Posted by yw5s8r24lq on August 24, 19113 at 19:09:04:
In Reply to: トッズ posted by vaclvicj on June 02, 19113 at 20:52:37:
e looked over his shoulders again. He needed Martin Amis to get over here right now and help him.Linda looked at him fiercely. "It was a great mini-series and a great reminder of the founding principles of our nation.""Did you know George Washington was afraid of being buried alive?""I didn't know about that.""The guy scarcely had a fear except for that one. You knew he freed his slaves?""Hmmmm." She was eating; he was not. This would not work to his advantage. Nonetheless he went on. "Talk about people who've toiled hard in this country - and yet, not to argue with your thesis too much, those slaves didn't all get ahead.""Your man Barama, my friend, would not even be in the running if he wasn't black."Now all appetite left him entirely. The food on his plate, whatever it was, splotches of taupe, dollops of orange, went abstract like a painting. His blood pressure flew up; he could feel the pulsing twitch in his temple. "You know, I never thought about it before but you're right! Being black really is the fastest, easiest way to get to the White House!"She said nothing, and so he added: "Unless you're going by cab, and then, well, it can slow you down a little." Chewing, Linda looked at him, a flash in her eyes. She swallowed. "Well, supposedly we've already had a black president.""We have?""Yes! A Nobel prize-winning author said so!""Hey. Take it firsthand from me: don't believe everything that a Nobel prizewinner tells you. I don't think a black president ever gets to become president when his nightclub-s
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icket from Aichison to Sievwright. In between come the more substantial 175-page biography by Basil Ashton Tinkler of "Farmer" White - A Somerset Hero Who Beat the Aussies and, at 192 pages, the warming and meticulous monograph by no less than three smitten authors in tribute to the remarkably loyal Brian Reynolds: The Times and Life of the Northamptonshire Sportsman. Booksellers have also turned to publishing. A stylish debut for Giles Lyon of Bodyline Books is Geoff Amey's unputdownable tragi-biog of Surrey's Victorian champion Julius Caesar, and Michael Down of Boundary Books has followed up David Frith's 1999 classic on England's pioneering tour to Australia in 1861 with Sir Michael Marshall's elegant centenary celebration of Arundel, Cricket At The Castle, in which, as you would expect, the innate goodness of the late Lord Cowdrey shines through. Once, it seemed, only Gloucester's cricket and rugby bard, the indefatigable Nico Craven, was the one annually intrepid solo pilot and author-publisher in the field, but the new desktop ease has been a boon to any club historian with a computer and a flair. The two centenary publications I have most enjoyed this year have been Ken Bernard's cheap and cheery History of Ilkley RUFC and Ross Reyburn's glossy splendour Life at the Graveyard, recording life and laughs at Moseley's Ashfield CC. Of the year's other sporting books not reeking of London lit's torpor and indifference, top three on the podium are Jim Holden's utterly illuminating and impressive life of S
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top and step away from the vehicle!(We have of course already stopped and are now studying a laminated site map and rule book.)Rule 2. Collect a laminated site map and rule book from reception.(Like your thinking!)Rule 3. Choose your pitch. Select any three pitches from: yellow zone; blue zone; or green zone, unless marked with a white flag.(Okay, this is workable.)Rule 4. Pitches in the green zone bordered by a broken blue line can be selected only if: A. there are no free yellow zones or B. if marked with a white flag (see above).(Ah ...)Rule 5. If there are no free yellow, green or blue zones please select from a white zone (unless marked with a blue flag) in which case we are full!(Right ...)For us, Camping Tropicana is a pit-stop en route to Barcelona. For others it's an open air Ideal Home Exhibition. We are surrounded by elderly Dutch couples in caravans. Many, perhaps unaware that campsites tend to come with their own built-in floor, are busy laying linoleum. It seems tomorrow they are handing out rosettes for best turned-out pitch, with special awards for awning erection, tableware and light dusting beyond the call of duty. Competition's fierce: fridges to be hooked up, satellite dishes aligned, pot plants potashed, candelabras buffed. A priapic plaster of Paris Bacchus in the shower block notwithstanding, evenings are uneventful at Camping Playa Tropicana. At 8pm everyone retires inside to watch satellite TV and charge their mobiles. We too abandon the night time's meagre offerings to dust down ou
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ation, near Arecibo in Puerto Rico, collects radiowaves over an area of 73,000 square metres, and has a long list of discoveries to its name. Using the telescope, astronomers spotted the first planets outside our solar system, confirmed Einstein's theory of general relativity and measured the rotation of Mercury.The SKA will have a collecting area of one million square metres, making it 50 times more sensitive than any other telescope. With it, astronomers hope to see as far back as the cosmic "dark ages", the period before the first stars blinked into being. Others will study how the first black holes formed, look for signs of alien life, and possibly unravel the mystery of the dark energy that drives the expansion of the universe.Instead of one giant telescope dish, the SKA will use 3,000 smaller dishes, each around 15m-wide, spread out over thousands of kilometres. These will collect high frequency radiowaves, while two other kinds of receptors, will pick up medium and low frequency waves. The signals from all of the receivers are combined and sent along a fibre optic cable to a high performance computer for processing.Peter Conrad The Observer,Sunday 11 September 2011 Jump to comments (…)Vittorio Grigolo on the set of Faust at the Royal Opera House in London. Photograph: Richard SakerLast year at the Royal Opera, audiences expecting to be seduced by the soprano Anna Netrebko as the gold-digging courtesan in Massenet's Manon received a shock. Netrebko has always dazzled and sizzled, but the sho
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