#doctor masaryk
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sk3tch404 · 9 months ago
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How do you do, you like me and and I like you 🎶😼
Psycho Cuties brainrot. Plz take it with caution 🙇
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brookston · 8 months ago
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Holidays 3.7
Holidays
Alexander Graham Bell Day
Arbor Day (California)
Be Heard Day
Bird Day (California)
Bloody Sunday Anniversary Day (Selma, Alabama)
Chamorro Heritage Day (Guam)
Cybercombine Day (Prudentianopolis)
Doronicum Day (French Republic)
Equal Pay Day (Gleicher Bezahlungstag; Germany)
Finnmarkslopet Dog Sled Race (Finland)
First Planting Festival (Elder Scrolls)
Get Grandma To Write Down Her Meatloaf Recipe Day
Hamilton Lavity Stoutt Day (British Virgin Islands)
International Brick Maker Day
International Day of the Anti-Fascist Woman
International Women’s Day (Angola, Tajikistan)
INTERPOL International Day of Remembrance for Fallen Officers
Jose Abad Day (Philippines)
Liberation of Sulaymaniyah (Iraqi Kurdistan)
Mahasivarathri Day (Sri Lanka)
Maritime Day (Slovenia)
Masaryk Day (Czech Republic, Slovakia)
Maslenitsa (Russia)
National Ben Day
National Carol Day
National Cooper Day
National Day of Lesbian Visibility (Argentina)
National Heroes and Benefactors Day (Belize)
National Sauna Day (Japan)
National Sharon Day
National Slam the Scam Day
National Teresa Day
Neil Diamond Day (Las Vegas)
Nones of March (Ancient Rome)
Plant Power Day (UK)
Say Hello Day
Suez Canal Day
Teacher’s Day (Albania)
Texas Energy Day (Texas)
307 Day
Transport and Telecommunication Workers Day (Turkmenistan)
World Oneness Day
Food & Drink Celebrations
National Cereal Day
National Crown Roast of Pork Day
National Flapjack Day
Punsch Roll Day (Sweden)
1st Thursday in March
Kid Lit Art Postcard Day [1st Thursday]
Nametag Day [Thursday of Name Week]
National Hospitalist Day [1st Thursday]
National Vending Day [1st Thursday]
White Ribbon Day (Massachusetts) [1st Thursday]
World Book Day (Ireland, UK) [1st Thursday]
Independence & Related Days
Aleutian Islands (Declared; 2020) [unrecognized]
Sulaymaniyah Liberation Day (Iraqi Kurdistan)
Festivals Beginning March 7, 2024
Antikmässan (Stockholm, Sweden) [thru 3. 10]
Brazilian Beer Festival (Blumeneau, Brazil) [thru 3.9]
Cincinnati International Wine Festival (Cincinnati, Ohio) [thru 3.9]
Crufts Dog Show (Birmingham, England) [thru 3. 10]
Eastern Bison Association Winter Conference (Harrisburg, Pennsylvania) [thru 3.9]
Fulton Oysterfest (Fulton, Texas) [thru 3.10]
Limassol Carnival (Limassol, Cyprus) [thru 3. 17]
National Coffee Association Convention (Nashville, Tennessee) [thru 3.9]
New England Brew Summit (Portland, Maine)
Red, White & Snow (Park City, Utah) [thru 3.9]
Sustainable Wine Dinner Series (Los Angeles, California)
The WhiskyX (Miami, Florida)
Feast Days
Ardo (Christian; Saint)
Barbara Eden Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Billy (Muppetism)
Boris Kustodiev (Artology)
Contradiction Day (No It’s Not!; Pastafarian)
The Devil Is God Reversed Day (Everyday Wicca)
Drausius (a.k.a. Drausin; Christian; Saint)
Empodocles (Positivist; Saint)
Edward Landseer (Artology)
Esterwine (Christian; Saint)
Festival for Vedovus (God of the Dead & Volcanic Movements; Ancient Rome)
Impeachment of March Goblins (Shamanism)
José Olallo (Christian; Saint)
Junoalia (Old Roman Festival to Juno)
Leonid Feodorov (Russian Greek Catholic Church)
March Storms and Blasting Rods Day (Starza Pagan Book of Days)
Milton Avery (Artology)
Paul the Simple (Christian; Saint)
Perpetua and Felicity (Christian; Saints & Martyrs)
Piet Mondrian (Artology)
Psyche’s Day (Pagan)
Pierre-Henri Dorie, Siméon-François Berneux (Christian; part of The Korean Martyrs)
Theophylact (Christian; Saint)
Thomas Aquinas, Doctor of the Church (Christian; Saint)
Treachery Day (Church of the SubGenius)
Tuan Reincarnation Day (Celtic Book of Days)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Sakimake (先負 Japan) [Bad luck in the morning, good luck in the afternoon.]
Umu Limnu (Evil Day; Babylonian Calendar; 11 of 60)
Premieres
Alice the Collegiate (Disney Cartoon; 1927)
The Caine Mutiny, by Herman Wouk (Novel; 1951)
Coal Miner’s Daughter
Foxes (Film; 1980)
The Edible Woman, by Margaret Atwood (Novel; 1969)
Erlkönig, by Franz Schubert (Lied; 1821)
From Genesis to Revelation, by Genesis (Album; 1969)
The Golden Eggs (Disney Cartoon; 1941)
The Grand Budapest Hotel (Film; 2014)
Grateful Gus (Noveltoons Cartoon; 1958)
Highlander (Film; 1986)
The Home Guard (Terrytoons Cartoon; 1941)
The Long Goodbye (Film; 1973)
Mame (Film; 1974)
Mickey’s Grand Opera (Disney Cartoon; 1936)
Mirror (Russian Film; 1975)
Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day (Film; 2008)
Mr. Peabody & Sherman (Animated Film; 2014)
My Beautiful Launderette (Film; 1986)
The Nude Who Never, by Ted Mark (Novel; 1965)
The Old Mill Pond (Happy Harmonies Cartoon; 1936)
Olive’s Sweepstake Ticket (Fleischer Popeye Cartoon; 1941)
Our Lady of the Flowers, by Jean Genet (Novel; 1943)
Page Miss Glory (WB MM Cartoon; 1936)
Pistol Packin’ Woodpecker (Woody Woodpecker Cartoon; 1960)
Post Office, by Charles Bukowski (Novel; 1971)
A Room with a View (Film; 1986)
Royal Cat Nap (Tom & Jerry Cartoon; 1958)
Sailor Moon (Japanese Anime Series; 1992)
The Six Million Dollar Man (TV Series; 1973)
Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening, by Robert Frost (Poem; 1923)
Taboo (Adult Film; 1980)
Things Ain’t What They Used To Be, recorded by Johnny Hodges and his Orchestra (Song; 1941)
Way Out West, by Sonny Rollins (Album; 1957)
Young Americans, by David Bowie (Album; 1975)
Today’s Name Days
Felicitas, Perpetua, Reinhard (Austria)
Bogoljub, Felicita, Perpetua, Teofil (Croatia)
Tomáš (Czech Republic)
Perpetua (Denmark)
Ralf, Raul, Rolf, Rudolf, Ruudi, Ruut (Estonia)
Taika, Tarja, Taru (Finland)
Félicie, Félicité, Nathan (France)
Felicitas, Felizitas, Perpet, Reinhard, Volker (Germany)
Evgenios (Greece)
Tamás (Hungary)
Quintilio, Tommaso (Italy)
Ella, Elmira (Latvia)
Felicita, Galmantė, Rimtautas, Tomas (Lithuania)
Are, Arild (Norway)
Felicja, Nadmir, Paweł, Polikarp, Tomasz (Poland)
Efrem (Romania)
Tomáš (Slovakia)
Felicidad, Perpetua (Spain)
Camilla, Ottilia (Sweden)
Davon, Devan, Deven, Devin, Devon, Devonta, Devonte, Devyn, Dewey, Lothar, Luther (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 67 of 2024; 299 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 4 of week 10 of 2024
Celtic Tree Calendar: Nuin (Ash) [Day 19 of 28]
Chinese: Month 1 (Bing-Yin), Day 27 (Geng-Wu)
Chinese Year of the: Dragon 4722 (until January 29, 2025)
Hebrew: 27 Adair I 5784
Islamic: 26 Sha’ban 1445
J Cal: 7 Green; Sevenday [7 of 30]
Julian: 23 February 2024
Moon: 10%: Waning Crescent
Positivist: 11 Aristotle (3rd Month) [Thucydides]
Runic Half Month: Tyr (Cosmic Pillar) [Day 13 of 15]
Season: Winter (Day 78 of 89)
Week: 1st Week of March
Zodiac: Pisces (Day 18 of 30)
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pisupsala · 2 years ago
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I love that we discovered so much about Anna in this new chapter. Finding out that Anna was a college student fascinated me. As I have read women in Europe began actively attending college even earlier than women in the United States. By World War II it was already very common for women throughout Europe (at least for the most part) to attend universities composed of both men and women. In the United States, on the other hand, although there were women-only universities, there were still very few women attending. I think it is right that Rooster is not surprised to discover that Anna was a university student and part of the resistance. Because for during WWII the U.S. Navy created the WAVES branch for college women to enter the Navy at officer rank and serve during the war. So I guess Bradley has already met several of those women. Even in England there were all-female aviation squadrons during WWII. I found it so sweet and yet so sad how Anna felt the need to explain to Rooster why she was so nervous at that moment during the night. It was quite melancholy how Anna wanted to let Bradley know that she used to be an ordinary girl before the war, which is true.
You are absolutely right, and just to add a little bit more context for Czechoslovakia specifically (im probably going to write too many words here so i'll put it under a keep reading)
The interwar years, or the First Republic, are broadly considered a time of progress: socially, economically and militarily. In particular, it saw almost all institutions open to women/become co-ed and which resulted in (a relative) surge of in women becoming practicing professionals as medical doctors and lawyers, professors, but also in a number of technical fields and entering the workforce in different vocations. This is in part through the influence of the first First Lady of Czechoslovakia, Charlotte Garrigue Masaryk, who herself was well-educated (and American-born) and was quite clearly a heavy influence on her husband when it came to matters of education equality (even before he became president in 1918). (not to leave out the efforts of other female Bohemian writers, thinkers and activists that were also active and successful during Austro-Hungarian times, but that's another topic)
That said, Anna would have still been part of a minority as a female student, even though a generation of graduates and professionals already preceded her and established a place in society. But the opportunities presented to her, academically and professionally, would be like night a day almost compared to pre-WWI—when girls for example could only take final exams at private schools, when boys could go to public school (and that after almost 200 years of compulsory 8 years of primary education for boys and girls >.> ). Austria-Hungary was actually relatively slow in establishing equal rights to education compared to many western countries, and real change only came about after the break-up of the empire. Anyway, I think that she is conscious of that, and that it's of definite influence on how she acts and perceives the world around her and her place in it.
And I agree on that Rooster would, again in the grand scheme of things, not be that surprised. Definitely through his experiences and what he must have seen in the U.S, and the U.K. of women not only entering the armed forces but also the workforce at large as you pointed out. But at that time at the eastern front, women saw active combat as snipers, in artillery and tank divisions (although, it should be noted that the majority of women in the armed forces there, too, usually served in medical units). And moreover, generally, all through Europe, women played pivotal roles in national resistance movements.
One particular example that always comes to mind is Hannie Schaft, of the best known resistance fighters in the Netherlands, who was executed by Dutch Nazis at only 24 in 1945. (and probably apocryphal, but after the first bullet only grazed her, she told her executioner "I shoot better!" — tbh i want that to be true so badly).
Okay, if you actually made it through that whole word vomit above haha, thanks 🧡 and thanks for reading the story, your comments make me super happy!
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qadri09 · 6 months ago
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Study in Czech Republic | Study Medicine in Czech Republic
Unlocking the Gateway to Medical Education: Studying Medicine in the Czech Republic
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Introduction:
Embarking on the journey to become a medical professional is both exciting and challenging. For many aspiring doctors, the dream of studying medicine overseas is accompanied by a plethora of questions and considerations. Among the diverse array of options available, the Czech Republic emerges as a beacon of opportunity, offering world-class medical education in a culturally rich environment. In this blog, we delve into the intricacies of study medicine in Czech Republic, exploring its esteemed institutions, unique advantages, and the vibrant experiences awaiting prospective students.
Study in the landscape of Study in Czech Republic with Qadri International. Qadri International has counseled half a million students and sent 70,000 students abroad. We have a 98% success rate with 38 years of experience. We have been helping the students achieve their dreams since 1986.
The Czech Republic: A Hub of Academic Excellence
Nestled in the heart of Europe, the Czech Republic boasts a long-standing tradition of academic excellence, making it an attractive destination for international students seeking quality education. Renowned for its historic universities and cutting-edge research facilities, the Czech Republic has earned a reputation as a global leader in higher education.
Prestigious Institutions:
Charles University: Established in 1348, Charles University stands as one of the oldest and most esteemed universities in Europe. Its Faculty of Medicine, located in Prague, offers comprehensive medical programs renowned for their academic rigor and clinical training.
Masaryk University: Situated in the vibrant city of Brno, Masaryk University is another top-tier institution known for its innovative approach to medical education. With state-of-the-art facilities and a commitment to research, Masaryk University attracts students from across the globe.
Advantages of Study Medicine in Czech Republic
Quality Education at Affordable Costs:
Compared to many Western countries, the cost of studying medicine in the Czech Republic is remarkably affordable. Tuition fees are competitive, and the overall cost of living is relatively low, making it an attractive option for budget-conscious students.
Despite its affordability, the Czech Republic maintains uncompromising standards of education. Students have access to world-class faculty, cutting-edge resources, and hands-on clinical experience, ensuring they are well-prepared for the challenges of medical practice.
Multicultural Environment:
Studying medicine in the Czech Republic offers more than just academic enrichment; it provides students with a multicultural experience that broadens their perspectives and fosters cross-cultural understanding. Interacting with peers from diverse backgrounds enhances communication skills and promotes cultural competency, essential qualities for future healthcare professionals.
Internationally Recognized Degrees:
Graduates of Czech medical universities hold degrees that are recognized worldwide, enabling them to pursue diverse career opportunities globally. Whether aspiring to practice medicine in Europe, North America, or beyond, a medical degree from the Czech Republic opens doors to a wide range of professional pathways.
Clinical Exposure and Research Opportunities:
One of the distinguishing features of medical education in the Czech Republic is its emphasis on practical training and research. Students have the opportunity to gain hands-on experience through clinical rotations in prestigious hospitals and healthcare facilities, allowing them to apply theoretical knowledge in real-world settings.
Additionally, Czech universities actively engage in cutting-edge research across various medical disciplines, providing students with opportunities to participate in groundbreaking projects and contribute to advancements in healthcare.
Experiencing Life as a Medical Student in the Czech Republic
Cultural Immersion:
Beyond the confines of the classroom, study medicine in Czech Republic offers a chance to immerse oneself in a rich tapestry of culture and history. From exploring medieval castles to savoring traditional Czech cuisine, students have ample opportunities to embrace the country's cultural heritage and create unforgettable memories.
Vibrant Student Life:
Czech universities foster vibrant student communities, organizing a myriad of extracurricular activities and events. Whether participating in student clubs, sports teams, or cultural exchanges, medical students have the chance to forge lifelong friendships and build networks that extend far beyond graduation.
Exploring Europe:
Situated at the crossroads of Central Europe, the Czech Republic serves as an ideal gateway for exploring the continent. With its convenient location and efficient transportation network, students can easily travel to neighboring countries and embark on weekend adventures, enriching their academic experience with diverse cultural encounters.
Conclusion:
Study medicine in Czech Republic offers a transformative educational experience that combines academic excellence, cultural immersion, and professional growth. With its prestigious institutions, affordable tuition, and diverse opportunities, the Czech Republic stands as a beacon of opportunity for aspiring doctors worldwide. By choosing to pursue their medical education in this vibrant and dynamic country, students embark on a journey that prepares them not only for a successful career in medicine but also for a lifetime of discovery and growth.
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Landline no.: +97143351390
Mobile no. +971507682055
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brookstonalmanac · 8 months ago
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Holidays 3.7
Holidays
Alexander Graham Bell Day
Arbor Day (California)
Be Heard Day
Bird Day (California)
Bloody Sunday Anniversary Day (Selma, Alabama)
Chamorro Heritage Day (Guam)
Cybercombine Day (Prudentianopolis)
Doronicum Day (French Republic)
Equal Pay Day (Gleicher Bezahlungstag; Germany)
Finnmarkslopet Dog Sled Race (Finland)
First Planting Festival (Elder Scrolls)
Get Grandma To Write Down Her Meatloaf Recipe Day
Hamilton Lavity Stoutt Day (British Virgin Islands)
International Brick Maker Day
International Day of the Anti-Fascist Woman
International Women’s Day (Angola, Tajikistan)
INTERPOL International Day of Remembrance for Fallen Officers
Jose Abad Day (Philippines)
Liberation of Sulaymaniyah (Iraqi Kurdistan)
Mahasivarathri Day (Sri Lanka)
Maritime Day (Slovenia)
Masaryk Day (Czech Republic, Slovakia)
Maslenitsa (Russia)
National Ben Day
National Carol Day
National Cooper Day
National Day of Lesbian Visibility (Argentina)
National Heroes and Benefactors Day (Belize)
National Sauna Day (Japan)
National Sharon Day
National Slam the Scam Day
National Teresa Day
Neil Diamond Day (Las Vegas)
Nones of March (Ancient Rome)
Plant Power Day (UK)
Say Hello Day
Suez Canal Day
Teacher’s Day (Albania)
Texas Energy Day (Texas)
307 Day
Transport and Telecommunication Workers Day (Turkmenistan)
World Oneness Day
Food & Drink Celebrations
National Cereal Day
National Crown Roast of Pork Day
National Flapjack Day
Punsch Roll Day (Sweden)
1st Thursday in March
Kid Lit Art Postcard Day [1st Thursday]
Nametag Day [Thursday of Name Week]
National Hospitalist Day [1st Thursday]
National Vending Day [1st Thursday]
White Ribbon Day (Massachusetts) [1st Thursday]
World Book Day (Ireland, UK) [1st Thursday]
Independence & Related Days
Aleutian Islands (Declared; 2020) [unrecognized]
Sulaymaniyah Liberation Day (Iraqi Kurdistan)
Festivals Beginning March 7, 2024
Antikmässan (Stockholm, Sweden) [thru 3. 10]
Brazilian Beer Festival (Blumeneau, Brazil) [thru 3.9]
Cincinnati International Wine Festival (Cincinnati, Ohio) [thru 3.9]
Crufts Dog Show (Birmingham, England) [thru 3. 10]
Eastern Bison Association Winter Conference (Harrisburg, Pennsylvania) [thru 3.9]
Fulton Oysterfest (Fulton, Texas) [thru 3.10]
Limassol Carnival (Limassol, Cyprus) [thru 3. 17]
National Coffee Association Convention (Nashville, Tennessee) [thru 3.9]
New England Brew Summit (Portland, Maine)
Red, White & Snow (Park City, Utah) [thru 3.9]
Sustainable Wine Dinner Series (Los Angeles, California)
The WhiskyX (Miami, Florida)
Feast Days
Ardo (Christian; Saint)
Barbara Eden Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Billy (Muppetism)
Boris Kustodiev (Artology)
Contradiction Day (No It’s Not!; Pastafarian)
The Devil Is God Reversed Day (Everyday Wicca)
Drausius (a.k.a. Drausin; Christian; Saint)
Empodocles (Positivist; Saint)
Edward Landseer (Artology)
Esterwine (Christian; Saint)
Festival for Vedovus (God of the Dead & Volcanic Movements; Ancient Rome)
Impeachment of March Goblins (Shamanism)
José Olallo (Christian; Saint)
Junoalia (Old Roman Festival to Juno)
Leonid Feodorov (Russian Greek Catholic Church)
March Storms and Blasting Rods Day (Starza Pagan Book of Days)
Milton Avery (Artology)
Paul the Simple (Christian; Saint)
Perpetua and Felicity (Christian; Saints & Martyrs)
Piet Mondrian (Artology)
Psyche’s Day (Pagan)
Pierre-Henri Dorie, Siméon-François Berneux (Christian; part of The Korean Martyrs)
Theophylact (Christian; Saint)
Thomas Aquinas, Doctor of the Church (Christian; Saint)
Treachery Day (Church of the SubGenius)
Tuan Reincarnation Day (Celtic Book of Days)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Sakimake (先負 Japan) [Bad luck in the morning, good luck in the afternoon.]
Umu Limnu (Evil Day; Babylonian Calendar; 11 of 60)
Premieres
Alice the Collegiate (Disney Cartoon; 1927)
The Caine Mutiny, by Herman Wouk (Novel; 1951)
Coal Miner’s Daughter
Foxes (Film; 1980)
The Edible Woman, by Margaret Atwood (Novel; 1969)
Erlkönig, by Franz Schubert (Lied; 1821)
From Genesis to Revelation, by Genesis (Album; 1969)
The Golden Eggs (Disney Cartoon; 1941)
The Grand Budapest Hotel (Film; 2014)
Grateful Gus (Noveltoons Cartoon; 1958)
Highlander (Film; 1986)
The Home Guard (Terrytoons Cartoon; 1941)
The Long Goodbye (Film; 1973)
Mame (Film; 1974)
Mickey’s Grand Opera (Disney Cartoon; 1936)
Mirror (Russian Film; 1975)
Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day (Film; 2008)
Mr. Peabody & Sherman (Animated Film; 2014)
My Beautiful Launderette (Film; 1986)
The Nude Who Never, by Ted Mark (Novel; 1965)
The Old Mill Pond (Happy Harmonies Cartoon; 1936)
Olive’s Sweepstake Ticket (Fleischer Popeye Cartoon; 1941)
Our Lady of the Flowers, by Jean Genet (Novel; 1943)
Page Miss Glory (WB MM Cartoon; 1936)
Pistol Packin’ Woodpecker (Woody Woodpecker Cartoon; 1960)
Post Office, by Charles Bukowski (Novel; 1971)
A Room with a View (Film; 1986)
Royal Cat Nap (Tom & Jerry Cartoon; 1958)
Sailor Moon (Japanese Anime Series; 1992)
The Six Million Dollar Man (TV Series; 1973)
Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening, by Robert Frost (Poem; 1923)
Taboo (Adult Film; 1980)
Things Ain’t What They Used To Be, recorded by Johnny Hodges and his Orchestra (Song; 1941)
Way Out West, by Sonny Rollins (Album; 1957)
Young Americans, by David Bowie (Album; 1975)
Today’s Name Days
Felicitas, Perpetua, Reinhard (Austria)
Bogoljub, Felicita, Perpetua, Teofil (Croatia)
Tomáš (Czech Republic)
Perpetua (Denmark)
Ralf, Raul, Rolf, Rudolf, Ruudi, Ruut (Estonia)
Taika, Tarja, Taru (Finland)
Félicie, Félicité, Nathan (France)
Felicitas, Felizitas, Perpet, Reinhard, Volker (Germany)
Evgenios (Greece)
Tamás (Hungary)
Quintilio, Tommaso (Italy)
Ella, Elmira (Latvia)
Felicita, Galmantė, Rimtautas, Tomas (Lithuania)
Are, Arild (Norway)
Felicja, Nadmir, Paweł, Polikarp, Tomasz (Poland)
Efrem (Romania)
Tomáš (Slovakia)
Felicidad, Perpetua (Spain)
Camilla, Ottilia (Sweden)
Davon, Devan, Deven, Devin, Devon, Devonta, Devonte, Devyn, Dewey, Lothar, Luther (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 67 of 2024; 299 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 4 of week 10 of 2024
Celtic Tree Calendar: Nuin (Ash) [Day 19 of 28]
Chinese: Month 1 (Bing-Yin), Day 27 (Geng-Wu)
Chinese Year of the: Dragon 4722 (until January 29, 2025)
Hebrew: 27 Adair I 5784
Islamic: 26 Sha’ban 1445
J Cal: 7 Green; Sevenday [7 of 30]
Julian: 23 February 2024
Moon: 10%: Waning Crescent
Positivist: 11 Aristotle (3rd Month) [Thucydides]
Runic Half Month: Tyr (Cosmic Pillar) [Day 13 of 15]
Season: Winter (Day 78 of 89)
Week: 1st Week of March
Zodiac: Pisces (Day 18 of 30)
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jobrxiv · 1 year ago
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PostDoc in Cryo-EM of human translation control CEITEC Masaryk University The Tesina lab is looking for a PostDoc to use cryo-EM to study human translation control. The position is fully funded by ERC. See the full job description on jobRxiv: https://jobrxiv.org/job/ceitec-masaryk-university-27778-postdoc-in-cryo-em-of-human-translation-control/?feed_id=65537 #ScienceJobs #hiring #research Brno #Czechia #PostdoctoralFellow
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botanyone · 2 years ago
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Post-doctoral Position for the Hormonal Crosstalk in Plant Development Group
Post-doctoral Position for the Hormonal Crosstalk in Plant Development Group https://ift.tt/j7gUPLp Based at Masaryk University, Czech Republic. The post Post-doctoral Position for the Hormonal Crosstalk in Plant Development Group appeared first on Botany One. via Botany One https://botany.one/ December 10, 2022 at 06:00PM
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caccienne · 7 years ago
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I was learning how to change blades. It went well, I haven’t hurt myself (yet). 🔪
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secondary-burial · 3 years ago
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Local history, day 1: Růžena Kamarádová
I’ve always liked to dig around for stories about the places I’ve lived in. And honestly, the more obscure stories, the better. 
And so one day I browsed the ‘net late at night and discovered some new stories about my base of operations, the location of my lair, the city district of Hejčín. 
Apart from being the oldest city district of Olomouc (well, the oldest village that became a city district to be precise) and having some gnarly legends about green-eyed beasts and water goblins, a couple of names came up. Not surprisingly, most of them are men, but three names are female and their stories I would love to tell.
The first name that I am going to introduce is the name Růžena Kamarádová. 
Hers is a story of injustice, persecution, and human evil, but amongst all that, a story of Růžena’s incredible resilience and fire within.
TW: political imprisonment, mentions of rape, torture, violence, war, injury
Note: I have used Wikipedia as a main source, since there is an unsurprising lack of other sources in english. 
Růžena (née Sedláčková) was born in 1942 in Olomouc. 
Her youth was defined by a passion for the gymnastics organization/movement Sokol and the adherence to the ideals of democracy and the “teachings” of the first Czechoslovak president T. G. Masaryk. 
During World War II., however, her life ground to a halt when she was not allowed to pursue higher education by the quickly advancing Nazi Party. Instead, she was forced to work in a factory that produced a lice-killing powder for german soldiers. After the powder destroyed the tips of her fingers, she was deployed to an explosives factory. 
When WWII was over, Růžena was sent home, to Hejčín, to witness the “liberation” of Czechoslovakia by the Red Army. Troops of rowdy foreign soldiers, drunk on victory and alcohol broke into people’s houses, pillaged their belongings, and even raped women and girls. It left a bitter taste in Růžena’s mouth. Once the Communist Party started seizing power in Czechoslovakia, Růžena was none too happy about it. 
She wasn’t afraid to voice her displeasure with the Party. During the 1948 Všesokolský Slet, the attending Sokolové paraded through the city of Prague, chanting anti-communist slogans, and Růžena was among them. The Party was already arresting people during the parades and it didn’t take long for the StB to come for her. 
In September 1948 she was arrested, interrogated, and tortured by State Security. Růžena didn’t make it easy for the State Security agents interrogating her - at one point she took to attacking her torturers with a chair until they had to put her in a straitjacket. 
In a public show trial, she was accused of espionage, based on a letter to an American manufacturer of nylon stockings. The stockings were highly sought after in the Eastern Bloc, and so Růžena ordered a package of them to give away to other women. State Security found the package during a search of Růžena’s apartment and labeled it as a spy correspondence. As a result, she was condemned to seven years in women’s prison. 
As a political prisoner, she wasn’t given any favors - quite the opposite. As Růžena herself recalled in an interview for Memory of Nations, she was treated brutally by the custodians and other inmates alike. The prisoners were denied proper food, deprived of sleep, and forced to work long hours in less than humane conditions. They weren’t even provided menstruation hygiene products and medical attention. When she got sick, the prison doctor advised prayer. They were also forced to work twelve hours shifts in the laundry or in the field, every day, no exception. 
On top of all that, she had to be constantly wary of other prisoners snitching on her, since even the smallest transgression could result in even further restriction of the already meager food supply. 
After three years, Růžena was released from prison. With her health severely compromised, her physical convalescence lasted over a year. Her ordeal was, however, not over just yet. For four more years, she was under constant surveillance of State Security. Wherever she went, an StB agent followed. Every day she lived with the fear of being arrested again. 
Thankfully, that day never came, and not for the lack of trying from the State Security. These days, Růžena lives in Olomouc in peaceful retirement. She summarizes her experiences thusly - “I’m not angry at those people, but I’ll never forget what they did to me. I just can’t.” 
For more stories like this one, please visit Memory of Nations and consider donating so their incredible labor of love can continue. The people who tell the stories are disappearing, but their testimonies don’t and shouldn’t have to. 
“Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” - George Santayana 
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historical-babes · 5 years ago
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Milan Rastislav Štefánik (1880-1919).
Slovak politician, diplomat, French Army general and astronomer.
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He was a Slovak politician, diplomat, aviator, Freemason, and astronomer. During World War I, he served at the same time as a general in the French Army and as Minister of War for Czechoslovakia. As one of the leading members of the Czechoslovak National Council (the resistance government), he contributed decisively to the cause of Czechoslovakian sovereignty, since the status of Czech- and Slovak-populated territories was one of those in question until shortly before the disintegration of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, in 1918.
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After study at the University of Prague, from which he received a doctorate of philosophy in 1904, Štefánik went to Paris. Joining the staff of the astronomical observatory at Meudon, he served on scientific expeditions to Africa, the Americas, and Oceania. Becoming a naturalized French citizen, he joined the army after the outbreak of World War I and eventually was drawn to the Czechoslovak liberation movement. Encouraged by the French government, he was sent on military and political missions to the United States, Russia, Italy, and other Allied powers. In 1918 he became minister of war in the provisional Czechoslovak government. The following year he perished in an airplane crash.
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He made a big impact both in astronomy and politics during his short life. His passion for politics developed while he studied astronomy and philosophy in Prague. His political activism put him in touch with mentors such as Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk and Vavro Šrobár. These men influenced Stefanik's strong desire to unite the Czech and Slovak people in one independent nation free from Austria-Hungarian rule.
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Note: "He was a general of the French army, but was born in the part of Austrian empire that is now Slovakia, he was so damn smart and accomplished so much it's insane. He died in a plane crash, but I honestly think the then president of Czechoslovakia was behind it. Anyway, I would die for those damn blue eyes!! 😍😍"
[Submission]
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sciencespies · 3 years ago
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Gardening for wildlife enhances bird diversity beyond your own backyard
https://sciencespies.com/nature/gardening-for-wildlife-enhances-bird-diversity-beyond-your-own-backyard/
Gardening for wildlife enhances bird diversity beyond your own backyard
Households manage their yards in diverse ways and new research has found that their landscaping and management decisions have the potential to increase wild bird habitat and influence bird biodiversity in their yard and also at the neighborhood and city scale.
Across the United States, bird populations are declining due to decreases in availability of habitat. Recently, a team of scientists explored the value of the biggest chunk of green space found in cities — residential yards -as wildlife habitat. A new study, “Residential yard management and landscape cover affect urban bird community diversity across the continental USA,” was published this month in the journal Ecological Applications. The research was co-led by USDA Forest Service Research Ecologist Susannah Lerman and Post-Doctoral Researcher Desirée L. Narango from City University of New York and University of Massachusetts. Together with partners they conducted bird diversity observations in four residential yard types and in natural parks in six cities with distinctly different climate conditions: Baltimore, MD; Boston, MA; Los Angeles, CA; Miami, FL; Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN; and Phoenix, AZ. The researchers found similar patterns in all six cities; although urban parks support more species of conservation concern (an official designation of species whose long-term persistence is in question) compared with yards, yards certified as wildlife habitat through the National Wildlife Federation’s certification program support a wider variety of bird species compared with more traditional yard landscaping (e.g., lawn-dominated yards.) This suggests that landscape management for wildlife can contribute to region-wide bird diversity. The study also considered public interest levels based on Google searches and bird sightings and found that yards supported more popular species compared with parks.
“This study shows that when people landscape with wildlife in mind, householders can contribute to conservation right in their own back yards,” said Lerman, who is with the Forest Service’s Northern Research Station. “And our yards often support some of our most beloved backyard birds.”
“Scientists are finding that we can’t study cities in isolation. It will improve bird conservation efforts if we can understand which management practices are effective across regions and nationally, and which are effective at a more local level, ” said Narango.
In addition to Lerman and Narango, co-authors include Meghan L. Avolio, Johns Hopkins University; Anika R. Bratt, Duke University and Davidson College; Jesse M. Engebretson, University of Minnesota; Peter M. Groffman, City University of New York and Cary Institute; Sharon J. Hall, Arizona State University; James B. Heffernan, Duke University; Sarah E. Hobbie, University of Minnesota; Kelli L. Larson, Arizona State University; Dexter H. Locke, USDA Forest Service; Christopher Neill, Woodwell Climate Research Center; Kristen C. Nelson, University of Minnesota; Josep Padullés Cubino, University of Minnesota and Masaryk University; and Tara L. E. Trammell, University of Delaware.
Story Source:
Materials provided by USDA Forest Service – Northern Research Station. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.
#Nature
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brookston · 2 years ago
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Holidays 3.7
Holidays
Alexander Graham Bell Day
Arbor Day (California)
Bird Day (California)
Bloody Sunday Anniversary Day (Selma, Alabama)
Chamorro Heritage Day (Guam)
Equal Pay Day (Gleicher Bezahlungstag; Germany)
Finnmarkslopet Dog Sled Race (Finland)
First Planting Festival (Elder Scrolls)
Get Grandma To Write Down Her Meatloaf Recipe Day
Hamilton Lavity Stoutt Day (British Virgin Islands)
International Day of the Anti-Fascist Woman
International Women’s Day (Angola, Tajikistan)
INTERPOL International Day of Remembrance for Fallen Officers
Liberation of Sulaymaniyah (Iraqi Kurdistan)
Mahasivarathri Day (Sri Lanka)
Masaryk Day (Czech Republic, Slovakia)
Maslenitsa (Russia)
National Be Heard Day
National Ben Day
National Heroes and Benefactors Day (Belize)
Nones of March (Ancient Rome)
Plant Power Day (UK)
Say Hello Day
Teacher’s Day (Albania)
Texas Energy Day (Texas)
307 Day
World Oneness Day
Food & Drink Celebrations
National Cereal Day
National Crown Roast of Pork Day
National Flapjack Day
Punch Roll Day (Sweden)
1st Tuesday in March
Football Day (England) [1st Tuesday]
National Sportsmanship Day [1st Tuesday]
Peace Corps Day [1st Tuesday]
Town Meeting Day (Vermont) [1st Tuesday]
Unique Names Day [Tuesday of Name Week]
Independence Days
Aleutian Islands (Declared; 2020) [unrecognized]
Feast Days
Barbara Eden Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Billy (Muppetism)
Contradiction Day (No It’s Not!; Pastafarian)
Empodocles (Positivist; Saint)
Festival for Vedovus (God of the Dead & Volcanic Movements; Ancient Rome)
Full Moon [3rd of the Year] (a.k.a. ... 
Big Famine Moon (Choctaw)
Chase Moon (England, Wicca)
Death Moon (Neo-Pagan)
Crow Comes Back Moon (Traditional)
Dolyatra (Powder Festival; India; Hinduism) [3rd Lunar Full Moon]
Fish Moon (Colonial)
Harvest Moon (South Africa)
Makha Bucha (Festival Celebrating the Concept of an Ideal Community; Buddhism; Thailand) [3rd Lunar Full Moon]
Sap Moon (Alternate, North America)
Sleepy Moon (China)
Sore Eyes Moon (Traditional)
Southern Hemisphere: Corn, Harvest
Strong Winds Moon (Traditional)
Sugar Moon (Traditional)
Windy Moon (Cherokee)
Winds Moon (Celtic)
Worm Moon (American Indian, Traditional)
José Olallo (Christian; Saint)
Junoalia (Old Roman Festival to Juno)
Leonid Feodorov (Russian Greek Catholic Church)
Paul the Simple (Christian; Saint)
Perpetua and Felicity (Christian; Saints)
Psyche’s Day (Pagan)
Pierre-Henri Dorie, Siméon-François Berneux (Christian; part of The Korean Martyrs)
Thomas of Aquino, Doctor of the Church (Christian; Saint)
Treachery Day (Church of the SubGenius)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Taian (大安 Japan) [Lucky all day.]
Umu Limnu (Evil Day; Babylonian Calendar; 11 of 60)
Premieres
Alice the Collegiate (Disney Cartoon; 1927)
Coal Miner’s Daughter
Foxes (Film; 1980)
From Genesis to Revelation, by Genesis (Album; 1969)
The Golden Eggs (Disney Cartoon; 1941)
The Grand Budapest Hotel (Film; 2014)
Highlander (Film; 1986)
The Long Goodbye (Film; 1973)
Mame (Film; 1974)
Mickey’s Grand Opera (Disney Cartoon; 1936)
Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day (Film; 2008)
Mr. Peabody & Sherman (Animated Film; 2014)
My Beautiful Launderette (Film; 1986)
A Room with a View (Film; 1986)
Sailor Moon (Japanese Anime Series; 1992)
The Six Million Dollar Man (TV Series; 1973)
Way Out West, by Sonny Rollins (Album; 1957)
Young Americans, by David Bowie (Album; 1975)
Today’s Name Days
Felicitas, Perpetua, Reinhard (Austria)
Bogoljub, Felicita, Perpetua, Teofil (Croatia)
Tomáš (Czech Republic)
Perpetua (Denmark)
Ralf, Raul, Rolf, Rudolf, Ruudi, Ruut (Estonia)
Taika, Tarja, Taru (Finland)
Félicie, Félicité, Nathan (France)
Felicitas, Felizitas, Perpet, Reinhard, Volker (Germany)
Evgenios (Greece)
Tamás (Hungary)
Quintilio, Tommaso (Italy)
Ella, Elmira (Latvia)
Felicita, Galmantė, Rimtautas, Tomas (Lithuania)
Are, Arild (Norway)
Felicja, Nadmir, Paweł, Polikarp, Tomasz (Poland)
Efrem (Romania)
Tomáš (Slovakia)
Felicidad, Perpetua (Spain)
Camilla, Ottilia (Sweden)
Davon, Devan, Deven, Devin, Devon, Devonta, Devonte, Devyn, Dewey, Lothar, Luther (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 66 of 2023; 299 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 2 of week 10 of 2023
Celtic Tree Calendar: Nuin (Ash) [Day 17 of 28]
Chinese: Month 2 (Yi-Mao), Day 16 (Jia-Zi)
Chinese Year of the: Rabbit 4721 (until February 10, 2024)
Hebrew: 14 Adar 5783
Islamic: 14 Sha’ban 1444
J Cal: 5 Ver; Fiveday [5 of 30]
Julian: 22 February 2023
Moon: 100%: Full Moon
Positivist: 10 Aristotle (3rd Month) [Empodocles]
Runic Half Month: Tyr (Cosmic Pillar) [Day 12 of 15]
Season: Winter (Day 77 of 90)
Zodiac: Pisces (Day 16 of 29)
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skimo-fashion · 7 years ago
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Queridos fashionistas En esta ocasión hablaremos de los lugares más feos y costosos de la Ciudad de México. 1.- Villa Coapa Miramontes Acoxpa la zona principal cara y fea durante el sismo pasado fue de los lugares que hasta la fecha no ha recibido la ayuda necesaria para levantamiento de escombro, a raíz de que se cayó Galerías Coapa perdió mucho auge,la plaza Acoxpa no es tan popular ni la otra que está junto al parque y yendo hacia las bombas es un lugar que perdió popularidad y sigue siendo caro y ni qué decir del bazar de pericoapa, piratería productos de mala calidad, mala higiene en los baños públicos, todo todo excesivamente caro el Bazar de pericoapa era considerado más caro que Galerías Coapa y que a coxpa juntos tan caro, ahi podías ir a ponerle un chip a tu Xbox para poder comprar discos piratas casi al nivel de Tepito y ni qué decir para rumbo Tasqueña mucha gente se quejo de robo asalto a mano armada en los camiones y a los transeúntes. 2.- Coyoacán está dividido en dos partes puedes llegar por Miguel Ángel de Quevedo parte bonita y puedes llegar por General Anaya llegando por General Anaya está la parte es fea todo Coyoacán es caro ya no está tan bonito como antes y si la parte para General Anaya ya quedó fea puestos de comida puestos ambulantes que no ofrecen ni calidad ni buen trato ni buen servicio y toda esa parte sucia incluyendo el mercado. 3.- Nezahualcóyotl una delegación excesivamente cara casi igual de caro que ir a Presidente Masaryk la gente gasta enormes cantidades de dinero en estos rumbos es un lugar con violencia robo asalto a mano armada muerte un lugar feo con una gran cantidad de antros de mala muerte donde en los noticieros sacan jovencitas de 14 y 13 años en estos lugares todas borrachas. 4.- Iztapalapa una delegación excesivamente cara en cuanto a los productos de la canasta básica en las tiendas y miscelaneas, en distintas colonias robó a negocios robó a transeúntes, muerte actualmente tiene la plaza comercial Tezontle que es una plaza el doble de cara que Acoxpa tiene el mercado y la zona en Sur 16 que es una zona sucia por donde la vean los mercados tianguis de la zona excesivamente caros, cuentan con el tianguis de San Juan y a orillas de Tláhuac tienen las torres ambos lugares excesivamente caros muy parecidos unos entre otros y ahí puedes ir a encontrar el celular que te robaron, el estéreo de tu carro, los tapones de tu carro entre otros. 5.- La doctores zona excesivamente cara casi tan cara como ir a la Colonia Roma zona con violencia zona excesivamente cara todas las fondas lugares de quesadillas sucios, mala higiene y caros zona que no es segura y que es demasiado cara para lo que realmente ofrece. 6.- Ciudad Azteca entre la Ciudad de México y el estado de México una zona también realmente sucia, cuenta con una plaza comercial donde la gente no tiene ningún respeto ni para entrar ni para salir tanto en el estacionamiento como transeúnte, zona cara sucia y llena de violencia aquí la gente gasta mucho en el centro comercial puesto que no hay mucho a donde ir a excepción del parque de Ciudad Azteca que es como un bosque con un medio lago pero todo el parque está sucio, la gente que vende quesadillas sopes refrescos frituras todo es caro y con mala higiene. 7.- Azcapotzalco otra zona excesivamente cara ahora cuenta con 2 centros comerciales que son bastante populares en la zona entre los adolescentes y adultos jóvenes que gustan de ir a presumir a la zona lugar lleno de reggaetoneros zona con altos índices de violencia robó entre otros zona sucia mala higiene mala educación lugar y zona más popular donde los jóvenes adolescentes tienden a drogarse. Estos lugares son zonas caras que la gente no se da cuenta porque tienen un mal estereotipo de lo que es caro y lo anudan a zonas como Polanco la Roma y la Condesa entre otras, que en realidad si lo vemos desde otra perspectiva estás zonas no son tan caras comparada a todo lo que gasta la población mexicana en estas zonas mencionadas, sólo porque son zonas feas sucias la gente se identifica más fácil y no le pesa pagar y son personas que no hacen cuentas al día de lo que se gasta en un fin de semana en estos lugares Recuerden el dicho lo barato sale más caro porque al ir pagando de a $20 por puesto y ya te echaste como $2000 al día qué es lo que te saldría bien comer en un buen lugar en una buena zona a la larga sale peor porque todos estos lugares con mala higiene hacen que la gente se enferme más fácil y más seguido by Tory Delarge♡.
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brookstonalmanac · 2 years ago
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Holidays 3.7
Holidays
Alexander Graham Bell Day
Arbor Day (California)
Bird Day (California)
Bloody Sunday Anniversary Day (Selma, Alabama)
Chamorro Heritage Day (Guam)
Equal Pay Day (Gleicher Bezahlungstag; Germany)
Finnmarkslopet Dog Sled Race (Finland)
First Planting Festival (Elder Scrolls)
Get Grandma To Write Down Her Meatloaf Recipe Day
Hamilton Lavity Stoutt Day (British Virgin Islands)
International Day of the Anti-Fascist Woman
International Women’s Day (Angola, Tajikistan)
INTERPOL International Day of Remembrance for Fallen Officers
Liberation of Sulaymaniyah (Iraqi Kurdistan)
Mahasivarathri Day (Sri Lanka)
Masaryk Day (Czech Republic, Slovakia)
Maslenitsa (Russia)
National Be Heard Day
National Ben Day
National Heroes and Benefactors Day (Belize)
Nones of March (Ancient Rome)
Plant Power Day (UK)
Say Hello Day
Teacher’s Day (Albania)
Texas Energy Day (Texas)
307 Day
World Oneness Day
Food & Drink Celebrations
National Cereal Day
National Crown Roast of Pork Day
National Flapjack Day
Punch Roll Day (Sweden)
1st Tuesday in March
Football Day (England) [1st Tuesday]
National Sportsmanship Day [1st Tuesday]
Peace Corps Day [1st Tuesday]
Town Meeting Day (Vermont) [1st Tuesday]
Unique Names Day [Tuesday of Name Week]
Independence Days
Aleutian Islands (Declared; 2020) [unrecognized]
Feast Days
Barbara Eden Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Billy (Muppetism)
Contradiction Day (No It’s Not!; Pastafarian)
Empodocles (Positivist; Saint)
Festival for Vedovus (God of the Dead & Volcanic Movements; Ancient Rome)
Full Moon [3rd of the Year] (a.k.a. ... 
Big Famine Moon (Choctaw)
Chase Moon (England, Wicca)
Death Moon (Neo-Pagan)
Crow Comes Back Moon (Traditional)
Dolyatra (Powder Festival; India; Hinduism) [3rd Lunar Full Moon]
Fish Moon (Colonial)
Harvest Moon (South Africa)
Makha Bucha (Festival Celebrating the Concept of an Ideal Community; Buddhism; Thailand) [3rd Lunar Full Moon]
Sap Moon (Alternate, North America)
Sleepy Moon (China)
Sore Eyes Moon (Traditional)
Southern Hemisphere: Corn, Harvest
Strong Winds Moon (Traditional)
Sugar Moon (Traditional)
Windy Moon (Cherokee)
Winds Moon (Celtic)
Worm Moon (American Indian, Traditional)
José Olallo (Christian; Saint)
Junoalia (Old Roman Festival to Juno)
Leonid Feodorov (Russian Greek Catholic Church)
Paul the Simple (Christian; Saint)
Perpetua and Felicity (Christian; Saints)
Psyche’s Day (Pagan)
Pierre-Henri Dorie, Siméon-François Berneux (Christian; part of The Korean Martyrs)
Thomas of Aquino, Doctor of the Church (Christian; Saint)
Treachery Day (Church of the SubGenius)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Taian (大安 Japan) [Lucky all day.]
Umu Limnu (Evil Day; Babylonian Calendar; 11 of 60)
Premieres
Alice the Collegiate (Disney Cartoon; 1927)
Coal Miner’s Daughter
Foxes (Film; 1980)
From Genesis to Revelation, by Genesis (Album; 1969)
The Golden Eggs (Disney Cartoon; 1941)
The Grand Budapest Hotel (Film; 2014)
Highlander (Film; 1986)
The Long Goodbye (Film; 1973)
Mame (Film; 1974)
Mickey’s Grand Opera (Disney Cartoon; 1936)
Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day (Film; 2008)
Mr. Peabody & Sherman (Animated Film; 2014)
My Beautiful Launderette (Film; 1986)
A Room with a View (Film; 1986)
Sailor Moon (Japanese Anime Series; 1992)
The Six Million Dollar Man (TV Series; 1973)
Way Out West, by Sonny Rollins (Album; 1957)
Young Americans, by David Bowie (Album; 1975)
Today’s Name Days
Felicitas, Perpetua, Reinhard (Austria)
Bogoljub, Felicita, Perpetua, Teofil (Croatia)
Tomáš (Czech Republic)
Perpetua (Denmark)
Ralf, Raul, Rolf, Rudolf, Ruudi, Ruut (Estonia)
Taika, Tarja, Taru (Finland)
Félicie, Félicité, Nathan (France)
Felicitas, Felizitas, Perpet, Reinhard, Volker (Germany)
Evgenios (Greece)
Tamás (Hungary)
Quintilio, Tommaso (Italy)
Ella, Elmira (Latvia)
Felicita, Galmantė, Rimtautas, Tomas (Lithuania)
Are, Arild (Norway)
Felicja, Nadmir, Paweł, Polikarp, Tomasz (Poland)
Efrem (Romania)
Tomáš (Slovakia)
Felicidad, Perpetua (Spain)
Camilla, Ottilia (Sweden)
Davon, Devan, Deven, Devin, Devon, Devonta, Devonte, Devyn, Dewey, Lothar, Luther (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 66 of 2023; 299 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 2 of week 10 of 2023
Celtic Tree Calendar: Nuin (Ash) [Day 17 of 28]
Chinese: Month 2 (Yi-Mao), Day 16 (Jia-Zi)
Chinese Year of the: Rabbit 4721 (until February 10, 2024)
Hebrew: 14 Adar 5783
Islamic: 14 Sha’ban 1444
J Cal: 5 Ver; Fiveday [5 of 30]
Julian: 22 February 2023
Moon: 100%: Full Moon
Positivist: 10 Aristotle (3rd Month) [Empodocles]
Runic Half Month: Tyr (Cosmic Pillar) [Day 12 of 15]
Season: Winter (Day 77 of 90)
Zodiac: Pisces (Day 16 of 29)
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jobrxiv · 1 year ago
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PostDoc in Cryo-EM of human translation control CEITEC Masaryk University The Tesina lab is looking for a PostDoc to use cryo-EM to study human translation control. The position is fully funded by ERC. See the full job description on jobRxiv: https://jobrxiv.org/job/ceitec-masaryk-university-27778-postdoc-in-cryo-em-of-human-translation-control/?feed_id=62803 #ScienceJobs #hiring #research Brno #Czechia #PostdoctoralFellow
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rightsinexile · 4 years ago
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Judicial dialogue about the Return Directive: Which role for courts in an era of executive governance?
This piece was written by Galina Cornelisse, Associate Professor at Vrije Universiteit Amsterday, and Madalina Moraru, a post-doctoral researcher at the Law faculty at Masaryk University. It was originally published by EU Immigration and Asylum Law and Policy on 1 September 2020.
The concept of judicial dialogue that is central to our book Law and Judicial Dialogue on the Return of Irregular Migrants from the European Union shows that in times characterised by legislative stalemate and crisis driven governance, courts and judicial interactions serve as important guarantors for the rule of law. As such they also set standards for policy-making that the institutions would be wise to engage with in the ongoing legislative process.
The COVID and perceived refugee crisis have seen a relapse of asylum and immigration policies across Europe towards executive driven policy making – both on the European level as on the level of the Member States. In this context the role of courts becomes especially salient and as such, a close look at the contribution of courts to the implementation of the Return Directive is more than timely. The contributors to our book show that European and domestic courts have played a crucial role in transforming the Return Directive from a ‘Directive of Shame’ to a positive normative example for legal orders around the globe. Judicial interactions in particular have been key for this policy transformation by giving the courts tools to act as gatekeepers for human rights protection and effective implementation of the Directive.
This has not been easy, since the task of those courts involved striking the right balance between competing objectives: they have been required to reconcile the demands of an effective return policy with the protection of the human rights of third-country nationals, or they had to find a compromise between traditions of judicial deference to administrative prerogatives over migration and the enhancement of legal accountability that is the direct consequence of introducing European legislation in this area. The 2018 Proposal for the Recast of the Return Directive put forward by the European Commission has brought back the debate on the design of return management and the vertical and horizontal allocation of powers. [Read more here.]
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