Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Gap growing between rich?and poor?of the Premier League

LONDON, June 3 ?The check internet speed test League chairmen will gather for their summer meeting this week facing the reality that the four clubs at the top are increasing their financial stranglehold on the English game.

Figures for the 2008/9 season reveal the Champions League is now worth around double the amount to the top four clubs than it was three years ago.

Premier League champions Manchester United earned fiber internet total streamyx mail password 90 million (RM518.3 million) cable dsl prize money and TV cash kamus bahasa malaysia all competitions last year ?nearly 60m more than bottom club West Bromwich Albion ?with 33.7 million coming from their march to the Champions League final.

Fourth-placed Arsenal earned 73.4 million compared to fifth-placed Evertons 49.5 million with the Gunners bringing in 23.4 million from European football. The figures do not include ticket money and merchandise income where the big four also dominate.

The moon, long an object to curiosity and worship, has inspired many tales in ancient China. While on board a boat, Tang Dynasty poet Li Po was believed to have tried to embrace the reflection of the moon while he was drunk. He fell overboard and drowned. In days of yore, malaysia resorts regarded a round shape as family reunion; thus the appearance of a full moon was regarded as an auspicious internet service for family members to get together. At no other time of the year is the moon brightest and fullest on the fifteenth day of the eighth lunar month. In 2009, that auspicious day falls on October 3, 2009, which is also known as the Mid-autumn Festival. Lantern processions and the eating of christian internet radio are internet speed calculator of the celebrations.

In Malaysia, which has a Chinese population, the Mooncake Festival is also celebrated on a moderately grand scale with prayers and reunion dinners. Altars are set up in the open air under the moonlight, and offerings of pomegranates, pomelos, steamed sponge cake, water-calthrops, mini yams and mooncakes are laid. The moon is worshipped, and there is feasting, moon gazing and, in modern families, partying and drinking. Children carry lanterns and sometimes competitions are held. According to older generations, on this day, the taboo of not pointing to the moon should be observed, lest a moon fairy will cut off one's ears!

In Kuala Lumpur, the Thean Hou Kung Temple on Jalan Syed Putra holds a grand celebration annually, while similar merry-making is held in Penang in either the Chinese Assembly Hall or the Kek Lok See Temple. Organisers of such celebrations are the Chinese guilds, associations and temple trustees.

Weeks before the festival, mooncakes and lanterns are put up for sale. In the Chinese districts of many cities, especially Kuala Lumpur, Georgetown, Malacca and Ipoh, red boxes packed with mooncakes are piled high on the sales counters of restaurants, and lanterns in the shapes of animals, flowers, butterflies and cartoon characters dangle in clusters from toy stores and incense shops. In keeping with the times, some of the lanterns are operated by battery though those lighted by candles are still popular. Mooncakes are bought not only for prayer and consumption but to be given to friends and relatives.

Shaped like the surface of a mooncakes come in several traditional varieties. They can be filled with black-bean paste, brownish lotus-paste, yellow-bean paste and lotus-seed mixed with sweetened paste. Usually, a preserved duck-egg yoke is added to the stuffing. These mooncakes are of the Cantonese version, and in addition, there are also less popular Hokkien-style mooncakes that come in a long cylindrical roll and Teochew mooncakes filled with yam. In Malaysia, halal mooncakes are also available. To cater to the increasing sophisticated taste buds of Malaysians, innovations in mooncakes include ice-cream mooncakes, pandanus moncakes, green tea mooncakes and durian mooncakes.

The origins of the Mooncake Festival have been lost in the mists of time but there are two legends associated with it. The first concerns its role in the overthrow of the Yuan Dynasty (AD 960-1280) that was established by the Mongols in ancient China. Under the oppressive rule of the Mongols, gatherings of a group of people were forbidden, and it was decreed that each household be allowed to own only one kitchen cleaver, which was chained to a chopping block. It was impossible to organise any uprisings. Liu Fu Tong, a rebel leader of Anhui province, requested permission from the District Officer to distribute cakes to bless the longevity of the Mongolian emperor. The District Officer agreed, and Liu made thousands of round cakes which he called mooncakes. Each cake contained a piece of paper outlining the plan of an attack. He told the recipients to eat the mooncakes on the 15th day of he 8th lunar moon. On that fateful day, when the people cut the mooncakes, they were able to coordinate a rebellion on a local scale. Another rebel leader, Chu Hung Wu, capitalised on the chaos to overthrow the Mongol emperor, and established the Ming Dynasty in AD 1368).

Another legend concerns Chang Er, who was a daughter of a poor farming family. When she was 18, Hou Yi, a skilled archer from a neighbouring village saw her attending to the fowls in her parents' farm, and was internet washer by her beauty. Over the next few days, he deliberately rode passed the farm again and managed to introduced himself. She accepted isp support friendship, and internet backup they became lovers. During the period of their courtship, a phenomenon happened. The ten suns of the earth that took turns to bring warmth and light appeared together. Rivers dried up and the land became barren, causing starvation and massive destruction.

Hou Yi climbed up to the highest mountain he could kuala lumpur city and launched his mighty arrows. One by one, nine of the suns were shot down. The people rejoiced and made Hou Yi their King. He married Chang Er, and they lived happily for several years. However, Hou Yi changed into a despot, and tried to seek immortality. He employed sorcerers to create an elixir of life for him. One prominent sorcerer told him he needed children to be sacrificed as part of the process of creating the elixir. Hou Yi ordered his troops to snatch children from their families, and the elixir table was almost completed.

One evening, Chang Er sneaked in the sorcerer's chamber that was housed in a tall tower in the palace. She rummaged everywhere and found the tablet. At that moment, the sorcerer burst in and Chang Er quickly swallowed the tablet. The sorcerer raised the alarm and in rushed Hou Yi who tried to force his wife to return the pill. It was too late. She had swallowed it, and in her bid to escape from Hou Yi, she was forced to jump from a window. However, she did not fall down but floated up to the moon, where she lives alone. Another version says that as punishment for stealing the elixir of life, Chang Er was turned into a three-legged toad. Her pet rabbit became her companion, and is always pounding the elixir of immortality in a large mortar. Today, it it believed that people celebrate the Mooncake Festival to remember Chang Er.

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