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question:What is the title of this article: The school has many nationally and internationally acclaimed scholars in social security, health care, health disparities, communication, social and health policy, and individual and family development. Many of the faculty have training in both social work and public health. The school's current dean is Edward F. Lawlor. In addition to affiliation with the university-wide Institute of Public Health, Brown houses 12 research centers. The Brown School Library collects materials on many topics, with specific emphasis on: children, youth, and families; gerontology; health; mental health; social and economic development; family therapy; and management. The library maintains subscriptions to over 450 academic journals.
answer:The title of this article could be "Brown School: Focused on Social Work and Public Health with Skilled Faculty and Research Centers."
question:Sentence 1: Try the House of Ireland (see above), or the Irish Crystal Store on Wicklow Street. Sentence 2: The Irish Crystal Store is on Dublin Street. Is this second sentence entailed by the first sentence?
answer:To check if the second sentence is entailed by the first sentence, I will analyze both sentences step by step: 1. Identify the main subjects and objects in each sentence. - In Sentence 1, the main subjects are the House of Ireland and the Irish Crystal Store, and the main object is Wicklow Street. - In Sentence 2, the main subject is the Irish Crystal Store, and the main object is Dublin Street. 2. Compare the relations in both sentences. - In Sentence 1, the relationship is a suggestion to try two specific stores, with the Irish Crystal Store being located on Wicklow Street. - In Sentence 2, the relationship is identifying the location of the Irish Crystal Store on Dublin Street. 3. Determine if the relationships in Sentence 2 are entailed by the relationships in Sentence 1. - Sentence 1 states that the Irish Crystal Store is on Wicklow Street. - Sentence 2 states that the Irish Crystal Store is on Dublin Street. Since the location of the Irish Crystal Store in Sentence 2 (Dublin Street) is different from the location presented in Sentence 1 (Wicklow Street), we cannot conclude that Sentence 2 is entailed by Sentence 1.
question:Review of Metallica in Forum on GAFFAdk What is the correctly punctuated version of this sentence?
answer:"Review of Metallica in Forum on GAFFAdk" is not a sentence, but rather a title or description of content. Here's a properly punctuated version: Review of Metallica in Forum: GAFFAdk
question:Write highlights for this article: A Perth Islamic preacher has posted to Facebook in support of the Islamic State saying scholars who support an Islamic State 'are on the front lines, in the battlefields, backing their words with actions'. Mohammed Junaid Thorne, who has rejected claims that he leads an extremist youth group tied to terrorist group ISIS, posted that they were 'suffering in the prisons' and 'known for speaking the truth, no matter what it costs them'. The 25-year-old also went on to mock 'The ones who spew the nonsense of "patriotism", "Australian Muslims", "deradicalization", and other terms for which Allah has sent down no authority.' Scroll down for video. Mohammed Junaid Thorne rejects claims of leading an Islamic extremist youth group in Perth. The 25-year-old was deported from Saudi Arabia last year for protesting his older brother Shayden's imprisonment on terrorism-related offences. Mr Thorne, who is an Australian citizen, also told his followers he will be in Sydney next week for some Ruqyah (spiritual healing) sessions, urging them to make contact if they wanted to meet with him. This comes just days after American photojournalist James Foley was executed by ISIS in Syria, after being abducted by the group in 2012. In June, Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said the federal government was investigating Mr Thorne's online posts. 'Any promotion or support for terrorism is against the law in our country,' she told the ABC. 'And [ISIS] is a proscribed terrorist organisation.' Mr Thorne says he is a university student and claims to have memorised the Koran at age six. The 25-year-old, who was deported from Saudi Arabia last year for protesting his older brother Shayden's imprisonment on terrorism-related offences, has previously been accused of being a radical preacher for allegedly praising militants responsible for beheadings and mass killings in Iraq in June. Mr Thorne and his brother Shayden moved to Saudi Arabia 19 years ago for their father's work, AAP reported. Mr Thorne (pictured left) says the accusations are all 'a big misunderstanding' Their mother, who lives in the Perth suburb of Thornlie and is divorced from their father, said her sons were Aboriginal, Australian citizens but identified primarily as Muslims. Curtin University terrorism expert Anne Aly, who is based in Perth, said Mr Thorne used to be the leader of Islamic group Millatu Ibrahim AU but she was not sure if it was still functional. 'I think now they're just a bit rag tag, a group of guys that stick together and he's trying to put his thoughts out there now,' Dr Aly told Daily Mail Australia. Dr Aly said he was intentionally trying to be provocative. 'He's been saying he's very much against democracy - they don't believe in democracy which means they don't believe in voting or Australian rule of law which is pretty typical of the jihadi ideology,' she said. 'The stuff he's put up about supporting the Islamic State, underlying that is this belief system that only those who go and fight – the mujahedeen – are true Muslims or are the best Muslims and that is very much what the Islamic State puts out there. 'That's very extreme to say.' Dr Aly said Mr Thorne was attention seeking but it was important to expose Mr Thorne's views in order to challenge them. 'If the young people he's speaking to via social media, if that's the only message they're getting, they don't have any other opportunity to get another message they only get that one side,' she said. 'Often their families who might be expressing concern don't know that this is how they started to believe these extreme ideas in the first place. 'But if it's out there in the broad media then there's more opportunity for those young people to hear another viewpoint.' Videos of Mr Thorne's speeches have been posted to the YouTube channel Islam In Focus Australia over the past few months. 'Our sisters being raped by these filthy Jews and Christians,' he said in one video posted in June. 'Our sisters are in the streets, their bodies are filling the streets, bombs dropping on houses killing women and children.' In a talk titled Islam and Democracy, posted on August 6, Mr Thorne said: 'No one has a problem with you worshipping Allah [the exulted]. 'But when you start speaking against or start speaking the truth, and you start calling people to the way of Allah [the exulted] and proving to them the falsehood of their false deities, and the corruption of their evil systems, this is when people start getting on edge and this is when people see their desires being attacked.' Last week, Mr Thorne said that reports he and a dozen Perth youths, from various ethnic backgrounds, were associated with the terrorist group ISIS were all part of 'a big misunderstanding' - despite posing in a video with ISIS flags. 'I don't have a group of youth nor Australian reverts, there is some big misunderstanding going on - I don't know why,' he told Daily Mail Australia. Mr Thorne (left) said he did not know of any 'Australian reverts' while a Perth man, who's believed to be named Matthew Smith (right), claims Islam saved him from a drug addiction. Smith (centre), Thorne (fourth from right) are pictured with others in front of ISIS flags. Mr Thorne wouldn't comment any further but said he will be releasing a video that will be 'a response and clarification to the current situation'. Although he denied knowing any Australian reverts, a recruitment video shows a ginger-bearded former Curtin University student who converted to Islam, The West Australian reported. A photo also shows Mr Thorne and the former hip-hop rapper posing together with ISIS flags. When asked about whether he knew the man, Thorne neither confirmed nor denied knowing him. The man, allegedly named Matthew Smith but calls himself 'Terry Wrist' - a play on 'terrorist', claims Islam saved him from a drug addiction in Perth in 2006. In the video, he expresses his invincibility through Islam and encourages others to join him. 'You gonna kill, you won't kill me because Allah says I'm alive, I'm receiving sustenance,' he said in the video. 'So what can you do to me? Absolutely nothing. 'Come to Islam, feel this feeling...come to Islam and you will not regret it.' He ends his passionate speech with: 'plenty of cold ones in paradise. All you can drink. Can't wait'. Highlights:
answer:- Perth Islamic preacher, Mohammed Junaid Thorne, posts on Facebook in support of Islamic State. - Thorne rejects claims that he leads an extremist youth group tied to ISIS. - Australian authorities have previously investigated Thorne's online posts. - Photos and videos show Thorne and other Australian individuals with ISIS flags. - Curtin University terrorism expert, Anne Aly, says Thorne's views need to be exposed in order to challenge them.