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question:You are a helpful assistant, who always provide explanation. Think like you are answering to a five year old. Background: Esma Redzepova-Teodosievska (Macedonian: Esma Redzhepova-Teodosievska Macedonian pronunciation: ['esma re'dZepova teo'dosiefska]; 8 August 1943 - 11 December 2016) was a Macedonian vocalist, songwriter, and humanitarian of Romani ethnicity. Because of her prolific repertoire, which includes hundreds of songs, and because of her contribution to Roma culture and its promotion, she was nicknamed Queen of the Gypsies. Context: During the 1980s, the musical career of Esma Redzepova slowed down. In 1989, she settled back in Skopje with her husband. After independence in 1991, the Republic of Macedonia went through difficult times. Stevo Teodosievski died in 1997 at 72. However, Esma Redzepova toured the United States the year after, performing at a series of benefit concerts. She also released a selection of duets with Usnija Jasarova in 1994. The 2000s where very fruitful and marked a slight shift in the singer's career. In Macedonia and former Yugoslavia, Esma gained a more modern image and redefined herself as a worldbeat artist. For instance, she made several collaborations with young pop singers. In 2002, she recorded a song with the Croatian band Magazin and a duet with the Macedonian singer Todor Proeski. She also recorded a song with the Bosnian band Crno Vino in 2005 and made a collaboration with Kiril Dzajkovski in 2010. On the international scene, Esma Redzepova contributed towards the establishment of Roma music as a non-mass-market good, pleasing an urban and cultural elite. However, many of her new songs were not widely accepted by Western audience because they did not match its expectation about Roma music. For instance, some songs featured synthesizer, an instrument that is not used in traditional Roma music. Esma was even booed at a concert in Spain, but defended herself saying that Roma music has always adapted itself and borrowed external features. Her best known single, Caje Sukarije, is the feature song on the 2006 Borat movie soundtrack, which she claims was used without her permission. Together with Naat Veliov from Kocani Orkestar she sued the producers of the film for 800,000 euro (USD 1,000,000). Afterwards, Redzepova won a EUR26,000 compensation, since it turned out that Cohen got permission from her production house to take the song, which she was not notified about. Esma was particularly upset because her song was used to illustrate backwardness, something she always fought. However, Borat contributed towards the expansion of her fame internationally. Esma Redzepova was selected together with Vlatko Lozanoski to represent Macedonia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2013. Their song, "Imperija", was unveiled in March 2013, but it caused controversy in the country as its clip featured many monuments of the controversial project Skopje 2014. The song was thus viewed as a nationalist act. Macedonian Radio-Television requested the singers write a new song. Eventually, "Pred da se razdeni" was released a month later. The song failed to advance from the second semi-final of the competition on 16 May 2013, placing 16th in the field of 17 songs, scoring 28 points. Question: What else did she do in her career?. Whats the answer?

answer:Esma Redzepova was a talented singer, songwriter, and humanitarian. In her career, she not only recorded hundreds of songs and became known as the "Queen of the Gypsies," but also 1. Collaborated with various artists, including young pop singers, a Croatian band called Magazin, Macedonian singer Todor Proeski, Bosnian band Crno Vino, and Kiril Dzajkovski. 2. Worked towards promoting Roma culture and music internationally. 3. Faced some challenges when her music didn't match Western expectations of Roma music, but defended the adaptability of Roma music traditions. 4. Had her song "Caje Sukarije" featured in the 2006 Borat movie soundtrack, and eventually won €26,000 in compensation for its unauthorized use. 5. Represented Macedonia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2013, alongside Vlatko Lozanoski, and participated in the competition with their song "Pred da se razdeni." Throughout her career, Esma Redzepova not only made music but also worked for the promotion and preservation of Roma culture.

question:You are a helpful assistant, who always provide explanation. Think like you are answering to a five year old. Please write a short summary for the following article: Dyslexic Law Graduate Sues on Exam's Time Limit In the newest legal battleground over what assistance must be given to learning-disabled students, a dyslexic 1996 law school graduate has sued the California committee of bar examiners, saying that its refusal to allow him to double the normal time to take the bar examination violated Federal anti-discrimination laws. The class-action lawsuit, filed by Robert Mueller on behalf of all learning-disabled law graduates, said the state had illegally thwarted his career by failing to accommodate his disability, which makes him a slow reader. Precisely what accommodations the Federal law requires for those with learning disabilities has been an increasingly contentious -- and litigious -- issue among educators and testers since 1992, when the Federal Americans with Disabilities Act went into effect. As the first wave of students determined to have learning disabilities moves through graduate education, those students are charting a new frontier, demanding that accommodations like extra time, a quiet room or use of a computer when they take professional licensing exams in law, medicine or accounting. *In June, in a West Virginia case against the National Board of Medical Examiners, a Federal district judge ruled against three medical students with attention-deficit disorder who had sought extra time and a separate testing room on their medical exams. *In July, in a New York case now on appeal, a Federal district judge ruled that the state bar examiners had wrongly refused accommodations to Marilyn Bartlett, a 1991 University of Vermont law graduate who lost her law-firm job in 1992 after failing the bar examination three times, and sued the state in 1993. The judge ordered, among other things, that Ms. Bartlett get double time, use of a word processor and the right to circle multiple-choice answers on the question sheet, rather than fill out a separate answer sheet. *In August, in a closely watched case involving Boston University, a Federal judge ruled that although the university had the right to set academic standards, its crackdown on accommodations to learning-disabled students had been based on uninformed stereotypes. The judge overturned the university's policy of accepting diagnoses only from certain professionals and ordered the university to reconsider whether its foreign-language requirement was essential to its view of liberal arts education. The California bar examiners granted accommodations to 305 applicants taking the July examination this year, down from 335 last year -- but up from 91 in 1990. While some of the accommodations are for students with physical disabilities, the majority are for those with learning disabilities or attention deficit disorder. Lawrence Ashe Jr., the lawyer representing the state bar in the lawsuit filed last month in Federal District Court in Oakland, said he believed the bar's handling of Mr. Mueller's request was proper -- and he suggested that reading at a normal rate might well be a legitimate qualification for becoming a lawyer. Increasingly, Mr. Ashe said, the bar examiners are turning to outside professionals for help in evaluating accommodation requests and are developing new procedures for handling requests. Erica Moeser, president of the National Conference of Bar Examiners, said: ''Matching disabilities to the appropriate accommodations is not an easy task, but I'd say most examiners do their best to truly level the playing field for people with disabilities. It has been a thicket, but my sense is that most disabilities are accommodated, although perhaps not to the level requested. Nationally, California has developed reputation for being among the more generously accommodating of jurisdictions.'' Sid Wolinsky, the lawyer representing Mr. Mueller, said that California's reputation was well-deserved -- until late last year. ''Up until the period leading to the February exam, we never received a single complaint about the bar's failure to give accommodations,'' said Mr. Wolinsky, a lawyer with Disability Rights Advocates in Oakland, who also represented the students in the Boston University case. ''But at the end of 1996, we had a rash of complaints, all of them from learning-disabled students who'd had accommodations in law school, but were being denied for the February bar. Then we had another set of complaints from people denied for the July exam. I've gotten the distinct impression that they're singling out learning disabilities, and cracking down.'' Mr. Mueller's case, he said, is typical of the recent denials. Now 44, he was found to have dyslexia in 1994. According to his psychologist's 1994 evaluation, Mr. Mueller's reading rate is in the bottom 3 percent of college seniors and his timed reading comprehension is in the bottom 5 percent. Untimed, however, his reading scores are in the high average to superior range. After years as a photographer, Mr. Mueller became interested in law and his diagnosis allowed him double time on the Law School Admission Test. As a student at Thomas Jefferson School of Law, he got double time on all his examinations. In 1995, he took the Multistate Professional Responsibility Examination with double time -- a requirement for admission to the state bar -- and passed. But the California bar examiners, based on their expert's review of documents he submitted, said Mr. Mueller could only have time and a half for the examination. Mr. Mueller took the exam under those conditions in February, and failed. He took it again in July, but later asked that the exam not be graded. Mr. Ashe was critical of that request, saying, ''I don't think that requesting that your exam not be scored is consistent with someone who wants to be admitted as soon as possible and is mitigating his losses.'' Graph: ''BY THE NUMBERS: Special Needs'' tracks number of stucents with disabilities who got accommodations like extra time on the California bar exam each July. Graph runs from 1990 through 1997. (Source: California Committee of Bar Examiners) Summary:

answer:A dyslexic law school graduate, Robert Mueller, sued the California committee of bar examiners because they didn't give him double the time to take the bar exam. He said this broke the law that tries to help people with disabilities. This law has been causing arguments about what help should be given to students with learning disabilities. More and more students with disabilities are asking for help when they take exams for important jobs like being a lawyer, doctor, or accountant. Some people think that being able to read fast is important for being a lawyer, and everyone should be treated fairly when taking the exams.

question:You are an AI assistant. You will be given a task. You must generate a detailed and long answer. Please answer the following question: A friend asked me to answer this question: What is the name of the person who was transferred to the asylum while one of his children was "crying as though her heart would break"?, using the article: Smetana's biographers describe him as physically frail and unimpressive in appearance yet, at least in his youth, he had a joie-de-vivre that women evidently found attractive. He was also excitable, passionate and strong-willed, determined to make his career in music whatever the hardships, over the wishes of his father who wanted him to become a brewer or a civil servant. Throughout his career he stood his ground; when under the severest of criticism for the "Wagnerism" in Dalibor he responded by writing Libuše, even more firmly based on the scale and concept of Wagnerian music drama. His personal life became stressful; his marriage to Bettina was loveless, and effectively broke down altogether in the years of illness and relative poverty towards the end of his life. Little of his relationships with his children is on record, although on the day that he was transferred to the asylum, Žofie was "crying as though her heart would break". There is broad agreement among most commentators that Smetana created a canon of Czech opera where none had previously existed, and that he developed a style of music in all his compositions that equated with the emergent Czech national spirit. A modified view is presented by the music writer Michael Steen, who questions whether "nationalistic music" can in fact exist: "We should recognise that, whereas music is infinitely expressive, on its own it is not good at describing concrete, earthly objects or concepts." He concludes that much is dependent upon what listeners are conditioned to hear.According to the musicologist John Tyrrell, Smetana's close identification with Czech nationalism and the tragic circumstances of his last years, have affected the objectivity of assessments of his work, particularly in his native land. Tyrrell argues that the almost iconic status awarded to Smetana in his homeland "monumentalized him into a figure where any criticism of his life or work was discouraged" by the Czech authorities, even as late as the last part of the 20th century. As a..., what would be the answer ? A:

answer:The answer to the question "What is the name of the person who was transferred to the asylum while one of his children was 'crying as though her heart would break'?" is Bedřich Smetana. He was a Czech composer who faced hardships in his personal life, including a stressful marriage and illness. The article you provided discusses his contributions to Czech opera and the development of a style of music that equated with the emerging Czech national spirit. On the day he was transferred to the asylum, his daughter Žofie was mentioned to be crying inconsolably.

question:You are a helpful assistant, who always provide explanation. Think like you are answering to a five year old. Но продолжаешь чего-то ждать...надеяться... Translate to English English:

answer:But you keep waiting for something...hoping... In a way a five-year-old would understand: You're still waiting and wanting something good to happen.

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