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The Spin | ‘Nobody likes to be belittled’: how New Zealand’s ‘Ilford seconds’ made history in 1986
Jeremy Coney’s tourists 40 years ago lacked the resources and professionalism of their opponents but got under England’s skin to claim a famous series winJeremy Coney is barking with laughter recalling the story of winding up England’s Phil Edmonds at Trent Bridge 40 years ago. “We needed about 70-odd runs to win the match and go 1-0 up in the series. Edmonds was bowling to myself and Martin Crowe with this rather garish sponsored wristwatch on.”
The Spin | ‘Nobody likes to be belittled’: how New Zealand’s ‘Ilford seconds’ made history in 1986
Jeremy Coney’s tourists 40 years ago lacked the resources and professionalism of their opponents but got under England’s skin to claim a famous series winJeremy Coney is barking with laughter recalling the story of winding up England’s Phil Edmonds at Trent Bridge 40 years ago. “We needed about 70-odd runs to win the match and go 1-0 up in the series. Edmonds was bowling to myself and Martin Crowe with this rather garish sponsored wristwatch on.”
A Min-Max Relation on Dicuts and Dijoins in Weighted Chordal Digraphs
arXiv:2501.10918v2 Announce Type: replace-cross Abstract: In a digraph, a dicut is a cut where all the arcs cross in one direction. A dijoin is a subset of arcs that intersects every dicut. Edmonds and Giles conjectured that in a weighted digraph, the minimum weight of a dicut is equal to the maximum size of a packing of dijoins.
Maximum Matching and Related Problems in Catalytic Logspace
arXiv:2604.24275v2 Announce Type: replace Abstract: Understanding the power of space-bounded computation with access to catalytic space has been an important theme in complexity theory over the recent years. One of the key algorithmic results in this area is that bipartite maximum matching can be computed in catalytic logspace with a polynomial-time bound, Agarwala and Mertz (2025). In this paper, we show that we can construct a \emph{maximum matching} in \emph{general graphs} in CL, and, in...
Your brain starts making social decisions before you do
Your brain starts making social decisions before you do - Date: - June 2, 2026 - Source: - The Hebrew University of Jerusalem - Summary: - Researchers found that social behavior begins in the brain before it becomes visible as movement. In zebrafish, a coordinated pattern of activity spread across the brain several seconds before the animals approached another fish. A higher brain region called the pallium played a key role, and fish with stronger neural signals were generally more social.
Louisiana Approves Map Eliminating a Majority-Black District
The Louisiana House of Representatives has approved a map that eliminates a majority-Black congressional district, in response to a U.S. Supreme Court ruling. The move has been criticized by civil rights groups, who argue that it will dilute the voting power of Black residents in the state. The new map will be used for the 2024 elections.
The Arc of the Voting Rights Act
THe morning after Louisiana’s House primaries were scheduled to take place, worshipers at Mount Zion First Baptist Church in Baton Rouge were on their feet, swaying to the gospel music that vibrated through the wooden pews. Just days earlier, the vote had been abruptly postponed as Republicans scrambled to redraw congressional boundaries in a way that would erase one of the state’s two majority-Black congressional districts and dilute the political influence that many in the congregation had...
‘Putting biodiversity in our hands’: British wildlife will soon be celebrated on banknotes
Some say 'animal underdogs' have been left off the shortlist, which is now open to a public vote. Historical figures like Winston Churchill will soon be replaced by native wildlife on UK banknotes. In a public consultation run by the Bank of England, the theme of nature came out on top.
4 jailed for rioting at Polytechnic University during 2019 unrest in Hong Kong
4 jailed for rioting at Polytechnic University during 2019 unrest in Hong Kong Male defendants jailed for up to 37 months for roles in clashes, with terms reduced for guilty pleas and delay in sentencing A Hong Kong court has jailed four men for up to three years and one month for rioting during the 2019 anti-government protests, in the latest round of sentences following authorities’ pledge to pursue those involved regardless of the time elapsed. The District Court on Monday sentenced the...