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"Ana Catarina Marques Borges (born 15 June 1990) is a Portuguese footballer who plays for Sporting CP and the Portugal women's national football team. After initially joining on loan from Chelsea, she made the move back to Portugal permanent in July 2017, just before UEFA Women's Euro 2017.http://www.chelseafc.com/news/latest-news/2017/07/ladies-keeper-contract- and-fond-farewell-.html She is an important member of the Portugal national teamProfile in UEFA's websiteAna Borges and Sílvia Rebelo are paid a hommage. Portuguese Football Federation with over 110 caps. Club career At the 2015 FA Women's Cup Final, staged at Wembley Stadium for the first time, Borges appeared as a late substitute in Chelsea's 1–0 win over Notts County. It was Chelsea's first major trophy. In October 2015 she was an unused substitute for Chelsea's 4–0 win over Sunderland, which secured the club's first FA WSL title and a League and Cup "double". In December 2016, Borges renewed her contract with Chelsea but agreed to move on loan to Sporting CP at the same time. On being introduced to the crowd at Estádio José Alvalade, Borges vowed: "I will do everything to help Sporting, the club of my whole life." Borges was voted the 2017–18 Campeonato Nacional de Futebol Feminino Player of the Season in June 2018. International career Borges scored on her debut for the Portugal women's national football team on 4 March 2009, a 2–1 win over Poland at the 2009 Algarve Cup. Two days later Portugal secured another 2–1 win, this time against Wales, and Borges scored again on the occasion of her second cap. She was named by coach Francisco Neto in the 23-player Portugal squad for UEFA Women's Euro 2017 in the Netherlands. In November 2017 she made her 100th appearance for Portugal in a 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification fixture against Moldova. References External links National team profile at Portuguese Football Federation (FPF) * Profile at Sporting CP 1990 births Living people Portuguese women's footballers Portuguese expatriates in Spain Portuguese expatriates in England Portugal women's international footballers USL W-League players Primera División (women) players Atlético Madrid Femenino players Chelsea F.C. Women players FA Women's Super League players Expatriate women's footballers in England Expatriate women's footballers in Spain Zaragoza CFF players People from Gouveia, Portugal Women's association football wingers Association football forwards FIFA Century Club Campeonato Nacional de Futebol Feminino players Sporting CP (women) footballers "
"Edmond Paris (25 January 1894 – 1970) was a French author of works on history, particularly the modern history of the Catholic church.Edmond Paris – Author of Secret History of the Jesuits Personal life He was born in Paris to a Roman Catholic family of scholars. Having come from a religious background, he was very much interested in philosophical, religious, and social matters right from his childhood. After he left Sorbonne where he was a student, he completed his studies in various parts of the world, such as Rome, Geneva, Salamanca, and Montreal. Having travelled widely and being a devout believer to be in close contact with truth and reality, he was thus able to compare what he learned with what he saw physically. Paris – The Vatican Against Europe (Suppressed Role of Vatican in fomenting Both World Wars)(1964) His work and life brought him into troubles. In the "Edmond Paris' The Secret History of the Jesuits" Introduction, A. Rivera wrote, :The Edmond Paris works on Roman Catholicism brought about the pledge on the part of the Jesuits to 1) destroy him 2) destroy his reputation, including his family and 3) destroy his work. And even now these great works of Edmond Paris are being tampered with...Edmond Paris: The Secret History of the Jesuits, Chick Publications, 1975 p. 9 Work According to the author Philip J. Cohen, Paris was "the author of several rabidly anti-Catholic works." Cohen also observes that Paris is described on the jacket of Genocide in Satellite Croatia, 1941–1945 (1961) as "a French historian from a Catholic family". L. E. Lee, writing about Genocide in Satellite Croatia,Loyd E. Lee: World War II in Asia and the Pacific and the War's Aftermath, with General Themes: A Handbook of Literature and Research, Greenwood Publishing Group, 1998 p. 369 described the work as a frightening documentation of the Ustaše. The journalist Richard West noted that Paris was one of a group of "anti-Catholic polemicists" who used events in the Independent State of Croatia to attack the Catholic Church as a whole. West observes that Genocide in Satellite Croatia, 1941–1945 was first published in French, and later in English. It was subsequently reprinted by a Protestant publisher in the United States as Convert or Die..., with a "blood- red cover showing a man kneeling at gunpoint in front of a priest". Despite this horrific imagery, West opines that Paris' book is based on careful research, much of it from Magnum Crimen. West states that Paris relied heavily on the testimony of Serbs who fled Yugoslavia after the war, whose testimony "bears out what we know of the Ustaše massacres from German, Italian and Yugoslav government sources".Richard West: Tito and the Rise and Fall of Yugoslavia, Faber & Faber, 2012 , Notes chapter, second page Bibliography French: * Le Vatican contre la France (1957) * Le Vatican contre l'Europe (1959) * Les mysteres de Lourdes, La Salette, Fatima * L'histoire secrète des jésuites * Regards sur l'Education Catholique: à Travers Couvents, Presbytères, Sacristies, Confessionnaux, écoles ... Le fer rouge sur des plaies hideuses (1972) * Bréviaire de la Superstition Catholique (1974) * L'enseignement Catholique ou le Merveilleux Catholique (1978?) English translations: The Vatican against Europe (1961) * The Secret History of the Jesuits (1975) See also * Viktor Novak * Avro Manhattan * Djoko Slijepčević References Articles lacking sources from February 2018 1894 births 1970 deaths Writers from Paris Anti-Catholic propagandists Anti-Catholicism in France American conspiracy theorists French male writers French Roman Catholics Roman Catholic writers 20th- century French non-fiction writers "
"Desulfobacula phenolica is a bacterium species in the genus Desulfobacula. The specific epithet is from New Latin noun phenol -olis, phenol; Latin feminine gender suff. -ica, suffix used with the sense of pertaining to; New Latin feminine gender adjective phenolica, pertaining to phenol.)Reclassification of Desulfobacterium phenolicum as Desulfobacula phenolica comb. nov. and description of strain SaxT as Desulfotignum balticum gen. nov., sp. nov. J Kuever, M Könneke, A Galushko and O Drzyzga, IJSEM, January 2001, vol. 51, no. 1, pages 171-177 (abstract) References External links *Type strain of Desulfobacula phenolica at BacDive - the Bacterial Diversity Metadatabase Desulfobacterales Bacteria described in 2001 "