roltons12 miniblogs

  • roltons12
    0

    Tie kas ir spelejushi noteikti likos un crydos

  • roltons12
    0

    Lajmigu jawnu god ))

    • Niggah
      0

      Leimig teu a. kaut mazak troll low elo feederi tiimaa un liels elū

      • roltons12
        0

        Loled es 2k elo porfesionalis get on mi level skrub

      • Pampox
        0

        BELD tu neko nesszaprwoti no eļõ. jõ vjairjak troll hai ļēvēļ pļāers jū mazāx eļūtef i

  • roltons12
    +2

    • Shattred
      +1

      Šodien exs visai uzjautrinošs. rofl_mini.gif Mr.Beens ir klasika.

    • Aikis0
      +1

      rofl_mini.gif klauns biggrin_mini2.gif

    • mairītis
      +1

      Par Bīnu nevar nesmieties biggrin_mini2.gif

  • roltons12
    +1

  • roltons12
    -2

    He criteria for whether a marathon receives an IAAF Label designation is based on six general issues: race organisation, course timing and measurement, media services, quality of international field of runners, health and safety, and athlete equality.[1][2][3]
    The race must be organised in accordance with IAAF Competition Rules, the standards of the national athletics body, and must comply with all relevant local and national laws. The race must be organised in a way that minimizes ecological damage to the surrounding areas.[3]
    All courses must have been measured to AIMS standards and full electronic timing must be in place to provide split timing and final results.
    The event must be broadcast live on television within the country, or delivered to a good standard through online streaming. Gold Label races must be broadcast in a minimum of five countries, while Silver Label races must have live coverage available on a national broadcaster. A centre must be specifically provided for media personnel, and TV monitors and commentary facilities must be present for Gold Label races. The race organisers must have a dedicated website with published results and must hold press conferences to support the event.
    A minimum of five nationalities must be represented among the "elite" runners. At least five male and five female elite athletes must be competing in each race. "Elite" athletes are defined as those whose personal best within the 3 year period preceding the respective event has reached a standard set by the IAAF and published on the IAAF website.
    All traffic must be closed off from the race course at all times during the competition. There must be adequate medical provision for the number of runners at the race. A number of doping tests must also be carried out after each race.
    All prize money and bonuses offered should be equal, irrespective of the athlete's nationality or gender. However, race organisers are allowed to offer additional bonuses to competitors from the host country in order to boost local participation.
    A maximum of 30 marathons may receive Gold Label status.[4] The label statuses are granted on a yearly basis and organisers must apply for renewal each year.[3]
    [edit]Race list

    • Arnis
      0

      Labi

    • ciems13
      0

      Un kurš to lasīs??? facepalm.gif

  • roltons12
    -1

    The Mississippi Renewal Forum was a design charrette in which over 200 community leaders and design professionals worked together to plan the rebuilding of the Mississippi Coast post-hurricane Katrina. In the course of a week in October 2005, the charrette’s design teams generated new plans and codes for all eleven municipalities along the Mississippi coast, including Waveland, Bay St. Louis, Pass Christian, Long Beach, Gulfport, Biloxi, D’Iberville, Ocean Springs, Gautier, Pascagoula and Moss Point.
    The Mississippi Renewal Forum was organized by Mississippi Governor Haley Barbour’s Commission on Recovery, Rebuilding and Renewal, in coordination with the Congress for the New Urbanism and Duany Plater-Zyberk & Company. Participants included 140 architects and planners from across the country, as well as more than 50 local planners and officials.
    The week-long charrette – considered by some to be the largest architectural brainstorm in 100 years – saw local and national architects worked together in teams to coordinate specific design plans for each municipality, as well as regional plans for transportation, coding and retail. Designers aimed to plan areas which would be more diverse, less auto-dependent, more environmentally-efficient and more secure from hurricanes. Accordingly, the projects not only focused on reconstruction plans, but also on zoning and development codes.
    Journalists from across the country attended the event, and the forum received coverage by The New York Times, USA Today, and The Chicago Tribune, amongst other local and national periodicals.

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