#Farhood
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grecoromanyaoi · 6 months ago
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i apologize in advance for admitting i watch booktok review/drama youtubers anyways to gaze upon wicked gods sounds insane in general but a part of it thats often glossed over which i think is utterly hilarious is how she looked at like the one place the romans didnt colonize and was like what if the romans colonized it instead of the people who actually colonized it
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clarabosswald · 10 months ago
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86 year old Shlomo Manzur is the oldest hostage currently held in Hamas captivity.
He was born in 1938 in Iraq, and as a young child he survived the Farhood pogrom.
The Farhood took place during the Jewish Shavu'ot holiday. Between 180 to over 1000 of the Jews of Baghdad were murdered in the pogrom. A Jewish intelligence report had stated that about 120 Jewish patients were murdered in hospitals via toxic injections. Mass robberies took place, which targeted some 50 thousand Jews. Jewish businesses were marked in red beforehand, as targets. Homes were robbed and then flooded by turning on all the water taps inside. People were raped and butchered in broad daylight, including children and the elderly. The events, which went on for two days, were later nicknamed "The Kristallnacht of Iraqi Jews". Some see it as a turning point and a key event in the chain of antisemitic events which eventually motivated Iraqi Jews to flee the country. Many of the Farhood victims were buried in a mass grave in the Jewish Cemetery in Baghdad - a cemetery which was later relocated with the intention to build a skyscraper on its grounds.
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Hadassah, Shlomo Manzur's sister, said last month: "He was kidnapped weighing 58 kg. We hope that he is not starving, and that he receives the conditions to live. Precisely on the day when the International Holocaust Day is celebrated, I want to ask: how is he going through such a tragedy again - and the world is silent? They murdered, raped, abused babies, kidnapped, beheaded, looted and burned stores marked with red paint ahead of time. It was the Kristallnacht for Iraqi Jews and the world was silent. Shlomo saw sights that accompanied him all his life. If we thought then 'never again' - we never imagined that such scenes would return when we have a sovereign state. My brother Shlomo was kidnapped from his home, his fortress, and these days he is going through another Holocaust in his old age. The heart aches with longing and thinking what goes through him in the dark. I talk about him, and my heart skips a beat."
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wildflower-007 · 1 year ago
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*MuSiC GaMe*
❤️🌹🎵🎶 Name a song that gets you excited ❤️🌹🎵🎶
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Lets get started with my music friends but the tags with no pressure!
And of course anyone who would like to play ..
Tagging with no obligation to play :
@the-jackk2 @the-jackk @the-man-on-the-silvermountain @theoneandonlylegitboss @sweetestofsins @fireslayer166 @peony911 @zgreeklover @mermaids-down-in-heaven-3 @new-name-same-me @oldgraywolf68-2 @wicked-voiced-vixen @lioness-of-the-north @ky-moonshine @one-starry-night @the-muse21 @we-could-call-it-love @spring-heeled-goddess @reddelicious-56-again @abrokenespada
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smil3x · 1 month ago
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got a pretty wild combo from this
Playlist Shuffle Poll!
Thank you @owlsandwich for the tag :D
rules: shuffle your On Repeat playlist and list the first five songs in a poll, then have your followers choose their favorite.
I'm just going with my liked songs because I don't particularly have a playlist i put on repeat
Damn that's varied, for some reason every other song that was showing up was a Kpop one, even though it's been months since i've last listened to some of them(asshole, whenever i shuffle my playlist none of these play but now that I'm doing this Spotify has decided to pull songs from the very depth of my listening history)
@zeherili-ankhein @chichihuahua1413 @no-idea-where-i-am-lost
@ineffable-basted @bookisposts and whoever wants to join
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robertmarch82 · 5 years ago
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Today June of 1941: In Baghdad, At least 179 Jews were murdered, 2,118 were wounded, 242 children  were orphaned, 50,000 property's was looted. British troops stationed outside the city did not intervene. The pogrom is known as the Farhood.
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brandeewine · 7 years ago
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Interpretation of #farhood #day11 #30faces30days #sktchy #postitnoteart #drawingeveryday #48of365 #365DaysofDrawing #pencil #february #artistsofinstagram
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tcogill · 7 years ago
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Shooting rapper Farhood for Dazed.com
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theboxingchannel · 7 years ago
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crmtonki · 2 years ago
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Matt farrago
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Matt farrago license#
Thanks to them, the former boxer was buried in a marked grave in the Bronx on Saturday. Help from the group has included not only the cost of funeral expenses, but also housing, phone bills, food, and prescription medicine, even for boxers who were once very successful, like current member Emile Griffith.īy the meeting’s end, another $500 was raised for Garrett, bringing the total donated by the association to some $2000. Other well-known boxers, trainers and managers. Over the years, Ring 8’s membership has included legends of the sport, such as Sugar Ray Robinson, Rocky Graziano, and Jack Dempsey, as well as many “She needs to be buried with dignity, not in Potter’s Field,” Farrago told the crowd of some 40 people. Garrett died on June 9, and money needed to be raised so she wouldn’t end up in a mass grave on Hart Island.Īt the end of their careers, most ex-fighters find themselves without a pension, health insurance, or any kind of safety net.
Matt farrago license#
The first item on the agenda last Tuesday night was the funeral of Jackie “Tonawanda” Garrett ( pictured, via Boxing Confidential) the first female to box in Madison Square Garden and be granted a boxing license by New York State. It was a sobering reminder of why they’d gathered in this darkened backroom of a Maspeth, Queens, restaurant: “Boxers helping Boxers.” That’s been the idea behind the association since it was founded more than half a century ago. And if the Pledge of Allegiance didn’t get everyone’s attention, then his tapping his water glass ten times, in honor of members of Ring 8, the International Veterans Boxers Association of New York, Inc., who had died since last month’s meeting, certainly did. Things could have gone on like that for hours, for there was much backslapping and catching up to do, but Matt Farrago had to call the meeting to order. A group of old timers hovered around the appetizer table, loading up on toothpick-speared meatballs, and former World Middleweight Boxing Champion Vito Antuofermo, mini-Golden Gloves dangling from his neck, worked the room, which hummed with the accent of old New York. Tickets are $135 and can be ordered through or by calling 63.Ģ017 Honorees Include Steve Farhood, Joey Giambra, Randy Gordon, Bruce Silverglade and Larry Hazzard.Įxpected guests include Randall Tex Cobb, Mark Breland, Dennis Milton, Junior Jones, Iran Barkley, Tyrone Jackson and actor Danny Aiello and many more.A few minutes before the meeting got underway, Tony Napoli, gold pinky ring flashing, signed copies of his mobster-filled autobiography My Father, My Don. pat prisco opponents Hector Rosario (3-9-0) Matt Farrago (23-0-1) Tony Corrado (10-11-0) Tony Suero (17-8-2) Jose Fuentes (6-5-6) Jerome Johnson (4-12-1). Gerald has a medicine that costs $600 a month before they removed Gerald’s colon and Matt paid for it every month for almost a year.”ġ00% of proceeds go directly to boxers in need. They really deserve to be praised and recognized because the truth is I don’t know where we would be without them. How wise Matthew Arnold was in exclaiming of Shakespeare: Others abide our. Not just for Gerald but for a lot of other fighters as well. Matt (Farrago) was has never turned me down when I’ve asked him for help. And as much as they do for the fighters you never hear them boast about it nor do they look for any recognition. “Done from the heart for the love of the fighters. Lisa McClellan, Gerald’s sister, said it best about Ring 10 and their efforts to help boxers: The fundraiser is Ring 10’s main source of funding and without funds, they simply cannot do what they do. New York City’s Ring 10 is holding their annual fundraising brunch/cocktail/dinner event on Sunday, September 24th at Marina del Ray in Bronx, NY from 11 a.m.
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health28 · 2 years ago
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Five-year, $2.7 million grant could help determine the best treatment for lung cancer patients
Five-year, $2.7 million grant could help determine the best treatment for lung cancer patients
The goal: Improve survival rates for lung cancer patients. The question researchers want to answer: Are there new ways to determine the best treatment for these patients? This is what UW Medicine researchers hope to discover through a five-year, $2.7 million grant from the National Cancer Institute. “Diagnostic tests have known error rates,” said Dr. Farhood Farjah, associate professor of…
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djblackvelveteen · 3 years ago
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Proton Showcase February 2022
Proton Showcase February 2022
1 PIERJ-  The Dark Sea of Awareness [Kanto Records] 2 Abdallah balti, Mehdi Maghraoui, try-ky, Cafe De Anatolia-  Habibi [Cafe De Anatolia] 3 Eleonora, UNDERHER-  Monochrome (Inámo’s Mononcholic Mix) [trueColors] 1 4 Abdallah balti, Mehdi Maghraoui, Cafe De Anatolia-  Marrakech [Cafe De Anatolia] 5 Namito, Chris Zippel-  Focus (Nicone Remix) [Ubersee Music] 6 Namito, Farhood Kavan-  Vessal…
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handfulsofhistory · 6 years ago
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Made by Sayed Farhood
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frontproofmedia · 3 years ago
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DOLO FLICKS: REVIEW - The Kings: Part Four: A Champion Never Quits
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Published: July 01, 2021
"People love to follow a good story, and they hope to get a good ending. And we had all that in the 80s. People came to a fight to see right there that something could happen. But the guy buying the ticket doesn’t know. They think it's just two fighters going against each other like flesh and bone. No, it’s all the emotions. That’s what you’re fighting. In a lot of cases, you’re beating parts of yourself. Both guys know that. Only they understand what they’ve been through. And that’s something that I think makes this sport so special. In the ring, that the one time there is no prejudice. There is no race. There is no religion. There is no politics. It's just two men. Just two men trying to find themselves. And that’s why people came to watch a boxing match. To see that miracle."  -- Teddy Atlas
The fourth and final installment of Showtime Sports’ documentary series "The Kings" that looks at the careers and lives of Roberto Duran, Thomas Hearns, Ray Leonard, and Marvin Hagler, reached its conclusion in dramatic fashion.
The fourth episode heavily focuses on the bout between Ray Leonard and Marvin Hagler, exploring what happened before and after.
After defeating Thomas Hearns in 1985, Hagler finally reached the zenith of notoriety and popularity he had yearned for his entire career. Appearances on television shows, commercials, and talk shows were plenty as he stood on top of the boxing world.
The episode also examines how Hagler contemplated retirement following the win over Hearns, along with Leonard seeing an opportunity to make a return to the ring after Hagler’s fight with John Mugabi.
After some posturing and negotiating, Hagler finally agreed to face Leonard in a fight that he was able to get all the financial advantages. In contrast, Leonard got the competitive advantages such as the fight being 12 instead of 15 rounds.
At the time, the fight was the richest in the history of the sport, with Hagler taking home roughly $17 million and Leonard earning upwards of $11 million.
Leonard had been out of the ring for almost three years before stepping in the ring with Hagler and fought most of his career in the Welterweight division. Needless to say, Hagler was the heavy favorite and, in some respects, despite the financial gain, was in a lose-lose situation.
“Even if Marvin in the back of his mind, kinda knew he was past his prime, he didn’t think he was gonna have any problem at all with Ray Leonard,” stated Steve Farhood in the episode.
Leonard’s own friends and family were hesitant and worried about his prospects in facing Hagler. The episode tells a story about Leonard almost being knocked out during a sparring session leading up to the Hagler bout. Leonard may have been one of a handful of people in the world that believed he stood a chance at winning against Hagler.
“I thought Ray was on a suicide mission of some sort." - Larry Merchant.
On April 6, 1987, Leonard stepped in the ring with Hagler at the outdoor arena in Caesars Palace in Las Vegas for the middleweight championship.
The episode, much like those that preceded, gave a breakdown of the match, highlighting significant moments and all of the major action.
Hagler-Leonard is one of if not the most debated matches in boxing history. Many observers are adamant that Hagler did more than enough to warrant a victory. Others believe Hagler's slow start where he fought orthodox instead of in his traditional southpaw stance cost him the fight.
Judge Lou Filippo scored the fight 115-113 for Hagler, and judge Dave Moretti had the fight for Leonard at 115-113.
The third judge Jose Juan Guerra turned in one of the worst scorecards in boxing history, having Leonard winning 118-110. Guerra isn’t interviewed in the episode to explain how he saw the fight.
Despite feeling like he was cheated, Hagler was still present for the post-fight interview and post-fight press conference. There was a level of dignity and honor that Hagler always showed, and he was no different in the face of defeat.
“He overthought it, Hagler,” said Teddy Atlas. “Because he was trying to capture something that was never given to him. Acceptance. What he thought he should have had. And how great he was. So maybe, in the end, he was a co-conspirator in his own demise.”
In many respects, Hagler-Leonard is the final chapter in the “Four Kings” era. Afterward, Hagler walked away from the sport and never returned. The remaining fights featuring Hearns, Leonard, and Duran all felt like epilogues.
Hagler was the one fighter of the four that didn’t overstay his welcome; there weren’t any losses and beatings that took place long after his prime. There was never a moment of sadness at seeing a shell of the fighter that used to be so great taking a beating at the hands of someone he would have destroyed in his prime.
“Now I’m trying to use boxing and not have boxing use me.” - Marvin Hagler
Following the segment on Hagler-Leonard, the episode transitions its focus to Hearns. The winner is often the focal point after a major fight, especially those as significant that took place between the “Four Kings.”
With Hearns, the episode makes it a priority to give attention to the fighter who was on the losing side of his biggest fights and how he managed to forge his own legacy.
“I really didn’t know how to accept it, and I was down on myself because I felt I let the public down, and I felt like I let Emanuel down,” Hearns stated. “I wanted so badly to go back in there to fight Ray and redeem myself. And after Marvin Hagler won that fight, I didn’t know what to do, how to think.”
Hearns would end up becoming boxing’s first four-division and five-division champion, winning titles at welterweight, junior middleweight, middleweight, super middleweight, and light heavyweight.
In 1994, Ring Magazine named Hearns the greatest junior middleweight in boxing history.
In a rematch with Leonard that took place in 1989, Hearns gained a measure of redemption in getting a draw in a fight that most observers felt he had clearly won.
“Not getting a victory, to me, it was like a letdown,” stated Hearns regarding the rematch with Leonard. “But I knew in my heart, and people knew who won that fight. And that meant a lot to me, too.”
The finale of the episode focuses on the first king, Roberto Duran. In this segment, the political landscape is again explored with the United States invasion of Panama in 1989 and Duran’s supposed ties with Manuel Noreiga.
The final triumph of Duran’s career against Iran Barkley is also shown. The Barkley fight furthered his legacy in winning a middleweight title. He became just the third fighter in history to win titles in four weight classes.
Mike Tyson, who became the biggest name in boxing following the ascension of the “Four Kings,” was used to show how much boxing has changed since the era of Duran, Leonard, Hearns, and Hagler. Tyson is somewhat painted negatively as the anchor for boxing’s continual decline in popularity over the years.
After all four episodes, “The Kings” did its job of showing how important those four men were to boxing. The 1980s may have been the last truly great era in boxing.
Something isn’t great because it lasts forever. Its greatness is measured by what can be remembered. All four “Kings” provided fans with a lifetime of memories. Fights that raised the bar on what boxing could be at its best.
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fredymetalshow17 · 4 years ago
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10 de marzo de 1966. Nace Philip Eric Xenidis en Toronto, Canadá, más conocido como Phil X. Es el guitarrista oficial de la banda de rock norteamericana Bon Jovi. En 1982 formó la banda de heavy metal Sidinex (nombre escogido por él mismo, cuyo significado es su apellido al revés) con el cantante Todd Farhood, el bajista y el baterista Kevin Gingrinch de Scott Masterson. En junio del 2016 es considerado el guitarrista oficial de la prestigiosa Banda Bon Jovi despues de la partida de su guitarrista virtuoso Richie Sambora en el 2013 quien afirmó que no regresaría mas a la banda. https://www.instagram.com/p/CMQBibwLFr9/?igshid=36qxnmx5doh
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latinboxsports · 4 years ago
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Rolando Romero Stops Avery Sparrow in Telecast Opener on SHOWTIME in Premier Boxing Champions Event. Photos from Amanda Westcott/SHOWTIME In the opening bout of the evening, Rolando Romero (13-0, 11 KOs) remained unbeaten against late replacement Avery Sparrow (10-4, 3 KOs) with a dominating performance that led Sparrow’s corner to call an end to the fight in seventh round. All three judges had the fight scored 60-51 at the time of the technical knockout stoppage, as did SHOWTIME’s unofficial ringside scorer Steve Farhood. @thisisamandaw 📸 @showtimeboxing (at Mohegan Sun) https://www.instagram.com/p/CKcvq1ml2k5/?igshid=101fspt4pg0js
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theboxingchannel · 7 years ago
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