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Alan Bush (22 December 1900 – 31 October 1995) was a British composer, pianist, teacher and
political activist. From a prosperous middle-class background, Bush enjoyed considerable success as a
student at the Royal Academy of Music in the early 1920s. Many of his early works took the form of
settings for pageants and workers' songs and choruses. In his maturer years he wrote symphonies,
operas and other large-scale works, which found greater acceptance in Eastern Europe than at home,
in part because of his lifelong communist convictions. In his prewar works, Bush's music retained an
essential Englishness, but was also influenced by the avant-garde European idioms of the period.
Later he sought to simplify this style, in line with his Marxist-inspired belief that music should be
widely accessible. Bush taught composition at the Academy for more than 50 years and was the
founder and president of the Workers' Music Association. (Full article...)

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Did you know...

The eight Li brothers

... that of the eight Li brothers (pictured), the eldest taught Mao Zedong, the second became the
"father of Chinese popular music", and the youngest wrote a novel that was adapted into an
Oscar-nominated film?

... that stromatolites, which constitute the main evidence of life from 3.5 to 1.5 billion years ago, still
grow in Laguna Socompa?

... that Herbert Vivian, a leader of the Neo-Jacobite Revival and later a fascist, was the first journalist
to interview Winston Churchill?

... that The Baker Street Journal has been called "the leading publication" in the study of Sherlock
Holmes?

... that Binokel, from which the American card game of Pinochle was developed in the 19th century, is
still popular in its native Württemberg?

... that Rolling Stone called Meghan Trainor 2014's "Most Unlikely Pop Star"?

... that the French submarine Laplace, built during World War I, was named after astronomer
Pierre-Simon Laplace?

... that Joseph Jagger broke the bank at Monte Carlo?

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In the news

The Balangiga bells


In field hockey, the World Cup concludes with Belgium defeating the Netherlands in the final.

The Balangiga bells (pictured), taken by US Army soldiers from the Philippines in 1901 as war trophies,
are repatriated.

Nine people are killed when a high-speed train collides with a locomotive in Ankara, Turkey.

Two days after a shooting at the Christmas market in Strasbourg, France, in which five people died,
French police kill the suspected perpetrator.

Ongoing: Yellow vests movement

Recent deaths: Bill Slater Penny Marshall Francis Roache T. K. Wetherell

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On this day

December 22

Chico Mendes

401 – The papacy of Innocent I began.

1807 – In an effort to avoid engaging in the Napoleonic Wars, the United States Congress passed the
Embargo Act, forbidding American ships from engaging in trade with foreign nations.

1968 – Cultural Revolution: The People's Daily published a piece by Mao Zedong directing that "the
intellectual youth must go to the country, and will be educated from living in rural poverty."

1988 – Brazilian unionist and environmental activist Chico Mendes (pictured) was murdered at his
Xapuri home.

2008 – A dike ruptured at a waste containment area in Roane County, Tennessee, U.S., releasing 1.1
billion US gallons (4,200,000 m3) of coal fly ash slurry into local waterways.

Étienne Martellange (b. 1569) · William Hyde Wollaston (d. 1828) · Rose Talbot Bullard (d. 1915)

More anniversaries: December 21 December 22 December 23

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Today's featured picture

Seth Rollins is the ring name of Colby Daniel Lopez (born 1986), an American professional wrestler. He
has been signed to WWE since 2010, having previously wrestled for Ring of Honor under the ring
name Tyler Black. He debuted on WWE's main roster at the 2012 Survivor Series as part of a faction
called The Shield, winning his first main roster championship while with the group, the WWE Tag
Team Championship with Roman Reigns.

This picture shows Rollins with the WWE Money in the Bank briefcase, which he won in 2014.
Photograph: Anton Jackson

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