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54798552_1_1
54798552
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ahmed%20Magdy%20%28actor%29
Ahmed Magdy (actor)
Ahmed Magdy (actor). Television In 2018, Magdy married an Egyptian woman, his wedding was in a prestigious place in his hometown Cairo.
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54798576
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diana%3A%20In%20Her%20Own%20Words
Diana: In Her Own Words
Diana: In Her Own Words. Diana: In Her Own Words is a television documentary that was broadcast on Channel 4 in the United Kingdom on 6 August 2017. This film was produced by Kaboom Film and Television of the United Kingdom. The film includes footage of the late Diana, Princess of Wales discussing aspects of her personal life, including her marriage to Prince Charles which was recorded during conversations she had with a voice coach in 1992 and 1993.
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54798576
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diana%3A%20In%20Her%20Own%20Words
Diana: In Her Own Words
Diana: In Her Own Words. In July 2017, it emerged that Channel 4 planned to broadcast the documentary in the run up to the 20th anniversary of the death of Diana. On 30 July, The Mail on Sunday reported that Diana's brother, the 9th Earl Spencer, had urged Channel 4 not to broadcast the tapes of his sister amid concerns it would cause distress to her two sons. His concerns were subsequently echoed by Royal commentators and friends of the late princess, including Rosa Monckton, who intended to write to the broadcaster urging them not to show the footage, which she said "doesn't belong in the public domain".
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54798576
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diana%3A%20In%20Her%20Own%20Words
Diana: In Her Own Words
Diana: In Her Own Words. The documentary drew a mixed reaction from critics, as well as giving Channel 4 their largest overnight ratings for over a year. Figures indicated the film was watched by an average audience of 3.5 million, peaking at 4.1 million.
54798576_0_3
54798576
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diana%3A%20In%20Her%20Own%20Words
Diana: In Her Own Words
Diana: In Her Own Words. The documentary aired on PBS in the United States in a slightly altered form, under the title Diana—Her Story.
54798576_0_4
54798576
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diana%3A%20In%20Her%20Own%20Words
Diana: In Her Own Words
Diana: In Her Own Words. A National Geographic documentary with the identical title, "Diana: In Her Own Words," was released the same year and was also structured around previously unaired interviews, but is unrelated. That documentary, by filmmakers Tom Jennings and David Tillman, used interviews from 1991 which had originally been recorded for the Andrew Morton biography, Diana: Her True Story.
54798587_0_0
54798587
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yesvantpur%E2%80%93Harihar%20Intercity%20Express
Yesvantpur–Harihar Intercity Express
Yesvantpur–Harihar Intercity Express. The 16577 / 78 Yesvantpur Junction–Harihar Intercity Express is an Intercity Express train belonging to Indian Railways South Western Railway zone that runs between and Harihar in India.
54798587_0_1
54798587
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yesvantpur%E2%80%93Harihar%20Intercity%20Express
Yesvantpur–Harihar Intercity Express
Yesvantpur–Harihar Intercity Express. It operates as train number 16577 from Yesvantpur Junction to Harihar and as train number 16578 in the reverse direction, serving the states of Karnataka.
54798587_0_2
54798587
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yesvantpur%E2%80%93Harihar%20Intercity%20Express
Yesvantpur–Harihar Intercity Express
Yesvantpur–Harihar Intercity Express. Coaches The 16577 / 78 Yesvantpur Junction–Harihar Intercity Express has one AC chair car, six Chair cars, six general unreserved & two SLR (seating with luggage rake) coaches. It does not carry a pantry car.
54798587_0_3
54798587
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yesvantpur%E2%80%93Harihar%20Intercity%20Express
Yesvantpur–Harihar Intercity Express
Yesvantpur–Harihar Intercity Express. As is customary with most train services in India, coach composition may be amended at the discretion of Indian Railways depending on demand.
54798587_0_4
54798587
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yesvantpur%E2%80%93Harihar%20Intercity%20Express
Yesvantpur–Harihar Intercity Express
Yesvantpur–Harihar Intercity Express. Service The 16577 Yesvantpur Junction–Harihar Intercity Express covers the distance of in 7 hours 15 mins (46 km/hr) & in 6 hours 15 mins as the 16578 Harihar–Yesvantpur Junction Intercity Express (53 km/hr).
54798587_0_5
54798587
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yesvantpur%E2%80%93Harihar%20Intercity%20Express
Yesvantpur–Harihar Intercity Express
Yesvantpur–Harihar Intercity Express. As the average speed of the train is lower than , as per railway rules, its fare doesn't includes a Superfast surcharge.
54798587_0_6
54798587
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yesvantpur%E2%80%93Harihar%20Intercity%20Express
Yesvantpur–Harihar Intercity Express
Yesvantpur–Harihar Intercity Express. Routing The 16577 / 78 Yesvantpur Junction–Harihar Intercity Express runs from Yesvantpur Junction via , Kadur Junction railway station to Harihar.
54798587_0_7
54798587
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yesvantpur%E2%80%93Harihar%20Intercity%20Express
Yesvantpur–Harihar Intercity Express
Yesvantpur–Harihar Intercity Express. Traction As the route is going to electrification, a Krishnarajapuram-based WDM-3A diesel locomotive pulls the train to its destination.
54798600_0_0
54798600
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bull%20Moose%20Music
Bull Moose Music
Bull Moose Music. Bull Moose is an independent retailer and record store chain based in Portland, Maine, USA. The chain has operated since 1989 and has eight locations in Maine and three in New Hampshire. It has been featured in various newspapers throughout Maine and New Hampshire. It was founded by Brett Wickard in Brunswick, Maine in 1989, though he did not file it as a Business Corporation until 1995. Bull Moose was started with $37,000. Chris Brown was hired in 1991 as a clerk and later became the creator of Record Store Day, and the company's Vice President.
54798600_0_1
54798600
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bull%20Moose%20Music
Bull Moose Music
Bull Moose Music. Wickard and Brown often appear on local news channel WCSH to discuss the latest media trends. They were covered by Bloomberg for using unique predictive algorithms to drive media sales. The retailer defies rumors of a dying physical media industry with its increased sales, sparking interest from media outlets in how Bull Moose manages to make a profit in tough times for other record stores such as Tower Records. The Portland Press-Herald has also covered Bull Moose Music and Wickard's business journey several times.
54798600_0_2
54798600
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bull%20Moose%20Music
Bull Moose Music
Bull Moose Music. On January 4, 2022, it was announced that Bull Moose would be sold to its 140 employees. Founder Brett Wickard will stay on as interim CEO and chair of the board during the transition.
54798600_0_3
54798600
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bull%20Moose%20Music
Bull Moose Music
Bull Moose Music. Record Store Day Bull Moose promotes local involvement and independent retailers, and is known in Maine as a business that creates community. The retailer is often cited in Maine as "the best record store." In 2007 when Brown was head of Bull Moose marketing, an email chain with Michael Kurtz, head of the Department of Record Stores, sparked the idea for Record Store Day. Each year the co-founders at the Department of Record Stores works to collaborate with multiple artists for exclusive releases made especially for Record Store Day. The releases for 2017 included works from David Bowie, Prince, St. Vincent, and more. The Department of Record Stores keeps a list of participating independent record stores.
54798600_0_4
54798600
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bull%20Moose%20Music
Bull Moose Music
Bull Moose Music. LEGO Fire Walk The Bull Moose Facebook account posted an image of a LEGO Fire Walk they created at the South Portland, ME based store to promote sales of The LEGO Movie on June 19, 2014. It was shared by famous Star Trek actor George Takei, and subsequently went viral. It was also covered by local news.
54798600_0_5
54798600
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bull%20Moose%20Music
Bull Moose Music
Bull Moose Music. Music Events Bull Moose is locally known for their in-store music events with musicians like The Decemberists, Mumford and Sons, and Wilco.
54798608_0_0
54798608
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas%20de%20Grey%2C%204th%20Baron%20Walsingham
Thomas de Grey, 4th Baron Walsingham
Thomas de Grey, 4th Baron Walsingham. The Ven. Thomas de Grey, 4th Baron Walsingham, MA (Chelsea 10 April 1778 – Merton, Norfolk, 8 September 1839) was Archdeacon of Winchester from 1807 until 1814; and then of Surrey from 1814 until his death.
54798608_0_1
54798608
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas%20de%20Grey%2C%204th%20Baron%20Walsingham
Thomas de Grey, 4th Baron Walsingham
Thomas de Grey, 4th Baron Walsingham. The 2nd son of Thomas de Grey, 2nd Baron Walsingham, he was educated at Eton and St John's College, Cambridge. He held livings at Aston Abbotts, Merton, Bishopstoke, Fawley, Weeke and Calbourne.
54798608_0_2
54798608
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas%20de%20Grey%2C%204th%20Baron%20Walsingham
Thomas de Grey, 4th Baron Walsingham
Thomas de Grey, 4th Baron Walsingham. He succeeded his brother George de Grey, 3rd Baron Walsingham, in 1831 when the latter was killed with his wife as the result of a house fire at his London Home, inheriting the barony and the family seat of Merton Hall, Norfolk.
54798608_0_3
54798608
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas%20de%20Grey%2C%204th%20Baron%20Walsingham
Thomas de Grey, 4th Baron Walsingham
Thomas de Grey, 4th Baron Walsingham. He died in 1839 and was buried at Merton, Norfolk. He had married in 1802 Elizabeth North, the daughter of Rt Rev Hon Brownlow North DD, Bishop of Winchester. They had six sons and three daughters. He was succeeded by his eldest son Thomas de Grey, 5th Baron Walsingham.
54798608_1_0
54798608
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas%20de%20Grey%2C%204th%20Baron%20Walsingham
Thomas de Grey, 4th Baron Walsingham
Thomas de Grey, 4th Baron Walsingham. 1778 births 1839 deaths People from Chelsea, London People educated at Eton College Alumni of St John's College, Cambridge Archdeacons of Winchester (ancient) Archdeacons of Surrey Thomas 4 People from Breckland District
54798614_0_0
54798614
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20the%20prehistoric%20life%20of%20Alabama
List of the prehistoric life of Alabama
List of the prehistoric life of Alabama. This list of the prehistoric life of Alabama contains the various prehistoric life-forms whose fossilized remains have been reported from within the US state of Alabama.
54798614_0_1
54798614
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20the%20prehistoric%20life%20of%20Alabama
List of the prehistoric life of Alabama
List of the prehistoric life of Alabama. Precambrian The Paleobiology Database records no known occurrences of Precambrian fossils in Alabama.
54798629_0_0
54798629
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eva%20Busch
Eva Busch
Eva Busch. Eva Busch (born Eva Zimmermann: 22 May 1909 - 20 July 2001) was a German born singer and cabaret artist.
54798629_1_0
54798629
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eva%20Busch
Eva Busch
Eva Busch. Family provenance and early years Eva Senta Elisabeth Zimmermann was born in Berlin: she shared her birthday with Richard Wagner. She was the illegitimate daughter of the opera singer Emmy Zimmermann whose admirers had included Claude Debussy. A year before the publication of her autobiography in 1991 she disclosed the identity of her father in an interview. Franz Beidler was a Swiss orchestral conductor and, perhaps even more significantly, a son in law to Richard Wagner whose musical reputation was by the time of Eva's birth sky high. He was another of Emmy Zimmermann's admirers. In 1908, while his wife, Isolde was suffering from a bout of tuberculosis, Franz Beidler and Emmy Zimmermann fell in love. Eva's birth was the result. Later Eva's mother, Emmy Zimmermann married: as a result Eva's name changed and she was known until her own marriage as Eva Klein.
54798629_1_1
54798629
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eva%20Busch
Eva Busch
Eva Busch. Musical training Eva Klein received her first piano lesson when she was 4 and her first violin lesson when she was 7. Dancing lessons began when she was 5. Musical training sometimes came at the expense of other conventional aspects of her schooling, and when her evening engagements began to interfere with her school work she gave up on her Lyceum (secondary school). She nevertheless received a rigorous conventional musical training, attending the Berlin Music Conservatory where she received lessons in piano and violin playing. Her first singing teacher was her mother. She also took lessons at the Reinhardt academy. Her first professional engagements were as a singer and actress at Berlin's recently opened Volksbühne (theatre). She frequently appeared both at the Volksbühne and in cabaret productions with Ernst Busch, a stage performer like herself and, additionally, a committed communist. The two of them married in 1932. One benefit of the marriage for Eva was that it gave her a nationality: because of her illegitimacy she had, up till this point, been legally "stateless". There is little sign that Eva Busch ever shared her husband's communist beliefs, but she was, like him, openly opposed to the Nazi party which was gaining public support in response to populist-nationalist currents of the time and the economically challenging backwash from the Great depression. Ernst and Eva Busch enjoyed success in their stage performances with songs by Bertolt Brecht, Walter Mehring and Kurt Tucholsky (and others).
54798629_1_2
54798629
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eva%20Busch
Eva Busch
Eva Busch. Exile from Nazi Germany The Nazis took power in January 1933 and lost no time in transforming Germany into a one-party dictatorship. Ernst Busch, who had a reputation from his cabaret appearances as a singer of political songs, received a tip-off that he was about to be arrested and on 9 March 1933, anticipating and avoiding the arresting officers by a few hours, he escaped to the Netherlands. He was accompanied or quickly followed by Eva. In the Netherlands she was engaged to perform as a singer on the national broadcasting network and began to put together her own programmes. Together with Ernst she also used her radio slots to criticise the Nazi government in Germany. According to one source this was the reason that Ernst and Eva were both deprived of their German citizenship "in absentia" in 1937. She also made a point of singing songs from The Threepenny Opera and other songs with words by German lyricists whose work had been banned from Germany's own broadcast media for reasons of race and/or politics.
54798629_1_3
54798629
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eva%20Busch
Eva Busch
Eva Busch. Life For Eva Busch statelessness was not an unfamiliar condition, but this time she was fairly quickly able to obtain identity documents from the Dutch authorities which enabled her to travel internationally. That was important for her work. In 1936 she travelled to the United States of America where she performed for various radio stations, but she missed Europe and returned to the Netherlands. Her travels also took her to Belgium and Switzerland. It was in Zürich that she was for a time a member of Erika Mann's exiled cabaret troupe, "Die Pfeffermühle" ("The pepper grinder"). Increasingly, however, it was to France that she was drawn. Meanwhile, Ernst Busch was drawn by his own professional and political connections to the Soviet Union where he worked with Gustav von Wangenheim on the 1935 film "Kämpfer" ("Fighters"). Shortly after that he became a fighter himself, moving to Spain where sources relate that he serves in the Civil War with the anti-fascist International Brigades as a singer. In or before 1938 Eva and Ernst Busch were divorced. Eva explained, "the divorce did not reflect any shortage of love, but our marriage was simply impossible" ("Die Scheidung war kein Mangel an Liebe, sondern unsere Ehe war einfach unmöglich.")
54798629_1_4
54798629
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eva%20Busch
Eva Busch
Eva Busch. Life By around 1937 Eva Busch was living and working as a singer and cabaret artist in Paris. She featured on the cabaret stage with Suzy Solidor. She met Picasso, Cocteau and Giraudoux. She appeared for the first time in the cabaret of Agnès Capri in January 1939. She also featured as a singer on the radio stations and began to make recordings. In May/June 1940 the German invasion of northern France took her by surprise. During the first part of the decade Paris had been a welcoming refuge for political refugees from Nazi Germany, but as international tensions increased French immigration policy had become less welcoming. By 1940 all the German born residents were obliged to register their address with their local town hall, and report to the local authorities once per week. That meant that once the Germans invaded and the government worked out what to do, the authorities had up to date information on the whereabouts of the many German exiles in Paris. Like all the registered German born citizens of Paris she was identified as an enemy alien and invited to report to the Winter Velodrome. Here they were detained, held for a few days in Paris, and then transported to the Gurs internment camp in the far southwest of the country where Busch remained between May and July 1940.
54798629_1_5
54798629
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eva%20Busch
Eva Busch
Eva Busch. Life The Gurs internment camp had been created a couple of years earlier to accommodate fighters returning from the Spanish Civil War. By around 1942 it was conventionally secure, but during 1940 "security" was for most purposes dependent on the fact that it was a long way up a small mountain valley and a very long way off the beaten track. Sources record that she escaped from Gurs, which she probably did by walking out through the front gate and not returning from the village in the evening. Making her way back across France, as she did, would have been a greater challenge. On returning to Paris she was able to work incognito, singing for the radio stations set up in France to entertain the German troops controlling northern France.
54798629_1_6
54798629
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eva%20Busch
Eva Busch
Eva Busch. Recapture and repatriation In 1942 the Gestapo caught up with her in Paris where she was condemned for having imperiled "the security of the people and the state" and for "damaging the reputation of Germans in the eyes of foreigners." The condemnation was accompanied by an eight-year prison sentence. She was taken from Paris to Berlin where she was held in the Alexanderplatz prison. After seven months her sentence was converted into indefinite detention in a concentration camp. She was transferred to the women's concentration camp at Ravensbrück in the marshy countryside to the north of Berlin. She was accommodated with other "political prisoners". Most had been imprisoned because they were Jewish or Communists (or both). Eva Busch was neither of these, but she had emigrated to get away from Nazi Germany which was enough for the authorities. Conditions were grim. Work was undertaken in "labour columns": it included loading barges, carrying rocks and creating timber structures. When she was caught helping French inmates she was placed in a dark windowless cell for seven weeks. In the words of one source, hatred for the Nazis gave her the strength to survive: she was determined to live long enough to see their downfall.
54798629_1_7
54798629
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eva%20Busch
Eva Busch
Eva Busch. Life After the war was over she told an interviewer that even while she was kept in the concentration camp, she was much loved by German audiences: "Because of Goebels' stupidity I was known here [in Germany]. Although my records were banned, he sent them to all the [soldiers at the] front".
54798629_1_8
54798629
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eva%20Busch
Eva Busch
Eva Busch. Life Eva's mother, Emmy Zimmermann, bombarded the authorities with appeals for Eva to be released. During 1944 the mother fell seriously ill which evidently increased her determination, or at least the effectiveness of her campaign on behalf of her daughter. It was not generally known at this time that Eva Busch had been conceived as a result of her mother sharing Eva Busch's father with the father's wife, Isolde, who also happened to be Richard Wagner's daughter. But Emmy Zimmermann's career as a top Wagner soprano during the earlier decades of the twentieth century and her continuing "connections" to the powerful Wagner dynasty were no secret. It was also no secret that top Nazis, including Hitler himself, were enthusiastic backers of the Wagner cult. Sources differ over whether it was her mother's efforts on her behalf that shifted government opinion, or whether she benefitted from a growing awareness that one of the singers whose records were most popular with the troops fighting the war was being held in a concentration camp. Either way, whereas most Ravensbrück survivors emerged only as the war ended, Eva Busch, camp inmate number 7964, was released some months earlier. She made her way back to Berlin, arriving in time to experience, from inside the city limits, the city's destruction . Escaping the city quickly became impossible and was in any case officially forbidden. At the "Haus Vaterland" pleasure palace in the Potsdammer Platz she sang to entertain war-wounded soldiers with songs she had earlier sung in Paris such as Manfred Krug's "Du hast Glück bei den Frau'n, Belami" ("You're lucky with the women, handsome friend"). Weeks later she was singing for Russian troops and then for the Americans.
54798629_1_9
54798629
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eva%20Busch
Eva Busch
Eva Busch. Life During the final ten days of April 1945 the Soviet army entered Berlin. Ernst Busch was released from the Brandenburg penitentiary on 27 April 1945 into a city where suddenly the artillery bombardments had fallen silent. He had spent most of the war years in state detention after being arrest in Antwerp on or shortly after 10 May 1940 as the German army invaded Belgium. Eva Busch and her former husband were briefly reunited in the sea of rubble that had been Berlin. Together they made an appearance on the RIAS (radio service) that the Americans had set up. Before she left the city Eva Busch made a couple more radio broadcasts which she used to report on aspects of her concentration camp experiences.
54798629_1_10
54798629
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eva%20Busch
Eva Busch
Eva Busch. "Home" to Paris In November 1945, again legally stateless, Eva Busch managed to get a seat on a plane returning to the only city where she really felt at home. In Paris, initially she was able to sing only to American troops, but once her identity papers had been sorted out she was able to sing to the French public and on radio broadcasts. On 6 January 1946, through a friend, she met the "Paris-Soir" journalist and resistance hero George Sinclair. As Eva Busch later (and repeatedly) stated, it was "love at first sight". The two of them would stay together till Sinclair's death on 19 May 1984. Sinclair wrote poems which Busch included in her musical repertoire, as she pursued a career as a German dark timbered singer concentrating on the chanson genre. It was only in 1982, when Sinclair fell ill, that she abandoned her stage career in order to care for him. Up till then she also had an international career as a chansonnière, travelling several times to the United States of America where she made two recordings with Bing Crosby. Closer to home she toured in the Netherlands and France and also made brief trips across the Rhine, appearing in the radio and television studios back in West Germany where she was perceived as exotic, francophile and "very literary", and thereby outside the mainstream of contemporary German singers in the chanson genre.
54798629_1_11
54798629
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eva%20Busch
Eva Busch
Eva Busch. Life In 1984, following Sinclair's death, she moved back to Germany, making her home in Munich. She continued to make media appearances in both France and Germany. Eva Busch died in Munich on 20 July 2001.
54798631_0_0
54798631
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Folake%20Akinyemi
Folake Akinyemi
Folake Akinyemi. Folake Akinyemi (born 31 March 1990) is a retired Nigerian-Norwegian sprinter who specialized in the 100 and 200 metres.
54798631_0_1
54798631
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Folake%20Akinyemi
Folake Akinyemi
Folake Akinyemi. She was born in Lagos. A promising junior, she finished fourth in the 100 metres at the 2007 European Youth Olympic Festival, and at the 2009 European Junior Championships she won the silver medal in the 100 metres and finished sixth in the 200 metres. She also competed at the 2006 World Junior Championships (relay only), the 2007 European Junior Championships (100 only) the 2008 World Junior Championships (100 and 200 metres) and the 2011 European U23 Championships (100 and 200 metres) without reaching the final.
54798631_0_2
54798631
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Folake%20Akinyemi
Folake Akinyemi
Folake Akinyemi. In senior events she competed at the 2009 European Indoor Championships, the 2010 World Indoor Championships, the 2010 European Championships, the 2012 European Championships and the 2013 European Indoor Championships without reaching the final. In her last international outing she reached the semi-final of the 100 metres at the 2013 Summer Universiade. She since retired because of injuries.
54798631_0_3
54798631
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Folake%20Akinyemi
Folake Akinyemi
Folake Akinyemi. Her personal best times were 7.36 seconds in the 60 metres (indoor), achieved in February 2009 in Florø; 11.46 seconds in the 100 metres, achieved in June 2012 in Florø; and 23.61 seconds in the 200 metres, achieved in July 2010 in Donnas, Italy. She represented the clubs IL i BUL and SK Vidar before joining IK Tjalve ahead of the 2014 season, a season when she did not record any result.
54798654_0_0
54798654
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Facklamia%20ignava
Facklamia ignava
Facklamia ignava. Facklamia ignava is a Gram-positive bacteria from the family of Facklamia which has been isolated from humans.
54798668_0_0
54798668
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ilham%20Kadri
Ilham Kadri
Ilham Kadri. Ilham Kadri (Born in 1969) is a French-Moroccan business executive with a scientific background. Since March 1, 2019, she has been the CEO, chairwoman of the executive committee and a member of the Board of Directors of Solvay, a Belgian chemicals company.
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54798668
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ilham%20Kadri
Ilham Kadri
Ilham Kadri. Early life and education Kadri was born and grew up in Casablanca, Morocco. She studied engineering at ECPM Strasbourg (formerly École des Hauts Polymères de Strasbourg), majoring in polymer physics and chemistry. Kadri obtained her PhD in macromolecular physical chemistry in 1997.
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54798668
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ilham%20Kadri
Ilham Kadri
Ilham Kadri. 1997-2007 Kadri started her career as a Development and Technical Service Manager at Royal Dutch Shell in Belgium, where she was part of a team that invented a synthetic bottle stopper made from a foamed thermoplastic elastomer to prevent the spread of fungi and bacteria from cork stoppers to stored liquids. She then joined LyondellBasell in France, where she worked in Sales and Global Key Account Management.
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54798668
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ilham%20Kadri
Ilham Kadri
Ilham Kadri. Career In 2002, Kadri took on a Product Management and Marketing role at UCB-Cytec in Belgium, until UCB sold its chemicals business.
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54798668
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ilham%20Kadri
Ilham Kadri
Ilham Kadri. Career In 2005, she moved to the Huntsman Corporation in Switzerland to become Marketing Director of the global epoxy business divested to private equity.
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54798668
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ilham%20Kadri
Ilham Kadri
Ilham Kadri. 2007-2013 In 2007, Kadri joined Rohm and Haas as Marketing Director of its paint, coatings and construction businesses until Dow Chemical Company acquired the company in 2009.
54798668_1_4
54798668
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ilham%20Kadri
Ilham Kadri
Ilham Kadri. Career In 2010, she became Marketing Director for Dow Coating Materiales. She was then appointed as General Manager Middle East and Africa (MEA) for Dow's Advanced Materials division and Commercial Director EMEA for Dow Water and Process Solutions.
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54798668
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ilham%20Kadri
Ilham Kadri
Ilham Kadri. Career While at Dow, Kadri built water purification plants in the United Arab Emirates, oversaw expansions in Kenya, Ghana and Nigeria, and developed water projects in Kuwait, Morocco, Oman, Israel, Kazakhstan and Azerbaijan. She also launched the construction of Saudi Arabia's first reverse osmosis (RO) membrane manufacturing plant.
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54798668
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ilham%20Kadri
Ilham Kadri
Ilham Kadri. 2013- January 2019 From 2013, Kadri became Senior Vice President and Officer for Sealed Air Corporation, and took on the role of President of Diversey Care, the company's hygiene and cleaning business, which had suffered losses in the previous year. On arriving at Diversey Care, Kadri was tasked with the turnaround of falling sales and profits, which saw her lead reforms of the service division.
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54798668
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ilham%20Kadri
Ilham Kadri
Ilham Kadri. Career She was also a key figure in Diversey Care focusing on a strategy of technological innovation. This includes the launch of the first global range of commercial cleaning robots across the US and Europe, and a digital food safety management platform that helps organizations to achieve regulatory compliance in the food industry. Originally based in the Netherlands, Kadri relocated to Sealed Air's new corporate headquarters in Charlotte, North Carolina, when it opened in 2015.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ilham%20Kadri
Ilham Kadri
Ilham Kadri. Career In early 2016, Kadri became Sealed Air's Digital Leader, responsible for Internet of Things (IoT) integration across the entire company – focusing on the IS digital architecture, external ecosystems acquisitions, digital monetisation and robotics.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ilham%20Kadri
Ilham Kadri
Ilham Kadri. Career In 2017, following the return to profitability, Diversey Care was acquired by Bain Capital for $3.2 billion and Ilham Kadri was appointed as President & CEO of the new business, Diversey.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ilham%20Kadri
Ilham Kadri
Ilham Kadri. March 2019-present In March 2019, Ilham Kadri became CEO of Solvay, where she had previously been an intern in Tavaux, France, in 1989. Her appointment was announced in October 2018.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ilham%20Kadri
Ilham Kadri
Ilham Kadri. Career Under her first year as CEO, Solvay launched its new strategy G.R.O.W., the Solvay One Planet sustainability plan, and its corporate purpose.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ilham%20Kadri
Ilham Kadri
Ilham Kadri. Memberships Kadri is an independent director at A.O. Smith Corporation and L’Oréal.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ilham%20Kadri
Ilham Kadri
Ilham Kadri. Career She is a steering committee member of the European Round Table (ERT), Executive Committee member of the World Business Council for Sustainable Development, and a permanent member of the International Business Council.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ilham%20Kadri
Ilham Kadri
Ilham Kadri. Career She is the founder of the ISSA Hygieia Network, which she and other female cleaning industry executives founded in 2015.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ilham%20Kadri
Ilham Kadri
Ilham Kadri. Career Kadri is a member of The B Team, a collective of global business and civil society leaders working to catalyze better business practices for the wellbeing of people and the planet.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ilham%20Kadri
Ilham Kadri
Ilham Kadri. Awards and recognition Ilham Kadri was ranked 21st in Fortune magazine's Most Powerful Women in Business -International list in 2019. In 2017, she won Golden award for Woman of the Year (Industry), and Golden award for Women Helping Women (Business) awards at the 14th annual Stevie Awards for Women in Business.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Georgiana%20%28ship%29
Georgiana (ship)
Georgiana (ship). Numerous vessels have borne the name Georgiana: served as a merchantman, packet ship for the British East India Company (EIC), whaler, sloop of the navy of the United States of America, and merchant vessel again. She was condemned as leaky and sold in 1818. was a Mexican vessel that the British captured and that between 1802 and 1808 made three voyages as a whaler for Samuel Enderby & Sons. Georgiana was the cutter King George that was renamed Georgiana in 1804 and that served the British Royal Navy as a hired armed vessel between August 1803 and August 1804 when she was wrecked. was launched in British India, probably in 1818, and made one voyage for the British EIC, and at least one voyage carrying immigrants to Australia. was launched at Quebec in 1826 and made three voyages transporting convicts to Australia SS Georgiana, a Confederate cruiser launched in 1863 that her captain scuttled on her maiden voyage Georgiana (steamboat), a steamboat that operated on the Columbia River from 1914 to 1940
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George%20de%20Grey%2C%203rd%20Baron%20Walsingham
George de Grey, 3rd Baron Walsingham
George de Grey, 3rd Baron Walsingham. Lieutenant General George de Grey, 3rd Baron Walsingham (11 June 1776 – 26 April 1831) was a British peer and Army officer.
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54798693
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George%20de%20Grey%2C%203rd%20Baron%20Walsingham
George de Grey, 3rd Baron Walsingham
George de Grey, 3rd Baron Walsingham. Early life George de Grey was born on 11 June 1776, the eldest son of Thomas de Grey, 2nd Baron Walsingham, and his wife Augusta Georgina Elizabeth Irby, who was the daughter of William Irby, 1st Baron Boston. He was educated at Eton College before joining the British Army in the early months of 1794 as a cornet in the 1st Dragoons.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George%20de%20Grey%2C%203rd%20Baron%20Walsingham
George de Grey, 3rd Baron Walsingham
George de Grey, 3rd Baron Walsingham. French Revolutionary War De Grey purchased a lieutenantcy in the 1st Dragoons almost immediately after becoming a cornet, and then on 13 March of the same year he transferred to the newly formed 25th Light Dragoons as a captain. He continued his swift rise up the ranks by purchasing the rank of major in the 25th on 25 May 1795, still only eighteen years of age. In early 1796 de Grey's regiment was sent to serve in India, as part of which journey they witnessed the Capitulation of Saldanha Bay in August 1796 off Cape Colony. After arriving in India the regiment joined the Madras garrison in time to participate in the Fourth Anglo-Mysore War. As part of such de Grey fought at the Battle of Mallavelly and Siege of Seringapatam in 1799.
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54798693
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George%20de%20Grey%2C%203rd%20Baron%20Walsingham
George de Grey, 3rd Baron Walsingham
George de Grey, 3rd Baron Walsingham. Military career Towards the end of 1799 de Grey learned from England that he had been promoted to lieutenant colonel to command the 26th Light Dragoons on 3 May. He returned to England to join the regiment, but by the time he arrived his orders had been changed and he was instead given command of his old regiment, the 1st Dragoons, dated from 6 June. The regiment was garrisoned in Kent and de Grey stayed there with them for the following two years, until in 1803 he was appointed an assistant adjutant general for the Home District. He served in this position until 1805, at which point he re-joined the 1st Dragoons. The regiment began a tour of the British Isles, marching north to Scotland and then travelling across the Irish Sea to Ireland, arriving there in 1807. On 25 April 1808 de Grey was promoted to the rank of brevet colonel and made an aide de camp to King George III, while still holding command of the 1st Dragoons.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George%20de%20Grey%2C%203rd%20Baron%20Walsingham
George de Grey, 3rd Baron Walsingham
George de Grey, 3rd Baron Walsingham. Napoleonic Wars De Grey's regiment had been meant to travel to Portugal to fight in the army of Lieutenant General Sir John Moore towards the end of 1808, but Moore's death and the subsequent evacuation of his army at the Battle of Corunna meant the move was cancelled. He stayed in England until August of the following year when the regiment was again sent orders to join an army in Portugal, and they arrived there in September. The regiment spent the remainder of the year at Lisbon before moving to the Spanish border near Ciudad Rodrigo at the start of 1810. Having arrived there, de Grey left the regiment to instead command a brigade of heavy cavalry on 13 May. He fought in command of his brigade at the subsequent Battle of Bussaco on 27 September and then formed part of the rearguard of the army as it retreated to the Lines of Torres Vedras for the winter. The Lines stopped the advance of the French towards Lisbon and when they began their retreat in November of the same year de Grey's brigade was part of the force that pursued the French, doing so until the enemy forces entered Spain in early 1811.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George%20de%20Grey%2C%203rd%20Baron%20Walsingham
George de Grey, 3rd Baron Walsingham
George de Grey, 3rd Baron Walsingham. Military career With the threat of an attack by the French now lessening, de Grey's brigade was sent to join Marshal William Beresford's force marching to fight at the Siege of Badajoz. After this open battle with the French began again, and de Grey's brigade was often involved. They were in reserve at the Battle of Campo Maior on 25 March but saw heavy combat at the subsequent battles of Los Santos and Albuera, on 16 April and 16 May respectively. Then at the Battle of Usagre on 25 May de Grey's force saw its greatest success, destroying a brigade of French dragoons in a fight that saw 250 Frenchmen killed to only 20 British soldiers. This was de Grey's last action as a colonel because on 4 June he was promoted to major general as part of a large group of promotions to that rank. With there being more major generals than there were commands for them in the Peninsular War, some were not able to continue in their commands but Lieutenant Colonel Henry Torrens organised for de Grey to stay in his role and this was announced on 26 June. At this time the army was reorganised and de Grey and his brigade were sent to join the 2nd Cavalry Division. In August they traveled back to Ciudad Rodrigo where they spent the remainder of 1811, while moving to the 1st Cavalry Division in October.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George%20de%20Grey%2C%203rd%20Baron%20Walsingham
George de Grey, 3rd Baron Walsingham
George de Grey, 3rd Baron Walsingham. Military career In the middle of 1811 de Grey injured his shoulder and requested to Lord Wellington, the commander of the army, that he be allowed to return home to recuperate. At some point after his brigade had moved to Ciudad Rodrigo de Grey was given permission to leave his command, and by the end of the year he had done so, although the exact date of his departure is unknown. It has been suggested that this harmed his relationship with Wellington because at this time a large number of officers were attempting to be sent home from Spain and Portugal for reasons Wellington thought to be unprofessional. De Grey never received another active military command during or after the Napoleonic Wars, instead serving on the Home Staff of the Kent District until 1814, which was his last military appointment.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George%20de%20Grey%2C%203rd%20Baron%20Walsingham
George de Grey, 3rd Baron Walsingham
George de Grey, 3rd Baron Walsingham. Military career De Grey inherited the title of Baron Walsingham from his father when the latter died on 16 January 1818, also becoming Comptroller of the First Fruits at the same time. By seniority he was promoted to lieutenant general on 19 July 1821 but did not receive any further rewards for his service apart from the Army Gold Medal with Albuera clasp. de Grey has been described as one of the forgotten generals of the Peninsular War, doing nothing bad but equally not having any great successes, resulting in him often being left out of the narrative of the cavalry's role in the war.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George%20de%20Grey%2C%203rd%20Baron%20Walsingham
George de Grey, 3rd Baron Walsingham
George de Grey, 3rd Baron Walsingham. Family and death de Grey married Matilda Methuen, the daughter of Paul Cobb Methuen, on 16 May 1804. They had no children. The couple lived in London at their home in Harley Street. On 26 April 1831 de Grey and his wife were sleeping there when his bed caught on fire; de Grey was unable to escape the incredibly intense fire and his corpse was found on the floor below, the fire having burned through the ceiling. His wife was not caught in the fire but jumped out of a window in order to escape it, breaking both of her thighs and dying shortly afterwards. The couple were buried at Merton, Norfolk and he was succeeded in his title by his brother, Thomas de Grey.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herbert%20von%20Denffer
Herbert von Denffer
Herbert von Denffer. Herbert Julius von Denffer (born 4 June 1907, date of death unknown) was a German actuarial mathematician. He was born in Narva, Estonia. During World War II, Dr Herbert Denffer worked as a cryptanalyst in Referat F, the Mathematical Referat, as part of the Inspectorate 7/VI, that was the signals intelligence agency of the Wehrmacht, before and during World War II. He would later work for the General der Nachrichtenaufklärung, the successor organization to the In 7/VI, specifically undertaking research in general theory of cryptography.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herbert%20von%20Denffer
Herbert von Denffer
Herbert von Denffer. Life Denffer was the son of author and banker Alexander von Denffer from the aristocratic Denffer family. On 26 February 1926, he received his Abitur certificate from the Marienstiftsgymnasium Gymnasium. Denffer undertook 3 semesters of study at the University of Tübingen and 6 semesters at the Humboldt University of Berlin. Denffer was eventually awarded an academic scholarship for gifted students, the Studienstiftung to undertake advanced study in mathematics at Berlin. On 15 December 1933, he became an actuarial mathematician and worked at the Association of Public Life Insurance Institutions () in Berlin. On 8 February 1935, he was promoted to Dr. Phil with a theses titled: On the Bernstein theory of partial differential equations of the second order of the elliptical type ().
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herbert%20von%20Denffer
Herbert von Denffer
Herbert von Denffer. At the end of the war, Denffer was named as chief of the () cryptanalysis unit with KONA 6 at the end.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Werner%20Reichardt%20Centre%20for%20Integrative%20Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience. The Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience (CIN) is the common platform for systems neuroscience at the University of Tübingen in Germany. It was installed as a cluster of excellence within the framework of the Excellence Initiative in 2007/2008. About 90 scientists with their research groups – 21 of which are currently supported with excellence initiative funds – form the CIN's membership. The focus of their work is on basic research in systems neurobiology. Based on an interdisciplinary and integrative approach, it encompasses projects rooted in biology, medicine, physics, computer science and engineering as well as cognition and neurophilosophy.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Werner%20Reichardt%20Centre%20for%20Integrative%20Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience. The namesake Werner Reichardt pioneered research into the fundamental principles of vision and information processing.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Werner%20Reichardt%20Centre%20for%20Integrative%20Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience. History The CIN was successfully applied for as a cluster of excellence starting during the second part of the Excellence Initiative's first round (application: 2006/2007; projects commencing 1 November 2007). It was officially inaugurated on 8 December 2008. At the cluster's foundation, 25 principal investigators (PIs) were joined by another 23 founding members. The CIN is intended as a common platform for exchange, coordination and cooperation within the Tübingen neuroscience community. It has dynamically developed its membership, which now encompasses about 90 Tübingen-based neuroscientists chosen based on scientific criteria.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Werner%20Reichardt%20Centre%20for%20Integrative%20Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience. When the Excellence Initiative entered its second round (application: 2010/2011; projects commencing 1 November 2012), the CIN applied for and received a five-year extension of funding and support. In that year, the University of Tübingen also successfully applied for Excellence Initiative support with its institutional strategy and research school.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Werner%20Reichardt%20Centre%20for%20Integrative%20Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience. Ever since it moved in in early 2012 (official opening ceremony: 14 May 2012), the CIN has been at home in a building of its own on the Tübingen University Hospital's Schnarrenberg campus. It is situated next to institutions that are neighbours topologically as well as scientifically, nestled in between the Hertie Institute for Clinical Brain Research (HIH) on one side and the German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE) on the other. Before it moved into its current building, the CIN was installed in a building of the Tübingen-Reutlingen Technology Park, in close proximity to the Tübingen Max Planck campus.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Werner%20Reichardt%20Centre%20for%20Integrative%20Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience. Since its inception, the CIN has been headed by its spokesman, the neurobiologist Prof Dr Peter Thier, who is also director of the Department of Cognitive Neurology at the Center for Neurology/Hertie Institute for Clinical Brain Research at Tübingen University Hospital.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Werner%20Reichardt%20Centre%20for%20Integrative%20Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience. Scientific approach and research questions Research at the CIN focuses on the twofold question how the brain generates its functions (such as perception, memory, emotion, communication, motor skills), and how diseases (such as Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, ALS etc.) impair these functions.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Werner%20Reichardt%20Centre%20for%20Integrative%20Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience. Scientific approach and research questions Researchers at the CIN seek to answer these questions using an integrative approach encompassing multiple levels of observation. These levels range from the lowest level of the genetic, cellular and molecular basis of brain functions through intermediate levels of larger neuronal network structures enabling information processing all the way up to high-level observation of the principles governing cognition and behaviour.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Werner%20Reichardt%20Centre%20for%20Integrative%20Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience. Scientific approach and research questions These different levels of observation require different scientific methods, resulting in different manners in which research results can be translated into medicine and engineering.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Werner%20Reichardt%20Centre%20for%20Integrative%20Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience. Scientific approach and research questions Research at the CIN is roughly divided into five research areas. Three research areas are defined by the shared level of observation of research groups engaged in them: the cellular level („The sensory and neuronal basis of integrative brain function (Cellular Level)“), the network level („The sensory and neuronal basis of integrative brain function (Network Level)“) and the cognitive-behavioural level („Cognition and behaviour originating from integrative brain functions (Cognitive Level)“. All of these areas employ computational neuroscience methods complementing biological and cognition research approaches.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Werner%20Reichardt%20Centre%20for%20Integrative%20Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience. Scientific approach and research questions To these three are added two research areas of a more overarching character which emphasise the development of methods and translation into applications. The research area “Designing the tools to probe integrative brain functions (Advanced Tools)“ focuses on imaging techniques, while the research area “Brain-related technical applications and neuroprosthetics (Neurotechnology)“ aims to promote innovative rehabilitation methods and prosthetics and develop neurotechnology based on neurobiological basic research.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Werner%20Reichardt%20Centre%20for%20Integrative%20Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience. Methods Due to their multiple levels of observation, the CIN's researchers employ a wide range of methods. Where investigation into the human brain is concerned, non-invasive imaging techniques such as electroencephalography (EEG) and magnetoencephalography (MEG) are very important. Measurements taken with these methods boast very high temporal resolution, but comparatively low spatial resolution. Fortunately, it is possible to establish anatomical reference points for these electrophysiological methods when they are combined with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), as fMRI reaches spatial resolutions about two orders of magnitude greater. To further improve spatial resolution of MRI, research groups at the CIN investigate the potential of high field technology, e.g. an experimental 9.4 Tesla MRI scanner for scanning the brains of human test subjects, and a 14.1 Tesla scanner for small animals, both in use at the Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics under the aegis of CIN professor Klaus Scheffler. For non-invasive molecular imaging, CIN research groups also combine MRI with positron emission tomography (PET).
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Werner%20Reichardt%20Centre%20for%20Integrative%20Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience. Methods Higher spatio-temporal resolutions are currently only available in invasive experiments, which usually require animal research. In these experiments, membrane potentials including action potentials of neurons are measured with extra- or intracellular electrodes in single-unit recording, with multielectrode arrays, or by employing the patch clamp technique, which enables measurements of membrane potentials in different parts of a given nerve cell.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Werner%20Reichardt%20Centre%20for%20Integrative%20Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience. Methods Besides these electrophysiological methods, which are constantly undergoing refinement, numerous optical methods are employed at the CIN to make individual cells or cell clusters visible in vitro or in vivo, and to observe their behaviour in realtime: fluorescence microscopy, most importantly making use of confocal or 2-photon microscopes. The most recent innovation in optical methods is the localisation of protein molecules in neuronal compartments by combining super-resolution microscopy with a molecule-specific marking technique. Super resolution microscopy can reach resolutions below the Abbe limit of conventional light microscopy. This combined method is used by a CIN junior research group to analyse the consequences of axonal damage incurred in the course of inflammatory or neurodegenerative diseases such as multiple sclerosis.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Werner%20Reichardt%20Centre%20for%20Integrative%20Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience. Methods Classical methods such as analysing brain lesions are in use in order to understand the role of certain neural circuits. Furthermore, the CIN makes use of a large number of experimental methods such as non-invasive transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), or invasive electrical microstimulation or local pharmacological manipulation. These methods are more and more complemented by invasive optogenetics, allowing activation and deactivation of individual genetically modified neurons using light of a defined wavelength.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Werner%20Reichardt%20Centre%20for%20Integrative%20Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience. Methods Biological data are analysed and processed using modern statistical methods, theoretical neuroscience approaches to simulate neuronal networks and generate hypotheses testable in further experiments.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Werner%20Reichardt%20Centre%20for%20Integrative%20Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience. Methods Several research groups at the CIN work hand-in-hand with the humanities, most importantly philosophy, a direction which has resulted in the creation of a professorship in neurophilosophy based on a former junior research group on this topic.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Werner%20Reichardt%20Centre%20for%20Integrative%20Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience. Local relations and partnerships The CIN is an interfaculty institution connecting three faculties of the University of Tübingen: the Faculty of Science, the Faculty of Medicine, and the Faculty of Humanities. The CIN is involved in close cooperation with several local partners: the Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics, with whom the CIN has established a joint professorship and research group in high field magnetic resonance tomography; the Max Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems; and the HIH and DZNE, with whom the CIN forms the neurocampus Schnarrenberg enabling efficient sharing of resources and facilities as well as constant scientific discourse. Common colloquia, many informal meetings, and an annual get-together are intended to foster that discourse further. The close cooperation among these institutions is evidenced by several joint research groups in sensomotoric research and learning and memory.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Werner%20Reichardt%20Centre%20for%20Integrative%20Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience. Local relations and partnerships The CIN further engages in close collaboration with the Natural and Medical Sciences Institute at the University of Tübingen (NMI), with the Tübingen branch of the German Center for Diabetes Research (DZD), and with the Stuttgart-based Fraunhofer Institute for Manufacturing Engineering and Automation (Fraunhofer IPA). In 2010, many CIN members took part in the successful application for the establishment of the Tübingen Bernstein Center for Computational Neuroscience (BCCN), which was coordinated by CIN professor Matthias Bethge and supported (2010–2015) by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research in the framework of its Bernstein initiative.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Werner%20Reichardt%20Centre%20for%20Integrative%20Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience. Support for early career researchers The CIN supports young people going into research at multiple levels of their career. Education and training of master and doctoral students are handled by the international Graduate Training Centre of Neuroscience (GTC). The GTC encompasses three graduate schools with different focus fields. Built upon the International Max Planck Research School (IMPRS) of Neural and Behavioural Sciences founded in 1999, the institute was expanded to three graduate schools concurrently with the CIN's foundation. The resulting GTC ensures a common structural basis and coordination of studies in neuroscience at the University of Tübingen. The added two graduate schools are the school of Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience and the school of Neural Information Processing. These schools differ from the behaviour- and systems-oriented first graduate school by focusing on the cell and molecular level and on theoretical neuroscience, respectively.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Werner%20Reichardt%20Centre%20for%20Integrative%20Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience. Support for early career researchers All three graduate schools teach in English. More than 50% of their students come from abroad. Candidates are chosen based on a multi-stage selection procedure. Currently, ca. 85 students aim for a Master of Science degree, while ca. 250 aim to become Doctors of Science.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Werner%20Reichardt%20Centre%20for%20Integrative%20Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience. Support for early career researchers Laboratory rotations ensure GTC students are introduced to self-organised scientific project work early on. Students at the GTC have many options to take responsibility; for instance, they can invite guest speakers, and they organise an annual conference aimed at junior neuroscientists (“NeNa-Konferenz”).
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Werner%20Reichardt%20Centre%20for%20Integrative%20Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience
Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience. Support for early career researchers For scientists further along their career paths, the CIN has established a tenure track concept. This allows promising junior researchers to head a research group after a postdoctoral phase, and to responsibly direct all of its activities. Junior research group leaders are supported and mentored by the CIN's advisory board. After four years, junior research group leaders undergo competitive evaluation based on numerous indicators of scientific accomplishment (publication record, third-party funding won etc.). External reviews mark the success level of the evaluation and are the factor determining whether the candidate receives tenure in the form of a professorship.