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Submission Wrestling from W&L Tournaments 11
This is an extract from a W&L video: Baston 2 Fighters : Christophe 1er de la Fosse aux Molosses vs Chême des Typhons et Pythons From their website: http://www.W-and-L.com W&L tournaments are out of this world : the fighters prefer to face each other with neither rules nor referee, and the winner is the guy who manages to score the greatest number of submissions in the space of 25 minutes. All holds are permitted and in some particularly aggressive matches, fighters don't think twice about using their fists, feet, elbows, shins and indeed heads for additional firepower ! In fact, the absence of a referee allows all sorts of bad behaviour ! What's more, the time allowed for these matches is usually long enough to allow each fighter's more primal and passionate characteristics to emerge : arrogance, frustration, pride, humiliation -- all very much in evidence amongst guys who don't trust each other one inch ; who use their voices regularly to intimidate as well as to insult, and who prolong particularly painful holds with relish and breathtaking cruelty ! W&L encounters are much more than straightforward fights ; they're titanic clashes of ego and temperament which slowly-but-surely descend to the level of brutal streetfights ! And as submissions alternate between one fighter and another, so the suspense (as well as the score) builds ! Such is the essence of W&L tournaments. http://www.W-and-L.com

Booker T & Goldust @ 7-11
Booker's layin low because Goldust still wants to be his tag partner, why not stop into 7-11 for an ice cold slurpee. "Y'all outta Booker T cups?! You must be SUCKA!"

Khartoum (1966) Citizens Allowed to Leave City - 8 of 11
- Khartoum - Movie 1966 - Part 8 of 11 - Citizens allowed to leave the city if they so choose. Government official who stole from the city's food supplies is caught and executed. British intelligence officers (including Major Kitchener) disguised as Arabs discover that gunboat sent with Colonel Stewart aboard did not make it through and that General Gordon is still in Khartoum. General Wolseley orders British troops to head immediately for Khartoum to rescue General Gordon. - Siege of Khartoum http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siege_of_Khartoum Charles George Gordon - Major-General - known as Chinese Gordon, Gordon Pasha, and Gordon of Khartoum, was a British army officer and administrator. He is remembered for his campaigns in China and northern Africa. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_George_Gordon Muhammad Ahmad - religious leader, in Sudan, who proclaimed himself the Mahdi - the prophesied redeemer of Islam who will appear at end times - in 1881, and declared a jihad against Egyptian authority in Sudan. He raised an army and led a successful religious war to topple the Egyptian occupation of Sudan. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muhammad_Ahmad - Khartoum (film) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khartoum_%28film%29 Khartoum is a 1966 film written by Robert Ardrey and directed by Basil Dearden. The film stars Charlton Heston as General Gordon, with Laurence Olivier as the Mahdi (Mahommed Ahmed), and is based on Gordon's defence of the Sudanese city of Khartoum from the forces of the Mahdist army during the Battle of Khartoum. Khartoum was filmed by cinematographer Ted Scaife in Ultra Panavision 70, and was exhibited in 70 mm Cinerama in premiere engagements. - Plot: The film is about the last months before the British lost their emplacement in Sudan - in theory a subject territory of Egypt - in January 1885. Britain had occupied, but did not formally annex, Egypt in 1883. This is why Gordon, who is technically the "Egyptian" governor of the Sudan, wears a red Egyptian fez. The political origins of the Khartoum affair are unclear. The film postulates a meeting between the Prime Minister, Mr Gladstone (correctly shown wearing a finger-stall to cover a finger lost in a shooting accident as a young man), and other officials, which Gladstone ends by declaring never to have taken place. In a shortened and simplified way the film shows how Khartoum was under siege by the Mahdist army while General Gordon had been planning last strategies before Khartoum fell and he was killed in action. The secret meeting between Gordon and the Mahdi in the Mahdist camp, as portrayed in the film, is entirely fictional. The final shot of Gordon descending a staircase before being speared to death, is based on a famous painting. Major Kitchener, who played a role in Wolseley's relief expedition, was himself later a famous general and commanded the Anglo-Egyptian conquest of the Sudan in 1898. He was known thereafter as Lord Kitchener of Khartoum. - The closing scene: The following words are from the closing scene of the film, spoken by a narrator (Leo Genn): "The relief came two days late. Two days. And for 15 years the Sudanese paid the price with pestilence and famine, the British with shame and war. Within months after Gordon died, the Mahdi died. Why, we shall never know. Gordon rests in his beloved Sudan. We cannot tell how long his memory will live. But there is this: a world with no room for the Gordons is a world that will return to the sands." ( Transliterated from the film ) - Khartoum (1966) http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0060588/ Directors: Basil Dearden Eliot Elisofon Writer: Robert Ardrey (writer) Cast: (in credits order) verified as complete Charlton Heston - Gen. Charles 'Chinese' Gordon Laurence Olivier - The Mahdi Richard Johnson - Col. J.D.H. Stewart Ralph Richardson - William Gladstone Alexander Knox - Sir Evelyn Baring Johnny Sekka - Khaleel Michael Hordern - Lord Granville Zia Mohyeddin - Zobeir Pasha Marne Maitland - Sheikh Osman Nigel Green - Gen. Wolseley Hugh Williams - Lord Hartington Ralph Michael - Sir Charles Dilke Douglas Wilmer - Khalifa Abdullah Edward Underdown - Col. William Hicks Peter Arne - Maj. Kitchener Alan Tilvern - Awaan Michael Anthony - Herbin (uncredited) Roger Delgado - (uncredited) Leo Genn - Narrator (uncredited) Lisa Guiraut - The dancer (uncredited) Ronald Leigh-Hunt - Lord Northbrook (uncredited) Alec Mango - Bordeini Bey (uncredited) George Pastell - Giriagis Bey (uncredited) Jerome Willis - Frank Power (uncredited) -

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