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Rebecca is shocked to discover it was her fault, so Aaron, Robert and Victoria encourage her to go the hospital where she’s told she’s suffering with Executive Dysfunction. Robert and Aaron worry about Seb’s safety, whilst Robert praises Aaron for saving Seb, Aaron suggests Seb comes to live with them, but Robert is unsure about taking him from Rebecca after everything she’s been through. However, Rebecca calls Aaron and Robert round to Keepers Cottage and informs them she no longer trusts herself and tells them to take Seb. As they pack up his belongings, Rebecca says a tearful goodbye promising Seb she still loves him before handing him over to Robert. A couple of days later Robert and Aaron arrive home at The Mill with Seb where Liv is giving Aaron the silent treatment. As they talk about Gabby, Liv confesses to her role in drugging Lisa. Robert and Aaron are shocked but decide to protect Liv insisting she keeps it quiet. In September, he was thrilled alongside with Rebecca when Lachlan was sentenced to Life imprisonment without parole. A year later Victoria is raped by Lee and Robert attacks him, leading Robert to be arrested for grevious bodily harm. Robert pleads guilty to GBH with intent. Later Lee dies from a brain haemorrhage sustained from the attack. Robert and Aaron both decide to go on the run together. But later Robert hands himself in to the police for Aaron’s safety and then Robert is charged with Lee’s murder, he pleads guilty on the advice of his solicitor and is sentenced to life in prison, minimum fourteen years without parole until full time has been served. ==Casting== while Vic stays behind to wait for Robert. When Robert rises from the water again, he desperately asks Vic how Aaron is. She tells him Adam went with him to the hospital and it didn't look good. Robert suddenly sees Lachlan on the bankside and is furious that his former stepson just stood there while he risked his own life going in after him. Robert threatens Lachlan that if Aaron dies he'll come for him. Robert then heads to the hospital with Vic, needing to make sure Aaron is safe. When they arrive Adam informs Robert that Aaron is in surgery for his liver. As they wait Vic asks Robert if Aaron said "yes" to the proposal and Robert tells her he didn't get the chance to ask properly. Chas and Liv arrive but Robert abruptly leaves to Liv's dismay. He heads back to the quarry to retrieve the ring. After Robert arrives back at hospital Chas hugs him and she is pleasantly surprised to discover that Robert planned to propose to Aaron. Robert is moved by Chas' acceptance of him and laughs as she and Liv jokingly plan the wedding. They keep vigil at Aaron's bedside and Aaron wakes and whispers to Robert "Yeah" accepting his proposal. With tears in his eyes Robert gently slips the ring onto Aaron's finger. Aaron's eyes close and the heart monitor starts beeping. Chas runs to get help and Robert and Liv watch in fear as Aaron fights for his life, but happily survives. Robert spends the night by Aaron's bedside and is relieved when he wakes up. They discuss the aftermath of the crash, including Lachlan's escape and James' death. Aaron notices the engagement ring on his finger and asks Robert if marriage is definitely what he wants. Robert responds by tenderly touching the scars on Aaron's arm, reminding Aaron that he almost lost him once already, that he couldn't bear the thought of it happening again and he wants to be with him forever. Moved by this, Aaron asks Robert to marry him. Robert immediately agrees and they kiss. Adam and Vic drop by the hospital and Vic gives Aaron the second engagement ring. He slips it onto Robert's finger making their engagement official. Chas and Liv also visit to celebrate the good news. Later, at the pub, Robert runs into Rebecca and lets her know that Lachlan knows about their past affair. Rebecca promises to help by finding evidence against Chrissie and Lachlan to secure Andy's freedom and also offers Robert shares of her inheritance, which he accepts as he has a wedding to plan. The next day Lachlan tells Chrissie about Robert and Rebecca in front of the entire pub. Robert assures Liv that Aaron already knows. Two days later, still reeling from the bombshell of Rebecca and Robert's fling, Chrissie confronts Robert in the pub and after winding her up about Rebecca and hinting that Lawrence once had a crush on him, Robert promises he will make her life hell for what she did to Andy. Robert and Aaron gather with the rest of the village to pay their final respects to James. During the burial Aaron takes Robert's hand for comfort.
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Is there room in the United midfield to keep Herrera? 23/35 Andreas Pereira - Manchester United Jose Mourinho was very complimentary towards him in pre-season Getty 24/35 Leighton Baines - Everton Baines is beginning to be replaced in the Everton side 25/35 Michel Vorm - Tottenham The Spurs reserve goalkeeper will bring experience to any side Getty Images 26/35 Danny Welbeck - Arsenal The England forward suffered a nasty injury that could keep him out for a while Arsenal FC via Getty 27/35 Mohamed Diame - Newcastle Consistent form has been hard to come by for the powerful midfielder Getty Images 28/35 Wes Morgan - Leicester He captained his side to Premier League glory, which has to be worth something Getty Images 29/35 Jakub Blaszczykowski - Wolfsburg Once a star at Borussia Dortmund, the Polish winger's career has slightly declined Getty 30/35 Fernando Llorente - Tottenham Athletic Club could offer him an early exit from Tottenham Getty 31/35 Willy Caballero - Chelsea The experienced goalkeeper endured a tricky World Cup but remains a solid back-up Getty 32/35 Stephan Lichtsteiner - Arsenal The Gunners will have to decide whether they have seen enough to keep him 33/35 Yacine Brahimi - Porto Newcastle, West Ham and Everton are said to be interested in the tricky winger Getty 34/35 James Milner - Liverpool The fine-wine of a midfielder will be a popular player for plenty of top-flight sides Action Images via Reuters 35/35 David Ospina - Napoli The Colombia and former Arsenal goalkeeper could be a good option And of all those recent defeats, this one, away to Queens Park Rangers, might be the most painful. Because it was a game in hand to put them back on top of the table. Because it was against a QPR side with almost nothing to play for. And because it came just three days before a far harder game against West Bromwich Albion, which Leeds now have no option but to win. After this game, after this press conference, Bielsa was photographed slumped in the Loftus Road tunnel, looking like a man in painful contemplation of what had gone wrong and how to fix it. Read more Bielsa's own explanation for why Leeds had lost was that they could not "elaborate attacks," and there was clearly a lack of quality and precision in the final third. With Kemar Roofe still recovering from a knee injury, the team desperately needs a cutting edge up front. Patrick Bamford made just his fourth Championship start of the season, and it showed. He missed their three best chances, sliding agonisingly short of one low Pablo Hernandez cross, as Leeds failed to take advantage of their strong first half. With Jack Clarke still missing after being taken ill earlier this month, Leeds looked short of pace and creativity in wide areas. Jack Harrison was not so much of a threat and Hernandez cannot do it all by himself at the age of 33. Especially after the surprise departure of Samu Saiz back to Spain. It felt like a game where they desperately lacked Daniel James, who was so close to joining before Swansea City pulled the plug. Clearly Bielsa has done brilliantly to get Leeds this far. They have less attacking firepower and experience than their promotion rivals, as they may well find out against West Brom on Friday. And their thin squad has been cut to pieces by injuries. At no point this season has Bielsa been able to put out a full strength side. Last night Izzy Brown made his Leeds debut, finally ready six months after joining on loan. Leeds were once again not at their best at Loftus Road (Getty Images) But even though Bielsa argued that this dip in results is not to do with a lack of energy, it must be to do with the diminishing physical resources at his disposal. And even if Leeds are still running as much ever, as Bielsa insisted, they are clearly not doing it as well as before. Tiredness can show in different ways, not just in being slow but also in being sloppy. And Leeds" bluntness in the box last night, or the form of Luke Ayling or Mateusz Klich, or even the way they let Massimo Luongo run through them for the goal, all point to a legginess and weariness among the squad. Even if the stats are as good as ever. And when it comes to Bielsa teams, this pattern - early burst, new year fatigue, eventual collapse - should be no surprise. It has happened enough times before, and of course he knows that better than anyone.
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"It doesn't work at all for me," Gordon said. "Nobody is going to go out there and walk me. I have to earn my keep." Gordon acknowledged to Miami reporters that he got tired at the end of last season - in part, he said, because the Dodgers had sent him to winter ball in the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico. When we asked whether he had harbored any doubt he could repeat his first-half success of 2014, he politely decided he had talked enough about the Dodgers. "Honestly? I'm a Marlin now," he said. "That's all that matters." Haren's homecoming With Brandon McCarthy and Hyun-Jin Ryu on the disabled list, the Dodgers desperately need a reliable starter or two for the back end of their rotation. Haren would be perfect. He is 4-1 with a 2.68 earned-run average, which ranks No. 1 on the Marlins and No. 13 in the National League. He has made 30 starts in each of his 10 full seasons in the majors. The Dodgers opted to sign McCarthy and Brett Anderson, each of whom had started 30 games once in his career. "I know both of them have had their problems staying healthy in the past, but the Dodgers were willing to take that risk," Haren said. "When those guys are on, they are top-of-the-rotation guys." Haren, 34, grew up in the San Gabriel Valley, attended Pepperdine and lives in Orange County. He announced last fall he might retire if the Dodgers traded him out of Southern California - his way, he says now, of trying to dissuade teams from a deal since he did not have the leverage of a no-trade clause. "I was doing what I could to stay home," he said. "I think some of the fans in Miami thought it was something personal with the Marlins, so that was unfortunate. I was portrayed like I was snobby or stuck up." Hill, the general manager, said Haren asked for no considerations - financial or otherwise - to report to Miami. Once the shock of the trade wore off, Hill said, Haren had done his research on the Marlins' talent and was excited for spring training. Haren is expected to start Tuesday at Dodger Stadium - against the team that pays his salary. "I know I make a lot of money," he said, breaking into a laugh. "But I don't think the Dodgers really care about $10 million."
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Like Perry's first novel, After Me Comes the Flood, water is a recurring theme ("I'm just obsessed with water") and she says, with a laugh, that maybe one day she will write a book without a vicar in it. Her debut featured Elijah, a preacher who had lost his faith; The Essex Serpent has William Ransome, a rector trying to use rationality and reason with his frightened flock, but who refuses to see that his faith, in Cora's words, is "all strangeness and mystery," even though he is enlightened and educated. Perry says this is "the whole preoccupation of my life - how to live with a faith and an intelligent and querying mind is the question. You would think it would have been answered in 2016, but not only has it not been answered, it seems to be getting more troubling." She describes herself as "post religious." She grew up in Chelmsford, the youngest of five daughters in a Strict Baptist family. "If you're brought up in a fundamentalist sect - or church, chapel, I never know what to say in a way that won't upset people - you're constantly attended by a number of feelings," she says. "First, of sin and of the hopelessness of your condition as a human. Second, the fact that redemption is merely a prayer away. So simultaneously you are a sinner - "The heart of man is deceitful above all things and desperately wicked" - but on the other hand: "Seek and you shall find." You're constantly treading this line." And that feeling of not fitting in with the rest of society? She nods. "I would go to school and people would be talking about television, which was meaningless to me, and bands. I can remember someone talking about Take That, and I was like: "Take what?"" Her church, the Ebenezer Strict and Particular Baptist Chapel, was a 19th-century building in Chelmsford with thick, mottled-glass windows, "like the bottom of a beer bottle, inappropriately. And on a Sunday morning, when Sunday trading opened, I would see people walking past the windows on the way into town. That glass might have been a gap of 100 years as far I was concerned, because I was in chapel with my head covered, in a long skirt, with my King James Bible, and at the front of the church a little old organ being pedalled away, and a man with a beard and proper fire-and-brimstone rhetoric. And people just trolleying along into town. I think that will never leave me, that feeling that something that may only be a pane of glass but might as well be an abyss separates me from everything else." At primary school, she thinks other children made attempts to bully her, and tell her she was strange. "I would be like: "I know." They weren't quite sure what to do. I suppose I would have liked to have worn jeans and gone to the school disco but I don't recall a feeling of discontent because all of the stuff that I was allowed to do - playing the piano, doing embroidery, painting, reading - I was really happy doing. I was aware that people found me strange and my family was unusual, but I didn't mind that much." She never wanted to rebel, she says. "What would I have done? Struggled into a pair of uncomfortable jeans - which I still can't wear, I don't know how anyone wears those - and stood really awkwardly in the corner of a disco, listening to music I didn't recognise." She was a devout teenager, baptised at 16 - she once stood in front of her biology class and announcing that she believed in the six-day creation, and remembers thinking that women who wore trousers were immoral. She laughs. "I remember speaking to my mum about it once and she said: "Where did you get that idea?" But if you teach your daughters they cannot wear trousers because it's forbidden in scripture, then what do you think they're going to think about all the women who do wear trousers?"
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2016-12-31 00:00:00
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Signaling a New Era in Relations, Cuban Embassy Reopens in Washington Cuba's Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez and US Secretary of State John Kerry hold a news conference at the State Department in Washington July 20, 2015. Reuters/Jonathan Ernst In 1917, the Cuban government of General Mario Garcia Menocal commissioned construction of a regal mansion on upper 16th street in Washington D.C. to house the Embassy of Cuba. It was that building President Eisenhower closed down on January 3, 1961, when he broke diplomatic relations with Fidel Castro's Cuba amidst the CIA's secret preparations for the Bay of Pigs invasion. The Swiss took custody of the building until the summer of 1977, when Jimmy Carter's efforts to improve relations led to the establishment of semi-embassies known as "Interests Sections" in both Washington and Havana. For 38 years, the plaque on the front wall of the building read "Seccion de Interes Cubano" - the Cuban Interests Section. Ad Policy At 10:35am on July 20, Cuban authorities unveiled a new plaque that reads "Embajada de La Republica de Cuba." A three-man honor guard then slowly hoisted the red, white and blue flag of the Republic of Cuba to the top of a newly constructed flagpole - officially inaugurating the resurrection of the Cuban Embassy and the restoration of U.S.-Cuban diplomatic relations. A promising new era now begins. Among the 500 or so dignitaries and guests watching in the blazing morning sun stood Wayne Smith, a former diplomat who had been posted at the US Embassy in Havana when President Eisenhower broke relations 54 years earlier. Now 83, Smith has spent the majority of his life working to bring Washington and Havana back together. "What a great day," Smith told The Nation, his face red with emotion. He proclaimed himself "ecstatic" at the ceremonial normalization of relations with Cuba. The ceremony was conducted in a solemn, respectful way - replete with a sound system playing both the Cuban and US national anthems. But it was a jubilant, almost giddy crowd that witnessed the making of US foreign policy history. Attendees included a large delegation of Cuban luminaries, US Senators and Representatives, Latin American ambassadors, Cuban-American businessmen, policy activists and analysts and artists and actors, among them Danny Glover, long associated with Cuban causes. Too many people to count murmured "this is historic" as the flag slid up and began to blow in the wind. "I am thrilled," exclaimed Congresswoman Kathy Castor who represents Tampa, Florida, and has dedicated her office to getting the trade embargo lifted. That needs to happen, she said, and will when "community activists, policy advocates, and church group educate enough members of Congress understand that their constituents are ready to move on the issue of Cuba." Cuban foreign minister Bruno Rodriguez, who presided over the re-inauguration of the Embassy, made the similar point. In his speech to an audience packed into the Embassy's sweltering second floor ballroom, he noted that Fidel Castro had stood in that very room during his famous trip to Washington in April 1959 to promote positive ties with his fledgling revolutionary government. The re-opening of the Embassy as part of an effort to normalize relations, Rodriguez said, only "made sense" if the United States followed through on addressing key issues that continue to render them abnormal, such as the Guantanamo naval base, and the economic embargo. With less-than-subtle diplomatic aplomb, Cuba's foreign minister also warned that better relations should not be misconstrued as an opportunity for "interference in our sovereign affairs." But, he noted, Cuba was encouraged by the tone and demeanor with which Washington was continuing to address bilateral relations with Havana. In yet another manifestation of momentum toward normalcy, Rodriguez then departed for the State Department to hold the first official meeting between a Cuban Foreign Minister and US Secretary of State since 1958. At their press conference, Kerry spoke passable Spanish: "The United States welcomes the new beginning of its relations with the people of the government of Cuba," he said using language that resonates in Cuba. "We are determined to live as good neighbors on the basis of mutual respect." Both nations, he suggested, "are better served by engagement than by estrangement." Kerry also announced he would travel to Cuba on August 14, to preside over a similar ceremony of lofting the US flag at newly reconstituted US Embassy which sits along Havana's famous sea-side drive known at the Malecon. That trip - Kerry will become the highest ranking US official to visit the island since the revolution - will generate widespread international media coverage along with alluring visual imagery, contributing immeasurably to the rapid and positive changes in US-Cuban relations.
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Biden slams Trump for Twitter tirades & attacks on US intelligence - RT America US Vice-President Joe Biden has criticized President-elect Donald Trump for raising questions about the US intelligence community and slammed his inflammatory Twitter activity, urging him to "grow up." In an interview with PBS aired Thursday, Biden said it is "absolutely mindless" that Trump thinks he knows more about intelligence than intelligence agencies, before telling the business mogel: "Time to be an adult, you're the president." Trump is due to be briefed on allegations of Russian interference in the US presidential election on Friday. The president-elect has repeatedly queried the accusations, which have been leveled without the provision of any evidence of Russian involvement. On Thursday, Trump questioned why the FBI outsourced the job of checking whether the Democratic National Committee's servers were hacked. READ MORE: "What is going on?" Trump wonders why FBI never requested access to the DNC's "hacked servers" "The Democratic National Committee would not allow the FBI to study or see its computer info after it was supposedly hacked by Russia... So how and why are they so sure about hacking if they never even requested an examination of the computer servers? What is going on?" the president-elect tweeted. "For a president not to have confidence in, not to be prepared to listen to, the myriad intelligence agencies, from defense intelligence to the CIA, is absolutely mindless," Biden said of Trump's outburst. "The idea that you may know more than the intelligence community knows, it's like saying I know more about physics than my professor. I didn't read the book, I just know I know more." READ MORE: "Propaganda intended to incite Americans": John McAfee to RT on "Russian hacking" claims The senate veteran went on to say that he has read the soon-to-be-published report by US intelligence agencies on Russian interference in the election. He claimed that the report says "that the Russians did, as a matter of policy, attempt to affect and... discredit the US electoral process." When pressed for his thoughts on Trump's use of Twitter, Biden said: "Grow up Donald, grow up, time to be an adult, you're president. Time to do something. Show us what you have. You're going to propose legislation, we're going to get to debate it. Let the public decide, let them vote in congress. "Let's see what happens. It's going to be much clearer what he's for and against, and what we're for and against, now that it's going to get to actually discussing in detail these issues that affect people's lives." On Friday Trump took to Twitter to reiterate his claim that Mexico will pay for the proposed border wall between the two countries and to berate Arnold Schwarzenegger for the viewership ratings of The Celebrity Apprentice which the movie star and former Republican Governor of California now presents.
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Benjamin Franklin was an early contributor eventually donating all his inventions including the Franklin stove, bifocals and the lightning rod to the public domain after successfully profiting off their sales and patents. New NGO communities are starting to use the open source technology as a tool. One example is the Open Source Youth Network started in 2007 in Lisboa by ISCA members. Open innovation is also a new emerging concept which advocate putting R&D in a common pool, the Eclipse platform is openly presenting itself as an Open innovation network ===Arts and recreation=== Copyright protection is used in the performing arts and even in athletic activities. Some groups have attempted to remove copyright from such practices. == Proposed content split == I'd like to propose that we need to split "Open content" into two distinct pages, with a corresponding disambiguation page. This is because "open content" has become a significant term of art in the data modeling, XML, and web services area, and this usage has essentially no overlap with the current Wikipedia 'open content' page. To confirm this, try searching the web for the terms 'open content' and 'WSDL', or 'open content' and'schema'. == Merge from free content == I don't think the difference between the two concepts "free content" and "open content" is significant enough to merit two separate articles. I know there is some technical differences between the two. But it would be more informative to readers if the two concepts are discussed at the same place; in particular, it would be easier to do comparison or talk about the history. as you say, they're different. And therefore they have to be treated separately. DGG (talk) :Yes, we can do them in the same place. Did you notice that the two articles contains a lot of duplication? :I think this they both are similar enough that they should be the same article. It really is just the same concept, just rebranded with different people behind it, or should I say, people's names behind them. Threy are also both relatively short, as well. Rustyfence (talk) ::Free content is a well-established, important subject that deserves an article, so no way should that article be merged into anything. This article, by its own terms, describes a neologism. I don't see anything to be served by merging the two articles. This article is all about distinguishing it from free content, and they are clearly different but related subjects. When two things are different but both notable and we want to distinguish one from the other, as a matter of style and organization it's best to keep the articles separate, and add a section to one or both highlighting the differences. Wikidemo (talk) What is open content? Free content has a definition at, which, while not formally recognised, is at least the basis for a definition and has some informat recognition. I'd be worried about merging a defined topic into an undefined one. Free content is an open content, but not vice versa, as I understand. That's how the article defines it and that's why the merger makes sense. There is several advantages for merging the two, but I don't want to repeat myself (you can read my initial post). Also, I don't see why notability or definiteness of the topic is an issue here. This is not AfD. No one has been arguing that free content is not non-notable or not a valid encyclopedic topic. :My point was that I don't see any sources to support the view the "open content" is a concept. To what degree does this topic exist? It seems that it either isn't a topic at all, or it is a topic that the current editors have not yet managed to describe properly. In either case, this is a very under-developed article (in terms of substance, not in terms of number of words) and I don't think it is currently a good target for any mergers. outdent: Hello, having written a large portion of the Free content article, I would like to revive this discussion, if any of the original posters are still around. Recently a user asked per the difference, and I was unable to give an answer that I felt was sufficiently solid. If we use the definition of free content as stated in the free content article, than I would hazard that the difference between the definitions of the two are very fine indeed.
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James Murray (1843 – January 16, 1900) was a merchant and political figure in Newfoundland. He represented Burgeo-LaPoile in the Newfoundland and Labrador House of Assembly from 1889 to 1894 as an Independent. He was born in St. John's, the son of James Murray and Elizabeth Stacey. Murray married Jennie Ritchie. He formed a commission agency and importing company in partnership with his brother. Murray became sole owner after his brother died in 1874. He later expanded into the fishery supply business. Murray ran unsuccessfully for a seat in the Newfoundland assembly in 1882. His election and the election of several Liberal members were overturned in 1894 after they were appealed by the Tories under the Corrupt Practices Act. The political instability that resulted from the Tory appeals caused a financial crisis and bank failures, which in turn, together with the effects of the Great Fire of 1892 led to the failure of Murray's business in 1894. Murray was the publisher of the periodicals Anti-Confederate and Centenary Magazine. He died at home in St. John's in 1900. == References == Members of the Newfoundland and Labrador House of Assembly 1843 births 1900 deaths Newfoundland Colony people
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"2016-10-07T02:48:55"
James Murray (Newfoundland politician)
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