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Tallis and scored
Tallis ' reaction later of giving the one-finger salute to a section of the crowd, right behind the northern try-line where Dane Carlaw's series-tying try was scored, became a major after-match talking point.

Tallis and try
In 1998 Tallis returned to St. George for the first time since his acrimonious split with the Saints and was pelted with garbage and insults and was loudly booed every time he touched the ball before his try secured a 30 18 victory.
Brisbane went on to capture another premiership with Tallis scoring a try and winning the prestigious Clive Churchill Medal as the best and fairest player on-field in the club's 38 12 1998 NRL grand final win over the Canterbury Bulldogs.
2000 saw him score a try in Australia's 52 0 thrashing of New Zealand in the ANZAC Test, but after being sent off in the opening State of Origin match for verbally abusing referee Bill Harrigan, Tallis suffered the ignominy of a whitewash defeat ( his public admission that the ' dead ' third match of the series should be cancelled was a momentary lapse in judgment that may have indirectly contributed to the Blues ' record 56 16 win ).

Tallis and Australia's
If Tallis ' stature as the most dominant forward in the game wasn't secure following Brisbane's 14 6 win over the Roosters in the 2000 NRL grand final, his four tries in Australia's 82 0 humiliation of Papua New Guinea before the 2000 World Cup, and his selection as Australian captain for the match against Russia ( which resulted in a record 110 4 victory ) did.
Following Australia's World Cup victory, Tallis and teammate Shane Webcke wrote an open letter to players appealing for an end to scandalous behaviour amongst footballers which had been tarnishing the sport.

Tallis and
Although anthems were written in the Elizabethan period by Tallis ( 1505 1585 ), Byrd ( 1539 1623 ), and others, they are not mentioned in the Book of Common Prayer until 1662, when the famous rubric " In quires and places where they sing here followeth the Anthem " first appears.
* 1973 Gorden Tallis, Australian rugby player
* July 27 Gorden Tallis, Australian rugby league player
* November 23 Thomas Tallis, English composer ( b. c. 1510 )
* January 21 * Queen Elizabeth I of England grants a monopoly on producing printed sheet music to Thomas Tallis and William Byrd
* Killing Me Softly ( 2003 ) Adam Tallis
To fill the now empty cells, a mass transfer from Barnhurst after a riot there had burnt out a cellblock ( and had ended in the off-screen death of Bea Smith ) introduced five new inmates to the series Nora Flynn ( Sonja Tallis ), a reformed triple murderess, ageing cat burglar May Collins ( Billie Hammerberg ) and her partner in crime, former fence Willie Beecham ( Kirsty Child who had played a corrupt prison officer who was later incarcerated and murdered in the prison in early episodes ), garden-loving misfit Daphne Graham ( Debra Lawrance ) and shy but highly intelligent thief Julie Egbert ( Jackie Woodburne ).
Thomas Tallis ( c. 1505 23 November 1585 the Julian calendar, 3 December 1585, by the Gregorian calendar ) was an English composer who occupies a primary place in anthologies of English church music, and is considered one of England's greatest early composers.
He was next sent to Court as Gentleman of the Chapel Royal in 1543 ( which later became a Protestant establishment ), where he composed and performed for Henry VIII, Edward VI ( 1547 1553 ), Queen Mary ( 1553 1558 ), and Queen Elizabeth I ( 1558 until Tallis died in 1585 ).
The reformed Anglican liturgy was inaugurated during the short reign of Edward VI ( 1547 53 ), and Tallis was one of the first church musicians to write anthems set to English words, although Latin continued to be used.
* Herald AV Publications HAVPCD305: Thomas Tallis
Early music Tallis Gaude gloriosa
Early Music Cipriano de Rore: Missa Praeter rerum seriem ; The Tallis Scholars / Peter Phillips, Gimell
Since the late 1540s Antonio and Juan both accompanied Felipe on his various trips, and visited Italy, the Netherlands, Germany ( in 1548 49 ), and England ( in 1554 56 ), where Antonio's variations may have influenced Byrd and Tallis, who latter took up the form.
* Thomas Tallis ( 1505 85 ), an English composer
The work takes its name from the original composer of the melody, Thomas Tallis ( c. 1505 1585 ).
Tallis returned to the game with the Broncos for the 1997 Super League season and was the most dominant forward in the competition, which culminated in Brisbane's crushing 26 8 win over the Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks in the Telstra Cup grand final.

Tallis and win
Tallis captained a rookie Queensland team in the 34 16 win over New South Wales in the opening match of the 2001 State of Origin series and was named man-of-the-match.

Tallis and match
* In 1994 Swans recruit Dermott Brereton was suspended for 7 weeks for standing on Hawthorn player Rayden Tallis ' head during a practice match ; he was suspended for another 7 matches later in the season for elbowing Richmond captain Tony Free and breaking his jaw.
Only one Bronco ( Peter Ryan ) had not played in the 1992 match up and four of the Dragons ( Jason Stevens, Nathan Brown, Gorden Tallis and Phil Blake ).
Tallis celebrated a remarkable year by making his Australian Kangaroos Test debut in the second match of the Trans-Tasman series.
It was in the deciding match of the 2002 State of Origin series that Gorden Tallis performed a famous tackle on Blues fullback, Brett Hodgson, dragging him several metres and eventually tossing him out of the field of play like a rag-doll.

Tallis and was
The team was quickly built through a number of trades engineered by its first General Manager, Cedric Tallis, including a trade for Lou Piniella, who won the Rookie of the Year during the Royals ' inaugural season.
Tallis ', and a reference in the prefatory material to the Cantiones sacrae published by Tallis and Byrd in 1575 tends to confirm that Byrd was a pupil of Thomas Tallis of the Chapel Royal.
In 1577 Byrd and Tallis were forced to petition Queen Elizabeth for financial help pleading that the publication had ' fallen oute to oure greate losse ' and that Tallis was now ' verie aged '.
However, the use of adult male falsettos in polyphony, commonly in the alto range, was common in all-male sacred choirs for some decades previous, as early as the mid-16th century, and modern-day ensembles such as the Tallis Scholars and The Sixteen maintain the use of male altos in period works.
Tallis argues that Lacan, who was poorly trained in both traditional medicine and psychoanalysis, superficially mimicked medicine and science, and that Lacan's later devotees similarly mimic their guru's confused concepts.
Thomas Tallis was the last organist at the Abbey prior to its dissolution.
The " Mag and Nunc " was set by many composers-such as Thomas Tallis, Herbert Sumsion, Charles Wood and John Tavener-of Anglican church music, often for choir a cappella or choir and organ.
Another formative experience for the young Howells was the premiere in September 1910 at the Gloucester Three Choirs Festival of Ralph Vaughan Williams ' Fantasia on a Theme of Thomas Tallis.
Both Vaughan Williams and the Tudor composers of which Tallis was one profoundly influenced Howells ' later work.
Tallis acquired a volume at the dissolution of the monastery of Waltham Holy Cross and preserved it ; one of the treatises in it was by Leonel Power, and the treatise itself prohibits consecutive unisons, fifths, and octaves.
" Tallis was capable of switching the style of his compositions to suit the different monarchs ' vastly different demands.
" Tallis was also a teacher, not only of William Byrd, but also of Elway Bevin, an organist of Bristol Cathedral and gentleman of the Chapel Royal.
Tallis helped found a relationship that was specific to the combining of words and music.
Tallis was content to draw his texts from the Liturgy and wrote for the worship services in the Chapel Royal.
A fictionalised Thomas Tallis was portrayed by Joe Van Moyland in 2007 on the Showtime television series The Tudors, loosely based upon the early reign of Henry VIII.
Terry built Westminster Cathedral Choir's reputation on performances of music — by Byrd, Tallis, Taverner, Palestrina and Victoria, among others — that had not been heard since the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, and Mass at the cathedral was soon attended by inquisitive musicians as well as the faithful.
Sheppard was one of the finest English church composers of the Tudor era, his achievements matched in his generation only by Thomas Tallis.

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