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7 investeringssynder du aldrig må begå

7 investeringssynder du aldrig må begå
euroinvestor.dk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from euroinvestor.dk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Dorset YFC Calf Show is great success | Somerset County Gazette

Dorset Young Farmers Club (YFC) had a highly successful calf show this year, face to face for the first time. The judges congratulated the members for not just their knowledge and confidence, but for their beautifully turned out and well behaved calves. The results are to be announced at the Presentation Celebration Afternoon on August 1. The Dorset YFC Calf Show Competition was held on April 24. It was organised by Matt and Angela Frampton at short notice due to popular update of this particular competition. The competition judges were Stephen Curtis as Beef Judge with Kevin Goodfellow as the Steward and John Bale as the Dairy Judge with Russell Coombes as the Steward.

We lost our way : ex-soldiers regret how Australia got bogged down in Afghanistan | Australian military

Last modified on Sat 17 Apr 2021 16.01 EDT When the government announced the final 80 Australian troops would be home from Afghanistan by September, bringing to a close Australia’s longest military engagement, John Bale was filled with “a mix of emotions”. Bale, a former army officer who was deployed to Afghanistan twice in 2008 and 2010, says: “When I read the news … I was a lot more emotional than I had expected. We knew this was coming but it hit me.” Now active in providing support to military veterans, Bale sees the withdrawal as a moment for Australia to reflect on “what we haven’t done as well as we could have, what we have done really well, and also to grieve what we’ve lost” – including the 41 Australian defence personnel who have died in Afghanistan since 2001.

We lost our way : ex-soldiers regret how Australia got bogged down in Afghanistan

‘We lost our way’: ex-soldiers regret how Australia got bogged down in Afghanistan Daniel Hurst Foreign affairs and defence correspondent © Provided by The Guardian Photograph: Australian Department of Defence/AAP When the government announced the final 80 Australian troops would be home from Afghanistan by September, bringing to a close Australia’s longest military engagement, John Bale was filled with “a mix of emotions”. Bale, a former army officer who was deployed to Afghanistan twice in 2008 and 2010, says: “When I read the news … I was a lot more emotional than I had expected. We knew this was coming but it hit me.”

The Dissolution Of The Monasteries: Mindless Violence Or Planned Precision?

The dissolution of the monasteries: mindless violence or planned precision? The dissolution of the monasteries has long been cast as an orgy of mindless violence unleashed by a hot-headed Henry VIII. Yet this was a precision-planned operation, writes Hugh Willmott, and wanton destruction wasn’t its primary aim Published: February 1, 2021 at 1:27 pm The dissolution of the monasteries was the greatest single act of vandalism in English, and perhaps European history,” undertaken by “a grasping and tyrannical king, and effected through… ruthless, cynical and philistine men.” So wrote the architectural historian Sir Howard Colvin in an essay on the topic in 1999.

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