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    resonance

    音楽 関連語 アルトネリコ ウイニングイレブン
    • Yvonne's moooves captivate Germany (+ video)
      As events go this turbulent August, the disappearance of a cow from a small farm in Bavaria doesn't quite have the resonance of Colonel Gaddafi's last stand, the arrest one-by-one of Rupert Murdoch's staff, or the implosion of the... イベントは、この乱流アウグスト行くように、バイエルン自由州の小さな農場から牛の消失は非常に大佐大佐の最後のスタンドの共鳴、逮捕ルパートマードックのスタッフの一つ一つ、またはの内破を持っていない..

    • The voices of people with disabilities must be heard loud and clear | AK Dube
      The challenges facing people with disabilities must be at the centre of all international development discussions if we are to change attitudes towards disability in AfricaAs a disabled person living in Africa, I have experienced the challenges and discrimination that many others in similar situations to me experience across the continent. Last week I spoke to parliamentarians, NGOs and donor agencies about the importance of ensuring people with disabilities are central to any discussions on international development that happen between now and 2015, the expiry date for the current millennium development goals (MDGs), and to ensure people living with disabilities are not left out again.Although attitudes towards disabled people across Africa are starting to change, people with disabilities still face many challenges, from the additional costs for the healthcare services they need, where these even exist, to the stigma and discrimination they can face. It is frequently assumed that because someone is disabled they will be a financial and social burden to their family, rather than a child to be proud of and who, with some support, can be an incredibly productive member of the community. I feel my own story has resonance here. The use of my right hand and left leg were impaired when I contracted polio and measles when I was two. Afterwards I lived with my father who was a soldier. He was strict and made sure I could look after myself – he did not treat me like a child with disabilities. As it was just the two of us, I ran the house; collecting firewood, cooking and washing – skills that made me independent. The people in our local village did not approve of this and thought I should be sent to an institution for the disabled, but my father steadfastly refused and in many w _NULL_

    • Guardian Books podcast: Africa and post-post-colonialism
      Half a century after the great rush to independence by dozens of African countries, a new generation of post-post-colonial writers are taking up the story. Among them are the Kenyan writer Binyavanga Wainaina, who tells Richard Lea why the new generation don't want to write about Aids and Oxfam, and how the English novel no longer has the resonance it once had among young African writers.We're joined in the studio by Lizzie Attree, administrator of the Caine prize for African writing and a former winner of the prize, the Zimbabwean writer Brian Chikwava. We return to Europe to talk to the Basque novelist Bernardo Atxaga about why he chose an African setting for his latest novel.Reading listThe Granta Book of the African Short Story edited by Helon Habila (Granta)Seven Houses in France by Bernardo Atxaga (Harvill)One Day I Will Write about this Place by Binyavanga Wainaina (Granta)Harare North by Brian Chikwava (Cape)Claire ArmitsteadRichard LeaTim Maby null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40

    • The U.S. and the U.ro
      Interestingly, two disconnected events made some resonance yesterday in Paris. null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40

    • Labour's mature patriotism over Europe | Douglas Alexander
      The Tories are shockingly complacent about the euro crisis. But it's vital that Britain safeguards its statusThis month's eurozone crisis shouldn't obscure the fact that the European Union has been, for some time, suffering from a wider public confusion about its purpose.To my father's generation the rationale for Europe was peace after a century scarred by war, a cause that had powerful emotional resonance. Later that emotional cause was supplemented by a drier one: that being part of Europe would help reverse Britain's postwar decline and boost prosperity.But Britain's rising prosperity during the boom that began in the 1990s contributed to a growing sense of national economic self-confidence. So in Britain, the foundations of the traditional pro-European case came under sustained pressure long before the current crisis.And for different reasons, on left and right, the accusation of a democratic deficit is heard across the EU.One of the responses to this rising scepticism heightened suspicions about the intentions of Europe's institutions. The push for anthems, flags and the aping of national symbols left the impression of a half-built superstate.Too often the idea seemed to be that the cost of being part of Europe was being less like Britain. So after years of fighting to defend Europe against attacks from the Eurosceptic right, it would be fatal to retreat into the same arguments and begin the battle anew.Like Labour in the 1980s, there is a tendency among some pro-Europeans to blame the press, or even the voters, for the fact that support haemorrhaged. Schadenfreude is not a wise European strategy for the Conservatives. But nor will Labour simply shout louder or seek to simply defend the status quo.Our task is instead to tell a new story about Britain and Europe, r null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40

    • Leszek Możdżer: Komeda – review
      (ACT) Germany's ACT label seems to be on a mission to introduce the world to Europe's rising new jazz-classical pianists. Polish pianist Leszek M。。。żer is classically trained, but discovered jazz in his late teens. His solo debut for the label is, fittingly, a homage to one of Polish music's legends, the short-lived jazz pianist and movie-score composer Krzysztof Komeda. All eight pieces are Komeda's, and M。。。żer gives them a romantic sheen (though one that's abraded by a dissonant urgency) the composer would have understood. The opening Svantetic develops from brightly dancing lines to demonic chordal percussiveness. Low, booming resonances softly boil beneath the tricklingly poignant, then threateningly spiky Sleep Safe and Warm (written for Polanski's film Rosemary's Baby), while the skipping, boppish Cherry is a rare upbeat number. M。。。żer's swaying swing and slow-melody nuances suggest Keith Jarrett at times, but his outbursts of percussive playing, flinty treble-note sparks and staccato drum-pattern sounds are all his own. The pianist stops dead in the midst of the closing Moja Ballada, as if in acknowledgement of Komeda's sudden (and mysterious) death in 1969, at the age of 38. JazzPolandJohn Fordhamguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds _NULL_

    • Large Hadron Collider scientists release music record
      Physicists at the LHC have their own music label, Neutralino Records – named after a hypothetical sub-atomic particleA group of 20 physicists working on the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), the world's largest particle accelerator, have recorded and released an album, titled Resonance.They have also set up their own music label, Neutralino Records, named after a hypothetical sub-atomic particle.All belong to the Atlas team at the LHC, which is probing the origins of matter and fundamental forces of nature.Their musical output covers two CDs and a DVD, and ranges from classical piano pieces to original pop songs.The LHC, housed in a 27-kilometre (16-mile) underground tunnel near Geneva, aims to collide particles together at energies not seen since the Big Bang that gave birth to the universe 13.7 billion years ago.More than 10,000 scientists and engineers are involved in the LHC project.CernPhysicsParticle physicsguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds LHCでの物理学者は、独自の音楽レーベルを持っているニュートラリーノを記録 - 大型ハドロン衝突型加速器(LHC)は、世界最大の粒子加速器に取り組んで20物理学者の仮想サブ原子particleAグループの名にちなんで名付け、記録して、アルバムをリリースし、共鳴タイトル彼らはまた、物質の起源とnature.Their音楽出力の基本的な力を調査しているLHCのでアトラスのチームに所属する架空の亜原子particle.Allの名にちなんで名付け、独自の音楽レーベル、ニュートラリーノの記録、設定されているカバー2枚のCDとDVD、および範囲は古典的なピアノ曲からジュネーブ近郊27(16マイル)キロの地下トンネル内に収容元ポップsongs.The LHCの、とビッグバンそれ以来見たことがないエネルギーで一緒に粒子を衝突することを目的と宇宙137億年を出産して、10,000以上の科学者やエンジニアは限定2010 LHCのproject.CernPhysicsParticle physicsguardian.co.uk ©ガーディアンのニュース&メディアに関与しているago.More |このコンテンツの使用は私達の対象となる利用規約|ほかのフィード

    • Science Weekly podcast: Saving giant pandas; tiger droppings; solar-power festivals; plus music from Cern
      WARNING: contains explicit language which may offend some listeners.Science writer Henry Nicholls tells us about the fascinating world of China's political animal, the giant panda. He also gives us an update on Lonesome George, the last of his species and the subject of his previous book. Henry's new book The Way of the Panda is out now. The Guardian's Steven Morris puts on his wellies to visit the UK's biggest private solar-power plant on the site of the Glastonbury music festival. We discuss why paw prints and faeces offer new hope for saving tigers. The Journal of Applied Ecology also goes into some graphic details concerning shapes and smells.Richard Holmes, biographer and author of the soon to be published The Lost Women of Victorian Science, tells us why women appear to have been written out of the history of science. The winners of the physics.org web awards have been announced. Alex Cheung from the Institute of Physics tells us why they stood out. There's a little mention for the best podcast. The Guardian's Science Weekly podcast. You may have heard of it. Thanks for voting for us. Physicists at the Large Hadron Collider have released an album! Resonance is a double CD with a variety of musical styles recorded by those at Cern in Geneva. Proceeds go to an orphanage in Nepal. At the end of the podcast we listen to the full version of a song written especially for the project. Subscribe for free via iTunes to ensure every episode gets delivered. (Here is the non-iTunes URL feed).Meet our crack team of science bloggers:The Lay Scientist by Martin RobbinsLife and Physics by Jon ButterworthPunctuated Equilibrium by GrrlScientistPolitical Science by Evan Harris Follow the podcast on our Science Weekly Twitter feed and receive updates on all breaking science news stor 警告は:ヘンリーNicholls氏は中国の政治的な動物、パンダの魅惑的な世界を物語っているいくつかのlisteners.Scienceライターを怒らせることが明示的な言語が含まれています

    • Poland and Russia: reconciled in tragedy | Jarosław Kurski
      The air crash that killed Poland's leaders has led Russia to face its role in past horrors in KatynThere is no such thing as a good death. Every tragic death is senseless and aimless. But today Poles can bring some sense to this unprecedented tragedy in their country's history.For the last 70 years, the name Katyn had little resonance for most people in the west. It was also seen as a symbol of Russophobia on the part of Poles. Paradoxically, what happened on Saturday in Smolensk makes this notion obsolete.Due to last weekend's tragedy, the killing of 22,000 Polish officers by Russians in 1940 will become common knowledge. We Poles do remember that, but because they wanted to keep Russia happy, its western allies chose not to challenge Russian propaganda blaming Germans for the Katyn massacre. Now, the truth will become widely known – and truth is the very first criterion of any reconciliation.A second paradox is that the Russian reaction to the deaths – a crash that claimed the life not only of the Polish president, but of many senior government officials and the entire top brass of the military on their way to Katyn – is creating a unique situation. Authentic reconciliation between Poles and Russians, just like that of French and Germans under Charles de Gaulle and Konrad Adenauer, has now become possible.Across Russia people are crying together with us today. And there are stunning, from our perspective, things happening in Russia as we speak. Prime Minister Vladimir Putin talks about Soviet crime in Katyn. He bows his head for the victims alongside the Polish prime minister, Donald Tusk. After the tragedy in Smolensk, Russia's president, Dmitry Medvedev, talks to the Polish people and declar ポーランドの指導者を殺害した航空機墜落事故は、ロシアKatynThere過去恐怖の役割に直面してつながっている良い死のようなものです

    • Hamer's death leaves another newsroom with painful memories
      Mirror reporter Rupert Hamer died doing a difficult, but necessary, jobJOURNALISTS killed, kidnapped or plunged into peril on some foreign field are not alone. There are families, friends and offices full of anxious people thinking about them back home. Rupert Hamer's death in Afghanistan produced moving tributes from Mirror colleagues last week. He will be remembered not just for his reporting, but for the way he died, the victim of yet another roadside bomb. And Afghanistan, around his old newsroom, will have a special resonance.In just the same way, the Observer still remembers Farzad Bazoft, an innocent executed by Saddam Hussein. And, month by month, that arc of remembered revulsion widens. Some 132 media men and women died last year, according to the International News Safety Institute.Should that colour views, stir anger and despair as well as sadness? Surely not: that's not why Hamer went to Afghanistan. He went to do a dangerous, unglamorous, necessary job. But memory can't always stop so short just as his colleagues wince over sudden tragedy and know what it is to be not some simple note-taking bystander, but involved.Daily MirrorNewspapers & magazinesAfghanistanIraqPeter Prestonguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds ミラー記者はルパートHamerが、難しいですが、必要に応じjobJOURNALISTS、拉致された、または危険にいくつかの外国のフィールドに急落した人だけではありませんことに死亡した

    • FTIR
      after 5 minutes, a fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (ftir) spectrum was taken of the reaction showing a strong isocyanate peak at 2263 cm<-1> . 5分後、反応物のフーリエ変。赤外分。法(ftir)スペクトルを取ると、2263cm-1にイソシアネートの強いピークが示された


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