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One-day and also
One-day cricket also gave NZ a chance to compete more regularly than Test cricket with the better sides in world cricket.
She has also scored 4, 814 runs at 48. 14 and taken 85 wickets at 20. 81 in her 141 Women's One-day Internationals, holding the record for the number of appearances until England's Charlotte Edwards won her her 142nd cap in 2010.
Trent Bridge is a Test, One-day international and County cricket ground located in West Bridgford, Nottinghamshire, England and is also the headquarters of Nottinghamshire County Cricket Club.
He also has a One-day International hat-trick to his name, achieved in the 2003 World Cup against Kenya.
He also became the second batsman to score 10, 000 runs in One-day Internationals ( again after Tendulkar ) and was named in the ICC World XI for both Tests and One-day Internationals in the 2005 ICC Awards.
He also made an unbeaten knock of 108 against Kenya to become the third Bangladeshi batsman to score a century in One-day Internationals.
Bichel made his Test debut for the Australian Cricket Team in Adelaide in 1996 in a match against the West Indies, and his One-day International Debut in Brisbane, also against the West Indies.
This stadium also hosted one of the greatest One-day international matches.
One-day contests have been played at Darley Dale, Repton School, Trent College, Leek, Staffordshire and Knypersley ( also in Staffordshire ).

One-day and part
In the 2004 / 5 Winter tour of South Africa he took part in all of England's Test and One-day matches.

One-day and .
One-day cricket is popular with spectators as it can encourage aggressive, risky, entertaining batting, often results in cliffhanger endings, and ensures that a spectator can watch an entire match without committing to five days of continuous attendance.
One-day cricket began between English county teams on 2 May 1962.
ICC has introduced a system of Powerplays in One-day Internationals which restrict the number of fielders outside the 30 yard circle.
One-day track and field meetings form the most common and seasonal aspect of the sport – they are the most basic level of track and field competition.
One-day pretzel fests and markets in other German towns are in Kirchhellen, a borough of Bottrop, or in Kornwestheim.
One-day long work-related festivals, where chicken, fish, and glutinous rice are eaten.
One-day cricket was his kind of game: it was instant and aggressive and its atmosphere brought out the best in him.
The Laws provide for One-day, or Limited overs cricket ( including Twenty20 ) by stipulating that the number of innings per side may be one or two, and that each innings may be restricted to a maximum number of overs, or a maximum period of time.
The current Test, One-day and Twenty20 captain is Ross Taylor.
One-day games can be won by one batsman getting a 50, a few others getting 30s, bowlers bowling economically and everyone fielding well.
He starred in both the One-day and Test New Zealand teams, as well as the Canterbury New Zealand domestic championship team.
One-day March Break workshops are offered during the Provincial school break.
The One-day series lasts from three to seven matches.
She has played 84 One-day internationals for her country, scoring 365 runs at an average of 15. 86 with her top score of 38 coming against the Ireland Women's team.
One-day international cricket was played at the Basin Reserve until 1999, after which it moved to the larger crowd capacity Westpac Stadium on the other side of Wellington.
The number of players in the outfield area is the same as for the One-day format.
In One-day Internationals, he was ranked by the ICC as the No. 1 ODI bowler in January 2006 and has been ranked among the top ten ODI bowlers since the start of 2003.

conferences and covering
* topicmap. com, portal covering tools, conferences, papers and news
Perhaps because of his stuttering, he had always avoided covering what other covered, feeling he could not succeed if he was forced to compete with other reporters by shouting out questions at news conferences.
The ACS holds national meetings twice a year covering the complete field of chemistry and also holds dozens of smaller conferences in specific fields.
Annual conferences also continued to be held ; these were major, multifaceted events covering a long bank-holiday weekend and can be seen in hindsight as key moments in the struggle for gay rights in Britain.
During many conferences related to the restoration of the Akhtamar church, the process of covering the bullet holes are identified as the hardest part of the restoration by academicians and architects.
The Industrial Education department offered training conferences for oil field foremen, covering topics related to job planning and work supervision.
The Faculty also provides for its members an ongoing programme of talks, seminars and conferences covering a wide range of topics.
program, the Law School also offers a review program for the Philippine Bar Examination, a Mandatory Continuing Legal Education program, as well as seminars, conferences, and talks covering various issues.
The Society has a varied programme of lectures and one-day and two-day conferences covering a wide range of historical issues.
He has travelled extensively covering all the continents and has attended, chaired, and presented papers at numerous UN and other international conferences.

conferences and some
Lists of conferences, researchers, and some open problems.
Very early conferences, such as that with British diplomats in Moscow in 1941 and with Churchill and American diplomats in Moscow in 1942, focused mostly upon war planning and supply, though some preliminary postwar reorganization discussion also occurred.
Journalists in many nations have some privileges that members of the general public do not ; including better access to public events, crime scenes and press conferences, and to extended interviews with public officials, celebrities and others in the public eye.
At the conferences, St-Laurent, compelled by his belief that the UN would be ineffective in times of war and armed conflict without some military means to impose its will, advocated the adoption of a UN military force.
Although some contemporary Soviet sources stated that Gagarin had parachuted separately to the ground, the Soviet Union officially insisted that he had landed with the Vostok ; the government forced the cosmonaut to lie in press conferences, and the FAI certified the flight.
* Paris Peace Conference ( disambiguation ), conferences held before the signing of some of the Paris peace treaties
Another movement that has criticized the UCPN ( M ) is the Communist Party of India ( Maoist ) -- although they were never formally a RIM member, the CPI ( Maoist ) was formed out of three organizations, some of which were RIM members, at conferences organized by RIM.
The phrase was coined in adverse reaction to something Murphy said when his devices failed to perform and was eventually cast into its present form prior to a press conference some months later — the first ever ( of many ) conferences given by Dr. John Stapp, a U. S. Air Force colonel and Flight Surgeon in the 1950s.
No mass-market personal computer hardware vendor dared to be incompatible with the latest version of Windows, and Microsoft's annual WinHEC conferences provided a setting in which Microsoft could lobby for and — in some cases dictate — the pace and direction of the hardware of the PC industry.
However, episcopal conferences are now authorized to allow some other form of penance to replace abstinence from meat.
The IACR sponsors some of the major conferences and workshops in the field of cryptography, publishes the Journal of Cryptology, and maintains the Cryptology ePrint Archive.
Since its founding years, ILGA has evolved from a loose organisation of volunteers and an emphasis on the conferences as the main platform for information exchange, inspiration and co-operation initiatives into a more professional lobby organisation with ( some ) paid staff members.
He commanded the council to disperse, and appointed Bologna as their meeting-place in eighteen months ' time, with the intention of making the session of the council coincide with some conferences with representatives of the Greek church, scheduled to be held there with a view to ecumenical union ( 18 December 1431 ).
He also sponsored a series of conferences between the Lutheran and Reformed clergy in the hopes of having them arrive at some consensus, but the result was the opposite: the more the two sides argued the further apart they found themselves.
It also alleged that the defendants used USF, where some of them were teachers or students, as cover and as a means to bring other PIJ members into the U. S., purportedly for academic meetings and conferences.
Digital signal processing can perform automatic mixing for some simple applications, such as courtrooms, conferences and panel discussions.
In some cases, we will have to describe aspects that are related to both fields like some conferences or journals which cover the concept of “ e-Service ” in both domains of e-government and e-business.
The origin of the terms turntablist and turntablism are widely contested and argued about, but over the years some facts have been established by various documentaries ( Battlesounds, Doug Pray's Scratch ), books ( DJ Culture ), conferences ( Skratchcon 2000 ) and interviews in online and printed magazines.
Unlike some of the older colleges, Robinson does not own large amounts of land which can be used as a source of income ; thus the ability to host conferences represents an important financial resource.
All Division I member schools are allowed to award athletic scholarships to students, although some schools and conferences voluntarily choose not to award athletic scholarships in some or all sports ( most notably the Ivy League, which prohibits such scholarships in all sports ).
In the early 20th century some Congregational ( later Congregational Christian ) churches took exception to the beginnings of a growth of regional or national authority in bodies outside the local church, such as mission societies, national committees, and state conferences.
Unlike some of his predecessors who filled the role, Early routinely prepared Roosevelt for his press conferences, bringing the President's attention to issues that might come up, suggesting the appropriate answers, and even planting questions or issues with certain reporters.

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