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#Joseph Kelemen
musicwithoutborders · 3 months
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Johann Caspar Kerll /Joseph Kelemen, Ricercata in D Minor I Organ Music (Suddeutsche Orgelmeister, Vol. 1), 2005
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Hans Leo Hassler - Kein grösser Freud hett ich auf diser Erden ·
Joseph Kelemen, organ
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joshiesjourney · 6 years
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Pesach
Based on this text I am gathering a first overview of the themes around Pesach: 
Slavery in Egypt
The first topic of interest is the slavery in Egypt. Some notes from the resources: 
1. Historical background: 
In the Torah, Joseph is sold into Egyptian slavery where he climbs the social ladder into becoming second-in-command over the Egyptian empire. Through him the Israelites arrive in Egypt to live there when a great famine made Israel uninhabitable. At a later time a pharaoh rises to power who does not remember the good Joseph did for the land and who puts the jewish people into slavery. 
Side note: There is not, to this day, conclusive evidence to support that this slavery and the exodus actually happened, however there are many theories surrounding it, different calculations of which year they actually had the Exodus from Egypt (I’ve read the year 2448 and 1265 BCE) My favorite that was explained and criticized in the Torah study class by Prof. Hayes at Yale (who assumes the Exodus happened in 1265 BCE): 
It involves the conquering of Egypt by the semitic people called the Hyksos around the 1700s BCE, around the time when Joseph might have been brough to Egypt. This theory explains how a jewish foreigner, part of the semitic people, could rise to a high position, and also why they were later enslaved: in the 16th century BCE the Egyptians regained control over their land, ending the Hyksos regime. 
Coincidentally, at the time of the Exodus Ramses II was in power in Egypt and he was well known for his building projects. In the torah it is mentioned that the jewish people were forced to work on big building projects. 
However, where the Hyksos theory falls apart according to Hayes: The years named in the torah are not necessarily reliable, may even be contradictory. Where Exodus 6:16-20 suggests a total stay of four generations, which would mean Joseph would have arrived and brought the Israelites after the Hyksos’ reign, rather than having a 430 year stay. (She also suggests the 430 year number would fit with a hebrew bible numeric ideal. I might go into numbers in judaism (gematria) some other day but honestly I am not too interested in mysticism at this time, I am still learning the absolute basics. Also the worksheet says it was 210 years, which is confirmed in Nedarim 32a. MORE RESEARCH NEEDED BY ME) 
Long story short, there is not enough evidence to back up the claim. However there are opinions that support there probably was some kind of truth in this story, since it doesn’t make much sense for a nation to recall that one time it was enslaved and humiliated for many years at the forefront of its history in the first place. It is unheard of for a people to create a fictional time of enslavement. 
Prof. Hayes held this lecture in 2006, the source cited by the worksheet, Rabbi Lawrence Kelemen’s, Permission to Receive which provides and sums up secular evidence for the Israelite slaves in Egypt, is from 1996. So you know what, I would need to do a bit more digging here to find more info and a conclusive opinion. I don’t have one yet, I’m just gathering data. 
ANYWAY back on topic. 
2. Reasons for slavery in Egypt:
The worksheet cites three reasons: 
a) To strengthen the jewish people’s trust in God
b) To develop a closer relationship between the people and God
c) “To show the Jews the consequences of an over-zealous pursuit of materialism” 
Let’s go through them one by one. 
a) 
- Abraham doubted God’s word that Israel would belong to his descendants, so the slavery would be a punishment for that (meant is this passage in Genesis)
- It is argued that the slavery they suffered through was akin to the process of a crucible purifying the metal it melts (Deuteronomy 4:20)
- Rashi’s commentary suggests that 4/5 of the jewish people in Egypt perished during the 3-day-darkness that came upon the land as one of the last of the plagues because they were “unworthy” of becoming part of the new people
b)
- God changes the order of events and the world around to dictate the fate of the Israelites
- by experiencing the evil they strive towards good 
c)
- Apparently the jewish people were being greedy and it got them stuck doing hard manual labor for pitiful pay, however I struggle to find the source of this. Might add later
3. Physical and spiritual slavery
This part is about identifying how the mind can be enslaved and bound.
- addictive behaviors: they shroud the mind and make it harder to be true to yourself as you will put them above your spiritual pursuits and they bind you to them
- “Every generation has its Egypt”: There is always something that is binding the current generation. Everyone is called upon to reflect upon themselves that God helped them, personally, out of Egypt - after all every jewish person is part of the entity “the jewish people” who once were lead out, meaning so did every individual 
- Pesach is there to make us reflect on these bondages in life 
Pesach Miracles and Their Lessons
1. Miracles of Exodus
The purpose of the plagues:  Set one (blood, frogs, lice): proving the existence of God to the Pharao who denies this. Performed by Aaron. Set two (wild animals, epidemic, boils): proving God’s control over the world, performed by Moses. Set tree (hail, locusts, darkness): proving that God’s power is absolute not comparable, performed by God.  The final plague is the death of each first born Egyptian son.
Each third plague came without warning. 
Shabbat HaGadol: Sheep were considered Idolized symbols of Gods in Egypt. The sacrifice of the sheep on this shabbat, rather than to cause them to be killed, was what saved the jewish people from the killing of the first borns, since they used the sacrifice’s blood to mark their doors. 
- Then comes the splitting of the Reed Sea and the successful battle against the Amalek
- Yitro, Moses’ father in law, is said to meet with them after the war of Amalek and eventually converting to Judaism
2. Lessons taught by the miracles 
- for us to realize that there is more than just what we see with our eyes/that we only see the surface layer
- each plague has a lesson about God, the most important ones being: a) to gain more awareness of God b) to demonstrate that the Israelites were the chosen people/set apart from the rest c) to show that false Gods cannot protect from God d) to instill gratitude in the jewish people so they will accept and be loyal to the Torah 
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houstonpress · 7 years
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'Immediate Needs' In Syria After ISIS: USAID Chief Visits Devastated Raqqa
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Mark Green, the top U.S. aid official, visited Raqqa Monday with CENTCOM Commander Joseph L. Votel. The U.S., which backs rebel forces, has given $875 million in "stabilization" aid to Syria.
(Image credit: Michele Kelemen/NPR)
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stiri-noi · 7 years
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Kelemen Hunor catre Joseph Daul: Legile adoptate nu afecteaza ... - HotNews
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miamiclasica · 6 years
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Nos dejaron en la música….
Oliver Knussen, Dieter Schnebel, David DiChiera, Glen Roven, Martin Dalby, Milko Kelemen, Bo Nilsson, Jóhann Jóhannsson, Matt Marks, Daniel Barkley, Claudio Scimone, Gennady Rozhdestvensky, Enoch zu Guttenberg, Jesús López Cobos, Jean-Claude Malgoire, Harold Farberman, George Walker, Edward Simons, Wanda Wilkomirska, Levine Andrade, Anshel Brusilow, Francis Lai, Herman Krebbers, Michael Tree, Didier Lockwood, Nina Beilina, Philip De Groote, Jean Grout, Nelson Cooke, Ivan Davis, Lívia Rév, Johannes Goritzi, Theodore Antoniou, Renaud Gagneux, Alan Stout, Patrick Williams, Milan Krizek, Gian Paolo Mele, Eitan Avitsur, Juan Hidalgo Codorniu, Thomas Pernes, Milko Kelemen, Alain Kremski…
Montserrat Caballe, Inge Borkh, Sylvia Geszty, Bonaldo Giaiotti, Michel Senechal, Huguette Tourangeau, Kristine Ciesinski, Barry McDaniel, Maria Orán, Maya Kuliyeva, Carlo Cava, Claudio Desderi, Maxim Mikhailov, Teo Maiste, Carlos Feller, Alexander Vedernikov, Valentina Levko, Arthur Davies, Virgilio Noreika, Ariel Bybee, Otoniel Gonzaga, Antonio Barasorda, Tamara Nizhnikova, Kjerstin Dellert…
Aretha Franklin, Nancy Wilson, Charles Aznavour, Maria Dolores Pradera, Bill Hughes, Enrico De Angelis, Lucho Gatica, Marlene Verplanck, Johnsy Cowell, Billy Hancock, Dolores O´Riordan, Preston Shannon, Carmela Rey, Heli Lääts, Little Sammy Davis, Didier Lockwood, Jerry González, Richard Hundley, Joseph Vella, Antonia la Negra, Morgana King, Xiomara Alfaro, Audret Morris, Nathan Davis, Cecil Taylor, Jacques Higuelin, Charlie Rice, Max Berry, Tony Cucchiara, Angela Maria, Kim Larsen, Celeste Rodrigue, Francois Budet…
Jose Antonio Abreu, Paul Taylor, Lindsay Kemp, Kazimierz Gierzod, Irwin Gage, Igor Zukhov, Vera Dmitrievna Nyrkova, Carolyn Brown, Nelson Cooke, John Hsu, Livia Rev, Robert Mann, Luigi Bianchi, Colin Bumbry, Blandine Verlet, Richard Weiner, Konrad Ragossnig, Dennis Kam, Aldo Parisot, Robert Turnbull,  Dame Gyllian Lynne, France Gall, Denisse Lasalle, Claude Gingras, Charles Hamlen, Lee Lamont, Olimpia Gineri…
Artes escénicas y cinematográficas
John Gavin, Dorothy Malone, Dame June Whitefield, Burt Reynolds, Stephanie Audran, Penny Marshall, Barbara Harris, Tab Hunter, Margot Kidder, Benny Fredricksson, Oleg Anofriyev, Novello Novelli, Bella Emberg, Montse Perez, Bradford Dillman, Peter Groeger, Anna Campori, Connie Sawyer, Bob Smith, Yves Afonso, Mark Salling, Ilse Petri, Rolf Zacher, Marie Gruber, Pier Paolo Capponi, Sonia Graham, Emma Chambers, Tatyana Karpova, Colin Campbell, Beth Morris, Maria Rubio, Andres Labarthe, Siegfried Rauch, Sir Ken Dodd, Oleg Tabakov, Anna Lisa, Martha Wallner, Isabella Biaghini, Kevin Colson, Nina Doroshina, Verne Troyer, Kristin Nelson, Javier Aller, Ken Berry, Ennio Fantastichini, Maria Pace, Philip Bosco, Marisa Porcel, Klaus Hagerup, Umberto Borso, Horst Schultze, Caroline Charriere, Francoise Adret, Iris Acker, Raven Wilkinson, Carlo Giuffre, Sondra Locke, Peter Armitage, Ed Kenney, Jean Piat…
Bernardo Bertolucci, Milos Forman, Vittorio Taviani, Nicolas Roeg, Claude Lanzmann, Petr Weigl, Joel Antoni, Michael Anderson, Hugh Wilson, Mathieu Riboulet, Folco Quilici, Judy Blame, Stan Lee…
Artes visuales y literatura
Guillermo Trujillo, Elmar Rojas, Robert Indiana, Eduardo Arroyo, Ed Moses, Arnaldo Roche Rabell, Anders Aberg, Boaz Arad, Armando, Nat Neujean, Bernard Koura, Jef Geys, Napoleón Abueva, Forges, Getulio Alviani, Gillo Dorfles, James Luna, Joy Laville, Gillian Ayres, Theo Ramos,  Lothar Baumgartner, José Sacal, Mel Ramos, Harold Stevenson, Ralph Kotai, Fernando del Paso, Miguel Angel Campano..
Amos Oz, Vidihadar Naipaul, Stephen Hawking, Dasa Drndic, Philip Roth, Tom Wolfe, Neil Simon, Pablo Garcia Baena, Nicanor Parra, Diana Der Hovanessian, Claribel Alegría, José Triana, Victor Heringer, Tom Griffin, Clement Rosset, Sergio Pitol,  Irina Tokmakova, Efrain Jara Idrovo, Pavel Srut, Jane Langton,  Julia Vinograd, Tom Leonard, Rob Hiaasen, Vicente Verdu, Inge Feltrinelli…
Jon Paul Steuer, Frank Buxton, Johann
es Brost, Anthony Bourdin, Sister Wendy Beckett, Paul Bocuse, Josep Fontana, Erling Mandelmann, David Austin, Robin Leach, Hubert de Givenchy….
Argentina
Osvaldo Bayer, Hermenegildo Sabat, Augusto Fernandes, Irene Gruss, Hugo Santiago, Horacio Molina, Elvira Orphee, Antonio Pujia, Tito Capobianco, Alicia Berdaxagar, Esteban Peicovich, Violeta Rivas, Jaime Torres, Jorge Demirjian, Gustavo Tambascio, Poldy Byrd, Maria Concepción César, Guillermo Bredeston, Alba Arnova, Emilio Disi, German Garcia, Juan Jose Stagnaro, Iris Alonso, Norma Bessouet, Julio Blanck, Juan Carlos Mastrángelo, Carlos Garaycochea, Betty Elizalde, Victor Buchino, Majo Okner,Tomas Maldonado, Elsa Bloise, Roxana Darín, Noemi Lapzeson, Deborah P. Volpin, Emilio Urdapilleta, Francisco Romero, Choly Berreteaga, Julio Llinas…
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  Los Adioses 2018 Nos dejaron en la música.... Oliver Knussen, Dieter Schnebel, David DiChiera, Glen Roven, Martin Dalby, Milko Kelemen, Bo Nilsson, Jóhann Jóhannsson, Matt Marks, Daniel Barkley, Claudio Scimone, …
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junker-town · 7 years
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2018 World Juniors rosters and key players to watch
The tournament begins Tuesday in Buffalo.
If you needed a warmup to get into international hockey before the 2018 Winter Olympics, the best young players in the world will have you covered at the 2018 World Junior Championship tournament. The United States will be looking to defend its title on home ice in Buffalo after a thrilling victory in Montreal a year ago.
The World Juniors is an annual under-20 tournament featuring junior national teams full of top prospects. It’s a great chance to watch some extremely gifted players in an intense competition as they represent their countries. Even if it’s not quite star-studded like an NHL-backed Olympic tournament would be, the talent level will be high.
And for NHL fans, the tournament is always a stellar opportunity to keep up with the future of the game. Many of the players in Buffalo will go on to become NHL stars. If you want to get a leg up on your friends when discussing the 2018 draft, then following the World Juniors is a good place to start.
With that in mind, here’s a quick look at every team competing in the 2018 World Juniors, along with a key player to watch on each roster. NHL rights are included in parenthesis.
United States
Roster
Forwards: Ryan Poehling (MTL), Brady Tkachuk, Josh Norris (SJS), Casey Mittelstadt (BUF), Joey Anderson (NJD), Kailer Yamamoto (EDM), Patrick Harper (NSH), Logan Brown (OTT), Kieffer Bellows (NYI), Riley Tufte (DAL), Trent Frederic (BOS), Max Jones (ANA)
Defensemen: Ryan Lindgren (BOS), Quinn Hughes, Adam Fox (CGY), Dylan Samberg (WPG), Scott Perunovich, Andrew Peeke (CBJ), Mikey Anderson (LAK)
Goaltenders: Jake Oettinger (DAL), Joseph Woll (TOR), Jeremy Swayman (BOS)
Key player to watch: Quinn Hughes
There are a lot of must-see talents on Team USA, including Mittelstadt, Norris, and Yamamoto, but Hughes stands out because you’ve probably never seen him before. The University of Michigan star is a top prospect for the 2018 NHL Draft, and projects as a possible top-five pick. He’s undersized but makes up for it with amazing skating and puck handling. This will be the first chance for a lot of fans to see him up close, which should be exciting.
Canada
Roster
Forwards: Dillon Dube (CGY), Jonah Gadjovich (VAN), Boris Katchouk (TBL), Maxime Comtois (ANA), Taylor Raddysh (TBL), Tyler Steenbergen (ARI), Drake Batherson (OTT), Michael McLeod (NJD), Brett Howden (TBL), Sam Steel (ANA), Alex Formenton (OTT), Jordan Kyrou (STL), Robert Thomas (STL)
Defensemen: Jake Bean (CAR), Conor Timmins (COL), Cal Foote (TBL), Cale Makar (COL), Dante Fabbro (NSH), Kale Clague (LAK), Victor Mete (MTL)
Goaltenders: Carter Hart (PHI), Colton Point (DAL)
Key player to watch: Robert Thomas
Team Canada lacks the usual star power you’d expect from the world’s biggest hockey powerhouse, but it’s still a solid roster full of top prospects. Thomas, the No. 20 overall pick in the 2017 draft, stands out given his scorching start in the OHL. The versatile center has 46 points in 27 games for the London Knights after averaging a point per game last season.
Sweden
Roster
Forwards: Marcus Davidsson (BUF), Tim Soderlund (CHI), Glenn Gustafsson, Elias Pettersson (VAN), Linus Lindstrom (CGY), Fredrik Karlstrom (DAL), Alexander Nylander (BUF), Isac Lundestrom, Jesper Boqvist (NJD), Axel Jonsson Fjallby (WAS), Lias Andersson (NYR), Fabian Zetterlund (NJD), Oskar Steen (BOS)
Defensemen: Rasmus Dahlin, Erik Brannstrom (VGK), Timothy Liljegren (TOR), Linus Hogberg (PHI), Gustav Lindstrom (DET), Jesper Sellgren, Jacob Moverare (LAK)
Goaltenders: Filip Gustavsson (PIT), Filip Larsson (DET), Olle Eriksson Ek (ANA)
Key player to watch: Rasmus Dahlin
Get ready to hear his name over and over. Rasmus Dahlin. It’s a great name for a prospect so talented he’s like the Connor McDavid of defensemen. Dahlin already has a treasure trove of ridiculous highlights on YouTube and he doesn’t turn 18 until April. The consensus projected No. 1 overall pick for the 2018 NHL Draft is a special prospect, and he’ll be a leader for Sweden despite being one of the youngest players on the team. Expect this to be a fun precursor to his leading role in Pyeongchang before he makes his NHL debut next fall.
Russia
Roster
Forwards: Vitali Abramov (CBJ), Andrei Altybarmakan (CHI), Georgi Ivanov, Artur Kayumov (CHI), Klim Kostin (STL), Mikhail Maltsev (NJD), Artyom Manukyan, Alexei Polodyan, German Rubtsov (PHI), Marsel Sholokhov, Dmitri Sokolov (MIN), Andrei Svechnikov
Defensemen: Nikolai Knyzhov, Nikita Makeyev, Artyom Minulin, Dmitri Samorukov (EDM), Alexander Shepelev, Vladislav Syomin, Anatoli Yelizarov, Yegor Zaitev (NJD)
Goaltenders: Vladislav Sukhachyov, Mikhail Berdin (WPG), Alexei Melnichuk
Key player to watch: Andrei Svechnikov
There’s little doubt who will be the star player for Russia in Buffalo. Svechnikov is widely expected to be the first forward selected in the 2018 NHL Draft. The 18-year-old has 14 goals in 16 games with the OHL’s Barrie Colts this season, and could be a prime contender to lead the tournament in scoring if Russia can make a deep run. Between Dahlin, Svechnikov, and Hughes, you’ll potentially be able to see the top three draft picks for next year.
Finland
Roster
Forwards: Juha Jaaska, Janne Kuokkanen (CAR), Otto Koivula (NYI), Kristian Vesalainen (WPG), Joona Koppanen (BOS), Eetu Tuulola (CGY), Eeli Tolvanen (NSH), Markus Nurmi (OTT), Aapeli Rasanen (EDM), Joni Ikonen (MTL), Aleksi Heponiemi (FLA), Jere Innala, Rasmus Kupari
Defensemen: Miro Heiskanen (DAL), Robin Salo (NYI), Eemeli Rasanen (TOR), Juuso Valimaki (CGY), Olli Juolevi (VAN), Urho Vaakanainen (BOS), Henri Jokiharju (CHI), Kasper Kotkansalo (DET)
Goaltenders: Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen (BUF), Lassi Lehtinen, Niilo Halonen
Key player to watch: Miro Heiskanen
The Heiskanen hype train rolls into Buffalo this week. The Stars’ 2017 first-round pick is already playing a starring role in Finland’s top league at age 18 and will likely be the country’s top defenseman for the 2018 Winter Olympics in February. Heiskanen has elite-level NHL upside, and this will be his first chance to put it all on display for a North American audience.
Czech Republic
Roster
Forwards: Filip Chytil (NYR), Filip Helt (STL), Martin Kaut, Krystof Hrabik, Petr Kodytek, Daniel Kurovsky, Jakub Lauko, Albert Michnac, Martin Necas (CAR), Radovan Pavlik, Kristian Reichel, Ostap Safin (EDM), Marek Zachar, Filip Zadina
Defensemen: Vojtech Budik (BUF), Jakub Galvas (CHI), Libor Hajek (TBL), Filip Kral, Radim Salda, Ondrej Vala (DAL)
Goaltenders: Milan Kloucek, Josef Korenar (SJS), Jakub Skarek
Key player to watch: Filip Zadina
The Czech Republic boasts a pair of 2017 first-round picks in Chytil and Necas, but its best player may be Zadina, the 2018 draft-eligible prospect who projects as a potential top-five pick. He’s been adjusting to the North American game this season with 46 points in 32 games in the QMJHL, and NHL.com gives him a (likely unreasonable) comparison to Patrick Kane. This could be a breakout opportunity for the 18-year-old.
Denmark
Roster
Forwards: Jacob Schmidt-Svejstrup, Valdemar Ahlberg, Christian Mathiasen-Wejse, Jonas Rondbjerg (VGK), Lucas Andersen, Nikolaj Krag (STL), Joachim Blichfeld (SJS), Daniel Nielsen, Andreas Grundtvig, David Madsen, Magnus Molge, Phillip Schultz, Christoffer Gath
Defensemen: Oliver Larsen, Malte Setkov (DET), Christian Larsen, Jakob Jessen, Jeppe Mogensen, Rasmus Heine, Lasse Mortensen
Goaltenders: Emil Gransoe, Mads Soegaard, Kasper Krog
Key player to watch: Jonas Rondbjerg
One of just two Golden Knights prospects in the tournament, Rondbjerg will also likely be Denmark’s best player. The 2017 third-round pick is already playing a steady role with the Vaxjo Lakers in the SHL, Sweden’s top league, as an 18-year-old. He has seven points in 25 games this season.
Slovakia
Roster
Forwards: Erik Smolka, Samuel Bucek, Viliam Cacho, Filip Krivosik, Milos Kelemen, Adam Liska, Marian Studenic (NJD), Peter Kundrik, Adam Ruzicka (CGY), Samuel Solensky, Alex Tamasi, Milos Roman
Defensemen: Tomas Hedera, Martin Bodak, Martin Fehervary, Marek Korencik, David Matejovic, Michal Ivan, Vojtech Zelenak, Samuel Fereta
Goaltenders: David Hrenak, Jakub Kostelny, Roman Durny
Key player to watch: Adam Ruzicka
Part of the dying breed of big-bodied power forwards, Ruzicka might’ve gone higher than No. 109 overall in the 2017 draft if he had been playing this well a year ago. The 6’4, 203-pound winger has a team-leading 20 goals and 142 shots on goal in 34 games for the OHL’s Sarnia Sting. He’ll be leaned on heavily on the power play for a team looking to improve upon last year’s eighth-place finish.
Belarus
Roster
Forwards: Viktor Bovbel, Vladislav Ryadchenko, Alexander Lukashevich, Igor Martynov, Arseni Astashevich, Sergei Pishuk, Yegor Sharangovich, Ivan Drozdov, Vladislav Mikhalchuk, Maxim Sushko (PHI), Artyom Anisimov, Ilya Litvinov, Dmitri Grinkevich
Defensemen: Andrei Gostev, Vladislav Sokolovski, Dmitri Deryabin, Vladislav Martynyuk, Vladislav Yeryomenko, Dmitri Burovtsev, Vladislav Gabrus
Goaltenders: Dmitri Rodik, Andrei Grishenko, Vikita Tolopilo
Key player to watch: Maxim Sushko
Belarus only has one player whose rights are held by an NHL team, so it’s not difficult to pick which player to focus on. Sushko, the Flyers’ 2017 fourth-round pick, is a talented winger with 16 goals in 28 games for the OHL’s Owen Sound Attack this season. He’s not going to get much help in Buffalo, but he’s worth keeping an eye on.
Switzerland
Roster
Forwards: Nicolas Muller, Guillaume Maillard, Marco Miranda, Justin Sigrist, Ken Jager, Valentin Nussbaumer, Axel Simic, Sven Leuenberger, Nando Eggenberger, Philipp Kurashev, Andre Heim, Marco Cavalleri, Dario Rohrbach
Defensemen: Simon le Coultre, Davyd Barandun, Tobias Geisser, Nico Gross, Elia Riva, Tim Berni, Dominik Egli
Goaltenders: Matteo Ritz, Akira Schmid, Philip Wuthrich
Key player to watch: Tobias Geisser
Switzerland is a candidate for relegation by the end of this tournament, and its lack of potential NHL talent is a bit reason why. Nico Hischier is no longer around to carry this group, which finished seventh a year ago. The one guy who stands out is Geisser, a 2017 fourth-round pick by the Capitals who brings a ton of size (6’4, 201 pounds) and a big shot to the table.
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smartseo4you · 7 years
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New Post has been published on Ziarul tau online
Cioloş, la braţ cu oamenii lui Băsescu la Malta
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Miercuri şi joi, popularii europeni şi-au dat întâlnire în Malta unde au discutat despre viitorul Uniunii Europene, politica de securitate europeană și situația economică a țărilor membre. Printre invitații la Congresul PPE s-au numărat președintele Klaus Iohannis, fostul premier Dacian Cioloș, dar și delegații numeroase ale PNL, PMP și UDMR – partidele din România afiliate PPE. Politicie­nii români au invadat reţelele de socializare cu fotografii şi live-uri de la reuniunea populară.
Românii prezenţi la Congresul PPE au folosit deplasarea din capitala Maltei, La Valletta, ca pe un city break de primăvară. Euro­parlamentarul PMP Siegrfried Mureşan, purtător de cuvânt al PPE, a anunţat că popularii europeni vor adopta un Cod de etică şi conduită care ar trebui să devină un model pentru preve­nirea și combaterea corupției pentru toate partidele membre, însă politicienii români nu au părut prea interesați de subiect, ci mai degrabă de cum să profite de „excursie” pentru a strânge like-uri Facebook.
„Selfie-urile”, o prioritate PNL a participat la reuniunea PPE cu o amplă delegație din care au făcut parte președintele interimar, Raluca Turcan, secre­tarul general, Cristian Bușoi, dar și liberali ca Gigel Știrbu, Cezar Preda, Valeria Schelean şi euro­parlamentarii Theodor Stolojan, Adina Vălean şi Ramona Mănescu „Deplasările nu sunt făcute din bani publici. Fiecare participant și-a susținut cheltu­ielile de deplasare”, a explicat Raluca Turcan, prezenţa lui Buşoi în toate fotografiile fiind ironizată pe pagina şefei PNL. Aceasta a compensat însă cu „un gând bun și un mesaj de susți­nere” pe care le-ar fi primit într-o discuţie tête-à-tête cu Angela Merkel. Din partea PMP au mers în Malta Robert Turcescu, Valeriu Steriu și Eugen Tomac, iar oamenii lui Traian Băsescu s-au tras în poze cu liderii europeni, dar și cu Dacian Cioloș, prezent și el la invitația președintelui Joseph Daul. Turcescu a profitat de ocazie și l-a atacat de la distanță pe ministrul Justiției. „Să asculți în același timp discursul lui Tudorel Toader din România și discursul liderilor PPE la Congresul din Malta, asta da provocare!”, a scris ironic liderul PMP. Delegația UDMR, condusă de președintele Uniunii, Kelemen Hunor, a fost singura care a fost mai puțin interesată de poze și mai mult de sprijinul politic al liderilor euro­peni pentru maghiarii din Transilvania și cazul Liceului Romano-Catolic din Târgu Mureș.
Iohannis schimbă vitezele În Malta, Klaus Iohannis le-a spus popularilor europeni că România nu susţine ideea unei Europe cu mai multe viteze, care ar adânci diviziunea şi neîncre­derea dintre statele membre, mai ales pe fondul Brexit şi a celor­lalte crize cu care se confruntă Uniunea Europeană. „România nu susţine o Uniune Europeană a «cercurilor concentrice de integrare» sau a «vitezelor multiple», care ar putea să ducă la o creştere a diviziunilor sociale şi economice între statele membre", a spus Iohannis, în plenul Congresului PPE.
Sursa articol jurnalul.ro
, sursa articol https://blogville.ro/ciolos-la-brat-cu-oamenii-lui-basescu-la-malta/
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Vincent Lübeck (1654-1740) - Ich ruf zu dir, Herr Jesu Christ, LubWV 13 ·
Joseph Kelemen, organ
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Johann Kaspar Kerll
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stiri-noi · 7 years
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Kelemen Hunor catre Joseph Daul: Legile adoptate nu afecteaza statul de drept si independenta justitiei - HotNews
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