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His Intrusion into This World

Fr. Pat gave this brief meditation at approximately midnight on January 1, 2014.




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Holy Water for the Whole World

Sometimes we divide the world into things that concern God and things that don't. What can holy water teach us about that?




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Beauty Will Save the World

The Orthodox author Dostoevsky once said that "beauty will save the world." What does beauty have to do with our salvation and relationship with God?




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Four Tips for Being an Orthodox Christian in the World (with Fr Andrew Damick)

You may be the only Orthodox Christian at school or work. Fr. Andrew joins Steve to offer 4 tips to help you live as an Orthodox Christian in the world.




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For God So Loved The World

Christianity is all about love.




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Tiny Virus and a Paralyzed World




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Into the Real World




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In a World full of Conflict and Problems

Wars, cruelty, pandemic, natural disasters, even inflation. So what does the Lord say? "You ain't seen nothing yet!"




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Sinner 'surprised' by World Anti-Doping Agency appeal

World number one Jannik Sinner says he is "surprised" by the World Anti-Doping Agency's appeal against the decision to clear him of blame after he twice tested positive for a banned substance.




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Nadal retiring tough for tennis world – Sinner

World number one Jannik Sinner praises Rafael Nadal after the Spanish legend announced he will retire from tennis later this year.




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How astronauts are helping Toulouse be out of this world

How do Toulouse adapt methods and practices of space training to the sports field




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Test rugby must get on the road – World Rugby candidate Robinson

Major Test nations need to play more matches overseas to help the game bring in more fans and money says World Rugby chair candidate Brett Robinson.




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Tour rebels should miss World Championship - Murphy

Former Crucible champion Shaun Murphy says any player who joins a potential breakaway tour should not be allowed to play in snooker's biggest events.




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How 'Dracula' the ex-miner became the snooker world's best

Ray Reardon, who has died aged 91, dominated the sport of snooker for the best part of a decade as he won six world titles between 1970 and 1978.




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Framed: The World Champions

Shabnam Younus-Jewell chats to some of the legends who have won snooker's ultimate prize.




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Watch the best shots as Wilson beats Jones to world title

Watch the best shots from the World Snooker Championship final as Kyren Wilson beat Jak Jones 18-14 at The Crucible Theatre, Sheffield.




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World Championship future 'great conversation to be having'

World champion Kyren Wilson says debate over where the World Snooker Championship should be staged in the future is healthy for the sport.




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England can match best in world - Cunningham

England are proving they are good enough to match world champions Australia when the sides meet in March, Jodie Cunningham says.




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The doctor who became a cycling world champion

A qualified doctor who watched the Tokyo Games while working at a hospital, Anna Morris is now a three-time world champion and Olympic medallist.




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World champions to part-timers - Martin needs patience

Cardiff's number eight has gone from part-timer to facing world champions and back again in the space of 12 months.




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Griggs sets world's best time for Parkrun

County Tyrone 19-year-old Nick Griggs produces a Parkrun world's best at Victoria Park in Belfast when he clocks 13 minutes and 44 seconds.




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Willstrop is new world number one

Britain's James Willstrop will replace fellow Yorkshireman Nick Matthew at the top of the world rankings after triumphing in the final of the PSA Masters event in Delhi.




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Simpson aims for world number one

Guernsey squash player Chris Simpson sets his sights on a match with world number one Nick Matthew at the British Championships.




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Egypt stun England in world final

Second seeds Egypt upset tournament favourites England to win the Women's World Team Championship in France.




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Willstrop wins opener at Worlds

World number one James Willstrop reaches the second round of the World Championships in Doha.




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Willstrop into last 16 at Worlds

World number one James Willstrop continues his bid for a first world title with victory over Canada's Shawn Delierre in Doha.




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How Scotland's first fire brigade inspired the world

Modern fire brigades around the world were created after Edinburgh led the way 200 years ago.




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'A crazy year to bring a baby into the world'

Four mums share their experiences of having a baby amid coronavirus lockdown restrictions.




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'Buzzing' - Griggs was 'not trying' to break Parkrun world record

Teenager Nick Griggs admits he didn't set out to break the Parkrun world record after achieving the feat in Belfast on Saturday.




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The Yarm surgeon saving hearing across the world

Dr Noweed Ahmad performs life-changing surgery that allows deaf people to hear.




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Team to tackle 'world's toughest row' ocean crossing

Four Army teachers are preparing to row across the Atlantic in a 3,000 mile challenge for charity.




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'She's my world and my heart' - an adoption journey

Rachel says adopting her daughter has been exciting and scary but she wouldn't have it any other way.




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World champion Payne aims to boost sidecar profile

World sidecar champion Harry Payne plans to also compete in the British Championship next year to help boost his profile.




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What in the World

In Nigeria and Ghana, the dream of owning property feels increasingly out of reach




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Renting costs in Brighton 'out of this world'

Brighton is the fourth least affordable place in England to rent according to government statistics.




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'I'm sailing around the world and want a record'

Poole sailor Pip Hare wants to be the first woman to complete the gruelling 24,300-mile Vendée Globe race twice.




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'Enjoy the world while you can,' says teen with MD

Car-obsessed teenager Dakota, who has muscular dystrophy, is treated to a trip to Silverstone.




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Hockey player 'proud' to be in Masters World Cup

Sabina Falcone-Healey is a member of the England women's over-45 squad.




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Woman, 70, wins triathlon world championship title

Judy Orme won the 2024 World Triathlon Championships in her 70-74 age group category in Spain.




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Cricket World Cup - kudos to Sri Lanka Cricket

I had the fortune of landing a ticket for Saturday's quarter final match between Sri Lanka and England. Someone who had 2 grandstand tickets got sick and I was lucky to be asked whether I want it at list price :). At Rs. 4000 each I felt they were pricey but then at the event I met a friend who had paid double that for his ticket! I will comment on the ticket selling process later.

First of all, the stadium atmosphere was just incredibly amazingly fantastically electric and rocking. Being there is nothing like watching at home .. despite being able to see the match poorly, the environment is of course unbeatable. The fact that Sri Lanka gave England a total drubbing was awesome, even though as a result the game became quite non-competitive .. but I'll settle for non-competitive games up to the final and thrilling victory in the final (vs. to have it stolen like the last time).

This post is not about the quarter final match - its about Sri Lanka Cricket, the embattled organization which runs the sport in Sri Lanka.

As most people in Sri Lanka know, the organizers were hammered very very hard in the press before the World Cup started about their preparations, about how the stadiums were completed last minute and about every aspect of team selection to overall management. I'm not an expert on cricket- so I have no useful views on the cricketing aspects and will leave them alone. However, I do want to comment on the overall organization of the event.

I have made it to 3 matches in Colombo - the first was the loss to Pakistan, the second the rained out draw with Australia and the third of course the drubbing of England.

All these were held at the newly refurbished Kettarama Stadium of course- an absolutely AWESOME stadium now! I have been there a few months ago and it was a nightmare to get in and out. Now its a breeze and reminds me of the convenience of getting in and out of Purdue's Mackey Arena (for basketball). Once you are inside, the view is breathtaking. The atmosphere is amazingly electric. Every match was sold out (of course) to a capacity crowd of 35,000+.

I didn't make it to Hambantota for the first match but the news from there was that the brand new stadium there was absolutely amazing as well. The words from a friend (usually a skeptic) was "money well spent".

Same has to be said for Pallekalle in Kandy. That's again a new stadium (or a refurb'ed old ground; not sure) and while its not as built up as Hambantota or Colombo the location is just amazing and all the reports are that the place was fantastic.

There was not a single time in all the matches in Sri Lanka where something went wrong with the logistics. All the comentators have been giving kudos about the venues and the amazing environments offered by them.

I too was caught up in the press vendetta against Suraj Dandeniya (the head of the World Cup organizing team in SLC). While the work was indeed completed last minute it is time to give this gentleman a tip of the hat and acknowledge the amazing work they have done to deliver perfectly for Sri Lanka. Press  stories have a way of finding individuals guilty without judge or jury and this vendetta was played out by most of the newspapers in a merciless manner. Maybe Suraj has refused some passes for the press and their buddies? Who knows.

Yes yes I know there's one more match to be played in Sri Lanka. That's the one where Sri Lanka will whack the New Zealanders home :-). I am confident that too will go off without a hitch! At one level "may the best team win" may apply but, honestly, to hell with that .. Sri Lanka has to win to set up an amazing final in India against (most probably) India. Nothing like that victory!

(The NZ team has done amazingly well to get to the semi-finals and they've always stepped up big at the big occasions. Their country also suffered a massive earthquake recently .. only to be overshadowed by an even bigger one. If they go on to winning the tournament they'll again get some all-important PR for the recovery efforts there. To that extent I want NZ to win. Yeah, treacherous.)

Now about those ticket sales.

Fundamentally, this is a no-win situation for the organizers. 35,000 tickets for the match where 500,000 at least would love to watch in person. So no matter what approach is taken, there will be 465,000+ who will be crying foul!

There have been stories about how people stood in line, bought the ticket and turned around and sold it to someone else. I see no way to stop that - and keeping the ticket price low (lowest was Rs. 50 for group stage matches in Colombo) meant that anyone could buy them without any problem - a good thing in general.

Personally I have no issue with blackmarket sales (and I don't understand why they are banned) - the only problem it highlights is that the original ticket was sold too low! Why doesn't Sri Lanka Cricket sell the ticket for Rs. 10,000 if it can get away with it and make more money? Maybe they should've also set up an auction at EBay or something where people can bid and buy tickets at whatever price above the minimum price. No I'm not suggesting doing that for all tickets but rather for a percentage- you give some on a pure lottery, some for those who stand in line .. and the rest to the best price via auction with batches sold daily. I don't understand why they created a secondary market in the first place when they themselves could've run both the primary and secondary markets. Obviously I don't know enough about market economics.

The real problem is that many tickets seem to have been sold only to "known parties". The Colombo powers-that-be who want to watch the matches shouldn't have been able to buy through back channels. If they don't want to stand in line they can certainly afford to buy the tickets on the blackmarket if they want and let some poor guy make some money. Why should these fat cats be able to buy tickets at list?!

When you are at the match (and I went to A lower the first time (Rs. 250), to C upper the second time (Rs. 100) and to the grand stand for the quarter final (Rs. 4000) its clear that most in attendance were way above average in economic terms. In practical terms, that suggests that a lot of blackmarket sales were happening. If someone's a true fan, there's no amount of money that would make them sell the ticket - so the people who sold the tickets were not real fans. Or they were true fans who felt the money was more economically valuable for them than the experience (maybe they had a sick child or needed some home repairs or whatever ..). Or they were savvy businessmen who stood in line and sold the ticket for a profit. The bottom line is that there's no way to prevent normal capitalism from taking place and the value balance ending up wherever it ends up.

So while I too am frustrated I can't get a ticket for the semi-finals, I am only upset about connected people getting tickets at list price through backchannel means. The rest of the system I have no concerns with - and next time (20-20 World Cup next year) I hope Sri Lanka Cricket does a combination of lines, lotteries and auctions to sell the tickets.

Talking about tickets .. anyone have a spare grandstand ticket for the semi final they want to sell me at list price? :-)




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Factors affecting the intention to continue to visit the virtual world metaverse

A metaverse is a virtual shared space connected to the real world, an alternative reality that enables economic activities, exchanges, and transactions as well as formation of relationships between user avatars and non-player characters (NPCs). Initial experiences of the metaverse were not very satisfactory; new virtual world metaverses may or may not survive as information services or platforms. The purpose of this empirical study is to identify the characteristics of a virtual world metaverse and their effects on intention to continue usage of the platform. Considering the metaverse as a new type of user experience and a powerful mode of communication, we examine the mediating role of these characteristics according to Pine and Gilmore's (1998) experience economy theory, which enriches our understanding of the factors affecting the success of a metaverse. In addition, since social interaction is important in metaverses, we extend Pine and Gilmore's experience economy model by including Schmitt's (2011) relate experience for better understanding.




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Academic Library Services in Virtual Worlds: An Examination of the Potential for Library Services in Immersive Environments




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Real World Project: Integrating the Classroom, External Business Partnerships and Professional Organizations




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Facilitating Exposure to Sign Languages of the World: The Case for Mobile Assisted Language Learning




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Readiness to Communicate in a Digital World




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Teaching in Virtual Worlds: Opportunities and Challenges




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Teachers in a World of Change: Teachers' Knowledge and Attitudes towards the Implementation of Innovative Technologies in Schools




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Learning from the World Wide Web: Using Organizational Profiles in Information Searches




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Do We Need to Impose More Regulation Upon the World Wide Web? -A Metasystem Analysis




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Role of Librarian in Internet and World Wide Web Environment