text
stringlengths 258
1.62k
| id
stringlengths 5
13
| seed
stringclasses 71
values | preceding_context
stringlengths 54
870
| trailing_context
stringlengths 50
691
| matching_sentence
stringlengths 51
808
| correlations
listlengths 1
24
| max_attention_score
float64 0
0.18
| max_found_at
stringclasses 3
values |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
The first woman speaker at the DEC was Catherine Curtis on November 1, 1937, and she spoke on "The Housewife as Capitalist." The first Black speaker was Lester Granger, President of the National Urban League, on January 19, 1948. Other speakers include Soviet Ambassador to the U.S. Antoly Dobrynin, Bruno Kreisky when he was the Australian Chancellor, and Ambassador of the Republic of Cuba to the U.S. Jose Ramon Cabanas Rodriguez. Presidents (DEC Presidents)
The President of the Club, historically, was the chief operating officer as well as the president. Nowadays, those titles and tasks are handled by two separate individuals. | 20958702_26 | presidents | The first woman speaker at the DEC was Catherine Curtis on November 1, 1937, and she spoke on "The Housewife as Capitalist." The first Black speaker was Lester Granger, President of the National Urban League, on January 19, 1948. Other speakers include Soviet Ambassador to the U.S. Antoly Dobrynin, Bruno Kreisky when he was the Australian Chancellor, and Ambassador of the Republic of Cuba to the U.S. Jose Ramon Cabanas Rodriguez. | Nowadays, those titles and tasks are handled by two separate individuals. | Presidents (DEC Presidents)
The President of the Club, historically, was the chief operating officer as well as the president. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0003988722455687821,
"distance": 82,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 2,
"gendered_word": "woman",
"word_pos": 84,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0007484264206141233,
"distance": 85,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 2,
"gendered_word": "woman",
"word_pos": 87,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
}
] | 0.000748 | preceding |
The club has hosted a meeting with every President of the United States since former President Nixon. The first woman speaker at the DEC was Catherine Curtis on November 1, 1937, and she spoke on "The Housewife as Capitalist." The first Black speaker was Lester Granger, President of the National Urban League, on January 19, 1948. Other speakers include Soviet Ambassador to the U.S. Antoly Dobrynin, Bruno Kreisky when he was the Australian Chancellor, and Ambassador of the Republic of Cuba to the U.S. Jose Ramon Cabanas Rodriguez. Presidents (DEC Presidents)
The President of the Club, historically, was the chief operating officer as well as the president. | 20958702_25 | speakers | The club has hosted a meeting with every President of the United States since former President Nixon. The first woman speaker at the DEC was Catherine Curtis on November 1, 1937, and she spoke on "The Housewife as Capitalist." The first Black speaker was Lester Granger, President of the National Urban League, on January 19, 1948. | Presidents (DEC Presidents)
The President of the Club, historically, was the chief operating officer as well as the president. | Other speakers include Soviet Ambassador to the U.S. Antoly Dobrynin, Bruno Kreisky when he was the Australian Chancellor, and Ambassador of the Republic of Cuba to the U.S. Jose Ramon Cabanas Rodriguez. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0035036345943808556,
"distance": 48,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 20,
"gendered_word": "woman",
"word_pos": 68,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.003504 | preceding |
In order to avoid a financial catastrophe, both Prince Milan and Prime Minister Piroćanac asked for the support of Austria-Hungary, having in mind both the survival of the Progressive party government and the need to avoid any radical change of foreign-policy orientation (i.e. towards Russia). According to Slobodan Jovanović, Piroćanac was convinced that Serbia could rely on Austria without danger, because it would probably turn into a federal state, which Serbia would be able to enter without losing its national and state individuality. Austrian mediation turned to be quite helpful and Prime Minister Piroćanac, in order to appease the situation, instead of an extensive financial report, presented to the National Assembly a draft law on the proclamation of the Kingdom of Serbia, with Prince Milan Obrenović as its new King (the first Serbian king since the Middle Ages), a proposal which was greeted with joy and approval by the deputies. Acceptance of this proposal on 22 February 22 (old style), strengthened, at least for a while, the position of the Piroćanac cabinet. | 20959155_22 | deputies | In order to avoid a financial catastrophe, both Prince Milan and Prime Minister Piroćanac asked for the support of Austria-Hungary, having in mind both the survival of the Progressive party government and the need to avoid any radical change of foreign-policy orientation (i.e. towards Russia). According to Slobodan Jovanović, Piroćanac was convinced that Serbia could rely on Austria without danger, because it would probably turn into a federal state, which Serbia would be able to enter without losing its national and state individuality. | Acceptance of this proposal on 22 February 22 (old style), strengthened, at least for a while, the position of the Piroćanac cabinet. | Austrian mediation turned to be quite helpful and Prime Minister Piroćanac, in order to appease the situation, instead of an extensive financial report, presented to the National Assembly a draft law on the proclamation of the Kingdom of Serbia, with Prince Milan Obrenović as its new King (the first Serbian king since the Middle Ages), a proposal which was greeted with joy and approval by the deputies. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.001030831946991384,
"distance": 160,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 9,
"gendered_word": "Prince",
"word_pos": 169,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.001315643428824842,
"distance": 29,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 140,
"gendered_word": "Prince",
"word_pos": 169,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.001316 | matching |
Facing one crisis after another, Prime Minister Piroćanac, lacking the support of Prince, later King, Milan, had no room left to prepare a new, more liberal constitution that would replace the old one of 1869. Piroćanac, as most other Progressives, was in favour of a two chamber system, advocating the upper chamber of Parliament as an obstacle against populism (“despotism of the masses”), ascribed mostly to the then-opposition National Radical Party of Nikola Pašić. The upper chamber, consisting of intellectuals appointed by the King would, as he proposed, control the irresponsible and uneducated peasant, mostly Radical, deputies. The Piroćanac government did manage to, however, pass a set of extremely important democratic Western-inspired laws in that would provide the political framework for future democratic development: the law on judicial independence (February 9, 1881), the law on the freedom of the press (March 28, 1881), on political association and organization (April 1, 1881), as well as the law on creating a standing army (January 3, 1883). | 20959155_28 | deputies | Facing one crisis after another, Prime Minister Piroćanac, lacking the support of Prince, later King, Milan, had no room left to prepare a new, more liberal constitution that would replace the old one of 1869. Piroćanac, as most other Progressives, was in favour of a two chamber system, advocating the upper chamber of Parliament as an obstacle against populism (“despotism of the masses”), ascribed mostly to the then-opposition National Radical Party of Nikola Pašić. | The Piroćanac government did manage to, however, pass a set of extremely important democratic Western-inspired laws in that would provide the political framework for future democratic development: the law on judicial independence (February 9, 1881), the law on the freedom of the press (March 28, 1881), on political association and organization (April 1, 1881), as well as the law on creating a standing army (January 3, 1883). | The upper chamber, consisting of intellectuals appointed by the King would, as he proposed, control the irresponsible and uneducated peasant, mostly Radical, deputies. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.001615002634935081,
"distance": 105,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 14,
"gendered_word": "Prince",
"word_pos": 119,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.001615 | preceding |
The successful revolutionaries organized themselves into a Council of State, and subsequently into a system where three main ministers led the government. This structure would last until the establishment of a prime minister, who would lead a cabinet in a western fashion, in 1885. Initially, not even the retention of the Emperor was certain; revolutionary leader Gotō Shōjirō later stated that some officials "were afraid the extremists might go further and abolish the Mikado". Japan's new leaders sought to reform the patchwork system of domains governed by the daimyōs. | 20960029_120 | extremists | The successful revolutionaries organized themselves into a Council of State, and subsequently into a system where three main ministers led the government. This structure would last until the establishment of a prime minister, who would lead a cabinet in a western fashion, in 1885. | Japan's new leaders sought to reform the patchwork system of domains governed by the daimyōs. | Initially, not even the retention of the Emperor was certain; revolutionary leader Gotō Shōjirō later stated that some officials "were afraid the extremists might go further and abolish the Mikado". | [
{
"attention_score": 0.00524076446890831,
"distance": 17,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 57,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 74,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.005241 | matching |
The whole of the furniture in the grand saloon and ladies' saloon is covered in plum colored velvet, while that of the social hall is done in velvet and rep, each having a very beautiful effect on the surroundings ... As a finishing touch, flamboyant owner Jim Fisk had 250 canaries in cages installed in each ship, each bird personally named by Fisk himself. Bristol and Providence began a tradition of luxury travel on Narragansett Bay that would remain a popular attraction to travellers for the next fifty years. For a modest price, an ordinary working person could gain a glimpse of the opulent lifestyles of the wealthy just by taking a cruise on such a vessel. | 20960253_36 | travellers | The whole of the furniture in the grand saloon and ladies' saloon is covered in plum colored velvet, while that of the social hall is done in velvet and rep, each having a very beautiful effect on the surroundings ... As a finishing touch, flamboyant owner Jim Fisk had 250 canaries in cages installed in each ship, each bird personally named by Fisk himself. | For a modest price, an ordinary working person could gain a glimpse of the opulent lifestyles of the wealthy just by taking a cruise on such a vessel. | Bristol and Providence began a tradition of luxury travel on Narragansett Bay that would remain a popular attraction to travellers for the next fifty years. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.000347020395565778,
"distance": 79,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 10,
"gendered_word": "ladies",
"word_pos": 89,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.000347 | preceding |
The original production, starring Coward and Gertrude Lawrence played in a pre-London tour, and then the West End, and finally New York, in 1935–1937. Red Peppers has been revived periodically and has been adapted for the cinema and television. The play depicts a second-rate music hall double act, a husband and wife team, who perform two musical numbers, in between which they bicker in their dressing room and quarrel with colleagues. Background
In the late 1920s and early 1930s, Coward wrote a succession of hits, ranging from the operetta Bitter Sweet (1929) and the epic Cavalcade (1931), requiring a large cast, gargantuan sets and a complex hydraulic stage, to the intimate comedies Private Lives (1930), in which Coward starred alongside Gertrude Lawrence, and Design for Living (1932). | 20960536_4 | colleagues | The original production, starring Coward and Gertrude Lawrence played in a pre-London tour, and then the West End, and finally New York, in 1935–1937. Red Peppers has been revived periodically and has been adapted for the cinema and television. | Background
In the late 1920s and early 1930s, Coward wrote a succession of hits, ranging from the operetta Bitter Sweet (1929) and the epic Cavalcade (1931), requiring a large cast, gargantuan sets and a complex hydraulic stage, to the intimate comedies Private Lives (1930), in which Coward starred alongside Gertrude Lawrence, and Design for Living (1932). | The play depicts a second-rate music hall double act, a husband and wife team, who perform two musical numbers, in between which they bicker in their dressing room and quarrel with colleagues. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0036072933580726385,
"distance": 23,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 60,
"gendered_word": "husband",
"word_pos": 83,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0010858899913728237,
"distance": 21,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 62,
"gendered_word": "wife",
"word_pos": 83,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.003607 | matching |
From November 2002 until September 2007, Fortenbacher played the leading role of Donna in the musical Mamma Mia! at the Operettenhaus Hamburg. For this she was selected by the readers of the Bildzeitung as second place in the Top Women of Hamburg 2005, behind Hannelore Schmidt. Television roles and Zurück zu mir
Apart from her stage roles, Fortenbacher also had two solo programs Charade and the James Bond parody, 0014 Jane Blond. | 20960956_18 | readers | From November 2002 until September 2007, Fortenbacher played the leading role of Donna in the musical Mamma Mia! at the Operettenhaus Hamburg. | Television roles and Zurück zu mir
Apart from her stage roles, Fortenbacher also had two solo programs Charade and the James Bond parody, 0014 Jane Blond. | For this she was selected by the readers of the Bildzeitung as second place in the Top Women of Hamburg 2005, behind Hannelore Schmidt. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.007950308732688427,
"distance": 10,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 42,
"gendered_word": "Women",
"word_pos": 32,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.00795 | matching |
His efforts have been central to leading the city of Tromsø, since 2001 a twin town of Gaza, to claim to be the city that has sent more health workers to the Palestinian territories than any other in the world. His book on the Gaza War, Eyes on Gaza (2009), has been translated into several languages. Gilbert has been lauded as a "hero" in Norwegian media for his work in Gaza; his humanitarian work has been hailed by Prime Ministers Kåre Willoch, Jens Stoltenberg and Erna Solberg, and Foreign Minister Jonas Gahr Støre. On 6 May 2013, King Harald V appointed Gilbert as a Commander of the Order of St. Olav for his "wide-ranging services to emergency medicine." He has also done volunteer work at a kibbutz. | 20961622_6 | ministers | His efforts have been central to leading the city of Tromsø, since 2001 a twin town of Gaza, to claim to be the city that has sent more health workers to the Palestinian territories than any other in the world. His book on the Gaza War, Eyes on Gaza (2009), has been translated into several languages. | On 6 May 2013, King Harald V appointed Gilbert as a Commander of the Order of St. Olav for his "wide-ranging services to emergency medicine." He has also done volunteer work at a kibbutz. | Gilbert has been lauded as a "hero" in Norwegian media for his work in Gaza; his humanitarian work has been hailed by Prime Ministers Kåre Willoch, Jens Stoltenberg and Erna Solberg, and Foreign Minister Jonas Gahr Støre. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0014585027238354087,
"distance": 19,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 71,
"gendered_word": "hero",
"word_pos": 90,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
}
] | 0.001459 | matching |
Farquhar's practice gradually developed a steady clientele and he became a physician, awarded his MD from King's College, Aberdeen in 1796. He was made a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh and a licenceate of the Royal College of Physicians in the same year. Among Farquhar's clients were many prominent figures of the period, including the Prince of Wales, Prime Minister William Pitt the Younger and prominent politician Lord Melville. This patronage led to him being awarded a baronetcy in 1796 and was soon appointed physician-in-ordinary to the Prince of Wales. | 20961783_12 | clients | Farquhar's practice gradually developed a steady clientele and he became a physician, awarded his MD from King's College, Aberdeen in 1796. He was made a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh and a licenceate of the Royal College of Physicians in the same year. | This patronage led to him being awarded a baronetcy in 1796 and was soon appointed physician-in-ordinary to the Prince of Wales. | Among Farquhar's clients were many prominent figures of the period, including the Prince of Wales, Prime Minister William Pitt the Younger and prominent politician Lord Melville. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.011236029677093029,
"distance": 11,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 67,
"gendered_word": "Prince",
"word_pos": 56,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0034625555854290724,
"distance": 24,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 80,
"gendered_word": "Lord",
"word_pos": 56,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0013945999089628458,
"distance": 49,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 105,
"gendered_word": "Prince",
"word_pos": 56,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.011236 | matching |
She owned two large houses in Hampstead, a house in the south of France and a property in Oxfordshire (probably Hedgerley Wood). Early in 1985 Mrs Paul was ill and owed an estimated £300,000. In November of that year the Hampstead and Highgate Express reported that Mrs Paul "now mentally ill" had been offered an unfair price (£225,000) for her house by the owner of the neighbouring property "Fine Art Tutors", who wanted to extend. Had a fair price been offered, Mrs Paul would have been able to pay off her creditors: ironically, the property was soon put on the market again, selling for £350,000. | 20962860_43 | tutors | She owned two large houses in Hampstead, a house in the south of France and a property in Oxfordshire (probably Hedgerley Wood). Early in 1985 Mrs Paul was ill and owed an estimated £300,000. | Had a fair price been offered, Mrs Paul would have been able to pay off her creditors: ironically, the property was soon put on the market again, selling for £350,000. | In November of that year the Hampstead and Highgate Express reported that Mrs Paul "now mentally ill" had been offered an unfair price (£225,000) for her house by the owner of the neighbouring property "Fine Art Tutors", who wanted to extend. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0016181602841243148,
"distance": 53,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 29,
"gendered_word": "Mrs",
"word_pos": 82,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0016236777883023024,
"distance": 30,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 52,
"gendered_word": "Mrs",
"word_pos": 82,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0013627315638586879,
"distance": 15,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 97,
"gendered_word": "Mrs",
"word_pos": 82,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
}
] | 0.001624 | matching |
In 1979, with the contribution of his wife, Plyushch published his book History's Carnival: A Dissident's Autobiography in which he described how he and other dissidents were committed to psychiatric hospitals. At the same year, the book was translated into English. In 1980, Andrei Snezhnevsky, who was a Corresponding Fellow of the Royal College of Psychiatry, was invited by his British colleagues to answer criticism relating to Plyushch and other dissidents. He refused to do so, and instead resigned his Fellowship. | 20963082_36 | colleagues | In 1979, with the contribution of his wife, Plyushch published his book History's Carnival: A Dissident's Autobiography in which he described how he and other dissidents were committed to psychiatric hospitals. At the same year, the book was translated into English. | He refused to do so, and instead resigned his Fellowship. | In 1980, Andrei Snezhnevsky, who was a Corresponding Fellow of the Royal College of Psychiatry, was invited by his British colleagues to answer criticism relating to Plyushch and other dissidents. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0035031582228839397,
"distance": 64,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 8,
"gendered_word": "wife",
"word_pos": 72,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.003503 | preceding |
Recognizing the potential impact a vaccine could make in decreasing the global public health burden of HIV, President Clinton in 1997 announced a plan to establish an HIV vaccine research center on the NIH campus. The dedication ceremony for the VRC took place in 1999 with President Clinton delivering the opening remarks. Named in honor of immunization advocates former Governor of Arkansas Dale Bumpers and his wife Betty Flanagan Bumpers, the Vaccine Research Center opened its doors as Building 40 on the NIH campus in 2000. The founding investigators leading the new center came from a range of scientific disciplines including virology, immunology, structural biology, bioengineering, manufacturing, clinical research and regulatory science. | 20964906_7 | advocates | Recognizing the potential impact a vaccine could make in decreasing the global public health burden of HIV, President Clinton in 1997 announced a plan to establish an HIV vaccine research center on the NIH campus. The dedication ceremony for the VRC took place in 1999 with President Clinton delivering the opening remarks. | The founding investigators leading the new center came from a range of scientific disciplines including virology, immunology, structural biology, bioengineering, manufacturing, clinical research and regulatory science. | Named in honor of immunization advocates former Governor of Arkansas Dale Bumpers and his wife Betty Flanagan Bumpers, the Vaccine Research Center opened its doors as Building 40 on the NIH campus in 2000. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0018481132574379444,
"distance": 9,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 69,
"gendered_word": "wife",
"word_pos": 60,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.001848 | matching |
The dedication ceremony for the VRC took place in 1999 with President Clinton delivering the opening remarks. Named in honor of immunization advocates former Governor of Arkansas Dale Bumpers and his wife Betty Flanagan Bumpers, the Vaccine Research Center opened its doors as Building 40 on the NIH campus in 2000. The founding investigators leading the new center came from a range of scientific disciplines including virology, immunology, structural biology, bioengineering, manufacturing, clinical research and regulatory science. While HIV vaccine research and development remains a core focus, the scope of activities has expanded to include advancing scientific understanding and developing biologics for a broad array of infectious pathogens. | 20964906_8 | investigators | The dedication ceremony for the VRC took place in 1999 with President Clinton delivering the opening remarks. Named in honor of immunization advocates former Governor of Arkansas Dale Bumpers and his wife Betty Flanagan Bumpers, the Vaccine Research Center opened its doors as Building 40 on the NIH campus in 2000. | While HIV vaccine research and development remains a core focus, the scope of activities has expanded to include advancing scientific understanding and developing biologics for a broad array of infectious pathogens. | The founding investigators leading the new center came from a range of scientific disciplines including virology, immunology, structural biology, bioengineering, manufacturing, clinical research and regulatory science. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.001249652705155313,
"distance": 24,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 32,
"gendered_word": "wife",
"word_pos": 56,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.00125 | preceding |
The dedication ceremony for the VRC took place in 1999 with President Clinton delivering the opening remarks. Named in honor of immunization advocates former Governor of Arkansas Dale Bumpers and his wife Betty Flanagan Bumpers, the Vaccine Research Center opened its doors as Building 40 on the NIH campus in 2000. The founding investigators leading the new center came from a range of scientific disciplines including virology, immunology, structural biology, bioengineering, manufacturing, clinical research and regulatory science. While HIV vaccine research and development remains a core focus, the scope of activities has expanded to include advancing scientific understanding and developing biologics for a broad array of infectious pathogens. | 20964906_8 | investigators | The dedication ceremony for the VRC took place in 1999 with President Clinton delivering the opening remarks. Named in honor of immunization advocates former Governor of Arkansas Dale Bumpers and his wife Betty Flanagan Bumpers, the Vaccine Research Center opened its doors as Building 40 on the NIH campus in 2000. | While HIV vaccine research and development remains a core focus, the scope of activities has expanded to include advancing scientific understanding and developing biologics for a broad array of infectious pathogens. | The founding investigators leading the new center came from a range of scientific disciplines including virology, immunology, structural biology, bioengineering, manufacturing, clinical research and regulatory science. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.001249652705155313,
"distance": 24,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 32,
"gendered_word": "wife",
"word_pos": 56,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.00125 | preceding |
That night, Louis is transformed into a woman. When he wakes up, he panics. His roommate and best friend, Charlotte De Wilde (Ianka Fleerackers), convinces him to go to the editors disguised as Louise, the niece of Louis, and do a very important presentation for investors of Uitgeverij Hercules, the company behind the magazine Don. When his boss, Vic Mutsaerts (Rudy Morren), tries to call Louis, he is surprised to get Charlotte on the line instead. | 20966750_9 | investors | That night, Louis is transformed into a woman. When he wakes up, he panics. | When his boss, Vic Mutsaerts (Rudy Morren), tries to call Louis, he is surprised to get Charlotte on the line instead. | His roommate and best friend, Charlotte De Wilde (Ianka Fleerackers), convinces him to go to the editors disguised as Louise, the niece of Louis, and do a very important presentation for investors of Uitgeverij Hercules, the company behind the magazine Don. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.002241571433842182,
"distance": 47,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 8,
"gendered_word": "woman",
"word_pos": 55,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0044232080690562725,
"distance": 11,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 44,
"gendered_word": "niece",
"word_pos": 55,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.004423 | matching |
In 1949, she enrolled in graduate school at the University of Denver (DU) and received her master's degree in audiology in 1951. She promptly went to work at DU, teaching audiology and directing the audiology clinic from 1951 to 1959. At DU, she supervised a contract with the Veteran's Administration, doing all the veterans' speech pathology and audiology exams and hearing aid assessments. In 1959, she began working as an audiologist in a new ear-nose-and-throat (otolaryngology) clinic at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. | 20967615_10 | veterans | In 1949, she enrolled in graduate school at the University of Denver (DU) and received her master's degree in audiology in 1951. She promptly went to work at DU, teaching audiology and directing the audiology clinic from 1951 to 1959. | In 1959, she began working as an audiologist in a new ear-nose-and-throat (otolaryngology) clinic at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. | At DU, she supervised a contract with the Veteran's Administration, doing all the veterans' speech pathology and audiology exams and hearing aid assessments. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0023322580382227898,
"distance": 44,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 19,
"gendered_word": "master",
"word_pos": 63,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.002332 | preceding |
Pink Kitchen (2007, 2008) - food festival that gathers premier chefs who want to support breast cancer awareness campaigns 3. Gifts that Give Back - ICanServe-produced year-round gift items available on the ICanServe shop online, proceeds help raise awareness and subsidize medical care for breast cancer patients undergoing treatment; In 2011, model-actress Tweetie de Leon-Gonzales, professional soccer player Yannick Tuason and singer-actress Lea Salonga-Chien helped with the foundation's fund-raising activity by modeling ICanServe-branded merchandise. Tweetie de Leon-Gonzales and Yannick Tuason modeled the ICanServe Be In The Loop T-shirts designed by Team Manila. | 20969080_26 | patients | Pink Kitchen (2007, 2008) - food festival that gathers premier chefs who want to support breast cancer awareness campaigns 3. | Tweetie de Leon-Gonzales and Yannick Tuason modeled the ICanServe Be In The Loop T-shirts designed by Team Manila. | Gifts that Give Back - ICanServe-produced year-round gift items available on the ICanServe shop online, proceeds help raise awareness and subsidize medical care for breast cancer patients undergoing treatment; In 2011, model-actress Tweetie de Leon-Gonzales, professional soccer player Yannick Tuason and singer-actress Lea Salonga-Chien helped with the foundation's fund-raising activity by modeling ICanServe-branded merchandise. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0018630975391715765,
"distance": 9,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 64,
"gendered_word": "actress",
"word_pos": 55,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0024314739275723696,
"distance": 24,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 79,
"gendered_word": "actress",
"word_pos": 55,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.002431 | trailing |
After a carriage accident in which her husband was killed, her womb and unborn child had to be removed. This caused her great strife as a doctor because she regularly performed abortions on prostitutes since they believed having a child was troublesome. Unable to bear her misery at ending so many pregnancies when she herself wanted one so badly, she began to kill her patients with Grell Sutcliff and the two become known as Jack the Ripper. However, she was unable to kill Ciel because she sees him as her own son, causing Grell to turn on her and kill her. | 20969875_124 | patients | After a carriage accident in which her husband was killed, her womb and unborn child had to be removed. This caused her great strife as a doctor because she regularly performed abortions on prostitutes since they believed having a child was troublesome. | However, she was unable to kill Ciel because she sees him as her own son, causing Grell to turn on her and kill her. | Unable to bear her misery at ending so many pregnancies when she herself wanted one so badly, she began to kill her patients with Grell Sutcliff and the two become known as Jack the Ripper. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.006685619708150625,
"distance": 61,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 7,
"gendered_word": "husband",
"word_pos": 68,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.006686 | preceding |
He is a stern, quiet, and impassive individual, and he is deeply loyal to Queen Victoria. He spends most of his time trying to console her hysterical fits of tears when she becomes depressed over her late husband's death. The "Double Charles" are two of the Queen's private secretaries and butlers. They seem to have mysterious jobs pertaining to the Queen's wishes. | 20969875_339 | secretaries | He is a stern, quiet, and impassive individual, and he is deeply loyal to Queen Victoria. He spends most of his time trying to console her hysterical fits of tears when she becomes depressed over her late husband's death. | They seem to have mysterious jobs pertaining to the Queen's wishes. | The "Double Charles" are two of the Queen's private secretaries and butlers. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.004778979811817408,
"distance": 16,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 41,
"gendered_word": "husband",
"word_pos": 57,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.004779 | matching |
He, like every first-string performer, referred to Baron Kelvin as "Father", because Baron Kelvin took him off the streets of the East End as a child and raised him in addition to providing artificial limbs. He died from extensive hemorrhaging, Sebastian having severed his other arm, as he attempted to defend Baron Kelvin from Ciel. Doctor was the kind, wheelchair-bound doctor who cared for the performers of the circus. However, this was later revealed to be a ruse as he really can walk and is quite sadistic. | 20969875_192 | performers | He, like every first-string performer, referred to Baron Kelvin as "Father", because Baron Kelvin took him off the streets of the East End as a child and raised him in addition to providing artificial limbs. He died from extensive hemorrhaging, Sebastian having severed his other arm, as he attempted to defend Baron Kelvin from Ciel. | However, this was later revealed to be a ruse as he really can walk and is quite sadistic. | Doctor was the kind, wheelchair-bound doctor who cared for the performers of the circus. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0028437022119760513,
"distance": 68,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 11,
"gendered_word": "Baron",
"word_pos": 79,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.001740208244882524,
"distance": 64,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 15,
"gendered_word": "Father",
"word_pos": 79,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0015808010939508677,
"distance": 60,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 19,
"gendered_word": "Baron",
"word_pos": 79,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.004355556331574917,
"distance": 18,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 61,
"gendered_word": "Baron",
"word_pos": 79,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.004356 | matching |
Doctor was the kind, wheelchair-bound doctor who cared for the performers of the circus. However, this was later revealed to be a ruse as he really can walk and is quite sadistic. He hand-carved the prosthetic limbs used by some of the first-string performers from an unknown strong material that he is developing through his research, funded by Baron Kelvin. This material is later revealed to be a special bone china made from the bones of the kidnapped children. | 20969875_194 | performers | Doctor was the kind, wheelchair-bound doctor who cared for the performers of the circus. However, this was later revealed to be a ruse as he really can walk and is quite sadistic. | This material is later revealed to be a special bone china made from the bones of the kidnapped children. | He hand-carved the prosthetic limbs used by some of the first-string performers from an unknown strong material that he is developing through his research, funded by Baron Kelvin. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0013572442112490535,
"distance": 56,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 69,
"gendered_word": "Baron",
"word_pos": 13,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0019090226851403713,
"distance": 16,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 69,
"gendered_word": "Baron",
"word_pos": 53,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.001909 | trailing |
He was later killed by Finnian when he and the other first-string members of the circus (except for Doll and Snake) invaded the Phantomhive manor to kidnap Ciel (unaware that he wasn't there at the time). Doll was a first-string member of the Noah's Ark Circus, and held the position of tightrope walker. When she wasn't performing, she pretended to be a new, male, second string member named , because she slept better when she is sharing a room with someone else, something the first-string performers do not have to do. Doll was friendly and welcoming, making conversation with Ciel after they were named tent mates. | 20969875_240 | performers | He was later killed by Finnian when he and the other first-string members of the circus (except for Doll and Snake) invaded the Phantomhive manor to kidnap Ciel (unaware that he wasn't there at the time). Doll was a first-string member of the Noah's Ark Circus, and held the position of tightrope walker. | Doll was friendly and welcoming, making conversation with Ciel after they were named tent mates. | When she wasn't performing, she pretended to be a new, male, second string member named , because she slept better when she is sharing a room with someone else, something the first-string performers do not have to do. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0026617867406457663,
"distance": 26,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 79,
"gendered_word": "male",
"word_pos": 105,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.002662 | matching |
When she wasn't performing, she pretended to be a new, male, second string member named , because she slept better when she is sharing a room with someone else, something the first-string performers do not have to do. Doll was friendly and welcoming, making conversation with Ciel after they were named tent mates. She was a bit naive, though, easily believing Ciel's lies, something that the other circus performers have reprimanded her for. She was exceedingly loyal to the other first-string members and viewed all of them as family. | 20969875_242 | performers | When she wasn't performing, she pretended to be a new, male, second string member named , because she slept better when she is sharing a room with someone else, something the first-string performers do not have to do. Doll was friendly and welcoming, making conversation with Ciel after they were named tent mates. | She was exceedingly loyal to the other first-string members and viewed all of them as family. | She was a bit naive, though, easily believing Ciel's lies, something that the other circus performers have reprimanded her for. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.003820948302745819,
"distance": 26,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 13,
"gendered_word": "male",
"word_pos": 39,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.004646334797143936,
"distance": 69,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 13,
"gendered_word": "male",
"word_pos": 82,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.004646 | preceding |
He started in the music business producing a single for the then unsigned Backstreet Boys in 1993. The single caught the attention of Mercury Records A&R executive Dave McPherson who signed the group and later moved to Jive Records/BMG. Upon learning that Chris Carter and the other two writer/producers of the song, Aaron Walker and Blake Schwab, were not credited and that Lou Pearlman’s label Transcontinental Records had not obtained the rights necessary to release the song under the Jive label, BMG delayed a 1994 U.S. debut until 1997 while successfully promoting the boy band in Europe in the interim. The three writers settled with Lou Pearlman for an undisclosed sum. | 20969968_4 | producers | He started in the music business producing a single for the then unsigned Backstreet Boys in 1993. The single caught the attention of Mercury Records A&R executive Dave McPherson who signed the group and later moved to Jive Records/BMG. | The three writers settled with Lou Pearlman for an undisclosed sum. | Upon learning that Chris Carter and the other two writer/producers of the song, Aaron Walker and Blake Schwab, were not credited and that Lou Pearlman’s label Transcontinental Records had not obtained the rights necessary to release the song under the Jive label, BMG delayed a 1994 U.S. debut until 1997 while successfully promoting the boy band in Europe in the interim. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0009358873940072954,
"distance": 49,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 103,
"gendered_word": "boy",
"word_pos": 54,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.000936 | trailing |
Beth and Kenneth help to find the girl and get her effective psychological help. The subplot gives the book the emotional warmth, sentimentality, and human interest that is typical of the series, but somewhat lacking in the politics of the main plot. Party politics
Commentators have been divided on the significance of the party alignment in the book. Critic Fred Erisman notes that the book "specifically identifies the villains as Democrats" in keeping with "Baum's lifelong Republicanism...." Yet there is little evidence of party allegiance in Baum's life, books, or correspondence. | 20971600_20 | commentators | Beth and Kenneth help to find the girl and get her effective psychological help. The subplot gives the book the emotional warmth, sentimentality, and human interest that is typical of the series, but somewhat lacking in the politics of the main plot. | Critic Fred Erisman notes that the book "specifically identifies the villains as Democrats" in keeping with "Baum's lifelong Republicanism...." Yet there is little evidence of party allegiance in Baum's life, books, or correspondence. | Party politics
Commentators have been divided on the significance of the party alignment in the book. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.00036672301939688623,
"distance": 43,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 7,
"gendered_word": "girl",
"word_pos": 50,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.000367 | preceding |
After the hotel was made available to men, it was renamed Beekman Tower (Panhellenic) to present a more inviting image to both genders. Other improvements included the conversion of the building's rooftop solarium into a bar in 1940; the conversion of the retail space on First Avenue into restaurant space in 1959; and the addition of air conditioning in 1960. The sorority sold the building to investors in 1964, and it became a conventional hotel. The architect, Sidney Goldhammer, installed bathrooms and kitchenettes in each room, as well as building apartments within the former event spaces. | 20971817_73 | investors | After the hotel was made available to men, it was renamed Beekman Tower (Panhellenic) to present a more inviting image to both genders. Other improvements included the conversion of the building's rooftop solarium into a bar in 1940; the conversion of the retail space on First Avenue into restaurant space in 1959; and the addition of air conditioning in 1960. | The architect, Sidney Goldhammer, installed bathrooms and kitchenettes in each room, as well as building apartments within the former event spaces. | The sorority sold the building to investors in 1964, and it became a conventional hotel. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0030917846597731113,
"distance": 67,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 7,
"gendered_word": "men",
"word_pos": 74,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.003092 | preceding |
Touré Kunda is a Senegalese band, noted for their musical versatility and political activism. Their 40-year career encompasses recordings in over six languages and collaborations with well-known musicians such as Carlos Santana and Talking Heads. They have had considerable success in Africa and Europe and are active in social causes such as children's rights and advocates for the homeless. Biography
Born twenty-two days apart in 1950 in Ziguinchor in Casamance, Senegal, Ismaïla and Sixu Tidiane Touré were introduced to music by their elder brother Amadou, a singer and musician. | 20971841_2 | advocates | Touré Kunda is a Senegalese band, noted for their musical versatility and political activism. Their 40-year career encompasses recordings in over six languages and collaborations with well-known musicians such as Carlos Santana and Talking Heads. | Biography
Born twenty-two days apart in 1950 in Ziguinchor in Casamance, Senegal, Ismaïla and Sixu Tidiane Touré were introduced to music by their elder brother Amadou, a singer and musician. | They have had considerable success in Africa and Europe and are active in social causes such as children's rights and advocates for the homeless. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.002788643352687359,
"distance": 34,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 97,
"gendered_word": "brother",
"word_pos": 63,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.002789 | trailing |
The company was involved in over 400 successful space missions and built the cargo Dream Chaser, which is planned to resupply the International Space Station with both pressurized and unpressurized cargo. As of July 2020, SNC has taken part in 14 different missions to Mars. History
The company was founded in 1963 by John Chisholm with a few employees working out of an airplane hangar in the Reno Stead Airport. It was acquired in 1994 by husband and wife Fatih Ozmen and Eren Ozmen. | 20972338_5 | employees | The company was involved in over 400 successful space missions and built the cargo Dream Chaser, which is planned to resupply the International Space Station with both pressurized and unpressurized cargo. As of July 2020, SNC has taken part in 14 different missions to Mars. | It was acquired in 1994 by husband and wife Fatih Ozmen and Eren Ozmen. | History
The company was founded in 1963 by John Chisholm with a few employees working out of an airplane hangar in the Reno Stead Airport. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.010754533112049103,
"distance": 19,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 82,
"gendered_word": "husband",
"word_pos": 63,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.01460409164428711,
"distance": 21,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 84,
"gendered_word": "wife",
"word_pos": 63,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.014604 | trailing |
History
The company was founded in 1963 by John Chisholm with a few employees working out of an airplane hangar in the Reno Stead Airport. It was acquired in 1994 by husband and wife Fatih Ozmen and Eren Ozmen. Fatih Ozmen was one of the original employees hired by Chisholm in 1981. At the time of the Ozmens' acquisition of SNC, it had around 20 employees. | 20972338_7 | employees | History
The company was founded in 1963 by John Chisholm with a few employees working out of an airplane hangar in the Reno Stead Airport. It was acquired in 1994 by husband and wife Fatih Ozmen and Eren Ozmen. | At the time of the Ozmens' acquisition of SNC, it had around 20 employees. | Fatih Ozmen was one of the original employees hired by Chisholm in 1981. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.005836614407598972,
"distance": 19,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 33,
"gendered_word": "husband",
"word_pos": 14,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.007780521176755428,
"distance": 21,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 35,
"gendered_word": "wife",
"word_pos": 14,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.008810590021312237,
"distance": 16,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 33,
"gendered_word": "husband",
"word_pos": 49,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.011863430961966515,
"distance": 14,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 35,
"gendered_word": "wife",
"word_pos": 49,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.004341720603406429,
"distance": 38,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 33,
"gendered_word": "husband",
"word_pos": 71,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.005328746046870947,
"distance": 36,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 35,
"gendered_word": "wife",
"word_pos": 71,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.011863 | preceding |
It was acquired in 1994 by husband and wife Fatih Ozmen and Eren Ozmen. Fatih Ozmen was one of the original employees hired by Chisholm in 1981. At the time of the Ozmens' acquisition of SNC, it had around 20 employees. The company has since grown into a multi-billion dollar company with over 4,000 employees. | 20972338_8 | employees | It was acquired in 1994 by husband and wife Fatih Ozmen and Eren Ozmen. Fatih Ozmen was one of the original employees hired by Chisholm in 1981. | The company has since grown into a multi-billion dollar company with over 4,000 employees. | At the time of the Ozmens' acquisition of SNC, it had around 20 employees. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0017751138657331467,
"distance": 16,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 6,
"gendered_word": "husband",
"word_pos": 22,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0019934452138841152,
"distance": 14,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 8,
"gendered_word": "wife",
"word_pos": 22,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0007621797267347574,
"distance": 38,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 6,
"gendered_word": "husband",
"word_pos": 44,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0013730605132877827,
"distance": 36,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 8,
"gendered_word": "wife",
"word_pos": 44,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00021526106866076589,
"distance": 55,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 6,
"gendered_word": "husband",
"word_pos": 61,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0003008188505191356,
"distance": 53,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 8,
"gendered_word": "wife",
"word_pos": 61,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.001993 | preceding |
A cell phone video broadcast on local television station KTVU on January 23 showed what appeared to be Pirone rushing towards one of the detained men and punching him in the face, multiple times, two minutes before the shooting. Grant's family alleges in their civil claim against BART that an officer threw Grant against a wall and kneed him in the face. Videos captured by bystanders contradicted Pirone's claims to investigators, showing Grant, a 22-year-old Hayward resident, never tried to punch or kick Pirone. To the contrary, the internal investigation report found that Pirone struck Grant in the head and kneed him, likely causing injuries documented in his autopsy, including head fractures and a hematoma. | 20972526_61 | investigators | A cell phone video broadcast on local television station KTVU on January 23 showed what appeared to be Pirone rushing towards one of the detained men and punching him in the face, multiple times, two minutes before the shooting. Grant's family alleges in their civil claim against BART that an officer threw Grant against a wall and kneed him in the face. | To the contrary, the internal investigation report found that Pirone struck Grant in the head and kneed him, likely causing injuries documented in his autopsy, including head fractures and a hematoma. | Videos captured by bystanders contradicted Pirone's claims to investigators, showing Grant, a 22-year-old Hayward resident, never tried to punch or kick Pirone. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0005405335105024278,
"distance": 51,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 25,
"gendered_word": "men",
"word_pos": 76,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.000541 | preceding |
A cell phone video broadcast on local television station KTVU on January 23 showed what appeared to be Pirone rushing towards one of the detained men and punching him in the face, multiple times, two minutes before the shooting. Grant's family alleges in their civil claim against BART that an officer threw Grant against a wall and kneed him in the face. Videos captured by bystanders contradicted Pirone's claims to investigators, showing Grant, a 22-year-old Hayward resident, never tried to punch or kick Pirone. To the contrary, the internal investigation report found that Pirone struck Grant in the head and kneed him, likely causing injuries documented in his autopsy, including head fractures and a hematoma. | 20972526_61 | investigators | A cell phone video broadcast on local television station KTVU on January 23 showed what appeared to be Pirone rushing towards one of the detained men and punching him in the face, multiple times, two minutes before the shooting. Grant's family alleges in their civil claim against BART that an officer threw Grant against a wall and kneed him in the face. | To the contrary, the internal investigation report found that Pirone struck Grant in the head and kneed him, likely causing injuries documented in his autopsy, including head fractures and a hematoma. | Videos captured by bystanders contradicted Pirone's claims to investigators, showing Grant, a 22-year-old Hayward resident, never tried to punch or kick Pirone. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0005405335105024278,
"distance": 51,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 25,
"gendered_word": "men",
"word_pos": 76,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.000541 | preceding |
In between the serializations of Mademoiselle Butterfly, she managed to do another one-shot, which was published in the September issue of LaLa. After having nine chapters, Mademoiselle Butterfly ended in the September 2006 issue of LaLa DX. It was compiled into two volumes. The series was also given the Outstanding Debut award in the 30th Hakusensha Athena Newcomers' Award. She continued working by having in the November issue of LaLa. | 20972948_17 | newcomers | In between the serializations of Mademoiselle Butterfly, she managed to do another one-shot, which was published in the September issue of LaLa. After having nine chapters, Mademoiselle Butterfly ended in the September 2006 issue of LaLa DX. It was compiled into two volumes. | She continued working by having in the November issue of LaLa. | The series was also given the Outstanding Debut award in the 30th Hakusensha Athena Newcomers' Award. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0007176706567406654,
"distance": 61,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 5,
"gendered_word": "Mademoiselle",
"word_pos": 66,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00031227024737745523,
"distance": 33,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 33,
"gendered_word": "Mademoiselle",
"word_pos": 66,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
}
] | 0.000718 | preceding |
Plot
Santu Waghela is a poor but spirited girl who lives in the village of Dharampur with her maternal grandfather, Madhav Solanki, an experienced diamond cutter working for the middle-aged diamond merchant Dharamraj Mahiyavanshi. As an incentive to his best worker, Dharamraj offers to arrange and sponsor Madhav's granddaughter's marriage. Hours before the wedding, the bridegroom backs out and Madhav's fellow workers get agitated. Dharamraj, a widower, comes forward to marry the bride, Santu. | 20973372_5 | workers | Plot
Santu Waghela is a poor but spirited girl who lives in the village of Dharampur with her maternal grandfather, Madhav Solanki, an experienced diamond cutter working for the middle-aged diamond merchant Dharamraj Mahiyavanshi. As an incentive to his best worker, Dharamraj offers to arrange and sponsor Madhav's granddaughter's marriage. | Dharamraj, a widower, comes forward to marry the bride, Santu. | Hours before the wedding, the bridegroom backs out and Madhav's fellow workers get agitated. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0031398036517202854,
"distance": 64,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 9,
"gendered_word": "girl",
"word_pos": 73,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0019460421754047275,
"distance": 54,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 19,
"gendered_word": "maternal",
"word_pos": 73,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0016615338390693069,
"distance": 53,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 20,
"gendered_word": "grandfather",
"word_pos": 73,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.00314 | preceding |
Browne went on to a distinguished career as an asylum reformer at Sunnyside Royal Hospital in Montrose (1834–1838) and, famously, at the Crichton Royal, Dumfries (1838–1857); his son, James Crichton-Browne, collaborated with Darwin in the preparation of The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals (1872). In the second year of Charles Darwin's education at Edinburgh he took an increased interest in natural history. Browne, Coldstream and George Fife as three of the five joint presidents proposed Darwin for membership, and he petitioned to join the Plinian on 21 November 1826, at a meeting when Browne announced his intention to refute Charles Bell's Anatomy and Philosophy of Expression. Darwin was elected a member of the Plinian on 28 November 1826, along with another student of his own age, William Rathbone Greg, who immediately announced plans for a talk showing that "the lower animals possess every faculty & propensity of the human mind." Greg would later become a noted writer on Victorian social problems, including prostitution, and on female sexual desire. | 20974524_34 | presidents | Browne went on to a distinguished career as an asylum reformer at Sunnyside Royal Hospital in Montrose (1834–1838) and, famously, at the Crichton Royal, Dumfries (1838–1857); his son, James Crichton-Browne, collaborated with Darwin in the preparation of The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals (1872). In the second year of Charles Darwin's education at Edinburgh he took an increased interest in natural history. | Darwin was elected a member of the Plinian on 28 November 1826, along with another student of his own age, William Rathbone Greg, who immediately announced plans for a talk showing that "the lower animals possess every faculty & propensity of the human mind." Greg would later become a noted writer on Victorian social problems, including prostitution, and on female sexual desire. | Browne, Coldstream and George Fife as three of the five joint presidents proposed Darwin for membership, and he petitioned to join the Plinian on 21 November 1826, at a meeting when Browne announced his intention to refute Charles Bell's Anatomy and Philosophy of Expression. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0006467632483690977,
"distance": 39,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 55,
"gendered_word": "Man",
"word_pos": 94,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0009044457692652941,
"distance": 104,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 198,
"gendered_word": "female",
"word_pos": 94,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.000904 | trailing |
Meine Ehre heißt Treue (; "My honor means loyalty") was the motto of the Schutzstaffel (SS) under Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party in Nazi Germany. Origin
In a National Socialist context, the phrase Meine Ehre heißt Treue refers to a declaration by Adolf Hitler following the Stennes Revolt, an incident between the Berlin Sturmabteilung (SA) and the Schutzstaffel (SS). In early April 1931, elements of the SA under Walter Stennes attempted to overthrow the head of the Berlin section of the National Socialist German Workers' Party. As the section chief Joseph Goebbels fled with his staff, a handful of SS men led by Kurt Daluege were beaten trying to repel the SA. | 20975173_2 | workers | Meine Ehre heißt Treue (; "My honor means loyalty") was the motto of the Schutzstaffel (SS) under Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party in Nazi Germany. Origin
In a National Socialist context, the phrase Meine Ehre heißt Treue refers to a declaration by Adolf Hitler following the Stennes Revolt, an incident between the Berlin Sturmabteilung (SA) and the Schutzstaffel (SS). | As the section chief Joseph Goebbels fled with his staff, a handful of SS men led by Kurt Daluege were beaten trying to repel the SA. | In early April 1931, elements of the SA under Walter Stennes attempted to overthrow the head of the Berlin section of the National Socialist German Workers' Party. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.015228070318698883,
"distance": 19,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 119,
"gendered_word": "men",
"word_pos": 100,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
}
] | 0.015228 | trailing |
The Oliver Group soon sold on the business after it failed to thrive, and today photographic outlets are still struggling to be profitable in an age where consumers are more inclined to keep digital photos on PCs than get them printed. As a boss, Shenton proved to be a highly egalitarian, hands-on leader whose enthusiasm was infectious. An approachable man, Shenton liked being on the factory or shop floor and created a culture in which employers and employees were on first name basis. In retirement Shenton volunteered to advise entrepreneurs in Romania and Sierra Leone on how to start their own business, he served on industrial tribunals and was an adviser to the private equity group 3i, as well as helping the elderly through the Association of Jewish Refugees. | 20975410_31 | employees | The Oliver Group soon sold on the business after it failed to thrive, and today photographic outlets are still struggling to be profitable in an age where consumers are more inclined to keep digital photos on PCs than get them printed. As a boss, Shenton proved to be a highly egalitarian, hands-on leader whose enthusiasm was infectious. | In retirement Shenton volunteered to advise entrepreneurs in Romania and Sierra Leone on how to start their own business, he served on industrial tribunals and was an adviser to the private equity group 3i, as well as helping the elderly through the Association of Jewish Refugees. | An approachable man, Shenton liked being on the factory or shop floor and created a culture in which employers and employees were on first name basis. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.004274671897292137,
"distance": 19,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 66,
"gendered_word": "man",
"word_pos": 85,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.004275 | matching |
The Oliver Group soon sold on the business after it failed to thrive, and today photographic outlets are still struggling to be profitable in an age where consumers are more inclined to keep digital photos on PCs than get them printed. As a boss, Shenton proved to be a highly egalitarian, hands-on leader whose enthusiasm was infectious. An approachable man, Shenton liked being on the factory or shop floor and created a culture in which employers and employees were on first name basis. In retirement Shenton volunteered to advise entrepreneurs in Romania and Sierra Leone on how to start their own business, he served on industrial tribunals and was an adviser to the private equity group 3i, as well as helping the elderly through the Association of Jewish Refugees. | 20975410_31 | employers | The Oliver Group soon sold on the business after it failed to thrive, and today photographic outlets are still struggling to be profitable in an age where consumers are more inclined to keep digital photos on PCs than get them printed. As a boss, Shenton proved to be a highly egalitarian, hands-on leader whose enthusiasm was infectious. | In retirement Shenton volunteered to advise entrepreneurs in Romania and Sierra Leone on how to start their own business, he served on industrial tribunals and was an adviser to the private equity group 3i, as well as helping the elderly through the Association of Jewish Refugees. | An approachable man, Shenton liked being on the factory or shop floor and created a culture in which employers and employees were on first name basis. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0029064412228763103,
"distance": 17,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 66,
"gendered_word": "man",
"word_pos": 83,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.002906 | matching |
The metrosexual period also made it socially acceptable for men to shave parts of their body that lay due south of their face and neck. Reasons for body grooming
Grooming is a matter of personal preference and men have numerous reasons for trimming or removing their body hair. For most men, being well-groomed means being more attractive to possible partners. In addition, men choose to remove body hair for hygiene purposes, sporting reasons, to show off their muscles, enhance the appearance of their body shape, for religious reasons, to express their personal style or to be up to date with the trends. | 20975422_23 | partners | The metrosexual period also made it socially acceptable for men to shave parts of their body that lay due south of their face and neck. Reasons for body grooming
Grooming is a matter of personal preference and men have numerous reasons for trimming or removing their body hair. | In addition, men choose to remove body hair for hygiene purposes, sporting reasons, to show off their muscles, enhance the appearance of their body shape, for religious reasons, to express their personal style or to be up to date with the trends. | For most men, being well-groomed means being more attractive to possible partners. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0010471708374097943,
"distance": 56,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 9,
"gendered_word": "men",
"word_pos": 65,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.012467799708247185,
"distance": 26,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 39,
"gendered_word": "men",
"word_pos": 65,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.019469942897558212,
"distance": 12,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 53,
"gendered_word": "men",
"word_pos": 65,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.010069247335195541,
"distance": 5,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 70,
"gendered_word": "men",
"word_pos": 65,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.01947 | matching |
This "moral minimum" would involve sincere co-operation with the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia in The Hague and recognition of the work of the Tribunal as a moral reference point. Biserko and the staff of HCHRS have experienced threats and intimidation. Physical assaults on Biserko and break-ins at her home in 2005 and 2006 were reportedly linked to government officials who had launched a campaign of harassment and intimidation directed against the women directors of a number of Serbian human rights NGOs. In 2008 a large group of protesters, including members of Movement 1389 and Protest, gathered in front of HCHRS's office shouting abusive threats, many aimed specifically at Sonja Biserko, leaving a large cardboard swastika outside the building. HCHRS received many threatening letters, some containing explicit death threats against Sonja Biserko, who was given no police protection. | 20975485_22 | directors | This "moral minimum" would involve sincere co-operation with the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia in The Hague and recognition of the work of the Tribunal as a moral reference point. Biserko and the staff of HCHRS have experienced threats and intimidation. | HCHRS received many threatening letters, some containing explicit death threats against Sonja Biserko, who was given no police protection. | Physical assaults on Biserko and break-ins at her home in 2005 and 2006 were reportedly linked to government officials who had launched a campaign of harassment and intimidation directed against the women directors of a number of Serbian human rights NGOs. In 2008 a large group of protesters, including members of Movement 1389 and Protest, gathered in front of HCHRS's office shouting abusive threats, many aimed specifically at Sonja Biserko, leaving a large cardboard swastika outside the building. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.015177934430539608,
"distance": 1,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 82,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 83,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.015178 | matching |
The captain of the fishing trawler Kuber was found beheaded aboard his ship and the rest of the crew missing and it was confirmed that this was the vessel that had been used. Female accomplice during attacks? Cama hospital workers and shopkeepers claimed that an unarmed burqa-clad woman, who wore a salwar kameez underneath, shopped for food supplies and knocked on doors with Azam Amir as he fired his weapon at the Cama hospital employee quarters at the beginning of the attacks on the evening of 26 November 2008. On 2 December, Mumbai Police Commissioner Hasan Gafoor was reported to say that "he was not sure about the involvement of any female terrorist", and the status of this unidentified woman remains unknown. | 20976840_143 | workers | The captain of the fishing trawler Kuber was found beheaded aboard his ship and the rest of the crew missing and it was confirmed that this was the vessel that had been used. Female accomplice during attacks? | On 2 December, Mumbai Police Commissioner Hasan Gafoor was reported to say that "he was not sure about the involvement of any female terrorist", and the status of this unidentified woman remains unknown. | Cama hospital workers and shopkeepers claimed that an unarmed burqa-clad woman, who wore a salwar kameez underneath, shopped for food supplies and knocked on doors with Azam Amir as he fired his weapon at the Cama hospital employee quarters at the beginning of the attacks on the evening of 26 November 2008. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0033925350289791822,
"distance": 7,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 34,
"gendered_word": "Female",
"word_pos": 41,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0018029646016657352,
"distance": 10,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 51,
"gendered_word": "woman",
"word_pos": 41,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0006055191624909639,
"distance": 79,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 120,
"gendered_word": "female",
"word_pos": 41,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0016758678248152137,
"distance": 89,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 130,
"gendered_word": "woman",
"word_pos": 41,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.003393 | preceding |
She appeared in 2002. Peg first appears on 24 January 2002 when Zak's cousins Elvis and Marilyn Dingle dropped her off on him, having had enough of her. Initially, Zak tries to pass off her to other relatives, including Charity and her husband Chris Tate. She briefly lives in a caravan outside Zak's house, but this burns down. | 20976981_18 | relatives | She appeared in 2002. Peg first appears on 24 January 2002 when Zak's cousins Elvis and Marilyn Dingle dropped her off on him, having had enough of her. | She briefly lives in a caravan outside Zak's house, but this burns down. | Initially, Zak tries to pass off her to other relatives, including Charity and her husband Chris Tate. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.00637185899540782,
"distance": 6,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 48,
"gendered_word": "husband",
"word_pos": 42,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.006372 | trailing |
The rapid expansion of the Order was due primarily to the patronage of the Archduchess Margaret of Austria, who had been betrothed in her infancy to the future King Charles VIII of France and brought up at the French royal court. When she became Governor of the Netherlands, she showed great interest in the Franciscan Order and the Order founded by Joan, whom she had known personally. Beginning in 1610, the Ministers Provincial of the Franciscan friars in France conducted a reform of female communities of the Franciscan Third Order Regular, which established for them enclosed monasteries and allowed the taking of solemn vows, which previously had been barred to them due to the more apostolic way of life they had followed. In this way a number of communities of Franciscan Sisters were added to the Annonciade nuns. | 20977007_11 | ministers | The rapid expansion of the Order was due primarily to the patronage of the Archduchess Margaret of Austria, who had been betrothed in her infancy to the future King Charles VIII of France and brought up at the French royal court. When she became Governor of the Netherlands, she showed great interest in the Franciscan Order and the Order founded by Joan, whom she had known personally. | In this way a number of communities of Franciscan Sisters were added to the Annonciade nuns. | Beginning in 1610, the Ministers Provincial of the Franciscan friars in France conducted a reform of female communities of the Franciscan Third Order Regular, which established for them enclosed monasteries and allowed the taking of solemn vows, which previously had been barred to them due to the more apostolic way of life they had followed. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.005238230340182781,
"distance": 12,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 89,
"gendered_word": "female",
"word_pos": 77,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
}
] | 0.005238 | matching |
A graduate of Oxford University and the University of Pennsylvania, Bilefsky has also worked as a reporter for The Wall Street Journal and The Financial Times and has been a correspondent for The New York Times based in New York, Istanbul and Prague. As a roving correspondent, Bilefsky has written on many subjects, from honor killings in Turkey to bullfighting in Portugal and the hunt for the Bosnian-Serb war crimes fugitive Ratko Mladic in the Balkans. In New York, he reported on what prosecutors called the most elaborate frame-up in recent law enforcement history: the bizarre case of a Queens man who raped his girlfriend and then framed her for a series of brazen crimes that never took place. But his work also includes the more light-hearted, such as the world's most high-tech brothel, in Antwerp. | 20977188_13 | prosecutors | A graduate of Oxford University and the University of Pennsylvania, Bilefsky has also worked as a reporter for The Wall Street Journal and The Financial Times and has been a correspondent for The New York Times based in New York, Istanbul and Prague. As a roving correspondent, Bilefsky has written on many subjects, from honor killings in Turkey to bullfighting in Portugal and the hunt for the Bosnian-Serb war crimes fugitive Ratko Mladic in the Balkans. | But his work also includes the more light-hearted, such as the world's most high-tech brothel, in Antwerp. | In New York, he reported on what prosecutors called the most elaborate frame-up in recent law enforcement history: the bizarre case of a Queens man who raped his girlfriend and then framed her for a series of brazen crimes that never took place. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0008074952638708055,
"distance": 20,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 112,
"gendered_word": "man",
"word_pos": 92,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0036244052462279797,
"distance": 24,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 116,
"gendered_word": "girlfriend",
"word_pos": 92,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.003624 | matching |
Critcizing the Legend
Legendary tales frequently use hyperbole to glorify the feats of the hero and demonize the opponents. The referenced versions of this story are no exception, making it somewhat difficult to ascertain fact from fiction. This is compounded the fact that no American settlers saw the event and there is no Native American account of the siege. Samuel McColloch is the sole source, and his original telling was not written down. | 20978694_38 | settlers | Critcizing the Legend
Legendary tales frequently use hyperbole to glorify the feats of the hero and demonize the opponents. The referenced versions of this story are no exception, making it somewhat difficult to ascertain fact from fiction. | Samuel McColloch is the sole source, and his original telling was not written down. | This is compounded the fact that no American settlers saw the event and there is no Native American account of the siege. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.004464915953576565,
"distance": 34,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 15,
"gendered_word": "hero",
"word_pos": 49,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.004465 | preceding |
As in the original trial, the prosecution case rested in part on the likelihood that two shoeprints below a window of the Nicarico home belonged to Hernandez or Cruz. A crime lab technician for the DuPage County Sheriff's office, Paul Sahs, was due to testify to this at their retrials under separate prosecutions. According to Sahs' testimony before the later "DuPage 7" grand jury, he asked the prosecutors to be excused as a witness. Nike officials had told him that the prints were made by a woman's shoe, size 5 1/2 or 6, too small for either Hernandez or Cruz. | 20978879_59 | prosecutors | As in the original trial, the prosecution case rested in part on the likelihood that two shoeprints below a window of the Nicarico home belonged to Hernandez or Cruz. A crime lab technician for the DuPage County Sheriff's office, Paul Sahs, was due to testify to this at their retrials under separate prosecutions. | Nike officials had told him that the prints were made by a woman's shoe, size 5 1/2 or 6, too small for either Hernandez or Cruz. | According to Sahs' testimony before the later "DuPage 7" grand jury, he asked the prosecutors to be excused as a witness. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.001251664012670517,
"distance": 20,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 97,
"gendered_word": "woman",
"word_pos": 77,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.001252 | trailing |
According to Sahs' testimony before the later "DuPage 7" grand jury, he asked the prosecutors to be excused as a witness. Nike officials had told him that the prints were made by a woman's shoe, size 5 1/2 or 6, too small for either Hernandez or Cruz. The prosecutors did not give this information to the defense as required by law. They put Sahs on the stand but did not ask him about shoe size or the sex of the wearer, and the information was not revealed at the trial. | 20978879_61 | prosecutors | According to Sahs' testimony before the later "DuPage 7" grand jury, he asked the prosecutors to be excused as a witness. Nike officials had told him that the prints were made by a woman's shoe, size 5 1/2 or 6, too small for either Hernandez or Cruz. | They put Sahs on the stand but did not ask him about shoe size or the sex of the wearer, and the information was not revealed at the trial. | The prosecutors did not give this information to the defense as required by law. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.003223904175683856,
"distance": 20,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 38,
"gendered_word": "woman",
"word_pos": 18,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.009411345236003399,
"distance": 19,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 38,
"gendered_word": "woman",
"word_pos": 57,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.009411 | preceding |
The contract binds the women to an agency for two years. A regulation that, according to Nabert, is not customary in the industry. The participants also agree that the recordings "present them in a way that they don't like themselves". According to Der Spiegel, the contracts say: "The contributors are aware of any burdens that may result for them". | 20979042_90 | participants | The contract binds the women to an agency for two years. A regulation that, according to Nabert, is not customary in the industry. | According to Der Spiegel, the contracts say: "The contributors are aware of any burdens that may result for them". | The participants also agree that the recordings "present them in a way that they don't like themselves". | [
{
"attention_score": 0.013227521441876888,
"distance": 24,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 4,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 28,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.013228 | preceding |
Entertainment While some states do not have age restrictions on actors, California requires infants to be at least 15 days old to work as actors. California Child Actor's Bill protects child performers to safeguard a portion of their earnings. Due to the restriction on tobacco, actors in Mad Men smoked herbal cigarettes instead. | 20979175_83 | performers | Entertainment While some states do not have age restrictions on actors, California requires infants to be at least 15 days old to work as actors. | Due to the restriction on tobacco, actors in Mad Men smoked herbal cigarettes instead. | California Child Actor's Bill protects child performers to safeguard a portion of their earnings. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0034456136636435986,
"distance": 19,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 53,
"gendered_word": "Men",
"word_pos": 34,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.003446 | trailing |
Anthony Bowens became the first openly gay wrestler to be an All Elite Wrestling champion. Lucas Krzikalla came out as gay, making him the first openly gay player in Handball-Bundesliga, and the first active male player in a professional team sport in Germany to come out as gay. Duda Salabert and Erika Hilton became the first two openly transgender people elected to the National Congress of Brazil, with both of them elected to its Chamber of Deputies. Byron Perkins of Hampton University came out as gay, making him the first openly gay football player at any HBCU. | 20979518_684 | deputies | Anthony Bowens became the first openly gay wrestler to be an All Elite Wrestling champion. Lucas Krzikalla came out as gay, making him the first openly gay player in Handball-Bundesliga, and the first active male player in a professional team sport in Germany to come out as gay. | Byron Perkins of Hampton University came out as gay, making him the first openly gay football player at any HBCU. | Duda Salabert and Erika Hilton became the first two openly transgender people elected to the National Congress of Brazil, with both of them elected to its Chamber of Deputies. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0011196591658517718,
"distance": 44,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 39,
"gendered_word": "male",
"word_pos": 83,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
}
] | 0.00112 | preceding |
On Our Backs, the first women-run erotica magazine and the first magazine to feature lesbian erotica for a lesbian audience in the United States, was first published in 1984 by Debi Sundahl and Myrna Elana, with the contributions of Susie Bright, Nan Kinney, Honey Lee Cottrell, Dawn Lewis, Happy Hyder, Tee Corinne, Jewelle Gomez, Judith Stein, Joan Nestle, and Patrick Califia. BiPOL sponsored the first bisexual rights rally, outside the Democratic National Convention in San Francisco. The rally featured nine speakers from civil rights groups allied with the bisexual movement. New South Wales becomes the fourth Australian jurisdiction to finally decriminalises male homosexuality (even though Sydney had the largest gay community and held the Sydney Mardi Gras). | 20979518_322 | speakers | On Our Backs, the first women-run erotica magazine and the first magazine to feature lesbian erotica for a lesbian audience in the United States, was first published in 1984 by Debi Sundahl and Myrna Elana, with the contributions of Susie Bright, Nan Kinney, Honey Lee Cottrell, Dawn Lewis, Happy Hyder, Tee Corinne, Jewelle Gomez, Judith Stein, Joan Nestle, and Patrick Califia. BiPOL sponsored the first bisexual rights rally, outside the Democratic National Convention in San Francisco. | New South Wales becomes the fourth Australian jurisdiction to finally decriminalises male homosexuality (even though Sydney had the largest gay community and held the Sydney Mardi Gras). | The rally featured nine speakers from civil rights groups allied with the bisexual movement. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0009742447873577476,
"distance": 91,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 6,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 97,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0001984620321309194,
"distance": 22,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 119,
"gendered_word": "male",
"word_pos": 97,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.000974 | preceding |
Luz Noceda and Amity Blight of The Owl House became Disney's first animated LGBT female regular characters. Karine Jean-Pierre became the first openly gay woman to serve as a vice presidential chief of staff. Malcolm Kenyatta, Sam Park, and Robert Garcia became the first openly gay speakers in a keynote slot at a Democratic National Convention. On 1 October 2020, Petra De Sutter was sworn in as one of seven deputy prime ministers in the government of Prime Minister Alexander De Croo, becoming Europe’s first transgender deputy prime minister, and the most senior trans politician in Europe. | 20979518_604 | speakers | Luz Noceda and Amity Blight of The Owl House became Disney's first animated LGBT female regular characters. Karine Jean-Pierre became the first openly gay woman to serve as a vice presidential chief of staff. | On 1 October 2020, Petra De Sutter was sworn in as one of seven deputy prime ministers in the government of Prime Minister Alexander De Croo, becoming Europe’s first transgender deputy prime minister, and the most senior trans politician in Europe. | Malcolm Kenyatta, Sam Park, and Robert Garcia became the first openly gay speakers in a keynote slot at a Democratic National Convention. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.014525648206472397,
"distance": 38,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 15,
"gendered_word": "female",
"word_pos": 53,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.10153433680534363,
"distance": 25,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 28,
"gendered_word": "woman",
"word_pos": 53,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.101534 | preceding |
Karine Jean-Pierre became the first openly gay woman to serve as a vice presidential chief of staff. Malcolm Kenyatta, Sam Park, and Robert Garcia became the first openly gay speakers in a keynote slot at a Democratic National Convention. On 1 October 2020, Petra De Sutter was sworn in as one of seven deputy prime ministers in the government of Prime Minister Alexander De Croo, becoming Europe’s first transgender deputy prime minister, and the most senior trans politician in Europe. Following the landslide 2020 New Zealand Election, New Zealand gains the most LGBT parliamentary representatives worldwide. | 20979518_605 | ministers | Karine Jean-Pierre became the first openly gay woman to serve as a vice presidential chief of staff. Malcolm Kenyatta, Sam Park, and Robert Garcia became the first openly gay speakers in a keynote slot at a Democratic National Convention. | Following the landslide 2020 New Zealand Election, New Zealand gains the most LGBT parliamentary representatives worldwide. | On 1 October 2020, Petra De Sutter was sworn in as one of seven deputy prime ministers in the government of Prime Minister Alexander De Croo, becoming Europe’s first transgender deputy prime minister, and the most senior trans politician in Europe. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0056457193568348885,
"distance": 53,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 9,
"gendered_word": "woman",
"word_pos": 62,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.005646 | preceding |
Serving as the show's protagonist, Patty's and Ellen's mentor-protégée relationship is the focal point of the show. Starting as ordinary associates and eventually progressing to a mother-daughter like relationship. Patty's behavior towards her opponents (most notably Arthur Frobisher), clients and her estranged relations with her son Michael are recurring storylines that are frequently explored. Since the show's pilot episode Patty's character and Close's performance are subjects of frequent praise. | 20980054_6 | clients | Serving as the show's protagonist, Patty's and Ellen's mentor-protégée relationship is the focal point of the show. Starting as ordinary associates and eventually progressing to a mother-daughter like relationship. | Since the show's pilot episode Patty's character and Close's performance are subjects of frequent praise. | Patty's behavior towards her opponents (most notably Arthur Frobisher), clients and her estranged relations with her son Michael are recurring storylines that are frequently explored. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.003152423305436969,
"distance": 19,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 33,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 52,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.003152 | matching |
The prime idea was creating an intimidating and somewhat dangerous woman who wields power, with a young and inexperienced "mentee" under her wing. Although not specifying the setting of the show, the legal world seemed adequate, because of the "power games" between the two female leads. Like the morally ambiguous character of Vic Mackey (Michael Chiklis) on The Shield, the producers conceived Patty as non-evil but a strong and powerful person. Having previously starred in The Shield'''s fourth season as Monica Rawling, also a powerful woman, Close approached FX president John Landgraf about the possibility of a spin-off series about Rawling. | 20980054_68 | producers | The prime idea was creating an intimidating and somewhat dangerous woman who wields power, with a young and inexperienced "mentee" under her wing. Although not specifying the setting of the show, the legal world seemed adequate, because of the "power games" between the two female leads. | Having previously starred in The Shield'''s fourth season as Monica Rawling, also a powerful woman, Close approached FX president John Landgraf about the possibility of a spin-off series about Rawling. | Like the morally ambiguous character of Vic Mackey (Michael Chiklis) on The Shield, the producers conceived Patty as non-evil but a strong and powerful person. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0011676116846501827,
"distance": 62,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 10,
"gendered_word": "woman",
"word_pos": 72,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0024848231114447117,
"distance": 20,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 52,
"gendered_word": "female",
"word_pos": 72,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0016900378977879882,
"distance": 31,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 103,
"gendered_word": "woman",
"word_pos": 72,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.002485 | matching |
He is fond of quoting Ralph Waldo Emerson at every opportunity. For 18 years, he has hosted Thanksgiving dinners at his home, but the dinner that opens the film marks an irrevocable change. His comfortable, predictable world is overturned when he learns, to his horror, that both his son and his daughter have fallen in love with non-Bostonians instead of with the partners Mr. Apley and the family have arranged. Son John, always intended for his cousin Agnes, a shy girl who adores him, has fallen for Myrtle, the daughter of a successful manufacturer who lives in Worcester. | 20981095_8 | partners | He is fond of quoting Ralph Waldo Emerson at every opportunity. For 18 years, he has hosted Thanksgiving dinners at his home, but the dinner that opens the film marks an irrevocable change. | Son John, always intended for his cousin Agnes, a shy girl who adores him, has fallen for Myrtle, the daughter of a successful manufacturer who lives in Worcester. | His comfortable, predictable world is overturned when he learns, to his horror, that both his son and his daughter have fallen in love with non-Bostonians instead of with the partners Mr. Apley and the family have arranged. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.001888276543468237,
"distance": 21,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 92,
"gendered_word": "girl",
"word_pos": 71,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.001888 | trailing |
History
In 1931 Norwegian missionaries Mr and Mrs Endressen arrived at Ngaoundéré from Madagascar. Mr. Endressen was pastor while his wife is a nurse. They began medical work, visiting patients at home and treating them. Given the number of patients who came to her, she had to ask the mission to build a room where she could hospitalize those who required a formal observation. | 20981381_5 | patients | History
In 1931 Norwegian missionaries Mr and Mrs Endressen arrived at Ngaoundéré from Madagascar. Mr. Endressen was pastor while his wife is a nurse. | Given the number of patients who came to her, she had to ask the mission to build a room where she could hospitalize those who required a formal observation. | They began medical work, visiting patients at home and treating them. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0010291467187926173,
"distance": 27,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 6,
"gendered_word": "Mr",
"word_pos": 33,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0014228220097720623,
"distance": 25,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 8,
"gendered_word": "Mrs",
"word_pos": 33,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0017627333290874958,
"distance": 11,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 22,
"gendered_word": "wife",
"word_pos": 33,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0007789040682837367,
"distance": 38,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 6,
"gendered_word": "Mr",
"word_pos": 44,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0010966231347993016,
"distance": 36,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 8,
"gendered_word": "Mrs",
"word_pos": 44,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0010518707567825913,
"distance": 22,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 22,
"gendered_word": "wife",
"word_pos": 44,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.001763 | preceding |
Mr. Endressen was pastor while his wife is a nurse. They began medical work, visiting patients at home and treating them. Given the number of patients who came to her, she had to ask the mission to build a room where she could hospitalize those who required a formal observation. A straw huts was erected, with one room serving as a hospital room for men and the second for women. | 20981381_6 | patients | Mr. Endressen was pastor while his wife is a nurse. They began medical work, visiting patients at home and treating them. | A straw huts was erected, with one room serving as a hospital room for men and the second for women. | Given the number of patients who came to her, she had to ask the mission to build a room where she could hospitalize those who required a formal observation. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.014468986541032791,
"distance": 11,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 6,
"gendered_word": "wife",
"word_pos": 17,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.002105287741869688,
"distance": 53,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 70,
"gendered_word": "men",
"word_pos": 17,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.003572794608771801,
"distance": 58,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 75,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 17,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0014124315930530429,
"distance": 22,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 6,
"gendered_word": "wife",
"word_pos": 28,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0036770531442016363,
"distance": 42,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 70,
"gendered_word": "men",
"word_pos": 28,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0035963314585387707,
"distance": 47,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 75,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 28,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.014469 | preceding |
Her many books were the first written on the subjects of religious ideas, aging, interracial love, domestic advice, Indian rights, women's rights, prison and social reform, and abolishing slavery. The bombshell book written in 1833 An Appeal in Favor of that Class of Americans Called Africans transcended time and was used by leaders during the 1960s Civil Rights Movement. Many of her books are housed in museums or used as reference material in libraries, while some of her works are still published today for lay readers, scholars, and researchers studying the impact she made on Americans. Lydia Maria Child was well regarded and quite known as an influential figure among her abolitionist and literary peers. | 20982049_14 | readers | Her many books were the first written on the subjects of religious ideas, aging, interracial love, domestic advice, Indian rights, women's rights, prison and social reform, and abolishing slavery. The bombshell book written in 1833 An Appeal in Favor of that Class of Americans Called Africans transcended time and was used by leaders during the 1960s Civil Rights Movement. | Lydia Maria Child was well regarded and quite known as an influential figure among her abolitionist and literary peers. | Many of her books are housed in museums or used as reference material in libraries, while some of her works are still published today for lay readers, scholars, and researchers studying the impact she made on Americans. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.002417035633698106,
"distance": 71,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 25,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 96,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.002417 | preceding |
He served as first President from 1960 to 1980. Seychelles
James Mancham served as first President of Seychelles from 1976 to 1977. He was one of the last White African presidents in the history of Africa. He considered himself the self-proclaimed "Founding Father"; however this title is often attributed to his socialist successor France-Albert René, who led the country to become one of the most democratic and most economically stable states in Africa. | 20982080_108 | presidents | He served as first President from 1960 to 1980. Seychelles
James Mancham served as first President of Seychelles from 1976 to 1977. | He considered himself the self-proclaimed "Founding Father"; however this title is often attributed to his socialist successor France-Albert René, who led the country to become one of the most democratic and most economically stable states in Africa. | He was one of the last White African presidents in the history of Africa. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.011361556127667427,
"distance": 16,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 49,
"gendered_word": "Father",
"word_pos": 33,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.011362 | trailing |
He was one of the last White African presidents in the history of Africa. He considered himself the self-proclaimed "Founding Father"; however this title is often attributed to his socialist successor France-Albert René, who led the country to become one of the most democratic and most economically stable states in Africa. Somalia
The Somali Youth League played a major role for Somalia's independence since the 1940s, with two of its members having served as the first two Somali presidents, Aden Adde and Abdirashid Shermarke. There are several murals and monuments dedicated to the SYL's independence movement in Mogadishu. | 20982080_110 | presidents | He was one of the last White African presidents in the history of Africa. He considered himself the self-proclaimed "Founding Father"; however this title is often attributed to his socialist successor France-Albert René, who led the country to become one of the most democratic and most economically stable states in Africa. | There are several murals and monuments dedicated to the SYL's independence movement in Mogadishu. | Somalia
The Somali Youth League played a major role for Somalia's independence since the 1940s, with two of its members having served as the first two Somali presidents, Aden Adde and Abdirashid Shermarke. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0010909737320616841,
"distance": 16,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 24,
"gendered_word": "Father",
"word_pos": 8,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.001543916529044509,
"distance": 67,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 24,
"gendered_word": "Father",
"word_pos": 91,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.001544 | preceding |
Chundrigar. Some historians credit the Muslim reformist Sir Syed Ahmad Khan as a founder of Pakistan because he provided the Two-Nation Theory which played a central role in the perception of Pakistan and its Muslim nationalist ideology largely based on Iqbal's philosophy and views. Palestine
Palestinian political leader Yasser Arafat has been considered by some commentators as being the "founding father" of Palestine. Born in 1929 in Cairo, Egypt, Arafat soon became a supporter of Arab nationalism and anti-Zionism; in the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, he fought alongside the Muslim Brotherhood against the newly independent State of Israel. | 20982080_384 | commentators | Chundrigar. Some historians credit the Muslim reformist Sir Syed Ahmad Khan as a founder of Pakistan because he provided the Two-Nation Theory which played a central role in the perception of Pakistan and its Muslim nationalist ideology largely based on Iqbal's philosophy and views. | Born in 1929 in Cairo, Egypt, Arafat soon became a supporter of Arab nationalism and anti-Zionism; in the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, he fought alongside the Muslim Brotherhood against the newly independent State of Israel. | Palestine
Palestinian political leader Yasser Arafat has been considered by some commentators as being the "founding father" of Palestine. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0003996855521108955,
"distance": 53,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 8,
"gendered_word": "Sir",
"word_pos": 61,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0003134325670544058,
"distance": 50,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 11,
"gendered_word": "Khan",
"word_pos": 61,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0013950471766293049,
"distance": 6,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 67,
"gendered_word": "father",
"word_pos": 61,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.001395 | trailing |
A total of 30 Palestinian civilians were known to have been killed on 5 January, and the total Palestinian death toll at the end of the day was 540, until details of the Samouni family incident (below) emerged several days later. 6 January 2009
According to Palestinian sources, 20 people were killed in a number of IDF attacks. Medical workers reported that an attack on Deir al-Balah and the Bureij refugee camp killed ten Palestinians, including a father and his three children. An IDF soldier was killed and four wounded in an ambush in northern Gaza City. | 20982206_269 | workers | A total of 30 Palestinian civilians were known to have been killed on 5 January, and the total Palestinian death toll at the end of the day was 540, until details of the Samouni family incident (below) emerged several days later. 6 January 2009
According to Palestinian sources, 20 people were killed in a number of IDF attacks. | An IDF soldier was killed and four wounded in an ambush in northern Gaza City. | Medical workers reported that an attack on Deir al-Balah and the Bureij refugee camp killed ten Palestinians, including a father and his three children. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.003332295920699835,
"distance": 21,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 88,
"gendered_word": "father",
"word_pos": 67,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.003332 | trailing |
The congress passed resolutions on the conditions of membership to the congress, international labor legislation, the Jewish question and the rights of women, the position of the working class regarding militarism, and strikes. It also proclaim May 1 a proletarian holiday. The resolution on the Jewish question originally only condemned anti-Semitism, and stated the liberation of the Jews, as with every other people, would only be brought about by the advent of socialism. It was changed however, on the initiative of Dr. Regnard and M. | 20982907_7 | jews | The congress passed resolutions on the conditions of membership to the congress, international labor legislation, the Jewish question and the rights of women, the position of the working class regarding militarism, and strikes. It also proclaim May 1 a proletarian holiday. | It was changed however, on the initiative of Dr. Regnard and M. | The resolution on the Jewish question originally only condemned anti-Semitism, and stated the liberation of the Jews, as with every other people, would only be brought about by the advent of socialism. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0070565990172326565,
"distance": 42,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 24,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 66,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
}
] | 0.007057 | preceding |
Journalist
During her time on the Grand Prix tennis tour with her husband Erik van Dillen she wrote 50 articles for sport magazines in 7 countries (France, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Singapore, England, Austria, and the United States) on tennis professionals Chris Evert, Jimmy Connors, Bjorn Borg, John McEnroe, and others in Tennis World Magazine in England where she was a contributing editor as well as Tennis in Singapore. She wrote articles on the Honorable Andrew Young, former mayor of Atlanta and a former United Nations Ambassador, and Becky London, the daughter of author Jack London. Speaker
Bakhtiar spoke as one of the participants at the UNESCO Culture of Peace: Women Making It Happen at the Dag Hammarskjold Auditorium, United Nations, New York, on March 2, 2000. She participated in The Gulf and The Globe Conference 2009 at the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis. | 20983034_35 | participants | Journalist
During her time on the Grand Prix tennis tour with her husband Erik van Dillen she wrote 50 articles for sport magazines in 7 countries (France, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Singapore, England, Austria, and the United States) on tennis professionals Chris Evert, Jimmy Connors, Bjorn Borg, John McEnroe, and others in Tennis World Magazine in England where she was a contributing editor as well as Tennis in Singapore. She wrote articles on the Honorable Andrew Young, former mayor of Atlanta and a former United Nations Ambassador, and Becky London, the daughter of author Jack London. | She participated in The Gulf and The Globe Conference 2009 at the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis. | Speaker
Bakhtiar spoke as one of the participants at the UNESCO Culture of Peace: Women Making It Happen at the Dag Hammarskjold Auditorium, United Nations, New York, on March 2, 2000. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.00015502625319641083,
"distance": 107,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 13,
"gendered_word": "husband",
"word_pos": 120,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.006390449590981007,
"distance": 8,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 128,
"gendered_word": "Women",
"word_pos": 120,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.00639 | trailing |
When filming began, Holland considered filming the scene inside the car instead. Steve Carell suggested Michael get in the car and leave Andy outside, then tell him while driving away, which was how the scene was ultimately shot. During a scene when Andy returns to the office and confronts his co-workers; there is a long, awkward silence, and the script originally called for Kevin to pass gas and ruin the tension. During filming, it was changed so Phyllis would pass gas instead because it was decided it would be funnier if it were a woman. | 20983072_66 | workers | When filming began, Holland considered filming the scene inside the car instead. Steve Carell suggested Michael get in the car and leave Andy outside, then tell him while driving away, which was how the scene was ultimately shot. | During filming, it was changed so Phyllis would pass gas instead because it was decided it would be funnier if it were a woman. | During a scene when Andy returns to the office and confronts his co-workers; there is a long, awkward silence, and the script originally called for Kevin to pass gas and ruin the tension. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0017141381977126002,
"distance": 49,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 106,
"gendered_word": "woman",
"word_pos": 57,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.001714 | trailing |
The episode received generally mixed reviews. According to Nielsen Media Research, "Prince Family Paper" was seen by 8.74 million viewers, a slight increase from the previous week's episode, "The Duel". Plot
Dunder Mifflin CFO David Wallace (Andy Buckley) enlists Michael Scott (Steve Carell) to report on the success of a small family-owned local paper company named Prince Paper, that works in an area where Dunder Mifflin has never acquired clients. Michael brings Dwight Schrute (Rainn Wilson) to help gather information. | 20983133_11 | clients | The episode received generally mixed reviews. According to Nielsen Media Research, "Prince Family Paper" was seen by 8.74 million viewers, a slight increase from the previous week's episode, "The Duel". | Michael brings Dwight Schrute (Rainn Wilson) to help gather information. | Plot
Dunder Mifflin CFO David Wallace (Andy Buckley) enlists Michael Scott (Steve Carell) to report on the success of a small family-owned local paper company named Prince Paper, that works in an area where Dunder Mifflin has never acquired clients. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0020300676114857197,
"distance": 73,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 14,
"gendered_word": "Prince",
"word_pos": 87,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.002613176591694355,
"distance": 14,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 73,
"gendered_word": "Prince",
"word_pos": 87,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.002613 | trailing |
The Hebraization of surnames (also Hebraicization) (, Ivrut, "Hebraization") is the act of adopting a Hebrew surname. For many diaspora Jews who migrated to Israel, taking a Hebrew surname was a way to erase remnants of their diaspora experience and to assimilate into a new shared Jewish identity with Mizrahi Jews and Palestinian Jews (Jewish residents of Ottoman Syria and Mandatory Palestine) and later as Israeli Jews (Jewish citizens of the independent State of Israel). The phenomenon was especially common among Ashkenazi Jews, because many such families acquired permanent surnames (rather than patronyms) only when surnames were made compulsory by the November 12, 1787, decree by Habsburg Emperor Joseph II. Sephardi Jews from the Iberian peninsula often had hereditary family names since well before the expulsion from Spain (e.g., Cordovero, Abrabanel, Shaltiel, de Leon, Alcalai, Toledano, Lopez). | 20983202_2 | jews | The Hebraization of surnames (also Hebraicization) (, Ivrut, "Hebraization") is the act of adopting a Hebrew surname. For many diaspora Jews who migrated to Israel, taking a Hebrew surname was a way to erase remnants of their diaspora experience and to assimilate into a new shared Jewish identity with Mizrahi Jews and Palestinian Jews (Jewish residents of Ottoman Syria and Mandatory Palestine) and later as Israeli Jews (Jewish citizens of the independent State of Israel). | Sephardi Jews from the Iberian peninsula often had hereditary family names since well before the expulsion from Spain (e.g., Cordovero, Abrabanel, Shaltiel, de Leon, Alcalai, Toledano, Lopez). | The phenomenon was especially common among Ashkenazi Jews, because many such families acquired permanent surnames (rather than patronyms) only when surnames were made compulsory by the November 12, 1787, decree by Habsburg Emperor Joseph II. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.002482872223481536,
"distance": 98,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 126,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 28,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0012700483202934265,
"distance": 67,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 126,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 59,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0009304261766374111,
"distance": 64,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 126,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 62,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.004458502866327763,
"distance": 49,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 126,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 77,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.005374053493142128,
"distance": 30,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 126,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 96,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0028886175714433193,
"distance": 5,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 126,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 131,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
}
] | 0.005374 | trailing |
For many diaspora Jews who migrated to Israel, taking a Hebrew surname was a way to erase remnants of their diaspora experience and to assimilate into a new shared Jewish identity with Mizrahi Jews and Palestinian Jews (Jewish residents of Ottoman Syria and Mandatory Palestine) and later as Israeli Jews (Jewish citizens of the independent State of Israel). The phenomenon was especially common among Ashkenazi Jews, because many such families acquired permanent surnames (rather than patronyms) only when surnames were made compulsory by the November 12, 1787, decree by Habsburg Emperor Joseph II. Sephardi Jews from the Iberian peninsula often had hereditary family names since well before the expulsion from Spain (e.g., Cordovero, Abrabanel, Shaltiel, de Leon, Alcalai, Toledano, Lopez). Very few Hebrew surnames existed before Hebraization, such as Cohen (priest), Moss (Moses) and Levi (Levite). | 20983202_3 | jews | For many diaspora Jews who migrated to Israel, taking a Hebrew surname was a way to erase remnants of their diaspora experience and to assimilate into a new shared Jewish identity with Mizrahi Jews and Palestinian Jews (Jewish residents of Ottoman Syria and Mandatory Palestine) and later as Israeli Jews (Jewish citizens of the independent State of Israel). The phenomenon was especially common among Ashkenazi Jews, because many such families acquired permanent surnames (rather than patronyms) only when surnames were made compulsory by the November 12, 1787, decree by Habsburg Emperor Joseph II. | Very few Hebrew surnames existed before Hebraization, such as Cohen (priest), Moss (Moses) and Levi (Levite). | Sephardi Jews from the Iberian peninsula often had hereditary family names since well before the expulsion from Spain (e.g., Cordovero, Abrabanel, Shaltiel, de Leon, Alcalai, Toledano, Lopez). | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0017960446421056986,
"distance": 98,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 101,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 3,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.001669383840635419,
"distance": 67,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 101,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 34,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0013239983236417174,
"distance": 64,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 101,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 37,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.004519801586866379,
"distance": 49,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 101,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 52,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.007325235288590193,
"distance": 30,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 101,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 71,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0028735101222991943,
"distance": 5,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 101,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 106,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
}
] | 0.007325 | matching |
The Liberals were starting from scratch in their campaign and attacked Labour for its complacency in an area which it was alleged they took their support for granted and the Conservatives on their performance on questions such as poverty and unemployment. Nomination of Giles Radice
An issue which surfaced during the campaign and which caused a great deal of bitterness was the question of how Labour candidate Giles Radice had been selected. The New Statesman magazine published an article on 23 February 1973, written by journalist Richard West, alleging that officials of the General and Municipal Workers Union had systematically gained control of the Chester-le-Street Constituency Labour Party and had in effect gerrymandered their representation in the division to obtain more votes than affiliated branches of other trade unions. In his article West claimed that the union's tactics had proved unpopular and divisive inside the local Labour party with 'loyal party workers' and some groups, such as the women's section, being particularly disgruntled. | 20983707_22 | workers | The Liberals were starting from scratch in their campaign and attacked Labour for its complacency in an area which it was alleged they took their support for granted and the Conservatives on their performance on questions such as poverty and unemployment. Nomination of Giles Radice
An issue which surfaced during the campaign and which caused a great deal of bitterness was the question of how Labour candidate Giles Radice had been selected. | In his article West claimed that the union's tactics had proved unpopular and divisive inside the local Labour party with 'loyal party workers' and some groups, such as the women's section, being particularly disgruntled. | The New Statesman magazine published an article on 23 February 1973, written by journalist Richard West, alleging that officials of the General and Municipal Workers Union had systematically gained control of the Chester-le-Street Constituency Labour Party and had in effect gerrymandered their representation in the division to obtain more votes than affiliated branches of other trade unions. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.00044709164649248123,
"distance": 71,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 172,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 101,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.004315659869462252,
"distance": 9,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 172,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 163,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.004316 | trailing |
Nomination of Giles Radice
An issue which surfaced during the campaign and which caused a great deal of bitterness was the question of how Labour candidate Giles Radice had been selected. The New Statesman magazine published an article on 23 February 1973, written by journalist Richard West, alleging that officials of the General and Municipal Workers Union had systematically gained control of the Chester-le-Street Constituency Labour Party and had in effect gerrymandered their representation in the division to obtain more votes than affiliated branches of other trade unions. In his article West claimed that the union's tactics had proved unpopular and divisive inside the local Labour party with 'loyal party workers' and some groups, such as the women's section, being particularly disgruntled. Liberal 'smears'
In the aftermath of this controversy, Labour turned its attack on the campaign of the Liberal candidate, accusing George Suggett of trying to smear Giles Radice personally and of trying to capitalise unfairly on the nomination issue. | 20983707_23 | workers | Nomination of Giles Radice
An issue which surfaced during the campaign and which caused a great deal of bitterness was the question of how Labour candidate Giles Radice had been selected. The New Statesman magazine published an article on 23 February 1973, written by journalist Richard West, alleging that officials of the General and Municipal Workers Union had systematically gained control of the Chester-le-Street Constituency Labour Party and had in effect gerrymandered their representation in the division to obtain more votes than affiliated branches of other trade unions. | Liberal 'smears'
In the aftermath of this controversy, Labour turned its attack on the campaign of the Liberal candidate, accusing George Suggett of trying to smear Giles Radice personally and of trying to capitalise unfairly on the nomination issue. | In his article West claimed that the union's tactics had proved unpopular and divisive inside the local Labour party with 'loyal party workers' and some groups, such as the women's section, being particularly disgruntled. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0005138323176652193,
"distance": 71,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 130,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 59,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.003507689107209444,
"distance": 9,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 130,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 121,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.003508 | trailing |
Women in baseball
The very first women's baseball game where girls were paid and prospectors paid admission took place in Illinois in 1875. However, many were unimpressed with the women's abilities while playing baseball. During this time, many Americans didn't see women as being athletes or as major participants in sports. In fact, even in the beginning of the 1900s, people opposed women in all sports because they were afraid that sports would ultimately destroy women's femininity. | 20983717_37 | participants | Women in baseball
The very first women's baseball game where girls were paid and prospectors paid admission took place in Illinois in 1875. However, many were unimpressed with the women's abilities while playing baseball. | In fact, even in the beginning of the 1900s, people opposed women in all sports because they were afraid that sports would ultimately destroy women's femininity. | During this time, many Americans didn't see women as being athletes or as major participants in sports. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0029123853892087936,
"distance": 56,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 0,
"gendered_word": "Women",
"word_pos": 56,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0017311846604570746,
"distance": 49,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 7,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 56,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0024709508288651705,
"distance": 23,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 33,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 56,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.006696208380162716,
"distance": 7,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 49,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 56,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.005578892305493355,
"distance": 17,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 73,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 56,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0017384644597768784,
"distance": 30,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 86,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 56,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.006696 | matching |
During World War II, the crew probably totalled around 1,800–1,900 men. During the ships' modernization during the 1930s, their forward superstructures were enlarged with multiple platforms added to their tripod foremasts. The rear superstructures were rebuilt to accommodate mounts for anti-aircraft (AA) guns and additional fire-control directors. Both ships were also given torpedo bulges to improve their underwater protection and to compensate for the weight of the additional armor. | 20984633_41 | directors | During World War II, the crew probably totalled around 1,800–1,900 men. During the ships' modernization during the 1930s, their forward superstructures were enlarged with multiple platforms added to their tripod foremasts. | Both ships were also given torpedo bulges to improve their underwater protection and to compensate for the weight of the additional armor. | The rear superstructures were rebuilt to accommodate mounts for anti-aircraft (AA) guns and additional fire-control directors. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0006217424524948001,
"distance": 47,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 11,
"gendered_word": "men",
"word_pos": 58,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.000622 | preceding |
Raised in England, he attended Millfield School. Apart from his native English, Hudson also speaks Spanish. In May 2019, Hudson founded the Forgotten Dogs Foundation, aimed at helping homeless dogs find a safe haven through work with communities, shelters and animal care and rescue programs across the country, working with experts to identify and find solutions to three core problems in the dog rescue space: prevention, protection and compassion. Former Premier League coach Harry Redknapp and women’s national team players Rose Lavelle and Jane Campbell are among the Forgotten Dogs Foundation’s 10-member board, holding soccer clinics and tournaments as fundraisers. | 20984738_99 | experts | Raised in England, he attended Millfield School. Apart from his native English, Hudson also speaks Spanish. | Former Premier League coach Harry Redknapp and women’s national team players Rose Lavelle and Jane Campbell are among the Forgotten Dogs Foundation’s 10-member board, holding soccer clinics and tournaments as fundraisers. | In May 2019, Hudson founded the Forgotten Dogs Foundation, aimed at helping homeless dogs find a safe haven through work with communities, shelters and animal care and rescue programs across the country, working with experts to identify and find solutions to three core problems in the dog rescue space: prevention, protection and compassion. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.007317477371543646,
"distance": 29,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 87,
"gendered_word": "women",
"word_pos": 58,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.007317 | trailing |
It is presumed that the reporters had knowledge of the program for at least several months; shortly after the article appeared they published a book that detailed the story further. The 2001 book, Germs: Biological Weapons and America's Secret War, and the article are the only publicly available sources detailing Project Jefferson and its sister projects, Bacchus and Clear Vision. Legality
Project Jefferson was operated by the Defense Intelligence Agency and reviewed by lawyers at the Pentagon. Those lawyers determined that Project Jefferson was in line with the BWC. | 20985187_10 | lawyers | It is presumed that the reporters had knowledge of the program for at least several months; shortly after the article appeared they published a book that detailed the story further. The 2001 book, Germs: Biological Weapons and America's Secret War, and the article are the only publicly available sources detailing Project Jefferson and its sister projects, Bacchus and Clear Vision. | Those lawyers determined that Project Jefferson was in line with the BWC. | Legality
Project Jefferson was operated by the Defense Intelligence Agency and reviewed by lawyers at the Pentagon. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.004134617745876312,
"distance": 22,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 60,
"gendered_word": "sister",
"word_pos": 82,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0018675324972718954,
"distance": 28,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 60,
"gendered_word": "sister",
"word_pos": 88,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.004135 | matching |
The 2001 book, Germs: Biological Weapons and America's Secret War, and the article are the only publicly available sources detailing Project Jefferson and its sister projects, Bacchus and Clear Vision. Legality
Project Jefferson was operated by the Defense Intelligence Agency and reviewed by lawyers at the Pentagon. Those lawyers determined that Project Jefferson was in line with the BWC. Despite assertions from the Clinton and Bush administrations that the project, and its sisters, were legal, several international legal scholars disagreed. | 20985187_11 | lawyers | The 2001 book, Germs: Biological Weapons and America's Secret War, and the article are the only publicly available sources detailing Project Jefferson and its sister projects, Bacchus and Clear Vision. Legality
Project Jefferson was operated by the Defense Intelligence Agency and reviewed by lawyers at the Pentagon. | Despite assertions from the Clinton and Bush administrations that the project, and its sisters, were legal, several international legal scholars disagreed. | Those lawyers determined that Project Jefferson was in line with the BWC. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.002913788892328739,
"distance": 22,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 28,
"gendered_word": "sister",
"word_pos": 50,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0013979085488244891,
"distance": 28,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 28,
"gendered_word": "sister",
"word_pos": 56,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.002914 | preceding |
Hall. Hall had contributed one picture to Baum's 1901 story collection American Fairy Tales, and in the interim had done abundant work for Baum's publisher Reilly & Britton. Hall specialized in adventure stories, scouting handbooks, and comparable material; he illustrated titles like Homemade Toys for Girls and Boys, Carpentry and Mechanics for Boys, and Gordon Stuart's Boy Scouts of the Air series of juvenile novels. The end
In a letter dated 7 October 1915, Baum's publisher suggested to him that while the Aunt Jane's Nieces series had been "one of your — and our — bread-and-butter winners," it was time to bring the series to its end and start a new venture. | 20985742_44 | mechanics | Hall. Hall had contributed one picture to Baum's 1901 story collection American Fairy Tales, and in the interim had done abundant work for Baum's publisher Reilly & Britton. | The end
In a letter dated 7 October 1915, Baum's publisher suggested to him that while the Aunt Jane's Nieces series had been "one of your — and our — bread-and-butter winners," it was time to bring the series to its end and start a new venture. | Hall specialized in adventure stories, scouting handbooks, and comparable material; he illustrated titles like Homemade Toys for Girls and Boys, Carpentry and Mechanics for Boys, and Gordon Stuart's Boy Scouts of the Air series of juvenile novels. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0011777624022215605,
"distance": 8,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 67,
"gendered_word": "Boy",
"word_pos": 59,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
}
] | 0.001178 | trailing |
In December 2012, Doyle directed PotashCorp's participation as a founding partner of the Global Institute for Food Security at the University of Saskatchewan, a "public-private partnership that enables innovative, multi-disciplinary research, training and technology development to improve sustainable crop production, enhance human and animal nutrition, and address the growing global demand for safe, reliable food". Under the terms of this partnership, PotashCorp will contribute up to $35 million over seven years to the Global Institute for Food Security, with the Government of Saskatchewan providing up to $15 million over the same period. Doyle is a graduate of Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., and chairman of the university's board of directors. In 2011, Bill Doyle and his wife Kathy gave a $10 million endowment to Georgetown to establish the Doyle Engaging Difference Program, a "campus-wide collaboration between the Berkley Center for Religion, Peace, and World Affairs, the Center for New Designs in Learning and Scholarship, and Georgetown College designed to deepen the university's own commitment to tolerance and diversity and enhance global awareness of the challenges and opportunities of an era of increasing interconnectedness." He is also on the board of the Big Shoulders Fund, a charity providing support to Catholic schools in the neediest areas of inner-city Chicago. | 20987178_16 | directors | In December 2012, Doyle directed PotashCorp's participation as a founding partner of the Global Institute for Food Security at the University of Saskatchewan, a "public-private partnership that enables innovative, multi-disciplinary research, training and technology development to improve sustainable crop production, enhance human and animal nutrition, and address the growing global demand for safe, reliable food". Under the terms of this partnership, PotashCorp will contribute up to $35 million over seven years to the Global Institute for Food Security, with the Government of Saskatchewan providing up to $15 million over the same period. | In 2011, Bill Doyle and his wife Kathy gave a $10 million endowment to Georgetown to establish the Doyle Engaging Difference Program, a "campus-wide collaboration between the Berkley Center for Religion, Peace, and World Affairs, the Center for New Designs in Learning and Scholarship, and Georgetown College designed to deepen the university's own commitment to tolerance and diversity and enhance global awareness of the challenges and opportunities of an era of increasing interconnectedness." He is also on the board of the Big Shoulders Fund, a charity providing support to Catholic schools in the neediest areas of inner-city Chicago. | Doyle is a graduate of Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., and chairman of the university's board of directors. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0008042044355534017,
"distance": 9,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 141,
"gendered_word": "wife",
"word_pos": 132,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.000804 | trailing |
During the early 1940s Marchisio initiated publicity and fundraising for Italy by unifying various charity groups including the Italian Welfare League, Christian Democratic Party, Boy Scouts and Sons of Italy. One of his largest contributions, in cooperation with the Christian Democratic Party, was the establishment of Boys' Town in Italy. Boys' Towns acted as Catholic orphanages for children of war veterans or those abandoned in destroyed cities. Specific efforts were made in order to accommodate the population of children, ensuring stable population growth. | 20987791_27 | veterans | During the early 1940s Marchisio initiated publicity and fundraising for Italy by unifying various charity groups including the Italian Welfare League, Christian Democratic Party, Boy Scouts and Sons of Italy. One of his largest contributions, in cooperation with the Christian Democratic Party, was the establishment of Boys' Town in Italy. | Specific efforts were made in order to accommodate the population of children, ensuring stable population growth. | Boys' Towns acted as Catholic orphanages for children of war veterans or those abandoned in destroyed cities. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0009458819404244423,
"distance": 42,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 26,
"gendered_word": "Boy",
"word_pos": 68,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.000946 | preceding |
Career
In 2017, he became the president of FICCI. He is the chairman of the board of governors of the Indian Institute of Science Education and Research, Kolkata and Indian Institute of Technology, Bhubaneswar; a member of the board of governors and also the chairman of the finance committee of the Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad; chairman of IIM Udaipur; member of the governing board of The Ahmedabad University, chairman of School of Life Sciences, Ahmedabad University; member of the board of management of the Narsee Monjee Institute of Management Studies and executive chairman, vice president and trustee of the Gujarat Cancer Society and chairman of the Gujarat Cancer and Research Institute. Patel was named the "Best Pharma Man of the year 2003" by the Foundation of Indian Industry and Economists in recognition of the growth of Cadila under his leadership. At that time, Patel predicted that Zydus Cadila would become the third-largest pharmaceutical company in India by 2005. | 20988512_6 | economists | Career
In 2017, he became the president of FICCI. He is the chairman of the board of governors of the Indian Institute of Science Education and Research, Kolkata and Indian Institute of Technology, Bhubaneswar; a member of the board of governors and also the chairman of the finance committee of the Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad; chairman of IIM Udaipur; member of the governing board of The Ahmedabad University, chairman of School of Life Sciences, Ahmedabad University; member of the board of management of the Narsee Monjee Institute of Management Studies and executive chairman, vice president and trustee of the Gujarat Cancer Society and chairman of the Gujarat Cancer and Research Institute. | At that time, Patel predicted that Zydus Cadila would become the third-largest pharmaceutical company in India by 2005. | Patel was named the "Best Pharma Man of the year 2003" by the Foundation of Indian Industry and Economists in recognition of the growth of Cadila under his leadership. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0033485665917396545,
"distance": 13,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 133,
"gendered_word": "Man",
"word_pos": 146,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
}
] | 0.003349 | matching |
To pursue the club's objects, the Wayfarers have regular organised meets around the UK, often in their own hut or those of their "Kindred Clubs". Informal climbing parties are also frequently in action at home and abroad. The Wayfarers' Club was a founding member of the British Mountaineering Council, the national representative body of climbers, hill walkers and mountaineers. Until the AGM of 2018 the club maintained the men-only membership rule with which almost all the senior clubs were founded. | 20989176_6 | mountaineers | To pursue the club's objects, the Wayfarers have regular organised meets around the UK, often in their own hut or those of their "Kindred Clubs". Informal climbing parties are also frequently in action at home and abroad. | Until the AGM of 2018 the club maintained the men-only membership rule with which almost all the senior clubs were founded. | The Wayfarers' Club was a founding member of the British Mountaineering Council, the national representative body of climbers, hill walkers and mountaineers. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.00008450156747130677,
"distance": 11,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 79,
"gendered_word": "men",
"word_pos": 68,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.000085 | trailing |
They had to uphold the legal fiction that they were merely an ordinary citizen generously helping out a friend for free, and thus they could never organize into a real profession—with professional associations and titles and all the other pomp and circumstance—like their modern counterparts. Therefore, if one narrows the definition to those who could practice the legal profession openly and legally, then the first lawyers would have to be the orators of ancient Rome. The ban on fees was abolished by Emperor Claudius, who legalized advocacy as a profession and allowed the Roman advocates to become the first lawyers who could practice openly—but he also imposed a fee ceiling of 10,000 sesterces. This was apparently not much money; the Satires of Juvenal complain that there was no money in working as an advocate. | 20989225_14 | advocates | They had to uphold the legal fiction that they were merely an ordinary citizen generously helping out a friend for free, and thus they could never organize into a real profession—with professional associations and titles and all the other pomp and circumstance—like their modern counterparts. Therefore, if one narrows the definition to those who could practice the legal profession openly and legally, then the first lawyers would have to be the orators of ancient Rome. | This was apparently not much money; the Satires of Juvenal complain that there was no money in working as an advocate. | The ban on fees was abolished by Emperor Claudius, who legalized advocacy as a profession and allowed the Roman advocates to become the first lawyers who could practice openly—but he also imposed a fee ceiling of 10,000 sesterces. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.00044784456258639693,
"distance": 13,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 91,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 104,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.000448 | matching |
The ban on fees was abolished by Emperor Claudius, who legalized advocacy as a profession and allowed the Roman advocates to become the first lawyers who could practice openly—but he also imposed a fee ceiling of 10,000 sesterces. This was apparently not much money; the Satires of Juvenal complain that there was no money in working as an advocate. Like their Greek contemporaries, early Roman advocates were trained in rhetoric, not law, and the judges before whom they argued were also not law-trained. But very early on, unlike Athens, Rome developed a class of specialists who were learned in the law, known as jurisconsults (iuris consulti). | 20989225_16 | advocates | The ban on fees was abolished by Emperor Claudius, who legalized advocacy as a profession and allowed the Roman advocates to become the first lawyers who could practice openly—but he also imposed a fee ceiling of 10,000 sesterces. This was apparently not much money; the Satires of Juvenal complain that there was no money in working as an advocate. | But very early on, unlike Athens, Rome developed a class of specialists who were learned in the law, known as jurisconsults (iuris consulti). | Like their Greek contemporaries, early Roman advocates were trained in rhetoric, not law, and the judges before whom they argued were also not law-trained. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0003178674669470638,
"distance": 13,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 7,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 20,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.006247605197131634,
"distance": 65,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 7,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 72,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.006248 | preceding |
The centralization and bureaucratization of the profession was apparently gradual at first, but accelerated during the reign of Emperor Hadrian. At the same time, the jurisconsults went into decline during the imperial period. In the words of Fritz Schulz, "by the fourth century things had changed in the eastern Empire: advocates now were really lawyers." For example, by the fourth century, advocates had to be enrolled on the bar of a court to argue before it, they could only be attached to one court at a time, and there were restrictions (which came and went depending upon who was emperor) on how many advocates could be enrolled at a particular court. By the 380s, advocates were studying law in addition to rhetoric (thus reducing the need for a separate class of jurisconsults); in 460, Emperor Leo imposed a requirement that new advocates seeking admission had to produce testimonials from their teachers; and by the sixth century, a regular course of legal study lasting about four years was required for admission. | 20989225_27 | advocates | The centralization and bureaucratization of the profession was apparently gradual at first, but accelerated during the reign of Emperor Hadrian. At the same time, the jurisconsults went into decline during the imperial period. | By the 380s, advocates were studying law in addition to rhetoric (thus reducing the need for a separate class of jurisconsults); in 460, Emperor Leo imposed a requirement that new advocates seeking admission had to produce testimonials from their teachers; and by the sixth century, a regular course of legal study lasting about four years was required for admission. | In the words of Fritz Schulz, "by the fourth century things had changed in the eastern Empire: advocates now were really lawyers." For example, by the fourth century, advocates had to be enrolled on the bar of a court to argue before it, they could only be attached to one court at a time, and there were restrictions (which came and went depending upon who was emperor) on how many advocates could be enrolled at a particular court. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.002518901601433754,
"distance": 38,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 19,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 57,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0008125802269205451,
"distance": 56,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 113,
"gendered_word": "emperor",
"word_pos": 57,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.005676567554473877,
"distance": 98,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 155,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 57,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0021152955014258623,
"distance": 53,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 19,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 72,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.001461836276575923,
"distance": 41,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 113,
"gendered_word": "emperor",
"word_pos": 72,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.006128085311502218,
"distance": 83,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 155,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 72,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0007053010631352663,
"distance": 99,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 19,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 118,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0008170133223757148,
"distance": 5,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 113,
"gendered_word": "emperor",
"word_pos": 118,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0008255825378000736,
"distance": 37,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 155,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 118,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0019860751926898956,
"distance": 112,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 19,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 131,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.002704944461584091,
"distance": 18,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 113,
"gendered_word": "emperor",
"word_pos": 131,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.006970523856580257,
"distance": 24,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 155,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 131,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0008893916383385658,
"distance": 143,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 19,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 162,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0010358705185353756,
"distance": 49,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 113,
"gendered_word": "emperor",
"word_pos": 162,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.002878264058381319,
"distance": 7,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 155,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 162,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.006971 | trailing |
At the same time, the jurisconsults went into decline during the imperial period. In the words of Fritz Schulz, "by the fourth century things had changed in the eastern Empire: advocates now were really lawyers." For example, by the fourth century, advocates had to be enrolled on the bar of a court to argue before it, they could only be attached to one court at a time, and there were restrictions (which came and went depending upon who was emperor) on how many advocates could be enrolled at a particular court. By the 380s, advocates were studying law in addition to rhetoric (thus reducing the need for a separate class of jurisconsults); in 460, Emperor Leo imposed a requirement that new advocates seeking admission had to produce testimonials from their teachers; and by the sixth century, a regular course of legal study lasting about four years was required for admission. Claudius's fee ceiling lasted all the way into the Byzantine period, though by then it was measured at 100 solidi. | 20989225_28 | advocates | At the same time, the jurisconsults went into decline during the imperial period. In the words of Fritz Schulz, "by the fourth century things had changed in the eastern Empire: advocates now were really lawyers." For example, by the fourth century, advocates had to be enrolled on the bar of a court to argue before it, they could only be attached to one court at a time, and there were restrictions (which came and went depending upon who was emperor) on how many advocates could be enrolled at a particular court. | Claudius's fee ceiling lasted all the way into the Byzantine period, though by then it was measured at 100 solidi. | By the 380s, advocates were studying law in addition to rhetoric (thus reducing the need for a separate class of jurisconsults); in 460, Emperor Leo imposed a requirement that new advocates seeking admission had to produce testimonials from their teachers; and by the sixth century, a regular course of legal study lasting about four years was required for admission. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0010923348600044847,
"distance": 56,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 91,
"gendered_word": "emperor",
"word_pos": 35,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.005853740032762289,
"distance": 98,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 133,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 35,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0014804101083427668,
"distance": 41,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 91,
"gendered_word": "emperor",
"word_pos": 50,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.006972186267375946,
"distance": 83,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 133,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 50,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0008004952105693519,
"distance": 5,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 91,
"gendered_word": "emperor",
"word_pos": 96,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0010200345423072577,
"distance": 37,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 133,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 96,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0029569827020168304,
"distance": 18,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 91,
"gendered_word": "emperor",
"word_pos": 109,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0075142234563827515,
"distance": 24,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 133,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 109,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0014681428438052535,
"distance": 49,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 91,
"gendered_word": "emperor",
"word_pos": 140,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.003181520849466324,
"distance": 7,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 133,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 140,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.007514 | matching |
This law was widely disregarded in practice, but was never abolished, which meant that orators could never present themselves as legal professionals or experts. They had to uphold the legal fiction that they were merely an ordinary citizen generously helping out a friend for free, and thus they could never organize into a real profession—with professional associations and titles and all the other pomp and circumstance—like their modern counterparts. Therefore, if one narrows the definition to those who could practice the legal profession openly and legally, then the first lawyers would have to be the orators of ancient Rome. The ban on fees was abolished by Emperor Claudius, who legalized advocacy as a profession and allowed the Roman advocates to become the first lawyers who could practice openly—but he also imposed a fee ceiling of 10,000 sesterces. | 20989225_13 | lawyers | This law was widely disregarded in practice, but was never abolished, which meant that orators could never present themselves as legal professionals or experts. They had to uphold the legal fiction that they were merely an ordinary citizen generously helping out a friend for free, and thus they could never organize into a real profession—with professional associations and titles and all the other pomp and circumstance—like their modern counterparts. | The ban on fees was abolished by Emperor Claudius, who legalized advocacy as a profession and allowed the Roman advocates to become the first lawyers who could practice openly—but he also imposed a fee ceiling of 10,000 sesterces. | Therefore, if one narrows the definition to those who could practice the legal profession openly and legally, then the first lawyers would have to be the orators of ancient Rome. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0003693824983201921,
"distance": 18,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 118,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 100,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0007931313011795282,
"distance": 18,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 118,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 136,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.000793 | trailing |
They had to uphold the legal fiction that they were merely an ordinary citizen generously helping out a friend for free, and thus they could never organize into a real profession—with professional associations and titles and all the other pomp and circumstance—like their modern counterparts. Therefore, if one narrows the definition to those who could practice the legal profession openly and legally, then the first lawyers would have to be the orators of ancient Rome. The ban on fees was abolished by Emperor Claudius, who legalized advocacy as a profession and allowed the Roman advocates to become the first lawyers who could practice openly—but he also imposed a fee ceiling of 10,000 sesterces. This was apparently not much money; the Satires of Juvenal complain that there was no money in working as an advocate. | 20989225_14 | lawyers | They had to uphold the legal fiction that they were merely an ordinary citizen generously helping out a friend for free, and thus they could never organize into a real profession—with professional associations and titles and all the other pomp and circumstance—like their modern counterparts. Therefore, if one narrows the definition to those who could practice the legal profession openly and legally, then the first lawyers would have to be the orators of ancient Rome. | This was apparently not much money; the Satires of Juvenal complain that there was no money in working as an advocate. | The ban on fees was abolished by Emperor Claudius, who legalized advocacy as a profession and allowed the Roman advocates to become the first lawyers who could practice openly—but he also imposed a fee ceiling of 10,000 sesterces. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.00043565742089413106,
"distance": 18,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 91,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 73,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0007126929704099894,
"distance": 18,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 91,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 109,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.000713 | matching |
The centralization and bureaucratization of the profession was apparently gradual at first, but accelerated during the reign of Emperor Hadrian. At the same time, the jurisconsults went into decline during the imperial period. In the words of Fritz Schulz, "by the fourth century things had changed in the eastern Empire: advocates now were really lawyers." For example, by the fourth century, advocates had to be enrolled on the bar of a court to argue before it, they could only be attached to one court at a time, and there were restrictions (which came and went depending upon who was emperor) on how many advocates could be enrolled at a particular court. By the 380s, advocates were studying law in addition to rhetoric (thus reducing the need for a separate class of jurisconsults); in 460, Emperor Leo imposed a requirement that new advocates seeking admission had to produce testimonials from their teachers; and by the sixth century, a regular course of legal study lasting about four years was required for admission. | 20989225_27 | lawyers | The centralization and bureaucratization of the profession was apparently gradual at first, but accelerated during the reign of Emperor Hadrian. At the same time, the jurisconsults went into decline during the imperial period. | By the 380s, advocates were studying law in addition to rhetoric (thus reducing the need for a separate class of jurisconsults); in 460, Emperor Leo imposed a requirement that new advocates seeking admission had to produce testimonials from their teachers; and by the sixth century, a regular course of legal study lasting about four years was required for admission. | In the words of Fritz Schulz, "by the fourth century things had changed in the eastern Empire: advocates now were really lawyers." For example, by the fourth century, advocates had to be enrolled on the bar of a court to argue before it, they could only be attached to one court at a time, and there were restrictions (which came and went depending upon who was emperor) on how many advocates could be enrolled at a particular court. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.00039172725519165397,
"distance": 42,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 19,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 61,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0005638400325551629,
"distance": 52,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 113,
"gendered_word": "emperor",
"word_pos": 61,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.000605548033490777,
"distance": 94,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 155,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 61,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.000606 | trailing |
From 1190 to 1230, however, there was a crucial shift in which some men began to practice canon law as a lifelong profession in itself. The legal profession's return was marked by the renewed efforts of church and state to regulate it. In 1231 two French councils mandated that lawyers had to swear an oath of admission before practising before the bishop's courts in their regions, and a similar oath was promulgated by the papal legate in London in 1237. During the same decade, Frederick II, the emperor of the Kingdom of Sicily, imposed a similar oath in his civil courts. | 20989225_42 | lawyers | From 1190 to 1230, however, there was a crucial shift in which some men began to practice canon law as a lifelong profession in itself. The legal profession's return was marked by the renewed efforts of church and state to regulate it. | During the same decade, Frederick II, the emperor of the Kingdom of Sicily, imposed a similar oath in his civil courts. | In 1231 two French councils mandated that lawyers had to swear an oath of admission before practising before the bishop's courts in their regions, and a similar oath was promulgated by the papal legate in London in 1237. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0018070082878693938,
"distance": 39,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 15,
"gendered_word": "men",
"word_pos": 54,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0004896940663456917,
"distance": 43,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 97,
"gendered_word": "emperor",
"word_pos": 54,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.001807 | preceding |
The ban on fees was abolished by Emperor Claudius, who legalized advocacy as a profession and allowed the Roman advocates to become the first lawyers who could practice openly—but he also imposed a fee ceiling of 10,000 sesterces. This was apparently not much money; the Satires of Juvenal complain that there was no money in working as an advocate. Like their Greek contemporaries, early Roman advocates were trained in rhetoric, not law, and the judges before whom they argued were also not law-trained. But very early on, unlike Athens, Rome developed a class of specialists who were learned in the law, known as jurisconsults (iuris consulti). | 20989225_16 | contemporaries | The ban on fees was abolished by Emperor Claudius, who legalized advocacy as a profession and allowed the Roman advocates to become the first lawyers who could practice openly—but he also imposed a fee ceiling of 10,000 sesterces. This was apparently not much money; the Satires of Juvenal complain that there was no money in working as an advocate. | But very early on, unlike Athens, Rome developed a class of specialists who were learned in the law, known as jurisconsults (iuris consulti). | Like their Greek contemporaries, early Roman advocates were trained in rhetoric, not law, and the judges before whom they argued were also not law-trained. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.002703517209738493,
"distance": 61,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 7,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 68,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.002704 | preceding |
Middle Ages After the fall of the western Roman Empire and the onset of the Early Middle Ages, the legal profession of Western Europe collapsed. As James Brundage has explained: "[by 1140], no one in Western Europe could properly be described as a professional lawyer or a professional canonist in anything like the modern sense of the term 'professional.' " However, from 1150 onward, a small but increasing number of men became experts in canon law but only in furtherance of other occupational goals, such as serving the Roman Catholic Church as priests. From 1190 to 1230, however, there was a crucial shift in which some men began to practice canon law as a lifelong profession in itself. | 20989225_39 | experts | Middle Ages After the fall of the western Roman Empire and the onset of the Early Middle Ages, the legal profession of Western Europe collapsed. | From 1190 to 1230, however, there was a crucial shift in which some men began to practice canon law as a lifelong profession in itself. | As James Brundage has explained: "[by 1140], no one in Western Europe could properly be described as a professional lawyer or a professional canonist in anything like the modern sense of the term 'professional.' " However, from 1150 onward, a small but increasing number of men became experts in canon law but only in furtherance of other occupational goals, such as serving the Roman Catholic Church as priests. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.008760192431509495,
"distance": 2,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 82,
"gendered_word": "men",
"word_pos": 84,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.003060257062315941,
"distance": 38,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 122,
"gendered_word": "men",
"word_pos": 84,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.00876 | matching |
An extra train had to be commissioned from Cork at 08:20 to cope with the demand by pensioners for transport to reach Dublin in time for the demonstration. All five carriages on the 07:30 train were fully booked by the previous evening; ironically, many of the passengers were pensioners using their free travel passes also provided by the government. The pensioners also availed themselves of taxis offering free journeys to the over-70s especially for the protest. One elderly man clutched a banner heralding the invitation "Just shoot us, it would be quicker". | 20990463_53 | pensioners | An extra train had to be commissioned from Cork at 08:20 to cope with the demand by pensioners for transport to reach Dublin in time for the demonstration. All five carriages on the 07:30 train were fully booked by the previous evening; ironically, many of the passengers were pensioners using their free travel passes also provided by the government. | One elderly man clutched a banner heralding the invitation "Just shoot us, it would be quicker". | The pensioners also availed themselves of taxis offering free journeys to the over-70s especially for the protest. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.003392021171748638,
"distance": 66,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 83,
"gendered_word": "man",
"word_pos": 17,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.002267929958179593,
"distance": 32,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 83,
"gendered_word": "man",
"word_pos": 51,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.0029547899030148983,
"distance": 19,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 83,
"gendered_word": "man",
"word_pos": 64,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.003392 | trailing |
He did not pursue football as a professional career and earned a place at Exeter College, Oxford, where he attained a second-class degree in mathematics, even sharing a tutorial with child genius Ruth Lawrence at one stage. He continued to play football at university, however, and eventually earned his Blue. Career
After leaving Oxford, Anson returned to the north-west of England to work for Andersen Consulting, where he represented various clients, including North West Water. However, in the early 1990s, he left Andersen to enrol on a Master of Business Administration (MBA) course at INSEAD in Fontainebleau. | 20990467_7 | clients | He did not pursue football as a professional career and earned a place at Exeter College, Oxford, where he attained a second-class degree in mathematics, even sharing a tutorial with child genius Ruth Lawrence at one stage. He continued to play football at university, however, and eventually earned his Blue. | However, in the early 1990s, he left Andersen to enrol on a Master of Business Administration (MBA) course at INSEAD in Fontainebleau. | Career
After leaving Oxford, Anson returned to the north-west of England to work for Andersen Consulting, where he represented various clients, including North West Water. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.006383915431797504,
"distance": 21,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 105,
"gendered_word": "Master",
"word_pos": 84,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.006384 | trailing |
He was also married to actress Maria Ribeiro, mother of his only son João (born on 30 March 2003). The couple separated in 2005. Political views
In 1989 Betti was one of the producers of the music video for the famous jingle "Lula Lá" ("Lula There") for the presidential candidate Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva from the Workers' Party. In this video, several famous artists of the time sing the jingle. | 20992629_11 | workers | He was also married to actress Maria Ribeiro, mother of his only son João (born on 30 March 2003). The couple separated in 2005. | In this video, several famous artists of the time sing the jingle. | Political views
In 1989 Betti was one of the producers of the music video for the famous jingle "Lula Lá" ("Lula There") for the presidential candidate Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva from the Workers' Party. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0008963635191321373,
"distance": 64,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 5,
"gendered_word": "actress",
"word_pos": 69,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.001081957365386188,
"distance": 60,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 9,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 69,
"word_pos_tag": "PROPN"
}
] | 0.001082 | preceding |
He was also married to actress Maria Ribeiro, mother of his only son João (born on 30 March 2003). The couple separated in 2005. Political views
In 1989 Betti was one of the producers of the music video for the famous jingle "Lula Lá" ("Lula There") for the presidential candidate Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva from the Workers' Party. In this video, several famous artists of the time sing the jingle. | 20992629_11 | producers | He was also married to actress Maria Ribeiro, mother of his only son João (born on 30 March 2003). The couple separated in 2005. | In this video, several famous artists of the time sing the jingle. | Political views
In 1989 Betti was one of the producers of the music video for the famous jingle "Lula Lá" ("Lula There") for the presidential candidate Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva from the Workers' Party. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0006448350031860173,
"distance": 34,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 5,
"gendered_word": "actress",
"word_pos": 39,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00045449944445863366,
"distance": 30,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 9,
"gendered_word": "mother",
"word_pos": 39,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.000645 | preceding |
Each Polybian legion contained a cavalry contingent of 300 horse, which does not appear to have been officered by an overall commander. The cavalry contingent was divided into 10 turmae (squadrons) of 30 men each. The squadron members would elect as their officers three decuriones ("leaders of ten men"), of whom the first to be chosen would act as the squadron's leader and the other two as his deputies. From the available evidence, the cavalry of a Polybian legion (and presumably confederate cavalry also) was armoured and specialised in the shock charge. | 20992655_41 | deputies | Each Polybian legion contained a cavalry contingent of 300 horse, which does not appear to have been officered by an overall commander. The cavalry contingent was divided into 10 turmae (squadrons) of 30 men each. | From the available evidence, the cavalry of a Polybian legion (and presumably confederate cavalry also) was armoured and specialised in the shock charge. | The squadron members would elect as their officers three decuriones ("leaders of ten men"), of whom the first to be chosen would act as the squadron's leader and the other two as his deputies. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0001543242105981335,
"distance": 42,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 37,
"gendered_word": "men",
"word_pos": 79,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
},
{
"attention_score": 0.00040935963625088334,
"distance": 24,
"gendered_location": "matching",
"gendered_pos": 55,
"gendered_word": "men",
"word_pos": 79,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.000409 | matching |
Upon the deposition of Emperor Haile Selassie, Mikael Imru resigned from the office of Prime Minister on 12 September. Nevertheless, he served into the following year as Minister of Information. Although he was of royal blood, his long standing leftist sympathies led the Derg administration to spare him the fate of the rest of the Imperial dynasty, and he was never imprisoned as most of his relatives and former colleagues were. Lij Mikael became a specialist for rural development and worked at the World Bank. | 20993685_13 | colleagues | Upon the deposition of Emperor Haile Selassie, Mikael Imru resigned from the office of Prime Minister on 12 September. Nevertheless, he served into the following year as Minister of Information. | Lij Mikael became a specialist for rural development and worked at the World Bank. | Although he was of royal blood, his long standing leftist sympathies led the Derg administration to spare him the fate of the rest of the Imperial dynasty, and he was never imprisoned as most of his relatives and former colleagues were. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.0006762827979400754,
"distance": 72,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 4,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 76,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.000676 | preceding |
Upon the deposition of Emperor Haile Selassie, Mikael Imru resigned from the office of Prime Minister on 12 September. Nevertheless, he served into the following year as Minister of Information. Although he was of royal blood, his long standing leftist sympathies led the Derg administration to spare him the fate of the rest of the Imperial dynasty, and he was never imprisoned as most of his relatives and former colleagues were. Lij Mikael became a specialist for rural development and worked at the World Bank. | 20993685_13 | relatives | Upon the deposition of Emperor Haile Selassie, Mikael Imru resigned from the office of Prime Minister on 12 September. Nevertheless, he served into the following year as Minister of Information. | Lij Mikael became a specialist for rural development and worked at the World Bank. | Although he was of royal blood, his long standing leftist sympathies led the Derg administration to spare him the fate of the rest of the Imperial dynasty, and he was never imprisoned as most of his relatives and former colleagues were. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.000487969140522182,
"distance": 69,
"gendered_location": "preceding",
"gendered_pos": 4,
"gendered_word": "Emperor",
"word_pos": 73,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.000488 | preceding |
Cooke and Douglas exchange sharp words of disagreement about their philosophies of the law. At the party, Cathy talks to Dr. Morrison, an expert neurologist and friend of the family, about her intermittent symptoms of weakness and headaches. At his office, Morrison performs a series of tests and then consults other experts. Rather than tell her the truth, Morrison contacts her husband. | 20993998_9 | experts | Cooke and Douglas exchange sharp words of disagreement about their philosophies of the law. At the party, Cathy talks to Dr. Morrison, an expert neurologist and friend of the family, about her intermittent symptoms of weakness and headaches. | Rather than tell her the truth, Morrison contacts her husband. | At his office, Morrison performs a series of tests and then consults other experts. | [
{
"attention_score": 0.04046028479933739,
"distance": 12,
"gendered_location": "trailing",
"gendered_pos": 69,
"gendered_word": "husband",
"word_pos": 57,
"word_pos_tag": "NOUN"
}
] | 0.04046 | trailing |
Subsets and Splits