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The draw for the play-off round will be held on 2 August 2021, 12:00 CEST.<section end="PO" /> |
A total of 12 teams will play in the play-off round. They will be divided into two paths: |
Seeding of teams will be based on their 2021 UEFA club coefficients. For the winners of the third qualifying round, whose identity will not be known at the time of draw, the club coefficient of the highest-ranked remaining team in each tie will be used. The first team drawn in each tie will be the home team of the first leg. |
<section begin="PO" /> |
Champions Path |
"Seeded:" |
"Seeded if seeded Q1 team advances to :" |
"Seeded if seeded Q2 team advances to :" |
"Seeding to be confirmed:" |
League Path |
"Seeded:" |
"Unseeded:" |
<section end="PO" /> |
The winners of the ties will advance to the group stage. The losers will be transferred to the Europa League group stage. |
Falcata |
Falcata is a Strategy game, developed and published by Gust, which was released in Japan in 1995. Falcata was one of the first games released on PlayStation in Japan, and for sure it was a strange one, the game is a mix between an strategy board game and a RPG game. In the game screen, the game draws a line connecting some different circles on a map, given a genuine and bizarre sense of atmosphere. |
The falcata is a type of sword typical of Pre-Roman Hispania (the Iberian Peninsula, modern Spain and Portugal), similar to the Greek kopis or Nepalese kukri. The term Falcata is not ancient. It seems to have been coined by Fernando Fulgosio in 1872, on the model of the Latin expression ensis falcatus "sickle-shaped sword" (which, however, refers to the Harpe). He presumably went with falcata rather than falcatus because the Spanish word for sword espada is feminine, although there are other presumable theories. The name caught on very quickly, and is now firmly entrenched in the scholarly literature. |
The game is set in 1500 BC in a land with different cities and hostile tribes, that makes most of the people to travel to other lands. The goal of the game is to restore the land so the people can stop their endless wandering, and finally arrived to that land and that will end with the tribal fights. The player's character will be the hero to reach that? Only time will tell. |
The game features 6 different parties that can be customized in their clothes and hair, all of them with their own stats. The gameplay is about going around those places and examine them, in some of them you will have to fight and then the game takes the usual rpg style with turns to choose the proper actions that the player wants his characters to do. But instead of fights he can also pay to avoid the fights, make pacts or discover relics, etc. |
Manufacturer's description: |
Set in ancient Persia, simulation strategy of all parties ploy Mujin movement intertwined with free will. Become the leader of the party up to 5 people, and nurture a character and fighting bandits or find items to explore the field, encountered, we will proceed with the sabotage to the other party at times, prosperity Asutoran city of illusion I will win. |
Features: |
Herbert Hainer |
Herbert Hainer (born 3 July 1954 in Dingolfing, Bavaria) is a German manager and the former CEO of Adidas-Group. He is the supervisory board chairman of the FC Bayern Munich AG. He is currently the president of the German club FC Bayern Munich. |
His alma mater was at the University of Applied Sciences Landshut, where he graduated in economics. |
ELEKS |
ELEKS (Eleks) is a Ukrainian IT company that provides software development, consulting and quality control services. |
The company was established in 1991 as a small utility company. At the beginning of its existence, the company was engaged in the development of its own software products for power companies. |
Since 1999, ELEKS Software has been operating in the outsourcing market. |
ELEKS is a partner of such well-known companies as Microsoft, IBM, Intel, Borland, a member of the IT Ukraine Association, RUSSOFT Association, the American Chamber of Commerce, the European Business Association and a member of the Association of Ukrainian Developers. |
Tallow |
Tallow is a type of rendered fat. It can come from beef or mutton. It usually has a longer shelf life than suet. Tallow doesn't have to come from beef or mutton. Lard is a type of tallow that comes from pigs. Tallow has been used for many things, as a soap ingredient, a cooking fat, and fuel. |
Tallow is mostly made up of saturated and monounsaturated fats and triglycerides. |
Chataignier, Louisiana |
Chataignier is a village in Evangeline Parish, Louisiana, United States. |
Pine Prairie, Louisiana |
Pine Prairie is a village in Evangeline Parish, Louisiana, United States. |
Hossein Movaghar |
Mirza Hossein Movaghar Khan (title) (Persian: میرزا حسین موقر , Persian pronunciation: mir za - hos - sein - mo -va -ghar ) (born 1867 Bushehr Iran - death 1931 Tehran Iran) was a Persian politician, under Qajar dynasty and Reza Shāh Pahlavi who served as the Ambassador and Senator of Iran in Germany. |
Mirza Hossein Khan was the father of Majid Movaghar and the grand father of Mohsen Movaghar . He was also the father in law of Mirza Ismail Khan. |
He used to work with Ali Amini a parent of his daughter in law , a young princess from Qajar dynasty. |
Turkey Creek, Louisiana |
Turkey Creek is a village in Evangeline Parish, Louisiana, United States. |
Fordoche, Louisiana |
Fordoche is a town in Pointe Coupee Parish, Louisiana, United States. |
Livonia, Louisiana |
Livonia is a town in Pointe Coupee Parish, Louisiana, United States. |
Morganza, Louisiana |
Morganza is a village in Pointe Coupee Parish, Louisiana, United States. |
Newsmax TV |
Newsmax TV is an American news channel. It's owner is Newsmax Media. It has a conservative political point of view. The shows that are mostly shown are opinion shows, with some documentaries shown on weekends. While the 2020 United States presidential election was going on, the channel grew by pushing conspiracy theories about the outcome of the election. |
The channel was started by American journalist Christopher Ruddy. It launched on June 16, 2014 to 35 million people. |
The channel's main headquarters is in Manhattan, with two others in West Palm Beach, Florida and Sugar Land, Texas. Many journalists that have left Fox News have come to Newsmax. |
Hyappatsu hyakuchu |
Hyappatsu hyakuchu (100発100中, "IronFinger") is a 1965 Japanese action adventure comedy film directed by and produced by . The film was shot in and . When appeared in "", released in 2004, he said "This is still a man who was said to be 100 out of 100 shots in the past. The line is about this work (by director 's plan). |
The story is about an ordinary vacationer takes up the mission of a dead agent and finds himself caught between two rival gangs who are fighting over an . |
Free Peru |
Free Peru, officially the Free Peru National Political Party (Spanish: "Perú Libre") is a socialist political party in Peru. It was started in 2007 as the Free Peru Political Regional Movement. It was registered (made official) as a political party in January 2016. It was given the name it has today in January 2019. |
Two Dozen and One Greyhounds |
"Two Dozen and One Greyhounds" is the 20th episode of "The Simpsons" 6th season. It was first broadcast on the Fox network on April 9, 1995. The episode was written by Mike Scully and Bob Anderson is the director. In the episode, Santa's Little Helper mates with another greyhound at a race track. Mr. Burns wants to take their puppies to make a tuxedo out of them. |
Santa's Little Helper, the Simpson family's dog, runs to a race track and mates with a greyhound there. The owner of the racing greyhound lets the Simpson family keep her. She gives birth to 25 puppies. Homer and Marge are not able to take care of the puppies and tries giving them away. Mr. Burns asks them for all of the puppies. Lisa does not want Burns to have them, but he takes the puppies when the family does not see them. |
Bart and Lisa later learn that Burns has taken the puppies. They go to his mansion and see him cleaning the puppies in a bath. Burns sees one of the puppies standing up and calls the puppy "Little Monty". He then sings a song on how he will kill the other 24 puppies and make a tuxedo out of them. Bart and Lisa go in the mansion to try to get the puppies back. They put the puppies in the basement and find Burns there. Bart tries to make it so that Burns does not know which puppy is Little Monty. When Burns makes Little Monty stand, Bart uses a clothes line to make all of the puppies stand. Burns wants to kill all of the puppies and Bart and Lisa, but then thinks he should not kill them all. He instead puts all of the puppies in greyhound racing and gets millions of dollars from it. |
"Two Dozen and One Greyhounds" was written by Mike Scully. Bob Anderson is the director of the episode. Al Jean and Mike Reiss came up with the story of the episode. They got the idea after seeing the movie "One Hundred and One Dalmatians". David Mirkin said as a joke that they like to take ideas from Disney. For example, another episode called "Simpsoncalifragilisticexpiala(Annoyed Grunt)cious" is a parody of the movie "Mary Poppins". Mirkin thought it was great that they could use ideas from Disney in a "completely legal way". |
Matt Groening (creator of "The Simpsons") was happy with the episode because it reminded him of the very first episode ("Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire"). He also liked the references to "One Hundred and One Dalmatians". He liked the movie when he was a child and said it made him want to learn about animation and cartoons. In one part of the movie, the puppies can be seen watching cartoons on a television screen. Groening said that made him love how cartoons work and made him create a fictional television show in "The Simpsons" called "The Itchy & Scratchy Show". |
In the episode, Mr. Burns says Little Monty reminds him of the actor Rory Calhoun. George Meyer got the idea for Mr. Burns to say that. Matt Groening did not want this in the episode because he thought people watching it would not know who Calhoun was. This was kept in because Calhoun would be talked about again during the end of the episode. After the episode was broadcast, Groening went on the Internet and saw discussions from people who did not know who Calhoun was. |
When Bart and Lisa first go near Mr. Burns' mansion, they see him singing a song called "See My Vest". It is about how he will kill the puppies and make a tuxedo out of them. One writer came up with the idea that Mr. Burns will show the bad things he will do to the puppies with a "fun and light" song. Scully made the lyrics to the song on the next day. The lyrics are a parody of the song "Be Our Guest" from "Beauty and the Beast". Mirkin liked the song and said "The rhymes are really clever. It's one of our very best songs". He also liked that one song can be put in the episode without the episode becoming a musical. He said "We'll just do one song and that's plenty. We have fun with that and then we're out." |
Animals in many cartoons may act like humans. Groening does not want this happening in "The Simpsons" and makes animals in the show act like real animals. This is how the animals in the episode act. Mirkin said they might not do this only for visual gags. Everything else has animals acting how they would in real life. Frank Welker made the animal sounds in the episode. Mirkin was happy with Welker's work and said "He can do anything, and it fits perfectly. You forget you're listening to a guy". Groening also thought he was very good at making animal sounds. |
Producers and the people with Fox network's censors got into an argument if they should show Santa's Little Helper mating with the racing greyhound. Writers first thought it would not be a good idea, but Mirkin knew it could be shown without it being very sexual. In the episode, only the dogs' heads can be seen while they are mating. Storyboards of this part of the episode was later put on DVD. Anderson said that many people were laughing while the censors were looking at this part of the episode. |
The song "See My Vest" was put in the album "Songs in the Key of Springfield". The "Daily Bruin" thought the song's lyrics were humorous and said that listening to it would give memories of the episode. They thought the song really showed Mr. Burns as a character and said it shows the "disturbing elements" of how humans act. MSNBC made a list of "TV's top 10 scariest characters" and put Mr. Burns on the top of the list. They talked about "Two Dozen and One Greyhounds" where Burns makes a plan on killing the puppies to make a tuxedo. |
Ben Rayner from the "Toronto Star" thought that "Two Dozen and One Greyhounds" was one episode of "The Simpsons" he liked the most. He thought Mr. Burns in the "See My Vest" song was the most interesting part. The "Toronto Star" later made a list of the best and worst episodes of "The Simpsons". They put this episode as one of the best and said "See My Vest" was the best part of the episode. Todd Glichrist from IGN called the episode "memorable" and talked about "See My Vest" by saying Mr. Burns "flirts with copyright infringement". Michael Price from IGN thought the song was just a great as "The Monorail Song" from the episode "Marge vs. the Monorail". Colin Jacobson from DVD Movie Guide liked the references to many Disney movies and to Roy Calhoun. Jacobson said this made it a "fine show". |
Breakthrough infection |
There are diseases where there are vaccines. In most cases, people who are vaccinated will no longer get the disease. In some cases, people who have been vaccinated will still catch the disease they have been vaccinated against. This is known as breakthrough infection. In some cases, vaccines do not provide immunity against the pathogen. Breakthrough infections have been described for diseases such as mumps, varicella (chicken pox), and influenza. As the person has been vaccinated, the disease will look different, in most cases: Usually, the symptoms will be milder, and it may not last as long (compared to someone who has not been vaccinated, and who naturally contracted the disease). |
There are different causes for breakthrough infections: The vaccine may not have been stored properly, or there may have been an error, when the person was vaccinated. Viruses change over time. The vaccine may have been developed for another version of the virus, and it may not be as effective against the current version. Also, antibodies may block the vaccine. |
For these reasons, vaccines are not 100% effective: The common flu vaccine is estimated to provide immunity to the flu in 58% of those vaccinated. The measles vaccine fails to provide immunity to 2% of children that receive the vaccine. However, if herd immunity exists, it typically prevents individuals who are ineffectively vaccinated from contracting the disease. Accordingly, herd immunity reduces the number of breakthrough infections in a population. |
In April 2021, the CDC reported that in the United States there were 5,814 COVID-19 breakthrough infections, and 74 deaths, among the more than 75 million people fully vaccinated for the COVID-19 virus. |
As a person grows older, their immune system change. This process is called immunosenescence. They will produce fewer naive T cells, and naive B cells. There is a reduced number of lymphocytes (T and B cells). This means that in older people, there are fewer lymphocytes, and they are also fewer types of different lymphocytes that can respond to the pathogens in a vaccine. |
For this reason, many vaccines are less effective in adults over the age of 65. Despite this, the CDC recommend that people of this age group still get the flu vaccine: An influenza infection is particularly dangerous to them and the vaccine can provide at least some immunity to the influenza virus. |
Infants have antibodies from their mother. This limits the efficacy of many vaccines. Maternal antibodies can bind to the proteins produced by the virus in the vaccine. Maternal antibodies can also neutralize the virus. The maternal antibodies help the immune system of the infant, which isn't very active yet: the infant produces fewer antibodies. This means that few memory B cells are produced. The level of memory B-cells is not adequate to ensure an infant's lifelong resistance to the pathogen. |
In most infants, maternal antibodies disappear twelve to fifteen months after birth. Vaccines given to infants older than 12-15 months are not compromised by maternal antibody interference. |
When a person is vaccinated against a disease, the person's immune system is triggered and memory B cells store the specific antibody response. These cells remain in circulation, the pathogen infection is cleared. Cell division is not perfect, so the information about the response slowly disappears. Typically, the cells live for multiple decades. The lifespan and protection also depend on the type and dosage of the vaccine. |
The reason why some memory B cells live longer than others currently unknown. However, it has been proposed that the differences in memory B cell longevity are due to the speed at which a pathogen infects the body and the number and type of cells involved in the immune response to the pathogen in the vaccine. |
When a person is vaccinated, their immune system develops antibodies that recognize specific segments of viruses or viral-induced proteins. Over time, however, viruses accumulate genetic mutations which changes the structure of viral proteins. If these mutations occur in sites that are recognized by antibodies, the mutations block antibody binding, which inhibits the immune response. This phenomenon is called antigenic drift. Breakthrough infections of Hepatitis B and mumps are partially attributed to antigenic drift. |
Sometimes, the vaccine that is used has a poor quality. Examples may be vaccines stored at the wrong temperature, or vaccines used after the expiration date. Similarly, the correct vaccine dosage is essential. Vaccine dosage is dependent on factors including a patient's age and weight. Patients that receive a lower dose than recommended of a vaccine do not have an adequate immune response to the vaccine to ensure immunity. |
In order for a vaccine to be effective, a person must respond to the pathogens in a vaccine through the adaptive branch of the immune system and that response must be stored in an individual's immunological memory. It is possible for an individual to neutralize and clear a pathogen through the humoral response without activating the adaptive immune response. Vaccines with weaker or fewer strains of a pathogen may primarily cause the humoral response: As a consequence, they fail to ensure future immunity. |
Delhi, Louisiana |
Delhi is a town in Richland Parish, Louisiana, United States. |
Dendropsophus norandinus |
The North Andean tree frog ("Dendropsophus norandinus") is a frog that lives in Colombia. Scientists have seen it between 1420 and 1950 meters above sea level. |
2015 FIFA U-20 World Cup |
The 2015 FIFA U-20 World Cup was the twentieth edition of the FIFA U-20 World Cup. The 2015 FIFA U-20 World Cup took place for the first time in New Zealand. |
Four FIFA member associations officially submitted their bids to host the 2015 FIFA U-20 World Cup by the deadline of 11 February 2011. On 3 March 2011, FIFA announced that the tournament would be held for the first time in New Zealand. This is the third FIFA competition staged in this country, after the 1999 FIFA U-17 World Championship and the 2008 FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup. |
Auckland, Christchurch, Dunedin, Hamilton, New Plymouth, Wellington and Whangarei were the 7 cities chosen to host the competition. |
Before the stadium announcements were made, Dunedin City council suggested in January 2013, that it would not bid to host matches at Forsyth Barr Stadium (also known as Otago Stadium) unless the costs (an estimated $1m) could be lowered. The stadium hosted seven matches there, the last of which being a Round of 16 game. |
In addition to host nation New Zealand, 23 nations qualified from six separate continental competitions. |
The final draw was held on 10 February 2015, 17:30 local time, at the SkyCity Grand, Auckland. For the draw, the 24 teams were divided into four seeding pots: |
As a basic principle, teams from the same confederation could not be drawn against each other at the group stage. As the CAF U-20 Championship was not completed at the time of the draw, a separate draw took place on 23 March 2015 in Dakar, Senegal, at the tournament's conclusion to determine the groups where the 2nd, 3rd and 4th placed CAF teams would play in, to ensure there was no manipulation of games in the qualifying tournament ensuring fairness to all qualified teams. |
The schedule of the tournament was unveiled on 20 November 2013. |
A total of 21 referees, 6 support referees, and 42 assistant referees were selected for the tournament. |
The 24 squads were officially announced by FIFA on 21 May 2015. Each participating national association had to submit a final list of 21 players (three of whom must be goalkeepers) at least 10 days before the tournament started. These players were shortlisted from a provisional list of 35 players, including a minimum of four goalkeepers. All players must have been born on or after 1 January 1995. If a player listed in the final squad suffered a serious injury up until 24 hours before the kick-off of his team's first match, he could be replaced by a player from the provisional list with the approval of FIFA's medical and organising committees. |
In July 2015, it was reported that the New Zealand squad had included an ineligible player, South African Deklan Wynne not having completed the requisite period of residence in New Zealand. |
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