we

Bahraini Dinar(BHD)/Norwegian Krone(NOK)

1 Bahraini Dinar = 27.0163 Norwegian Krone




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Chilean Peso(CLP)/Swedish Krona(SEK)

1 Chilean Peso = 0.0118 Swedish Krona




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Chilean Peso(CLP)/Norwegian Krone(NOK)

1 Chilean Peso = 0.0124 Norwegian Krone




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[Women's Outdoor Track & Field] Four Track & Field Throwers Named 2017 Daktronics-NAIA ...

Kansas City, MO - The National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) announced Friday that 467 women's indoor & outdoor track & field student-athletes have been named 2017 Daktronics-NAIA Scholar-Athletes. Four Haskell student-athletes - Cherica Eckiwaudah, Elizabeth Davey, Taylor Hall, and Kari Snelding earned the honor. 




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Maldivian Rufiyaa(MVR)/Swedish Krona(SEK)

1 Maldivian Rufiyaa = 0.6303 Swedish Krona




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Maldivian Rufiyaa(MVR)/Norwegian Krone(NOK)

1 Maldivian Rufiyaa = 0.659 Norwegian Krone




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Malaysian Ringgit(MYR)/Swedish Krona(SEK)

1 Malaysian Ringgit = 2.2547 Swedish Krona




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Malaysian Ringgit(MYR)/Norwegian Krone(NOK)

1 Malaysian Ringgit = 2.3574 Norwegian Krone




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Bolsonaro Fights for Survival, Turning to Empowered Military Elders

A flailing leader has given Brazil’s generals an opening to insert themselves onto the front lines of politics.




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[Women's Cross Country] Cross Country Runner Tavia Hart Is Named A.I.I. Runner of the Week

Haskell Women's Cross Country runner Tavia Hart comes out runner of the week after second meet of the season.




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Nicaraguan Cordoba Oro(NIO)/Swedish Krona(SEK)

1 Nicaraguan Cordoba Oro = 0.284 Swedish Krona



  • Nicaraguan Cordoba Oro

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Nicaraguan Cordoba Oro(NIO)/Norwegian Krone(NOK)

1 Nicaraguan Cordoba Oro = 0.297 Norwegian Krone



  • Nicaraguan Cordoba Oro

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NFL Power Rankings: 1-32 poll, plus post-draft winners for every team

Ben Roethlisberger and Chandler Jones got some support in the NFL draft, while Alvin Kamara's importance was cemented even more.




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Everything we know about the NFL's plans for a virtual offseason

With the NFL offseason going virtual, how will teams adapt and what changes can we expect heading into the summer? We answer all of your questions.




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Saints' schedule 2020: Tom Brady in Week 1, Vikings on Christmas

The NFL didn’t wait long to shine a spotlight on the new Brady-Brees rivalry, but the Saints' fate could be decided by brutal late-season stretch.




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Netherlands Antillean Guilder(ANG)/Swedish Krona(SEK)

1 Netherlands Antillean Guilder = 5.4433 Swedish Krona



  • Netherlands Antillean Guilder

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Netherlands Antillean Guilder(ANG)/Norwegian Krone(NOK)

1 Netherlands Antillean Guilder = 5.6913 Norwegian Krone



  • Netherlands Antillean Guilder

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Estonian Kroon(EEK)/Swedish Krona(SEK)

1 Estonian Kroon = 0.6851 Swedish Krona




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Estonian Kroon(EEK)/Norwegian Krone(NOK)

1 Estonian Kroon = 0.7164 Norwegian Krone




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Danish Krone(DKK)/Swedish Krona(SEK)

1 Danish Krone = 1.4201 Swedish Krona




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Danish Krone(DKK)/Norwegian Krone(NOK)

1 Danish Krone = 1.4848 Norwegian Krone




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Fiji Dollar(FJD)/Swedish Krona(SEK)

1 Fiji Dollar = 4.3372 Swedish Krona




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Fiji Dollar(FJD)/Norwegian Krone(NOK)

1 Fiji Dollar = 4.5348 Norwegian Krone




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New Zealand Dollar(NZD)/Swedish Krona(SEK)

1 New Zealand Dollar = 5.998 Swedish Krona



  • New Zealand Dollar

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New Zealand Dollar(NZD)/Norwegian Krone(NOK)

1 New Zealand Dollar = 6.2712 Norwegian Krone



  • New Zealand Dollar

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Croatian Kuna(HRK)/Swedish Krona(SEK)

1 Croatian Kuna = 1.4083 Swedish Krona




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Croatian Kuna(HRK)/Norwegian Krone(NOK)

1 Croatian Kuna = 1.4725 Norwegian Krone




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Peruvian Nuevo Sol(PEN)/Swedish Krona(SEK)

1 Peruvian Nuevo Sol = 2.8749 Swedish Krona



  • Peruvian Nuevo Sol

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Peruvian Nuevo Sol(PEN)/Norwegian Krone(NOK)

1 Peruvian Nuevo Sol = 3.0058 Norwegian Krone



  • Peruvian Nuevo Sol

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[Softball] Softball Falls to Southwestern College in Double Header




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[Men's Golf] Graceland Invitational cut short due to weather conditions.

Maryville, MO – The Haskell Men's golf team competed in the Graceland Invitational which was cut short due to inclement weather conditions on the second day. 




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[Men's Golf] Grant Shorty named Golfer of the Week

LAWRENCEVILLE, Ga. – The Association of Independent Institutions (A.I.I.) announced on Monday that Grant Shorty (SO/Albuquerque, NM) of Haskell Indian Nations University (Kan.) has been named the A.I.I.'s Men's Golfer of the Week for the duration of April 10-16.




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[Cross Country] Cross Country Runs Well Last Meet Before A.I.I. Championship Meet

Haskell Cross Country teams traveled to Mount Mercy in Iowa this past Saturday and performed well a week before A.I.I. Championship Meet on Saturday 11/9/19.




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Dominican Peso(DOP)/Swedish Krona(SEK)

1 Dominican Peso = 0.1775 Swedish Krona




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Dominican Peso(DOP)/Norwegian Krone(NOK)

1 Dominican Peso = 0.1856 Norwegian Krone




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[Men's Outdoor Track & Field] Haskell Throwers Make Their Mark at ESU Spring Open

NCAA Division II, Emporia State University served as the 2ndmeet of the Outdoor Track and Field season for the Indians.  Highlights from the meet include:

Ian Stand, a sophomore from Bay Point, California returned to the discus ring and completed a toss of 36.52 meters, an improvement from his first meet.  Stand, also earned a seventh place finish in the shot put with a distance of 10.76 meters. 




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[Men's Outdoor Track & Field] Indian Track & Field Competes at Northwest Open

Two Haskell men finish fourth, while one Indian woman places sixth




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Papua New Guinean Kina(PGK)/Swedish Krona(SEK)

1 Papua New Guinean Kina = 2.8486 Swedish Krona



  • Papua New Guinean Kina

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Papua New Guinean Kina(PGK)/Norwegian Krone(NOK)

1 Papua New Guinean Kina = 2.9784 Norwegian Krone



  • Papua New Guinean Kina

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Brunei Dollar(BND)/Swedish Krona(SEK)

1 Brunei Dollar = 6.9144 Swedish Krona




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Brunei Dollar(BND)/Norwegian Krone(NOK)

1 Brunei Dollar = 7.2294 Norwegian Krone




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[Men's Basketball] Men's Basketball Athlete, Nakia Hendricks, Named A.I.I. Player of the Week




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May be harmful if inhaled or swallowed

In the book “The World of _____” by Bennett Alan Weinberg and Bonnie K Bealer, there is a photograph of a label from a jar of pharmaceutical-grade crystals. It reads:

“WARNING: MAY BE HARMFUL IF INHALED OR SWALLOWED. HAS CAUSED MUTAGENIC AND REPRODUCTIVE EFFECTS IN LABORATORY ANIMALS. INHALATION CAUSES RAPID HEART RATE, EXCITEMENT, DIZZINESS, PAIN, COLLAPSE, HYPOTENSION, FEVER, SHORTNESS OF BREATH. MAY CAUSE HEADACHE, INSOMNIA, VOMITING, STOMACH PAIN, COLLAPSE AND CONVULSIONS.”

Fill in the blank.

Workoutable © 2007 IndiaUncut.com. All rights reserved.
India Uncut * The IU Blog * Rave Out * Extrowords * Workoutable * Linkastic




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We Must Reclaim Nationalism From the BJP

This is the 18th installment of The Rationalist, my column for the Times of India.

The man who gave us our national anthem, Rabindranath Tagore, once wrote that nationalism was “a great menace.” He went on to say, “It is the particular thing which for years has been at the bottom of India’s troubles.”

Not just India’s, but the world’s: In his book The Open Society and its Enemies, published in 1945 as Adolf Hitler was defeated, Karl Popper ripped into nationalism, with all its “appeals to our tribal instincts, to passion and to prejudice, and to our nostalgic desire to be relieved from the strain of individual responsibility which it attempts to replace by a collective or group responsibility.”

Nationalism is resurgent today, stomping across the globe hand-in-hand with populism. In India, too, it is tearing us apart. But must nationalism always be a bad thing? A provocative new book by the Israeli thinker Yael Tamir argues otherwise.

In her book Why Nationalism, Tamir makes the following arguments. One, nation-states are here to stay. Two, the state needs the nation to be viable. Three, people need nationalism for the sense of community and belonging it gives them. Four, therefore, we need to build a better nationalism, which brings people together instead of driving them apart.

The first point needs no elaboration. We are a globalised world, but we are also trapped by geography and circumstance. “Only 3.3 percent of the world’s population,” Tamir points out, “lives outside their country of birth.” Nutopia, the borderless state dreamed up by John Lennon and Yoko Ono, is not happening anytime soon.

If the only thing that citizens of a state have in common is geographical circumstance, it is not enough. If the state is a necessary construct, a nation is its necessary justification. “Political institutions crave to form long-term political bonding,” writes Tamir, “and for that matter they must create a community that is neither momentary nor meaningless.” Nationalism, she says, “endows the state with intimate feelings linking the past, the present, and the future.”

More pertinently, Tamir argues, people need nationalism. I am a humanist with a belief in individual rights, but Tamir says that this is not enough. “The term ‘human’ is a far too thin mode of delineation,” she writes. “Individuals need to rely on ‘thick identities’ to make their lives meaningful.” This involves a shared past, a common culture and distinctive values.

Tamir also points out that there is a “strong correlation between social class and political preferences.” The privileged elites can afford to be globalists, but those less well off are inevitably drawn to other narratives that enrich their lives. “Rather than seeing nationalism as the last refuge of the scoundrel,” writes Tamir, “we should start thinking of nationalism as the last hope of the needy.”

Tamir’s book bases its arguments on the West, but the argument holds in India as well. In a country with so much poverty, is it any wonder that nationalism is on the rise? The cosmopolitan, globe-trotting elites don’t have daily realities to escape, but how are those less fortunate to find meaning in their lives?

I have one question, though. Why is our nationalism so exclusionary when our nation is so inclusive?

In the nationalism that our ruling party promotes, there are some communities who belong here, and others who don’t. (And even among those who ‘belong’, they exploit divisions.) In their us-vs-them vision of the world, some religions are foreign, some values are foreign, even some culinary traditions are foreign – and therefore frowned upon. But the India I know and love is just the opposite of that.

We embrace influences from all over. Our language, our food, our clothes, our music, our cinema have absorbed so many diverse influences that to pretend they come from a single legit source is absurd. (Even the elegant churidar-kurtas our prime minister wears have an Islamic origin.) As an example, take the recent film Gully Boy: its style of music, the clothes its protagonists wear, even the attitudes in the film would have seemed alien to us a few decades ago. And yet, could there be a truer portrait of young India?

This inclusiveness, this joyous khichdi that we are, is what makes our nation a model for the rest of the world. No nation embraces all other nations as ours does. My India celebrates differences, and I do as well. I wear my kurta with jeans, I listen to ghazals, I eat dhansak and kababs, and I dream in the Indian language called English. This is my nationalism.

Those who try to divide us, therefore, are the true anti-nationals. We must reclaim nationalism from them.



© 2007 IndiaUncut.com. All rights reserved.
India Uncut * The IU Blog * Rave Out * Extrowords * Workoutable * Linkastic




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For this Brave New World of cricket, we have IPL and England to thank

This is the 24th installment of The Rationalist, my column for the Times of India.

Back in the last decade, I was a cricket journalist for a few years. Then, around 12 years ago, I quit. I was jaded as hell. Every game seemed like déjà vu, nothing new, just another round on the treadmill. Although I would remember her fondly, I thought me and cricket were done.

And then I fell in love again. Cricket has changed in the last few years in glorious ways. There have been new ways of thinking about the game. There have been new ways of playing the game. Every season, new kinds of drama form, new nuances spring up into sight. This is true even of what had once seemed the dullest form of the game, one-day cricket. We are entering into a brave new world, and the team leading us there is England. No matter what happens in the World Cup final today – a single game involves a huge amount of luck – this England side are extraordinary. They are the bridge between eras, leading us into a Golden Age of Cricket.

I know that sounds hyperbolic, so let me stun you further by saying that I give the IPL credit for this. And now, having woken up you up with such a jolt on this lovely Sunday morning, let me explain.

Twenty20 cricket changed the game in two fundamental ways. Both ended up changing one-day cricket. The first was strategy.

When the first T20 games took place, teams applied an ODI template to innings-building: pinch-hit, build, slog. But this was not an optimal approach. In ODIs, teams have 11 players over 50 overs. In T20s, they have 11 players over 20 overs. The equation between resources and constraints is different. This means that the cost of a wicket goes down, and the cost of a dot ball goes up. Critically, it means that the value of aggression rises. A team need not follow the ODI template. In some instances, attacking for all 20 overs – or as I call it, ‘frontloading’ – may be optimal.

West Indies won the T20 World Cup in 2016 by doing just this, and England played similarly. And some sides began to realise was that they had been underestimating the value of aggression in one-day cricket as well.

The second fundamental way in which T20 cricket changed cricket was in terms of skills. The IPL and other leagues brought big money into the game. This changed incentives for budding cricketers. Relatively few people break into Test or ODI cricket, and play for their countries. A much wider pool can aspire to play T20 cricket – which also provides much more money. So it makes sense to spend the hundreds of hours you are in the nets honing T20 skills rather than Test match skills. Go to any nets practice, and you will find many more kids practising innovative aggressive strokes than playing the forward defensive.

As a result, batsmen today have a wider array of attacking strokes than earlier generations. Because every run counts more in T20 cricket, the standard of fielding has also shot up. And bowlers have also reacted to this by expanding their arsenal of tricks. Everyone has had to lift their game.

In one-day cricket, thus, two things have happened. One, there is better strategic understanding about the value of aggression. Two, batsmen are better equipped to act on the aggressive imperative. The game has continued to evolve.

Bowlers have reacted to this with greater aggression on their part, and this ongoing dialogue has been fascinating. The cricket writer Gideon Haigh once told me on my podcast that the 2015 World Cup featured a battle between T20 batting and Test match bowling.

This England team is the high watermark so far. Their aggression does not come from slogging. They bat with a combination of intent and skills that allows them to coast at 6-an-over, without needing to take too many risks. In normal conditions, thus, they can coast to 300 – any hitting they do beyond that is the bonus that takes them to 350 or 400. It’s a whole new level, illustrated by the fact that at one point a few days ago, they had seven consecutive scores of 300 to their name. Look at their scores over the last few years, in fact, and it is clear that this is the greatest batting side in the history of one-day cricket – by a margin.

There have been stumbles in this World Cup, but in the bigger picture, those are outliers. If England have a bad day in the final and New Zealand play their A-game, England might even lose today. But if Captain Morgan’s men play their A-game, they will coast to victory. New Zealand does not have those gears. No other team in the world does – for now.

But one day, they will all have to learn to play like this.



© 2007 IndiaUncut.com. All rights reserved.
India Uncut * The IU Blog * Rave Out * Extrowords * Workoutable * Linkastic




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Special Route not connecting to Power Rings

Hi,

I'm a newbie and I'm working on a mixed-signal chip in Innovus. I've got a few analog LEF files that I've imported into my floorplan as macros.

My chip has got two power domains - VCC and VBAT.

One of the macro in the VBAT domain uses VBAT and GND as power rails myloweslife.com.

On doing Special-Route, I've got a lot of minute power rails for the standard cells, as expected.

But, the VBAT power rails are not getting extended till the outer power rings. Only the GND rails are correctly getting extended till the outer power rings.

A screen shot is attached for reference.

Thanks for any help




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Special Route not connecting to Power Rings

Hi,

I'm a newbie and I'm working on a mixed-signal chip in Innovus. I've got a few analog LEF files that I've imported into my floorplan as macros.

My chip has got two power domains - VCC and VBAT.

One of the macro in the VBAT domain uses VBAT and GND as power rails KrogerFeedback.com.

On doing Special-Route, I've got a lot of minute power rails for the standard cells, as expected.

But, the VBAT power rails are not getting extended till the outer power rings. Only the GND rails are correctly getting extended till the outer power rings.

A screen shot is attached for reference.

Thanks for any help




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What's the difference between Cadence PCB Editor and Cadence Allegro?

Are they basically the same thing? I am trying to get as much experience with Allegro since a lot of jobs I am looking at right now are asking for Cadence Allegro experience (I wish they asked for Altium experience...). I currently have access to PCB Editor, but I don't want to commit to learning Editor if Allegro is completely different. Also walmart one, are the Cadence Allegro courses worth it? I won't be paying for it and if it's worth it, I figure I might as well use the opportunity to say I know how to use two complex CAD tools.




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Voltus power analysis

Hi,

I was wondering if it is possible to save the coordinates of each stripe and row of the power grid 

and if it is possible to find out the effective resistance between two given points using Voltus

My goal is to built a resistance model of the power grid

Thanks




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How do I write the LEF view of a power pad

I have a set of pads for use in a design and I was wondering which attributes should I put on each pin.

Let's say it has the following pins:

   - inh_vdd, inh_vss, CORE, PAD where the first two are for the pad rings, the CORE pin is to use in the die and the PAD pin is the bonding pad.

I guess CORE would need:

   CLASS CORE

   USE POWER  (or GROUND if this happened to be a ground pad)

What about the inh_vdd and inh_vss? Theyu would not have the CLASS CORE, but would I use USE POWER/GROUND on them too?

   USE POWER (or GROUND)

   SHAPE ABUTMENT

And the bonding pad? Should I put it in the LEF? Or would that cause confusion to innovus or Voltus? And what attributed would it use? USE POWER/GROUND only?

Do I need anything in the LEF to indicate that the pin CORE and the pin PAD are essentially the same thing, just different places on the same power pad?