vegetables, which are alkaline-producing, need to be consumed to balance the body. Some of the amino acids from proteins are designated nonessential. This does not mean that they are unnecessary, but rather that they do not have to come from the diet because they can be synthesized by the body from other amino acids. Other amino acids are considered essential, meaning that the body cannot synthesize them, and therefore must obtain them from the diet. Whenever the body makes a protein-when it builds muscle, for instance-it needs a variety of amino acids for the protein-making process. These amino acids may come from dietary protein or from the body's own pool of amino acids. If a shortage of amino acids becomes chronic, which can occur if the diet is deficient in essential amino acids, the building of protein in the body stops, and the body suffers. The brain will trigger the muscle cells to release vital proteins to support the body. However, in extreme cases, some patients develop cachexia, which presents as weight loss, muscle atrophy, and severe fatigue and can result from a poor dietary protein intake. (For more information about amino acids, see AMINO ACIDS in Part One.) Because of the importance of consuming proteins that provide all of the necessary amino acids, dietary proteins are considered to belong to two different groups, depending on the amino acids they provide. Complete proteins, which constitute the fi rst group, contain ample amounts of all the essential amino acids. These proteins are found in meat, fi sh, poultry, cheese, eggs, and milk. Incomplete proteins, which constitute the second group, contain only some of the essential amino acids. These proteins are found in a variety of foods, including grains, legumes, and leafy green vegetables. · Fats Although much attention has been focused on the need to reduce dietary fat, the body does need fat. During infancy and childhood, fat is necessary for normal brain development. Throughout life, it is essential to provide energy and support growth. Fat is, in fact, the most concentrated source of energy available to the body. However, after about two years of age, the body requires only small amounts of fat- much less than is provided by the average American diet. If you are an adult, about one-third of your calories should come from fat. Of that total, one-third should be saturated, one-third polyunsaturated (corn oil and fish oil), and one third monounsaturated (olive oil). Excessive fat intake is a major causative factor in obesity, high blood pressure, coronary heart disease, and colon cancer, and has been linked to a number of other disorders as well. To understand how fat intake is related to these health problems, it is necessary to understand the different types of fats available and the ways in which these fats act within the body. Fats are composed of building blocks called fatty acids. There are three major categories of fatty acids-saturated, polyunsaturated, and monounsaturated. These classifications are based on the number of hydrogen atoms in the chemical structure of a given molecule of fatty acid. Saturated fatty acids are found primarily in animal products, including dairy items such as whole milk, cream, butter, and cheese, and fatty meats like beef, veal, lamb, pork, and ham. The fat marbling you can see in beef and pork is composed of saturated fat. Some vegetable products- including coconut oil and palm kernel oil-are also high in saturates. The liver uses saturated fats to manufacture cholesterol. The excessive dietary intake of saturated fats can significantly raise the blood cholesterol level, especially the level of low-density lipoproteins (LDLs), or "bad cholesterol." Polyunsaturated fatty acids are found in greatest abundance in corn, soybean, safflower, and sunflower oils. Certain fish oils are also high in polyunsaturates. Unlike the saturated fats, polyunsaturates may actually lower the total blood cholesterol level. In doing so, however, large amounts of polyunsaturates also have a tendency to reduce levels of high-density lipoproteins (HDLs), or "good cholesterol." Monounsaturated fatty acids are found mostly in vegetable and nut oils such as olive, peanut, and canola. These fats appear to reduce blood levels of LDLs without affecting HDLs in any way. However, this positive impact upon LDL cholesterol is relatively modest. It is clear that if your goal is to lower blood cholesterol, polyunsaturated and monounsaturated fats are more desirable than saturated fats or products with trans-fatty acids. Just as important, your total calories from fat should range between 20 to 35 percent of daily calories. 3rd Edition of ND News Vitamins & Minerals (Micronutrients) Vitamins are essential to life. They contribute to good health by regulating the metabolism and assisting the biochemical processes that release energy from digested food. They are considered micronutrients because the body needs them in relatively small amounts compared with nutrients such as carbohydrates, proteins, fats and water, Of the major vitamins, some are soluble in water and others in oil. Water-soluble vitamins must be taken into the body daily, as they cannot be stored and are excreted within four hours to one day. These include vitamin C and the B-complex vitamins. Oil-soluble vitamins can be stored for longer periods of time in the body's fatty tissue and the liver. These include vitamins A, D, E and K. Both types of vitamin are needed by the body for proper functioning. SYNTHETIC VERSUS NATURAL Vitamin supplements can be divided into two groups-synthetic and natural. Synthetic vitamins are produced in laboratories from isolated chemicals that mirror their counterparts found in nature. Natural vitamins are derived from food sources. Although there are no major chemical differences between a vitamin found in food and one created in a laboratory, synthetic supplements contain the isolated vitamins only, while natural supplements may contain other nutrients not yet discovered. This is because there vitamins are in their natural state. Supplements that are not labeled natural also may include coal tars, artificial coloring, preservatives, sugars, and starch, as well as other additives. You should beware of such harmful elements. Vitamins might contain vitamins that have not been extracted from a natural food source. It is necessary to read labels carefully to make sure the products you buy contain nutrients from food sources, with none of the artificial additives mentioned above. RDA VERSUS RDI VERSUS ODI Recommended Dietary Allowances (RDA's) were instituted more than forty years ago by the National Academy of Sciences' U.S. Food and Nutrition Board as a standard for the daily amounts of vitamins needed by a healthy person. Scientific studies have shown that taking dosages of vitamins above the Reference Daily Intake (RDI's) helps our bodies work better. The RDI's therefore are not very useful for determining what our intake of different vitamins should be. We prefer to speak in terms ofOptimum Daily Intakes (ODI's)-the amounts of nutrients needed for vibrant good health. 4th Edition of ND News AMINO ACIDS (BUILDING BLOCKS) To understand how vital amino acids are, you must understand how essential proteins are to life. It is protein that provides the structure for all living things. Every living organism, from the largest animal to the tiniest microbe, is composed of protein. Protein participates in the vital chemical processes that sustain life. Next to water, protein makes up the greatest portion of our body weight. In the human body, protein substances make up the muscles, ligaments, tendons, organs, glands, nails, hair, and many vital body fluids, and are essential for the growth of bones. The enzymes and hormones that catalyze and regulate all bodily processes are proteins. Proteins are chains of amino acids linked together by what are called peptide bonds. Amino acids are the chemical units, or 'building blocks," as they are popularly called, that make up proteins. They also are the end products of protein digestion, or hydrolysis. There are approximately twenty-eight commonly known amino acids that are combines in various ways to create the hundreds of different types of proteins present in all living things. In the human body, the liver produces about 80 percent of the amino acids needed. The remaining 20 percent must be obtained from the diet. These are called the essential amino acids. The essential amino acids that must enter the body through diet are histidine, isoleucine, leucine, lysine, methionine, phenylalanine, threonine, tryptophan, and vline. Although infants need to obtain histidine from their diet, most adult bodies can make enough. The nonessential amino acids, which can be manufactured in the body from other amino acids obtained from dietary sources, include alanine, arginine, asparagine, aspartic acid, citruline, cysteine, cysteine, gamma-aminobutyric acid, glutamic acid, glutamine, glycine, ornithine, proline, serine, taurine, and tyrosine. The fact that they are termed nonessential does not mean that they are not necessary, only that they need not be obtained through the diet because the body can manufacture them as needed. The processes of assembling amino acids to make proteins, and of breaking down proteins into individual amino acids for the body's use, are continuous ones. If your diet is not properly balanced---that is, if it fails to supply adequate amounts of the essential amino acids--- sooner or later, this will become apparent as some type of physical disorder. It is possible to take supplements containing amino acids, both essential and nonessential. For certain disorders, taking supplements of specific amino acids can be very specific. Vegetarians, especially vegans, would be wise to take a formula containing all of the essential amino acids to ensure that their protein requirements are met. ANTIOXIDANTS Antioxidants are natural compounds that help protect the body from harmful free radicals. These are atoms or groups of atoms that can cause damage to cells, impairing the immune system and leading to infections and various degenerative diseases such as heart disease and cancer. Antioxidants therefore play a beneficial role in the prevention of disease. Free radical damage is thought by scientist to be the basis for the aging process as well. There are a number of known free radicals that occur in the body. They may be formed by exposure to radiation, including exposure to the sun's rays; exposure to toxic chemicals such as those found in cigarette smoke, polluted air, and industrial and household chemicals; and various metabolic processes, such as the process of breaking down stored fat molecules for use as an energy source. Free radicals are normally kept in check by the action of free radical scavengers that occur naturally in the body. These scavengers neutralize the free radicals. The body makes these as a matter of course. There are also a number of phytochemicals and nutrients that act as antioxidants, including vitamin A, beta-carotene and other carotenoids, flavonoids, vitamins C and E, and the mineral selenium. Although many antioxidants can be obtained from food sources such as sprouted grains and fresh fruits and vegetables, it is difficult to get enough of them from these sources to hold back the free radicals constantly being generated in our polluted environment. We can minimize free radical damage by taking supplements of key nutrients. A high intake of antioxidant nutrients appears to be especially protective against cancer. Antioxidants work synergistically in giving protection against free radical damage, so it is better to take smaller doses of several different antioxidants than a large amount of only one. For example, while beta-carotene by itself is an excellent antioxidant, a mix of natural carotenoids provides more health benefits thank a beta-carotene alone. Similarly, taking antioxidants together, for example beta-carotene with vitamin E and vitamin C, appears to be more effective than taking any one alone. Enzymes assist in practically all body functions. Digestive enzymes break down food particles for energy. This chemical reaction is calledhydrolysis, and it involves using water to break the chemical bonds to turn food into energy. Enzymes are often divided into two groups: digestive enzymes and metabolic enzymes. Digestive enzymes are secreted along the gastrointestinal tract and break down foods, enabling the nutrients to be absorbed into the bloodstream for use in various bodily functions. If you don’t make enough digestive enzymes, you will experience any or all of the following symptoms: bloating, gas, indigestion, diarrhea, and pain. There are three main categories of digestive enzymes: amylase, protease, and lipase. Amylase, found in saliva and in the pancreatic and intestinal juices, breaks down carbohydrates. It begins to act as soon as you start chewing (this is why it is important to chew your food well). Different types of amylase break down specific types of sugars. For example, lactase breaks down lactose (milk sugar), maltase breaks down maltose (malt sugar), and sucrose breaks down sucrose (cane and beet sugar). Protease, found in the stomach juices and also in the pancreatic and intestinal juices, helps to digest protein. Lipase, found in the stomach and pancreatic juices, and also present in fats in foods, aids in fat digestion. Another component of the digestive process is hydrochloric acid. While not technically an enzyme itself, it interacts with digestive enzymes as they perform their functions. Metabolic enzymes are enzymes that catalyze the various chemical reactions within the cells, such as energy production and detoxification. Metabolic enzymes govern the activities of all the body’s organs, tissues, and cells. They are the workers that build the body from proteins, carbohydrates, and fats. Metabolic enzymes are found doing their specific work in the blood, organs, and tissues. Each body tissue has its own specific set of metabolic enzymes. Two particularly important metabolic enzymes are superoxide dismutase (SOD) and its partner, catalase. SOD is an antioxidant that protects the cells by attacking a common free radical, superoxide. Catalase breaks down hydrogen peroxide, a metabolic waste product, and liberates oxygen for the body to use. The body uses most of its enzyme-producing potential to produce about two dozen enzymes. These control the breakdown and utilization of proteins, fats, and carbohydrates to create the hundreds of metabolic enzymes necessary to maintain the rest of the tissues and organs in their functions. Essential Fatty Acids (EFA’s) Contrary to popular myth, the body does need some of the right kind of fat. The fatty acids that are necessary for health and that cannot be made by the body are called essential fatty acids (EFAs). EFAs must be supplied through the diet. EFAs have desirable effects on many disorders. They improve the skin and hair, reduce blood pressure, aid in the prevention of arthritis, lower cholesterol and triglyceride levels, and reduce the risk of blood clot formation. They are beneficial for candidiasis, cardiovascular disease, eczema, and psoriasis. Found in high concentrations in the brain, EFAs aid in the transmission of nerve impulses, and are needed for the normal development and functioning of the brain. A deficiency of EFAs can lead to an impaired ability to learn and recall information. Infant formulas now contain ARA and DHA, essential fats for infants, which may promote better learning. Every living cell in the body needs EFAs. They are essential for rebuilding and producing new cells. There are two basic categories of EFAs, designated omega-3 and omega-6, based on their chemical structures. Omega-3 EFAs, including alpha-linolenic and eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA), are found in fresh deepwater fish, fish oil, and certain vegetable oils, among them canola oil, flaxseed oil, and walnut oil. Omega-6 EFAs, which include linoleic and gamma-linoleic acids, are found primarily in raw nuts, seeds, and legumes, and in unsaturated vegetable oils, such as borage oil, grape seed oil, primrose oil, sesame oil, and soybean oil. The daily requirement for EFAs is satisfied by an amount equivalent to 10 to 20 percent of total fat intake. A number of sources of EFAs are recommended in the “Prescription for Nutritional Healing 5th Edition”, among them fish oils, flaxseed and flaxseed oil, and primrose oil. Found in many foods, fiber helps to lower blood cholesterol levels and stabilize blood sugar levels. It helps prevent colon cancer, constipation, hemorrhoids, obesity, and many other disorders. Fiber is also good for removing certain toxic metals from the body. Because the refining process has removed much of the natural fiber from our foods, the typical American diet is lacking in fiber. There are seven basic classifications of fiber: brain, cellulose, gum, hemicellulose, lignin, mucilages, and pectin. Each form has its own function. It is best to rotate among several different supplemental fiber sources. In addition to using a fiber supplement, you should make sure to get fiber through your diet. Make sure your diet contains these high-fiber foods: Whole-grain cereals and flours. Brown rice. All kinds of bran. Fresh Fruit. Dried prunes. Seeds (especially flaxseeds) Lentils. Peas. Fresh, raw vegetables. Eat several of these foods daily. When eating organic produce, leave the skin on apples and potatoes. Coat chicken I corn bran or oats for baking. Add extra bran to cereals and breads. Unsalted, unbuttered popcorn is also excellent for added fiber. Whey is a normal by-product of cheese making; it is the liquid that is left when the solids in milk come together and are pressed into solid form. Filtering and purifying produces whey protein, then the water is removed to produce a powder that, while high in quality protein, is free of fat and lactose (milk sugar). This supplement helps to build lean body mass increasing the body's production of muscle protein. A 30 gram serving of whey protein contains nearly all of the essential amino acids necessary each day. For this reason, it is popular among athletes and bodybuilders, and may also help to protect against muscle wasting in people with such diseases as AIDS and cancer. In addition to its effect on muscles, it appears to inhibit the proliferation of cancer cells, protect against free radical damage, and enhance immune function. Compared to soy protein, whey seems more effective at promoting weight loss. 11th Edition of ND News Vitamin A and the Carotenoids Vitamin A prevents night blindness and other eye problems, as well as some skin disorders, such as acne. It enhances immunity, may help to heal gastrointestinal ulcers, and is needed for the maintenance and repair of epithelial tissue, of which the skin and mucous membranes are composed. It is important in the formation of bones and teeth, aids in fat storage, and protects against colds, flu, and infections of the kidneys, bladder, lungs, and mucous membranes. Vitamin A acts as an antioxidant, helping to protect the cells against cancer and other diseases and is necessary for new cell growth. It guards against heart disease and stroke, and lowers cholesterol levels. People receiving radiation treatment for cervical cancer, prostate cancer, or colorectal cancer have benefited from taking oral vitamin A. This important vitamin also slows the aging process. The body cannot utilize protein without vitamin A. Vitamin A is a well-known wrinkle eliminator. A deficiency of vitamin A can cause dry hair and/or skin, dryness of the conjunctiva and cornea, poor growth, and/or night blindness. Other possible results of vitamin A deficiency include abscesses in the ears; insomnia; fatigue; reproductive difficulties; sinusitis, pneumonia, and frequent colds and other respiratory infections; skin disorders, including acne; and weight loss. The carotenoids are a class of compounds related to vitamin A. In some cases, they can act as precursors of vitamin A; some act as antioxidants or have other important functions. The best-known subclass of the carotenoids is the carotenes, of which beta-carotene is the most widely known. Also included in this group are alpha-carotene, gamma-carotene, and lycopene. When food or supplements containing beta-carotene are consumed, the beta-carotene is converted into vitamin A in the liver. Other types of carotenoids that have been identified are the xanthophylls (including beta-cryptoxanthin, canthazanthin, lutein, and zeaxanthin); the limonoids (including limonene); and the phytosterols (including perillyl alcohol). Evidence suggests that greater consumption of lutein reduces the risk of cataracts and age-related macular degeneration (AMD), and that taking lutein supplements can slow the progress of these disorders. High lutein consumption has also been reported to decrease the incidence of prostate cancer. Science has not yet discovered all of the carotenoids, although once source documents six hundred different carotenoids identified so far. Combinations of carotenoids have been shown to be more beneficial than individual carotenoids taken alone. The B vitamins help to maintain the health of the nerves, sin, eyes, hair, liver, and mouth, as well as healthy muscle tone in the gastrointestinal tract and proper brain function. B-complex vitamins act as coenzymes, helping enzymes to react chemically with other substances, and are involved in energy production. They may be useful for alleviating depression or anxiety as well. Adequate intake of the B vitamins is very important for elderly people because these nutrients are not as well absorbed as we age. There have even been cases of people diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease whose problems were later found to be due to a deficiency of vitamin B12 plus the B complex vitamins. The B vitamins should always be taken together, but up to two to three times more of one B vitamin than another can be taken for a period of time if needed for a particular disorder. There are spray and sublingual forms that are absorbed more easily, which are good choices for older adults and those with absorption problems. Because the B vitamins work together, a deficiency in one often indicates a deficiency in another. Vitamin C is an antioxidant that is required for at least three hundred metabolic functions in the body, including tissue growth and repair, adrenal gland function, and healthy gums. It also aids in the production of antistress hormones and interferon, and important immune system protein, and is needed for the metabolism of folic acid, tyrosine, and phenylalanine. Studies have shown that taking vitamin C can reduce symptoms of asthma. It protects against the harmful effects of pollution, helps to prevent cancer, protects against infection, and enhances immunity. Vitamin C increases the absorption of iron. It can combine with toxic substances, such as certain heavy metals, and render them harmless so that they can be eliminated from the body. This vitamin also may reduce levels of low-density lipoproteins (LDL, the so-called "bad cholesterol"), while increasing levels of high-density lipoproteins (HDL, or "good cholesterol"), as well as lowering high blood pressure and helping to prevent atherosclerosis. Essential in the formation of collagen, vitamin C protects against abnormal blood clotting and bruising, may reduce the risk of cataracts, and promotes the healing of wounds and burns. IT may even boost your love life by causing more of the hormone oxytocin to be released. Vitamin C works synergistically with both vitamin E and beta-carotene--that is, when these vitamins work together, they have an effect even greater than the sum of their individual effects. Because the body cannot manufacture vitamin C, it must be obtained through the diet or in the form of supplements. Vitamin D is a nutrient found in some foods that is needed for health and to maintain strong bones. It does so by helping the body absorb calcium (one of bone's main building blocks) from food and supplements. People who get too little vitamin D may develop soft, thin, and brittle bones, a condition known as rickets in children and osteomalacia in adults. Vitamin D is important to the body in many other ways as well. Muscles need it to move, for example, nerves need it to carry messages between the brain and every body part, and the immune system needs vitamin D to fight off invading bacteria and viruses. Together with calcium, vitamin D also helps protect older adults from osteoporosis. Vitamin D is found in cells throughout the body. How much vitamin D do I need? The amount of vitamin D you need each day depends on your age. Average daily recommended amounts from the Food and Nutrition Board (a national group of experts) for different ages are listed below in International Units (IU): Recommended Amount Birth to 12 months 400 IU Children 1-13 years 600 IU Teens 14-18 years 600 IU Adults 19-70 years 600 IU Adults 71 years and older 800 IU Pregnant and breastfeeding women 600 IU What are some effects of vitamin D on health? Vitamin D is being studied for its possible connections to several diseases and medical problems, including diabetes, hypertension, and autoimmune conditions such as multiple sclerosis. Two of them discussed below are bone disorders and some types of cancer. Bone disorders As they get older, millions of people (mostly women, but men too) develop, or are at risk of, osteoporosis, where bones become fragile and may fracture if one falls. It is one consequence of not getting enough calcium and vitamin D over the long term. Supplements of both vitamin D3 (at 700-800 IU/day) and calcium (500-1,200 mg/day) have been shown to reduce the risk of bone loss and fractures in elderly people aged 62-85 years. Men and women should talk with their health care providers about their needs for vitamin D (and calcium) as part of an overall plan to prevent or treat osteoporosis. Some studies suggest that vitamin D may protect against colon cancer and perhaps even cancers of the prostate and breast. But higher levels of vitamin D in the blood have also been linked to higher rates of pancreatic cancer. At this time, it's too early to say whether low vitamin D status increases cancer risk and whether higher levels protect or even increase risk in some people. (Information taken from the Office of Dietary Supplements National Institutes of Health website http://ods.od.nih.gov/factsheets/VitaminD-QuickFacts/) Newsletter Sign Up for our newsletter and receive monthly sale flyers, events information, diet and nutrition updates and much more! Please wait... About Us It all started back in 1998. As our motto states "Name Brand Nutrition at Wholesale Prices!" - we provide the best in health and nutrition products and the best prices with the most knowledgeable staff. Please wait... Contact Us © Copyright 1998-2013. Nutrition Depot. All Rights Reserved. EventsND MediaStoresContact Us
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1605
{"url": "http://www.mynutritiondepot.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=37:nd-news&catid=12:content&Itemid=180", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.mynutritiondepot.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:43:22Z", "digest": "sha1:CIBTLSI7XPAY6BN7ZUCJXQ6PFH3BEFFZ"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 34834, 34834.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 34834, 36628.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 34834, 136.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 34834, 185.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 34834, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 34834, 224.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 34834, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 34834, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 34834, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 34834, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 34834, 0.3729044]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 34834, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 34834, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 34834, 0.02310278]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 34834, 0.01089687]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 34834, 0.00318415]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 34834, 0.00318415]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 34834, 0.00318415]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 34834, 0.00990624]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 34834, 0.00537768]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 34834, 0.00544843]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 34834, 0.02114484]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 34834, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 34834, 0.15148769]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 34834, 0.25681981]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 34834, 5.07268485]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 34834, 0.00060414]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 34834, 6.10237265]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 34834, 5572.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 42, 0.0], [42, 108, 0.0], [108, 556, 0.0], [556, 583, 0.0], [583, 606, 0.0], [606, 644, 0.0], [644, 831, 1.0], [831, 1821, 0.0], [1821, 1845, 0.0], [1845, 2115, 1.0], [2115, 2371, 1.0], [2371, 2662, 1.0], [2662, 2828, 1.0], [2828, 3821, 1.0], [3821, 3900, 0.0], [3900, 3923, 0.0], [3923, 4129, 1.0], [4129, 4214, 0.0], [4214, 4366, 1.0], [4366, 4606, 1.0], [4606, 7211, 1.0], [7211, 7221, 0.0], [7221, 9423, 0.0], [9423, 10758, 1.0], [10758, 11351, 0.0], [11351, 11762, 0.0], [11762, 12025, 1.0], [12025, 12307, 1.0], [12307, 12330, 0.0], [12330, 12367, 0.0], [12367, 12703, 0.0], [12703, 13164, 1.0], [13164, 13189, 0.0], [13189, 13383, 1.0], [13383, 13736, 1.0], [13736, 13933, 1.0], [13933, 14189, 1.0], [14189, 14215, 0.0], [14215, 14439, 1.0], [14439, 14794, 1.0], [14794, 14817, 0.0], [14817, 15176, 1.0], [15176, 15515, 1.0], [15515, 15600, 1.0], [15600, 15779, 1.0], [15779, 16725, 1.0], [16725, 16913, 1.0], [16913, 17070, 1.0], [17070, 17268, 1.0], [17268, 17448, 1.0], [17448, 17607, 1.0], [17607, 18066, 1.0], [18066, 18457, 1.0], [18457, 18620, 1.0], [18620, 18860, 1.0], [18860, 19289, 1.0], [19289, 19638, 1.0], [19638, 19791, 1.0], [19791, 20023, 1.0], [20023, 20107, 1.0], [20107, 20439, 1.0], [20439, 20524, 1.0], [20524, 20937, 1.0], [20937, 21050, 1.0], [21050, 21160, 1.0], [21160, 21334, 1.0], [21334, 21793, 1.0], [21793, 22099, 1.0], [22099, 22390, 1.0], [22390, 22420, 0.0], [22420, 22659, 1.0], [22659, 22969, 1.0], [22969, 23322, 1.0], [23322, 23423, 1.0], [23423, 23960, 1.0], [23960, 24069, 1.0], [24069, 24239, 1.0], [24239, 24631, 1.0], [24631, 24853, 1.0], [24853, 25000, 0.0], [25000, 25032, 1.0], [25032, 25044, 1.0], [25044, 25063, 1.0], [25063, 25076, 1.0], [25076, 25090, 1.0], [25090, 25119, 0.0], [25119, 25128, 1.0], [25128, 25134, 1.0], [25134, 25157, 1.0], [25157, 25406, 1.0], [25406, 25724, 1.0], [25724, 26328, 1.0], [26328, 26352, 0.0], [26352, 26382, 0.0], [26382, 26671, 1.0], [26671, 27196, 1.0], [27196, 27346, 1.0], [27346, 27728, 1.0], [27728, 27907, 1.0], [27907, 28219, 1.0], [28219, 28655, 1.0], [28655, 28748, 1.0], [28748, 28994, 1.0], [28994, 29175, 1.0], [29175, 29507, 1.0], [29507, 29864, 1.0], [29864, 30107, 1.0], [30107, 30676, 1.0], [30676, 30859, 1.0], [30859, 31126, 1.0], [31126, 31400, 1.0], [31400, 31590, 1.0], [31590, 31705, 1.0], [31705, 32063, 1.0], [32063, 32451, 1.0], [32451, 32481, 1.0], [32481, 32707, 0.0], [32707, 32726, 0.0], [32726, 32752, 0.0], [32752, 32779, 0.0], [32779, 32804, 0.0], [32804, 32830, 0.0], [32830, 32863, 0.0], [32863, 32903, 0.0], [32903, 32949, 1.0], [32949, 33208, 1.0], [33208, 33223, 0.0], [33223, 33821, 1.0], [33821, 34206, 1.0], [34206, 34368, 0.0], [34368, 34490, 1.0], [34490, 34514, 0.0], [34514, 34717, 1.0], [34717, 34743, 0.0], [34743, 34804, 1.0], [34804, 34834, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 42, 0.0], [42, 108, 0.0], [108, 556, 0.0], [556, 583, 0.0], [583, 606, 0.0], [606, 644, 0.0], [644, 831, 0.0], [831, 1821, 0.0], [1821, 1845, 0.0], [1845, 2115, 0.0], [2115, 2371, 0.0], [2371, 2662, 0.0], [2662, 2828, 0.0], [2828, 3821, 0.0], [3821, 3900, 0.0], [3900, 3923, 0.0], [3923, 4129, 0.0], [4129, 4214, 0.0], [4214, 4366, 0.0], [4366, 4606, 0.0], [4606, 7211, 0.0], [7211, 7221, 0.0], [7221, 9423, 0.0], [9423, 10758, 0.0], [10758, 11351, 0.0], [11351, 11762, 0.0], [11762, 12025, 0.0], [12025, 12307, 0.0], [12307, 12330, 0.0], [12330, 12367, 0.0], [12367, 12703, 0.0], [12703, 13164, 0.0], [13164, 13189, 0.0], [13189, 13383, 0.0], [13383, 13736, 0.0], [13736, 13933, 0.0], [13933, 14189, 0.0], [14189, 14215, 0.0], [14215, 14439, 0.0], [14439, 14794, 0.0], [14794, 14817, 0.0], [14817, 15176, 0.0], [15176, 15515, 0.0], [15515, 15600, 0.0], [15600, 15779, 0.0], [15779, 16725, 0.0], [16725, 16913, 0.0], [16913, 17070, 0.0], [17070, 17268, 0.0], [17268, 17448, 0.0], [17448, 17607, 0.0], [17607, 18066, 0.0], [18066, 18457, 0.0], [18457, 18620, 0.0], [18620, 18860, 0.0], [18860, 19289, 0.0], [19289, 19638, 0.0], [19638, 19791, 0.0], [19791, 20023, 0.0], [20023, 20107, 0.0], [20107, 20439, 0.0], [20439, 20524, 0.0], [20524, 20937, 0.0], [20937, 21050, 0.0], [21050, 21160, 0.0], [21160, 21334, 0.0], [21334, 21793, 0.0], [21793, 22099, 0.0], [22099, 22390, 0.0], [22390, 22420, 0.0], [22420, 22659, 0.0], [22659, 22969, 0.0], [22969, 23322, 0.0], [23322, 23423, 0.0], [23423, 23960, 0.0], [23960, 24069, 0.0], [24069, 24239, 0.0], [24239, 24631, 0.0], [24631, 24853, 0.0], [24853, 25000, 0.0], [25000, 25032, 0.0], [25032, 25044, 0.0], [25044, 25063, 0.0], [25063, 25076, 0.0], [25076, 25090, 0.0], [25090, 25119, 0.0], [25119, 25128, 0.0], [25128, 25134, 0.0], [25134, 25157, 0.0], [25157, 25406, 0.0], [25406, 25724, 0.0], [25724, 26328, 0.0], [26328, 26352, 0.0], [26352, 26382, 0.0], [26382, 26671, 0.0], [26671, 27196, 0.0], [27196, 27346, 0.0], [27346, 27728, 0.0], [27728, 27907, 0.0], [27907, 28219, 0.0], [28219, 28655, 0.0], [28655, 28748, 0.0], [28748, 28994, 0.0], [28994, 29175, 0.0], [29175, 29507, 0.0], [29507, 29864, 0.0], [29864, 30107, 0.0], [30107, 30676, 0.0], [30676, 30859, 0.0], [30859, 31126, 0.0], [31126, 31400, 0.0], [31400, 31590, 0.0], [31590, 31705, 0.0], [31705, 32063, 0.0], [32063, 32451, 0.0], [32451, 32481, 0.0], [32481, 32707, 0.0], [32707, 32726, 0.0], [32726, 32752, 0.0], [32752, 32779, 0.0], [32779, 32804, 0.0], [32804, 32830, 0.0], [32830, 32863, 0.0], [32863, 32903, 0.0], [32903, 32949, 0.0], [32949, 33208, 0.0], [33208, 33223, 0.0], [33223, 33821, 0.0], [33821, 34206, 0.0], [34206, 34368, 0.0], [34368, 34490, 0.0], [34490, 34514, 0.0], [34514, 34717, 0.0], [34717, 34743, 0.0], [34743, 34804, 0.0], [34804, 34834, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 42, 4.0], [42, 108, 13.0], [108, 556, 72.0], [556, 583, 3.0], [583, 606, 5.0], [606, 644, 5.0], [644, 831, 25.0], [831, 1821, 173.0], [1821, 1845, 3.0], [1845, 2115, 52.0], [2115, 2371, 49.0], [2371, 2662, 50.0], [2662, 2828, 30.0], [2828, 3821, 170.0], [3821, 3900, 10.0], [3900, 3923, 5.0], [3923, 4129, 35.0], [4129, 4214, 15.0], [4214, 4366, 25.0], [4366, 4606, 44.0], [4606, 7211, 413.0], [7211, 7221, 2.0], [7221, 9423, 360.0], [9423, 10758, 218.0], [10758, 11351, 91.0], [11351, 11762, 58.0], [11762, 12025, 42.0], [12025, 12307, 45.0], [12307, 12330, 5.0], [12330, 12367, 3.0], [12367, 12703, 48.0], [12703, 13164, 82.0], [13164, 13189, 3.0], [13189, 13383, 26.0], [13383, 13736, 53.0], [13736, 13933, 29.0], [13933, 14189, 41.0], [14189, 14215, 5.0], [14215, 14439, 36.0], [14439, 14794, 55.0], [14794, 14817, 5.0], [14817, 15176, 56.0], [15176, 15515, 55.0], [15515, 15600, 14.0], [15600, 15779, 29.0], [15779, 16725, 137.0], [16725, 16913, 33.0], [16913, 17070, 25.0], [17070, 17268, 33.0], [17268, 17448, 26.0], [17448, 17607, 25.0], [17607, 18066, 73.0], [18066, 18457, 65.0], [18457, 18620, 26.0], [18620, 18860, 38.0], [18860, 19289, 67.0], [19289, 19638, 52.0], [19638, 19791, 23.0], [19791, 20023, 35.0], [20023, 20107, 12.0], [20107, 20439, 50.0], [20439, 20524, 12.0], [20524, 20937, 68.0], [20937, 21050, 18.0], [21050, 21160, 19.0], [21160, 21334, 25.0], [21334, 21793, 70.0], [21793, 22099, 45.0], [22099, 22390, 45.0], [22390, 22420, 4.0], [22420, 22659, 44.0], [22659, 22969, 45.0], [22969, 23322, 58.0], [23322, 23423, 17.0], [23423, 23960, 81.0], [23960, 24069, 20.0], [24069, 24239, 27.0], [24239, 24631, 62.0], [24631, 24853, 32.0], [24853, 25000, 25.0], [25000, 25032, 4.0], [25032, 25044, 2.0], [25044, 25063, 4.0], [25063, 25076, 2.0], [25076, 25090, 2.0], [25090, 25119, 3.0], [25119, 25128, 1.0], [25128, 25134, 1.0], [25134, 25157, 3.0], [25157, 25406, 42.0], [25406, 25724, 57.0], [25724, 26328, 98.0], [26328, 26352, 5.0], [26352, 26382, 5.0], [26382, 26671, 47.0], [26671, 27196, 82.0], [27196, 27346, 23.0], [27346, 27728, 54.0], [27728, 27907, 31.0], [27907, 28219, 45.0], [28219, 28655, 56.0], [28655, 28748, 14.0], [28748, 28994, 35.0], [28994, 29175, 31.0], [29175, 29507, 53.0], [29507, 29864, 66.0], [29864, 30107, 39.0], [30107, 30676, 87.0], [30676, 30859, 31.0], [30859, 31126, 36.0], [31126, 31400, 46.0], [31400, 31590, 29.0], [31590, 31705, 20.0], [31705, 32063, 63.0], [32063, 32451, 68.0], [32451, 32481, 7.0], [32481, 32707, 38.0], [32707, 32726, 2.0], [32726, 32752, 6.0], [32752, 32779, 5.0], [32779, 32804, 5.0], [32804, 32830, 5.0], [32830, 32863, 7.0], [32863, 32903, 6.0], [32903, 32949, 9.0], [32949, 33208, 38.0], [33208, 33223, 2.0], [33223, 33821, 104.0], [33821, 34206, 67.0], [34206, 34368, 15.0], [34368, 34490, 19.0], [34490, 34514, 4.0], [34514, 34717, 34.0], [34717, 34743, 4.0], [34743, 34804, 8.0], [34804, 34834, 3.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 42, 0.0], [42, 108, 0.0], [108, 556, 0.0], [556, 583, 0.0], [583, 606, 0.04545455], [606, 644, 0.0], [644, 831, 0.0], [831, 1821, 0.0], [1821, 1845, 0.0], [1845, 2115, 0.0], [2115, 2371, 0.03643725], [2371, 2662, 0.00361011], [2662, 2828, 0.01315789], [2828, 3821, 0.01334702], [3821, 3900, 0.01333333], [3900, 3923, 0.04545455], [3923, 4129, 0.0], [4129, 4214, 0.01190476], [4214, 4366, 0.06944444], [4366, 4606, 0.01293103], [4606, 7211, 0.00317839], [7211, 7221, 0.0], [7221, 9423, 0.0], [9423, 10758, 0.0], [10758, 11351, 0.0], [11351, 11762, 0.0], [11762, 12025, 0.0], [12025, 12307, 0.01449275], [12307, 12330, 0.04545455], [12330, 12367, 0.0], [12367, 12703, 0.0], [12703, 13164, 0.0], [13164, 13189, 0.0], [13189, 13383, 0.0], [13383, 13736, 0.0], [13736, 13933, 0.0], [13933, 14189, 0.0], [14189, 14215, 0.0], [14215, 14439, 0.0], [14439, 14794, 0.0], [14794, 14817, 0.04545455], [14817, 15176, 0.0], [15176, 15515, 0.0], [15515, 15600, 0.0], [15600, 15779, 0.0], [15779, 16725, 0.00440044], [16725, 16913, 0.0], [16913, 17070, 0.0], [17070, 17268, 0.0], [17268, 17448, 0.0], [17448, 17607, 0.0], [17607, 18066, 0.0], [18066, 18457, 0.0], [18457, 18620, 0.0], [18620, 18860, 0.0], [18860, 19289, 0.0], [19289, 19638, 0.0], [19638, 19791, 0.0], [19791, 20023, 0.0], [20023, 20107, 0.0], [20107, 20439, 0.0], [20439, 20524, 0.0], [20524, 20937, 0.0], [20937, 21050, 0.0], [21050, 21160, 0.0], [21160, 21334, 0.0], [21334, 21793, 0.0], [21793, 22099, 0.0], [22099, 22390, 0.0], [22390, 22420, 0.0], [22420, 22659, 0.0], [22659, 22969, 0.0], [22969, 23322, 0.0], [23322, 23423, 0.0], [23423, 23960, 0.00790514], [23960, 24069, 0.03738318], [24069, 24239, 0.00606061], [24239, 24631, 0.0], [24631, 24853, 0.0], [24853, 25000, 0.0], [25000, 25032, 0.0], [25032, 25044, 0.0], [25044, 25063, 0.0], [25063, 25076, 0.0], [25076, 25090, 0.0], [25090, 25119, 0.0], [25119, 25128, 0.0], [25128, 25134, 0.0], [25134, 25157, 0.0], [25157, 25406, 0.0], [25406, 25724, 0.0], [25724, 26328, 0.00338409], [26328, 26352, 0.08695652], [26352, 26382, 0.0], [26382, 26671, 0.0], [26671, 27196, 0.0], [27196, 27346, 0.0], [27346, 27728, 0.0], [27728, 27907, 0.0], [27907, 28219, 0.0], [28219, 28655, 0.0], [28655, 28748, 0.0], [28748, 28994, 0.0], [28994, 29175, 0.0], [29175, 29507, 0.0], [29507, 29864, 0.00568182], [29864, 30107, 0.0], [30107, 30676, 0.0], [30676, 30859, 0.0], [30859, 31126, 0.0], [31126, 31400, 0.0], [31400, 31590, 0.0], [31590, 31705, 0.0], [31705, 32063, 0.0], [32063, 32451, 0.0], [32451, 32481, 0.0], [32481, 32707, 0.0], [32707, 32726, 0.0], [32726, 32752, 0.2], [32752, 32779, 0.24], [32779, 32804, 0.30434783], [32804, 32830, 0.29166667], [32830, 32863, 0.15625], [32863, 32903, 0.07692308], [32903, 32949, 0.0], [32949, 33208, 0.0], [33208, 33223, 0.0], [33223, 33821, 0.03135889], [33821, 34206, 0.0], [34206, 34368, 0.0], [34368, 34490, 0.0], [34490, 34514, 0.0], [34514, 34717, 0.02051282], [34717, 34743, 0.0], [34743, 34804, 0.14285714], [34804, 34834, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 42, 0.0], [42, 108, 0.0], [108, 556, 0.0], [556, 583, 0.0], [583, 606, 0.0], [606, 644, 0.0], [644, 831, 0.0], [831, 1821, 0.0], [1821, 1845, 0.0], [1845, 2115, 0.0], [2115, 2371, 0.0], [2371, 2662, 0.0], [2662, 2828, 0.0], [2828, 3821, 0.0], [3821, 3900, 0.0], [3900, 3923, 0.0], [3923, 4129, 0.0], [4129, 4214, 0.0], [4214, 4366, 0.0], [4366, 4606, 0.0], [4606, 7211, 0.0], [7211, 7221, 0.0], [7221, 9423, 0.0], [9423, 10758, 0.0], [10758, 11351, 0.0], [11351, 11762, 0.0], [11762, 12025, 0.0], [12025, 12307, 0.0], [12307, 12330, 0.0], [12330, 12367, 0.0], [12367, 12703, 0.0], [12703, 13164, 0.0], [13164, 13189, 0.0], [13189, 13383, 0.0], [13383, 13736, 0.0], [13736, 13933, 0.0], [13933, 14189, 0.0], [14189, 14215, 0.0], [14215, 14439, 0.0], [14439, 14794, 0.0], [14794, 14817, 0.0], [14817, 15176, 0.0], [15176, 15515, 0.0], [15515, 15600, 0.0], [15600, 15779, 0.0], [15779, 16725, 0.0], [16725, 16913, 0.0], [16913, 17070, 0.0], [17070, 17268, 0.0], [17268, 17448, 0.0], [17448, 17607, 0.0], [17607, 18066, 0.0], [18066, 18457, 0.0], [18457, 18620, 0.0], [18620, 18860, 0.0], [18860, 19289, 0.0], [19289, 19638, 0.0], [19638, 19791, 0.0], [19791, 20023, 0.0], [20023, 20107, 0.0], [20107, 20439, 0.0], [20439, 20524, 0.0], [20524, 20937, 0.0], [20937, 21050, 0.0], [21050, 21160, 0.0], [21160, 21334, 0.0], [21334, 21793, 0.0], [21793, 22099, 0.0], [22099, 22390, 0.0], [22390, 22420, 0.0], [22420, 22659, 0.0], [22659, 22969, 0.0], [22969, 23322, 0.0], [23322, 23423, 0.0], [23423, 23960, 0.0], [23960, 24069, 0.0], [24069, 24239, 0.0], [24239, 24631, 0.0], [24631, 24853, 0.0], [24853, 25000, 0.0], [25000, 25032, 0.0], [25032, 25044, 0.0], [25044, 25063, 0.0], [25063, 25076, 0.0], [25076, 25090, 0.0], [25090, 25119, 0.0], [25119, 25128, 0.0], [25128, 25134, 0.0], [25134, 25157, 0.0], [25157, 25406, 0.0], [25406, 25724, 0.0], [25724, 26328, 0.0], [26328, 26352, 0.0], [26352, 26382, 0.0], [26382, 26671, 0.0], [26671, 27196, 0.0], [27196, 27346, 0.0], [27346, 27728, 0.0], [27728, 27907, 0.0], [27907, 28219, 0.0], [28219, 28655, 0.0], [28655, 28748, 0.0], [28748, 28994, 0.0], [28994, 29175, 0.0], [29175, 29507, 0.0], [29507, 29864, 0.0], [29864, 30107, 0.0], [30107, 30676, 0.0], [30676, 30859, 0.0], [30859, 31126, 0.0], [31126, 31400, 0.0], [31400, 31590, 0.0], [31590, 31705, 0.0], [31705, 32063, 0.0], [32063, 32451, 0.0], [32451, 32481, 0.0], [32481, 32707, 0.0], [32707, 32726, 0.0], [32726, 32752, 0.0], [32752, 32779, 0.0], [32779, 32804, 0.0], [32804, 32830, 0.0], [32830, 32863, 0.0], [32863, 32903, 0.0], [32903, 32949, 0.0], [32949, 33208, 0.0], [33208, 33223, 0.0], [33223, 33821, 0.0], [33821, 34206, 0.0], [34206, 34368, 0.0], [34368, 34490, 0.0], [34490, 34514, 0.0], [34514, 34717, 0.0], [34717, 34743, 0.0], [34743, 34804, 0.0], [34804, 34834, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 42, 0.16666667], [42, 108, 0.1969697], [108, 556, 0.046875], [556, 583, 0.88888889], [583, 606, 0.17391304], [606, 644, 0.86842105], [644, 831, 0.01069519], [831, 1821, 0.01111111], [1821, 1845, 0.125], [1845, 2115, 0.01111111], [2115, 2371, 0.01171875], [2371, 2662, 0.01030928], [2662, 2828, 0.0060241], [2828, 3821, 0.01107754], [3821, 3900, 0.06329114], [3900, 3923, 0.17391304], [3923, 4129, 0.04368932], [4129, 4214, 0.04705882], [4214, 4366, 0.05263158], [4366, 4606, 0.04583333], [4606, 7211, 0.02456814], [7211, 7221, 0.1], [7221, 9423, 0.01453224], [9423, 10758, 0.00973783], [10758, 11351, 0.01349073], [11351, 11762, 0.01703163], [11762, 12025, 0.04562738], [12025, 12307, 0.0070922], [12307, 12330, 0.17391304], [12330, 12367, 0.08108108], [12367, 12703, 0.00892857], [12703, 13164, 0.02603037], [13164, 13189, 0.88], [13189, 13383, 0.01030928], [13383, 13736, 0.00849858], [13736, 13933, 0.01015228], [13933, 14189, 0.0078125], [14189, 14215, 0.80769231], [14215, 14439, 0.0625], [14439, 14794, 0.05070423], [14794, 14817, 0.17391304], [14817, 15176, 0.07799443], [15176, 15515, 0.00884956], [15515, 15600, 0.01176471], [15600, 15779, 0.01117318], [15779, 16725, 0.00739958], [16725, 16913, 0.00531915], [16913, 17070, 0.00636943], [17070, 17268, 0.00505051], [17268, 17448, 0.01111111], [17448, 17607, 0.00628931], [17607, 18066, 0.03485839], [18066, 18457, 0.00511509], [18457, 18620, 0.01226994], [18620, 18860, 0.02083333], [18860, 19289, 0.00699301], [19289, 19638, 0.00573066], [19638, 19791, 0.01960784], [19791, 20023, 0.01293103], [20023, 20107, 0.01190476], [20107, 20439, 0.0060241], [20439, 20524, 0.01176471], [20524, 20937, 0.00968523], [20937, 21050, 0.00884956], [21050, 21160, 0.00909091], [21160, 21334, 0.01149425], [21334, 21793, 0.01089325], [21793, 22099, 0.02614379], [22099, 22390, 0.00687285], [22390, 22420, 0.2], [22420, 22659, 0.0334728], [22659, 22969, 0.01612903], [22969, 23322, 0.04249292], [23322, 23423, 0.04950495], [23423, 23960, 0.02793296], [23960, 24069, 0.03669725], [24069, 24239, 0.04705882], [24239, 24631, 0.0127551], [24631, 24853, 0.01351351], [24853, 25000, 0.01360544], [25000, 25032, 0.03125], [25032, 25044, 0.08333333], [25044, 25063, 0.05263158], [25063, 25076, 0.15384615], [25076, 25090, 0.07142857], [25090, 25119, 0.03448276], [25119, 25128, 0.11111111], [25128, 25134, 0.16666667], [25134, 25157, 0.04347826], [25157, 25406, 0.02409639], [25406, 25724, 0.00628931], [25724, 26328, 0.01490066], [26328, 26352, 0.16666667], [26352, 26382, 0.1], [26382, 26671, 0.01038062], [26671, 27196, 0.01142857], [27196, 27346, 0.03333333], [27346, 27728, 0.0104712], [27728, 27907, 0.02234637], [27907, 28219, 0.01282051], [28219, 28655, 0.01146789], [28655, 28748, 0.01075269], [28748, 28994, 0.00813008], [28994, 29175, 0.01104972], [29175, 29507, 0.01204819], [29507, 29864, 0.01960784], [29864, 30107, 0.01234568], [30107, 30676, 0.01054482], [30676, 30859, 0.01639344], [30859, 31126, 0.02621723], [31126, 31400, 0.01459854], [31400, 31590, 0.01578947], [31590, 31705, 0.0173913], [31705, 32063, 0.01396648], [32063, 32451, 0.02061856], [32451, 32481, 0.1], [32481, 32707, 0.04424779], [32707, 32726, 0.10526316], [32726, 32752, 0.11538462], [32752, 32779, 0.11111111], [32779, 32804, 0.12], [32804, 32830, 0.11538462], [32830, 32863, 0.09090909], [32863, 32903, 0.075], [32903, 32949, 0.04347826], [32949, 33208, 0.01158301], [33208, 33223, 0.06666667], [33223, 33821, 0.01505017], [33821, 34206, 0.01558442], [34206, 34368, 0.07407407], [34368, 34490, 0.01639344], [34490, 34514, 0.125], [34514, 34717, 0.03448276], [34717, 34743, 0.11538462], [34743, 34804, 0.09836066], [34804, 34834, 0.23333333]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 34834, 0.49653584]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 34834, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 34834, 0.16136897]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 34834, -1003.96897642]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 34834, 139.60516341]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 34834, -69.59653848]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 34834, 321.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Generate your totally free Spiritual Profile An Astrological Reading containing all astrological symbols mySpiritualProfile is proud to present a totally free Astrology Reading with an entire selection of astrological horoscope signs matching your personality characteristics . Simply fill in your first name plus birth date and you get a free Astrology Reading which contains a summary of astrological horoscope signs that are related to your first name and birth date, like; Star sign, ChineseZodiac, Horoscope Sign, Celtic Tree sign, Planet etc. mySpiritualProfile combines Western Astrology, Numerology, Colorology, Birthday Divination and Chinese & Druid Astrology. My Spiritual Profile January February March April May June July August September October November December 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981 1980 1979 1978 1977 1976 1975 1974 1973 1972 1971 1970 1969 1968 1967 1966 1965 1964 1963 1962 1961 1960 1959 1958 1957 1956 1955 1954 1953 1952 1951 1950 1949 1948 1947 1946 1945 1944 1943 1942 1941 1940 1939 1938 1937 1936 1935 1934 1933 1932 1931 1930 1929 1928 1927 1926 1925 1924 1923 1922 1921 1920 1919 1918 1917 1916 1915 1914 1913 1912 1911 1910 1909 1908 1907 1906 1905 1904 1903 1902 1901 1900 1899 1898 1897 1896 1895 1894 Additionally you can also obtain the full and insightful spiritual profile with the complete details of each astrological symbol that match your name and birth date and describe your personality traits. Get your free Astrological Report! Tell me your first name and your date of birth? Jump to mySpiritual Profile Form Western Zodiac| Western Element| Chinese Zodiac| Chinese Element| Colorology| Birthstone| Celtic Tree| Seasons| Celebrities| © 1996-2014 - | mySpiritualProfilemySpiritualProfile offers a free online astrology reading. The personal report shows astrological signs using Astrology, Numerology, Colorology and Birthday Divination. Web Design: Hedgehog Creations
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1606
{"url": "http://www.myspiritualprofile.com/content/atoz_astrology_readings.cfm?yearofbirth=1957", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.myspiritualprofile.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:13:23Z", "digest": "sha1:HS5FJODUZCLD2YTONQD2TYBPDW4P44TY"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2060, 2060.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2060, 3137.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2060, 23.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2060, 204.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2060, 0.72]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2060, 231.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2060, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2060, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2060, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2060, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2060, 0.16997167]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2060, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2060, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2060, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2060, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2060, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2060, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2060, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2060, 0.02815249]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2060, 0.0228739]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2060, 0.03284457]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2060, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2060, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2060, 0.44475921]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2060, 0.72727273]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2060, 5.34482759]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2060, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2060, 5.25489332]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2060, 319.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 105, 0.0], [105, 278, 1.0], [278, 671, 1.0], [671, 692, 0.0], [692, 778, 0.0], [778, 1383, 0.0], [1383, 1586, 1.0], [1586, 1621, 1.0], [1621, 1645, 0.0], [1645, 1669, 1.0], [1669, 1702, 0.0], [1702, 1718, 0.0], [1718, 1735, 0.0], [1735, 1751, 0.0], [1751, 1768, 0.0], [1768, 1780, 0.0], [1780, 1792, 0.0], [1792, 1805, 0.0], [1805, 1814, 0.0], [1814, 1827, 0.0], [1827, 2030, 1.0], [2030, 2060, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 105, 0.0], [105, 278, 0.0], [278, 671, 0.0], [671, 692, 0.0], [692, 778, 0.0], [778, 1383, 0.0], [1383, 1586, 0.0], [1586, 1621, 0.0], [1621, 1645, 0.0], [1645, 1669, 0.0], [1669, 1702, 0.0], [1702, 1718, 0.0], [1718, 1735, 0.0], [1735, 1751, 0.0], [1751, 1768, 0.0], [1768, 1780, 0.0], [1780, 1792, 0.0], [1792, 1805, 0.0], [1805, 1814, 0.0], [1814, 1827, 0.0], [1827, 2030, 0.0], [2030, 2060, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 45, 6.0], [45, 105, 7.0], [105, 278, 22.0], [278, 671, 57.0], [671, 692, 3.0], [692, 778, 12.0], [778, 1383, 121.0], [1383, 1586, 31.0], [1586, 1621, 5.0], [1621, 1645, 5.0], [1645, 1669, 5.0], [1669, 1702, 5.0], [1702, 1718, 2.0], [1718, 1735, 2.0], [1735, 1751, 2.0], [1751, 1768, 2.0], [1768, 1780, 1.0], [1780, 1792, 1.0], [1792, 1805, 2.0], [1805, 1814, 1.0], [1814, 1827, 1.0], [1827, 2030, 22.0], [2030, 2060, 4.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 105, 0.0], [105, 278, 0.0], [278, 671, 0.0], [671, 692, 0.0], [692, 778, 0.0], [778, 1383, 0.8013245], [1383, 1586, 0.0], [1586, 1621, 0.0], [1621, 1645, 0.0], [1645, 1669, 0.0], [1669, 1702, 0.0], [1702, 1718, 0.0], [1718, 1735, 0.0], [1735, 1751, 0.0], [1751, 1768, 0.0], [1768, 1780, 0.0], [1780, 1792, 0.0], [1792, 1805, 0.0], [1805, 1814, 0.0], [1814, 1827, 0.0], [1827, 2030, 0.04145078], [2030, 2060, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 105, 0.0], [105, 278, 0.0], [278, 671, 0.0], [671, 692, 0.0], [692, 778, 0.0], [778, 1383, 0.0], [1383, 1586, 0.0], [1586, 1621, 0.0], [1621, 1645, 0.0], [1645, 1669, 0.0], [1669, 1702, 0.0], [1702, 1718, 0.0], [1718, 1735, 0.0], [1735, 1751, 0.0], [1751, 1768, 0.0], [1768, 1780, 0.0], [1780, 1792, 0.0], [1792, 1805, 0.0], [1805, 1814, 0.0], [1814, 1827, 0.0], [1827, 2030, 0.0], [2030, 2060, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 45, 0.06666667], [45, 105, 0.05], [105, 278, 0.02312139], [278, 671, 0.05597964], [671, 692, 0.14285714], [692, 778, 0.13953488], [778, 1383, 0.0], [1383, 1586, 0.00492611], [1586, 1621, 0.08571429], [1621, 1645, 0.04166667], [1645, 1669, 0.0], [1669, 1702, 0.12121212], [1702, 1718, 0.125], [1718, 1735, 0.11764706], [1735, 1751, 0.125], [1751, 1768, 0.11764706], [1768, 1780, 0.08333333], [1780, 1792, 0.08333333], [1792, 1805, 0.15384615], [1805, 1814, 0.11111111], [1814, 1827, 0.07692308], [1827, 2030, 0.04926108], [2030, 2060, 0.13333333]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2060, 0.04462969]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2060, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2060, 0.15053427]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2060, -177.17433272]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2060, -83.17884497]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2060, -36.30346139]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2060, 9.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Your browser does not support iframes. Read a digital copy of the latest edition of The Trimble Banner online. TRIMBLE COUNTY NEWS OF PUBLIC RECORD -A A +A Wednesday, August 15, 2012 at 10:28 am Items published in court news are public record. The Trimble Banner publishes all misdemeanors, felonies and small-claims judgments recorded in district court, as well as all civil suits recorded in circuit court. Juvenile court cases are not published. Crime reports are provided by local law enforcement agencies. Charges or citations reported to The Trimble Banner do not imply guilt. The following cases were heard in Trimble County Court the week of Aug. 4-10, 2012.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1607
{"url": "http://www.mytrimblenews.com/content/trimble-county-news-public-record-8?mini=calendar-date%2F2012-11", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.mytrimblenews.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:44:04Z", "digest": "sha1:DC75EHN5XHQM4UCM6QYXHWIBGU3K4KAQ"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 666, 666.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 666, 3554.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 666, 5.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 666, 62.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 666, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 666, 290.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 666, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 666, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 666, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 666, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 666, 0.23664122]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 666, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 666, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 666, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 666, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 666, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 666, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 666, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 666, 0.05565863]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 666, 0.0890538]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 666, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 666, 0.06870229]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 666, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 666, 0.19847328]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 666, 0.65137615]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 666, 4.94495413]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 666, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 666, 4.07455043]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 666, 109.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 148, 0.0], [148, 244, 1.0], [244, 449, 1.0], [449, 583, 1.0], [583, 666, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 148, 0.0], [148, 244, 0.0], [244, 449, 0.0], [449, 583, 0.0], [583, 666, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 148, 25.0], [148, 244, 18.0], [244, 449, 30.0], [449, 583, 21.0], [583, 666, 15.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 148, 0.0], [148, 244, 0.11235955], [244, 449, 0.0], [449, 583, 0.0], [583, 666, 0.08860759]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 148, 0.0], [148, 244, 0.0], [244, 449, 0.0], [449, 583, 0.0], [583, 666, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 148, 0.24324324], [148, 244, 0.0625], [244, 449, 0.0195122], [449, 583, 0.03731343], [583, 666, 0.06024096]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 666, 0.0260452]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 666, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 666, 0.00634927]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 666, -42.23204132]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 666, -10.88150015]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 666, -0.77934365]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 666, 9.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
In association with GOLF DIGEST HomeMy Usual GameBiographyVideosArticlesGolf BooksContact Let’s Have a Look at Those Famous Merion Showers Posted on June 15, 2013 by David Owen Men’s locker room, Merion Golf Club. Like any sensible golf fan, I’m at home playing with my friends and, between rounds, watching the Open on TV. I visited Merion back in March, though, and while I was there I took a close look at the club’s famous showers, which have heads the size of manhole covers. Using one is like bathing in a car wash—in a good way. The showers require not just oversize supply pipes but also oversize drains. In the nineteen-forties, as the club struggled to overcome the economic impact of both the Great Depression and the Second World War, the house committee replaced them with conventional fixtures, in the hope of reducing the club’s water bill. J. Howard Pew, who was the president of the Sun Oil Company, demanded that the old fixtures be put back, and instructed the committee to add the club’s water expense to his own house account—as it did for years. (Merion didn’t retire its mortgage until 1971.) The view from below. Don’t try this while the water is flowing. Merion-style shower heads have become standard fixtures at go-to-hell golf clubs all over. Pine Valley (which was founded by pretty much the same group of guys who founded Merion) has them. So, surprisingly, do a few clubs in the British Isles, which may be the source of this grooming arrangement: If this were England, there would be a nail brush in there, too, plus a nail file hanging from a chain. When Merion remodeled its women’s locker room, the women decided they wanted Merion-style showers, too. But then one of them realized that if they had them they would no longer be able to avoid getting their hair wet, so they stuck with wall-mounted fixtures. Their loss. Merion’s men’s locker room has two levels, whose residents compete every year in an upstairs/downstairs tournament. (Winged Foot members do the same.) The current titleholder is indicated by a clock-like dial on the upper level, although I was told, confidentially, that members of the vanquished side will sometimes move the pointer. On the wall outside the downstairs shower room are several framed scorecards. One of them commemorates a round in 1964 during which a member named Andrew J. Davis, Jr., played the first seven holes in two over par (after hitting a ball out of bounds on the second) and then made ten consecutive 3s. He finished with what must, by that point, have seemed like a disappointing 4, on the club’s 450-yard closing hole, for a score of 65. On a winter evening a decade ago, a member named Edward Slevin, Jr., organized a dinner for a small group of his golf buddies in the bar on the second floor of the Merion clubhouse. They were marking time till spring and, not incidentally, trying to spend down their food minimums. In the years since then, their informal gathering has evolved into a monthly off-season party, and it’s now so popular that the only club space large enough to accommodate it is the men’s locker room. I attended the March dinner, two weeks before the East Course was scheduled to reopen for 2013. Slevin sat at the head of a very long table, which was almost a full lob wedge from end to end, and when dessert and various announcements were over much of the group reconvened downstairs, in the bar. Here’s what the table looked like before we all sat down: Hey, how about a shower before dessert? ShareFacebookTwitterPinterestGoogleEmail This entry was posted in England, Golf Courses, Tournaments, U. S. Open and tagged Merion Golf Club by David Owen. Bookmark the permalink. 9 thoughts on “Let’s Have a Look at Those Famous Merion Showers” whitedragongolf on June 15, 2013 at 8:35 pm said: Great post, what a good dining table, looks like my kind of place. Reply ↓ Tadpole on June 17, 2013 at 12:47 pm said: I would really like to know where they buy the “blue stuff” in the Winged Foot showers! It is the greatest foot wash in history. One can shower and use the “blue stuff” and walk another 18 holes. Reply ↓ DougZ on June 18, 2013 at 11:47 am said: Couldnt agree more, the “blue stuff” rules, I’ve used it at Deepdale. Use your connection and find out where we can buy the “stuff” Reply ↓ David Owen on June 18, 2013 at 3:20 pm said: I will get to work on this. I have ways of making people talk. Reply ↓ David Owen on June 19, 2013 at 12:05 pm said: Mystery now solved. See next post. Ron Davis on October 25, 2013 at 10:01 am said: Who is the manufacturer of the Merion Shower Head and where can i get one? Reply ↓ David Owen on October 26, 2013 at 1:39 pm said: I believe this is the company that makes them: http://www.speakmancompany.com/. But they’re not a regular product, I’m sure. There are a number of companies out there that make super large heads, however. One thing to keep in mind is that, to get the full effect, you’ll almost certainly need larger water supply pipes (and a nice big drain). Reply ↓ Ron Davis on October 26, 2013 at 5:00 pm said: Thank you for your prompt reply. I was aware that they require a 1″ supply line but have not found anyone that makes a head with such a fitting. It has probably been 10 years since my baptism at Merion which after a cool fall round was absolute heaven. I am installing an outdoor shower here in Florida and hope to be able to duplicate a great experience. Your help is greatly appreciated.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1608
{"url": "http://www.myusualgame.com/2013/06/15/lets-have-a-look-at-those-famous-merion-showers/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.myusualgame.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:23:31Z", "digest": "sha1:QBRXGBJLNGOTVBGC346VZNYULV6GVPHU"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 5464, 5464.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 5464, 6072.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 5464, 32.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 5464, 51.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 5464, 0.97]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 5464, 275.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 5464, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 5464, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 5464, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 5464, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 5464, 0.3951947]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 5464, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 5464, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 5464, 0.03906611]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 5464, 0.02265372]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 5464, 0.01294498]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 5464, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 5464, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 5464, 0.0110957]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 5464, 0.01040222]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 5464, 0.01040222]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 5464, 0.01739851]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 5464, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 5464, 0.1980116]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 5464, 0.47487179]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 5464, 4.43692308]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 5464, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 5464, 5.58128653]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 5464, 975.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 32, 0.0], [32, 90, 0.0], [90, 139, 0.0], [139, 214, 1.0], [214, 536, 1.0], [536, 1116, 0.0], [1116, 1180, 1.0], [1180, 1479, 0.0], [1479, 1583, 1.0], [1583, 1855, 1.0], [1855, 2190, 1.0], [2190, 2624, 1.0], [2624, 3463, 0.0], [3463, 3503, 1.0], [3503, 3798, 0.0], [3798, 3865, 1.0], [3865, 3916, 0.0], [3916, 4112, 1.0], [4112, 4161, 0.0], [4161, 4231, 1.0], [4231, 4293, 1.0], [4293, 4346, 0.0], [4346, 4409, 1.0], [4409, 4463, 0.0], [4463, 4498, 1.0], [4498, 4546, 0.0], [4546, 4621, 1.0], [4621, 4677, 0.0], [4677, 4757, 1.0], [4757, 5020, 1.0], [5020, 5075, 0.0], [5075, 5464, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 32, 0.0], [32, 90, 0.0], [90, 139, 0.0], [139, 214, 0.0], [214, 536, 0.0], [536, 1116, 0.0], [1116, 1180, 0.0], [1180, 1479, 0.0], [1479, 1583, 0.0], [1583, 1855, 0.0], [1855, 2190, 0.0], [2190, 2624, 0.0], [2624, 3463, 0.0], [3463, 3503, 0.0], [3503, 3798, 0.0], [3798, 3865, 0.0], [3865, 3916, 0.0], [3916, 4112, 0.0], [4112, 4161, 0.0], [4161, 4231, 0.0], [4231, 4293, 0.0], [4293, 4346, 0.0], [4346, 4409, 0.0], [4409, 4463, 0.0], [4463, 4498, 0.0], [4498, 4546, 0.0], [4546, 4621, 0.0], [4621, 4677, 0.0], [4677, 4757, 0.0], [4757, 5020, 0.0], [5020, 5075, 0.0], [5075, 5464, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 32, 5.0], [32, 90, 4.0], [90, 139, 9.0], [139, 214, 14.0], [214, 536, 62.0], [536, 1116, 97.0], [1116, 1180, 12.0], [1180, 1479, 50.0], [1479, 1583, 21.0], [1583, 1855, 46.0], [1855, 2190, 51.0], [2190, 2624, 79.0], [2624, 3463, 152.0], [3463, 3503, 7.0], [3503, 3798, 45.0], [3798, 3865, 13.0], [3865, 3916, 11.0], [3916, 4112, 38.0], [4112, 4161, 11.0], [4161, 4231, 12.0], [4231, 4293, 12.0], [4293, 4346, 12.0], [4346, 4409, 14.0], [4409, 4463, 12.0], [4463, 4498, 6.0], [4498, 4546, 10.0], [4546, 4621, 15.0], [4621, 4677, 12.0], [4677, 4757, 10.0], [4757, 5020, 48.0], [5020, 5075, 12.0], [5075, 5464, 73.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 32, 0.0], [32, 90, 0.0], [90, 139, 0.0], [139, 214, 0.08450704], [214, 536, 0.0], [536, 1116, 0.00707965], [1116, 1180, 0.0], [1180, 1479, 0.0], [1479, 1583, 0.0], [1583, 1855, 0.0], [1855, 2190, 0.0], [2190, 2624, 0.02625298], [2624, 3463, 0.004884], [3463, 3503, 0.0], [3503, 3798, 0.03521127], [3798, 3865, 0.0], [3865, 3916, 0.21276596], [3916, 4112, 0.01041667], [4112, 4161, 0.22222222], [4161, 4231, 0.0], [4231, 4293, 0.0], [4293, 4346, 0.18367347], [4346, 4409, 0.0], [4409, 4463, 0.2], [4463, 4498, 0.0], [4498, 4546, 0.22727273], [4546, 4621, 0.0], [4621, 4677, 0.17307692], [4677, 4757, 0.0], [4757, 5020, 0.0], [5020, 5075, 0.17647059], [5075, 5464, 0.0078125]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 32, 0.0], [32, 90, 0.0], [90, 139, 0.0], [139, 214, 0.0], [214, 536, 0.0], [536, 1116, 0.0], [1116, 1180, 0.0], [1180, 1479, 0.0], [1479, 1583, 0.0], [1583, 1855, 0.0], [1855, 2190, 0.0], [2190, 2624, 0.0], [2624, 3463, 0.0], [3463, 3503, 0.0], [3503, 3798, 0.0], [3798, 3865, 0.0], [3865, 3916, 0.0], [3916, 4112, 0.0], [4112, 4161, 0.0], [4161, 4231, 0.0], [4231, 4293, 0.0], [4293, 4346, 0.0], [4346, 4409, 0.0], [4409, 4463, 0.0], [4463, 4498, 0.0], [4498, 4546, 0.0], [4546, 4621, 0.0], [4621, 4677, 0.0], [4677, 4757, 0.0], [4757, 5020, 0.0], [5020, 5075, 0.0], [5075, 5464, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 32, 0.34375], [32, 90, 0.17241379], [90, 139, 0.14285714], [139, 214, 0.10666667], [214, 536, 0.03416149], [536, 1116, 0.02413793], [1116, 1180, 0.03125], [1180, 1479, 0.02341137], [1479, 1583, 0.01923077], [1583, 1855, 0.01838235], [1855, 2190, 0.01492537], [2190, 2624, 0.01612903], [2624, 3463, 0.01549464], [3463, 3503, 0.025], [3503, 3798, 0.09491525], [3798, 3865, 0.01492537], [3865, 3916, 0.05882353], [3916, 4112, 0.0255102], [4112, 4161, 0.08163265], [4161, 4231, 0.04285714], [4231, 4293, 0.01612903], [4293, 4346, 0.0754717], [4346, 4409, 0.03174603], [4409, 4463, 0.07407407], [4463, 4498, 0.05714286], [4498, 4546, 0.0625], [4546, 4621, 0.05333333], [4621, 4677, 0.07142857], [4677, 4757, 0.0125], [4757, 5020, 0.01520913], [5020, 5075, 0.07272727], [5075, 5464, 0.01799486]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 5464, 0.02297294]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 5464, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 5464, 0.21442777]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 5464, -332.84091947]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 5464, 21.39465829]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 5464, -331.97481175]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 5464, 57.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
NO 7 Rogers State vs. NO 2 Cumberlands (Ky.) 3/14/2012 Frankfort,KY Back To Top Date: 3/14/2012 Arena: Convention Center Time: 9:45 pm City, State: Frankfort, KY VISITOR: NO 2 Cumberlands (Ky.) (28-4) 20 Bicane, Dace F 3 5 0 0 0 0 4 6 10 2 6 0 2 0 1 35+ 21 Alexander, Jackie G 2 5 1 2 0 0 1 3 4 3 5 1 2 0 0 31 23 Howard, Jade G 1 6 0 3 3 4 1 0 1 3 5 5 3 0 2 33+ 5 Ratliff, Haley * 3 12 1 7 5 6 1 7 8 5 12 1 2 0 0 42+ 10 Wombles, Lauren * 10 24 3 6 12 13 2 5 7 4 35 2 1 0 2 44+ 3 Upchurch, Jessica 1 3 1 3 2 2 0 1 1 3 5 2 2 0 1 21+ 15 Costa, Thali Rodrigue 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0+ 22 Moss, Vernisha 1 4 0 0 3 4 0 1 1 4 5 0 2 0 0 18- Team Totals 21 59 6 21 25 29 13 30 43 24 73 11 14 0 6 225 Total FG% - 1st: 6/27 0.222 2nd and OTs: 15/32 0.469 Game: 0.356 Deadball 3-PT FG% - 1st: 0/9 0.000 2nd and OTs: 6/12 0.500 Game: 0.286 Rebounds Total FT% - 1st: 12/14 0.857 2nd and OTs: 13/15 0.867 Game: 0.862 (2,0) HOME: NO 7 Rogers State (21-11) 10 Froese, Logan F 10 17 0 1 1 3 4 4 8 2 21 3 0 0 0 37+ 21 Woods, Gianna F 4 8 0 0 2 2 1 4 5 4 10 1 1 1 1 26- 11 Smith, Leah G 6 14 1 2 3 4 0 3 3 2 16 3 2 0 2 34+ 15 Cornwell, Sierra G 2 5 1 1 9 11 0 1 1 2 14 1 1 0 3 29- 20 Barnes, Sasha G 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 2 2 0 2 4 4 0 0 36+ 5 Walker, Rician 2 3 1 1 2 2 0 1 1 3 7 1 0 0 0 9- 14 Silva, Ariani 3 10 0 5 3 6 0 1 1 2 9 1 1 0 0 27+ 22 Giles, Larrielle 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 3 2 0 0 0 0 0 10+ 40 Harris, Madison 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 1 1 2 1 0 1 1 1 16+ Team Totals 28 59 3 10 21 30 8 27 35 19 80 14 10 2 7 225 Total FG% - 1st: 11/27 0.407 2nd and OTs: 17/32 0.531 Game: 0.475 Deadball 3-PT FG% - 1st: 1/5 0.200 2nd and OTs: 2/5 0.400 Game: 0.300 Rebounds Total FT% - 1st: 6/9 0.667 2nd and OTs: 15/21 0.714 Game: 0.700 (2,0) Technical Fouls: UC (0) : ROGR (0) OFFICIALS : Dan Miller Harlen Gathright Carol Smith NO 2 Cumberlands (Ky.) 24 39 10 73 NO 7 Rogers State 29 34 17 80 Roger State will play Shorter 6:15 pm Friday Back To Top UC Starters: Ratliff, Wombles, Bicane, Alexander, Howard ROGR Starters: BARNES, SMITH, CORNWELL, WOODS, FROESE Jump Ball: Gianna WOODS (ROGR) vs. Dace Bicane (UC), won by UC Turnover by Jade Howard (UC) Stolen by Sierra CORNWELL (ROGR) FG MADE by Logan FROESE (ROGR) assisted by Sasha BARNES FG MADE by Jade Howard (UC) Foul called on Haley Ratliff (UC) Turnover by Sasha BARNES (ROGR) Stolen by Lauren Wombles (UC) 3pt FG missed by Jade Howard (UC) offensive Team rebound by UC FG missed by Jade Howard (UC) rebounded by Sasha BARNES (ROGR)
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1609
{"url": "http://www.naia.org/fls/27900/1NAIA/SportsInfo/Championships/2012DIWBB/Game8_2012DIWBB.htm?DB_OEM_ID=27900", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.naia.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:41:29Z", "digest": "sha1:ZD7NRN767RCYYOFHW7RPDYYYIV345DH7"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3078, 3078.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3078, 3883.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3078, 47.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3078, 84.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3078, 0.62]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3078, 214.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3078, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3078, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3078, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3078, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3078, 0.02644231]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3078, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3078, 0.0096911]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3078, 0.06117505]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3078, 0.05511811]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3078, 0.01393095]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3078, 0.0096911]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3078, 0.0096911]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3078, 0.05693519]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3078, 0.0563295]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3078, 0.0557238]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3078, 0.07451923]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3078, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3078, 0.71033654]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3078, 0.29268293]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3078, 2.68455285]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3078, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3078, 4.27952578]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3078, 615.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 68, 0.0], [68, 131, 0.0], [131, 184, 0.0], [184, 223, 0.0], [223, 305, 0.0], [305, 386, 0.0], [386, 468, 0.0], [468, 549, 0.0], [549, 631, 0.0], [631, 712, 0.0], [712, 794, 0.0], [794, 876, 0.0], [876, 957, 0.0], [957, 1038, 0.0], [1038, 1119, 0.0], [1119, 1199, 0.0], [1199, 1231, 0.0], [1231, 1313, 0.0], [1313, 1395, 0.0], [1395, 1477, 0.0], [1477, 1559, 0.0], [1559, 1641, 0.0], [1641, 1722, 0.0], [1722, 1804, 0.0], [1804, 1886, 0.0], [1886, 1968, 0.0], [1968, 2049, 0.0], [2049, 2130, 0.0], [2130, 2211, 0.0], [2211, 2291, 0.0], [2291, 2315, 0.0], [2315, 2326, 0.0], [2326, 2387, 0.0], [2387, 2436, 0.0], [2436, 2480, 0.0], [2480, 2525, 0.0], [2525, 2550, 0.0], [2550, 2594, 0.0], [2594, 2648, 0.0], [2648, 2711, 0.0], [2711, 2773, 0.0], [2773, 2829, 0.0], [2829, 2857, 0.0], [2857, 2891, 0.0], [2891, 2953, 0.0], [2953, 3016, 0.0], [3016, 3078, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 68, 0.0], [68, 131, 0.0], [131, 184, 0.0], [184, 223, 0.0], [223, 305, 0.0], [305, 386, 0.0], [386, 468, 0.0], [468, 549, 0.0], [549, 631, 0.0], [631, 712, 0.0], [712, 794, 0.0], [794, 876, 0.0], [876, 957, 0.0], [957, 1038, 0.0], [1038, 1119, 0.0], [1119, 1199, 0.0], [1199, 1231, 0.0], [1231, 1313, 0.0], [1313, 1395, 0.0], [1395, 1477, 0.0], [1477, 1559, 0.0], [1559, 1641, 0.0], [1641, 1722, 0.0], [1722, 1804, 0.0], [1804, 1886, 0.0], [1886, 1968, 0.0], [1968, 2049, 0.0], [2049, 2130, 0.0], [2130, 2211, 0.0], [2211, 2291, 0.0], [2291, 2315, 0.0], [2315, 2326, 0.0], [2326, 2387, 0.0], [2387, 2436, 0.0], [2436, 2480, 0.0], [2480, 2525, 0.0], [2525, 2550, 0.0], [2550, 2594, 0.0], [2594, 2648, 0.0], [2648, 2711, 0.0], [2711, 2773, 0.0], [2773, 2829, 0.0], [2829, 2857, 0.0], [2857, 2891, 0.0], [2891, 2953, 0.0], [2953, 3016, 0.0], [3016, 3078, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 68, 11.0], [68, 131, 8.0], [131, 184, 7.0], [184, 223, 6.0], [223, 305, 20.0], [305, 386, 20.0], [386, 468, 20.0], [468, 549, 19.0], [549, 631, 19.0], [631, 712, 19.0], [712, 794, 20.0], [794, 876, 19.0], [876, 957, 18.0], [957, 1038, 13.0], [1038, 1119, 13.0], [1119, 1199, 13.0], [1199, 1231, 6.0], [1231, 1313, 20.0], [1313, 1395, 20.0], [1395, 1477, 20.0], [1477, 1559, 20.0], [1559, 1641, 20.0], [1641, 1722, 19.0], [1722, 1804, 19.0], [1804, 1886, 19.0], [1886, 1968, 19.0], [1968, 2049, 18.0], [2049, 2130, 13.0], [2130, 2211, 13.0], [2211, 2291, 13.0], [2291, 2315, 4.0], [2315, 2326, 2.0], [2326, 2387, 7.0], [2387, 2436, 8.0], [2436, 2480, 8.0], [2480, 2525, 8.0], [2525, 2550, 5.0], [2550, 2594, 5.0], [2594, 2648, 7.0], [2648, 2711, 12.0], [2711, 2773, 10.0], [2773, 2829, 10.0], [2829, 2857, 6.0], [2857, 2891, 6.0], [2891, 2953, 10.0], [2953, 3016, 12.0], [3016, 3078, 11.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 68, 0.15], [68, 131, 0.14583333], [131, 184, 0.08571429], [184, 223, 0.12903226], [223, 305, 0.4], [305, 386, 0.35185185], [386, 468, 0.3877551], [468, 549, 0.4], [549, 631, 0.43636364], [631, 712, 0.35294118], [712, 794, 0.32727273], [794, 876, 0.3877551], [876, 957, 0.52631579], [957, 1038, 0.33870968], [1038, 1119, 0.34482759], [1119, 1199, 0.42105263], [1199, 1231, 0.18518519], [1231, 1313, 0.41509434], [1313, 1395, 0.39215686], [1395, 1477, 0.42], [1477, 1559, 0.38181818], [1559, 1641, 0.38], [1641, 1722, 0.36170213], [1722, 1804, 0.40816327], [1804, 1886, 0.37254902], [1886, 1968, 0.38], [1968, 2049, 0.51785714], [2049, 2130, 0.34920635], [2130, 2211, 0.33333333], [2211, 2291, 0.4], [2291, 2315, 0.05], [2315, 2326, 0.16666667], [2326, 2387, 0.0], [2387, 2436, 0.29032258], [2436, 2480, 0.31034483], [2480, 2525, 0.06976744], [2525, 2550, 0.0], [2550, 2594, 0.0], [2594, 2648, 0.0], [2648, 2711, 0.0], [2711, 2773, 0.0], [2773, 2829, 0.0], [2829, 2857, 0.0], [2857, 2891, 0.0], [2891, 2953, 0.0], [2953, 3016, 0.01666667], [3016, 3078, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 68, 0.0], [68, 131, 0.0], [131, 184, 0.0], [184, 223, 0.0], [223, 305, 0.0], [305, 386, 0.0], [386, 468, 0.0], [468, 549, 0.0], [549, 631, 0.0], [631, 712, 0.0], [712, 794, 0.0], [794, 876, 0.0], [876, 957, 0.0], [957, 1038, 0.0], [1038, 1119, 0.0], [1119, 1199, 0.0], [1199, 1231, 0.0], [1231, 1313, 0.0], [1313, 1395, 0.0], [1395, 1477, 0.0], [1477, 1559, 0.0], [1559, 1641, 0.0], [1641, 1722, 0.0], [1722, 1804, 0.0], [1804, 1886, 0.0], [1886, 1968, 0.0], [1968, 2049, 0.0], [2049, 2130, 0.0], [2130, 2211, 0.0], [2211, 2291, 0.0], [2291, 2315, 0.0], [2315, 2326, 0.0], [2326, 2387, 0.0], [2387, 2436, 0.0], [2436, 2480, 0.0], [2480, 2525, 0.0], [2525, 2550, 0.0], [2550, 2594, 0.0], [2594, 2648, 0.0], [2648, 2711, 0.0], [2711, 2773, 0.0], [2773, 2829, 0.0], [2829, 2857, 0.0], [2857, 2891, 0.0], [2891, 2953, 0.0], [2953, 3016, 0.0], [3016, 3078, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 68, 0.16176471], [68, 131, 0.11111111], [131, 184, 0.11320755], [184, 223, 0.28205128], [223, 305, 0.03658537], [305, 386, 0.03703704], [386, 468, 0.03658537], [468, 549, 0.02469136], [549, 631, 0.02439024], [631, 712, 0.02469136], [712, 794, 0.03658537], [794, 876, 0.02439024], [876, 957, 0.02469136], [957, 1038, 0.08641975], [1038, 1119, 0.09876543], [1119, 1199, 0.075], [1199, 1231, 0.25], [1231, 1313, 0.03658537], [1313, 1395, 0.03658537], [1395, 1477, 0.03658537], [1477, 1559, 0.03658537], [1559, 1641, 0.03658537], [1641, 1722, 0.02469136], [1722, 1804, 0.02439024], [1804, 1886, 0.02439024], [1886, 1968, 0.02439024], [1968, 2049, 0.02469136], [2049, 2130, 0.08641975], [2130, 2211, 0.09876543], [2211, 2291, 0.075], [2291, 2315, 0.16666667], [2315, 2326, 0.36363636], [2326, 2387, 0.24590164], [2387, 2436, 0.08163265], [2436, 2480, 0.09090909], [2480, 2525, 0.08888889], [2525, 2550, 0.24], [2550, 2594, 0.11363636], [2594, 2648, 0.64814815], [2648, 2711, 0.28571429], [2711, 2773, 0.30645161], [2773, 2829, 0.42857143], [2829, 2857, 0.35714286], [2857, 2891, 0.14705882], [2891, 2953, 0.27419355], [2953, 3016, 0.14285714], [3016, 3078, 0.27419355]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3078, 0.00444508]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3078, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3078, 0.12785769]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3078, -1146.91479783]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3078, -423.46445069]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3078, -297.27945001]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3078, 24.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Home > News > 4 Platform Drugmakers to Watch September 26th, 2007 4 Platform Drugmakers to Watch Abraxis BioScience (Nasdaq: ABBI) is developing drugs based on its nab (nanoparticle-albumin bound) technology. Essentially, the company takes chemotherapy drugs and surrounds them with albumin protein. Since albumin is used by tumor cells as a way to bring in nutrients, the tumor cells take up the albumin-bound drug more readily than they would a similar drug without albumin. The shell also increases the solubility of the drug, making it easier to deliver it to wherever it's needed in the body.Abraxane, the company's one marketed drug based on the nab technology, has been competing well against the other taxanes on the market -- Bristol-Myers Squibb's (NYSE: BMY) Taxol and Sanofi-Aventis' (NYSE: SNY) Taxotere -- since it was approved to treat metastatic breast cancer in 2005. Abraxis is running additional clinical trials to get its label expanded to include other types of tumors.The company is also developing four other chemotherapy drugs based on the nab technology. Two clinical trials for nab-docetaxel have already begun, and clinical studies for nab-rapamycin are expected to begin later this year. The other two molecules are still in pre-clinical trials but could be in the clinic as early as 2008. Source:fool.com Bookmark: Related News Press
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1610
{"url": "http://www.nanotech-now.com/news.cgi?story_id=25230", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nanotech-now.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:43:44Z", "digest": "sha1:I2MYOKGUD45T7WUWHFGWC6FF4BLPFNDW"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 1362, 1362.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1362, 3557.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1362, 4.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1362, 58.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1362, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1362, 332.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1362, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1362, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1362, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1362, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1362, 0.35185185]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1362, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1362, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1362, 0.08900999]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1362, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1362, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1362, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1362, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1362, 0.01907357]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1362, 0.03451408]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1362, 0.03814714]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1362, 0.01851852]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1362, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1362, 0.18518519]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1362, 0.63033175]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1362, 5.21800948]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1362, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1362, 4.64312106]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1362, 211.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 97, 0.0], [97, 1318, 1.0], [1318, 1362, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 97, 0.0], [97, 1318, 0.0], [1318, 1362, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 45, 7.0], [45, 97, 8.0], [97, 1318, 191.0], [1318, 1362, 5.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 45, 0.025], [45, 97, 0.14], [97, 1318, 0.00679694], [1318, 1362, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 97, 0.0], [97, 1318, 0.0], [1318, 1362, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 45, 0.11111111], [45, 97, 0.07692308], [97, 1318, 0.03030303], [1318, 1362, 0.11363636]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1362, 0.0900892]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1362, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1362, 0.4763065]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1362, -81.81429061]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1362, -3.80490311]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1362, 0.83462414]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1362, 11.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Home > Press > Game-changing Nanodiamond Discovery for MRI A Gd(III)-nanodiamond conjugate [Gd(III)-ND] was prepared and characterized, enabling detection of nanodiamonds by MR imaging. The Gd(III)-ND particles significantly reduced the T1 of water protons with a per-Gd(III) relaxivity of 58.82 � 1.18 mM−1 s−1 at 1.5 T (60 MHz). This represents a 10-fold increase compared to the monomer Gd(III) complex (r1 = 5.42 � 0.20 mM−1 s−1) and is among the highest per-Gd(III) relaxivities reported. Dramatically enhanced image contrast could revolutionize diagnostics and therapeutics Game-changing Nanodiamond Discovery for MRI Evanston, IL | Posted on January 16th, 2010A Northwestern University study shows that coupling a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast agent to a nanodiamond results in dramatically enhanced signal intensity and thus vivid image contrast. "The results are a leap and not a small one -- it is a game-changing event for sensitivity," said Thomas J. Meade, the Eileen Foell Professor in Cancer Research in the Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences and the Feinberg School of Medicine. "This is an imaging agent on steroids. The complex is far more sensitive than anything else I've seen."Meade led the study along with Dean Ho, assistant professor of biomedical engineering and mechanical engineering in the McCormick School of Engineering and Applied Science. Ho already has demonstrated that the nanodiamonds have excellent biocompatibility and can be used for efficient drug delivery. This new work paves the way for the clinical use of nanodiamonds to both deliver therapeutics and remotely track the activity and location of the drugs. The study, published online by the journal Nano Letters (1), also is the first published report of nanodiamonds being imaged by MRI technology, to the best of the researchers' knowledge. The ability to image nanodiamonds in vivo would be useful in biological studies where long-term cellular fate mapping is critical, such as tracking beta islet cells or tracking stem cells.MRI is a noninvasive medical imaging technique that uses an intravenous contrast agent to produce detailed images of internal structures in the body. MRI is capable of deep tissue penetration, achieves an efficient level of soft tissue contrast with high spatial and time-related resolution, and does not require ionizing radiation. Contrast agents are used in MRI because they alter the relaxivity (contrast efficacy indicator) and improve image resolution. Gadolinium (Gd) is the material most commonly used as an MRI contrast agent, but its contrast efficacy can be improved.Meade, Ho and their colleagues developed a gadolinium(III)-nanodiamond complex that, in a series of tests, demonstrated a significant increase in relaxivity and, in turn, a significant increase in contrast enhancement. The Gd(III)-nanodiamond complex demonstrated a greater than 10-fold increase in relaxivity -- among the highest per Gd(III) values reported to date. This represents an important advance in the efficiency of MRI contrast agents. Ho and Meade imaged a variety of nanodiamond samples, including nanodiamonds decorated with various concentrations of Gd(III), undecorated nanodiamonds and water. The intense signal of the Gd(III)-nanodiamond complex was brightest when the Gd(III) level was highest."Nanodiamonds have been shown to be effective in attracting water molecules to their surface, which can enhance the relaxivity properties of the Gd(III)-nanodiamond complex," said Ho. "This might explain why these complexes are so bright and such good contrast agents." "The nanodiamonds are utterly unique among nanoparticles," Meade said. "A nanodiamond is like a cargo ship -- it gives us a nontoxic platform upon which to put different types of drugs and imaging agents."The biocompatibility of the Gd(III)-nanodiamond complex underscores its clinical relevance. In addition to confirming the improved signal produced by the hybrid, the researchers conducted toxicity studies using fibroblasts and HeLa cells as biological testbeds. They found little impact of the hybrid complex on cellular viability, affirming the complex's inherent safety and positioning it as a clinically significant nanomaterial. (Other nanodiamond imaging methods, such as fluorescent nanodiamond agents, have limited tissue penetration and are more appropriate for histological applications.)Nanodiamonds are carbon-based materials approximately four to six nanometers in diameter. Each nanodiamond's surface possesses carboxyl groups that allow a wide spectrum of compounds to be attached to it, not just gadolinium(III). The researchers are exploring the pre-clinical application of the MRI contrast agent-nanodiamond hybrid in various animal models. With an eye towards optimizing this novel hybrid material, they also are continuing studies of the structure of the Gd(III)-nanodiamond complex to learn how it governs increased relaxivity.Meade has pioneered the design and synthesis of chemical compounds for applications in cancer detection, cellular signaling and gene regulation. Ho has pioneered the development of nanodiamonds and has demonstrated their efficiency as drug delivery vehicles. Both are members of the Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center of Northwestern University. The Nano Letters paper is titled "Gd(III)-Nanodiamond Conjugates for MRI Contrast Enhancement." In addition to Ho and Meade, other authors of the paper are Lisa M. Manus (first author), Daniel J. Mastarone, Emily A. Waters, Xue-Qing Zhang, Elise A. Schultz-Sikma, and Keith W. MacRenaris, all from Northwestern University.The National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health, among others, supported the research.(1) A copy of the paper can be found at pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/nl903264h####About Northwestern University Northwestern University combines innovative teaching and pioneering research in a highly collaborative environment that transcends traditional academic boundaries. It provides students and faculty exceptional opportunities for intellectual, personal and professional growth in a setting enhanced by the richness of Chicago. Contacts:Megan Fellman Copyright © Northwestern University If you have a comment, please Contact us.Issuers of news releases, not 7th Wave, Inc. or Nanotechnology Now, are solely responsible for the accuracy of the content.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1611
{"url": "http://www.nanotech-now.com/news.cgi?story_id=36296", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nanotech-now.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:28:30Z", "digest": "sha1:IKU377XLXFOV4YES4FIKIC5OJE6TXJ33"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 6398, 6398.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 6398, 9287.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 6398, 7.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 6398, 73.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 6398, 0.92]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 6398, 288.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 6398, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 6398, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 6398, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 6398, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 6398, 0.30697279]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 6398, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 6398, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 6398, 0.01444592]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 6398, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 6398, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 6398, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 6398, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 6398, 0.01235507]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 6398, 0.02471013]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 6398, 0.02128873]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 6398, 0.03911565]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 6398, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 6398, 0.18282313]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 6398, 0.49507119]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 6398, 5.76232202]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 6398, 0.00340136]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 6398, 5.47530083]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 6398, 913.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 59, 0.0], [59, 494, 1.0], [494, 580, 0.0], [580, 624, 0.0], [624, 6175, 1.0], [6175, 6198, 0.0], [6198, 6398, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 59, 0.0], [59, 494, 0.0], [494, 580, 0.0], [580, 624, 0.0], [624, 6175, 0.0], [6175, 6198, 0.0], [6198, 6398, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 59, 7.0], [59, 494, 65.0], [494, 580, 9.0], [580, 624, 5.0], [624, 6175, 794.0], [6175, 6198, 2.0], [6198, 6398, 31.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 59, 0.0], [59, 494, 0.06265664], [494, 580, 0.0], [580, 624, 0.0], [624, 6175, 0.00409378], [6175, 6198, 0.0], [6198, 6398, 0.00518135]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 59, 0.0], [59, 494, 0.0], [494, 580, 0.0], [580, 624, 0.0], [624, 6175, 0.0], [6175, 6198, 0.0], [6198, 6398, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 59, 0.13559322], [59, 494, 0.08965517], [494, 580, 0.01162791], [580, 624, 0.13636364], [624, 6175, 0.03512881], [6175, 6198, 0.13043478], [6198, 6398, 0.05]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 6398, 0.39496875]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 6398, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 6398, 0.55679846]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 6398, -290.95962382]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 6398, -25.59518909]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 6398, 26.73324]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 6398, 59.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Preventing Childhood Obesity: Health in the Balance ( Front Matter R1-R20 Executive Summary 1-20 1 Introduction 21-53 2 Extent and Consequences of Childhood Obesity 54-78 3 Developing An Action Plan 79-124 4 A National Public Health Priority 125-152 5 Industry, Advertising, Media, and Public Education 153-192 6 Local Communities 193-236 7 Schools 237-284 8 Home 285-318 9 Confronting the Childhood Obesity Epidemic 319-326 Appendix A: Acronyms 327-330 Appendix B: Glossary 331-338 Appendix C: Literature Review 339-342 Appendix D: Lessons Learned from Public Health Efforts and Their Relevance to Preventing Childhood Obesity 343-376 Appendix E: Workshop Programs 377-382 Appendix F: Biographical Sketches 383-394 Index 395-414 Preventing Childhood Obesity Health in the Balance Committee on Prevention of Obesity in Children and Youth Food and Nutrition Board Board on Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Jeffrey P. Koplan, Catharyn T. Liverman, Vivica I. Kraak, Editors INSTITUTE OF MEDICINE OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMIES THE NATIONAL ACADEMIES PRESS Washington, D.C.www.nap.edu Front Matter R1-R20 Executive Summary 1-20 1 Introduction 21-53 2 Extent and Consequences of Childhood Obesity 54-78 3 Developing An Action Plan 79-124 4 A National Public Health Priority 125-152 5 Industry, Advertising, Media, and Public Education 153-192 6 Local Communities 193-236 7 Schools 237-284 8 Home 285-318 9 Confronting the Childhood Obesity Epidemic 319-326 Appendix A: Acronyms 327-330 Appendix B: Glossary 331-338 Appendix C: Literature Review 339-342 Appendix D: Lessons Learned from Public Health Efforts and Their Relevance to Preventing Childhood Obesity 343-376 Appendix E: Workshop Programs 377-382 Appendix F: Biographical Sketches 383-394 Index 395-414 Close Front Matter ." Preventing Childhood Obesity: Health in the Balance . Washington, DC: The National Academies Press, Preventing Childhood Obesity: Health in the Balance Preventing Childhood Obesity www.nap.edu 500 Fifth Street, N.W. Washington, DC 20001 NOTICE: The project that is the subject of this report was approved by the Governing Board of the National Research Council, whose members are drawn from the councils of the National Academy of Sciences, the National Academy of Engineering, and the Institute of Medicine. The members of the committee responsible for the report were chosen for their special competences and with regard for appropriate balance. The study was supported by Contract No. 200-2000-00629, T.O. #14 between the National Academy of Sciences and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; by Contract No. N01-OD-4-2139, T.O. #126 with the National Institutes of Health; and by Grant No. 047513 with The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The contracts were supported by funds from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion; Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases; National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; National Institute of Child Health and Human Development; and the Division of Nutrition Research Coordination of the National Institutes of Health. Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this publication are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the organizations or agencies that provided support for the project. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Institute of Medicine (U.S.). Committee on Prevention of Obesity in Children and Youth. Preventing childhood obesity : health in the balance / Committee on Prevention of Obesity in Children and Youth, Food and Nutrition Board, Board on Health Promotion and Disease Prevention ; Jeffrey P. Koplan, Catharyn T. Liverman, Vivica I. Kraak, editors. p. ; cm. ISBN 0-309-09196-9 (hardcover) — ISBN 0-309-09315-5 1. Obesity in children—United States—Prevention. 2. Child health services—United States. 3. Nutrition policy—United States. 4. Health promotion—United States. [DNLM: 1. Obesity—prevention & control—Adolescent. 2. Obesity—prevention & control—Child. 3. Health Policy—Adolescent. 4. Health Policy—Child. 5. Health Promotion—methods. 6. Social Environment. WD 210 I604p 2005] I. Koplan, Jeffrey. II. Liverman, Catharyn T. III. Kraak, Vivica I. IV. Institute of Medicine (U.S.). Board on Health Promotion and Disease Prevention. V. Title. RJ399.C6I575 2005 618.92’398—dc22 Additional copies of this report are available from the National Academies Press, 500 Fifth Street, N.W., Box 285, Washington, DC 20055. Call (800) 624-6242 or (202) 334-3313 (in the Washington metropolitan area), Internet, http://www.nap.edu. For more information about the Institute of Medicine, visit the IOM home page at: www.iom.edu. Copyright 2005 by the National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved. Illustration by Becky Heavner. Printed in the United States of America. The serpent has been a symbol of long life, healing, and knowledge among almost all cultures and religions since the beginning of recorded history. The serpent adopted as a logotype by the Institute of Medicine is a relief carving from ancient Greece, now held by the Staatliche Museen in Berlin. “Knowing is not enough; we must apply. Willing is not enough; we must do.” Adviser to the Nation to Improve Health Advisers to the Nation on Science, Engineering, and Medicine The National Academy of Sciences is a private, nonprofit, self-perpetuating society of distinguished scholars engaged in scientific and engineering research, dedicated to the furtherance of science and technology and to their use for the general welfare. Upon the authority of the charter granted to it by the Congress in 1863, the Academy has a mandate that requires it to advise the federal government on scientific and technical matters. Dr. Bruce M. Alberts is president of the National Academy of Sciences. The National Academy of Engineering was established in 1964, under the charter of the National Academy of Sciences, as a parallel organization of outstanding engineers. It is autonomous in its administration and in the selection of its members, sharing with the National Academy of Sciences the responsibility for advising the federal government. The National Academy of Engineering also sponsors engineering programs aimed at meeting national needs, encourages education and research, and recognizes the superior achievements of engineers. Dr. Wm. A. Wulf is president of the National Academy of Engineering. The Institute of Medicine was established in 1970 by the National Academy of Sciences to secure the services of eminent members of appropriate professions in the examination of policy matters pertaining to the health of the public. The Institute acts under the responsibility given to the National Academy of Sciences by its congressional charter to be an adviser to the federal government and, upon its own initiative, to identify issues of medical care, research, and education. Dr. Harvey V. Fineberg is president of the Institute of Medicine. The National Research Council was organized by the National Academy of Sciences in 1916 to associate the broad community of science and technology with the Academy’s purposes of furthering knowledge and advising the federal government. Functioning in accordance with general policies determined by the Academy, the Council has become the principal operating agency of both the National Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Engineering in providing services to the government, the public, and the scientific and engineering communities. The Council is administered jointly by both Academies and the Institute of Medicine. Dr. Bruce M. Alberts and Dr. Wm. A. Wulf are chair and vice chair, respectively, of the National Research Council. www.national-academies.org JEFFREY P. KOPLAN (Chair), Woodruff Health Sciences Center, Emory University, Atlanta, GA DENNIS M. BIER, Children’s Nutrition Research Center, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX LEANN L. BIRCH, Dpartment of Human Development and Family Studies, Pennsylvania State University, University Park ROSS C. BROWNSON, Department of Community Health, St. Louis University School of Public Health, MO JOHN CAWLEY, Department of Policy Analysis and Management, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY GEORGE R. FLORES, The California Endowment, San Francisco, CA SIMONE A. FRENCH, Division of Epidemiology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis SUSAN L. HANDY, Department of Environmental Science and Policy, University of California, Davis ROBERT C. HORNIK, Annenberg School for Communication, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia DOUGLAS B. KAMEROW, Health, Social and Economics Research, RTI International, Washington, DC SHIRIKI K. KUMANYIKA, Center for Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia BARBARA J. MOORE, Shape Up America!, Washington, DC ARIE L. NETTLES, School of Education, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor RUSSELL R. PATE, Department of Exercise Science, University of South Carolina, Columbia JOHN C. PETERS, Food and Beverage Technology, Procter & Gamble Company, Cincinnati, OH THOMAS N. ROBINSON, Division of General Pediatrics and Stanford Prevention Research Center, Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo Alto, CA CHARLES ROYER, Evans School of Public Affairs, University of Washington, Seattle SHIRLEY R. WATKINS, SR Watkins & Associates, Silver Spring, MD ROBERT C. WHITAKER, Mathematica Policy Research, Inc., Princeton, NJ CATHARYN T. LIVERMAN, Study Director LINDA D. MEYERS, Director, ROSE MARIE MARTINEZ, Director, VIVICA I. KRAAK, Senior Program Officer JANICE RICE OKITA, Senior Program Officer CARRIE SZLYK, Program Officer (through September 2003) TAZIMA A. DAVIS, Research Associate J. BERNADETTE MOORE, Science and Technology Policy Intern (through June 2003) ELISABETH RIMAUD, Financial Associate SHANNON L. RUDDY, Senior Program Assistant CATHERINE E. WOTEKI (Chair), Department of Food Science and Human Nutrition, Iowa State University, Ames ROBERT M. RUSSELL (Vice-Chair), U.S. Department of Agriculture Jean Mayer Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging, Tufts University, Boston, MA LARRY R. BEUCHAT, Center for Food Safety, University of Georgia, Griffin SUSAN FERENC, SAF* Risk, LC, Madison, WI NANCY F. KREBS, Department of Pediatrics, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver REYNALDO MARTORELL, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, GA LYNN PARKER, Child Nutrition Programs and Nutrition Policy, Food Research and Action Center, Washington, DC NICHOLAS J. SCHORK, Department of Psychiatry, Polymorphism Research Laboratory, University of California, San Diego JOHN W. SUTTIE, Department of Biochemistry, University of Wisconsin, Madison STEPHEN L. TAYLOR, Department of Food Science and Technology and Food Processing Center, University of Nebraska-Lincoln BARRY L. ZOUMAS, Department of Agricultural Economics and Rural Sociology, Pennsylvania State University, University Park IOM Council Liaison DONNA E. SHALALA, University of Miami, Coral Gables, FL LINDA D. MEYERS, Director GERALDINE KENNEDO, Administrative Assistant JAMES W. CURRAN (Chair), RONALD BAYER, Joseph L. Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York, NY DAN G. BLAZER, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC HELEN B. DARLING, National Business Group on Health, Washington, DC STEPHEN B. FAWCETT, KU Work Group on Health Promotion and Community Development, University of Kansas, Lawrence JONATHAN FIELDING, Department of Health Services, Los Angeles County, CA LAWRENCE O. GOSTIN, School of Law, Georgetown University and Department of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Washington, DC ELLEN R. GRITZ, Department of Behavioral Science, University of Texas, Houston GEORGE J. ISHAM, HealthPartners, Minneapolis, MN MARK S. KAMLET, Department of Economics and Public Policy, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA JOYCE SEIKO KOBAYASHI, Department of Psychiatry, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center and Acute Crisis Services Denver Health Medical Center ELENA O. NIGHTINGALE, Member Emerita, Institute of Medicine, Washington, DC ROXANNE PARROTT, Department of Communication Arts & Sciences, Pennsylvania State University, University Park THOMAS A. PEARSON, Department of Community and Preventive Medicine, University of Rochester, NY IRVING ROOTMAN, Faculty of Human and Social Development, University of Victoria, British Columbia, Canada DAVID J. TOLLERUD, School of Public Health and Information Sciences, University of Louisville, KY KATHLEEN E. TOOMEY, Division of Public Health, Georgia Department of Human Resources, Atlanta WILLIAM A. VEGA, University Behavioral HealthCare, Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, New Brunswick, NJ PATRICIA WAHL, School of Public Health and Community Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle LAUREN A. ZEISE, Reproductive and Cancer Hazard Assessment, Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment, Oakland, CA JEFFREY P. KOPLAN, ROSE MARIE MARTINEZ, Director RITA A. GASKINS, Administrative Assistant This report has been reviewed in draft form by individuals chosen for their diverse perspectives and technical expertise, in accordance with procedures approved by the National Research Council’s Report Review Committee. The purpose of this independent review is to provide candid and critical comments that will assist the institution in making its published report as sound as possible and to ensure that the report meets institutional standards for objectivity, evidence, and responsiveness to the study charge. The review comments and draft manuscript remain confidential to protect the integrity of the deliberative process. We wish to thank the following individuals for their review of this report: LINDA ADAIR, Carolina Population Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill TOM BARANOWSKI, Children’s Nutrition Research Center, Baylor College of Medicine EDWARD N. BRANDT, College of Public Health, University of Oklahoma CUTBERTO GARZA, Division of Nutritional Sciences, Cornell University MICHAEL S. JELLINEK, Newton Wellesley Hospital, Newton Lower Falls, MA DAVID L. KATZ, Yale Prevention Research Center, Yale University CARINE LENDERS, Department of Pediatrics, Boston Medical Center AVIVA MUST, Department of Family Medicine and Community Health, Tufts University VIVIAN PILANT, Office of School Food Services and Nutrition, South Carolina Department of Education ALONZO PLOUGH, Department of Public Health-Seattle & King County, School of Public Health and Community Medicine, University of Washington ROSSI RAY-TAYLOR, Minority Student Achievement Network, Ann Arbor, MI JAMES F. SALLIS, San Diego State University, Active Living Research Program MARILYN D. SCHORIN, Yum! Brands, Inc. DONNA E. SHALALA, University of Miami MICHAEL D. SLATER, Department of Journalism and Technical Communication, Colorado State University SYLVIE STACHENKO, Centre for Chronic Disease Prevention and Control, Ottawa, Ontario ROLAND STURM, RAND Corporation BOYD SWINBURN, Centre for Physical Activity and Nutrition Research, Deakin University, Melbourne MARGARITA S. TREUTH, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University LINDA VAN HORN, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University BARRY L. ZOUMAS, Department of Agricultural Economics and Rural Sociology, Pennsylvania State University Although the reviewers listed above have provided many constructive comments and suggestions, they were not asked to endorse the conclusions or recommendations nor did they see the final draft of the report before its release. The review of this report was overseen by ENRIQUETA C. BOND, Burroughs Wellcome Fund, and GORDON H. DEFRIESE, Department of Social Medicine, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Appointed by the National Research Council, they were responsible for making certain that an independent examination of this report was carried out in accordance with institutional procedures and that all review comments were carefully considered. Responsibility for the final content of this report rests entirely with the authoring committee and the institution. In 2001, the U.S. Surgeon General issued the Call to Action to Prevent and Decrease Overweight and Obesity to stimulate the development of specific agendas and actions targeting this public health problem. In recognition of the need for greater attention directed to prevent childhood obesity, Congress, through the fiscal year 2002 Labor, Health and Human Services, Education Appropriations Act Conference Report, directed the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to request that the Institute of Medicine (IOM) develop an action plan targeted to the prevention of obesity in children and youth in the United States. In addition to CDC, this study was supported by the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion (ODPHP); National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK); the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI); the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD); the Division of Nutrition Research Coordination of the National Institutes of Health; and The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF). The charge to the IOM committee was to develop a prevention-focused action plan to decrease the prevalence of obesity in children and youth in the United States. The primary emphasis of the study’s task was on examining the behavioral and cultural factors, social constructs, and other broad environmental factors involved in childhood obesity and identifying promising approaches for prevention efforts. To address this charge, the IOM appointed a 19-member multidisciplinary committee with expertise in child health and development, obesity, nutrition, physical activity, economics, education, public policy, and public health. Six meetings were held during the 24-month study and a variety of sources informed the committee’s work. The committee obtained information through a literature review (Appendix C) and a commissioned paper discussing insights, strategies, and lessons learned from other public health issues and social change campaigns that might be relevant to the prevention of obesity in children and youth (Appendix D). The meetings included two workshops that were key elements of the committee’s information-gathering process (Appendix E). Held in June 2003, the first workshop focused on strategies for developing school-based policies to promote nutrition and physical activity in children and youth. The second workshop was organized in December 2003 and addressed marketing and media influences on preventing childhood obesity and issues related to family dynamics. Each workshop included public forum sessions, and the committee benefited from the breadth of issues raised by nonprofit organizations, professional associations, and individuals. Since the inception of this study, the committee recognized that it faced a broad task and a complex problem that has become an epidemic not only in the United States but also internationally. The committee appreciated the opportunity to develop an action plan on the prevention of obesity in children and youth and developed its recommendations to encompass the roles and responsibilities of numerous stakeholders and many sectors of society. Children are highly cherished in our society. The value we attach to our children is fundamentally connected to society’s responsibility to provide for their growth, development, and well-being. Extensive discussions will need to continue beyond this report so that shared understandings are reached and support is garnered for sustained societal and lifestyle changes that will reverse the obesity trends among our children and youth. Jeffrey P. Koplan, Chair It was a privilege to chair this Institute of Medicine (IOM) committee whose members not only brought their breadth and depth of expertise to this important topic but were actively engaged in the committee’s work. This report represents the result of six meetings, two open sessions, numerous emails and phone conferences, and the extensive analysis and thoughtful writing contributed by the committee members who volunteered their time to work on this study. I thank each of the committee members for their dedication and perseverance in working through the diversity of issues in a truly interdisciplinary collaboration. The committee greatly benefited from the opportunity for discussion with the individuals who made presentations and attended the committee’s workshops and meetings, including: Neal Baer, Kelly Brownell, Harold Goldstein, Paula Hudson Collins, Mary Engle, Susan McHale, Alex Molnar, Eric Rosenthal, Mark Vallianatos, Jennifer Wilkins, and Judith Young, as well as all those who spoke during the open forums (Appendix E). This study was sponsored by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion; National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases; National Institute of Child Health and Human Development; the Division of Nutrition Research Coordination of the National Institutes of Health; and The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The committee thanks Terry Bazzarre, William Dietz, Karen Donato, Gilman Grave, Van Hubbard, Woodie Kessel, Kathryn McMurry, Pamela Starke-Reed, Susan Yanovski, and their colleagues for their support and guidance on the committee’s task. This study was conducted in collaboration with the IOM Board on Health Promotion and Disease Prevention (HPDP), and we wish to thank both Rose Martinez, director of the HPDP Board, for her thoughtful interactions and discussions with the committee, and Carrie Szlyk, who was of great assistance in the early phases of this study. We appreciate the extensive analysis of lessons learned from other public health efforts and their relevance to preventing childhood obesity written by Michael Eriksen (Appendix D). Many thanks to Sally Ann Lederman and Lynn Parker for their technical review of sections of the report. Kathi Hanna’s work as a consultant, financial oversight by Elisabeth Rimaud, and the editing work of Steven Marcus, Laura Penny, and Tom Burroughs are also greatly appreciated. The work of Rebecca Klima-Hudson and Stephanie Deutsch is also most appreciated. The report has been enhanced by the artwork of Becky Heavner, and we thank her for these creative efforts. Last, but not least, I would like to thank the Food and Nutrition Board study staff, Linda Meyers, Cathy Liverman, Vivica Kraak, Janice Okita, Tazima Davis, and Shannon Ruddy, for their extraordinary competence, diligence, wisdom, and intellectual openness. Their in-depth knowledge of the subject matter, keen sense of policy and practice, and willingness to constantly work and revise to make this document as useful, thoughtful, and accurate as possible was invaluable in its creation. Preventing Childhood Obesity: Health in the Balance presents a set of recommendations that, when implemented together, will catalyze synergistic actions among families, communities, schools, and the public and private sectors to effectively prevent the large majority of children and youth in the United States from becoming obese. Although the committee members have diverse backgrounds, over the course of this study we have gained a deeper appreciation for the difficulty and complexity of the steps necessary to prevent obesity in our nation’s youth. We provide this guidance with the hope that it will benefit the health of our nation and future generations. An Epidemic of Childhood Obesity, Implications for Children and Society at Large, Contexts for Action, Public Health Precedents, Summary, References, EXTENT AND CONSEQUENCES OF CHILDHOOD OBESITY Prevalence and Time Trends, Considering the Costs for Children and for Society, DEVELOPING AN ACTION PLAN Definitions and Terminology, Framework for Action, Obesity Prevention Goals, Energy Balance, Review of the Evidence, A NATIONAL PUBLIC HEALTH PRIORITY Leadership, Coordination, and Priority Setting, State and Local Priorities, Research and Evaluation, Surveillance and Monitoring, Nutrition and Physical Activity Programs, Nutrition Assistance Programs, Agricultural Policies, Other Policy Considerations, INDUSTRY, ADVERTISING, MEDIA, AND PUBLIC EDUCATION Nutrition Labeling, Advertising, Marketing, and Media, Media and Public Education, Mobilizing Communities, Food and Beverages in Schools, Physical Activity, Classroom Curricula, Advertising in Schools, School Health Services, After-School Programs and Schools as Community Centers, Evaluation of School Programs and Policies, Promoting Healthful Eating Behaviors, Promoting Physical Activity, Decreasing Inactivity, Parents as Role Models, Raising Awareness of Weight as a Health Issue, CONFRONTING THE CHILDHOOD OBESITY EPIDEMIC Next Steps for Action and Research, Lessons Learned from Public Health Efforts and Their Relevance to Preventing Childhood Obesity Workshop Programs Biographical Sketches
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1612
{"url": "http://www.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=11015", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nap.edu", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:19:28Z", "digest": "sha1:IA7RZZ4YICKTOK3I6QY532BSGN5VXYW2"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 25246, 25246.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 25246, 30035.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 25246, 244.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 25246, 467.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 25246, 0.89]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 25246, 251.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 25246, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 25246, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 25246, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 25246, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 25246, 0.23729553]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 25246, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 25246, 0.13204005]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 25246, 0.24593242]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 25246, 0.22032348]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 25246, 0.18768653]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 25246, 0.15885241]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 25246, 0.14359295]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 25246, 0.01641475]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 25246, 0.01386348]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 25246, 0.01540387]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 25246, 0.08985823]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 25246, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 25246, 0.2174482]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 25246, 0.32751938]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 25246, 5.75138427]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 25246, 0.00043621]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 25246, 5.96403873]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 25246, 3612.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 54, 0.0], [54, 759, 0.0], [759, 781, 0.0], [781, 838, 0.0], [838, 863, 0.0], [863, 912, 0.0], [912, 978, 0.0], [978, 1026, 0.0], [1026, 1055, 0.0], [1055, 1083, 0.0], [1083, 1765, 0.0], [1765, 1881, 0.0], [1881, 1933, 0.0], [1933, 1962, 0.0], [1962, 1974, 0.0], [1974, 2018, 0.0], [2018, 2429, 1.0], [2429, 3402, 1.0], [3402, 3453, 0.0], [3453, 3541, 1.0], [3541, 3798, 1.0], [3798, 3807, 1.0], [3807, 3859, 0.0], [3859, 4018, 1.0], [4018, 4394, 1.0], [4394, 4412, 0.0], [4412, 4428, 0.0], [4428, 4484, 0.0], [4484, 4510, 0.0], [4510, 4672, 1.0], [4672, 4767, 1.0], [4767, 4840, 1.0], [4840, 4871, 1.0], [4871, 4912, 1.0], [4912, 5209, 1.0], [5209, 5248, 1.0], [5248, 5284, 1.0], [5284, 5324, 0.0], [5324, 5385, 0.0], [5385, 5897, 1.0], [5897, 6507, 1.0], [6507, 7054, 1.0], [7054, 7801, 1.0], [7801, 7828, 0.0], [7828, 7855, 0.0], [7855, 7918, 0.0], [7918, 7934, 0.0], [7934, 8012, 0.0], [8012, 8028, 0.0], [8028, 8126, 0.0], [8126, 8144, 0.0], [8144, 8225, 0.0], [8225, 8238, 0.0], [8238, 8315, 0.0], [8315, 8333, 0.0], [8333, 8377, 0.0], [8377, 8395, 0.0], [8395, 8458, 0.0], [8458, 8474, 0.0], [8474, 8554, 0.0], [8554, 8572, 0.0], [8572, 8649, 0.0], [8649, 8669, 0.0], [8669, 8742, 0.0], [8742, 8764, 0.0], [8764, 8876, 0.0], [8876, 8894, 0.0], [8894, 8928, 0.0], [8928, 8945, 0.0], [8945, 9000, 0.0], [9000, 9017, 0.0], [9017, 9088, 0.0], [9088, 9104, 0.0], [9104, 9175, 0.0], [9175, 9195, 0.0], [9195, 9321, 0.0], [9321, 9336, 0.0], [9336, 9402, 0.0], [9402, 9422, 0.0], [9422, 9465, 0.0], [9465, 9485, 0.0], [9485, 9534, 0.0], [9534, 9571, 0.0], [9571, 9598, 0.0], [9598, 9629, 0.0], [9629, 9669, 0.0], [9669, 9711, 0.0], [9711, 9766, 0.0], [9766, 9802, 0.0], [9802, 9880, 0.0], [9880, 9918, 0.0], [9918, 9961, 0.0], [9961, 9990, 0.0], [9990, 10066, 0.0], [10066, 10098, 0.0], [10098, 10211, 0.0], [10211, 10229, 0.0], [10229, 10284, 0.0], [10284, 10298, 0.0], [10298, 10325, 0.0], [10325, 10341, 0.0], [10341, 10421, 0.0], [10421, 10441, 0.0], [10441, 10504, 0.0], [10504, 10517, 0.0], [10517, 10612, 0.0], [10612, 10632, 0.0], [10632, 10728, 0.0], [10728, 10744, 0.0], [10744, 10805, 0.0], [10805, 10824, 0.0], [10824, 10925, 0.0], [10925, 10942, 0.0], [10942, 11047, 0.0], [11047, 11067, 0.0], [11067, 11085, 0.0], [11085, 11123, 0.0], [11123, 11149, 0.0], [11149, 11193, 0.0], [11193, 11218, 0.0], [11218, 11232, 0.0], [11232, 11309, 0.0], [11309, 11324, 0.0], [11324, 11367, 0.0], [11367, 11385, 0.0], [11385, 11435, 0.0], [11435, 11455, 0.0], [11455, 11547, 0.0], [11547, 11566, 0.0], [11566, 11620, 0.0], [11620, 11640, 0.0], [11640, 11751, 0.0], [11751, 11767, 0.0], [11767, 11830, 0.0], [11830, 11847, 0.0], [11847, 11879, 0.0], [11879, 11895, 0.0], [11895, 11981, 0.0], [11981, 12004, 0.0], [12004, 12131, 0.0], [12131, 12169, 0.0], [12169, 12207, 0.0], [12207, 12224, 0.0], [12224, 12316, 0.0], [12316, 12335, 0.0], [12335, 12412, 0.0], [12412, 12469, 0.0], [12469, 12518, 0.0], [12518, 12537, 0.0], [12537, 12616, 0.0], [12616, 12636, 0.0], [12636, 12710, 0.0], [12710, 12727, 0.0], [12727, 12815, 0.0], [12815, 12830, 0.0], [12830, 12912, 0.0], [12912, 12929, 0.0], [12929, 13034, 0.0], [13034, 13053, 0.0], [13053, 13083, 0.0], [13083, 13125, 0.0], [13125, 13831, 0.0], [13831, 13916, 0.0], [13916, 13997, 0.0], [13997, 14064, 0.0], [14064, 14133, 0.0], [14133, 14204, 0.0], [14204, 14268, 0.0], [14268, 14332, 0.0], [14332, 14413, 0.0], [14413, 14513, 0.0], [14513, 14652, 0.0], [14652, 14722, 0.0], [14722, 14798, 0.0], [14798, 14836, 1.0], [14836, 14874, 0.0], [14874, 14973, 0.0], [14973, 15058, 0.0], [15058, 15089, 0.0], [15089, 15186, 0.0], [15186, 15267, 0.0], [15267, 15336, 0.0], [15336, 15441, 0.0], [15441, 16219, 1.0], [16219, 17333, 1.0], [17333, 17918, 0.0], [17918, 19002, 1.0], [19002, 19446, 1.0], [19446, 19882, 1.0], [19882, 19907, 0.0], [19907, 20530, 1.0], [20530, 20950, 1.0], [20950, 21509, 0.0], [21509, 21654, 1.0], [21654, 21984, 1.0], [21984, 22635, 1.0], [22635, 23124, 1.0], [23124, 23788, 1.0], [23788, 23822, 0.0], [23822, 23870, 0.0], [23870, 23891, 0.0], [23891, 23917, 0.0], [23917, 23926, 0.0], [23926, 23938, 0.0], [23938, 23983, 0.0], [23983, 24011, 0.0], [24011, 24063, 0.0], [24063, 24089, 0.0], [24089, 24118, 0.0], [24118, 24140, 0.0], [24140, 24166, 0.0], [24166, 24182, 0.0], [24182, 24206, 0.0], [24206, 24240, 0.0], [24240, 24288, 0.0], [24288, 24316, 0.0], [24316, 24341, 0.0], [24341, 24370, 0.0], [24370, 24412, 0.0], [24412, 24443, 0.0], [24443, 24466, 0.0], [24466, 24495, 0.0], [24495, 24546, 0.0], [24546, 24566, 0.0], [24566, 24601, 0.0], [24601, 24629, 0.0], [24629, 24653, 0.0], [24653, 24684, 0.0], [24684, 24703, 0.0], [24703, 24724, 0.0], [24724, 24748, 0.0], [24748, 24772, 0.0], [24772, 24828, 0.0], [24828, 24872, 0.0], [24872, 24910, 0.0], [24910, 24939, 0.0], [24939, 24962, 0.0], [24962, 24986, 0.0], [24986, 25033, 0.0], [25033, 25076, 0.0], [25076, 25112, 0.0], [25112, 25207, 0.0], [25207, 25225, 0.0], [25225, 25246, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 54, 0.0], [54, 759, 0.0], [759, 781, 0.0], [781, 838, 0.0], [838, 863, 0.0], [863, 912, 0.0], [912, 978, 0.0], [978, 1026, 0.0], [1026, 1055, 0.0], [1055, 1083, 0.0], [1083, 1765, 0.0], [1765, 1881, 0.0], [1881, 1933, 0.0], [1933, 1962, 0.0], [1962, 1974, 0.0], [1974, 2018, 0.0], [2018, 2429, 0.0], [2429, 3402, 0.0], [3402, 3453, 0.0], [3453, 3541, 0.0], [3541, 3798, 0.0], [3798, 3807, 0.0], [3807, 3859, 0.0], [3859, 4018, 0.0], [4018, 4394, 0.0], [4394, 4412, 0.0], [4412, 4428, 0.0], [4428, 4484, 0.0], [4484, 4510, 0.0], [4510, 4672, 0.0], [4672, 4767, 0.0], [4767, 4840, 0.0], [4840, 4871, 0.0], [4871, 4912, 0.0], [4912, 5209, 0.0], [5209, 5248, 0.0], [5248, 5284, 0.0], [5284, 5324, 0.0], [5324, 5385, 0.0], [5385, 5897, 0.0], [5897, 6507, 0.0], [6507, 7054, 0.0], [7054, 7801, 0.0], [7801, 7828, 0.0], [7828, 7855, 0.0], [7855, 7918, 0.0], [7918, 7934, 0.0], [7934, 8012, 0.0], [8012, 8028, 0.0], [8028, 8126, 0.0], [8126, 8144, 0.0], [8144, 8225, 0.0], [8225, 8238, 0.0], [8238, 8315, 0.0], [8315, 8333, 0.0], [8333, 8377, 0.0], [8377, 8395, 0.0], [8395, 8458, 0.0], [8458, 8474, 0.0], [8474, 8554, 0.0], [8554, 8572, 0.0], [8572, 8649, 0.0], [8649, 8669, 0.0], [8669, 8742, 0.0], [8742, 8764, 0.0], [8764, 8876, 0.0], [8876, 8894, 0.0], [8894, 8928, 0.0], [8928, 8945, 0.0], [8945, 9000, 0.0], [9000, 9017, 0.0], [9017, 9088, 0.0], [9088, 9104, 0.0], [9104, 9175, 0.0], [9175, 9195, 0.0], [9195, 9321, 0.0], [9321, 9336, 0.0], [9336, 9402, 0.0], [9402, 9422, 0.0], [9422, 9465, 0.0], [9465, 9485, 0.0], [9485, 9534, 0.0], [9534, 9571, 0.0], [9571, 9598, 0.0], [9598, 9629, 0.0], [9629, 9669, 0.0], [9669, 9711, 0.0], [9711, 9766, 0.0], [9766, 9802, 0.0], [9802, 9880, 0.0], [9880, 9918, 0.0], [9918, 9961, 0.0], [9961, 9990, 0.0], [9990, 10066, 0.0], [10066, 10098, 0.0], [10098, 10211, 0.0], [10211, 10229, 0.0], [10229, 10284, 0.0], [10284, 10298, 0.0], [10298, 10325, 0.0], [10325, 10341, 0.0], [10341, 10421, 0.0], [10421, 10441, 0.0], [10441, 10504, 0.0], [10504, 10517, 0.0], [10517, 10612, 0.0], [10612, 10632, 0.0], [10632, 10728, 0.0], [10728, 10744, 0.0], [10744, 10805, 0.0], [10805, 10824, 0.0], [10824, 10925, 0.0], [10925, 10942, 0.0], [10942, 11047, 0.0], [11047, 11067, 0.0], [11067, 11085, 0.0], [11085, 11123, 0.0], [11123, 11149, 0.0], [11149, 11193, 0.0], [11193, 11218, 0.0], [11218, 11232, 0.0], [11232, 11309, 0.0], [11309, 11324, 0.0], [11324, 11367, 0.0], [11367, 11385, 0.0], [11385, 11435, 0.0], [11435, 11455, 0.0], [11455, 11547, 0.0], [11547, 11566, 0.0], [11566, 11620, 0.0], [11620, 11640, 0.0], [11640, 11751, 0.0], [11751, 11767, 0.0], [11767, 11830, 0.0], [11830, 11847, 0.0], [11847, 11879, 0.0], [11879, 11895, 0.0], [11895, 11981, 0.0], [11981, 12004, 0.0], [12004, 12131, 0.0], [12131, 12169, 0.0], [12169, 12207, 0.0], [12207, 12224, 0.0], [12224, 12316, 0.0], [12316, 12335, 0.0], [12335, 12412, 0.0], [12412, 12469, 0.0], [12469, 12518, 0.0], [12518, 12537, 0.0], [12537, 12616, 0.0], [12616, 12636, 0.0], [12636, 12710, 0.0], [12710, 12727, 0.0], [12727, 12815, 0.0], [12815, 12830, 0.0], [12830, 12912, 0.0], [12912, 12929, 0.0], [12929, 13034, 0.0], [13034, 13053, 0.0], [13053, 13083, 0.0], [13083, 13125, 0.0], [13125, 13831, 0.0], [13831, 13916, 0.0], [13916, 13997, 0.0], [13997, 14064, 0.0], [14064, 14133, 0.0], [14133, 14204, 0.0], [14204, 14268, 0.0], [14268, 14332, 0.0], [14332, 14413, 0.0], [14413, 14513, 0.0], [14513, 14652, 0.0], [14652, 14722, 0.0], [14722, 14798, 0.0], [14798, 14836, 0.0], [14836, 14874, 0.0], [14874, 14973, 0.0], [14973, 15058, 0.0], [15058, 15089, 0.0], [15089, 15186, 0.0], [15186, 15267, 0.0], [15267, 15336, 0.0], [15336, 15441, 0.0], [15441, 16219, 0.0], [16219, 17333, 0.0], [17333, 17918, 0.0], [17918, 19002, 0.0], [19002, 19446, 0.0], [19446, 19882, 0.0], [19882, 19907, 0.0], [19907, 20530, 0.0], [20530, 20950, 0.0], [20950, 21509, 0.0], [21509, 21654, 0.0], [21654, 21984, 0.0], [21984, 22635, 0.0], [22635, 23124, 0.0], [23124, 23788, 0.0], [23788, 23822, 0.0], [23822, 23870, 0.0], [23870, 23891, 0.0], [23891, 23917, 0.0], [23917, 23926, 0.0], [23926, 23938, 0.0], [23938, 23983, 0.0], [23983, 24011, 0.0], [24011, 24063, 0.0], [24063, 24089, 0.0], [24089, 24118, 0.0], [24118, 24140, 0.0], [24140, 24166, 0.0], [24166, 24182, 0.0], [24182, 24206, 0.0], [24206, 24240, 0.0], [24240, 24288, 0.0], [24288, 24316, 0.0], [24316, 24341, 0.0], [24341, 24370, 0.0], [24370, 24412, 0.0], [24412, 24443, 0.0], [24443, 24466, 0.0], [24466, 24495, 0.0], [24495, 24546, 0.0], [24546, 24566, 0.0], [24566, 24601, 0.0], [24601, 24629, 0.0], [24629, 24653, 0.0], [24653, 24684, 0.0], [24684, 24703, 0.0], [24703, 24724, 0.0], [24724, 24748, 0.0], [24748, 24772, 0.0], [24772, 24828, 0.0], [24828, 24872, 0.0], [24872, 24910, 0.0], [24910, 24939, 0.0], [24939, 24962, 0.0], [24962, 24986, 0.0], [24986, 25033, 0.0], [25033, 25076, 0.0], [25076, 25112, 0.0], [25112, 25207, 0.0], [25207, 25225, 0.0], [25225, 25246, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 54, 7.0], [54, 759, 99.0], [759, 781, 4.0], [781, 838, 9.0], [838, 863, 4.0], [863, 912, 7.0], [912, 978, 10.0], [978, 1026, 7.0], [1026, 1055, 4.0], [1055, 1083, 2.0], [1083, 1765, 97.0], [1765, 1881, 15.0], [1881, 1933, 7.0], [1933, 1962, 3.0], [1962, 1974, 1.0], [1974, 2018, 7.0], [2018, 2429, 65.0], [2429, 3402, 144.0], [3402, 3453, 5.0], [3453, 3541, 13.0], [3541, 3798, 37.0], [3798, 3807, 2.0], [3807, 3859, 6.0], [3859, 4018, 18.0], [4018, 4394, 48.0], [4394, 4412, 2.0], [4412, 4428, 1.0], [4428, 4484, 9.0], [4484, 4510, 3.0], [4510, 4672, 22.0], [4672, 4767, 15.0], [4767, 4840, 11.0], [4840, 4871, 4.0], [4871, 4912, 7.0], [4912, 5209, 50.0], [5209, 5248, 7.0], [5248, 5284, 7.0], [5284, 5324, 7.0], [5324, 5385, 9.0], [5385, 5897, 80.0], [5897, 6507, 89.0], [6507, 7054, 87.0], [7054, 7801, 113.0], [7801, 7828, 1.0], [7828, 7855, 4.0], [7855, 7918, 8.0], [7918, 7934, 3.0], [7934, 8012, 10.0], [8012, 8028, 3.0], [8028, 8126, 12.0], [8126, 8144, 3.0], [8144, 8225, 12.0], [8225, 8238, 2.0], [8238, 8315, 10.0], [8315, 8333, 3.0], [8333, 8377, 6.0], [8377, 8395, 3.0], [8395, 8458, 7.0], [8458, 8474, 3.0], [8474, 8554, 10.0], [8554, 8572, 3.0], [8572, 8649, 8.0], [8649, 8669, 3.0], [8669, 8742, 9.0], [8742, 8764, 3.0], [8764, 8876, 13.0], [8876, 8894, 3.0], [8894, 8928, 5.0], [8928, 8945, 3.0], [8945, 9000, 8.0], [9000, 9017, 3.0], [9017, 9088, 9.0], [9088, 9104, 3.0], [9104, 9175, 9.0], [9175, 9195, 3.0], [9195, 9321, 17.0], [9321, 9336, 2.0], [9336, 9402, 9.0], [9402, 9422, 3.0], [9422, 9465, 6.0], [9465, 9485, 3.0], [9485, 9534, 6.0], [9534, 9571, 5.0], [9571, 9598, 4.0], [9598, 9629, 4.0], [9629, 9669, 6.0], [9669, 9711, 6.0], [9711, 9766, 7.0], [9766, 9802, 5.0], [9802, 9880, 11.0], [9880, 9918, 4.0], [9918, 9961, 6.0], [9961, 9990, 4.0], [9990, 10066, 11.0], [10066, 10098, 4.0], [10098, 10211, 16.0], [10211, 10229, 3.0], [10229, 10284, 8.0], [10284, 10298, 2.0], [10298, 10325, 5.0], [10325, 10341, 3.0], [10341, 10421, 10.0], [10421, 10441, 2.0], [10441, 10504, 9.0], [10504, 10517, 2.0], [10517, 10612, 13.0], [10612, 10632, 3.0], [10632, 10728, 11.0], [10728, 10744, 3.0], [10744, 10805, 7.0], [10805, 10824, 3.0], [10824, 10925, 13.0], [10925, 10942, 3.0], [10942, 11047, 12.0], [11047, 11067, 3.0], [11067, 11085, 3.0], [11085, 11123, 6.0], [11123, 11149, 4.0], [11149, 11193, 4.0], [11193, 11218, 4.0], [11218, 11232, 2.0], [11232, 11309, 12.0], [11309, 11324, 3.0], [11324, 11367, 6.0], [11367, 11385, 3.0], [11385, 11435, 7.0], [11435, 11455, 3.0], [11455, 11547, 13.0], [11547, 11566, 2.0], [11566, 11620, 8.0], [11620, 11640, 3.0], [11640, 11751, 15.0], [11751, 11767, 3.0], [11767, 11830, 8.0], [11830, 11847, 3.0], [11847, 11879, 3.0], [11879, 11895, 3.0], [11895, 11981, 11.0], [11981, 12004, 3.0], [12004, 12131, 17.0], [12131, 12169, 5.0], [12169, 12207, 5.0], [12207, 12224, 2.0], [12224, 12316, 10.0], [12316, 12335, 3.0], [12335, 12412, 10.0], [12412, 12469, 8.0], [12469, 12518, 6.0], [12518, 12537, 3.0], [12537, 12616, 11.0], [12616, 12636, 3.0], [12636, 12710, 10.0], [12710, 12727, 3.0], [12727, 12815, 11.0], [12815, 12830, 2.0], [12830, 12912, 11.0], [12912, 12929, 3.0], [12929, 13034, 13.0], [13034, 13053, 3.0], [13053, 13083, 4.0], [13083, 13125, 5.0], [13125, 13831, 105.0], [13831, 13916, 12.0], [13916, 13997, 10.0], [13997, 14064, 10.0], [14064, 14133, 8.0], [14133, 14204, 10.0], [14204, 14268, 9.0], [14268, 14332, 8.0], [14332, 14413, 11.0], [14413, 14513, 14.0], [14513, 14652, 18.0], [14652, 14722, 9.0], [14722, 14798, 11.0], [14798, 14836, 6.0], [14836, 14874, 6.0], [14874, 14973, 12.0], [14973, 15058, 11.0], [15058, 15089, 4.0], [15089, 15186, 12.0], [15186, 15267, 11.0], [15267, 15336, 9.0], [15336, 15441, 13.0], [15441, 16219, 116.0], [16219, 17333, 167.0], [17333, 17918, 83.0], [17918, 19002, 154.0], [19002, 19446, 70.0], [19446, 19882, 64.0], [19882, 19907, 4.0], [19907, 20530, 96.0], [20530, 20950, 60.0], [20950, 21509, 80.0], [21509, 21654, 20.0], [21654, 21984, 54.0], [21984, 22635, 102.0], [22635, 23124, 74.0], [23124, 23788, 101.0], [23788, 23822, 5.0], [23822, 23870, 7.0], [23870, 23891, 3.0], [23891, 23917, 3.0], [23917, 23926, 1.0], [23926, 23938, 1.0], [23938, 23983, 6.0], [23983, 24011, 4.0], [24011, 24063, 8.0], [24063, 24089, 4.0], [24089, 24118, 3.0], [24118, 24140, 3.0], [24140, 24166, 3.0], [24166, 24182, 2.0], [24182, 24206, 4.0], [24206, 24240, 5.0], [24240, 24288, 5.0], [24288, 24316, 4.0], [24316, 24341, 3.0], [24341, 24370, 3.0], [24370, 24412, 5.0], [24412, 24443, 3.0], [24443, 24466, 2.0], [24466, 24495, 3.0], [24495, 24546, 6.0], [24546, 24566, 2.0], [24566, 24601, 4.0], [24601, 24629, 4.0], [24629, 24653, 2.0], [24653, 24684, 5.0], [24684, 24703, 2.0], [24703, 24724, 2.0], [24724, 24748, 3.0], [24748, 24772, 3.0], [24772, 24828, 7.0], [24828, 24872, 6.0], [24872, 24910, 4.0], [24910, 24939, 3.0], [24939, 24962, 2.0], [24962, 24986, 4.0], [24986, 25033, 8.0], [25033, 25076, 5.0], [25076, 25112, 6.0], [25112, 25207, 13.0], [25207, 25225, 2.0], [25225, 25246, 2.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 54, 0.0], [54, 759, 0.15657312], [759, 781, 0.0], [781, 838, 0.0], [838, 863, 0.0], [863, 912, 0.0], [912, 978, 0.0], [978, 1026, 0.0], [1026, 1055, 0.0], [1055, 1083, 0.0], [1083, 1765, 0.16207951], [1765, 1881, 0.0], [1881, 1933, 0.0], [1933, 1962, 0.0], [1962, 1974, 0.0], [1974, 2018, 0.20512821], [2018, 2429, 0.0], [2429, 3402, 0.03194888], [3402, 3453, 0.0], [3453, 3541, 0.0], [3541, 3798, 0.0], [3798, 3807, 0.0], [3807, 3859, 0.46511628], [3859, 4018, 0.02666667], [4018, 4394, 0.04733728], [4394, 4412, 0.6875], [4412, 4428, 0.71428571], [4428, 4484, 0.0], [4484, 4510, 0.0], [4510, 4672, 0.22463768], [4672, 4767, 0.0], [4767, 4840, 0.05714286], [4840, 4871, 0.0], [4871, 4912, 0.0], [4912, 5209, 0.0], [5209, 5248, 0.0], [5248, 5284, 0.0], [5284, 5324, 0.0], [5324, 5385, 0.0], [5385, 5897, 0.00798403], [5897, 6507, 0.00670017], [6507, 7054, 0.00744879], [7054, 7801, 0.00546448], [7801, 7828, 0.0], [7828, 7855, 0.0], [7855, 7918, 0.0], [7918, 7934, 0.0], [7934, 8012, 0.0], [8012, 8028, 0.0], [8028, 8126, 0.0], [8126, 8144, 0.0], [8144, 8225, 0.0], [8225, 8238, 0.0], [8238, 8315, 0.0], [8315, 8333, 0.0], [8333, 8377, 0.0], [8377, 8395, 0.0], [8395, 8458, 0.0], [8458, 8474, 0.0], [8474, 8554, 0.0], [8554, 8572, 0.0], [8572, 8649, 0.0], [8649, 8669, 0.0], [8669, 8742, 0.0], [8742, 8764, 0.0], [8764, 8876, 0.0], [8876, 8894, 0.0], [8894, 8928, 0.0], [8928, 8945, 0.0], [8945, 9000, 0.0], [9000, 9017, 0.0], [9017, 9088, 0.0], [9088, 9104, 0.0], [9104, 9175, 0.0], [9175, 9195, 0.0], [9195, 9321, 0.0], [9321, 9336, 0.0], [9336, 9402, 0.0], [9402, 9422, 0.0], [9422, 9465, 0.0], [9465, 9485, 0.0], [9485, 9534, 0.0], [9534, 9571, 0.0], [9571, 9598, 0.0], [9598, 9629, 0.0], [9629, 9669, 0.0], [9669, 9711, 0.0], [9711, 9766, 0.07843137], [9766, 9802, 0.0], [9802, 9880, 0.05479452], [9880, 9918, 0.0], [9918, 9961, 0.0], [9961, 9990, 0.0], [9990, 10066, 0.0], [10066, 10098, 0.0], [10098, 10211, 0.0], [10211, 10229, 0.0], [10229, 10284, 0.0], [10284, 10298, 0.0], [10298, 10325, 0.0], [10325, 10341, 0.0], [10341, 10421, 0.0], [10421, 10441, 0.0], [10441, 10504, 0.0], [10504, 10517, 0.0], [10517, 10612, 0.0], [10612, 10632, 0.0], [10632, 10728, 0.0], [10728, 10744, 0.0], [10744, 10805, 0.0], [10805, 10824, 0.0], [10824, 10925, 0.0], [10925, 10942, 0.0], [10942, 11047, 0.0], [11047, 11067, 0.0], [11067, 11085, 0.0], [11085, 11123, 0.0], [11123, 11149, 0.0], [11149, 11193, 0.0], [11193, 11218, 0.0], [11218, 11232, 0.0], [11232, 11309, 0.0], [11309, 11324, 0.0], [11324, 11367, 0.0], [11367, 11385, 0.0], [11385, 11435, 0.0], [11435, 11455, 0.0], [11455, 11547, 0.0], [11547, 11566, 0.0], [11566, 11620, 0.0], [11620, 11640, 0.0], [11640, 11751, 0.0], [11751, 11767, 0.0], [11767, 11830, 0.0], [11830, 11847, 0.0], [11847, 11879, 0.0], [11879, 11895, 0.0], [11895, 11981, 0.0], [11981, 12004, 0.0], [12004, 12131, 0.0], [12131, 12169, 0.0], [12169, 12207, 0.0], [12207, 12224, 0.0], [12224, 12316, 0.0], [12316, 12335, 0.0], [12335, 12412, 0.0], [12412, 12469, 0.0], [12469, 12518, 0.0], [12518, 12537, 0.0], [12537, 12616, 0.0], [12616, 12636, 0.0], [12636, 12710, 0.0], [12710, 12727, 0.0], [12727, 12815, 0.0], [12815, 12830, 0.0], [12830, 12912, 0.0], [12912, 12929, 0.0], [12929, 13034, 0.0], [13034, 13053, 0.0], [13053, 13083, 0.0], [13083, 13125, 0.0], [13125, 13831, 0.0], [13831, 13916, 0.0], [13916, 13997, 0.0], [13997, 14064, 0.0], [14064, 14133, 0.0], [14133, 14204, 0.0], [14204, 14268, 0.0], [14268, 14332, 0.0], [14332, 14413, 0.0], [14413, 14513, 0.0], [14513, 14652, 0.0], [14652, 14722, 0.0], [14722, 14798, 0.0], [14798, 14836, 0.0], [14836, 14874, 0.0], [14874, 14973, 0.0], [14973, 15058, 0.0], [15058, 15089, 0.0], [15089, 15186, 0.0], [15186, 15267, 0.0], [15267, 15336, 0.0], [15336, 15441, 0.0], [15441, 16219, 0.0], [16219, 17333, 0.00740741], [17333, 17918, 0.0034965], [17918, 19002, 0.00944287], [19002, 19446, 0.0], [19446, 19882, 0.0], [19882, 19907, 0.0], [19907, 20530, 0.0], [20530, 20950, 0.0], [20950, 21509, 0.0], [21509, 21654, 0.0], [21654, 21984, 0.0], [21984, 22635, 0.0], [22635, 23124, 0.0], [23124, 23788, 0.0], [23788, 23822, 0.0], [23822, 23870, 0.0], [23870, 23891, 0.0], [23891, 23917, 0.0], [23917, 23926, 0.0], [23926, 23938, 0.0], [23938, 23983, 0.0], [23983, 24011, 0.0], [24011, 24063, 0.0], [24063, 24089, 0.0], [24089, 24118, 0.0], [24118, 24140, 0.0], [24140, 24166, 0.0], [24166, 24182, 0.0], [24182, 24206, 0.0], [24206, 24240, 0.0], [24240, 24288, 0.0], [24288, 24316, 0.0], [24316, 24341, 0.0], [24341, 24370, 0.0], [24370, 24412, 0.0], [24412, 24443, 0.0], [24443, 24466, 0.0], [24466, 24495, 0.0], [24495, 24546, 0.0], [24546, 24566, 0.0], [24566, 24601, 0.0], [24601, 24629, 0.0], [24629, 24653, 0.0], [24653, 24684, 0.0], [24684, 24703, 0.0], [24703, 24724, 0.0], [24724, 24748, 0.0], [24748, 24772, 0.0], [24772, 24828, 0.0], [24828, 24872, 0.0], [24872, 24910, 0.0], [24910, 24939, 0.0], [24939, 24962, 0.0], [24962, 24986, 0.0], [24986, 25033, 0.0], [25033, 25076, 0.0], [25076, 25112, 0.0], [25112, 25207, 0.0], [25207, 25225, 0.0], [25225, 25246, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 54, 0.0], [54, 759, 0.0], [759, 781, 0.0], [781, 838, 0.0], [838, 863, 0.0], [863, 912, 0.0], [912, 978, 0.0], [978, 1026, 0.0], [1026, 1055, 0.0], [1055, 1083, 0.0], [1083, 1765, 0.0], [1765, 1881, 0.0], [1881, 1933, 0.0], [1933, 1962, 0.0], [1962, 1974, 0.0], [1974, 2018, 0.0], [2018, 2429, 0.0], [2429, 3402, 0.0], [3402, 3453, 0.0], [3453, 3541, 0.0], [3541, 3798, 0.0], [3798, 3807, 0.0], [3807, 3859, 0.0], [3859, 4018, 0.0], [4018, 4394, 0.0], [4394, 4412, 0.0], [4412, 4428, 0.0], [4428, 4484, 0.0], [4484, 4510, 0.0], [4510, 4672, 0.0], [4672, 4767, 0.0], [4767, 4840, 0.0], [4840, 4871, 0.0], [4871, 4912, 0.0], [4912, 5209, 0.0], [5209, 5248, 0.0], [5248, 5284, 0.0], [5284, 5324, 0.0], [5324, 5385, 0.0], [5385, 5897, 0.0], [5897, 6507, 0.0], [6507, 7054, 0.0], [7054, 7801, 0.0], [7801, 7828, 0.0], [7828, 7855, 0.0], [7855, 7918, 0.0], [7918, 7934, 0.0], [7934, 8012, 0.0], [8012, 8028, 0.0], [8028, 8126, 0.0], [8126, 8144, 0.0], [8144, 8225, 0.0], [8225, 8238, 0.0], [8238, 8315, 0.0], [8315, 8333, 0.0], [8333, 8377, 0.0], [8377, 8395, 0.0], [8395, 8458, 0.0], [8458, 8474, 0.0], [8474, 8554, 0.0], [8554, 8572, 0.0], [8572, 8649, 0.0], [8649, 8669, 0.0], [8669, 8742, 0.0], [8742, 8764, 0.0], [8764, 8876, 0.0], [8876, 8894, 0.0], [8894, 8928, 0.0], [8928, 8945, 0.0], [8945, 9000, 0.0], [9000, 9017, 0.0], [9017, 9088, 0.0], [9088, 9104, 0.0], [9104, 9175, 0.0], [9175, 9195, 0.0], [9195, 9321, 0.0], [9321, 9336, 0.0], [9336, 9402, 0.0], [9402, 9422, 0.0], [9422, 9465, 0.0], [9465, 9485, 0.0], [9485, 9534, 0.0], [9534, 9571, 0.0], [9571, 9598, 0.0], [9598, 9629, 0.0], [9629, 9669, 0.0], [9669, 9711, 0.0], [9711, 9766, 0.0], [9766, 9802, 0.0], [9802, 9880, 0.0], [9880, 9918, 0.0], [9918, 9961, 0.0], [9961, 9990, 0.0], [9990, 10066, 0.0], [10066, 10098, 0.0], [10098, 10211, 0.0], [10211, 10229, 0.0], [10229, 10284, 0.0], [10284, 10298, 0.0], [10298, 10325, 0.0], [10325, 10341, 0.0], [10341, 10421, 0.0], [10421, 10441, 0.0], [10441, 10504, 0.0], [10504, 10517, 0.0], [10517, 10612, 0.0], [10612, 10632, 0.0], [10632, 10728, 0.0], [10728, 10744, 0.0], [10744, 10805, 0.0], [10805, 10824, 0.0], [10824, 10925, 0.0], [10925, 10942, 0.0], [10942, 11047, 0.0], [11047, 11067, 0.0], [11067, 11085, 0.0], [11085, 11123, 0.0], [11123, 11149, 0.0], [11149, 11193, 0.0], [11193, 11218, 0.0], [11218, 11232, 0.0], [11232, 11309, 0.0], [11309, 11324, 0.0], [11324, 11367, 0.0], [11367, 11385, 0.0], [11385, 11435, 0.0], [11435, 11455, 0.0], [11455, 11547, 0.0], [11547, 11566, 0.0], [11566, 11620, 0.0], [11620, 11640, 0.0], [11640, 11751, 0.0], [11751, 11767, 0.0], [11767, 11830, 0.0], [11830, 11847, 0.0], [11847, 11879, 0.0], [11879, 11895, 0.0], [11895, 11981, 0.0], [11981, 12004, 0.0], [12004, 12131, 0.0], [12131, 12169, 0.0], [12169, 12207, 0.0], [12207, 12224, 0.0], [12224, 12316, 0.0], [12316, 12335, 0.0], [12335, 12412, 0.0], [12412, 12469, 0.0], [12469, 12518, 0.0], [12518, 12537, 0.0], [12537, 12616, 0.0], [12616, 12636, 0.0], [12636, 12710, 0.0], [12710, 12727, 0.0], [12727, 12815, 0.0], [12815, 12830, 0.0], [12830, 12912, 0.0], [12912, 12929, 0.0], [12929, 13034, 0.0], [13034, 13053, 0.0], [13053, 13083, 0.0], [13083, 13125, 0.0], [13125, 13831, 0.0], [13831, 13916, 0.0], [13916, 13997, 0.0], [13997, 14064, 0.0], [14064, 14133, 0.0], [14133, 14204, 0.0], [14204, 14268, 0.0], [14268, 14332, 0.0], [14332, 14413, 0.0], [14413, 14513, 0.0], [14513, 14652, 0.0], [14652, 14722, 0.0], [14722, 14798, 0.0], [14798, 14836, 0.0], [14836, 14874, 0.0], [14874, 14973, 0.0], [14973, 15058, 0.0], [15058, 15089, 0.0], [15089, 15186, 0.0], [15186, 15267, 0.0], [15267, 15336, 0.0], [15336, 15441, 0.0], [15441, 16219, 0.0], [16219, 17333, 0.0], [17333, 17918, 0.0], [17918, 19002, 0.0], [19002, 19446, 0.0], [19446, 19882, 0.0], [19882, 19907, 0.0], [19907, 20530, 0.0], [20530, 20950, 0.0], [20950, 21509, 0.0], [21509, 21654, 0.0], [21654, 21984, 0.0], [21984, 22635, 0.0], [22635, 23124, 0.0], [23124, 23788, 0.0], [23788, 23822, 0.0], [23822, 23870, 0.0], [23870, 23891, 0.0], [23891, 23917, 0.0], [23917, 23926, 0.0], [23926, 23938, 0.0], [23938, 23983, 0.0], [23983, 24011, 0.0], [24011, 24063, 0.0], [24063, 24089, 0.0], [24089, 24118, 0.0], [24118, 24140, 0.0], [24140, 24166, 0.0], [24166, 24182, 0.0], [24182, 24206, 0.0], [24206, 24240, 0.0], [24240, 24288, 0.0], [24288, 24316, 0.0], [24316, 24341, 0.0], [24341, 24370, 0.0], [24370, 24412, 0.0], [24412, 24443, 0.0], [24443, 24466, 0.0], [24466, 24495, 0.0], [24495, 24546, 0.0], [24546, 24566, 0.0], [24566, 24601, 0.0], [24601, 24629, 0.0], [24629, 24653, 0.0], [24653, 24684, 0.0], [24684, 24703, 0.0], [24703, 24724, 0.0], [24724, 24748, 0.0], [24748, 24772, 0.0], [24772, 24828, 0.0], [24828, 24872, 0.0], [24872, 24910, 0.0], [24910, 24939, 0.0], [24939, 24962, 0.0], [24962, 24986, 0.0], [24986, 25033, 0.0], [25033, 25076, 0.0], [25076, 25112, 0.0], [25112, 25207, 0.0], [25207, 25225, 0.0], [25225, 25246, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 54, 0.09259259], [54, 759, 0.09503546], [759, 781, 0.09090909], [781, 838, 0.0877193], [838, 863, 0.12], [863, 912, 0.10204082], [912, 978, 0.15151515], [978, 1026, 0.85416667], [1026, 1055, 0.86206897], [1055, 1083, 0.10714286], [1083, 1765, 0.09530792], [1765, 1881, 0.12068966], [1881, 1933, 0.09615385], [1933, 1962, 0.10344828], [1962, 1974, 0.0], [1974, 2018, 0.15909091], [2018, 2429, 0.05109489], [2429, 3402, 0.07194245], [3402, 3453, 0.09803922], [3453, 3541, 0.10227273], [3541, 3798, 0.08949416], [3798, 3807, 0.0], [3807, 3859, 0.15384615], [3859, 4018, 0.08176101], [4018, 4394, 0.12765957], [4394, 4412, 0.22222222], [4412, 4428, 0.0], [4428, 4484, 0.01785714], [4484, 4510, 0.11538462], [4510, 4672, 0.06790123], [4672, 4767, 0.06315789], [4767, 4840, 0.06849315], [4840, 4871, 0.09677419], [4871, 4912, 0.09756098], [4912, 5209, 0.02693603], [5209, 5248, 0.02564103], [5248, 5284, 0.02777778], [5284, 5324, 0.1], [5324, 5385, 0.08196721], [5385, 5897, 0.02734375], [5897, 6507, 0.03606557], [6507, 7054, 0.03107861], [7054, 7801, 0.04417671], [7801, 7828, 0.0], [7828, 7855, 0.55555556], [7855, 7918, 0.14285714], [7918, 7934, 0.6875], [7934, 8012, 0.12820513], [8012, 8028, 0.6875], [8028, 8126, 0.10204082], [8126, 8144, 0.72222222], [8144, 8225, 0.13580247], [8225, 8238, 0.76923077], [8238, 8315, 0.11688312], [8315, 8333, 0.72222222], [8333, 8377, 0.15909091], [8377, 8395, 0.72222222], [8395, 8458, 0.07936508], [8458, 8474, 0.6875], [8474, 8554, 0.0875], [8554, 8572, 0.72222222], [8572, 8649, 0.07792208], [8649, 8669, 0.75], [8669, 8742, 0.15068493], [8742, 8764, 0.77272727], [8764, 8876, 0.08035714], [8876, 8894, 0.72222222], [8894, 8928, 0.17647059], [8928, 8945, 0.70588235], [8945, 9000, 0.10909091], [9000, 9017, 0.70588235], [9017, 9088, 0.09859155], [9088, 9104, 0.6875], [9104, 9175, 0.12676056], [9175, 9195, 0.75], [9195, 9321, 0.11904762], [9321, 9336, 0.8], [9336, 9402, 0.10606061], [9402, 9422, 0.75], [9422, 9465, 0.18604651], [9465, 9485, 0.75], [9485, 9534, 0.14285714], [9534, 9571, 0.51351351], [9571, 9598, 0.48148148], [9598, 9629, 0.58064516], [9629, 9669, 0.375], [9669, 9711, 0.42857143], [9711, 9766, 0.25454545], [9766, 9802, 0.38888889], [9802, 9880, 0.26923077], [9880, 9918, 0.44736842], [9918, 9961, 0.37209302], [9961, 9990, 0.5862069], [9990, 10066, 0.11842105], [10066, 10098, 0.5], [10098, 10211, 0.14159292], [10211, 10229, 0.72222222], [10229, 10284, 0.10909091], [10284, 10298, 0.78571429], [10298, 10325, 0.33333333], [10325, 10341, 0.6875], [10341, 10421, 0.1], [10421, 10441, 0.85], [10441, 10504, 0.14285714], [10504, 10517, 0.76923077], [10517, 10612, 0.12631579], [10612, 10632, 0.75], [10632, 10728, 0.09375], [10728, 10744, 0.6875], [10744, 10805, 0.08196721], [10805, 10824, 0.73684211], [10824, 10925, 0.0990099], [10925, 10942, 0.70588235], [10942, 11047, 0.0952381], [11047, 11067, 0.25], [11067, 11085, 0.72222222], [11085, 11123, 0.15789474], [11123, 11149, 0.5], [11149, 11193, 0.40909091], [11193, 11218, 0.52], [11218, 11232, 0.78571429], [11232, 11309, 0.15584416], [11309, 11324, 0.66666667], [11324, 11367, 0.1627907], [11367, 11385, 0.72222222], [11385, 11435, 0.14], [11435, 11455, 0.75], [11455, 11547, 0.11956522], [11547, 11566, 0.84210526], [11566, 11620, 0.14814815], [11620, 11640, 0.75], [11640, 11751, 0.11711712], [11751, 11767, 0.6875], [11767, 11830, 0.0952381], [11830, 11847, 0.70588235], [11847, 11879, 0.15625], [11879, 11895, 0.6875], [11895, 11981, 0.11627907], [11981, 12004, 0.82608696], [12004, 12131, 0.11023622], [12131, 12169, 0.5], [12169, 12207, 0.13157895], [12207, 12224, 0.82352941], [12224, 12316, 0.09782609], [12316, 12335, 0.73684211], [12335, 12412, 0.1038961], [12412, 12469, 0.29824561], [12469, 12518, 0.10204082], [12518, 12537, 0.73684211], [12537, 12616, 0.11392405], [12616, 12636, 0.75], [12636, 12710, 0.10810811], [12710, 12727, 0.70588235], [12727, 12815, 0.14772727], [12815, 12830, 0.8], [12830, 12912, 0.09756098], [12912, 12929, 0.70588235], [12929, 13034, 0.11428571], [13034, 13053, 0.73684211], [13053, 13083, 0.6], [13083, 13125, 0.33333333], [13125, 13831, 0.01416431], [13831, 13916, 0.21176471], [13916, 13997, 0.24691358], [13997, 14064, 0.26865672], [14064, 14133, 0.26086957], [14133, 14204, 0.33802817], [14204, 14268, 0.25], [14268, 14332, 0.28125], [14332, 14413, 0.19753086], [14413, 14513, 0.21], [14513, 14652, 0.17985612], [14652, 14722, 0.31428571], [14722, 14798, 0.26315789], [14798, 14836, 0.47368421], [14836, 14874, 0.39473684], [14874, 14973, 0.21212121], [14973, 15058, 0.25882353], [15058, 15089, 0.51612903], [15089, 15186, 0.20618557], [15186, 15267, 0.28395062], [15267, 15336, 0.24637681], [15336, 15441, 0.19047619], [15441, 16219, 0.06041131], [16219, 17333, 0.09156194], [17333, 17918, 0.01880342], [17918, 19002, 0.01291513], [19002, 19446, 0.00900901], [19446, 19882, 0.00688073], [19882, 19907, 0.16], [19907, 20530, 0.01284109], [20530, 20950, 0.06428571], [20950, 21509, 0.10017889], [21509, 21654, 0.06896552], [21654, 21984, 0.06666667], [21984, 22635, 0.04608295], [22635, 23124, 0.03680982], [23124, 23788, 0.01355422], [23788, 23822, 0.11764706], [23822, 23870, 0.08333333], [23870, 23891, 0.0952381], [23891, 23917, 0.11538462], [23917, 23926, 0.11111111], [23926, 23938, 0.08333333], [23938, 23983, 0.86666667], [23983, 24011, 0.10714286], [24011, 24063, 0.07692308], [24063, 24089, 0.84615385], [24089, 24118, 0.06896552], [24118, 24140, 0.09090909], [24140, 24166, 0.11538462], [24166, 24182, 0.125], [24182, 24206, 0.08333333], [24206, 24240, 0.85294118], [24240, 24288, 0.08333333], [24288, 24316, 0.10714286], [24316, 24341, 0.08], [24341, 24370, 0.06896552], [24370, 24412, 0.0952381], [24412, 24443, 0.09677419], [24443, 24466, 0.08695652], [24466, 24495, 0.10344828], [24495, 24546, 0.82352941], [24546, 24566, 0.1], [24566, 24601, 0.08571429], [24601, 24629, 0.10714286], [24629, 24653, 0.08333333], [24653, 24684, 0.09677419], [24684, 24703, 0.10526316], [24703, 24724, 0.0952381], [24724, 24748, 0.08333333], [24748, 24772, 0.125], [24772, 24828, 0.10714286], [24828, 24872, 0.09090909], [24872, 24910, 0.10526316], [24910, 24939, 0.10344828], [24939, 24962, 0.08695652], [24962, 24986, 0.125], [24986, 25033, 0.10638298], [25033, 25076, 0.88372093], [25076, 25112, 0.11111111], [25112, 25207, 0.10526316], [25207, 25225, 0.11111111], [25225, 25246, 0.0952381]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 25246, 0.1057021]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 25246, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 25246, 0.70991921]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 25246, -1348.77226405]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 25246, -310.7721061]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 25246, 187.67490616]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 25246, 230.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Search results for 'Willie Nelson' DeSoto Public Records:15 Shelby Public Records:178 The Nashville Ledger subscribers get full access to more than Editorial Results (free)1. Prism of modern country on display at ACM Awards - Friday, April 04, 2014NASHVILLE (AP) - The new artist of the year category at the 2014 Academy of Country Music Awards is a primer in Modern Country 101 with three nominees who perfectly capture the genre's 21st century sound.2. Top Midstate commercial real estate transactions for Nov. 2013 - Friday, December 20, 2013Top November 2013 commercial real estate transactions for Davidson, Williamson, Rutherford, Wilson and Sumner counties, as compiled by Chandler Reports.3. Merle Haggard calls Ray Price 'the first outlaw' - Friday, December 13, 2013NASHVILLE (AP) - Merle Haggard can still remember the first time he heard Ray Price's voice come out of the radio, fronting Lefty Frizzell's band on "If You're Ever Lonely Darling" in 1951. And the memory of hearing "I'll Be There" for the first time in 1954 still makes him break out into song.4. Influential country singer Ray Price dead at 87 - Friday, December 13, 2013DALLAS (AP) — Good friends like Willie Nelson and Merle Haggard got more credit for their contrary ways and trend-setting ideas, but it was Ray Price who set the precedent for change in country music more than a decade earlier.5. 48 hours in Nashville: Entertaining out-of-town guests over the holidays? Show them the “It City” like a pro! - Friday, December 06, 2013“He Stopped Loving Her Today,” proclaims the throat-thickening No. 1 tourist destination for anyone either visiting Nashville or simply trying to show holiday guests around town. George Jones’ monument, which presides over the mid-section of Woodlawn Memorial Park in Berry Hill, could easily fit in as the first, last, or perhaps bookend stops on a 48-hour tour of Music City USA.6. CMA Awards, fellow stars salute George Strait - Friday, November 01, 2013NASHVILLE (AP) — The entertainer of the year trophy at the Country Music Association Awards is one of the most coveted honors in the genre, but sometimes it's OK to lose — like, say, when George Strait is a nominee.7. Music and art mesh in Veda’s storied life - Friday, November 01, 2013Introduced to the Grand Ole Opry crowd as “The Spanish Hank Williams” back in 1962, there remains a sense of music, of rhythm in the voice of Gil Veda as he sits in his adopted hometown’s busiest coffee house named for a dog and raises his soft voice as much as possible to be heard above the din.8. On the bill again: Nelson back on festival lineup - Friday, September 27, 2013NASHVILLE (AP) - An improving Willie Nelson will make his festival date this Saturday in Nashville after all, and he's bringing a friend. A news release from festival organizers said Nelson has recuperated enough from a shoulder injury that he's able to keep his evening slot at the Zac Brown Band's Southern Ground Music & Food Festival. Warren Haynes will sit in with Nelson and his band for a handful of songs as well.9. Nelson pulls out of festival with shoulder injury - Friday, September 20, 2013NASHVILLE (AP) - Willie Nelson has been forced to pull out of the Southern Ground Music & Food Festival and three other shows due to a shoulder injury.10. Tompall Glaser, an original Nashville outlaw, dies - Friday, August 09, 2013NASHVILLE (AP) - Tompall Glaser, a country music singer, publisher and studio owner best known for his association with the outlaw movement against record labels, died Tuesday. He was 79.Louis Glaser, Tompall Glaser's nephew, said the singer died in Nashville after a long illness.11. George Jones, country superstar, has died at 81 - Friday, April 26, 2013NASHVILLE (AP) - When it comes to country music, George Jones was The Voice. Other great singers have come and gone, but this fact remained inviolate until Jones passed away Friday at 81 in a Nashville hospital after a year of ill health.12. Accidental outlaw Willie Nelson celebrates 80th - Friday, April 26, 2013NASHVILLE (AP) — America loves its outlaws, and few are as admired and lionized as Willie Nelson.As the enduring American icon's 80th birthday has approached, he's been honored with lifetime achievement awards, serenaded at special performances and saluted by musicians from every genre of music. And Nelson has taken it all in with a bemused smile.13. Nelson to hold benefit for Texas blast victims - Friday, April 19, 2013NASHVILLE (AP) — Willie Nelson said Thursday that he will turn an upcoming Texas concert into a benefit for victims of the explosion at a fertilizer plant not far from where he grew up.14. Rogers, Bare, Clement in Country Hall of Fame - Friday, April 05, 2013NASHVILLE (AP) - The Country Music Hall of Fame recognized pioneers who are responsible for the genre's growing diversity by selecting its new class of Kenny Rogers, Bobby Bare and Jack Clement. The trio of trailblazing inductees attended a news conference Wednesday at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum to announce the class of 2013.15. Bare finds right label for dream folk album - Friday, February 08, 2013Bobby Bare has a simple explanation for why it took him 25 years to put out his dream album of folk songs. “There’s no demand for an old fart doing an album,” the affable 77-year-old shrugs.16. Blake Shelton pulls off surprise win at CMAs - Friday, November 02, 2012 NASHVILLE (AP) — Winning the Country Music Association Awards' entertainer of the year is a top honor and always counted as a career high point. But for Blake Shelton it wasn't even the most memorable moment of an amazing Thursday night.17. Top residential real estate transactions for August 2012 - Friday, September 28, 2012August 2012 residential real estate transactions for Davidson, Williamson, Rutherford, Wilson and Sumner counties, as compiled by Chandler Reports. Chandler Reports has been publishing Real Estate Market Data since 1968. That year, Chandler began collecting residential sales information for the Chandler Residential Report, considered the authoritative source for residential real estate sales information. Over the next three decades, the publications have been continually refined, enhanced and expanded, growing to include lot sales data, new residential construction and absorption information, and commercial sales. In 1987, Chandler Reports began one of the first on–line real estate market data services in the country, and is a nationally recognized leader in the industry. In 2004, Chandler Reports was purchased by The Daily News Publishing Co. In 2007, Chandler introduced RegionPlus, including property research for Nashville and Middle Tennessee. Visit online at chandlerreports.com.18. Willie Nelson pens new memoir for release Nov. 13 - Friday, September 21, 2012NASHVILLE (AP) — Willie Nelson has proven to be one of America's most prolific songwriters. Turns out he's no slouch when it comes to memoirs, either: He has a new one due in November.19. Top residential real estate transactions for August 2012 - Friday, September 21, 2012August 2012 residential real estate transactions for Davidson, Williamson, Rutherford, Wilson and Sumner counties, as compiled by Chandler Reports.20. Unusual rides draw car lovers to Lane - Friday, September 21, 2012With cars ranging in manufacture from Nissan Z, at some 300 horsepower and a speed of 180 mph, to the smallest manufactured passenger vehicle in the world, the one-cylinder Peel P50 with a maximum speed of 40 mph, the Lane Motor Museum of Nashville has one of the most unique collections of automobiles in the country.21. Funky to formal, area offers a variety of party venues - Friday, September 14, 2012A 400-person wedding, a bachelorette party, the latest No. 1 hit … 5 o’clock. Nashville is a town that will use any excuse to party. But it can’t be just any kind of party. It has to be a Nashville party, one that really shows off the personality of the area.22. Grafitti gaining recognition as art form - Friday, August 10, 2012Outdoor art in Nashville tends to make a big splash. Consider Ghost Ballet for the East Bank Machineworks, the giant, red sculpture just across the Cumberland River from downtown. Some love it, some not so much … but you’re not going to miss it.23. Jamey Johnson salutes songwriter with duets album - Friday, July 27, 2012NASHVILLE (AP) — Jamey Johnson sang at Hank Cochran's bedside in the hours before his death. Now he's showing his love for the legendary songwriter again.Johnson's next album will be a collaborative celebration of Cochran's music. "Livin' for a Song: A Tribute to Hank Cochran" will include appearances by Willie Nelson, George Strait, Alison Krauss, Elvis Costello and many others, each singing a duet with Johnson. The album will come out Sept. 25 on vinyl and Oct. 16 in other formats.24. Former music royalties executive Preston dies in Nashville - Friday, June 08, 2012NASHVILLE (AP) - Frances Williams Preston, who worked with top songwriters as president of the royalties company Broadcast Music Inc., died Wednesday. She was 83. Preston was president of New York-based BMI, which collects and distributes royalties to songwriters, from 1986 to 2004. Before that, she was head of the company's office in Nashville, where she was born and grew up.25. 5 rising acts to check out at Bonnaroo - Friday, June 01, 2012NASHVILLE (AP) — While major acts and headliners like Radiohead, Red Hot Chili Peppers, The Beach Boys and Phish always draw the masses out to the Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival, it's discovering new acts that's the true joy of the four-day festival down on the farm in Manchester, Tenn.26. Underwood takes her 3rd video of year win at CMTs - Friday, June 01, 2012NASHVILLE (AP) — Nashville's Bridgestone Arena is turning into quite a memorable place for Carrie Underwood and her hunky husband, NHL star Mike Fisher.27. Obama, Romney to go country at CMT Awards - Friday, June 01, 2012NASHVILLE (AP) - Presidential elections are usually serious business, but President Barack Obama and likely Republican nominee Mitt Romney are taking a little time for laughs during the CMT Music Awards on Wednesday.28. Willie Nelson and friends to light up CMT Awards - Friday, June 01, 2012NASHVILLE (AP) — Willie Nelson may have penned himself another classic and CMT Music Awards viewers will get a chance to judge for themselves.29. Sponsor: Horse slaughter bill not likely to pass - Friday, April 13, 2012NASHVILLE (AP) - The sponsor of a bill seeking to attract horse slaughter facilities said the bill likely will not pass this year.Rep. Andy Holt said that chances were not good for the bill to pass, but he remained committed to bringing the industry to Tennessee.30. Country stars stampede to studio to help Richie - Friday, March 23, 2012NASHVILLE (AP) - Kenny Chesney was so excited about the idea of working with Lionel Richie that he drunk-dialed the pop legend to suggest a song. Darius Rucker tossed aside a lyric sheet in the studio, saying he'd been preparing for the moment his entire life. And so many people were clamoring to get on the project that stars like Keith Urban and Brad Paisley didn't even make the cut - this time.31. New music on the way from late Waylon Jennings - Friday, February 10, 2012NASHVILLE (AP) - The family of Waylon Jennings will soon release songs the country music icon recorded shortly before his death 10 years ago.At least eight of the 12 songs on the tentatively titled "Goin' Down Rockin': The Final Recordings" were written by Jennings and eight have not been released in any version before. The simple vocal and guitar tracks were cut at steel guitarist Robby Turner's studio before Jennings' death in 2002 and musicians who worked with Jennings have gathered to finish the tracks.32. London calling, y'all - Friday, February 03, 2012George Hamilton IV doesn’t take credit for it, but he is a country music business pioneer. The one-time pop heartthrob – he converted to country after sharing the stage with Sam Cooke, Buddy Holly, Chuck Berry, Jerry Lee Lewis and even Satchmo – maintains he became something of an accidental international icon after a quick courtesy stop in London.33. State museum site of TV taping Friday night - Friday, January 20, 2012NASHVILLE (AP) — A music show for broadcast on Public Broadcasting Service stations nationwide will be taped Friday night at the Tennessee State Museum."Jammin' at Hippie Jack's Live at the Tennessee State Museum!" will feature Billy Joe Shaver and Elizabeth Cook, both performers and songwriters.34. Music still packs the house - Friday, September 16, 2011Lower Broadway’s “campus” is expanding, thanks largely to its honky-tonk heritage and the constant, energetic growth of “the student body” that comes here for suds and such.35. Nashville was never limited to country music - Friday, June 03, 2011Pundits may look at the fact that Jack White and other young artists and support staffs are moving in and say the city is fast evolving past its traditional country music identity.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1613
{"url": "http://www.nashvilleledger.com/Search/Search.aspx?fn=Willie&ln=Nelson&redir=1", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nashvilleledger.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:30:19Z", "digest": "sha1:QGPJJ7ACNDGCX7YTI6B6DAFX4BRU7SVD"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 13062, 13062.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 13062, 15011.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 13062, 5.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 13062, 69.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 13062, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 13062, 297.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 13062, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 13062, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 13062, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 13062, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 13062, 0.30426647]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 13062, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 13062, 0.04457624]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 13062, 0.08723933]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 13062, 0.06169887]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 13062, 0.05146355]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 13062, 0.04457624]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 13062, 0.04457624]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 13062, 0.006696]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 13062, 0.01262675]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 13062, 0.01434857]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 13062, 0.02432635]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 13062, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 13062, 0.2260479]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 13062, 0.43836268]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 13062, 4.97572584]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 13062, 0.0007485]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 13062, 6.06333896]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 13062, 2101.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 35, 0.0], [35, 60, 0.0], [60, 86, 0.0], [86, 148, 0.0], [148, 13062, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 35, 0.0], [35, 60, 0.0], [60, 86, 0.0], [86, 148, 0.0], [148, 13062, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 35, 5.0], [35, 60, 3.0], [60, 86, 3.0], [86, 148, 10.0], [148, 13062, 2080.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 35, 0.0], [35, 60, 0.08695652], [60, 86, 0.125], [86, 148, 0.0], [148, 13062, 0.03207091]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 35, 0.0], [35, 60, 0.0], [60, 86, 0.0], [86, 148, 0.0], [148, 13062, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 35, 0.08571429], [35, 60, 0.16], [60, 86, 0.11538462], [86, 148, 0.0483871], [148, 13062, 0.06357442]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 13062, 0.08642966]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 13062, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 13062, 0.89206314]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 13062, -652.71554486]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 13062, 25.80292609]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 13062, 1.92087798]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 13062, 121.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Adventure Main | E-Mail the Editors | Adventure Customer Service | Subscribe October 2002 ExcerptsFrom the Print Edition, October 2002 They Shoot Poachers, Don't They? Fall Travel: Smoky Mountain High Mountaineering Legend Bradford Washburn's Great Escape In the heart of central Africa, marauding bands of bush-meat hunters are terrorizing villages and slaughtering wildlife to the brink of extinction. Now a family practitioner from Wyoming has decided to recruit his own army to stop them. By Tom Clynes The story, as I first heard it, had the zing of a Hollywood pitch: Led by a soft-spoken doctor, a band of American conservationists had persuaded the president of the Central African Republic to let them raise a militia and take over the eastern third of the Texas-size country. Their mission was to drive out the marauding gangs of Sudanese poachers who were rapidly wiping out the region's elephants and other animals. Their authority: Shoot on sight. No one had been killed yet when I arrived in Bangui in early March. Throughout the dilapidated capital, signs of a November coup attempt were still fresh: Bullet divots scored the bricks of the Tropicana Club, and a curfew remained in effect. A detachment of Libyan paratroopers hulked in front of the mansion of President Ange-Félix Patassé, who had been bailed out, again, by his friend Muammar Qaddafi. Most of the fighting had taken place in the northern reaches of town, where the American group, Africa Rainforest and River Conservation (ARRC), had rented a gated compound. As I approached the large whitewashed porch, it struck me that ARRC was well prepared for another flare-up. Scattered among the wicker furniture were several men in fatigues, a couple of AK-47s, a grenade launcher, and a very excited chimpanzee. Dave Bryant, a 49-year-old South African who had been hired in August to lead the militia, extended his hand. "Welcome to bloody paradise," he said. He introduced a slight, 26-year-old Iowan named Michelle Wieland, who was in charge of ARRC's community-development component, and a thin 35-year-old named Richard Hagen, who had flown up from South Africa to help with security. "And the little fellow jumping up and down is Commando," said Bryant. "We rescued him from a Sudanese trader, and to show his appreciation he's been crapping all over our floors." Bryant's face seemed custom-assembled for bad-ass impact. Beneath a clean-shaven scalp, a towering forehead descended into a deep ravine of a scowl line, bridged by wraparound sunglasses. An expansive Fu Manchu mustache arched around a loaded cigarette holder, which dangled expertly from one side of his mouth. "I guess you've heard that we're in a bit of a cock-up," he said. "We've been stuck in this shit-hole for five months now, trying to get out into the bush to do a reccy [reconnaissance] before the rains hit. We're waiting for gear, we're waiting for money, and we're waiting for vehicles. And we're waiting for people in this zoo they call a government to do something other than put their bloody hands out." The three were eager to hear about my meeting that day with the American ambassador, Mattie Sharpless. Sharpless had recently arrived in Bangui, and I had asked her what she knew about ARRC. "The rumor is that they're hiring South African mercenaries and diverting funds into diamond ventures," Sharpless had answered. Wieland winced when I relayed the quote, but Bryant smiled and leaned back in his chair. "Yes, well. We South Africans don't usually like to use the term 'mercenary.' We prefer to say 'play
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1614
{"url": "http://www.nationalgeographic.com/adventure/0210/story.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nationalgeographic.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:05:31Z", "digest": "sha1:OI4MZCJL4LPJHVYPIJEHOWR2ARPR4UQX"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3574, 3574.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3574, 3720.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3574, 16.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3574, 19.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3574, 0.98]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3574, 309.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3574, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3574, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3574, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3574, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3574, 0.37112011]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3574, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3574, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3574, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3574, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3574, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3574, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3574, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3574, 0.00874432]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3574, 0.01958727]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3574, 0.01189227]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3574, 0.01754386]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3574, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3574, 0.17139001]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3574, 0.6034188]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3574, 4.88717949]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3574, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3574, 5.37851804]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3574, 585.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 90, 0.0], [90, 135, 0.0], [135, 168, 1.0], [168, 201, 0.0], [201, 256, 0.0], [256, 493, 1.0], [493, 507, 0.0], [507, 961, 1.0], [961, 1367, 1.0], [1367, 1787, 1.0], [1787, 2345, 0.0], [2345, 2657, 1.0], [2657, 3066, 0.0], [3066, 3257, 1.0], [3257, 3385, 1.0], [3385, 3574, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 90, 0.0], [90, 135, 0.0], [135, 168, 0.0], [168, 201, 0.0], [201, 256, 0.0], [256, 493, 0.0], [493, 507, 0.0], [507, 961, 0.0], [961, 1367, 0.0], [1367, 1787, 0.0], [1787, 2345, 0.0], [2345, 2657, 0.0], [2657, 3066, 0.0], [3066, 3257, 0.0], [3257, 3385, 0.0], [3385, 3574, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 90, 11.0], [90, 135, 6.0], [135, 168, 5.0], [168, 201, 5.0], [201, 256, 6.0], [256, 493, 38.0], [493, 507, 3.0], [507, 961, 77.0], [961, 1367, 68.0], [1367, 1787, 68.0], [1787, 2345, 91.0], [2345, 2657, 47.0], [2657, 3066, 75.0], [3066, 3257, 33.0], [3257, 3385, 18.0], [3385, 3574, 34.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 90, 0.04878049], [90, 135, 0.09302326], [135, 168, 0.0], [168, 201, 0.0], [201, 256, 0.0], [256, 493, 0.0], [493, 507, 0.0], [507, 961, 0.0], [961, 1367, 0.0], [1367, 1787, 0.00493827], [1787, 2345, 0.01136364], [2345, 2657, 0.0], [2657, 3066, 0.0], [3066, 3257, 0.0], [3257, 3385, 0.0], [3385, 3574, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 90, 0.0], [90, 135, 0.0], [135, 168, 0.0], [168, 201, 0.0], [201, 256, 0.0], [256, 493, 0.0], [493, 507, 0.0], [507, 961, 0.0], [961, 1367, 0.0], [1367, 1787, 0.0], [1787, 2345, 0.0], [2345, 2657, 0.0], [2657, 3066, 0.0], [3066, 3257, 0.0], [3257, 3385, 0.0], [3385, 3574, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 90, 0.11111111], [90, 135, 0.11111111], [135, 168, 0.15151515], [168, 201, 0.15151515], [201, 256, 0.10909091], [256, 493, 0.01687764], [493, 507, 0.21428571], [507, 961, 0.02863436], [961, 1367, 0.04187192], [1367, 1787, 0.0452381], [1787, 2345, 0.04121864], [2345, 2657, 0.01602564], [2657, 3066, 0.00977995], [3066, 3257, 0.05759162], [3257, 3385, 0.03125], [3385, 3574, 0.04232804]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3574, 0.9511081]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3574, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3574, 0.87973517]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3574, 33.69701539]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3574, 51.65446791]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3574, -77.88158032]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3574, 31.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Solar Subsidy Recipient Suing Treasury for More By Veronique de Rugy May 7, 2013 5:17 PM Comments 9 I didn’t see this one coming. According to the Wall Street Journal, the largest installer of residential solar panels, a company called SolarCity, is suing the federal government for underpayment of green-energy subsidies:In its suit, SolarCity says two of the company’s subsidiaries received smaller-than-expected grants. The company doesn’t say exactly how much funding it applied for originally, but it says the final grants issued by the Treasury Department were $8 million less than was proper under the law.The company says it could lose millions of dollars more if the government does the same thing on all $400 million in grants it has sought.If SolarCity’s suit is successful, other participants in the grant program might be encouraged to file cases of their own or push for higher grants on what remains of pending applications, said Morten Lund, an attorney for Stoel Rives LLP in San Diego.A look at the Department of Treasury Section 1603 data shows that SolarCity received 27 awards across 15 states amounting to $95.6 million in cash from a long-standing tax credit for renewable-energy investment turned into a direct grant in the stimulus bill. SolarCity has applied for approximately $325 million in these stimulus grants, according to the SEC filing.There are a few things to note here.First, as Tim Carney of the Examiner explained last October, SolarCity is one of the solar companies that is being investigated by the IRS after Treasury found that it ”repeatedly overstated the value of its investments, the SEC filings indicate.” Since the dollar amount of the grant is a set percentage of the value of the project, the benefit of overstating one’s value is that it leads to more taxpayers’ cash.Second, the chairman of SolarCity is Elon Musk, who is also a large owner in the company. In addition to being the chairman of SolarCity, he is also CEO of the automobile company Tesla. Tesla received $465 million from the ATVM loan-guarantee program, the DOE program that gave us the Fisker scandal. Musk also founded a company called SpaceX, which has received $1 billion in NASA funding. Third, it is worth noting that Elon Musk is a generous political donor. Why does this matter? Because it’s one thing for the government to mismanage taxpayers’ money (as it may have with 1603 payments to SolarCity); it’s another when the mismanagement happens to heavily benefit some of the administration’s large donors. Carney writes:Musk is the paradigmatic political entrepreneur, launching businesses that seek to capitalize on government favors and lobbying clout rather than provide goods or services that consumers demand.Musk is CEO of and the biggest investor in Tesla Motors, an electric car company that depends on stimulus money and other subsidies. He also founded Space Exploration Technologies, or SpaceX, whose primary customer is the federal government.Musk has personally given more than $100,000 to Obama’s re-election campaign, including two gifts of more than $30,000 each to the Obama Victory Fund, which divides the money between the maximum allowable donations to the Democratic National Committee and the maximum to the Obama campaign. (Musk has also given generously to Republicans.)Keep those max gifts in mind when Obama says he rejects donations from lobbyists.Fourth, as Paul Chesser reported a few months ago both Telsa and SolarCity spent a lot of money lobbying Congress for the subsidies:According to the Center for Responsive Politics, SolarCity spent $535,000 in 2009 and 2010 to lobby Congress and the Department of Energy on climate legislation, theRecovery Act, “green workforce training and development,” and provisions in various legislation “relevant to solar development.” SolarCity has sought to extend a program, due to expire at the end of 2012, that delivers to manufacturers an upfront cash grant in lieu of a 30 percent Investment Tax Credit (called the Section 1603 grant program). So far, according to DOE reports, SolarCity has received more than $66 million from that program.The company also won a partial guarantee from DOE of a $344 million loan that will place up to 160,000 rooftop solar installations on military housing across the country.Similarly, Musk’s Tesla Motors spent $480,000 from 2007 to 2011 to lobby Congress, the White House, EPA and DOE on climate and energy issues, the Advanced Technology Vehicles Manufacturing loan program, the Promoting Electric Vehicles Act, and the Recovery Act. Tesla receiveda $465 million loan guarantee from DOE’s ATVM program.Finally, as Chesser notes above, originally SolarCity applied and won a conditional commitment by the DOE to receive $344 million in 1705 loan guarantees. The 1705 loan guarantee gave us Solyndra. The rationale behind the loan guarantee is that the loan recipients wouldn’t be able to get private funding otherwise. After Solyndra collapsed, however, the program received some much needed scrutiny about the DOE loan programs and its politically connected recipients. In the end, SolarCity didn’t end up getting the DOE guarantee. Now if you have followed my writings on the 1705 loan program, you know that one of my biggest complaints with the program is that it grants loan guarantees to companies that could get private funding for their projects without the government help. So here you go: According to the Wall Street Journal, after the DOE funding fell through, the company went on to borrow the money from Bank Of America almost immediately. Now, going back to where we started, taxpayers could be on the hook for even more cash than they have already paid out to these green-energy companies (and their very financially secure owners) if the courts decide that they were indeed eligible for much more money. The Wall Street Journal concludes:At least one other renewable-energy developer has sued the government over stimulus grants that were smaller than requested. LCM Energy Solutions, of Dallas, sued in U.S. Federal Claims Court in May 2012 seeking $500,000 in stimulus funds. In the case, which is still pending, the company accused the Treasury Department of undervaluing its projects and underpaying stimulus grants for 18 solar-panel systems.John Hayes, a lawyer for LCM, Energy,said it will soon be asking the court to increase several more grants it recently received. He said he is aware of other firms “who are in a similar situation. Not everybody’s filed suit yet.” The Treasury Department declined to comment on the LCM suit.As a reminder, so far Treasury has paid over $17 billion in stimulus grants to green-energy companies. Print
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1615
{"url": "http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/347621/solar-subsidy-recipient-suing-treasury-more", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nationalreview.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T09:11:21Z", "digest": "sha1:P3R5BAC2CRKKIX5AG3SAWUVPZ3NUWYL3"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 6700, 6700.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 6700, 8375.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 6700, 3.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 6700, 66.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 6700, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 6700, 281.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 6700, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 6700, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 6700, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 6700, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 6700, 0.38348765]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 6700, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 6700, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 6700, 0.01132213]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 6700, 0.01132213]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 6700, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 6700, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 6700, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 6700, 0.0073046]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 6700, 0.00766983]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 6700, 0.0109569]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 6700, 0.02083333]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 6700, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 6700, 0.16743827]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 6700, 0.45233645]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 6700, 5.11775701]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 6700, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 6700, 5.51052912]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 6700, 1070.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 51, 0.0], [51, 100, 0.0], [100, 6700, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 51, 0.0], [51, 100, 0.0], [100, 6700, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 51, 8.0], [51, 100, 10.0], [100, 6700, 1052.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 51, 0.0], [51, 100, 0.19565217], [100, 6700, 0.01830309]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 51, 0.0], [51, 100, 0.0], [100, 6700, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 51, 0.1372549], [51, 100, 0.12244898], [100, 6700, 0.0380303]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 6700, 0.87720358]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 6700, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 6700, 0.61232561]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 6700, -294.04934754]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 6700, 185.63636659]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 6700, -102.00346653]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 6700, 49.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Urinary Health Behavior & Performance Digestive & Bowel Support EQuine Health First Aid & Wound Care Immune System & Protection Liver, Kidney & Pancreatic Health Respiratory Support Thyroid & Adrenal Support Weight, Metabolism & Cleansing Cardiovascular & Systemic Health Energy & Vitality Eyes, Ears & Oral Health Fleas, Ticks & Parasites + Joints, Muscles & Bones Nutrition & Treats Skin & Coat Urinary Tract Health OTHER WAYS TO SHOP PetAlive Specials Remedies for People Kennel Cough - Treatment Related Products By Tess Thompson Kennel cough, or tracheobronchitis, is bronchitis that is marked by a dry, spasmodic cough, retching, sneezing, snorting or choking. It is characterized by inflammation of the upper respiratory system. It can be caused by either a viral or bacterial infection. Tracheobronchitis is highly contagious and occurs when dogs are kept in crowded places with poor ventilation and a lot of warm air - places like boarding kennels, vaccination clinics, hospital waiting rooms, or any other such place where other infected dogs may be present. Kennel cough in canines is equivalent, in some aspects, to the common cold in humans. The symptoms are characteristic and obvious enough for diagnosis. And just as the common cold caused by a virus requires no treatment, kennel cough in dogs also does not require any treatment if the condition has been caused due to a viral infection. The symptoms tend to go away within 10 days. However, the commonality between the common cold and kennel cough ends there, since instances of kennel cough that involve the distemper virus carry a high risk and are considered to be serious. Such cases need immediate attention to ensure that the progression of the disease is contained. The canine respiratory tract has enough safeguards against bacterial invasion. These are present in the shape of hair-like structures, with a coat of mucous, that protrude from the cells lining the respiratory tract. When this protective mechanism is damaged, the invading bacteria, especially Bordetella bronchiseptica, can travel down the airways and cause kennel cough. Kennel cough caused by bacterial infection is also self-limiting. Treatment is limited to cough suppressants to provide relief, as natural recovery takes its course. There are some veterinarians who may recommend or insist on directly killing Bordetella bronchiseptica with the aid of antibiotics. The stress caused by crowding, heavy dust exposure, and poor ventilation during shipping usually leads to kennel cough in dogs and especially in puppies. Such cases can lead to severe tracheobronchitis. Dry cough in puppies is commonly seen in pet stores. The incubation period of the virus is between two to twelve days, and owners usually come to know about the condition after that have bought home a very sick puppy. Vaccination during the incubation period proves ineffective, and therefore young puppies with symptoms of kennel cough need to be taken to a veterinarian for treatment. Kennel cough in puppies is also self-limiting, but if exposed to Bordetella bronchiseptica during a viral infection, it can lead to serious consequences for the young ones. The condition is known to progress to pneumonia, which can be life-threatening if timely treatment is not given. References: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kennel_cough http://www.peteducation.com/article.cfm?cls=2&articleid=452 KC-Defense™ Homeopathic remedy for cats and dogs to relieve symptoms of kennel cough, plus provide respiratory and immunity protection Get $5 OFF your order when you sign up for our email list!
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1616
{"url": "http://www.nativeremedies.com/petalive/articles/kennel-cough-treatment.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nativeremedies.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:43:42Z", "digest": "sha1:DUDO6KGA2KDE42T3RJFLICXGFBL6KLQ3"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3596, 3596.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3596, 4324.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3596, 10.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3596, 48.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3596, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3596, 300.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3596, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3596, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3596, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3596, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3596, 0.33895706]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3596, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3596, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3596, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3596, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3596, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3596, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3596, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3596, 0.04485219]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3596, 0.01766905]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3596, 0.01495073]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3596, 0.00920245]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3596, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3596, 0.15337423]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3596, 0.52886406]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3596, 5.48044693]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3596, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3596, 5.19532153]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3596, 537.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 15, 0.0], [15, 437, 0.0], [437, 455, 0.0], [455, 475, 0.0], [475, 500, 0.0], [500, 3301, 0.0], [3301, 3403, 0.0], [3403, 3415, 0.0], [3415, 3538, 0.0], [3538, 3596, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 15, 0.0], [15, 437, 0.0], [437, 455, 0.0], [455, 475, 0.0], [475, 500, 0.0], [500, 3301, 0.0], [3301, 3403, 0.0], [3403, 3415, 0.0], [3415, 3538, 0.0], [3538, 3596, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 15, 2.0], [15, 437, 52.0], [437, 455, 2.0], [455, 475, 3.0], [475, 500, 3.0], [500, 3301, 441.0], [3301, 3403, 2.0], [3403, 3415, 1.0], [3415, 3538, 18.0], [3538, 3596, 13.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 15, 0.0], [15, 437, 0.0], [437, 455, 0.0], [455, 475, 0.0], [475, 500, 0.0], [500, 3301, 0.00072913], [3301, 3403, 0.04878049], [3403, 3415, 0.0], [3415, 3538, 0.0], [3538, 3596, 0.01785714]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 15, 0.0], [15, 437, 0.0], [437, 455, 0.0], [455, 475, 0.0], [475, 500, 0.0], [500, 3301, 0.0], [3301, 3403, 0.0], [3403, 3415, 0.0], [3415, 3538, 0.0], [3538, 3596, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 15, 0.13333333], [15, 437, 0.15165877], [437, 455, 0.16666667], [455, 475, 0.1], [475, 500, 0.12], [500, 3301, 0.01142449], [3301, 3403, 0.00980392], [3403, 3415, 0.25], [3415, 3538, 0.00813008], [3538, 3596, 0.06896552]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3596, 0.08398986]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3596, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3596, 0.20100743]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3596, -143.55247061]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3596, -26.42958957]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3596, -83.04158083]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3596, 30.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
NATO plans to acquire an Alliance Ground Surveillance (AGS) system that will give commanders a comprehensive picture of the situation on the ground. NATO’s operation to protect civilians in Libya showed how important such a capability is. A group of Allies intends to acquire five unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) and the associated command and control base stations. NATO will then operate and maintain them on behalf of all 28 Allies. The AGS system is expected to be acquired by 14 Allies (Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Germany, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Norway, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia and the United States), and then will be made available to the Alliance in the 2015-2017 timeframe. This key transatlantic procurement programme is in execution after the 14 acquisition nations signed the procurement contract at the Chicago Summit in May 2012. The NATO-owned and -operated AGS core capability will enable the Alliance to perform persistent surveillance over wide areas from high-altitude, long-endurance, unmanned aerial platforms operating at considerable stand-off distances and in any weather or light condition. Using advanced radar sensors, these systems will continuously detect and track moving objects throughout observed areas and will provide radar imagery of areas of interest and stationary objects. The main operating base for AGS will be located at Sigonella Air Base in Italy, which will serve a dual purpose as a NATO Joint Intelligence, Surveillance & Reconnaissance (JISR) deployment base and data exploitation and training centre. Just as NATO’s Airborne Early Warning & Control (NAEW&C) aircraft – also known as AWACS – monitor Alliance airspace, AGS will be able to observe what is happening on the earth’s surface, providing situational awareness before, during and, if needed, after NATO operations. AGS responds to one of the major capability commitments of the Lisbon Summit. The AGS Core will be an integrated system consisting of an air segment, a ground segment and a support segment. The air segment consists of five Global Hawk Block 40 high-altitude, long-endurance UAVs. The UAVs will be equipped with a state-of-the-art, multi-platform radar technology insertion program (MP-RTIP) ground surveillance radar sensor, as well as an extensive suite of line-of-sight and beyond-line-of-sight, long-range, wideband data links. The air segment will also contain the UAV flight control stations. The ground segment will provide an interface between the AGS Core system and a wide range of command, control, intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (C2ISR) systems to interconnect with and provide data to multiple deployed and non-deployed operational users, including reach-back facilities remote from the surveillance area. The ground segment component will consist of a number of ground stations in various configurations, such as mobile and transportable, which will provide data-link connectivity, data-processing and exploitation capabilities and interfaces for interoperability with C2ISR systems. The AGS Core support segment will include dedicated mission support facilities at the AGS main operating base (MOB) in Sigonella, Italy. Contributions-in-kind provided by France and the United Kingdom will complement the AGS with additional surveillance systems. The composition of the AGS Core system and these contributions-in-kind will provide NATO with considerable flexibility in employing its ground surveillance capabilities. This will be supplemented by additional interoperable national airborne surveillance systems from NATO nations, tailored to the needs of a specific operation or mission conducted by the Alliance. Mechanisms The NATO Alliance Ground Surveillance Management Organization (NAGSMO) is responsible for the acquisition of the AGS core capability on behalf of the 14 participating nations. The AGS Implementation Office (AGS IO) at Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe (SHAPE) is responsible for ensuring the successful operational integration and employment of the NATO AGS core capability. The NATO Alliance Ground Surveillance Management Agency (NAGSMA), representing the 14 AGS acquisition nations, has received the final AGS system proposal from the prime contractor and the contractual negotiation has been successfully finalised. The contractual arrangements are being evaluated and staffed by procurement nations. The contract award is expected at the Chicago Summit or shortly thereafter. The industries of all 14 participating nations will contribute to the delivery of the AGS system. The engagement of NATO common funds for infrastructure, communications, operation and support will follow normal funding authorisation procedures applicable within the Alliance. By the time AGS becomes fully operational in 2017, France and the United Kingdom will sign a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the Strategic Allied Commander Europe (SACEUR), outlining the modalities for making their contributions-in-kind available to the Alliance. Supporting NATO’s core tasks The Lisbon Summit set out the vision of Allied heads of state and government for the evolution of NATO and the security of its member nations. This vision is based on three core tasks, which are detailed in the new Strategic Concept: cooperative security crisis management collective defence AGS was recognised at Lisbon as a critical capability for the Alliance and is planned to be a major contributor to NATO’s Joint Intelligence, Surveillance & Reconnaissance (JISR) ambition. AGS will contribute to these three core tasks through using its Swath & Spot Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) and its Ground Moving Target Indicator (GMTI) capabilities to collect information that will provide political and military decision makers with a comprehensive picture of the situation on the ground. Evolution Originating from the Defence Planning Committee in 1992, the AGS programme was defined as a capability acquisition effort in 1995, when the NATO Defence Ministers agreed that “the Alliance should pursue work on a minimum essential NATO-owned and operated AGS core capability, supplemented by interoperable national assets”. The AGS programme was to provide NATO with a complete and integrated ground surveillance capability that would offer the Alliance and its nations unrestricted and unfiltered access to ground surveillance data in near-real-time and in an interoperable manner. It was to include an air segment comprising airborne radar sensors and a ground segment comprising fixed, transportable and mobile ground stations for data exploitation and dissemination, all seamlessly interconnected linked through high-performance data links. From the outset, the AGS capability was expected to be based on one or more types of ground surveillance assets either already existing or in development in NATO nations, an approach that later also came to include proposed developmental systems based on US or European radars. However, all those approaches failed to obtain sufficient support by the NATO nations to allow their realisation. In 2001, the Reinforced North Atlantic Council (NAC(R)) decided to revitalise AGS through a developmental programme available to all NATO nations and a corresponding cooperative radar development effort called the Transatlantic Cooperative AGS Radar (TCAR). In 2004, NATO decided to move ahead with what was labelled as a mixed-fleet approach. The air segment was to include Airbus A321 manned aircraft and Global Hawk Block 40 UAVs, both carrying versions of the TCAR radar, while the ground segment was to comprise an extensive set of fixed and deployable ground stations. Due to declining European defence budgets, NATO decided in 2007 to discontinue the mixed fleet approach and instead to move forward with a simplified AGS system where the air segment was based on the on the off-the-shelf Global Hawk Block 40 UAV and its associated multi-platform radar technology insertion program (MP-RTIP) sensor. The ground segment, which would largely be developed and built by European and Canadian industry, remained virtually unchanged as its functional and operational characteristics were largely independent of the actual aircraft and sensor used. In February 2009, the NATO nations participating in the AGS programme started the process to sign the Programme Memorandum of Understanding (PMOU). This was a significant step forward on the road towards realising an urgently required, operationally essential capability for NATO. NAGSMA was established in September 2009, after all participating nations had agreed on the PMOU. The PMOU serves as the basis for the procurement of this new NATO capability. Another important milestone for the AGS programme was the 2010 Lisbon Summit, where the strong operational need for a NATO owned and operated AGS capability was re-confirmed with NATO’s new Strategic Concept. AGS also featured in the Lisbon Package as one of the Alliance’s most pressing capability needs. On 3 February 2012, the North Atlantic Council (NAC) decided on a way ahead to collectively cover the costs for operating AGS for the benefit of the Alliance. The decision to engage NATO common funding for infrastructure, satellite communications and operations and support paves the way for awarding the AGS acquisition contract by 14 Allies. In addition, an agreement was reached to make the United Kingdom Sentinel system and the future French Heron TP system available as national contributions-in-kind, partly replacing financial contributions from those two Allies. Facts and Figures General characteristics of the Global Hawk Block 40 UAV: Primary function: High-altitude, long-endurance intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance Power Plant: Rolls Royce-North American AE 3007H turbofan Thrust: 7,600 lbs Wingspan: 130.9 ft / 39.8 m Length: 47.6 ft / 14.5 m Height: 15.3 ft / 4.7 m Weight: 14,950 lbs / 6,781 kg Maximum takeoff weight: 32,250 lbs / 14,628 kg Fuel Capacity: 17,300 lbs / 7,847 kg Payload: 3,000 lbs / 1,360 kg Speed: 310 knots / 357 mph / 575 kph Range: 8,700 nautical miles / 10,112 miles / 16,113 km Ceiling: 60,000 ft / 18,288 m Last updated: 15-Apr-2013 12:53 Natochannel.tv NATO’s New Unmanned Air Vehicles 03 Feb. 2012 Alliance Ground Surveillance to protect NATO forces24 May. 2012 NATO Alliance Ground Surveillance Programme takes off in Chicago20 May. 2012 Press briefing by the NATO Spokesperson and the Deputy Assistant Secretary General, Defence Policy and Planning Division on 15 February 201215 Feb. 2012 Statement by the Secretary General on Danish withdrawal from AGS project22 Jun. 2010 Defence Ministers mark progress on Alliance Ground Surveillance (AGS) Programme23 Oct. 2009 Media backgrounder: Allied Ground Surveillance (AGS) Summit Declaration on Defence Capabilities: Toward NATO Forces 202020 May. 2012 The Alliance's Strategic Concept approved by the Heads of State and Government participating in the meeting of the North Atlantic Council in Washington D.C.24 Apr. 1999 NATO Alliance Ground Surveillance Management Agency (NAGSMA) NATO Library Articles on this subject Organization What is NATO?
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1617
{"url": "http://www.nato.int/cps/en/SID-0A3E43B0-FF652DF9/natolive/topics_48892.htm", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nato.int", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:15:33Z", "digest": "sha1:Q5MDI5DU5MSV7LWQWK5KLDXKDJ726RBO"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 11176, 11176.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 11176, 13062.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 11176, 30.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 11176, 125.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 11176, 0.92]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 11176, 245.9]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 11176, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 11176, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 11176, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 11176, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 11176, 0.28790882]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 11176, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 11176, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 11176, 0.07543898]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 11176, 0.05137654]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 11176, 0.02124431]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 11176, 0.00997182]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 11176, 0.00997182]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 11176, 0.01040538]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 11176, 0.01972686]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 11176, 0.00737047]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 11176, 0.0579782]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 11176, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 11176, 0.18830525]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 11176, 0.38966565]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 11176, 5.60851064]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 11176, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 11176, 5.62254427]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 11176, 1645.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 436, 1.0], [436, 880, 1.0], [880, 1348, 1.0], [1348, 1859, 1.0], [1859, 1937, 1.0], [1937, 2049, 1.0], [2049, 2457, 1.0], [2457, 3504, 1.0], [3504, 3711, 0.0], [3711, 4598, 1.0], [4598, 5076, 0.0], [5076, 5875, 0.0], [5875, 7370, 1.0], [7370, 9615, 0.0], [9615, 9949, 0.0], [9949, 10063, 0.0], [10063, 10185, 0.0], [10185, 10217, 0.0], [10217, 10232, 0.0], [10232, 10278, 0.0], [10278, 10342, 0.0], [10342, 10419, 0.0], [10419, 10572, 0.0], [10572, 10657, 0.0], [10657, 10749, 0.0], [10749, 10802, 0.0], [10802, 10882, 0.0], [10882, 11051, 0.0], [11051, 11112, 0.0], [11112, 11176, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 436, 0.0], [436, 880, 0.0], [880, 1348, 0.0], [1348, 1859, 0.0], [1859, 1937, 0.0], [1937, 2049, 0.0], [2049, 2457, 0.0], [2457, 3504, 0.0], [3504, 3711, 0.0], [3711, 4598, 0.0], [4598, 5076, 0.0], [5076, 5875, 0.0], [5875, 7370, 0.0], [7370, 9615, 0.0], [9615, 9949, 0.0], [9949, 10063, 0.0], [10063, 10185, 0.0], [10185, 10217, 0.0], [10217, 10232, 0.0], [10232, 10278, 0.0], [10278, 10342, 0.0], [10342, 10419, 0.0], [10419, 10572, 0.0], [10572, 10657, 0.0], [10657, 10749, 0.0], [10749, 10802, 0.0], [10802, 10882, 0.0], [10882, 11051, 0.0], [11051, 11112, 0.0], [11112, 11176, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 436, 70.0], [436, 880, 66.0], [880, 1348, 64.0], [1348, 1859, 79.0], [1859, 1937, 13.0], [1937, 2049, 20.0], [2049, 2457, 56.0], [2457, 3504, 141.0], [3504, 3711, 29.0], [3711, 4598, 126.0], [4598, 5076, 65.0], [5076, 5875, 123.0], [5875, 7370, 218.0], [7370, 9615, 348.0], [9615, 9949, 48.0], [9949, 10063, 18.0], [10063, 10185, 20.0], [10185, 10217, 4.0], [10217, 10232, 1.0], [10232, 10278, 8.0], [10278, 10342, 9.0], [10342, 10419, 11.0], [10419, 10572, 23.0], [10572, 10657, 13.0], [10657, 10749, 12.0], [10749, 10802, 6.0], [10802, 10882, 11.0], [10882, 11051, 26.0], [11051, 11112, 7.0], [11112, 11176, 10.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 436, 0.00468384], [436, 880, 0.03764706], [880, 1348, 0.0], [1348, 1859, 0.0], [1859, 1937, 0.0], [1937, 2049, 0.0], [2049, 2457, 0.00520833], [2457, 3504, 0.00195886], [3504, 3711, 0.0], [3711, 4598, 0.00689655], [4598, 5076, 0.00860215], [5076, 5875, 0.0], [5875, 7370, 0.00816882], [7370, 9615, 0.0154335], [9615, 9949, 0.12211221], [9949, 10063, 0.2755102], [10063, 10185, 0.32038835], [10185, 10217, 0.37037037], [10217, 10232, 0.0], [10232, 10278, 0.13636364], [10278, 10342, 0.09677419], [10342, 10419, 0.08], [10419, 10572, 0.08], [10572, 10657, 0.07228916], [10657, 10749, 0.06818182], [10749, 10802, 0.0], [10802, 10882, 0.12987013], [10882, 11051, 0.03658537], [11051, 11112, 0.0], [11112, 11176, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 436, 0.0], [436, 880, 0.0], [880, 1348, 0.0], [1348, 1859, 0.0], [1859, 1937, 0.0], [1937, 2049, 0.0], [2049, 2457, 0.0], [2457, 3504, 0.0], [3504, 3711, 0.0], [3711, 4598, 0.0], [4598, 5076, 0.0], [5076, 5875, 0.0], [5875, 7370, 0.0], [7370, 9615, 0.0], [9615, 9949, 0.0], [9949, 10063, 0.0], [10063, 10185, 0.0], [10185, 10217, 0.0], [10217, 10232, 0.0], [10232, 10278, 0.0], [10278, 10342, 0.0], [10342, 10419, 0.0], [10419, 10572, 0.0], [10572, 10657, 0.0], [10657, 10749, 0.0], [10749, 10802, 0.0], [10802, 10882, 0.0], [10882, 11051, 0.0], [11051, 11112, 0.0], [11112, 11176, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 436, 0.05733945], [436, 880, 0.05855856], [880, 1348, 0.02136752], [1348, 1859, 0.09197652], [1859, 1937, 0.06410256], [1937, 2049, 0.04464286], [2049, 2457, 0.05147059], [2457, 3504, 0.04106972], [3504, 3711, 0.03381643], [3711, 4598, 0.08680947], [4598, 5076, 0.07112971], [5076, 5875, 0.06007509], [5875, 7370, 0.04882943], [7370, 9615, 0.0623608], [9615, 9949, 0.06886228], [9949, 10063, 0.03508772], [10063, 10185, 0.02459016], [10185, 10217, 0.0625], [10217, 10232, 0.06666667], [10232, 10278, 0.19565217], [10278, 10342, 0.125], [10342, 10419, 0.12987013], [10419, 10572, 0.10457516], [10572, 10657, 0.09411765], [10657, 10749, 0.10869565], [10749, 10802, 0.13207547], [10802, 10882, 0.1375], [10882, 11051, 0.08284024], [11051, 11112, 0.24590164], [11112, 11176, 0.1875]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 11176, 0.66765195]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 11176, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 11176, 0.94372958]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 11176, -651.32733936]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 11176, -8.60212505]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 11176, 128.95519127]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 11176, 69.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
GE Offers Carbon-Reduction Credit Card NAW Staff, Wednesday 25 July 2007 - 11:53:02 Fairfield, Conn.-headquartered General Electric Co. (GE) has introduced the GE Money Earth Rewards Platinum MasterCard, the first U.S. credit card designed to reduce cardholders' carbon emissions through greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions offsets.The credit card allows users to reduce their carbon footprints by automatically contributing up to 1% of their card purchases to buy greenhouse gas emissions offsets.All card rewards designated for GHG reduction projects will be accrued over the year, GE explains. Each Earth Day (April 22), those rewards will be used to purchase and retire GHG credits through GE AES Greenhouse Gas Services, a joint venture between GE Energy Financial Services and The AES Corp., which will identify and invest in projects that reduce GHG emissions.In addition, GE AES Greenhouse Gas Services recently unveiled a comprehensive standard for the creation and sale of its GHG credits in the U.S. The standard will ensure that credits produced by the joint venture are scientifically verified and provide a positive, measurable environmental benefit, according to the company. this content item is from North American Windpower ( http://www.nawindpower.com/e107_plugins/content/content.php?content.1010 )
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1618
{"url": "http://www.nawindpower.com/print.php?plugin:content.1010", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nawindpower.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:38:10Z", "digest": "sha1:F7EPTYN7N5N226GXB3LF6KQTJEOPCJLJ"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 1313, 1313.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1313, 1357.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1313, 5.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1313, 6.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1313, 0.92]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1313, 296.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1313, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1313, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1313, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1313, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1313, 0.23076923]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1313, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1313, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1313, 0.04832714]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1313, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1313, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1313, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1313, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1313, 0.04832714]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1313, 0.02788104]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1313, 0.03345725]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1313, 0.08097166]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1313, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1313, 0.20647773]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1313, 0.61827957]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1313, 5.78494624]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1313, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1313, 4.5156114]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1313, 186.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 39, 0.0], [39, 84, 0.0], [84, 1186, 1.0], [1186, 1237, 0.0], [1237, 1313, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 39, 0.0], [39, 84, 0.0], [84, 1186, 0.0], [1186, 1237, 0.0], [1237, 1313, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 39, 5.0], [39, 84, 7.0], [84, 1186, 165.0], [1186, 1237, 8.0], [1237, 1313, 1.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 39, 0.0], [39, 84, 0.30769231], [84, 1186, 0.00280112], [1186, 1237, 0.0], [1237, 1313, 0.11666667]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 39, 0.0], [39, 84, 0.0], [84, 1186, 0.0], [1186, 1237, 0.0], [1237, 1313, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 39, 0.17948718], [39, 84, 0.13333333], [84, 1186, 0.06352087], [1186, 1237, 0.05882353], [1237, 1313, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1313, 0.17403203]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1313, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1313, 0.1157425]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1313, -147.38503613]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1313, -25.6770802]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1313, -20.58687891]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1313, 18.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
| Reviews | Buy Online | Country Global Site Australia Canada China Denmark Finland France Germany Hong Kong Japan Korea New Zealand Norway Sweden UK USA Classical Music Home > New Releases EuroArts - April 2014 DELIBES, L.: Coppélia (Victor Ullate Ballet, 2013) (Blu-ray, HD) Coppelia (Victor Ullate Ballet, 2013) (Blu-ray, HD) Acosta, D. | Calero, Z. | Cassegrain, S. | Castresana, L. | Mulens, Y. | Oliveri, C. | Tapia, A. | Yu, Z. | Victor Ullate Ballet DELIBES, L.: Coppélia (Victor Ullate Ballet, 2013) (NTSC) Coppelia (Victor Ullate Ballet, 2013) (NTSC) EUROPA-KONZERT 1991 - MOZART, W.A. (Blu-ray, Full-HD) Don Giovanni, K. 527 (excerpts) (Blu-ray, Full-HD) ♦ Symphony No. 29 in A Major, K. 201 (Blu-ray, Full-HD) ♦ Ch'io mi scordi di te … Non temer, amato bene, K. 505 (Blu-ray, Full-HD) ♦ Symphony No. 35 in D Major, K. 385, `Haffner` (Blu-ray, Full-HD) Canino, B. | Studer, C. | Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra | Abbado, C. EUROPA-KONZERT 1995 - BEETHOVEN, L. van / BLACHER, B. / PAGANINI, N. / STRAVINSKY, I. / DVORÁK, A. (Sarah Chang, Mehta) (Blu-ray, Full-HD) Fidelio, Op. 72: Overture (Blu-ray, Full-HD) ♦ Orchestral Variations on a Theme by Paganini, Op. 26 (Blu-ray, Full-HD) ♦ Violin Concerto No. 1 in D Major, Op. 6, MS 21: I. Allegro maestoso (Blu-ray, Full-HD) ♦ Petrushka (Blu-ray, Full-HD) ♦ Slavonic Dance in G Minor, Op. 46, No. 8, B. 83 (Blu-ray, Full-HD) Chang, S. | Mehta, Z. RAABE, Max: Max Raabe and Palast Orchester (Waldbühne, 2006) (Blu-ray, Full-HD) Max Raabe and Palast Orchester (Blu-ray, Full-HD) Raabe, M. | Palast Orchester Not available in Germany, Austria, Switzerland and Liechtenstein SCHRODER, Mario: Chaplin (Ballet) (Leipzig Ballet, 2013) (Blu-ray, Full-HD) Chaplin (Leipzig Ballet, 2013) (Blu-ray, Full-HD) Avemarg, R. | Calil de Albuquerque, I. | Galster, T. | Lobo Garcia, U. | Preiss, O. | Shield, V. | Teutscher, A. | Waller, A. | Leipzig Ballet | Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra | Foremny, M. SCHRODER, Mario: Chaplin (Ballet) (Leipzig Ballet, 2013) (NTSC) Chaplin (Leipzig Ballet, 2013) (NTSC) SIMON RATTLE AND THE BERLIN PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA (4 Blu-ray Disc Set) Prince Igor: Polovtsian Dances (Blu-ray, Full-HD) ♦ Symphony No. 2 in B Minor (Blu-ray, Full-HD) ♦ Khovanshchina, Act I: Prelude (Blu-ray, Full-HD) ♦ Pictures at an Exhibition (orch. M. Ravel) (Blu-ray, Full-HD) ♦ The Golden Age Suite, Op. 22a: IV. Dance: Allegro (Blu-ray, Full-HD) ♦ The Nutcracker, Op. 71 (Blu-ray, Full-HD) ♦ Piano Concerto No. 3 in D Minor, Op. 30 (Blu-ray, Full-HD) ♦ Le sacre du printemps (The Rite of Spring) (Blu-ray, Full-HD) ♦ Parsifal: Prelude (Blu-ray, Full-HD) ♦ Double Concerto for Violin and Cello in A Minor, Op. 102 (Blu-ray, Full-HD) ♦ Symphony No. 4 in E Minor, Op. 98 (Blu-ray, Full-HD) ♦ Symphony in 3 Movements (Blu-ray, Full-HD) ♦ Violin Concerto No. 1 in G Minor, Op. 26 (Blu-ray, Full-HD) ♦ Symphony No. 7 in A Major, Op. 92 (Blu-ray, Full-HD) Batiashvili, L. | Bronfman, Y. | Mork, T. | Repin, V. | Rattle, S. Select Month/Year: April - 2014 March - 2014 February - 2014 January - 2014 December - 2013 November - 2013 October - 2013 September - 2013 August - 2013 July - 2013 June - 2013 May - 2013 Naxos Arthaus Musik Basel Symphony Orchestra Campanella Musica Christopher Nupen Film Divox Solo Musica Tactus Naxos Ebooks
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1619
{"url": "http://www.naxos.com/newreleases.asp?lbl=EAD&releasemonth1=2010/5&displayname=EuroArts", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.naxos.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:48:44Z", "digest": "sha1:JYBRBGH63X7PINWJO76MRBUPZKB4N2WF"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3285, 3285.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3285, 5384.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3285, 60.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3285, 149.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3285, 0.69]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3285, 249.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3285, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3285, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3285, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3285, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3285, 0.0247678]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3285, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3285, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3285, 0.22620572]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3285, 0.11438327]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3285, 0.09816475]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3285, 0.02731541]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3285, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3285, 0.14852753]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3285, 0.11096884]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3285, 0.05377721]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3285, 0.12074303]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3285, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3285, 0.49019608]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3285, 0.4889336]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3285, 4.71428571]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3285, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3285, 4.92452369]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3285, 497.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 190, 0.0], [190, 278, 0.0], [278, 330, 0.0], [330, 341, 1.0], [341, 354, 1.0], [354, 371, 1.0], [371, 388, 1.0], [388, 401, 1.0], [401, 415, 1.0], [415, 427, 1.0], [427, 436, 1.0], [436, 459, 0.0], [459, 518, 0.0], [518, 563, 0.0], [563, 617, 0.0], [617, 868, 0.0], [868, 879, 1.0], [879, 892, 1.0], [892, 924, 0.0], [924, 937, 1.0], [937, 1077, 0.0], [1077, 1385, 0.0], [1385, 1395, 1.0], [1395, 1407, 1.0], [1407, 1488, 0.0], [1488, 1538, 0.0], [1538, 1548, 1.0], [1548, 1567, 0.0], [1567, 1632, 0.0], [1632, 1708, 0.0], [1708, 1758, 0.0], [1758, 1770, 1.0], [1770, 1797, 1.0], [1797, 1811, 1.0], [1811, 1829, 1.0], [1829, 1842, 1.0], [1842, 1855, 1.0], [1855, 1871, 1.0], [1871, 1884, 1.0], [1884, 1901, 0.0], [1901, 1932, 0.0], [1932, 1946, 1.0], [1946, 2010, 0.0], [2010, 2048, 0.0], [2048, 2120, 0.0], [2120, 2906, 0.0], [2906, 2922, 1.0], [2922, 2937, 1.0], [2937, 2948, 1.0], [2948, 2960, 1.0], [2960, 2973, 1.0], [2973, 3168, 0.0], [3168, 3182, 0.0], [3182, 3207, 0.0], [3207, 3225, 0.0], [3225, 3248, 0.0], [3248, 3254, 0.0], [3254, 3266, 0.0], [3266, 3273, 0.0], [3273, 3285, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 190, 0.0], [190, 278, 0.0], [278, 330, 0.0], [330, 341, 0.0], [341, 354, 0.0], [354, 371, 0.0], [371, 388, 0.0], [388, 401, 0.0], [401, 415, 0.0], [415, 427, 0.0], [427, 436, 0.0], [436, 459, 0.0], [459, 518, 0.0], [518, 563, 0.0], [563, 617, 0.0], [617, 868, 0.0], [868, 879, 0.0], [879, 892, 0.0], [892, 924, 0.0], [924, 937, 0.0], [937, 1077, 0.0], [1077, 1385, 0.0], [1385, 1395, 0.0], [1395, 1407, 0.0], [1407, 1488, 0.0], [1488, 1538, 0.0], [1538, 1548, 0.0], [1548, 1567, 0.0], [1567, 1632, 0.0], [1632, 1708, 0.0], [1708, 1758, 0.0], [1758, 1770, 0.0], [1770, 1797, 0.0], [1797, 1811, 0.0], [1811, 1829, 0.0], [1829, 1842, 0.0], [1842, 1855, 0.0], [1855, 1871, 0.0], [1871, 1884, 0.0], [1884, 1901, 0.0], [1901, 1932, 0.0], [1932, 1946, 0.0], [1946, 2010, 0.0], [2010, 2048, 0.0], [2048, 2120, 0.0], [2120, 2906, 0.0], [2906, 2922, 0.0], [2922, 2937, 0.0], [2937, 2948, 0.0], [2948, 2960, 0.0], [2960, 2973, 0.0], [2973, 3168, 0.0], [3168, 3182, 0.0], [3182, 3207, 0.0], [3207, 3225, 0.0], [3225, 3248, 0.0], [3248, 3254, 0.0], [3254, 3266, 0.0], [3266, 3273, 0.0], [3273, 3285, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 190, 28.0], [190, 278, 12.0], [278, 330, 7.0], [330, 341, 2.0], [341, 354, 2.0], [354, 371, 2.0], [371, 388, 2.0], [388, 401, 2.0], [401, 415, 2.0], [415, 427, 2.0], [427, 436, 2.0], [436, 459, 3.0], [459, 518, 8.0], [518, 563, 6.0], [563, 617, 6.0], [617, 868, 45.0], [868, 879, 2.0], [879, 892, 2.0], [892, 924, 3.0], [924, 937, 2.0], [937, 1077, 18.0], [1077, 1385, 53.0], [1385, 1395, 2.0], [1395, 1407, 2.0], [1407, 1488, 11.0], [1488, 1538, 7.0], [1538, 1548, 2.0], [1548, 1567, 2.0], [1567, 1632, 8.0], [1632, 1708, 9.0], [1708, 1758, 6.0], [1758, 1770, 2.0], [1770, 1797, 4.0], [1797, 1811, 2.0], [1811, 1829, 3.0], [1829, 1842, 2.0], [1842, 1855, 2.0], [1855, 1871, 2.0], [1871, 1884, 2.0], [1884, 1901, 2.0], [1901, 1932, 3.0], [1932, 1946, 2.0], [1946, 2010, 8.0], [2010, 2048, 5.0], [2048, 2120, 11.0], [2120, 2906, 134.0], [2906, 2922, 2.0], [2922, 2937, 2.0], [2937, 2948, 2.0], [2948, 2960, 2.0], [2960, 2973, 2.0], [2973, 3168, 27.0], [3168, 3182, 2.0], [3182, 3207, 3.0], [3207, 3225, 2.0], [3225, 3248, 3.0], [3248, 3254, 1.0], [3254, 3266, 2.0], [3266, 3273, 1.0], [3273, 3285, 2.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 190, 0.0], [190, 278, 0.10526316], [278, 330, 0.09090909], [330, 341, 0.0], [341, 354, 0.0], [354, 371, 0.0], [371, 388, 0.0], [388, 401, 0.0], [401, 415, 0.0], [415, 427, 0.0], [427, 436, 0.0], [436, 459, 0.0], [459, 518, 0.07843137], [518, 563, 0.1025641], [563, 617, 0.0952381], [617, 868, 0.07476636], [868, 879, 0.0], [879, 892, 0.0], [892, 924, 0.0], [924, 937, 0.0], [937, 1077, 0.03603604], [1077, 1385, 0.0490566], [1385, 1395, 0.0], [1395, 1407, 0.0], [1407, 1488, 0.07042254], [1488, 1538, 0.0], [1538, 1548, 0.0], [1548, 1567, 0.0], [1567, 1632, 0.0], [1632, 1708, 0.06349206], [1708, 1758, 0.09756098], [1758, 1770, 0.0], [1770, 1797, 0.0], [1797, 1811, 0.0], [1811, 1829, 0.0], [1829, 1842, 0.0], [1842, 1855, 0.0], [1855, 1871, 0.0], [1871, 1884, 0.0], [1884, 1901, 0.0], [1901, 1932, 0.0], [1932, 1946, 0.0], [1946, 2010, 0.07407407], [2010, 2048, 0.125], [2048, 2120, 0.01470588], [2120, 2906, 0.03074671], [2906, 2922, 0.0], [2922, 2937, 0.0], [2937, 2948, 0.0], [2948, 2960, 0.0], [2960, 2973, 0.0], [2973, 3168, 0.28571429], [3168, 3182, 0.0], [3182, 3207, 0.0], [3207, 3225, 0.0], [3225, 3248, 0.0], [3248, 3254, 0.0], [3254, 3266, 0.0], [3266, 3273, 0.0], [3273, 3285, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 190, 0.0], [190, 278, 0.0], [278, 330, 0.0], [330, 341, 0.0], [341, 354, 0.0], [354, 371, 0.0], [371, 388, 0.0], [388, 401, 0.0], [401, 415, 0.0], [415, 427, 0.0], [427, 436, 0.0], [436, 459, 0.0], [459, 518, 0.0], [518, 563, 0.0], [563, 617, 0.0], [617, 868, 0.0], [868, 879, 0.0], [879, 892, 0.0], [892, 924, 0.0], [924, 937, 0.0], [937, 1077, 0.0], [1077, 1385, 0.0], [1385, 1395, 0.0], [1395, 1407, 0.0], [1407, 1488, 0.0], [1488, 1538, 0.0], [1538, 1548, 0.0], [1548, 1567, 0.0], [1567, 1632, 0.0], [1632, 1708, 0.0], [1708, 1758, 0.0], [1758, 1770, 0.0], [1770, 1797, 0.0], [1797, 1811, 0.0], [1811, 1829, 0.0], [1829, 1842, 0.0], [1842, 1855, 0.0], [1855, 1871, 0.0], [1871, 1884, 0.0], [1884, 1901, 0.0], [1901, 1932, 0.0], [1932, 1946, 0.0], [1946, 2010, 0.0], [2010, 2048, 0.0], [2048, 2120, 0.0], [2120, 2906, 0.0], [2906, 2922, 0.0], [2922, 2937, 0.0], [2937, 2948, 0.0], [2948, 2960, 0.0], [2960, 2973, 0.0], [2973, 3168, 0.0], [3168, 3182, 0.0], [3182, 3207, 0.0], [3207, 3225, 0.0], [3225, 3248, 0.0], [3248, 3254, 0.0], [3254, 3266, 0.0], [3266, 3273, 0.0], [3273, 3285, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 190, 0.16315789], [190, 278, 0.21590909], [278, 330, 0.13461538], [330, 341, 0.18181818], [341, 354, 0.15384615], [354, 371, 0.11764706], [371, 388, 0.11764706], [388, 401, 0.15384615], [401, 415, 0.14285714], [415, 427, 0.16666667], [427, 436, 0.22222222], [436, 459, 0.13043478], [459, 518, 0.28813559], [518, 563, 0.17777778], [563, 617, 0.46296296], [617, 868, 0.1314741], [868, 879, 0.18181818], [879, 892, 0.15384615], [892, 924, 0.09375], [924, 937, 0.15384615], [937, 1077, 0.46428571], [1077, 1385, 0.14935065], [1385, 1395, 0.2], [1395, 1407, 0.16666667], [1407, 1488, 0.19753086], [1488, 1538, 0.16], [1538, 1548, 0.2], [1548, 1567, 0.10526316], [1567, 1632, 0.07692308], [1632, 1708, 0.22368421], [1708, 1758, 0.14], [1758, 1770, 0.16666667], [1770, 1797, 0.11111111], [1797, 1811, 0.14285714], [1811, 1829, 0.16666667], [1829, 1842, 0.15384615], [1842, 1855, 0.15384615], [1855, 1871, 0.125], [1871, 1884, 0.15384615], [1884, 1901, 0.11764706], [1901, 1932, 0.09677419], [1932, 1946, 0.14285714], [1946, 2010, 0.265625], [2010, 2048, 0.18421053], [2048, 2120, 0.65277778], [2120, 2906, 0.15394402], [2906, 2922, 0.125], [2922, 2937, 0.13333333], [2937, 2948, 0.18181818], [2948, 2960, 0.16666667], [2960, 2973, 0.15384615], [2973, 3168, 0.08205128], [3168, 3182, 0.14285714], [3182, 3207, 0.12], [3207, 3225, 0.11111111], [3225, 3248, 0.13043478], [3248, 3254, 0.16666667], [3254, 3266, 0.16666667], [3266, 3273, 0.14285714], [3273, 3285, 0.16666667]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3285, 0.00036919]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3285, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3285, 0.82383561]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3285, -622.32662862]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3285, -363.25312331]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3285, 18.06996694]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3285, 67.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
| Reviews | Buy Online | Country Global Site Australia Canada China Denmark Finland France Germany Hong Kong Japan Korea New Zealand Norway Sweden UK USA Classical Music Home > Hans Schmidt-Isserstedt HANS SCHMIDT-ISSERSTEDT Hans As a child Schmidt-Isserstedt learnt to play the violin, and went on to study at the Berlin High School for Music and Berlin University, where the subject of his doctoral dissertation was the Italian influence upon instrumentation in Mozart’s youthful operas. As was the case with many other significant figures in twentieth-century music, he decided to become a conductor after hearing Nikisch in concert. He began his musical career as a répétiteur at Wuppertal from 1923 to 1928, where he also played in the orchestra as a violinist and where his opera Hassan gewinnt received its first performance in 1928. This period was followed by a typical series of appointments as he worked his way up the musical ladder in Germany: conductor at Rostock from 1928 to 1931, and at Darmstadt from 1931 to 1933; first conductor at Hamburg from 1935 to 1942; and finally chief conductor at the Deutsche Oper, Berlin from 1943 to 1944. Having remained politically neutral throughout the period of the Nazi regime, Schmidt-Isserstedt was invited by Hugh Carlton Greene of the British occupying authorities in Germany (brother of the writer Graham Greene and a future Chairman of the BBC) to found the Symphony Orchestra of North German Radio (NDRSO) based in Hamburg, and he served as chief conductor of this orchestra from 1945 to 1971, when he became its honorary conductor. With the NDRSO Schmidt-Isserstedt toured extensively, visiting England, France, the USSR and the USA. From 1955 to 1964 he was also chief conductor of the Royal Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra, and worked extensively as a guest conductor throughout Europe, appearing with more than one hundred different orchestras: his concerts with the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra were major events in Vienna for both orchestra and audience. Schmidt-Isserstedt’s British operatic appearances were regrettably few but most memorable: they included Mozart’s Le nozze di Figaro at Glyndebourne in 1958 and Wagner’s Tristan und Isolde and Der fliegende Holländer at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden in 1962 and 1972. In his later years he also often appeared in London with the New Philharmonia Orchestra. Together with Karajan, Klemperer and Rosbaud, Schmidt-Issterstedt was a distinguished representative of the Austro-German reaction against the subjectivity of interpretation epitomised by Furtwängler and Abendroth. His baton technique was exemplary, always clear in both phrasing and rhythm, with a wide dynamic sweep. His performances were notable for their acute sense of appropriate tempo, lyrical phrasing, rhythmic firmness and sustained tension. A completely dependable musician, he made numerous commercial studio recordings throughout his career and left a notable recorded legacy. For Decca he recorded a complete cycle of the Beethoven symphonies with the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra; this contained especially fine accounts of the Symphonies Nos 7 and 9 ‘Choral’. For Mercury he made notable recordings of symphonies by Mozart and Schubert with the London Symphony Orchestra and for Tono of two symphonies by Berwald with the Royal Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra. Undoubtedly his richest legacy of recordings lies with the North German Radio Symphony Orchestra: commercially-released issues included, for Decca, excellent accounts of Brahms’s Symphony No. 4, Dvořák’s Symphony No. 7 and Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 5. More recently North German Radio has released many radio recordings which include the complete Brahms symphonies and piano concertos with Claudio Arrau, Tchaikovsky’s Symphonies Nos 4, 5, and 6 ‘Pathètique’, and Dvořák’s Symphonies Nos 8 and 9 ‘From the New World’, as well as works by Stravinsky, Bartók, and Hindemith, for all of whom Schmidt-Isserstedt was a most sympathetic interpreter. His strengths as an opera conductor are fully revealed in several post-war radio recordings made in Hamburg: these include operas by Beethoven (Fidelio – excerpts), Verdi (Aida and La forza del destino), Wagner (Tristan und Isolde) and Mozart (La finta giardinera and Idomeneo), all of which admirably amplify his limited commercially-made operatic repertoire, and completely justify the verdict of Ande Anderson, resident producer at Covent Garden during the 1960s and 1970s, that Schmidt-Isserstedt was ‘the real thing’. © Naxos Rights International Ltd. — David Patmore (A–Z of Conductors, Naxos 8.558087–90). Role: Conductor Album Title Catalogue No Work Category A TO Z OF CONDUCTORS BERGER, Erna: A Vocal Portrait (1934-1949) Naxos Historical8.110733 CULT OPERA OF THE 1970s (Hamburg State Opera, 1967-1971) (NTSC) (11 DVD set) MOZART: Nozze di Figaro (Le) (Hamburg State Opera studio production, 1967) (NTSC) SACK, Erna: The German Nightingale (1934-1950)
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1620
{"url": "http://www.naxos.com/person/Schmidt-Isserstedt,%20Hans/32341.htm", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.naxos.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:56:03Z", "digest": "sha1:ZODPZY3EHKNNZS7BJ2AO52FRA5KJPMYJ"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 4975, 4975.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 4975, 6813.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 4975, 10.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 4975, 63.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 4975, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 4975, 173.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 4975, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 4975, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 4975, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 4975, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 4975, 0.29513514]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 4975, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 4975, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 4975, 0.03513909]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 4975, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 4975, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 4975, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 4975, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 4975, 0.01098097]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 4975, 0.01171303]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 4975, 0.01415325]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 4975, 0.03135135]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 4975, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 4975, 0.20108108]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 4975, 0.51861702]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 4975, 5.44946809]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 4975, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 4975, 5.42412365]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 4975, 752.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 201, 0.0], [201, 4536, 1.0], [4536, 4626, 1.0], [4626, 4654, 0.0], [4654, 4702, 0.0], [4702, 4745, 0.0], [4745, 4770, 0.0], [4770, 4847, 0.0], [4847, 4929, 0.0], [4929, 4975, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 201, 0.0], [201, 4536, 0.0], [4536, 4626, 0.0], [4626, 4654, 0.0], [4654, 4702, 0.0], [4702, 4745, 0.0], [4745, 4770, 0.0], [4770, 4847, 0.0], [4847, 4929, 0.0], [4929, 4975, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 201, 28.0], [201, 4536, 659.0], [4536, 4626, 13.0], [4626, 4654, 4.0], [4654, 4702, 9.0], [4702, 4745, 6.0], [4745, 4770, 2.0], [4770, 4847, 13.0], [4847, 4929, 12.0], [4929, 4975, 6.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 201, 0.0], [201, 4536, 0.02117149], [4536, 4626, 0.10843373], [4626, 4654, 0.0], [4654, 4702, 0.0], [4702, 4745, 0.21621622], [4745, 4770, 0.30434783], [4770, 4847, 0.20588235], [4847, 4929, 0.05479452], [4929, 4975, 0.19512195]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 201, 0.0], [201, 4536, 0.0], [4536, 4626, 0.0], [4626, 4654, 0.0], [4654, 4702, 0.0], [4702, 4745, 0.0], [4745, 4770, 0.0], [4770, 4847, 0.0], [4847, 4929, 0.0], [4929, 4975, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 201, 0.15920398], [201, 4536, 0.04913495], [4536, 4626, 0.11111111], [4626, 4654, 0.14285714], [4654, 4702, 0.41666667], [4702, 4745, 0.23255814], [4745, 4770, 0.08], [4770, 4847, 0.31168831], [4847, 4929, 0.19512195], [4929, 4975, 0.17391304]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 4975, 0.42757672]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 4975, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 4975, 0.94285822]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 4975, -200.8932927]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 4975, -13.70698637]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 4975, 138.6004887]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 4975, 26.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Performance Areas Wind Symphony Nazareth College Opera Workshop Nazareth College Jazz Ensemble Music Department Forms Concert Brochure Music@Naz The Nazareth College Department of Music is well connected with the community of Rochester. Over 200 performances of faculty, guest artists, students, and ensembles are offered each academic year. The culturally rich area of Rochester allows students the opportunity to experience the Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra, the Mercury Opera, and an endless list of performing organizations. In addition to individual lessons and recitals there are many opportunities for students to participate in music ensembles, large and small. OrchestraWind Symphony Chamber Ensembles Flute Ensemble The Nazareth College Flute Ensemble provides weekly chamber and small ensemble experience for both major and non-major flutists. Drawing from the vast repertoire of music arranged for flute choir, as well as from the numerous contemporary works written specifically for this instrumentation, students enjoy the opportunity to work independently in chamber groups as well as collaboratively in large ensembles. The opportunity to play the entire family of flutes (C-flute, Piccolo, Alto Flute, and Bass flute,) develops the students' knowledge of their instrument, and prepares them to lead their own flute ensembles in the future. For more information, please contact Liisa Ambegaokar Grigorov, director Liisa Ambegaokar Grigorov The Jazz Combo, "Loose Change," is an auditioned small ensemble that presents a formal concert each semester, and performs for other events as well, both on and off campus. Rehearsing twice weekly, the ensemble explores the standard jazz repertory, and frequently focuses on one or two composers or styles each semester. Student compositions are encouraged. Members will normally have had some experience with jazz improvisation, since much of the music is improvised. Private jazz improvisation lessons are also available. Rehearsal Time: Mondays and Thursdays, 7:00-8:00 p.m. Dr. Paul Smoker, conductor 585-389-2700 (work) 585-381-3711 (home) Dr. Paul Smoker Clarinet Ensemble The Nazareth College Clarinet Ensemble is conducted by Dr. Marcy Bacon, lecturer in music. Open to clarinet majors and other students by audition, this group was selected to perform at the 2006 International Clarinet Choir Festival at the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, New York. The clarinet ensemble has also appeared at the St. Andrew Concert Series, the Pittsford Library Concert Series and other campus and community venues. Rehearsal Times:Wednesdays 4:00 - 5:20 p.m. Dr. Marcy Bacon, director [email protected] The Nazareth College Jazz Ensemble, while based on the standard saxophone, trumpet, trombone, and rhythm instrumentation, welcomes all instrumentalists who are interested in learning about and performing in the jazz idiom. Rehearsal Time: Mondays and Thursdays, 8:30-9:30 PM Dr. Paul Smoker, conductor 585-389-2700 (work) [email protected] Piano Chamber Players Piano Chamber Players provides opportunities for pianists to participate in piano quartets, trios, duos and duets, vocal accompanying, and mixed chamber ensembles. Students meet weekly to explore literature, and prepare for performances on and off campus. While all piano primaries participate, the ensembles are open to other qualified students upon audition. Dr. Beverly Smoker, director 585-389-2696 [email protected] Saxophone Ensemble The saxophone quartet/ensemble accepts anyone who is interested in performing in the ensemble. Saxophone quartet usually consists of a soprano, alto, tenor and bari saxophones. The saxophone ensemble is formed when students register a group of 6 or more. The repertoire for the ensemble consists of transcriptions and original saxophone quartet pieces. Performances are given each semester. The group meets with the director once a week in addition to the students' own rehearsals. Dr. Chisato Eda Marling, director [email protected] Low Brass Choir The Nazareth College Low Brass Choir is a chamber ensemble open to all low brass students at Nazareth, whether they are music majors or not. The LBC meets once a week on Tuesday evenings from 7:30 to 9:00, and maintains an active on and off campus performance schedule. Members gain valuable ensemble, musical, and technical advancement through the study, rehearsal, and performance of standard low brass choir repertoire, arrangements, and new works by living composers. The Nazareth College Low Brass Choir is open to tubists, trombonists, and euphonium players, as well as members of the community. Steven Zugelder, director [email protected] The Nazareth College Percussion Ensemble is open to any Nazareth College student with percussion training and experience. We meet every Thursday afternoon from 4-6 PM, and present concerts on and off campus each semester. The repertoire includes a broad range from classic literature to contemporary and minimalistic music, world music, marimba ensemble, jazz, rock, and found object "Stomp" style pieces. Students are encouraged to compose and arrange their own pieces for performance by the group. The NCR Percussion Ensemble gives students a chance to develop their musicianship, ensemble and technical skills, and have fun in the process. Rehearsal Time: Tuesdays, 7:30 - 9:30 p.m. Professor Kristen Shiner McGuire, Coordinator of Percussion Studies 585-389-2704 [email protected] The Nazareth College Opera Workshop is a program devoted to the performance of opera, operetta, and all kinds of music theatre. Students involved in the workshop benefit from rehearsals and master classes focusing on musical preparation, character development, stage movement, communication and artistry. Cast members are chosen by audition. Students rehearse in the fall semester, and present a fully-staged performance early in the spring. The students in the program also participate in a recruitment/educational tour following the performances. In November 2005, the workshop presented the New York State premiere of Felice by Benton Hess. Past productions have included: Purcell's Dido and Aeneas, Gilbert & Sullivan's Trial by Jury and Cox and Box, Andrew Lippa's john & jen, Mozart's Marriage of Figaro, Puccini's Sister Angelica, and Sunday Excursion by Rochester's own Alec Wilder. Rehearsal Time: Tuesdays, 6:30 - 8:30 p.m. Dr. Robert Strauss, , stage director [email protected] Dr. Linda Boianova, music director [email protected]
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1621
{"url": "http://www.naz.edu/music/ensembles", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.naz.edu", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:17:04Z", "digest": "sha1:CVCH6XTSVDOOHVMMP66N4RSTF5Q7W2ZB"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 6475, 6475.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 6475, 8002.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 6475, 53.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 6475, 144.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 6475, 0.92]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 6475, 327.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 6475, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 6475, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 6475, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 6475, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 6475, 0.2716763]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 6475, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 6475, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 6475, 0.03838194]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 6475, 0.02634055]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 6475, 0.02634055]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 6475, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 6475, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 6475, 0.03104421]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 6475, 0.02709313]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 6475, 0.01053622]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 6475, 0.00412882]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 6475, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 6475, 0.21800165]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 6475, 0.43683084]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 6475, 5.69057816]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 6475, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 6475, 5.36924221]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 6475, 934.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 18, 0.0], [18, 32, 0.0], [32, 64, 0.0], [64, 95, 0.0], [95, 118, 0.0], [118, 135, 0.0], [135, 145, 0.0], [145, 213, 0.0], [213, 277, 0.0], [277, 346, 0.0], [346, 415, 0.0], [415, 487, 0.0], [487, 532, 1.0], [532, 673, 1.0], [673, 696, 0.0], [696, 714, 0.0], [714, 729, 0.0], [729, 858, 1.0], [858, 1360, 1.0], [1360, 1433, 0.0], [1433, 1459, 0.0], [1459, 1983, 1.0], [1983, 2084, 0.0], [2084, 2104, 0.0], [2104, 2120, 0.0], [2120, 2138, 0.0], [2138, 2575, 1.0], [2575, 2619, 1.0], [2619, 2645, 0.0], [2645, 2661, 0.0], [2661, 2884, 1.0], [2884, 2936, 0.0], [2936, 2983, 0.0], [2983, 3000, 0.0], [3000, 3022, 0.0], [3022, 3383, 1.0], [3383, 3425, 0.0], [3425, 3442, 0.0], [3442, 3461, 0.0], [3461, 3943, 1.0], [3943, 3977, 0.0], [3977, 3991, 0.0], [3991, 4007, 0.0], [4007, 4609, 1.0], [4609, 4635, 0.0], [4635, 4652, 0.0], [4652, 5295, 1.0], [5295, 5338, 1.0], [5338, 5419, 0.0], [5419, 5436, 0.0], [5436, 6370, 1.0], [6370, 6459, 0.0], [6459, 6475, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 18, 0.0], [18, 32, 0.0], [32, 64, 0.0], [64, 95, 0.0], [95, 118, 0.0], [118, 135, 0.0], [135, 145, 0.0], [145, 213, 0.0], [213, 277, 0.0], [277, 346, 0.0], [346, 415, 0.0], [415, 487, 0.0], [487, 532, 0.0], [532, 673, 0.0], [673, 696, 0.0], [696, 714, 0.0], [714, 729, 0.0], [729, 858, 0.0], [858, 1360, 0.0], [1360, 1433, 0.0], [1433, 1459, 0.0], [1459, 1983, 0.0], [1983, 2084, 0.0], [2084, 2104, 0.0], [2104, 2120, 0.0], [2120, 2138, 0.0], [2138, 2575, 0.0], [2575, 2619, 0.0], [2619, 2645, 0.0], [2645, 2661, 0.0], [2661, 2884, 0.0], [2884, 2936, 0.0], [2936, 2983, 0.0], [2983, 3000, 0.0], [3000, 3022, 0.0], [3022, 3383, 0.0], [3383, 3425, 0.0], [3425, 3442, 0.0], [3442, 3461, 0.0], [3461, 3943, 0.0], [3943, 3977, 0.0], [3977, 3991, 0.0], [3991, 4007, 0.0], [4007, 4609, 0.0], [4609, 4635, 0.0], [4635, 4652, 0.0], [4652, 5295, 0.0], [5295, 5338, 0.0], [5338, 5419, 0.0], [5419, 5436, 0.0], [5436, 6370, 0.0], [6370, 6459, 0.0], [6459, 6475, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 18, 2.0], [18, 32, 2.0], [32, 64, 4.0], [64, 95, 4.0], [95, 118, 3.0], [118, 135, 2.0], [135, 145, 1.0], [145, 213, 11.0], [213, 277, 9.0], [277, 346, 10.0], [346, 415, 10.0], [415, 487, 9.0], [487, 532, 6.0], [532, 673, 21.0], [673, 696, 2.0], [696, 714, 2.0], [714, 729, 2.0], [729, 858, 18.0], [858, 1360, 76.0], [1360, 1433, 9.0], [1433, 1459, 3.0], [1459, 1983, 79.0], [1983, 2084, 13.0], [2084, 2104, 2.0], [2104, 2120, 3.0], [2120, 2138, 2.0], [2138, 2575, 69.0], [2575, 2619, 5.0], [2619, 2645, 4.0], [2645, 2661, 1.0], [2661, 2884, 31.0], [2884, 2936, 7.0], [2936, 2983, 6.0], [2983, 3000, 1.0], [3000, 3022, 3.0], [3022, 3383, 51.0], [3383, 3425, 5.0], [3425, 3442, 1.0], [3442, 3461, 2.0], [3461, 3943, 73.0], [3943, 3977, 5.0], [3977, 3991, 1.0], [3991, 4007, 3.0], [4007, 4609, 96.0], [4609, 4635, 3.0], [4635, 4652, 1.0], [4652, 5295, 97.0], [5295, 5338, 6.0], [5338, 5419, 9.0], [5419, 5436, 1.0], [5436, 6370, 136.0], [6370, 6459, 11.0], [6459, 6475, 1.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 18, 0.0], [18, 32, 0.0], [32, 64, 0.0], [64, 95, 0.0], [95, 118, 0.0], [118, 135, 0.0], [135, 145, 0.0], [145, 213, 0.0], [213, 277, 0.04918033], [277, 346, 0.0], [346, 415, 0.0], [415, 487, 0.0], [487, 532, 0.0], [532, 673, 0.0], [673, 696, 0.0], [696, 714, 0.0], [714, 729, 0.0], [729, 858, 0.0], [858, 1360, 0.0], [1360, 1433, 0.0], [1433, 1459, 0.0], [1459, 1983, 0.0], [1983, 2084, 0.18390805], [2084, 2104, 0.66666667], [2104, 2120, 0.0], [2120, 2138, 0.0], [2138, 2575, 0.00936768], [2575, 2619, 0.16666667], [2619, 2645, 0.0], [2645, 2661, 0.07692308], [2661, 2884, 0.0], [2884, 2936, 0.13043478], [2936, 2983, 0.25], [2983, 3000, 0.07142857], [3000, 3022, 0.0], [3022, 3383, 0.0], [3383, 3425, 0.27027027], [3425, 3442, 0.07142857], [3442, 3461, 0.0], [3461, 3943, 0.00212314], [3943, 3977, 0.0], [3977, 3991, 0.09090909], [3991, 4007, 0.0], [4007, 4609, 0.01027397], [4609, 4635, 0.0], [4635, 4652, 0.07142857], [4652, 5295, 0.00319489], [5295, 5338, 0.17647059], [5338, 5419, 0.12987013], [5419, 5436, 0.07142857], [5436, 6370, 0.01119821], [6370, 6459, 0.0125], [6459, 6475, 0.07142857]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 18, 0.0], [18, 32, 0.0], [32, 64, 0.0], [64, 95, 0.0], [95, 118, 0.0], [118, 135, 0.0], [135, 145, 0.0], [145, 213, 0.0], [213, 277, 0.0], [277, 346, 0.0], [346, 415, 0.0], [415, 487, 0.0], [487, 532, 0.0], [532, 673, 0.0], [673, 696, 0.0], [696, 714, 0.0], [714, 729, 0.0], [729, 858, 0.0], [858, 1360, 0.0], [1360, 1433, 0.0], [1433, 1459, 0.0], [1459, 1983, 0.0], [1983, 2084, 0.0], [2084, 2104, 0.0], [2104, 2120, 0.0], [2120, 2138, 0.0], [2138, 2575, 0.0], [2575, 2619, 0.0], [2619, 2645, 0.0], [2645, 2661, 0.0], [2661, 2884, 0.0], [2884, 2936, 0.0], [2936, 2983, 0.0], [2983, 3000, 0.0], [3000, 3022, 0.0], [3022, 3383, 0.0], [3383, 3425, 0.0], [3425, 3442, 0.0], [3442, 3461, 0.0], [3461, 3943, 0.0], [3943, 3977, 0.0], [3977, 3991, 0.0], [3991, 4007, 0.0], [4007, 4609, 0.0], [4609, 4635, 0.0], [4635, 4652, 0.0], [4652, 5295, 0.0], [5295, 5338, 0.0], [5338, 5419, 0.0], [5419, 5436, 0.0], [5436, 6370, 0.0], [6370, 6459, 0.0], [6459, 6475, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 18, 0.11111111], [18, 32, 0.14285714], [32, 64, 0.125], [64, 95, 0.12903226], [95, 118, 0.13043478], [118, 135, 0.11764706], [135, 145, 0.2], [145, 213, 0.07352941], [213, 277, 0.03125], [277, 346, 0.01449275], [346, 415, 0.01449275], [415, 487, 0.06944444], [487, 532, 0.0], [532, 673, 0.0070922], [673, 696, 0.13043478], [696, 714, 0.11111111], [714, 729, 0.13333333], [729, 858, 0.03875969], [858, 1360, 0.01394422], [1360, 1433, 0.05479452], [1433, 1459, 0.11538462], [1459, 1983, 0.01717557], [1983, 2084, 0.06930693], [2084, 2104, 0.0], [2104, 2120, 0.1875], [2120, 2138, 0.11111111], [2138, 2575, 0.06407323], [2575, 2619, 0.06818182], [2619, 2645, 0.11538462], [2645, 2661, 0.0], [2661, 2884, 0.02242152], [2884, 2936, 0.11538462], [2936, 2983, 0.06382979], [2983, 3000, 0.0], [3000, 3022, 0.13636364], [3022, 3383, 0.01385042], [3383, 3425, 0.07142857], [3425, 3442, 0.0], [3442, 3461, 0.10526316], [3461, 3943, 0.01244813], [3943, 3977, 0.11764706], [3977, 3991, 0.0], [3991, 4007, 0.1875], [4007, 4609, 0.03156146], [4609, 4635, 0.07692308], [4635, 4652, 0.0], [4652, 5295, 0.0311042], [5295, 5338, 0.06976744], [5338, 5419, 0.09876543], [5419, 5436, 0.0], [5436, 6370, 0.04603854], [6370, 6459, 0.06741573], [6459, 6475, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 6475, 0.04144037]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 6475, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 6475, 0.28387618]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 6475, -286.35821691]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 6475, -62.80308745]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 6475, 23.69169248]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 6475, 68.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Medical marijuana backlash By: Christy Dimond Email Updated: Tue 10:12 AM, Oct 30, 2012 / Article GRAND JUNCTION, Colo. (KKCO) -- A local Grand Junction woman said she is be ostracized after publicly speaking about her use of medical marijuana and her support of Amendment 64. Ladonna Lee spoke with KKCO 11 News two weeks ago about using medicinal marijuana to treat her multiple sclerosis symptoms. She said since her interview aired, all of her physical therapy services through Mesa County Health and Human Services have been cut off. "As soon as they saw my TV interview, they stopped all my benefits," Lee said. "The nurses who come to stretch me for atrophy stopped; the lady who comes to fill my pill box stopped. I can't believe they're going to crucify me for telling the truth." Lee said for the last ten years, a physical therapist would come to her home three times each week to stretch her since she spends most of her time in a wheelchair, but not anymore. Lee said she asked her case worker at Mesa County Health and Human Services what was going on. "She told me nobody would help me, and I said, 'why?' and she said it's because of my choice of medicinal uses," Lee said. Karen Martsolf, public information officer for Mesa County Health and Human Services said the department does not monitor the media to determine eligibility for programs. "Eligibility for adult service programs is based on functional and financial eligibility," Martsolf said in a statement to KKCO 11 News. "The decisions we would make in Ms. Lee's case are no different than in any other case." Lee, however, said she is concerned there's more to it and believes the community is trying to silence people in support of Amendment 64 and medical marijuana use. "I thought this was America and I was safe, but if I say something and everybody else doesn't agree, apparently they really can harm me even if I'm not doing anything wrong," Lee said. Lee has been using medicinal marijuana to treat her MS since first getting a license in 2000. "I'm always, always in pain, and I did medical marijuana, and I didn't have the pain," Lee said. "I thought how can this be bad? How can something that stops pain I've been in since I was 24 be a bad thing?"
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1622
{"url": "http://www.nbc11news.com/home/headlines/Medical-marijuana-backlash-176346101.html?site=mobile", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nbc11news.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:24:45Z", "digest": "sha1:PJCVWQVZYEJTDNVB7PFXR46UQPYHMFHO"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2237, 2237.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2237, 4021.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2237, 7.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2237, 89.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2237, 0.99]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2237, 297.9]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2237, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2237, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2237, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2237, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2237, 0.44327731]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2237, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2237, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2237, 0.09199319]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2237, 0.09199319]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2237, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2237, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2237, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2237, 0.02385009]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2237, 0.02725724]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2237, 0.03236797]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2237, 0.04411765]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2237, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2237, 0.16806723]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2237, 0.52405063]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2237, 4.45822785]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2237, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2237, 4.98813703]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2237, 395.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 27, 0.0], [27, 88, 0.0], [88, 790, 0.0], [790, 1190, 1.0], [1190, 1587, 0.0], [1587, 2030, 1.0], [2030, 2237, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 27, 0.0], [27, 88, 0.0], [88, 790, 0.0], [790, 1190, 0.0], [1190, 1587, 0.0], [1587, 2030, 0.0], [2030, 2237, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 27, 3.0], [27, 88, 11.0], [88, 790, 120.0], [790, 1190, 77.0], [1190, 1587, 63.0], [1587, 2030, 79.0], [2030, 2237, 42.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 27, 0.0], [27, 88, 0.18181818], [88, 790, 0.00591716], [790, 1190, 0.0], [1190, 1587, 0.00519481], [1587, 2030, 0.01398601], [2030, 2237, 0.01036269]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 27, 0.0], [27, 88, 0.0], [88, 790, 0.0], [790, 1190, 0.0], [1190, 1587, 0.0], [1587, 2030, 0.0], [2030, 2237, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 27, 0.03703704], [27, 88, 0.14754098], [88, 790, 0.05982906], [790, 1190, 0.025], [1190, 1587, 0.04282116], [1587, 2030, 0.0248307], [2030, 2237, 0.03864734]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2237, 0.5389725]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2237, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2237, 0.9167099]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2237, 35.74499172]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2237, 38.12483643]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2237, -144.48748189]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2237, 21.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Colo. sets record for gun background checks after shooting By: Brian Shlonsky Email Updated: Tue 12:16 PM, Dec 18, 2012 By: Brian Shlonsky Email Home / Article GRAND JUNCTION, Colo. (KKCO) -- Some potential gun buyers waited in line for hours at Colorado stores on Saturday, setting a new record for gun background checks in a single day. According to the Colorado Bureau of Investigation, there were more than 4,200 requests to buy guns on Saturday. That's at least 200 more than the old record set on Black Friday. The rush to the stores comes just a day after a gunman killed 20 kids in an elementary school in Connecticut, and some say tragedies like that are the reason for the surge in requests. "It's not a surprise to me that there were that many background checks in one day. I mean, it's amazing because people are so afraid that this government is going to take all of our privileges and rights," Ray Montgomery, owner of Ray’s Gunsmith Shop, said. Montgomery has been in the gun business for forty years, and has clients all over the country. He said it isn’t just Colorado where people are flooding gun shops following one of the worst massacres in U.S. history, and he said he thinks the fear of stricter gun regulations following the recent shootings is what’s sending gun buyers into stores. "They're buying everything that they can afford because they're scared to death at this government, that they want to dictate to us what we can and cannot do in this country," Montgomery said. But others point to a different reason for the surge in background checks: safety. "I'm kind of close to someone who was really affected by a shooting," said Kiefer Rohweder, whose friend was in the Aurora theater directly next door to where James Holmes shot and killed 12 movie-goers and injured 58 others. "It definitely made me think, 'What if I had a gun? What if I had a concealed weapon permit, and what if I were that hero, you know?' Just dreaming,” Rohweder said. His friend made it out unharmed, but that man's friend did not, suffering a gun shot wound to the head. The Aurora tragedy, coupled with last week's school shooting, have Rohweder ready to get a background check himself. "I think I would actually go through with it if I had the time," he said. KKCO 11 News spoke with staff at Sportsman's Warehouse on Monday, and they told us corporate has ordered them not to talk to the media about gun sales following the shooting in Connecticut, but employees said that as of Monday, more than 1,000 background checks were still pending at their store, and they had a 22-hour backlog at that time. A typical background check only takes a few minutes, while many are now taking more than a day. Some stores say they are even calling in extra staff to handle added customers.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1623
{"url": "http://www.nbc11news.com/news/headlines/Colorado-sets-record-for-gun-background-checks-following-shooting-183888041.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nbc11news.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:15:12Z", "digest": "sha1:2CCTDAOLUA5WDPAOWJ42HF3IDLOPNAOX"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2787, 2787.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2787, 4549.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2787, 15.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2787, 95.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2787, 0.98]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2787, 323.9]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2787, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2787, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2787, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2787, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2787, 0.44033613]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2787, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2787, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2787, 0.05258386]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2787, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2787, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2787, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2787, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2787, 0.03626473]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2787, 0.00951949]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2787, 0.0199456]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2787, 0.02689076]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2787, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2787, 0.16638655]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2787, 0.51829268]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2787, 4.48373984]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2787, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2787, 5.15657171]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2787, 492.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 59, 0.0], [59, 120, 0.0], [120, 150, 0.0], [150, 339, 1.0], [339, 517, 1.0], [517, 702, 1.0], [702, 1308, 1.0], [1308, 1501, 1.0], [1501, 1584, 1.0], [1584, 1810, 1.0], [1810, 1975, 1.0], [1975, 2196, 1.0], [2196, 2270, 1.0], [2270, 2612, 1.0], [2612, 2787, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 59, 0.0], [59, 120, 0.0], [120, 150, 0.0], [150, 339, 0.0], [339, 517, 0.0], [517, 702, 0.0], [702, 1308, 0.0], [1308, 1501, 0.0], [1501, 1584, 0.0], [1584, 1810, 0.0], [1810, 1975, 0.0], [1975, 2196, 0.0], [2196, 2270, 0.0], [2270, 2612, 0.0], [2612, 2787, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 59, 9.0], [59, 120, 11.0], [120, 150, 5.0], [150, 339, 31.0], [339, 517, 31.0], [517, 702, 35.0], [702, 1308, 106.0], [1308, 1501, 33.0], [1501, 1584, 14.0], [1584, 1810, 39.0], [1810, 1975, 32.0], [1975, 2196, 38.0], [2196, 2270, 16.0], [2270, 2612, 60.0], [2612, 2787, 32.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 59, 0.0], [59, 120, 0.18181818], [120, 150, 0.0], [150, 339, 0.0], [339, 517, 0.04069767], [517, 702, 0.01098901], [702, 1308, 0.0], [1308, 1501, 0.0], [1501, 1584, 0.0], [1584, 1810, 0.01834862], [1810, 1975, 0.0], [1975, 2196, 0.0], [2196, 2270, 0.0], [2270, 2612, 0.02402402], [2612, 2787, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 59, 0.0], [59, 120, 0.0], [120, 150, 0.0], [150, 339, 0.0], [339, 517, 0.0], [517, 702, 0.0], [702, 1308, 0.0], [1308, 1501, 0.0], [1501, 1584, 0.0], [1584, 1810, 0.0], [1810, 1975, 0.0], [1975, 2196, 0.0], [2196, 2270, 0.0], [2270, 2612, 0.0], [2612, 2787, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 59, 0.01694915], [59, 120, 0.14754098], [120, 150, 0.16666667], [150, 339, 0.11640212], [339, 517, 0.04494382], [517, 702, 0.01081081], [702, 1308, 0.01980198], [1308, 1501, 0.01036269], [1501, 1584, 0.01204819], [1584, 1810, 0.02654867], [1810, 1975, 0.04848485], [1975, 2196, 0.01809955], [2196, 2270, 0.04054054], [2270, 2612, 0.02923977], [2612, 2787, 0.01142857]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2787, 0.47887379]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2787, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2787, 0.82731259]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2787, 13.92338544]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2787, 90.8058936]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2787, -151.84541025]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2787, 24.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Closings Olympics UPDATE: Sesquicentennial license plates to be replaced over next year Posted: Tue 8:54 AM, Aug 27, 2013 / Article UPDATED Tuesday, August 27, 2013 --- 7:45 a.m. MADISON, Wis. (AP) -- Transportation officials plan to replace the license plates that celebrate the state's 150th anniversary because the red lettering has faded. The Sesquicentennial plates were first issued in 1996. The state Department of Transportation says the special plates will be replaced with regular license plates. About 160,000 Sesquicentennial plates are still on the road. The DOT says it will also replace 135,000 regular red-lettered plates with standard black-lettered plates. The State Journal says the DOT hopes to complete the replacement process by September 2014. Posted Monday, August 26, 2013 --- 11:02 a.m. Posted from our news partner, WITI in Milwaukee: MILWAUKEE (WITI) – The special license plate developed for Wisconsin’s Sesquicentennial will soon become history as it is replaced over the coming year. Issued between 1996 and 1998, the plate has had a long, successful run, but the aging plates are creating concerns for safety and law enforcement. “The oldest Sesquicentennial plates have been on the road for more than 17 years now, much longer than national standards recommend,” notes Mitchell Warren, director of the Bureau of Vehicle Services in the Wisconsin Department of Transportation’s Division of Motor Vehicles (DMV). “Many of the plates are so faded and their reflectivity is so deteriorated, that they can’t be read easily, if at all. It’s really a safety and law enforcement issue.” Steven Riffel, Sheboygan Falls chief of police and president of the Wisconsin Chiefs of Police Association agrees. “Law enforcement officers around the state have been struggling with reading these faded plates for some time now. We appreciate the fact that they’re being replaced.” Stephen Fitzgerald, superintendent of WisDOT’s Division of State Patrol concurs. “Our officers need to be able to read license plates; it’s pretty basic. We’re glad DMV is addressing this issue. It will be a big help to our officers.” In addition to replacing the Sesquicentennial plates, DMV will also replace other standard auto plates that have red letters as they too are showing their age. The American Association of Motor Vehicle Administrators recommends license plates with white backgrounds and black letters or numbers. This provides the most contrast and is considered optimal. Holders of plates being replaced will receive new plates over the next 14 months, starting in August. “Plate holders will receive a notice from DMV when it is time to renew,” notes Warren. “The notice will provide details, so holders are asked to keep their plates on their vehicles until they hear from us. There is no need to do anything right now.” In total, about 160,000 Sesquicentennial and 135,000 red-letter standard auto plates will be reissued. Over the course of the year, DMV expects to reissue on average about 25,000 sets of plates per month. Reissuance of these plates will be complete when the entire renewal cycle has passed in September of 2014. Find out more about the reissuance of plates at the official Wisconsin DMV web site: www.wisconsindmv.gov, in the Announcements section. UPDATE Man charged with hoax near marathon finish line Comments are posted from viewers like you and do not always reflect the views of this station.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1624
{"url": "http://www.nbc15.com/home/headlines/Sesquicentennial-license-plates-to-be-replaced-over-next-year-221175901.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nbc15.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T09:52:00Z", "digest": "sha1:GH6F57ZRA2MB6K5FRCF275VRZHQHDVRA"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3435, 3435.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3435, 6040.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3435, 16.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3435, 152.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3435, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3435, 279.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3435, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3435, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3435, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3435, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3435, 0.35874439]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3435, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3435, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3435, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3435, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3435, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3435, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3435, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3435, 0.02325581]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3435, 0.01288014]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3435, 0.01645796]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3435, 0.02541106]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3435, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3435, 0.19730942]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3435, 0.51565378]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3435, 5.14732965]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3435, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3435, 5.19158448]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3435, 543.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 88, 0.0], [88, 122, 0.0], [122, 343, 1.0], [343, 675, 1.0], [675, 767, 1.0], [767, 813, 1.0], [813, 862, 0.0], [862, 1162, 1.0], [1162, 1612, 1.0], [1612, 2130, 1.0], [2130, 2485, 1.0], [2485, 2587, 1.0], [2587, 2837, 1.0], [2837, 3149, 1.0], [3149, 3286, 1.0], [3286, 3435, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 88, 0.0], [88, 122, 0.0], [122, 343, 0.0], [343, 675, 0.0], [675, 767, 0.0], [767, 813, 0.0], [813, 862, 0.0], [862, 1162, 0.0], [1162, 1612, 0.0], [1612, 2130, 0.0], [2130, 2485, 0.0], [2485, 2587, 0.0], [2587, 2837, 0.0], [2837, 3149, 0.0], [3149, 3286, 0.0], [3286, 3435, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 88, 12.0], [88, 122, 7.0], [122, 343, 31.0], [343, 675, 48.0], [675, 767, 15.0], [767, 813, 7.0], [813, 862, 8.0], [862, 1162, 48.0], [1162, 1612, 72.0], [1612, 2130, 82.0], [2130, 2485, 53.0], [2485, 2587, 17.0], [2587, 2837, 46.0], [2837, 3149, 51.0], [3149, 3286, 20.0], [3286, 3435, 26.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 88, 0.0], [88, 122, 0.31034483], [122, 343, 0.06], [343, 675, 0.0495356], [675, 767, 0.04444444], [767, 813, 0.27777778], [813, 862, 0.0], [862, 1162, 0.02739726], [1162, 1612, 0.00455581], [1612, 2130, 0.0], [2130, 2485, 0.0], [2485, 2587, 0.02020202], [2587, 2837, 0.0], [2837, 3149, 0.06953642], [3149, 3286, 0.0], [3286, 3435, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 88, 0.0], [88, 122, 0.0], [122, 343, 0.0], [343, 675, 0.0], [675, 767, 0.0], [767, 813, 0.0], [813, 862, 0.0], [862, 1162, 0.0], [1162, 1612, 0.0], [1612, 2130, 0.0], [2130, 2485, 0.0], [2485, 2587, 0.0], [2587, 2837, 0.0], [2837, 3149, 0.0], [3149, 3286, 0.0], [3286, 3435, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 88, 0.10227273], [88, 122, 0.14705882], [122, 343, 0.09502262], [343, 675, 0.03313253], [675, 767, 0.07608696], [767, 813, 0.06521739], [813, 862, 0.12244898], [862, 1162, 0.05666667], [1162, 1612, 0.04], [1612, 2130, 0.04826255], [2130, 2485, 0.03380282], [2485, 2587, 0.01960784], [2587, 2837, 0.028], [2837, 3149, 0.02564103], [3149, 3286, 0.04379562], [3286, 3435, 0.05369128]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3435, 0.23186713]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3435, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3435, 0.28937829]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3435, -235.813357]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3435, 47.37153536]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3435, -136.46914915]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3435, 37.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
0 event(s) found in Auctions in the future starting Apr 16, 2014
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1625
{"url": "http://www.nbc26.com/events/?catID=880179&catID=880179&quick_date=future&quick_date=future", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nbc26.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:37:19Z", "digest": "sha1:MDTCAEMIW5C7Z6PBFGOZAJ4AVBCO6MML"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 64, 64.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 64, 2085.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 64, 1.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 64, 132.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 64, 0.91]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 64, 199.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 64, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 64, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 64, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 64, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 64, 0.25]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 64, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 64, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 64, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 64, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 64, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 64, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 64, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 64, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 64, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 64, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 64, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 64, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 64, 0.375]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 64, 0.91666667]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 64, 4.16666667]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 64, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 64, 2.36938212]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 64, 12.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 64, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 64, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 64, 12.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 64, 0.1147541]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 64, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 64, 0.03125]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 64, -3.58e-06]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 64, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 64, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 64, -9.32804978]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 64, -0.7738324]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 64, 1.61644104]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 64, 1.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Robbery fugitive from Hancock County busted in Hammond CrimeTrackerTangipahoa Parish Sheriff's Office Share POSTED: Wednesday, September 12, 2012 - 12:30pm UPDATED: Wednesday, September 12, 2012 - 12:34pm HAMMOND, LA — A wanted fugitive was arrested in Hammond last night. We’re told the 25 year old was wanted by the Hancock County Sheriff’s Office. The Tangipahoa Parish Sheriff’s Office arrested Alex Green on Tuesday, Sept. 11. Green was wanted on robbery charges and it was learned that he was possibly residing in Tangipahoa Parish. Assisted by the State Police and Hammond PD, deputies responded to several Hammond residences in the attempt to locate Green. Deputies soon received a tip that Green was traveling in a blue Trailblazer near the areas of North Morrison or North Oak St. Deputies searched the area and located Green at a convenient store on University Ave. Subsequently Green was arrested and taken into custody without incident. He was charged with being a fugitive.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1626
{"url": "http://www.nbc33tv.com/news/crimetracker/robbery-fugitive-from-hancock-county-busted-in-hammond", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nbc33tv.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T09:53:58Z", "digest": "sha1:ZG7WO4YZRXOAPVTX7K6GHK5S4GYL5HXT"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 987, 987.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 987, 3783.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 987, 7.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 987, 121.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 987, 0.98]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 987, 297.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 987, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 987, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 987, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 987, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 987, 0.29787234]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 987, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 987, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 987, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 987, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 987, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 987, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 987, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 987, 0.02973978]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 987, 0.04956629]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 987, 0.05947955]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 987, 0.03191489]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 987, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 987, 0.19148936]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 987, 0.60645161]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 987, 5.20645161]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 987, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 987, 4.31327553]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 987, 155.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 108, 0.0], [108, 156, 0.0], [156, 205, 0.0], [205, 351, 1.0], [351, 539, 1.0], [539, 877, 1.0], [877, 987, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 108, 0.0], [108, 156, 0.0], [156, 205, 0.0], [205, 351, 0.0], [351, 539, 0.0], [539, 877, 0.0], [877, 987, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 108, 13.0], [108, 156, 6.0], [156, 205, 6.0], [205, 351, 26.0], [351, 539, 30.0], [539, 877, 57.0], [877, 987, 17.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 108, 0.0], [108, 156, 0.24390244], [156, 205, 0.23809524], [205, 351, 0.01408451], [351, 539, 0.01092896], [539, 877, 0.0], [877, 987, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 108, 0.0], [108, 156, 0.0], [156, 205, 0.0], [205, 351, 0.0], [351, 539, 0.0], [539, 877, 0.0], [877, 987, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 108, 0.10185185], [108, 156, 0.16666667], [156, 205, 0.18367347], [205, 351, 0.10958904], [351, 539, 0.06382979], [539, 877, 0.0591716], [877, 987, 0.02727273]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 987, 0.10496992]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 987, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 987, 0.20709151]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 987, -50.91663672]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 987, 12.50804032]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 987, -4.05944514]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 987, 10.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
I agree to the Terms of Service. I would like to receive special alerts and other information from WVLA NBC33 | Baton Rouge News, Weather and Sports. What code is in the image?: *
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1627
{"url": "http://www.nbc33tv.com/user/register?destination=node%2F35791", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nbc33tv.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:09:25Z", "digest": "sha1:G3XMC4GYIVWLQJVO4AGZDDP7RD3GBZHR"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 179, 179.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 179, 2901.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 179, 1.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 179, 115.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 179, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 179, 276.9]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 179, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 179, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 179, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 179, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 179, 0.34210526]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 179, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 179, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 179, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 179, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 179, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 179, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 179, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 179, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 179, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 179, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 179, 0.10526316]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 179, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 179, 0.15789474]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 179, 0.875]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 179, 4.34375]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 179, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 179, 3.29244911]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 179, 32.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 179, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 179, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 179, 32.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 179, 0.01176471]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 179, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 179, 0.09497207]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 179, 0.00049269]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 179, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 179, -8.46e-06]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 179, -11.81390846]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 179, -5.73832701]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 179, -11.79897966]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 179, 3.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
NCBFAA Member Categories Search Our Membership Directory Member Benefits & Application For more than a century, the NCBFAA has represented the commercial interests of members who include Customs brokers, freight forwarders and ocean transportation intermediaries as well as members representing carriers, sureties, communications, ports, and other specialized services. Categories of membership include: Open to firms regularly engaged in business as licensed customs brokers, licensed ocean freight forwarders, international air cargo agents, and ocean transportation intermediaries located within the limits of the United States, its possessions and territories. Each Regular Member firm has one-vote in Association matters. This encompasses the firm’s branches, affiliates, subsidiaries or related companies. Open to firms not licensed as customs brokers or freight forwarders but in business as suppliers or vendors of transportation-related services, international business services or products specific to functions with international trade. Open to firms regularly engaged in business as a customs broker and/or international freight forwarder located outside the limits of the United States, its possessions and territories. NEI Professional Membership Open to individuals employed by firms not eligible for membership in the NCBFAA whose work engages them in some aspect of the international transportation logistics industry and who wish to participate in the Association's programs and services at member rates.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1628
{"url": "http://www.ncbfaa.org/Scripts/4Disapi.dll/4DCGI/cms/review.html?Action=CMS_Document&DocID=8590&Time=-973984609&MenuKey=about", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.ncbfaa.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:22:20Z", "digest": "sha1:SYEC4HXUIHWOILHCOIKUOVOX5W4I3SY6"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 1522, 1522.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1522, 2005.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1522, 8.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1522, 23.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1522, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1522, 326.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1522, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1522, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1522, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1522, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1522, 0.31666667]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1522, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1522, 0.08385093]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1522, 0.14440994]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1522, 0.14440994]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1522, 0.14440994]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1522, 0.14440994]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1522, 0.08385093]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1522, 0.01863354]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1522, 0.02562112]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1522, 0.05590062]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1522, 0.01666667]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1522, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1522, 0.11666667]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1522, 0.53140097]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1522, 6.22222222]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1522, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1522, 4.43802135]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1522, 207.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 25, 0.0], [25, 57, 0.0], [57, 87, 0.0], [87, 404, 0.0], [404, 812, 1.0], [812, 1048, 1.0], [1048, 1261, 0.0], [1261, 1522, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 25, 0.0], [25, 57, 0.0], [57, 87, 0.0], [87, 404, 0.0], [404, 812, 0.0], [812, 1048, 0.0], [1048, 1261, 0.0], [1261, 1522, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 25, 3.0], [25, 57, 4.0], [57, 87, 3.0], [87, 404, 41.0], [404, 812, 54.0], [812, 1048, 32.0], [1048, 1261, 30.0], [1261, 1522, 40.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 25, 0.0], [25, 57, 0.0], [57, 87, 0.0], [87, 404, 0.0], [404, 812, 0.0], [812, 1048, 0.0], [1048, 1261, 0.0], [1261, 1522, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 25, 0.0], [25, 57, 0.0], [57, 87, 0.0], [87, 404, 0.0], [404, 812, 0.0], [812, 1048, 0.0], [1048, 1261, 0.0], [1261, 1522, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 25, 0.32], [25, 57, 0.125], [57, 87, 0.1], [87, 404, 0.02839117], [404, 812, 0.01960784], [812, 1048, 0.00423729], [1048, 1261, 0.03755869], [1261, 1522, 0.03065134]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1522, 0.04955816]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1522, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1522, 0.07295716]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1522, -40.92396111]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1522, 2.91476955]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1522, 20.46370493]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1522, 7.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
HomeNews, Media and EventsPagesNW20120924MarquisRetires View the latest news, media and events at NCUA, including newsletters, speeches, and press releases. NCUA Executive Director Marquis to Retire Home > News, Media and Events > NCUA Executive Director Marquis to Retire Page Content​Career Spanned More Than Three Decades, Brought “Innovative Solutions” ALEXANDRIA, Va. (Sept. 24, 2012) – After 34 years of protecting the safety and soundness of the credit union industry, Executive Director David Marquis will retire at the end of this year, the National Credit Union Administration (NCUA) today announced. “It is difficult to imagine this agency without Dave,” NCUA Board Chairman Debbie Matz said. “Over the course of his career, Dave initiated many of the changes that enabled NCUA to protect the safety and soundness of the increasingly sophisticated credit union industry. Dave’s foresight and diligence transformed NCUA’s exam process to ensure that examiners have the requisite expertise, tools and training, and that exams are thorough and effective.” Since starting his career at NCUA in 1978, the credit union industry’s total assets grew 1,860 percent from $51.4 billion to more than $1 trillion. Marquis also worked to ensure the stability of credit unions and the industry through five recessions over more than three decades. “During my tenure as Chairman,” Matz added, “in the wake of the extraordinary economic downturn that shook the very foundation of the financial system, Dave’s calm and steady leadership resulted in innovative solutions that literally brought the industry back from the brink of disaster. In the process, Dave earned the admiration, trust and respect of the entire agency.” Marquis has overseen NCUA’s day-to-day operations since his appointment as Executive Director in January 2009. For the previous 14 years, Marquis served as Director of the Office of Examination and Insurance, where he was responsible for the safe and sound operation of the National Credit Union Share Insurance Fund (NCUSIF) and monitoring the examination and supervision procedures at federally insured credit unions. He has also served as a supervisory examiner, regional manager, associate regional director, regional director, and Deputy Director of the Office of Examination and Insurance. Marquis began his career with NCUA as an examiner in Baltimore. “Dave Marquis cares profoundly about the health, safety and soundness of the institutions he has supervised,” NCUA Board Member Gigi Hyland said. “As a young examiner he got to see firsthand the amazing things credit unions can do to serve their members and the difference credit unions can make in communities. As the longest-serving Director of the Office of Examination and Insurance, he then mentored many of the current executives and managers in the agency—a proud and worthy accomplishment. Finally, the productive debates he and I had on policy issues because of his experiences resulted, in my opinion, in policy and regulations that appropriately protected credit unions and the NCUSIF during the Great Recession.” “Dave Marquis has had an exemplary career at NCUA. He has done an outstanding job in every position held, as he moved up the ranks to his current position as Executive Director,” NCUA Board Member Michael Fryzel said. “I wish him all the best in everything he goes on to do.” The NCUA Board will select the agency’s next Executive Director later this year. Notes SC NCUA is the independent federal agency created by the U.S. Congress to regulate, charter and supervise federal credit unions. With the backing of the full faith and credit of the U.S. Government, NCUA operates and manages the National Credit Union Share Insurance Fund, insuring the deposits of more than 96 million account holders in all federal credit unions and the overwhelming majority of state-chartered credit unions. At MyCreditUnion.gov and Pocket Cents, NCUA also educates the public on consumer protection and financial literacy issues.. --NCUA-- Office of Public & Congressional Affairs 703.518.6330 [email protected] John Fairbanks [email protected] Ben C. Hardaway [email protected] Kenzie Snowden [email protected] "Protecting credit unions and the consumers who own them through effective regulation"
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1629
{"url": "http://www.ncua.gov/News/Pages/NW20120924MarquisRetires.aspx", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.ncua.gov", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:23:57Z", "digest": "sha1:ZKXGYGMQNQVMBEMWYGW2N6D67ZD2EJ2L"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 4287, 4287.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 4287, 7122.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 4287, 23.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 4287, 90.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 4287, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 4287, 244.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 4287, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 4287, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 4287, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 4287, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 4287, 0.32496863]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 4287, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 4287, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 4287, 0.10169972]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 4287, 0.09518414]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 4287, 0.06005666]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 4287, 0.03739377]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 4287, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 4287, 0.01983003]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 4287, 0.01699717]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 4287, 0.0203966]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 4287, 0.03638645]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 4287, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 4287, 0.1706399]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 4287, 0.50153846]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 4287, 5.43076923]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 4287, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 4287, 5.13526016]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 4287, 650.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 56, 0.0], [56, 199, 0.0], [199, 273, 0.0], [273, 357, 1.0], [357, 611, 1.0], [611, 1064, 1.0], [1064, 1344, 1.0], [1344, 1717, 1.0], [1717, 2137, 1.0], [2137, 2377, 1.0], [2377, 3378, 1.0], [3378, 3459, 1.0], [3459, 3468, 0.0], [3468, 4026, 0.0], [4026, 4067, 0.0], [4067, 4098, 0.0], [4098, 4113, 0.0], [4113, 4133, 0.0], [4133, 4149, 0.0], [4149, 4168, 0.0], [4168, 4183, 0.0], [4183, 4201, 0.0], [4201, 4287, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 56, 0.0], [56, 199, 0.0], [199, 273, 0.0], [273, 357, 0.0], [357, 611, 0.0], [611, 1064, 0.0], [1064, 1344, 0.0], [1344, 1717, 0.0], [1717, 2137, 0.0], [2137, 2377, 0.0], [2377, 3378, 0.0], [3378, 3459, 0.0], [3459, 3468, 0.0], [3468, 4026, 0.0], [4026, 4067, 0.0], [4067, 4098, 0.0], [4098, 4113, 0.0], [4113, 4133, 0.0], [4133, 4149, 0.0], [4149, 4168, 0.0], [4168, 4183, 0.0], [4183, 4201, 0.0], [4201, 4287, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 56, 4.0], [56, 199, 21.0], [199, 273, 11.0], [273, 357, 10.0], [357, 611, 40.0], [611, 1064, 69.0], [1064, 1344, 46.0], [1344, 1717, 58.0], [1717, 2137, 62.0], [2137, 2377, 36.0], [2377, 3378, 165.0], [3378, 3459, 13.0], [3459, 3468, 2.0], [3468, 4026, 84.0], [4026, 4067, 5.0], [4067, 4098, 2.0], [4098, 4113, 2.0], [4113, 4133, 1.0], [4133, 4149, 3.0], [4149, 4168, 1.0], [4168, 4183, 2.0], [4183, 4201, 1.0], [4201, 4287, 12.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 56, 0.14814815], [56, 199, 0.0], [199, 273, 0.0], [273, 357, 0.0], [357, 611, 0.03305785], [611, 1064, 0.0], [1064, 1344, 0.04411765], [1344, 1717, 0.0], [1717, 2137, 0.01459854], [2137, 2377, 0.0], [2377, 3378, 0.0], [3378, 3459, 0.0], [3459, 3468, 0.0], [3468, 4026, 0.00371058], [4026, 4067, 0.0], [4067, 4098, 0.38461538], [4098, 4113, 0.0], [4113, 4133, 0.0], [4133, 4149, 0.0], [4149, 4168, 0.0], [4168, 4183, 0.0], [4183, 4201, 0.0], [4201, 4287, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 56, 0.0], [56, 199, 0.0], [199, 273, 0.0], [273, 357, 0.0], [357, 611, 0.0], [611, 1064, 0.0], [1064, 1344, 0.0], [1344, 1717, 0.0], [1717, 2137, 0.0], [2137, 2377, 0.0], [2377, 3378, 0.0], [3378, 3459, 0.0], [3459, 3468, 0.0], [3468, 4026, 0.0], [4026, 4067, 0.0], [4067, 4098, 0.0], [4098, 4113, 0.0], [4113, 4133, 0.0], [4133, 4149, 0.0], [4149, 4168, 0.0], [4168, 4183, 0.0], [4183, 4201, 0.0], [4201, 4287, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 56, 0.16071429], [56, 199, 0.09090909], [199, 273, 0.16216216], [273, 357, 0.13095238], [357, 611, 0.0984252], [611, 1064, 0.04635762], [1064, 1344, 0.02142857], [1344, 1717, 0.01608579], [1717, 2137, 0.06190476], [2137, 2377, 0.05], [2377, 3378, 0.04395604], [3378, 3459, 0.09876543], [3459, 3468, 0.33333333], [3468, 4026, 0.06272401], [4026, 4067, 0.09756098], [4067, 4098, 0.0], [4098, 4113, 0.13333333], [4113, 4133, 0.0], [4133, 4149, 0.1875], [4149, 4168, 0.0], [4168, 4183, 0.13333333], [4183, 4201, 0.0], [4201, 4287, 0.01162791]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 4287, 0.06100452]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 4287, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 4287, 0.79399526]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 4287, -191.71971422]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 4287, 81.97032696]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 4287, -29.64465347]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 4287, 40.0]], "is_duplicate": false}
re: Smeargle's Sketching Game | Thread One Smeargle's Sketching Game | Thread One - Page 26 This thread is closed to replies. Winner: Chaos Team PAGES: «prev 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1630
{"url": "http://www.neoseeker.com/forums/51385/t1710486-smeargles-sketching-game-thread-one/26.htm", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.neoseeker.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:52:29Z", "digest": "sha1:BLUX4AZQS57X3CKVNXWAPVCEP7YJI6A7"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 250, 250.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 250, 1170.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 250, 4.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 250, 66.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 250, 0.59]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 250, 93.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 250, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 250, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 250, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 250, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 250, 0.07142857]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 250, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 250, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 250, 0.34254144]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 250, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 250, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 250, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 250, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 250, 0.19889503]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 250, 0.24309392]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 250, 0.30939227]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 250, 0.01428571]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 250, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 250, 0.64285714]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 250, 0.87931034]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 250, 3.12068966]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 250, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 250, 3.8841101]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 250, 58.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 43, 0.0], [43, 92, 0.0], [92, 145, 0.0], [145, 250, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 43, 0.0], [43, 92, 0.0], [92, 145, 0.0], [145, 250, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 43, 6.0], [43, 92, 7.0], [92, 145, 9.0], [145, 250, 36.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 43, 0.0], [43, 92, 0.04651163], [92, 145, 0.0], [145, 250, 0.56730769]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 43, 0.0], [43, 92, 0.0], [92, 145, 0.0], [145, 250, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 43, 0.11627907], [43, 92, 0.12244898], [92, 145, 0.0754717], [145, 250, 0.04761905]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 250, 0.00536621]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 250, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 250, 0.0001303]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 250, -67.18773847]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 250, -30.01541997]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 250, -16.13249515]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 250, 2.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
The pocket office is a unique feature to the new Caiden-style model, tucked away yet convenient and functional on the first floor.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1631
{"url": "http://www.newburyportnews.com/archive/x1307052403", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.newburyportnews.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:58:18Z", "digest": "sha1:QMRDI7C6DQCZEI2JCVU6YRXWPQL7DSW4"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 130, 130.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 130, 5996.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 130, 1.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 130, 207.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 130, 0.87]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 130, 266.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 130, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 130, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 130, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 130, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 130, 0.42307692]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 130, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 130, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 130, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 130, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 130, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 130, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 130, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 130, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 130, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 130, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 130, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 130, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 130, 0.11538462]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 130, 0.90909091]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 130, 4.81818182]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 130, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 130, 2.94123169]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 130, 22.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 130, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 130, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 130, 22.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 130, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 130, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 130, 0.01538462]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 130, 0.57538235]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 130, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 130, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 130, -1.39664365]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 130, 0.54481208]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 130, -0.58265814]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 130, 1.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Polls open tomorrow at St. Mary's Church Rowley Town Notebook Michelle Pelletier Marshall ---- — The polls will be open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. tomorrow at St. Mary’s Church Hall on Main Street. Voters will be choosing the president and vice president, along with making decisions about senators and representatives in Congress and the General Court. Additionally, there will be five ballot questions, including the controversial topics of assisted suicide and the medical use of marijuana in Massachusetts.Absentee ballots are available for voters who will be out of town during polling hours or have a physical disability or religious belief that would prevent them from going to the polls tomorrow. The deadline to apply for an absentee ballot is noon today and those interested must apply in person at the town clerk’s office.Any resident who has questions about the election procedure or their eligibility to vote should contact Town Clerk Susan Hazen at 978-948-2081.---Residents are invited to get the facts about the shingles vaccine at a free lecture at the Rowley Public Library today from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. Dr. Kevin Ennis, a geriatrician from Beverly Hospital, will be the guest speaker.---The Council on Aging will host a Veterans Day supper on Wednesday, beginning at 5:30 p.m. Call the council at 978-948-7637 for more information or to make reservations to attend.---Riders from the Myopia Hunt Club in Wenham will make their annual ride through Rowley on Thursday from 1 to 3 p.m.---Local Scout troops will hold a paper drive on Saturday from 9 a.m. to noon at the First Congregational Church. Collectible items include newspapers, books and magazines. The Scouts also will coll
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1632
{"url": "http://www.newburyportnews.com/election/x1499658939/Polls-open-tomorrow-at-St-Marys-Church/print", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.newburyportnews.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:55:48Z", "digest": "sha1:TRGHDAUN243VBTIPW5AYRQJ3P457NQVA"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 1693, 1693.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1693, 1857.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1693, 3.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1693, 7.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1693, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1693, 200.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1693, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1693, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1693, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1693, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1693, 0.38643068]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1693, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1693, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1693, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1693, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1693, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1693, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1693, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1693, 0.02201027]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1693, 0.01760822]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1693, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1693, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1693, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1693, 0.179941]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1693, 0.62043796]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1693, 4.97445255]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1693, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1693, 4.7990746]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1693, 274.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 41, 0.0], [41, 90, 0.0], [90, 1693, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 41, 0.0], [41, 90, 0.0], [90, 1693, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 41, 7.0], [41, 90, 6.0], [90, 1693, 261.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 41, 0.0], [41, 90, 0.0], [90, 1693, 0.02196382]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 41, 0.0], [41, 90, 0.0], [90, 1693, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 41, 0.09756098], [41, 90, 0.12244898], [90, 1693, 0.03243918]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1693, 0.29403138]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1693, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1693, 0.51395458]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1693, -114.71245587]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1693, -5.77784616]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1693, -61.19805558]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1693, 26.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
1987 series Only showSilver Surfer covers Publisher Marvel • Super-hero Fantastic_Four Ages_7-12 Ages_13-16 First Issue #1 - July 1987 Last #146 - November 1998 Continued from Silver Surfer (1968 series) Continued in Silver Surfer (2003 series) The Silver Surfer was another Stan Lee, Jack Kirby creation. First appearance was in Fantastic Four (1961 series) #48. A native of Zenn-La, Norrin Radd was the sentinnel for Galactus. Exiled on Earth for siding with humanity over his master. The Silver Surfer was featured in 20th Century Fox's 2007 movie: Fantastic 4: Rise of the Silver Surfer. We have 127 of the 146 issues. Issue on this page in red Click to view issue # 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 37 39 40 41 42 43 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 138 139 141 145 Silver Surfer Annuals, and other issues also for sale Out of stock in gray. Annuals Dangerous Artifacts The Coming of Galactus Witchblade: Devil's Reign Wizard 1/2 Other issues 1 click adds adds issues #1 to #10 Best Copies $ 89.40 for all 10Lowest Price $ 47.76 for all 10 or add individual issues below or better. Silver Surfer #58 Tod Smith Infinity Gauntlet. Near Mint + Near Mint - Very Fine Fine Very Good Good $ 8.50 $ 5.00 $ 3.50 $ 1.80 $ 1.20 $ .60 We have 5 copies in stock. To buy click box below and Add to Cart Condition Click ↓ for details Value You save Your Price Near Mint + $ 8.50 15% $ 7.27 Near Mint - $ 5.00 23% $ 3.84 Very Fine + $ 4.64 27% $ 3.39 Very Fine $ 3.50 23% $ 2.69 Very Fine - $ 3.18 22% $ 2.49 You can remove comics later Best Copies or Lowest Price and Silver Surfer comic books shown are in stock. Ordering Silver Surfer comic books is easy: Instructions Go to issues 57 58 Go to issues 59 Top Selling Comic Books by buyers of Silver Surfer comic books 1 The list of top selling comic books of people buying Silver Surfer comic books was created by our customers. Every time a customer buys any Silver Surfer comic books, we track all the other comic books they also buy. Then, we add up all those other comic books purchased by people buying any Silver Surfer comic books, and rank them. The comic books most often bought by comic book readers buying any copies of Silver Surfer comic books is displayed first. So, for everyone buying Silver Surfer comic books, the other comic books they most often buy are shown above. The comic books shown are not guesses of other comic books you will like. They are the result of the buying preferences of thousands of comic book buyers of Silver Surfer comic books here at our online comic book store. They are the other comic books that our comic book buyers buy, along with their Silver Surfer comic books. You benefit from the preferences of thousands of other readers of comic books. So, if you enjoy Silver Surfer comic books, check out the other comic books enjoyed by comic book buyers of Silver Surfer comic books. Click the comic's cover or name and you'll go to that comic book. Or browse our 20 best selling comic books from our online comic book store: Searchmore waysby issue # ofSilver Surfer
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1633
{"url": "http://www.newkadia.com/?isu=3349%7C58&shi=S", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.newkadia.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:09:31Z", "digest": "sha1:SGQEUXFYLRBWYSUUQTAC3AFLJKXCIJCQ"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3360, 3360.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3360, 6854.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3360, 17.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3360, 166.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3360, 0.87]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3360, 317.3]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3360, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3360, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3360, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3360, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3360, 0.19354839]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3360, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3360, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3360, 0.13715614]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3360, 0.04184425]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3360, 0.03022084]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3360, 0.03022084]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3360, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3360, 0.09298721]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3360, 0.07903913]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3360, 0.10228594]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3360, 0.00129032]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3360, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3360, 0.39612903]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3360, 0.51486698]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3360, 4.03912363]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3360, 0.01032258]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3360, 5.2916098]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3360, 639.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 42, 0.0], [42, 161, 0.0], [161, 245, 0.0], [245, 592, 1.0], [592, 649, 0.0], [649, 1154, 1.0], [1154, 1290, 0.0], [1290, 1383, 0.0], [1383, 1412, 0.0], [1412, 1422, 0.0], [1422, 1441, 1.0], [1441, 1834, 0.0], [1834, 2028, 0.0], [2028, 2069, 0.0], [2069, 2636, 1.0], [2636, 3319, 0.0], [3319, 3360, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 42, 0.0], [42, 161, 0.0], [161, 245, 0.0], [245, 592, 0.0], [592, 649, 0.0], [649, 1154, 0.0], [1154, 1290, 0.0], [1290, 1383, 0.0], [1383, 1412, 0.0], [1412, 1422, 0.0], [1422, 1441, 0.0], [1441, 1834, 0.0], [1834, 2028, 0.0], [2028, 2069, 0.0], [2069, 2636, 0.0], [2636, 3319, 0.0], [3319, 3360, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 42, 6.0], [42, 161, 16.0], [161, 245, 12.0], [245, 592, 58.0], [592, 649, 13.0], [649, 1154, 145.0], [1154, 1290, 22.0], [1290, 1383, 16.0], [1383, 1412, 5.0], [1412, 1422, 2.0], [1422, 1441, 2.0], [1441, 1834, 71.0], [1834, 2028, 35.0], [2028, 2069, 8.0], [2069, 2636, 100.0], [2636, 3319, 123.0], [3319, 3360, 5.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 42, 0.09756098], [42, 161, 0.17924528], [161, 245, 0.10126582], [245, 592, 0.03915663], [592, 649, 0.10909091], [649, 1154, 0.56], [1154, 1290, 0.04615385], [1290, 1383, 0.13953488], [1383, 1412, 0.07692308], [1412, 1422, 0.0], [1422, 1441, 0.0], [1441, 1834, 0.17791411], [1834, 2028, 0.03141361], [2028, 2069, 0.025], [2069, 2636, 0.0], [2636, 3319, 0.00298507], [3319, 3360, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 42, 0.0], [42, 161, 0.0], [161, 245, 0.0], [245, 592, 0.0], [592, 649, 0.0], [649, 1154, 0.0], [1154, 1290, 0.0], [1290, 1383, 0.0], [1383, 1412, 0.0], [1412, 1422, 0.0], [1422, 1441, 0.0], [1441, 1834, 0.0], [1834, 2028, 0.0], [2028, 2069, 0.0], [2069, 2636, 0.0], [2636, 3319, 0.0], [3319, 3360, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 42, 0.07142857], [42, 161, 0.10084034], [161, 245, 0.07142857], [245, 592, 0.0778098], [592, 649, 0.03508772], [649, 1154, 0.00990099], [1154, 1290, 0.08088235], [1290, 1383, 0.04301075], [1383, 1412, 0.06896552], [1412, 1422, 0.2], [1422, 1441, 0.10526316], [1441, 1834, 0.07888041], [1834, 2028, 0.08247423], [2028, 2069, 0.04878049], [2069, 2636, 0.02645503], [2636, 3319, 0.02196193], [3319, 3360, 0.07317073]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3360, 0.29614478]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3360, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3360, 0.19404912]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3360, -370.53211087]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3360, -126.81244517]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3360, -97.9582036]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3360, 41.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Cameron enjoys school, his family and playing games. He is interested in history, engineering and astronomy. He will be turning 8 on Feb 22.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1634
{"url": "http://www.news8000.com/news/look-whos-eight/10700548?nopageview=true&offset=793", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.news8000.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T09:14:53Z", "digest": "sha1:OVXIPT7FZ6PQC7VSCJ5ZB5FW7E3CPJYH"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 140, 140.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 140, 4099.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 140, 1.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 140, 248.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 140, 0.99]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 140, 206.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 140, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 140, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 140, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 140, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 140, 0.27586207]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 140, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 140, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 140, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 140, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 140, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 140, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 140, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 140, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 140, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 140, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 140, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 140, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 140, 0.24137931]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 140, 0.91666667]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 140, 4.66666667]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 140, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 140, 3.0625293]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 140, 24.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 140, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 140, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 140, 24.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 140, 0.02222222]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 140, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 140, 0.02857143]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 140, 0.00063866]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 140, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 140, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 140, -0.41217966]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 140, 2.15978268]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 140, 2.12661927]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 140, 3.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
What's your opinion? We value your opinion and encourage you to share it with our readers by writing a Letter to the Editor. Submit your letter online with our Virtual Newsroom. « Cooperation Facilities not key in juvenile justice August 11, 2013 Save | Several changes in where West Virginia incarcerates juvenile offenders, along with $2 million in facility upgrades, are the result of a judge's order that two centers for underage criminals be closed. The question now is whether new surroundings will translate to more appropriate treatment and handling of youthful inmates. This spring, state officials decided to close the Industrial Home for Youth at Salem, after a lawsuit was filed over allegations of mistreatment of juveniles there. Mercer County Circuit Judge Omar Aboulhosn, appointed by the state Supreme Court to handle the case, found a number of shortcomings. Among them were mixing young offenders with others who, though 18 years of age or older, were being housed in close proximity. Outright mistreatment of some juveniles, along with failure to engage in realistic rehabilitation, also were cited. Then, this summer, Aboulhosn decided problems at the Harriet B. Jones Treatment Center, also at Salem, were serious enough it should be closed to juveniles. Youthful sex offenders and a few juveniles with behavioral or mental problems are housed there. State corrections officials have decided to convert the Salem facilities for use by adult prisoners. Meanwhile, juveniles who had been at Salem have been sent or are to be transferred elsewhere. About $2 million will be used to upgrade some of the corrections facilities, most in southern or eastern West Virginia, to be used in the new system for juveniles, devised directly or indirectly because of the judge's orders. A hearing in the case is scheduled for Aug. 13, but that will do no more than give Aboulhosn an opportunity to review and, in all likelihood, sign off on physical facilities. Much more important will be how the juvenile offenders are handled. Some of the state's plans in that regard sound good. For example, plans to keep youths convicted of serious crimes away from those incarcerated for lesser offenses are included. Whether the new system works - providing a real potential to rehabilitate some juvenile offenders - will remain to be seen, however. That, not just different quarters for various categories of youth criminals, should be Judge Aboulhosn's criteria for deciding whether the state is complying with his mandate for change. Save | Subscribe to Parkersburg News and Sentinel Parkersburg Weather Forecast, WV (26101)
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1635
{"url": "http://www.newsandsentinel.com/page/content.detail/id/576923/Rehabilitation.html?nav=5057", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.newsandsentinel.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:02:07Z", "digest": "sha1:IATX46DXPG3YXON3IWSLE2SNN6F65I33"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2625, 2625.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2625, 3480.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2625, 3.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2625, 26.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2625, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2625, 274.9]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2625, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2625, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2625, 1.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2625, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2625, 0.42474227]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2625, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2625, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2625, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2625, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2625, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2625, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2625, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2625, 0.02380952]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2625, 0.00840336]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2625, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2625, 0.00618557]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2625, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2625, 0.1443299]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2625, 0.56937799]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2625, 5.12440191]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2625, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2625, 5.12285175]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2625, 418.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 192, 0.0], [192, 247, 0.0], [247, 2625, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 192, 0.0], [192, 247, 0.0], [247, 2625, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 192, 33.0], [192, 247, 9.0], [247, 2625, 376.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 192, 0.0], [192, 247, 0.11320755], [247, 2625, 0.00474752]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 192, 0.0], [192, 247, 0.0], [247, 2625, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 192, 0.04166667], [192, 247, 0.03636364], [247, 2625, 0.0235492]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2625, 0.22721481]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2625, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2625, 0.44455421]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2625, -64.79208919]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2625, 10.25686403]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2625, -31.27730727]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2625, 23.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
The following faculty teach in this school: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z All Margaret Bishop Leslie Bobb John Bruce
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1636
{"url": "http://www.newschool.edu/parsons/faculty_school.aspx?AtoZ=B&sc=PUDM,PUFN,PUIC", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.newschool.edu", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:22:04Z", "digest": "sha1:DKLCZYOFSLNTO5UQTCJC47DPY7PZ4QJY"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 138, 138.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 138, 862.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 138, 4.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 138, 28.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 138, 0.87]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 138, 49.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 138, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 138, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 138, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 138, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 138, 0.07317073]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 138, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 138, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 138, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 138, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 138, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 138, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 138, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 138, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 138, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 138, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 138, 0.63414634]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 138, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 138, 0.02439024]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 138, 1.0]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 138, 2.45]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 138, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 138, 3.68887945]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 138, 40.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 44, 0.0], [44, 116, 0.0], [116, 128, 0.0], [128, 138, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 44, 0.0], [44, 116, 0.0], [116, 128, 0.0], [128, 138, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 44, 7.0], [44, 116, 29.0], [116, 128, 2.0], [128, 138, 2.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 44, 0.0], [44, 116, 0.0], [116, 128, 0.0], [128, 138, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 44, 0.0], [44, 116, 0.0], [116, 128, 0.0], [128, 138, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 44, 0.02272727], [44, 116, 0.40277778], [116, 128, 0.16666667], [128, 138, 0.2]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 138, 1.526e-05]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 138, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 138, 1.705e-05]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 138, -22.16563943]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 138, -14.51529211]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 138, -4.43434431]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 138, 1.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Emmys Were a Total 'Bummer' No one had fun watching this show: critics Updated Sep 23, 2013 7:33 AM CDT The reviews are in for last night's Emmy Awards, and they are not good. (Catch up on what happened here.) One big problem: The In Memoriam segments that seemed to arrive every 20 minutes or so. A sampling of the reactions: The "steady stream of in-memoriam segments ... stopped just long enough for a series of less relevant downers including, but not limited to, a Beatles cover performed by Carrie Underwood, a US-history lesson from Don Cheadle, and a tribute to Liberace by Elton John," writes Julie Miller in Vanity Fair, calling the proceedings "torturous" and "relentlessly depressing." The CBS telecast "was, in a word, a bummer," writes Curt Wagner in the Chicago Tribune. Host Neil Patrick Harris "tried to bring up the energy ... but nothing seemed to help. Every time the show got moving, a tribute cast a pall over the proceedings." The opening sketch was "dreary," the first onstage piece "tiresome," and the whole thing "anemic and often awkward," writes Hank Stuever in the Washington Post. All the jokes seemed to be about the show itself, and then there were the bits that were included because ... why? No one seems to know (think the aforementioned Carrie Underwood performance). "So, to sum up: An awards show filled with skits about how bad awards shows are gave awards to people who talked about how bad the show turned out, while everyone on Twitter had decided that hours earlier." There were lots of unexpected wins, but even so, the whole thing was "a bloated bore," writes David Rooney in the Hollywood Reporter. The "overload of solemnity" and "self-important sobriety" was part of the problem, but the "labored filler segments" were also pretty bad—especially considering they were the reason the "award recipients were played off virtually as soon as they began speaking." Even a long-overdue best drama win for Breaking Bad couldn't save this "plodding, lifeless, and just plain glum" show. Everyone agrees, however, Merritt Wever's acceptance speech was a total highlight. Nathan Fillion, from left, Neil Patrick Harris, and Sarah Silverman perform on stage at the 65th Primetime Emmy Awards at Nokia Theatre on Sunday, Sept. 22, 2013, in Los Angeles. (Photo by Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP) Sep 23, 2013 7:06 PM CDT Those shows are mostly rituals of self-aggrandizement. Newsroom is pretentious. It also suffers from awkward directing. It's an ensemble piece but the actors don't blend in. Fortunately, the Ray Donovan series excels where Newsroom should have gone. If you really want to watch brilliance, watch Game of Thrones. toryd All awards shows are much too long and bloated, not to mention narcissistic. This one wasn't any worse than the rest. Is it bye-bye Neil Patrick Harris? Maybe not, since he produced it. Evann did you really watch the Emmys and miss Breaking Bad? What's wrong with you. Celebrity •
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1637
{"url": "http://www.newser.com/story/174687/emmys-were-a-total-bummer.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.newser.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:30:43Z", "digest": "sha1:EORYFLUNXTKYRMYE275FXIVKYBF3DNLG"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2951, 2951.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2951, 8522.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2951, 13.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2951, 251.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2951, 0.97]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2951, 311.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2951, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2951, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2951, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2951, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2951, 0.34831461]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2951, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2951, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2951, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2951, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2951, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2951, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2951, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2951, 0.01031371]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2951, 0.02191663]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2951, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2951, 0.01284109]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2951, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2951, 0.2070626]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2951, 0.60040984]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2951, 4.76844262]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2951, 0.00481541]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2951, 5.3094426]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2951, 488.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 28, 0.0], [28, 71, 0.0], [71, 104, 0.0], [104, 2110, 1.0], [2110, 2289, 1.0], [2289, 2327, 0.0], [2327, 2352, 0.0], [2352, 2602, 1.0], [2602, 2665, 1.0], [2665, 2671, 0.0], [2671, 2857, 1.0], [2857, 2940, 1.0], [2940, 2951, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 28, 0.0], [28, 71, 0.0], [71, 104, 0.0], [104, 2110, 0.0], [2110, 2289, 0.0], [2289, 2327, 0.0], [2327, 2352, 0.0], [2352, 2602, 0.0], [2602, 2665, 0.0], [2665, 2671, 0.0], [2671, 2857, 0.0], [2857, 2940, 0.0], [2940, 2951, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 28, 5.0], [28, 71, 8.0], [71, 104, 7.0], [104, 2110, 329.0], [2110, 2289, 30.0], [2289, 2327, 4.0], [2327, 2352, 6.0], [2352, 2602, 37.0], [2602, 2665, 11.0], [2665, 2671, 1.0], [2671, 2857, 33.0], [2857, 2940, 15.0], [2940, 2951, 2.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 28, 0.0], [28, 71, 0.0], [71, 104, 0.3], [104, 2110, 0.00104767], [2110, 2289, 0.04705882], [2289, 2327, 0.0], [2327, 2352, 0.40909091], [2352, 2602, 0.0], [2602, 2665, 0.0], [2665, 2671, 0.0], [2671, 2857, 0.0], [2857, 2940, 0.0], [2940, 2951, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 28, 0.0], [28, 71, 0.0], [71, 104, 0.0], [104, 2110, 0.0], [2110, 2289, 0.0], [2289, 2327, 0.0], [2327, 2352, 0.0], [2352, 2602, 0.0], [2602, 2665, 0.0], [2665, 2671, 0.0], [2671, 2857, 0.0], [2857, 2940, 0.0], [2940, 2951, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 28, 0.14285714], [28, 71, 0.02325581], [71, 104, 0.21212121], [104, 2110, 0.03040877], [2110, 2289, 0.08938547], [2289, 2327, 0.15789474], [2327, 2352, 0.24], [2352, 2602, 0.032], [2602, 2665, 0.04761905], [2665, 2671, 0.0], [2671, 2857, 0.03763441], [2857, 2940, 0.06024096], [2940, 2951, 0.09090909]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2951, 0.10226971]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2951, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2951, 0.74088252]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2951, -21.97911729]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2951, 23.07877284]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2951, -44.45952369]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2951, 33.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Average Rating: Rate this article: First Dropbox Developer Conference Planned for July By Adam Dickter May 7, 2013 5:17PM "Generally speaking, vendors have to be 'on the map' before launching an event like this or they risk having a party no one attends," said analyst Charles King of Dropbox's first developers conference, DBX 2013. "That said, when they're successful, developer and partner events can measurably raise a company's profile among desirable audiences." Related Topics Developers Conference There's CES, MWC, WWDC, and now, the latest addition to the calendar of acronym tech-company events, DBX 2013. The developers conference for Dropbox this summer may not be as big a deal as the Consumer Electronics Show in La Vegas, Mobile World Congress in Barcelona or Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference, but the growing cloud storage company, which has been angling for a bigger share of the business user pie amid competition from Google's Drive and Microsoft's SkyDrive, clearly hopes it will more firmly establish the company on the map. Sharing Ideas with Engineers "At DBX, you'll meet fellow developers, see the great things they're building, and share ideas with the engineers and designers working on Dropbox's API," the company said in a blog post Monday. "But most importantly, you'll be the first to learn about new products that will make developing on Dropbox even easier." The conference is planned for Tuesday, July 9, at Fort Mason in the company's home town of San Francisco. Interested developers can request an invitation at Dropbox.com. If you get one (seating is limited), be prepared to shell out $350. As we reported last month, Dropbox has launched Dropbox for Business with a system that allows users to sign in once with an identity profile and access all their applications. An earlier addition added an administrative sharing console allowing easier control for collaborators to share effortlessly. The company was founded in 2007 and was estimated by research firm iSuppli's Mobile and Wireless Communications Service to have 100 million users last year, which constitutes 20 percent of the world's current half-billion cloud subscriptions as the industry continues to soar. Dropbox for Teams, which paved the way for the business segment, launched in 2011, starting at $795 for up to five users with unlimited storage. Developer conferences are a great way for companies to show their human face to the public while developing partnerships with emerging talent. Next week, Google will hold its annual I/O (input-output) event at the Moscone Center in San Francisco. The widely attended event is an opportunity for the company to give away hardware to developers, such as its Nexus 7 tablet and Samsung Chromebox computer last year, as well as unveil the latest version of its Android operating system. And Apple's WWDC kicks off June 10-14, also in San Francisco. Is It too Soon? Charles King, principal analyst at Pund-IT, said the event isn't necessarily intended to put the company on the map in terms of the tech events calendar, but is an opportunity to create new ventures. "Generally speaking, vendors have to be 'on the map' before launching an event like this or they risk having a party no one attends," King told us. "That said, when they're successful, developer and partner events can measurably raise a company's profile among desirable audiences." Tell Us What You Think
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1638
{"url": "http://www.newsfactor.com/news/Tablet-Sales-Seen-Doubling-in-4-Years/story.xhtml?story_id=020000NIH7OG", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.newsfactor.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T09:05:53Z", "digest": "sha1:BYW5YN546EHHJBM5JXGNFPRMC6ZNOIF2"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3428, 3428.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3428, 9137.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3428, 11.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3428, 90.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3428, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3428, 301.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3428, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3428, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3428, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3428, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3428, 0.35829662]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3428, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3428, 0.15468016]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3428, 0.16769064]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3428, 0.15468016]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3428, 0.15468016]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3428, 0.15468016]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3428, 0.15468016]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3428, 0.01807011]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3428, 0.01156487]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3428, 0.02023853]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3428, 0.01762115]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3428, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3428, 0.1732746]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3428, 0.51992754]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3428, 5.01268116]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3428, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3428, 5.27964479]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3428, 552.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 103, 0.0], [103, 484, 0.0], [484, 506, 0.0], [506, 1054, 1.0], [1054, 1083, 0.0], [1083, 1400, 0.0], [1400, 1638, 1.0], [1638, 2362, 1.0], [2362, 2907, 1.0], [2907, 2923, 1.0], [2923, 3428, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 103, 0.0], [103, 484, 0.0], [484, 506, 0.0], [506, 1054, 0.0], [1054, 1083, 0.0], [1083, 1400, 0.0], [1400, 1638, 0.0], [1638, 2362, 0.0], [2362, 2907, 0.0], [2907, 2923, 0.0], [2923, 3428, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 103, 15.0], [103, 484, 59.0], [484, 506, 2.0], [506, 1054, 89.0], [1054, 1083, 4.0], [1083, 1400, 52.0], [1400, 1638, 40.0], [1638, 2362, 113.0], [2362, 2907, 90.0], [2907, 2923, 4.0], [2923, 3428, 84.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 103, 0.0], [103, 484, 0.03314917], [484, 506, 0.0], [506, 1054, 0.00753296], [1054, 1083, 0.0], [1083, 1400, 0.0], [1400, 1638, 0.01769912], [1638, 2362, 0.02253521], [2362, 2907, 0.00943396], [2907, 2923, 0.0], [2923, 3428, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 103, 0.0], [103, 484, 0.0], [484, 506, 0.0], [506, 1054, 0.0], [1054, 1083, 0.0], [1083, 1400, 0.0], [1400, 1638, 0.0], [1638, 2362, 0.0], [2362, 2907, 0.0], [2907, 2923, 0.0], [2923, 3428, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 103, 0.11650485], [103, 484, 0.03412073], [484, 506, 0.09090909], [506, 1054, 0.0620438], [1054, 1083, 0.10344828], [1083, 1400, 0.03470032], [1400, 1638, 0.04201681], [1638, 2362, 0.0179558], [2362, 2907, 0.04220183], [2907, 2923, 0.1875], [2923, 3428, 0.02574257]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3428, 0.82775241]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3428, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3428, 0.78956574]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3428, -81.77605644]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3428, 43.74377013]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3428, -57.95991313]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3428, 23.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
COMMENTS 19 New Orleans shooting victims included 2 kids By AP Published: Sunday, May 12, 2013 at 20:10 PM. NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Gunmen opened fire on dozens of people marching in a neighborhood Mother's Day parade in New Orleans on Sunday, wounding at least 19 people, police said. The FBI said that the shooting appeared to be "street violence" and wasn't linked to terrorism. Many of the victims were grazed and most of the wounds weren't life-threatening, according to a police news release. No deaths were reported. The victims included 10 men, seven women, a boy and a girl. The children, both 10 years old, were grazed and in good condition. Police said at least two people were in surgery Sunday night. Mary Beth Romig, a spokeswoman for the FBI in New Orleans, said federal investigators have no indication that the shooting was an act of terrorism. "It's strictly an act of street violence in New Orleans," she said. Officers were interspersed with the marchers, which is routine for such events. As many as 400 people joined in the procession that stretched for about 3 blocks, though only half that many were in the immediate vicinity of the shooting, said Police Superintendent Ronal Serpas. 1 NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Gunmen opened fire on dozens of people marching in a neighborhood Mother's Day parade in New Orleans on Sunday, wounding at least 19 people, police said. The FBI said that the shooting appeared to be "street violence" and wasn't linked to terrorism. Many of the victims were grazed and most of the wounds weren't life-threatening, according to a police news release. No deaths were reported. The victims included 10 men, seven women, a boy and a girl. The children, both 10 years old, were grazed and in good condition. Police said at least two people were in surgery Sunday night. Mary Beth Romig, a spokeswoman for the FBI in New Orleans, said federal investigators have no indication that the shooting was an act of terrorism. "It's strictly an act of street violence in New Orleans," she said. Officers were interspersed with the marchers, which is routine for such events. As many as 400 people joined in the procession that stretched for about 3 blocks, though only half that many were in the immediate vicinity of the shooting, said Police Superintendent Ronal Serpas. Police saw three suspects running from the scene in the city's 7th Ward neighborhood. No arrests had been made as of late afternoon. Second-line parades are loose processions in which people dance down the street, often following behind a brass band. They can be impromptu or planned and are sometimes described as moving block parties. A social club called The Original Big 7 organized Sunday's event. The group was founded in 1996 at the Saint Bernard housing projects, according to its MySpace page. The neighborhood where the shooting happened was a mix of low-income and middle-class row houses, some boarded up. As of last year, the neighborhood's population was about 60 percent of its pre-Hurricane Katrina level. Police vowed to make swift arrests. Serpas said it wasn't clear if particular people in the second line were targeted, or if the shots were fired in a random fashion. "We'll get them. We have good resources in this neighborhood," Serpas said. In the late afternoon, the scene was taped off and police had placed bullet casing markers in at least 10 spots.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1639
{"url": "http://www.newsherald.com/news/crime-public-safety/19-new-orleans-shooting-victims-included-2-kids-1.142027?page=0", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.newsherald.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:31:34Z", "digest": "sha1:GTRDCSPEHAHAGGFJ3JUYOOXSVXQICMAH"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3377, 3377.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3377, 5060.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3377, 17.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3377, 92.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3377, 0.99]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3377, 177.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3377, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3377, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3377, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3377, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3377, 0.37553957]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3377, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3377, 0.64740741]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3377, 0.64740741]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3377, 0.64740741]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3377, 0.64740741]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3377, 0.64740741]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3377, 0.64740741]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3377, 0.03333333]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3377, 0.02666667]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3377, 0.00962963]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3377, 0.02014388]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3377, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3377, 0.18129496]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3377, 0.38461538]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3377, 4.72027972]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3377, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3377, 4.90257977]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3377, 572.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 63, 0.0], [63, 108, 1.0], [108, 1205, 0.0], [1205, 1378, 1.0], [1378, 1474, 1.0], [1474, 1616, 1.0], [1616, 1806, 1.0], [1806, 1954, 1.0], [1954, 2022, 1.0], [2022, 2300, 1.0], [2300, 2433, 1.0], [2433, 2637, 1.0], [2637, 2803, 1.0], [2803, 3022, 1.0], [3022, 3189, 1.0], [3189, 3265, 1.0], [3265, 3377, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 63, 0.0], [63, 108, 0.0], [108, 1205, 0.0], [1205, 1378, 0.0], [1378, 1474, 0.0], [1474, 1616, 0.0], [1616, 1806, 0.0], [1806, 1954, 0.0], [1954, 2022, 0.0], [2022, 2300, 0.0], [2300, 2433, 0.0], [2433, 2637, 0.0], [2637, 2803, 0.0], [2803, 3022, 0.0], [3022, 3189, 0.0], [3189, 3265, 0.0], [3265, 3377, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 63, 11.0], [63, 108, 8.0], [108, 1205, 187.0], [1205, 1378, 30.0], [1378, 1474, 16.0], [1474, 1616, 23.0], [1616, 1806, 35.0], [1806, 1954, 25.0], [1954, 2022, 12.0], [2022, 2300, 45.0], [2300, 2433, 23.0], [2433, 2637, 32.0], [2637, 2803, 28.0], [2803, 3022, 34.0], [3022, 3189, 30.0], [3189, 3265, 12.0], [3265, 3377, 21.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 63, 0.0483871], [63, 108, 0.25641026], [108, 1205, 0.01036758], [1205, 1378, 0.01204819], [1378, 1474, 0.0], [1474, 1616, 0.0], [1616, 1806, 0.02197802], [1806, 1954, 0.0], [1954, 2022, 0.0], [2022, 2300, 0.01470588], [2300, 2433, 0.00775194], [2433, 2637, 0.0], [2637, 2803, 0.0310559], [2803, 3022, 0.00952381], [3022, 3189, 0.0], [3189, 3265, 0.0], [3265, 3377, 0.01818182]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 63, 0.0], [63, 108, 0.0], [108, 1205, 0.0], [1205, 1378, 0.0], [1378, 1474, 0.0], [1474, 1616, 0.0], [1616, 1806, 0.0], [1806, 1954, 0.0], [1954, 2022, 0.0], [2022, 2300, 0.0], [2300, 2433, 0.0], [2433, 2637, 0.0], [2637, 2803, 0.0], [2803, 3022, 0.0], [3022, 3189, 0.0], [3189, 3265, 0.0], [3265, 3377, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 63, 0.20634921], [63, 108, 0.11111111], [108, 1205, 0.04102097], [1205, 1378, 0.10404624], [1378, 1474, 0.04166667], [1474, 1616, 0.01408451], [1616, 1806, 0.02105263], [1806, 1954, 0.05405405], [1954, 2022, 0.04411765], [2022, 2300, 0.02158273], [2300, 2433, 0.02255639], [2433, 2637, 0.00980392], [2637, 2803, 0.06024096], [2803, 3022, 0.01826484], [3022, 3189, 0.01197605], [3189, 3265, 0.03947368], [3265, 3377, 0.00892857]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3377, 0.99380684]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3377, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3377, 0.98224384]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3377, 9.64758656]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3377, 138.0976732]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3377, 37.10296023]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3377, 36.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
COMMENTS Pearl Harbor survivor helps identify unknown dead By AUDREY McAVOY / Associated Press Published: Thursday, December 6, 2012 at 23:18 PM. Livingston’s nephew, Ken Livingston, said his uncle and his father were raised together by their grandmother and attended the same one-room schoolhouse. They grew up working on farms in and around Worthington, Ind. Livingston remembers his dad saying the brothers took turns wearing a pair of shoes they shared. When the family learned Alfred was found, they brought him home from Hawaii to be buried in the same cemetery where his grandmother and mother rest. About a third of the town showed up for his 2007 memorial service in Worthington, a town of just 1,400 about 80 miles southwest of Indianapolis. The local American Legion put up a sign welcoming home “Worthington’s missing son.” “It brought a lot of closure,” said Ken Livingston, 62, his voice cracking. John Lewis, a retired Navy captain who worked with Emory while assigned to the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command between 2001 and 2004, said the command is fortunate someone like Emory has the time and initiative to painstakingly connect the dots on the unknowns. “Without Ray Emory I don’t know if this ever would have been done,” Lewis said from Flowood, Miss. Emory says people sometimes ask him why he’s spending so much time on events from 70 years ago. He tells them to talk to the relatives to see if they want the unknowns identified. 1 HONOLULU (AP) — Ray Emory could not accept that more than one quarter of the 2,400 Americans who died at Pearl Harbor were buried, unidentified, in a volcanic crater. And so he set out to restore names to the dead. Emory, a survivor of the attack, doggedly scoured decades-old documents to piece together who was who. He pushed, and sometimes badgered, the government into relabeling more than 300 gravestones with the ship names of the deceased. And he lobbied for forensic scientists to exhume the skeletons of those who might be identified. On Friday, the 71-year anniversary of the Japanese attack, the Navy and National Park Service will honor the 91-year-old former sailor for his determination to have Pearl Harbor remembered, and remembered accurately. “Some of the time, we suffered criticism from Ray and sometimes it was personally directed at me. And I think it was all for the better,” said National Park Service historian Daniel Martinez. “It made us rethink things. It wasn’t viewed by me as personal, but a reminder of how you need to sharpen your pencil when you recall these events and the people and what’s important.” Emory first learned of the unknown graves more than 20 years ago when he visited the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific shortly before the 50th anniversary of the attack. The grounds foreman told him the Pearl Harbor dead were scattered around the veterans’ graveyard in a volcanic crater called Punchbowl after its resemblance to the serving dish. Emory got a clipboard and walked along row after row of flat granite markers, making notes of any listing death around Dec. 7, 1941. He got ahold of the Navy’s burial records from archives in Washington and determined which ships the dead in each grave were from. He wrote the government asking why the markers didn’t note ship names and asked them to change it. “They politely told me to go you-know-where,” Emory told The Associated Press in an interview at his Honolulu home, where he keeps a “war room” packed with documents, charts and maps. Military and veterans policy called for changing grave markers only if remains are identified, an inscription is mistaken or a marker is damaged. Emory appealed to the late Patsy Mink, a Hawaii congresswoman who inserted a provision in an appropriations bill requiring Veterans Affairs to include “USS Arizona” on gravestones of unknowns from that battleship. Today, unknowns from other vessels like the USS Oklahoma and USS West Virginia, also have new markers. Some of the dead, like those turned to ash, will likely never be identified. But Emory knew some could be. The Navy’s 1941 burial records noted one body, burned and floating in the harbor, was found wearing shorts with the name “Livingston.” Only two men named Livingston were assigned to Pearl Harbor at the time, and one of the two was accounted for. Emory suspected the body was the other Livingston. Government forensic scientists exhumed him. Dental records, a skeletal analysis and circumstantial evidence confirmed Emory’s suspicions. The remains belonged to Alfred Livingston, a 23-year-old fireman first class assigned to the USS Oklahoma. Livingston’s nephew, Ken Livingston, said his uncle and his father were raised together by their grandmother and attended the same one-room schoolhouse. They grew up working on farms in and around Worthington, Ind. Livingston remembers his dad saying the brothers took turns wearing a pair of shoes they shared. When the family learned Alfred was found, they brought him home from Hawaii to be buried in the same cemetery where his grandmother and mother rest. About a third of the town showed up for his 2007 memorial service in Worthington, a town of just 1,400 about 80 miles southwest of Indianapolis. The local American Legion put up a sign welcoming home “Worthington’s missing son.” “It brought a lot of closure,” said Ken Livingston, 62, his voice cracking. John Lewis, a retired Navy captain who worked with Emory while assigned to the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command between 2001 and 2004, said the command is fortunate someone like Emory has the time and initiative to painstakingly connect the dots on the unknowns. “Without Ray Emory I don’t know if this ever would have been done,” Lewis said from Flowood, Miss. Emory says people sometimes ask him why he’s spending so much time on events from 70 years ago. He tells them to talk to the relatives to see if they want the unknowns identified. He doesn’t get emotional about the work, except when the government doesn’t exhume people he thinks should be dug up and identified. “I get more emotional when they don’t do something,” he said. He’ll keep working after he’s formally recognized during the Pearl Harbor ceremony on Friday to remember and honor the dead. He has names of 100 more men buried at Punchbowl he believes are identifiable.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1640
{"url": "http://www.newsherald.com/news/pearl-harbor-survivor-helps-identify-unknown-dead-1.60949?page=2", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.newsherald.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:36:50Z", "digest": "sha1:OLUJAD33DXAUS3PIDBXNVZKHU7XBOMIF"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 6315, 6315.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 6315, 8119.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 6315, 28.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 6315, 105.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 6315, 0.97]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 6315, 325.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 6315, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 6315, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 6315, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 6315, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 6315, 0.40510367]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 6315, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 6315, 0.41317482]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 6315, 0.41317482]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 6315, 0.41317482]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 6315, 0.41317482]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 6315, 0.41317482]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 6315, 0.41317482]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 6315, 0.0126681]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 6315, 0.00760086]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 6315, 0.01208341]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 6315, 0.01355662]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 6315, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 6315, 0.15869219]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 6315, 0.39791073]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 6315, 4.87274454]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 6315, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 6315, 5.48387012]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 6315, 1053.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 59, 0.0], [59, 95, 0.0], [95, 146, 1.0], [146, 1456, 0.0], [1456, 1623, 1.0], [1623, 1671, 1.0], [1671, 2000, 1.0], [2000, 2217, 1.0], [2217, 2594, 1.0], [2594, 2950, 1.0], [2950, 3214, 1.0], [3214, 3313, 1.0], [3313, 3643, 1.0], [3643, 3857, 1.0], [3857, 3960, 1.0], [3960, 4067, 1.0], [4067, 4364, 1.0], [4364, 4609, 1.0], [4609, 4921, 1.0], [4921, 5070, 1.0], [5070, 5299, 1.0], [5299, 5375, 1.0], [5375, 5638, 1.0], [5638, 5737, 1.0], [5737, 5917, 1.0], [5917, 6050, 1.0], [6050, 6112, 1.0], [6112, 6315, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 59, 0.0], [59, 95, 0.0], [95, 146, 0.0], [146, 1456, 0.0], [1456, 1623, 0.0], [1623, 1671, 0.0], [1671, 2000, 0.0], [2000, 2217, 0.0], [2217, 2594, 0.0], [2594, 2950, 0.0], [2950, 3214, 0.0], [3214, 3313, 0.0], [3313, 3643, 0.0], [3643, 3857, 0.0], [3857, 3960, 0.0], [3960, 4067, 0.0], [4067, 4364, 0.0], [4364, 4609, 0.0], [4609, 4921, 0.0], [4921, 5070, 0.0], [5070, 5299, 0.0], [5299, 5375, 0.0], [5375, 5638, 0.0], [5638, 5737, 0.0], [5737, 5917, 0.0], [5917, 6050, 0.0], [6050, 6112, 0.0], [6112, 6315, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 59, 8.0], [59, 95, 5.0], [95, 146, 8.0], [146, 1456, 223.0], [1456, 1623, 29.0], [1623, 1671, 11.0], [1671, 2000, 52.0], [2000, 2217, 32.0], [2217, 2594, 67.0], [2594, 2950, 58.0], [2950, 3214, 47.0], [3214, 3313, 18.0], [3313, 3643, 54.0], [3643, 3857, 32.0], [3857, 3960, 17.0], [3960, 4067, 20.0], [4067, 4364, 51.0], [4364, 4609, 32.0], [4609, 4921, 49.0], [4921, 5070, 26.0], [5070, 5299, 39.0], [5299, 5375, 13.0], [5375, 5638, 43.0], [5638, 5737, 18.0], [5737, 5917, 34.0], [5917, 6050, 22.0], [6050, 6112, 11.0], [6112, 6315, 34.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 59, 0.0], [59, 95, 0.0], [95, 146, 0.2], [146, 1456, 0.01792673], [1456, 1623, 0.025], [1623, 1671, 0.0], [1671, 2000, 0.009375], [2000, 2217, 0.01913876], [2217, 2594, 0.0], [2594, 2950, 0.01133144], [2950, 3214, 0.01937984], [3214, 3313, 0.0], [3313, 3643, 0.0], [3643, 3857, 0.0], [3857, 3960, 0.0], [3960, 4067, 0.0], [4067, 4364, 0.0137931], [4364, 4609, 0.00843882], [4609, 4921, 0.0], [4921, 5070, 0.0], [5070, 5299, 0.04464286], [5299, 5375, 0.02816901], [5375, 5638, 0.03100775], [5638, 5737, 0.0], [5737, 5917, 0.01129944], [5917, 6050, 0.0], [6050, 6112, 0.0], [6112, 6315, 0.01492537]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 59, 0.0], [59, 95, 0.0], [95, 146, 0.0], [146, 1456, 0.0], [1456, 1623, 0.0], [1623, 1671, 0.0], [1671, 2000, 0.0], [2000, 2217, 0.0], [2217, 2594, 0.0], [2594, 2950, 0.0], [2950, 3214, 0.0], [3214, 3313, 0.0], [3313, 3643, 0.0], [3643, 3857, 0.0], [3857, 3960, 0.0], [3960, 4067, 0.0], [4067, 4364, 0.0], [4364, 4609, 0.0], [4609, 4921, 0.0], [4921, 5070, 0.0], [5070, 5299, 0.0], [5299, 5375, 0.0], [5375, 5638, 0.0], [5638, 5737, 0.0], [5737, 5917, 0.0], [5917, 6050, 0.0], [6050, 6112, 0.0], [6112, 6315, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 59, 0.16949153], [59, 95, 0.38888889], [95, 146, 0.09803922], [146, 1456, 0.03282443], [1456, 1623, 0.08982036], [1623, 1671, 0.02083333], [1671, 2000, 0.00911854], [2000, 2217, 0.04147465], [2217, 2594, 0.02917772], [2594, 2950, 0.0252809], [2950, 3214, 0.01893939], [3214, 3313, 0.01010101], [3313, 3643, 0.02121212], [3643, 3857, 0.04672897], [3857, 3960, 0.09708738], [3960, 4067, 0.02803738], [4067, 4364, 0.03030303], [4364, 4609, 0.04081633], [4609, 4921, 0.0224359], [4921, 5070, 0.02013423], [5070, 5299, 0.03056769], [5299, 5375, 0.03947368], [5375, 5638, 0.05323194], [5638, 5737, 0.07070707], [5737, 5917, 0.01111111], [5917, 6050, 0.0075188], [6050, 6112, 0.01612903], [6112, 6315, 0.02955665]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 6315, 0.8637982]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 6315, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 6315, 0.9531799]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 6315, -136.64683535]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 6315, 230.66683806]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 6315, -130.10139888]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 6315, 55.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Tags: 2012 President Race Cain Tells Kimmel: I'll 'Set the Record Straight' at News Conference By Martin Gould and Michelle Lopata Just hours after saying he would not play by the media’s rules when it comes to sexual harassment allegations, Herman Cain told late-night TV host Jimmy Kimmel that he will have a news conference Tuesday to “set the record straight.” The Republican presidential candidate, who still flatly denies all claims that he behaved inappropriately with women, told Kimmel Monday night: “When I made the statement that I'm done talking about this, I was talking about the firestorm last week. I wasn't talking about this new firestorm that we discovered today." Story continues below video. Cain, whose news conference in Phoenix, Ariz., will take place at 5 p.m. Eastern time today, declared: “There’s not an ounce of truth in all of these accusations.” The latest drama for the Cain campaign came when 50-year-old single mother Sharon Bialek went public on Monday to say that Cain put his hand up her skirt and pushed her head toward his lap as they sat in a car in Washington, D.C., 15 years ago. She had been fired from her job with the National Restaurant Association’s educational foundation and had approached Cain, who then was the association’s CEO, to ask him for help finding another job, she claimed. She told reporters in New York that she protested and asked Cain what he was doing, as he knew she had a boyfriend. She said he replied: “You want a job, right?” But he stopped and immediately drove her back to her hotel. Cain, a 65-year-old father of two, told Kimmel he had had “a rough start” to his day. He said he watched Bialek’s press conference while in San Francisco and immediately called his wife, Gloria, who has remained at home in Atlanta, far from the campaign trail. “I had a few of my staff members there with me, and I'm sitting here and they're watching me and they could see the steam coming out of my ears,” he said. “And the feelings that you have when you know that all of this is totally fabricated and you go from anger then you get disgusted, you try to control yourself to make sure you watch this thing all the way through it.” He insisted, “There is not an ounce of truth in all these accusations.” Now that Bialek has gone public, he said he knows “who it was and what it was” that he has to deal with. On Tuesday, Bialek appeared on CNN’s “American Morning,” where she said she is struggling financially and could have sold her story to make a quick buck but decided against it. “My whole objective is to tell the truth and also help other people out there who have been in similar situations. “Initially, I went into this hoping every hope of hopes that Herman would just step forward. That was my primary goal — just admit it. Step forward, admit it, and move forward,” she said. After Bialek’s announcement on Monday, another woman, Donna Donella, told the Washington Examiner that Cain appeared close to crossing the line with a businesswoman who questioned him during a United States Agency for International Development speech he gave in Egypt in 2002. Donella, who worked for the agency at the time, said Cain approached her and a colleague after the speech and said, “Could you put me in touch with that lovely young lady who asked the question, so I can give her a more thorough answer over dinner?" She said she was “suspicious” of Cain’s behavior and eventually a group went out to eat, and Cain did nothing inappropriate during the meal — although he ordered two $400 bottles of wine, leaving the Egyptian woman with the bill. “I couldn't swear that he had some untoward intentions, but we all thought his tone was suspect and we didn't feel comfortable putting him in touch with that woman," Donella told the Examiner. Cain sent out an email to supporters shortly before his appearance with Kimmel, in which he attacked the media’s handling of the harassment accusations. “I have touched on this before — the emphasis on "gaffes," gotcha questions, and time devoted to trivial nonsense — and everyone knows the process only became further detached from relevance this week as the media published anonymous, ancient, vague personal allegations against me,” he wrote. “Once this kind of nonsense starts, the media's rules say you have to act in a certain way. I am well aware of these rules. And I refuse to play by them.” He said most people agreed with him that he should not be drawn into the controversy that is swirling. “If the media want to continue talking about nonsense, that's fine. I'm not going to join them. It doesn't look like the citizenry plans to join them either.” But as soon as he was on television he changed his tack, telling Kimmel he now planned to tackle the accusations head on. “I will talk about any and all future firestorms because here's one thing people know about Herman Cain: I'm in it to win it and I'm not going to be discouraged.” Cain has been dogged with accusations of improper behavior towards women for more than a week now. The brouhaha started when the website Politico reported on Oct. 30 that two female employees of the restaurant association, who still remain unidentified, were paid to quit their jobs after laying formal complaints of harassment in the late 1990s. Since then another unidentified ex-employee told The Associated Press that he invited her up to his corporate apartment and conservative radio host Steve Deace said he made “awkward, inappropriate” comments to two female members of his staff when he went to this studio in Des Moines, Iowa, for an interview. Cain has been criticized harshly for his handling of the accusations. Even though Politico told his campaign they were planning to run a story 10 days before they actually did, his campaign reacted slowly. He initially denied knowing about paying off any staff members because of complaints, then admitted he remembered one of them. He also insisted before Bialek went public that there could not be any further embarrassing disclosures. All along he has said virtually nothing about the accusations as he has desperately tried to refocus media coverage on his 9-9-9 tax plan.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1641
{"url": "http://www.newsmax.com/InsideCover/Cain-Sexual-harassment-Kimmel/2011/11/08/id/417245/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.newsmax.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:24:53Z", "digest": "sha1:MRIOGJZOPLAJKXKL24IVTTD6AGPEB4JV"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 6179, 6179.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 6179, 8715.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 6179, 26.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 6179, 129.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 6179, 0.99]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 6179, 250.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 6179, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 6179, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 6179, 1.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 6179, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 6179, 0.45888802]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 6179, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 6179, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 6179, 0.00886561]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 6179, 0.00886561]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 6179, 0.00886561]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 6179, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 6179, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 6179, 0.00725368]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 6179, 0.00644771]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 6179, 0.00483578]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 6179, 0.01722788]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 6179, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 6179, 0.14643696]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 6179, 0.46598322]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 6179, 4.62534949]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 6179, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 6179, 5.63720705]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 6179, 1073.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 26, 0.0], [26, 95, 0.0], [95, 131, 0.0], [131, 365, 1.0], [365, 684, 0.0], [684, 713, 1.0], [713, 877, 1.0], [877, 1122, 1.0], [1122, 1335, 1.0], [1335, 1557, 1.0], [1557, 1818, 1.0], [1818, 2191, 1.0], [2191, 2368, 1.0], [2368, 2660, 1.0], [2660, 2848, 1.0], [2848, 3125, 1.0], [3125, 3375, 0.0], [3375, 3605, 1.0], [3605, 3798, 1.0], [3798, 4400, 1.0], [4400, 4662, 1.0], [4662, 4947, 1.0], [4947, 5294, 1.0], [5294, 5603, 1.0], [5603, 5809, 1.0], [5809, 6179, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 26, 0.0], [26, 95, 0.0], [95, 131, 0.0], [131, 365, 0.0], [365, 684, 0.0], [684, 713, 0.0], [713, 877, 0.0], [877, 1122, 0.0], [1122, 1335, 0.0], [1335, 1557, 0.0], [1557, 1818, 0.0], [1818, 2191, 0.0], [2191, 2368, 0.0], [2368, 2660, 0.0], [2660, 2848, 0.0], [2848, 3125, 0.0], [3125, 3375, 0.0], [3375, 3605, 0.0], [3605, 3798, 0.0], [3798, 4400, 0.0], [4400, 4662, 0.0], [4662, 4947, 0.0], [4947, 5294, 0.0], [5294, 5603, 0.0], [5603, 5809, 0.0], [5809, 6179, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 26, 4.0], [26, 95, 11.0], [95, 131, 6.0], [131, 365, 40.0], [365, 684, 50.0], [684, 713, 4.0], [713, 877, 28.0], [877, 1122, 47.0], [1122, 1335, 34.0], [1335, 1557, 43.0], [1557, 1818, 46.0], [1818, 2191, 74.0], [2191, 2368, 36.0], [2368, 2660, 51.0], [2660, 2848, 34.0], [2848, 3125, 42.0], [3125, 3375, 47.0], [3375, 3605, 40.0], [3605, 3798, 33.0], [3798, 4400, 102.0], [4400, 4662, 47.0], [4662, 4947, 54.0], [4947, 5294, 56.0], [5294, 5603, 50.0], [5603, 5809, 34.0], [5809, 6179, 60.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 26, 0.16666667], [26, 95, 0.0], [95, 131, 0.0], [131, 365, 0.0], [365, 684, 0.0], [684, 713, 0.0], [713, 877, 0.00649351], [877, 1122, 0.01687764], [1122, 1335, 0.0], [1335, 1557, 0.0], [1557, 1818, 0.00796813], [1818, 2191, 0.0], [2191, 2368, 0.0], [2368, 2660, 0.0], [2660, 2848, 0.0], [2848, 3125, 0.01470588], [3125, 3375, 0.0], [3375, 3605, 0.01333333], [3605, 3798, 0.0], [3798, 4400, 0.0], [4400, 4662, 0.0], [4662, 4947, 0.0], [4947, 5294, 0.01759531], [5294, 5603, 0.0], [5603, 5809, 0.00990099], [5809, 6179, 0.00824176]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 26, 0.0], [26, 95, 0.0], [95, 131, 0.0], [131, 365, 0.0], [365, 684, 0.0], [684, 713, 0.0], [713, 877, 0.0], [877, 1122, 0.0], [1122, 1335, 0.0], [1335, 1557, 0.0], [1557, 1818, 0.0], [1818, 2191, 0.0], [2191, 2368, 0.0], [2368, 2660, 0.0], [2660, 2848, 0.0], [2848, 3125, 0.0], [3125, 3375, 0.0], [3375, 3605, 0.0], [3605, 3798, 0.0], [3798, 4400, 0.0], [4400, 4662, 0.0], [4662, 4947, 0.0], [4947, 5294, 0.0], [5294, 5603, 0.0], [5603, 5809, 0.0], [5809, 6179, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 26, 0.11538462], [26, 95, 0.13043478], [95, 131, 0.13888889], [131, 365, 0.03418803], [365, 684, 0.02821317], [684, 713, 0.03448276], [713, 877, 0.0304878], [877, 1122, 0.03673469], [1122, 1335, 0.03755869], [1335, 1557, 0.03153153], [1557, 1818, 0.03065134], [1818, 2191, 0.0080429], [2191, 2368, 0.02259887], [2368, 2660, 0.03082192], [2660, 2848, 0.02659574], [2848, 3125, 0.05054152], [3125, 3375, 0.016], [3375, 3605, 0.0173913], [3605, 3798, 0.01554404], [3798, 4400, 0.01162791], [4400, 4662, 0.01526718], [4662, 4947, 0.0245614], [4947, 5294, 0.01152738], [5294, 5603, 0.02912621], [5603, 5809, 0.01456311], [5809, 6179, 0.01081081]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 6179, 0.96510315]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 6179, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 6179, 0.95563966]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 6179, 37.09845149]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 6179, 260.17307539]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 6179, -323.11386823]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 6179, 50.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Autopen Obama's Signature: Is it Real or Is it Autopenned? Monday, 27 Jun 2011 07:07 AM WASHINGTON — It's the open secret that nobody in government wants to talk about: That cherished presidential signature that's tucked away in a scrapbook or framed for all to see might never have passed under the president's hand. For decades, presidents of both parties have let an autopen do some of the heavy lifting when it comes to scrawling their signatures. The machine was recently put to use signing a bill into law, apparently a first. Overseas and out of reach when lawmakers passed an extension of certain provisions of the Patriot Act, President Barack Obama employed the autopen to sign it, a step the White House has been mum about ever since. "I always heard the autopen was the second most guarded thing in the White House after the president," says Jack Shock, who had permission to wield former President Bill Clinton's autopen as his director of presidential letters and messages. Jim Cicconi, who oversaw the use of autopens for President George H.W. Bush, recalls that the plastic signature templates for the machines — yes, there was more than one autopen — would wear out from repeated use. Ronald Reagan had 22 different signature templates, including "Ron," ''Dutch" and other iterations, to boost the aura of authenticity surrounding his fake signatures, says Stephen Koschal, an autograph authenticator who two years ago published a guide to presidential autopen signatures. It's not just ordinary Americans who get the autopen treatment. Koschal says he once visited Vice President Dan Quayle's office in the Capitol and spotted a signed photograph from the first President Bush that he said had clearly been autopenned. Obama took the presidential autopen out of the closet and into a new realm. While traveling in Europe last month, Obama directed his staff in Washington to use an autopen to sign into law an extension of certain Patriot Act powers to fight terrorism. The legislation had been approved by Congress at the last minute, and there was no time to fly it to France for Obama's signature before the anti-terrorism powers expired. It was believed to be the first time a president has used an autopen to sign legislation, and that didn't sit well with a number of Republicans. Twenty-one GOP House members sent Obama a letter on June 17 asking him to re-sign the legislation with his actual signature because use of the autopen "appears contrary to the Constitution." Obama's team relied on a 29-page legal analysis crafted during the administration of President George W. Bush to argue that the faux signature passed constitutional muster. Ari Fleischer, White House press secretary under the younger Bush, says the Bush White House had considered using the autopen to sign a minor piece of legislation as a test case, "but in the end Bush just kept signing the parchment himself." Bush used the autopen for routine correspondence and photos but not on matters of importance, Fleischer said. While a number of White House aides from administrations past were willing to discuss the presidential autopen, that kind of talk is frowned upon while a president is in office. "You want to preserve the president's semblance of reaching out and being connected," says Shock. "But the cold hard facts are that when you get 10,000 letters a day he can't possibly handle all that kind of correspondence himself." It turns out there are varying levels of fakeness in presidential signatures. There are preapproved form letters with digital signatures. There are preprinted cards for birthdays and other special events. Autopen signatures generally are reserved for more personalized correspondence that doesn't score a real signature, say officials from administrations past. Obama's staff is loath to talk about his use of the autopen. The president prefers to keep the focus on the sampling of 10 letters a day that he reads from among the tens of thousands that ordinary people send to the White House. In many cases, he writes back to these people, with his own signature. But the president couldn't get around explaining how the Patriot Act got signed into law without briefly shining a spotlight on the autopen. Once that news was out, though, the White House clammed up. It declined to provide any further details about how many autopens the administration uses, what they look like, where they're kept, or who makes the machine. And don't ask Bob Olding, whose company is the leading manufacturer of autopens, to discuss his clientele. "I'm not going to help you," he said. "Our customers do not want anyone else knowing they have these machines." Olding did reveal, though, that "when there's a major change in government, we get an uptick in business." Olding is president of Rockville, Md.-based Damilic Corp., whose signature machines run from $2,000 up to $10,000. Hulking older versions look like a drafting table and are too big to fit through a doorway. Newer models, with microprocessors and digital controls, sit on a tabletop. But they still feature two mechanical arms that move a pen back and forth, up and down. The machines sign letters at about the same pace as does the human hand. An autopen machine that automatically signs a stack of documents can spit out roughly 500 signatures an hour; those with manual document feeders, about 200 an hour. As recently as the second Bush administration, the autopen in use was a large piece of furniture that looked like a drafting table, says Heidi Smith, who served as Bush's correspondence director for two years. She says those with clearance to use the autopen would head over to the executive clerk's office in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, next to the White House, where the autopen wielded Bush's pen of choice — a Sharpie. Autopens have been used by presidents since Dwight Eisenhower, says Koschal, and President John F. Kennedy put them to heavy use. Many presidents have had secretaries sign their names to correspondence and documents, he says. More than 200 years ago, Thomas Jefferson acquired a mechanical copying device called a polygraph that attached to his pen and made a second copy of what he was writing. Jefferson liked it so much he wrote that "I could not, now therefore, live without the Polygraph." It's not just busy presidents who rely on autopens. They're used by thousands of organizations, companies and government officials. Donald H. Rumsfeld got in hot water for using one as defense secretary to sign letters of condolence to the families of U.S. troops killed in action. When word leaked out in 2004, Rumsfeld said he'd done it to "ensure expeditious contact with grieving family members." "I have directed that in the future I sign each letter," he said. Other officials and candidates have fingered the autopen as an excuse to avoid taking responsibility for documents that appeared to bear their names. One was Enron executive Kenneth Lay, who was convicted of fraud, conspiracy and lying to banks despite his lawyers' arguments that he shouldn't be held accountable for documents signed by autopen. His conviction was later vacated on other grounds. So how to tell the difference between a real signature and an autopen version? Koschal says the best way to detect a fake is to lay the signature in question over a known autopen version and hold the two documents up to a light. If they're exactly the same, chances are that the top one was created with an autopen. But presidents often create multiple autopen signatures to make it less obvious when they're letting a machine do the work. As for Obama's autopen signature on the extension of Patriot Act powers, it may pass the constitutional test, but not Koschal's. "I'd pay peanuts for it," the autograph authenticator said. "It's not a real signature."
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1642
{"url": "http://www.newsmax.com/Politics/US-Obamas-Autopen/2011/06/27/id/401519/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.newsmax.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:36:45Z", "digest": "sha1:GHD5VE7FUEOPGETCB4ZAXGZJKQUQ5YIK"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 7844, 7844.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 7844, 10533.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 7844, 39.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 7844, 136.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 7844, 0.97]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 7844, 313.9]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 7844, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 7844, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 7844, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 7844, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 7844, 0.43754045]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 7844, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 7844, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 7844, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 7844, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 7844, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 7844, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 7844, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 7844, 0.01896933]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 7844, 0.01027506]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 7844, 0.00632311]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 7844, 0.01035599]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 7844, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 7844, 0.14110032]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 7844, 0.42419602]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 7844, 4.84379786]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 7844, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 7844, 5.60396697]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 7844, 1306.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 8, 0.0], [8, 59, 1.0], [59, 88, 0.0], [88, 318, 1.0], [318, 533, 1.0], [533, 746, 1.0], [746, 988, 1.0], [988, 1202, 1.0], [1202, 1490, 1.0], [1490, 1554, 1.0], [1554, 1737, 1.0], [1737, 1813, 1.0], [1813, 2160, 1.0], [2160, 2496, 0.0], [2496, 2669, 1.0], [2669, 3021, 1.0], [3021, 3199, 1.0], [3199, 3432, 0.0], [3432, 3510, 1.0], [3510, 3794, 1.0], [3794, 3855, 1.0], [3855, 4095, 1.0], [4095, 4455, 1.0], [4455, 4562, 1.0], [4562, 4674, 0.0], [4674, 4781, 0.0], [4781, 5152, 1.0], [5152, 5390, 1.0], [5390, 5827, 1.0], [5827, 6053, 1.0], [6053, 6322, 0.0], [6322, 6454, 1.0], [6454, 6723, 0.0], [6723, 6789, 1.0], [6789, 7187, 1.0], [7187, 7266, 1.0], [7266, 7627, 1.0], [7627, 7756, 1.0], [7756, 7844, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 8, 0.0], [8, 59, 0.0], [59, 88, 0.0], [88, 318, 0.0], [318, 533, 0.0], [533, 746, 0.0], [746, 988, 0.0], [988, 1202, 0.0], [1202, 1490, 0.0], [1490, 1554, 0.0], [1554, 1737, 0.0], [1737, 1813, 0.0], [1813, 2160, 0.0], [2160, 2496, 0.0], [2496, 2669, 0.0], [2669, 3021, 0.0], [3021, 3199, 0.0], [3199, 3432, 0.0], [3432, 3510, 0.0], [3510, 3794, 0.0], [3794, 3855, 0.0], [3855, 4095, 0.0], [4095, 4455, 0.0], [4455, 4562, 0.0], [4562, 4674, 0.0], [4674, 4781, 0.0], [4781, 5152, 0.0], [5152, 5390, 0.0], [5390, 5827, 0.0], [5827, 6053, 0.0], [6053, 6322, 0.0], [6322, 6454, 0.0], [6454, 6723, 0.0], [6723, 6789, 0.0], [6789, 7187, 0.0], [7187, 7266, 0.0], [7266, 7627, 0.0], [7627, 7756, 0.0], [7756, 7844, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 8, 1.0], [8, 59, 9.0], [59, 88, 6.0], [88, 318, 38.0], [318, 533, 38.0], [533, 746, 37.0], [746, 988, 39.0], [988, 1202, 37.0], [1202, 1490, 40.0], [1490, 1554, 10.0], [1554, 1737, 30.0], [1737, 1813, 14.0], [1813, 2160, 59.0], [2160, 2496, 58.0], [2496, 2669, 26.0], [2669, 3021, 59.0], [3021, 3199, 30.0], [3199, 3432, 39.0], [3432, 3510, 12.0], [3510, 3794, 38.0], [3794, 3855, 12.0], [3855, 4095, 45.0], [4095, 4455, 60.0], [4455, 4562, 17.0], [4562, 4674, 20.0], [4674, 4781, 18.0], [4781, 5152, 62.0], [5152, 5390, 41.0], [5390, 5827, 74.0], [5827, 6053, 35.0], [6053, 6322, 47.0], [6322, 6454, 19.0], [6454, 6723, 46.0], [6723, 6789, 13.0], [6789, 7187, 62.0], [7187, 7266, 14.0], [7266, 7627, 66.0], [7627, 7756, 21.0], [7756, 7844, 14.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 8, 0.0], [8, 59, 0.0], [59, 88, 0.38461538], [88, 318, 0.0], [318, 533, 0.0], [533, 746, 0.0], [746, 988, 0.0], [988, 1202, 0.0], [1202, 1490, 0.00724638], [1490, 1554, 0.0], [1554, 1737, 0.0], [1737, 1813, 0.0], [1813, 2160, 0.0], [2160, 2496, 0.00611621], [2496, 2669, 0.01190476], [2669, 3021, 0.0], [3021, 3199, 0.0], [3199, 3432, 0.02252252], [3432, 3510, 0.0], [3510, 3794, 0.0], [3794, 3855, 0.0], [3855, 4095, 0.00851064], [4095, 4455, 0.0], [4455, 4562, 0.0], [4562, 4674, 0.0], [4674, 4781, 0.0], [4781, 5152, 0.02542373], [5152, 5390, 0.02575107], [5390, 5827, 0.0], [5827, 6053, 0.0], [6053, 6322, 0.01149425], [6322, 6454, 0.0], [6454, 6723, 0.01544402], [6723, 6789, 0.0], [6789, 7187, 0.0], [7187, 7266, 0.0], [7266, 7627, 0.0], [7627, 7756, 0.0], [7756, 7844, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 8, 0.0], [8, 59, 0.0], [59, 88, 0.0], [88, 318, 0.0], [318, 533, 0.0], [533, 746, 0.0], [746, 988, 0.0], [988, 1202, 0.0], [1202, 1490, 0.0], [1490, 1554, 0.0], [1554, 1737, 0.0], [1737, 1813, 0.0], [1813, 2160, 0.0], [2160, 2496, 0.0], [2496, 2669, 0.0], [2669, 3021, 0.0], [3021, 3199, 0.0], [3199, 3432, 0.0], [3432, 3510, 0.0], [3510, 3794, 0.0], [3794, 3855, 0.0], [3855, 4095, 0.0], [4095, 4455, 0.0], [4455, 4562, 0.0], [4562, 4674, 0.0], [4674, 4781, 0.0], [4781, 5152, 0.0], [5152, 5390, 0.0], [5390, 5827, 0.0], [5827, 6053, 0.0], [6053, 6322, 0.0], [6322, 6454, 0.0], [6454, 6723, 0.0], [6723, 6789, 0.0], [6789, 7187, 0.0], [7187, 7266, 0.0], [7266, 7627, 0.0], [7627, 7756, 0.0], [7756, 7844, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 8, 0.125], [8, 59, 0.11764706], [59, 88, 0.13793103], [88, 318, 0.05217391], [318, 533, 0.00930233], [533, 746, 0.03755869], [746, 988, 0.03305785], [988, 1202, 0.03271028], [1202, 1490, 0.02083333], [1490, 1554, 0.03125], [1554, 1737, 0.04371585], [1737, 1813, 0.01315789], [1813, 2160, 0.02881844], [2160, 2496, 0.0297619], [2496, 2669, 0.02890173], [2669, 3021, 0.03125], [3021, 3199, 0.01685393], [3199, 3432, 0.01287554], [3432, 3510, 0.01282051], [3510, 3794, 0.01056338], [3794, 3855, 0.01639344], [3855, 4095, 0.01666667], [4095, 4455, 0.01944444], [4455, 4562, 0.02803738], [4562, 4674, 0.01785714], [4674, 4781, 0.00934579], [4781, 5152, 0.02156334], [5152, 5390, 0.00840336], [5390, 5827, 0.03203661], [5827, 6053, 0.03982301], [6053, 6322, 0.02230483], [6322, 6454, 0.01515152], [6454, 6723, 0.0260223], [6723, 6789, 0.03030303], [6789, 7187, 0.01507538], [7187, 7266, 0.01265823], [7266, 7627, 0.00831025], [7627, 7756, 0.03875969], [7756, 7844, 0.02272727]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 7844, 0.9792577]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 7844, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 7844, 0.9778496]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 7844, 11.25078932]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 7844, 213.69929604]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 7844, -54.36093917]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 7844, 71.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Over A Dozen Cars Vandalized By: Lindsay Puccio Updated: Wed 12:33 PM, Jul 13, 2005 / Article July 12, 2005 Albemarle County Police are sorting out the details after at least 12 cars were vandalized in the early morning hours of July 12. Police said the random acts of violence caused thousands of dollars worth of damage. Over a dozen vehicles were vandalized. Windows were smashed in and glass was shattered everywhere. That's what some Albemarle County families awoke to the morning of July 12. "My daughter came inside the house and she said 'something is wrong with the car.' And we figured 'what's wrong with the car?' I thought it might have had a fender bender or something like that, but we came out here and looked at it and there it was, glass all over the place," said Von Parrish, a Camelot resident. Witnesses said they heard that three teenagers went on a vandalism rampage with a baseball bat, smashing cars in Camelot, Briarwood, Hollymeade, and Forest Lakes. "We believe it may have happened aometime between midnight and three or four o'clock in the morning," said John Texiera, of Albemarle County Police Department. Police said they were shocked to find out that the vandals didn't take anything from any of the cars. "The interesting thing about these vandalisms was nothing was taken, no theft was involved, which shows that the intent was to damage," said Texiera. Although Albemarle County police said the attacks were random, each of the vandalized cars was parked on the street rather than the driveway. "We don't have any suspects as of this time nor do we have any significant leads, however I'm confident that we will be able to develop some," said Texiera. While police are left searching for the attackers, the victims are left wondering why. "The cops said [the vandals] just didn't have anything better to do," said Parrish. If you have any information about these incidents, police ask you to call Crimestoppers at 434-977-4000. Relay Runners Run to Boston for Charity Most Read Stories When Can Police Draw Their Guns?
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1643
{"url": "http://www.newsplex.com/news/headlines/1687197.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.newsplex.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:18:49Z", "digest": "sha1:UAWTEUKY6QFFGNOXMTNXEXLCJYD5KG4Y"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2054, 2054.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2054, 4980.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2054, 15.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2054, 149.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2054, 0.99]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2054, 296.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2054, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2054, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2054, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2054, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2054, 0.42992874]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2054, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2054, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2054, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2054, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2054, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2054, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2054, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2054, 0.03667482]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2054, 0.03850856]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2054, 0.01833741]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2054, 0.00950119]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2054, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2054, 0.17577197]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2054, 0.56446991]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2054, 4.68767908]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2054, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2054, 4.92722086]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2054, 349.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 84, 0.0], [84, 108, 0.0], [108, 323, 1.0], [323, 498, 1.0], [498, 814, 1.0], [814, 977, 1.0], [977, 1137, 1.0], [1137, 1239, 1.0], [1239, 1389, 1.0], [1389, 1531, 1.0], [1531, 1688, 1.0], [1688, 1775, 1.0], [1775, 1859, 1.0], [1859, 1964, 1.0], [1964, 2054, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 84, 0.0], [84, 108, 0.0], [108, 323, 0.0], [323, 498, 0.0], [498, 814, 0.0], [814, 977, 0.0], [977, 1137, 0.0], [1137, 1239, 0.0], [1239, 1389, 0.0], [1389, 1531, 0.0], [1531, 1688, 0.0], [1688, 1775, 0.0], [1775, 1859, 0.0], [1859, 1964, 0.0], [1964, 2054, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 84, 15.0], [84, 108, 4.0], [108, 323, 37.0], [323, 498, 28.0], [498, 814, 60.0], [814, 977, 25.0], [977, 1137, 25.0], [1137, 1239, 19.0], [1239, 1389, 24.0], [1389, 1531, 23.0], [1531, 1688, 29.0], [1688, 1775, 14.0], [1775, 1859, 14.0], [1859, 1964, 16.0], [1964, 2054, 16.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 84, 0.12820513], [84, 108, 0.3], [108, 323, 0.01886792], [323, 498, 0.01176471], [498, 814, 0.0], [814, 977, 0.0], [977, 1137, 0.0], [1137, 1239, 0.0], [1239, 1389, 0.0], [1389, 1531, 0.0], [1531, 1688, 0.0], [1688, 1775, 0.0], [1775, 1859, 0.0], [1859, 1964, 0.1], [1964, 2054, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 84, 0.0], [84, 108, 0.0], [108, 323, 0.0], [323, 498, 0.0], [498, 814, 0.0], [814, 977, 0.0], [977, 1137, 0.0], [1137, 1239, 0.0], [1239, 1389, 0.0], [1389, 1531, 0.0], [1531, 1688, 0.0], [1688, 1775, 0.0], [1775, 1859, 0.0], [1859, 1964, 0.0], [1964, 2054, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 84, 0.1547619], [84, 108, 0.08333333], [108, 323, 0.02325581], [323, 498, 0.03428571], [498, 814, 0.01898734], [814, 977, 0.03680982], [977, 1137, 0.04375], [1137, 1239, 0.00980392], [1239, 1389, 0.01333333], [1389, 1531, 0.02112676], [1531, 1688, 0.01910828], [1688, 1775, 0.01149425], [1775, 1859, 0.02380952], [1859, 1964, 0.01904762], [1964, 2054, 0.15555556]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2054, 0.75552523]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2054, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2054, 0.88230211]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2054, 15.2751104]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2054, 36.26594768]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2054, -89.08927475]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2054, 18.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Texas-based IT company to open operations to Utah SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - Gov. Gary Herbert's economic developers are announcing that an information technology company will open a western regional office in Salt Lake City. SolarWinds Inc. of Austin, Texas, is taking up Utah's offer of tax incentives tied to the number of jobs it creates. The company says it employs more than 900 people worldwide and could add more than 1,000 in Utah over two decades. SolarWinds makes a broad range of software products for large and small companies, notably for network monitoring and cloud computing.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1644
{"url": "http://www.newsradioklbj.com/TexasFrontPageNews/Story.aspx?ID=1956955", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.newsradioklbj.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:16:23Z", "digest": "sha1:OWSIH727V6EPTKFZNMWBA2OTUCECOLQL"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 587, 587.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 587, 2966.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 587, 5.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 587, 67.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 587, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 587, 207.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 587, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 587, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 587, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 587, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 587, 0.30172414]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 587, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 587, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 587, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 587, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 587, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 587, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 587, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 587, 0.03368421]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 587, 0.05052632]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 587, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 587, 0.04310345]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 587, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 587, 0.1637931]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 587, 0.76041667]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 587, 4.94791667]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 587, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 587, 4.1959726]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 587, 96.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 50, 0.0], [50, 221, 1.0], [221, 338, 1.0], [338, 453, 1.0], [453, 587, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 50, 0.0], [50, 221, 0.0], [221, 338, 0.0], [338, 453, 0.0], [453, 587, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 50, 8.0], [50, 221, 26.0], [221, 338, 21.0], [338, 453, 21.0], [453, 587, 20.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 50, 0.0], [50, 221, 0.0], [221, 338, 0.0], [338, 453, 0.0625], [453, 587, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 50, 0.0], [50, 221, 0.0], [221, 338, 0.0], [338, 453, 0.0], [453, 587, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 50, 0.08], [50, 221, 0.11695906], [221, 338, 0.05128205], [338, 453, 0.0173913], [453, 587, 0.01492537]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 587, 0.83951622]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 587, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 587, 0.15375483]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 587, -40.25003025]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 587, 3.32460109]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 587, -6.50271458]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 587, 6.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Double Eagle 20 Dollar Coin by Zxeddery Skyrim » Miscellaneous Uploaded by zxeddery Description Last updated at 11:31, 16 Nov 2012 Uploaded at 22:13, 2 Dec 2011 This is a mod that replaces the original septims with double eagle dollar coins.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::Tired of the original Skyrim theme menu song? Try this mod: Skyrim Dovahkiin Techno Remix © Copyright 2014, Robin Scott. All rights reserved.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1645
{"url": "http://www.nexusmods.com/skyrim/mods/2398", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nexusmods.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:34:47Z", "digest": "sha1:AMAIY6NMYUTD3R7CON2W7ORWFV4UHI4S"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 563, 563.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 563, 3927.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 563, 4.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 563, 204.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 563, 0.59]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 563, 230.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 563, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 563, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 563, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 563, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 563, 0.15789474]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 563, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 563, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 563, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 563, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 563, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 563, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 563, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 563, 0.07096774]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 563, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 563, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 563, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 563, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 563, 0.28947368]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 563, 0.79365079]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 563, 4.92063492]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 563, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 563, 3.84876846]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 563, 63.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 40, 0.0], [40, 63, 0.0], [63, 84, 0.0], [84, 563, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 40, 0.0], [40, 63, 0.0], [63, 84, 0.0], [84, 563, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 40, 7.0], [40, 63, 3.0], [63, 84, 3.0], [84, 563, 50.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 40, 0.05128205], [40, 63, 0.0], [63, 84, 0.0], [84, 563, 0.07986111]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 40, 0.0], [40, 63, 0.0], [63, 84, 0.0], [84, 563, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 40, 0.125], [40, 63, 0.08695652], [63, 84, 0.04761905], [84, 563, 0.03549061]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 563, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 563, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 563, 0.00603259]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 563, -35.51613987]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 563, -15.57882253]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 563, -12.9143112]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 563, 4.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Document information pages (list of NFPA codes & standards) NFPA 123 NFPA 123: Standard for Fire Prevention and Control in Underground Bituminous Coal Mines NFPA members and public sector officials may submit a question on an NFPA code or standard. Responses are provided by NFPA staff on an informal basis. Submit your question online or call +1 800 344-3555 between the hours of 9:00am-5:00pm (EST). Please have your NFPA membership number on-hand. AHJS/Public Sector Officials Submit your question online or call +1 800 344-3555 between the hours of 9:00am-5:00pm (EST). Join NFPA to get access to technical support and information to help you make the right choices in your on-the-job decisions. Important Notice: NFPA’s Technical Questions Service is meant to provide information on and assistance in accessing and understanding NFPA codes and standards. Interpretations and opinions contained in responses provided in fulfilling this service do not constitute Formal Interpretations issued pursuant to NFPA Regulations. Any opinion expressed, therefore, is the personal opinion of the responder and does not necessarily represent the official position of the NFPA or its Technical Committees. In addition, responses provided are not intended, nor should they be relied upon, to provide professional consultation or services.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1646
{"url": "http://www.nfpa.org/codes-and-standards/document-information-pages?mode=code&code=123&tab=questions", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nfpa.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:22:34Z", "digest": "sha1:GNRSFQDRUDYYFU53TPDLWFDOWEIU5UCN"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 1330, 1330.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1330, 2436.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1330, 8.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1330, 55.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1330, 0.87]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1330, 303.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1330, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1330, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1330, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1330, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1330, 0.31048387]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1330, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1330, 0.1297989]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1330, 0.1297989]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1330, 0.1297989]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1330, 0.1297989]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1330, 0.1297989]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1330, 0.1297989]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1330, 0.01645338]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1330, 0.03290676]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1330, 0.04387569]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1330, 0.06048387]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1330, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1330, 0.20564516]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1330, 0.58585859]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1330, 5.52525253]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1330, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1330, 4.49715798]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1330, 198.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 69, 0.0], [69, 157, 0.0], [157, 308, 1.0], [308, 451, 1.0], [451, 480, 0.0], [480, 574, 1.0], [574, 700, 1.0], [700, 1330, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 69, 0.0], [69, 157, 0.0], [157, 308, 0.0], [308, 451, 0.0], [451, 480, 0.0], [480, 574, 0.0], [574, 700, 0.0], [700, 1330, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 69, 10.0], [69, 157, 13.0], [157, 308, 26.0], [308, 451, 22.0], [451, 480, 3.0], [480, 574, 15.0], [574, 700, 21.0], [700, 1330, 88.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 69, 0.046875], [69, 157, 0.03488372], [157, 308, 0.0], [308, 451, 0.12878788], [451, 480, 0.0], [480, 574, 0.2], [574, 700, 0.0], [700, 1330, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 69, 0.0], [69, 157, 0.0], [157, 308, 0.0], [308, 451, 0.0], [451, 480, 0.0], [480, 574, 0.0], [574, 700, 0.0], [700, 1330, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 69, 0.13043478], [69, 157, 0.13636364], [157, 308, 0.08609272], [308, 451, 0.06293706], [451, 480, 0.24137931], [480, 574, 0.04255319], [574, 700, 0.03968254], [700, 1330, 0.04603175]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1330, 0.00962281]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1330, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1330, 0.01016599]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1330, -102.51980946]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1330, -29.40333742]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1330, -55.02492152]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1330, 10.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
New Hampshire Business Review / New Hampshire Business Review Archive 2002 / N.H. is No. 2 in car insurance affordability N.H. is No. 2 in car insurance affordability Published: An industry group says New Hampshire has the second most affordable auto insurance costs in the country.InsWeb, an online insurance comparison provider based in Sacramento, Calif., compared the median household car insurance rate and median household income of each of the 50 states and Washington, D.C., to determine what it calls an “affordability factor,” with a low factor indicating less of a family’s budget is spent on car insurance.New Hampshire’s affordability factor was 2.23 percent, slightly higher than top-ranked Massachusetts, which had an affordability factor of 1.84 percent.Vermont was just behind the Granite State at 2.39 percent, placing third.Lousiana had the nation’s highest affordability factor, 6.93 percent."Comparing median car insurance rates by state gives us a good sense of where drivers are paying higher and lower premiums, but it doesn't necessarily tell us where states rank in terms of affordability," said Brad Cooper, senior vice president of product, site and marketing at InsWeb. "To really get a sense of where car insurance is the most and least affordable, you have to consider how much of a typical family's income goes towards premiums, and that's what our affordability factor measures." InsWeb uses a proprietary system that tracks the rating algorithms of multiple insurance carriers in each state. Rates are based on actual customer profiles that can include multiple drivers, multiple vehicles and other variables. Income data is provided by Zip-Codes.com. Affordability factors are calculated as of May 31. – CINDY KIBBE/NEW HAMPSHIRE BUSINESS REVIEW This article appears in the Archive 2002 issue of New Hampshire Business Review
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1647
{"url": "http://www.nhbr.com/Archive-2002/N.H.-is-No.-2-in-car-insurance-affordability/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nhbr.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:36:16Z", "digest": "sha1:FE3GBIAPWMA3M6TUVQWDIMVBHDFCWZES"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 1860, 1860.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1860, 3543.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1860, 2.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1860, 41.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1860, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1860, 300.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1860, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1860, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1860, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1860, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1860, 0.32311978]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1860, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1860, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1860, 0.04470743]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1860, 0.04470743]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1860, 0.04470743]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1860, 0.04470743]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1860, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1860, 0.03944773]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1860, 0.06048652]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1860, 0.05128205]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1860, 0.03342618]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1860, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1860, 0.19220056]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1860, 0.57597173]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1860, 5.3745583]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1860, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1860, 4.80293133]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1860, 283.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 1781, 0.0], [1781, 1860, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 1781, 0.0], [1781, 1860, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 1781, 270.0], [1781, 1860, 13.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 1781, 0.01276843], [1781, 1860, 0.05063291]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 1781, 0.0], [1781, 1860, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 1781, 0.04660303], [1781, 1860, 0.07594937]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1860, 0.01700234]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1860, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1860, 0.38582945]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1860, -122.00554101]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1860, 11.35511731]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1860, -22.64339334]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1860, 26.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
You are here: Home / Users / sunyholiday / Blogs sunyholiday’s blog What I don't get... What I don't get is when "adults" need to one up another adult for no reason other than to prove they are the big man. A simple question was asked. Just answer the question. there is no reason to be an ass. I was not criticizing. I was not saying you were wrong. I just asked a question. Your reaction was over the top. You spoke to me in a way that you should never have dared to. My... Back to sunyholiday’s profile
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1648
{"url": "http://www.nickelback.com/users/1BXfboPp/blogs", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nickelback.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:51:32Z", "digest": "sha1:NPUHJHGFBW5Y4WJKEKK6GPHNLEPNOXH2"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 505, 505.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 505, 1127.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 505, 5.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 505, 45.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 505, 0.99]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 505, 260.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 505, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 505, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 505, 1.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 505, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 505, 0.45454545]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 505, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 505, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 505, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 505, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 505, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 505, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 505, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 505, 0.02604167]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 505, 0.046875]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 505, 0.0625]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 505, 0.04958678]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 505, 0.4]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 505, 0.17355372]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 505, 0.66666667]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 505, 4.0]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 505, 0.01652893]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 505, 3.99117267]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 505, 96.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 49, 0.0], [49, 68, 0.0], [68, 88, 1.0], [88, 476, 1.0], [476, 505, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 49, 0.0], [49, 68, 0.0], [68, 88, 0.0], [88, 476, 0.0], [476, 505, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 49, 7.0], [49, 68, 2.0], [68, 88, 4.0], [88, 476, 79.0], [476, 505, 4.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 49, 0.0], [49, 68, 0.0], [68, 88, 0.0], [88, 476, 0.0], [476, 505, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 49, 0.0], [49, 68, 0.0], [68, 88, 0.0], [88, 476, 0.0], [476, 505, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 49, 0.08163265], [49, 68, 0.0], [68, 88, 0.1], [88, 476, 0.0257732], [476, 505, 0.03448276]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 505, -9.89e-06]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 505, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 505, 0.0005222]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 505, -23.52553121]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 505, -6.30955243]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 505, -94.16307613]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 505, 12.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Willkommen auf der Website der Gemeinde Nidwalden Sprungnavigation Von hier aus k?nnen Sie direkt zu folgenden Bereichen springen: Startseite Alt+0 Inhalt Alt+2 Suche Alt+3 Inhaltsverzeichnis Alt+4 PDF von aktueller Seite erzeugen Kanton Nidwalden Schriftgrösse: Webseite durchsuchen Benutzerkonto Canton Nidwalden Filmportrait Politik / Behörden Rechtspflege Medien / Anlässe Home | Kanton Nidwalden | Canton Nidwalden | Living Living in Nidwalden Lake Lucerne, Nidwalden's mountains, charming ancient villages and little towns, and beautiful countryside all conspire to produce a quality of life that is rare these days. A great place to live Nidwalden stands out for its attractive residential zones situated on slopes enjoying fabulous views of the lake and mountains, for its idyllic villages, and for the splendour of its natural surroundings. Demand for private residential accommodation is high, but there is plenty to go round. The standard on offer is mid to high. The market consists of properties � flats and houses � for rent and owner-occupation. For details please visit ImmoMarkt Nidwalden, Homegate and ImmoScout24. First-class schools Switzerland's schools continue to rank among the best in Europe. In Switzerland, state-run kindergartens, primary and middle schools are free to children resident in the respective canton. Compulsory schooling takes ten years: two years of kindergarten, six years of primary education and a three-year orientation phase at middle school level. Once a child has completed primary school, and depending on his or her ability, he or she can transfer straight to gymnasial secondary education (Kollegium Stans), something that is also possible following any one of the three orientation years in middle school. Following compulsory schooling, the young person starts an apprenticeship, continues with his or her education or joins a bridging programme. Nidwalden offers every level of education. Switzerland also enjoys a longstanding university tradition. Depending on their area of interest, students attend universities in Basel, Berne, Fribourg, Geneva, Lausanne, Lucerne, St. Gallen, Zurich, or any one of the universities of applied sciences, e.g. Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts. So far as apprenticeships are concerned, Switzerland applies a dual system, where practical training is combined with attendance at a vocational college. Good range of further training / continuous professional development opportunities Switzerland offers a wide range of high-quality opportunities across the board. The interchangeability of the country's education and training system means that opportunity continues to expand at tertiary level. Sporting and leisure opportunities Canton Nidwalden's open countryside is never more than ten minutes away. Sporting and leisure opportunities are virtually unlimited, with swimming, sailing, waterskiing, windsurfing, diving, paragliding, climbing and mountain biking in the summer, and skiing, snowboarding, cross-country skiing, snowshoeing, sledging and skating in the winter � not forgetting the après-ski! Superb health care Health insurance: Switzerland does not offer compulsory health insurance funds. Instead, private health insurers compete with each other and premiums can differ widely. By how much depends not so much on the insured's income as on the options selected. In accordance with the Federal Law on Compulsory Health Care (KVG), residents are required to take out basic health care cover, but the choice of insurer is down to the individual. Insurers also offer a range of affordable optional extras. Accident insurance: In Switzerland, employed persons are covered by the obligatory accident insurance for occupational accidents and occupational illness and (if working more than a minimum number of hours) non-occupational accidents as well. The premiums for occupational accident and illness cover are paid by the employer; the employee's contribution is deducted from his or her remuneration. Persons not subject to mandatory insurance under the Federal Law on Accident Insurance (UVG), such as the self-employed, etc., are free to opt for the insurer of their choice. Canton Nidwalden has excellent medical practitioners and its own accident and emergency hospital (Nidwalden Cantonal Hospital). Other specialists and clinics can be reached within a few minutes' drive. Nidwalden is also well served when it comes to dentists and dental services. Culture ancient and modern Nidwalden has enjoyed a long and eventful history, which explains the distinctive regionality from which has emerged a rich cultural heritage. Living in Nidwalden, in other words, means participating in an ancient cultural tradition. Not to be forgotten, though, is the canton's contemporary cultural life, including art, music, theatre and film. Nearby is the KKL Luzern concert hall complex, and the cultural attractions of Zurich, Basel, Berne and Lugano are also not far. Staatskanzlei Nidwalden, 6371 Stans Datenschutz|Impressum|Barrierefreiheit
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1649
{"url": "http://www.nidwalden.ch/de/portrait/encantonnw/enlivingnw/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nidwalden.ch", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:14:27Z", "digest": "sha1:D43NN2U7RS72QNCEHSFQIX76ICPYKCUF"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 5052, 5052.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 5052, 5376.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 5052, 23.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 5052, 53.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 5052, 0.91]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 5052, 313.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 5052, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 5052, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 5052, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 5052, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 5052, 0.31756757]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 5052, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 5052, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 5052, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 5052, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 5052, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 5052, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 5052, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 5052, 0.0047824]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 5052, 0.00573888]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 5052, 0.00526064]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 5052, 0.00563063]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 5052, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 5052, 0.16328829]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 5052, 0.54332875]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 5052, 5.75240715]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 5052, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 5052, 5.50817085]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 5052, 727.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 50, 0.0], [50, 67, 0.0], [67, 131, 0.0], [131, 148, 0.0], [148, 161, 0.0], [161, 173, 0.0], [173, 198, 0.0], [198, 231, 0.0], [231, 248, 0.0], [248, 263, 0.0], [263, 284, 0.0], [284, 298, 0.0], [298, 315, 0.0], [315, 328, 0.0], [328, 347, 0.0], [347, 360, 0.0], [360, 377, 0.0], [377, 429, 0.0], [429, 449, 0.0], [449, 623, 1.0], [623, 4978, 1.0], [4978, 5014, 0.0], [5014, 5052, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 50, 0.0], [50, 67, 0.0], [67, 131, 0.0], [131, 148, 0.0], [148, 161, 0.0], [161, 173, 0.0], [173, 198, 0.0], [198, 231, 0.0], [231, 248, 0.0], [248, 263, 0.0], [263, 284, 0.0], [284, 298, 0.0], [298, 315, 0.0], [315, 328, 0.0], [328, 347, 0.0], [347, 360, 0.0], [360, 377, 0.0], [377, 429, 0.0], [429, 449, 0.0], [449, 623, 0.0], [623, 4978, 0.0], [4978, 5014, 0.0], [5014, 5052, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 50, 7.0], [50, 67, 1.0], [67, 131, 10.0], [131, 148, 2.0], [148, 161, 2.0], [161, 173, 2.0], [173, 198, 2.0], [198, 231, 5.0], [231, 248, 2.0], [248, 263, 1.0], [263, 284, 2.0], [284, 298, 1.0], [298, 315, 2.0], [315, 328, 1.0], [328, 347, 2.0], [347, 360, 1.0], [360, 377, 2.0], [377, 429, 6.0], [429, 449, 3.0], [449, 623, 26.0], [623, 4978, 642.0], [4978, 5014, 4.0], [5014, 5052, 1.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 50, 0.0], [50, 67, 0.0], [67, 131, 0.0], [131, 148, 0.06666667], [148, 161, 0.09090909], [161, 173, 0.1], [173, 198, 0.04347826], [198, 231, 0.0], [231, 248, 0.0], [248, 263, 0.0], [263, 284, 0.0], [284, 298, 0.0], [298, 315, 0.0], [315, 328, 0.0], [328, 347, 0.0], [347, 360, 0.0], [360, 377, 0.0], [377, 429, 0.0], [429, 449, 0.0], [449, 623, 0.0], [623, 4978, 0.00047259], [4978, 5014, 0.11764706], [5014, 5052, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 50, 0.0], [50, 67, 0.0], [67, 131, 0.0], [131, 148, 0.0], [148, 161, 0.0], [161, 173, 0.0], [173, 198, 0.0], [198, 231, 0.0], [231, 248, 0.0], [248, 263, 0.0], [263, 284, 0.0], [284, 298, 0.0], [298, 315, 0.0], [315, 328, 0.0], [328, 347, 0.0], [347, 360, 0.0], [360, 377, 0.0], [377, 429, 0.0], [429, 449, 0.0], [449, 623, 0.0], [623, 4978, 0.0], [4978, 5014, 0.0], [5014, 5052, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 50, 0.08], [50, 67, 0.05882353], [67, 131, 0.046875], [131, 148, 0.11764706], [148, 161, 0.15384615], [161, 173, 0.16666667], [173, 198, 0.08], [198, 231, 0.12121212], [231, 248, 0.11764706], [248, 263, 0.06666667], [263, 284, 0.04761905], [284, 298, 0.07142857], [298, 315, 0.11764706], [315, 328, 0.07692308], [328, 347, 0.10526316], [347, 360, 0.07692308], [360, 377, 0.11764706], [377, 429, 0.11538462], [429, 449, 0.1], [449, 623, 0.01724138], [623, 4978, 0.02204363], [4978, 5014, 0.08333333], [5014, 5052, 0.07894737]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 5052, 0.05555654]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 5052, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 5052, 0.36134738]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 5052, -155.76370158]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 5052, -28.88214731]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 5052, 25.53359891]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 5052, 40.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Home › Early Release School: Thornton Date: Fri, 02/08/2013 - 11:45am - 2:45pm Fri, 04/12/2013 - 11:45am - 2:45pm Fri, 05/10/2013 - 11:45am - 2:45pm Event Category: Early Release Day « October
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1650
{"url": "http://www.nisd.net/events/10342?mini=calendar%2F2013-10", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nisd.net", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:39:39Z", "digest": "sha1:J5GBUXWWNK4FSJWCAPLP5UVTMCCPW3BN"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 192, 192.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 192, 1912.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 192, 2.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 192, 35.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 192, 0.73]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 192, 133.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 192, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 192, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 192, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 192, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 192, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 192, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 192, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 192, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 192, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 192, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 192, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 192, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 192, 0.24087591]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 192, 0.20437956]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 192, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 192, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 192, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 192, 0.66129032]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 192, 0.69230769]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 192, 5.26923077]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 192, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 192, 2.77116964]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 192, 26.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 21, 0.0], [21, 192, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 21, 0.0], [21, 192, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 21, 4.0], [21, 192, 22.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 21, 0.0], [21, 192, 0.31914894]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 21, 0.0], [21, 192, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 21, 0.14285714], [21, 192, 0.07017544]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 192, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 192, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 192, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 192, -88.97237033]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 192, -37.67880837]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 192, -29.80540802]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 192, 1.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Home › 5th Grade STAAR Reading Retest School: Passmore Date: Wed, 06/26/2013 - 8:00am Event Category: Testing « April S M T W T F S 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 Search by Keyword
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1651
{"url": "http://www.nisd.net/events/12465", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nisd.net", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:58:28Z", "digest": "sha1:O3V5B532QGEFO2URDVBCMCQAP2JI4DWL"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 224, 224.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 224, 1848.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 224, 3.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 224, 35.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 224, 0.58]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 224, 120.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 224, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 224, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 224, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 224, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 224, 0.01492537]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 224, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 224, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 224, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 224, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 224, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 224, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 224, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 224, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 224, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 224, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 224, 0.11940299]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 224, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 224, 0.62686567]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 224, 0.96428571]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 224, 2.85714286]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 224, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 224, 3.97584118]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 224, 56.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 38, 0.0], [38, 118, 0.0], [118, 224, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 38, 0.0], [38, 118, 0.0], [118, 224, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 38, 7.0], [38, 118, 11.0], [118, 224, 38.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 38, 0.02702703], [38, 118, 0.15714286], [118, 224, 0.44339623]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 38, 0.0], [38, 118, 0.0], [118, 224, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 38, 0.23684211], [38, 118, 0.1], [118, 224, 0.08490566]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 224, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 224, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 224, -5.96e-06]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 224, -82.22199167]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 224, -37.09739877]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 224, -25.73987913]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 224, 1.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
PO 360 April 4, 2001 Christine Grant Commissioner Laura Otterbourg or Chris Gage New Jersey Department of Health and Senior Services Spreads the Word About Free Smoking Cessation Programs Trenton, April 4, 2001 - The New Jersey Department of Health and Senior Services announced today that it has chosen Autowraps, Inc. to help spread the word to state residents about two free smoking cessation services, New Jersey QuitnetTM and Quitline. During the March to June program, 50 state residents are "wrapping" their own cars with a high-quality vinyl adhesive material bearing advertising for the New Jersey cessation programs, the program logos and contact information. "This free smoking cessation program represents good news for New Jersey smokers who want to quit smoking," said Acting Governor DiFrancesco. "It's so important that the actual flow of money from the national tobacco settlement fund these types of anti-tobacco initiatives as part of New Jersey's Comprehensive Tobacco Control Program - whether it's preventing our young people from actually starting smoking to helping people stop once they've started." All program participants, who each receive a stipend, are required to drive VW Bugs and be non-smokers. Participants were also selected based on their driving frequency, and are encouraged to drive highly trafficked locations, near schools, hospitals and recreation areas. The participants range in age from 20-63 and are geographically dispersed throughout New Jersey. In addition to the high visibility that personal vehicles get, these cars can go places that no other medium can reach. "Using Autowraps to advertise New Jersey Quitline and New Jersey Quitnet is part of our conscious effort to choose innovative, non-traditional advertising that makes a strong impact, " said DHSS Commissioner of Health and Senior Services Christine Grant. "We are trying to reach people outdoors at the point that they might be smoking--on the street or in their cars. Our research found that 69% of New Jersey tobacco users who have "not yet" tried quitting tobacco indicated that they would like to quit. We want them to know that help is available." The auto-wrapped VW Bugs can be seen throughout New Jersey's roads and highways from March to June. Capitalizing on the increased time that consumers are spending in their cars, auto wrapping is a reliable, cost-effective outdoor advertising option. They have a high retention rate due to their novelty and conspicuous location. "As a smoker 25 year ago, I had a Camel ad on my VW Bug. I knew that smoking wasn't a good thing, but I wasn't concerned about driving around with an advertisement for cigarettes, since not as much was known about the dangers of smoking," said Joanne Blazure of Lebanon, NJ. "Today I am a non-smoker and am thrilled with the increase presence of anti-smoking messages in the media. I'm especially proud to drive my new VW Bug and promote New Jersey Quitnet and New Jersey Quitline services." New Jersey Quitnet, Quitline and Quit Centers New Jersey Quitnet and New Jersey Quitline are free smoking cessation services, available to all New Jersey residents. New Jersey Quitnet (www.nj.quitnet.com) is an online resource that provides a comprehensive, individually tailored smoking cessation plan. New Jersey Quitnet's online community provides peer support groups and access to trained counselors. Registered New Jersey Quitnet users can access resources such as Quitting Guides to help plan a quitting strategy, referrals to local programs and information about medications that can help end the addiction. New Jersey Quitline is a hotline offering personal counseling to New Jersey residents at 1-866 NJ-STOPS (1-866-657-8677) six days a week. New Jersey Quitline can be accessed Monday through Friday from 8:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. and Saturday from 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Trained counselors are available in 26 languages to work with callers to develop comprehensive treatment plans that meet the individual's needs. The services are open to all age groups. There are also one-on-one counseling sites at nine locations in New Jersey. The program will expand to fifteen sites by the end of June, providing all New Jerseyans access to face-to-face counseling. Advertising for the three cessation programs appear on local radio spots, billboards, newspapers, coffee sleeves, bar coasters and matchbooks in bars throughout New Jersey. New Jersey Quitline, New Jersey Quitnet and New Jersey QuitCenters are among the many initiatives sponsored by the Department of Health and Senior Services and funded with money from the 1998 Master Tobacco Settlement Agreement between 46 states and the tobacco industry. New Jersey is one of only 15 states, which are directing a substantial portion of these funds -- $30 million in the first three years of the program - toward smoking prevention and cessation. New Jersey's Comprehensive Tobacco Control Program is designed to reduce the sickness, disability and death among New Jerseyans associated with the use of tobacco and exposure to environmental tobacco smoke.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1652
{"url": "http://www.nj.gov/health/news/p10404b.htm", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nj.gov", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:25:22Z", "digest": "sha1:Y2PR2QBIEU7BFY53VNX33EFL2UBX4EBK"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 5099, 5099.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 5099, 5216.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 5099, 13.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 5099, 19.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 5099, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 5099, 248.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 5099, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 5099, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 5099, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 5099, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 5099, 0.34053498]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 5099, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 5099, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 5099, 0.08082752]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 5099, 0.07481357]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 5099, 0.0384893]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 5099, 0.02116911]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 5099, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 5099, 0.05845562]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 5099, 0.02694251]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 5099, 0.01635795]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 5099, 0.01440329]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 5099, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 5099, 0.16769547]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 5099, 0.4642409]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 5099, 5.21580928]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 5099, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 5099, 5.30811778]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 5099, 797.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 7, 0.0], [7, 50, 0.0], [50, 81, 0.0], [81, 133, 0.0], [133, 188, 0.0], [188, 670, 1.0], [670, 1125, 0.0], [1125, 2496, 1.0], [2496, 2988, 0.0], [2988, 3034, 0.0], [3034, 4255, 1.0], [4255, 4428, 1.0], [4428, 5099, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 7, 0.0], [7, 50, 0.0], [50, 81, 0.0], [81, 133, 0.0], [133, 188, 0.0], [188, 670, 0.0], [670, 1125, 0.0], [1125, 2496, 0.0], [2496, 2988, 0.0], [2988, 3034, 0.0], [3034, 4255, 0.0], [4255, 4428, 0.0], [4428, 5099, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 7, 2.0], [7, 50, 6.0], [50, 81, 5.0], [81, 133, 8.0], [133, 188, 8.0], [188, 670, 74.0], [670, 1125, 67.0], [1125, 2496, 217.0], [2496, 2988, 89.0], [2988, 3034, 7.0], [3034, 4255, 186.0], [4255, 4428, 24.0], [4428, 5099, 104.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 7, 0.5], [7, 50, 0.12195122], [50, 81, 0.0], [81, 133, 0.0], [133, 188, 0.0], [188, 670, 0.01498929], [670, 1125, 0.0], [1125, 2496, 0.00450113], [2496, 2988, 0.00422833], [2988, 3034, 0.0], [3034, 4255, 0.02548853], [4255, 4428, 0.0], [4428, 5099, 0.01519757]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 7, 0.0], [7, 50, 0.0], [50, 81, 0.0], [81, 133, 0.0], [133, 188, 0.0], [188, 670, 0.0], [670, 1125, 0.0], [1125, 2496, 0.0], [2496, 2988, 0.0], [2988, 3034, 0.0], [3034, 4255, 0.0], [4255, 4428, 0.0], [4428, 5099, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 7, 0.28571429], [7, 50, 0.09302326], [50, 81, 0.12903226], [81, 133, 0.11538462], [133, 188, 0.12727273], [188, 670, 0.04564315], [670, 1125, 0.03076923], [1125, 2496, 0.03063457], [2496, 2988, 0.05081301], [2988, 3034, 0.13043478], [3034, 4255, 0.03849304], [4255, 4428, 0.01734104], [4428, 5099, 0.04172876]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 5099, 0.02869046]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 5099, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 5099, 0.36549026]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 5099, -225.85587331]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 5099, -12.03308812]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 5099, -58.23533134]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 5099, 44.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Stories Tagged with "high school competition" from 2008 Home » News NJIT To Host Chemistry Olympics for High School Students Talented high school students from throughout North Jersey will test their knowledge in performing timed laboratory experiments, writing computer programs, designing chemical apparatus, and more at the New Jersey Chemistry Olympics on May 21 in Tiernan Hall. The one-day competition is co-sponsored by NJIT and The North Jersey Section of the American Chemical Society-Teacher Affiliates. >> Tagged: college of science and liberal arts, department of chemistry and environmental science, american chemical society, new jersey chemistry olympics NJIT To Host JETS/TEAMS Competition for High School Students New Jersey public and private high schools will participate in a national test of engineering aptitude, mathematics, and science on March 17, 8:30 a.m-2 p.m. in the NJIT Campus Center. Hosted by NJIT's Center for Pre-College Programs, the NJ JETS/TEAMS competition is a one-day, two-part academic exam coordinated by the Junior Engineering Technical Society (JETS) designed to introduce students to an engineering team work environment. >> Tagged: pre-college New Jersey Institute of Technology
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1653
{"url": "http://www.njit.edu/news/stories.php?year=2008&tag=high%20school%20competition", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.njit.edu", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:24:22Z", "digest": "sha1:M5Z4NAPUQAZVZBJG2Y33IM37W6BYZGJP"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 1225, 1225.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1225, 2820.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1225, 6.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1225, 86.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1225, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1225, 302.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1225, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1225, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1225, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1225, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1225, 0.23684211]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1225, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1225, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1225, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1225, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1225, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1225, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1225, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1225, 0.03968254]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1225, 0.05357143]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1225, 0.04166667]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1225, 0.04824561]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1225, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1225, 0.19736842]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1225, 0.5625]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1225, 5.72727273]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1225, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1225, 4.37819106]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1225, 176.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 68, 0.0], [68, 125, 0.0], [125, 517, 0.0], [517, 731, 0.0], [731, 1171, 0.0], [1171, 1225, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 68, 0.0], [68, 125, 0.0], [125, 517, 0.0], [517, 731, 0.0], [731, 1171, 0.0], [1171, 1225, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 68, 11.0], [68, 125, 9.0], [125, 517, 55.0], [517, 731, 29.0], [731, 1171, 65.0], [1171, 1225, 7.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 68, 0.06153846], [68, 125, 0.0], [125, 517, 0.00526316], [517, 731, 0.0], [731, 1171, 0.01438849], [1171, 1225, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 68, 0.0], [68, 125, 0.0], [125, 517, 0.0], [517, 731, 0.0], [731, 1171, 0.0], [1171, 1225, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 68, 0.05882353], [68, 125, 0.19298246], [125, 517, 0.06122449], [517, 731, 0.09345794], [731, 1171, 0.08409091], [1171, 1225, 0.09259259]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1225, 1.705e-05]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1225, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1225, 0.05134809]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1225, -103.4014784]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1225, -29.67695618]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1225, -3.8526544]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1225, 8.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Calgary signs pair of goalies to compete for jobs Roughnecks re-sign Scigliano, and sign free agent Flindell Frankie Scigliano showed promise during opportunities to play as a rookie during the 2012 season. He and Matt Flindell will likely compete for the job to serve as backup to Mike Poulin. Photo Credit: Larry Palumbo Calgary Roughnecks general manager Mike Board announced today that the club has re-signed goaltender Frankie Scigliano and signed goaltender Matt Flindell to one-year contracts for the 2013 NLL season. Scigliano and Flindell join 2012 Goaltender of the Year Mike Poulin who enters the second year of his three-year contract. “Frankie is a good, young developing goalie who gained valuable experience in the league last season,” said Board. “He wants to continue to improve and we’re happy to have him come back to develop and compete for playing time this season.” Scigliano, a native of Coquitlam, British Columbia, finished the 2012 regular season with a 2-1 record while posting a 10.70 goal-against average and .797 save percentage over 168 minutes played. The Roughnecks selected the 20-year-old goaltender in the second round, 18th overall, in the 2011 NLL Entry Draft. Flindell, a Victoria, British Columbia product, made his NLL debut in 2009, registering an 11.60 goal-against average and .789 save percentage over 124 minutes played. He had a strong summer playing lacrosse in BC and will compete for a job in training camp. “Matt is excited with the opportunity to get back into the league,” commented Board on the 25-year-old goaltender. “He is young and skilled and adds depth to the goaltending position.” Calgary Roughnecks season tickets are on sale now with the 2013 home opener set for Saturday, January 12 when the Toronto Rock visit the Scotiabank Saddledome Home Calgary Roughnecks Back to Previous Page
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1654
{"url": "http://www.nll.com/news_article/show/185858", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nll.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:08:30Z", "digest": "sha1:MN5EPNZ2GGLHSOJU2TJU7B2XYTKFU45S"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 1847, 1847.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1847, 6480.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1847, 9.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1847, 226.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1847, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1847, 317.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1847, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1847, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1847, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1847, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1847, 0.32402235]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1847, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1847, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1847, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1847, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1847, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1847, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1847, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1847, 0.02650762]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1847, 0.027833]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1847, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1847, 0.01117318]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1847, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1847, 0.18715084]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1847, 0.57575758]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1847, 5.08080808]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1847, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1847, 4.79631368]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1847, 297.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 50, 0.0], [50, 109, 0.0], [109, 323, 0.0], [323, 648, 1.0], [648, 888, 1.0], [888, 1199, 1.0], [1199, 1643, 1.0], [1643, 1802, 0.0], [1802, 1847, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 50, 0.0], [50, 109, 0.0], [109, 323, 0.0], [323, 648, 0.0], [648, 888, 0.0], [888, 1199, 0.0], [1199, 1643, 0.0], [1643, 1802, 0.0], [1802, 1847, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 50, 9.0], [50, 109, 8.0], [109, 323, 36.0], [323, 648, 49.0], [648, 888, 41.0], [888, 1199, 48.0], [1199, 1643, 73.0], [1643, 1802, 26.0], [1802, 1847, 7.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 50, 0.0], [50, 109, 0.0], [109, 323, 0.01904762], [323, 648, 0.02507837], [648, 888, 0.0], [888, 1199, 0.08080808], [1199, 1643, 0.03729604], [1643, 1802, 0.03821656], [1802, 1847, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 50, 0.0], [50, 109, 0.0], [109, 323, 0.0], [323, 648, 0.0], [648, 888, 0.0], [888, 1199, 0.0], [1199, 1643, 0.0], [1643, 1802, 0.0], [1802, 1847, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 50, 0.02], [50, 109, 0.05084746], [109, 323, 0.05140187], [323, 648, 0.05230769], [648, 888, 0.0125], [888, 1199, 0.03536977], [1199, 1643, 0.02927928], [1643, 1802, 0.05031447], [1802, 1847, 0.13333333]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1847, 0.02611881]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1847, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1847, 0.89266437]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1847, -106.33276552]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1847, 46.31221369]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1847, 10.51983102]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1847, 17.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Robert B. Nadler, MD 312-695-8146 Website: http://www.nmff.org Tuesday:8:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Wednesday:8:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. Thursday:1:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. Clinical Interests Credentials Locations Biography Disclosures Clinical Interests Kidney Stones, Robotic Urologic Surgery Northwestern Univ Feinberg School of Medicine 1989 Barnes Hospital 1991 Biography Dr. Nadler joined the department of urology in 1996. During his residency training at Barnes Hospital/Washington University in St. Louis, MO, Dr. Nadler was twice named outstanding resident by the faculty, and was awarded both an American Cancer Society Clinical Oncology Fellowship and an American Foundation of Urologic Disease National Kidney Foundation Fellowship during his research year. After residency, he was appointed to the faculty of the division of urology at Barnes Hospital/Washington University where he concentrated on laparoscopic and minimally invasive treatment for prostate cancer, kidney cancer, and kidney stones. Since coming to Northwestern, he has published over 100 peer-reviewed papers, and has won awards including Outstanding Resident Teacher of the Year and the Vincent J. O'Conner Jr. Award for Excellence in Teaching from the medical students.Dr. Nadler's specific areas of interest include robotic prostatectomy where he is concentrating his efforts on outcomes of robotic prostatectomy patients specifically pertaining to erectile function and margin rates. He is also pioneering a technique of robotic partial nephrectomy, which avoids clamping the renal hilum to better preserve kidney function during robotic partial nephrectomy for renal cell cancer. Finally, he continues to do work in the minimally invasive surgical management of complex kidney stones and renal pelvis tumors
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1655
{"url": "http://www.nmh.org/nm/physician_nadler_robert_b_1054&browse_by_name=yes", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nmh.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:25:27Z", "digest": "sha1:SWRUUZ7Y4WOEHAGIIWEYQWJQTS4DPU3X"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 1778, 1778.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1778, 4665.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1778, 12.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1778, 166.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1778, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1778, 181.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1778, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1778, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1778, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1778, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1778, 0.26047904]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1778, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1778, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1778, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1778, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1778, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1778, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1778, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1778, 0.02455662]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1778, 0.03547067]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1778, 0.04911323]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1778, 0.01497006]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1778, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1778, 0.23652695]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1778, 0.60080645]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1778, 5.91129032]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1778, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1778, 4.76778846]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1778, 248.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 21, 0.0], [21, 43, 0.0], [43, 63, 0.0], [63, 93, 1.0], [93, 126, 1.0], [126, 157, 1.0], [157, 198, 0.0], [198, 239, 0.0], [239, 279, 0.0], [279, 330, 0.0], [330, 351, 0.0], [351, 1778, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 21, 0.0], [21, 43, 0.0], [43, 63, 0.0], [63, 93, 0.0], [93, 126, 0.0], [126, 157, 0.0], [157, 198, 0.0], [198, 239, 0.0], [239, 279, 0.0], [279, 330, 0.0], [330, 351, 0.0], [351, 1778, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 21, 4.0], [21, 43, 2.0], [43, 63, 1.0], [63, 93, 4.0], [93, 126, 4.0], [126, 157, 4.0], [157, 198, 4.0], [198, 239, 4.0], [239, 279, 5.0], [279, 330, 7.0], [330, 351, 3.0], [351, 1778, 206.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 21, 0.0], [21, 43, 0.55555556], [43, 63, 0.0], [63, 93, 0.3], [93, 126, 0.30434783], [126, 157, 0.28571429], [157, 198, 0.0], [198, 239, 0.0], [239, 279, 0.0], [279, 330, 0.08], [330, 351, 0.2], [351, 1778, 0.005]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 21, 0.0], [21, 43, 0.0], [43, 63, 0.0], [63, 93, 0.0], [93, 126, 0.0], [126, 157, 0.0], [157, 198, 0.0], [198, 239, 0.0], [239, 279, 0.0], [279, 330, 0.0], [330, 351, 0.0], [351, 1778, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 21, 0.23809524], [21, 43, 0.04545455], [43, 63, 0.0], [63, 93, 0.03333333], [93, 126, 0.03030303], [126, 157, 0.03225806], [157, 198, 0.09756098], [198, 239, 0.09756098], [239, 279, 0.125], [279, 330, 0.09803922], [330, 351, 0.0952381], [351, 1778, 0.03573931]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1778, 0.64924878]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1778, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1778, 0.73794949]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1778, -124.89199349]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1778, -41.70386873]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1778, -26.55138025]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1778, 28.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
for Aretha FranklinAKA Aretha Louise FranklinBorn: 25-Mar-1942Birthplace: Memphis, TNGender: FemaleReligion: BaptistRace or Ethnicity: BlackSexual orientation: StraightOccupation: SingerNationality: United StatesExecutive summary: R-E-S-P-E-C-TThe daughter of a prominent Baptist minister, Aretha Franklin not surprisingly was given her earliest opportunities to develop her talents through gospel music, singing in the choir of the New Bethel Baptist Church with her two sisters. By the age of twelve she was out in front of the choir as a featured soloist, and by 14 she had started her recording career with the album The Gospel Sound of Aretha Franklin, released on the Checker label in 1956. The next year, however, both her education and her singing ambitions were interrupted by her first pregnancy; within two years Franklin found herself the single mother of two boys, and making little progress establishing herself in the music industry. Finally, at the age of eighteen, she was able to get her future back on track when her grandmother took the children under her care and put the promising young singer on a train bound for New York City. Once in New York, Franklin recorded a series of demo tapes that quickly attracted the attention of several different record labels. Offers from RCA and Motown were passed over in favor of a deal with Columbia, but this arrangement proved to be far from the best choice: the ten albums released over the next six years failed to realize the singer's potential, as Columbia had chosen to steer the singer towards more commercial, pop-oriented material rather than utilize her strengths as a gospel and blues vocalist. A more suitable home was found in 1966, when Franklin -- now under the management of first husband Ted White -- signed to Atlantic Records. The 1967 single I Never Loved a Man (the Way I Loved You) b/w Do-Right Woman, Do-Right Man gave a promising start to this new arrangement, launching her for the first time into the U.S. top ten. With producer Jerry Wexler at the helm, a series of popular releases followed throughout the end of the 60s, amongst them such classics as Respect, Chain of Fools, Think, You Make Me Feel Like a Natural Woman, and Since You've Been Gone. After several years spent once again leaning into pop territory with albums like Young, Gifted and Black (1971) and versions of contemporary songs like Bridge Over Troubled Water and The Long and Winding Road, Aretha Franklin made a return to her gospel roots in 1972 with the release of Amazing Grace, featuring backing by James Cleveland and the Southern California Community Choir. By the end of the decade she had drifted into the disco-pop that was dominating the music scene at the time, and her career suffered a corresponding decline. After one last record for Atlantic (La Diva, 1979) she made a move to Arista, but -- despite work with then-hot names like George Benson and Luther Vandross and a cameo appearance in the 1980 comedy The Blues Brothers -- it wasn't until 1985's Who's Zoomin' Who? that she managed to release an album that rivaled the popularity of her early Atlantic output, returning to the top ten with singles for Freeway of Love, Another Night, and the title track Who's Zoomin' Who. In the remaining years of the 1980s, Franklin kept a presence in the mainstream through duets with the likes of George Michael, Elton John and Whitney Houston, as well as making a second return to gospel with 1987's One Lord, One Faith, One Baptism -- the same year that she became the first woman inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. During the 1990s she remained largely absent from the music scene, beginning the decade with What You See Is What You Sweat (1991), but not following it until the hip-hop influenced release A Rose Is Still A Rose in 1998. Occasional performances, such as her appearance at Bill Clinton's 1993 inauguration and various television events, took place in the interim. Her first offering for the 2000s arrived in the form of So Damn Happy (2003), which featured contributions from young performers such as Mary J. Blige.Father: Reverend Clarence L. Franklin (Baptist minister, b. circa 1915, d. 1984, shot during a burglary, five year coma)Mother: Barbara (musician)Sister: Erma Franklin (musician)Sister: Carolyn Franklin (musician)Brother: Cecil FranklinHusband: Ted White (her then-manager, m. 1961, div. 1969)Son: Ted White, Jr. (b. 1969)Boyfriend: Ken CunninghamSon: KecalfHusband: Glynn Turman (actor, m. 11-Apr-1978, div. 1984)Boyfriend: William 'Willie' Wilkerson (broken engagement, 2012) Aretha Franklin Delta Sigma Theta Sorority Grammy Best R&B Solo Vocal Performance, Female (1967) Grammy Best Rhythm & Blues Recording (1967) Grammy Best R&B Performance, Female (1968) Grammy Best R&B Vocal Performance, Female (1969) Grammy Best R&B Vocal Performance, Female (1970) Grammy Best R&B Vocal Performance, Female (1971) Grammy Best Soul Gospel Performance (1972) Grammy Best R&B Vocal Performance, Female (1972) Grammy Best R&B Vocal Performance, Female (1973) Grammy Best R&B Vocal Performance, Female (1974) Grammy Best R&B Vocal Performance, Female (1981) Grammy Best R&B Vocal Performance, Female (1985) Grammy Best R&B Performance By A Duo Or Group With Vocal (with George Michael) (1987) Grammy Best R&B Vocal Performance, Female (1987) Grammy Best Soul Gospel Performance, Female (1988) Grammy Hall of Fame Award (1998) Grammy Hall of Fame Award (1999) Grammy Hall of Fame Award (1999) Grammy Legend Award (2001) Grammy Hall of Fame Award (2001) Grammy Best Traditional R&B Vocal Performance (2003) National Medal of Arts 1999 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame 1987 Kennedy Center Honor 1994 Presidential Medal of Freedom 9-Nov-2005 Funeral: Martin Luther King (1968) Disturbing the Peace Detroit, MI (1969) Risk Factors: Acrophobia, Aviophobia FILMOGRAPHY AS ACTOR Muscle Shoals (26-Jan-2013) · Herself The Zen of Bennett (18-Apr-2012) · Herself Blues Brothers 2000 (6-Feb-1998) · Mrs. Murphy Listen Up: The Lives of Quincy Jones (3-Oct-1990) · Herself The Blues Brothers (16-Jun-1980) · Soul Food Cafe Owner Official Website:http://www.sodamnhappy.com/ Aretha: From These Roots (1999, memoir) NNDB MAPPERSteve Albini Jesus LizardAretha FranklinRequires Flash 7+ and Javascript.Related TopicsAfrican-American MusicAmerican MusicGospel MusicPopular CultureSingingPossible CohortsJohn LandisKathleen FreemanDan AykroydJames BrownFrank OzSteve LawrenceHelix Fossil
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1656
{"url": "http://www.nndb.com/people/105/000023036/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nndb.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:38:54Z", "digest": "sha1:WBTNNW22X5H3R5HK45642CHGSUY6NEUN"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 6465, 6465.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 6465, 6848.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 6465, 8.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 6465, 25.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 6465, 0.9]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 6465, 182.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 6465, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 6465, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 6465, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 6465, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 6465, 0.24422934]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 6465, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 6465, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 6465, 0.09972942]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 6465, 0.07962891]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 6465, 0.02551218]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 6465, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 6465, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 6465, 0.03092385]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 6465, 0.02783147]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 6465, 0.02957093]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 6465, 0.03574088]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 6465, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 6465, 0.25763217]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 6465, 0.5044955]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 6465, 5.16883117]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 6465, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 6465, 5.61967371]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 6465, 1001.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 1152, 1.0], [1152, 2241, 1.0], [2241, 3255, 1.0], [3255, 5848, 0.0], [5848, 6113, 0.0], [6113, 6158, 0.0], [6158, 6198, 0.0], [6198, 6465, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 1152, 0.0], [1152, 2241, 0.0], [2241, 3255, 0.0], [3255, 5848, 0.0], [5848, 6113, 0.0], [6113, 6158, 0.0], [6158, 6198, 0.0], [6198, 6465, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 1152, 177.0], [1152, 2241, 188.0], [2241, 3255, 171.0], [3255, 5848, 393.0], [5848, 6113, 41.0], [6113, 6158, 2.0], [6158, 6198, 6.0], [6198, 6465, 23.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 1152, 0.01072386], [1152, 2241, 0.00949668], [2241, 3255, 0.0203666], [3255, 5848, 0.07186858], [5848, 6113, 0.1322314], [6113, 6158, 0.0], [6158, 6198, 0.11428571], [6198, 6465, 0.00378788]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 1152, 0.0], [1152, 2241, 0.0], [2241, 3255, 0.0], [3255, 5848, 0.0], [5848, 6113, 0.0], [6113, 6158, 0.0], [6158, 6198, 0.0], [6198, 6465, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 1152, 0.04947917], [1152, 2241, 0.04775023], [2241, 3255, 0.04536489], [3255, 5848, 0.09448515], [5848, 6113, 0.18113208], [6113, 6158, 0.04444444], [6158, 6198, 0.1], [6198, 6465, 0.17602996]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 6465, 0.44125134]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 6465, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 6465, 0.93918544]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 6465, -418.41118523]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 6465, -173.4952142]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 6465, 96.61274808]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 6465, 34.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Long snappers looking upside down at game NEW ORLEANS — They look at the world upside down between their legs. The only time they get noticed is when they mess up. Such is life for a long snapper. In Sunday’s Super Bowl, Brian Jennings of the San Francisco 49ers and Morgan Cox of the Baltimore Ravens will be snapping for punts, field goals and extra points. They have the same goal: Don’t do anything that draws a lick of attention. “That’s part of a long snapper’s personality,” Cox said. “We just want to stay in the background.” It may seem like a simple skill — hiking the ball between your legs — but it takes years of practice to be able to perform it with the consistency, accuracy and velocity required in the NFL. They know one slight miscue could cost the game. “You’ve got guys who’ve been out there banging their heads for 3 1/2 hours,” Jennings said. “You don’t want to go out there and screw it up.” While snappers, like kickers and punters, are viewed as something of outcasts compared to the rest of the roster, there’s a growing appreciation for what they do. Camps have sprung up around the country dedicated solely to the art of hiking the ball — 7 or 8 yards to a holder for field goals and PATs, 14 or 15 yards to a punter. A player who has no chance of making it to the NFL based on arm strength or his 40 time can now carve out a niche on special teams. Don’t chuckle. Jennings has managed to stay in the league for 13 years — all with San Francisco — doing nothing but snapping the ball. Cox is finishing up his third year with the Ravens and he, too, hopes for a long career looking at the world from a different perspective. “I snap the ball accurately for a living,” the 36-year-old Jennings said. “I think that’s awesome.”
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1657
{"url": "http://www.normantranscript.com/sports-national/x1525010085/Long-snappers-looking-upside-down-at-game", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.normantranscript.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:31:18Z", "digest": "sha1:4LC3WVBH3O2PXEFBSGEKF6LCIBW7CTAU"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 1752, 1752.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1752, 7918.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1752, 12.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1752, 221.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1752, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1752, 191.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1752, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1752, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1752, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1752, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1752, 0.44529262]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1752, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1752, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1752, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1752, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1752, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1752, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1752, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1752, 0.02015839]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1752, 0.01439885]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1752, 0.01583873]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1752, 0.0178117]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1752, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1752, 0.17048346]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1752, 0.58054711]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1752, 4.2218845]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1752, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1752, 4.89443905]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1752, 329.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 42, 0.0], [42, 111, 1.0], [111, 164, 1.0], [164, 197, 1.0], [197, 435, 1.0], [435, 534, 1.0], [534, 725, 1.0], [725, 916, 1.0], [916, 1247, 1.0], [1247, 1379, 1.0], [1379, 1653, 1.0], [1653, 1752, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 42, 0.0], [42, 111, 0.0], [111, 164, 0.0], [164, 197, 0.0], [197, 435, 0.0], [435, 534, 0.0], [534, 725, 0.0], [725, 916, 0.0], [916, 1247, 0.0], [1247, 1379, 0.0], [1379, 1653, 0.0], [1653, 1752, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 42, 7.0], [42, 111, 13.0], [111, 164, 11.0], [164, 197, 7.0], [197, 435, 42.0], [435, 534, 17.0], [534, 725, 37.0], [725, 916, 36.0], [916, 1247, 63.0], [1247, 1379, 29.0], [1379, 1653, 51.0], [1653, 1752, 16.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 42, 0.0], [42, 111, 0.0], [111, 164, 0.0], [164, 197, 0.0], [197, 435, 0.00862069], [435, 534, 0.0], [534, 725, 0.0], [725, 916, 0.01621622], [916, 1247, 0.01851852], [1247, 1379, 0.01538462], [1379, 1653, 0.00746269], [1653, 1752, 0.0212766]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 42, 0.0], [42, 111, 0.0], [111, 164, 0.0], [164, 197, 0.0], [197, 435, 0.0], [435, 534, 0.0], [534, 725, 0.0], [725, 916, 0.0], [916, 1247, 0.0], [1247, 1379, 0.0], [1379, 1653, 0.0], [1653, 1752, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 42, 0.02380952], [42, 111, 0.15942029], [111, 164, 0.01886792], [164, 197, 0.03030303], [197, 435, 0.05882353], [435, 534, 0.03030303], [534, 725, 0.02094241], [725, 916, 0.02094241], [916, 1247, 0.01510574], [1247, 1379, 0.03030303], [1379, 1653, 0.02189781], [1653, 1752, 0.03030303]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1752, 0.8742584]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1752, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1752, 0.63224614]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1752, -101.54810668]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1752, 91.64545929]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1752, -133.16316112]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1752, 19.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
The happy couple. Lena Henderson and Roland Davis, who will marry again on Saturday. (AP)48 Years After Divorce, Couple Is Giving Marriage Another Shotby Mark Memmott Aug 2, 2012 (All Things Considered) Launch in player Share this All Things Considered for August 2, 2012Roland DavisLena HendersonMust ReadslovesmartphoneThe Two-WayAround the NationU.S.Home Page Top StoriesNewsAll Things Considered As Lena Henderson says, she hadn't been expecting to remarry Roland Davis some 48 years after their divorce, but "you never know what tomorrow is going to bring."All Things Considered today tells the touching story of how the two 85-year-olds are set to tie the knot again on Saturday in Buffalo, N.Y.Davis and Henderson first married in 1944. After having four children, they split 20 years later. Each of them remarried in subsequent years. Each of them lost their later spouses. Davis' wife died earlier this year. Then, as the Buffalo News reported earlier this week, it was at the suggestion of a daughter (from his first marriage, to Henderson), that he decided to move to the Buffalo area to be near the rest of the family.The two had stayed in touch over the years and as the prospect of relocating to Western New York started to become real, their conversations "turned to something much more serious," as the News reports:"We were talking on the phone one day and he said, 'Will you marry me again?' Henderson recalled. ""I said 'well, well ... yes.' "Davis tells the News that "I always thought it might happen. ... It was always in the back of my mind."One of the couple's sons died in 1996. The now adult "kids" who survive seem thrilled by their parents' reunion. Daughter Renita Shadwick tells All Things Considered that:"I see the way that he comes along beside her and wants to help her as she walks inside a building or the way he scoots around her to open a door. I look at the way my mother smiles at him when he's talking about something. Those are the moments I pray that all children are looking at when they are looking at their parents loving one another."They will tie the knot again Saturday at Buffalo's Elim Christian Fellowship Church. Unlike the first time around, when a justice of the peace did the officiating, the groom had to go to work the next day as a bellhop and there was no time for a celebration, this second wedding has been "blown into great proportions" compared to 1944, Henderson says. In attendance and taking part in the ceremony: Four generations of family, including more than 20 grandchildren and a growing number of greatgrandchildren.More from All Things Considered's conversations with Henderson and her daughter is due on today's broadcast. We'll add the as-aired audio to the top of this post later today. Copyright 2014 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.Read full story transcriptMissing some content? Check the source: NPRCopyright(c) 2014, NPR
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1658
{"url": "http://www.northcountrypublicradio.org/news/npr/157785272/48-years-after-divorce-couple-is-giving-marriage-another-shot", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.northcountrypublicradio.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:50:01Z", "digest": "sha1:2MDY2FPOS4PYJ3WXU6WZCWPU3LVQL6TZ"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2914, 2914.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2914, 7533.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2914, 3.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2914, 210.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2914, 0.97]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2914, 317.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2914, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2914, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2914, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2914, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2914, 0.40759076]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2914, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2914, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2914, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2914, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2914, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2914, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2914, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2914, 0.03451251]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2914, 0.02459016]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2914, 0.01294219]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2914, 0.01815182]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2914, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2914, 0.17656766]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2914, 0.5392562]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2914, 4.7892562]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2914, 0.00330033]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2914, 5.17168861]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2914, 484.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 203, 0.0], [203, 231, 0.0], [231, 2914, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 203, 0.0], [203, 231, 0.0], [231, 2914, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 203, 32.0], [203, 231, 5.0], [231, 2914, 447.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 203, 0.03626943], [203, 231, 0.0], [231, 2914, 0.01279566]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 203, 0.0], [203, 231, 0.0], [231, 2914, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 203, 0.11330049], [203, 231, 0.07142857], [231, 2914, 0.0391353]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2914, 0.07138377]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2914, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2914, 0.30844754]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2914, -4.65230988]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2914, 41.09959633]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2914, -63.70697997]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2914, 35.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
HomeNewsHOT DATESClassifiedsContactArchives FeaturesDiningArtMusicLettersAbout UsAdvertise >>>Previous Digital Editions<<< Letters Letters 04-14-14 Benishek Inching Regarding “Benishek No Environmentalist” I agree with Mr. Powell’s letter to the editor/ opinion of Congressman Dan Benishek’s poor environmental record and his penchant for putting corporate interests ahead of his constituents’...Climate Change Warning Currently there are three assaults on climate change. The first is on the integrity of the scientists who support human activity in climate change. Second is that humans are not capable of affecting the climate...Fed Up About Roads It has gotten to the point where I cringe when I have to drive around this area. There are areas in Traverse City that look like a war zone. When you have to spend more time viewing potholes instead on concentrating on the road, accidents are bound to happen...Don’t Blame the IRS I have not heard much about the reason for the IRS getting itself entangled with the scrutiny of certain conservative 501(c) groups (not for profit) seeking tax exemption. Groups seeking tax relief must be organizations that are operated “primarily for the purpose of bringing about civic betterment and social improvements.” Home · Articles · News · Random Thoughts · 2010 . . . . 2010 Robert Downes - March 3rd, 2008 Have you heard about the Mayan Prophecy? New Age types have been talking about it for months on the Internet and radio talk shows such as “Coast-to-Coast,” which explores paranormal topics. Apparently, before their civilization collapsed in Central America 1,000 years ago, the Mayans predicted that the world would end in the year 2012.This is the date which coincides with the “end” of the Mayan calendar -- and the end of the world as we know it. So queue up that old R.E.M. song, because you’ve got four years left to party like it’s 1999. Then -- kaboom... if you believe in what a Mayan prophet had to say 1,300 years ago, that is. Some New Agers speculate that the Mayans were wise to the magnetic field shift of the Earth in which the positive and negative poles of our planet “flip” on the average of every 200,000 yearsThe Earth, you see, is believed to have a core of solid iron, located some 4,000 miles beneath your feet. According to National Geographic, this core is surrounded by molten iron and nickel which whips around, generating a magnetic field that protects our planet from charged particles shooting from the sun.In other words, you’re living on a giant magnet and its polarity could flip at any moment, possibly scrambling your brain or something, such as it is...Geological evidence shows that the last time the Earth’s magnetic field flipped was 780,000 years ago. So, we’re long overdue.Other possible end-of-the-world culprits include global warming, solar flares, a supervolcano under Yellowstone Park, and Jesus returning in a really bad mood.Unfortunately, there are reasons to believe that those long-gone Mayans could be right. In the New York Times last year, Al Gore noted that we’re currently pumping 70 million tons of CO2 into the atmosphere every day by burning coal and oil.He also pointed out that Venus and the Earth contain about the same amount of CO2; the difference is that the CO2 on Venus is in the atmosphere and our CO2 is mostly in the ground. So why are we feverishly trying to turn our planet into Venus?Did you know the average temperature on Venus is 867 degrees? But the thing is, people have been predicting the end of the world for eons, and we’re still here. If there‘s anything you can predict about prophets, it‘s that they tend to be dead wrong.Writer Benjamin Anastas noted in the New York Times Magazine that the Jehovah’s Witnesses have predicted the end of the world for 1914, 1915, 1918, 1920, 1925, 1941, 1975 and 1994. The Russians believed that Napolean was the Antichrist and that the world would end in the early 1800s. The Shakers said the world would end in 1792; and there was a so-called “Great Disappointment” among Baptists when the world failed to end on Oct. 22, 1844.As has been noted elsewhere, the world is always ending for someone. For the Mayans, it ended around 900 A.D. when their civilization fell apart due to depleted soil and the social consequences of their bloodthirsty religion. The world ended for the Confederate South in 1865. It ended for the Jews of Europe in the early 1940s and for Native Americans in the period between 1492 and the 1870s.But when the world ends, the survivors pick themselves up and move on.So, stock up on pizza and beer. Lay in a supply of funny DVDs and run your credit cards up to the max. Give up dieting and exercise -- you won’t need ‘em where you’re going. The world is ending in 2012 -- the Mayans said so, so it must be true. CORRECTIONApologies to sculptor Edward Chesney, who is the creator of the Fireman‘s Monument in Roscommon, and not Marshall Fredericks as stated in this column last week. Chesney sculpted the 12-foot bronze for its installation in 1980, just off I-75 in Roscommon. About Northern Express Contact Us Advertise Home ©Copyright 2014 by Northern Express | Privacy Statement | Terms Of Use
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1659
{"url": "http://www.northernexpress.com/michigan/article-3134-2010.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.northernexpress.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:15:20Z", "digest": "sha1:K4SCFEUCK3N4ZFRYEYLLUBZDYNFCTNIQ"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 5193, 5193.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 5193, 6044.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 5193, 14.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 5193, 54.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 5193, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 5193, 315.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 5193, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 5193, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 5193, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 5193, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 5193, 0.39943609]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 5193, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 5193, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 5193, 0.0373295]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 5193, 0.02105767]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 5193, 0.01196458]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 5193, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 5193, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 5193, 0.02105767]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 5193, 0.00933238]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 5193, 0.011486]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 5193, 0.01503759]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 5193, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 5193, 0.18515038]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 5193, 0.54123113]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 5193, 4.85365854]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 5193, 0.00469925]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 5193, 5.52696978]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 5193, 861.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 131, 0.0], [131, 148, 0.0], [148, 175, 0.0], [175, 429, 0.0], [429, 654, 0.0], [654, 726, 0.0], [726, 870, 0.0], [870, 934, 0.0], [934, 1258, 1.0], [1258, 1306, 0.0], [1306, 1319, 0.0], [1319, 1351, 0.0], [1351, 5074, 1.0], [5074, 5193, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 131, 0.0], [131, 148, 0.0], [148, 175, 0.0], [175, 429, 0.0], [429, 654, 0.0], [654, 726, 0.0], [726, 870, 0.0], [870, 934, 0.0], [934, 1258, 0.0], [1258, 1306, 0.0], [1306, 1319, 0.0], [1319, 1351, 0.0], [1351, 5074, 0.0], [5074, 5193, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 131, 8.0], [131, 148, 2.0], [148, 175, 3.0], [175, 429, 34.0], [429, 654, 38.0], [654, 726, 15.0], [726, 870, 26.0], [870, 934, 11.0], [934, 1258, 49.0], [1258, 1306, 10.0], [1306, 1319, 1.0], [1319, 1351, 5.0], [1351, 5074, 642.0], [5074, 5193, 17.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 131, 0.0], [131, 148, 0.42857143], [148, 175, 0.0], [175, 429, 0.0], [429, 654, 0.0], [654, 726, 0.0], [726, 870, 0.0], [870, 934, 0.0], [934, 1258, 0.00946372], [1258, 1306, 0.08510638], [1306, 1319, 1.0], [1319, 1351, 0.17857143], [1351, 5074, 0.03265984], [5074, 5193, 0.03478261]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 131, 0.0], [131, 148, 0.0], [148, 175, 0.0], [175, 429, 0.0], [429, 654, 0.0], [654, 726, 0.0], [726, 870, 0.0], [870, 934, 0.0], [934, 1258, 0.0], [1258, 1306, 0.0], [1306, 1319, 0.0], [1319, 1351, 0.0], [1351, 5074, 0.0], [5074, 5193, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 131, 0.19083969], [131, 148, 0.05882353], [148, 175, 0.11111111], [175, 429, 0.0511811], [429, 654, 0.03111111], [654, 726, 0.02777778], [726, 870, 0.02777778], [870, 934, 0.09375], [934, 1258, 0.01234568], [1258, 1306, 0.10416667], [1306, 1319, 0.0], [1319, 1351, 0.09375], [1351, 5074, 0.03384367], [5074, 5193, 0.12605042]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 5193, 0.19686174]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 5193, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 5193, 0.62927121]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 5193, -122.7662052]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 5193, 80.23051909]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 5193, -131.26665498]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 5193, 52.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Forgotten Iwo Jima statue going up for auction By ULA ILNYTZKY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Wire Service A long-forgotten piece of America's military history is going up for sale. The original 12 1/2-foot-tall statue of the iconic raising of the U.S. flag at Iwo Jima in 1945 is expected to fetch up to $1.8 million Feb. 22 at a New York auction dedicated to World War II artifacts. Most Americans are familiar with the 32-foot-tall Marine Corps War Memorial in Arlington, Va. Felix de Weldon's 1954 bronze depicts five Marines and a Navy Corpsman raising the flag on Iwo Jima's Mount Suribachi as Allied forces struggled to capture the Japanese-held island. De Weldon, a sculptor serving as an artist in the Navy, was inspired by the famed photograph of the Feb. 23, 1945, flag planting. The cast-stone monument de Weldon created was erected in Washington, D.C., in front of what is now the Federal Reserve Building. It was removed in 1947 to make room for a new building. Around the same time, the government authorized de Weldon to build a much larger statue in bronze — the 32-foot monument in Arlington. The 12 1/2-foot version was returned to de Weldon and left, forgotten, behind his studio, until 1990, when military historian Rodney Hilton Brown bought and restored it. Tags: Community News | Entertainment News
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1660
{"url": "http://www.northjersey.com/community-news/forgotten-iwo-jima-statue-going-up-for-auction-1.542231", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.northjersey.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:39:10Z", "digest": "sha1:NO3SPCLH2AM3TIGA4BX2BZBDDPDYXE2K"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 1312, 1312.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1312, 5441.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1312, 4.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1312, 100.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1312, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1312, 144.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1312, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1312, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1312, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1312, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1312, 0.27561837]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1312, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1312, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1312, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1312, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1312, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1312, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1312, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1312, 0.03062201]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1312, 0.01913876]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1312, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1312, 0.03886926]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1312, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1312, 0.21908127]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1312, 0.63063063]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1312, 4.70720721]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1312, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1312, 4.66062038]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1312, 222.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 47, 0.0], [47, 97, 0.0], [97, 1292, 0.0], [1292, 1312, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 47, 0.0], [47, 97, 0.0], [97, 1292, 0.0], [1292, 1312, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 47, 8.0], [47, 97, 8.0], [97, 1292, 204.0], [1292, 1312, 2.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 47, 0.0], [47, 97, 0.0], [97, 1292, 0.03304348], [1292, 1312, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 47, 0.0], [47, 97, 0.0], [97, 1292, 0.0], [1292, 1312, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 47, 0.06382979], [47, 97, 0.64], [97, 1292, 0.04769874], [1292, 1312, 0.1]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1312, 0.11694843]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1312, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1312, 0.93042409]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1312, -77.38828435]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1312, 9.39162892]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1312, 26.56112372]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1312, 17.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Sullivan: The only foe Giants coach Tom Coughlin defers to is the sun By Tara Sullivan The Record CHRIS PEDOTA/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER Giants coach Tom Coughlin cautions of the effects of the sun after bouts with skin cancer. EAST RUTHERFORD — Tom Coughlin strolled through the phalanx of players ready for conditioning drills Friday afternoon, hands clasped in familiar position behind his back, his blue cap pulled low on his head and matching blue collar turned high against his neck. In other words, the 66-year-old Giants coach struck his usual commanding pose.But Coughlin’s sartorial choices had nothing to do with intimidation, and everything to do with protection. With two separate bouts of skin cancer in the past few years, Coughlin long ago joined the legion of fair-skinned baby boomers paying the price for youthful days of sun-baked ignorance.So now, when he arrives at training camp ready to attack a new season, he also comes prepared with plenty of sunscreen, ready to defend himself from the sun’s damaging ultraviolet rays. For a man who never gave in to the harsh glare of football scrutiny, he knows he is no match for the dangerous glare of the sun.“You should see me on vacation, I’ve got my big old hat, I’m in the shade as much as I can,” Coughlin told The Record, stopping to talk before he headed back to his office. “Like so many of us, they tell me this damage was from a long time ago, when I was young, when we didn’t know anything about sunscreen.”Coughlin has a small vertical scar on his left cheek, and was also treated for a spot on his forehead, and said he had two different lesions removed via the Mohs method, a microscopic surgery designed to remove cancerous tissue with the smallest possible margin as well as a high cure rate. Coughlin said he had one case of basal cell carcinoma and one of squamous cell carcinoma, the two most common forms of the disease.According to statistics from the Skin Cancer Foundation, between 40 and 50 percent of Americans who live to age 65 will have either basal cell or squamous cell at least once. The American Cancer Society lists skin cancer as the most common of all forms of cancer, accounting for nearly half of all cases of the disease in the United States. The Giants’ organization has put itself at the forefront of education, not only for its football players about being careful in the sun, but to the public at large as well by holding multiple free screenings at MetLife Stadium.It is a disease with a very long reach. The late Giants’ owner Wellington Mara fought skin cancer in his latter years. Former Steelers coach turned television commentator Bill Cowher lost his wife to skin cancer. Former Giants quarterback Phil Simms has had many treatments to remove pre-cancerous cells, and is adamant now that he stays out of the sun completely.“Three or four years ago I went to the dermatologist and she said, ‘You could be in trouble,’ ” Simms said by phone Friday. “So for the last three of four years I’ve really spent time trying to correct it. I stay out of the sun. I don’t go in the sun at all. It’s hard to do, but I’ve learned to work around it.”Simms hasn’t golfed in years. He swims at nights when his pool is shaded. He no longer prowls anyone’s training camp sidelines. But if he is forced into the light? “I take an umbrella, I’ll wear a towel around my neck, and I have a hat the size of Mexico. And I still have sunscreen on,” he said.Simms’ approach is precisely the sort of caution skin cancer experts advise to anyone going out in the sun, and our newest generation of kids has learned to lather up before heading outside. Yet, this is a message that will always bear repeating. Having been diagnosed with a case of malignant melanoma as a teenager, I remain acutely aware of the importance of sun protection, and try hard to impart those lessons to my own two children.For a man as public as Coughlin, just admitting out loud that he had to deal with the repercussions of overexposure to the sun serves as one of the strongest messages to the public that we all need to be careful.“I wear lots of sunscreen and I get checked by the dermatologist one or two times a year,” Coughlin said. “My son went to the dermatologist a few years ago and they told him, ‘You have the kind of skin that needs clouds and rain.’ Same as me.”A month of training camp doesn’t offer much of that sort of relief, which is why Coughlin has learned how to protect himself. Friday represented one of the coach’s favorite days of the football calendar, awakening his competitive drive with the promise of endless possibility, stirring the same emotions as it has across five-plus decades in football. That part of him has never changed. At 66, he isn’t ready to defer to thoughts of retirement, isn’t ready to rest on the laurels of two Super Bowl titles, intent instead on adding a third. But one part of him has changed. With his hat pulled low and his collar turned high, he will defer to the sun. Let him be an example for us all.Email: [email protected] | Giants
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1661
{"url": "http://www.northjersey.com/sports/sullivan-the-only-foe-giants-coach-tom-coughlin-defers-to-is-the-sun-1.632629", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.northjersey.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:14:43Z", "digest": "sha1:B4CTNYBLGQNQULIK7N4V7RARZV6QFYWP"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 5057, 5057.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 5057, 9297.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 5057, 8.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 5057, 106.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 5057, 0.98]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 5057, 283.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 5057, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 5057, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 5057, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 5057, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 5057, 0.43502825]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 5057, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 5057, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 5057, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 5057, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 5057, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 5057, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 5057, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 5057, 0.01355347]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 5057, 0.00591424]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 5057, 0.01084278]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 5057, 0.02165725]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 5057, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 5057, 0.12429379]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 5057, 0.48720801]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 5057, 4.51390434]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 5057, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 5057, 5.45254205]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 5057, 899.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 70, 0.0], [70, 98, 0.0], [98, 130, 0.0], [130, 221, 1.0], [221, 483, 1.0], [483, 4873, 1.0], [4873, 5049, 0.0], [5049, 5057, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 70, 0.0], [70, 98, 0.0], [98, 130, 0.0], [130, 221, 0.0], [221, 483, 0.0], [483, 4873, 0.0], [4873, 5049, 0.0], [5049, 5057, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 70, 13.0], [70, 98, 5.0], [98, 130, 3.0], [130, 221, 16.0], [221, 483, 42.0], [483, 4873, 787.0], [4873, 5049, 32.0], [5049, 5057, 1.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 70, 0.0], [70, 98, 0.0], [98, 130, 0.0], [130, 221, 0.0], [221, 483, 0.0], [483, 4873, 0.00232396], [4873, 5049, 0.0], [5049, 5057, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 70, 0.0], [70, 98, 0.0], [98, 130, 0.0], [130, 221, 0.0], [221, 483, 0.0], [483, 4873, 0.0], [4873, 5049, 0.0], [5049, 5057, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 70, 0.07142857], [70, 98, 0.17857143], [98, 130, 0.875], [130, 221, 0.03296703], [221, 483, 0.0648855], [483, 4873, 0.02027335], [4873, 5049, 0.02272727], [5049, 5057, 0.125]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 5057, 0.83076626]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 5057, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 5057, 0.43807143]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 5057, -27.62791784]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 5057, 160.36875342]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 5057, -212.9159332]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 5057, 45.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Vikings' AP is NFC Offensive Player of the Week Updated Oct 24, 2012 at 5:38 PM CDT Minneapolis, MN (Northland's NewsCenter) --- Minnesota Vikings running back Adrian Peterson has been named the NFC offensive player of the week, it was announced on Wednesday morning. Peterson had 23 rushes for 153 yards this past Sunday in Minnesota's 21-14 win over Arizona, also scoring a touchdown in that winning effort. The game was Peterson's 29th career 100-plus yard performance, tying him with Robert Smith for the franchise's all-time lead. Coming off ACL and MCL surgery near the end of last season, Peterson so far this year leads the NFL with 787 yards from scrimmage and is tied for third with 652 rushing yards.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1662
{"url": "http://www.northlandsnewscenter.com/sports/Vikings-AP-is-NFC-Offensive-Player-of-the-Week-175690671.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.northlandsnewscenter.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:18:46Z", "digest": "sha1:WM4PS4OVPCMPBSVLKZ7FVK6N4T6D7GTP"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 711, 711.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 711, 3464.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 711, 6.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 711, 124.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 711, 0.98]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 711, 184.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 711, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 711, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 711, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 711, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 711, 0.32666667]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 711, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 711, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 711, 0.0952381]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 711, 0.0952381]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 711, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 711, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 711, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 711, 0.04232804]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 711, 0.06349206]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 711, 0.07054674]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 711, 0.06]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 711, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 711, 0.22]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 711, 0.78333333]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 711, 4.725]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 711, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 711, 4.42112925]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 711, 120.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 48, 0.0], [48, 84, 0.0], [84, 268, 1.0], [268, 410, 1.0], [410, 536, 1.0], [536, 711, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 48, 0.0], [48, 84, 0.0], [84, 268, 0.0], [268, 410, 0.0], [410, 536, 0.0], [536, 711, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 48, 9.0], [48, 84, 8.0], [84, 268, 26.0], [268, 410, 24.0], [410, 536, 19.0], [536, 711, 34.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 48, 0.0], [48, 84, 0.27272727], [84, 268, 0.0], [268, 410, 0.06569343], [410, 536, 0.04201681], [536, 711, 0.03468208]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 48, 0.0], [48, 84, 0.0], [84, 268, 0.0], [268, 410, 0.0], [410, 536, 0.0], [536, 711, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 48, 0.1875], [48, 84, 0.19444444], [84, 268, 0.07608696], [268, 410, 0.02816901], [410, 536, 0.03174603], [536, 711, 0.06285714]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 711, 0.04379898]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 711, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 711, 0.45723933]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 711, -28.26681867]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 711, 9.1878783]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 711, 16.88658753]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 711, 4.0]], "is_duplicate": false}
About NPL » Hours & Locations Blyden Branch Click here to join the Blyden Branch book club. With your free book chapters, you will also receive a list of events at Blyden Branch Library. The History of Blyden Branch Library Happy Birthday, MLK Jr.!Happy Birthday Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., A TREK for Civility Week EventDate: 01/11/2014 11:00 AM - 12:00 PM 01/11/2014 11:00 AM 01/11/2014 12:00 PMLocation: Blyden Branch Library879 E. Princess Anne RoadNorfolk, Virginia 23504 Blyden Branch and the National Sorority of Phi Delta Kappa, Inc. Alpha Lambda Chapter will stage a reader’s theater production titled "The Story of a Dream" to celebrate the birthday of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. (Family) 879 East Princess Anne Rd
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1663
{"url": "http://www.npl.lib.va.us/about-npl/hours-locations/barron-f-black-branch-page/blyden-branch-page/-item-4393", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.npl.lib.va.us", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:46:54Z", "digest": "sha1:BJRGPQHNRBBP64RUT3HBYWKEHHRYHLYZ"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 724, 724.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 724, 4090.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 724, 5.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 724, 74.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 724, 0.79]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 724, 259.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 724, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 724, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 724, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 724, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 724, 0.14285714]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 724, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 724, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 724, 0.06980803]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 724, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 724, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 724, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 724, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 724, 0.12565445]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 724, 0.06631763]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 724, 0.06282723]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 724, 0.04968944]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 724, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 724, 0.32298137]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 724, 0.66666667]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 724, 4.8974359]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 724, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 724, 4.17122979]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 724, 117.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 44, 0.0], [44, 224, 0.0], [224, 477, 0.0], [477, 699, 0.0], [699, 724, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 44, 0.0], [44, 224, 0.0], [224, 477, 0.0], [477, 699, 0.0], [699, 724, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 44, 7.0], [44, 224, 32.0], [224, 477, 36.0], [477, 699, 37.0], [699, 724, 5.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 44, 0.0], [44, 224, 0.0], [224, 477, 0.20869565], [477, 699, 0.0], [699, 724, 0.12]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 44, 0.0], [44, 224, 0.0], [224, 477, 0.0], [477, 699, 0.0], [699, 724, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 44, 0.18181818], [44, 224, 0.06666667], [224, 477, 0.15810277], [477, 699, 0.09009009], [699, 724, 0.16]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 724, -3.34e-06]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 724, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 724, 0.02634478]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 724, -122.5667912]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 724, -49.7383857]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 724, -61.55153357]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 724, 10.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Just In Song Premiere: Peter Bjorn & John, 'I Wish I Was A Spy' by Maya Munoz October 09, 2012 6:00 PM ET hide captionYo Gabba Gabba, Vol. 4 Courtesy Of the Artist Yo Gabba Gabba, Vol. 4 Courtesy Of the Artist Peter Bjorn and John are releasing a catchy, espionage-inspired track on the latest installment of the Yo Gabba Gabba! soundtrack. Yo Gabba Gabba! is a popular children's show in its fourth season on Nick Jr. The colorful cast of characters and landscapes captivates kids, while the show's soundtrack featuring alternative rock stars appeals to parents. This fourth volume of songs from Yo Gabba Gabba!, like its predecessors, features popular musical artists like Peter Bjorn and John, who contribute the fun, two-minute-long "I Wish I Was A Spy," in which PB&J pretend to be spies. With a twanging, spy-sounding guitar and Peter Moren's haunting voice, it makes for a great listen outside of playtime as well. "I Wish I Was A Spy" by Peter Bjorn & John I Wish I Was A Spy
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1664
{"url": "http://www.npr.org/blogs/allsongs/2012/10/09/162578597/song-premiere-peter-bjorn-john-i-wish-i-was-a-spy?ft=3&f=1039", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.npr.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:30:17Z", "digest": "sha1:JXGOQ7TLWMNOGB6JFEQD7EHIAXU5JT5Q"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 983, 983.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 983, 1569.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 983, 7.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 983, 50.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 983, 0.89]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 983, 231.3]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 983, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 983, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 983, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 983, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 983, 0.20909091]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 983, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 983, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 983, 0.19505852]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 983, 0.19505852]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 983, 0.17815345]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 983, 0.15604681]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 983, 0.07022107]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 983, 0.06501951]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 983, 0.03120936]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 983, 0.04681404]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 983, 0.07272727]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 983, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 983, 0.20454545]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 983, 0.5755814]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 983, 4.47093023]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 983, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 983, 4.29014771]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 983, 172.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 64, 0.0], [64, 78, 0.0], [78, 106, 0.0], [106, 141, 0.0], [141, 210, 0.0], [210, 965, 0.0], [965, 983, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 64, 0.0], [64, 78, 0.0], [78, 106, 0.0], [106, 141, 0.0], [141, 210, 0.0], [210, 965, 0.0], [965, 983, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 64, 13.0], [64, 78, 3.0], [78, 106, 6.0], [106, 141, 6.0], [141, 210, 13.0], [210, 965, 125.0], [965, 983, 6.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 64, 0.0], [64, 78, 0.0], [78, 106, 0.36], [106, 141, 0.03125], [141, 210, 0.01515152], [210, 965, 0.0], [965, 983, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 64, 0.0], [64, 78, 0.0], [78, 106, 0.0], [106, 141, 0.0], [141, 210, 0.0], [210, 965, 0.0], [965, 983, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 64, 0.203125], [64, 78, 0.14285714], [78, 106, 0.17857143], [106, 141, 0.11428571], [141, 210, 0.14492754], [210, 965, 0.05298013], [965, 983, 0.33333333]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 983, 0.24388576]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 983, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 983, 0.93706959]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 983, -44.9134112]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 983, -15.32435212]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 983, -10.34287583]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 983, 11.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
America More Of The Nation Is Getting The Worst Of The Drought August 16, 2012 1:27 PM ET The drought gripping much of the nation is "exceptional" — the most severe classification — in an area covering 6.26 percent of the lower 48 states, according to the latest data from the National Drought Mitigation Center. Key differences in the ratings from the National Drought Mitigation Center: — Abnormally dry: "Going into drought." — Moderate drought: "Some damage to crops."
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1665
{"url": "http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2012/08/16/158933342/more-of-the-nation-is-getting-the-worst-of-the-drought?ft=3&f=", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.npr.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:48:25Z", "digest": "sha1:NN3JMHHCQ5XMZ5XAZNTBZ4M4XUGONYWL"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 472, 472.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 472, 1507.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 472, 3.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 472, 79.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 472, 0.85]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 472, 292.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 472, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 472, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 472, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 472, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 472, 0.22105263]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 472, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 472, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 472, 0.2010582]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 472, 0.2010582]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 472, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 472, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 472, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 472, 0.05291005]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 472, 0.05820106]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 472, 0.06878307]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 472, 0.02105263]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 472, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 472, 0.26315789]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 472, 0.63291139]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 472, 4.78481013]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 472, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 472, 3.61871222]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 472, 79.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 63, 0.0], [63, 90, 0.0], [90, 472, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 63, 0.0], [63, 90, 0.0], [90, 472, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 63, 12.0], [63, 90, 6.0], [90, 472, 61.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 63, 0.0], [63, 90, 0.375], [90, 472, 0.01358696]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 63, 0.0], [63, 90, 0.0], [90, 472, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 63, 0.19047619], [63, 90, 0.18518519], [90, 472, 0.03664921]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 472, 0.00702697]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 472, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 472, 0.26278573]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 472, -33.05012641]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 472, 4.90307687]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 472, 11.09638572]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 472, 4.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
< Chinese Journalist: Bo Xilai Had History Of Bribes Copyright ©2012 NPR. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required. LYNN NEARY, HOST: China is in the grips of a scandal - a tale of murder, betrayal, and political intrigue, and it could threaten the stability of the entire nation. At its heart is the death last November of a 41-year-old British businessman, Neil Heywood. This scandal has brought down a high-flying Chinese politician, Bo Xilai and his wife. NPR's Louisa Lim reports on the events that caused the scandal and Beijing's uphill attempts at damage control. LOUISA LIM, BYLINE: The death of an Englishman overseas has rarely had such fallout. In the British Parliament yesterday, Neil Heywood's death was raised by foreign secretary William Hague. The U.S. too has been drawn in, since the scandal first broke when Bo Xilai's former police chief sought asylum at a U.S. consulate in early February. He was bearing details of the murder. He was refused asylum and is now in Chinese custody. UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN: (Foreign language spoken) LIM: Then last week, this stunning official announcement on Chinese television. Neil Heywood, it said, had been murdered. Named as a prime suspect was the woman dubbed China's Jackie Kennedy, Gu Kailai, the wife of Bo Xilai. It said she'd been close to Heywood but they'd had a conflict over e
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1666
{"url": "http://www.npr.org/templates/transcript/transcript.php?storyId=150859101", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.npr.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T09:10:25Z", "digest": "sha1:6X3DG7O66MPCJP7DT72HXGFS65NTCVKK"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 1400, 1400.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1400, 2343.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1400, 2.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1400, 74.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1400, 0.97]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1400, 294.9]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1400, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1400, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1400, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1400, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1400, 0.31772575]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1400, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1400, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1400, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1400, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1400, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1400, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1400, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1400, 0.01886792]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1400, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1400, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1400, 0.05016722]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1400, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1400, 0.19397993]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1400, 0.63636364]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1400, 4.81818182]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1400, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1400, 4.73110263]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1400, 231.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 53, 0.0], [53, 1400, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 53, 0.0], [53, 1400, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 53, 8.0], [53, 1400, 223.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 53, 0.0], [53, 1400, 0.00464037]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 53, 0.0], [53, 1400, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 53, 0.1509434], [53, 1400, 0.08017817]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1400, 0.6988458]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1400, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1400, 0.94722962]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1400, -8.389837]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1400, 34.19440215]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1400, 46.25092757]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1400, 21.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
AST Home About AST AST Presentations Astronomy & Astrophysics Advisory Committee (AAAC) AST Portfolio Review View AST Staff Search AST Staff News From the Field Neutron Stars May Be Too Weak to Power Some Gamma-ray Bursts Long-duration gamma-ray bursts flash across the universe to signal the collapse of a massive star, but this collapsar model predicts either a neutron star or a black hole is left behind. New calculations of the energy released by gamma-ray bursts find it too large to be powered by a neutron star, even highly magnetized, spinning magnetars. Thus, University of California, Berkeley, astronomers conclude, the likely power source is a black hole. Full Story SourceUniversity of California, Berkeley
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1667
{"url": "http://www.nsf.gov/news/news_summ.jsp?cntn_id=118090&org=AST&from=news", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nsf.gov", "date_download": "2014-04-16T09:10:54Z", "digest": "sha1:V7PYCVFFDQFOYC3UMPXCE72Z4G3Q374U"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 720, 720.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 720, 5385.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 720, 10.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 720, 211.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 720, 0.82]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 720, 302.3]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 720, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 720, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 720, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 720, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 720, 0.23880597]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 720, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 720, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 720, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 720, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 720, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 720, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 720, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 720, 0.07118644]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 720, 0.04067797]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 720, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 720, 0.05223881]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 720, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 720, 0.13432836]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 720, 0.67857143]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 720, 5.26785714]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 720, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 720, 4.15838957]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 720, 112.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 9, 0.0], [9, 19, 0.0], [19, 37, 0.0], [37, 88, 0.0], [88, 109, 0.0], [109, 124, 0.0], [124, 141, 0.0], [141, 222, 0.0], [222, 669, 1.0], [669, 720, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 9, 0.0], [9, 19, 0.0], [19, 37, 0.0], [37, 88, 0.0], [88, 109, 0.0], [109, 124, 0.0], [124, 141, 0.0], [141, 222, 0.0], [222, 669, 0.0], [669, 720, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 9, 2.0], [9, 19, 2.0], [19, 37, 2.0], [37, 88, 5.0], [88, 109, 3.0], [109, 124, 3.0], [124, 141, 3.0], [141, 222, 15.0], [222, 669, 71.0], [669, 720, 6.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 9, 0.0], [9, 19, 0.0], [19, 37, 0.0], [37, 88, 0.0], [88, 109, 0.0], [109, 124, 0.0], [124, 141, 0.0], [141, 222, 0.0], [222, 669, 0.0], [669, 720, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 9, 0.0], [9, 19, 0.0], [19, 37, 0.0], [37, 88, 0.0], [88, 109, 0.0], [109, 124, 0.0], [124, 141, 0.0], [141, 222, 0.0], [222, 669, 0.0], [669, 720, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 9, 0.44444444], [9, 19, 0.4], [19, 37, 0.22222222], [37, 88, 0.15686275], [88, 109, 0.23809524], [109, 124, 0.33333333], [124, 141, 0.29411765], [141, 222, 0.16049383], [222, 669, 0.01342282], [669, 720, 0.11764706]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 720, 5.13e-06]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 720, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 720, 0.1383568]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 720, -40.32512254]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 720, -10.30701025]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 720, 0.10518384]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 720, 4.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation Conditions of Use Warning! The information provided is intended for community safety purposes only. Extreme care should be exercised in using any information obtained from this website. Anyone who uses any information on this website to injure, harass, threaten or intimidate or for any other unlawful purpose may be subject to criminal prosecution or civil liability. Return to Conditions of Use
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1668
{"url": "http://www.nsopr.gov/(S(1aufptzqb05jbydmpbkc3cp4))/en/Search/StandAloneConditions/PBPNATION?AspxAutoDetectCookieSupport=1", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nsopr.gov", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:20:01Z", "digest": "sha1:AMJ3LT4GUDGV2Y235CEBRBGAN5ABGJDL"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 427, 427.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 427, 754.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 427, 1.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 427, 16.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 427, 0.87]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 427, 333.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 427, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 427, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 427, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 427, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 427, 0.3943662]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 427, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 427, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 427, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 427, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 427, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 427, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 427, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 427, 0.06722689]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 427, 0.08403361]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 427, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 427, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 427, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 427, 0.08450704]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 427, 0.76923077]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 427, 5.49230769]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 427, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 427, 3.8222733]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 427, 65.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 427, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 427, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 427, 65.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 427, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 427, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 427, 0.03044496]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 427, 0.00220048]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 427, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 427, 0.00014639]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 427, -21.61255072]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 427, -7.18488373]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 427, -11.87329813]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 427, 5.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Pascua Yaqui Indian Tribe Conditions of Use The Pascua Yaqui Police Department has established this site according to the requirements of The Pascua Yaqui Tribe Sex Offender Registration and Tracking Ordinance of 2009. The Pascua Yaqui Police Department is responsible for maintaining the site and annually verifying the addresses of all registered sex offenders. WARNING: This site does not contain information on all convicted sex offenders! Information is only provided for sex offenders with risk assessment scores of Level 2 (Intermediate) or Level 3 (High)! The Pascua Yaqui Police Department updates this information regularly, however, you are cautioned that the information contained on this site may not reflect the current residence, status, or other information regarding the offender! If you believe that any of the information found in these records is in error, please send us your comments. THE INFORMATION PROVIDED ON THIS SITE IS INTENDED FOR COMMUNITY SAFETY PURPOSES ONLY AND SHOULD NOT BE USED TO THREATEN, INTIMIDATE, OR HARASS. MISUSE OF THIS INFORMATION MAY RESULT IN CRIMINAL PROSECUTION. Return to Conditions of Use
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1669
{"url": "http://www.nsopr.gov/(S(zcq22omzo3qtwd3gn0z3lc0z))/en/Search/StandAloneConditions/PASCUAYAQUI?AspxAutoDetectCookieSupport=1", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nsopr.gov", "date_download": "2014-04-16T09:02:09Z", "digest": "sha1:2GFIB53QLT6KADESWFH6Z2CPNBVCCQLG"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 1141, 1141.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1141, 1463.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1141, 1.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1141, 16.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1141, 0.85]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1141, 172.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1141, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1141, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1141, 4.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1141, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1141, 0.29381443]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1141, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1141, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1141, 0.09503696]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1141, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1141, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1141, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1141, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1141, 0.05807814]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1141, 0.05913411]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1141, 0.06335797]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1141, 0.17010309]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1141, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1141, 0.11340206]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1141, 0.54857143]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1141, 5.41142857]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1141, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1141, 4.26604294]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1141, 175.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 1141, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 1141, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 1141, 175.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 1141, 0.00535236]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 1141, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 1141, 0.19106047]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1141, 0.00253075]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1141, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1141, 0.00851768]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1141, -59.00977897]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1141, -12.931774]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1141, -18.62898292]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1141, 9.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
NTSB Identification: CEN12CA240 14 CFR Part 91: General AviationAccident occurred Tuesday, April 10, 2012 in Monroe, LAProbable Cause Approval Date: 07/18/2012Aircraft: CESSNA 172S, registration: N5253QInjuries: 1 Uninjured. NTSB investigators used data provided by various entities, including, but not limited to, the Federal Aviation Administration and/or the operator and did not travel in support of this investigation to prepare this aircraft accident report.The student pilot reported that the airplane bounced while landing. The airplane then departed the left side of the runway and hit the precision approach path indicator lights. The airplane sustained substantial damage to the horizontal stabilizer. The pilot reported no mechanical malfunctions with the airplane.The National Transportation Safety Board determines the probable cause(s) of this accident to be: The student pilot's improper landing flare, which resulted in a bounced landing and loss of directional control. Full narrative availableIndex for Apr2012 | Index of months
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1670
{"url": "http://www.ntsb.gov/aviationquery/brief.aspx?ev_id=20120412X45456&key=1", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.ntsb.gov", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:26:40Z", "digest": "sha1:XX5MF5XVGG7YZ4FP3MUKLKCIHF7UNMDD"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 1047, 1047.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1047, 1059.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1047, 1.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1047, 1.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1047, 0.87]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1047, 276.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1047, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1047, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1047, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1047, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1047, 0.26519337]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1047, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1047, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1047, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1047, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1047, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1047, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1047, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1047, 0.03780069]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1047, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1047, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1047, 0.03314917]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1047, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1047, 0.19889503]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1047, 0.75172414]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1047, 6.02068966]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1047, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1047, 4.4724582]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1047, 145.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 1047, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 1047, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 1047, 145.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 1047, 0.03441495]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 1047, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 1047, 0.05635148]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1047, 0.06320381]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1047, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1047, 0.09576231]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1047, -64.17145852]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1047, -15.94833841]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1047, -2.22005034]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1047, 8.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Sign Out Hostess seeks approval for executive bonuses Hostess Twinkies SAN FRANCISCO - SEPTEMBER 22: Hostess Twinkies sit on a table September 22, 2004 in San Francisco. Interstate Bakeries Corp., the largest U.S. wholesale bakery, maker of Wonder bread and Hostess Twinkies, filed for bankruptcy on Wednesday after struggling with more than $1.3 billion in debt and weak demand for bread products amid the popularity of low-carbohydrate diets. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1671
{"url": "http://www.nwcn.com/news/181376271.html?gallery=y&c=y&img=11&c=y", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nwcn.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:34:33Z", "digest": "sha1:BNTDDPSY5C5TPN2PG7G7JHN4O4FJ2JCZ"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 484, 484.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 484, 1595.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 484, 3.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 484, 83.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 484, 0.84]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 484, 257.3]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 484, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 484, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 484, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 484, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 484, 0.20652174]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 484, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 484, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 484, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 484, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 484, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 484, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 484, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 484, 0.11392405]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 484, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 484, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 484, 0.05434783]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 484, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 484, 0.22826087]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 484, 0.76388889]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 484, 5.48611111]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 484, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 484, 3.91555786]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 484, 72.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 54, 0.0], [54, 71, 0.0], [71, 484, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 54, 0.0], [54, 71, 0.0], [71, 484, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 54, 8.0], [54, 71, 2.0], [71, 484, 62.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 54, 0.0], [54, 71, 0.0], [71, 484, 0.02531646]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 54, 0.0], [54, 71, 0.0], [71, 484, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 54, 0.05555556], [54, 71, 0.11764706], [71, 484, 0.0968523]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 484, 0.19485909]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 484, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 484, 0.0312196]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 484, -49.12092026]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 484, -7.06914457]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 484, -4.16569613]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 484, 7.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Sign Out MLK's dream inspires a new march, and a president WASHINGTON, DC - AUGUST 28: People cheer and pray during the 'Let Freedom Ring Commemoration and Call to Action' honoring the 50th anniversary of the historic March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom on the National Mall August 28, 2013 in Washington, DC. The 1963 landmark civil rights event was where Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his famous speech, saying, 'I still have a dream, a dream deeply rooted in the American dream...one day this nation will rise up and live up to its creed, "We hold these truths to be self evident: that all men are created equal." I have a dream . . .' (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1672
{"url": "http://www.nwcn.com/news/Martin-Luther-King-dream-speech-anniversary-221469441.html?gallery=y&img=19&c=y&c=y", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nwcn.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T09:16:20Z", "digest": "sha1:L7F7RUONZOV253WEIPHB2TDHMLORKIUX"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 691, 691.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 691, 1846.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 691, 2.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 691, 83.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 691, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 691, 162.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 691, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 691, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 691, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 691, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 691, 0.31543624]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 691, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 691, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 691, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 691, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 691, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 691, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 691, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 691, 0.03345725]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 691, 0.03717472]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 691, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 691, 0.04697987]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 691, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 691, 0.20805369]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 691, 0.74789916]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 691, 4.5210084]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 691, 0.00671141]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 691, 4.33505013]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 691, 119.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 59, 0.0], [59, 691, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 59, 0.0], [59, 691, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 59, 11.0], [59, 691, 108.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 59, 0.0], [59, 691, 0.02337229]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 59, 0.0], [59, 691, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 59, 0.08474576], [59, 691, 0.07911392]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 691, 0.39284474]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 691, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 691, 0.29355133]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 691, -13.18010874]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 691, -1.16908602]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 691, -5.53299831]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 691, 7.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Nadal nervous about return from knee injury MADRID (AP) — Rafael Nadal says he is nervous about his return to tennis after a seven-month layoff and believes it may be some time before his injured knee is completely healed. Nadal told Canal Plus television Friday that "I'm prepared to accept that my knee may not respond well at the beginning." He has considered playing off and on during the first three months of 2013. The 26-year-old Spaniard is set to play in Abu Dhabi on Dec. 27. It will be his first match since he was sidelined with tendinitis in his left knee after a second-round loss to 100th-ranked Lukas Rosol at Wimbledon in June. Nadal says his goal is to be back in top form for Monte Carlo in April.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1673
{"url": "http://www.nwcn.com/sports/sounders-fc/world-soccer/184423451.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nwcn.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T09:12:24Z", "digest": "sha1:32K2DNQ34JU5YXDZEEUG7KV4SZCLIWQ2"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 716, 716.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 716, 3277.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 716, 5.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 716, 122.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 716, 0.99]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 716, 207.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 716, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 716, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 716, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 716, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 716, 0.4379085]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 716, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 716, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 716, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 716, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 716, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 716, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 716, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 716, 0.04217926]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 716, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 716, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 716, 0.01960784]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 716, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 716, 0.13071895]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 716, 0.69465649]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 716, 4.34351145]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 716, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 716, 4.35087337]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 716, 131.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 44, 0.0], [44, 223, 1.0], [223, 421, 1.0], [421, 645, 1.0], [645, 716, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 44, 0.0], [44, 223, 0.0], [223, 421, 0.0], [421, 645, 0.0], [645, 716, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 44, 7.0], [44, 223, 32.0], [223, 421, 35.0], [421, 645, 41.0], [645, 716, 16.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 44, 0.0], [44, 223, 0.0], [223, 421, 0.02083333], [421, 645, 0.03240741], [645, 716, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 44, 0.0], [44, 223, 0.0], [223, 421, 0.0], [421, 645, 0.0], [645, 716, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 44, 0.02272727], [44, 223, 0.05586592], [223, 421, 0.03030303], [421, 645, 0.04464286], [645, 716, 0.05633803]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 716, 0.94274449]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 716, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 716, 0.90979087]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 716, 0.55976062]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 716, 25.34825012]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 716, 3.01745969]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 716, 7.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
U.S. sends forces to Jordan BRUSSELS – The United States has sent troops to Jordan to bolster its military capabilities in the event Syria’s civil war escalates, U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said Wednesday, reflecting U.S. concerns about the conflict spilling over allies’ borders and about the security of Syria’s chemical weapons arsenal.Speaking at a NATO conference of defense ministers, Panetta said the U.S. has been working with Jordan to monitor chemical and biological weapons sites in Syria and also to help Jordan deal with refugees pouring over the border from Syria.About 150 U.S. troops, largely Army special operations forces, are working out of a military center near Amman, two senior defense officials said on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about the mission. The troops have moved back and forth to the Syrian border as part of their work, which is joint planning and intelligence gathering, one official said.The revelation of U.S. military personnel so close to the 19-month-old Syrian conflict suggests an escalation in the U.S. involvement in the conflict, even as the Obama administration pushes back on any suggestion of a direct intervention in Syria.News of the U.S. mission to Jordan also follows several days of shelling between Turkey and Syria, an indication that the civil war could become a regional conflict. One of the U.S. defense officials said the extra planning is aimed at avoiding those kinds of clashes between Jordan and Syria.The development comes with the U.S. presidential election less than a month away, as Republican nominee Mitt Romney criticizes President Barack Obama for weak leadership in foreign policy. Romney has said he would send U.S. troops into Syria if needed to prevent the spread of chemical weapons, while Obama has said that movement or use of chemical weapons would have “enormous consequences.”Panetta has said that while the U.S. believes the weapons are still secure, intelligence suggests the regime might have moved some to protect them.Syria is believed to have one of the world’s largest chemical weapons programs, and the Assad regime has said it might use the weapons against external threats, though not against Syrians. The U.S. and Jordan share the same concern about Syria’s chemical and biological weapons – that they could fall into the wrong hands should the regime in Syria collapse and lose control of them.Jordan’s King Abdullah II fears such weapons could go to the al-Qaida terror network or other militants, primarily the Iranian-allied Lebanese Hezbollah – a vocal critic of Jordan’s longstanding alliance with the United States.The Monterey, Calif.-based James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies provided a map purporting to show four Syrian production sites for chemical weapons, three for storage, one for research and development, and two with dual use infrastructure.Steven Bucci, an expert in chemical weapons at the Heritage Foundation, has told Congress there might be as many as 50 chemical weapons sites. He said in an interview Wednesday that Syria’s stockpile is potentially “like a gift from God” for militants since they don’t have the know-how to assemble such weapons, while some of Syria’s chemical agents are believed to have already been fitted into missile warheads. Pentagon press secretary George Little, traveling with Panetta, said the U.S. and Jordan agreed that “increased cooperation and more detailed planning are necessary in order to respond to the severe consequences of the Assad regime’s brutality.”He said the U.S. has provided medical kits, water tanks and other forms of humanitarian aid to help Jordanians assist Syrian refugees fleeing into their country.“We have a group of our forces there working to help build a headquarters there and to insure that we make the relationship between the United States and Jordan a strong one so that we can deal with all the possible consequences of what’s happening in Syria,” Panetta said.In Jordan, the biggest problem at the moment seems to be the strain put on the country’s meager resources by the estimated 200,000 Syrian refugees who have flooded across the border – the largest number fleeing to any country.Several dozen refugees in Jordan rioted in their desert border camp of Zaatari earlier this month, destroying tents and medicine and leaving scores of refugee families out in the night cold.Jordanian men also are moving the other way across the border, joining what intelligence officials have estimated to be around 2,000 foreigners fighting alongside Syrian rebels trying to topple Assad. A Jordanian border guard was wounded after armed men – believed trying to go fight – exchanged gunfire at the northern frontier.Turkey has reinforced its border with artillery and deployed more fighter jets to an air base close to the border region after an errant Syrian mortar shell killed five people in a Turkish border town last week and Turkey retaliated with artillery strikes.Turkey’s military chief, Gen. Necdet Ozel, vowed Wednesday to respond with more force to any further shelling from Syria, keeping up the pressure on its southern neighbor a day after NATO said it stood ready to defend Turkey.Gen. Martin Dempsey, the chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, said in Washington on Wednesday that the Pentagon was planning for “a number of contingencies” and was prepared to provide the administration with options on Syria, if needed.“But the military instrument of power at this point is not the prominent instrument of power that should be applied in Syria,” he said.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1674
{"url": "http://www.nwherald.com/2012/10/10/u-s-sends-forces-to-jordan/a3ve7hv/?page=3", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nwherald.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:40:55Z", "digest": "sha1:UDSO4WEUYOJLEL3WVP3BB2LUDYADOGWT"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 5619, 5619.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 5619, 8095.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 5619, 3.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 5619, 129.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 5619, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 5619, 202.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 5619, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 5619, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 5619, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 5619, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 5619, 0.40148699]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 5619, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 5619, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 5619, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 5619, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 5619, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 5619, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 5619, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 5619, 0.01082485]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 5619, 0.00584542]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 5619, 0.00692791]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 5619, 0.03438662]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 5619, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 5619, 0.12918216]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 5619, 0.47203579]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 5619, 5.16666667]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 5619, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 5619, 5.4157728]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 5619, 894.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 28, 0.0], [28, 3335, 1.0], [3335, 5619, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 28, 0.0], [28, 3335, 0.0], [3335, 5619, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 28, 5.0], [28, 3335, 520.0], [3335, 5619, 369.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 28, 0.0], [28, 3335, 0.00216316], [3335, 5619, 0.00444642]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 28, 0.0], [28, 3335, 0.0], [3335, 5619, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 28, 0.10714286], [28, 3335, 0.03568189], [3335, 5619, 0.02583187]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 5619, 0.92446274]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 5619, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 5619, 0.93144804]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 5619, -237.10085364]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 5619, 216.77716264]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 5619, -6.55170536]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 5619, 62.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
On our way back to Edmonton, we got struck by lightning, and the emergency brakes caught on fire. The flames were inside the car. We jumped out of the car and poured water all over to put the fire out. We had only one hundred dollars between the two of us This money took us all the way to Little Buffalo River, where we ran out of gas. We slept in the car until a vehicle stopped and asked if we needed help, but he was going in the wrong direction. Just then, another vehicle came, and the driver let us use his mobile phone. Frank called his parents and told them we had run out of gas. His parents arrived, and Frank introduced me to them. We continued on our journey to Fort Resolution and stayed at my new in-laws� home. We immediately went to bed to rest. Previous Page Table of Contents Next Page
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1675
{"url": "http://www.nwt.literacy.ca/resources/adultlit/echoes/p13.htm", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nwt.literacy.ca", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:40:37Z", "digest": "sha1:D7CXCMTDNM4BAEF7TJVEFEGB664RI5HM"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 804, 804.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 804, 1328.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 804, 3.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 804, 3.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 804, 0.99]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 804, 281.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 804, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 804, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 804, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 804, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 804, 0.47727273]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 804, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 804, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 804, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 804, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 804, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 804, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 804, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 804, 0.02852615]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 804, 0.02535658]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 804, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 804, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 804, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 804, 0.10795455]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 804, 0.64102564]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 804, 4.04487179]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 804, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 804, 4.32258126]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 804, 156.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 202, 1.0], [202, 763, 1.0], [763, 804, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 202, 0.0], [202, 763, 0.0], [763, 804, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 202, 40.0], [202, 763, 109.0], [763, 804, 7.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 202, 0.0], [202, 763, 0.0], [763, 804, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 202, 0.0], [202, 763, 0.0], [763, 804, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 202, 0.01980198], [202, 763, 0.02495544], [763, 804, 0.14634146]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 804, 0.03985029]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 804, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 804, 0.01175171]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 804, 17.96018428]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 804, 19.76631184]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 804, -25.13768387]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 804, 11.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
In the Promised Land Patricia Storace May 26, 1994 Issue Fima by Amos Oz, translated by Nicolas de Lange Harcourt Brace/A Helen and Kurt Wolff Book, 322 pp., $22.95 Fima, short for Efraim, Nisan, the hero of Amos Oz’s new novel, is a present-day native of 1989 Jerusalem, a city where men (if not women), at least in the world of the book, are all “half prophet, half prime minister.” With more gift for rhetoric than for attentiveness, Fima is an encyclopedic talker. He debates politics with strangers in coffee shops, wakes friends for urgent monologues on the poems of Amir Gilboa, and electrifies imaginary cabinet meetings with daring analyses of Israeli-Palestinian politics. He even attempts, without notable success, to initiate philosophical dialogues with his penis. Fima, like his country, is a tangle of high aspirations, mixed motives, and unfulfilled promises. He lives simultaneously a daily existence of comical physical squalor (even the cockroaches in his flat seemingly die of poor sanitation) and visionary beauty in what he sees in the world outside his window: Fima watched the sun straining to free itself from the clouds. An elusive change was coming over the streets and the hills. Not so much a brightening as a slight quivering of hues, as though the air itself were smitten with hesitations or doubts…. There is a forgotten promised land somewhere here—no, not a land, not promised, not even really forgotten, but something calling to you. Fima is romantically preoccupied with Yael, the ex-wife he drove away; he is a man who longs to be a father, but is so terrified of having children that he insisted on an abortion when Yael became pregnant. He is a would-be lover who doesn’t achieve a sexual consummation for the duration of his story. A political idealist, he is also a personal nihilist, who has concluded that “love leads inexorably to disaster, whereas relations without love cause only humiliation and hurt.” Absorbed by fantasies of leading his country to peace, he neglects his ailing elderly father, whose death he might have been able to forestall. Having failed both as a promising historian and as a promising poet, Fima works as a clerk-receptionist in a gynecologist’s office. But he has taken on the most challenging of all employment: adrift in his personal conflicts, citizen of a country whose fundamental ethics are in mortal danger, he is trying to live a good life. He is hampered in his struggle by both the outer state of Israel and the inner state of Fima. The shell of Fima’s story is concrete, straightforward, almost stunningly ordinary. We follow Fima as he dreams, does cross-word puzzles, pisses, babysits, attempts to seduce women, engages in the incessant political debates that are a staple of Israeli life, and looks out the window. Fima’s window-gazing is almost an organizing principle of the book. When Fima looks out the window, he sees both outside and inside himself, and it is something of a tour de force to have made this almost involuntary daily activity so much a focus of the novel’s action. (Interestingly, although Fima spends a large part of … —— May 26, 1994 —— Dog’s Bone Breyten Breytenbach Sacred Woods Anne Barton Richard Nixon’s Revolution Murray Kempton Romancing Flaubert Julian Barnes
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1676
{"url": "http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/1994/may/26/in-the-promised-land/?insrc=wai", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nybooks.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:43:17Z", "digest": "sha1:E5RLRSYDH52D5QYQVI4LDZ4EC3CQ6F44"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3277, 3277.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3277, 5439.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3277, 16.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3277, 105.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3277, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3277, 299.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3277, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3277, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3277, 2.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3277, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3277, 0.39605463]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3277, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3277, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3277, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3277, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3277, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3277, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3277, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3277, 0.00566893]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3277, 0.00680272]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3277, 0.01284958]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3277, 0.0030349]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3277, 0.0625]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3277, 0.16236722]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3277, 0.57981651]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3277, 4.85504587]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3277, 0.0030349]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3277, 5.26525113]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3277, 545.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 21, 0.0], [21, 38, 0.0], [38, 57, 0.0], [57, 62, 0.0], [62, 105, 0.0], [105, 165, 0.0], [165, 778, 1.0], [778, 1084, 0.0], [1084, 1469, 1.0], [1469, 2422, 1.0], [2422, 3128, 0.0], [3128, 3147, 0.0], [3147, 3178, 0.0], [3178, 3203, 0.0], [3203, 3245, 0.0], [3245, 3277, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 21, 0.0], [21, 38, 0.0], [38, 57, 0.0], [57, 62, 0.0], [62, 105, 0.0], [105, 165, 0.0], [165, 778, 0.0], [778, 1084, 0.0], [1084, 1469, 0.0], [1469, 2422, 0.0], [2422, 3128, 0.0], [3128, 3147, 0.0], [3147, 3178, 0.0], [3178, 3203, 0.0], [3203, 3245, 0.0], [3245, 3277, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 21, 4.0], [21, 38, 2.0], [38, 57, 4.0], [57, 62, 1.0], [62, 105, 8.0], [105, 165, 10.0], [165, 778, 97.0], [778, 1084, 49.0], [1084, 1469, 66.0], [1469, 2422, 162.0], [2422, 3128, 120.0], [3128, 3147, 5.0], [3147, 3178, 4.0], [3178, 3203, 4.0], [3203, 3245, 5.0], [3245, 3277, 4.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 21, 0.0], [21, 38, 0.0], [38, 57, 0.35294118], [57, 62, 0.0], [62, 105, 0.0], [105, 165, 0.13207547], [165, 778, 0.00676819], [778, 1084, 0.0], [1084, 1469, 0.0], [1469, 2422, 0.0], [2422, 3128, 0.0], [3128, 3147, 0.35294118], [3147, 3178, 0.0], [3178, 3203, 0.0], [3203, 3245, 0.0], [3245, 3277, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 21, 0.0], [21, 38, 0.0], [38, 57, 0.0], [57, 62, 0.0], [62, 105, 0.0], [105, 165, 0.0], [165, 778, 0.0], [778, 1084, 0.0], [1084, 1469, 0.0], [1469, 2422, 0.0], [2422, 3128, 0.0], [3128, 3147, 0.0], [3147, 3178, 0.0], [3178, 3203, 0.0], [3203, 3245, 0.0], [3245, 3277, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 21, 0.14285714], [21, 38, 0.11764706], [38, 57, 0.10526316], [57, 62, 0.2], [62, 105, 0.09302326], [105, 165, 0.11666667], [165, 778, 0.0228385], [778, 1084, 0.00653595], [1084, 1469, 0.01038961], [1469, 2422, 0.00944386], [2422, 3128, 0.0184136], [3128, 3147, 0.05263158], [3147, 3178, 0.12903226], [3178, 3203, 0.16], [3203, 3245, 0.11904762], [3245, 3277, 0.125]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3277, 0.86818039]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3277, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3277, 0.3198747]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3277, 1.89792973]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3277, 75.25142466]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3277, -15.31225512]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3277, 23.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Home > Content Library of the Cancer Center Medical Content > Cancer Center Alternative Therapy: Art Therapy, Dance Therapy, Music Therapy, and Imagery What is art therapy? Creating art, viewing it, and talking about it provides a way for people to cope with emotional conflicts, increase self-awareness, and express unspoken and often unconscious concerns about their illness. The art therapist uses pictures, art supplies, and visual symbols as well as an understanding of behavior to help patients address their own personal concerns and conflicts. Art therapists work with patients individually or in groups. The art therapist provides the materials necessary to create paintings, drawings, sculptures, and other types of artwork. This type of therapy may help you express feelings about cancer through art and discuss emotions and concerns as related to it. In another form of art therapy, you may view pieces of art, often in photographs, and then talk with a therapist about what you see. Can art therapy help people with cancer? Art therapy is a body-mind therapy. The American Cancer Society states that art therapy has not undergone rigorous scientific study to determine its therapeutic value for people with cancer, but many clinicians have observed and documented significant benefits among people who have participated in art therapy. Participating in art therapy or creating art on your own can be an effective form of distraction as well. Thinking about and creating art can help to distract you from focusing on thoughts of pain and anxiety. Many art therapists believe this type of therapy works, in part, because of the act of creating art influences brain wave patterns and the substances released by the brain. It helps people express hidden emotions; reduce stress, fear and anxiety; and provides a sense of freedom. How does art therapy work? Creating art with an art therapist helps you express painful thoughts or memories possibly related to your cancer diagnosis. This may, in turn, help you cope with the difficulties of the diagnosis. In conventional mental health therapy, people talk with a counselor. To talk about traumatic or painful experiences that may be hidden in the subconscious mind is an important part of the healing process. In much the same way, creating a drawing or painting of an emotion or event can serve as a tool that helps the art therapist guide you through the process of dealing with similar concerns. Are there any possible problems or complications associated with art therapy? Art therapy is considered safe and may help people with cancer deal with their emotions. However, it does not cure cancer. Art therapy, as an addition to your cancer treatment plan, has the potential to be pleasant and productive, but should not replace the care and treatment provided by your cancer care team. Always consult your health care provider for more information. What is dance therapy? Dance therapy uses movement to improve mental and physical well-being. It is a recognized form of complementary therapy used in hospitals and comprehensive clinical cancer centers. Can dance therapy help people with cancer? Several clinical reports suggest that dance therapy helps people accomplish the following: Develop positive body image Improve self-concept and self-esteem Reduce stress, anxiety, and depression Decrease isolation, chronic pain, and body tension Increase communication skills Encourage a sense of well-being For some cancer patients, dance therapy is an effective form of exercise. However, dance therapy has not been studied enough to know if there are any unique health benefits to cancer patients, or to confirm the effects on prevention and/or recovery of illness. How does dance therapy work? The physical benefits of dance therapy as exercise are well documented. Experts have shown that physical activity is known to increase special neurotransmitter substances in the brain (endorphins), which create a state of well-being. And total body movement such as dance enhances the functions of other body systems, such as circulatory, respiratory, skeletal, and muscular systems. Dance therapy can help you stay physically fit and enjoy the pleasure of creating rhythmic motions with your body. Are there any possible problems or complications associated with dance therapy? There are no known negative side effects of dance therapy. However, dance is a form of exercise. Always consult your health care provider before beginning any exercise program, especially if you have a chronic condition such as arthritis. Your health care provider can evaluate whether the physical movements of dance therapy might be harmful to your cardiovascular system, joints, or muscles. What is music therapy? Music therapy uses music to promote healing and enhance quality of life. It is a complementary therapy that is used along with other cancer treatments to help patients cope mentally and physically with their diagnosis. Music therapy may involve listening to music, creating music, singing, and discussing music, in addition to guided imagery with music. Can music therapy help people with cancer? Scientific studies have shown the positive value of music therapy on the body, mind, and spirit of children and adults. Researchers have found that music therapy used along with anti-emetic drugs (drugs that relieve nausea and vomiting) in patients receiving high-dose chemotherapy can be effective in easing the physical symptoms of nausea and vomiting. When used in combination with pain-relieving drugs, music has been found to decrease the overall intensity of the patient's experience of pain, and can sometimes result in a reduced use of pain medication. Music can also help accomplish the following: Relieve stress, apprehension, and fear Improve mood Lower heart rate, blood pressure, and breathing rate Relieve depression Relieve sleeplessness Relieve muscle tension and provide relaxation Music therapists believe that: Rhythm is beneficial. Our muscles, including the heart muscle, synchronize to the beat of music. For example, some classical music approximates the rhythm of the resting heart (70 beats per minute). This music can slow a heart that is beating too fast. Self-expression in music therapy can reveal subconscious thoughts and feelings, and be therapeutic in the same way psychotherapy has shown to be therapeutic. The creative process of creating art whether it is through music, painting, sculpture, or dance can be beneficial. How does music therapy work? Music therapy can be incorporated into many different environments. People listen to music alone or in groups, with trained therapists or without. It can be as simple as someone listening to a CD. Specially selected music can be broadcasted into hospital rooms. Music therapists design music therapy sessions for a wide variety of needs. Some of the ways music is used as therapy include the following: Music improvisation Receptive music listening Lyric discussion Imagery and relaxation Performance of music For example, in a music therapy session that is specially designed to promote self-expression, the therapist might create a musical and emotional environment that encourages you to respond by revealing personal experiences or feelings. The session might incorporate speech and drama as well as music. Or the therapist might use singing and discussions. By playing music with lyrics, the therapist can encourage you to make up words that are then formed into a positive, unique song. Are there any possible problems or complications associated with music therapy? Music therapy, as an addition to your cancer treatment plan, has the potential to be pleasant and productive, but should not replace the care and treatment provided by your cancer care team. Always consult your health care provider for more information. Imagery is a form of distraction. It involves mental exercises designed to stimulate the mind to influence the health and well-being of the body. It uses visualization techniques to help reduce stress, anxiety, and depression, as well as manage pain, lower blood pressure, and ease some of the side effects of chemotherapy. Can imagery help people with cancer? There is no scientific evidence demonstrating that imagery affects cancer cells. Rather, it is a relaxation technique, similar to meditation, that has other physical and psychological effects on the body. In some cases, imagery has been found to alleviate nausea and vomiting associated with chemotherapy, relieve stress, enhance the immune system, facilitate weight gain, combat depression, and reduce pain. How does imagery work? There are many different imagery techniques. One popular method is called palming, which involves placing the palms of your hands over your eyes and first imagining a color you associate with anxiety or stress (such as red), then imagining a color you associate with relaxation or calmness (such as blue). Visualizing a calming color may make you feel relaxed, which may, in turn, improve your health and sense of well-being. Another common imagery technique is known as guided imagery. Guided imagery involves visualizing a specific image or goal to be achieved, and then imagining yourself achieving that goal. Athletes often use this technique to improve their performance. Are there any possible problems or complications associated with imagery? Imagery techniques, as an addition to your cancer treatment plan, have the potential to be pleasant and productive, but should not replace the care and treatment provided by your cancer care team. Always consult your health care provider for more information.Click here to view the Online Resources of Cancer Center Sialoblastoma of Intraoral Minor Salivary Gland Origin; A Case Report and Review of the LiteratureOncologic SurgeryOncology and Hematology (Cancer and Blood) Cancer Types - The Pituitary GlandGallbladder ScanLobular Breast Cancer Linked to HRT Use NYHQ Cancer Center Receives National Achievement Award from Commission on Cancer of American College of Surgeons04/08/2011Cancer Specialist Joins Staff of New York Hospital Queens; Returns to Serve Queens Community08/31/2010Novel Radiation Therapy to Treat Lung Cancer Used for First Time in U.S. at New York Hospital Queens12/17/2009
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1677
{"url": "http://www.nyhq.org/diw/Content.asp?PageID=DIW007338", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nyhq.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:08:53Z", "digest": "sha1:ESCWVEVB6L3DL3R7SOAVWBVRKDCS4FVM"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 10303, 10303.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 10303, 12800.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 10303, 65.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 10303, 183.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 10303, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 10303, 314.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 10303, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 10303, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 10303, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 10303, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 10303, 0.36942329]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 10303, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 10303, 0.06495344]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 10303, 0.1242485]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 10303, 0.10715549]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 10303, 0.09572085]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 10303, 0.09572085]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 10303, 0.09135919]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 10303, 0.01980431]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 10303, 0.01131675]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 10303, 0.01178828]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 10303, 0.00326442]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 10303, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 10303, 0.12350381]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 10303, 0.31972362]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 10303, 5.32851759]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 10303, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 10303, 5.43466049]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 10303, 1592.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 76, 0.0], [76, 152, 0.0], [152, 173, 1.0], [173, 552, 1.0], [552, 996, 1.0], [996, 1037, 1.0], [1037, 1559, 1.0], [1559, 1839, 1.0], [1839, 1866, 1.0], [1866, 2458, 1.0], [2458, 2536, 1.0], [2536, 2911, 1.0], [2911, 2934, 1.0], [2934, 3115, 1.0], [3115, 3158, 1.0], [3158, 3249, 0.0], [3249, 3277, 0.0], [3277, 3314, 0.0], [3314, 3353, 0.0], [3353, 3404, 0.0], [3404, 3434, 0.0], [3434, 3466, 0.0], [3466, 3727, 1.0], [3727, 3756, 1.0], [3756, 4255, 1.0], [4255, 4335, 1.0], [4335, 4729, 1.0], [4729, 4752, 1.0], [4752, 5106, 1.0], [5106, 5149, 1.0], [5149, 5710, 1.0], [5710, 5756, 0.0], [5756, 5795, 0.0], [5795, 5808, 0.0], [5808, 5861, 0.0], [5861, 5880, 0.0], [5880, 5902, 0.0], [5902, 5948, 0.0], [5948, 5979, 0.0], [5979, 6232, 1.0], [6232, 6390, 1.0], [6390, 6505, 1.0], [6505, 6534, 1.0], [6534, 6796, 1.0], [6796, 6937, 0.0], [6937, 6957, 0.0], [6957, 6983, 0.0], [6983, 7000, 0.0], [7000, 7023, 0.0], [7023, 7044, 0.0], [7044, 7527, 1.0], [7527, 7607, 1.0], [7607, 7861, 1.0], [7861, 8185, 1.0], [8185, 8222, 1.0], [8222, 8631, 1.0], [8631, 8654, 1.0], [8654, 9080, 1.0], [9080, 9331, 1.0], [9331, 9405, 1.0], [9405, 9687, 0.0], [9687, 9721, 0.0], [9721, 9879, 0.0], [9879, 9969, 0.0], [9969, 10303, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 76, 0.0], [76, 152, 0.0], [152, 173, 0.0], [173, 552, 0.0], [552, 996, 0.0], [996, 1037, 0.0], [1037, 1559, 0.0], [1559, 1839, 0.0], [1839, 1866, 0.0], [1866, 2458, 0.0], [2458, 2536, 0.0], [2536, 2911, 0.0], [2911, 2934, 0.0], [2934, 3115, 0.0], [3115, 3158, 0.0], [3158, 3249, 0.0], [3249, 3277, 0.0], [3277, 3314, 0.0], [3314, 3353, 0.0], [3353, 3404, 0.0], [3404, 3434, 0.0], [3434, 3466, 0.0], [3466, 3727, 0.0], [3727, 3756, 0.0], [3756, 4255, 0.0], [4255, 4335, 0.0], [4335, 4729, 0.0], [4729, 4752, 0.0], [4752, 5106, 0.0], [5106, 5149, 0.0], [5149, 5710, 0.0], [5710, 5756, 0.0], [5756, 5795, 0.0], [5795, 5808, 0.0], [5808, 5861, 0.0], [5861, 5880, 0.0], [5880, 5902, 0.0], [5902, 5948, 0.0], [5948, 5979, 0.0], [5979, 6232, 0.0], [6232, 6390, 0.0], [6390, 6505, 0.0], [6505, 6534, 0.0], [6534, 6796, 0.0], [6796, 6937, 0.0], [6937, 6957, 0.0], [6957, 6983, 0.0], [6983, 7000, 0.0], [7000, 7023, 0.0], [7023, 7044, 0.0], [7044, 7527, 0.0], [7527, 7607, 0.0], [7607, 7861, 0.0], [7861, 8185, 0.0], [8185, 8222, 0.0], [8222, 8631, 0.0], [8631, 8654, 0.0], [8654, 9080, 0.0], [9080, 9331, 0.0], [9331, 9405, 0.0], [9405, 9687, 0.0], [9687, 9721, 0.0], [9721, 9879, 0.0], [9879, 9969, 0.0], [9969, 10303, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 76, 11.0], [76, 152, 10.0], [152, 173, 4.0], [173, 552, 57.0], [552, 996, 73.0], [996, 1037, 7.0], [1037, 1559, 83.0], [1559, 1839, 46.0], [1839, 1866, 5.0], [1866, 2458, 100.0], [2458, 2536, 11.0], [2536, 2911, 62.0], [2911, 2934, 4.0], [2934, 3115, 26.0], [3115, 3158, 7.0], [3158, 3249, 12.0], [3249, 3277, 4.0], [3277, 3314, 4.0], [3314, 3353, 5.0], [3353, 3404, 7.0], [3404, 3434, 3.0], [3434, 3466, 5.0], [3466, 3727, 43.0], [3727, 3756, 5.0], [3756, 4255, 75.0], [4255, 4335, 11.0], [4335, 4729, 61.0], [4729, 4752, 4.0], [4752, 5106, 55.0], [5106, 5149, 7.0], [5149, 5710, 87.0], [5710, 5756, 7.0], [5756, 5795, 5.0], [5795, 5808, 2.0], [5808, 5861, 8.0], [5861, 5880, 2.0], [5880, 5902, 2.0], [5902, 5948, 6.0], [5948, 5979, 4.0], [5979, 6232, 42.0], [6232, 6390, 23.0], [6390, 6505, 18.0], [6505, 6534, 5.0], [6534, 6796, 42.0], [6796, 6937, 24.0], [6937, 6957, 2.0], [6957, 6983, 3.0], [6983, 7000, 2.0], [7000, 7023, 3.0], [7023, 7044, 3.0], [7044, 7527, 76.0], [7527, 7607, 11.0], [7607, 7861, 41.0], [7861, 8185, 52.0], [8185, 8222, 6.0], [8222, 8631, 59.0], [8631, 8654, 4.0], [8654, 9080, 70.0], [9080, 9331, 37.0], [9331, 9405, 10.0], [9405, 9687, 45.0], [9687, 9721, 5.0], [9721, 9879, 21.0], [9879, 9969, 12.0], [9969, 10303, 46.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 76, 0.0], [76, 152, 0.0], [152, 173, 0.0], [173, 552, 0.0], [552, 996, 0.0], [996, 1037, 0.0], [1037, 1559, 0.0], [1559, 1839, 0.0], [1839, 1866, 0.0], [1866, 2458, 0.0], [2458, 2536, 0.0], [2536, 2911, 0.0], [2911, 2934, 0.0], [2934, 3115, 0.0], [3115, 3158, 0.0], [3158, 3249, 0.0], [3249, 3277, 0.0], [3277, 3314, 0.0], [3314, 3353, 0.0], [3353, 3404, 0.0], [3404, 3434, 0.0], [3434, 3466, 0.0], [3466, 3727, 0.0], [3727, 3756, 0.0], [3756, 4255, 0.0], [4255, 4335, 0.0], [4335, 4729, 0.0], [4729, 4752, 0.0], [4752, 5106, 0.0], [5106, 5149, 0.0], [5149, 5710, 0.0], [5710, 5756, 0.0], [5756, 5795, 0.0], [5795, 5808, 0.0], [5808, 5861, 0.0], [5861, 5880, 0.0], [5880, 5902, 0.0], [5902, 5948, 0.0], [5948, 5979, 0.0], [5979, 6232, 0.00823045], [6232, 6390, 0.0], [6390, 6505, 0.0], [6505, 6534, 0.0], [6534, 6796, 0.0], [6796, 6937, 0.0], [6937, 6957, 0.0], [6957, 6983, 0.0], [6983, 7000, 0.0], [7000, 7023, 0.0], [7023, 7044, 0.0], [7044, 7527, 0.0], [7527, 7607, 0.0], [7607, 7861, 0.0], [7861, 8185, 0.0], [8185, 8222, 0.0], [8222, 8631, 0.0], [8631, 8654, 0.0], [8654, 9080, 0.0], [9080, 9331, 0.0], [9331, 9405, 0.0], [9405, 9687, 0.0], [9687, 9721, 0.0], [9721, 9879, 0.0], [9879, 9969, 0.0], [9969, 10303, 0.07384615]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 76, 0.0], [76, 152, 0.0], [152, 173, 0.0], [173, 552, 0.0], [552, 996, 0.0], [996, 1037, 0.0], [1037, 1559, 0.0], [1559, 1839, 0.0], [1839, 1866, 0.0], [1866, 2458, 0.0], [2458, 2536, 0.0], [2536, 2911, 0.0], [2911, 2934, 0.0], [2934, 3115, 0.0], [3115, 3158, 0.0], [3158, 3249, 0.0], [3249, 3277, 0.0], [3277, 3314, 0.0], [3314, 3353, 0.0], [3353, 3404, 0.0], [3404, 3434, 0.0], [3434, 3466, 0.0], [3466, 3727, 0.0], [3727, 3756, 0.0], [3756, 4255, 0.0], [4255, 4335, 0.0], [4335, 4729, 0.0], [4729, 4752, 0.0], [4752, 5106, 0.0], [5106, 5149, 0.0], [5149, 5710, 0.0], [5710, 5756, 0.0], [5756, 5795, 0.0], [5795, 5808, 0.0], [5808, 5861, 0.0], [5861, 5880, 0.0], [5880, 5902, 0.0], [5902, 5948, 0.0], [5948, 5979, 0.0], [5979, 6232, 0.0], [6232, 6390, 0.0], [6390, 6505, 0.0], [6505, 6534, 0.0], [6534, 6796, 0.0], [6796, 6937, 0.0], [6937, 6957, 0.0], [6957, 6983, 0.0], [6983, 7000, 0.0], [7000, 7023, 0.0], [7023, 7044, 0.0], [7044, 7527, 0.0], [7527, 7607, 0.0], [7607, 7861, 0.0], [7861, 8185, 0.0], [8185, 8222, 0.0], [8222, 8631, 0.0], [8631, 8654, 0.0], [8654, 9080, 0.0], [9080, 9331, 0.0], [9331, 9405, 0.0], [9405, 9687, 0.0], [9687, 9721, 0.0], [9721, 9879, 0.0], [9879, 9969, 0.0], [9969, 10303, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 76, 0.11842105], [76, 152, 0.11842105], [152, 173, 0.04761905], [173, 552, 0.00527704], [552, 996, 0.00900901], [996, 1037, 0.02439024], [1037, 1559, 0.01340996], [1559, 1839, 0.00714286], [1839, 1866, 0.03703704], [1866, 2458, 0.00844595], [2458, 2536, 0.01282051], [2536, 2911, 0.01066667], [2911, 2934, 0.04347826], [2934, 3115, 0.01104972], [3115, 3158, 0.02325581], [3158, 3249, 0.01098901], [3249, 3277, 0.03571429], [3277, 3314, 0.02702703], [3314, 3353, 0.02564103], [3353, 3404, 0.01960784], [3404, 3434, 0.03333333], [3434, 3466, 0.03125], [3466, 3727, 0.00766284], [3727, 3756, 0.03448276], [3756, 4255, 0.00801603], [4255, 4335, 0.0125], [4335, 4729, 0.01015228], [4729, 4752, 0.04347826], [4752, 5106, 0.00847458], [5106, 5149, 0.02325581], [5149, 5710, 0.00534759], [5710, 5756, 0.02173913], [5756, 5795, 0.02564103], [5795, 5808, 0.07692308], [5808, 5861, 0.01886792], [5861, 5880, 0.05263158], [5880, 5902, 0.04545455], [5902, 5948, 0.02173913], [5948, 5979, 0.03225806], [5979, 6232, 0.01581028], [6232, 6390, 0.00632911], [6390, 6505, 0.00869565], [6505, 6534, 0.03448276], [6534, 6796, 0.02290076], [6796, 6937, 0.0141844], [6937, 6957, 0.05], [6957, 6983, 0.03846154], [6983, 7000, 0.05882353], [7000, 7023, 0.04347826], [7023, 7044, 0.04761905], [7044, 7527, 0.00828157], [7527, 7607, 0.0125], [7607, 7861, 0.00787402], [7861, 8185, 0.00925926], [8185, 8222, 0.02702703], [8222, 8631, 0.00733496], [8631, 8654, 0.04347826], [8654, 9080, 0.00704225], [9080, 9331, 0.01195219], [9331, 9405, 0.01351351], [9405, 9687, 0.0106383], [9687, 9721, 0.11764706], [9721, 9879, 0.10759494], [9879, 9969, 0.16666667], [9969, 10303, 0.1257485]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 10303, 0.06775606]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 10303, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 10303, 0.0607807]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 10303, -344.86932083]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 10303, -36.97929456]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 10303, -183.50069855]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 10303, 88.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Home > Content Library of Ped English Medical Content > Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology Common Variable Immunodeficiency (CVID) What is common variable immunodeficiency (CVID)? CVID is an immunodeficiency disorder characterized by a low level of antibodies, making it difficult for the child's body to fight diseases. The child then becomes sick with recurrent infections. The disease may become evident during infancy, during childhood or puberty, or even later into adulthood. The symptoms of the disease are very different for each child affected, which is why it is called a variable group of disorders. What causes CVID? The cause of CVID is unknown. The disorder is characterized by a decrease in the number of immunoglobulins (antibodies) in the affected person. Immunoglobulins are produced by the body and are necessary in fighting infections. In some cases, more than one individual in a family may be affected. What are the symptoms of CVID? The following are the most common symptoms of CVID. However, each child may experience symptoms differently. Symptoms may include: Recurrent infections that can affect the eyes, skin, ears, sinuses, and lungs (the more these infections occur, the greater the risk of scarring and permanent damage to the lungs and breathing tubes) Inflammation in the joints of the knees, ankles, elbows, or wrists Stomach and bowel disorders Increased risk of developing some cancers How is CVID diagnosed? A diagnosis of CVID is usually made based on a complete medical history and physical examination. In addition, multiple blood tests may be ordered to help confirm the diagnosis, and testing for low serum IgG concentrations is primary to diagnose this condition. What is the treatment for CVID? Specific treatment for CVID will be determined by your child's doctor based on: Immunoglobulin therapy. Intravenous (IV) infusions of immunoglobulin (antibodies) may be given to help boost the child's immune system and replace the immunoglobulins that are needed. Medication. Prophylactic antibiotics to prevent infection as prescribed by your child's doctor. Routine blood tests Postural drainage of the lungs. This is done to help with lung infections and removal of secretions. Online Resources of Allergy, Asthma, & Immunology 22q11.2 Deletion SyndromeAll About the Immune SystemImmune DeficienciesImmune DisordersSevere Combined Immunodeficiency (SCID)X-linked Agammaglobulinemia
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1678
{"url": "http://www.nyhq.org/diw/content.asp?PageID=P01680&More=DIW", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nyhq.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:29:53Z", "digest": "sha1:EVX62TPO5R2EIZQSZZ5M2PTUFPJZT3PT"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2422, 2422.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2422, 5046.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2422, 20.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2422, 136.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2422, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2422, 218.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2422, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2422, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2422, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2422, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2422, 0.35402299]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2422, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2422, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2422, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2422, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2422, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2422, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2422, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2422, 0.01205424]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2422, 0.03013561]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2422, 0.03415369]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2422, 0.03448276]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2422, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2422, 0.15632184]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2422, 0.52077562]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2422, 5.51523546]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2422, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2422, 4.80479759]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2422, 361.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 88, 0.0], [88, 128, 0.0], [128, 177, 1.0], [177, 608, 1.0], [608, 626, 1.0], [626, 953, 1.0], [953, 1084, 0.0], [1084, 1284, 0.0], [1284, 1351, 0.0], [1351, 1379, 0.0], [1379, 1421, 0.0], [1421, 1444, 1.0], [1444, 1706, 1.0], [1706, 1738, 1.0], [1738, 1818, 0.0], [1818, 2002, 1.0], [2002, 2098, 1.0], [2098, 2219, 1.0], [2219, 2269, 0.0], [2269, 2422, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 88, 0.0], [88, 128, 0.0], [128, 177, 0.0], [177, 608, 0.0], [608, 626, 0.0], [626, 953, 0.0], [953, 1084, 0.0], [1084, 1284, 0.0], [1284, 1351, 0.0], [1351, 1379, 0.0], [1379, 1421, 0.0], [1421, 1444, 0.0], [1444, 1706, 0.0], [1706, 1738, 0.0], [1738, 1818, 0.0], [1818, 2002, 0.0], [2002, 2098, 0.0], [2098, 2219, 0.0], [2219, 2269, 0.0], [2269, 2422, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 88, 12.0], [88, 128, 4.0], [128, 177, 6.0], [177, 608, 69.0], [608, 626, 3.0], [626, 953, 54.0], [953, 1084, 19.0], [1084, 1284, 32.0], [1284, 1351, 11.0], [1351, 1379, 4.0], [1379, 1421, 6.0], [1421, 1444, 4.0], [1444, 1706, 42.0], [1706, 1738, 6.0], [1738, 1818, 13.0], [1818, 2002, 25.0], [2002, 2098, 12.0], [2098, 2219, 20.0], [2219, 2269, 6.0], [2269, 2422, 13.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 88, 0.0], [88, 128, 0.0], [128, 177, 0.0], [177, 608, 0.0], [608, 626, 0.0], [626, 953, 0.0], [953, 1084, 0.0], [1084, 1284, 0.0], [1284, 1351, 0.0], [1351, 1379, 0.0], [1379, 1421, 0.0], [1421, 1444, 0.0], [1444, 1706, 0.0], [1706, 1738, 0.0], [1738, 1818, 0.0], [1818, 2002, 0.0], [2002, 2098, 0.0], [2098, 2219, 0.0], [2219, 2269, 0.0], [2269, 2422, 0.03355705]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 88, 0.0], [88, 128, 0.0], [128, 177, 0.0], [177, 608, 0.0], [608, 626, 0.0], [626, 953, 0.0], [953, 1084, 0.0], [1084, 1284, 0.0], [1284, 1351, 0.0], [1351, 1379, 0.0], [1379, 1421, 0.0], [1421, 1444, 0.0], [1444, 1706, 0.0], [1706, 1738, 0.0], [1738, 1818, 0.0], [1818, 2002, 0.0], [2002, 2098, 0.0], [2098, 2219, 0.0], [2219, 2269, 0.0], [2269, 2422, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 88, 0.11363636], [88, 128, 0.175], [128, 177, 0.10204082], [177, 608, 0.0162413], [608, 626, 0.27777778], [626, 953, 0.03975535], [953, 1084, 0.05343511], [1084, 1284, 0.005], [1284, 1351, 0.01492537], [1351, 1379, 0.03571429], [1379, 1421, 0.02380952], [1421, 1444, 0.2173913], [1444, 1706, 0.03053435], [1706, 1738, 0.15625], [1738, 1818, 0.0625], [1818, 2002, 0.02173913], [2002, 2098, 0.02083333], [2098, 2219, 0.02479339], [2219, 2269, 0.1], [2269, 2422, 0.12418301]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2422, 0.05909824]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2422, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2422, 0.23210526]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2422, -84.90430732]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2422, -2.69427056]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2422, 1.57971644]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2422, 25.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Date: 07/10/13 Hours: Tues-Fri 8pm, Saturdays 3pm and 8pm, Sundays 2pm and 7pm Ages: YE,TW,TE,AD Price: $65 Address: 250 Main St. - 631-261-2900 Northport, NY 11768 engemantheater.com Description: Sailor hijinks, the danger of war, and the passion of young love are all joined together by Rogers and Hammerstein's score in one of the most popular musicals of all time.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1679
{"url": "http://www.nymetroparents.com/neweventinfoprint.cfm?id=140101", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nymetroparents.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:57:21Z", "digest": "sha1:QIC7XCWIS77RWHWGNI5XHJ2PKQRRMAFM"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 368, 368.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 368, 409.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 368, 3.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 368, 3.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 368, 0.86]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 368, 316.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 368, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 368, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 368, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 368, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 368, 0.22580645]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 368, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 368, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 368, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 368, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 368, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 368, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 368, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 368, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 368, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 368, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 368, 0.05376344]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 368, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 368, 0.3655914]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 368, 0.82758621]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 368, 4.9137931]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 368, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 368, 3.76460197]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 368, 58.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 108, 0.0], [108, 184, 0.0], [184, 368, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 108, 0.0], [108, 184, 0.0], [184, 368, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 108, 17.0], [108, 184, 9.0], [184, 368, 32.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 108, 0.13829787], [108, 184, 0.26865672], [184, 368, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 108, 0.0], [108, 184, 0.0], [184, 368, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 108, 0.14814815], [108, 184, 0.07894737], [184, 368, 0.02173913]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 368, 0.12738937]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 368, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 368, 0.00016201]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 368, -39.34010906]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 368, -20.6088816]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 368, -12.55524298]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 368, 3.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
MarketWatch.com Soars in IPO By KENNETH N. GILPIN n an indication that investors remain manic for new Internet stocks, the price of Marketwatch.com, the operator of a popular financial news site on the World Wide Web, rose more than 474 percent yesterday, its first day of trading. Much of that advance came on the first trade. The 2.75-million-share issue, offered to investors through an underwriting group led by BT Alex. Brown Inc. and the Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette Securities Corporation, was initially priced at $17 a share, slightly above the expected $14 to $16. When the shares were reoffered, their first trade was at $90 a share, an increase of 429 percent. Of recent initial offerings for Internet companies, only Theglobe.com had a bigger percentage gain on the first trade from its initial price, rising 605 percent on the opening when it was offered to investors last November. The move was just the latest illustration of a voracious appetite for Internet stocks that has become almost commo
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1680
{"url": "http://www.nytimes.com/library/tech/99/01/biztech/articles/16watch.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nytimes.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:50:55Z", "digest": "sha1:EDJ2NIGU52FPOXSFAJN5FO7SZIEAMSDB"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 1010, 1010.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1010, 1056.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1010, 3.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1010, 5.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1010, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1010, 221.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1010, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1010, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1010, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1010, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1010, 0.36453202]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1010, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1010, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1010, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1010, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1010, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1010, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1010, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1010, 0.02460025]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1010, 0.02460025]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1010, 0.03690037]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1010, 0.02463054]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1010, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1010, 0.19704433]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1010, 0.65662651]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1010, 4.89759036]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1010, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1010, 4.45091004]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1010, 166.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 29, 0.0], [29, 50, 0.0], [50, 1010, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 29, 0.0], [29, 50, 0.0], [50, 1010, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 29, 4.0], [29, 50, 4.0], [50, 1010, 158.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 29, 0.0], [29, 50, 0.0], [50, 1010, 0.02150538]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 29, 0.0], [29, 50, 0.0], [50, 1010, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 29, 0.20689655], [29, 50, 0.71428571], [50, 1010, 0.025]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1010, 0.63263768]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1010, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1010, 0.64236885]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1010, -58.1533088]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1010, 7.80866078]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1010, 2.28602592]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1010, 13.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
More Oakwood News » World-renowned artist headlines Red Tie Ball fundraiser With the theme ‘Children at the heart of it all,’ the Oakwood Red Tie Ball in honor of Winfred and Paula Weldon, promises to be an electrifying event featuring one-of-a-kind entertainment in support of two good causes. The 7th annual event will feature famed artist Michael Israel, sponsored Kelly’s Kidz and the Hermann Family, who will bring his ‘Art in Concert’ concept to the ice at Joe Louis Arena on April 21 for the fundraiser, which will benefit the Oakwood Center For Exceptional Families (CEF) and the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) at the Oakwood Healthcare, Inc. “This will be a wonderful event that supports two very worthy causes,” said Carla O’Malley, executive director of the Oakwood Foundation. Israel is the featured entertainer of the night. He has performed with musicians as well known as Bruce Springsteen and Garth Brooks, appeared with celebrities such as Warren Buffett and has performed at presidential galas and Olympic ceremonies. He helped generate more than $7 million in charitable donations last year. During his high-energy show, which he describes as a combination of a rock concert with paint and an emotional happening, he’ll create five six-foot tall paintings in about half an hour on spinning canvasses. “It’s action; it’s almost like watching a story unfold very quickly in the time it takes to play a couple of songs,” Israel said. Israel said collectors have been known to fly in from as far away as Australia to bid on his work, which retail for about $50,000. The paintings will be auctioned off after his performance. The event takes place on the ice at Joe Louis Arena. Doors open at 5:30 p.m. An elegant dinner will be served at 7 p.m. Other activities include The Giving Pool, a silent auction, photo opportunities on the Zamboni and self-guided tours of the Detroit Red Wings locker room. The Legends Club and Olympia Club will be open after 6 p.m. The NICU cares for about 500 premature and/or at-risk infants annually—and many of them require long-term medical care, therapy or other support. The Center for Exceptional Families provides care for more than 3,000 children with special needs—and their families—throughout southeastern Michigan. It is a nationally-recognized facility providing unique services of all sorts, from medical care to physical therapy, support groups and more, under one roof. Israel said he was happy to be able to help generate funds for the two programs. “It’s an amazing feeling to do what you love and be able to help other people,” he said. “Everybody, in their own way, should do something to help out.” For more information or for tickets, visit www.oakwood.org/foundation. For more information about Michael Israel, visit www.michaelisrael.com. More Oakwood News » Paula Rivera-Kerr - 313.791.4817 Scott Spielman - 313.586.5474 After hours - 313.593.7000 New Health System inquiries Matt Friedman 248.626.0006 ABOUT OAKWOOD Site photos Boilerplates Facts & Figures Video Library STAY CONNECTED TO OAKWOOD Friends of Oakwood monthly email newsletter Champions of Care TV & radio health shows Friend us on Facebook
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1681
{"url": "http://www.oakwood.org/News/?nid=1488&FromDate=9/30/2012&ToDate=3/31/2013", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.oakwood.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:29:02Z", "digest": "sha1:L6AK7ZBROCOFFKE7TENQI3OQDV7ONL3M"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3180, 3180.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3180, 6830.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3180, 12.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3180, 210.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3180, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3180, 254.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3180, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3180, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3180, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3180, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3180, 0.34556575]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3180, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3180, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3180, 0.0162917]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3180, 0.0162917]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3180, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3180, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3180, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3180, 0.0155159]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3180, 0.01163693]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3180, 0.01241272]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3180, 0.01681957]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3180, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3180, 0.20030581]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3180, 0.58464567]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3180, 5.07480315]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3180, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3180, 5.31476426]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3180, 508.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 20, 0.0], [20, 76, 0.0], [76, 2833, 0.0], [2833, 2923, 0.0], [2923, 2951, 0.0], [2951, 2978, 0.0], [2978, 2992, 0.0], [2992, 3004, 0.0], [3004, 3017, 0.0], [3017, 3047, 0.0], [3047, 3073, 0.0], [3073, 3180, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 20, 0.0], [20, 76, 0.0], [76, 2833, 0.0], [2833, 2923, 0.0], [2923, 2951, 0.0], [2951, 2978, 0.0], [2978, 2992, 0.0], [2992, 3004, 0.0], [3004, 3017, 0.0], [3017, 3047, 0.0], [3047, 3073, 0.0], [3073, 3180, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 20, 4.0], [20, 76, 7.0], [76, 2833, 451.0], [2833, 2923, 9.0], [2923, 2951, 4.0], [2951, 2978, 3.0], [2978, 2992, 2.0], [2992, 3004, 2.0], [3004, 3017, 1.0], [3017, 3047, 4.0], [3047, 3073, 4.0], [3073, 3180, 17.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 20, 0.0], [20, 76, 0.0], [76, 2833, 0.0078329], [2833, 2923, 0.39473684], [2923, 2951, 0.0], [2951, 2978, 0.41666667], [2978, 2992, 0.0], [2992, 3004, 0.0], [3004, 3017, 0.0], [3017, 3047, 0.0], [3047, 3073, 0.0], [3073, 3180, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 20, 0.0], [20, 76, 0.0], [76, 2833, 0.0], [2833, 2923, 0.0], [2923, 2951, 0.0], [2951, 2978, 0.0], [2978, 2992, 0.0], [2992, 3004, 0.0], [3004, 3017, 0.0], [3017, 3047, 0.0], [3047, 3073, 0.0], [3073, 3180, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 20, 0.15], [20, 76, 0.07142857], [76, 2833, 0.03735945], [2833, 2923, 0.06666667], [2923, 2951, 0.10714286], [2951, 2978, 0.07407407], [2978, 2992, 0.85714286], [2992, 3004, 0.08333333], [3004, 3017, 0.07692308], [3017, 3047, 0.13333333], [3047, 3073, 0.84615385], [3073, 3180, 0.07476636]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3180, 0.05124366]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3180, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3180, 0.7631585]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3180, -210.50971762]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3180, 42.66854809]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3180, -101.82127349]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3180, 39.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Japan’s TEPCO gears up for US shale gas imports TOKYO — Tokyo Electric Power Co., operator of the devastated Fukushima Dai-Ichi nuclear power plant, plans to buy liquefied natural gas from the LNG terminal in Cameron Parish, Louisiana, raising expectations Japan will tap into the U.S. shale gas boom. TEPCO plans to buy 400,000 tons of LNG a year, for 20 years beginning in 2017, from the Cameron project through trading house Mitsui & Co. It expects a similar deal with Mitsubishi Corp. and other deals that would boost its imports by 1.2 million tons a year. Both deals link the LNG price to the Henry Hub benchmark, at about $3.30 per million metric British thermal units, way lower than what Japan pays for its current gas imports. TEPCO said it was the first time it had set a long-term contract to the lower benchmark. Japan is keen to cut costs for fuel imports that have surged after most of its nuclear plants were taken offline following the March 2011 accident at Fukushima Dai-Ichi. The cost of most of its LNG imports is linked to crude oil prices, nearly five times the Henry Hub level as of late last year. A boom in U.S. gas production thanks to hydraulic fracturing — blasting mixtures of water, sand and chemicals deep underground to stimulate the release of gas — has taken U.S. prices to 10-year lows. Reduced U.S. demand for LNG from the Middle East, thanks to the increased domestic supply, is freeing up more LNG for Asia, including Japan, which accounts for 30 percent of global consumption. But resource-scarce Japan’s access to U.S. shale gas is limited by restrictions on exports of LNG to countries that have free trade agreements with Washington, which does not include its longtime Asian ally. Tokyo is lobbying for changes in that policy which limit it to buying gas from the Cameron Parish terminal. In the meantime, Japanese trading houses and energy companies are seeking access to LNG from Canada and elsewhere. The Japanese government which took power in late December, led by the Liberal Democratic Party, appears to be backing away from a commitment by the previous administration to phase out nuclear power. But tighter regulations following the Fukushima accident and public opposition are slowing any moves to bring nuclear plants shut down for safety checks back online. Soaring imports of oil and gas helped push Japan’s trade deficit in 2012 to 6.9 trillion yen ($75 billion). As the largest Japanese electricity company, TEPCO is especially keen to reduce costs for its fuel imports. It said its facilities, designed to handle so-called “hot” or “rich” LNG, need to be adapted to the type of “lean LNG” — LNG with a low heating value — to be shipped from the Cameron project. A 10-year plan the company announced earlier calls for importing 10 million metric tons per year of lean LNG, expanding its LNG storage capacity, setting up a specialized LNG receiving terminal and upgrading equipment. Mitsui and Mitsubishi are targeting 4 million metric tons a year in U.S. LNG exports from the Cameron project, the Nihon Keizai Shimbun newspaper reported.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1682
{"url": "http://www.observer-reporter.com/article/20130207/NEWS0801/130209508/0/news05", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.observer-reporter.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T09:13:18Z", "digest": "sha1:D5IGWZOJUPGJSDHYBNG3YTEMIAS6CMHK"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3096, 3096.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3096, 6864.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3096, 12.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3096, 279.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3096, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3096, 262.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3096, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3096, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3096, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3096, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3096, 0.31621188]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3096, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3096, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3096, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3096, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3096, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3096, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3096, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3096, 0.01680672]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3096, 0.02240896]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3096, 0.02521008]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3096, 0.05617978]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3096, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3096, 0.16372392]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3096, 0.52671756]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3096, 4.76908397]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3096, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3096, 5.1665118]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3096, 524.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 48, 0.0], [48, 302, 1.0], [302, 562, 1.0], [562, 826, 1.0], [826, 1123, 1.0], [1123, 1517, 1.0], [1517, 1948, 1.0], [1948, 2314, 1.0], [2314, 2530, 1.0], [2530, 2722, 1.0], [2722, 2941, 1.0], [2941, 3096, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 48, 0.0], [48, 302, 0.0], [302, 562, 0.0], [562, 826, 0.0], [826, 1123, 0.0], [1123, 1517, 0.0], [1517, 1948, 0.0], [1948, 2314, 0.0], [2314, 2530, 0.0], [2530, 2722, 0.0], [2722, 2941, 0.0], [2941, 3096, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 48, 9.0], [48, 302, 40.0], [302, 562, 47.0], [562, 826, 48.0], [826, 1123, 55.0], [1123, 1517, 66.0], [1517, 1948, 70.0], [1948, 2314, 57.0], [2314, 2530, 36.0], [2530, 2722, 37.0], [2722, 2941, 34.0], [2941, 3096, 25.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 48, 0.0], [48, 302, 0.0], [302, 562, 0.056], [562, 826, 0.01171875], [826, 1123, 0.01369863], [1123, 1517, 0.01055409], [1517, 1948, 0.0], [1948, 2314, 0.0], [2314, 2530, 0.03846154], [2530, 2722, 0.0], [2722, 2941, 0.01869159], [2941, 3096, 0.00662252]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 48, 0.0], [48, 302, 0.0], [302, 562, 0.0], [562, 826, 0.0], [826, 1123, 0.0], [1123, 1517, 0.0], [1517, 1948, 0.0], [1948, 2314, 0.0], [2314, 2530, 0.0], [2530, 2722, 0.0], [2722, 2941, 0.0], [2941, 3096, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 48, 0.16666667], [48, 302, 0.08267717], [302, 562, 0.05384615], [562, 826, 0.04924242], [826, 1123, 0.03703704], [1123, 1517, 0.04568528], [1517, 1948, 0.04176334], [1948, 2314, 0.02185792], [2314, 2530, 0.04166667], [2530, 2722, 0.05729167], [2722, 2941, 0.0456621], [2941, 3096, 0.07096774]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3096, 0.8986097]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3096, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3096, 0.91245157]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3096, -196.82019919]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3096, 61.4525989]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3096, 23.77298546]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3096, 36.0]], "is_duplicate": false}
Mike Buzzelli Dashboard Confessional, The Sequel A while back, I confessed I don’t know diddly-squat about my car. I know how to go forward and reverse. I know that I have to put gas in before the dial goes to E. And, finally, I know to change the oil when the date on the sticker expires. The two scariest words in my vocabulary are “Check Engine.” I hyperventilate when that light comes on. Here’s how I check the engine. I open the hood and notice that the engine is still there. I have officially checked the engine. The next item on the check list is, “Call mechanic.” I look at the car manual twice a year, once to Fall Back and the other to Spring Ahead. Every six months I forget how to change the clock. You think I would have figured it out by now. The check engine light usually means one thing to me. Money. Lots of money. Piles and piles of money. Car repairs are rarely cheap. Every time I get out of the dealership, Pep Boys, or wherever for under a hundred dollars, I am ecstatic. Mechanics, like grocery stores, should offer a rewards card. I find myself sitting in a chair at the dealership watching “The View” way more than I would ever agree to it, which would be no more than once every 10,000 years. I need a rewards card, clubs or coupons. That’s probably why I love Triple A. They run it like a grocery store with clubs and coupons. I also love Triple A because, while I am a male in my 40s, I don’t change flat tires. They have people to do that. I would hate to take away someone else’s job by changing my own flat. That, and I don’t like to get dirty. I might be wearing jeans I’ve had since the late ’90s, it doesn’t mean I have to look like it. Always make sure there are three A’s on the door of the building. Two A’s will only try to take away your cocktail. Two A’s doesn’t have clubs, cards or coupons, just cigarettes, coffee and donuts. The other day, I had a new light come on. It said, “Oil Life 90%.” I didn’t know my oil was alive. If oil is alive, I think we have a new reason to stop fracking. I am picturing a row of yellow Valvoline bottles crying in the Advance Auto. Clearly, I have a sick mind, one with no mechanical aptitude. I had to go to the dealership to find out that I hit a button by mistake. I somehow hit a button on my dashboard that tells me my oil life instead of my mileage. It turns out 90 percent was a good thing. I didn’t know. What if it were out of a possible 1,000? I had to make sure. While it’s embarrassing to have a mechanic tell you, “You hit a button by mistake,” it was a lot cheaper than actually paying for a car repair. So, I’m putting this in my win column.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1683
{"url": "http://www.observer-reporter.com/article/20130329/COLUMN0701/130329150/0/APF", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.observer-reporter.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T10:17:10Z", "digest": "sha1:DDH7RHTCQIOFM3LAFNHXPSGTL7CZDES6"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2636, 2636.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2636, 6402.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2636, 13.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2636, 279.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2636, 0.97]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2636, 323.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2636, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2636, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2636, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2636, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2636, 0.4245283]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2636, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2636, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2636, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2636, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2636, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2636, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2636, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2636, 0.00979432]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2636, 0.01469148]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2636, 0.01175318]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2636, 0.07075472]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2636, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2636, 0.16666667]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2636, 0.49323017]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2636, 3.94970986]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2636, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2636, 5.01246445]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2636, 517.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 14, 0.0], [14, 49, 0.0], [49, 290, 1.0], [290, 574, 1.0], [574, 759, 1.0], [759, 861, 1.0], [861, 1263, 1.0], [1263, 1300, 1.0], [1300, 1674, 1.0], [1674, 1872, 1.0], [1872, 2174, 1.0], [2174, 2454, 1.0], [2454, 2636, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 14, 0.0], [14, 49, 0.0], [49, 290, 0.0], [290, 574, 0.0], [574, 759, 0.0], [759, 861, 0.0], [861, 1263, 0.0], [1263, 1300, 0.0], [1300, 1674, 0.0], [1674, 1872, 0.0], [1872, 2174, 0.0], [2174, 2454, 0.0], [2454, 2636, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 14, 2.0], [14, 49, 4.0], [49, 290, 50.0], [290, 574, 51.0], [574, 759, 39.0], [759, 861, 19.0], [861, 1263, 74.0], [1263, 1300, 7.0], [1300, 1674, 78.0], [1674, 1872, 36.0], [1872, 2174, 61.0], [2174, 2454, 61.0], [2454, 2636, 35.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 14, 0.0], [14, 49, 0.0], [49, 290, 0.0], [290, 574, 0.0], [574, 759, 0.0], [759, 861, 0.0], [861, 1263, 0.0128866], [1263, 1300, 0.0], [1300, 1674, 0.01101928], [1674, 1872, 0.0], [1872, 2174, 0.00692042], [2174, 2454, 0.02205882], [2454, 2636, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 14, 0.0], [14, 49, 0.0], [49, 290, 0.0], [290, 574, 0.0], [574, 759, 0.0], [759, 861, 0.0], [861, 1263, 0.0], [1263, 1300, 0.0], [1300, 1674, 0.0], [1674, 1872, 0.0], [1872, 2174, 0.0], [2174, 2454, 0.0], [2454, 2636, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 14, 0.14285714], [14, 49, 0.11428571], [49, 290, 0.0373444], [290, 574, 0.03521127], [574, 759, 0.04864865], [759, 861, 0.03921569], [861, 1263, 0.02985075], [1263, 1300, 0.10810811], [1300, 1674, 0.03475936], [1674, 1872, 0.03030303], [1872, 2174, 0.04635762], [2174, 2454, 0.025], [2454, 2636, 0.02197802]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2636, 0.44501966]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2636, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2636, 0.0288707]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2636, -109.32903344]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2636, 42.57510822]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2636, -405.8683681]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2636, 46.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar's skyhook captured in bronze
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1684
{"url": "http://www.ocregister.com/articles/jabbar-378047-abdul-lakers.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.ocregister.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:45:26Z", "digest": "sha1:THDRPSCVXX56KBNY5LIXUZNSDKHQ56AW"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 48, 48.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 48, 629.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 48, 1.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 48, 23.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 48, 0.9]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 48, 40.3]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 48, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 48, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 48, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 48, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 48, 0.2]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 48, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 48, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 48, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 48, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 48, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 48, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 48, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 48, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 48, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 48, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 48, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 48, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 48, 0.2]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 48, 1.0]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 48, 6.83333333]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 48, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 48, 1.79175947]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 48, 6.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 48, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 48, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 48, 6.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 48, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 48, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 48, 0.0625]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 48, -8.46e-06]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 48, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 48, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 48, 0.23483278]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 48, 0.32668381]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 48, 0.39787686]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 48, 1.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
OECD Labour and Employment MinisterialProgramme for the Policy Forum Programme for Ministerial Meeting Related OECD documents ELSLABMIN09 › Mr. Stefano Scarpetta, Director, Employment, Labour and Social Affairs, OECD Mr. Stefano Scarpetta, Director, Employment, Labour and Social Affairs, OECD © OECD Photo Mr. Stefano Scarpetta Director, Employment, Labour and Social AffairsOECD Stefano Scarpetta is Director for Employment, Labour and Social Affairs at the OECD.Mr. Scarpetta joined the OECD in 1991 and held several positions in the Economics Department and in his current Directorate. He led several large-scale research projects, including: "Implementing the OECD Jobs Strategy"; the "Sources of Economic Growth in OECD Countries"; and contributed to others including “The Policy Challenges of Population Ageing" and “The Effects of Product Market Competition on Productivity and Labour Market Outcomes”. From 2002 to 2006 he worked at the World Bank, where he took over the responsibility of labour market advisor and lead economist. In this capacity, he coordinated a Bank-wide research program of Employment and Development and contributed extensively to the Bank's investment climate assessments. He returned to the Economics Department of the OECD in November 2006 where he became the head of the Country Studies Division in charge of Japan, Korea, China, India, Mexico, Portugal, Denmark and Sweden. From March 2008 to June 2010, he was the editor of the OECD Employment Outlook and the Head of the Employment Analysis and Policy Division of the Directorate of Employment, Labour and Social Affairs (DELSA). He became the Deputy Director of DELSA in June 2010 and in May 2013 has become Director. He has published extensively in academic journals, including in the American Economic Review, The Economic Journal, Economic Policy and The International Journal of Industrial Organisation. He edited several books in the fields of: labour economics and industrial relations; economic growth; and industrial organisation. He is the co-director of the programme of work on Employment and Development at the Institute for the Studies of Labour (IZA, Bonn, Germany); Research Fellow of IZA; Member of the expert group on the minimum wage in France; Member of the Executive Board of the CAED (Comparative Analysis of Enterprise Data) network and member of the Scientific Committee of the DARES (French Ministry of Labour).Mr. Scarpetta holds a Ph.D. in Economics from the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Science Sociales (EHESS), Département et Laboratoire d’Economie Théorique Appliquée (DELTA) in Paris and a Master of Science in Economics from the London School of Economics and Political Science. Full CV (pdf)
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1685
{"url": "http://www.oecd.org/employment/ministerial/mrstefanoscarpettaheadofemploymentanalysisandpolicydivisionoecd.htm", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.oecd.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:10:02Z", "digest": "sha1:KD4SPGV5FQQDITE3WARUKECH53NEBYV3"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2713, 2713.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2713, 2902.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2713, 10.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2713, 22.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2713, 0.92]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2713, 133.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2713, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2713, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2713, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2713, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2713, 0.29959514]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2713, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2713, 0.0556553]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2713, 0.1072711]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2713, 0.07854578]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2713, 0.07854578]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2713, 0.07854578]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2713, 0.0556553]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2713, 0.02468582]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2713, 0.04263914]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2713, 0.05610413]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2713, 0.04453441]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2713, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2713, 0.17408907]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2713, 0.45365854]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2713, 5.43414634]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2713, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2713, 4.57643831]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2713, 410.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 69, 0.0], [69, 103, 0.0], [103, 126, 0.0], [126, 217, 0.0], [217, 294, 0.0], [294, 307, 0.0], [307, 329, 0.0], [329, 381, 0.0], [381, 2700, 1.0], [2700, 2713, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 69, 0.0], [69, 103, 0.0], [103, 126, 0.0], [126, 217, 0.0], [217, 294, 0.0], [294, 307, 0.0], [307, 329, 0.0], [329, 381, 0.0], [381, 2700, 0.0], [2700, 2713, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 69, 9.0], [69, 103, 4.0], [103, 126, 3.0], [126, 217, 12.0], [217, 294, 10.0], [294, 307, 3.0], [307, 329, 3.0], [329, 381, 6.0], [381, 2700, 357.0], [2700, 2713, 3.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 69, 0.0], [69, 103, 0.0], [103, 126, 0.0], [126, 217, 0.02352941], [217, 294, 0.0], [294, 307, 0.0], [307, 329, 0.0], [329, 381, 0.0], [381, 2700, 0.01417811], [2700, 2713, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 69, 0.0], [69, 103, 0.0], [103, 126, 0.0], [126, 217, 0.0], [217, 294, 0.0], [294, 307, 0.0], [307, 329, 0.0], [329, 381, 0.0], [381, 2700, 0.0], [2700, 2713, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 69, 0.14492754], [69, 103, 0.08823529], [103, 126, 0.2173913], [126, 217, 0.23076923], [217, 294, 0.15584416], [294, 307, 0.38461538], [307, 329, 0.13636364], [329, 381, 0.17307692], [381, 2700, 0.08624407], [2700, 2713, 0.23076923]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2713, 0.02568263]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2713, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2713, 0.93610477]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2713, -71.78675586]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2713, 5.9385767]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2713, 106.76551082]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2713, 20.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
OECD Home › Direction des affaires financières et des entreprises › Investissement international › Politiques de l'investissement › Capital flow management and liberalisation: the role of international co-operation Politiques de l'investissement ConcurrenceAffaires d'entreprisesCorruption dans les marchés internationauxMarchés financiers, assurance et pensionsInvestissement international Politiques de l'investissement Capital flow management and liberalisation: the role of international co-operation Remarks by Angel Gurría, OECD Secretary-General, delivered at a high-level seminar on the role of international co-operation in capital flow management and liberalisation. Paris, Tuesday 9 October 2012 (As prepared for delivery) See the agenda. Dear Governors, Dear Deputy Governors, Dear friends, Ladies and Gentlemen, It’s a great pleasure to welcome you to the OECD for this day of discussion, debate and reflection on how we can collectively make the most of international capital flows to make our economies more prosperous and resilient. I am glad that distinguished central bank governors and deputy governors will have such an active role in our discussions. Let me also extend a special welcome to the representatives of countries that are “partners” of the OECD in this undertaking. It is encouraging to see so many of you at this table. This high-level seminar is a promising start for what we hope will be a long journey together. I look forward to hearing from colleagues from South Africa, China and Colombia about their experiences.Making the most of international capital flows The flow of capital across country borders is a key feature of international finance. It allows investors in capital-rich countries to seek better investment opportunities abroad. It allows fast-growing economies to tap international markets to complement domestic sources of finance for much-needed investment. At the same time, we know that dealing with international capital flows can be challenging. When they are too large, capital inflows may overwhelm the capacity of domestic markets to absorb foreign savings in the most productive manner and can distort asset prices. When they are too reliant on capital inflows, countries can become vulnerable to those sudden stops and flow reversals that wreak so much havoc in the economy. The task before us is therefore to make the most of international capital flows as a tool to finance growth and development while dealing with the challenges that they pose for policymakers. We can only perform this task through international cooperation, one that needs to involve capital exporters and capital importers; mature, emerging-market and developing economies; policymakers and practitioners. We have a lot to learn from each other, from our collective wisdom, from the experiences of our countries.The OECD Codes of Liberalisation as a tool for collaboration The OECD is proud to have been – since its early days – a focal point of discussion of capital flow issues. We share views and experiences, we seek a better understanding of the forces shaping national policies and global events; we look for solutions to global problems through dialogue. Our cooperation has been based on the ground rules provided by the OECD Codes of Liberalisation. Our members value the contribution that the Codes have made to preserve an open international system and to avoid individual uncoordinated responses that could be detrimental to all. Very much like trade protectionism, widespread recourse to capital controls could bring forth retaliatory reactions that could paralyse the global financial system and hurt jobs and growth. The OECD Codes are about maintaining deep liquid capital markets. This is why the Codes are now available to all. We should also look behind, and ask ourselves where the codes would need to be modified, and how we can continue to make the best out of them, while avoiding downside risks of capital liberalization. The OECD Council decided last June to open the Codes to countries outside the OECD, with equal rights as OECD countries. I am delighted to have received just last week a letter from Colombia expressing their interest in adhering to the Codes. We also need your views on how the Codes can be strengthened. This is a first step to deepen our dialogue on capital flow issues. We have set up a new Task Force to address these issues. We will be inviting you and other experts to its meetings. I now turn the floor to Governor Fischer, who may wish to offer some introductory remarks. Capital flows and the OECD Code of Liberalisation of Capital Movements Also Available Capital flow management and liberalisation: the role of international co-operation
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1686
{"url": "http://www.oecd.org/fr/daf/inv/politiques-investissement/capitalflowmanagementandliberalisationtheroleofinternationalco-operation.htm", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.oecd.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:41:17Z", "digest": "sha1:37DAN467CEXJNWILBQTIFJEZR2YYDSNP"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 4730, 4730.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 4730, 8137.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 4730, 17.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 4730, 46.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 4730, 0.9]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 4730, 334.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 4730, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 4730, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 4730, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 4730, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 4730, 0.40838323]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 4730, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 4730, 0.05432288]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 4730, 0.10048457]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 4730, 0.08237694]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 4730, 0.07370569]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 4730, 0.05432288]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 4730, 0.05432288]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 4730, 0.03060444]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 4730, 0.02142311]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 4730, 0.02448355]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 4730, 0.01916168]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 4730, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 4730, 0.10778443]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 4730, 0.45986395]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 4730, 5.33469388]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 4730, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 4730, 5.22445016]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 4730, 735.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 215, 0.0], [215, 391, 0.0], [391, 505, 0.0], [505, 677, 1.0], [677, 707, 0.0], [707, 734, 0.0], [734, 825, 0.0], [825, 1172, 1.0], [1172, 2337, 1.0], [2337, 2528, 1.0], [2528, 2909, 0.0], [2909, 3198, 1.0], [3198, 4287, 1.0], [4287, 4471, 1.0], [4471, 4562, 1.0], [4562, 4633, 0.0], [4633, 4730, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 215, 0.0], [215, 391, 0.0], [391, 505, 0.0], [505, 677, 0.0], [677, 707, 0.0], [707, 734, 0.0], [734, 825, 0.0], [825, 1172, 0.0], [1172, 2337, 0.0], [2337, 2528, 0.0], [2528, 2909, 0.0], [2909, 3198, 0.0], [3198, 4287, 0.0], [4287, 4471, 0.0], [4471, 4562, 0.0], [4562, 4633, 0.0], [4633, 4730, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 215, 28.0], [215, 391, 14.0], [391, 505, 13.0], [505, 677, 23.0], [677, 707, 5.0], [707, 734, 4.0], [734, 825, 13.0], [825, 1172, 58.0], [1172, 2337, 185.0], [2337, 2528, 32.0], [2528, 2909, 55.0], [2909, 3198, 50.0], [3198, 4287, 180.0], [4287, 4471, 36.0], [4471, 4562, 16.0], [4562, 4633, 11.0], [4633, 4730, 12.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 215, 0.0], [215, 391, 0.0], [391, 505, 0.0], [505, 677, 0.0], [677, 707, 0.17857143], [707, 734, 0.0], [734, 825, 0.0], [825, 1172, 0.0], [1172, 2337, 0.0], [2337, 2528, 0.0], [2528, 2909, 0.0], [2909, 3198, 0.0], [3198, 4287, 0.0], [4287, 4471, 0.0], [4471, 4562, 0.0], [4562, 4633, 0.0], [4633, 4730, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 215, 0.0], [215, 391, 0.0], [391, 505, 0.0], [505, 677, 0.0], [677, 707, 0.0], [707, 734, 0.0], [734, 825, 0.0], [825, 1172, 0.0], [1172, 2337, 0.0], [2337, 2528, 0.0], [2528, 2909, 0.0], [2909, 3198, 0.0], [3198, 4287, 0.0], [4287, 4471, 0.0], [4471, 4562, 0.0], [4562, 4633, 0.0], [4633, 4730, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 215, 0.04186047], [215, 391, 0.03409091], [391, 505, 0.01754386], [505, 677, 0.05232558], [677, 707, 0.1], [707, 734, 0.03703704], [734, 825, 0.0989011], [825, 1172, 0.01729107], [1172, 2337, 0.01630901], [2337, 2528, 0.0052356], [2528, 2909, 0.02362205], [2909, 3198, 0.02076125], [3198, 4287, 0.03673095], [4287, 4471, 0.02717391], [4471, 4562, 0.03296703], [4562, 4633, 0.12676056], [4633, 4730, 0.03092784]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 4730, 0.27648753]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 4730, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 4730, 0.38147932]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 4730, -113.75058776]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 4730, 37.81354897]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 4730, -139.16454428]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 4730, 33.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
OECD Home › Newsroom › FDI from OECD countries jumps 50% in 2007 but set to fall in 2008 Upcoming eventsPublications and statisticsSecretary-General speechesPhotos and videosContact us FDI from OECD countries jumps 50% in 2007 but set to fall in 2008 24/06/2008 - Foreign direct investment (FDI) outflows from OECD countries in 2007 leapt to a record USD 1.82 trillion from USD 1.2 trillion in 2006 but are projected to fall sharply in 2008, according to estimates from the OECD. If a slowdown in merger and acquisitions observed in the first half of 2008 continues, FDI outflows could fall to USD 1.14 trillion. FDI inflows to OECD countries rose to USD 1.37 trillion in 2007, up from USD 1.05 trillion in 2006 and up slightly from the previous record of USD 1.29 trillion set in 2000. But FDI inflows are projected to fall back in 2008 to USD 1.035 trillion. The projected fall in FDI outflows from OECD countries in 2008 will also impact developing countries. Based upon the historical relationship between developing country inflows and OECD outflows, the projected 37% drop in OECD outflows in 2008 could result in a decline of around 40% for developing country inflows to around USD 276 billion from their 2007 record of USD 471 billion. The new records set in 2007 for OECD inflows and outflows were helped by the fall in the US dollar against most other major currencies. (In addition to greenfield investment and mergers and acquisitions, FDI includes reinvested earnings, cross-border loans and capital transactions between related firms.) The United States continued to hold its position as the top OECD investor and recipient of foreign investment in 2007, with USD 333 billion in outflows and USD 238 billion in inflows. The United Kingdom was second, with USD 230 billion in outflows and USD 186 billion in inflows, followed by France with inflows of USD 158 billion and outflows of USD 225 billion. FDI inflows into Spain increased by more than 80% in 2007, mainly due to a large Italian investment in the electricity sector. Foreign investment in Japan was exceptionally high by historical standards at USD 22.5 billion, largely due to major investments in the financial sector and the capitalisation of foreign subsidiaries in Japan engaged in real estate investment. FDI into developing economies reached a record USD 471 billion in 2007, an increase of almost 30% over the previous record of USD 368 billion set in 2006. Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa accounted for approximately 50% to 60% of developing country inflows. For further information, journalists should contact Michael Gestrin of OECD’s Investment Division (tel. + 33 1 45 24 76 24).
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1687
{"url": "http://www.oecd.org/newsroom/fdifromoecdcountriesjumps50in2007butsettofallin2008.htm", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.oecd.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:01:45Z", "digest": "sha1:32R7L7ACTRWZ2AS2T4RTUNVDDB6AZZ2N"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2680, 2680.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2680, 5641.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2680, 14.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2680, 41.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2680, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2680, 290.3]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2680, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2680, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2680, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2680, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2680, 0.30097087]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2680, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2680, 0.046875]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2680, 0.11580882]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2680, 0.07444853]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2680, 0.046875]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2680, 0.046875]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2680, 0.046875]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2680, 0.02205882]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2680, 0.03125]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2680, 0.01838235]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2680, 0.07961165]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2680, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2680, 0.2407767]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2680, 0.4221219]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2680, 4.91196388]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2680, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2680, 4.61126255]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2680, 443.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 89, 0.0], [89, 185, 0.0], [185, 251, 0.0], [251, 613, 1.0], [613, 861, 1.0], [861, 963, 1.0], [963, 1244, 1.0], [1244, 1550, 0.0], [1550, 1734, 1.0], [1734, 1914, 1.0], [1914, 2041, 1.0], [2041, 2285, 1.0], [2285, 2556, 1.0], [2556, 2680, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 89, 0.0], [89, 185, 0.0], [185, 251, 0.0], [251, 613, 0.0], [613, 861, 0.0], [861, 963, 0.0], [963, 1244, 0.0], [1244, 1550, 0.0], [1550, 1734, 0.0], [1734, 1914, 0.0], [1914, 2041, 0.0], [2041, 2285, 0.0], [2285, 2556, 0.0], [2556, 2680, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 89, 19.0], [89, 185, 8.0], [185, 251, 14.0], [251, 613, 61.0], [613, 861, 47.0], [861, 963, 16.0], [963, 1244, 46.0], [1244, 1550, 46.0], [1550, 1734, 32.0], [1734, 1914, 32.0], [1914, 2041, 22.0], [2041, 2285, 36.0], [2285, 2556, 45.0], [2556, 2680, 19.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 89, 0.11494253], [89, 185, 0.0], [185, 251, 0.15625], [251, 613, 0.09195402], [613, 861, 0.12083333], [861, 963, 0.04], [963, 1244, 0.06521739], [1244, 1550, 0.01342282], [1550, 1734, 0.05524862], [1734, 1914, 0.06818182], [1914, 2041, 0.04878049], [2041, 2285, 0.0125], [2285, 2556, 0.07662835], [2556, 2680, 0.09401709]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 89, 0.0], [89, 185, 0.0], [185, 251, 0.0], [251, 613, 0.0], [613, 861, 0.0], [861, 963, 0.0], [963, 1244, 0.0], [1244, 1550, 0.0], [1550, 1734, 0.0], [1734, 1914, 0.0], [1914, 2041, 0.0], [2041, 2285, 0.0], [2285, 2556, 0.0], [2556, 2680, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 89, 0.14606742], [89, 185, 0.0625], [185, 251, 0.10606061], [251, 613, 0.06906077], [613, 861, 0.09274194], [861, 963, 0.07843137], [963, 1244, 0.05338078], [1244, 1550, 0.03594771], [1550, 1734, 0.07065217], [1734, 1914, 0.08888889], [1914, 2041, 0.03937008], [2041, 2285, 0.02459016], [2285, 2556, 0.05535055], [2556, 2680, 0.07258065]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2680, 0.64863598]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2680, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2680, 0.65635753]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2680, -172.3573042]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2680, -5.20263299]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2680, 58.20086956]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2680, 24.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Olby Out: Al Gore's Current TV has canned it's lead purveyor of left-wing hate speech, Keith Olbermann. Awww. I'll sure miss Olby, even though I haven't watched him since he was on that other left-wing hate speech station, MSNBC (quick MSNBC hate speech example - last night Chris Matthews' show was calling Florida's Stand Your Ground law the "Kill At Will" law, which of course it is not. I don't know how anyone watches that crap). Olby will be replaced by the disgraced former Governor of New York, Eliot Spitzer. You really can't make this stuff up. I assume Malik Zulu Shabazz wasn't available.Escalate: Speaking of MSNBC, former Democratic presidential candidate, riot inciter, race baiter, framer of innocent people, MSNBC talk show host, and lynch mob leader, Al Sharpton, has called for an escalation of civil disobedience if George Zimmerman isn't arrested for the shooting of Trayvon Martin. Sharpton said he will take things to the next "level", all peacefully, of course. Maybe someone should inform Sharpton that the shooting is under investigation at both the state and FBI level, and if the facts warrant it, Zimmerman WILL be arrested. The last time I checked, Al Sharpton was not the American justice system. Democrats On An Escalator This one is self-explanatory: Budget Plans To Nowhere On wednesday, the House of Representative voted on three budget plans. Here are the results:- A budget based on President Obama's 2013 budget plan was defeated by a unanimous vote of 414-0. Not even one Democrat voted for it. This is a similar outcome to the last Obama budget Congress voted on, over in the Senate in 2011. That one was defeated by a unanimous vote of 97-0. Again, not one Democrat voted with the President. Who says this President can't unite the country ? To read more or comment... EPA To Stop Coal Plant Construction Because the Obama administration couldn't get Cap And Trade passed through a resistant Congress, it has turned to another legislative branch of the federal government (though we thought there was only supposed to be one), which is known as the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). The EPA is a curious federal entity. It can make it's own rules, and those rules don't have to be approved by the constitutionally authorized legislative branch. That makes the EPA sort of an Americanized version of the old Soviet Politburo. The consent of the governed is not required. Here's the latest unilateral action taken by the EPA: Scalia Slaps Down Federal Government In the following video, Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia knocks down the federal government's alleged Commerce Clause case precedents for the ObamaCare individual mandate (and makes the point of my previous post). Scalia also gives the government solicitor a lesson on enumerated powers and the Tenth Amendment. This is music to my ears. Precedent For ObamaCare Mandate ? The Supreme Court is hearing a case about the ObamaCare mandate this week. Under the mandate, all citizens of the United States will be forced to either purchase government-approved health insurance from private providers or pay a fine. The case is an appeal of an Eleventh Circuit Court decision which held the ObamaCare individual mandate to be unconstitutional under both the Commerce Clause and the Taxing And Spending Clause of the Constitution. That ruling stated the following: Elke's Warning The collective over the individual, nationalizing health care, nationalizing banks, confiscating guns, the abolition of God, the government in charge of industry, liberty in chains, all to help the common man, of course... Politics Enters Trayvon Martin Fray President Obama made the following comments about the killing of Florida teenager Trayvon Martin, who was shot by a Hispanic neighborhood watch captain in a gated community: Free Speech Files Correction: Before I get into today's subject matter, I want to issue a correction regarding a source I used in a post about voting fraud. In a January 23rd post titled, 'Monday Madness', I cited the South Carolina Attorney General's letter to the U.S. Justice Dept., which stated that 953 dead people voted in a South Carolina election. I used that source to say liberals were lying about occurrences of voting fraud. Liberals have been contending recently that there are very few instances of voting fraud (contrary to what liberals contended in the aftermath of the 2000 and 2004 elections). After a partial investigation of the matter, it turns out the S.C. Attorney General's voting fraud fears may be unfounded: Occupy Movement...Literally Now that nice weather has returned, the Occupy Wall Street crazies are ba-ack...and crazier than ever. Yesterday: Etch-A-Sketching Romney's Record On television last night, I saw both Rick Santorum (R-PA) and Newt Gingrich (R-GA) waving Etch-A-Sketches around onstage, saying Mitt Romney (R-MA) would erase his primary campaign and move left for the general election. This was meant to imply Romney is a flip-flopping politician with no conservative principles, and came after Romney adviser Eric Fehrnstrom went on CNN and compared the general election to an Etch A Sketch, saying Romney can "shake it up" and "start all over again" in the fall. Such is politics, I suppose, but this prompts me to share a few thoughts about the GOP primary race. To read more or comment... Stereotype Right, Stereotype Left Normally, I would rather get a root canal than post a clip from Bill Maher's show, but I'm going to make an exception here. The following videos were made by filmmaker Alexandra Pelosi (Nancy Pelosi's daughter). The first part of the video shows some stereotypical rednecks from the deep South being...stereotypical rednecks from the deep South (Stereotype Right). The second part of the video shows stereotypical welfare seekers looking for handouts being...stereotypical welfare seekers looking for handouts (Stereotype Left). Unfortunately, Bill Maher also appears in the video. Sorry about that. I would have edited out his dumb comments if I could have, but I couldn't. To read more or comment... How Much Oil Do We Really Have ? On the campaign trail, President Obama keeps keeps repeating this point: St. Patrick's Day Humor Happy St. Patrick's Day, everyone !Time for some Irish jokes. Because I'm a good Catholic boy, and 1/4th Irish, these jokes will be clean.===An Irishman was walking through a graveyard, when he saw a headstone with the inscription, 'Here Lies A Politician And An Honest Man'. "Faith and Begorrah", exclaimed the Irishman. "I wonder how they fit the two of them in the same coffin ?".==="Seamus, why don't you give up the drinking, smoking and carousing?' asked Mrs O'Leary.'It's too late,' replied Seamus.'It's never too late,' assured the virtuous Mrs O'Leary.'Well, there's no rush then,' smiled Seamus. ===Two Irishmen, Pat and Murphy, saw a sign saying "Tree fellers wanted".Murphy said to Pat, 'If only Seamus had been with us, we'd have got that job.' [wait for it...]===David and Peter, two English men, are walking along O'Connell Street in Dublin, when they see a sign in a shop window: Suits £15.00, shirts £2.00, trousers £2.50.Peter says to Dave, 'Look at that - we could buy a lot of that gear and, when we get back to England we could make a fortune. When we go into the shop don't say anything, let me do all the talking, because if they hear our accent they might not serve us, so I'll speak in my best Irish accent.'They go in, and Peter orders 50 suits at £15.00, 100 shirts at £2.00, and 50 trousers at £2.50.The owner of the shop says, 'You're English, aren't you?'Peter replies 'Oh bother... Yes, how on earth did you know that?'The owner says, 'Because this is a dry cleaners...' ===This next bit of humor came from Kimberly Driscoll, the mayor of Salem, Massachusetts: How Ron Paul Won And Lost The Virgin Islands Caucus As the mainstream media reported, Mitt Romney won the Virgin Islands Republican caucus: To read more or comment... From the Obama administration's sexist belief that women aren't capable of being responsible for their own sex lives (birth control), to the Obama administration's racist belief that minorities are too dumb to obtain id's (even when those id's are free), you'd think three-fourths of the country would be pissed off at the Obama administration by now.Then when you add in the Obama administration's belief that adults are too stupid to figure out what constitutes healthy food, and are unable to feed their children properly, almost everyone should be offended. To read more or comment... Possible Obama Impeachment ? Here's a conversation between Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-AL) and Defense Secretary Leon Panetta during a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing about possible military action in Syria: Too Little Taxation, Or Too Much Spending ? In general, if you ask Republicans, they say the government spends too much. If you ask Democrats, they say the government taxes too little. Conservatives talk about cutting spending. Liberals talk about raising taxes. There are, of course, variations to this generalization, but I'm not going to get into that today. I want to focus on the bigger picture.Who is correct in this debate ? Let's look at some numbers. To read more or comment... The Fifty Dollar Light Bulb The Obama administration at work: The Left's Hypocritical Misogynistic Double Standard My liberal blogger friend, the Reverend, speaking about Rush Limbaugh's nasty name-calling directed toward Georgetown law student Sandra Fluke, claimed there was no equivalent misogynistic behavior coming from the political left. Because that was one of the more unbelievable statements I've heard in my life, I decided to write a post showing the Reverend exactly how wrong he was. Luckily for me, liberal columnist and Fox News contributor Kirsten Powers did my research for me, with an article called 'Rush Limbaugh Isn't The Only Media Misogynist'. Ms. Powers save me a lot of time and effort, so I'll just print her entire column here. She nailed it: Obama Violates Medicare Law...Again When Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI) put forth his budget plan in 2011, it included a provision to make Medicare sustainable into the future, but Democrats dishonestly pretended Ryan was setting out to destroy Medicare rather than save it. You may remember the Democrat ad that showed Ryan pushing a wheelchaired grandmother over a cliff. The Democrats were so dishonest about Ryan's proposal that Factcheck.Org deemed the Democrat lie one of the worst politiical deceptions of 2011 in it's Whopper's Of 2011 list.To those dedicated to the truth rather than deception, it is obvious the only thing that will ultimately destroy Medicare is to leave it unsustainable, as it is now. The unfunded Medicare liability stands at over $81.755 TRILLION dollars. We don't have to come up with all that dough immediately, of course, but we do need to start addressing the problem sooner rather than later, or we'll be in a world of hurt. As things stand now, the Medicare Hospital Insurance Trust Fund will become insolvent in 2024. To read more or comment... The Energy Killers As I mentioned in my last post, Obama's Energy Secretary, Stephen Chu, longs for high gasoline prices. Here's what he said in 2008: What If His Name Was Bush ? I don't understand why people support President Obama, unless it's out of some sense of misguided tribal loyalty. By any objective measure, Obama has done a terrible job as President, but for some reason, liberals and Democrats want to re-elect him. Why ??? If Bush was still the President and had done everything Obama has done, I doubt you could find a Democrat in the country to support him. So what gives ? Is party (tribe) really THAT important ? Is it more important than country, the Constitution, fiscal sanity, and honesty ???If any of you are confused as to what I mean here, allow me to explain. Let's play the 'What If His Name Was Bush ?' game. Imagine Bush was still the President, and had done what Obama has done. Would you still support these things ?...
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1688
{"url": "http://www.ohio.com/blogs/all-da-king-s-men/all-da-king-s-men-1.297964/the-politicization-of-jobs-1.298492?month=2&year=2012", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.ohio.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:32:13Z", "digest": "sha1:QIRO5KLNMPSQWHRPGM2HHQF6HFNM6G2J"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 12062, 12062.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 12062, 18494.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 12062, 44.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 12062, 501.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 12062, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 12062, 318.9]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 12062, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 12062, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 12062, 2.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 12062, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 12062, 0.358393]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 12062, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 12062, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 12062, 0.04754441]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 12062, 0.02194357]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 12062, 0.01316614]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 12062, 0.00710554]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 12062, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 12062, 0.00679206]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 12062, 0.00731452]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 12062, 0.00877743]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 12062, 0.02665076]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 12062, 0.20454545]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 12062, 0.18019093]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 12062, 0.44410723]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 12062, 4.84066768]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 12062, 0.00676213]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 12062, 6.09122804]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 12062, 1977.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 1228, 1.0], [1228, 1254, 0.0], [1254, 1284, 0.0], [1284, 1308, 0.0], [1308, 1810, 1.0], [1810, 1846, 0.0], [1846, 2470, 0.0], [2470, 2507, 0.0], [2507, 2849, 1.0], [2849, 2883, 1.0], [2883, 3368, 0.0], [3368, 3383, 0.0], [3383, 3606, 1.0], [3606, 3642, 0.0], [3642, 3816, 0.0], [3816, 3834, 0.0], [3834, 4552, 0.0], [4552, 4580, 0.0], [4580, 4694, 0.0], [4694, 4727, 0.0], [4727, 5355, 1.0], [5355, 5389, 0.0], [5389, 6091, 1.0], [6091, 6124, 1.0], [6124, 6197, 0.0], [6197, 6221, 0.0], [6221, 7813, 0.0], [7813, 7865, 0.0], [7865, 7980, 1.0], [7980, 8569, 1.0], [8569, 8598, 1.0], [8598, 8779, 0.0], [8779, 8823, 1.0], [8823, 9266, 1.0], [9266, 9294, 0.0], [9294, 9328, 0.0], [9328, 9381, 0.0], [9381, 10037, 0.0], [10037, 10073, 0.0], [10073, 11112, 1.0], [11112, 11131, 0.0], [11131, 11263, 0.0], [11263, 11291, 1.0], [11291, 12062, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 1228, 0.0], [1228, 1254, 0.0], [1254, 1284, 0.0], [1284, 1308, 0.0], [1308, 1810, 0.0], [1810, 1846, 0.0], [1846, 2470, 0.0], [2470, 2507, 0.0], [2507, 2849, 0.0], [2849, 2883, 0.0], [2883, 3368, 0.0], [3368, 3383, 0.0], [3383, 3606, 0.0], [3606, 3642, 0.0], [3642, 3816, 0.0], [3816, 3834, 0.0], [3834, 4552, 0.0], [4552, 4580, 0.0], [4580, 4694, 0.0], [4694, 4727, 0.0], [4727, 5355, 0.0], [5355, 5389, 0.0], [5389, 6091, 0.0], [6091, 6124, 0.0], [6124, 6197, 0.0], [6197, 6221, 0.0], [6221, 7813, 0.0], [7813, 7865, 0.0], [7865, 7980, 0.0], [7980, 8569, 0.0], [8569, 8598, 0.0], [8598, 8779, 0.0], [8779, 8823, 0.0], [8823, 9266, 0.0], [9266, 9294, 0.0], [9294, 9328, 0.0], [9328, 9381, 0.0], [9381, 10037, 0.0], [10037, 10073, 0.0], [10073, 11112, 0.0], [11112, 11131, 0.0], [11131, 11263, 0.0], [11263, 11291, 0.0], [11291, 12062, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 1228, 202.0], [1228, 1254, 4.0], [1254, 1284, 4.0], [1284, 1308, 4.0], [1308, 1810, 89.0], [1810, 1846, 6.0], [1846, 2470, 102.0], [2470, 2507, 5.0], [2507, 2849, 53.0], [2849, 2883, 4.0], [2883, 3368, 77.0], [3368, 3383, 2.0], [3383, 3606, 33.0], [3606, 3642, 5.0], [3642, 3816, 27.0], [3816, 3834, 3.0], [3834, 4552, 120.0], [4552, 4580, 2.0], [4580, 4694, 17.0], [4694, 4727, 3.0], [4727, 5355, 106.0], [5355, 5389, 4.0], [5389, 6091, 110.0], [6091, 6124, 7.0], [6124, 6197, 11.0], [6197, 6221, 4.0], [6221, 7813, 274.0], [7813, 7865, 10.0], [7865, 7980, 18.0], [7980, 8569, 94.0], [8569, 8598, 3.0], [8598, 8779, 26.0], [8779, 8823, 7.0], [8823, 9266, 74.0], [9266, 9294, 5.0], [9294, 9328, 5.0], [9328, 9381, 6.0], [9381, 10037, 107.0], [10037, 10073, 4.0], [10073, 11112, 174.0], [11112, 11131, 3.0], [11131, 11263, 23.0], [11263, 11291, 6.0], [11291, 12062, 134.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 1228, 0.0], [1228, 1254, 0.0], [1254, 1284, 0.0], [1284, 1308, 0.0], [1308, 1810, 0.03118503], [1810, 1846, 0.0], [1846, 2470, 0.0], [2470, 2507, 0.0], [2507, 2849, 0.0], [2849, 2883, 0.0], [2883, 3368, 0.0], [3368, 3383, 0.0], [3383, 3606, 0.0], [3606, 3642, 0.0], [3642, 3816, 0.0], [3816, 3834, 0.0], [3834, 4552, 0.01873199], [4552, 4580, 0.0], [4580, 4694, 0.0], [4694, 4727, 0.0], [4727, 5355, 0.0], [5355, 5389, 0.0], [5389, 6091, 0.0], [6091, 6124, 0.0], [6124, 6197, 0.0], [6197, 6221, 0.0], [6221, 7813, 0.01989026], [7813, 7865, 0.0], [7865, 7980, 0.0], [7980, 8569, 0.0], [8569, 8598, 0.0], [8598, 8779, 0.0], [8779, 8823, 0.0], [8823, 9266, 0.0], [9266, 9294, 0.0], [9294, 9328, 0.0], [9328, 9381, 0.0], [9381, 10037, 0.0], [10037, 10073, 0.0], [10073, 11112, 0.02083333], [11112, 11131, 0.0], [11131, 11263, 0.03225806], [11263, 11291, 0.0], [11291, 12062, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 1228, 0.0], [1228, 1254, 0.0], [1254, 1284, 0.0], [1284, 1308, 0.0], [1308, 1810, 0.0], [1810, 1846, 0.0], [1846, 2470, 0.0], [2470, 2507, 0.0], [2507, 2849, 0.0], [2849, 2883, 0.0], [2883, 3368, 0.0], [3368, 3383, 0.0], [3383, 3606, 0.0], [3606, 3642, 0.0], [3642, 3816, 0.0], [3816, 3834, 0.0], [3834, 4552, 0.0], [4552, 4580, 0.0], [4580, 4694, 0.0], [4694, 4727, 0.0], [4727, 5355, 0.0], [5355, 5389, 0.0], [5389, 6091, 0.0], [6091, 6124, 0.0], [6124, 6197, 0.0], [6197, 6221, 0.0], [6221, 7813, 0.0], [7813, 7865, 0.0], [7865, 7980, 0.0], [7980, 8569, 0.0], [8569, 8598, 0.0], [8598, 8779, 0.0], [8779, 8823, 0.0], [8823, 9266, 0.0], [9266, 9294, 0.0], [9294, 9328, 0.0], [9328, 9381, 0.0], [9381, 10037, 0.0], [10037, 10073, 0.0], [10073, 11112, 0.0], [11112, 11131, 0.0], [11131, 11263, 0.0], [11263, 11291, 0.0], [11291, 12062, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 1228, 0.06433225], [1228, 1254, 0.15384615], [1254, 1284, 0.03333333], [1284, 1308, 0.16666667], [1308, 1810, 0.03984064], [1810, 1846, 0.22222222], [1846, 2470, 0.04647436], [2470, 2507, 0.13513514], [2507, 2849, 0.04093567], [2849, 2883, 0.14705882], [2883, 3368, 0.04536082], [3368, 3383, 0.13333333], [3383, 3606, 0.00896861], [3606, 3642, 0.13888889], [3642, 3816, 0.03448276], [3816, 3834, 0.16666667], [3834, 4552, 0.03760446], [4552, 4580, 0.10714286], [4580, 4694, 0.04385965], [4694, 4727, 0.15151515], [4727, 5355, 0.06050955], [5355, 5389, 0.11764706], [5389, 6091, 0.03703704], [6091, 6124, 0.21212121], [6124, 6197, 0.04109589], [6197, 6221, 0.16666667], [6221, 7813, 0.04711055], [7813, 7865, 0.19230769], [7865, 7980, 0.06086957], [7980, 8569, 0.01188455], [8569, 8598, 0.10344828], [8598, 8779, 0.08839779], [8779, 8823, 0.15909091], [8823, 9266, 0.02708804], [9266, 9294, 0.17857143], [9294, 9328, 0.05882353], [9328, 9381, 0.11320755], [9381, 10037, 0.04115854], [10037, 10073, 0.13888889], [10073, 11112, 0.04042348], [11112, 11131, 0.15789474], [11131, 11263, 0.06060606], [11263, 11291, 0.21428571], [11291, 12062, 0.04669261]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 12062, 0.48235655]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 12062, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 12062, 0.26889634]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 12062, -224.42494465]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 12062, 80.53427202]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 12062, -505.08252181]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 12062, 136.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Mixed Notes - Aug. 31 TV Land kicks off a 40th-anniversary celebration of "MASH" on Sunday. From the official word: "TV Land will honor the 40th anniversary of the iconic television series “M*A*S*H” with a month-long celebration this September, it was announced today by the network. The celebration will kick off on Sunday, September 2, with the airing of “M*A*S*H: 30th Anniversary Reunion” and a day-long marathon on Labor Day – Monday, September 3 – from 8am to 6pm ET/PT. Programming will also include the 20th reunion special, “Memories of M*A*S*H,” on Sunday, September 9, as well as the pilot and three-hour finale of the sitcom on Sunday, September 16. “M*A*S*H” will air on weekdays all during the month of September (check the schedule page on TVLand.com)." The comedy-drama premiered on Sept. 17, 1972,. And if TV Land really wants to celebrate the show, it will run the episodes in their original network form, not the trimmed-for-more-commercial-space versions too many shows get on TV Land and other nostalgia networks. Robin Roberts' Mother Dies Lucimarian Tolliver Roberts, originally from Akron, passed away Thursday at the age of 88. You can read one report here.The Beacon Journal's Jewell Cardwell interviewed Lucimarian Roberts earlier this year. Here's a bit from that story: MTV Sets Complete "Hills" Marathon Revisit the days when (some) people cared about Speidi ...The official word: MTV’s pop culture smash “The Hills” returns this Labor Day weekend as a part of Retro Mania, MTV’s nostalgic look back at fan favorite shows, for a three day run of the entire series. Beginning on Friday, August 31 at 12:48 p.m. ET/PT through Sunday, September 2 at 9:00 p.m. ET/PT, MTV will air all six seasons of “The Hills” over the course of the weekend. During the marathon, several guest stars and super celebrity fans will provide commentary, interviews and hosting duties in celebration of “The Hills” including Audrina Patridge, Lo Bosworth, Stephanie Pratt and MTV’s Layla Kayleigh (“The Hills” superfan). “The Hills” (Seasons 1 – 6) When season two of “Laguna Beach” ended, MTV followed LC to “The Hills” of L.A. to watch her as she embarked upon a new fabulous journey. It's one thing to be young and beautiful in Laguna Beach. It's another to be young and beautiful in the city that values it most. “The Hills” followed Lauren (“LC” from “Laguna Beach”) as she made the move from her O.C. digs to Los Angeles, where she chased her dreams of entering the fashion business while balancing a full course load at college and a full social calendar. Through Lauren we met her new roommate, Heidi, who aspired to make the LA nightlife her whole life, Audrina, a receptionist who moved to LA in hopes of becoming a model/actress, and Whitney, Lauren's fashionable co-worker and confidante at Teen Vogue. These four girls took full advantage of being in the “in” crowd of LA, hopping from club, to party, to hot restaurant as they lived the Hollywood lifestyle to the fullest. To read more or comment... The Annual Best Public Restroom Contest! I especially like that a finalist in a toilet-based competition is the "Hollywood Bowl.:" The official word: Will America’s next Best Restroom be the result of a multi-million dollar renovation to the nation’s largest natural outdoor amphitheater, and set against picturesque iconic Hollywood Hills? Or will Sin City’s most luxurious loo, a sprawling 2,000 square foot space inside Vegas’ Hard Rock Hotel & Casino, earn America’s popular vote? Perhaps it’s the charm of theOld World Style Craftsmanship found in the hand carved wood doors and oversized oak barrel sinks that are nestled inside Georgetown’s Mie N Yu Restaurant that will capture the crown? Robin Roberts, expected to begin medical leave tomorrow, instead began it after today's telecast. From ABC: Robin Roberts will make her final appearance on "Good Morning America" on Thursday and will then fly home to Mississippi to be with her ailing mother, Lucimarian, and her family in the hurricane zone. Friday was expected to be her last day.Next week as planned, she will begin final preparations for a bone marrow transplant. "James Bond Day" Coming in October At least, it is for movie fans. "Skyfall," by the way, is due in November. The cumbersome official word:In celebration of the 50th anniversary of the James Bond film franchise on the anniversary of Dr. No, which enjoyed its world film premiere in London on October 5, 1962, and in anticipation of the worldwide release of the 23rd James Bond adventure SKYFALL™, Albert R. Broccoli’s EON Productions, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios, Sony Pictures Entertainment and Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment announced today that October 5, 2012 will be Global James Bond Day, a day-long series of events for Bond fans around the world. "Magic Mike" Video Release Set Details about the Channing Tatum male-stripper movie follow. You can read my review of the film here. The official word: It will be raining men when “Magic Mike” arrives onto Blu-ray Combo Pack, DVD and Digital Download on October 23 from Warner Home Entertainment Group. “Magic Mike” is set in the world of male strippers, following Mike (Tatum) as he takes a young dancer under his wing and schools him in the fine arts of partying, picking up women, and making easy money. The Blu-ray Combo Pack and digital download include extended dance scenes not seen in theaters. "Anger Management" Gets 90 More Episodes The FX series starring Charlie Sheen began with 10 telecasts, and the understanding that certain ratings would get another 90. Here's the official word: Anger Management, the sitcom starring Charlie Sheen and created by Executive Producer Bruce Helford, has received a 90-episode order from FX, it was announced today by Chuck Saftler, Executive Vice President of FX Networks. Whedon/Goddard's "Cabin in the Woods" Video Release Set When the movie was in theaters, I said, "Some scenes will have fans eagerly awaiting a video release so they can study the images and homages layering the film." So here's your chance. (And you can read my full review here.)The official word: If you think you know the story, think again. Experience the film that critics and audiences are raving about when The Cabin In The Woods arrives on Blu-ray Disc (plus Digital Copy), DVD (plus Digital Copy) and On Demand and Pay-Per-View September 18 from Lionsgate. The Cabin In The Woods will also be available on EST September 4, two weeks prior to the Blu-ray, DVD and On Demand release. Co-written by fan favorites, Joss Whedon (The Avengers, TV’s “Buffy The Vampire Slayer”) and Drew Goddard (Cloverfield) and directed by Goddard, The Cabin In The Woods is a film that “horror fans will be gushing about for years” (FearNet). A Little Context By Rich Heldenfels As the news is ever more full of talk about Hurricane Isaac, the threat to New Orleans and how that will reflect in politics, I thought you might be interested in a piece I wrote when Hurricane Katrina was still fresh news and how it was covered, and its own reflection in politics (and Kanye West). So here's that piece from the Beacon Journal archives:From the big red blotch on weather maps to New Orleans buildings in flames, television carried images from the Hurricane Katrina disaster. From ABC: "The winner of the “Viewers’ Choice: All-Stars” vote and the 13th celebrity to join the “Dancing with the Stars: All-Stars” cast is Sabrina Bryan! She will be joined by professional partner Louis Van Amstel, who returns for his ninth season."Some thoughts about "19 Kids and Counting" are here. The latest Lance Armstrong news depresses me. I want to rationalize Armstrong's decision, to think that after more than a decade of fighting the charges, Armstrong just decided it was time to stop paying lawyers in a case that was not going to end until they found ... something that would justify the pursuit of Armstrong. But then I think that this is Armstrong, a man who was determined to win, a man who -- as his "Dodgeball" appearance underscored -- did not quit when many others would have. So why now, unless there was indeed that "something"? Either way, as I said, this is depressing.Today's Heldenfiles is here. Those of you from my demographic will be amused to know that one of my (much younger) co-workers asked me today who Rowan & Martin were. A look at the career of comedian Chris Tucker is here. I thought again of Tucker lately while watching the Blu-ray of "Think Like a Man" -- because Kevin Hart's character is so Tucker-like, and as funny as Hart can be, I thought how much better Tucker could have been in the role.Today's mailbag is here. Mixed Notes Aug. 22 Check out some of my colleagues' thoughts about the coming TV season. (I put the video at the top of this post but right now it's after the jump. Oh, how I miss our old blogging system.) If nothing else, their remarks made me realize how many bad pilots I had managed to erase from memory. Of course, I will have to dredge them up for my fall preview package in September.Ever wonder what Frankie Muniz of "Malcolm in the Middle" is up to? Well, somebody might. And the answer is that, besides acting, he's playing drums. From an official word: "The Office" Sets Farewell The coming season will be its last. One of the stories about the decision is here. I was long fond of the show, but struggled to keep up with it last season. I think the season finale is still sitting, unwatched, in my DVR. But the announcement of its conclusion had me thinking back to when it premiered. And here is that column: No matter what the Nielsens end up saying about The Office, it has already triumphed in one way. To read more or comment... "Copper" Coming to DVD and Blu-ray The series on BBC America, which premiered Sunday, has announced its home-video plans; the set will be $49.98 on DVD, and $10 more on Blu-ray. The official word:BBC Home Entertainment invites you to join New York’s Finest when COPPER shoots its way to Blu-ray and DVD on October 30, 2012. Wall Street Journal calls this gripping drama “powerful,” while Boston Globe says, “COPPER casts a spell.” The first original scripted series from BBC AMERICA which premiered on Sunday, August 19, became the channel’s highest rated series premiere ever when it delivered 1.8 million* viewers in total audience. The series, which is filled with intrigue, corruption, mystery and murder, follows Detective Kevin Corcoran – a rugged Irish immigrant cop – as he seeks justice for the powerless in the notorious immigrant neighborhood of Five Points. ABC Moving Kimmel to 11:35, "Nightline" to 12:35 and Prime Time in 2013 The official word: Capitalizing on ratings momentum, advertising demand and increased revenue potential for entertainment programming in the 11:35 p.m. time slot, ABC today announced a strategic shift in its late-night strategy to better position the network for increased ratings and financial performance over the long term. On Tuesday, January 8, “Jimmy Kimmel Live,” the only late-night broadcast talk show to increase in Total Viewers this past season, will move to 11:35 p.m., putting the show in head-to-head competition with “The Tonight Show with Jay Leno” and “Late Show with David Letterman.” Proven late-night performer “Nightline” will shift to 12:35 a.m., allowing viewers to begin and end their broadcast day with news. The moves are timed to take advantage of the built-in promotional platforms provided by ABC’s “Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve with Ryan Seacrest” and ESPN’s Bowl Championship Series, which culminates with the National Championship Game on Monday, January 7. In addition, “Nightline” will expand its programming commitments with a move into primetime, Friday nights at 9:00 p.m. beginning March 1. Given its success and growth, the ABC News series “What Would You Do?” will also find a new home on the schedule.In making the announcement, Anne Sweeney, co-chair, Disney Media Networks and president, Disney/ABC Television Group, said: “Given the passionate fan base ‘Jimmy Kimmel Live’ has built over the past decade and the show’s ratings and creative momentum this season, the time is right to make this move. There is the potential for far greater upside over the long term with this shift, given increased advertiser demand for competitive entertainment programming in the time slot.” She continued: “This shift also allows us to bookend our programming day with compelling news content. And the addition of a new primetime hour of ‘Nightline’ on Friday nights will ensure that the program has even more opportunities to continue its incredible, award-winning reporting.” More Notes - Aug. 20: "NewsNite," "Bunheads" Tweeting, "19 Kids" Returns By Rich Heldenfels You may have seen last week's item about "NewsNite" ending its panel format to save money. Here's the station announcement of the show's season premiere on Sept. 7:Civil discourse in the political arena will be the first topic of discussion for the new season of NewsNite, the weekly Western Reserve PBS (WNEO 45.1/WEAO 49.1) program that airs Fridays at 8:30 p.m. beginning Sept. 7. NewsNite, in its 14th season on Western Reserve PBS, features stories about the greater Akron area and this year has a new host — Jody Miller — and a new format. "Appropriate Adult" Coming to DVD The excellent, award-winning production arrives Sept. 11 with a price of $26.98. The official word:Inception Media Group, LLC, a diversified media company specializing in the production, acquisition and distribution of entertainment content, will distribute the award-winning film Appropriate Adult, produced by ITV Studios, on home video and digitally Sept. 11, 2012 in North America. To read more or comment... Tony Scott, the director of "Top Gun" and other films, has died, an apparent suicide. The New York Times story is here. Among Scott's credits is "Unstoppable," the Denzel Washington movie shot partly in Ohio. I interviewed the location manager, Janice Polley, and she had some enlightening things to say about Scott's visual approach to film. You can read that interview here. IWhen you consider movies like "Top Gun," "Unstoppable," "Days of Thunder," "True Romance" and "The Hunger," keep this in mind: Bellaire, meanwhile, was not in the original script. Scott and his crew spotted it during a helicopter ride to scout railways — since the movie often uses overhead shots of the trains. He thought Bellaire would make an effective moment in the film, and the script was rewritten. To read more or comment... "Homeland" Season 2 Trailer "NewsNite" Dead? Maybe not dead, certainly stripped down. The Western Reserve Public Media series is dumping its longtime news panel, going with a cheaper format and certain to be less timely. Here's a note sent to show participants: To read more or comment... "Boss" begins its second season on Starz tonight. Although I drifted away from the first season after two episodes, a look at the beginning of the second season found plenty to like, including Kelsey Grammer's performance as a Chicago mayor with a debilitating illness and the way it portrays political scheming. It looks even better in the context of USA's "Political Animals," which wraps up its first season on Sunday night with an ongoing ludicrousness. "Boss" has its flaws, including dialogue that aims for the Shakespearean and instead often sounds pompous, and the overuse of Grammer's hallucinations, one of which proves pivotal in tonight's telecast. Still, I watched far more of the new season than I originally planned, and am very curious about where all the maneuvers will lead. My full review of the new "Sparkle" is here. Today's print HeldenFiles is here. And "Breaking Bad" fans will enjoy this: an accused real-life meth dealer named Walter White. Seven Films by Animator Miyazaki Coming to Cinematheque The official word: Seven feature films by Japan’s master animator Hayao Miyazaki will show between September 14 and October 28 at the Cleveland Institute of Art Cinematheque, 11141 East Boulevard in University Circle. The series, entitled “Spirited Away: Seven Films by Hayao Miyazaki,” includes new English-subtitled 35mm prints of the director’s greatest works, including MY NEIGHBOR TOTORO, CASTLE IN THE SKY, PRINCESS MONONOKE, and the Oscar-winning SPIRITED AWAY. Admission to each film is $9; Cinematheque members $7; age 25 & under $5 (with proof of age). The series marks a homecoming of sorts, for it was the Cinematheque that first “broke” Miyazaki in Cleveland over two decades ago. (The theatre presented the local premiere of six of the seven movies in the retrospective.) “We’re thrilled to be bringing these magical and moving animated masterpieces back to Cleveland,” said Cinematheque Director John Ewing, “especially in newly-struck prints with subtitles, for earlier versions were often dubbed. Miyazaki has long been one of our biggest draws.” Home Viewing News: "Ghosts of the Abyss" in 3D, "Wilderness Family" to VOD "Ghosts" will be available in a Blu-ray combo pack with 3D and 2D Blu-rays and a DVD on Sept. 11. The official word: Academy Award®-winning Director and master storyteller, James Cameron journey’s back to the site of his greatest inspiration – the legendary wreck of the titanic. With a team of the world’s foremost historic and marine experts and friend Bill Paxton, he embarks on an unscripted adventure back to the final grave where nearly 1,500 souls lost their lives almost a century ago. Ghosts of the Abyss 3D uses state-of-the-art technology developed expressly for this expedition, Cameron and his crew are able to explore virtually all of the wreckage, inside and out, as never-before. With the most advanced 3D photography, moviegoers will experience the ship as if they are part of crew, right inside the dive subs. That Devo Song Mixed Notes - August 17 More DVD/Blu-ray News: "End of the Road," "Sunset Boulevard" "End of the Road,":a 1970 film that was much discussed and debated in its day, is finally coming to DVD, while "Sunset" is getting the Blu-ray treatment. The official word on "Road": Directed by innovative auteur Aram Avakian (Cops and Robbers, Jazz on a Summer's Day, 11 Harrowhouse) and co-written by Dennis McGuire (Shoot It Black, Shoot It Blue), Terry Southern (Dr. Strangelove, Barbarella, Easy Rider), and Aram Avakian, End of the Road makes its long-awaited debut on DVD September 18 from Warner Home Video. Produced by Terry Southern and Stephen F. Kesten and adapted from the John Barth novel, End of the Road resonated with fans of the counter-culture movement and was viewed as shocking, powerful and controversial at the time of its release. A groundbreaking art house film with strong anti-establishment sensibilities, the DVD release of End of the Road will include an all-new special feature produced and directed by Steven Soderbergh, which tells the compelling story of how this brutally honest film was made, the obstacles it overcame, and its lasting impact. The DVD will have a suggested retail price of $19.97.End of the Road features the talents of Stacy Keach (Fat City by John Huston, The Heart is a Lonely Hunter), Harris Yulin (Training Day, Rush Hour 2), Dorothy Tristan (Klute, Scarecrow) and James Earl Jones (Dr. Strangelove, Star Wars franchise). It was also the first film for legendary cinematographer Gordon Willis (The Godfather, All The Presidents Men) and features an original soundtrack composed by Teo Macero, J.S. Bach and P.I. Tchaikowsky and supervised by George Avakian. To read more or comment... "Raiders of the Lost Ark" Hits IMAX in September The showings precede the Blu-ray release of the four Indy movies. The official word:The cinematic classic that introduced the world to Indiana Jones is ready to embark on a new adventure when director Steven Spielberg and executive producer George Lucas’ unforgettable Raiders of the Lost Ark is released for an exclusive one-week engagement in select IMAX® theatres beginning September 7, 2012. The film has undergone a complete restoration for the IMAX exclusive one-week release and subsequent debut on Blu-ray. Tickets and a list of participating theatres are available starting today at www.imax.com. Comedy Central Announces Fall Plans Summer may be coming to an end, but COMEDY CENTRAL is riding the heat wave into the fall! This autumn, the network will premiere a sizzling hot line-up of hilarious new series and specials as well as returning favorites including: the return of brand hits (“Tosh.0,” “Key & Peele,” “South Park” and “Gabriel Iglesias Presents Stand-Up Revolution”); the debut of a new animated series from Daniel Tosh (“Brickleberry”) and a unique new half-hour stand-up series hosted by T.J. Miller (Mash Up); live election night coverage from everyone’s favorite fake news anchors (“The Daily Show with Jon Stewart” and “The Colbert Report” Live Election Night Coverage); the fourth collaboration between COMEDY CENTRAL, Jon Stewart’s Busboy Productions and The New York Center For Autism for the biennial benefit for Autism education programs (“Night of Too Many Stars: America Comes Together for Autism Programs”) and brand new one-hour stand-up specials from Demetri Martin, Jeff Dunham, D.L. Hughley, Chris Hardwick and Russell Peters. Devo Plans Musical Tribute to Mitt Romney's Dog - On Sale Aug. 25 "A Christmas Story 2"? Yup The iconic Cleveland film is coming to DVD and Blu-ray. The official word:The holiday season arrives early this year as A Christmas Story 2 debuts on Blu-ray Combo Pack and DVD on October 30th, and Digital Download on October 16th from Warner Bros. Home Entertainment Group. From Warner Premiere and director Brian Levant (The Flintstones, Jingle All The Way), A Christmas Story 2 stars Daniel Stern (Home Alone, City Slickers) as The Old Man, Braeden LeMasters (television’s “Men of a Certain Age,” Easy A) as 15 year-old Ralphie Parker and Stacy Travis (Fun with Dick and Jane, Bandits) as Mrs. Parker. Kent State Folk Festival Details The official word: The 46th Kent State Folk Festival once again lays claim to its autumnal residency with concerts and events lined up from Thursday, Sept. 20 through Saturday, Sept.22. The Kent Stage hosts concerts each night with Folk Alley ‘Round Town driving up the musical temperature throughout Kent on Friday and a big move downtown for the free Saturday workshops. To read more or comment... "Moonrise Kingdom" DVD/Blu-ray Set Oct. 16 It got 94 percent on Rotten Tomatoes and has been touted by some Oscars handicappers for 2013.The official word: A star-studded and visually stunning box office hit, and a tale of first love directed by two-time Academy Award®-nominated filmmaker Wes Anderson (The Royal Tenenbaums, Fantastic Mr. Fox, Rushmore), Focus Features’ Moonrise Kingdom will be available on Blu-ray™ Combo Pack with UltraViolet™, on DVD, On Demand and on Digital Download on October 16, 2012, from Universal Studios Home Entertainment. Set on an island off the coast of New England in the summer of 1965, Moonrise Kingdom follows two 12-year-olds who fall in love, make a secret pact and run away together into the wilderness. As various authorities try to hunt them down, a violent storm is brewing off-shore – and the peaceful island community is turned upside down in every which way. To read more or comment... More Amusement In honor of Julia Child's 100th birthday. For Your Wednesday Amusement Go to the 1:30 mark and watch a little winged critter arrive, then hang around for the rest of the song. Very amusing. Too bad they weren't playing "Free Bird." NBC says "Pretty please, watch 'Go On' and "Animal Practice' " with still more preview showings. I'd say watch "Go On" if you have not yet, and avoid "Animal Practice." The official word on the previews: NBC has scheduled encore broadcasts of the pilot episodes of its new comedies “Go On” (10-10:30 p.m. ET) and “Animal Practice” (10:30-11 p.m. ET) on Tuesday, August 21 following early previews of both series during NBC’s coverage of the recent Summer Olympics.The new broadcasts of the new series will provide additional viewer sampling leading out of a new episode of “America’s Got Talent” (8-10 p.m. ET).TNT considers these ratings successful. I see 2 million viewers bailing on "Major Crimes." The word: TNT's blockbuster series The Closer ended its extraordinary seven-season run last night with 9,075,000 viewers in Live + Same Day, making it cable's #1 series telecast for the summer-to-date. The Closer's finale was followed by the debut of TNT's newest drama, Major Crimes, which brought in 7,184,000 viewers in Live + Same Day to rank as cable's #1 new series launch for the year-to-date. TNT has now charted cable's Top 3 new series launches of 2012, with Major Crimes followed by the June 13 premiere of Dallas (6.9 million viewers) and the July 9 debut of Perception (5.6 million viewers). By the way, the final season of "The Closer" will be on DVD on Aug. 21. RIP, Ron Palillo TV's Arnold Horshack has died. Brief story here. I interviewed Palillo in 1997, and here's the story:It took close to 20 years, therapy and a change of coasts, but Ron Palillo has finally made peace with Arnold Horshack. To read more or comment... It's the customary DVD release day of the week, but today will be greatly overshadowed by the release later this week of "The Hunger Games" on DVD and Blu-ray. My column about that and some other video matters is here.So, did you watch the finale of "The Closer' and the premiere of "Major Crimes"? I wrote about the "Major Crimes" premiere for Sunday's Beacon Journal but once again a Sunday column proved impossible to find online. So here's the text: "Avatar" Coming to Blu-ray 3D in October The official word: The world of Pandora has never looked better as over 33 million AVATAR Facebook fans were the first to learn of the upcoming release of the AVATAR Blu-ray 3D Collector’s Edition, debuting globally beginning October 15, releasing in North America October 16, from Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment. A home entertainment experience like no other, for the first time ever, fans will be able to welcome James Cameron’s global box office sensation into their homes in stunning 3D high-definition. “3D television is the future of home entertainment,” said James Cameron, the Oscar® winning Director. “I’m a huge proponent of the technology and very pleased that AVATAR can be viewed in the living room the way it is meant to be seen.” RIP, Helen Gurley Brown, Irving Fein Two more pop-culture figures have passed away: Cosmopolitan editor and "Sex and the Single Girl" author Helen Gurley Brown, who was 90, and show-biz manager and producer Irving Fein, 101. Following are a few words about each.In 1985, I was at a press gathering with George Burns and Steve Martin (even now, I get a little thrill) for a comedy anthology show that was weird and wonderful and, alas, short-lived. Burns -- 89 at the time -- would launch into a story, only to hesitate -- "It was in, in ..." From the back of the room came a voice: "1938, George!" Burns would continue his story, occasionally pause, receive another shouted detail, and go on. The man shouting the details was Irving Fein, Burns's manager, and clearly someone who not only protected his clients but was trusted to get them over the rough spots. Well, done, Irving Fein. RIP. Mel Brooks DVD Collection Coming in November The official word: On November 13, 2012, Shout! Factory will release The Incredible Mel Brooks: An Irresistible Collection of Unhinged Comedy, a 5-DVD/1-CD set that is a veritable treasure trove of all things Brooksian, a laugh-filled celebration of his illustrious career. This box set takes viewers on a journey through time with performances, extensive interviews, film clips and rare archival television footage, as well as some never-before-seen photos, and special tributes. To read more or comment... Student Campaign Succeeds: Presidential Debate Gets Woman Moderator By Rich Heldenfels You can learn more about the campaign here. The official word: In an announcement Monday by the Commission on Presidential Debates, CNN chief political correspondent and anchor Candy Crowley was named as moderator of the second of the 2012 general election presidential debates. Her selection as moderator makes her the first woman in two decades to be chosen for this prestigious role.Crowley will moderate the only town hall-style presidential debate between President Barack Obama and the presumptive Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney. The debate will take place on Tuesday, Oct. 16 on the campus of Hofstra University in Hempstead, NY. The town hall debate will be the only format that allows undecided voters to ask questions of the candidates directly on foreign policy and domestic issues. Monkees Reunion Tour Hitting NE Ohio Tickets for the local appearance are $40-65 and go on sale Friday. Tour includes Dolenz, Tork and Nesmith. The official word:Michael Nesmith, Micky Dolenz, and Peter Tork return to the concert stage this November for a historic, twelve-date tour of the United States. These performances will mark their first concerts together since 1997. The jaunt kicks off at Escondido’s California Center For The Arts on November 8 and wraps at New York City’s prestigious Beacon Theatre on December 2. Tickets for the Saturday, November 17 performance at Lakewood Civic Auditorium go on sale at 10am on Friday, August 17. "DWTS" Celeb/Pro All-Star Pairings From ABC this morning: Emmitt Smith/Cheryl Burke, Shawn Johnson/Derek Hough, Kirstie Alley/Maks C, Melissa Rycroft/Tony Dovolani, Pam Anderson/Tristan McManus, Kelly Monaco/Val C, Joey Fatone/Kym Johnson, Helio Castroneves/Chelsie Hightower, Drew Lachey/Anna Trebunskaya, Gilles Marini/Peta Murgatroyd, Apolo Anton Ohno/Karina Smirnoff, Bristol Palin/Mark Ballas.,The partner for the 13th contestant will, of course, depend on who is picked for the 13th slot. Williamson Joins Rubber City Radio Here's the word Ed Esposito sent to station staff, and forwarded to me: I'm excited to announced Mark Williamson will be joining the RCRG news family; many of you may have spotted Mark working in the newsroom last week or heard him as a participant on the WAKR Ray Horner Morning Show (we'll try to forget the performance on Supreme's Trivia last Friday) and you'll be seeing and hearing much more of Mark as he gets up to speed on our news digital production systems and starts dipping his toes with newscasts starting later this week.We're very fortunate to have someone of Mark's character and caliber join our team; while many identify Mark as the City's spokesman for more than 15 years, long-time Akron residents remember Mark as the primary anchor and News Director of WAKC-TV and a valued member of the news department at a time when WAKR, WAEZ (WONE) and WAKC were co-owned and operated. There are few with a better Rolodex, network of relationships and institutional knowledge of how Akron works than Mark. The Olympics are almost over and for some viewers that means ... "Dr. Phil" is coming back.WKYC bumped the show from its late afternoon slot during the Olympics, not least so it games audience could lead into an early newscast (and maybe come back to the news when the games were over). I've received several calls asking if Phil was gone for good; he's not. WKYC's schedule has him back on Monday, and a station rep assured me that he will be back for a new season in the fall. AMC, WE Offer Dish Subscribers "Hell on Wheels," "Braxton" Feeds The official word: In response to DISH’s recent drop of AMC and WE tv to gain leverage in an unrelated lawsuit, AMC Networks will provide DISH customers access to AMC’s HELL ON WHEELS season two premiere episode on Sunday, August 12 at 9 PM ET/PT and the return of WE tv’s BRAXTON FAMILY VALUES on Thursday, August 16 at 9 PM ET/PT.AMC is offering a special live stream of the HELL ON WHEELS season two premiere episode to DISH subscribers at http://www.amctv.com/hellonwheels4dish. My summary ofthis column is very simple: Bret Easton Ellis is an idiot. And women think Matt Borner is hot. (I did a survey.)You don't think "Shark Tank" has gotten producers thinking? Check out this item from Lifetime: Rich and the movies: 'Bourne Legacy' The Bourne saga continues with Jeremy Renner replacing Matt Damon in the lead role. Akron Beacon Journal pop culture writer Rich Heldenfels offers a review. Mixed Notes - Aug. 9 I rejoined Netflix not long ago and have since then spent far too much time searching for various titles and piling up more than 100 in my Instant Queue. Some were movies I have not seen, some were movies I saw a very long time ago, some were just movies I love but never got around to buying a hard copy.But with that big a list, I've been feeling more and more that I should winnow, and I have tried to do that lately. "The Choirboys"? It took less than 15 minutes for me to have the same feeling I had when I first saw it -- that it was an awful adaptation of a good Joseph Wambaugh novel. Off the queue it went. Some other title, which seemed interesting a month or so ago, was now one that I had to admit I would not be finding the time to watch. FX Orders "Americans" Series The official word: FX has placed a 13-episode order for its next drama series The Americans. .... The series begins production in October and is scheduled to premiere in early 2013. The Americans, created by Joe Weisberg and starring Keri Russell, Matthew Rhys and Noah Emmerich, is a period drama about the complex marriage of two KGB spies posing as Americans in suburban Washington DC shortly after Ronald Reagan is elected President. The arranged marriage of Phillip (Rhys) and Elizabeth Jennings (Russell), who have two children who know nothing about their parents true identity, grows more passionate and genuine by the day, but is constantly tested by the escalation of the Cold War and the intimate, dangerous and darkly funny relationships they must maintain with a network of spies and informants under their control. Complicating their relationship further is Phillip’s growing sense of affinity for America’s values and way of life. Tensions also heighten upon the arrival of a new neighbor, Stan (Emmerich), an FBI agent working in counter intelligence. Mixed DVD/Blu-ray Notes By Rich Heldenfels From Warner, details about the $500 mega-set of Harry Potter movies: Just in time for Harry Potter’s birthday, Warner Home Video announces today the exclusive features that can only be found in the Harry Potter Wizard’s Collection. The most successful film franchise in history will be available September 7 in a limited-edition collectible box set. The most comprehensive Harry Potter movie collection yet, the set will include all eight films, exclusive never-before-seen content and must-have memorabilia for the most devoted Harry Potter fan. To read more or comment... A fundraiser for radio personality Tom Erickson is coming. The official word:Local radio favorite WNIR'S Tom Erickson has been undergoing a severe medical condition and is in need of support from his listeners and friends. While Tom has been slowly improving day by day and is eager to recover, he has a long road ahead of him and will not be back on the airwaves for a period of time. To help Tom on his road to recovery, we are throwing a fundraiser to show Tom we are all with him on his wellness journey back to the seat behind the microphone and we are asking the community to help us with his insurance and mounting medical costs. On Sunday August 19th, from 5-8pm at Ripper Owens Tap House, 491 E Waterloo Rd. in Akron, we will support Tom by holding a fundraiser with 10% of ALL sales being donated and complete with an awesome raffle of prizes with tickets only $1 each or 6 for $5, a 50/50 raffle, a money machine, a silent auction and....a two set performance by reggae band HUMAN NATURE!!! Tom has supported this community for many years and now it is time to help Tom. Please come support this great man of the community by coming out Sunday August 19th. For a complete list of raffle items, silent auction items and more info about the benefit please visit www.RadioBoyTom.com. To read more or comment... RIP, Judith Crist By Rich Heldenfels The film critic has died. One long, respectful obit ishere. For many of us living outside the big metropolises, Judith Crist was the first movie critic we knew by name. Every week, there she was in TV Guide (back when it was a big, much-read mag), hectoring, sniping, suggesting that a knack for invective was the same as perceptiveness, but tightly assessing movies in a way that for many years was readable and engaging,But the Times obit linked here seems to sneer fainlty at her most important quality: Complete "Peter Gunn" Series Coming to DVD in October The classic crime series co-starred Akron's own Lola Albright! The official word:One of television's most iconic characters, Peter Gunn (Craig Stevens) is a handsome, suave detective tough enough to take on the hardest of hard cases, but with a soft touch when it comes to the ladies. On October 23, Timeless Media Group, a division of Shout! Factory, will release the complete series of this beloved show on DVD for the first time. A must-have for fans of detective series and classic television alike, this 12-DVD collection boasts all 114 original episodes, as well as a bonus CD of Henry Mancini’s Grammy and Emmy-Award winning score. The collection is available for pre-order from Amazon. Bits and pieces from the email, along with some viewing notes about "Political Animals" and "Breaking Bad."And one thing I neglected to mention in my previous post, that "Political Animals" included a closeted, gay, Republican congressman -- from Akron. RIP, Marvin Hamlisch The composer and entertainer has died, reportedly of a brief, unspecified illness. One obit is here. I chatted with him in 2008 before his visit to the University of Akron, and you can find that story here. One interesting aspect of our conversation was how difficult it is in the modern theater world to get a show going -- even when you have a shelf full of Oscars and Tonys. Akron Film+Pixel Events Set The official word: Akron Film+Pixel is proud to announce a full schedule of contests, film screenings and events for late Summer and early Fall 2012. Please see below for details about our three new upcoming events. Secrets of Science Animation Contest Orientation: Sunday, August 12, 2012 Screening Event: Thursday, August 30, 2012 Akron Film+Pixel invites Northeast Ohio artists to create a short animated movie that re-imagines how a given technology or natural phenomenon works in the new filmmaking competition “Secrets of Science.” The resulting films will be exhibited and a winner selected on August 30, 2012 at 7 p.m. at the Akron Art Museum. “We anticipate entries from experienced animators and from people trying animation for the first time,” says Akron Film+Pixel Executive Director Steve Felix. “There are charming low-tech ways to animate, like with cutouts or LEGO pieces. And since all entries are screened at a fun event at the Akron Art Museum, everyone gets something out of the contest.” Orientation and Rules Each animator or team will randomly be assigned a technology or a natural phenomenon at an orientation on Sunday, August 12, 2012 at 1:30 p.m. in the Akron Art Museum’s Charles and Jane Lehner Auditorium. They will then have two weeks to write and produce an animated short film that either a) tells a true or fictional story of its invention or discovery or b) provides a true or fictional story explaining how it works. The animated piece must be under five minutes in length and can use any method of animation including computer animation, digital stills, clay, hand-drawn and more. The final project must be delivered by August 26th at 11:59 p.m. as a file using the Akron Film+Pixel FTP server or a hosting service such as Dropbox. Registration Registration is required and open to the public. Participants must sign up by visiting www.akronfilm.com. Registration is $20 per group with no limit on group size. The orientation is encouraged but not required. Attending the Screening All entries will be screened at a free event on August 30, 2012 at 7 p.m. in the Akron Art Museum’s Charles and Jane Lehner Auditorium. Each movie will be viewed by an independent panel of reviewers, who will select a winning entry to receive $250 and a repeat screening at Night of the Freakishly Short Animation Festival on October 25, 2012 at the Akron Art Museum. Good Grief, a "Dance Moms" Spinoff I have made my distaste for "Dance Moms" clear. So imagine how I feel about this official word: Lifetime has picked-up the reality series Abby’s Ultimate Dance Competition, headlined by Dance Moms’ Abby Lee Miller, which will feature 12 of the country’s most talented girl and boy dancers competing for a $100,000 cash prize and a scholarship to the Young Dancer Program at the Joffrey Ballet School in New York. Joining Miller at the judges table will be Robin Antin, founder of the pop group sensation Pussycat Dolls, and dancer and cutting-edge celebrity choreographer Richard Jackson (Lady Gaga’s “Marry the Night”). Kevin Manno (MTV’s The Seven) will host. Abby’s Ultimate Dance Competition will begin by following a dozen aspiring dancers -- ages six through 13 – who will learn new routines and compete in a number of challenges designed to test their skills when they perform before Miller, Antin and Jackson, as well as a live audience, at the historic Los Angeles Theatre. Along the way, each competitor will be accompanied and coached by his or her own mother, who will make critical training, costume, music and choreographic decisions for their child while also navigating the precarious waters of the other highly competitive parents. As Miller, Antin and Jackson must make the sometimes easy and other times difficult decision to eliminate one dancer each week, the intense on stage competition and stakes between dancers and mothers increase throughout the season – culminating with a finale performance that assuredly will change the winning dancer’s life forever. Nickelodeon Orders Fourth Season of "Big Time Rush" The official word: As music sensation Big Time Rush crosses the U.S. this summer performing to sold-out audiences and arenas, and with their hit single “Windows Down” climbing the charts, Nickelodeon has ordered a fourth season of their self-titled hit comedy series Big Time Rush. Created by Scott Fellows and produced in partnership with Sony Music, the series chronicles the adventures of four best friends living the dream in Los Angeles, balancing their newfound fame, fans, music and girlfriends. Starring Kendall Schmidt, James Maslow, Carlos Pena and Logan Henderson, Big Time Rush is slated to commence production on 13 episodes early 2013 in Los Angeles. The band’s summer anthem “Windows Down,” sparked by their strongest first week sales to date, is trending to be their biggest hit yet at radio, digital sales providers and online, with their music video approaching nearly three million views. “Windows Down” will be Big Time Rush’s third consecutive charted single at Pop radio. The “Big Time Summer Tour” has the band entertaining fans in 60 cities, making appearances across the U.S., Canada and South America. Their debut, gold-certified BTR and follow-up album Elevate, both entered the Billboard charts in the top 15 and currently total over 1.25 million albums sold worldwide and 3.5 million singles in the U.S. To read more or comment... Edie Adams Christmas Album To Be Released Ernie Kovacs is also included. The offiiclal word: Omnivore Recordings announced today the release of The Edie Adams Christmas Album featuring Ernie Kovacs on October 9. The first-ever Edie Adams (www.edieadams.com) Christmas album features classic holiday recordings from the early-to-mid-1950s drawn from the Kovacs Unlimited television show. The 15-track album includes extensive liner notes coupled with rare photos from her personal archive and duets with the legendary comedian Ernie Kovacs (www.erniekovacs.com). A great surprise from Santa to put under the tree this year! For more information, please visit www.OmnivoreRecordings.com. Edie Adams was the perfect portrait of the consummate entertainer and if you think she could do anything, you’re right. But one thing that never appeared on her extraordinarily impressive resume, until now, is a holiday album. In association with Ediad Productions, Inc., Omnivore Recordings has pulled together all of Edie Adams’ surviving recordings sourced from acetates made from rare audio air checks of the Kovacs Unlimited. The very existence and archiving of these acetates can be credited to Edie herself as she paid a transcription service to record the audio from the show so she could hear herself singing contemporary pop songs. Now, with personal liner notes by Edie’s son, Josh Mills, recalling the star-studded Hollywood holidays of his youth, we are able to enjoy, for the first time, this beautiful seasonal album by Edie Adams. “Onmivore Recordings did an amazing job compiling The Edie Adams Christmas Album Featuring Ernie Kovacs” said Josh Mills of Ediad Productions. “Edie Adams never wanted to be known as ‘the widow Kovacs’ and this first release from our extensive archive is just the beginning of a reissue campaign that will showcase just how talented she was in her own right. It’s clear from the fidelity of the audio, the fantastic packaging and the passion that went into its creation that make this release so gratifying.” Earlier this year, Omnivore Recordings and Ediad Productions, Inc. announced an ongoing agreement to release audio material from the archive of the estates of legendary comedian Ernie Kovacs and Edie Adams. The first album project released was Percy Dovetonsils…Thpeaks, a previously unreleased comedy album featuring Kovacs’ best-known and beloved character originally recorded in 1961. Additional audio-only material from the archive includes a vast, never-before-heard collection of soundtracks from Ernie Kovacs shows of the early 1950s and audio selections from the career of Edie Adams, who was also Kovacs’ wife up until his passing in 1962. Omnivore is currently compiling these recordings for future releases. Mixed Notes - Aug. 6 (Expanded) Since the original post I have added items about a "Charlie's Angels" box and a "Dictator" app. Scroll down for them.Fox Sports Ohio has set some replays of the Pro Football Hall of Fame parade. The official word: FOX Sports Ohio will be airing the Pro Football Hall of Fame Enshrinement Festival Timken Grand Parade from 6-8pm on this Sunday, August 12. The parade took place this past Saturday, August 4 in Canton, Ohio. ... FOX Sports Ohio will also replay the 2-hour airing of the parade on Monday, August 13 at 8:30pm. Mixed Note - Aug. 5 I mentioned in yesterday's post that I spent part of my Saturday shift following the construction of new playgrounds in Akron. You can read my story, which includes contributions from Betty Lin-Fisher, here.Today's video column, with an array of DVD and Blu-ray items, is here. The accompanying list of new releases is here. I am working a Saturday shift and spent part of this morning watching volunteers building playgrounds in needy areas in Akron. The work is through the KaBOOM! organization, with funding from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, but the beauty of it lies with the people hauling mulch, pouring concrete, hammering and sawing, and otherwise making something beautiful and useful where that had not existed before. I'll have a story about it in tomorrow's Beacon Journal.Tomorrow is the 50th anniversary of the death of Marilyn Monroe, and I have a few words about her in tomorrow's print Beacon Journal -- and online now. (That "today" in the beginning of the story is meant to refer to Sunday.) You can read the piece here. And while you're at it, Turner Classic Movies is showing Marilyn movies all day today. As I mentioned in a Tweet not long ago, it's a good time to watch "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes," which has both Monroe and a group playing a men's Olympic team! Heading into the weekend ... ... what could be more appropriate than the announcement of still more hedonistic behavior on "Jersey Shore" and "Snooki and JWOWW"? That and more from MTV in this official word:The much-anticipated premiere date for season six of “Jersey Shore,” along with the premiere dates for new and returning series, and season two renewals for “Snooki & JWOWW” and “Money From Strangers,” were among the announcements today by David Janollari, Head of MTV Programming, during the network’s presentation at the Summer 2012 Television Critics Association Press Tour. MTV also unveiled an all-new clip from the upcoming comedy “The Inbetweeners,” set to debut on Monday, August 20 at 10:30 p.m. ET/PT, check it out HERE. Rich and the movies: 'Total Recall' By Ohio.com This week Beacon Journal pop culture writer Rich Heldenfels discusses the reboot of Total Recall, which he calls "dull nonsense."Read his full review of the movie here. Today's print HeldenFiles included more about the Sight & Sound survey of the best films of all time, including a local expert's vote. You can read it here.The passing of Gore Vidal has prompted PBS to re-show its 2003 "American Masters" about the author in various venues. Here's the official word: Mixed Notes, Aug. 2: "Total Recall" Review, Mailbag, Sight & Sound Poll, More (Updated) My review of the new "Total Recall" is here. I will not pretend that the original was a great movie, but it was a grand, splendidly dumb action cartoon in the vein of director Paul Verhoeven's "Robocop." The new one is just a lot of noise and action, glum and characterless.Sight & Sound has releasedits latest poll of the greatest films of all time. "Citizen Kane" has been bumped from the top spot by "Vertigo," which I would not even rank as the best Hitchcock. (Better than "Rear Window"? I think not.) To read more or comment... Next "American Horror Story" -- "Asylum" The official word from FX: Award-winning producer Ryan Murphy today revealed the title of the new chapter of American Horror Story, “American Horror Story: Asylum.”* Set in 1964, American Horror Story: Asylum stars Jessica Lange, Sarah Paulson, Evan Peters, Lily Rabe, Zachary Quinto, James Cromwell, and Joseph Fiennes. Principal photography on the new minseries began on July 17 and it premieres on FX in October. Steve Harvey Says Goodbye to Stand-Up, Alas Steve Harvey's final standup will be on Thursday night on pay-per-view as he prepares to add a daytime talk show to his media empire. I have interviewed Steve more than once over the years, and admire his work (and work ethic). Below is the official word of his farewell show, followed by stories I wrote about him in 1994, 1996, 2000 and 2002. The essence of those stories is that he has been hard-working (he told me one time that ""I'm quitting no jobs."), smart and very, very ambitious.First, the official word: Comedian Steve Harvey headlines his final stand-up comedy show on August 2 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, celebrating the end of more than 27 years in stand-up comedy. But fans who can’t get to Vegas still have a chance to experience his side-splitting humor via a live Pay-Per-View (PPV) telecast available on cable systems around the country. The two hour special farewell performance, Steve Harvey’s Grand Stand-Up Finale will air live from Las Vegas on cable Pay-Per-View August 2nd at 11 PM EDT/8 PM PDT. After the live show, fans will still be able to access the special via cable PPV for several months and also on Video On Demand (VOD) beginning on August 3. The show is available in both standard and high-definition.* ... To read more or comment... Anderson Cooper's Daytime Show Getting Overhauled With a tough fall coming for daytime talk (including new shows from Katie Couric and Steve Harvey), Cooper's making some changes. The official word: Anderson," the one-hour daily syndicated talk show hosted by Anderson Cooper, returns for its second season as "Anderson Live" on Monday, September 10, 2012, with a brand new show name, new set and new live format with rotating co-hosts. The announcement was made today by "Anderson Live" Executive Producer Terence Noonan."Anderson Live" will tape in front of a live studio audience at the CBS Broadcast Center in New York City where Cooper will be joined daily by co-hosts for the show's sophomore season. "Anderson Live's" new set with live capabilities will enable Cooper to cover stories while they are breaking and update his viewers with the latest news, truly becoming water cooler TV in the daytime. Gore Vidal, RIP The writer, raconteur, political commentator and talk-show favorite has died. The New York Times obit is here. A Washington Post piece is here. I am a longtime fan of his writing, especially his Washington novels (I remember "1876" in particular as a breathtaking read). His essays, in their certainty and elegance (it seems that one can't talk about Vidal without dropping an "elegant" or two), would turn on opposing arguments and swat them, vigorously, as pesky things that were in Vidal's way. For that matter, it seemed that Vidal often viewed people like the villains in "Superman II" -- strange creatures, generally beneath him; I can imagine Vidal in his dry way saying "like pets." I remember about a decade ago, Vidal appeared on press tour for a PBS program. It was nominally a question-and-answer session, but a single answer might go on far longer than an armload of questions. Our obligation, it was clear, was to listen to Vidal, to follow the roll of his words, the flow of his ideas. He might acknowledgment disagreement but swat, swat, away it went. -- in a mostly entertaining fashion.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1689
{"url": "http://www.ohio.com/blogs/heldenfiles/the-heldenfiles-online-1.258385/conan-o-brien-speaks-1.259853?month=7&year=2012", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.ohio.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:27:11Z", "digest": "sha1:H7XXQ5FFV2B4LPGY57IMGEG3V76MFYXE"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 54011, 54011.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 54011, 65119.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 54011, 128.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 54011, 770.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 54011, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 54011, 270.9]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 54011, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 54011, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 54011, 2.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 54011, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 54011, 0.33038008]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 54011, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 54011, 0.00245495]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 54011, 0.0302932]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 54011, 0.01306221]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 54011, 0.00880078]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 54011, 0.00245495]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 54011, 0.00245495]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 54011, 0.00868498]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 54011, 0.00833758]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 54011, 0.00416879]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 54011, 0.02888279]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 54011, 0.125]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 54011, 0.19296536]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 54011, 0.31683725]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 54011, 4.85637161]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 54011, 0.00248073]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 54011, 6.6989666]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 54011, 8891.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 22, 0.0], [22, 1035, 1.0], [1035, 1062, 0.0], [1062, 1299, 0.0], [1299, 1334, 0.0], [1334, 3020, 1.0], [3020, 3061, 1.0], [3061, 3717, 1.0], [3717, 4151, 1.0], [4151, 4186, 0.0], [4186, 4816, 1.0], [4816, 4847, 0.0], [4847, 5419, 1.0], [5419, 5460, 0.0], [5460, 5837, 1.0], [5837, 5893, 0.0], [5893, 6768, 1.0], [6768, 6804, 0.0], [6804, 7297, 1.0], [7297, 7602, 1.0], [7602, 8362, 1.0], [8362, 8667, 1.0], [8667, 8687, 0.0], [8687, 9232, 0.0], [9232, 9259, 0.0], [9259, 9714, 1.0], [9714, 9749, 0.0], [9749, 10584, 1.0], [10584, 10656, 0.0], [10656, 12671, 1.0], [12671, 12763, 0.0], [12763, 13309, 1.0], [13309, 13343, 0.0], [13343, 13756, 1.0], [13756, 14567, 1.0], [14567, 14595, 0.0], [14595, 14612, 1.0], [14612, 14856, 1.0], [14856, 15823, 1.0], [15823, 15879, 0.0], [15879, 16943, 1.0], [16943, 17018, 0.0], [17018, 17846, 1.0], [17846, 17861, 0.0], [17861, 17885, 0.0], [17885, 17946, 0.0], [17946, 19588, 1.0], [19588, 19637, 0.0], [19637, 20243, 1.0], [20243, 20279, 0.0], [20279, 21304, 1.0], [21304, 21370, 0.0], [21370, 21397, 0.0], [21397, 22002, 1.0], [22002, 22035, 0.0], [22035, 22435, 1.0], [22435, 22478, 0.0], [22478, 23369, 1.0], [23369, 23384, 0.0], [23384, 23426, 1.0], [23426, 23455, 0.0], [23455, 23616, 0.0], [23616, 24995, 1.0], [24995, 25012, 0.0], [25012, 25260, 1.0], [25260, 25714, 0.0], [25714, 25755, 0.0], [25755, 26510, 1.0], [26510, 26547, 0.0], [26547, 27401, 1.0], [27401, 27446, 0.0], [27446, 27954, 1.0], [27954, 28041, 0.0], [28041, 28848, 1.0], [28848, 28885, 0.0], [28885, 29495, 1.0], [29495, 29530, 0.0], [29530, 29990, 1.0], [29990, 30025, 0.0], [30025, 31042, 1.0], [31042, 31521, 1.0], [31521, 31586, 0.0], [31586, 32069, 1.0], [32069, 32289, 0.0], [32289, 32326, 0.0], [32326, 32483, 1.0], [32483, 32504, 0.0], [32504, 33256, 1.0], [33256, 33285, 0.0], [33285, 34353, 1.0], [34353, 34396, 0.0], [34396, 34970, 1.0], [34970, 36289, 1.0], [36289, 36326, 0.0], [36326, 36833, 0.0], [36833, 36887, 0.0], [36887, 37581, 1.0], [37581, 37835, 1.0], [37835, 37856, 0.0], [37856, 38234, 1.0], [38234, 38262, 0.0], [38262, 40650, 1.0], [40650, 40685, 0.0], [40685, 42267, 1.0], [42267, 42319, 0.0], [42319, 43679, 1.0], [43679, 43721, 0.0], [43721, 46440, 1.0], [46440, 46472, 0.0], [46472, 46996, 1.0], [46996, 47016, 0.0], [47016, 47341, 1.0], [47341, 48316, 1.0], [48316, 48345, 1.0], [48345, 49054, 1.0], [49054, 49102, 0.0], [49102, 49271, 1.0], [49271, 49571, 0.0], [49571, 49659, 0.0], [49659, 50193, 1.0], [50193, 50234, 0.0], [50234, 50650, 1.0], [50650, 50694, 0.0], [50694, 51983, 1.0], [51983, 52033, 0.0], [52033, 52891, 1.0], [52891, 52907, 0.0], [52907, 54011, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 22, 0.0], [22, 1035, 0.0], [1035, 1062, 0.0], [1062, 1299, 0.0], [1299, 1334, 0.0], [1334, 3020, 0.0], [3020, 3061, 0.0], [3061, 3717, 0.0], [3717, 4151, 0.0], [4151, 4186, 0.0], [4186, 4816, 0.0], [4816, 4847, 0.0], [4847, 5419, 0.0], [5419, 5460, 0.0], [5460, 5837, 0.0], [5837, 5893, 0.0], [5893, 6768, 0.0], [6768, 6804, 0.0], [6804, 7297, 0.0], [7297, 7602, 0.0], [7602, 8362, 0.0], [8362, 8667, 0.0], [8667, 8687, 0.0], [8687, 9232, 0.0], [9232, 9259, 0.0], [9259, 9714, 0.0], [9714, 9749, 0.0], [9749, 10584, 0.0], [10584, 10656, 0.0], [10656, 12671, 0.0], [12671, 12763, 0.0], [12763, 13309, 0.0], [13309, 13343, 0.0], [13343, 13756, 0.0], [13756, 14567, 0.0], [14567, 14595, 0.0], [14595, 14612, 0.0], [14612, 14856, 0.0], [14856, 15823, 0.0], [15823, 15879, 0.0], [15879, 16943, 0.0], [16943, 17018, 0.0], [17018, 17846, 0.0], [17846, 17861, 0.0], [17861, 17885, 0.0], [17885, 17946, 0.0], [17946, 19588, 0.0], [19588, 19637, 0.0], [19637, 20243, 0.0], [20243, 20279, 0.0], [20279, 21304, 0.0], [21304, 21370, 0.0], [21370, 21397, 0.0], [21397, 22002, 0.0], [22002, 22035, 0.0], [22035, 22435, 0.0], [22435, 22478, 0.0], [22478, 23369, 0.0], [23369, 23384, 0.0], [23384, 23426, 0.0], [23426, 23455, 0.0], [23455, 23616, 0.0], [23616, 24995, 0.0], [24995, 25012, 0.0], [25012, 25260, 0.0], [25260, 25714, 0.0], [25714, 25755, 0.0], [25755, 26510, 0.0], [26510, 26547, 0.0], [26547, 27401, 0.0], [27401, 27446, 0.0], [27446, 27954, 0.0], [27954, 28041, 0.0], [28041, 28848, 0.0], [28848, 28885, 0.0], [28885, 29495, 0.0], [29495, 29530, 0.0], [29530, 29990, 0.0], [29990, 30025, 0.0], [30025, 31042, 0.0], [31042, 31521, 0.0], [31521, 31586, 0.0], [31586, 32069, 0.0], [32069, 32289, 0.0], [32289, 32326, 0.0], [32326, 32483, 0.0], [32483, 32504, 0.0], [32504, 33256, 0.0], [33256, 33285, 0.0], [33285, 34353, 0.0], [34353, 34396, 0.0], [34396, 34970, 0.0], [34970, 36289, 0.0], [36289, 36326, 0.0], [36326, 36833, 0.0], [36833, 36887, 0.0], [36887, 37581, 0.0], [37581, 37835, 0.0], [37835, 37856, 0.0], [37856, 38234, 0.0], [38234, 38262, 0.0], [38262, 40650, 0.0], [40650, 40685, 0.0], [40685, 42267, 0.0], [42267, 42319, 0.0], [42319, 43679, 0.0], [43679, 43721, 0.0], [43721, 46440, 0.0], [46440, 46472, 0.0], [46472, 46996, 0.0], [46996, 47016, 0.0], [47016, 47341, 0.0], [47341, 48316, 0.0], [48316, 48345, 0.0], [48345, 49054, 0.0], [49054, 49102, 0.0], [49102, 49271, 0.0], [49271, 49571, 0.0], [49571, 49659, 0.0], [49659, 50193, 0.0], [50193, 50234, 0.0], [50234, 50650, 0.0], [50650, 50694, 0.0], [50694, 51983, 0.0], [51983, 52033, 0.0], [52033, 52891, 0.0], [52891, 52907, 0.0], [52907, 54011, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 22, 4.0], [22, 1035, 164.0], [1035, 1062, 4.0], [1062, 1299, 36.0], [1299, 1334, 5.0], [1334, 3020, 291.0], [3020, 3061, 6.0], [3061, 3717, 102.0], [3717, 4151, 71.0], [4151, 4186, 6.0], [4186, 4816, 101.0], [4816, 4847, 5.0], [4847, 5419, 98.0], [5419, 5460, 6.0], [5460, 5837, 58.0], [5837, 5893, 8.0], [5893, 6768, 151.0], [6768, 6804, 6.0], [6804, 7297, 86.0], [7297, 7602, 50.0], [7602, 8362, 131.0], [8362, 8667, 55.0], [8667, 8687, 4.0], [8687, 9232, 101.0], [9232, 9259, 4.0], [9259, 9714, 86.0], [9714, 9749, 6.0], [9749, 10584, 134.0], [10584, 10656, 13.0], [10656, 12671, 312.0], [12671, 12763, 13.0], [12763, 13309, 95.0], [13309, 13343, 5.0], [13343, 13756, 59.0], [13756, 14567, 135.0], [14567, 14595, 4.0], [14595, 14612, 2.0], [14612, 14856, 41.0], [14856, 15823, 158.0], [15823, 15879, 8.0], [15879, 16943, 162.0], [16943, 17018, 13.0], [17018, 17846, 138.0], [17846, 17861, 3.0], [17861, 17885, 4.0], [17885, 17946, 9.0], [17946, 19588, 266.0], [19588, 19637, 9.0], [19637, 20243, 92.0], [20243, 20279, 5.0], [20279, 21304, 158.0], [21304, 21370, 12.0], [21370, 21397, 5.0], [21397, 22002, 101.0], [22002, 22035, 5.0], [22035, 22435, 66.0], [22435, 22478, 6.0], [22478, 23369, 146.0], [23369, 23384, 2.0], [23384, 23426, 7.0], [23426, 23455, 4.0], [23455, 23616, 30.0], [23616, 24995, 230.0], [24995, 25012, 3.0], [25012, 25260, 43.0], [25260, 25714, 80.0], [25714, 25755, 7.0], [25755, 26510, 124.0], [26510, 26547, 6.0], [26547, 27401, 146.0], [27401, 27446, 7.0], [27446, 27954, 76.0], [27954, 28041, 11.0], [28041, 28848, 126.0], [28848, 28885, 6.0], [28885, 29495, 99.0], [29495, 29530, 4.0], [29530, 29990, 58.0], [29990, 30025, 5.0], [30025, 31042, 176.0], [31042, 31521, 89.0], [31521, 31586, 10.0], [31586, 32069, 82.0], [32069, 32289, 38.0], [32289, 32326, 6.0], [32326, 32483, 25.0], [32483, 32504, 4.0], [32504, 33256, 151.0], [33256, 33285, 4.0], [33285, 34353, 169.0], [34353, 34396, 6.0], [34396, 34970, 88.0], [34970, 36289, 240.0], [36289, 36326, 6.0], [36326, 36833, 88.0], [36833, 36887, 9.0], [36887, 37581, 114.0], [37581, 37835, 38.0], [37835, 37856, 3.0], [37856, 38234, 69.0], [38234, 38262, 4.0], [38262, 40650, 397.0], [40650, 40685, 6.0], [40685, 42267, 254.0], [42267, 42319, 8.0], [42319, 43679, 218.0], [43679, 43721, 7.0], [43721, 46440, 415.0], [46440, 46472, 5.0], [46472, 46996, 92.0], [46996, 47016, 4.0], [47016, 47341, 53.0], [47341, 48316, 169.0], [48316, 48345, 4.0], [48345, 49054, 111.0], [49054, 49102, 8.0], [49102, 49271, 27.0], [49271, 49571, 50.0], [49571, 49659, 13.0], [49659, 50193, 96.0], [50193, 50234, 5.0], [50234, 50650, 65.0], [50650, 50694, 7.0], [50694, 51983, 225.0], [51983, 52033, 6.0], [52033, 52891, 140.0], [52891, 52907, 3.0], [52907, 54011, 186.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 22, 0.11111111], [22, 1035, 0.021875], [1035, 1062, 0.0], [1062, 1299, 0.00877193], [1299, 1334, 0.0], [1334, 3020, 0.00738916], [3020, 3061, 0.0], [3061, 3717, 0.00625978], [3717, 4151, 0.0], [4151, 4186, 0.0], [4186, 4816, 0.02306425], [4816, 4847, 0.0], [4847, 5419, 0.00359712], [5419, 5460, 0.05263158], [5460, 5837, 0.01639344], [5837, 5893, 0.0], [5893, 6768, 0.00358423], [6768, 6804, 0.0], [6804, 7297, 0.0], [7297, 7602, 0.0137457], [7602, 8362, 0.0], [8362, 8667, 0.0], [8667, 8687, 0.11111111], [8687, 9232, 0.0], [9232, 9259, 0.0], [9259, 9714, 0.0], [9714, 9749, 0.0], [9749, 10584, 0.01982652], [10584, 10656, 0.18181818], [10656, 12671, 0.00919305], [12671, 12763, 0.05063291], [12763, 13309, 0.0248566], [13309, 13343, 0.0], [13343, 13756, 0.03061224], [13756, 14567, 0.0], [14567, 14595, 0.04], [14595, 14612, 0.0], [14612, 14856, 0.0], [14856, 15823, 0.0], [15823, 15879, 0.0], [15879, 16943, 0.01554908], [16943, 17018, 0.01470588], [17018, 17846, 0.0124533], [17846, 17861, 0.0], [17861, 17885, 0.0952381], [17885, 17946, 0.0], [17946, 19588, 0.0083014], [19588, 19637, 0.0], [19637, 20243, 0.0084317], [20243, 20279, 0.0], [20279, 21304, 0.0010142], [21304, 21370, 0.03278689], [21370, 21397, 0.04347826], [21397, 22002, 0.0137931], [22002, 22035, 0.0], [22035, 22435, 0.01542416], [22435, 22478, 0.05405405], [22478, 23369, 0.02090592], [23369, 23384, 0.0], [23384, 23426, 0.07692308], [23426, 23455, 0.0], [23455, 23616, 0.01973684], [23616, 24995, 0.03700848], [24995, 25012, 0.0], [25012, 25260, 0.02553191], [25260, 25714, 0.0], [25714, 25755, 0.02702703], [25755, 26510, 0.01216216], [26510, 26547, 0.0], [26547, 27401, 0.01872659], [27401, 27446, 0.0], [27446, 27954, 0.01649485], [27954, 28041, 0.0], [28041, 28848, 0.00755668], [28848, 28885, 0.0], [28885, 29495, 0.02698145], [29495, 29530, 0.0], [29530, 29990, 0.00930233], [29990, 30025, 0.0], [30025, 31042, 0.00201816], [31042, 31521, 0.0], [31521, 31586, 0.0], [31586, 32069, 0.01495726], [32069, 32289, 0.0], [32289, 32326, 0.0], [32326, 32483, 0.0], [32483, 32504, 0.05882353], [32504, 33256, 0.0068306], [33256, 33285, 0.0], [33285, 34353, 0.00577478], [34353, 34396, 0.0], [34396, 34970, 0.00719424], [34970, 36289, 0.01404056], [36289, 36326, 0.0], [36326, 36833, 0.0], [36833, 36887, 0.0], [36887, 37581, 0.01046338], [37581, 37835, 0.0], [37835, 37856, 0.0], [37856, 38234, 0.01089918], [38234, 38262, 0.0], [38262, 40650, 0.02406532], [40650, 40685, 0.0], [40685, 42267, 0.00646412], [42267, 42319, 0.0], [42319, 43679, 0.01136364], [43679, 43721, 0.0], [43721, 46440, 0.00714554], [46440, 46472, 0.03846154], [46472, 46996, 0.022], [46996, 47016, 0.0625], [47016, 47341, 0.0], [47341, 48316, 0.00212993], [48316, 48345, 0.0], [48345, 49054, 0.01470588], [49054, 49102, 0.0], [49102, 49271, 0.0], [49271, 49571, 0.01398601], [49571, 49659, 0.01333333], [49659, 50193, 0.0], [50193, 50234, 0.0], [50234, 50650, 0.01503759], [50650, 50694, 0.0], [50694, 51983, 0.01946472], [51983, 52033, 0.0], [52033, 52891, 0.00726392], [52891, 52907, 0.0], [52907, 54011, 0.00380228]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 22, 0.0], [22, 1035, 0.0], [1035, 1062, 0.0], [1062, 1299, 0.0], [1299, 1334, 0.0], [1334, 3020, 0.0], [3020, 3061, 0.0], [3061, 3717, 0.0], [3717, 4151, 0.0], [4151, 4186, 0.0], [4186, 4816, 0.0], [4816, 4847, 0.0], [4847, 5419, 0.0], [5419, 5460, 0.0], [5460, 5837, 0.0], [5837, 5893, 0.0], [5893, 6768, 0.0], [6768, 6804, 0.0], [6804, 7297, 0.0], [7297, 7602, 0.0], [7602, 8362, 0.0], [8362, 8667, 0.0], [8667, 8687, 0.0], [8687, 9232, 0.0], [9232, 9259, 0.0], [9259, 9714, 0.0], [9714, 9749, 0.0], [9749, 10584, 0.0], [10584, 10656, 0.0], [10656, 12671, 0.0], [12671, 12763, 0.0], [12763, 13309, 0.0], [13309, 13343, 0.0], [13343, 13756, 0.0], [13756, 14567, 0.0], [14567, 14595, 0.0], [14595, 14612, 0.0], [14612, 14856, 0.0], [14856, 15823, 0.0], [15823, 15879, 0.0], [15879, 16943, 0.0], [16943, 17018, 0.0], [17018, 17846, 0.0], [17846, 17861, 0.0], [17861, 17885, 0.0], [17885, 17946, 0.0], [17946, 19588, 0.0], [19588, 19637, 0.0], [19637, 20243, 0.0], [20243, 20279, 0.0], [20279, 21304, 0.0], [21304, 21370, 0.0], [21370, 21397, 0.0], [21397, 22002, 0.0], [22002, 22035, 0.0], [22035, 22435, 0.0], [22435, 22478, 0.0], [22478, 23369, 0.0], [23369, 23384, 0.0], [23384, 23426, 0.0], [23426, 23455, 0.0], [23455, 23616, 0.0], [23616, 24995, 0.0], [24995, 25012, 0.0], [25012, 25260, 0.0], [25260, 25714, 0.0], [25714, 25755, 0.0], [25755, 26510, 0.0], [26510, 26547, 0.0], [26547, 27401, 0.0], [27401, 27446, 0.0], [27446, 27954, 0.0], [27954, 28041, 0.0], [28041, 28848, 0.0], [28848, 28885, 0.0], [28885, 29495, 0.0], [29495, 29530, 0.0], [29530, 29990, 0.0], [29990, 30025, 0.0], [30025, 31042, 0.0], [31042, 31521, 0.0], [31521, 31586, 0.0], [31586, 32069, 0.0], [32069, 32289, 0.0], [32289, 32326, 0.0], [32326, 32483, 0.0], [32483, 32504, 0.0], [32504, 33256, 0.0], [33256, 33285, 0.0], [33285, 34353, 0.0], [34353, 34396, 0.0], [34396, 34970, 0.0], [34970, 36289, 0.0], [36289, 36326, 0.0], [36326, 36833, 0.0], [36833, 36887, 0.0], [36887, 37581, 0.0], [37581, 37835, 0.0], [37835, 37856, 0.0], [37856, 38234, 0.0], [38234, 38262, 0.0], [38262, 40650, 0.0], [40650, 40685, 0.0], [40685, 42267, 0.0], [42267, 42319, 0.0], [42319, 43679, 0.0], [43679, 43721, 0.0], [43721, 46440, 0.0], [46440, 46472, 0.0], [46472, 46996, 0.0], [46996, 47016, 0.0], [47016, 47341, 0.0], [47341, 48316, 0.0], [48316, 48345, 0.0], [48345, 49054, 0.0], [49054, 49102, 0.0], [49102, 49271, 0.0], [49271, 49571, 0.0], [49571, 49659, 0.0], [49659, 50193, 0.0], [50193, 50234, 0.0], [50234, 50650, 0.0], [50650, 50694, 0.0], [50694, 51983, 0.0], [51983, 52033, 0.0], [52033, 52891, 0.0], [52891, 52907, 0.0], [52907, 54011, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 22, 0.13636364], [22, 1035, 0.06021718], [1035, 1062, 0.14814815], [1062, 1299, 0.05907173], [1299, 1334, 0.2], [1334, 3020, 0.0569395], [3020, 3061, 0.14634146], [3061, 3717, 0.04420732], [3717, 4151, 0.03686636], [4151, 4186, 0.14285714], [4186, 4816, 0.07142857], [4816, 4847, 0.16129032], [4847, 5419, 0.0506993], [5419, 5460, 0.12195122], [5460, 5837, 0.06366048], [5837, 5893, 0.125], [5893, 6768, 0.07542857], [6768, 6804, 0.16666667], [6804, 7297, 0.03853955], [7297, 7602, 0.07213115], [7602, 8362, 0.025], [8362, 8667, 0.05245902], [8667, 8687, 0.15], [8687, 9232, 0.03486239], [9232, 9259, 0.14814815], [9259, 9714, 0.03076923], [9714, 9749, 0.17142857], [9749, 10584, 0.07305389], [10584, 10656, 0.11111111], [10656, 12671, 0.04119107], [12671, 12763, 0.13043478], [12763, 13309, 0.06043956], [13309, 13343, 0.17647059], [13343, 13756, 0.04600484], [13756, 14567, 0.0431566], [14567, 14595, 0.10714286], [14595, 14612, 0.17647059], [14612, 14856, 0.03278689], [14856, 15823, 0.03102378], [15823, 15879, 0.10714286], [15879, 16943, 0.09022556], [16943, 17018, 0.14666667], [17018, 17846, 0.02898551], [17846, 17861, 0.2], [17861, 17885, 0.125], [17885, 17946, 0.16393443], [17946, 19588, 0.07064555], [19588, 19637, 0.18367347], [19637, 20243, 0.04290429], [20243, 20279, 0.13888889], [20279, 21304, 0.08780488], [21304, 21370, 0.15151515], [21370, 21397, 0.14814815], [21397, 22002, 0.1107438], [22002, 22035, 0.15151515], [22035, 22435, 0.0525], [22435, 22478, 0.18604651], [22478, 23369, 0.05050505], [23369, 23384, 0.13333333], [23384, 23426, 0.07142857], [23426, 23455, 0.13793103], [23455, 23616, 0.0310559], [23616, 24995, 0.05801305], [24995, 25012, 0.29411765], [25012, 25260, 0.05241935], [25260, 25714, 0.05506608], [25714, 25755, 0.12195122], [25755, 26510, 0.05960265], [26510, 26547, 0.21621622], [26547, 27401, 0.03864169], [27401, 27446, 0.17777778], [27446, 27954, 0.04330709], [27954, 28041, 0.12643678], [28041, 28848, 0.03593556], [28848, 28885, 0.18918919], [28885, 29495, 0.06393443], [29495, 29530, 0.25714286], [29530, 29990, 0.11956522], [29990, 30025, 0.14285714], [30025, 31042, 0.0560472], [31042, 31521, 0.03340292], [31521, 31586, 0.18461538], [31586, 32069, 0.1863354], [32069, 32289, 0.05909091], [32289, 32326, 0.08108108], [32326, 32483, 0.07006369], [32483, 32504, 0.14285714], [32504, 33256, 0.03058511], [33256, 33285, 0.17241379], [33285, 34353, 0.0411985], [34353, 34396, 0.20930233], [34396, 34970, 0.03832753], [34970, 36289, 0.04018196], [36289, 36326, 0.21621622], [36326, 36833, 0.02169625], [36833, 36887, 0.16666667], [36887, 37581, 0.04755043], [37581, 37835, 0.04330709], [37835, 37856, 0.23809524], [37856, 38234, 0.02116402], [38234, 38262, 0.17857143], [38262, 40650, 0.04020101], [40650, 40685, 0.14285714], [40685, 42267, 0.03603034], [42267, 42319, 0.13461538], [42319, 43679, 0.04558824], [43679, 43721, 0.16666667], [43721, 46440, 0.03273262], [46440, 46472, 0.125], [46472, 46996, 0.08015267], [46996, 47016, 0.15], [47016, 47341, 0.04307692], [47341, 48316, 0.04102564], [48316, 48345, 0.03448276], [48345, 49054, 0.07334274], [49054, 49102, 0.10416667], [49102, 49271, 0.04733728], [49271, 49571, 0.05], [49571, 49659, 0.13636364], [49659, 50193, 0.03745318], [50193, 50234, 0.12195122], [50234, 50650, 0.08894231], [50650, 50694, 0.15909091], [50694, 51983, 0.05120248], [51983, 52033, 0.12], [52033, 52891, 0.04312354], [52891, 52907, 0.3125], [52907, 54011, 0.02717391]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 54011, 0.55808538]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 54011, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 54011, 0.91322774]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 54011, -2717.927287]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 54011, 136.32485896]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 54011, -1052.21847717]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 54011, 493.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Expanded horizons: Returning to her roots New professor at Ohio University, no stranger to Athens Oct 29, 2009 By Bridget Coughlin Natalie Kruse started taking classes at Ohio University when she was just 11 years old and later attended full-time as a Drs. Cruse W. and Virginia Patton Moss-Cutler Scholar. After finishing a degree in civil engineering at 20, she obtained her Ph.D. from Newcastle University in northern England and has completed extensive research on underground mines, watershed management and post-industrial pollution, as well as worked for companies around the globe. Kruse, a new assistant professor this quarter in the Voinovich School of Leadership and Public Affairs, spent her summer in the U.K., finishing research on the sustainability of biofuels in rural Asia and Africa and food security in Southern Africa. She also did research on the longevity of mine water treatment systems and potential solutions for improving aging treatment systems.After her time in England, Kruse was ready to bring her knowledge and experience back to her hometown. "I have been a lot of places, but my real passion is to work on post-industrial pollution in rural areas," Kruse said. "There is a huge environmental problem, right in our backyard. A lot of people don't know it's there, but it really impacts the quality of life for people here."Kruse returned to Athens just before fall quarter classes began, and hopes to use her recent research to improve the quality of life for those in the Athens community, specifically dealing with her experience and research with the effective and efficient design of acid mine drainage treatment systems. "If we design them better, we can hopefully have more reliable, long-term solutions," Kruse said.The overall goal of Kruse's research is to improve the environment in mining and industrial communities through better design and use of data. Kruse said that working with community members is central to this goal. "My approach to this work is to quantify the basic chemical, physical and biological processes that control environmental remediation to create simple, yet effective design solutions," Kruse said. "Better design of low-cost, low-energy treatment systems for mine water and industrial drainage will not only reduce the contaminant load into streams and rivers but will also help to reduce the energy consumption of the wastewater treatment industry. "My hope is that advances in low-energy treatment of mine waters can help to inform similar technologies for industrial wastewater and sewage treatment," she added.OHIO connectionsEven though Kruse is only 25 years old, she has known her passion since she was a child when her friend and mentor, the late Mary Stoertz, first sparked her interest in rural environments and post-industrial pollution. "When I was 10 or 11, she (Stoertz) took my brother and I to a few different mining sites to take water samples and measure some water quality characteristics, then to a water education day in New Straitsville," Kruse said. "I was fascinated by what was happening in the region and how widespread the problem was and how close to home it was."Stoertz, a former associate professor in the Department of Geological Sciences, worked with Kruse closely throughout Kruse's undergraduate career. Kruse was even invited to present research at a conference Stoertz orchestrated. "We spent a lot of time together during my undergrad and she was a great help to me when I applied for scholarships for both my undergrad and Ph.D.," Kruse said. "The research that later formed my PhD dissertation grew from a conversation that we once had about research ideas and directions that we would like to go."Kruse's family is very involved in the Ohio University community as well. Her father, Hans Kruse, is a professor in the McClure School of Information and Telecommunication Systems. Her mother and her older sister each have degrees from Ohio University, and two of her younger siblings are currently enrolled in the university. "I am of course delighted that Natalie has chosen to begin her faculty career at OU," said her father, Hans Kruse. "Not just because it means her return to Athens, but also because I know in her OU is gaining a skilled researcher who will contribute greatly to the university, the region and her field in general." Related LinksNatalie Kruse joins Voinovich School faculty: http://www.voinovichcenter.ohio.edu/news/56.aspx MSES Leadership Option pays tribute to Mary Stoertz: http://www.ohio.edu/outlook/08-09/June/665.cfm Published: Oct 29, 2009 8:00 AM At the age of 25, Natalie Kruse brings years of study and experience to her role as professor with the Voinovich School of Leadership and Public Affairs. Photographer: Kevin Riddell Share this story Email To:
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1690
{"url": "http://www.ohio.edu/outlook/09-10/October/133.cfm", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.ohio.edu", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:12:07Z", "digest": "sha1:2CXW5EPJAFTE3S63XVZNJ4G5JO34BZBU"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 4798, 4798.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 4798, 5895.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 4798, 1.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 4798, 21.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 4798, 0.98]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 4798, 252.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 4798, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 4798, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 4798, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 4798, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 4798, 0.38336933]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 4798, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 4798, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 4798, 0.03336756]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 4798, 0.02361396]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 4798, 0.02361396]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 4798, 0.02361396]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 4798, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 4798, 0.01026694]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 4798, 0.00462012]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 4798, 0.01026694]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 4798, 0.01943844]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 4798, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 4798, 0.15334773]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 4798, 0.46578947]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 4798, 5.12631579]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 4798, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 4798, 5.30053465]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 4798, 760.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 4798, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 4798, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 4798, 760.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 4798, 0.00773362]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 4798, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 4798, 0.03147145]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 4798, 0.17490464]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 4798, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 4798, 0.71897286]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 4798, -116.85165305]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 4798, 21.15198229]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 4798, -117.68509191]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 4798, 44.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
What I’m doing with my life Looking for my next adventure. Life goes on...Always be positive. I’m really good at Taking care of people, laughing.. The first things people usually notice about me My eyes... Favorite books, movies, shows, music, and food Avatar, The Wanted - Glad You Came... The six things I could never do without Car, iphone, home food, cnbc news, friends and family. I spend a lot of time thinking about How to enjoy the present moment. you snooze you lose. On a typical Friday night I am Lately been relaxing at home but love going out.. The most private thing I’m willing to admit we are all crazy I’m looking for Girls who like guys Ages 22–42 Near me Who are single For new friends, long-term dating, short-term dating You should message me if you believe that behind every successful man there is a woman.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1691
{"url": "http://www.okcupid.com/profile/Richardger?cf=profile_similar", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.okcupid.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:08:57Z", "digest": "sha1:23PI4TYKXJVLYUO5OI4LFHP6NRBJ4TWW"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 829, 829.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 829, 3139.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 829, 9.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 829, 13.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 829, 0.92]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 829, 338.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 829, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 829, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 829, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 829, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 829, 0.34759358]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 829, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 829, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 829, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 829, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 829, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 829, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 829, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 829, 0.0309119]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 829, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 829, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 829, 0.03743316]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 829, 0.22222222]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 829, 0.17647059]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 829, 0.75675676]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 829, 4.37162162]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 829, 0.01604278]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 829, 4.59915041]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 829, 148.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 94, 1.0], [94, 147, 1.0], [147, 206, 1.0], [206, 291, 1.0], [291, 386, 1.0], [386, 477, 1.0], [477, 558, 1.0], [558, 619, 0.0], [619, 829, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 94, 0.0], [94, 147, 0.0], [147, 206, 0.0], [206, 291, 0.0], [291, 386, 0.0], [386, 477, 0.0], [477, 558, 0.0], [558, 619, 0.0], [619, 829, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 94, 16.0], [94, 147, 9.0], [147, 206, 10.0], [206, 291, 13.0], [291, 386, 17.0], [386, 477, 18.0], [477, 558, 16.0], [558, 619, 12.0], [619, 829, 37.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 94, 0.0], [94, 147, 0.0], [147, 206, 0.0], [206, 291, 0.0], [291, 386, 0.0], [386, 477, 0.0], [477, 558, 0.0], [558, 619, 0.0], [619, 829, 0.0195122]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 94, 0.0], [94, 147, 0.0], [147, 206, 0.0], [206, 291, 0.0], [291, 386, 0.0], [386, 477, 0.0], [477, 558, 0.0], [558, 619, 0.0], [619, 829, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 94, 0.05319149], [94, 147, 0.03773585], [147, 206, 0.03389831], [206, 291, 0.08235294], [291, 386, 0.03157895], [386, 477, 0.02197802], [477, 558, 0.04938272], [558, 619, 0.03278689], [619, 829, 0.03333333]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 829, 0.00323707]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 829, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 829, 0.00906539]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 829, -52.98948154]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 829, -18.4921421]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 829, -120.56140026]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 829, 11.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
The Complete Columbia Albums Collection [Box Set] [Limited Edition] (7-CD Box Set) Item: SNY 791891 Crime Story - Complete Series (9-DVD) $26.98 Al Cohn / Dexter Gordon We Three (With Zoot Sims) (CD) $6.49 Add to Cart Dexter Gordon Blue Dex: Dexter Gordon Plays the Blues (CD) $10.43 Dexter Gordon The Best of Dexter Gordon (CD) $4.98 Sonny Rollins Prestige Profiles (Plus Bonus CD, Volume 3) (2-CD) $6.98 Add to Cart Dexter Gordon The Art of the Ballad (CD) $13.48 Dexter Gordon Round Midnight [Original Motion Picture Soundtrack] (CD) $4.99 Classic Jazz (3-CD Set) $8.08 Dexter Gordon Dexter Digs In: The Young Dexter Gordon (CD) $5.98 Label: Sony Tracks on Disc 1: 1.Gingerbread Boy 2.Little Red&apos;s Fantasy 3.Fenja 4.In Case You Haven&apos;t Heard 5.Fried Bananas 1.It&apos;s You or No One 2.Let&apos;s Get Down 3.&apos;Round Midnight 4.Backstairs 5.Body and Soul 1.Laura 2.The Moontrane 3.Red Top 5.You&apos;re Blas? 6.How Insensitive 7.Diggin&apos; In 8.It&apos;s Only a Paper Moon 1.As Time Goes By 2.Moment&apos;s Notice 3.Tanya 4.I Told You So 6.LTD 7.Ruby, My Dear 8.Secret Love 4.The End of a Love Affair 6.More Than You Know 8.Blues Up and Down 10.Cheesecake 1.Hi Fly 2.A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square 3.Blues Walk, The (Loose Walk) 4.Gotham City 5.A Conversation with Dexter Gordon: Gotham City / A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square / Hi Fly / Blues Walk 6.Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas [Short Version] 7.Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas [Long Version] 4.Polka Dots and Moonbeams 5.Project S 6.Isn&apos;t She Lovely Personnel: Dexter Gordon (soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone); Eddie Jefferson (vocals); George Benson (guitar); Frank Wess (flute, piccolo, alto saxophone); Howard Johnson (baritone saxophone, tuba); Woody Shaw, Benny Bailey (trumpet, flugelhorn); Curtis Fuller, Slide Hampton, Wayne Andre (trombone); George Cables, George Duke, Kirk Lightsey, Ronnie Mathews, Cedar Walton (piano); Bobby Hutcherson (vibraphone); Eddie Gladden, Louis Hayes, Art Blakey, Victor Lewis, Billy Brooks (drums).Audio Mixer: Joe Jorgensen.Audio Remixers: Danny Kadar ; Don Puluse; Jerry Smith ; Malcolm Addey; William Wittman.Liner Note Authors: Michael Cuscuna; Maxine Gordon.Recording information: Carnegie Hall, New York, NY (01/29/1979); Columbia 30th Street Studio, New York, NY (01/29/1979); Columbia Studios, New York, NY (01/29/1979); Columbia Studios, San Francisco (01/29/1979); Montreux Jazz Festival (01/29/1979); Sound Ideas, New York, NY (01/29/1979); The Karl Marx Theatre, Havana, Cuba (01/29/1979); The Village Vanguard, New York, NY (01/29/1979); Carnegie Hall, New York, NY (03/03/1979); Columbia 30th Street Studio, New York, NY (03/03/1979); Columbia Studios, New York, NY (03/03/1979); Columbia Studios, San Francisco (03/03/1979); Montreux Jazz Festival (03/03/1979); Sound Ideas, New York, NY (03/03/1979); The Karl Marx Theatre, Havana, Cuba (03/03/1979); The Village Vanguard, New York, NY (03/03/1979); Carnegie Hall, New York, NY (05/01/1978-05/04/1978); Columbia 30th Street Studio, New York, NY (05/01/1978-05/04/1978); Columbia Studios, New York, NY (05/01/1978-05/04/1978); Columbia Studios, San Francisco (05/01/1978-05/04/1978); Montreux Jazz Festival (05/01/1978-05/04/1978); Sound Ideas, New York, NY (05/01/1978-05/04/1978); The Karl Marx Theatre, Havana, Cuba (05/01/1978-05/04/1978); The Village Vanguard, New York, NY (05/01/1978-05/04/1978); Carnegie Hall, New York, NY (06/21/1977-06/22/1977); Columbia 30th Street Studio, New York, NY (06/21/1977-06/22/1977); Columbia Studios, New York, NY (06/21/1977-06/22/1977); Columbia Studios, San Francisco (06/21/1977-06/22/1977); Montreux Jazz Festival (06/21/1977-06/22/1977); Sound Ideas, New York, NY (06/21/1977-06/22/1977); The Karl Marx Theatre, Havana, Cuba (06/21/1977-06/22/1977); The Village Vanguard, New York, NY (06/21/1977-06/22/1977); Carnegie Hall, New York, NY (07/24/1977); Columbia 30th Street Studio, New York, NY (07/24/1977); Columbia Studios, New York, NY (07/24/1977); Columbia Studios, San Francisco (07/24/1977); Montreux Jazz Festival (07/24/1977); Sound Ideas, New York, NY (07/24/1977); The Karl Marx Theatre, Havana, Cuba (07/24/1977); The Village Vanguard, New York, NY (07/24/1977); Carnegie Hall, New York, NY (08/11/1980-08/12/1980); Columbia 30th Street Studio, New York, NY (08/11/1980-08/12/1980); Columbia Studios, New York, NY (08/11/1980-08/12/1980); Columbia Studios, San Francisco (08/11/1980-08/12/1980); Montreux Jazz Festival (08/11/1980-08/12/1980); Sound Ideas, New York, NY (08/11/1980-08/12/1980); The Karl Marx Theatre, Havana, Cuba (08/11/1980-08/12/1980); The Village Vanguard, New York, NY (08/11/1980-08/12/1980); Carnegie Hall, New York, NY (09/23/1978); Columbia 30th Street Studio, New York, NY (09/23/1978); Columbia Studios, New York, NY (09/23/1978); Columbia Studios, San Francisco (09/23/1978); Montreux Jazz Festival (09/23/1978); Sound Ideas, New York, NY (09/23/1978); The Karl Marx Theatre, Havana, Cuba (09/23/1978); The Village Vanguard, New York, NY (09/23/1978); Carnegie Hall, New York, NY (11/04/1980); Columbia 30th Street Studio, New York, NY (11/04/1980); Columbia Studios, New York, NY (11/04/1980); Columbia Studios, San Francisco (11/04/1980); Montreux Jazz Festival (11/04/1980); Sound Ideas, New York, NY (11/04/1980); The Karl Marx Theatre, Havana, Cuba (11/04/1980); The Village Vanguard, New York, NY (11/04/1980); Carnegie Hall, New York, NY (12/11/1976-12/12/1976); Columbia 30th Street Studio, New York, NY (12/11/1976-12/12/1976); Columbia Studios, New York, NY (12/11/1976-12/12/1976); Columbia Studios, San Francisco (12/11/1976-12/12/1976); Montreux Jazz Festival (12/11/1976-12/12/1976); Sound Ideas, New York, NY (12/11/1976-12/12/1976); The Karl Marx Theatre, Havana, Cuba (12/11/1976-12/12/1976); The Village Vanguard, New York, NY (12/11/1976-12/12/1976); Carnegie Hall, New York, NY (12/1976); Columbia 30th Street Studio, New York, NY (12/1976); Columbia Studios, New York, NY (12/1976); Columbia Studios, San Francisco (12/1976); Montreux Jazz Festival (12/1976); Sound Ideas, New York, NY (12/1976); The Karl Marx Theatre, Havana, Cuba (12/1976); The Village Vanguard, New York, NY (12/1976).Editor: Ken Robertson.Introduction by: Dexter Gordon.Photographer: Ronald G. Harris.Arranger: Slide Hampton.Tenor saxophonist Dexter Gordon had been an expatriate since 1963 when he discovered Europe was where the consistently paying jazz gigs were to be found. In 1976 he returned to the States and began recording for Columbia Records and also embarked on an acting career. Sony Legacy repackaged and re-released six Dexter Gordon albums of that era in their entirety with mini-LP sleeves and original cover art: Homecoming: Live at the Village Vanguard (1976), Sophisticated Giant (1977), Manhattan Symphonie (1978), Live at Carnegie Hall (1978), and Gotham City (1980). Also included is a bonus disc with tracks recorded at the Montreux Jazz Festival, the Havana Jam, and a version of Stevie Wonder's "Isn't She Lovely" that was released as a single in 1977. While not as celebrated as his Blue Note releases, these Columbia sessions show Gordon hadn't lost his virtuosity and found him playing with a younger generation of jazz musicians such as Woody Shaw, Bobby Hutcherson, and George Cables. Lovingly produced by Michael Cuscuna with support from Woody Shaw's son and Gordon's wife, manager and producer Maxine Gordon, who also provided liner notes with Cuscuna, The Complete Columbia Albums Collection affords listeners another opportunity to enjoy this final period of Dexter Gordon's recorded output. ~ Al Campbell Get Email Alerts for Dexter Gordon
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1692
{"url": "http://www.oldies.com/product-view/37923O.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.oldies.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:17:41Z", "digest": "sha1:G7EI7Q7DFIYNWSIV7VVH6Q5YN6GEFCYY"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 7670, 7670.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 7670, 11731.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 7670, 52.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 7670, 256.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 7670, 0.67]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 7670, 92.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 7670, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 7670, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 7670, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 7670, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 7670, 0.05107779]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 7670, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 7670, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 7670, 0.38702965]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 7670, 0.25836657]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 7670, 0.05722213]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 7670, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 7670, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 7670, 0.06069013]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 7670, 0.07803017]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 7670, 0.03294607]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 7670, 0.03280225]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 7670, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 7670, 0.54404873]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 7670, 0.37572254]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 7670, 5.55587669]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 7670, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 7670, 5.15235433]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 7670, 1038.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 83, 0.0], [83, 100, 0.0], [100, 145, 0.0], [145, 206, 0.0], [206, 284, 0.0], [284, 335, 0.0], [335, 406, 0.0], [406, 466, 0.0], [466, 543, 0.0], [543, 573, 0.0], [573, 638, 0.0], [638, 668, 0.0], [668, 686, 0.0], [686, 714, 0.0], [714, 722, 0.0], [722, 755, 0.0], [755, 771, 0.0], [771, 797, 0.0], [797, 819, 0.0], [819, 842, 0.0], [842, 855, 0.0], [855, 871, 0.0], [871, 879, 0.0], [879, 895, 0.0], [895, 905, 0.0], [905, 925, 1.0], [925, 943, 0.0], [943, 961, 0.0], [961, 991, 0.0], [991, 1009, 0.0], [1009, 1032, 0.0], [1032, 1040, 0.0], [1040, 1056, 0.0], [1056, 1062, 0.0], [1062, 1078, 0.0], [1078, 1092, 0.0], [1092, 1119, 0.0], [1119, 1140, 0.0], [1140, 1160, 0.0], [1160, 1174, 0.0], [1174, 1183, 0.0], [1183, 1223, 0.0], [1223, 1254, 0.0], [1254, 1268, 0.0], [1268, 1379, 0.0], [1379, 1436, 0.0], [1436, 1492, 0.0], [1492, 1519, 0.0], [1519, 1531, 0.0], [1531, 1555, 0.0], [1555, 7636, 0.0], [7636, 7670, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 83, 0.0], [83, 100, 0.0], [100, 145, 0.0], [145, 206, 0.0], [206, 284, 0.0], [284, 335, 0.0], [335, 406, 0.0], [406, 466, 0.0], [466, 543, 0.0], [543, 573, 0.0], [573, 638, 0.0], [638, 668, 0.0], [668, 686, 0.0], [686, 714, 0.0], [714, 722, 0.0], [722, 755, 0.0], [755, 771, 0.0], [771, 797, 0.0], [797, 819, 0.0], [819, 842, 0.0], [842, 855, 0.0], [855, 871, 0.0], [871, 879, 0.0], [879, 895, 0.0], [895, 905, 0.0], [905, 925, 0.0], [925, 943, 0.0], [943, 961, 0.0], [961, 991, 0.0], [991, 1009, 0.0], [1009, 1032, 0.0], [1032, 1040, 0.0], [1040, 1056, 0.0], [1056, 1062, 0.0], [1062, 1078, 0.0], [1078, 1092, 0.0], [1092, 1119, 0.0], [1119, 1140, 0.0], [1140, 1160, 0.0], [1160, 1174, 0.0], [1174, 1183, 0.0], [1183, 1223, 0.0], [1223, 1254, 0.0], [1254, 1268, 0.0], [1268, 1379, 0.0], [1379, 1436, 0.0], [1436, 1492, 0.0], [1492, 1519, 0.0], [1519, 1531, 0.0], [1531, 1555, 0.0], [1555, 7636, 0.0], [7636, 7670, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 83, 12.0], [83, 100, 3.0], [100, 145, 6.0], [145, 206, 11.0], [206, 284, 14.0], [284, 335, 9.0], [335, 406, 11.0], [406, 466, 12.0], [466, 543, 10.0], [543, 573, 5.0], [573, 638, 11.0], [638, 668, 6.0], [668, 686, 2.0], [686, 714, 3.0], [714, 722, 1.0], [722, 755, 5.0], [755, 771, 2.0], [771, 797, 5.0], [797, 819, 3.0], [819, 842, 2.0], [842, 855, 1.0], [855, 871, 3.0], [871, 879, 1.0], [879, 895, 2.0], [895, 905, 2.0], [905, 925, 2.0], [925, 943, 2.0], [943, 961, 2.0], [961, 991, 5.0], [991, 1009, 4.0], [1009, 1032, 2.0], [1032, 1040, 1.0], [1040, 1056, 4.0], [1056, 1062, 1.0], [1062, 1078, 3.0], [1078, 1092, 2.0], [1092, 1119, 6.0], [1119, 1140, 4.0], [1140, 1160, 4.0], [1160, 1174, 1.0], [1174, 1183, 2.0], [1183, 1223, 6.0], [1223, 1254, 5.0], [1254, 1268, 2.0], [1268, 1379, 17.0], [1379, 1436, 8.0], [1436, 1492, 8.0], [1492, 1519, 4.0], [1519, 1531, 2.0], [1531, 1555, 3.0], [1555, 7636, 790.0], [7636, 7670, 6.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 83, 0.01333333], [83, 100, 0.4], [100, 145, 0.13513514], [145, 206, 0.05769231], [206, 284, 0.05555556], [284, 335, 0.06521739], [335, 406, 0.08064516], [406, 466, 0.07272727], [466, 543, 0.04285714], [543, 573, 0.16666667], [573, 638, 0.05084746], [638, 668, 0.03703704], [668, 686, 0.0625], [686, 714, 0.04166667], [714, 722, 0.16666667], [722, 755, 0.03448276], [755, 771, 0.07142857], [771, 797, 0.04545455], [797, 819, 0.05555556], [819, 842, 0.05263158], [842, 855, 0.09090909], [855, 871, 0.07142857], [871, 879, 0.16666667], [879, 895, 0.07142857], [895, 905, 0.125], [905, 925, 0.06666667], [925, 943, 0.0625], [943, 961, 0.07142857], [961, 991, 0.03846154], [991, 1009, 0.0625], [1009, 1032, 0.05263158], [1032, 1040, 0.16666667], [1040, 1056, 0.07142857], [1056, 1062, 0.25], [1062, 1078, 0.07692308], [1078, 1092, 0.08333333], [1092, 1119, 0.04], [1119, 1140, 0.05263158], [1140, 1160, 0.05555556], [1160, 1174, 0.16666667], [1174, 1183, 0.14285714], [1183, 1223, 0.02631579], [1223, 1254, 0.03846154], [1254, 1268, 0.08333333], [1268, 1379, 0.00980392], [1379, 1436, 0.01886792], [1436, 1492, 0.01923077], [1492, 1519, 0.04], [1519, 1531, 0.1], [1531, 1555, 0.05], [1555, 7636, 0.17420561], [7636, 7670, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 83, 0.0], [83, 100, 0.0], [100, 145, 0.0], [145, 206, 0.0], [206, 284, 0.0], [284, 335, 0.0], [335, 406, 0.0], [406, 466, 0.0], [466, 543, 0.0], [543, 573, 0.0], [573, 638, 0.0], [638, 668, 0.0], [668, 686, 0.0], [686, 714, 0.0], [714, 722, 0.0], [722, 755, 0.0], [755, 771, 0.0], [771, 797, 0.0], [797, 819, 0.0], [819, 842, 0.0], [842, 855, 0.0], [855, 871, 0.0], [871, 879, 0.0], [879, 895, 0.0], [895, 905, 0.0], [905, 925, 0.0], [925, 943, 0.0], [943, 961, 0.0], [961, 991, 0.0], [991, 1009, 0.0], [1009, 1032, 0.0], [1032, 1040, 0.0], [1040, 1056, 0.0], [1056, 1062, 0.0], [1062, 1078, 0.0], [1078, 1092, 0.0], [1092, 1119, 0.0], [1119, 1140, 0.0], [1140, 1160, 0.0], [1160, 1174, 0.0], [1174, 1183, 0.0], [1183, 1223, 0.0], [1223, 1254, 0.0], [1254, 1268, 0.0], [1268, 1379, 0.0], [1379, 1436, 0.0], [1436, 1492, 0.0], [1492, 1519, 0.0], [1519, 1531, 0.0], [1531, 1555, 0.0], [1555, 7636, 0.0], [7636, 7670, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 83, 0.15662651], [83, 100, 0.23529412], [100, 145, 0.15555556], [145, 206, 0.18032787], [206, 284, 0.15384615], [284, 335, 0.15686275], [335, 406, 0.15492958], [406, 466, 0.15], [466, 543, 0.12987013], [543, 573, 0.16666667], [573, 638, 0.16923077], [638, 668, 0.13333333], [668, 686, 0.11111111], [686, 714, 0.10714286], [714, 722, 0.125], [722, 755, 0.15151515], [755, 771, 0.125], [771, 797, 0.15384615], [797, 819, 0.13636364], [819, 842, 0.08695652], [842, 855, 0.07692308], [855, 871, 0.125], [871, 879, 0.125], [879, 895, 0.125], [895, 905, 0.2], [905, 925, 0.1], [925, 943, 0.11111111], [943, 961, 0.11111111], [961, 991, 0.13333333], [991, 1009, 0.22222222], [1009, 1032, 0.08695652], [1032, 1040, 0.125], [1040, 1056, 0.25], [1056, 1062, 0.5], [1062, 1078, 0.1875], [1078, 1092, 0.14285714], [1092, 1119, 0.14814815], [1119, 1140, 0.19047619], [1140, 1160, 0.15], [1160, 1174, 0.07142857], [1174, 1183, 0.22222222], [1183, 1223, 0.125], [1223, 1254, 0.16129032], [1254, 1268, 0.14285714], [1268, 1379, 0.13513514], [1379, 1436, 0.12280702], [1436, 1492, 0.125], [1492, 1519, 0.11111111], [1519, 1531, 0.16666667], [1531, 1555, 0.125], [1555, 7636, 0.09817464], [7636, 7670, 0.14705882]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 7670, 0.01221269]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 7670, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 7670, 0.34329742]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 7670, -1972.49113126]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 7670, -743.41104922]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 7670, -399.64124764]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 7670, 65.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Instituto Oncol�gico Dr. Rosell Tel. 900 101 549+34 93 546 01 35 HomeA multidisciplinary approach Accurate, rapid diagnosis Localized disease Advanced disease Request an appointment Personalized TreatmentLung cancer Gastric cancer Breast cancer Colorectal-cancer Thoracic surgery The Clinical Team LaboratoryMolecular testing Molecular pathology Laboratory team Dr. Rafael Rosell Dr Rafael Rosell Head, Medical Oncology Department Specialty: Thoracic tumors Currículum Vitae Detail Dr Rosell is Head of the Medical Oncology Department at the Dr Rosell Oncology Institute, Quirón Dexeus University Hospital. He is also Head of the Medical Oncology Service at the Catalan Institute of Oncology, Hospital Germans Trias i Pujol in Badalona (Barcelona). Dr Rosell has specialized in oncology since 1982 and, since then, has worked tirelessly on the investigation of a cure for cancer. Dr. Rosell has earned well-deserved professional respect among the scientific community, as a speaker at conferences and as organizer of many of the most important seminars and conferences around the world. His work in the field of translational oncology in non-small-cell lung cancer deserves special recognition. He is also the author of over 500 scientific papers in recognized medical journals such as the New England Journal of Medicine, Clinical Cancer Research, Oncogene, The Lancet Oncology, Journal of Clinical Oncology and many more. Dr. Rosell also holds several awards, bestowed in recognition of his extensive scientific work. Dr Rosell is a board member of the IASLC (International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer) and of the EACR (European Association for Cancer Research). He is an active member of the ESMO Educational Committee (European Medical Oncology Society) and of the EORTC Protocol Review Committee (European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer). He was a board member of the ASCO Scientific Committee (American Society of Clinical Oncology) from 2002 to 2004. He was President of the 11th World Conference on Lung Cancer held in Barcelona in July 2005. He is a member of scientific organizing committee of the ESMO-IASLC second European Lung Cancer Conference, combining the prestige of two of the most important international oncology societies: ESMO (European Society of Medical Oncology) and IASLC (International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer), held in Geneva in April 2010. He was also involved in the organization of the first conference in April 2009. Dr Rosell is International Editor for the journal Clinical Lung Cancer. He is also on the Editorial Board of the following scientific publications: Lung Cancer, Annals of Oncology, American Journal of Cancer, The Oncologist and Medicina Clínica. He has also served as Editor of the Revista de Oncología, the official publication of five of the most important Spanish medical oncology societies. Dr Rosell has also been President of the Spanish Lung Cancer Group since its inception in 1991 and is President of the Fundación para la Investigación Clínica y Molecular del Cáncer de Pulmón. He has also served as President of the ASEICA (Asociación Española de Investigación sobre el Cáncer). What is cancer?Clinical trialsNewsBlog IORPress releasesScientific publicationsSpeaking engagementsQuirón Dexeus University HospitalLocationContactMultimedia Multimedia time2online Joomla Extensions: Simple Video Flash Player Module Síguenos en | Copyright © 2014 Instituto Oncológico Dr. Rosell. All Rights Reserved. | Dasi Informàtica
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1693
{"url": "http://www.oncorosell.com/en/dr-rafael-rosell", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.oncorosell.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:37:45Z", "digest": "sha1:E3FTOE46FKAW3RJE6JCDTHHWYKEWAJYU"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3525, 3525.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3525, 3703.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3525, 12.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3525, 20.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3525, 0.91]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3525, 262.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3525, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3525, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3525, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3525, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3525, 0.28762542]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3525, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3525, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3525, 0.07465219]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3525, 0.03529013]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3525, 0.03529013]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3525, 0.03529013]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3525, 0.03529013]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3525, 0.03053953]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3525, 0.01900238]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3525, 0.01832372]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3525, 0.01672241]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3525, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3525, 0.14882943]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3525, 0.45086705]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3525, 5.67822736]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3525, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3525, 4.84013599]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3525, 519.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 32, 0.0], [32, 65, 0.0], [65, 380, 0.0], [380, 397, 0.0], [397, 482, 0.0], [482, 880, 1.0], [880, 1520, 1.0], [1520, 2499, 1.0], [2499, 2894, 1.0], [2894, 3189, 1.0], [3189, 3358, 0.0], [3358, 3525, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 32, 0.0], [32, 65, 0.0], [65, 380, 0.0], [380, 397, 0.0], [397, 482, 0.0], [482, 880, 0.0], [880, 1520, 0.0], [1520, 2499, 0.0], [2499, 2894, 0.0], [2894, 3189, 0.0], [3189, 3358, 0.0], [3358, 3525, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 32, 4.0], [32, 65, 8.0], [65, 380, 35.0], [380, 397, 3.0], [397, 482, 10.0], [482, 880, 64.0], [880, 1520, 96.0], [1520, 2499, 155.0], [2499, 2894, 61.0], [2894, 3189, 49.0], [3189, 3358, 12.0], [3358, 3525, 22.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 32, 0.0], [32, 65, 0.66666667], [65, 380, 0.0], [380, 397, 0.0], [397, 482, 0.0], [482, 880, 0.01028278], [880, 1520, 0.00480769], [1520, 2499, 0.0230608], [2499, 2894, 0.0], [2894, 3189, 0.01337793], [3189, 3358, 0.0], [3358, 3525, 0.0308642]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 32, 0.0], [32, 65, 0.0], [65, 380, 0.0], [380, 397, 0.0], [397, 482, 0.0], [482, 880, 0.0], [880, 1520, 0.0], [1520, 2499, 0.0], [2499, 2894, 0.0], [2894, 3189, 0.0], [3189, 3358, 0.0], [3358, 3525, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 32, 0.125], [32, 65, 0.03030303], [65, 380, 0.07301587], [380, 397, 0.17647059], [397, 482, 0.10588235], [482, 880, 0.07537688], [880, 1520, 0.03125], [1520, 2499, 0.1011236], [2499, 2894, 0.06582278], [2894, 3189, 0.08813559], [3189, 3358, 0.10650888], [3358, 3525, 0.10778443]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3525, 0.01447606]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3525, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3525, 0.60810667]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3525, -153.51103678]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3525, 1.6566472]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3525, 120.62776218]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3525, 28.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
One Frugal Girl My Dad Could’ve Been $10,000 Richer! My dad likes to play the lottery. He isn’t a fanatic or anything, but he buys tickets from time to time and always jokes about what he’d do with the money if he won. Sometimes he let’s the machine pick the numbers, but most of the time he buys a ticket with his lucky set. Three of the numbers are the birthdays of my brother, mother and grandmother and the other is his anniversary date. This time he didn’t buy a ticket for the $587.5 million Powerball jackpot, but this time his numbers were picked! Four of the six numbers, including the Powerball number, were among the four he plays week after week. If you match four numbers including the power ball you win $10,000 and $10,000 would’ve made a pretty sweet Christmas gift! Well you win some, you lose some, but it’s true what they say “you have to be in it to win it” and this week of all weeks he decided not to play. I haven’t talked to my dad yet today, but I’m sure he’s kicking himself about it. I rarely play the lottery, but I do enter online giveaways from time to time. Winning for me is less about the prize then the excitement of being picked. I’ve been pretty lucky in the past. I once won a $250 gift card to Marshall’s. That was definitely my biggest haul, but I’ve also won smaller prizes typically ranging from $25 to $50. My favorite prizes are money and gift cards, but I’ve also won board games, books and even a huge box packed with high-quality barbeque sauces. I’m usually a pretty optimistic girl, but I really love the idea that luck is on my side. Entering and winning giveaways somehow reinforces that notion. Here’s to hoping I win a couple of prizes and that my dad’s lucky numbers are picked on a day he actually plays the lottery! November 29, 2012 at 11:53 AM 2 comments Stocking Stuffers for My Husband: Part Two Between the end of November and the end of December ‘stocking stuffers for my husband’ is the number one search query readers use to find this blog. It seems my blog is inundated every December by women searching for that perfect Christmas gift for their husband. The original post that lures Google readers to my blog isn’t much of a post at all. In fact, in it I ask readers for their suggestions on the topic, because I had absolutely no idea what to buy for my husband. Since that post, originally written in 2008, I’ve come across some great ideas. Here are a few of my favorites. (Most of the items highlighted in red contain links to similar products on Amazon.) LED Lanterns. We keep a few of these in the house in case our power gets knocked out. They are great for providing enough light to play cards or board games and even light up the bathroom if you need it. We also keep one of these in each car in case we are stranded on a dark and lonely night. Of course LED flashlights are a must have. We keep a handful of these in various rooms in the house and one in each car too. Headlamps. I know, I know you’re thinking “another light!” But trust me this one serves a different purpose. Headlamps are great when you are fixing cars, household appliances or just about anything else where you may have limited light. You can place them on your head and keep your hands free to do the real work. My husband LOVES these! Ever try to hold a flashlight while changing a toddler’s diaper. With headlamps you can have both hands free! They range in price from as low as $10 to $15 to as high as a few hundred. The more expensive ones usually burn brighter and more directly. With all those electronics you’ll certainly need batteries, so throw in a pack or two. Make certain you double check the type you need. There is nothing worse then buying something that needs AAAs and you have nothing but AAs in the house. Favorite candy or cookies. Some guys like to chomp on gum, others prefer something chewy like Starburst or chocolatey like M&Ms. Throw in a bag of whatever your husband loves. Odds are they’ll be eaten before the end of Christmas day. Walk inside any gourmet grocery store and you can spend hours picking expensive vinegar or olive oil from the shelves. If your husband is a foodie he might enjoy using a more expensive version of one of these staples. You can also look for unique bottles of honey or jam. Spices are another great gift for someone who loves to cook. Have you ever looked at the price of saffron? If your guy likes to cook try buying him a more expensive version of a spice he typically cooks with or buy him an ingredient he’s never tried before. Find a new recipe that includes the ingredient and tell him part of the gift is finding a night to cook together. If your guy doesn’t like to cook, but loves to eat, how about some unique hot sauces to spice up his meals? Tacos and enchiladas are a staple in our home, but dinner always feels a little extra special when you can add something unexpected to the meal. Does your guy love pancakes or waffles? Why not buy him a box and promise to make him breakfast in bed. Don’t forget to throw in a small bottle of maple syrup. My husband LOVES to eat movie theater popcorn. You could add a few bags to your husband’s stocking along with a new Blu-ray movie. Tell him you want to plan a date night where you light a fire in the fireplace and stay snug indoors. There are also all sorts of popcorn seasonings that might be fun to try. Consider buying vintage sodas too. For the man who savors a cold beer after a long day’s work you can search for a unique brand he’s never tried or buy him a special beer mug. Bottle openers are good ideas for stocking stuffers too. If your husband is like mine he likes to keep one near the fridge, one in the garage and one in the cooler for tailgating. If your spouse travels a lot for work think about buying him photo luggage tags or tags that are unique or unusual in shape. He won’t confuse his bag with the guy standing next to him ever again. What man doesn’t like to put his feet up at the end of the day? How about a pair of warm slippers. My husband prefers slippers with plastic soles so he can go take out the trash, pick up the newspaper or walk around the yard without ever having to put his shoes on. If your husband is anything like mine he could also use gloves, scarves or a warm winter hat. My husband tends to leave his gloves behind and often needs a spare pair mid way through the winter. If your guy loves his car consider buying him a car cleaning kit. Even better offer to help him clean it on a hot, sticky day next summer. If you have any other ideas or think I left something hot and juicy off the list feel free to leave a comment below. November 28, 2012 at 4:30 PM 4 comments $20 Voucher to Toys ‘R Us or Babies ‘R Us Just $10 Want to save a few extra dollars on toys or baby related items? If so, hurry over to Groupon where you can buy a $20 voucher to Toys“R”Us, Babies“R”Us for only $10. Make sure to read the fine print but as far as I can tell this Groupon would also be valid on baby related items like diapers or baby food. I don’t see any exclusions stating otherwise. November 27, 2012 at 10:46 AM Saying Goodbye To My Past Last week I wrote about my struggle to rid my home of sentimental clutter. Thankfully I received a bunch of great suggestions on how to pare down the mess. Among my favorites were picking out the very best items, removing duplicates and limiting the amount of stuff so that it all has to fit inside one small tote. I followed a similar set of rules when figuring out which of my son’s clothes to donate. It’s funny what I hold on to in life. After my son was born I had no problem boxing up all of my old clothes and dropping them off at the donation center. I didn’t want to look in the closet and think about the size I had been or the size I wanted to be. That decision seemed like an easy one to make. Keep some of the pregnancy related items in case another little one makes his or her way into the world, but discard just about everything else. I kept my pants, sweaters and sweatshirts, but most of my shirts, blouses and skirts went off in search of a better home. So if that’s so easy to decide why is it so difficult to get rid of other things. I’ve been holding on to an old pair of snowboard boots for the past seven years. Why? Because I didn’t want to face the fact that my health problems prevented me from returning to the slopes. Did keeping those boots in my closet help me snowboard again? No, in fact I felt worse about myself every time I saw them. So why did I hold on to them? The answer, (when I forced myself to think about it), was an easy one. I held on to them because I simply wasn’t ready to admit that my health and life had unexpectedly and unpleasantly changed. Sometimes we hold onto things because they represent a happier, or in my case healthier, time in our lives. It’s tough to let go of a past when the present and future look a less rosy. Interestingly enough I wasn’t even good at snow boarding. In fact I was downright terrible at it. I learned when I was in my early twenties and being 6 feet tall and not the least bit athletically inclined I spent more time sitting in the snow then gliding on top of it. So this weekend I dragged my old snow boots and a few pairs of snow pants out of the closet, threw them into the back of my car and sold them at a local sports store that buys and sells used equipment. I decided that though my body may never glide down the slope it has been very, very good to me. After all, it helped me conceive and carry my son, something that I didn’t think would be possible when I first got sick so many years ago. I am grateful for my current health and although not perfect I am thankful for my body. I hope those boots see the slopes again even if they won’t be strapped to my feet. November 26, 2012 at 7:30 PM Leave a comment Minimizing: How to Let Go of Sentimental Clutter? In 1999 I bought a children’s medical kit for $5. You know one of those plastic boxes full of pretend thermometers, stethoscopes and blood pressure monitors. I intended to use it as part of my Halloween costume, but changed my mind at the last minute and switched from dressing like a doctor to dressing like a school girl. Although I lived in a very tiny 9-by-9 room I found a small space to store that medical kit and when I bought and moved into my house it came with me. I held on to it with the intention of gifting it to my niece or nephew, but for one reason or another I kept forgetting to put it in the car. Thirteen years later I found myself digging through the basement in search of that little plastic box. I know I placed it somewhere among the toys we’ve been handed down from friends, former coworkers and my brother, but for the life of me I can’t remember where I placed it. I want to find that medical kit so my son and I can play with it. After all these years I want to make use of it. My niece and nephew are too old to care about it anymore. As I searched through the basement I came across all sorts of other treasures I’d forgotten about. The dolls I’ve held onto since I was a child. The essays I wrote in high school and college, complete with typing errors and bright red grades. Photographs dating back to the sixth grade. So many random pieces of my history that bring so many memories flushing back to me. I try to clear my house of unwanted clutter. I try my best to get rid of things we don’t use and don’t need. In my heart I know that I could digitize a lot of these things. I could scan the photographs into my computer, along with the old essays and other random things, but I’m not sure it will feel the same when I look at them. There is nothing quite like holding onto the very paper you wound into your typewriter. The white out marks won’t look the same from my computer screen. And viewing an old photograph won’t be nearly the same as holding one of those old fashioned Polaroid pictures in the palm of my hand. So what’s a girl to do? It’s not like I look at these things often. I know people who move a lot wouldn’t have the desire to box these up and move them from one place to another, but I don’t plan on moving anytime soon. Should I dedicate a small area of the house for these legacy items or finally give them the old heave-ho? November 22, 2012 at 10:51 PM 12 comments The Dreaded Christmas List My mom has been bugging me to create a Christmas list for weeks now. “Can’t you just sit down and come up with a list for me,” she asks. So I pour myself a large glass of ice water, plop into my favorite chair and stare at my laptop. I have every intention in the world of generating a neat, little row of bullets that will help make my life more complete. The trouble is my life is already complete and I can’t seem to think of a single thing in life that I want or need. I stand up, move about the house and walk from room to room waiting for inspiration to strike me. Nothing pops into my head. I stroll about for quite a bit, but still nothing. I wander into my closet. I could use some new sweaters, a jacket and a couple of long sleeve shirts, but buying clothes is unbelievably difficult. I’m over six feet tall and most brands simply don’t fit me. The only thing I dread more than creating this list is standing in line returning each and every article of clothing I receive on Christmas day. God bless my mom. She wants us to be excited for Christmas as we were when we were children. When you are a kid Christmas is awesome, because you have absolutely no money to your name, no means of transportation and thus no hopes of buying anything for yourself. As an adult you buy what you need when you need it, so there really isn’t a lot of sense in asking people to buy you something when you can drive to the store and get it yourself. My mom hates it when I give her a list of things we want with specific links to the places where she can buy them. She says there is no fun in that and while I agree I must say that it’s more fun that standing in long lines returning a bunch of stuff I didn’t want in the first place. It’s not just wasted time for me. She’s also wasting time walking from store to store in search of the perfect present. When we all know perfect doesn’t really exist. That seems like a lot of time and energy that could be spent in better ways. So this year I’m thinking about making a Christmas list with just one item. It’ll look a little something like this: Rather than spending countless hours walking through malls and searching the Internet for things we may or may not like I’d like my mom to grant me the gift of time. We can spend that time baking sugar cookies with my son, rolling out play dough, finger painting, walking through my neighborhood or just sitting together in the living room. I don’t really care how we spend the time as long as we spend it together. When all the presents are opened and Christmas day ends I can barely remember all that we received. With the gift of time we’ll have memories that will last forever. November 21, 2012 at 1:34 PM 3 comments Do You Downplay Your Joy? Over the course of my lifetime I’ve often downplayed my happiness and success. When I bought my second home I was hesitant to tell my friends and family about it. When I was promoted at work I decided to keep the news to myself. When I found out I was pregnant with my son I kept it a secret from all but two people for nearly four months. My life is absolutely amazing. I am happily married to a man who is the yin to my yang. I have an amazingly easy and happy baby who I stay home with every day. Minus some lingering issues I am in fairly good health. My parents are both alive and still happily married. I am close to my ninety year old grandmother who is still functional and thriving. I’m not saying my life is perfect, far from it, but in a world full of so many problems why does my life seem so easy? I often feel guilty about it. I tell my friends that I feel bad that my brother’s life isn’t as easy as mine. That I was born with a happy-go-lucky spirit while he was born with a down-in-the-dumps demeanor. I tell people I’m lucky to have this-that-and-the-other-thing rather than acknowledging the fact that my husband and I have worked hard to achieve our success. I always downplay the work we’ve put into our lives. There are people in much more difficult, physically grueling lines of work then my husband and I. It seems strange to say we’ve worked hard when I’ve witnessed people truly working hard high on roofs, in heat or trudging heavy supplies and equipment. I’ve never verbalized this before, but I suppose I feel unworthy of such happiness. Do I deserve to feel such joy? When others are struggling why am I so happy and fulfilled? I am very grateful for all that I have, but I guess I’m always worried that something will happen to make it all go away. As crazy as it sounds I’m nervous typing this into my computer right now. If I tell people just how wonderful I feel, will it all go away? I have friends and family who are perpetual worriers. They believe that every time something good happens something bad is sure to follow. I suppose some of that belief has rubbed off on me. The joy in my world is so great that sometimes it makes my heart hurt. It’s those little moments. You know the ones. Like when my son plays hide-and-seek and runs out from behind the furniture when he hears me coming to get him. When my husband scoops ice cream, drizzles chocolate over the top along with brightly colored sprinkles and brings it to me while I sit in the living room. Or how about the sound of my son giggling for absolutely no reason from the back of the car. It’s a sound that immediately makes me smile and melts my heart. I try my best to allow these moments to absorb into me. To pause and let the light shine into my heart and soul. To take a mental snapshot so I won’t forget how wonderful all of these tiny, every day moments feel. I am grateful for all that I have and I thank my lucky stars every night for all that I have been blessed with, but as I count my blessings I sometimes wonder how long this joy can last. Am I the only one who worries that happiness can be short lived? November 19, 2012 at 8:04 PM 6 comments This Is Much Harder Than I Thought It Would Be This week I decided to take a stab at the plastic containers full of baby clothes and toys in my basement. My original intent was to donate most of my son’s stuff to a local charity. Although I’m pretty sure my husband and I will try for a second child it seemed kind of silly to hold on to everything. After all, we don’t know if the child will be the same gender or born at the same time of year. So I started the great dig on Friday. Only moments into the first box I realized this was going to be a lot harder then I ever imagined. I started with my son’s earliest items, the clothes and blankets he wore during his very first days on this earth. Of course, I wanted to keep the onesie and blanket we brought him home in. Then there was the little hat a friend knitted and the swaddle blanket we dressed him in on his first day. “Okay, okay,” I thought, “those were no brainers. Now let’s find some things to donate.” The problem is that every little outfit brought memories flooding back to me. Every little terry cloth sleeper, every blanket, every little onesie made me smile. I can’t believe how much my son has grown in a year and every time I pulled an item out of the box I stared in disbelief at how little he once was. A friend of ours is expecting a baby in April. So I dug through the boxes and found a few sleepers and onesies that were super cute, but no where near favorites of mine. I found enough items to fill a large gift bag. My husband’s cousin is visiting this week and their son is a few months younger then my son but much smaller in size. I bundled up a few items that might fit him. Again they are super cute, but not really favorites of mine. Some of them were actually hand-me-downs from a former coworker of mine and a bunch of the items were never worn by my son. I didn’t get rid of nearly as much stuff as I expected. Despite the fact that I’ve taken thousands of photographs of my son in these clothes I couldn’t bear the thought of getting rid of them just yet. I’m not normally sentimental about stuff, but it was clear that this wasn’t going to be an easy process. I did decide to donate a bunch of holiday related clothing. Friends and family provided us with lots of Thanksgiving and Christmas gear that is really too cute to sit inside a box waiting for our next child. I also pulled out everything that I didn’t absolutely love. My son was given a lot of clothes from friends and family and then received a ton of hand-me-downs. If I felt a special affection for an item I kept it, if I didn’t think much about or thought it was cute, but not ridiculously adorable, then I donated it. All in all I ended up with three grocery bags full of baby clothes sized newborn to twelve months. I managed to cram all of the remaining baby clothes into one large plastic container. I also kept a smaller container with sleep related items like baby blankets and sleep sacks. It still seems like quite a lot of stuff, but my heart isn’t ready to pass it on to another family just yet. November 18, 2012 at 10:14 PM 4 comments Your Financial Future: Start Building Your Credit Rating Now Note: This is a sponsored post from Pounds to Pocket. The content for this post was provided by a guest author. Your Financial Future: Start Building Your Credit Rating Now We all hear about bad credit ratings and how restrictive it can be if you ever want to borrow money. So it’s not surprising that the current economic climate has made banks very wary about lending to people that have a history of not paying back their loans and it’s getting more and more difficult to borrow money. No Credit History Might As Well Be a Bad One But what happens if you don’t have a bad credit history, you simply haven’t got a credit history at all? If you have no credit rating, you’re likely to find it just as difficult to borrow money as someone that has a bad history! It all seems rather unfair. Why should you suffer just because you’ve never had to borrow money before? Well, yes, it is unfair, but you can see why a bank would be wary. How will they know that you are likely to repay the loan without any prior evidence? Start Building Your Credit Early The best thing to do is to start building your credit history early. Building up a good history of borrowing money and paying it back in full and on time is a great way to show the banks that you’re a good person to lend to. The earlier you start building up a history, the better your credit rating will be, and you shouldn’t have as much trouble securing something like a mortgage. It’s all well and good saying that you should build a credit history, but how should you actually go about it? Be Tactical with a Credit Card Most of us savers tend to stay away from credit cards like the plague, but they can certainly do some good if you use them sensibly. Set a low limit on your credit card Only use your credit card for regular purchases such as fuel or your weekly shop that you would usually use your debit card for Be sure that you will always have enough funds to pay off your credit card at the end of the month ALWAYS pay off your card in full every month! Don’t Ruin a Good Opportunity Before applying for any loan be it large banks loans or unsecured loans, it’s essential to know that you will be able to meet the regular payments and pay the loan back in full. If you apply and are approved for a loan, don’t waste this great opportunity to build your credit rating! Be sure to pay every installment in full and on time. This will all go on your credit history, which will directly affect your chances of securing a mortgage in the future. Similarly, however, if you miss payments, you could have a black mark against your name for quite some time. If you don’t have any credit history at all, the current economic climate certainly isn’t your friend; it’s made banks very reluctant to lend and even those with a great credit history are finding it difficult. It’s important that you have a good credit history behind you in life and now is the perfect time to start building it: what are you waiting for? The information in this article is provided for education and informational purposes only, without any express or implied warranty of any kind, including warranties of accuracy, completeness or fitness for any particular purpose. The information in this article is not intended to be and does not constitute financial or any other advice. The information in this article is general in nature and is not specific to you the user or anyone else. November 17, 2012 at 9:00 AM Leave a comment Book Review: My Life Map Ever wonder where you are headed or think hard about where you’ve been? Are you unsure of where your life might take you? Are you struggling to decide what you really want out of life, where you want to live, what you want to do for a living or how you want to spend your free time? Does everyone tell you to find your passion in life? That the best course of action is finding a job you truly love. How many times have we heard Oprah say “it’s not work if you love what you do” and wondered why you can’t figure out what you want to do? Kate and David Marshall, the authors of My Life Map, want to help shape your future. They’ve devised a workbook that steps you through a series of questions to help you narrow your focus and define your goals. This isn’t just about your career. It’s also about the people in your life, the places you should live, the service you want to impart on the world and how you want to learn and play. I thoroughly enjoyed reading this book and reflecting on its questions. The book begins by focusing on aspects of your past and present. You are asked to write down your strengths, the top ten significant events in your life thus far and the top five emotional highs and lows. You are even asked to grade yourself in various aspects of your life including work, love life, physical health and friends. After writing down the answers your goal is to search for patterns, themes and lessons. On one page you are asked to decide what aspects of your current life you want to keep and which you wish to change. As you reflect on your past and present the book guides you through the process of creating ten year and whole life maps. I like that this book focuses on ALL aspects of your life. It isn’t just about the job you do, it’s also about the people in your life, the service you commit to the world and the way you spend your free time. I know a couple of miserable folks who aren’t happy in their lives, but aren’t sure how to make things better. They know they are unhappy but they don’t know what they’d rather be doing. Unsure of where to turn they stay stuck in the exact same place day after day. I plan to lend my book to one particular family member. I hope it helps him reflect on his life and focus on a new path for the future. To learn more about My Life Map visit the BlogHer book club. Note: This is a paid review for BlogHer Book Club but the opinions expressed are my own. November 15, 2012 at 11:16 AM Leave a comment Older Posts Follow on Twitter Follow @OneFrugalGirl BlogHer Ads Other Stuff Compare Wonga loans Archives Select Month April 2014 March 2014 February 2014 January 2014 December 2013 November 2013 October 2013 September 2013 August 2013 July 2013 June 2013 May 2013 April 2013 March 2013 February 2013 January 2013 December 2012 November 2012 October 2012 September 2012 August 2012 July 2012 June 2012 May 2012 April 2012 March 2012 February 2012 January 2012 December 2011 November 2011 October 2011 September 2011 August 2011 July 2011 June 2011 May 2011 April 2011 March 2011 February 2011 January 2011 December 2010 November 2010 October 2010 September 2010 August 2010 July 2010 June 2010 May 2010 April 2010 March 2010 February 2010 January 2010 December 2009 November 2009 October 2009 September 2009 August 2009 July 2009 June 2009 May 2009 April 2009 March 2009 February 2009 January 2009 December 2008 November 2008 October 2008 September 2008 August 2008 July 2008 June 2008 May 2008 April 2008 March 2008 February 2008 January 2008 December 2007 November 2007 October 2007 September 2007 August 2007 July 2007 June 2007 May 2007 April 2007 March 2007 February 2007 January 2007 December 2006 November 2006 October 2006 August 2006 July 2006 June 2006 May 2006 April 2006 March 2006 Categories giving challenge haggling on behalf of rental home stay-at-home Stats Theme: Blix by Sebastian Schmieg . Get a free blog at WordPress.com
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1694
{"url": "http://www.onefrugalgirl.com/2012/11/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.onefrugalgirl.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:13:31Z", "digest": "sha1:6KIPMQ7ZEBYRECESPYULZJ43AC5FRGSX"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 28803, 28803.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 28803, 29855.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 28803, 115.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 28803, 189.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 28803, 0.97]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 28803, 305.9]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 28803, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 28803, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 28803, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 28803, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 28803, 0.4590373]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 28803, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 28803, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 28803, 0.02083698]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 28803, 0.01335143]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 28803, 0.00752933]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 28803, 0.00752933]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 28803, 0.00752933]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 28803, 0.00372089]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 28803, 0.00315181]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 28803, 0.00402732]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 28803, 0.03267453]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 28803, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 28803, 0.1283073]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 28803, 0.25004576]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 28803, 4.18158521]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 28803, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 28803, 6.10787426]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 28803, 5463.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 16, 0.0], [16, 53, 1.0], [53, 442, 1.0], [442, 783, 1.0], [783, 1011, 1.0], [1011, 1493, 1.0], [1493, 1771, 1.0], [1771, 1855, 0.0], [1855, 2119, 1.0], [2119, 2409, 1.0], [2409, 2525, 0.0], [2525, 2819, 1.0], [2819, 2944, 1.0], [2944, 3534, 1.0], [3534, 3774, 1.0], [3774, 4009, 1.0], [4009, 4281, 1.0], [4281, 4653, 1.0], [4653, 4906, 1.0], [4906, 5066, 1.0], [5066, 5407, 1.0], [5407, 5728, 1.0], [5728, 5924, 1.0], [5924, 6190, 1.0], [6190, 6385, 1.0], [6385, 6524, 1.0], [6524, 6641, 1.0], [6641, 6732, 0.0], [6732, 7083, 1.0], [7083, 7139, 0.0], [7139, 7543, 1.0], [7543, 8112, 1.0], [8112, 8734, 1.0], [8734, 8919, 1.0], [8919, 9190, 1.0], [9190, 9716, 1.0], [9716, 9799, 1.0], [9799, 9894, 1.0], [9894, 10218, 1.0], [10218, 10511, 1.0], [10511, 10787, 1.0], [10787, 10959, 1.0], [10959, 11331, 1.0], [11331, 11662, 1.0], [11662, 11950, 1.0], [11950, 12276, 1.0], [12276, 12345, 0.0], [12345, 12818, 1.0], [12818, 13346, 1.0], [13346, 13789, 1.0], [13789, 14074, 1.0], [14074, 14318, 1.0], [14318, 14435, 0.0], [14435, 14851, 1.0], [14851, 15017, 1.0], [15017, 15083, 1.0], [15083, 15423, 1.0], [15423, 15775, 1.0], [15775, 16102, 1.0], [16102, 16566, 1.0], [16566, 16741, 1.0], [16741, 17002, 1.0], [17002, 17193, 1.0], [17193, 17736, 1.0], [17736, 17950, 1.0], [17950, 18202, 1.0], [18202, 18289, 0.0], [18289, 18688, 1.0], [18688, 18940, 1.0], [18940, 19521, 1.0], [19521, 19738, 1.0], [19738, 20086, 1.0], [20086, 20393, 1.0], [20393, 20601, 1.0], [20601, 21016, 1.0], [21016, 21304, 1.0], [21304, 21406, 0.0], [21406, 21518, 1.0], [21518, 21579, 0.0], [21579, 21895, 1.0], [21895, 21940, 0.0], [21940, 22425, 1.0], [22425, 22458, 0.0], [22458, 22842, 1.0], [22842, 22953, 1.0], [22953, 22984, 0.0], [22984, 23117, 1.0], [23117, 23153, 0.0], [23153, 23281, 0.0], [23281, 23380, 0.0], [23380, 23426, 1.0], [23426, 23456, 0.0], [23456, 23740, 1.0], [23740, 24022, 1.0], [24022, 24379, 1.0], [24379, 24823, 1.0], [24823, 24893, 0.0], [24893, 25176, 1.0], [25176, 25431, 1.0], [25431, 25825, 1.0], [25825, 26432, 1.0], [26432, 26764, 1.0], [26764, 27166, 1.0], [27166, 27227, 1.0], [27227, 27316, 1.0], [27316, 27374, 0.0], [27374, 27414, 0.0], [27414, 27458, 0.0], [27458, 28666, 0.0], [28666, 28683, 0.0], [28683, 28692, 0.0], [28692, 28705, 0.0], [28705, 28717, 0.0], [28717, 28730, 0.0], [28730, 28803, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 16, 0.0], [16, 53, 0.0], [53, 442, 0.0], [442, 783, 0.0], [783, 1011, 0.0], [1011, 1493, 0.0], [1493, 1771, 0.0], [1771, 1855, 0.0], [1855, 2119, 0.0], [2119, 2409, 0.0], [2409, 2525, 0.0], [2525, 2819, 0.0], [2819, 2944, 0.0], [2944, 3534, 0.0], [3534, 3774, 0.0], [3774, 4009, 0.0], [4009, 4281, 0.0], [4281, 4653, 0.0], [4653, 4906, 0.0], [4906, 5066, 0.0], [5066, 5407, 0.0], [5407, 5728, 0.0], [5728, 5924, 0.0], [5924, 6190, 0.0], [6190, 6385, 0.0], [6385, 6524, 0.0], [6524, 6641, 0.0], [6641, 6732, 0.0], [6732, 7083, 0.0], [7083, 7139, 0.0], [7139, 7543, 0.0], [7543, 8112, 0.0], [8112, 8734, 0.0], [8734, 8919, 0.0], [8919, 9190, 0.0], [9190, 9716, 0.0], [9716, 9799, 0.0], [9799, 9894, 0.0], [9894, 10218, 0.0], [10218, 10511, 0.0], [10511, 10787, 0.0], [10787, 10959, 0.0], [10959, 11331, 0.0], [11331, 11662, 0.0], [11662, 11950, 0.0], [11950, 12276, 0.0], [12276, 12345, 0.0], [12345, 12818, 0.0], [12818, 13346, 0.0], [13346, 13789, 0.0], [13789, 14074, 0.0], [14074, 14318, 0.0], [14318, 14435, 0.0], [14435, 14851, 0.0], [14851, 15017, 0.0], [15017, 15083, 0.0], [15083, 15423, 0.0], [15423, 15775, 0.0], [15775, 16102, 0.0], [16102, 16566, 0.0], [16566, 16741, 0.0], [16741, 17002, 0.0], [17002, 17193, 0.0], [17193, 17736, 0.0], [17736, 17950, 0.0], [17950, 18202, 0.0], [18202, 18289, 0.0], [18289, 18688, 0.0], [18688, 18940, 0.0], [18940, 19521, 0.0], [19521, 19738, 0.0], [19738, 20086, 0.0], [20086, 20393, 0.0], [20393, 20601, 0.0], [20601, 21016, 0.0], [21016, 21304, 0.0], [21304, 21406, 0.0], [21406, 21518, 0.0], [21518, 21579, 0.0], [21579, 21895, 0.0], [21895, 21940, 0.0], [21940, 22425, 0.0], [22425, 22458, 0.0], [22458, 22842, 0.0], [22842, 22953, 0.0], [22953, 22984, 0.0], [22984, 23117, 0.0], [23117, 23153, 0.0], [23153, 23281, 0.0], [23281, 23380, 0.0], [23380, 23426, 0.0], [23426, 23456, 0.0], [23456, 23740, 0.0], [23740, 24022, 0.0], [24022, 24379, 0.0], [24379, 24823, 0.0], [24823, 24893, 0.0], [24893, 25176, 0.0], [25176, 25431, 0.0], [25431, 25825, 0.0], [25825, 26432, 0.0], [26432, 26764, 0.0], [26764, 27166, 0.0], [27166, 27227, 0.0], [27227, 27316, 0.0], [27316, 27374, 0.0], [27374, 27414, 0.0], [27414, 27458, 0.0], [27458, 28666, 0.0], [28666, 28683, 0.0], [28683, 28692, 0.0], [28692, 28705, 0.0], [28705, 28717, 0.0], [28717, 28730, 0.0], [28730, 28803, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 16, 3.0], [16, 53, 6.0], [53, 442, 75.0], [442, 783, 59.0], [783, 1011, 49.0], [1011, 1493, 88.0], [1493, 1771, 51.0], [1771, 1855, 15.0], [1855, 2119, 46.0], [2119, 2409, 55.0], [2409, 2525, 21.0], [2525, 2819, 61.0], [2819, 2944, 26.0], [2944, 3534, 107.0], [3534, 3774, 43.0], [3774, 4009, 41.0], [4009, 4281, 50.0], [4281, 4653, 71.0], [4653, 4906, 48.0], [4906, 5066, 32.0], [5066, 5407, 64.0], [5407, 5728, 64.0], [5728, 5924, 38.0], [5924, 6190, 54.0], [6190, 6385, 37.0], [6385, 6524, 28.0], [6524, 6641, 24.0], [6641, 6732, 20.0], [6732, 7083, 68.0], [7083, 7139, 11.0], [7139, 7543, 75.0], [7543, 8112, 114.0], [8112, 8734, 122.0], [8734, 8919, 36.0], [8919, 9190, 52.0], [9190, 9716, 106.0], [9716, 9799, 17.0], [9799, 9894, 17.0], [9894, 10218, 58.0], [10218, 10511, 63.0], [10511, 10787, 50.0], [10787, 10959, 39.0], [10959, 11331, 67.0], [11331, 11662, 69.0], [11662, 11950, 52.0], [11950, 12276, 66.0], [12276, 12345, 12.0], [12345, 12818, 97.0], [12818, 13346, 98.0], [13346, 13789, 87.0], [13789, 14074, 61.0], [14074, 14318, 46.0], [14318, 14435, 21.0], [14435, 14851, 76.0], [14851, 15017, 30.0], [15017, 15083, 13.0], [15083, 15423, 68.0], [15423, 15775, 68.0], [15775, 16102, 65.0], [16102, 16566, 78.0], [16566, 16741, 32.0], [16741, 17002, 53.0], [17002, 17193, 34.0], [17193, 17736, 103.0], [17736, 17950, 43.0], [17950, 18202, 52.0], [18202, 18289, 18.0], [18289, 18688, 81.0], [18688, 18940, 49.0], [18940, 19521, 110.0], [19521, 19738, 44.0], [19738, 20086, 68.0], [20086, 20393, 58.0], [20393, 20601, 38.0], [20601, 21016, 79.0], [21016, 21304, 54.0], [21304, 21406, 17.0], [21406, 21518, 21.0], [21518, 21579, 9.0], [21579, 21895, 58.0], [21895, 21940, 10.0], [21940, 22425, 93.0], [22425, 22458, 5.0], [22458, 22842, 73.0], [22842, 22953, 21.0], [22953, 22984, 6.0], [22984, 23117, 26.0], [23117, 23153, 8.0], [23153, 23281, 24.0], [23281, 23380, 21.0], [23380, 23426, 9.0], [23426, 23456, 5.0], [23456, 23740, 53.0], [23740, 24022, 51.0], [24022, 24379, 64.0], [24379, 24823, 72.0], [24823, 24893, 14.0], [24893, 25176, 57.0], [25176, 25431, 52.0], [25431, 25825, 74.0], [25825, 26432, 109.0], [26432, 26764, 66.0], [26764, 27166, 80.0], [27166, 27227, 12.0], [27227, 27316, 17.0], [27316, 27374, 11.0], [27374, 27414, 5.0], [27414, 27458, 7.0], [27458, 28666, 198.0], [28666, 28683, 2.0], [28683, 28692, 1.0], [28692, 28705, 3.0], [28705, 28717, 2.0], [28717, 28730, 1.0], [28730, 28803, 12.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 16, 0.0], [16, 53, 0.15151515], [53, 442, 0.0], [442, 783, 0.04268293], [783, 1011, 0.0], [1011, 1493, 0.01498929], [1493, 1771, 0.0], [1771, 1855, 0.1375], [1855, 2119, 0.0], [2119, 2409, 0.0141844], [2409, 2525, 0.0], [2525, 2819, 0.0], [2819, 2944, 0.0], [2944, 3534, 0.00695652], [3534, 3774, 0.0], [3774, 4009, 0.0], [4009, 4281, 0.0], [4281, 4653, 0.0], [4653, 4906, 0.0], [4906, 5066, 0.0], [5066, 5407, 0.0], [5407, 5728, 0.0], [5728, 5924, 0.0], [5924, 6190, 0.0], [6190, 6385, 0.0], [6385, 6524, 0.0], [6524, 6641, 0.0], [6641, 6732, 0.1627907], [6732, 7083, 0.01169591], [7083, 7139, 0.18867925], [7139, 7543, 0.0], [7543, 8112, 0.0], [8112, 8734, 0.0], [8734, 8919, 0.0], [8919, 9190, 0.00374532], [9190, 9716, 0.0], [9716, 9799, 0.0], [9799, 9894, 0.1], [9894, 10218, 0.01577287], [10218, 10511, 0.00696864], [10511, 10787, 0.0], [10787, 10959, 0.0], [10959, 11331, 0.0], [11331, 11662, 0.0], [11662, 11950, 0.0], [11950, 12276, 0.0], [12276, 12345, 0.18181818], [12345, 12818, 0.0], [12818, 13346, 0.0], [13346, 13789, 0.0], [13789, 14074, 0.0], [14074, 14318, 0.0], [14318, 14435, 0.0], [14435, 14851, 0.0], [14851, 15017, 0.0], [15017, 15083, 0.16129032], [15083, 15423, 0.0], [15423, 15775, 0.0], [15775, 16102, 0.0], [16102, 16566, 0.0], [16566, 16741, 0.0], [16741, 17002, 0.0], [17002, 17193, 0.0], [17193, 17736, 0.0], [17736, 17950, 0.0], [17950, 18202, 0.0], [18202, 18289, 0.11904762], [18289, 18688, 0.0], [18688, 18940, 0.0], [18940, 19521, 0.0], [19521, 19738, 0.0], [19738, 20086, 0.0], [20086, 20393, 0.0], [20393, 20601, 0.0], [20601, 21016, 0.0], [21016, 21304, 0.0], [21304, 21406, 0.1122449], [21406, 21518, 0.0], [21518, 21579, 0.0], [21579, 21895, 0.0], [21895, 21940, 0.0], [21940, 22425, 0.0], [22425, 22458, 0.0], [22458, 22842, 0.0], [22842, 22953, 0.0], [22953, 22984, 0.0], [22984, 23117, 0.0], [23117, 23153, 0.0], [23153, 23281, 0.0], [23281, 23380, 0.0], [23380, 23426, 0.0], [23426, 23456, 0.0], [23456, 23740, 0.0], [23740, 24022, 0.0], [24022, 24379, 0.0], [24379, 24823, 0.0], [24823, 24893, 0.13636364], [24893, 25176, 0.0], [25176, 25431, 0.0], [25431, 25825, 0.0], [25825, 26432, 0.0], [26432, 26764, 0.0], [26764, 27166, 0.0], [27166, 27227, 0.0], [27227, 27316, 0.0], [27316, 27374, 0.18181818], [27374, 27414, 0.0], [27414, 27458, 0.0], [27458, 28666, 0.32145816], [28666, 28683, 0.0], [28683, 28692, 0.0], [28692, 28705, 0.0], [28705, 28717, 0.0], [28717, 28730, 0.0], [28730, 28803, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 16, 0.0], [16, 53, 0.0], [53, 442, 0.0], [442, 783, 0.0], [783, 1011, 0.0], [1011, 1493, 0.0], [1493, 1771, 0.0], [1771, 1855, 0.0], [1855, 2119, 0.0], [2119, 2409, 0.0], [2409, 2525, 0.0], [2525, 2819, 0.0], [2819, 2944, 0.0], [2944, 3534, 0.0], [3534, 3774, 0.0], [3774, 4009, 0.0], [4009, 4281, 0.0], [4281, 4653, 0.0], [4653, 4906, 0.0], [4906, 5066, 0.0], [5066, 5407, 0.0], [5407, 5728, 0.0], [5728, 5924, 0.0], [5924, 6190, 0.0], [6190, 6385, 0.0], [6385, 6524, 0.0], [6524, 6641, 0.0], [6641, 6732, 0.0], [6732, 7083, 0.0], [7083, 7139, 0.0], [7139, 7543, 0.0], [7543, 8112, 0.0], [8112, 8734, 0.0], [8734, 8919, 0.0], [8919, 9190, 0.0], [9190, 9716, 0.0], [9716, 9799, 0.0], [9799, 9894, 0.0], [9894, 10218, 0.0], [10218, 10511, 0.0], [10511, 10787, 0.0], [10787, 10959, 0.0], [10959, 11331, 0.0], [11331, 11662, 0.0], [11662, 11950, 0.0], [11950, 12276, 0.0], [12276, 12345, 0.0], [12345, 12818, 0.0], [12818, 13346, 0.0], [13346, 13789, 0.0], [13789, 14074, 0.0], [14074, 14318, 0.0], [14318, 14435, 0.0], [14435, 14851, 0.0], [14851, 15017, 0.0], [15017, 15083, 0.0], [15083, 15423, 0.0], [15423, 15775, 0.0], [15775, 16102, 0.0], [16102, 16566, 0.0], [16566, 16741, 0.0], [16741, 17002, 0.0], [17002, 17193, 0.0], [17193, 17736, 0.0], [17736, 17950, 0.0], [17950, 18202, 0.0], [18202, 18289, 0.0], [18289, 18688, 0.0], [18688, 18940, 0.0], [18940, 19521, 0.0], [19521, 19738, 0.0], [19738, 20086, 0.0], [20086, 20393, 0.0], [20393, 20601, 0.0], [20601, 21016, 0.0], [21016, 21304, 0.0], [21304, 21406, 0.0], [21406, 21518, 0.0], [21518, 21579, 0.0], [21579, 21895, 0.0], [21895, 21940, 0.0], [21940, 22425, 0.0], [22425, 22458, 0.0], [22458, 22842, 0.0], [22842, 22953, 0.0], [22953, 22984, 0.0], [22984, 23117, 0.0], [23117, 23153, 0.0], [23153, 23281, 0.0], [23281, 23380, 0.0], [23380, 23426, 0.0], [23426, 23456, 0.0], [23456, 23740, 0.0], [23740, 24022, 0.0], [24022, 24379, 0.0], [24379, 24823, 0.0], [24823, 24893, 0.0], [24893, 25176, 0.0], [25176, 25431, 0.0], [25431, 25825, 0.0], [25825, 26432, 0.0], [26432, 26764, 0.0], [26764, 27166, 0.0], [27166, 27227, 0.0], [27227, 27316, 0.0], [27316, 27374, 0.0], [27374, 27414, 0.0], [27414, 27458, 0.0], [27458, 28666, 0.0], [28666, 28683, 0.0], [28683, 28692, 0.0], [28692, 28705, 0.0], [28705, 28717, 0.0], [28717, 28730, 0.0], [28730, 28803, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 16, 0.1875], [16, 53, 0.13513514], [53, 442, 0.01028278], [442, 783, 0.01759531], [783, 1011, 0.01315789], [1011, 1493, 0.02074689], [1493, 1771, 0.01798561], [1771, 1855, 0.10714286], [1855, 2119, 0.02272727], [2119, 2409, 0.02413793], [2409, 2525, 0.02586207], [2525, 2819, 0.02380952], [2819, 2944, 0.04], [2944, 3534, 0.02711864], [3534, 3774, 0.03333333], [3774, 4009, 0.03404255], [4009, 4281, 0.01102941], [4281, 4653, 0.01075269], [4653, 4906, 0.00790514], [4906, 5066, 0.01875], [5066, 5407, 0.03225806], [5407, 5728, 0.00934579], [5728, 5924, 0.01020408], [5924, 6190, 0.0112782], [6190, 6385, 0.01025641], [6385, 6524, 0.01438849], [6524, 6641, 0.01709402], [6641, 6732, 0.12087912], [6732, 7083, 0.03703704], [7083, 7139, 0.14285714], [7139, 7543, 0.01485149], [7543, 8112, 0.01757469], [8112, 8734, 0.02411576], [8734, 8919, 0.01081081], [8919, 9190, 0.02583026], [9190, 9716, 0.01520913], [9716, 9799, 0.01204819], [9799, 9894, 0.10526316], [9894, 10218, 0.0154321], [10218, 10511, 0.02047782], [10511, 10787, 0.02173913], [10787, 10959, 0.02906977], [10959, 11331, 0.02956989], [11331, 11662, 0.02416918], [11662, 11950, 0.01388889], [11950, 12276, 0.02147239], [12276, 12345, 0.10144928], [12345, 12818, 0.01902748], [12818, 13346, 0.01893939], [13346, 13789, 0.01354402], [13789, 14074, 0.02105263], [14074, 14318, 0.01639344], [14318, 14435, 0.03418803], [14435, 14851, 0.01201923], [14851, 15017, 0.02409639], [15017, 15083, 0.12121212], [15083, 15423, 0.03529412], [15423, 15775, 0.02272727], [15775, 16102, 0.01834862], [16102, 16566, 0.01724138], [16566, 16741, 0.04], [16741, 17002, 0.03448276], [17002, 17193, 0.01570681], [17193, 17736, 0.01473297], [17736, 17950, 0.01869159], [17950, 18202, 0.03174603], [18202, 18289, 0.14942529], [18289, 18688, 0.01754386], [18688, 18940, 0.02777778], [18940, 19521, 0.01893287], [19521, 19738, 0.02304147], [19738, 20086, 0.01149425], [20086, 20393, 0.01954397], [20393, 20601, 0.01923077], [20601, 21016, 0.02409639], [21016, 21304, 0.01041667], [21304, 21406, 0.11764706], [21406, 21518, 0.04464286], [21518, 21579, 0.14754098], [21579, 21895, 0.00632911], [21895, 21940, 0.2], [21940, 22425, 0.01237113], [22425, 22458, 0.15151515], [22458, 22842, 0.0078125], [22842, 22953, 0.00900901], [22953, 22984, 0.12903226], [22984, 23117, 0.0075188], [23117, 23153, 0.02777778], [23153, 23281, 0.0078125], [23281, 23380, 0.01010101], [23380, 23426, 0.13043478], [23426, 23456, 0.13333333], [23456, 23740, 0.00704225], [23740, 24022, 0.0106383], [24022, 24379, 0.00560224], [24379, 24823, 0.00675676], [24823, 24893, 0.12857143], [24893, 25176, 0.01060071], [25176, 25431, 0.01568627], [25431, 25825, 0.02284264], [25825, 26432, 0.00988468], [26432, 26764, 0.01807229], [26764, 27166, 0.01243781], [27166, 27227, 0.09836066], [27227, 27316, 0.06741573], [27316, 27374, 0.10344828], [27374, 27414, 0.15], [27414, 27458, 0.15909091], [27458, 28666, 0.08360927], [28666, 28683, 0.0], [28683, 28692, 0.0], [28692, 28705, 0.0], [28705, 28717, 0.0], [28717, 28730, 0.0], [28730, 28803, 0.10958904]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 28803, 0.04777968]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 28803, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 28803, 0.02394468]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 28803, -1418.58043368]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 28803, 3.95791052]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 28803, -3501.94914366]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 28803, 296.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
the candidate's Personal score meets the Economic score on the grid below is the candidate's political philosophy. Based on the above score, the candidate is a Hard-Core Conservative.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1695
{"url": "http://www.ontheissues.org/VoteMatch/candidate_map.asp?a1=5&a2=3&a3=5&a4=1&a5=2&a6=1&a7=2&a8=4&a9=1&a10=1&a11=5&a12=2&a13=2&a14=5&a15=4&a16=2&a17=2&a18=3&a19=5&a20=5&i1=1&i2=1&i3=1&i4=1&p=10&e=80&t=5", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.ontheissues.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:22:46Z", "digest": "sha1:RWZYJKICWTWVPSSHLARKLHYQUGDD3F2X"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 183, 183.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 183, 8348.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 183, 1.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 183, 184.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 183, 0.85]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 183, 183.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 183, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 183, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 183, 1.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 183, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 183, 0.40540541]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 183, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 183, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 183, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 183, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 183, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 183, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 183, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 183, 0.17333333]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 183, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 183, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 183, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 183, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 183, 0.16216216]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 183, 0.64285714]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 183, 5.35714286]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 183, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 183, 2.68201605]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 183, 28.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 183, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 183, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 183, 28.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 183, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 183, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 183, 0.03278689]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 183, 0.20905811]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 183, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 183, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 183, -2.44624607]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 183, 4.65613188]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 183, 4.21370972]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 183, 2.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
the candidate's Personal score meets the Economic score on the grid below is the candidate's political philosophy. Based on the above score, the candidate is a Libertarian-Leaning Conservative.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1696
{"url": "http://www.ontheissues.org/VoteMatch/candidate_map.asp?a1=5&a2=4&a3=5&a4=1&a8=5&a9=1&a10=1&a5=4&a6=1&a7=1&a14=5&a15=5&a16=2&a19=1&a17=2&a18=3&a20=5&a11=5&a12=4&a13=5&i1=1&i2=1&i3=1&i4=1&p=28&e=80&t=10", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.ontheissues.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:18:21Z", "digest": "sha1:YDOKTLYCOZXWAALCJH5C45VTKEXINOOL"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 193, 193.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 193, 8358.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 193, 1.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 193, 184.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 193, 0.86]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 193, 175.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 193, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 193, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 193, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 193, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 193, 0.40540541]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 193, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 193, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 193, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 193, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 193, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 193, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 193, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 193, 0.1625]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 193, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 193, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 193, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 193, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 193, 0.16216216]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 193, 0.64285714]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 193, 5.71428571]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 193, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 193, 2.68201605]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 193, 28.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 193, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 193, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 193, 28.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 193, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 193, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 193, 0.03108808]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 193, 0.20195729]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 193, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 193, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 193, 0.73167365]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 193, 4.44933697]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 193, 3.93507582]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 193, 2.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
'Real Housewives of New York' cast members Jill Zarin, Kelly Bensimon and Alex McCord will not return Get more: TV, 'The Real Housewives of New York City' 09/18/2011 by Kristina Lopez Jill Zarin, Kelly Bensimon, Cindy Barshop and Alex McCord are officially out of "The Real Housewives of New York" season 5, the network confirmed on Saturday. Related NewsPhotos: 'Real Housewives of Miami' cast Stories:'Real Housewives of Beverly Hills' cast talks Russell Armstrong suicide on 'Today' - See video'Real Housewives of Beverly Hills' premiere to be delayed in wake of Russell Armstrong's death?'Real Housewives of D.C.' canceled after one seasonRumors began early last week that Zarin, 47, Bensimon, 43, and McCord, 37, were fired from the show. However, the cast members and the network initially remained mum about the rumors, with the exception of Zarin's spokesperson who claimed that she was still negotiating with the network. "Ramona Singer, Sonja Morgan and LuAnn DeLesseps will be returning for season five of 'The Real Housewives of New York City,'" a spokesperson for Bravo said in a statement to The Hollywood Reporter. "We've had a fabulous run with all the ladies and appreciate them sharing their lives with our viewers. It is a friendly departure among the other ladies and we continue to have ongoing discussions with them." Singer, 54, and DeLesseps, 46, are the last two original cast members to still appear on the series. Morgan, 47, joined the show in season 3. Zarin and McCord were also original cast members while Bensimon joined the show in season 2 and Barahop came on to the show in season 4. When the industry paper reached out to Zarin, her spokesperson said that the reality star was out of town but "is humbled by the extraordinary amount of media interest in her response and looks forward to personally opening up about all of this very soon and announcing some exciting new projects." Meanwhile McCord's husband Simon van Kampen, who also appeared on the series, released a statement to the Hollywood Reporter that said, "Alex and I are sad that it's come to this. We had a great four years. We don't intend for this to be the final time you'll see us on television. Everything happens for a reason. We are not happy, we're not sad. It is what it is. We thank our fans."
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1697
{"url": "http://www.ontheredcarpet.com/Real-Housewives-of-New-York-cast-members-Jill-Zarin--Kelly-Bensimon-and-Alex-McCord-will-not-return/8358881", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.ontheredcarpet.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:16:26Z", "digest": "sha1:SX7ZSPPFTEJFUS37KJQPHYROXJOQCSHC"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2303, 2303.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2303, 2659.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2303, 6.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2303, 11.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2303, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2303, 271.9]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2303, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2303, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2303, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2303, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2303, 0.37759336]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2303, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2303, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2303, 0.11986864]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2303, 0.08429119]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2303, 0.04926108]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2303, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2303, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2303, 0.05254516]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2303, 0.04378763]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2303, 0.04159825]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2303, 0.00829876]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2303, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2303, 0.18879668]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2303, 0.51282051]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2303, 4.68461538]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2303, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2303, 4.90516124]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2303, 390.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 102, 0.0], [102, 155, 0.0], [155, 184, 0.0], [184, 363, 0.0], [363, 395, 0.0], [395, 2303, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 102, 0.0], [102, 155, 0.0], [155, 184, 0.0], [184, 363, 0.0], [363, 395, 0.0], [395, 2303, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 102, 17.0], [102, 155, 10.0], [155, 184, 4.0], [184, 363, 28.0], [363, 395, 5.0], [395, 2303, 326.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 102, 0.0], [102, 155, 0.0], [155, 184, 0.30769231], [184, 363, 0.00584795], [363, 395, 0.0], [395, 2303, 0.00815661]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 102, 0.0], [102, 155, 0.0], [155, 184, 0.0], [184, 363, 0.0], [363, 395, 0.0], [395, 2303, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 102, 0.10784314], [102, 155, 0.16981132], [155, 184, 0.06896552], [184, 363, 0.10055866], [363, 395, 0.09375], [395, 2303, 0.03773585]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2303, 0.88531971]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2303, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2303, 0.97940189]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2303, -37.24678261]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2303, 43.5147565]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2303, -7.70824492]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2303, 20.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
Commodities Briefing - Categorized | Bullion/Gold, Listings/IPO/Stock Market, Metals and Minerals more Mining shares seen outperforming gold in rising price environment Posted on 26 September 2013 Tweet Gold-mining stocks are likely to outperform gold itself if the metal returns to a rising price environment, said fund managers and mining analysts attending the Denver Gold Forum. Historically, this has been the case. But there was a spell during gold’s long bull run when the metal was outpacing mining shares………………………………………..Full Article: Source
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1698
{"url": "http://www.opalesque.com/Commodities_Briefing/?p=127451", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.opalesque.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:40:26Z", "digest": "sha1:OHK6BJWKFLRQ2KMFBFIN3O2UW3S2QZZH"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 550, 550.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 550, 7576.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 550, 4.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 550, 137.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 550, 0.9]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 550, 206.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 550, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 550, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 550, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 550, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 550, 0.28282828]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 550, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 550, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 550, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 550, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 550, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 550, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 550, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 550, 0.04824561]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 550, 0.09649123]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 550, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 550, 0.01010101]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 550, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 550, 0.17171717]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 550, 0.80769231]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 550, 5.84615385]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 550, 0.15151515]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 550, 4.05892413]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 550, 78.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 103, 0.0], [103, 169, 0.0], [169, 203, 0.0], [203, 550, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 103, 0.0], [103, 169, 0.0], [169, 203, 0.0], [203, 550, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 103, 10.0], [103, 169, 9.0], [169, 203, 6.0], [203, 550, 53.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 103, 0.0], [103, 169, 0.0], [169, 203, 0.18181818], [203, 550, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 103, 0.0], [103, 169, 0.0], [169, 203, 0.0], [203, 550, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 103, 0.12621359], [103, 169, 0.01515152], [169, 203, 0.08823529], [203, 550, 0.0259366]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 550, 2.539e-05]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 550, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 550, -5.48e-06]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 550, -42.59771912]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 550, -5.41292416]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 550, -26.53569229]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 550, 4.0]], "is_duplicate": false}
Islamic Finance Briefing - Categorized | Bonds (Sukuk), Market Moves more Islamic bond market to remain buoyant Posted on 23 November 2011 Tweet Islamic bond issues, which have outpaced the conventional bonds industry in recent months, should continue to show strength into the first quarter of 2012 as borrowers seek better pricing and alternative funding amid the global debt crisis, Islamic bankers said. Both conventional and Islamic institutions, as well as global sovereigns, have been flocking to the Islamic bond, or sukuk, market, creating an unusually active fourth quarter………………………………………..Full Article: Source
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/1699
{"url": "http://www.opalesque.com/IslamicFinance_Briefing/?p=14451", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.opalesque.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:29:32Z", "digest": "sha1:DKQC5M3JOO7ZLIEPJOQJZHLXG6RJFZ3W"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 620, 620.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 620, 6656.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 620, 5.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 620, 109.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 620, 0.9]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 620, 185.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 620, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 620, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 620, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 620, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 620, 0.26666667]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 620, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 620, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 620, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 620, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 620, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 620, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 620, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 620, 0.06432749]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 620, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 620, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 620, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 620, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 620, 0.17142857]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 620, 0.75280899]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 620, 5.76404494]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 620, 0.14285714]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 620, 4.06395269]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 620, 89.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 74, 0.0], [74, 112, 0.0], [112, 145, 0.0], [145, 408, 1.0], [408, 620, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 74, 0.0], [74, 112, 0.0], [112, 145, 0.0], [145, 408, 0.0], [408, 620, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 74, 9.0], [74, 112, 6.0], [112, 145, 6.0], [145, 408, 40.0], [408, 620, 28.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 74, 0.0], [74, 112, 0.0], [112, 145, 0.1875], [145, 408, 0.01550388], [408, 620, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 74, 0.0], [74, 112, 0.0], [112, 145, 0.0], [145, 408, 0.0], [408, 620, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 74, 0.10810811], [74, 112, 0.02631579], [112, 145, 0.09090909], [145, 408, 0.00760456], [408, 620, 0.02830189]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 620, 0.00032556]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 620, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 620, 5.388e-05]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 620, -27.14793957]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 620, 3.50516593]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 620, 1.17484605]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 620, 3.0]], "is_duplicate": true}