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Search resuls for: "James Hill"


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As pale morning light flickered across the Seine, Capt. Freddy Badar steered his hulking river barge, Le Bosphore, past picturesque Normandy villages and snow-fringed woodlands, setting a course for Paris. Onboard were containers packed with furniture, electronics and clothing loaded the night before from a cargo ship that had docked in Le Havre, the seaport in northern France. Using Le Bosphore and its crew of four prevented tons of carbon emissions from entering the atmosphere. “The river is part of a wider solution for cleaner transport and the environment,” Captain Badar said, his eyes scanning other vessels carrying wares up and down the Seine.
Persons: Freddy Badar, Le Bosphore, Captain Badar Locations: Normandy, Paris, Le Havre, France, European
For decades, the Epos navigated the intricately carved fjords along Norway’s coast during winter, bringing books to residents. Built in 1963, it served as a bokbåt, or library boat, until 2020, when its funding was cut. To save the Epos and its mission, supporters created a foundation that bought the boat and relaunched it as a center for literary events and a traveling bookstore.
A cellphone allows travelers to have a camera always at the ready. Here are a few tips on when and what to shoot, and how to better frame what we see when we travel. On most cellphones, you can set up a three-by-three grid for the screen in the camera settings. Test different compositions by turning your cellphone both vertically and horizontally, and, if you have a choice of lenses, decide if the scene is best framed tightly or wide. Another way to enrich the landscape is to spot a person or an object and place them carefully in the frame as a focal point.
Persons: Steven Spielberg, John Ford,
At the eight-minute mark of the final of the CAN 18 soccer tournament, the players on the Mauritania team score three times in rapid succession. The balls hitting the goalkeeper’s small net sound like the blasts of a cannon. The last two happen so quickly that many in the crowd miss them. “Did they score?” the Ivory Coast fan squished next to me asks, looking stunned. “Yes, twice,” a Mauritanian fan on my other side responds gleefully.
Persons: , Organizations: Mauritania, Ivory, Mauritanian Locations: Ivory Coast
Yannick Noah was nervous. There was even that night after the finals, long after he had retired, and it was late, and after many drinks had been consumed, he convinced the staff to keep the lights on just bright enough and let him and his friends play some tipsy, barefoot tennis on the red clay. But he had never performed on Philippe Chatrier court like this, which is to say, never given a concert as the version of himself that has for the past three decades dominated his life: the African-pop-reggae star of sorts. “I lived my best moment here,” he said later, during a news conference more packed than it would have been for any active player. “I have memories everywhere here, including my first kiss.”
Persons: Yannick Noah, Roland Garros, Philippe Chatrier, Noah, ,
The Exclusive, Elusive World of Real Tennis
  + stars: | 2023-06-03 | by ( James Hill | Photographs | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Today, the sport is played competitively in the four countries that also make up tennis’s Grand Slam: France, where the game is known as jeu de paume; Britain and Australia, where it goes by real tennis; and the United States, home of the current men’s world champion, Camden Riviere. There are just over 50 courts in the world, and the prohibitive cost of constructing new courts is a major issue. Whatever they might lack in numbers, court tennis players make up for with enthusiasm. 10 in the world and is a 13-time French amateur champion. “You really have to master the tactics because there are so many options on the court.”
Persons: Camden Riviere, Matthieu Sarlangue, , Organizations: Camden Locations: Versailles, France, paume, Britain, Australia, United States
On a frigid Saturday evening earlier this year inside the Stade Charléty, a World War II-era stadium tucked alongside a highway, the stands are barely a quarter full. Only about 3,000 fans have turned up to watch Paris F.C., a crowd so small that when the home team goes to salute its support after its victory, the players need only to go to one corner of the stadium. On Sunday, another Paris team takes the field, and fans around the world tune in to ‌watch. ‌That yawning gulf between the teams is something that the owners of Paris F.C. They argue that the Paris region, with its population of more than 12 million, deserves an elite league rivalry, the kind that courses through European cities like London and Lisbon, Madrid and Milan.
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