Frank – USMAIL24.COM https://usmail24.com News Portal from USA Sat, 09 Mar 2024 22:36:18 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.4 https://usmail24.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/Untitled-design-1-100x100.png Frank – USMAIL24.COM https://usmail24.com 32 32 195427244 Havertz ‘shouldn’t have been on the pitch’ to score the late Arsenal winner, says Frank https://usmail24.com/kai-havertz-brentford-fury-arsenal-frank/ https://usmail24.com/kai-havertz-brentford-fury-arsenal-frank/#respond Sat, 09 Mar 2024 22:36:18 +0000 https://usmail24.com/kai-havertz-brentford-fury-arsenal-frank/

BRENTFORD boss Thomas Frank insists Arsenal’s late match-winner Kai Havertz should have been sent off earlier. And fns joined Frank in expressing their anger at Havertz escaping a second yellow card for what appeared to be a clear dive. “I actually don’t think Havertz should be on the pitch when he scored the goal” 😬 […]

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BRENTFORD boss Thomas Frank insists Arsenal’s late match-winner Kai Havertz should have been sent off earlier.

And fns joined Frank in expressing their anger at Havertz escaping a second yellow card for what appeared to be a clear dive.

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There appeared to be no contact as Kai Havertz tumbled into the box
Nathan Collins protests his innocence as Havertz appears to dive into the penalty area, without a yellow card or penalty being awarded

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Nathan Collins protests his innocence as Havertz appears to dive into the penalty area, without a yellow card or penalty being awarded

The German lunged forward and tumbled into the penalty area when Bees’ defender Nathan Collins challenged him – but without making contact.

Havertz then headed the Gunners past Liverpool and Manchester City to the top of the Premier League with an 86th-minute breakthrough.

Brentord’s Yoane Wisse had punished Aaron Ramsdale’s blunder by canceling out Declan Rice’s opener.

And although the Gunners had almost all the pressure and chances after that, Frank was in no doubt that Havertz deserved to see red before sealing a 2-1 victory by scoring for the fourth time in the past four games.

The Dane told Sky Sports: “I actually don’t think Havertz should be on the pitch if he scored the goal.

“For me it was a clear dive when it was a penalty. When you look back at it slowly, it is clear.

“Maybe it’s difficult for the referee, but the linesman should have seen it in my opinion.”

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Fans condemned whistler Rob Jones for the crucial moment.

One wrote: That’s absolutely true. That was a very clear dive and if it had been a Brentford player in that position he would have easily been sent off.

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Another said of Frank’s candid assessment: “Perfect. Referees in this country are a joke.”

And a third argued: “100 percent accurate! Only Rob Jones will have the answer to how Kai Havertz was still in the picture.”

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Frank Popoff, who wanted to lead a friendlier Dow Chemical, dies at 88 https://usmail24.com/frank-popoff-dead-html/ https://usmail24.com/frank-popoff-dead-html/#respond Wed, 06 Mar 2024 00:17:29 +0000 https://usmail24.com/frank-popoff-dead-html/

Frank Popoff, a CEO and chairman who tried to make Dow Chemical more conciliatory toward regulators and environmentalists in the late 1980s and 1990s and who urged the chemical industry to adopt safer practices, died Feb. 25 at his home in Midland. Michigan, where Dow is located. He was 88. A company spokesperson said the […]

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Frank Popoff, a CEO and chairman who tried to make Dow Chemical more conciliatory toward regulators and environmentalists in the late 1980s and 1990s and who urged the chemical industry to adopt safer practices, died Feb. 25 at his home in Midland. Michigan, where Dow is located. He was 88.

A company spokesperson said the cause was cancer.

When the Bulgarian-born Popoff was named president and CEO of Dow in 1987, the company tried to shed its image as a belligerent chemical giant that napalm and the defoliant Agent Orange for the US military during the Vietnam War; toxic waste was released, as well as dioxins, from the Midland plant into the Tittabawassee River; and fought the Environmental Protection Agency to prevent flyover inspections of its emissions.

An estimated $50 million advertising campaign, begun two years before Mr. Popoff reached the top, used the slogan “Dow lets you do great things.” It was intended to change public perception of Dow, promote its image as a kinder company, and highlight the charitable and humanitarian uses of its products.

“I think we still have a fair amount of work to do in terms of the way we are perceived,” Mr. Popoff told The New York Times in 1987, shortly before he succeeded. Paul F. Oreffice as general manager. “We know we will never change Ralph Nader’s mind. But Dow is at peace with itself and we want our people to feel good about the company too.”

The company was then best known for manufacturing chemicals, including chlorine, and for using chemicals in making plastics, pharmaceuticals, and supermarket items such as Saran Wrap, Fantastik cleaning fluid, and Ziploc bags.

Regulators and environmentalists at the time were heavily focused on chemicals. In 1991, Mr. Popoff and another Dow executive, David Buzzelli, established a panel of outside environmental policy advisers — including Lee Thomas, a former EPA administrator – who scrutinized Dow’s activities and was able to obtain confidential information. A current version of that panel remains in place at Dow.

Between 1988 and mid-1991, Dow reduced emissions of 121 harmful chemicals the EPA had been tracking by nearly a third, and was on track to its goal of cutting emissions in half.

“I’m in the chemical business,” Mr. Popoff told The Detroit Free Press in 1992. “That is synonymous with a lot of bad things. But I am for environmental responsibility.”

In a speech to the Economic Club of Detroit a year later, he elaborated on the need for Dow to be open to ideas from regulators and environmentalists. “There is no alternative to environmental reform in our industry,” he said, arguing that chemical companies must lead such efforts or be forced to deal with poorly designed regulations.

Carol Browner, the EPA administrator at the time, recalled in an email that Dow was “easier to work with” under Mr. Popoff. But when she suggested in 1994 that the agency wanted to “replace, reduce or ban” the widespread use of chlorine and chlorinated products within three years, Mr. Popoff sent a sharp letter to President Bill Clinton.

“It would be irresponsible to implement a policy that assumes all chlorine products are bad, without considering the scientific evidence on chlorine chemistry or the economic impact of a chlorine ban,” he wrote. He added: “The decision to tackle this very complicated issue in such a major way was taken without industry participation. The Dow Chemical Company is committed to constructive participation.”

Jack Doyle, who wrote “Trespass Against Us: Dow Chemical & The Toxic Century” (2004) for the Environmental Health Fund, an advocacy group, said chlorine was too important to Dow’s bottom line to give it up without a fight.

Dow’s commitment to the chlorine industry was “so dominant and so intertwined in the global economy,” he added, “that making real dramatic changes was out of the question.”

Frank Popoff, whose given name was Pencho, was born on October 27, 1935 in Sofia, Bulgaria. His father, Eftim, also known as Frank, owned a dry cleaning business with his mother, Stoyanka (Kossoroff) Popoff, who went by Stany.

He emigrated to the United States with his parents and sister in 1939 and they settled in Terre Haute, Ind.

Inspired by a high school teacher who was gassed while fighting in World War I, Mr. Popoff studied chemistry at Indiana University, where he earned both a bachelor’s degree and a master’s degree in business administration in the same year, 1959.

However, he did not want to become a chemist.

“Maybe I missed the creativity and vision that successful chemists have,” he said an interview in 2012 with the Chemical Heritage Foundation (now the Science History Institute, in Philadelphia). “I was very interested in the commercialization and application of chemistry.”

He joined Dow in 1959 and remained with the company for 41 years. He worked in the urethane laboratory and in the early 1960s in technical services and chemical sales. Over the next quarter century, he held increasingly influential positions: president of Dow Europe in 1981, executive vice president of Dow Chemical in 1985, and president and CEO two years later. In 1992 he was appointed chairman.

Under Mr. Popoff, Dow Chemical expanded the company’s Asian operations and in 1989 bought a majority stake in drugmaker Marion Laboratories (it was renamed Marion Merrell Dow) before selling it six years later amid patent expirations and intense competition.

In the early 1990s, Dow Chemical became embroiled in controversy over the safety of silicone breast implants made by Dow Corning, its joint venture with Corning Inc.

“Rightly or wrongly, a lot of people are outraged by the implants,” Mr. Popoff told The Free Press in 1992, but he added: “Our liability is limited to that of a stockholder because that’s what we are. ”

However, in 1995, the company was found liable by a Nevada jury for more than $14 million in damages after a woman suffered health problems due to leaking implants. The following year, the New York State Appellate Division ruled that Dow Chemical was not liable in 1,400 lawsuits over the implants.

Mr. Popoff resigned as CEO in 1995 and as chairman in 2000. He later taught for a time at Indiana University and served on boards of directors.

He is survived by his wife, Jean (Urse) Popoff, whom he met in college and married in 1958; three sons, John, Thomas and Steven; and four grandchildren.

Jim Fitterling, Dow’s current chairman and CEO, said Mr. Popoff’s key achievements revolved around making safety a critical goal – “not that it wasn’t important, but he made it a priority” – and the fact that he was an early proponent of sustainability. That included generating less waste, using fewer resources and better ensuring worker safety. He helped promote a voluntary industry-wide code of conduct that formalized these principles, called Responsible Care.

But Mr Popoff said it wasn’t always easy to get other companies to comply with the rules. There was opposition early on.

“Some things had more impact on big companies than on small companies,” he told the Science History Institute. “Then the hard work started, making sure everyone followed the rules. And what can you do? You can use every pulpit you have to assure other people that this is not only in their best interest, but that it is also mandatory for the industry to survive without undermining the hostility and ill will of society, which the chemical industry is sometimes capable of. Of doing.”

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Frank Kitson, 97, deceased; Helped shape the conflict in Northern Ireland https://usmail24.com/frank-kitson-dead-html/ https://usmail24.com/frank-kitson-dead-html/#respond Thu, 15 Feb 2024 23:59:23 +0000 https://usmail24.com/frank-kitson-dead-html/

General Frank Kitson arrived in Northern Ireland in September 1970, charged with leading a brigade of British paratroopers in Belfast. The thirty-year struggle known as the Troubles, which pitted loyalists who wanted to remain part of Britain against Republicans who wanted to secede, was only just beginning – and over the next two years General […]

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General Frank Kitson arrived in Northern Ireland in September 1970, charged with leading a brigade of British paratroopers in Belfast. The thirty-year struggle known as the Troubles, which pitted loyalists who wanted to remain part of Britain against Republicans who wanted to secede, was only just beginning – and over the next two years General Kitson would do much do to shape Britain's course. the conflict.

By this time, General Kitson was considered one of Britain's leading warrior intellectuals. He had just completed a year-long fellowship at Oxford and had used his time there to write a book, 'Low Intensity Operations: Subversion, Insurgency and Peacekeeping' (1971), which drew on his decades of experience with fighting colonial wars in Africa. and Asia and has since been considered a classic text in the art of counterinsurgency.

General Kitson was short and stocky, with a ramrod stance and a high, nasal voice. He hated small talk and rarely spoke, but he had a martial charisma that won him widespread admiration among his ranks.

In his 2007 autobiography, “Soldier,” Gen. Mike Jackson, then a young officer in Gen. Kitson's brigade, called him “the sun around which the planets revolved,” adding that he “largely set the tone for the operational style.”

General Kitson used his overseas experience to change the British approach to problems. He set up an undercover unit, the Military Reaction Force, charged with surveillance and occasional killings of Republican fighters. He provided superficial information to local reporters and supported the British Army's campaign to intern thousands of suspects without charge.

On the morning of January 30, 1972, approximately 10,000 unarmed Irish Republicans marched through the city of Derry to protest against internment. They walked along the edge of a 'no-go' area, where British soldiers were denied entry and risked an armed attack if they did.

Soldiers from General Kitson's brigade waited for the demonstrators, with plans to arrest several leaders of the Irish Republican Army, whom they expected to head the march.

As the demonstrators approached the soldiers, some began throwing stones; the soldiers responded with rubber bullets, tear gas and water cannons. Suddenly shots were fired and within minutes thirteen demonstrators were dead; another died in hospital from injuries. The day became known as Bloody Sunday, one of the worst losses of life during the Troubles and a rallying cry for the Republican forces.

General Kitson was on leave when the shootings occurred, but when he returned he gave his deputy a dressing down – for not being more aggressive. Once the shooting started, he said, his soldiers should have taken advantage of the confusion and pushed into the no-go area.

“There was no doubt that we could have recaptured the 'no-go' area,” General Jackson, who listened to the conversation, wrote in his book, “although this would almost certainly have resulted in more deaths.”

Just weeks after Bloody Sunday, General Kitson was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire. He left Northern Ireland in April 1972 and later held a number of senior military positions, including aide-de-camp to Queen Elizabeth II and commander of the United Kingdom Army. He was knighted in 1980.

His death on January 2, at the age of 97, was greeted with cautious praise for his career by many London newspapers, detailing his innovative counterinsurgency tactics, while The Belfast Telegraph noted that his “controversial methods led to him becoming a hate figure became for Republicans” in Northern Ireland.

The death was announced by the Royal Green Jackets Association, a memorial organization dedicated to his original infantry regiment. The statement did not mention the location or cause of death.

Frank Edward Kitson was born on December 15, 1926 in London. He came from a 200-year line of armed forces officers. His father, Henry Kitson, was a vice admiral in the British Navy; his mother, Marjorie (de Pass) Kitson, was the daughter of a wealthy sugar and coffee importer.

He knew early on that he wanted to be an army officer, and he immediately joined an infantry brigade after graduating from Stowe School, a prestigious private academy, in 1945.

He was stationed in Germany for the first time, too late to see the fighting in World War II. But he was only at the beginning of a new era of warfare in the far-flung British colonies in Africa, the Middle East and Asia.

General Kitson served as an intelligence officer in Kenya during the Mau-Mau uprising by pro-independence guerrillas and developed the concept of “pseudo-gangs,” which consisted of Kenyans who secretly worked with the British to disrupt rebel operations. .

The eight-year conflict resulted in more than 10,000 deaths, more than 1,000 executed and at least 100,000 prisoners in concentration camps, many of whom were also tortured by the British.

General Kitson subsequently served in what is now Malaysia, where communist rebels threatened Britain's hold on the resource-rich colony, and later in Cyprus and Oman. For his services he was twice awarded the Military Cross, one of Britain's highest honours.

Over time, he built on his innovations in Kenya to develop a comprehensive counterinsurgency doctrine. He emphasized the importance of gathering information, developing informants and double agents among the insurgents' ranks, conducting covert operations and using psychological warfare to root out guerrillas.

“If a fish needs to be destroyed, it can be attacked directly with a fishing rod or net,” he wrote in “Low Intensity Operations,” borrowing a metaphor from Chinese leader Mao Zedong. “But if the rod and net cannot work on their own, it may be necessary to do something about the water” – including, he added, “polluting the water.”

General Kitson's book 'Low Intensity Operations', published in 1971, has since been considered a classic text in the art of counterinsurgency.Credit…Stackpole Books

General Kitson married Elizabeth Spencer in 1962. She survives him, as do their daughters Catherine, Rosemary and Marion, and seven grandchildren.

His reputation as an expert on counterinsurgency earned him senior leadership positions as well as his Oxford Fellowship. After serving in Ireland, he led an armored division and an Army Staff College before taking command of the British Army, responsible for the defense of the homeland and other areas.

General Kitson retired in 1985, his time in Northern Ireland seemingly far behind him. But the end of the Troubles in 1998 brought renewed interest in Bloody Sunday. Prime Minister Tony Blair launched an investigation into the military's conduct during the event, and General Kitson was called as one of the key witnesses.

The investigation concluded with a report in 2010 blaming General Kitson's soldiers for firing the first shots on Bloody Sunday.

The investigation into General Kitson's leadership did not end there. In 2015, he was named a co-defendant in a lawsuit by Mary Heenan, the widow of Eugene Heenana worker murdered by a loyalist paramilitary group in Belfast in 1973. Elements of the group, the Ulster Defense Organization, had ties to the British military – making it, according to the indictment, a version of General Kitson's pseudo-gangs. long promoted in counterinsurgency campaigns.

Although he had long since left Northern Ireland at the time of the murder, General Kitson was accused in the trial of instituting policies and tactics that were “reckless as to whether state agents would be involved in murder.”

The lawsuit, which also named the British Ministry of Defense as a defendant, was still ongoing at the time of General Kitson's death.

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Farewell to Queen's Traveling Yeoman: Funeral to be held in Windsor for 89-year-old Frank Holland who served on the royal yacht – after the flag at Buckingham Palace was lowered to half-mast in his honor https://usmail24.com/farewell-queens-travelling-yeoman-funeral-held-windsor-89-year-old-frank-holland-served-royal-yacht-flag-buckingham-palace-lowered-half-mast-honour-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/ https://usmail24.com/farewell-queens-travelling-yeoman-funeral-held-windsor-89-year-old-frank-holland-served-royal-yacht-flag-buckingham-palace-lowered-half-mast-honour-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/#respond Fri, 09 Feb 2024 15:41:12 +0000 https://usmail24.com/farewell-queens-travelling-yeoman-funeral-held-windsor-89-year-old-frank-holland-served-royal-yacht-flag-buckingham-palace-lowered-half-mast-honour-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/

Frank Holland was Her Majesty's Traveling Yeoman for almost forty years By Harry Howard, History Correspondent Published: 10:09 EST, February 9, 2024 | Updated: 10:38 EST, February 9, 2024 The funeral of a key aide to the late Queen took place in Windsor today. Frank Holland, who was Her Majesty's Traveling Yeoman for almost 40 […]

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  • Frank Holland was Her Majesty's Traveling Yeoman for almost forty years

The funeral of a key aide to the late Queen took place in Windsor today.

Frank Holland, who was Her Majesty's Traveling Yeoman for almost 40 years, died earlier this month at the age of 88.

He spent much of his career on the Queen's beloved Royal Yacht Britannia, which was decommissioned by Tony Blair's Labor government in 1997.

Staff stood outside the Royal Mews at Windsor Castle this morning as a hearse carrying Mr Holland's coffin headed to nearby St Edward's Catholic Church.

In 1969, the Queen awarded Mr Holland the Royal Victorian Medal for his services to her.

Frank Holland

The funeral of a key aide to the late Queen took place in Windsor today. Frank Holland, who served as Her Majesty's Traveling Yeoman for almost four decades, died earlier this month at the age of 88.

After retiring, he lived in an apartment opposite Windsor's St George's Chapel, where Her Majesty was buried in September 2022 following her death at Balmoral.

Philip Reynolds, who served with Mr Holland in the local Catenian Association, spoke warmly of the former royal aide in a moving eulogy.

He told how King Charles sent him a bouquet of flowers after a recent hospital visit and the Queen visited him before leaving for Balmoral for the last time.

“I always found it admirable how he downplayed his relationship with the royal family,” he said.

“Whenever he was asked where he lived, his usual response was, 'Oh, I live at the top of the city.'

'I am told that the King recently asked Frank, “How long have we known each other?”, to which Frank replied, “I have known you since you were five, Your Majesty.”

'And when Frank returned from a long stay in hospital last year, he was delighted to receive a large bouquet of flowers with the message 'welcome home, Charles.'

Royal staff stand outside the Royal Mews in Windsor before the hearse carrying Mr Holland's coffin is driven past

Mr Holland spent much of his career on the Queen's beloved royal yacht Britannia (above: the yacht that arrived in Torquay during a visit by the Queen and Prince Philip in 1988).  It was dismantled by Tony Blair's Labor government in 1997

Mr Holland spent much of his career on the Queen's beloved royal yacht Britannia (above: the yacht that arrived in Torquay during a visit by the Queen and Prince Philip in 1988). It was dismantled by Tony Blair's Labor government in 1997

Queen Elizabeth II aboard the Royal Yacht Britannia during her Royal Jubilee Tour of Western Samoa, February 1977

Queen Elizabeth II aboard the Royal Yacht Britannia during her Royal Jubilee Tour of Western Samoa, February 1977

The order of service for Mr Holland's funeral at St Edward's Catholic Church in Windsor

The order of service for Mr Holland's funeral at St Edward's Catholic Church in Windsor

'I also know that the late Queen, before she went to Balmoral for the last time, made a point of seeing Frank to say goodbye. I think she knew she wouldn't be returning to Windsor.

“Many of us noticed the change in Frank, and how deeply her death affected him.”

Mr Holland began his service on the Royal Yacht after serving in the Royal Navy as part of National Service.

He met his wife Joan, who was on the Queen Mother's staff, after joining the Royal Family.

His role as Traveling Yeoman included overseeing logistics on the

Mr Reynolds added: “He was a lovely man, a lovely gentleman and a very sweet, gentle man.

'It was a pleasure and a privilege to know you Frank. May you rest in peace and rise in glory.”

The hearse carrying Mr. Holland's coffin is carried towards St. Edward's Catholic Church

The hearse carrying Mr. Holland's coffin is carried towards St. Edward's Catholic Church

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Boney M founder Frank Farian dies at 82: Hitmaker behind Rasputin and Daddy Cool died peacefully in his Miami apartment two years after a pig heart valve was inserted https://usmail24.com/boney-m-founder-frank-farian-dead-82-heart-valve-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/ https://usmail24.com/boney-m-founder-frank-farian-dead-82-heart-valve-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/#respond Tue, 23 Jan 2024 14:23:19 +0000 https://usmail24.com/boney-m-founder-frank-farian-dead-82-heart-valve-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/

Well-known German music producer Frank Farian has died at the age of 82, his representatives have announced. Farian is best known for his success after founding Boney M in the 1970s, where he was responsible for hits such as Daddy Cool, Rasputin and Brown Girl in the Ring. Farian, born in the town of Kirin […]

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Well-known German music producer Frank Farian has died at the age of 82, his representatives have announced.

Farian is best known for his success after founding Boney M in the 1970s, where he was responsible for hits such as Daddy Cool, Rasputin and Brown Girl in the Ring.

Farian, born in the town of Kirin in rural southwestern Germany, where he was born Frank Reuther, died at his home in Miami.

During his career, Farian was also involved in one of the biggest scandals in pop music history when his protégés, boy band Milli Vanilli, were discovered to have been lip-syncing during their Grammy award-winning run.

In 2022, Farian revealed in an interview with Image that he had a 'pig heart valve' inserted into his chest because his own valve shrank with age. As a result of the surgery, Farian said he was prescribed a similar drug to Viagra.

'This is a similar active substance to Viagra and has a nice side effect. But honestly, I'm not thinking about sex at all right now. Today I enjoy a good meal and I am happy to be alive,” he said.

Farian pictured with Boney M. singers Liz Mitchell (L) and Marcia Barret (R) in 2007

During his career, Farian also collaborated with music legends such as Meat Loaf and Stevie Wonder

During his career, Farian also collaborated with music legends such as Meat Loaf and Stevie Wonder

The procedure involves surgically replacing a defective human valve with a tissue valve, such as from a pig or cow. The new valve usually lasts up to 15 years.

During his career, Farian also collaborated with music legends such as Meat Loaf and Stevie Wonder.

“The success was a big surprise,” Farian once told the German news agency DPA.

'I always thought I wouldn't make it. It didn't seem like it at first,” he once told the German news agency.

But his success was not always without scandal. In 1988, Farian founded the German R&B group Milli Vanilli by selecting Fab Morvan and Rob Pilatus as the lip-syncing frontmen.

Singer John Davis was brought in as the voice behind the band, but he was not told his vocals would be used for lip syncing, the singer said.

Farian had him come to the studio late at night to keep him separated from other artists, he said.

The veneer first began to crack when the duo met an MTV executive who began to suspect that their English language skills would not have been good enough to record the song as it was done.

Farian founded the scandal hit Milli Vanilli, which caused a stir after frontmen Fab Morvan and Rob Pilatus were found to be lip-syncing to another singer's vocals

Farian founded the scandal hit Milli Vanilli, which caused a stir after frontmen Fab Morvan and Rob Pilatus were found to be lip-syncing to another singer's vocals

The duo was forced to hand in their Grammy Award due to the scandal, but Farian remained unapologetic about his cheating

The duo was forced to hand in their Grammy Award due to the scandal, but Farian remained unapologetic about his cheating

The lie began to fully unravel in 1989 when the group's backing track jammed during a live MTV performance in Connecticut, causing Pilate to flee the stage in embarrassment.

From then on, suspicions only increased, while the duo also began to exert more pressure to gain more artistic control.

Finally, in 1990, Fabian announced that he had fired both men and revealed the extent of the deception.

Morvan and Pilatus were forced to surrender their Grammy award for Best New Artist amid intense backlash and the threat of several lawsuits.

But Farian remained unapologetic about the scandal.

“It was great new music, people were happy, so what's the problem?” he said during an interview with the WashingtonPost.

In 2008, Farian separated from his common-law wife and mother of his children, former swimsuit model Chinya Onyewenjo.

In a interview from 2012, Farian, then 70, confirmed that he broke up with Onyewenjo and was now dating her best friend, a woman named Angie, who was 28 years old at the time.

'She was too old and too bitchy for me! Now she's with her ugly lawyer, who looks like the Hunchback of Notre Dame. And I have my new princess. After this wife swap I can only say: sometimes the world is so beautiful.'

Angie was an aspiring singer in her own right who went by the name Princess Guyana.

Last August, Farian sold a waterfront lot in Miami Beach worth $13.6 million, after purchasing it in 2001 for just $1.4 million.

He is estimated to have sold 800 million records worldwide and was one of the most successful pop producers of the 20th century.

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Tristan Frank, 14, who disappeared in the Outback three years ago, ‘was chased away by a feather-footed entity’, his family believes https://usmail24.com/tristan-frank-balgo-family-say-featherfoot-men-involved-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/ https://usmail24.com/tristan-frank-balgo-family-say-featherfoot-men-involved-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/#respond Fri, 12 Jan 2024 14:32:48 +0000 https://usmail24.com/tristan-frank-balgo-family-say-featherfoot-men-involved-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/

The family of a boy who disappeared three years ago believe he was chased away by ‘feather-footed’ men capable of killing. Tristan Frank, 14, went missing near the remote community of Balgo, close to the WA/NT border, on December 3, 2020, while traveling with family to a funeral. At a hearing at the WA Coroner’s […]

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The family of a boy who disappeared three years ago believe he was chased away by ‘feather-footed’ men capable of killing.

Tristan Frank, 14, went missing near the remote community of Balgo, close to the WA/NT border, on December 3, 2020, while traveling with family to a funeral.

At a hearing at the WA Coroner’s Court on Friday, some members of the local community believed he could have been hidden in the sand dunes of the nearby Tanami Desert.

Members of Tristan’s family agreed that he may have been taken by the “featherfoot” men – powerful spirits that some in the culture believe move without being seen or heard and can cause death.

Tristan was traveling between NT and WA of his grandparents who had dropped him off at Balgo to catch up with his brother. He spent the night talking and smoking cannabis, but the next morning he mysteriously disappeared.

Tristan Frank, 14, went missing on December 3, 2020 near the remote community of Balgo, close to the WA border, and was never seen again

An inquest into his disappearance at the WA Coroner's Court on Friday revealed his family believe he may have been driven away and hidden by "feather foot" men (Balgo pictured)

An inquest into his disappearance at the WA Coroner’s Court on Friday revealed his family believes he may have been chased away and hidden by ‘feather-footed’ men (Balgo photo)

In the opening statement of Friday’s inquest, coroner’s counsel addressed for the first time what Tristan’s family and friends thought could have happened to him.

‘Many family members expressed their spiritual beliefs in this [Tristan] “He may have been taken by ‘feather-footed’ men who made him invisible and hid him in the lands outside the city,” the coroner’s counsel said. according to the ABC.

According to counsel, it was considered normal for the extended family to care for each other’s children – and so Tristan’s grandparents felt comfortable when he asked to stay overnight in Balgo during the trio’s journey from Nyirripi to Noonkanbah as they continued their journey .

The next day, December 5, when the funeral was canceled, his grandparents tried to call him several times but were unable to contact him before going back to pick him up.

Tristan’s brother said he looked “happy and smiling,” and his aunt, who was the last to see him, also had no reason to believe anything was wrong.

When his grandparents returned, no one they spoke to had seen Tristan or knew where he was, so they called the police on December 6 to report him missing.

Police launched a cross-border search across thousands of kilometers of desert and dirt roads in an attempt to find him, but to no avail.

Despite installing stop-motion cameras in nearby caves in the hope of spotting him, along with using aircraft, drones and infrared technology, Tristan was never found.

The community even invited a ‘maban’ to track him down; traditional healers sometimes tried to communicate and reason with spirits.

Tristan's grandparents dropped him off in Balgo (pictured) to stay with extended family who said he was 'happy and smiling' when they last saw him

Tristan’s grandparents dropped him off in Balgo (pictured) to stay with extended family who said he was ‘happy and smiling’ when they last saw him

His family believes that 'ferrymen', powerful native spirits that move without being seen or heard and are capable of causing death, hid him in the Tanami Desert (pictured)

His family believes that ‘ferrymen’, powerful native spirits that move without being seen or heard and are capable of causing death, hid him in the Tanami Desert (pictured)

The local community began discussing Tristan in the weeks following his disappearance, with many believing that the ‘ferrymen’ had hid him in the Tanami Desert.

The board of coroners spoke to a survival expert who said the chances of Tristan surviving more than two days were extremely slim.

‘Dr. Paul Luckin … opined that this was the case in this case [he] got lost in the Balgo area, where the temperature had reached 42 to 45 degrees Celsius without rain, he estimated someone as [Tristan] could have succumbed to the circumstances within one or two days,” the counsel said.

It was also noted that Balgo was not Tristan’s traditional lands that might have influenced his ability to utilize local survival skills.

Six weeks after his disappearance, Senior Sergeant Charlie Moylan, head of Balgo police station, said there were no leads for his unit to follow.

“No information has been received from outside the community that the missing boy has been seen or that he is elsewhere,” he said.

It is believed that in the absence of a breakthrough, Tristan could have left the community and hitchhiked, became disoriented and lost, or was exposed to foul play.

He was never found.

The mystery behind Tristan’s disappearance has also deepened, in part because his family declined to comment publicly on the situation.

The coroner will now decide whether there is sufficient evidence available to determine whether Tristan died.

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Frank Ryan dies at 87; Cerebral quarterback led Browns to ’64 title https://usmail24.com/frank-ryan-dead-html/ https://usmail24.com/frank-ryan-dead-html/#respond Tue, 02 Jan 2024 20:04:40 +0000 https://usmail24.com/frank-ryan-dead-html/

Ryan was released by the Browns after the 1968 season and subsequently joined the Washington Redskins (now the Washington Commanders), who hired Lombardi as their coach and general manager. Ryan spent two seasons as Sonny Jurgensen’s backup and saw only brief action, the first year under Lombardi and the second season for Coach Bill Austin […]

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Ryan was released by the Browns after the 1968 season and subsequently joined the Washington Redskins (now the Washington Commanders), who hired Lombardi as their coach and general manager. Ryan spent two seasons as Sonny Jurgensen’s backup and saw only brief action, the first year under Lombardi and the second season for Coach Bill Austin after Lombardi’s death from cancer in September 1970.

Ryan retired with 16,042 passing yards and a 51.1 percent completion percentage. He was voted to the Pro Bowl every season from 1964 to 1966. And he led the NFL in touchdown passes in 1964, with 25, and in 1966, with 29.

In addition to his son Frank, he is survived by his wife of 65 years, Joan Ryan, a former sports columnist for The Cleveland Plain Dealer and The Washington Post; three other sons, Michael, Stuart and Heberden; a sister, Patricia Ryan; 11 grandchildren; and a great-grandchild, with another “on the way,” his son Frank said. A brother, Robert W. Ryan Jr., predeceased him.

Ryan lived in Grafton, Virginia, for many years before moving to the healthcare facility in Connecticut.

Ryan donated his brain to the Boston University CTE Center, which researches chronic traumatic encephalopathy, a brain disorder similar to Alzheimer’s disease caused by repetitive head injuries and linked to football and other contact sports. His family said in a statement that they suspected CTE may have “played a role” in Ryan’s condition.

“There’s a lot of exploitation in football, a lot of deception about what the real values ​​of life and of doing are,” Ryan told Peter Richmond for the website Sports on Earth in 2013, reflecting on his dual career and the world of the big players. time college football. “I’m not saying we shouldn’t have football in all its glory, but the players need to focus on something other than running a 4.5 forty.”

Bernard Mokam reporting contributed.

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Frank Lampard is a doting dad through and through as he treats rarely seen kids Patricia, four, and Freddie, two, to a fun outing in Winter Wonderland https://usmail24.com/frank-lampard-rarely-seen-children-patricia-freddie-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/ https://usmail24.com/frank-lampard-rarely-seen-children-patricia-freddie-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/#respond Thu, 21 Dec 2023 10:35:39 +0000 https://usmail24.com/frank-lampard-rarely-seen-children-patricia-freddie-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/

Frank Lampard treated youngest children Patricia and Freddie to a fun day out at Hyde Park’s Winter Wonderland in London on Wednesday. The former footballer, 45, who shares the little ones with his wife and Loose Women star Christine, 44, was every doting dad on the outing. Frank wore a thick coat and a hat, […]

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Frank Lampard treated youngest children Patricia and Freddie to a fun day out at Hyde Park’s Winter Wonderland in London on Wednesday.

The former footballer, 45, who shares the little ones with his wife and Loose Women star Christine, 44, was every doting dad on the outing.

Frank wore a thick coat and a hat, showed his sporting skills at the fairground games and won the children a whole series of cuddly toys.

Patricia, four, and Freddie, two, were also dressed for the cold weather as they tucked into cotton candy and sweets while their dad had a pint.

Frank is also father to Isla, 16, and Luna, 18, who he shares with former partner Elen Rivas.

Frank Lampard, 45, treated youngest children Patricia, four, and Freddie, two, to a fun day out at Hyde Park’s Winter Wonderland in London on Wednesday

The former footballer, who shares the little ones with his wife and Loose Women star Christine, 44, was every doting dad on the outing.

The former footballer, who shares the little ones with his wife and Loose Women star Christine, 44, was every doting dad on the outing.

It comes after Christine revealed she had cut a close friend out of her life after they became too ‘flirty’ with her husband Frank.

The presenter admitted that although she hates confrontation, she is not afraid to ghost someone if they touch her the wrong way.

The Loose Women star admitted that at the start of her relationship with the former Chelsea and England footballer, 45, she had a boyfriend who crossed the line and became too ‘flirty and touchy’ with the sportsman.

In an interview with Closer magazine, Christine explained: ‘It was in the early days of Frank and I and there was a certain person, who we don’t really see anymore, who could get very flirty and touchy while I was there!

“I found that really awkward – at least a kiss is out there and in the open, but secretly under a table?”

Christine continued: ‘I avoid confrontation – I don’t like confrontation – but I’m brilliant at ghosting. I can easily distance myself and that’s how I deal with things that irritate me.’

After first meeting at the 2009 Pride of Britain Awards, the couple have now been happily married for almost eight years and share two children together, Patricia, five, and Freddie, two.

The star previously spoke about how the two met told The mirror: ‘It was a complete Sliding Doors moment, I remember the first meeting as clear as day. Who goes to an awards show and finds a husband? That was me!

Frank had put on a thick coat and a hat and showed his sporting skills at the fair games

Frank had put on a thick coat and a hat and showed his sporting skills at the fair games

He won a whole series of cuddly toys for the children, including a huge flamingo

He won a whole series of cuddly toys for the children, including a huge flamingo

Patricia, four, and Freddie, two, were also dressed for the cold weather

Patricia, four, and Freddie, two, were also dressed for the cold weather

The children were spoiled rotten, tucked into cotton candy and sweets

The children were spoiled rotten, tucked into cotton candy and sweets

Frank later enjoyed a pint as he got into the festive mood

Frank later enjoyed a pint as he got into the festive mood

He was saddled with the huge collection of soft toys

He was saddled with the huge collection of soft toys

While her family enjoyed themselves on Thursday, Christine moderated Loose Women (pictured)

While her family enjoyed themselves on Thursday, Christine moderated Loose Women (pictured)

‘We weren’t both supposed to go and I was late after hosting The One Show. So if we’re there now, we’ll drink a celebratory glass of champagne. It’s a special evening for us.’

Christine keeps her family life very private, yet in June she gave a rare insight into the blended family life she shares with her husband and her battle with anxiety.

Speak with Women&Home magazine, Christine said, “Freddie just turned two, so he’s a whirlwind.

‘They’re both funny, amazing and exhausting. I think they took all my energy away, but it’s worth it.”

Frank flashed a big smile as he enjoyed quality time with his kids

Frank flashed a big smile as he enjoyed quality time with his kids

The family had a great time during the countdown to Christmas

The family had a great time during the countdown to Christmas

Freddie and Patricia watched as their father demonstrated his skills

Freddie and Patricia watched as their father demonstrated his skills

Frank talked on his phone while tucking into a hamburger

Frank talked on his phone while tucking into a hamburger

He made sure to take a few snaps of their beautiful day out

He made sure to take a few snaps of their beautiful day out

The Loose Women star said about her marriage to Frank: ‘We try to prioritize the needs of each other and the children, but when he was playing football he would be away at least two or three nights a week training afterwards.

‘Now we do our best to go out for dinner, or spend an evening on the couch if possible.’

The brunette beauty also explained that her life now is very different from when she first met Frank’s daughters and that she can’t remember life before.

Christine added: “Being part of a blended family is wonderful. I can’t remember life before.

‘When I first met Isla and Luna, they were two and four. Now they are sixteen and almost eighteen and have just completed their GCSE and A-levels.’

Frank is also dad to Isla, 16, and Luna, 18, who he shares with former partner Elen Rivas (pictured with wife Christine in 2015)

Frank is also dad to Isla, 16, and Luna, 18, who he shares with former partner Elen Rivas (pictured with wife Christine in 2015)

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Panthers fire Frank Reich during 1-10 season https://usmail24.com/frank-reich-fired-panthers/ https://usmail24.com/frank-reich-fired-panthers/#respond Mon, 27 Nov 2023 17:51:02 +0000 https://usmail24.com/frank-reich-fired-panthers/

The Carolina Panthers have fired Frank Reich after 11 games, owner David Tepper announced Monday morning. Special teams coordinator Chris Tabor will serve as interim coach. pic.twitter.com/ewX2UsICZM — Carolina Panthers (@Panthers) November 27, 2023 The move comes two weeks after Reich took over play-calling duties from offensive coordinator Thomas Brown – three games after delegating […]

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The Carolina Panthers have fired Frank Reich after 11 games, owner David Tepper announced Monday morning.

Special teams coordinator Chris Tabor will serve as interim coach.

The move comes two weeks after Reich took over play-calling duties from offensive coordinator Thomas Brown – three games after delegating responsibility to Brown in Week 8. Carolina fell to 1-10 on Sunday in a 17-10 loss to the Tennessee Titans.

Brown will resume offensive operations with senior assistant Jim Caldwell as special advisor, Tepper said.

GO DEEPER

A stadium takeover, a 3 TD loss for Panthers. Is history about to repeat itself?

At 11 games, Reich’s tenure is the second-shortest in NFL history for a head coach who coached a regular-season game. The San Francisco 49ers fired Pete McCulley after a 1-8 start to the 1978 season.

(Two head coaches didn’t make it past the regular season; Bill Belichick resigned as coach of the New York Jets after one day in 2000, while George Allen was fired by the Los Angeles Rams after two preseason games in 1977.)

The Panthers hired Reich in January and traded up in March for the No. 1 pick in the 2023 NFL Draft, selecting Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback Bryce Young. Under Reich, however, Young has posted a 74.9 passer rating, the worst of the three QBs selected in the first round. The Panthers also rank 30th in the NFL with 265.9 yards per game on offense.

Reich took over for interim coach Steve Wilks, who was promoted after Carolina fired Matt Rhule after a 1-4 start to the 2022 season. The Panthers have the worst record in the NFL after going 7-10 in 2022.

Carolina traded its 2024 first-round pick to the Chicago Bears in the trade that netted Young.

Reich previously went 40-33-1 in four-plus seasons with the Indianapolis Colts, reaching the playoffs twice and winning one postseason game. He was fired after a 3-5-1 start to the 2022 season.

The Panthers are the second team to make a coaching change this season, joining the Raiders, who fired Josh McDaniels after eight games.

What was Reich’s downfall?

Tepper was sold on Reich’s offensive qualities and his ability to bring in a large staff that included former coaches (Caldwell, Dom Capers) and several newcomers. The idea was that Young would have a building full of QB whisperers. Except it didn’t last.

The Panthers were near the bottom of the league offensively, Young struggled and the offense did not improve after Reich reclaimed the play-calling from Brown. Reich appeared defeated after Sunday’s loss to Tennessee, where Tepper dropped an F-bomb and shook his head after leaving the locker room. – Joe Person, Panthers staff writer

go deeper

GO DEEPER

Panthers anemic and 1-10 record led to the only choice: firing Frank Reich

Who will Tepper target?

Monday’s announcement did not address the future of general manager Scott Fitterer, who is thought to be on shaky ground after failing to provide Young with enough playmakers. It is expected that Tepper will again pursue an offensive-minded coach.

Lions offensive coordinator Ben Johnson was his first choice last winter before Johnson ruled himself out. Tepper will almost certainly make another run at Johnson and don’t be surprised if he tries to make a splash with someone like Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh or New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick.

But Tepper’s history of firing coaches and being hands-on could give proven coaches pause. – Person

Required reading

(Photo: Michael Reaves/Getty Images)

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Anger in Italy as Anne Frank and ‘Warsaw Ghetto Boy’ murals designed to denounce anti-Semitism are vandalized in the streets of Milan within 24 hours https://usmail24.com/fury-italy-anne-frank-warsaw-ghetto-boy-murals-designed-denounce-anti-semitism-vandalised-24-hours-streets-milan-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/ https://usmail24.com/fury-italy-anne-frank-warsaw-ghetto-boy-murals-designed-denounce-anti-semitism-vandalised-24-hours-streets-milan-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/#respond Sun, 19 Nov 2023 02:30:34 +0000 https://usmail24.com/fury-italy-anne-frank-warsaw-ghetto-boy-murals-designed-denounce-anti-semitism-vandalised-24-hours-streets-milan-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/

There is anger in Italy after two murals of Anne Frank and the ‘warsaw ghetto boy’, designed to denounce anti-Semitism, were painted on the streets of Milan with pro-Palestinian messages within 24 hours destroyed. Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini joined widespread condemnation of the vandalism of the murals, saying Italians must “stand together against hatred.” […]

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There is anger in Italy after two murals of Anne Frank and the ‘warsaw ghetto boy’, designed to denounce anti-Semitism, were painted on the streets of Milan with pro-Palestinian messages within 24 hours destroyed.

Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini joined widespread condemnation of the vandalism of the murals, saying Italians must “stand together against hatred.”

A mural showing Holocaust victim Anne Frank crying while holding the Israeli flag in Milan’s central Piazza Castello was painted over with the words “GAZA FREE.”

The original mural depicted a Palestinian girl in a traditional keffiyeh next to Anne Frank burning the flag of terror group Hamas, but it was not destroyed.

A mural showing Holocaust victim Anne Frank crying while holding the Israeli flag in Milan’s central Piazza Castello was painted over with the words ‘GAZA FREE’

The Anne Frank mural, designed to combat anti-Semitism in Milan before it was defaced

The Anne Frank mural, designed to combat anti-Semitism in Milan before it was defaced

Vandals defaced a mural depicting a 'warsaw ghetto boy' held captive by Hamas by completely removing the image of the Jewish child

Vandals defaced a mural depicting a ‘warsaw ghetto boy’ held captive by Hamas by completely removing the image of the Jewish child

The mural in Milan depicting the famous 'warsaw ghetto boy' wearing the yellow Star of David badge that the Nazis forced the Jews to wear before it was defaced

The mural in Milan depicting the famous ‘warsaw ghetto boy’ wearing the yellow Star of David badge that the Nazis forced the Jews to wear before it was defaced

The second mural, which appeared near the Porta Nuova Project in Milan, was also defaced.

That image depicted the famous “Warsaw Ghetto Boy” wearing the yellow Star of David badge that the Nazis forced the Jews to wear.

His hands are raised as he is held hostage by Hamas terrorists who point assault rifles at him, referring to the real photo of the 1943 Warsaw Ghetto Uprising where a boy points a submachine gun at him by Nazi SS soldier Josef Blösche .

After vandals defaced the mural, the child was completely blackened, but the Hamas terrorist and the young Gazan soldier at his side remained intact.

Artist aleXsandro Palombo’s series of street artworks entitled ‘Innocence, Hate and Hope’ appeared in Milan, a month after the Hamas attack on Israel on October 7.

He painted several murals in Milan, which he said “provided a warning of the wave of anti-Semitism sweeping Jews around the world.”

These include the central Piazza Castello, where demonstrations by the Jewish community have been held in recent weeks, and in the area of ​​the new Porta Nuova project acquired by the sovereign wealth fund of the Emirate of Qatar.

Italian Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini said it was a “shame” that the murals had been defaced.

‘Such actions have no place in our society. We must stand together against hate,” he said The Jerusalem Post.

Artist Palombo told it The Jewish Chronicle: ‘The gesture of these anti-Semitic racists is to erase the memory to impose their terrorist thoughts, but these cowardly actions do not intimidate me and I will continue to defend the freedom of expression of our democracy and with my art I will respond until the terror they want to drag us into.

“However, this vandalization only reinforces the meaning of the works and forces us to respond even more forcefully, as it highlights all the anger and social danger of this hateful anti-Semitic machine at work.”

The boys' mural in the Warsaw Ghetto is a reference to this photo from the 1943 Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, where a boy has a submachine gun pointed at him by Nazi SS soldier Josef Blösche

The boys’ mural in the Warsaw Ghetto is a reference to this photo from the 1943 Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, where a boy has a submachine gun pointed at him by Nazi SS soldier Josef Blösche

Italian Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini (pictured) joined widespread condemnation of the anti-Semitic vandalism of the murals, saying Italians must 'stand together against hatred'

Italian Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini (pictured) joined widespread condemnation of the anti-Semitic vandalism of the murals, saying Italians must ‘stand together against hatred’

He added: “These acts of vandalism are demonstrations of terrorist thinking that undermine the freedom of us all. If politicians and institutions do not respond strongly to anti-Semitic violence, we will all lose: legitimizing these gestures also means legitimizing terrorist thinking in our society. And that’s what Hamas propaganda wants.

“The anti-Semitic rage unleashed by Hamas is overwhelming Jews in all parts of the world. This horror resurfacing from the past should give us all pause as it undermines the freedom, security and future of us all.”

Israeli art historian researcher Batya Brutin, who received the Yad Vashem Award for her lifetime achievements in Holocaust education, said: “Palombo’s current street art murals are an important message of warning to the world.”

Ms Brutin added that the vandals’ motives “remain unclear” and that “the importance of combating anti-Semitism and hatred wherever it exists” must be kept in mind.

“While the vandals’ motivations remain unclear, we must remember the importance of combating anti-Semitism and hatred wherever they exist.”

This is the latest incident in a recent wave of anti-Semitic vandalism in Italy. On November 2, a Star of David appeared on a building in Rome and four gold cobblestones, ‘stumbling stones’ that commemorate murdered Jews, were destroyed.

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