Thursday, October 19, 2023

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 https://twitter.com/CFlipados


um novo dia uma nova conta




um novo dia uma nova conta







um novo dia uma nova conta




more power and distance

 https://www.golfdigest.com/story/hit-more-bombs-drill-crank-up-backswing?utm_medium=email&utm_source=101823&utm_campaign=tips&utm_content=DM45310&uuid=e79ad79f26924571bf73c59a55a97d89



GolfDigest+
Iain Highfield
One drill for more power and distance
Try this drill to hit more bombs, and crank up your backswing.
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FROM THE MAGAZINE

Try this drill to hit more bombs, and crank up your backswing

March 16, 2022
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IAIN HIGHFIELD, a Golf Digest Best Young Teacher, is director of the KOHR Golf Academy in Natick, Mass.

Hitting ball after ball on the range, working on something specific, is not going to help you retain that skill over time. Several top motor-learning specialists believe the best way to practice and improve on a skill is to lose the feeling of the desired swing change you’re trying to make—and then recalling it.

Here is a drill for swing speed I learned from leading golf-biomechanics researcher Sasho MacKenzie. After you get loose, make five driver swings taking the club back as fast as you can. Really crank it back. Then hit a drive using that super-fast backswing. I bet you generate a lot more speed than you usually do.

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This technique works because the faster you swing the club back, the harder you have to work to start the downswing. You have to apply a high amount of force to the grip of the club as you transition down, which transfers more energy into the shaft and the clubhead, creating more speed.

For this drill to really take hold, go tackle another task, like practice putting, after just one round, then come back and do another round of the drill. If you train like this, youll find your brain has to work harder to recall what you need to do, and this type of varied practice makes it more likely you will retain this speed over time—and transfer it to the golf course. —With Dave Allen

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$3.7 Million Rodin Sculpture Has Been Missing... and more

 

A Glasgow Museum Reveals a $3.7 Million Rodin Sculpture Has Been Missing From Its Collection for Nearly 75 Years
Museums
A Glasgow Museum Reveals a $3.7 Million Rodin Sculpture Has Been Missing From Its Collection for Nearly 75 Years
By Adam Schrader



artnet
Morning News
October 19, 2023


A plaster version of the $3.7 million sculpture Les Bourgeois de Calais, one of many castings made by Auguste Rodin, has been missing from the Glasgow Museums collection for nearly 75 years.

Rodin was allowed under French law to cast multiple versions of the sculpture, commissioned by the city of Calais in 1884. A number of castings in bronze stand at museums across the world.

Glasgow Life, the charity that oversees the city’s museums, confirmed over email that the statue was missing. The city’s museums include the Riverside Museum, The Burrell Collection, GoMA, the People’s Palace, and Kelvingrove Park—where the sculpture was last exhibited in 1949.

That exhibition, “Sculpture in the Open Air,” ran from June 25 to September 30, 1949, a spokesperson for Glasgow Life said in an email. The spokesperson confirmed that authorities lost track of the sculpture after that exhibition.


Auguste Rodin's Bourgeois de Calais (The Burghers of Calais) (1889). Philippe Huguen/AFP/Getty Images.

Auguste Rodin's Bourgeois de Calais (The Burghers of Calais) (1889). Philippe Huguen/AFP/Getty Images.




Another sculpture by Rodin that had been exhibited, Saint jean de Baptiste, remains in storage at Glasgow Museums Resource Center.

Les Bourgeois de Calais suffered damage while on display in this exhibition and at present is unlocated,” the spokesperson said.

Director Jérôme le Blay told the French newswire AFP that the value of the work is estimated around $3.7 million.

Glasgow Museums was founded in the 1860s and acquired the sculpture in 1901. However, as reported by the BBC, it is one of among 1,750 items currently listed as missing or stolen.

The Glasgow Life spokesperson said the process of recording, cataloguing, and caring for the collection “has improved significantly” since Glasgow Museums was founded.

“For 30 years, the cataloguing of the collection has been increasingly centralized using the Museum’s Collection Management System,” the spokesperson said, adding that the storage of the collection has also been improved through capital improvement projects in Glasgow in the past two decades.

Glasgow Museums has spent the past 20 years conducting an inventory of the items in the collection, and, based on these processes, finding objects which had previously been recorded as “unlocated,” according to the spokesperson.

“This process has enhanced security of the collections, preventing theft from storage in the last 20 years, and reduced the number of objects recorded as unlocated, even temporarily,” the spokesperson said.

“Where historic thefts have been conclusively identified, we have robust processes in place including notifying the police and adding the items to the Art Loss register which makes it difficult to secure sales at legitimate auctions.” Art Loss is a private registry for missing artifacts seeking to aid in their recovery.

The revelation comes as museums take account of their collections in the wake of a scandal at the British Museum, where a senior curator was found to have stolen more than 2,000 objects from its collection over the course of years.



A Glasgow Museum Reveals a $3.7 Million Rodin Sculpture Has Been Missing From Its Collection for Nearly 75 Years

The sculpture was last seen during an exhibition in 1949 after which it was recorded as "unlocated."


    A Glasgow Museum Reveals a $3.7 Million Rodin Sculpture Has Been Missing From Its Collection for Nearly 75 Years

    The sculpture was last seen during an exhibition in 1949 after which it was recorded as "unlocated."

    Auguste Rodin's Bourgeois de Calais (The Burghers of Calais) (1889). Philippe Huguen/AFP/Getty Images.
    Auguste Rodin's Bourgeois de Calais (The Burghers of Calais) (1889). Philippe Huguen/AFP/Getty Images.






    ARTS AND IDEAS

    Amir Hamja/The New York Times

    Mimicking the stores it replaced

    Barnes & Noble, the biggest brick-and-mortar bookseller in the U.S., is pursuing a back-to-basics, books-first strategy, in which the chain aims to act more like the indie stores it was once notorious for displacing — and to embrace lighter, brighter interiors with modular shelves designed for maximum flexibility.

    Consistency between outlets is low on the priority list. New York City has nine Barnes & Noble stores featuring four different logos above the front doors. Two stores are new; one has been fully renovated; and the others have had some updates but are mostly frozen in time, the still-functioning remains of bygone retail strategies.



    Morning Briefing, Europe Edition

    October 19, 2023


    British Museum Announces Plan to Stop Thefts

    The museum will overhaul its record keeping, but its leaders said that millions of items still would not be individually documented.

    People are shown walking in front of a building with columns.
    The British Museum’s digitization project will take five years and cost about $12.2 million, though much of that money still needs to be raised.Credit...Hollie Adams/Reuters
    People are shown walking in front of a building with columns.

    Two months after it announced the firing of a curator suspected of stealing artifacts from its stores, the British Museum on Wednesday unveiled a $12-million project to plug holes in its records and its online catalog.

    Addressing a British parliamentary committee on Wednesday, Mark Jones, the museum’s interim director, said..........


    British Museum Announces Plan to Stop Thefts

    The museum will overhaul its record keeping, but its leaders said that millions of items still would not be individually documented.

    People are shown walking in front of a building with columns.
    The British Museum’s digitization project will take five years and cost about $12.2 million, though much of that money still needs to be raised.Credit...Hollie Adams/Reuters
    People are shown walking in front of a building with columns.

    Two months after it announced the firing of a curator suspected of stealing artifacts from its stores, the British Museum on Wednesday unveiled a $12-million project to plug holes in its records and its online catalog.

    Addressing a British parliamentary committee on Wednesday, Mark Jones, the museum’s interim director, said that inventory failures contributed to the theft of about 2,000 artifacts, including gems, semiprecious stones and glass items.

    Jones, who was appointed in September, said that the fired curator targeted items that hadn’t been cataloged, because they were seen as low value at the time they entered the museum’s collections. “These 2,000 objects were only known to one person, and that person decided to take advantage of that,” Jones said.

    Subscribe to The Times to read as many articles as you like.

    Alex Marshall is a European culture reporter, based in London. More about Alex Marshall