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  1. 1

    Temporal Changes and Between-Competition Differences in the Activity Profile of Elite Hurling Referees by Aidan J. Brady, Michael Scriney, Mark Roantree, Andrew McCarren, Niall M. Moyna

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…<b>Background/Objectives:</b> This study examined the activity profile of elite hurling referees during games in the National Hurling League (NHL) and All-Ireland Championship (AIC) and across all divisions of the NHL and phases of the AIC. …”
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  2. 2

    Toulouse, université hispanique. Des relations universitaires franco-espagnoles du Moyen Âge à l’Ilustración by Patrick Ferté

    Published 2013-06-01
    “…After the lowest attendance level in the mid of the seventeenth century, exhaustive serial sources are proving that traditional transpyrenean tropism was revived and increased in the eighteenth century : after the instauration of a favourable to Castillan party Bourbon regime, who suppressed ancient catalan universities, and replaced those rebellious seats by the new and submissive university of Cervera (1717), more than 900 uncompromising Catalan students scorned it with a sort of passive resistance and they hurled themselves at Toulouse, who became again a spare campus in spite of interdicts.…”
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  3. 3

    De Paris à Padoue, le grand tour d’un universitaire proscrit par Louis XIV : Charles Patin, médecin, numismate (1633-1693) by Patrick Ferté

    Published 2011-02-01
    “…This peregrinatio academica led the outlaw to Padoua University, where Venetian Republic recruited him as a defiance hurled at French militar and cultural hegemony. Patin found a family there and became the kingpin of padouan and venetian intellectual sociability, which he revived, both with his medical, numismatical and historiographical productions than with his academic initiatives, notably feminist.…”
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  4. 4

    Forgetting and Remembering the Darwin Bombings by Elizabeth RECHNIEWSKI

    Published 2012-12-01
    “…On 19 February 1942 Japanese warplanes struck Darwin harbour, where an important section of the American fleet was at anchor, with a force greater than that hurled against Pearl Harbour, causing the death of over 300 people and extensive damage to the harbour, airfields and city. …”
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