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hunter-gatherer-11 · 4 months
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Incorrect Quote #1 (Bondi Rescue)
 Jacko: Ah shit Joel: Watch your fucking language
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southernboy420 · 4 months
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Love-Drunk Gazes (Bondi Rescue)
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Summary: Jacko isn't a lightweight. Harrison is. Harrison also mentions that he's in love with Jacko...to Jacko's face. On accident. Because he's wasted. Jacko thinks it's cute. And agrees.
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It was New Years Eve, and the lifeguards were at the beach, celebrating with the crowds while also being on duty. It was just after dusk, and there were crowds of people in the water, making it dufficult to see if someone was drowning, but as midnight approached, they started leaving the water, presumably to drink more. Reidy was at Southern End, watching a girl, concerned. Singlets was near Flat Rock, helping a freshly-scraped victim, and Jacko and Harrison were the only two in the little tower a few yards from the Central Tower.
"Lots of people, ey?" Jacko asked. Harrison hummed. He wasn't on shift, but he'd come anyway, and frmo the way he was staring at the water, he was pretty drunk already, but Jacko wasn't gonna let Harrison not have fun (while also keeping him, preferably, safe). Harrison shifted in the chair, eyes blinking slowly, and asked, "Can I...tell you something?" He sounded unsure, shy, and was slurring. "Sure." Jacko said. "You can't tell anyone." "Okay." "I like someone." "Okay..." Jacko frowned. "Why is that bad?" "It's a guy." "Oh," Jacko realized. Of course Hutz wouldn't want anyone to know. Despite having a freaking PRIDE event each year, Harrison was worried that the team would be judgmental or something. Him and Jacko have talked about it before. Harrison was bisexual, Jacko was pan, and both wanted more than just some person. They'd talked for years about coming out to the team, but never have. "Who is this guy?" Jacko asked, eyes tracking a surfer. "You." Jacko's knee slammed into the bottom of the table as he turned to stare at Hutz. "What?" He asked, wide-eyed. "I...never knew?" It souded like a question. "I never wanted you to know anyway," Hutz said. "But...it's New Years, and I figured, what the hell, go out with a bang, right?" "Um...yeah." Jacko's mind was reeling. He'd been in love with Hutz for three years, and...he liked him back? "I'm really sorry," Hutz stood suddenly, nearly toppling over. "I-I'm gonna go--" "No!" Jacko stepped between Hutz and the door, blocking the way, and kissed Hutz. He felt the younger boy go stiff in surprise, but the Harrison kissed him back. His lips were really soft, and he tasted like the way salt smelled on the wind near the ocean. "I'm sorry I haven't told you," Hutz said as they pulled apart. "No, don't be. I'm glad you told me now," Jacko whispered. BOOM! The first firework went off. "Happy New Years, Hutz," Jacko grinned in the dark. Hutz smiled, his teeth turned purple from the next firework. "Happy New Years, Jacko."
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if-you-fan-a-fire · 4 years
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“DENIES RUMORS OF TROUBLE AT PENITENTIARY,” Regina Leader-Post. November 26, 1929. Page 10. --- Bob Wyllie, Deputy Warden, Tenders Resignation at Prince Albert ----- (Special Despatch) PRINCE ALBERT, Sask., Nov. 25. Following closely upon the heels of unconfirmed rumors of "some trouble" at the Saskatchewan penitentiary here, Deputy Warden Bob Wyllie has tendered his resignation to take effect after the expiration of sick leave which has been granted. 
This was confirmed tonight by E. R. Jackson, Ottawa, inspector of penitentiaries who arrived a few days after rumors of the alleged trouble began to circulate to take charge of the Institution In the absence of Warden MacLeod, who had been ill at his home for six weeks s the result of a nervous breakdown. 
"There is absolutely no truth to the rumors of trouble," Mr. Jackson emphatically declared again today when he confirmed the report of Wyllie's resignation. "The resignation is entirely due to the Illness of Mr. Wyllie. He has been granted sick leave and asked for the resignation to take effect at the end of that period. It has not been accepted. I have forwarded it to the department." 
For the time being at least, if not permanently, Mr. Wyllie will be succeeded by Chief Keeper Doolan, who will be acting deputy until such time as he receives the permanent appointment or another is appointed to the vacated post by the department. 
Mr. Jackson also stated he will continue to be in charge of the penal institution until Mr. MacLeod's health has improved sufficiently for him to assume his duties as warden.
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anxious-ace · 2 years
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Haunted SMP:
Tanya Ivanovna (Kate):
27
Birth: July 4th, 1995
Death: August 18th, 2022
Dating Mariska Paalman (Adrian)
Killed by Theo Hunt (Kenny)
Haunting Hayden Hill (Max)
Theo Hunt (Kenny):
28
Birth: March 22nd, 1994
Death: August 18th, 2022
Dating Peter Ward (Jackson)
Killed in explosion
Haunting Mariska (Adrian)
Mariska Paalman (Adrian):
27
August 15th, 1995
Dating Tanya
Haunted by Theo
Peter Ward (Jackson):
27
September 22nd, 1994
Dating Theo (Kenny)
Haunted by Antonio Zaragoza (Andrew)
Antonio Zaragoza (Andrew):
27
Birth: October 7th, 1995
Death: November 8th, 2022
Killed by Matt Carter (Michael)
Haunting Peter
Matt Carter (Michael):
28
April 17th, 1994
Haunted by Armel Levett (Gabe)
Armel Levett (Gabe):
26
Birth: September 18th, 1995
Death: October 4th, 2022
Killed by malnutrition
Haunting Matt
Lydie Levett (Natasha):
26
September 18th, 1995
Dating Annabelle Doolan (Allison)
Haunted by Annabelle
Annabelle Doolan (Allison):
27
Birth: August 13th, 1995
Death: August 13th, 2022
Killed by Armel
Haunting/dating Lydie
Potapova Ivanovna (Julie):
25
November 15th, 1997
Haunted by Auli Jokela (Becky)
Auli Jokela (Becky):
27
Birth: April 20th, 1995
Death: June 17th, 2022
Killed by Armel
Haunting Potapova
Hayden Hill (Max:
28
May 4th, 1994
Haunted by Tanya
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ivyfon · 3 years
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Headline Speakers Added March 15th - Online 2021 Outlook Family Office & Institutional Investor
We have added more headline speakers to the Ivy Family Office Network (IVYFON) SXSW family office and institutional investor forum which will be limited in person in downtown Austin, TX and online on March 15th from 8 a.m. central time to 4:30 p.m central time. We will be covering family office trends with a deep dive into the TX business investment eco system. We expect 350 people online more than 300 are already registered. We will broadcast the event globally all day.  We average 350 registrants per monthly forum.
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  The agenda is here - https://ivyfon.com/mar15forum/agenda.html.
You can register to view online via (free) Zoom here - https://ivyfon.com/mar15forum/registration.html.
If you wish to attend in person, please contact me directly.  Please note, with Texas re-opening on March 10th, we have added an outdoor reception to the event for family offices.
New headliners include:  Anthony Emtman of Ikigai Asset Management (top performing cryto hedge fund), David Drake of LDJ Capital, Laurence Richards, of Legacy Road Family Offices, Ed Butowsky of Chapwood Investments and Ari Rastegar of Rastegar Property Company
Other speakers include Nick Markola of Markola LLC, Laurence Richards of Legacy Road Family Offices, Sean Doolan of Global Founders Capital, Josh Roach of LLoyd Capital Partners,  Bradley Rotter of Entanglement Research Institute, Inc., Chip Perkins of Perkins Fund Marketing, J. Alan Reid of Reid Partners, Alan Snyder of Shinnecock Partners,  , Robert Mason of Mason Capital Partners, Scott D. Cheskiewicz of Jackson Walker, Nancy Fechnay and Robert Butler of Butler Advisory.  More are listed below my signature.
About IvyFON: 
IvyFON is a leading provider of forums for institutional investors and family offices.  More than 3,000 people have attended our events since April, 2020 during the pandemic.  We have had more than 45,000 attendees at our events with more than 4,000 speakers since 2001.
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sciencespies · 4 years
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Crowdsourcing Project Aims to Document the Many U.S. Places Where Women Have Made History
https://sciencespies.com/history/crowdsourcing-project-aims-to-document-the-many-u-s-places-where-women-have-made-history/
Crowdsourcing Project Aims to Document the Many U.S. Places Where Women Have Made History
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For nearly 30 years, Alaskan Ahtna Athabascan elder Katie John awaited resolution to her peaceful battle over Native subsistence rights. The legal dispute—centering on her family’s right to fish in Batzulnetas, a historic village and fish camp in Wrangell-St. Elias National Park—made it all the way up to the U.S. Supreme Court. The Court’s ruling cleared the way for the subsistence fishing rights of many Alaska Native to be included under federal subsistence protection. Although John died in 2013 before litigation was complete, her 2014 win was a victory for Native Americans everywhere.
Today, the fish camp remains a testament to John’s life work, and it represents just one of the many sites where women’s history and achievements happened, often with no official sign or record recognizing their importance.
Since mid-January, the National Trust for Historic Preservation has been crowdsourcing places like the fish camp for its 1,000 Places Where Women Made History, and the process to submit is simple. Anyone can log an online entry, which consists of a photo, as well as a short paragraph about the U.S.-based property and its location. “This is our way of bringing people together to tell us what are the places and stories that matter to them,” says Chris Morris, a National Trust senior field officer who’s spearheading the campaign. Through submissions from local preservation societies, community organizations, and everyday people, they’ve already compiled more than 750 sites. Some, like the fish camp, may not have much recognition of their role in history while others have been named National Historic Landmarks.
“Although 2020’s 100th anniversary of women’s suffrage is the impetus for this work,” says Morris, “we also wanted to use the project to fully honor those many female leaders related to American history and culture.”
According to Morris, the 1,000 Places project is part of a larger mission of the Trust’s to preserve women’s history. The Trust encourages local organizations to take direct action in preserving buildings and homes where women have “made a stand, raised their voice, and found the courage to change the world,” she says, and identifies historic sites that recognize women as part of its annual 11 Most Endangered Historic Places list, which in 2019 included the Excelsior Club in Charlotte, North Carolina—a once-thriving hub of the city’s African American social scene—and Nashville’s Music Row. The National Trust also operates 27 of its own historic sites at which they’re working to bring to light the many amazing women associated with these places. The Farnsworth House in Plano, Illinois, for instance, was designed by famed modernist architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, but it was native Chicagoan and doctor Edith Farnsworth who commissioned it. “So this year Farnsworth House is shifting its perspective to tell the story of the house from her point of view,” says Morris.
The ever-growing list of 1,000 Places Where Women Made History currently includes everything from homes where pioneering women once lived, buildings where specific events that involved them occurred, and where women-led accomplishments happened. It includes spots like the former home of prominent investigative journalist Ida Tarbell in Titusville, Pennsylvania; the historic Auditorium Theatre in Chicago, saved through a fundraising campaign led by Beatrice Spachner; and Trumpet Records in Jackson, Mississippi, the former work site of a young record producer named Lillian McMurry, who recorded both black and white artists during the height of Mississippi segregation.
“We want to reveal those sort of lesser-known and untold stories, because we recognize that women’s history is America’s history,” says Morris. “This crowdsourcing effort has been very successful in revealing such underappreciated tales, ones of women’s vision, courage and leadership countrywide. They make up the majority of our entries. They’re tales of thinkers, artists, scientists, entrepreneurs…those women who have really shaped the nation that we are today, and who continue to help us to move forward.”
One of the Trust’s main goals with this project is to help a new generation of Americans, especially young women, see their own potential in the history of these places, says Morris. “We also will encourage everyone who submitted an entry to consider applying for funding from our many grant programs,” she says, “to support the broader interpretation and long-term preservation of these places where women made history.”
Five Sites Where Women Made History
Here are six lesser-known sites in the U.S. where women made history. Most of them are recognized in the 1,000 Places project, and all are on the Trust’s radar for renovation and reuse in some capacity. Though each is in various stages of preservation and redevelopment, they’re all moving forward as a testament to women’s achievements and inspiration for new stories to come.
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Marjory Stoneman Douglas House
(National Trust for Historic Preservation)
Located on a residential block in Miami’s upscale Coconut Grove neighborhood, this uninhabited wood-framed and T-shaped cottage has a special place in American history, as the former home of Marjory Stoneman Douglas, a journalist, author and conservationist known as the “Grand Dame of the Everglades.” (She may sound familiar, too, as the namesake of the high school in Parkland, Florida, where 17 people were killed in a mass shooting in 2018.) Douglas published her seminal book, The Everglades: River of Grass, highlighting Florida’s endlessly diverse subtropical wilderness and its need for ongoing preservation, in 1947. A month later, 20 percent of the Everglades’ southernmost portion became a national park. Douglas also founded the still-thriving Friends of the Everglades—an activist organization dedicated to protecting the landscape—in 1970, and often held meetings for conservationists at her Coconut Grove home, where she lived from 1926 until 1998. The Land Trust of Dade County currently oversees the property, which became a National Historic Landmark in 2015, and is working with other local and national preservation organizations for a reuse plan that continues Stoneman’s legacy as an environmentalist, while also being respectful of the community that surrounds it. One possibility, says Morris, is to use the property as a residency where scientists can come to continue their research on environmental issues and climate change.
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Pauli Murray House
(National Trust for Historic Preservation)
Pauli Murray was both a civil rights and women’s rights activist, an author, lawyer and member of the LGBTQ community, as well as the first African American woman to be ordained as an Episcopal priest. She spent her formative years in this one-and-a-half-story home, built by her grandfather, alongside her grandparents and aunts—all of whom helped raise Murray. In 1944, this descendent of both enslaved laborers and slave holders graduated first in her class at Howard University. Murray later received a Masters of Law degree from U.C. Berkeley in 1945, and in 1947 was named one of 10 “Young Women of the Year” by Mademoiselle magazine. She was also a founding member of the National Organization for Women (NOW) Foundation, which tackles a wide range of women’s rights issues, from economic justice to reproductive rights.
Murray’s Durham childhood home has been a National Historic Landmark since 2016, and is both an entry on the National Trust’s crowdsourcing campaign as well as one of its National Treasures. The Duke Human Rights Center at the Franklin Humanities Institute runs the Pauli Murray Project, which oversees the property, renovated it and is preparing to open it to the public as the the Pauli Murray Center for History and Social Justice later this year.
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Harada House
(National Trust for Historic Preservation)
In 1915, Japanese immigrants Jukichi and Ken Harada wanted to purchase a home in Riverside, but the California Alien Land Law of 1913 prevented them from doing so. Instead, the couple acquired their modest Lemon Street property by putting it in the name of their three young children—a move that soon became a focal point for the groundbreaking legal case California v. Harada. Under the 14th Amendment, the Haradas won the right to keep their 1884 home, though their lives would never be the same. In 1942, the entire family was relocated to Japanese internment camps where both Jukichi and Ken died. However, their youngest daughter Sumi returned to the Riverside home in the wake of World War II, taking in as boarders other Japanese families who’d lost their properties. Sumi resided at what’s now known as Harada House until 1998, during which time she preserved many of the home’s furnishings and fixtures, and kept a wealth of family heirlooms, including kimonos featuring the Harada family crest, personal letters and kitchenware. She also saved a message that her brother scribbled on a bedroom wall on the day his family was forced into a relocation center.
Today the Riverside Metropolitan Museum oversees the home, which Jukichi had transformed from a single-story saltbox into a multi-story space, and is working to both restore it and turn it into an interpretive center highlighting the Harada story—one of lost city rights, a fight against racial discrimination, and immigrants. The property has been a National Historic Landmark since 1990.
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Doolan-Larson Residence and Storefronts
(Scott Hahn/SF Heritage)
On the famous San Francisco corner of Haight and Ashbury streets—the heart of the 1960s counterculture movement—stands the Doolan-Larson building, a mixed-use, multi-story property built in the 20th century. This Colonial Revival-style structure, which survived the city’s 1906 earthquake before being elevated to add storefronts, became home to San Francisco’s first-ever hippie boutique. Twenty-four-year-old Peggy Caserta opened this mod clothing store, called Mnasidika (its name a shout-out to The Songs of Bilitis, a French book of lesbian poetry from the late 19th century), in 1965 and ran it until 1968, during which time it was a pivotal part of the Haight-Ashbury’s counterculture scene. Caserta herself was bisexual—she was Janis Joplin’s lover until Joplin’s death in 1970—and according to Levi Strauss & Co., it was at Mnasidika that Jimi Hendrix developed his iconic Flower Child style. Caserta is also credited with convincing Levi Strauss to create bell-bottom jeans, which she then sold at Mnasidika and became a seminal part of ’60s fashion.
When the property’s owner Norman Larson died in 2018, he donated the Doolan-Larson building to San Francisco Heritage. Mnasidika’s original storefront—now a T-shirt shop—remains largely as it was during the Summer of Love. Though not yet on the list of places “Where Women Made History,” it is a part of the Trust’s National Treasures. San Francisco Heritage and other preservation groups are currently looking at ways to reuse the structure in telling the stories of San Francisco’s counterculture movement, including those of women like Caserta, as well as to highlight both its overall impact and continued relevance today.
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Another addition to the National Trust’s 100 National Treasures list, Villa Lewaro was the summer home of Madam C.J. Walker (born Sara Breedlove), an early 20th century entrepreneur who made a fortune in developing hair products for African American women. Walker, who is considered the first African American female millionaire in the U.S., is the subject of the new Netflix TV series, “Self Made,” starring Octavia Spencer as Walker. Along with being a businesswoman, Walker was a philanthropist and political and social activist. She occupied the 34-room, Italianate-style Villa Lewaro from 1918 to 1919, and though it’s not currently open to the public, visitors can take a virtual tour of the estate led by Walker’s great-great granddaughter, A’Lelia Bundles. The New Voices Foundation—created to empower entrepreneur women of color— acquired the property in 2018 and is working toward turning it into a “think tank,” according to New Voice’s founder Richelieu Dennis, “to foster entrepreneurship for present and future generations.”
#History
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bankingexampdf-blog · 6 years
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Jackson Bird sends Queensland crashing to 93 all out Tasmania 355 (Doolan 115, Wade 72, George 4-76) and 132 (Wade 51, Swepson 3-17, Steketee 3-34) beat Queensland 148 (Peirson 42, Bird 5-35) and 98 (Bird 5-42, Bell 4-17) by 246 runs…
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365footballorg-blog · 6 years
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Cabin for an office and kicked off your own training pitch - what's it like managing one of EFL's smallest clubs?
“I said recently that we play better football than Barcelona could play in League One. The next training session my midfielder Sam Finlay turned up in a Barca shirt. I blanked him completely.”
John Coleman is sitting in his office in a portable building behind the away stand at the Wham Stadium, a cup of tea in one hand and his mobile phone in the other. Accrington Stanley’s training is finished for the day so his eldest daughter has just asked for a Facetime catch-up alongside his new baby granddaughter.
It is hardly the most glamorous of locations, but it is from here that Coleman, with his assistant Jimmy Bell and first-team coach John Doolan, has masterminded an impressive rise for what he calls the “biggest little club in the country”.
Thanks in part to a 10-game unbeaten run, Stanley – sandwiched geographically between Premier League Burnley and Championship Blackburn – are sixth, level on points with former top-flight regulars Sunderland.[1][2]
For a club who “get kicked off our pitches when Burnley FC Ladies training starts”, it is quite an achievement.
“If you’re talking about character, endeavour, effort or enjoyment we’re probably one of the biggest clubs in the league,” says Liverpudlian Coleman. “It’s well documented that we will have the lowest budget in League One and the budget we’ve got this season would probably be about 15th in League Two and 10th in the National League.
“It’s not about money, it’s about what you get out of your players.”
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Depression, regret… and redemption
Coleman signed a new four-year contract in September, a significant moment for a club that celebrates its 50th anniversary this month – and which rose to national prominence in the 1980s because of a milk advert.[3][4]
There have been plenty of tough periods but they are now at an all-time high, Coleman having last season secured a fourth promotion spanning two spells with Stanley, when they went up to the third tier for the first time, as League Two champions.[5][6]
It has been a long road for the Kirkby-born former amateur footballer. The Reds were part-time when then player-manager Coleman came to the club in 1999. But after promotion to the Conference in 2003, and turning professional a year later, they returned to the Football League in 2006.[7]
They came close to promotion in 2016, but were denied on the last day of the season by a single goal.[8] It is a memory that still affects Coleman in what he says was one of the worst days of his managerial career.
“The club had all the banners ready saying Accrington are going up, and the medals were there and the champagne too, and they all had to be put back in the sponsor’s car. All my family were there too so that was a big, big low.
“There’s an age-old saying ‘Who motivates the motivator?’ I did have problems in the past at picking myself up, I’d be a bit of a recluse for a couple of days and my home life suffered. But I’ve gradually learned to coach myself into controlling what I can control and not get too high and not get too low.”
The 56-year-old left Accrington to join Rochdale in 2012,[9] a decision he came to regret hugely, returning[10] to Stanley in September 2014 following spells at Southport[11] and League of Ireland side Sligo Rovers.
“We had such an affinity with the people of the town of Accrington,” he says. “We went to funerals, weddings, christenings. We were close to a lot of people in and out of the club.
“But I thought the club was in danger of going under. I just thought I was standing still. I regret leaving now because I went to a club I shouldn’t have gone to.
“It was a poor time for me, a depressing time. And I did go into depression. I found it very difficult. You miss the stress more than anything and you miss purpose in your life and it just snowballs and you overanalyse things.”
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‘Whether you drive a Bentley or a Focus doesn’t matter’
The economic reality of lower-league football has always posed major challenges for Stanley.
There was a period of five years when the club went through financial difficulty, with wages and tax bills going unpaid and two winding-up orders. But like the team on the pitch, they battled through.
The town, which has a population of 35,000, has attracted an average home attendance of 2,088 so far this season – the lowest in League One and about 28,000 fewer a week than Sunderland.
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“We do still need the crowds,” says Coleman. “Nineteen years ago I was player-manager, we played Belper Town and there were 2,000-plus there. Yet we played AFC Wimbledon in League One, five leagues above what we were in, and there were fewer people there.”
The club has the financial backing of local businessman Andy Holt, but Coleman remains cautious in his approach.
“I’ve got to be fiscally prudent,” he says. “I understand what the club is about. I never try to live beyond our means.
“To get £2.5m for two players at Accrington Stanley [Janoi Donacien and Kayden Jackson joined Ipswich this summer] is unheard of but that mould had to be broken. We had to stop being the bargain basement club. We simply had to stop being a Lidl and become a Waitrose.
“I like proving people wrong. And the thing I most like to prove people wrong about is when they say it’s all about money.
“If you’re a right-winger playing against a left-back it doesn’t make him better than you because he drives a Bentley and you drive a Ford Focus, or he eats steak and you eat hamburgers. It’s what you do on the day and it’s what you’ve got in your heart. We continue to confound people with that mentality.”
‘No waistcoats’ – a team in its manager’s image
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Despite his limited resources, Coleman is uncompromising when it comes to the kind of players he is trying to nurture at the club.
“Treat them like men, empathise with them, know you feel their pain and you feel their joy, and likewise they will feel your pain and your joy,” he says.
“If they need telling off I’ll tell them off, if they need pulling into line I’ll pull them into line, if they need a cuddle they’ll get a cuddle.”
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One thing the players seem to have enjoyed since Coleman’s return is a relaxation of the club’s dress code.
“When we left and James Beattie took over, the club spent a lot of money on three-piece suits with smart waistcoats and when we came back we didn’t think it fitted with what Accrington is about,” added Coleman.
“So at our first home game after we returned from Sligo, Jimmy wrote the dress code on the whiteboard and in capital letters put – ‘NO WAISTCOATS!’ To be fair I reckon I could carry it off; I don’t think any of my players could though.”
Coleman is similarly strong in his views when it comes to how far he can take the club.
“I think we could get to the Championship and if you don’t believe you can get out of a league you’re in, I personally believe you shouldn’t be in that league,” he says.
“I don’t see us as underdogs, and we’re not a laughing stock anymore. I don’t fear anyone. We’re here on merit and we’re going to give it a right good go and enjoy the ride.”
References
^ 10-game unbeaten run, (www.bbc.co.uk)
^ former top-flight regulars Sunderland. (www.bbc.co.uk)
^ new four-year contract (www.bbc.co.uk)
^ milk advert. (en.wikipedia.org)
^ fourth promotion spanning two spells with Stanley, (www.bbc.co.uk)
^ as League Two champions. (www.bbc.co.uk)
^ returned to the Football League in 2006. (news.bbc.co.uk)
^ by a single goal. (www.bbc.co.uk)
^ to join Rochdale in 2012, (www.bbc.co.uk)
^ returning (www.bbc.co.uk)
^ Southport (www.bbc.co.uk)
BBC Sport – Football
Cabin for an office and kicked off your own training pitch – what's it like managing one of EFL's smallest clubs? was originally published on 365 Football
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ipzl · 6 years
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via EasyHealthTip Easy Health Tip https://ift.tt/2wRP7tY
Life and death is a law of nature. But, when we lose our loved ones and role models, we mourn. Here is a list of celebrities who died in 2018, including Dolores O’Riordian, Billy Graham, Jon Paul Steuer and more. They are no longer in this world, but have left reasons to be alive in millions of hearts. Watch the video to know the list of celebrities.
Read the Transcript at: http://bit.ly/2IcROYN
Jon Paul Steuer: 0:46 DOB: March 27, 1984 DOD: January 1, 2018
John Young: 1:06 DOB: September 24, 1930 DOD: January 5, 2018
Tommy Lawrence: 1:27 DOB: May 14, 1940 DOD: January 9, 2018
Doreen Tracey: 1:47 DOB: April 13, 1943 DOD: January 10, 2018
Keith Jackson: 2:07 DOB: October 18, 1928 DOD: January 12, 2018
Hugh Wilson: 2:25 DOB: August 21, 1943 DOD: January 14, 2018
Cyrille Regis: 2:41 DOB: February 6, 1958 DOD: January 14, 2018
Dolores O’Riordan: 3:01 DOB: September 6, 1971 DOD: January 15, 2018
Peter Wyngarde: 3:27 DOB: August 23, 1927 DOD: January 15, 2018
Moya O’Sullivan: 3:48 DOB: November 30, 1926 DOD: January 16, 2018
Jo Jo White: 4:08 DOB: November 16, 1946 DOD: January 16, 2018
Ed Doolan: 4:30 DOB: July 20, 1941 DOD: January 16, 2018
Simon Shelton Barnes: 4:51 DOB: January 13, 1966 DOD: January 17, 2018
Jessica Falkholt: 5:11 DOB: May 15, 1988 DOD: January 17, 2018
Fredo Santana: 5:44 DOB: July 4, 1990 DOD: January 19, 2018
Howard Lew Lewis: 6:04 DOB: August 21, 1941 DOD: January 20, 2018
Jimmy Armfield: 6:29 DOB: September 21, 1935 DOD: January 22, 2018
Connie Sawyer: 6:49 DOB: November 27, 1912 DOD: January 21, 2018
Jack Ketchum: 7:10 DOB: November 10, 1946 DOD: January 24, 2018
Mark E. Smith: 7:33 DOB: March 5, 1957 DOD: January 24, 2018
Dennis Edwards: 7:53 DOB: February 3, 1943 DOD: February 1, 2018
John Mahoney: 8:14 DOB: June 20, 1940 DOD: February 4, 2018
John Gavin: 8:35 DOB: April 8, 1931 DOD: February 9, 2018
Reg E Cathey: 8:55 DOB: August 18, 1958 DOD: February 9, 2018
Billy Graham: 9:17 DOB: November 7, 1918 DOD: February 21, 2018
Source: http://bit.ly/2pABuc4
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Mark E Smith’s family confirm cause of death
Mark E. Smith of The Fall died of terminal lung and kidney cancer, family reveals
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R.I.P. Horror Author Jack Ketchum Has Died
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Jimmy Armfield dead: Blackpool and England legend turned BBC 5Live broadcaster passes away aged 82 after battle with cancer
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Jessica Falkholt dead aged 29 – Home and Away actress dies three weeks after horror crash that killed her parents and sister
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Peter Wyngarde dead at 90 – Jason King star and TV heartthrob passes away after career spanning eight decades
Peter Wyngarde dead at 90 – Jason King star and TV heartthrob passes away after career spanning eight decades
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Tragic Cranberries singer Dolores O’Riordan to be buried next to her dad in hometown
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An appreciation of Keith Jackson
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On this day in 1962, goalkeeper Tommy Lawrence made his #LFC debut. 390 games, two titles and one FA Cup followed. pic.twitter.com/hY90uKgtjs
— Liverpool FC (@LFC) October 27, 2014
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goalhofer · 7 years
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1915 Chicago Whales Roster:
Front: Bill Bailey, Dave Black, Ad Brennan, Claude Hendrix and Mordecai Brown.
Middle: Adam Johnson, George McConnell, Mike Prendergast, Henry Rasmussen, Clem Clemens, William Fischer, Art Wilson and Fred Beck.
Back: Mickey Doolan, Jack Farrell, Harry Fritz, Arnold Hauser, Bill Jackson, Charlie Pechous, Jimmy Smith, Joe Tinker and Joe Weiss.
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bobnorthway · 7 years
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Aboriginal artists make ‘Spaghetti Western’ film to screen at Tarnanthi indigenous art festival | Adelaide Now
Aboriginal artists make ‘Spaghetti Western’ film to screen at Tarnanthi indigenous art festival | Adelaide Now
Cast of the short film Never Stop Riding: Patuway Mungkuri, Johnny Doolan, Peter Mungkuri, Vincent Namatjira, Michael Drover and Kunmanara Andy at Indulana. Picture: Jackson Lee/Iwantja Arts Cast of the short film Never Stop Riding: Patuway Mungkuri, Johnny Doolan, Peter Mungkuri, Vincent…
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southernboy420 · 4 months
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Accidentally In Love (Bondi Rescue)
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Prompt: Them accidentally (or purposefully) dozing off in a hammock together as the sun sets and the air cools down.
I chose to do it on accident :)
************************************************************************
Third Person POV The day was warm, and the lifeguards were just hanging out at Joel and Jeff's place, having a cookout for Christmas. Joel was trying to convince Maxi that elves were real, and Jethro was vetoing for Santa. Harrison was just staring at them like tehy were dumb or something.
Jake was laying in a hammock, staring at the sky. "Yo." A voice said, and he glanced up, seeing Chase standing there. "Hey," Jake said, trying to scoot over, and Chase chuckled, taking the now-open spot. The problem with hammocks, especially rope ones like this one, was balance, so naturally, getting in, Chase fell into Jake. "Shit, sory." "It's okay. Good?" Jake asked, helping Chase sit up. "Yeah." Chase smiled.
Jake's heart fluttered, and he frowned. Stop that, he thought. He's way out of your league. He'd been in love with Chase for years, but he doubted Chase was even on the LGBT+ spectrum at all.
"You're dumb," Harrison said, shaking his head. "What?!" Joel cried. "It's true! How else do you think that shit gets there? The man's too fat to fit!"
"That doesn't mean he's not real, stupid." Jethro rolled his eyes, and Joel started shouting indignantly. Jake watched them, eyebrows raised. "Is Jeff still trying to say Santa is real?" "Yep. Joel's not having it," Chase mumbled. Both were now lying back, staring at the sky (but avoiding the bright sun, of course).
As the day wore on, Jake felt himself getting sleepier and sleepier as the warmth increased. He turned, about to ask Chase if he felt the same, and saw the younger boy passed out cold, eyes shut. Jake felt like a creep, but Chase was so pretty when he slept. He wasn't worried or stressed, but relaxed, peaceful. With a sigh, Jake closed his eyes.
Harries eyed the two boys, wondering if he should wake them up for dinner. The team knew. They've been watching the looks Chase and Jake would send the other if they weren't looking. "Should we...?" "Let them sleep, we can save them some." Reidy said, and everyone went inside.
Jake woke up an hour before dusk. He sighed, rubbing the sleep from his eyes, and nearly had a heart attack when something moved beside him. He looked over quickly and was met with Chase's brown eyes. "Hi." Chase blinked. "Hey." Jake said.
There was talking inside, laughing, but Jake was focused entirely on Chase. The boy licked his lips quickly, eyes going from Jake's lips to his face again. "I, uh..." "Can I kiss you?" Jake blurted, feeling his face heatr up the moment the words left his lips. "Oh, my God..." He moaned, covering his face. "No, don't--don't be embarrassed. Yes, of course you can," Chase whispered, pulling Jake's hands from his face and kissing him gently.
Jake pressed into Chase, loving the way he tasted, like salt and the sea. "I've really wanted to do that forever," Chase whispered as tey broke apart. "Me, too." Jake whispered. Then...
"Hey, if you guys are, like, done making out or whatever, we got food." Jacko yelled. "JACKO!" Chase shrieked, red-faced. Jake started to laugh, kissing CHase as he got out of the hammock (and totally ignoring the team, because he figured they'd find out eventually anyway). "Come on, let's go in." Chase blushed, following Jake. "Kay."
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if-you-fan-a-fire · 4 years
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SASKATCHEWAN  PENITENTIARY Warden's  Office 
Nov.  22nd,  1929. My dear  Sir: Re:  Unrest  at  this penitentiary. Relative to the above I beg to acknowledge the receipt of your letter of the 16th inst., enclosing an order to be placed in the Order book of this Prison. The above did not arrive until after the arrival of myself and Mr. Allan. Therefore I had already placed in the Order Book an extract from your letter of instructions to me saying I would be in charge of the Prison, with Mr. Allan as my assistant and that Mr. Wyllie would revert to Deputy Warden and Mr. Doolan to Chief Keeper. Yours very sincerely, sd. E. R. Jackson, Inspector Acting Warden. 
The Superintendent of Penitentiaries,  Department of Justice,  Ottawa, Ont.
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thefootballlife · 7 years
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The Dumpster Fire - Running through the teams in the race for sixth in the Premiership
In December, I made a prediction - that Accies and Caley would soon be cut adrift at the bottom (and that Caley would finish bottom). It hasn’t entirely been proven right but, in this season where the sides from 6th downwards have been separated by only a couple of points, the 3 point gap between Accies in 11th and Motherwell in 10th is almost a yawning chasm (especially given Accies’ next four games are against the top four - three of which are away. Caley’s fixture list contains home games against Rangers and Celtic, a trip to Firhill and then a Highland Derby at home). It leaves (at time of writing) 5 sides separated by two points in the race for 6th or, given the 11 point gap between 5th and 6th, the race to be the one dodgy side that is definitely not going to be relegated. It is a chaotic mess between sides who are genuinely having poor seasons and sides who are having perfectly acceptable ones. As the table stands, it’s the two sides having perfectly fine seasons that top this group - Partick Thistle and Killie. This site is often loathe to praise Kilmarnock - a 3G pitch, a stadium far too large for the club’s needs, a business that has been run poorly for years with seemingly no repercussions: they have often appeared to be a club without a direction or much in the way of soul. However, while Lee Clark’s largesse in the transfer market may well have attracted some deserved laughs, so much was thrown at the wall that some of it actually stuck, not least Souleymane Coulibaly who not only earned the club a decent transfer fee in January but scored enough goals to keep them relatively safe. The departure of Lee Clark poses some obvious questions as to whether they will continue to trundle along not being especially impressive but also not looking especially endangered. Killie are, however, less of a pushover than 12 months ago and, while Lee Clark and Gary Locke’s tenures are broadly comparable in terms of results, the team right now is stronger than under Locke. They remain, however, the lowest scorers in the division, scoring less than a goal a game and Lee McCulloch’s first challenge will be to try and get that up a little while also finding his best defence - he can, at least, rely on the fact that if Kris Boyd is fed enough (metaphorically or literally - take your pick) he will score. Unlike Kris Boyd, Ade Azeez could be fed and fed and fed and still never manage to score. Partick Thistle occupy 6th place now in spite of fielding the footballing Tantalus - being given all the tools with which to score but never actually being able to do so. But, while there is plenty to mock about Azeez, there is little to mock about Thistle as a whole. They continue to improve little by little, season on season with a strong defence and a reliable, if steady, stream of goals up front thanks to the consistent 10-15 goals a season Kris Doolan provides (and rarely when it doesn’t matter). Thistle could perhaps be compared to the St Mirren of Danny Lennon - a club with a small-ish budget who always stay that little bit ahead of any real trouble but they are now surpassing that benchmark by progressing into becoming, almost, a classic mid-table side - a Poundland St Johnstone, if you will - who have no discernible weaknesses but also no players whom you would look at and say they are the undisputed star of the show. If St Johnstone are a side of 7/10s, Thistle are a side of 6/10s and there is little wrong with that. It is a small squad put together well and sent out onto the pitch well - the sort of side who, two seasons ago, would probably have won a cup but who, now, will have to merely be content with 6th as their target. If they get it, then they will have hit their peak. Both those sides will be quite happy with their season. The others, less so. Dundee are in the process of becoming a basket case. The money for Kane Hemmings and Greg Stewart appears to have gone nowhere, the flirtation with playing a home game in America has gone nowhere and the side itself are going nowhere. There is, if not a neglect, at least a sense of drift about the club. They are neither especially good or especially bad at anything, they are simply a side who had their two best players ripped from them and replaced them with faceless jobbers. With Scott Bain likely to go in the summer, the side looks like becoming one big bag of meh and the existential question of whether Dundee, as a city, would be best served by one big club or two middling ones will continue to rear it’s head. That is another question for another time but that Dundee need some sort of makeover is impossible to dispute. In three seasons, they have gone from being a top six side to being a bottom six side that should have been a top six side (and no amount of relegating Dundee United at Dens Park will change that) into just a bottom six side - that is a clear and consistent regression and that is clearly going to have to change. Ross County are a side in recovery but this season can still only be seen as disappointing. They have struggled to find a defensive blend and struggled to fill the hole left by Jackson Irvine. The latter is unsurprising - Irvine was and is an incredible presence - the former, however, is a shock. Much of it was to do with the replacement of Andrew Davies with Jay McEveley except Davies didn't actually go and County were stuck with an unbalanced defence. It took Jim McIntyre time to work out how to best accommodate everyone and, while he has done it, County are more predictable in everything they do. They are comparable to Aberdeen except, where Aberdeen have players (plural) who can break through a side on their own, County do not. In addition to that, Liam Boyce is very much a form striker - he either bangs lots in or he does next to nothing - and the players partnering him in attack are all good workers but poor finishers. It leaves a side who, if you meet them on the wrong day, can blow most teams in the division away but also a side who, more often than not, huff and puff and get repulsed. McIntyre rarely experiments with formation and tactic unless forced to (except, oddly, in the League Cup Final last season) and the feeling that they simply just need a bit of fresh thinking is hard to escape. Which leaves Motherwell. It's not been a good week to be a Motherwell fan, not that many are. The annihilation in Aberdeen should live long in the memory except for the fact that Mark McGhee managed to change the narrative away from “Motherwell just got destroyed” into “Mark McGhee is a raving lunatic” after being sent to the stands, getting filmed having a go at fans while also turning a fetching shade of purple and then claiming he was going to speak to his lawyer about the behaviour of the fourth official because he misinterpreted McGhee “joking around”. This is all ludicrous, of course, but it stops people pointing out things like, after McGhee was sent off, Motherwell lost that period 3-2 as opposed to 4-0 while in charge. The club are not in a state but the manager is starting to become consistently an embarrassment. Few hold any affection for McGhee after his spell at Aberdeen, his claims he should be managing Liverpool, his complaining at the SFA vociferously in spite of being in their employ - the man has become a one person echo chamber of disagreeableness. Being generally dislikable is no bar to being a manager, but Motherwell have been defensively suspect for so long that such a shellacking as the Dons handed out has been coming. Much like Ross County, they have the striking power to be well clear of where they are and be in the top six but they aren't. And while claiming that the real injustice of losing 7-2 was that the 4th official didn't like you might fool some people in the short term, Well sit 10th, closest to Accies of all and with a poorer goal difference. They should not get relegated, but that one would rate their chances of top six as lower than Partick Thistle is an indictment in itself. Similarly to Lee Clark-Gary Locke, McGhee made the side improve in the short term, but as time has spun on, the side does not look better than that left to him by Ian Baraclough - and at least Baraclough’s side could play some damned good stuff on their day. So, four clubs have some thinking to do. Killie have the least of those - Lee McCulloch deserves a shot until the end of the season. He was a decent caretaker last year and Killie don't feel hugely at risk right now - in two months, maybe, but McCulloch at least should get an extended caretakership with a view to him becoming permanent if he shows enough. Dundee have a decline to arrest but there are other questions floating around that may become more important. Ross County have to simply ask just what Plans B and C they have. Motherwell have to wonder what on earth is going on. The race for 6th is messy, at best.
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365footballorg-blog · 6 years
Text
Livingston come from behind to lead play-off tie
Livingston will take a one-goal lead to Firhill in the Premiership play-off final second leg after a deserved home win over Partick Thistle.
Kris Doolan got his head to a long ball from Baily Cargill to nod Partick Thistle in front.
However, within minutes Keaghan Jacobs found space on the right and picked a spot in the bottom far corner.
And when Josh Mullin got to the byline his low cut-back found Scott Pittman to finish from close range.
The two sides meet again on Sunday in Glasgow to determine who plays in the Scottish Premiership next season.
More to follow.
Line-ups[1]
Match Stats[2]
Live Text[3]
Line-ups
Livingston
1Alexander
31Gallagher
26Halkett
4Lithgow
14Jacobs
24ThompsonBooked at 45minsSubstituted forMullinat 60'minutes
6ByrneBooked at 42mins
8Pittman
3Longridge
18MillerSubstituted forBuchananat 87'minutes
17RobinsonSubstituted forCaddenat 78'minutes
Substitutes
2McMillan
5Buchanan
7Mullin
11Cadden
19Frizzell
20Maley
Partick Thistle
1Cerny
16McGinn
15DevineBooked at 51mins
4Cargill
3Booth
37Woods
13Barton
11LawlessSubstituted forSpittalat 67'minutes
9Doolan
19Edwards
18SammonSubstituted forStoreyat 85'minutes
Substitutes
2Dumbuya
7Spittal
12Scully
14Elliott
21Penrice
24McCarthy
39Storey
Referee:
Craig Thomson
Attendance:
5,469
Match Stats
Home TeamLivingstonAway TeamPartick Thistle
Possession
Home47%
Away53%
Shots
Home4
Away2
Shots on Target
Home3
Away1
Corners
Home3
Away2
Fouls
Home10
Away7
Live Text
Posted at
Match ends, Livingston 2, Partick Thistle 1.
Full Time
Posted at 90'+4'
Second Half ends, Livingston 2, Partick Thistle 1.
Posted at 88'
Corner, Livingston. Conceded by Blair Spittal.
Substitution
Posted at 87'
Substitution, Livingston. Gregor Buchanan replaces Lee Miller.
Posted at 85'
Corner, Partick Thistle. Conceded by Jackson Longridge.
Substitution
Posted at 85'
Substitution, Partick Thistle. Miles Storey replaces Conor Sammon.
Posted at 81'
Corner, Livingston. Conceded by Callum Booth.
Substitution
Posted at 78'
Substitution, Livingston. Nicky Cadden replaces Scott Robinson.
Posted at 78'
Foul by Craig Halkett (Livingston).
Posted at 78'
Conor Sammon (Partick Thistle) wins a free kick in the attacking half.
Goal!
Posted at 74'
Goal! Livingston 2, Partick Thistle 1. Scott Pittman (Livingston) right footed shot from very close range to the high centre of the goal. Assisted by Josh Mullin.
Posted at 73'
Corner, Livingston. Conceded by Baily Cargill.
Posted at 70'
Foul by Lee Miller (Livingston).
Posted at 70'
Martin Woods (Partick Thistle) wins a free kick in the attacking half.
Substitution
Posted at 67'
Substitution, Partick Thistle. Blair Spittal replaces Steven Lawless.
Posted at 67'
Delay over. They are ready to continue.
Posted at 66'
Delay in match Lee Miller (Livingston) because of an injury.
Substitution
Posted at 60'
Substitution, Livingston. Josh Mullin replaces Jordan Thompson.
Posted at 59'
Foul by Lee Miller (Livingston).
Posted at 59'
Paul McGinn (Partick Thistle) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Posted at 59'
Attempt saved. Scott Pittman (Livingston) right footed shot from the left side of the box is saved in the centre of the goal.
Posted at 56'
Foul by Jordan Thompson (Livingston).
Posted at 56'
Martin Woods (Partick Thistle) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Posted at 51'
Jackson Longridge (Livingston) wins a free kick in the attacking half.
Booking
Posted at 51'
Danny Devine (Partick Thistle) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.
Posted at 51'
Foul by Danny Devine (Partick Thistle).
Posted at 47'
Keaghan Jacobs (Livingston) wins a free kick on the left wing.
Posted at 47'
Foul by Ryan Edwards (Partick Thistle).
Posted at 46'
Lee Miller (Livingston) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Posted at 46'
Foul by Baily Cargill (Partick Thistle).
Second Half
Posted at
Second Half begins Livingston 1, Partick Thistle 1.
Half Time
Posted at 45'+3'
First Half ends, Livingston 1, Partick Thistle 1.
Booking
Posted at 45'+1'
Jordan Thompson (Livingston) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.
Posted at 45'+1'
Foul by Jordan Thompson (Livingston).
Posted at 45'+1'
Baily Cargill (Partick Thistle) wins a free kick in the attacking half.
Booking
Posted at 42'
Shaun Byrne (Livingston) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.
Posted at 42'
Foul by Shaun Byrne (Livingston).
Posted at 42'
Kris Doolan (Partick Thistle) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Posted at 41'
Foul by Jordan Thompson (Livingston).
Posted at 41'
Steven Lawless (Partick Thistle) wins a free kick in the attacking half.
Show more updates
goal
References
^ Line-ups (www.bbc.co.uk)
^ Match Stats (www.bbc.co.uk)
^ Live Text (www.bbc.co.uk)
BBC Sport – Scottish
Livingston come from behind to lead play-off tie was originally published on 365 Football
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bobnorthway · 7 years
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Aboriginal artists make ‘Spaghetti Western’ film to screen at Tarnanthi indigenous art festival | Adelaide Now Cast of the short film Never Stop Riding: Patuway Mungkuri, Johnny Doolan, Peter Mungkuri, Vincent Namatjira, Michael Drover and Kunmanara Andy at Indulana. Picture: Jackson Lee/Iwantja Arts Cast of the short film Never Stop Riding: Patuway Mungkuri, Johnny Doolan, Peter Mungkuri, Vincent Namatjira, Michael Drover and Kunmanara Andy at Indulana. Picture: Jackson Lee/Iwantja Arts Confidential Aboriginal artists make ‘Spaghetti Western’ film to screen at Tarnanthi indigenous art festival Patrick McDonald, Chief Arts Writer, The Advertiser September 11, 2017 9:40pm AN Aboriginal ‘Spaghetti Western’ film shot in the state’s far north will be among the more unusual offerings at next month’s Tarnanthi indigenous art festival. Never Stop Riding was filmed when senior artists Peter Mungkuri, Alec Baker and Jimmy Pompey shared their early experiences as stockmen at a camp with young men from Indulkana community on the APY Lands. “Wanted” poster for the short film Never Stop Riding. Image: Iwantja Arts http://www.adelaidenow.com.au/entertainment/confidential/aboriginal-artists-make-spaghetti-western-film-to-screen-at-tarnanthi-indigenous-art-festival/news-story/e75818c232bd58766cd950bb43003342
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