text
stringlengths 1
2.56k
|
---|
The organ of the church was made by in 1899. |
It has 43 stops and 3 keyboards, as follows: |
Václav Pšenička Jr. |
Václav Pšenička Jr. (14 May 1931 – 31 December 2015) was a Czech weightlifter. |
He competed at the 1952 Summer Olympics and the 1956 Summer Olympics. |
Maimi von Mirbach |
Maimi von Mirbach, full name "Maria Celina Gabrielle Antoinette Freiin von Mirbach" (born April 9, 1899 in Antwerp; died October 8, 1984 in Berlin), was a German cellist and member of the Confessing Church. |
Maimi von Mirbach came from an old noble family. |
Her father, the merchant Wilhelm Freiherr von Mirbach (1858-1914) was a brother of the Prussian lieutenant general and court official Ernst von Mirbach (1844-1925). |
Through her mother Carmen Laura, née von Bary (1876-1938), Maimi von Mirbach was directly related to Cornelio Saavedra, the first president of the United Provinces of the Rio de la Plata. |
In this cosmopolitan and international parental home, she enjoyed a Christian-liberal education with a strong musical orientation. |
In 1914, the family had to leave Belgium within 24 hours of the beginning of the First World War, moving to Potsdam. |
Shaped by her experience as a member of a minority, Maimi von Mirbach turned early to people who needed help. |
Already in the 1920s, she recognized the nationalistic and anti-Semitic development in Germany. |
After the Nazi seizure of power, she helped persecuted Jews. |
also following the values of the Confessing Church. |
She abhorred the racial ideology of the Nazis and, as a cellist, continued to cultivate numerous contacts with Jewish musicians, even though this repeatedly put her in danger. |
Maimi von Mirbach helped Fritz Hirschfeld, with whom she played in a private string quartet, escape in 1938. |
Hirschfeld, chairman of the Potsdam Labor Court for six years from 1927, was arrested after Kristallnacht and remained in Potsdam police prison for three weeks. |
He was only released on the condition that he would leave the country. |
The German authorities demanded a Reich Flight Tax of 35,000 Reichsmark and a Jewish property tax of 38,000 Reichsmark. |
To raise this sum, Maimi von Mirbach acquired the Hirschfelds' house and property. |
His "Aryan" wife Grete stayed in the house free of charge until her death in April 1941. |
Maimi von Mirbach gave Fritz Hirschfeld 8,000 Reichsmark in cash for his escape to Holland. |
In August 1942, he was deported to the Theresienstadt concentration camp and finally deported to Auschwitz, after which it is unknown what happened to him. |
Maimi von Mirbach visited him several times in the internment camp and gave him food, jewelry, and money. |
Von Mirbach hid Jews wanted by the Gestapo in her house several times in order to save them from deportation. |
At the end of 1941 she accepted the former music student Gisela Distler-Brendel, a pupil of the composer and piano teacher Ilse Fromm-Michaels, as a lodger. |
Gisela Distler-Brendel was a "first-degree half-breed" who was not allowed to study at a university. |
She also had a forbidden relationship with a gentile, from whom she expected an illegitimate child. |
Maimi von Mirbach kept this relationship secret from the authorities, and was thus guilty of racial disgrace under the Nuremberg Laws. |
After 1945, Maimi von Mirbach was subjected to many humiliations and restrictions in the Soviet occupation zone and in the early days of the GDR. |
In 1956, she left Potsdam and moved to Berlin-Charlottenburg. |
Until her death, she told students about her experiences during the period of National Socialism in schools and youth institutions. |
In 2005, the Potsdam Administrative Court dismissed an action brought by Maimi von Mirbach's heirs against the reassignment to Hirschfeld's daughter Aenne Dorothy Scott of the property in Klein Glienicke lawfully acquired by Fritz Hirschfeld and expropriated by the GDR. |
André Dochy |
André Dochy (12 March 1928 – 31 October 2011) was a French weightlifter. |
He competed in the men's middleweight event at the 1952 Summer Olympics. |
2019 World Para Athletics Championships – Women's 800 metres |
The women's 800 metres at the 2019 World Para Athletics Championships was held in Dubai on 8, 11, and 14 November 2019. |
Jalal Mansouri |
Mirjalal Ghaffarzadeh Mansour (, 10 January 1930 – 11 November 2012) more known as Jalal Mansouri () was an Iranian weightlifter. |
He competed at the 1952 Summer Olympics and the 1956 Summer Olympics. |
Ángel Sposato |
Ángel Sposato (born 17 May 1922) was an Argentine weightlifter. |
He competed in the men's middleweight event at the 1952 Summer Olympics. |
Dadarpur Katha |
Dadarpur Katha is a village and Gram panchayat in Bilhaur Tehsil, Kanpur Nagar district, Uttar Pradesh, India. |
It is located 53 KMs away from Kanpur City. |
According to 2011 Census of India the population of the village is 1,336, in which 742 are males and 594 are females. |
Canon EOS 5000 |
The Canon EOS 5000 (sold in Asian countries as the EOS 888) was an entry-level 35mm autofocus single-lens reflex camera marketed by Canon in January 1995. |
The camera was introduced as a low-end camera for the European market, and was not sold in Japan or the Americas. |
Unlike most Canon EOS cameras, the EOS 5000 is primarily controlled by a single dial on the top of the camera. |
The camera offers five fully automatic exposure modes, as well as shutter-priority autoexposure. |
No manual aperture control is provided. |
Along with renamed versions for different markets, a QD version which could print the date or time the photograph was taken was available. |
It was replaced in the market by the EOS 3000 in 1999 |
Mitchell Lake |
Mitchell Lake or Lake Mitchell can refer to: |
Ben Yennie |
Ben Yennie is an American producer's representative, speaker, author, and entrepreneur working at the intersection of technology and film. |
He’s helped to package, finance, market, and distribute 15 films to date, generally receiving the title of executive producer for his role as a producer’s rep. |
He has written three books to date (most notably a guide to the American Film Market and a macroeconomic study of the film industry), co-founded a film oriented project management company called ProductionNext, and is also known as a blogger, and event organizer. |
In 2014 Ben founded Guerrilla Rep Media, a producer’s representation firm. |
Some of the films he’s worked on have been released theatrically and shown on outlets such as Starz and Showtime. |
He is best known for "Queen of the Capital", "Goodland", "Cicada Moon", and "The Devil's Restaurant". |
Films he has represented have been accepted to the Slamdance Film Festival and many other film festivals. |
Ben has spoken at many conferences including the Seattle Film Summit, The Dona Ana Arts Council, and various in person events in and around San Francisco. |
He has also appeared on many podcasts, including The Lean Startup Podcast, the Indie Film Hustle Podcast, the Making Movies is Hard Podcast, and the Nancy Fulton Podcast. |
Ben is the author of "The Guerrilla Rep: American Film Market Distribution Success on No Budget". |
The book is currently in its second edition. |
Debbie Brubaker, unit production manager of Woody Allen's "Blue Jasmine", Tim Burton’s "Big Eyes", and Gus Van Sant’s "When We Rise" wrote the preface. |
Oscar-nominated producer Marc Smolowitz wrote the forward. |
This book has been used as a supplemental text at multiple film schools. |
Ben also wrote the State of the "Film Industry Report", which was a first of its kind report on the macroeconomics of the film industry. |
Data was gathered with the help of IndieWire, Stage 32, and Fandor. |
Ben also heads the blogs for Guerrilla Rep Media which focuses primarily on the business of the film industry and serves as editor for the ProductionNext blog which focuses more on production and general critique of the film industry. |
In 2015, Ben co-founded a project management company called ProductionNext. |
ProductionNext is a cloud-based project management system specifically designed for independent film. |
Ben has served periodically as an adviser and organizer for several angel investment groups targeted at the arts. |
Previously, Ben served as executive director for Producer Foundry, a community organization and business school for independent film. |
Åke Hedberg |
Åke Hedberg (14 December 1929 – 7 April 1971) was a Swedish weightlifter. |
He competed in the men's middleweight event at the 1952 Summer Olympics. |
Moustafa Laham |
Moustafa Laham (born 1929) was a Lebanese weightlifter. |
He competed in the men's middleweight event at the 1952 Summer Olympics. |
Gladiolus mariae |
Gladiolus mariae is a species of the genus "Gladiolus" of perennial cormous flowering plants in the family Iridaceae. |
The species was first described in 2019, found growing endemicly on two table mountains in the Kounounkan Forest Reserve near Moussaya, Forécariah, Guinea, West Africa. |
It was named as one of Kew Gardens Top 10 plants discovered in 2019 and has been assessed as potentially critically endangered. |
"Gladiolus mariae" is similar in appearance to "Gladiolus sudanicus" and grows to between . |
It has up to 6 orange flowers. |
1990 in Australian literature |
This article presents a list of the historical events and publications of Australian literature during 1990. |
A list, ordered by date of birth (and, if the date is either unspecified or repeated, ordered alphabetically by surname) of births in 1990 of Australian literary figures, authors of written works or literature-related individuals follows, including year of death. |
Unknown date |
A list, ordered by date of death (and, if the date is either unspecified or repeated, ordered alphabetically by surname) of deaths in 1990 of Australian literary figures, authors of written works or literature-related individuals follows, including year of birth. |
Ismail Ragab |
Subsets and Splits
No saved queries yet
Save your SQL queries to embed, download, and access them later. Queries will appear here once saved.