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This is Draw The Line Radio Show with Jacki-E, presenting the best music from female producers and DJs. Helping me Draw The Line this week, with her guest mix in the second hour, it's La Biche, a French DJ living in Lausanne, Switzerland. She's a member of the Franco-Swiss collective Fast and Technous and she draws inspiration from the liberating energy of techno and her own diverse musical influences. Behind the decks she delicately blends groovy rhythms, dance-inducing beats, and powerful sonic landscapes with the tenderness of a doe— the literal English translation of her DJ name. Links for La Biche:- Soundcloud:- https://soundcloud.com/la_biche Instagram::- https://www.instagram.com/labiche_music/ In my all female mix in the first hour I'm playing tracks by Deborah de Luca, Nur Jaber, The Lady Machine, Paula Koski, Keira Meier & lots more. If you like the tracks we play, please support the artists by buying their music. It's time to say NO to gender imbalance in dance music. It's time to Draw The Line!! Draw The Line Radio Show is produced for radio by Sergio Erridge and is A Darker Wave production. Track list 1st hour mixed by Jacki-E 1. Juliane Wolf – Fly Me To The Juno (original mix) Wizarding Wolf. 2. Eelke Kleijn – Maschine 2.0 (Nakadia remix) Armada. 3. Klaudia Gawlas – The Siren (original mix) Redimension. 4. Marika Rossa, Deborah de Luca – Because (original mix) Fresh Cut. 5. The Lady Machine – Amplify (original mix) Mote Evolver. 6. Ailen DC – Metatron (original mix) Redlof Records. 7. Nur Jaber – Beyond Borders (original mix) OSF. 8. Miss Dre – Foreign Love (original mix) Insomniac Records promo to be released 5th January 2024. 9. Shay de Castro – Viper Vision (original mix) Free Download https://soundcloud.com/shaydecastro/shay-de-castro-viper-vision-free-download 10. Lady Maru, Ayako Mori – Don't Move (D.A.V.E. the Drummer remix) 11. Candi Staton – You Got The Love ( Brian Vee UK remix) Free Download https://soundcloud.com/brian_vee-1/u-got-the-love 12. Charlotte de Witte – High St (Astrix remix) KNTXT. 13. Ida Bux – Where is the Night (original mix) Tooflex Muzik. 14. Efe Ce Ele – Follwed by Shadows (original mix) Fragment A. 15. Paula Koski – Fever Coat (original mix) Soma Records. 16. Deborah de Luca – It's a Fine Day ft Valeria Mancini (original mix) Sola Mente. 17. Keira Meier – LFM (original mix) Suara. 18. Ki / Ki – To the Vibe Rework (original mix) Slash. 19. Alys LF – Seize (original mix) Children of Tomorrow. 20. MarAxe, CC Luna – Error (original mix) Støk Recordings. 2nd hour La Biche - An exclusive guest mix for Draw The Line Radio Show. 1. Cleric & Kmyle - Televised (original mix) Clergy. 2. Regent – Healer (original mix) Planet Rhythm. 3. Deranged - Time Has Come (original mix) Prtl Wrx. 4. Biri - The Void (original mix) BCCO. 5. Flits – Amazing (original mix) Bunkers Collective. 6. Alpharisc – Flow (original mix) Mutual Rytm. 7. JXXXO & HERS - Bret SensaHon (original mix) Ghetto Rhythm Records. 8. Roberto ClemenH - Seas of Seas (original mix) ARTS. 9. Florian Meindl - All Those Moments (Mython Remix) Flash Recordings. 10. François X - Shame Satre (original mix) XX Lab Records. 11. Schacke - Loose Ends (nYc Mix) BCCO. 12. Gina Demarchi - Viuda Negra (Cult remix) Bunkers Collective. 13. Isaiah - Fuck Your Style (original mix) Mutual Rytm. 14, Obscure Shape & SHDW - Gefallene Engel (original mix) Rekids. 15. Regent – Eastbound (original mix) Planet Rhythm. 16. Rove Ranger – 101010 (original mix) LT Records. 17. d.aiff – Queller (original mix) Flash Recordings. 18. Ida Engelhardt - Cutecore (original mix) Mama Told Ya.
Minister for Further and Higher Education, Research, Innovation and Science Simon Harris TD has today secured Government approval to submit Ireland's formal application to join the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) as an Associate Member. CERN is one of the world's largest and most respected centres for scientific research. Ireland to join CERN Speaking at Government Buildings today, Minister Harris said: "This is a development that has been, for decades, eagerly awaited by our academic community and I would like to thank them for their assistance in bringing us to this milestone in Irish science and in preparing Ireland's formal application. "I am so pleased we have reached this milestone moment. CERN will consider the application in mid-December. I really want to thank my Department officials for all of their work. We are on the cusp of something significant." Membership of CERN can be expected to bring benefits to Ireland across research, industry, skills, science outreach, and international relations. It will open doors for Ireland's researchers to participate in CERN's scientific programmes and will make Irish citizens eligible for staff positions and fellowships at CERN. With CERN membership, Irish citizens will gain access to CERN's formal training schemes. These include masters and PhD programmes, apprenticeships, a graduate engineering training scheme, internships for computer scientists and engineers, and technical training experience. These skills will be developed far beyond what is possible in Ireland and are in industry-relevant areas such as electronics, photonics, materials, energy systems and software. Membership will also allow Ireland's enterprises to compete in CERN procurement programmes. Much of CERN's instrumentation and equipment requires the development or exploitation of novel technologies, which spurs enterprise innovation. Many of these technologies have applications in other spheres such as medicine, space, energy and ICT. Minister Harris added: "My Department will continue to work closely with CERN, in order to expedite the application process and we hope that Ireland's membership can commence in late 2024. We will continue to work with the academic community to make the necessary preparations for the Irish researchers to participate effectively at CERN from day one of Irish membership." It is hoped that CERN Council may be in a position to agree this December to send a fact-finding Task Force to Ireland in March 2024 to carry out their formal assessment. The Department will then formally establish the National Advisory Committee on CERN to prepare for membership and to coordinate with CERN's fact-finding Task Force. The Task Force will submit a report on Ireland's suitability for Associate Membership to the Director-General and the President of the CERN Council. In June 2024, the CERN Council may take a final vote on whether to admit Ireland as an Associate Member. Notes to editors CERN is an intergovernmental organisation that operates the largest particle physics laboratory in the world. CERN is the leading global collaboration investigating the fundamental composition of matter. It was established in 1954 and straddles the Franco-Swiss border, just outside Geneva. CERN currently has 23 Member States (including most of the EU Member States) and has co-operation agreements with over 40 other states. The main focus of activity in CERN is the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). This is an underground ring which is 27km in circumference in which protons, one of the constituent particles of an atom, are accelerated to 99.9999991% of the speed of light and collided into one another. The Large Hadron Collider was used to discover the Higgs boson in 2012. CERN also plays a leading role in promoting and organising international cooperation in scientific research The CERN Convention specifically stipulates that CERN "shall have no concern with work for military requirements and the results of...
Subscribe to Quotomania on Simplecast or search for Quotomania on your favorite podcast app!Benjamin Constant, in full Henri-Benjamin Constant de Rebecque, (born Oct. 25, 1767, Lausanne, Switz.—died Dec. 8, 1830, Paris), Franco-Swiss novelist and political writer, the author of Adolphe, a forerunner of the modern psychological novel. The son of a Swiss officer in the Dutch service, whose family was of French origin, he studied at Erlangen, Ger., briefly at the University of Oxford, and at Edinburgh. In 1787 he formed, in Paris, his first liaison, with Madame de Charrière, 27 years his senior. His republican opinions in no way suited him to the office of chamberlain to the duke of Brunswick, which he held for several years. In 1794 he chose the side of the French Revolution, abandoning his office and divorcing his wife, a lady of the court. Madame de Staël had much to do with his decision. Their tumultuous and passionate relationship lasted until 1806.After the coup d'état of 18 Brumaire (1799), Constant was nominated to the tribunate, but he quickly became, like Madame de Staël, an opponent of the Bonapartist regime. Expelled from the tribunate in 1802, he followed her into exile the year after. Thereafter he spent his time either at Madame de Staël's salon at Coppet, near Geneva, or in Germany, chiefly at Weimar, where he met Goethe and Friedrich Schiller. Constant was the associate of the brothers Friedrich and August von Schlegel, the pioneers of the Romantic idea, and with them he inspired Madame de Staël's book De l'Allemagne (“On Germany”).In 1808 Constant secretly married Charlotte von Hardenberg. But his intellectual relationship with Madame de Staël and the group at Coppet remained unbroken. As a liberal he was disappointed by the restoration of the Bourbon monarchy in 1814, and he reconciled himself with the Napoleonic empire of the Hundred Days under the influence of Madame Récamier, the other great love of his life. On his return to Paris, Constant became one of the leaders of liberal journalism. He was elected a deputy in 1819. After the revolution of July 1830, he was appointed president of the council of state but died the same year.During his exile, Constant began work on De la religion considérée dans sa source, ses formes, et ses développements, 5 vol. (1824–31; “On Religion Considered in Its Source, Its Forms, and Its Developments”), a historical analysis of religious feeling. He is better known, however, for his novels. Published in 1816 and written in a lucid and classical style, the autobiographical Adolphe (Eng. trans. Adolphe) describes in minute analytical detail a young man's passion for a woman older than himself. Nearly 150 years after the publication of Adolphe, another of Constant's autobiographical novels, Cécile, dealing with events between 1793 and 1808, was discovered and first published. Constant is also known for his Journaux intimes(“Intimate Journals”), first published in their entirety in 1952. They add to the autobiographical picture of Constant provided by his Le Cahier rouge (1907; The Red Notebook). From https://www.britannica.com/biography/Benjamin-Constant. For more information about Benjamin Constant: Adolphe: https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/202107/adolphe-by-benjamin-constant/ Adolphe: https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/13861/pg13861.html
The death of Franco-Swiss filmmaker Jean-Luc Godard earlier this month provoked an outpouring of emotion in France. He was arguably the most iconic member of the French New Wave, one of the most influential movements in film history and one that made a mark on generations of filmmakers around the world. While French cinema has traditionally inspired and fascinated filmmakers abroad, today it needs defending from the bulldozer of major foreign filmmaking machines like Hollywood, as well as streaming platforms. So what does the state do to protect French cinema? We take a closer look in this edition of French Connections.
The kinetic, experimental style of films like "Breathless" and "Pierrot le Fou" saw Jean-Luc Godard crowned among the leading lights of the French New Wave. Following the Franco-Swiss filmmaker's death at 91, Lisa Nesselson tells us how Godard's formal innovations revolutionised European cinema, bringing Jean-Paul Belmondo, Jean Seberg, Anna Karina and even the streets of 1960s Paris to a global audience.
In part two of our visit to the Large Hadron Collider on the Franco-Swiss border, Alok Jha asks whether the machine's next iteration can take the field of particle physics beyond the Standard Model. We also investigate the long-term future of particle colliders. Will scientists ever build the instruments required to reveal the true building blocks of the universe?Listen to both episodes of the series at economist.com/LHC-pod.For full access to The Economist's print, digital and audio editions subscribe at economist.com/podcastoffer and sign up for our weekly science newsletter at economist.com/simplyscience. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In part two of our visit to the Large Hadron Collider on the Franco-Swiss border, Alok Jha asks whether the machine's next iteration can take the field of particle physics beyond the Standard Model. We also investigate the long-term future of particle colliders. Will scientists ever build the instruments required to reveal the true building blocks of the universe?Listen to both episodes of the series at economist.com/LHC-pod.For full access to The Economist's print, digital and audio editions subscribe at economist.com/podcastoffer and sign up for our weekly science newsletter at economist.com/simplyscience. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is restarting after a three-year break for maintenance and upgrades. In the first of two episodes, host Alok Jha travels to the Franco-Swiss border to find out what the particle accelerator could reveal about the fundamental building blocks of the universe. In 2012, the LHC discovered the Higgs boson, the final piece of the Standard Model of particle physics. But physicists know that that theory is incomplete—it does not account for gravity, dark energy or dark matter, and cannot explain why there seems to be more matter than antimatter. In its third run of experiments, we investigate how the LHC might change our understanding of physics at its most fundamental scales. For full access to The Economist's print, digital and audio editions subscribe at economist.com/podcastoffer and sign up for our weekly science newsletter at economist.com/simplyscience. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is restarting after a three-year break for maintenance and upgrades. In the first of two episodes, host Alok Jha travels to the Franco-Swiss border to find out what the particle accelerator could reveal about the fundamental building blocks of the universe. In 2012, the LHC discovered the Higgs boson, the final piece of the Standard Model of particle physics. But physicists know that that theory is incomplete—it does not account for gravity, dark energy or dark matter, and cannot explain why there seems to be more matter than antimatter. In its third run of experiments, we investigate how the LHC might change our understanding of physics at its most fundamental scales. For full access to The Economist's print, digital and audio editions subscribe at economist.com/podcastoffer and sign up for our weekly science newsletter at economist.com/simplyscience. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Enter the world of Lorenzo Viotti, a Franco-Swiss conductor with a very Italian style. Embodying the spirit of Bulgari's record-breaking Octo Finissimo watch collection, challenging the rules has already led the young maestro to great success. But Lorenzo is so much more. Listen as the Chief Conductor tells the B*Maestro Podcast about his relationship with time itself and his forward-thinking approach to life and music.
In this episode, Myra & Mojo talk about how the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is the most powerful particle accelerator ever built. The accelerator sits in a tunnel 100 meters underground at CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research, on the Franco-Swiss border near Geneva, Switzerland. they also discuss how The name Easter is never associated with the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ in the original Scriptures and is actually derived from the word "Eostre." Eostre was Queen Semiramis, the wife of Nimrod, Noah's evil but enterprising great-grandson (Genesis 10:6-8). They will also discuss if Call Of Duty Cold War Zombies if the Forsaken map which is based off when Zykov entered the Dark Aether, over forty years of corruption, he would be transformed into a monstrous, malignant Elder God. With this new stage in his life, he named himself as The Forsaken, in reference to his abandonment by Lazarev and much more. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
CERN, established in 1954, is based in a northwest suburb of Geneva on the Franco–Swiss border and has 23 member states. Israel is the only non-European country granted full membership. CERN is an official United Nations Observer. But is CERN everything it is said to be? Once the curtain is lifted on this illusion, your fears that the world will implode into the abyss will be allayed; the main work being at CERN is related to the World Wide Web and has little to do with their stated mission. By seeing the full scope of the project, you can also start demanding more transparency for a so-called science operation that is sucking trillions of dollars and euros from citizens around the world.thefacthunter.com
The Ending of the Age The year 2020 has surpassed our imaginations and has been recorded as a year unlike any this generation has ever seen. In Matthew 24:3-14 the disciples asked Jesus an astounding question “As he sat on the Mount of Olives, the disciples came to him privately, saying, “Tell us, when will these things be, and what will be the sign of your coming and of the end of the age?” And Jesus answered them, “See that no one leads you astray. We are living in the end of that age the disciples asked Jesus about. The atmosphere has shifted open your eyes and you will see that life as we knew it has changed and is gone forever. It is time for us as believers to empty ourselves and make our vessels available to be used by the Most High. The earth is groaning in he midst of a spiritual war. We are in the midst of a pandemic no one has an answer as to how it started however it has claimed lives, hospitalised many, has forced many out of business and has closed many churches. Pushing everyone on the world wide web, where everything is centralised. It is interesting to note that the internet is an online world that was created by a the physicist Tim Berners-Lee and other physicist at CERN. The acronym stands for the European Organization for Nuclear Research located in Europe at the Franco-Swiss boarder near Geneva home of the Large Hadron Collider that produces the god particle .
The Ending of the AgeThe year 2020 has surpassed our imaginations and has been recorded as a year unlike any this generation has ever seen. In Matthew 24:3-14 the disciples asked Jesus an astounding question “As he sat on the Mount of Olives, the disciples came to him privately, saying, “Tell us, when will these things be, and what will be the sign of your coming and of the end of the age?” And Jesus answered them, “See that no one leads you astray.We are living in the end of that age the disciples asked Jesus about. The atmosphere has shifted open your eyes and you will see that life as we knew it has changed and is gone forever. It is time for us as believers to empty ourselves and make our vessels available to be used by the Most High. The earth is groaning in he midst of a spiritual war. We are in the midst of a pandemic no one has an answer as to how it started however it has claimed lives, hospitalised many, has forced many out of business and has closed many churches. Pushing everyone on the world wide web, where everything is centralised. It is interesting to note that the internet is an online world that was created by a the physicist Tim Berners-Lee and other physicist at CERN. The acronym stands for the European Organization for Nuclear Research located in Europe at the Franco-Swiss boarder near Geneva home of the Large Hadron Collider that produces the god particle .
The Ending of the AgeThe year 2020 has surpassed our imaginations and has been recorded as a year unlike any this generation has ever seen. In Matthew 24:3-14 the disciples asked Jesus an astounding question “As he sat on the Mount of Olives, the disciples came to him privately, saying, “Tell us, when will these things be, and what will be the sign of your coming and of the end of the age?” And Jesus answered them, “See that no one leads you astray.We are living in the end of that age the disciples asked Jesus about. The atmosphere has shifted open your eyes and you will see that life as we knew it has changed and is gone forever. It is time for us as believers to empty ourselves and make our vessels available to be used by the Most High. The earth is groaning in he midst of a spiritual war. We are in the midst of a pandemic no one has an answer as to how it started however it has claimed lives, hospitalised many, has forced many out of business and has closed many churches. Pushing everyone on the world wide web, where everything is centralised. It is interesting to note that the internet is an online world that was created by a the physicist Tim Berners-Lee and other physicist at CERN. The acronym stands for the European Organization for Nuclear Research located in Europe at the Franco-Swiss boarder near Geneva home of the Large Hadron Collider that produces the god particle .
How Republicans helped prop up the controversial congresswoman from Georgia. Why nursing home workers keep turning down vaccines. And, a tale of two ski resorts. Read more:Marjorie Taylor Greene didn’t get to Congress on her own. Michael Kranish explores how prominent Republicans promoted the follower of extremist QAnon ideology, helping to usher her to power and ultimately deepening rifts in the party.Reporter Rachel Chason explains the skepticism amongst nursing home workers to get the coronavirus vaccine.Across the Franco-Swiss border, reporter Rick Noack finds a tale of two very different ski resorts where covid rules clash, and regional policies are having a major impact on tourism.What you need to know about the coronavirus variants.
The white blanket of France's eastern Jura Mountains stretches out for 340 kilometres along the Swiss border. Trekking across this wilderness is an unforgettable journey. We follow a small group of cross-country skiers for a three-day hike through pine trees, frozen lakes, gentle slopes and sunny peaks. At night we stop off at a chalet to sample rösti, a local Jura specialty. At the Franco-Swiss border, we discover a passage where Resistance fighters and Jews risked their lives to flee occupied France between 1941 and 1945.
In Australia, the killing of George Floyd in the US has resonated strongly with indigenous Australians, who often face prejudicial policing, and make up a disproportionate number of Australia's prison population. Shaimaa Khalil met members of the Aboriginal community in Sydney. Turkey has so far had relatively few deaths from coronavirus, for the size of its population. That's according to the official data. But in the past week numbers of new infections have surged, following the easing of restrictions in early June. Could there be a second wave? Orla Guerin has been following events in Istanbul. The vast container ships that travel the oceans to supply us with food and other goods have not been left untouched by the pandemic. Fear of the virus means the crews are no longer welcome in many ports, and they have seen their employment rights eroded, Horatio Clare reports. Around a quarter of the world's population already eat insects as part of their diet, but many still recoil from the idea. And yet insects may be an answer for future sustainable food production. So how to make them more palatable? A laboratory in Kenya is working on it. Grasshopper biscuit anyone? Emilie Filou had a taste. In much of Europe, residents had been enjoying free movement for many years, when coronavirus lockdowns closed the borders. Suddenly friends, relatives even lovers on two sides of a border could no longer see each other. But a hotel which sits right on the Franco-Swiss border, with entries on both sides, offered a solution, as Imogen Foulkes has found. Presenter: Kate Adie Producer: Arlene Gregorius
With this year’s Geneva Motor Show being cancelled, Alan had to find another way to get his annual many-cars-in-a-large-building-near-the-Franco-Swiss-border fix, so he went to Mulhouse in Alsace to visit one of the world’s largest motor museums, the Cité de L’Automobile and Schlumpf Collection, with its amazing collection of Bugatti.
Deep beneath the Franco-Swiss border, the Large Hadron Collider is sleeping. But it won't be quiet for long. Over the coming years, the world's largest particle accelerator will be supercharged, increasing the number of proton collisions per second by a factor of two and a half. Once the work is complete in 2026, researchers hope to unlock some of the most fundamental questions in the universe.
On this day in 1918, On this day in 1918, the Franco-Swiss border was closed to contain the spread of Spanish Flu. But in Devon, the doors of Engleby Hall are thrown wide open to mark the first day of harvest. Written by Sarah Daniels Directed by Ciaran Bermingham Editor: Jessica Dromgoole.
Since the Garden of Eden the search for ideas, inventions, and excuses to challenge the instructions given by God has been rejected and manipulated by the enemy to persuade the hearts of mankind to become gods themselves. This seed of corruption started with an angel that had great prominence and position in the Kingdom of God, but through his pride and arrogance sin was brought forth and iniquity was revealed.----.....................----In 1954 a European research organization was formed that operates the largest particle physics laboratory in the world. This organization was formed and given the titled CERN which is an acronym for -Counsel European Research Nuclear-. CERN is located in a northwest suburb of Geneva located on the Franco-Swiss border and has 21 European member states, including Israel, which is the first and currently only non-European country granted full membership.----CERN's main function is to provide the particle accelerators and other infrastructure needed for high-energy physics research - as a result, numerous experiments have been constructed at CERN as a result of international collaborations.----You might find it interesting to know that The World Wide Web began as a CERN project named ENQUIRE, it was initiated by Tim Berners-Lee in 1989 and Robert Cailliau in 1990.----Most of the activities at CERN currently involve operating the Large Hadron Collider -LHC-, and the experiments for it. The LHC represents a large-scale, worldwide scientific cooperation project. The main research that is being done today is to find the God particle. Once again mankind wants to find out the ultimate formula to develop life themselves and to eliminate God.