Predicted lineups are available for the match a few days in advance while the actual lineup will be available about an hour ahead of the match
The current head to head record for the teams are Aarhus Fremad 4 win(s)
Have scored 17 goals in their last 5 matches
Have kept the most clean sheets in the competition (13)
Have scored 3 goals in their last 5 matches
Haven't kept a clean sheet in 5 matches
Aarhus Fremad is playing home against Skive on Fri
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Quantafuel is a Norwegian technology-based recycling company with the purpose of ending wasteful and unsustainable handling of our planet's resources
Drawing on more than ten years of development
Quantafuel converts waste plastics back into low-carbon synthetic oil products replacing virgin oil products
Quantafuel aims to rapidly build up production capacity on a global scale and to have a meaningful impact on one of our time's most pressing environmental challenges
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The case – Mr C Kane vs Debmat Surfacing Ltd – involved a driver for the company claiming unfair dismissal in pursuant to Section 98 Employment Rights Act 1996
The driver had taken periods of absence due to ill-health
including from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
he was seen by a manager from Debmat smoking outside a social club on the first day he was off sick
What is your sickness absence rate really telling you?
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What followed saw company management call the claimant
who claimed he had “been bad in bed all day with his chest”
denying the he had been in the club that day
although admitting he had the following day
The situation was compounded on 21 March when the claimant was not able to attend work because he was shielding as directed by the NHS
before the company launched an investigation on 23 March for “dishonesty and breach of company regulations”
In interview and subsequent correspondents
the company eventually suggested if the driver had been “unfit for work and on antibiotics
saying his actions were inappropriate and he was dismissed for a breach of trust and dishonesty
The tribunal highlighted flaws concerning the investigation
and also questions on whether a fair disciplinary procedure followed
going to the Social Club while on sick leave was not deemed gross misconduct
“There is no rule the respondent can point to which says that an employee cannot socialise in whatever way they deem appropriate whilst absent from work through illness,” the judgment states
the claimant should not be at the Social Club because of the nature of his condition and because he should be shielding.”
the judge concluded there would have been just a 25% chance of the claimant being dismissed if the respondent had conducted a fair procedure
the case is comforting for people who are off sick and concerned that being seen by their bosses in public
whether down the a pub or other social setting rather than being tucked up in bed
it is also a reminder that a cynical or selective approach to sick leave policies – especially encroaching (or passing judgment) on an employee’s personal life can backfire
as many employers have seen a significant drop in sickness rates during the COVID-19 pandemic with the establishment of flexible working policies are a key factor
heavy-handed approach to sick leave is just not fit for purpose
Jules Quinn is partner at King & Spalding
Quantafuel can report that the third production line at its Skive plant was completed on 30th of June and has over the last days started commercial production
Ongoing operations are currently facing increased costs of operation and lower margins.“The Skive plant is moving steadily towards completion of all our four production lines with the third production line now in operation
The onboarding of the fourth production line is targeted for early fourth quarter,” says Quantafuel’s CEO Lars Rosenløv
The third production line is the first heated with gas produced in the pyrolysis process
The remaining lines will be upgraded this autumn to run on NCG as well.“Running on NCG minimises the demand for external energy and provides significant cost savings for Quantafuel,” he continues
Pressure on operating costs“Our focus for the Skive plant has been on increasing production capacity and stable production
We are exposed to prevailing general market conditions with pressure on key cost drivers like natural gas
We are also exposed to a contractual fixed oil off-take price at the moment but are discussing this with our off-take partner
We will renegotiate prices and take other improvement measures maintaining long-term operating margins in line with our guiding,” says Rosenløv
The focus on high regularity and stable throughput at Skive continues
as well as the ability to process a variety of plastic qualities
Quantafuel processes plastic from mixed household waste
including waste contaminated with biological material
The Skive plant continues to produce oil within product specifications
confirming Quantafuel’s chemical recycling process
Claim: Saturday Night Live (SNL) aired a "Conspiracy Theory Rock!" segment once in 1998
WHAT'S TRUE: A 1998 episode of SNL included a "Schoolhouse Rock!" parody segment called "Conspiracy Theory Rock!" that was dropped from subsequent reruns of the episode
WHAT'S FALSE: The "Conspiracy Theory Rock!" segment was banned or suppressed by the network because its anti-corporate message was deemed too dangerous
or otherwise unflattering to various corporations
This was actually shown on Saturday Night Live in 1998 — just one time
It was then pulled from future syndication of SNL
Posted by Brandon Weber on Friday, September 11, 2015
Origins: On 11 September 2015, Upworthy contributor Brandon Weber posted the video shown above
a segment from a 1998 episode of Saturday Night Live
a conspiracy theory-like segment (done in a video style imitative of the popular "Schoolhouse Rock!" series of animated educational shorts= films) that posited a phenomenon of large corporations gaining increasing control of the news (and other informational) media and using their hegemony to control what the public sees and hears — usually to the benefit of the corporation and the detriment of consumers
Weber's post stated that the segment had aired only once (during the SNL episode's original network broadcast) and then had been excised from syndicated repeats of the episode
suggesting that the corporate powers-that-be had wielded their influence to clamp down on furthers airing of such an unflattering (and possibly true) portrayal
Alert viewers will notice something missing from this weekend's "Saturday Night Live," a repeat of a March broadcast hosted by actress Julianne Moore: the "TV Funhouse" animated segment that aired in the original show
The slyly lighthearted piece titled "Conspiracy Theory Rock" and produced in the style of PBS' "Schoolhouse Rock" kids' show actually was a sophisticated satire of the increasing concentration of media ownership in a small number of huge multi-national corporations
"SNL" executive producer Lorne Michaels said he decided to pull the segment because "I didn't think it worked comedically."
Michaels said he was not concerned at all about the references to NBC and General Electric
and that a passing dig at NBC West Coast executive Don Ohlmeyer for firing former "SNL" cast member Norm Macdonald is now dated
"The test was putting it on live," Michaels said
we would have been accused of bowing to corporate pressure and censorship and all that
I wanted to support [writer/producer] Robert [Smigel] in what he wanted to do creatively
Then there is the matter of a short called "Conspiracy Theory Rock," a parody of the ABC educational cartoon "Schoolhouse Rock," which begins as a bright
sing-along indictment of media consolidation
and ends by criticizing NBC's news division for ignoring the misdeeds of General Electric
episode of "SNL," "Conspiracy Theory Rock" has not been rebroadcast
"It just struck me as really funny to do it on our own network," he said
"I was somewhat delighted that they were O.K
Michaels said that "Conspiracy Theory Rock" had simply been cut from reruns to make room for a second performance from the episode's musical guests
When "Saturday TV Funhouse" is not stirring up controversy
Smigel to express ideas that perhaps no other venue could accommodate
It aired once with the original "SNL" episode
and was pulled from syndication because it "wasn't funny," according to "SNL" creator and producer Lorne Michaels
but it got a lot of attention when comedian Marc Maron tweeted a link to the video
The cartoon has since gone viral as a "banned" clip
who created "Funhouse" along with Robert Smigel for "The Dana Carvey Show," the clip was "unavailable for viewing (separate from our studio's reel) for quite some time," but did
eventually end up being "included in the "Saturday TV Funhouse" DVD compilation that was released in 2006," which is probably where the video being passed around online was ripped from
So although it's true that "Conspiracy Theory Rock" was largely elided from subsequent SNL broadcasts of the episode in which it originally appeared
no available evidence supports the notion that the clip was formally banned by any particular interests rather than
it was trimmed due to run-time restrictions and his judgment that the material was dated and didn't come across as funny
It's also the case that if NBC and/or the network's corporate parent
had considered the "Conspiracy Theory Rock!" segment too offensive or potentially troublesome for their tastes
they likely wouldn't have broadcast it in the first place
While Saturday Night Live's format means the network has somewhat diminished control over what goes out on the air should there be a disparity between the show's scripted material and what gets performed live in the moment
the "Saturday TV Funhouse" segments were animated and were therefore necessarily prepared in advance and available for review prior to airtime
In any case, since the 29 April 2006 release of the Saturday Night Live — The Best of Saturday TV Funhouse DVD included "Conspiracy Theory Rock!" among 24 installments of that recurring SNL segment in a package officially released by NBC Universal Television
it's fairly safe to say "Conspiracy Theory Rock!" is not now in a state of being "banned" or "suppressed" by network ownership
Kim LaCapria is a former writer for Snopes
This material may not be reproduced without permission
Snopes and the Snopes.com logo are registered service marks of Snopes.com
enough to fill the inner portions of a solar system
wclavin@caltech.edu
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