亲爱的猫猫99
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雨田里得麦圈
History of Football 足球运动的历史Football is the universal language of scores of millions of people around the world, including countless children and teenagers. Young people play in narrow, urban alleyways. They play in refugee camps. They play in abandoned swimming pools. In car parks, war zones, on street corners--wherever there are young people, it seems there is football. Children play football at the launch of the FIFA-UNICEF alliance at United Nations Headquarters in New York. But the sport is more than just a game. It's a positive lifestyle. It's a way to promote a peaceful approach to conflict resolution. It's a tool for wooing a young body away from the lures of drugs, unsafe sex, or violence. It's a way to help ensure that young people grow up healthy, fit and full of self-esteem. And, what's more, it's a manifestation of the right to play that the Convention on the Rights of the Child includes as one of the fundamental rights of all children.这是World Cup History 世界杯历史(也不错的,可以参考:)
美美吻臭臭
While the Second World War produced numerous acts of self-sacrifice, it also made many people rich. The criminal activities of the underworld that extended from the civilian population right through to the armed forces constitute one of the great untold stories of the war. The Blitz of 1940 may have made a nation of heroes, but in the shadows the shelter gangs and looters prowled. Illegal food supplies threatened the nation's health - a consignment of black-market sausages in Hackney contained tuberculosis meat, while the industrial alcohol or 'hooch' served in West End clubs could produce blindness and brain damage. The scale of theft in the army was also colossal. Donald Thomas draws on extensive archive material to tell the extraordinary and frequently ludicrous story of these less-than-heroic Britons. The facts he uncovers are often so preposterous that in a novel they would seem unbelievable. (Donald Thomas, John Murray, ISBN 0 7195 5732 1, £20.00)
沐小宁橙紫儿
the Second World War While the Second World War produced numerous acts of self-sacrifice, it also made many people rich. The criminal activities of the underworld that extended from the civilian population right through to the armed forces constitute one of the great untold stories of the war. The Blitz of 1940 may have made a nation of heroes, but in the shadows the shelter gangs and looters prowled. Illegal food supplies threatened the nation's health - a consignment of black-market sausages in Hackney contained tuberculosis meat, while the industrial alcohol or 'hooch' served in West End clubs could produce blindness and brain damage. The scale of theft in the army was also colossal. Donald Thomas draws on extensive archive material to tell the extraordinary and frequently ludicrous story of these less-than-heroic Britons. The facts he uncovers are often so preposterous that in a novel they would seem unbelievable. (Donald Thomas, John Murray, ISBN 0 7195 5732 1, £20.00)
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