Chris White
Chris White
Jazz and rock saxophone player who toured with Dire Straits for a decade.
ProfessionSaxophonist
Date of Birth13 July 1955
airport compliance continuing full hope work
We are continuing to work with the airport and our hope is they will come into full compliance with our regulations.
bit half second stepped
We were a little off in the first half, but we stepped up a bit in the second half and it was more even.
season
I look at the season in two parts,
cease mall next time
By this time next year, the mall will cease to be a mall.
attempt aviation believe detect spent taken threat time
Because these enhancements have taken place, the threat to aviation has shifted. We believe that time is better spent to attempt to detect explosives.
earn eight good leadership mix seniors strong team three
The way it works, ... is I did not look at a roster. Everyone had to earn their way on to the team. We have a pretty good mix of classes. We have eight seniors on the team and have strong leadership from our three captains.
game helps hopefully money profile progress raises towards unless
It raises our profile and hopefully helps the development of the game. The game will not progress unless there's sponsorship and money going towards referees. Without referees, there's no game.
intense knew shot
It's nothing like on TV, ... On the way down there we knew we had no idea what it was going to be like. I've been shot at before in life, and it wasn't as intense as what I saw.
ball chad dish dump hard nice room sam summer weight worked
Our expectations were pretty high. Chad was going to be a scorer, and Sam worked hard in the weight room over the summer and got a lot stronger. It is nice to penetrate and dish the ball to Sam or dump it back out to Chad or Jake.
acceptable downtime expect longer people system work
People expect a system to work 100% of the time; it is no longer acceptable to have downtime even for maintenance.
chance disease fact five history killer life longer next poorest time within
For the first time in the history of malaria, there is a real chance that within the next five to 10 years, this killer disease will no longer be a fact of life for many of Africa's poorest people.