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question:Please answer the following question: Article: Singaporean singer Stefanie Sun goes to Tahoua, West Africa to visit the children who have _ and war. Stefanie Sun is touched by those poor kids there: "Some children are already 3 or 4 years old, but they are so thin that you can hold them with your single arm. You can see scare and hopelessness in their eyes. The children only wish to have food to eat, and can survive and go to school. However, these basic needs are like dreams to them." Stefanie Sun is deeply touched by a 4-month baby who weighs only 2.5kg! Stefanie says that the children have nothing but leaves to eat during famine. The reconstruction in that area needs enough food, education, and clean water. Question: Stefanie Sun is a singer, who is from _ . Yes or no, is the answer "Singapore"? Answer:

answer:Yes

question:You are an AI assistant. User will you give you a task. Your goal is to complete the task as faithfully as you can. While performing the task think step-by-step and justify your steps. Write some highlights for the following article: By. Simon Tomlinson. A dilapidated school where pupils were forced to have lessons in the corridor because of the decaying classrooms is still in a state of disrepair one year on. Teachers at Richard Lee Primary School, in Wyken, Coventry, have told how nothing has changed. One one occasion in the last twelve months, a corridor was turned into a river after blocked and cracked storm drains overflowed. Bleak outlook: Pupils Georgia Diston and Harvey Billing have to resort to holding an umbrella at Richard Lee Primary School in Coventry because there are so many leaks in their dilapidated classroom. Disrepair: After class, the two youngsters have to then walk along crumbling corridors, one of which became a river when a cracked storm drain overflowed. And in the last two weeks, six leaks have sprung up in classroom roofs, forcing the children to hold umbrellas during lessons. It all adds to a tale of woe at the 509-pupil school - soon to increase to 700 students in September - that includes crumbling walls, moldy carpets, drafty doors, cracked windows, collapsing roofs and freezing classrooms. When Nick Gibb, minister of state for schools, visited he dubbed the conditions the worst he has ever seen. Mr Gibb added: 'I would be very cross about the standard of the building if I was a parent with children at the school. This is clearly a very poor building that was built in the 1950s and needs work. Patch job: Headteacher Nicola Harwood in one of the out-of-bounds classrooms, which have sprung six leaks in the last two weeks. Expensive: Mrs Harwood looks up at one of the large leaks in the corridor. She believes it will revealed that it would cost upwards of £1million to bring the school up to standard. 'Children failed': Schools Minister Nick Gibb (pictured) said they were the worst conditions he had ever seen when he visited the school this week. The run-down primary school hit the. headlines last year when four and five-year-olds were forced to have. lessons in a corridor after their classroom was flooded by a faulty. boiler. And just five months later part of a roof collapsed - again forcing kids out of their classroom. Pupils,. teachers and parents have since campaigned for a rebuild - even taking. their fight to Downing Street and the Department for Education in July. Their. protests prompted a visit from Mr Gibb yesterday, where the minister. praised staff in keeping teaching standards at the school high, even. when the facilities were not. He. said: 'This is a school focused on making sure that children improve. their reading and arithmetic, despite the problems that they labour. under.' The school is now part of seven in Coventry bidding for funding as part of the Priority Schools Building Programme. But headteacher Nicola Harwood said: 'We will have to wait and see if funding materialises. Hopefully our school will be at the top of the list to receive money or a rebuild. Frustrated: Mrs Harwood, pointing out a crack in the food store cupboard, is desperately hoping for funding to materialise before conditions get any worse. 'Children failed': Schools Minister Nick Gibb (pictured) said they were the worst conditions he had ever seen when he visited the school this week. 'For now we will have to keep patching up the school and continue to make sure Richard Lee is fit for purpose.' Nicola revealed that it would cost. upwards of £1million to bring the school up to standard - including a. £40,000 boiler system and £25,000 to install new doors and windows. throughout. The headteacher added: 'Since last year when we moved classes into a corridor, that has been flooded by broken storm drains overflowing. 'It was like a river running down the corridor. We are running out of rooms which don’t have anything wrong with them to be honest. 'It meant we had to take classes into the main hall, which is not ideal. 'I think there are issues over funding for schools. They need to do surveys to make sure schools don’t get to the stage we are at again. 'The most frustrating thing is that the decision on who will receive money keeps on being put back. 'It could be another year before we see any change but I am very optimistic and the minister had nothing but good things to say about the level of teaching. Coventry MP Bob Ainsworth, who has raised the school's plight in parliament, said: 'We made sure the schools minister was aware of the really shocking state of the building and he said it was the worst he had seen. 'I knew that if he came he would be shocked and all we can hope for is that it puts Richard Lee at the centre of minds when it comes to deciding funding allocations for the Priority Schools Building Programme.'

answer:Highlights: - Richard Lee Primary School in Coventry remains in disrepair, with decaying classrooms and corridors one year on. - Pupils have been forced to hold umbrellas during lessons due to leaks and have lessons in the corridor after classrooms were flooded. - Schools Minister Nick Gibb called the conditions the worst he has ever seen during his visit to the school. - The school is part of seven in Coventry bidding for funding as part of the Priority Schools Building Programme. - It is estimated that at least £1 million is needed to bring the school up to standard, including a £40,000 boiler system and £25,000 for new doors and windows.

question:You are an AI assistant. You will be given a task. You must generate a detailed and long answer. ItwasthefastestsellingmusicalalbumeverreleasedinDenmark.Platinuminjustfourmonths-andthissuccesswasfollowedupwithacompletelysold-outconcerttour. Please segment the words:

answer:"It was the fastest selling musical album ever released in Denmark. Platinum in just four months - and this success was followed up with a completely sold-out concert tour."

question:You are a helpful assistant, who always provide explanation. Think like you are answering to a five year old. Add punctuation: The storyboard shows which visual material we will show in the film at key points It can be anything from graphs and numbers to pictures of employees products and production facilities

answer:The storyboard shows which visual material we will show in the film at key points. It can be anything from graphs and numbers, to pictures of employees, products, and production facilities.

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