merge The Future of Money Beyond Greed and Scarcity date March 2012 Terra The Trade Reference Currency, TRC is the name of a possible World currency world currency . The concept was proposed by Belgium Belgian economist and expert on monetary systems Bernard Lietaer Bernard A. Lietaer in 2001, based on a similar proposal from the 1930s. The currency is meant to be based on a Basket finance basket of the 9 12 most important Commodity commodities according to their importance in World Trade Organization world wide trade . Lietaers opines this would provide a currency that wouldn t suffer from inflation quotation poem Terra reference unit defined as standardized basket of key internationally traded commodities & services. Example 100 Terra 1 barrel of oil 10 bushels of wheat 20 kg of copper ... 1 10 of ounce of gold NB any standardizable good or service can be included. Similar stability to gold standard , but with basket instead of single commodity more stable than any one component ... Terra is Inflation resistant by definition. ref Bernard Lietaer. http www.worldacademy.org files Options 20for 20managing 20systemic 20banking 20crisis 20by 20Bernard 20Lietaer.ppt The Future of Money New Ways to Create Wealth, Work and a Wiser World ref poem The basic principle emerged from early concepts presented in an article in the France French newspaper Le F d riste on 1 January 1933. The idea to establish a L Europa monnaie de la paix , in English Europe Money of peace , was given birth. The idea was enthusiastically picked up by Lietaer during an educational journey. See also ISO 4217 Currency codes History of money World currency Commodity currency References Reflist Cite book last Lietaer first Bernard authorlink Bernard Lietaer year 2001 title The Future of Money isbn 0 7126 8399 2 publisher Century location London oclc 43633316 Page needed date September 2010 Cite book last Lietaer first Bernard authorlink Bernard Lietaer title Das Geld der Zukunft. Sonderausgabe. publishe ... more details
Symphony No. 11 in D major , K chel catalogue K. 84 73q, was at one time considered unquestionably to be the work of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart . Its status has, however, been challenged, and as of 2008 remains uncertain. It is believed to date from 1770, and may have been written in Milan or Bologna, if it is a genuine Mozart work. An early manuscript from Vienna attributes the work to Wolfgang, but nineteenth century copies of the score attribute it respectively to Leopold Mozart and to Carl Ditters von Dittersdorf Carl Dittersdorf . Neal Zaslaw writes A comparison of the results of two stylistic analyses of the work s first movement with analyses of unquestionably genuine first movements of the period by the three composers suggests that Wolfgang is the most likely of the three to have been the composer of K73q . ref name Zaslaw175 Zaslaw, pp. 175&ndash 77 ref ref Dearling, p. 71 ref The symphony is in three movements, lacking a minuet and trio. Kenyon opines that there is little special about the work, ref Kenyon, p. 155 ref while Zaslaw finds a Gluckish ambience , and some affinity with opera buffa in the repeated triplets found in the Finale. ref name Zaslaw175 Movements and instrumentation The instrumentation was string section strings , 2 oboe s, 2 horn section horns , bassoon , basso continuo continuo ref name Zaslaw175 File Mozart SY11 Incipit.gif 600px Tempo Italian tempo markings Allegro , 4 4 Tempo Italian tempo markings Andante , 3 8 Allegro, 2 4 Performance details There are no details available as to when the initial performance took place References reflist 1 Sources Dearling, Robert The Music of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart The Symphonies Associated University Presses Ltd, London 1982 ISBN 0 8386 2335 2 Nicholas Kenyon Kenyon, Nicholas The Pegasus Pocket Guide to Mozart Pegasus Books, New York 2006 ISBN 1 933648 23 6 Neal Zaslaw Zaslaw, Neal Mozart s Symphonies Context, Performance Practice, Reception OUP, Oxford 1991 ISBN 0 19 816286 3 External links NMA ... more details
Agrippinus floruit 451 461 was a general of the Western Roman Empire , Magister militum per Gallias under emperors Valentinian III , Petronius Maximus , Avitus and Libius Severus . Biography Agrippinus was a native of Gaul Ralph Mathisen points out his attested ties are concentrated in the eastern part of Lugdunensis writers from no other area have anything good to say about him Mathisen adds in parentheses. ref Ralph W. Mathisen, Ecclesiastical Factionalism and Religious Controversy in Fifth Century Gaul Washington Catholic University of America Press, 1989 , p. 218 ref He was appointed Comes and later Magister militum per Gallias Hydatius records that, as a comes , he received a letter from Euphronius, bishop of Autun describing a comet seen at Easter, 451. ref Hydatius, Chronica , 151. See Steven Muhlberger, The Fifth century chroniclers Prosper, Hydatius, and the Gallic Chronicler of 452 Leeds Francis Cairns, 1990 , p. 208 ref The Vita Aniani records that when he was wounded, Aignan of Orleans Anianus , Roman Catholic Diocese of Orl ans Bishop of Aurelianum miraculously healed him as a show of gratitude, Agrippinus freed all his prisoners. When Avitus was deposed by Majorian in 456, Majorian replaced Agrippinus with Aegidius as comes Aegidius then accused his predecessor of various kinds of treachery. Accompanied by Lupicinus, abbot of the monastery of St. Claude, Agrippius was sent to Rome where he was tried and sentenced to death without the possibility to appeal to the Emperor or to the Senate. According to the Vita Lupicini , Agrippinus escaped and took refuge in the church of St. Peter. Later he was pardoned by the Emperor, with the abbot Lupicinus help, and was sent back to Gaul exalted with honors. ref Mathisen, Ecclesiastical Factionalism , pp. 199f. Mathisen opines in a footnote that Agrippinus probably never went to Rome at all p. 200 n. 124 ref It is possible that Agrippinus, who was considered an enemy by Majorian, was restored in power by one of his ... more details
Nicole El Karoui is a French mathematician, and pioneer in the development of Mathematical Finance . The courses she teaches are regarded by many as the most prestigious in this field. citation needed date October 2010 She is currently professor of Applied Mathematics at the Pierre and Marie Curie University and previously at cole Polytechnique . Her research has contributed to the application of probability and stochastic differential equation s to modeling and risk management in financial markets. File Nicole El Karoui 2008.jpg thumb Nicole El Karoui, 2008. Teaching The reputation of Professor El Karoui s classes is such that Wall Street Journal opines that there may be too many of her students in important positions handling financial derivatives . ref http online.wsj.com article SB114187184703793317 search.html?KEYWORDS 22Carnegie 2BMellon 22&COLLECTION wsjie 6month ref She is the director, with Marc Yor and Gilles Pag s, of the Master of Advanced Studies program Probability & Finance , ref http www.master finance.proba.jussieu.fr index2.php ref jointly operated by cole Polytechnique ref http fr.wikipedia.org wiki C3 89cole polytechnique France ref and the Pierre and Marie Curie University Paris VI . This program, usually called DEA El Karoui , is one of the most prestigious program in quantitative finance in the world and No 1 in France. Citation needed date March 2012 The class size is around 60 70 students yearly, most of whom are from grandes coles and universities in France. Her students are well recognized by the quantitative finance industry. Every year, almost every investment bank in London and Paris will come to make presentations and recruit many students from her class. In an interview with the Wall Street Journal, Rama Cont, a well known mathematician, described a degree with Ms. El Karoui s name on it as the magic word that opened doors for young people. Citation needed date March 2012 Selected publications Changes of Numeraire, Changes of Proba ... more details
Infobox film name Namma Basava image Nammabasava.jpg caption director Veerashankar writer M Sathya Kiran , A Santosh Reddy producer M Sathya Kiran , A Santosh Reddy starring Puneeth Rajkumar , Gowri Munjal , music music on language Kannada country FilmIndia website cinematography K Duttu editing distributor released Sep 2009 runtime Namma Basava is a Kannada language film starring Puneet Rajkumar and Gowri Munjal , it was her debut in the Kannada film industry. ref http www.indiaglitz.com channels kannada trailer 7819.html ref Production M Sathya Kiran A Santosh Reddy Cast Puneeth Rajkumar Gowri Munjal Avinash Kannada actor Avinash Plot Basava Puneet Rajkumar runs a gym centre and lives with his brother Avinash and Sudharani wife of Avinash , who treat him as their own son. He is permanently opposed by competitors. When his brother start seeking a girl as his bride, he opines that he should select his future bride. He selects Gowri, daughter of an auditor who is working with Pampathy. Pampathy s younger brother is Home Minister and Pampathy s son is a vagabond womanizer. To gain her approval, Basava makes every effort, but before he can get her green signal, her engagement is fixed with the vagabond son of Pampathy. Supported by Gowri s peppy and naughty grandmother Lakshmidevi , Basava rises against the autocratic behaviour of Pampathy, challenges him in public, and wins, thereby also winning the heart and hand of Gowri. SoundTrack Infobox Album See Wikipedia WikiProject Albums Name Namma Basava Type Soundtrack Artist Gurukiran Cover Released div style white space nowrap Sep 2009 Recorded Genre Film soundtrack Feature film soundtrack Length Label border 2 cellpadding 4 cellspacing 0 style margin 1em 1em 1em 0 background f9f9f9 border 1px aaa solid border collapse collapse font size 95 bgcolor CCCCCF align center Track Song Singer s Duration 1 Allolla Kallolla Gurukiran 2 Andonditu Kaala 3 Mina mina 4 Rukku Rukku Rukkamma Puneet Rajkumar 5 Seritumana References Refl ... more details
Wikify date January 2012 Culture Industry Reconsidered was written by Theodor W. Adorno , a German philosopher. He was born on September 11, 1903. He belonged to the Frankfurt School of social theory. The Frankfurt School takes its name from the Institute for Social Research established in Frankfurt, Germany in 1923. Adorno along with Max Horkheimer published a book named Dialectic of Enlightenment in 1947. In this book they use the term cultural industry for the first time. Content In the essay Cultural Industry Reconsidered, Adorno replaces the expression mass culture with culture industry . This is to avoid the popular understanding of mass culture as the culture that arises from the masses.He prefers to call it culture industry because of the commodification of the culture forms or artistic objects. He opines that cultural forms create a means of income for their creators, so profit has become more important than the artistic expression. Hence, culture has turned into an industry and the cultural objects are looked at as products. One of the characteristics of cultural industry is that it intentionally integrates both the high and low art. By referring to the term industry , Adorno does not point to the production process. Instead he is looking at the standardization of the thing itself and to the rationalization of distribution techniques, and not strictly to the production process. It is industrial more in a sociological sense, in terms of incorporation of the industrial forms of organization, even though nothing is manufactured. He also makes clear the difference between the technique used in cultural industry and the technique used in works of art. In the works of art the technique refers to the formal organization of the object, with its inner logic, whereas in cultural industry it refers to the distribution and the mechanical production. Thus technique in cultural industry is external to the object, whereas in the works of art it is internal. Adorno says t ... more details
distinguish octopamine Chembox Verifiedfields changed verifiedrevid 477505511 ImageFile Octopine structure.svg ImageSize 200px IUPACName 2 S 2 nowiki nowiki 1 R 1 Carboxyethyl amino 5 diaminomethylideneamino pentanoic acid OtherNames Section1 Chembox Identifiers CASNo 34522 32 2 CASNo Ref cascite changed ?? ChEBI Ref ebicite correct EBI ChEBI 15805 PubChem 108172 ChemSpiderID Ref chemspidercite correct chemspider ChemSpiderID 97253 SMILES O C O C H N C H C O O CCC N C N N C InChI 1 C9H18N4O4 c1 5 7 14 15 13 6 8 16 17 3 2 4 12 9 10 11 h5 6,13H,2 4H2,1H3, H,14,15 H,16,17 H4,10,11,12 t5 ,6 m1 s1 InChIKey IMXSCCDUAFEIOE RITPCOANBD StdInChI Ref stdinchicite correct chemspider StdInChI 1S C9H18N4O4 c1 5 7 14 15 13 6 8 16 17 3 2 4 12 9 10 11 h5 6,13H,2 4H2,1H3, H,14,15 H,16,17 H4,10,11,12 t5 ,6 m1 s1 StdInChIKey Ref stdinchicite correct chemspider StdInChIKey IMXSCCDUAFEIOE RITPCOANSA N Section2 Chembox Properties C 9 H 18 N 4 O 4 Appearance Density MeltingPt BoilingPt Solubility Section3 Chembox Hazards MainHazards FlashPt Autoignition Octopine is a derivative chemistry derivative of the amino acid s arginine and alanine . It was the first member of the class of chemical compounds known as opines to be discovered. Octopine gets its name from Octopus octopodia from which it was first isolated in 1927. ref cite journal author Morizawa, Kiyoshi title The extractive substances in Octopus octopodia journal Acta Scholae Medicinalis Universitatis Imperialis in Kioto year 1927 volume 9 pages 285 298 ref Octopine has been isolated from the muscle tissue of invertebrates such as octopus , Pecten maximus and Sipunculus nudus where it functions as an analog of lactic acid . ref cite journal doi 10.1126 science.831256 title Octopine as an end product of anaerobic glycolysis in the chambered nautilus year 1977 last1 Hockachka first1 P. last2 Hartline first2 P. last3 Fields first3 J. journal Science volume 195 issue 4273 pages 72 4 pmid 831256 ref It is also produced by Agrobacterium an ... more details
Infobox film name Koormavatara image caption director Girish Kasaravalli writer Amaresh Nudgoni br Girish Kasaravalli producer Basanthkumar Patil starring Dr. Shikaripura Krishnamurthy br Jayanthi actress Jayanthi br Apoorva Kasaravalli music Issac Thomas Kottukapally cinematography G. S. Bhaskar editing released Film date 2011 7 runtime language Kannada country Film India Koormavatara lang kan is a 2011 Kannada film directed by noted Kannada film director Girish Kasaravalli . It is based on a Kannada novel written by Kum Veerabhadrappa with the same title name. ref http www.supergoodmovies.com 31412 sandalwood dr girish kasaravelli on tabara and gandhi combine news details ref The film cast includes Dr. Shikaripura Krishnamurthy, Jayanthi actress Jayanthi , HG Somasekhara Rao, Goa Datthu among others and received positive reviews from the film critics. It won several national and international awards. It won the National Film Award for Best Feature Film in Kannada for the year 2012. ref http entertainment.oneindia.in kannada news 2012 girish kasaravalli kurmavatara national award 070312.html ref Production & Casting Former President of Karnataka Film Chamber of Commerce, hotelier and actor Basanthkumar Patil is producing this film that has completed 15 days shooting in Bengaluru. Abhinayasharadhe Jayanthi plays the Kastura Bai role in this film. Dr Shikaripura Krishnamurthy plays the lead protagonist role. HG Somasekhara Rao, Goa Datthu, Ninasam Chaswa, Rashmi, Vikram Soori, Nanjunda and Apoorva Kasaravalli forms the rest of cast. Issac Thomas scores the music and GS Bhasker another stalwart in cinematography, is behind the camera. Plot The protagonist in Koormavathara film is at the edge of retirement from government service happens to play the role of Gandhiji in a television serial. Unknowingly the qualities of Gandhiji imbibe in him. How resurrect is the crux of the film. One thing is sure one would question to himself after seeing this film opines D ... more details
in Jerusalem or the priests. Maimonides opines that this undesignated herem be given the priests ... of the beth din choosing an eligible kohen, Rabbi Luria opines that The status quo Kohen is sufficient ... more details
Platonism Plato , in Plato s Republic The Republic 507b 509c book VI , uses the sun as a metaphor for the source of illumination , arguably intellectual illumination, which he held to be The Form of the Good , which is sometimes interpreted as Plato s notion of God . The metaphor is about the nature of ultimate reality and how knowledge is acquired concerning it. Socrates is the speaker of The Republic, but it is generally believed that the thoughts expressed are Plato s. The eye, Plato says, is unusual among the sense organs in that it needs a medium, namely light , in order to operate. The strongest and best source of light is the sun with it, objects can be discerned clearly. Analogous things, he writes, can be said of intelligible objects i.e., the fixed and eternal forms that are the ultimate objects of scientific and philosophical study When the soul is firmly fixed on the domain where truth and reality shine resplendent it apprehends and knows them and appears to possess reason, but when it inclines to that region which is mingled with darkness, the world of becoming and passing away, it opines only and its edge is blunted, and it shifts its opinions hither and thither, and again seems as if it lacked reason. The Republic bk. VI, 508d trans. Paul Shorey By the world of becoming and passing away Plato means the familiar visual or perceptual world we see around us. Thus if we attempt to understand why things are as they are, and what general categories can be used to understand various particulars around us, without reference to any forms universal metaphysics universal s , we will fail completely, as if we lacked reason . By contrast, the domain where truth and reality shine resplendent is none other than Plato s world of forms illuminated by the highest of the forms, that of the Good. Since true being resides in the world of the forms, we must direct our intellects there to have knowledge, in Plato s view otherwise, we are stuck with mere opinion of what may ... more details
Infobox language name Vandalic states Spain , North Africa extinct 6th century AD familycolor Indo European fam2 Germanic languages Germanic fam3 East Germanic languages East Germanic iso3 xvn Vandalic was a Germanic language probably closely related to Gothic language Gothic . The Vandals , Hasdingi and Silingi established themselves in Gallaecia Northern Portugal and Galicia Spain Galicia and in Southern Spain , following other Germanic and non Germanic peoples Visigoths , Alans and Suevi , before moving to North Africa in AD 429. Very little is known about the Vandalic language other than a small number of personal names of Vandalic origin in Spanish language Spanish . The regional name Andalusia is derived from the Vandals, according to the traditional view. When the Moors invaded and occupied Spain from the 8th century to the end of the 15th, the region was called Al Andalus . The epigram De conviviis barbaris in the Latin Anthology , of North African origin and disputed date, contains a fragment in a Germanic language that some authors believe to be Vandalic, ref http www.univie.ac.at indogermanistik quellentexte.cgi?5 ref ref Greule, Albrecht and Matthias Springer. Namen des Fr hmittelalters als sprachliche Zeugnisse und als Geschichtsquellen. P. 49 50. ref although the fragment itself refers to the language as Gothic . This may be because both languages were East Germanic and closely related scholars have pointed out in this context ref Greule, Albrecht and Matthias Springer. Namen des Fr hmittelalters als sprachliche Zeugnisse und als Geschichtsquellen. P. 48 ref that Procopius refers to the Goths, Vandals, Visigoths, and Gepaedes as Gothic nations and opines that they are all of the Arian faith, and have one language called Gothic . ref http www.gutenberg.org files 16765 16765 h 16765 h.htm Procopius of Caesarea, THE VANDALIC WAR I,2 8 ref The fragment reads Inter eils Goticum scapia matzia ia drincan non audet quisquam dignos educere versus. Translation B ... more details
About the Babylon 5 episode Soulmate disambiguation notability Episode date June 2011 Infobox Television episode Title Soul Mates Series Babylon 5 Image Deleted image removed Image B5 Soul Mates 1.jpg 256px Caption small Londo s wives arrive small Season 2 Episode 7 Airdate December 14, 1994 Production 208 Writer Peter David Director John C. Flinn, III Guests Keith Szarabajka Matthew Stoner br Lois Nettleton Daggair br Blair Valk Mariel br David L. Crowley Lou Welch br Carel Struycken Trader br Jane Carr Timov Episode list List of Babylon 5 episodes List of Babylon 5 episodes Prev A Spider in the Web Next A Race Through Dark Places Soul Mates is a second season episode of the science fiction television series Babylon 5 . Synopsis Londo Mollari brings his three wives, all of whom barely tolerate him, to the station for the purpose of divorcing two of them as part of a special boon granted by the List of Babylon 5 characters Turhan Centauri Emperor . Two of his wives, Daggair and Mariel, compete for Londo s affections, while the third, Timov, bluntly rejects any such competition. Several characters imply that John Sheridan Babylon 5 Sheridan ought not get too comfortable with his job. Matthew Stoner, Talia Winters Talia s ex husband, arrives on the station. He claims to have left the Psi Corps , even though no one leaves the Corps . Later he explains to Talia that he was the subject of experimentation which eliminated his telepathic ability. He claims he can reproduce the procedure for Talia, and she can thereby escape the Corps. Although initially tempted, she refuses. Delenn is struggling with her new human characteristics, namely her hair. She tells Susan Ivanova Ivanova that the Minbari soak themselves in a caustic chemical instead of bathing, which Ivanova believes has ruined Delenn s hair. Ivanova helps her wash and style it, something Delenn knows absolutely nothing about. Sheridan opines that Stoner has become an Empath In fiction.2C art.2C and music empath . ... more details
Infobox Language name Meroitic states Sudan region Mero extinct 400 CE script Meroitic alphabet familycolor Nilo Saharan fam2 Eastern Sudanic languages Eastern Sudanic iso3 xmr Image Meroitic stela.png right thumbnail Meroitic funerary stele of Waleye, son or daughter of Kadeye, from Sa island Sa , North Sudan , now at the British Museum . The Meroitic language was spoken in Meroe Mero and the Sudan during the Meroitic period attested from 300 BCE and went extinct about 400 400 CE . It was written in two forms of the Meroitic alphabet Meroitic Cursive, which was written with a stylus and was used for general record keeping and Meroitic Hieroglyphic, which was carved in stone or used for royal or religious documents. It is poorly understood owing to the scarcity of bilingual texts. The classification of Meroitic has long been uncertain due to the scarcity of data. It is much easier to ascertain which of the language groups of Sudan ancient and modern it is certainly not related to. For instance, there seems to be little sign of the complex prefixing and suffixing which make up most of the grammar of Coptic ref Margaret Alice Murray, Elementary Coptic Sahidic Grammar, Bernard Quaritch, London 1911. ref . Greek and other ancient languages of the Mediterranean region are well known, and Meroitic seems to bear little resemblance to these ref Compare any standard Greek or Hebrew Grammar ref . A Semitic origin would, one suppose, have produced numerous words with three consonant roots ref J.H.Kramers, De Semietische Talen, Leiden 1949. ref . This leaves us with the numerous language groups of the interior Nubian, etc. These of course are very poorly documented in the Nuba Mountains in Kordofan the numerous groups and classifications were spelt out by R.C.Stevenson ref R.C.Stevenson, The Nuba People of Kordofan Province, University of Khartoum 1984 ref , who opines that Nyimang may be distantly related to both the Nubian type languages and to the Nilotic, etc. languages ... more details
Unsourced image removed Image officespace.jpg right thumb 300px Gary Cole on the left as Bill Lumbergh and Ron Livingston as Peter Gibbons . Infobox character colour colour text name William Lumbergh series Office Space image caption first last creator Mike Judge portrayer Gary Cole episode nickname Bill br Lumbergh age born death specialty occupation Vice President, Initech title family spouse significantother children relatives residence religion nationality William Bill Lumbergh is a fictional character , who appeared initially in the Milton cartoon Milton animated shorts, and later was portrayed by Gary Cole in the 1999 film Office Space . A caricature of corporate management, Lumbergh is the division Vice President of the software company Initech, and serves as the main antagonist of the film. Lumbergh is a micromanagement micromanager who is focused on busy work pointless red tape paperwork , notably TPS report s he has been described as the antithesis of the motivational management leadership ideal . ref cite book last1 Green first1 Doyle title The American Worker on Film A Critical History, 1909 1999 publisher McFarland & Company year 2010 pages 191 92 accessdate 2010 12 18 isbn 978 0786447343 http books.google.com books?id iwce1d w Z0C&pg PA191 Excerpt available on Google Books . ref He uses What s happening? as a greeting, and when asking an employee to do some unpleasant task starts his sentences with, m yeah, I m gonna need you to or if you could just go ahead and , as well as ending these requests with That d be great and Mmmkay? . A Wharton School Wharton Journal perspectives article opines that the character brilliantly exposed the emptiness of linguistic conventions at work. ref cite news url http media.www.whartonjournal.com media storage paper201 news 2007 02 12 Perspectives Why We.Should.Remember.Bill.Lumbergh 2716395.shtml title Why we should remember Bill Lumbergh first Douglas last Cole date 2 12 07 accessdate 2007 02 06 ref Social historian Jo ... more details
chess notation Image JanRusinekRotterdam1991.jpg thumb right Jan Rusinek in 1991 Jan Rusinek born December 2, 1950 is a Poland Polish mathematician and chess problem chess composer , particularly noted for his brilliant endgame studies . He was editor of the study section of Szachy Chess from 1971 to the magazine s closure in 1990. Rusinek became an International Judge of Chess Composition International Judge of chess composition in 1983, and a List of grandmasters for chess composition Grandmaster of chess composition in 1992. He won over 30 first prizes in composing tourneys. The Oxford Companion to Chess opines that his achievements are likely to rival those of his greatest predecessors . Endgame studies Chess diagram tleft Jan Rusinek br First Prize, New Statesman , 1971 kl pl nd kd pl pl pl bd nd White to move and draw To the left is one of Rusinek s better known studies. Black threatens Nb5 d6 or Ne4 d6 and 1.Kb7 Bd5 does not help, so 1.a7 is necessary. Now 1...Bd5 can be answered with, among other lines, 2.g8Q Bxg8 3.a8Q Nxb6 4.Kb7 Nxa8 5.Kxa8 Be6 6.Kb8 and Black must give up a piece for the c pawn, so instead 1...Ba6 2.b7 . Now 2...Nb5 threatens 3...Nd6 but is met with 3.g8N Ke8 4.Nf6 when 4...Nxf6 loses to 5.a8Q. Instead, therefore, Black plays 2...Ne4 3.g8N Ke8 4.Nf6 and now 4...Nexf6 is possible. This seems to put White in a dilemma, since 5.a8Q loses to 5...Nd5 with 6...Ne7 next move. But instead there is 5.a8B when 5...Nd5 is stalemate, so therefore 5...Ne5 6.Kb8 Nc6 7.Kc8 Bf1 and again White has a problem because 8.b8Q will lose to 8...Ba6 9.Qb7 Ne4 10.Qxa6 Nd6 . 8.b8N is no better 8...Ne7 9.Kb7 Bg2 10.Ka7 10.Nc6 Bxc6 11.Ka7 Bd7 10...Nc8 11.Ka6 Bxa8. However, white can draw with a third underpromotion 8.b8R . Now after 8...Ba6 9.Rb7 , 9...Ne4 is stalemate, and there is no useful way for Black to avoid this. White draws. Chess diagram small tright bl kl kd rl pl bd nd nd Final position White being required to make all three underpromotion s in order to ... more details
Infobox album Name The Olatunji Concert The Last Live Recording Type live Artist John Coltrane Cover ColtraneOlatunjiCover.jpg Alt A green, yellow, and red outline of continental Africa on a white background includes a black and white inset of Coltrane playing flute. Released 2001 Recorded April 23, 1967, Olatunji Center of African Culture, New York City , New York , United States Genre Free jazz Length 63 38 Language Instrumental Label Impulse Records Impulse Producer Bryan Koniarz Last album This album Next album album ratings noprose yes rev1 Allmusic rev1Score Rating 4 5 ref Allmusic class album id r552448 tab review first Sam last Samuelson accessdate February 9, 2012 ref rev2 Pitchfork Media rev2Score 10 ref cite web url http pitchfork.com reviews albums 1550 the olatunji concert the last live recording title John Coltrane The Olatunji Concert The Last Live Recording Album Reviews first Luke last Buckman date October 15, 2001 publisher Pitchfork Media accessdate February 9, 2012 ref The Olatunji Concert The Last Live Recording is the Impulse Records released final live recording of saxophonist John Coltrane , recorded April 23, 1967, at the Babatunde Olatunji Olatunji Center of African Culture in New York and released posthumously on Compact Disc. The album consists of two songs Ogunde song Ogunde , which Coltrane also recorded for his final self approved album, Expression album Expression , and an especially Free jazz free form My Favorite Things song My Favorite Things , which Coltrane had performed live regularly since 1960. The recording was done for broadcast on Billy Taylor s local radio station, WLIB . On the recording, Coltrane performs intense and lengthy, though poorly recorded, Solo music solos . Sonically, the album is notable for its overwhelming din of multiple drummers. Rumors of Coltrane being deathly ill and unable to stand during the gig are dispelled in Lewis Porter s John Coltrane His Life and Music . Rashied Ali opines that Coltrane might ... more details