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Photos: Israel and Iran trade strikes for a third day

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Investigations   来源:Soccer  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:Sabalenka, a three-time Grand Slam winner who has only once reached the semifinals at Roland-Garros, beat Olga Danilovic 6-2, 6-3 on Court Philippe-Chatrier, where the hot weather contrasted with previous days.

Sabalenka, a three-time Grand Slam winner who has only once reached the semifinals at Roland-Garros, beat Olga Danilovic 6-2, 6-3 on Court Philippe-Chatrier, where the hot weather contrasted with previous days.

McLaughlin’s best lap in practice Monday was 221.561 mph, better only than Kyffin Simpson and Christian Lundgaard.Other favorites struggled, too.

Photos: Israel and Iran trade strikes for a third day

Robert Shwartzman, the first rookie toin 42 years, was 26th among the 33 cars with a best lap of 222.561 mph. And while 2008 winner Scott Dixon showed plenty of speed, he only managed six laps before warning lights went off to signal an overheating issue, and he spent the last 90 minutes of the practice session in the garage.The only incident in practice involved Christian Rasmussen, who touched the wall for the second time in five days. The impact sent him across the track and bumping into the inner wall, though his car appeared to escape significant damage.

Photos: Israel and Iran trade strikes for a third day

Rasmussen had just run a lap of 225.247 mph, which wound up being the ninth-quickest on the day.“I’m just bummed for the guys. We’re into race week and it’s just not where we want to be,” Rasmussen said. “There’s always things you can do differently, but were preparing to race — we’re trying to race as close to the front as we can. You’ve got to try to do something but we have to look at what we have an reevaluate.”

Photos: Israel and Iran trade strikes for a third day

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Indianapolis 500 rookie Robert Shwartzman’s memorable month of May ended with a terrifying crash on pit road.

Shwartzman, who bested some of the best drivers in the worldNegotiations between Harvard and Lanier lawyers resulted in a settlement that included the removal of the images from Harvard’s ownership.

On Wednesday, Lanier stood holding a portrait of Papa Renty while arm-in-arm with Susanna Moore, the great-great-great-granddaughter of Harvard biologist Louis Agassiz, who commissioned the images on behalf of the university and whose theories on racial difference were once used to support slavery in the U.S. Both great-great-great granddaughters — one of enslaved people and another of a man who exploited them — praised the resolution.“This is a moment in history where the sons and daughters of stolen ancestors can stand with pride and rightfully proclaim a victory for reparations,” Lanier said. “This pilfered property, images taken without dignity or consent and used to promote a racist pseudoscience will now be repatriated to a home where their stories can be told and their humanity can be restored.”

Moore called the images captured by her ancestor, Agassiz, a “deeply racist project.”“This victory reminds us that the meaning of such objects in museums can and should change,” she said. “This woman standing next to me, she knew all along she was not small and she was not alone.”

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