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Season Comparison - Updated



Turkey

Well-known member
Jul 4, 2003
15,583
2004/2005

Derby 3-0 Brighton
Brighton 0-1 Reading
Brighton 1-3 Crewe
(Hull) Forest 0-1 Brighton
Preston 3-0 Brighton
Brighton 0-2 Plymouth
Leeds 1-1 Brighton
Brighton 1-1 Sheff Utd
Brighton 1-1 Coventry
Burnley 1-1 Brighton
Leicester 0-1 Brighton
Brighton 2-4 Wigan (Norwich)
Brighton 1-1 Cardiff
(Palace) Sunderland 2-0 Brighton

Points: 11 GD: -13

2005/2006

Derby 1-1 Brighton
Brighton 0-2 Reading
Brighton 2-2 Crewe
Hull 1-0 Brighton
Preston 0-0 Brighton
Brighton 2-0 Plymouth
Leeds 3-3 Brighton
Brighton 0-1 Sheff Utd
Brighton 2-2 Coventry
Burnley 1-1 Brighton
Leicester 0-0 Brihgton
Brighton 1-3 Norwich
Brighton 1-2 Cardiff
Palace 0-1 Brighton


Points: 13 GD: -5

Against the teams we played last season we're doing better (prom/relegated replaced with equiv in prom/relegation. So top Champ - Sunderland equals 3rd bottom prem - Palace) however based on just the amount of games, we're trailing, last season is certainly catchable though.


13games8mk.jpg
 






Tom Nicholls

New member
Aug 21, 2005
25
Gloucester
Arthur Asher Miller (October 17, 1915 – February 10, 2005) was an American playwright, essayist, and , and author. He was a prominent figure in American literature and cinema for over 60 years, writing a wide variety of plays. Miller's best-known works were The Crucible and Death of a Salesman, which are still widely studied and performed. He was also known for his short-lived marriage to Marilyn Monroe, who converted to Judaism for him.

Miller was born to moderately wealthy Jewish immigrants in New York. His father was a women's clothing manufacturer. His mother was a

Miller was born to moderately wealthy Jewish immigrants in New York. His father was a women's clothing manufacturer. His mother was a housewife and schoolteacher. He had a brother and a sister, Kermit Miller and Joan Miller, Joan became an actress known as Joan Copeland and has appeared in some of her brother's plays. His family was forced to move to Harlem.

Miller attended P.S. 24 in Harlem from 1920 to 1928, and saw his first play (a melodrama) in 1923 at the Schubert Theatre. At Abraham Lincoln High School near Coney Island, in Brooklyn, New York, Miller was a talented athlete and mediocre student. He was rejected by both the University of Michigan and the Cornell University. After graduating, he read works of Charles Dickens and Fyodor Dostoevsky and worked at a car parts warehouse. There Miller experienced a great deal of anti-Semitism, which would influence his later works (especially A Memory of Two Mondays). Miller put $13 of every $15 pay check he earned into a college fund and reapplied to the University of Michigan, where he was accepted in 1934.

At Michigan, Miller studied journalism and drama, becoming particularly interested in ancient Greek drama and the dramas of Henrik Ibsen. During spring break in 1936 (his sophomore year), he wrote his first work, No Villain (reportedly because of a contest offering a $250 prize, which he won). The play centered around a strike and the main character's inability to express himself, and won an Avery Hopwood Award, the first of two he received. Miller retained strong ties to his alma mater throughout the rest of his life, establishing the Arthur Miller Award in 1985 and Arthur Miller Award for Dramatic Writing in 1999, and lending his name to the Arthur Miller Theatre in the forthcoming Walgreen Drama Center. The University also honored its distinguished alumnus with an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree in 1956 and several tributes and symposia on his frequent returns to Ann Arbor.

In 1938, Miller received his bachelor's degree in English. In 1940, he married his college sweetheart, Mary Slattery (with whom he had two children, Jane and Robert). He was exempted from military service during World War II because of a football injury.

Miller's 1949 play Death of a Salesman won the Pulitzer Prize and three Tony Awards, as well as the New York Drama Critics Circle Award. It was the first play ever to win all three. His next play, The Crucible, opened on Broadway on January 22, 1953. In 1956, he divorced his wife. In June of the same year, he appeared before the House Un-American Activities Committee, having been named by Elia Kazan as having attended Communist Party meetings, and at the end of the month on June 29, he married Marilyn Monroe, whom he had met eight years earlier through Kazan. Monroe converted to Judaism for the marriage.

On May 31st, 1957, Miller was found guilty of contempt of Congress for refusing to reveal the names of members of a literary circle suspected of Communist affiliation. His conviction was reversed August 8, 1958, by the U.S. Court of Appeals. The same year, he published Collected Plays.

On January 24, 1961, Monroe was granted a divorce two months after Miller left her for Inge Morath, whom he married on February 17, 1962. They had met when she and other photographers from the Magnum Photos agency documented the making of The Misfits. They had two children, Rebecca, born that September, and Daniel. According to biographer Martin Gottfried, Daniel was born with Down Syndrome. Miller placed Daniel in an institution in Roxbury, Connecticut, and never visited him. Miller doesn't mention Daniel in Timebends, his 1987 autobiography, and the issue was ignored in the New York Times obituary[1] of February 11, 2005 (though it was reported in the Los Angeles Times and elsewhere). Rebecca Miller is a screenwriter, actor and director.

Miller was one of the original founders of International PEN's Writers in Prison committee, and in 1965 was elected the organization's president, a position he held for four years [2], [3].

In 1985, Miller visited Turkey and was honored at the American embassy. After his traveling companion Harold Pinter was thrown out of the country for discussing torture, Miller left in support.

On January 30, 2002, Inge Morath died. On May 1 the same year, Miller was awarded Spain's Principe de Asturias Prize for Literature as "the undisputed master of modern drama". Previous winners include Doris Lessing, Günter Grass and Carlos Fuentes. The following year Miller won the Jerusalem Prize.

In December 2004, the 89 year old Miller announced that he had been living with 34 year old artist Agnes Barley since 2002, and they were planning to marry. Within hours of his death, Barley had moved out of his house on orders of Miller's daughter Rebecca, who disapproved of the relationship.
 


mejonaNO12 aka riskit

Well-known member
Dec 4, 2003
21,758
England
Tom Nicholls said:
Arthur Asher Miller (October 17, 1915 – February 10, 2005) was an American playwright, essayist, and , and author. He was a prominent figure in American literature and cinema for over 60 years, writing a wide variety of plays. Miller's best-known works were The Crucible and Death of a Salesman, which are still widely studied and performed. He was also known for his short-lived marriage to Marilyn Monroe, who converted to Judaism for him.

Miller was born to moderately wealthy Jewish immigrants in New York. His father was a women's clothing manufacturer. His mother was a

Miller was born to moderately wealthy Jewish immigrants in New York. His father was a women's clothing manufacturer. His mother was a housewife and schoolteacher. He had a brother and a sister, Kermit Miller and Joan Miller, Joan became an actress known as Joan Copeland and has appeared in some of her brother's plays. His family was forced to move to Harlem.

Miller attended P.S. 24 in Harlem from 1920 to 1928, and saw his first play (a melodrama) in 1923 at the Schubert Theatre. At Abraham Lincoln High School near Coney Island, in Brooklyn, New York, Miller was a talented athlete and mediocre student. He was rejected by both the University of Michigan and the Cornell University. After graduating, he read works of Charles Dickens and Fyodor Dostoevsky and worked at a car parts warehouse. There Miller experienced a great deal of anti-Semitism, which would influence his later works (especially A Memory of Two Mondays). Miller put $13 of every $15 pay check he earned into a college fund and reapplied to the University of Michigan, where he was accepted in 1934.

At Michigan, Miller studied journalism and drama, becoming particularly interested in ancient Greek drama and the dramas of Henrik Ibsen. During spring break in 1936 (his sophomore year), he wrote his first work, No Villain (reportedly because of a contest offering a $250 prize, which he won). The play centered around a strike and the main character's inability to express himself, and won an Avery Hopwood Award, the first of two he received. Miller retained strong ties to his alma mater throughout the rest of his life, establishing the Arthur Miller Award in 1985 and Arthur Miller Award for Dramatic Writing in 1999, and lending his name to the Arthur Miller Theatre in the forthcoming Walgreen Drama Center. The University also honored its distinguished alumnus with an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree in 1956 and several tributes and symposia on his frequent returns to Ann Arbor.

In 1938, Miller received his bachelor's degree in English. In 1940, he married his college sweetheart, Mary Slattery (with whom he had two children, Jane and Robert). He was exempted from military service during World War II because of a football injury.

Miller's 1949 play Death of a Salesman won the Pulitzer Prize and three Tony Awards, as well as the New York Drama Critics Circle Award. It was the first play ever to win all three. His next play, The Crucible, opened on Broadway on January 22, 1953. In 1956, he divorced his wife. In June of the same year, he appeared before the House Un-American Activities Committee, having been named by Elia Kazan as having attended Communist Party meetings, and at the end of the month on June 29, he married Marilyn Monroe, whom he had met eight years earlier through Kazan. Monroe converted to Judaism for the marriage.

On May 31st, 1957, Miller was found guilty of contempt of Congress for refusing to reveal the names of members of a literary circle suspected of Communist affiliation. His conviction was reversed August 8, 1958, by the U.S. Court of Appeals. The same year, he published Collected Plays.

On January 24, 1961, Monroe was granted a divorce two months after Miller left her for Inge Morath, whom he married on February 17, 1962. They had met when she and other photographers from the Magnum Photos agency documented the making of The Misfits. They had two children, Rebecca, born that September, and Daniel. According to biographer Martin Gottfried, Daniel was born with Down Syndrome. Miller placed Daniel in an institution in Roxbury, Connecticut, and never visited him. Miller doesn't mention Daniel in Timebends, his 1987 autobiography, and the issue was ignored in the New York Times obituary[1] of February 11, 2005 (though it was reported in the Los Angeles Times and elsewhere). Rebecca Miller is a screenwriter, actor and director.

Miller was one of the original founders of International PEN's Writers in Prison committee, and in 1965 was elected the organization's president, a position he held for four years [2], [3].

In 1985, Miller visited Turkey and was honored at the American embassy. After his traveling companion Harold Pinter was thrown out of the country for discussing torture, Miller left in support.

On January 30, 2002, Inge Morath died. On May 1 the same year, Miller was awarded Spain's Principe de Asturias Prize for Literature as "the undisputed master of modern drama". Previous winners include Doris Lessing, Günter Grass and Carlos Fuentes. The following year Miller won the Jerusalem Prize.

In December 2004, the 89 year old Miller announced that he had been living with 34 year old artist Agnes Barley since 2002, and they were planning to marry. Within hours of his death, Barley had moved out of his house on orders of Miller's daughter Rebecca, who disapproved of the relationship.

so true
 


Muhammed - I’m hard - Bruce Lee

You can't change fighters
NSC Patron
Jul 25, 2005
10,895
on a pig farm
Tom Nicholls said:
Arthur Asher Miller (October 17, 1915 – February 10, 2005) was an American playwright, essayist, and , and author. He was a prominent figure in American literature and cinema for over 60 years, writing a wide variety of plays. Miller's best-known works were The Crucible and Death of a Salesman, which are still widely studied and performed. He was also known for his short-lived marriage to Marilyn Monroe, who converted to Judaism for him.

Miller was born to moderately wealthy Jewish immigrants in New York. His father was a women's clothing manufacturer. His mother was a

Miller was born to moderately wealthy Jewish immigrants in New York. His father was a women's clothing manufacturer. His mother was a housewife and schoolteacher. He had a brother and a sister, Kermit Miller and Joan Miller, Joan became an actress known as Joan Copeland and has appeared in some of her brother's plays. His family was forced to move to Harlem.

Miller attended P.S. 24 in Harlem from 1920 to 1928, and saw his first play (a melodrama) in 1923 at the Schubert Theatre. At Abraham Lincoln High School near Coney Island, in Brooklyn, New York, Miller was a talented athlete and mediocre student. He was rejected by both the University of Michigan and the Cornell University. After graduating, he read works of Charles Dickens and Fyodor Dostoevsky and worked at a car parts warehouse. There Miller experienced a great deal of anti-Semitism, which would influence his later works (especially A Memory of Two Mondays). Miller put $13 of every $15 pay check he earned into a college fund and reapplied to the University of Michigan, where he was accepted in 1934.

At Michigan, Miller studied journalism and drama, becoming particularly interested in ancient Greek drama and the dramas of Henrik Ibsen. During spring break in 1936 (his sophomore year), he wrote his first work, No Villain (reportedly because of a contest offering a $250 prize, which he won). The play centered around a strike and the main character's inability to express himself, and won an Avery Hopwood Award, the first of two he received. Miller retained strong ties to his alma mater throughout the rest of his life, establishing the Arthur Miller Award in 1985 and Arthur Miller Award for Dramatic Writing in 1999, and lending his name to the Arthur Miller Theatre in the forthcoming Walgreen Drama Center. The University also honored its distinguished alumnus with an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree in 1956 and several tributes and symposia on his frequent returns to Ann Arbor.

In 1938, Miller received his bachelor's degree in English. In 1940, he married his college sweetheart, Mary Slattery (with whom he had two children, Jane and Robert). He was exempted from military service during World War II because of a football injury.

Miller's 1949 play Death of a Salesman won the Pulitzer Prize and three Tony Awards, as well as the New York Drama Critics Circle Award. It was the first play ever to win all three. His next play, The Crucible, opened on Broadway on January 22, 1953. In 1956, he divorced his wife. In June of the same year, he appeared before the House Un-American Activities Committee, having been named by Elia Kazan as having attended Communist Party meetings, and at the end of the month on June 29, he married Marilyn Monroe, whom he had met eight years earlier through Kazan. Monroe converted to Judaism for the marriage.

On May 31st, 1957, Miller was found guilty of contempt of Congress for refusing to reveal the names of members of a literary circle suspected of Communist affiliation. His conviction was reversed August 8, 1958, by the U.S. Court of Appeals. The same year, he published Collected Plays.

On January 24, 1961, Monroe was granted a divorce two months after Miller left her for Inge Morath, whom he married on February 17, 1962. They had met when she and other photographers from the Magnum Photos agency documented the making of The Misfits. They had two children, Rebecca, born that September, and Daniel. According to biographer Martin Gottfried, Daniel was born with Down Syndrome. Miller placed Daniel in an institution in Roxbury, Connecticut, and never visited him. Miller doesn't mention Daniel in Timebends, his 1987 autobiography, and the issue was ignored in the New York Times obituary[1] of February 11, 2005 (though it was reported in the Los Angeles Times and elsewhere). Rebecca Miller is a screenwriter, actor and director.

Miller was one of the original founders of International PEN's Writers in Prison committee, and in 1965 was elected the organization's president, a position he held for four years [2], [3].

In 1985, Miller visited Turkey and was honored at the American embassy. After his traveling companion Harold Pinter was thrown out of the country for discussing torture, Miller left in support.

On January 30, 2002, Inge Morath died. On May 1 the same year, Miller was awarded Spain's Principe de Asturias Prize for Literature as "the undisputed master of modern drama". Previous winners include Doris Lessing, Günter Grass and Carlos Fuentes. The following year Miller won the Jerusalem Prize.

In December 2004, the 89 year old Miller announced that he had been living with 34 year old artist Agnes Barley since 2002, and they were planning to marry. Within hours of his death, Barley had moved out of his house on orders of Miller's daughter Rebecca, who disapproved of the relationship.
:rolleyes:
 






cardboard

New member
Jul 8, 2003
4,573
Mile Oak
Tom Nicholls said:
Arthur Asher Miller (October 17, 1915 – February 10, 2005) was an American playwright, essayist, and , and author. He was a prominent figure in American literature and cinema for over 60 years, writing a wide variety of plays. Miller's best-known works were The Crucible and Death of a Salesman, which are still widely studied and performed. He was also known for his short-lived marriage to Marilyn Monroe, who converted to Judaism for him.

Miller was born to moderately wealthy Jewish immigrants in New York. His father was a women's clothing manufacturer. His mother was a

Miller was born to moderately wealthy Jewish immigrants in New York. His father was a women's clothing manufacturer. His mother was a housewife and schoolteacher. He had a brother and a sister, Kermit Miller and Joan Miller, Joan became an actress known as Joan Copeland and has appeared in some of her brother's plays. His family was forced to move to Harlem.

Miller attended P.S. 24 in Harlem from 1920 to 1928, and saw his first play (a melodrama) in 1923 at the Schubert Theatre. At Abraham Lincoln High School near Coney Island, in Brooklyn, New York, Miller was a talented athlete and mediocre student. He was rejected by both the University of Michigan and the Cornell University. After graduating, he read works of Charles Dickens and Fyodor Dostoevsky and worked at a car parts warehouse. There Miller experienced a great deal of anti-Semitism, which would influence his later works (especially A Memory of Two Mondays). Miller put $13 of every $15 pay check he earned into a college fund and reapplied to the University of Michigan, where he was accepted in 1934.

At Michigan, Miller studied journalism and drama, becoming particularly interested in ancient Greek drama and the dramas of Henrik Ibsen. During spring break in 1936 (his sophomore year), he wrote his first work, No Villain (reportedly because of a contest offering a $250 prize, which he won). The play centered around a strike and the main character's inability to express himself, and won an Avery Hopwood Award, the first of two he received. Miller retained strong ties to his alma mater throughout the rest of his life, establishing the Arthur Miller Award in 1985 and Arthur Miller Award for Dramatic Writing in 1999, and lending his name to the Arthur Miller Theatre in the forthcoming Walgreen Drama Center. The University also honored its distinguished alumnus with an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree in 1956 and several tributes and symposia on his frequent returns to Ann Arbor.

In 1938, Miller received his bachelor's degree in English. In 1940, he married his college sweetheart, Mary Slattery (with whom he had two children, Jane and Robert). He was exempted from military service during World War II because of a football injury.

Miller's 1949 play Death of a Salesman won the Pulitzer Prize and three Tony Awards, as well as the New York Drama Critics Circle Award. It was the first play ever to win all three. His next play, The Crucible, opened on Broadway on January 22, 1953. In 1956, he divorced his wife. In June of the same year, he appeared before the House Un-American Activities Committee, having been named by Elia Kazan as having attended Communist Party meetings, and at the end of the month on June 29, he married Marilyn Monroe, whom he had met eight years earlier through Kazan. Monroe converted to Judaism for the marriage.

On May 31st, 1957, Miller was found guilty of contempt of Congress for refusing to reveal the names of members of a literary circle suspected of Communist affiliation. His conviction was reversed August 8, 1958, by the U.S. Court of Appeals. The same year, he published Collected Plays.

On January 24, 1961, Monroe was granted a divorce two months after Miller left her for Inge Morath, whom he married on February 17, 1962. They had met when she and other photographers from the Magnum Photos agency documented the making of The Misfits. They had two children, Rebecca, born that September, and Daniel. According to biographer Martin Gottfried, Daniel was born with Down Syndrome. Miller placed Daniel in an institution in Roxbury, Connecticut, and never visited him. Miller doesn't mention Daniel in Timebends, his 1987 autobiography, and the issue was ignored in the New York Times obituary[1] of February 11, 2005 (though it was reported in the Los Angeles Times and elsewhere). Rebecca Miller is a screenwriter, actor and director.

Miller was one of the original founders of International PEN's Writers in Prison committee, and in 1965 was elected the organization's president, a position he held for four years [2], [3].

In 1985, Miller visited Turkey and was honored at the American embassy. After his traveling companion Harold Pinter was thrown out of the country for discussing torture, Miller left in support.

On January 30, 2002, Inge Morath died. On May 1 the same year, Miller was awarded Spain's Principe de Asturias Prize for Literature as "the undisputed master of modern drama". Previous winners include Doris Lessing, Günter Grass and Carlos Fuentes. The following year Miller won the Jerusalem Prize.

In December 2004, the 89 year old Miller announced that he had been living with 34 year old artist Agnes Barley since 2002, and they were planning to marry. Within hours of his death, Barley had moved out of his house on orders of Miller's daughter Rebecca, who disapproved of the relationship.



Are you on drugs???????
 


Bob!

Coffee Buyer
Jul 5, 2003
11,485
DAMANCLAY said:
If we have more point now that at this tage last year how are we behind last year in the graph?

We don't

the graph shows points vs games played.

the original post compares our points tally against the same clubs last season

it is on the comparison v same clubs that we are better off than last season.
 


Da Man Clay

T'Blades
Dec 16, 2004
16,280
BHA links said:
We don't

the graph shows points vs games played.

the original post compares our points tally against the same clubs last season

it is on the comparison v same clubs that we are better off than last season.

Ahh yes, all is understood. Thanks for That BHA links.
 


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