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#Harrison Salisbury
amethysttribble · 2 years
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I’ve started /reading/ again, which feels good in and of itself, but I’m doubly enjoying it because I cannot remember ever being so gripped by a non-fiction book
Freedom from academia is a amazing
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tudorblogger · 4 months
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Book and Writing Update
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mapsontheweb · 10 months
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The Two Mongolias
The native Mongolian peoples have historically lived in the Mongolian People’s Republic and the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region in the People’s Republic of China, which together once comprised Greater Mongolia. While Inner Mongolia is an autonomous subnational division of China, the nation of Mongolia (sometimes known as Outer Mongolia) is a free and open state with a democratic government.
Political and historical reasons led to the split of Mongolia into these two regions. One important contributing aspect is that, in the 19th century, Han Chinese farmers were drawn to the Mongolian region in search of land to cultivate due to population pressure in China’s south. Conflicts with herders resulted from this, and Outer Mongolia gained independence in 1912 and Inner Mongolia gained administrative autonomy in 1932.
Is a reunion between the two Mongolias possible?
Sources:
Beal, Rich. "A tale of two Mongolias." Koryo Group. 14 October 2020.
Salisbury, Harrison E. "The two Mongolias are bitter enemies." The New York Times. 17 October 1977.
by anthro.atlas
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harrisonarchive · 7 months
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George with his self-titled album’s co-producer Russ Titelman; photo by Mike Salisbury.
“With George Harrison, there was a certain awe I had to get past, but I came to understand the specialness of what he brought to the Beatles and to popular music in his solo work. George’s guitar style and sounds are incredibly unique, but it’s important to realize that George was not that much of a jamming soloist, as Eric Clapton was and is. So all George’s unforgettable Beatles solos were very deliberately thought out. He was a craftsman of the highest order and he remains that kind of player in his solo music. The fluid approach he got from India was in songs on ‘George Harrison’, like ‘Dark Sweet Lady’, ‘Love Comes To Everyone’ and ‘Blow Away’, which is a phenomenal pop single. A lot of people don’t realize that ‘Blow Away’ used the rebuilding of Friar Park, the broken-down nunnery that he restored as his family home, as a metaphor for how he had to rebuild his life after the Beatles broke up and his marriage to Patti[e] ended. The song has a brilliant lyric and musical structure. George also brought both a very confident spiritual dimension and a knowledge of world music to pop music that it had never had previously. Things like that take guts and an inner will.” - Russ Titelman, Billboard, June 22, 1996 “Russ Titelman recalls working on Harrison’s eponymous 1979 release, which include the U.S. top 20 hit ‘Blow Away.’ After initial labor at Warner Bros.’ Amigo studio facility, Titelman flew to England to Harrison’s home studio in Henley-on-Thames. ‘I was very jet-lagged. I must have slept for 12 hours,’ he says. ‘The next morning, I started to come awake a little bit and heard someone outside my door singing “Here Comes The Sun.” It was George. That’s how I woke up on my first morning there. He was crouching outside my door, playing the guitar and singing. He was my alarm clock.’”- Billboard, December 15, 2001 (x)
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itchy-9884 · 5 months
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There is no shortcut to life. To the end of our days, life is a lesson imperfectly learned.
—Harrison E. Salisbury
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madsmilfelsen · 9 months
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Hello! I'm really curious, what books/authors would you recommend to someone who's new to writing horror?
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Hi! Here is what I have on hand (minus my loaned out copies of my favorite book ever Mongrels by Stephen Graham Jones and Never Whistle At Night: an indigenous anthology of dark fiction which made me cry on an airplane and made the person next to me very uncomfortable, like she was just trying to build a cart at banana republic, apologies to seat 17B)
God’s Cruel Joke Lit Mag because I’m in them and will be in issue 4, too :) published either mid-January or February 2024– @labyrinthphanlivingafacade is in issue 3 with a great short story that I won’t spoil ***right now the magazines are available to purchase in physical copies but I was told all issues will be free to download as pdfs pretty soon!
Severance by Ling Ma (body horror but not in the way you think, the real horror is repetition and loneliness)
Wilder Girls by Rory Power (body horror)
The Female of the Species by Mindy McGinnis (adjacent the horror genre but a hell of a read)
ANYTHING BY STEPHAN GRAHAM JONES ANYTHING
We Have Always Lived in a Castle by Shirely Jackson (I read this for the first time last spring boy howdy, I also included The Lottery for its suspense)
Dean Koontz because my husband suggested it for the list— this was just the first title I grabbed, I think he said Patrician Crowell too but I was busy looking for Mongrels
A Good and Happy Child by Justin Evans (I didn’t finish this because depression set in shortly after I started but the first chapter plays with second pov which I really liked, I’m determined to read it this year)
Sharp Objects by Gillian Flynn (I really enjoyed HBO’s adaptation)
The Girl With All The Gifts by M.R. Carey (likely the only zombie stories that made me weep uncontrollably)
Girls & Sex by Peggy Orenstein (non-fiction: explores modern young women navigating sexuality and because I have a thing for loss of autonomy— it’s been a few years since I read it but there is discussion of sexual assault, but I appreciate the expanse of her research and even included a conversation with someone who is asexual)
Black Leopard Red Wolf by Marlon James (got a chill just typing this out— the audio book is exquisite)
You’ll notice some nonfiction because, as a historian undergrad, nothing scares me more than man. The battles of Leningrad and Stalingrad are particularly stomach churning. America’s Reconstruction Era is full of acted out malice and under taught in my opinion.
An Indigenous People’s History of the United States by Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz
The 900 Days, The Siege of Leningrad by Harrison E. Salisbury
Enemy at the Gates by William Craig
(On the other side of WW2 I have a book of the experiences of German solider’s left over from a paper I wrote on the inadequacy of Nazi uniforms and how it expedited their failure in Russia, Frontsoldaten by Stephen G. Fritz)
Stony the Road by Henry Louis Gates, Jr (one of my favorite authors, try finding “How Reconstruction Still Shapes American Racism” Time Magazine, April 2, 2019, I used it as a source for a paper on the history of voting rights)
Bloodstoppers and Bearwalkers— folk tales of Canadians, Lumberjacks & Indians by Richard M. Dorson (published around 1952 but content collected from the Upper Peninsula of Michigan in the 40’s)
Raven Tells Stories: An Anthology of Alaskan Native Writing (I’m Alutiiq and the museum on Kodiak has a lot of stories recorded under Alutiiq Museum Podcast— my kids and I listen on Spotify)
I think the genre of horror is really mastering tension and playing on peoples fears which is why I included old school folk stories (An Underground Education had a great write up on the Grimm Brothers and the original fairy tales from around the world such as the Chinese and Egyptian Cinderella, as well as several different sections of funny tales, torture techniques, absolute weirdos etc etc) in this vein of thought The Uses of Enchanment: The Meaning and Importance of Fairy Tales by Bruno Bettelheim could prove to be useful
If you’re writing a character with Bad Parents— Adult Children of Emotionally Immature Parents and Toxic Parents (it has a longer subtitle but I don’t see my copy anywhere) might be able to help you shape character traits
I reached out to @littleredwritingcat who has a mind plentiful in sources who recommended
The Gathering Dark: an anthology of folk horror (I will be picking this one up asap)
Toll by Cherie Priest (southern gothic)
Anything by Jennifer MacMahon
The Elementals by Michael McDowell
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alanshemper · 10 months
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If these arguments sound familiar, it’s because they’re the same ones Israeli officials have used for years to justify disproportionate civilian casualties from the country’s periodic bombing of the Gaza Strip. But they also have a much older pedigree: Virtually all of these talking points were used decades ago by US and South Vietnamese officials to justify the horrific civilian death toll caused by the US war in Vietnam—a war that is viewed overwhelmingly negatively by Americans today, and whose brutal bombing campaigns few would now justify.
Yet that’s exactly what US officials and commentators did one year into Operation Rolling Thunder, President Lyndon Johnson’s three-year-long bombing campaign that saw 864,000 tons of bombs and missiles dropped on the country and killed 21,000 civilians. Christmas 1966 saw the publication of the first dispatch from North Vietnam by New York Times reporter Harrison Salisbury, who had become the first American journalist to report from Hanoi, and through firsthand accounts disproved the administration’s assurances that the US military was targeting only “concrete and steel, not human life.”
14 November 2023
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mariacallous · 2 years
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Vladimir Putin turns 70 years old today. Ramzan Kadyrov has already announced that the day will be celebrated with pomp and circumstance in Chechnya. In Moscow, expect more muted felicitations, but there will still be a roll call of the powerful showing their deference. But there will be no standing ovations at the Bolshoi Theater as there were for Joseph Stalin on December 21, 1949, when the Soviet leader celebrated his 70th birthday. It is also unlikely that Xi Jinping will come to congratulate Putin in person, as Mao Zedong famously did in 1949, ushering in the first of many short-lived waves of Sino-Soviet co-operation. (And even if Xi did come, he would arrive as Putin’s master not as a junior partner.) There are remarkable similarities and important differences between these two long-serving dictators at the age of 70, explains historian Juliane Fürst in a guest essay for Meduza.
Whereas Stalin became a septuagenarian at the height of his power, four years after a victorious war that extended the Soviet empire and served as a potent unifier of his people, Putin’s position at the epicenter of power is far from certain and is ironically threatened most by those sycophantically celebrating his anniversary.
Yet, details notwithstanding, there are also remarkable parallels between Stalin’s position in 1949 and Putin’s today. Both leaders look back on a more-than-20-year rule, in which they gradually but unmistakably tightened the screws on any kind of opposition — Stalin a bit earlier and more decisively than Putin, who for a long time left a façade of permitted dissent, especially in the cultural sphere.
Both also pathologically fear(ed) old age with its physical frailty and loss of command. Putin’s every youthful self-fashioning was matched by Stalin’s extreme control over his image in the last few years of his reign. He hardly ever appeared in public, censored photographs of his image, and preferred to use film doubles in visuals for the Soviet population. Harrison Salisbury, the long-time New York Times correspondent, recounted around the time of Stalin’s 70th birthday how people had gathered in shock around a shop window where a photo was exhibited showing Stalin with grey hair. Putin is more visible, but he too resorts to recorded and staged videos and keeps absolute privacy about his health and well-being.
While Stalin’s last years were quieter compared to the terror of the 1930s, it was by no means clear at the time that they would remain so. Stalin’s external war had been fought and won by 1949, but internally he unleashed a number of smaller purges in Leningrad and Georgia and ruled with an iron hand everywhere else. The anti-cosmopolitan campaign, formally started in 1948, reminded East and West alike that Stalin continued to rule by division and ethnic persecution. In 1952, the pressure was ratcheted upward further when several Jewish doctors working for the Kremlin were arrested on charges of treason and murdering Stalin’s ally, Andrey Zhdanov.
When Stalin died on March 5, 1953, the country (and the foreign press corps) had for some time been expecting the forced resettlement of the 2 million Soviet Jews residing within the USSR’s borders — an idea no less crazy and brutal than the unprovoked invasion of a neighboring country.
In 1949, as well as in October 2022, it is hard to imagine Moscow without the leaders who define the country’s image, so much so that they are synonymous with their regimes. Few could imagine in 1949 that Stalinism would be over soon, just as Putin’s system feels irrevocably entrenched today. And yet not only did Stalin’s successors, who had been his loyal cronies, dismantle public representations of him almost immediately — the Soviet people, too, moved on with astonishing speed.
After the ill-fated funeral where dozens of people were crushed in a stampede, Stalin disappeared from peoples’ thoughts surprisingly quickly (albeit not completely). In many ways, the 1953–1956 years were the most turbulent of the Thaw period, characterized by multiple challenges to the Stalinist way things had been done. This was especially true in universities, the Komsomol, and other youthful spaces, where not only Stalin but the system found itself under attack.
With hindsight, it’s clear that Stalin lost large parts of the young generation in his final years — especially the young intelligentsia, even if (barring a few exceptions) young people did not rebel en masse against the regime. People in this demographic were born too late to benefit from the social mobility Stalinist policies engendered in the 1930s and were quasi-disenfranchised by the Soviet Union’s second founding myth: victory in the Great Patriotic War.
The veteran generation’s dominance over Soviet politics and society was only broken with the ascendancy of Mikhail Gorbachev, who at the time of Stalin’s death was a student at Moscow State University and whose first political steps as a Komsomol organizer in the law department came in the heady days of post-Stalinism. Meanwhile, young men with quiffs and a love for Western fashion listened to jazz on Voice of America and paraded their colorful socks and ties on Gorky Street. They outdid each other in stylish innovation and (unconsciously) created an ideological and visual counterpoint to their elders’ military culture and Stalinist puritanism.
Putin has also disenfranchised the young by catering almost exclusively to the psychological needs of Russia’s older generation. Unlike Stalin who had a victory at his disposal, Putin’s generational focal point has always been a negative one (at least in his estimation): the collapse of the Soviet Union. Putin’s frequent rallying around the memory of Western betrayals in the “terrible 1990s” does not resonate with those who have no active memory of the period and whose experience of the West is determined by actual encounters rather than imaginary u- or dys-topias.
Long before the war against Ukraine drove many young people across Russia’s borders, Putin’s star had declined among this segment of the population. 
None of this can tell us what the future holds for Putinist or post-Putinist Russia. Stalin died before he could fully implement his last great bloodletting, while Putin has embarked on his biggest aggression yet, just as he turns 70 (and we do not know what he will do next).
The reports and documents we have detailing Stalin’s life in his twilight years testify to the fact that age does not mellow dictators but heightens their paranoia and intensifies their desperate grip on power. The fear of imminent death and the immunity to commit literally any activity combine in dictators to form a chilly climate that’s safe for no one — not even the wives of top politicians (for example, Molotov’s Jewish wife Polina Zhemchuzhina was arrested in 1948).
Even when living standards rise (as they did after 1947) and people find belonging in the collective veneration of their leader, these regimes can be unexpectedly fragile. It’s not for nothing that Soviet writer Ilya Ehrenburg likened the late Stalinist years to a winter — a winter that had no end in sight until March 5, 1953.
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seasonsfm · 1 year
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⸻  ⊰  𝐖𝐄𝐋𝐂𝐎𝐌𝐄  𝐓𝐎  𝐌𝐀𝐘𝐅𝐀𝐈𝐑  !  the  ton  is  buzzing  at  your  arrival.  the  following  character(s)  and  faceclaim(s)  are  now  taken  and  closed  for  applications.  please  make  sure  to  read  through  and  follow  each  step  of  our  checklist  and  submit  your  blog(s)  via our  asks  within    the    next    24    hours  so  we  are  able  to  send  you  the  discord  link . 
ana  de  armas  as  aurelie  dogood,  the  lady  of  rosse  by  taryn  (  oc  dormer  spot  ).
anya  taylor - joy  as  theodosia  duffy  née  howard,  the  duchess  of  fife  by  velvet.
arsema  thomas  as  frances,  miss  maynard  by  bonnie.
ben  barnes  as  grayson  cecil,  the  marquess  of  salisbury  by  marie.
charitha  chandran  as  henrietta,  miss  olivier  by  garnet.
corey  mylchreest  as  edmond,  mister  lambton  by  faye.
dev  patel  as  miles  wilson  by  ferb.
elle  fanning  as  lilac,  miss  dunbar  by  ferb.
florence  pugh  as  elizabeth,  lady  hayes  by  dani.
hannah  dodd  as  lyanna,  lady  hastings  by  krystal.
india  amarteifio  as  louise,  the  duchess  of  macklenberg - strelitz  by  kai.
jessie  mei  li  as  eliza,  lady  duff  by  s.
joe  alwyn  as  robert,  earl  spencer  by  di  (  oc  grosvenor  spot  ).
jonah  hauer  king  as  james,  earl  grosvenor  by  juno.
jonathan  bailey  as  edward  melbourne,  the  duke  of  wellington  by  meg  (  oc  hanover  spot  ).
katie  findlay  as  sophronia  blakely,  the  mistress  and  innkeeper  of  the  white  rabbit  by  faye.
kelvin  harrison  jnr.  as  ludlow,  mister  maynard  by  velvet.
kylie  bunbury  as  elisabeth,  the  duchess  of  macklenberg - strelitz  by  annie.
matilda  de  angelis  as  sophia,  the  princess  of  great  britain  by  lu.
morfydd  clark  as  eleanor,  miss  lambton  by  circe.
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patrick  gibson  as  felix,  the  duke  of  york  by  s.
rege - jean  page  as  albert  augustus,  the  duke  of  macklenberg - strelitz  by  di.
sai  bennett  as  catherine  grosvenor,  the  duchess  of  york  by  annie.
simone  ashley  as  lalitha,  miss  selvam - townsend  by  circe.
theo  james  as  william  augustus,  the  prince  of  wales  by  kai.
timothee  chalamet  as  westley  evans  by  kell  (  oc  hanover  spot  ).
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alrederedmixedmedia · 11 months
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Alredered Remembers journalist Harrison Salisbury, non-fiction author and Pulitzer Prize winner for international reporting, on his birthday.
"There is no shortcut to life. To the end of our days, life is a lesson imperfectly learned." -Harrison Salisbury
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amethysttribble · 2 years
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tagged by @agroupofcrows . rules: answer the questions and tag 9 people you want to know better/catch up with!
Last song: Family Tradition by Hank Williams Jr.! Been listening to my Rhinestone Cowboy playlist
Three ships: Hm, right now I’ve been spending a lot of time trying to partition out how I see Celegorm/Tilion; Hubert/Sylvain from FE3H has been on my mind; and because I was tagged by the gintamarillion mutual, I must shoutout Gintoki/Sakamoto, which owns my heart as my fav Gintama ship
Currently reading: The New Emperors by Harrison Salisbury and Return of the King (lotr reread is eternal and ongoing)
Last movie: This made me realize that I, uh, haven’t watched a movie in months? Anyway, I /think/ it was the Corpse Bride.
Craving: Salt and Vinegar chips, oh my goooooddd, why can’t I find them in any vending machine in this complex?
Thank you so much for the tag!! Goodness, nine’s a lot of people, but I’ve been so negligent with my tag games, I need to pay some folks back, so I’m going to tag @wynterwind, @herinke9, @himemiyaaah  @theghostinthemargins, @shrikeseams, @nutmegs-tired, @octaviangrey, @zealouswerewolfcollector
Please feel free to do or ignore at your leisure!
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otherpplnation · 1 year
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826. Tiffany Clarke Harrison
Tiffany Clarke Harrison is the author of the debut novel Blue Hour, available from Soft Skull Press.
Harrison graduated from Salisbury University with a BA in English, Creative Writing concentration, and holds an MFA in Creative Writing (Fiction) from Queens University of Charlotte. Writing is a whole-body experience, and her intuitive writing process has helped shape the raw honesty of her stories, and the stories of other authors she's coached. Tiffany lives with her husband and two children in North Carolina.
***
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mitchbeck · 2 years
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TAFT RHINOS END REGULAR SEASON WITH 4-0 SHUTOUT OF HOTCHKISS
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By: Gerry Cantlon, Howlings WATERTOWN, CT - Taft Rhinos goaltender Rudy Giumond (Pointe-Claire, QC) was solid between the pipes with a 35-save shutout, ending the prep school regular season with a 19-8-1 record in a 4-0 win over the Hotchkiss (Lakeville, CT) Bearcats before a packed house on Seniors Day at Odden Arena. The Rhinos battled to make the New England Prep playoffs with five other schools. They wound up with the Large Division home playoff date on Wednesday. They are the #1 seed and play at the Odden Arena at 4:45 pm against #8 seed Kent School. Guimond played like a brick wall shutting down the Bearcats on quality chances and limiting them to one-and-done chances by the CSB-ranked netminder. Guimond came out of his crease and cut angles down repeatedly. At 3:15 of the first period, Guimond turned aside Derek Tremblay (Boischatel, QC), then turned away scoring bids by Dylan Ah Now (Short Hills, NJ) and Big James Mackay (Villanova, PA) on the left wing, Jake Owens (Chittenano, NY), and D Nate Harrison (New Canaan). After a scoreless first frame, Taft tallied the first goal at 1:13 when Zave Greene converted on a two-on-one break. Late in the second, Taft's Ken Alexander (Watertown) had a solid chance, and Guimond stopped Hotchkiss' Michael Buenzow (Evanston, IL). Hotchkiss goalie Grant Kloeber (Raleigh, NC) stopped Greene, Remy Reynolds, and Aidan Foley (Southport) before they eventually scored. Hidy Preston tallied before Jackson Holl was on the left wing and converted a one-timer at 8:49 and at 12:03. Lemieux closed out the Taft scoring from the right wing. NOTES: Guimond is undecided if he will return to Taft next year. It will likely hinge on whether he gets drafted. He is currently #16 among North American goalies. Both the USHL and NAHL are options, or if he is selected in June's QMJHL Draft as a Quebec native, he won't count as a North American import are possibilities. Other Connecticut schools still in play include the Open Large Division perennial postseason contender #3 Avon Old Farms Winged Beavers. They will be hosting #7 Westminster Prep of Simsbury at 2:45. #5 Brunswick School of Greenwich takes on MA-based #4 Noble Greenough at 4:30 at Noble. In the large division, along with Taft, are the #2 Salisbury Crimson Knights, who will host #7 Loomis Chaffe of Windsor at 4 pm. In small school action, #3 Frederick Gunn School of Washington, Connecticut, hosts #6 Tilton School of New Hampshire at 5:30 at Deerfield Academy in Enfield. All games are on Wednesday. The winners will play in the semifinals on Saturday at the school of the higher seed. The championship finals will be held Sunday at NCAA Division III Sullivan Arena on the campus of St. Anselm College in Manchester, NH. Matt Chennette, Taft Class '84 living in MA, an Iraq war vet, is battling ALS. Donations are being made to help the family defray medical costs. TAFT SCHOOL HOCKEY HOME Read the full article
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harrisonarchive · 2 years
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Photos by Mike Salisbury.
“In the little kitchen filled with color Polaroids pasted to the wall there were snapshots of George and the many musicians who had been through the Park. There were beers and endless cigarettes, and next door a room with walls lined with guitars, hundreds of them, from the Beatle days, some tie-dyed, many familiar. Double glass doors led into the stained-glass Victorian studio itself, jam-packed with all manner of instruments, weird harmoniums and shiny metal xylophones and vast kettledrums. Downstairs our stunning women, Tania and Liv, both dark and beautiful and American, would hang out together or prepare sumptuous vegetarian curry dinners.” - Eric Idle, The Greedy Bastard Diary (2003)
“It’s hard to think of leaving the privacy and quiet of the happy life I have here [at Friar Park].” - George Harrison, Billboard, June 19, 1999
“George and I were together for 27 years, and we worked together, and… everything we did was sort of a family project. […] I think the answer [to finding one’s own path] is in nature, I think the answer is in silence, and not being afraid of nothingness, not being afraid of the abyss, the void, the silence. I think that’s where man can be saved from where we are now. I really do. I think you need to go sit somewhere in silence and be overwhelmed by nature. That seems to be a way to reset our lives.” - Olivia Harrison, Cultura Pop, October 2017 (x)
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itchy-9884 · 1 year
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There is no shortcut to life. To the end of our days, life is a lesson imperfectly learned.
—Harrison E. Salisbury
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news24fr · 2 years
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Afficher uniquement les événements clésVeuillez activer JavaScript pour utiliser cette fonctionnalitéFlux en directLes évènements clésil y a 34 moisLes compositions de Leeds United contre Manchester Cityil y a 50 mPremier League : Leeds United contre Manchester CityAfficher uniquement les événements clésVeuillez activer JavaScript pour utiliser cette fonctionnalitéil y a 34 mois14.09 HNELes compositions de Leeds United contre Manchester CityLeeds United : Meslier, Kristensen, Struijk, Cooper, Koch, Roca, Forshaw, Aaronson, Gnonto, Greenwood, Rodrigo.Sous-titres : Robles, Ayling, Firpo, Summerville, Harrison, Llorente, Gyabi, Gelhardt, Klich.Manchester City: Ederson, Lewis, Ake, Stones, Akanji, Gundogan, Rodri, De Bruyne, Grealish, Mahrez, Haaland.Sous-titres : Moreno, Walker, Phillips, Cancelo, Laporte, Silva, Gomez, Foden, Palmer.Mis à jour à 14h37 HNEil y a 36 mois14.08 HNENouvelles de l'équipeIlan Meslier commence dans le but pour Leeds après s'être remis d'une fièvre glandulaire. Crysencio Summerville commence sur le banc et avec Tyler Adams est suspendu, Sam Greenwoood et Adam Forshaw commencent.Illan Meslier de Leeds United prend le terrain pour l'échauffement. Photographie : Lee Smith/Action Images/ReutersL'attaquant de Manchester City né à Leeds, Erling Haaland, est un partant évident contre son père Alfie ancien club, où il affrontera son père l'entraîneur du RB Salzburg Jesse Marsch. Jack Grealish s'aligne également contre Leeds, Cole Palmer s'éloignant de l'équipe qui a commencé lors de la victoire de la Coupe Carabao en milieu de semaine contre Liverpool. Ederson est de retour dans le but pour City, tandis que John Stones remplace Aymeric Laporte au cœur de la défense de City.Mis à jour à 14h37 HNEil y a 36 mois14.08 HNEChelsea conclut un accord pour signer l'attaquant David Datro Fofana afin de renforcer les options d'attaqueLire la suiteil y a 36 mois14.08 HNEOfficiels du match de ce soir Arbitre: Stuart Atwell Arbitres assistants : Harry Lennard et Darren Cann Quatrième officiel : Michel Salisbury VAR : Jarred Gillet Stuart Attwell est chargé de maintenir l'ordre entre Leeds United et Manchester City lors de ce qui pourrait être une rencontre épicée à Elland Road ce soir. Photographie : Javier García/ShutterstockMis à jour à 14h13 HNEil y a 49 min13h54 HNEPremières nouvelles de l'équipeLeeds United est privé de Tyler Adams, le capitaine américain suspendu ce soir en raison de son renvoi tardif contre Tottenham Hotspur la dernière fois. Les absents de longue durée Stuart Dallas (jambe cassée) et Archie Gray (cheville) sont également écartés. Le gardien Ilan Meslier est également incertain en raison de sa maladie, tandis que l'attaquant Patrick Bamford, les ailiers Crysencio Summerville et Jack Harrison, le défenseur central Liam Cooper et le milieu de terrain Mateusz Klich sont également des doutes majeurs. Klich devrait quitter le club en janvier, le club MLS DC United ayant déposé une offre généreuse.Manchester City sera privé de Kalvin Phillips, que Pep Guardiola a estimé transporter trop de bois à son retour de la Coupe du monde avec l'Angleterre. Oh pour être aussi "en surpoids" que le milieu de terrain défensif apparemment lard. On peut supposer qu'il est toujours en train de faire la fête quelque part en Argentine alors qu'il célèbre son rôle central dans la victoire de son pays en Coupe du monde, Julian Alvarez est également indisponible. L'arrière central Ruben Diaz sera également absent en raison d'une blessure aux ischio-jambiers.Manchester City Julian Alvarez est naturellement indisposé pour le match de ce soir entre Leeds et Manchester City après la victoire de l'Argentine à la Coupe du monde. Photographie : Tomás Cuesta/AFP/Getty Imagesil y a 49 min13h54 HNEMarsch se prépare à retrouver Haaland, l'ancien responsable « unique » de Salzbourg | Louise TaylorLire la suiteil y a 50 m13h54 HNEPremier League : Leeds United contre Manchester CityBonnes fêtes à toutes et à tous. Le calendrier
festif se poursuit avec le match de ce soir entre Leeds United et Manchester City à Elland Road. Bien qu'ils soient les favoris pour conserver leur titre, les champions en titre occupent la troisième place, à huit points du leader de la ligue, Arsenal.Lors de leur dernière excursion en Premier League à la mi-novembre, ils ont perdu 2-1 à domicile contre Brentford. Leeds United, leurs hôtes ce soir, a perdu par l'étrange but de sept dans un thriller à White Hart Lane le même jour. Alors que les deux équipes cherchent à retrouver le chemin de la victoire dans l'élite ce soir, le coup d'envoi dans le Yorkshire est à 20 heures. Restez à l'écoute en attendant pour les nouvelles de l'équipe et la construction. Les sujetspremière ligueLeeds UnitedManchester CityRéutiliser ce contenu
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