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Filbert Sanka Bayi: Tanzania’s greatest Athlete and the Tracks to the World Records

Introduction

THAILAND 2011

Thailand has become well known worldwide for its many attractions. Many attractions can all over the country, offering visitors interesting knowledge of Thai culture to be found uniquely.



For instance, there are numerous Buddhist temples that the tourist can visit to learn about the national religion co Thailand. In Bangkok, the capital city of the country, there are many important temples. One of the most important temples is the Temple of the Emerald Buddha, where a Buddhist image made from a large Emerald is kept. The Temple of Dawn is also in Bangkok on the bank of the chao Phraya River. These are only two of the many important Buddhist Temples in the Bangkok area. There are many more throughout the country.

Legendary Kenyan athlete Hezekiah Kipchoge “Kip” Keino had in October 1968 under searing temperatures in the high-humidity and high-altitude Mexico City, and against curative advice because of his stomach ailments and weakness, won the Olympic gold medal in the 1500 meters (establishing a new Olympic record of 3min. 34.91sec.). Kip Keino even managed to bag the silver medal in the 5000 meters, finishing behind legendary Tunisian Mohamed Gammoudi, and ahead of the third Naftali Temu who had won the very first ever Olympic gold for Kenya by earlier winning in the 10000 meters. Keino had collapsed from weakness while competitive in the 10000 meters, but would rise up and congratulate and hug his young team-mate at the finishing line.

Nyheter

A versatile, enthusiastic, patriotic, and carefully middle- and long-distance runner, Kip Keino now in Munich in the summer of 1972 was now a 32 year-old veteran and an Olympian for a third consecutive time. But Keino, amidst the youthful competition, defied his age. In Mexico City, in 1968, only two of the 52 other competitors in the 1500m had been older than the then 28 year-old Keino. In Munich at age 32, Keino was very much the elderly statesman in the 1500m line-up. Furthermore, the extraordinary Keino had only four months earlier started to embrace the 3000m steeplechase. And he did qualify in the steeplechase to compete for Kenya! Keino had taken the steeplechase seriously after he had found that the Olympic schedule would not allow him to compete in both the 1500m and the 5000m.


Compared to glorious Keino, a very unknown commodity in the man of Filbert Sanka Bayi was in Munich to characterize an additional one east African country–Tanzania. Keino was de facto one of Bayi’s foremost idols and inspirations. Keino remains the most immortal name among African track athletes!

Filbert Bayi, an athlete with an “afro-hairstyle” and boyish looks, had grown up near Arusha on a farm in Karutu within sight of Mount Kilimanjaro. Bayi left school at age 17 and migrated to the capital Dar-es-Salaam. Bayi’s early running training was relatively crude. In the crowded, high-humidity capital, Bayi would pick out and sprint alongside a piquant bus and rest when the bus was loading and unloading passengers—some form of interval training. In 1971 Bayi achieved a reasonably good 3min 52 seconds in the 1500m.

The Year 1972

It was earlier in 1972, Bayi’s personal bests and national wins in the 1500m (3:45) and steeplechase (8:55) superior him to characterize Tanzania at the Olympic Games in Munich.

In Munich, Filbert Bayi, a tall 19 year-old lightweight, a Tanzania airforce technician just so happened to be scheduled to compete in the same two events that Kip Keino was enrolled: the 1500m and the 3000m steeplechase. And while Keino was the elder, Filbert Bayi was one of two 19 year-olds that were youngest of the steeplechase competitors. There would only be four heats, and the top three finishers in each round would enlarge to the finals. The heats took place on September 1, 1972. Bayi was drawn in Heat One, the same heat that included Keino. Tapio Kantanen of Finland won (with an Olympic record of 8:24.8), Keino was second, and the third finals’ qualifier was Takaharu Koyama of Japan. Bayi was ninth with a time of 8:41.4 (a Tanzania national record) and therefore was out of the competition. Heat Two witnessed Kenya’s legendary Benjamin Jipcho win; in Heat Three an additional one Finn Pekka Paivarinta won. The Fourth Heat was won by an additional one Kenyan legend Amos Biwott who had won the steeplechase Olympic gold four years earlier. Biwott’s stop in 8:23.73 broke the Olympic record that had been established three heats ago! Notably, Biwott’s steeplechase win in 1968 would be the starting of the consecutive dominance of the steeplechase by Kenyans at the Olympics (apart from the 1976 and 1980 Games which Kenya boycotted) that has yet to be shattered!

The finals of the steeplechase were held on September 7th, 1972. Kip Keino would win in a new Olympic record of 8:23.64, followed by Benjamin “Ben” Wabura Jipcho (8:24.62), and the bronze was won by Tapio Kantanen (8:24.66). Amos Biwott came in sixth in a time of 8:33.48.

As for the 1500m, seven heats were established for Round One to take place on September 8th. The fastest four of each heat (plus two wild cards) would enlarge to the semi-finals. Filbert Bayi was eliminated when in Heat Two he complete sixth out of 8 competitors. But commendably, Bayi had again established an additional one new national record–3:45.4. Keino won in Heat Four and was followed by Rod Dixon of New Zealand. Heat Six was won by Pekka Vasala of Finland; and Heat Seven was won by an additional one Kenyan legend Mike Boit. The semi-finals were held on September 9th. Mike Boit, Keino, and Rod Dixon won in the three Heats. Ten that together with big names in the competition such as Pekka Vasala and Brendan take care of (Gbr) were set for the 1500m finals showdown. On September 10, Keino worked to psychologically wear down the competition, but in the final stretch of the 1500m he was outsprinted by 24 year-old Pekka Vasala (3:36.33) of Finland and placed for the silver (3:36.81). This was regarded by many as an upset. Rod Dixon of New Zealand claimed the bronze, Mike Boit was fourth, and Brendan take care of was fifth. What would become of Filbert Bayi?

The yearly East and Central African Championships were next held in Dar-es-Salaam in Tanzania, conveniently Bayi’s territory. Bayi was not disappointing. On December 3rd, 1972, only 3 months after the Olympics, Bayi became a regional champion in the 1500m. He won in an impressive time of 3:38.9, not only a national record but a shaving off of more than 5 seconds from the national record he had established less than three months earlier at the Olympics. Two Kenyans Wilson Waigwa and D. Mungai won the silver and bronze, respectively. Bayi was fast gaining the confidence to face even more formidable competition.

The Year 1973

Bayi would compete again with Keino at the second All-Africa Games which were held in Lagos in Nigeria in January 1973. It would be interesting. On January 11th in a 1500m heat that included both runners, a slow and relaxed run witnessed Bayi take second place in 3:48.32, following Olympian Shibrou Regassa (Ethiopia), then Kip Keino jogging in third. Keino was quick to say that he had relaxed and naturally wanted to make it to the finals. Keino assured the communal that the finals would be very dissimilar from what had happened in the Heat. But possibly all those years of running and victory had exacted a toll on the aging veteran. On January 13th, Filbert Bayi taking the lead from the start, beat Keino, winning in the finals in a commendable time of 3:37.18, yet an additional one Tanzania national record. Shibrou Regassa was third. Notably, Bayi had suffered a bout of malaria just before the Games. Henceforth Africans and the rest of the world started to take a second serious look at this new Tanzanian phenomenon that had emerged from nowhere. Kipchoge Keino would retire from competitive sports in 1974 as an Ita (International Track Association) professional, but he was impressed by Bayi to whom he offered congratulations and encouraging words.

A string of wins in international competition, followed in 1973. In Paris, near the end of May, Bayi won in the 1000m and established an Africa record of 2:19.5. Then in Boras in Sweden in early June, Bayi won the 1500m in a relaxed 3:45.5. The next day in Strangnas also in Sweden, Bayi won in the 1500m in 3:44.6. Again in Sweden, this time in Stockholm, Bayi won in quite a fast 3:37.9 on June 12th.

Then on the June 14th, Bayi changed gears and went for the 800m in Potsdam in the German Democratic Republic (Gdr). Bayi was beaten by 2-time Olympian Dieter Fromm (Gdr) into second place, but Bayi managed to design a Tanzania record of 1:46.9.

A week later on June 21st, at the Kusocinski Memorial Meet held in Warsaw in Poland, Bayi won in the 1500m, finishing in 3:37.9. He then flew to Denmark to partake in the Aarhus Games. Here Bayi won the 1500m in 3:35.6, a new Tanzania record! Bayi was piquant up fast and furiously! Danish Olympian Tom Hansen was second, and Olympian Rolf Gysin of Switzerland was third.

Only four days later, on June 28th at the World Games held in Helsinki in 1973, Bayi won the 1500m in what would be the world best time in the 1500m–3:34.6–yet an additional one Tanzania record. This race was essential in that it included many preeminent international athletes that included Kenyans Mike Boit and Ben Jipcho, and Americans Steve Prefontaine and Dave Wottle, among others. Bayi would display to the world his signature way of running—take the lead with a fast pace right from the starting of the race!. Bayi had ran a blistering 53.6 in the first 400m, 1:51.6 at the 800m mark, and 2:52.2 at the 1200m mark! David Wottle (800m Olympic gold medallist) was second (3:36.2), and Ben Jipcho (Olympic silver medallist) was third (3:36.6).

The very next day, June 29th, this time in a track meet in Vasteras in Sweden, Bayi was again the victor in the 1500m, winning in 3:40.7.

Again in Sweden, this time at a meet in Stockholm, but this time running the slightly longer one mile, Bayi was challenged by an impressive field that included Jipcho and Emiel Puttemans. It was July 2nd, 1973. This time, Ben Jipcho won, beating Bayi into second place. But Bayi did design a Tanzania mile record of 3:52.86. At hand to watch the much improbable battle between 20 year-old Bayi and 30 year-old Jipcho for a possible world record in the mile, were 18120 spectators in Stockholm’s Olympic Stadium. Near the end of the race, the foremost Bayi started to tire and Jipcho (who had been 10 yards behind) passed Bayi about 75 yards before the finishing line. Jipcho, encouraged by a standing cheering audience, had established the fastest mile in Europe in 3:52.0, one of the three fastest times ever recorded in the world, and a new Kenya and African record. Bayi had set quite a trying pace: 400m–52.5, 800m–1:51.1, and 1200m-2:52.2.

Only three days later, July 5th at the Oslo International, Bayi true to form, beat an impressive field. He won in the 1500m in an impressive 3:37.6. On the 19th of July, Bayi was in Tunis to compete in the African Youth Festival Championships. Bayi won in the 1500m in 3:45.3. Second place was captured by Suleiman Nyambui, an additional one Tanzanian who is only a concentrate of months older than Bayi. Nyambui would continue to be one of Bayi’s track rivals and he would moderately become a national sports icon. On July 24th at the Bislett Games held in Oslo, this time in the 800m, Bayi was beaten into second place by 20 year-old John George Walker of New Zealand–another of Bayi’s more enduring historical track rivals! Walker won in 1:46.3. Still, Bayi’s time of 1:46.7 was a new Tanzania record.

The next day, July 25th, Bayi was at a track meet in Stockholm. He won in the 1500m, finishing in a good time of 3:38.46. Soon afterwards, on August 4th, Filbert Bayi was ready to run the 1500m at the Africa vs. Usa Meet that was taking place in Dakar in Senegal. This time Bayi was beaten into second place by his older and more experienced rival Ben Jipcho. But Bayi’s time of 3:37.85 was impressive. Twelve days later, at the Latin America vs. Africa Meet held in Guadalajara in Mexico on August 16th, Bayi achieved first place in the 1500m in a time of 3:40.6. There followed a relatively long interval, until Bayi competed in Nairobi. In the 1500m, Bayi started off very fast, 52.0 in the first 400m, 1:52.0 at the 800m mark. But the abysmally high pace likely cost Bayi the race. He was beaten into second place by an additional one Kenyan legend John Kipkurgat. The then 29 year-old Kipkurgat is mostly preeminent for having competed in the 800m.

The Year 1974

Nearly exactly a year after Bayi, in beating Kip Keino, had won in the 1500m in Lagos at the All-Africa Games, the very busy athlete was ready to meet the impressive middle-distance line-up at the Commonwealth of Nations Games held in Christchurch in New Zealand. Bayi would compete in the 800m followed by the 1500m.

On January 19th of 1974, about a week prior to the Commonwealth Games, Filbert Bayi was beaten into second place in the 800m by Kenyan Olympic bronze medallist Mike Boit. Nevertheless, Bayi was impressive in his setting of a new Tanzania record–1:46.0.

In Heat One of the actual Commonwealth Games, Bayi won in the 800m in 1:47.09. This was on January 27th 1974. The winners of the other three heats, respectively, were familiar middle distance giants: John Kipkurgat, John Walker, and Mike Boit. The top four finishers of each heat would be placed among the two semi-final rounds to be held later in the day. Bayi was placed in the second semi-final. In Semi-Final One, the top four finishers were advanced to the finals and they were John Kipkurgat, Andy Carter (England), Daniel Omwanza (Kenya), and Phil Lewis (Wales). Semi-Final Two witnessed Bayi (1:46.56) enlarge to the finals although he was beaten into fourth place, possibly him relaxing and naturally contented with qualifying for the final round. Mike Boit won in this semi-final, followed by John Walker, then John Hooker (Australia).

In the finals, ran on January 29th, John Kipkurgat of Kenya won impressively in 1:43.91 (a new Africa Record), followed by Mike Boit (1:44.39), and then John Walker (1:44.92). Filbert Bayi was fourth in 1:45.32, nevertheless yet a new Tanzania record! At the 400m mark, Bayi had made a piquant endeavor to keep up with the tall lanky Kenyans, but they were too fast and too smooth, and Walker would finally overtake Bayi. Apparently, Bayi was never a strong sprinter so, it benefited him to lead widely from the starting given his stamina and consistency.

The heats of Bayi’s main specialization, at the Commonwealth Games, the 1500m, would take place on January 31st. There were three heats, Bayi was placed in Heat 2, and the top four finishers of each heat would move on to the finals. Heat One complicated Mike Boit (3:44.61) winning, followed by Australian Graham Crouch (3:44.64), then New Zealander Rod Dixon (1:44.64), then fourth was Englishman Brendan take care of (3:44.89). The second heat would turn out to be by far the fastest of the heats. Here the top four were Filbert Bayi (3:38.18), John Kirkbride of England (3:39.79), David Fitzsimons of Australia (3:39.92), and Tony Polhill (Nzl) in 3:40.30. The final tally of the first four finishers in Heat 3 was John Walker (3:42.52), Bayi’s fellow-countryman Suleiman Nyambui (3:42.57), Australian Randal Markey (3:42.77). Ben Jipcho, probably relaxed and naturally contented with advancing to the finals and rescue his energy for the greatest run, was fourth (3:43.55).

The 1974 finals of the 1500m, at the Commonwealth Games, will loom in the minds of many track enthusiasts for a very long time. On February 2nd Bayi would ran his most iconic race, taking the lead from the beginning. The timing at the 400m mark was 54.4, 1:51.8 at the 800m mark, and 2:50.4 at the 1200m mark. Bayi established a new world record of 3:32.16, only 15 months after he had competed and emerged as a mediocre unknown at the Olympics in Munich. But given Bayi’s improbable enlarge over the procedure of a year, Bayi had been improbable by many to break the world record. The runners-up also achieved extraordinary and foremost world times–John Walker (New Zealand national record)—3:32.52; Ben Jipcho (Kenya national record)—3:33.16; and Rodney Dixon (New Zealand)–3:33.89. Graham Crouch was fifth (3:34.22), Mike Boit was sixth (3:36.84), and Suleiman Nyambui (3:39.62) was eighth. Jipcho’s signature spurt in the last three hundred meters did not conduct to stave off the young energetic Walker who was chasing Bayi, and Walker did close up on Bayi in the fight for the gold. About taking the lead right from the start, Bayi would remark, “I got boxed in [at the Olympic Games of 1972 in Munich] and was never able to take the lead….So now I take the lead from the start” (in “Bayi Breaks record in 1500 Meter Race,” by Ap in Rome News-Tribune, February 3,1974).

The employment of a fast rabbit in this race would likely have produced a faster world record. Also, in the race, the foremost Bayi often looked behind at his competition–perhaps an indication that he had improbable the other athletes to chase him faster than they had done, and for him to perform a best time. Also, Bayi’s fast old semi-final may apparently mean that he had fewer energy reserves for the finals than did most of the other elite competitors. In the end Bayi was elated and jumped up and down as he jogged in front of the appreciating jubilant crowd after his world-record win. Bayi was used to winning, so it was the world record that was the more exciting. Filbert Bayi had erased the 1500m world record that had previously been held by legendary American James Ronald (“Jim”) Ryun. Bayi had shattered the world record by nearly one second, and Walker had also complete below Ryun’s old record. Legendary Jipcho who complete slightly exterior the old record, had already won gold in both the steeplechase and the 5000m. His gallant endeavor to win an unprecedented Commonwealth Games triple gold became thwarted!

The old 1500m world-record run on July 8th 1967, while the Usa vs. British Commonwealth of Nations track meet in the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, mostly complicated a memorable duel between Kip Keino and Ryun. The two exchanged the lead a concentrate of times in the fast pace, Ryun ran away from Keino near the end of the race and established a new world record of 3:33.1. The world record (3:35.6) established by Australian Herb Elliot on September 5th 1960 was no more. This was de facto one of Ryun’s many running performances. Track and Field News reported that “after 220 yards of dawdling, a record seemed out of the question.” However, after 440 yards, which Ryun, in third place, passed in 60.9 seconds, Kip Keino took the lead and ran the next lap in 56 seconds (the fastest second lap ever run in the 1500m at that time). Ryun, just behind, passed the 880-yard mark in 1:57.0. At 1320 yards the two were side by side in 2:55.0. Ryun pulled away to stop in 3:33.1, a record that stood for seven years. With a last 440 yards of 53.9 and a last 880 yards of 1:51.3, Cordner Nelson of Track and Field News called it “the mightiest finishing drive ever seen,” and said of Ryun’s performance, “This was most de facto his many race.”

On June 5th 1974, in the Tanzania capital Dar-es-Salaam, Filbert Bayi won in the 800m while the national championships after a relatively long layoff from traditional competition. The finishing time was a modest 1:49.7. Later on, on June 27th in Helsinki, at the Top Games, Bayi was for the first time beaten in the 1500m by main rival John Walker. The winning time margin was quite significant: Walker complete in 3:33.89 and Bayi was second (3:37:20). On just the next day, at the International Meet in Vasteras in Sweden, Bayi changed gears to the 800m and was able to win in 1:47.1, beating legendary Kenyan Olympic 800m finalist and 4x400m relay gold medallist and also 1970 Commonwealth of Nations 800m and 4x400m relay gold medallist Robert Ouko. Soon after, in Stockholm at the Dagens Nyheter Galan meet, Bayi won in the one mile in quite an impressive 3:54.10 on July 1st. The next day, in the same event, Bayi won in the 1500m, finishing in 3:43.16. Soon afterwards, on July 4th, Bayi was at the Bislett Games in Oslo. But, he uncharacteristically, probably from injury, did not stop in the 1500m. The winner was Tom-Birger Hansen (Denmark) who was tenth in the 1500m at the Olympics held in Munich; Olympic silver medallist Mike Boit of Kenya was fifth in this meet in Oslo.

The Year 1975

After quite a long layoff from international competition, Bayi emerged in 1975 at the New Zealand Games right in Christchurch where he had set the world record. This time, on January 20th, Bayi competed in and won in the infrequent 3000m and won in 7:53.9. Four days later at the New Zealand Games in the same city, Bayi won in the 800m (1:45.49), beating second-placed John Walker (1:45.9) and even 800m Commonwealth Games gold medallist John Kipkurgat who was third. The finals of the 800m, at an International meet in Auckland on January 28th witnessed Walker winning (1:46.7) in the 800m, Bayi racing in second (1:47.3), and John Kipkurgat beaten into a disappointing third place. At the end of January, Bayi competed in the Milrose Games in New York, winning in the mile in his first indoor performance in 3:59.3.

Soon afterwards, on February 7th, Bayi competed in Los Angeles (Inglewood) at the Los Angeles Times (160y indoor) track meet. Here, in the mile, Bayi won in 3:59.6, and beat off John Walker who was second in 3:59.9. On February 15th, in San Diego at the Jack in the Box Invitational (160y indoor track), Bayi significantly improved on his personal best through winning in 3:56.4, again beating nemesis John Walker (3:56.9) who was second. February 21st witnessed Bayi winning in the 1500m at the Olympic Invitational in new York. His finishing time was 3:41.2, ahead of second-placed Irish hereafter legendary indoor world-record owner Eamonn Coghlan. At the Aau Indoor Championships in New York, on February 28th, Bayi won in the mile in a moderate 4:02.1. Then on the 6th day of March, in Cinque Mulini in San Vittore Olona in Italy, Bayi won in an unconventional 9.5 km cross-country race, ahead of New Zealanders Euan Robertson and then John Walker in third place.

After three months, Bayi was back again in international competition, again in an Italian city Formia. At the Citta di Formia, on May 8th 1975, Bayi won in the infrequently ran 1000m with a delivery of a national record of 2:18.1. On May 10th, again in an additional one Italy city Caserta, Bayi won in the 800m at an international meet. The competition was not strong, and the finishing time was relatively modest: 1:48.3. But it was one of the tune-ups for Bayi’s next legendary run.

On May 17th 1975, Sergeant Filbert Bayi had traveled all the way to the capital Kingston of Jamaica to compete in the mile at the Martin Luther King International relaxation Games. The competition was quite formidable and it included Eamonn Coghlan and American legend Martin “Marty” Liquori. Bayi confidently stood in the inner lane at the start line and immediately took the lead when the gun went off. while the first 600 meters, Bayi ran away from the other athletes and maintained a essential distance of lead just before Liquori and Coghlan began zeroing down on him and attempted to overtake him. But this naturally encouraged Bayi to run faster and wear them out. The rest of the runners were considerably far behind. At the 440 yard mark, Bayi was timed at 56.9, 1: 56.9 at 880 yards, 2:55.3 at 1320 yards, and an extraordinary 3:35.0 at 1500m. In this “Dream Mile” (or “Miracle Mile”), Filbert Bayi broke Jim Ryun’s world record by establishing a time of 3:51.0. Bayi had shaved a tenth of a second off Jim Ryun’s record set in June 1967 in Bakersfield in California at the National Amateur Athletic Union meet. The old 1500m record that Bayi broke had also been held by Ryun. In the “Dream Mile,” Marty Liquori of Philadelphia was second (3:52.1), followed by Eamonn Coghlan (3:53.3) then at Philadelphia’s Villanova University.

When interviewed, Bayi would remark, “I run hard at the start because that way I don’t have to run in a bunch. They have to catch me….When I run from the front I know what kind of power I have…I didn’t know if I was running a world record….All I was doing was trying to win (In Bayi New King of Milers; Williams Outsprints McTear,” by Ap in St. Petersburg Times, May 19, 1975).

On August 12th 1975, nearly only three months after Bayi had slightly shattered the mile world record, his main nemesis the 6′ 1″ tall and sizeable (185 pounds, about 50 pounds heavier than Bayi) 23 year-old New Zealander John Walker supplementary lowered the record by an extraordinary 1.6 seconds! The new record became 3:49.4, the first ever timing below the 3:50, established at the Goteborg Games in Germany. Bayi was not among the competitors in this world-record run, but the margin of more than 5 seconds ahead of second placed Kenneth Hall of Australia was also significant. Walker had, this year lost three times to Bayi, two times indoors.

The Later Years

In 1975, John Walker would become number one with the foremost time of 3:32.4. Bayi would be ranked second with the time of 3:35.0 this year.!In 1976, Bayi again dropped down to third in ranking (3:34.8) behind John Walker (3:34:19) and Thomas Wessighage of Germany (3:34.80). In 1977, Bayi was not on top 10 list. Walker was still number one, followed by Steve Ovett of Great Britain. In 1978 Bayi was ranked world second behind Dave Moorcroft of Great Britain, and it would be the last year that Bayi would be among the foremost 1500m ten runners of the world. This year he lost the Commonwealth 1500m crown to the same Dave Moorcroft, Bayi winning the silver medal.

Bayi’s athletic performances reached their apex while 1973 to 1977. Thereafter, Bayi prolonged to perform relatively excellently and he also progressively partake in more of the longer distances such as the 3000m, 3000m steeplechase, and 5000m. Bayi was far best at the longer distances than the 800m. At the same time, competition intensified with more and more people all over the world were taking on athletic careers as the dividends from sports opportunities became more and more lucrative. Competition became progressively more piquant Over the four years toward the end of his indulgence in international competition in 1989, Bayi competed less and less, and concentrated on mainly marathons a concentrate of times per year. The marathon results were mixed, but notably at the Honolulu Marathon on December 12th 1986, Bayi was fourth placed behind Kenyan legend Ibrahim Hussein and fellow Tanzanians Suleiman Nyambui and Gidamis Shahanga. Bayi’s time was good (2hr:16:16). Bayi’s career in athletics had spanned quite a busy two decades. Bayi stands out as one of the most disciplined, flexible, well-conditioned and dedicated athletes; the many athlete that Tanzania has ever produced.

Among the other more preeminent of Bayi’s achievements were the silver medal in the 1500m at the Commonwealth of Nations Games held in Edmonton in 1978; the silver medal in the 3000m steeplechase (in a new national record) at the Olympics held in Moscow in 1980 (Tanzania did not partake in the Olympics in 1976), some East and Central African gold medal wins, and some African Games wins. The medals that Bayi and Suleiman Nyambui won in Moscow are still the only Olympic medal wins by Tanzanians.

The starting of the new century witnessed Retired Major Filbert Bayi and his wife commendably setting up a foundation (Filbert Bayi Foundation) and building schools in Tanzania that are intended to tap and design athletic and educational talent in youngsters as part of discipline, health, economic, and overall empowerment. Bayi’s complicated lies in Mkuza which is 50 miles from the capital city Dar-es-Salaam. Bayi de facto stands out as much greater than his image of one many athletes in the world.

Filbert Sanka Bayi: Tanzania’s greatest Athlete and the Tracks to the World Records

The Great Nobel Prize Controversy About the Discoverer of the Mri

The Nobel Prize for treatment 2003 was given to Paul Lauterbur, the director of the Biomedical Imaging Centre at the University of Illinois, and Sir Peter Mansfield, a physicist at the University of Nottingham in Britain for discoveries that “led to the development of modern magnetic-resonance imaging”. The Nobel Prize Committee awarded the laureates the Prize because they felt that the two recipients had made seminal discoveries with regard to the use of magnetic resonance to visualise separate structures, which finally led to the development of modern magnetic resonance imaging, Mri, a breakthrough in healing diagnostics and research.

THAILAND 2011

Thailand has become well known worldwide for its many attractions. Many attractions can all over the country, offering visitors interesting knowledge of Thai culture to be found uniquely.



For instance, there are numerous Buddhist temples that the tourist can visit to learn about the national religion co Thailand. In Bangkok, the capital city of the country, there are many important temples. One of the most important temples is the Temple of the Emerald Buddha, where a Buddhist image made from a large Emerald is kept. The Temple of Dawn is also in Bangkok on the bank of the chao Phraya River. These are only two of the many important Buddhist Temples in the Bangkok area. There are many more throughout the country.

This year’s Nobel Laureates in Physiology or treatment are awarded for crucial achievements in the development of applications of healing importance. In the beginning of the 1970s, they made seminal discoveries with regard to the development of the technique to visualize separate structures. These findings provided the basis for the development of magnetic resonance into a beneficial imaging method. Many in the field felt the award of the Nobel Prize for the invention of Mri has been long overdue. However, the decision to award the Prize to two scientists, Paul Lauterbur and Sir Peter Mansfield re-ignited a controversy with regard to Dr. Raymond Damadian-a healing doctor who regards himself as the true originator of Mri, and when I spoke to him at Fonar recently claims that this year’s winners made technological improvements based on his discovery. In fact, I gave the discovery of the Mri to Dr. Raymond Damadian to him in an report that I wrote in Imt some years ago. Therefore, who is Dr. Damadian and what are his claims to the Nobel Prize.

Nyheter

Raymond Damadian was born in 1936, the same year that Adolf Hitler gave his blessing to the new ‘people’s car’, the Volkswagen. He entered the University of Wisconsin as a 16-year-old freshman, after winning a scholarship from the Ford Foundation. His major area of study was mathematics, but he then chose to go to study treatment and moved to the Albert Einstein College of treatment in New York. He completed his residency at the Downstate healing center and after a integrate of postgraduate courses, assumed a professorship in 1967. It was the same year that Christian Barnard carried out the world’s first human heart transplant operation.


In the late 1960s, Dr Damadian, at the time a doctor at State University of New York’s healing centre in Brooklyn, was among the first to peruse using Nmr to scan the human body for disease. One of his postgraduate projects complex measuring the balance of inescapable electrolytes in living cells and in 1969; he began to use nuclear magnetic resonance to rule the ratios. Damadian thought about whether the Nmr signal would be separate for cancerous cells and began researching on mouse tumour tissue. Following an obscure law devised by Gilbert Ling, a physiologist, Dr Damadian believed he would be able to distinguish cancerous from wholesome tissues based on the buildings of the water molecules in the cell. We should take a occasion to reconsider how this works. The dominant Nmr signal from cells comes from the hydrogen atoms in water they contain. The signal varies with the configuration of the liquid, depending on whether the water molecules are bound tightly to various cell structures or more loosely held. Dr Damadian was undeterred that most scientists thought about Dr Ling’s ideas irrational and he experimented by analysing excised tumours of rats using machines at Nmr Specialties, a now-defunct enterprise based in New Kensington, Pennsylvania. He found that the hydrogen nuclei of water in cancerous and wholesome tissues showed pronounced differences in relaxation times, and in 1971, he published his findings in a paper entitled “Tumour Detection by Nuclear Magnetic Resonance.” In the paper he stated that Nmr signals persisted in cancerous cells longer than in wholesome ones and he brashly described how doctors could use Mri to scan the human body for cancerous tumours. He had completed his experiments on mice without any investigate grant, and he now made it be known that he needed funds to build a human-size scanner. Unfortunately, his audacious claims for the potential of the technique alienated many of his conservative peers, and most of his colleagues ridiculed him, considering the very idea of scanning the body in this way for cancer to be science fictional.

He was outraged when the National Institutes of health refused to give him a grant, so he wrote a personal letter to President Richard M. Nixon, boldly request him to intercede. The year was 1972, and Nixon was ending his historic visit to the People’s Republic of China. The ploy proved to be sufficient because the President had also recently decided that the U.S. Should claim a multibillion-dollar war on cancer, and he furnished him with a small grant. Damadian also received a telephone call from an administrator at the Nih, ostensibly reprimanding him for writing directly to the president.

However, in the same year, President Nixon’s accomplices were caught placing listening devices in the Democratic Party’s National Committee construction giving rise to the Watergate scandal.

Around the same time, Dr Lauterbur, then president of Nmr Specialties, got a investigate team to repeat Dr Damadian’s experiments. Dr Lauterbur had the idea that is now at the core of how Mri scanners operate: to superimpose small variations, or gradients, in the uniform magnetic field regularly used in Nmr spectroscopy. Changing the field force affects the resonance frequency of nuclei in direct proportion, and can thus be used to fetch spatial information.

In 1973, Dr Lauterbur published his idea in Nature, along with the first Mr images, of two tiny tubes filled with water. However, his paper did not cite Dr Damadian’s Science paper, even though Dr Lauterbur made a direct reference to it in a notebook entry made the day after his own discovery. When Damadian found out about this, he was livid and tis is one of the main reasons that bitter antagonism still exists in the middle of these two people. Lauterbur began to promote the possibilities of Mri or “zeugmatography”. The mid-1970s saw a flurry of performance in the area as teams at a handful of universities in America and Britain raced to issue images of ever expanding complexity.

In 1973, Sir Peter Mansfield published a paper in which he devised a project to fetch Mr signals and institute images rapidly by using gradients. His recipe could theoretically speed up the process of producing images from an hour to a fraction of a second. Because of the hardware requirements, it took more than a decade to implement his “echo-planar” imaging technique, but it is now commonly used to watch the brain at work in functional Mri.

In 1974, Nixon resigned to avoid impeachment and Raymond Damadian was unable to fetch the funds required for the costly liquid helium he used to cool the cryogenic magnet in his prototype scanner. In December 1976, he hatched other plan and decided that he would go down and visit President elect Jimmy Carter’s cousins in Plains, Georgia. When, they joined the Carter administration, Damadian made an motion for investigate funds.

In 1977, Damadian made a new Mri scanner called Indomitable, and in the summer of that year, he stepped into the engine hoping to make the first Mr scan of the human chest. The attempt failed, because he could not fit within the largest radio pickup coil he could get to work. Eventually, one of the graduate students, Larry Minkoff, volunteered and thus became the first person in the world to have a Mri scan. On July 3rd 1977, after four hours and 45 minutes of collecting data from 106 points, the first image of a chest cavity of a live man was created. The image not very detailed but some organs could clearly be seen. In characteristic fashion, Dr Damadian sent out a press issue claiming he had created “a new technique for the non-surgical detection of cancer everywhere in the human body” had been created. The gargantuan magnetic apparatus appeared in popular Science magazine and brought Damadian a inescapable number of popular notoriety. At that point, however, the engine had not been tested on cancer patients and many scientists idea creating a diagnostic imaging expedient based on Nmr seemed far-fetched, if not ludicrous. When experts questioned Damadian’s assertion, he was forced to back down, the New York Times published an article, casting doubt on Damadian’s claims, and his project went again unfunded.

Damadian was simply furious, and in 1978, he decided to form a new enterprise called Fonar in order to bring Mri scanning to the healing world. He named his new enterprise Fonar, which stood for ‘Field fOcused Nuclear mAgnetic Resonance’ and based it in Melville, New York. The small enterprise struggled against its grand competitors. Other researchers made their mark on the field, such as Richard Ernst, a Swiss scientist suggested positioning gradients to form a rectangular grid, to simplify the process of creating two-dimensional images. In 1980, two British teams-one from Aberdeen University, the other a collaboration in the middle of Emi and Hammersmith Hospital-developed ways to optimise the unlikeness of images using differences in relaxation times. The Aberdeen group also came up with a practical implementation of Dr Ernst’s technique, known as “spin warp” imaging, the recipe most commonly used for Mri today.

In 1988, Dr. Damadian was awarded the National Medal of Technology by President Ronald Reagan, which he shared jointly with Dr. Lauterbur, for “their independent contributions in conceiving and developing the application of magnetic resonance technology to healing uses, including whole-body scanning and diagnostic imaging.”. Normal electric and Siemens finally man-made the Mri Scanner and Damadian spent many years in court trying to defend his patent granted in 1974 for an “apparatus and recipe for detecting cancer in tissue”. In 1997, after a lengthy legal fight that ended up in the supreme Court of the United States, Normal electric was ordered to pay Fonar nearly 0m for patent infringement.

Despite Dr. Damadian’s offering to medicine, uncut peer acceptance, and now the Nobel prize, have eluded him. He has taken a typically unyielding stance and to voice his new disappointment, he took out several full-page advertisements in the Washington Post, the New York Times, and a Swedish newspaper, Dagens Nyheter, after the notification was made. He has allowed me to provide a smaller version of this for the Irish healing Times.

At the end of the day, the interrogate of who deserves reputation for discovering the Mri comes down to how much you value the crucial steps in invention. There is puny doubt that Dr Damadian was in fact a visionary who initially proposed the idea that Mri scanning straight through the human body could be used to detect cancers in their early form. I feel that the Nobel Prize Committee was short sighted not to contain him in this year’s laureates for his outstanding offering to medicine. The discovery of Mri has in fact a complex history, made potential by contributions from numerous visionary scientists over a duration of more than 50 years, including a handful of Nobel prize winners. In 1952, Felix Bloch of Stanford and Edward Purcell of Harvard shared the Nobel prize for developing a way to quantum the phenomenon that underpins Mri: nuclear magnetic resonance (Nmr). 1991, Richard Ernst, Switzerland, was awarded the Nobel Prize for contributions relating to high resolution Nmr spectroscopy and in 2002, his countryman, Kurt Wüthrich, received other for his development of Nmr spectroscopy of the three-dimensional buildings of biological macromolecules in solution

There is puny doubt that the gradient field was the “key invention” that led to the Mri advent into uncut industrial use but not to recognise Dr Damadian’s offering is akin to giving the Nobel Prize in Physiology or treatment 1945 to Sir Howard Walter Florey and Ernst Boris Chain alone for their work in the discovery of Penicillin and not recognising Sir Alexander Fleming’s seminal observation, which led to this miracle of medicine. In 1975, Howard Temin and David Baltimore were independently honoured for the discovery of reverse transcriptase, an enzyme that translates Rna back into Dna. Many viruses, notably H.I.V., employ reverse transcriptase when infecting animal cells. Like Fleming, Renato Dulbecco the third laureate took no part in the work itself but was given a Nobel Prize. In 1986, Gerd Binnig and Heinrich Rohrer received the physics prize for the scanning tunnelling electron microscope. However, they shared it with Ernst Ruska, who had invented the device’s remote ancestor, the first electron microscope. This means that predecessors have been included in Nobels several times and it is for this conjecture that I suggest that we as doctors should protest to the Nobel Prize Committee that a great injustice was done to treatment and finally to their own organisation by not recognising Dr Damadian’s rightful offering to this miracle of science.

The Great Nobel Prize Controversy About the Discoverer of the Mri

Thailand trip – 10 moving Facts About Thailand

It’s positively the mesmeric land of Thais that attracts more visitants than any other country in the Southeast Asia. Thailand is the country known for beguiling scenic beauty, remarkable beaches, impressing culture, commendable hospitality, fabulous temples, ruins & souvenirs of fabulous aged kingdoms, gastronomic riches, and lovely, smiling, and welcoming people.

THAILAND 2011

Thailand has become well known worldwide for its many attractions. Many attractions can all over the country, offering visitors interesting knowledge of Thai culture to be found uniquely.



For instance, there are numerous Buddhist temples that the tourist can visit to learn about the national religion co Thailand. In Bangkok, the capital city of the country, there are many important temples. One of the most important temples is the Temple of the Emerald Buddha, where a Buddhist image made from a large Emerald is kept. The Temple of Dawn is also in Bangkok on the bank of the chao Phraya River. These are only two of the many important Buddhist Temples in the Bangkok area. There are many more throughout the country.

Thailand positively the destination that appeals you, bewitches you, captivates you, enthralls you….! It’s the place that makes you visit it again and again. It’s the vacation destination that you dream of. Surely, you can find oodles of bright things in Thailand, but here are the 10 most bright facts about Thailand.

Thailand

It is often nicknamed as the “Land Of Smiles,” because of the perceived gentleness of its people. The country is positively populated by smiling, inviting, and receiving people. Thais are positively gentle, polite, soft spoken, friendly, and hospitable human beings.


Siam was the old name of Thailand. It was the official name of the country until 1949, when it was changed to Thailand by official proclamation. ‘Thai’ in the Thai language means ‘freedom’. So, Thailand means “land of freedom” or “land of the free”.

The Mon ruled over what is now known as Thailand. The area was also held by Khmer. The Mon Empire was a great Buddhist empire, and the empire had trading relations with Indians for centuries.

Thailand retains much of its traditional culture, because it is the only Southeast Asian nation that has never been colonized. Thai culture is kin to the Cambodian culture & religion, which was adopted by Thais in the 13th century, after the fall of the Khmer Kingdom.

King Rama I, the founder of the Chakri Dynasty, established Bangkok as the capital in 1782. Bhumibol Adulyadej, the current King of Thailand, is also a Chakri Dynasty ruler. He is also known as Rama Ix. He is the longest serving monarch in the Thai history.

95% of the Thai citizen are Buddhists of the Theravada tradition. 4.6% of the citizen are Muslims. Malays are mainly concentrated on the southern tip of Thailand. 0.75% of the citizen are Christians, mainly Catholics. Sikhs & Hindus are tiny, but influential. The nation also has a small Jewish community.

Thailand is also known as the “Land of white Elephant.” White elephants were highly esteemed and valued by the Thai Rulers. Elephants are still highly revered in Thailand. They are considered as the seal of peace and prosperity.

Thais do not like someone touching them on head. They believe that soul, which is considered highly sacred, resides in head. So, don’t ever touch a Thai on the head, not even a Thai child.

Thailand is the 49th country area wise, with its total land area of 514,000 km² (198,000 sq mi). It is comparable to the size of France, and it is somewhat larger than the California State of the United States.

Thailand has 5 Unesco World inheritance Sites, which contain Ban Chiang Archaeological Site near Udon Thani, Dong Phayayen – Khao Yai Forest Complex, Historic City of Ayutthaya & connected Historic Towns, Historic Town of Sukhothai & connected Historic Towns – together with Kampang Phet and Si Satchanalai, and Thungyai-Huai Kha Khaeng Wildlife Sanctuaries.

Thailand trip – 10 moving Facts About Thailand

Thailand – My popular Foods

I was thinking of providing a allinclusive of “foods found in Thailand” list but decided there are just too many and listing the foods that I love most would be far easier. So… The list below provides a short list of my favorite Thai foods.

THAILAND 2011

Thailand has become well known worldwide for its many attractions. Many attractions can all over the country, offering visitors interesting knowledge of Thai culture to be found uniquely.



For instance, there are numerous Buddhist temples that the tourist can visit to learn about the national religion co Thailand. In Bangkok, the capital city of the country, there are many important temples. One of the most important temples is the Temple of the Emerald Buddha, where a Buddhist image made from a large Emerald is kept. The Temple of Dawn is also in Bangkok on the bank of the chao Phraya River. These are only two of the many important Buddhist Temples in the Bangkok area. There are many more throughout the country.

Fried Rice – I love Thai style pork fried rice for breakfast. This is basic fried rice with tomatoes, onions with Thai spices like lime and chili thrown in at the end.

 

Thai Omelet – The Thai omelet is simple but appetizing dish made of eggs, chili, onions, pork and other things as desire. The chilies make it spicy and Thai. The omelet is served with white rice.

 

Som tum or papaya salad – som tum is a spicy salad consisting mostly of shredded fresh papaya with tomatoes, chilies, garlic, lime juice, and fish sauce. Thais love this dish Spicy, so be careful.

 

Hoi tod – hoi tod is a composition of egg and mussels (or oysters) pan fried with spices, namely white pepper. This is served over a bed of fresh bean sprouts. This is often made on the road and I like mine cooked crispy.

 

La moo ma ma or Ground pork salad – this is browned ground pork with chilies, fish sauce, tomato sauce with chopped shallots mixed in before served. This is often served with instant noodles. This is another Hot dish so, again, be careful.

 

Wing bean salad – This very similar to the dish above but tends to have more of a tomato base and chopped fresh wing bean are added and lightly cooked at the end. Very tasty. 

 

Glass noodle salad – glass noodles are made of green bean, are very thin, and suck up the flavor of the along foods very nicely.

 

Fried grouper – this a simple deep fried sea fish dish. What makes it on my favorite is the condiment they serve with it. The English name is seafood sauce and it is made with finely chopped green chilies and garlic in fish sauce. It is very spicy and delicious.

 

Common Condiments

  • Fish sauce – fishy and salty amber colored liquid
  • Seafood sauce – green, level to lumpy, chili and garlic dip
  • Soy sauce – tangy and salty brown liquid
  • Red pepper – dried chopped red chili
  • Vinegar – usually served with fresh chopped chili
  • Sugar

Thailand

The longer i live in Thailand the longer this list grows. When visiting Thailand I urge you to try as many things as possible, but remember, most western habitancy can not eat the spice level of the Thais, not without practice.


Thailand – My popular Foods