bbcworldservice
mardi 31 mai 2016
lundi 23 mai 2016
100-year-old runner Ida Keeling won't be stopping anytime soon
100-year-old runner Ida Keeling won't be stopping anytime soon
Ida Keeling stacks up at a
whopping 4-foot-6 and weighs in at 83 pounds. To the untrained eye, she might
not look like a force to be reckoned with. Heck, she might even look frail. But
that couldn't be further from the truth.
The 100-year-old Keeling is an
avid runner who began racing in her late 60s. She still holds the fastest time
for American women age 95 to 99 in the 60-meter dash (29.86 seconds).
Keeling runs for reasons that
go beyond just maintaining her physical health. After losing two sons to
drug-related violence, she started running as a method for dealing with life's
hardships. She
explained her outlook to The New York Times:
"You see so many older
people just sitting around -- well, that's not me. Time marches on, but I keep
going. ... What makes me faster now is that everyone else slowed down."
Proof:
What a boss. May we all strive
to channel our inner Ms. Keeling today and always.
Update: Check out video of Keeling
competing in the Masters 100 at the Penn Relays on Sunday, setting a world record for
the 100+ age group with a time of one minute, 17 seconds.
lundi 16 mai 2016
January 26, 1930: Gandhi publishes the Declaration of Independence of India.
March 2, 1931: Gandhi warns the Viceroy of his intention to break the Salt Laws.
March 12-April 6, 1931: Gandhi leads his Salt March to the sea.
May 5, 1931: Gandhi is arrested for violating the Salt Laws; non-cooperation movements break out across India.
January
1931: British government yields to protests, releases all prisoners,
invites a Congress representative to Britain for a Round Table
Conference (the Congress asks Gandhi to be this representative).
Autumn 1931: Gandhi participates in the Round Table Conference in Britain.
December 28, 1931: Gandhi returns to India.
January 4, 1932: Gandhi is arrested for sedition, and held without a trial.
September 20-25, 1932: Gandhi fasts in prison to protest the treatment of untouchables.
1934-38: Gandhi avoids politics, travels in rural India.
1935:
Government of India Act passes British Parliament and is implemented in
India; it is the first movement toward independence.
September 1939: World War II begins, lasting until 1945.
March
22, 1942: Sir Stafford Cripps arrives in India, presenting to the
Indian National Congress a proposal for Dominion status (autonomy within
the British Commonwealth) after the War.
August 8, 1942: The Indian
National Congress rejects the Cripps proposal, and declares it will
grant its support for the British war effort only in return for
independence.
August 1942: Congress leaders are arrested; Gandhi is imprisoned in the Aga Khan's palace.
February 10 to March 2, 1943: Gandhi fasts while imprisoned, to protest British rule.
February 22, 1944: Death of Kasturbai
May 6, 1944: Gandhi is released from the Aga Khan's palace.
Summer 1944: Gandhi visits Muhammed Ali Jinnah in Bombay, but is unable to work out an agreement that will keep India whole.
May
16, 1946: British Cabinet Mission publishes proposal for an Indian
state, without partition; Jinnah and the Muslim League reject the
proposal.
March 1947: Lord Mountbatten arrives in India and hammers out agreement for independence and partition.
August 15, 1947: Indian independence becomes official, as does the partition into two countries, India and Pakistan.
August-December 1948: India dissolves into chaos and killings, as Hindus and Muslims flee for the borders of India and Pakistan.
January 30, 1948: Gandhi is assassinated by Nathuram Vinayuk Godse, a Hindu nationalist.
March 2, 1931: Gandhi warns the Viceroy of his intention to break the Salt Laws.
March 12-April 6, 1931: Gandhi leads his Salt March to the sea.
May 5, 1931: Gandhi is arrested for violating the Salt Laws; non-cooperation movements break out across India.
January
1931: British government yields to protests, releases all prisoners,
invites a Congress representative to Britain for a Round Table
Conference (the Congress asks Gandhi to be this representative).
Autumn 1931: Gandhi participates in the Round Table Conference in Britain.
December 28, 1931: Gandhi returns to India.
January 4, 1932: Gandhi is arrested for sedition, and held without a trial.
September 20-25, 1932: Gandhi fasts in prison to protest the treatment of untouchables.
1934-38: Gandhi avoids politics, travels in rural India.
1935:
Government of India Act passes British Parliament and is implemented in
India; it is the first movement toward independence.
September 1939: World War II begins, lasting until 1945.
March
22, 1942: Sir Stafford Cripps arrives in India, presenting to the
Indian National Congress a proposal for Dominion status (autonomy within
the British Commonwealth) after the War.
August 8, 1942: The Indian
National Congress rejects the Cripps proposal, and declares it will
grant its support for the British war effort only in return for
independence.
August 1942: Congress leaders are arrested; Gandhi is imprisoned in the Aga Khan's palace.
February 10 to March 2, 1943: Gandhi fasts while imprisoned, to protest British rule.
February 22, 1944: Death of Kasturbai
May 6, 1944: Gandhi is released from the Aga Khan's palace.
Summer 1944: Gandhi visits Muhammed Ali Jinnah in Bombay, but is unable to work out an agreement that will keep India whole.
May
16, 1946: British Cabinet Mission publishes proposal for an Indian
state, without partition; Jinnah and the Muslim League reject the
proposal.
March 1947: Lord Mountbatten arrives in India and hammers out agreement for independence and partition.
August 15, 1947: Indian independence becomes official, as does the partition into two countries, India and Pakistan.
August-December 1948: India dissolves into chaos and killings, as Hindus and Muslims flee for the borders of India and Pakistan.
January 30, 1948: Gandhi is assassinated by Nathuram Vinayuk Godse, a Hindu nationalist.
Martin Luther King the interview
The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.'s 'I Have a Dream' speech is among the
most acclaimed in U.S. history, and the 50th anniversary this week of
the March on Washington where he delivered it highlights the speech's
staying power.
Inscription à :
Articles (Atom)