Franz Beckenbauer - FIFA.com

Franz Beckenbauer
FIFA.com
Franz Beckenbauer is without doubt one of the greatest players and managers of all time. He redefined the role of ‘libero’, lifted the FIFA World Cup™ as captain in 1974, before repeating the feat as a manager in 1990.

Duration : 0:6:12

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yugoslavia-brazil 0-0 1974

world cup 1974 stuttgart

Duration : 0:1:48

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World cup 1992

Team Tsunami, Home base Redondo Beach and Sunshine Kite Company, this is the routine that made it to Japan in 1992, Tsunami flew until 1997 then re-formed as the Spectra all stars, the largest team to ever compete, 10 people, Team sport kiting started here in 1974 on the Redondo Beach Pier.

Duration : 0:5:42

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Grzegorz Lato dla Futbol.pl część 1.

http://www.futbol.pl - wywiad z Grzegorzem Lato przed wyborami na stanowisko prezesa PZPN

Duration : 0:8:11

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Drink From The Cup !! The Cup of Suffering !!

Our Lady of All Nations

On 31 May 2002 Bishop Jozef Marianus Punt of Haarlem, having concluded a period of investigation, declared the apparitions accorded Ida Peerdeman of Amsterdam, Holland, in which the Blessed Virgin Mary asked to be known as Our Lady of All Nations, to be “of a supernatural origin”.

Decree of 31 May 2002 (Requires Adobe Acrobat Reader)

This decree ends a 45 year period of investigation and decision, as reflected in the following history:

7 May 1956 - Bishop of Haarlem finds no evidence of the supernatural nature of the apparitions, and prohibits public veneration.

2 March 1957 - Bishop of Haarlem confirms this decision with consent of the Holy Office (13 March 1957).

24 May 1972 - Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, responding to a letter of 29 March from the Bishop, re-affirms its decision.

27 June 1974 - CDF affirms its earlier decision, after a deeper investigation, inviting the faithful to discontinue all forms propaganda with regard to these alleged apparitions and revelations.

31 May 1996 - The then Bishop of Haarlem, Henry Bomers, published a Notification clarifying the distinction between the title, image and prayer, on one hand, and the messages on the other. The title, image and prayer had been approved for private veneration since the 1950s (according to this decree), and he was now granting the privilege of public veneration, as well. The belief in the messages had been prohibited, but now was permitted according to one’s own conscience, the Church being unable to rule definitively “at the moment”. As the decree notes, he consulted with “official authorities”, without specifying who those authorities were.

3 December 1997 - The Bishop writes Letter (HB-97-403) commending the “Action of The Lady of All Nations” and the work of Fr. Paul Maria Sigl.

3 May 2002 - In a Letter of 3 May 2002, Raphael Soffner of the public affairs office of the diocese of Haarlem affirmed to EWTN that the public veneration of Our Lady of All Nations by title, image and prayer, is permitted to Catholics by decision of the Bishop of Haarlem, “with the consent of the Prefect of the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith in Rome”. Catholics may make “a personal judgment according to their conscience” regarding the messages and apparition.

31 May 2002 - Bishop Punt declares the apparitions to be of supernatural origin.

The Expression “Who Once Was Mary”

In the approved prayer, the Blessed Virgin is referred to as Our Lady of All Nations “who once was Mary”. It is explained by the promoters of the devotion in the following manner:

This refers to the fact that Mary is no longer just Mary but rather The Lady, The Woman at the foot of the Cross. These words refer to her Eternal Motherhood over all of us, for she is Mother Whom Jesus gave to us from the Cross with the words: Woman behold thy Son!

I might add that the Motherhood of Mary is eternal in the sense that it was foreseen by God, along with the Incarnation of the Word, from all eternity. Similarly, the Church speaks of Mary as the Mother of God, not because she herself is eternal or Mother of the divine nature, but because He of whom she is Mother in the order of human nature is God, the Eternal Word.

Duration : 0:3:21

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“Jackie Blue” by The Ozark Mountain Daredevils

By: The Ozark Mountain Daredevils
Title: “Jackie Blue”
Album: It’ll Shine When it Shines
Track: 3
Released: 1974
Length: 4:10
_______________________________________

Ooh-hoo, Jackie Blue
Lives her life from inside of a room
Hides that smile when she’s wearing a frown
Ooh Jackie, you’re not so down

You like your life in a free-form style
You’ll take an inch but you’d love a mile
There never seems to be quite enough
Floating around to fill your lovin’ cup

Ooh-hoo, Jackie Blue
What’s a game, girl, if you never lose
Ask a winner and you’ll probably find
Ooh Jackie, they’ve lost at some time

Don’t try to tell me that you’re not aware
Of what you’re doing and that you don’t care
You say it’s easy, just a natural thing
Like playing music but you never sing

Ooh-hoo, Jackie Blue
Making wishes that never come true
Going places where you’ve never been
Ooh Jackie, you’re going again

Ooh-hoo, Jackie Blue
Lives a dream that can never come true
Making love is like sifting through sand
Ooh Jackie, it slips through your hand

Every day, in your indigo eyes
I watch the sunset but I don’t see it rise
Moonlight and stars in your strawberry wine
You’d take the world but you won’t take the time

Ooh-hoo, Jackie Blue
Lives her life from inside of a room
Makes you think that her life is a drag
Ooh Jackie, what fun you have had

Ooh Jackie, ooh Jackie, ooh Jackie, ooh Jackie
Hey, hey, hey, hey

Duration : 0:4:10

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World Cup 1974 (Germany) - Road to the Final with Holland

Road to the Final, national Football of Holland,The best team ever. We will never forget them.

Duration : 0:6:55

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BR DEUTSCHLAND NIEDERLANDE FINAL WORLD CUP 1974

1974-07-07
Olympiastadion, Munich
Attendance: 75,200
Referee: Jack Taylor (England)

Neeskens 2′(pen.) (Netherlands)
Breitner 25′(pen.) (W. Germany)
Müller 43′(W. Germany)

Duration : 0:9:58

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Trophy Awards RBS 20-20 Cricket Gaddafi Stadium Night 8 Oct

Final 20-20 Cricket Tournament Gaddafi Stadium at Night 8 October 2008 Lahore Pakistan

Trophy Awards RBS 20-20

Final won by Sialkot

Picture Gallery
http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?pid=1380154&l=1960b&id=660876765

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=56765&l=1e334&id=660876765

Gaddafi Stadium is a Test cricket ground in Lahore, Pakistan. It was designed by Pakistani architect Murat Khan and completed in 1959. Some additions were added many years later by Nayyar Ali Dada. After its renovation for the 1996 Cricket World Cup, the stadium has a capacity of over 60,000 spectators for high profile matches or events.

Ground facts

* The ground was originally named “Lahore Stadium”, but was renamed in 1974 in honour of Colonel Gaddafi of Libya after a rousing speech he gave at a Organisation of the Islamic Conference meeting in favour of Pakistan’s right to pursue nuclear weapons.

* Gaddafi Stadium also houses the headquarters of the Pakistan Cricket Board.

* In 1995-96, the stadium was completely renovated by original architect Nayyar Ali Dada for the 1996 Cricket World Cup. The stadium held the final, with over 60,000 spectators.

* Three hat-tricks have been taken at the stadium:

o Peter Petherick of New Zealand against Pakistan, October 9, 1976
o Wasim Akram of Pakistan against Sri Lanka, March 6, 1999
o Mohammad Sami of Pakistan against Sri Lanka, March 8, 2002

Located in the historical city of Lahore, the Gaddafi Stadium, named after the Libyan leader, was completely renovated during 1995-96 ready for the 1996 Cricket World Cup. Designed by the famous architect Nayyar Ali Dada who modeled it on the Mughal School of red hand-laid brickwork and arches, the new stadium is completely covered with plastic seating rather than concrete benches. The lower portion under the stands has been enclosed and converted to shops for boutiques and offices. This was the first stadium in Pakistan to be equipped with modern floodlights which have their own standby power generators. Modern facilities for the media are also provided.

Pakistan have enjoyed some memorable moments on the ground, including a fifth-wicket stand of 281 between Javed Miandad and Asif Iqbal against New Zealand in 1976 and an innings and 324 run win against New Zealand in 2002 The stadium hosted the final of the 1996 World Cup, which was watched by over 60,000 spectators. However, despite the impressive capacity, the ground is often sparsely attended for Test matches, with sometimes as few as 1000 fans turning up. One-day internationals, as with the whole of the subcontinent, are more popular; crowds in excess of 20,000 are common.

Records

Test

* Highest team total: 699, by Pakistan against India in 1989.
* Lowest team total: 73, by New Zealand against Pakistan in 2002.
* Highest individual score: 329, by Inzamam-ul-Haq against New Zealand in 2002.

One Day International

* Highest team total: 357/9, by Sri Lanka against Bangladesh, June 25, 2008.
* Lowest team total: 112, by India against Pakistan, December 22, 1989.
* Highest individual score: 139*, by Ijaz Ahmed against India, October 2, 1997.

Text Reference From Wikipedia

Duration : 0:6:50

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Six on first ball-Final 20-20 Cricket Tournament Gaddafi Stadium at Night 8 Oct 2008 Lahore Pakistan (Picture Galleries) http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?pid=1380154&l=1960b&id=660876765 http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=56765&l=1e334&id=660876765

Final 20-20 Cricket Tournament Gaddafi Stadium at Night 8 October 2008 Lahore Pakistan

Final won by Sialkot

Picture Gallery
http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?pid=1380154&l=1960b&id=660876765

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=56765&l=1e334&id=660876765

Gaddafi Stadium is a Test cricket ground in Lahore, Pakistan. It was designed by Pakistani architect Murat Khan and completed in 1959. Some additions were added many years later by Nayyar Ali Dada. After its renovation for the 1996 Cricket World Cup, the stadium has a capacity of over 60,000 spectators for high profile matches or events.

Ground facts

* The ground was originally named “Lahore Stadium”, but was renamed in 1974 in honour of Colonel Gaddafi of Libya after a rousing speech he gave at a Organisation of the Islamic Conference meeting in favour of Pakistan’s right to pursue nuclear weapons.

* Gaddafi Stadium also houses the headquarters of the Pakistan Cricket Board.

* In 1995-96, the stadium was completely renovated by original architect Nayyar Ali Dada for the 1996 Cricket World Cup. The stadium held the final, with over 60,000 spectators.

* Three hat-tricks have been taken at the stadium:

o Peter Petherick of New Zealand against Pakistan, October 9, 1976
o Wasim Akram of Pakistan against Sri Lanka, March 6, 1999
o Mohammad Sami of Pakistan against Sri Lanka, March 8, 2002

Located in the historical city of Lahore, the Gaddafi Stadium, named after the Libyan leader, was completely renovated during 1995-96 ready for the 1996 Cricket World Cup. Designed by the famous architect Nayyar Ali Dada who modeled it on the Mughal School of red hand-laid brickwork and arches, the new stadium is completely covered with plastic seating rather than concrete benches. The lower portion under the stands has been enclosed and converted to shops for boutiques and offices. This was the first stadium in Pakistan to be equipped with modern floodlights which have their own standby power generators. Modern facilities for the media are also provided.

Pakistan have enjoyed some memorable moments on the ground, including a fifth-wicket stand of 281 between Javed Miandad and Asif Iqbal against New Zealand in 1976 and an innings and 324 run win against New Zealand in 2002 The stadium hosted the final of the 1996 World Cup, which was watched by over 60,000 spectators. However, despite the impressive capacity, the ground is often sparsely attended for Test matches, with sometimes as few as 1000 fans turning up. One-day internationals, as with the whole of the subcontinent, are more popular; crowds in excess of 20,000 are common.

Records

Test

* Highest team total: 699, by Pakistan against India in 1989.
* Lowest team total: 73, by New Zealand against Pakistan in 2002.
* Highest individual score: 329, by Inzamam-ul-Haq against New Zealand in 2002.

One Day International

* Highest team total: 357/9, by Sri Lanka against Bangladesh, June 25, 2008.
* Lowest team total: 112, by India against Pakistan, December 22, 1989.
* Highest individual score: 139*, by Ijaz Ahmed against India, October 2, 1997.

Text Reference From Wikipedia

Duration : 0:3:43

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