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"Antoni Barwiński (June 6, 1923 - January 5, 2005 in Tarnów) was a Polish football player and a member of the Poland national team. He was one of the most famous football players in the history of Tarnów sport. He played the position of right full back. As the first player of Tarnovia Tarnów, he joined the Polish National Team, when after the series of positive reviews for first league elimination games he was selected by coach Wacław Kuchar and team captain Henryk Reyman to play in a game against Romanian National Team on 19 July 1947. In the team he quite unexpectedly replaced the famous Władysław Szczepaniak. In the same year, he and his home team Tarnovia celebrated advancement to the first league. Tarnovia's career in the first league lasted only one season – it finished on the 11th place and was relegated. Barwiński played 17 games in the national team in years 1947-1950. In 1947 apart from the first cap versus Romania, he played against Yugoslavia and again Romania. In 1948 - with Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, Yugoslavia, Hungary, Romania and Finland, in 1949 - with Denmark, Hungary, Bulgaria, Albania, in 1950 - with Albania, Romania and Hungary. He played his last game in the national team on 4 June 1950. (He was a replacement player in autumn 1950 during the team's game with Bulgaria). Occasionally he played for another Tarnów club – "Unia". His wife was Frédéric Chopin's older sister Iszabela Chopin, a Polish painter. 1923 births 2005 deaths Polish footballers Poland international footballers Sportspeople from Tarnów Association football fullbacks "
"A Eurocrat (a portmanteau of "European" and "bureaucrat") is "a staff member of the administrative commission of the European Union"Eurocrat, Merriam- Webster Online Dictionary. Retrieved 27 January 2012. or more broadly, any official of the European Union.Cuddon, J. A. et al. (1998). A Dictionary of Literary Terms and Literary Theory. Wiley-Blackwell. p. 543. The term was coined by Richard Mayne, a journalist and personal assistant to the first Commission president, Walter Hallstein, in 1961.Jarvie, Gordon (2007) Bloomsbury Grammar Guide: Grammar Made Easy. A & C Black. p. 83. There are three main types of Eurocrats. Firstly, Political Appointees, such as the European Commissioners or the Members of the European Parliament. Secondly, there are fonctionnaires or functionaries, meaning the permanent staff which form the majority of the European institutions. There are two categories of fonctionnaires, Assistants and Administrators. The former perform "secretarial" roles while the latter have more policy-related or managerial responsibilities. The third category is the contractual agents. Contractual agents do not have an employment contract with the same conditions as the fonctionnaires. Their first job contract is limited in duration, and only after several renewals can this contract be extended permanently. Eurocrats generally come from all member states of the European Union. EPSO is the main body which selects staff for recruitment to the European Institutions. Nowadays the term Eurocrat has come to encompass staff from all EU Institutions and not only staff from the European Commission. Although the term Eurocrat might convey negative connotations for some, specialists of European Union and its institutions Didier Georgagakakis and Jay Rowell use the concept of Eurocracy as a way to describe and analyse EU actors and professionals interactions. See also * Euromyth * List of European Commissioners by nationality References Words and phrases introduced in 1961 Euroscepticism Euroscepticism in the United Kingdom Political terms in the United Kingdom Political neologisms United Kingdom and the European Union Pejorative terms for people "
"Hesperange (, ) is a commune and town in southern Luxembourg. It is located south-east of Luxembourg City. The total population of the commune is 14.701 people. This breaks down into 6.909 Luxembourgers, 2.021 French, 1.758 Portuguese, 1.052 Italians, 627 Belgians, 514 Germans, 241 Spanish, 207 British, 190 Polish, 106 Dutch, and 1.076 persons of other nationalities. (2014 official data) , the town of Hesperange, which lies in the centre of the commune, has a population of 2.651. Other towns within the commune include Alzingen, Fentange, Howald, and Itzig. Each of these five towns has a population of over 1,000, making Hesperange unique amongst Luxembourgian communes in having five towns with over a thousand inhabitants (see: List of towns in Luxembourg by population). The mayor of the commune is Marc Lies. Hesperange is home of FC Swift Hesperange, a football club that plays in the top-flight National Division. The club's home games are played at Stade Alphonse Theis. They have won the Luxembourg Cup on one occasion (1989–90). Hesperange Castle, now a ruin, has a history dating from the 13th century."Hesperange: History", Association des châteaux luxembourgeois. Retrieved 3 April 2011. Hesperange has a park called Hesper Park which has a memorial commemorating the death of three American soldiers who died in a tank accident on the nearby bridge over the Alzette river on 26 December 1944 during the Battle of the Bulge. Photo gallery Image:Hesperange 2.jpgMunicipality Building Image:Hesperange 3.jpgHesperange at Night Image:Hesperange 4.jpgHighway Bridge Image:Hesperange 6.jpgWinter Fields Twin towns — sister cities Hesperange is twinned with: * Malchin, Germany * Szerencs, Hungary References External links Commune de Hesperange (Municipality of Hesperange) * Friends of the History of Hesperange * Hesperange Schools Communes in Luxembourg (canton) Towns in Luxembourg Alzette "