#max krause
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yourfavebooklrsfavebooklr · 7 months ago
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Some books by Asian authors to read this may!
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Edit: thank you @linkedsoul for letting me know that I misused the term AAPI in the original post. I’m very sorry about that, and have changed the title to accurately reflect what this list is.
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buckyeah · 8 months ago
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My procrastinating ass : I'll watch the episodes when the 3 parts premier is out
My procrastinating ass : I'll watch the episodes when ep 100 is out
My procrastinating ass : I'll watch the episodes when-
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best-series-forever · 1 year ago
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notanothertvpodcast · 3 months ago
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We have a new GOAT.
In honor of the Olympics, our theme was sports.
“Eli’s Comin’” (SPORTS NIGHT)
VS
Max Chapman (A LEAGUE OF THEIR OWN)
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tevantarlos · 6 days ago
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i don't get why the show cares about baiting bvddie-fans, like how many are there? most bvddie-posts on tumblr get max 5-10k notes, usually less, are there 500k of them on twitter and instagram?
why do they care if a few thousand people stop watching if they make it clear bvddie is NEVER HAPPENING? would it actually change how many people watched? probably not
and it wouldn't matter if fandom-drama was just kept in fandom spaces, but actors are getting bullied and sent hate, so it's not really ok for the show to continue to let that happen for 7 years and not do anything to stop it
From what they (the Bvddie fans, OS, and 911) act like, it causes me to think, that they assume the Bvddie fans make up the majority of the show's fanbase, which to me, is just nuts. People love Angela Bassett and Peter Krause, so I'm sure many fans watch for them.
And people love Bathena, Henren and Madney. But the way a lot of people act, they act like the Bvddies are the biggest fanbase of the show and I don't think that's true. Yes, I think they have a decent sized fanbase, but I doubt it's as big as they, (Bvddies and 911) actually think.
The thing is, 911, OS, and RG have never officially said that Bvddie is never happening. They're never going to do that. What HAS been said, is RG has said many times that Eddie is straight. The show literally had Eddie say he was straight in an episode this season. I think it was to try and stop the madness, but that will never happen.
RG and Eddie joined the show in S2, and they just want to keep stringing the Bvddies along, so they never deny that it's not happening, so they don't lose that majority of the fanbase.
Even with Eddie saying he's straight in canon, the Bvddie's are convinced it just a mislead and that they'll get 'Bvddie canon!' when the show returns for the last few episodes of this season. Of course, they've been so sure it's going to happen since RG joined the show, but it's gotten so much worse ever since the show randomly made Buck bisexual.
The show, and the main actors don't give a shit. If they did, they would've stopped this psycho shit in it's tracks shortly after RG joined the cast yrs ago. But I think they subscribe to the theory that any publicity is good publicity, which is simply not true. I feel like the show and OS are going to keep baiting those fans until the show finally gets cancelled.
It doesn't seem like there's any intention of them going there with Bvddie, but they're too afraid to actually say it and piss off those nutjobs.
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doedipus · 1 year ago
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I'm running late for class so I don't have a silly phrase for today but
hey what do you call a vegetable that's only kind of cool
youtube
a radish
credits under break
Alto Saxophone – Jukka Perko
Artwork [Cover Art (Detail)] – Gerd & Uwe Tobias*
Bass – Dan Berglund
Drums – Wolfgang Haffner
Guest, Bass – Christian Von Kaphengst (tracks: 3)
Guest, Piano – Frank Chastenier (tracks: 3)
Guest, Trombone – Nils Landgren (tracks: 8)
Guest, Vocals – Max Mutzke (tracks: 3)
Mastered By – Peter Heider
Mixed By – Arne Schumann
Photography By – Gregor Hohenberg
Piano – Jan Lundgren
Producer – Siggi Loch*, Wolfgang Haffner
Recorded By – Arne Schumann (tracks: 1, 2, 4 to 11), Philip Krause (tracks: 3)
Recorded By [Assistant] – Jonas Zadow (tracks: 1, 2, 4 to 11)
Trumpet – Dusko Goykovich
Vibraphone – Christopher Dell
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ARTISTS' BOOK DISPLAY, AUGUST 2023
The Insistence of Green Blue Transport. Judith Krause and Shelley Sopher. Saskatoon, SK: JackPine Press, 2007.
Postcards. Jo Cook, Wesley Mulvin, and Emily Goodden. Vancouver, BC: Perro Verlag Books, 2005.
Portscapes. Max Andrews and Mariana Cánepa Luna. Rotterdam, NLD: Port of Rotterdam Authority; Amsterdam, NLD: SKOR (Foundation Art and Public Space), 2009.
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sistersorrow · 11 months ago
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Due to nearly daily power outages and dropping out of college, I've had a lot more free time this year, so I decided I'd read more this year, and here's a list of the things I read either partly or to completion (I'm including ttrpg sourcebooks, comics, and fanfics cause I feel like it)
Jerusalem by Alan Moore
The Fifth Science by Exurb1a
Horus Rising by Dan Abnett
False Gods by Graham McNeill
Galaxy in Flames by Ben Counter
Flight of the Eisenstein by James Swallow
Descent of Angels by Mitchel Scanlon
The Men Who Stare at Goats by Jon Ronson
The Psychopath Test by Jon Ronson
Lost at Sea by Jon Ronson
The Rise of Kyoshi by F.C Yee
The Shadow of Kyoshi by F.C Yee
The Dawn of Yangchen by F.C Yee
The Legacy of Yangchn by F.C Yee
A Study in Emerald by Neil Gaiman
Norse Mythology by Neil Gaiman
Dreadnought by April Daniels
Sovereign by April Daniels
The Emerald Tablets of Thoth the Atlantean
The Corpus Hermeticum
RWBY: Scars by Doneesses
The Silmarillion by JRR Tolkien
The Prague Cemetery by Eco Umber
Hyperbole and a Half by Allie Brosh
The Bible Repairman by Tim Powers
Soonish: Ten Emerging Technologies That'll Improve and/or Ruin Everything by Kelly and Zach Weinersmith
The Gods of Pegana by Lord Dunsany
Time and the Gods by Lord Dunsany
Welcome to the NHK by Tasuhiko Takimoto
What If? by Randall Munroe
TTRPGs I read books for:
Eclipse Phase
Exalted (2e and 3e)
Lancer
Nobilis (2e and 3e)
Numenera
Ponyfinder
Unknown Armies (1e, 2e, and 3e)
World of Darkness (Old and Chronicles)
Continuum, Roleplaying in the Yet
Broken Worlds
Comics and Manga I read this year:
A Study Emerald by Rafael Scavone, Rafael Albuquerque, and Dave Stewart
Alters by Paul Jenkins and Leila Leiz
All the Last Airbender and Legend of Korra comics
Black Hole by Charles Burns
Giant Days by John Allison, Lissa Treiman, Max Sarin, and Julia Madrigal
The Unbelievable Gwenpool by Christopher Hastings, Gurihiru, Danilo Beyruth, Iren Strychalski, Myisha Haynes, and Alti Firmansyah
Gwenpool Strikes Back by Leah Williams and David Baldeon
I Hate Fairyland by Skottie Young
Irredeemable by Mark Waid, Peter Krause, Diego Barreto, and Eduardo Barreto
Jem and the Holograms by Kelly Thompson, Sophie Campbell, Emma Vieceli, and Corin Howell
Judas by Jeff Loveness and Jakub Rebelka
Kill 6 Billion Demons by Tom Bloom
Monstress by Marjorie Liu and Sana Takeda
Saga by Brian K. Vaughan and Fiona Staples
The Woods by James Tynion V and Michael Dialynas
The Wicked + The Divine by Kieron Gillen and Jaime McKelvie
Batman: Whatever Happened to the Craped Crusader by Neil Gaiman and Andy Kubert
Cheer Up! Love and Pompoms by Crystal Fraiser and Val Wise
Okko by Hub
Chainsaw Man by Tatsuki Fujimoto
Goodbye, Eri by Tatsuki Fujimoto
Inside Mari Shuzo Oshimi
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geekcavepodcast · 10 months ago
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EC Comics Returns at Oni Press
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EC Comics - founded by M.C. "Max" Gaines as "Educational Comics" back in 1944, renamed "Entertaining Comics" by William M. Gaines in the late 1940s, original home of Tales for the Crypt, Mad Magazine, Weird Science, Two-Fisted Tales, and more, killed by the censorship of The Comics Code Authority in 1956 - is now back after a near 70-year hiatus.
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Oni Press is partnering with William M. Gaines Agent, Inc. to foster the return of EC Comics with all-new series this summer. The publishing program will be overseen by Hunter Gorison (Oni Press President & Publisher) and Sierra Hahn (Oni Press Editor-in-Chief) in partnership with Cathy Gaines Mifud and Corey Mifsud, (administrators of William M. Gaines Agent, Inc, and daughter and grandson, respectively, of William M. Gaines).
Oni Press' curated line of EC titles will include at least two series on a monthly basis beginning in July 2024, in the genres of horror science fiction, fantasy, and more. Creatives include writers Jason Aaron, Brian Azzarello, Rodney Barnes, Corinna Bechko, Cullen Bunn, Christopher Cantwell, Cecil Castellucci, Chris Condon, Joshua Hale Fialkov, J. Holtham, Jeff Jensen, Matt Kindt, Sean Lewis, Stephanie Phillips, Jay Stephens, Zac Thompson, and Ben H. Winters and artists Kano, Peter Krause, Leomacs, Malachi Ward, and Dustin Weaver.
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New EC Comics Epitaphs from the Abyss #1, featuring a cover by Lee Bermejo, goes on sale in July 2024, and Cruel Universe #1, featuring a cover by Greg Smallwood, goes on sale in August 2024.
(Images via Oni Press - EC Comics 2024 Logo, Lee Bermejo's Cover of Epitaphs from the Abyss #1, Greg Smallwood's Cover of Cruel Universe #1)
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abbyandhanako · 1 year ago
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THE ABILITIES OF KRAUSE (KRAUSE BRAIN PARASITE/T-VERONICA)
The abilities of Krause is a psychic ability identified as astral projection and dream manipulation inherited by the Krause family, Relations between the Harmonia and Krause abilities are still under investigation.
The First Krause “Veronica” was executed as a witch during the time of King Harmonia for her strange abilities.
The ability can only be used by women and girls as men and boys such as Hugh Mishima (Enemy #03 of Team Plasma) and the late Max Krause do not show any signs of the ability, however men born into the family can pass down the ability onto their daughters as in the case of the latter and his daughter Louisia and granddaughter Hana.
The Krause Brain Parasite/T-Veronica is a phenomenon when someone with the ability uses it to affect the mind of someone else’s, For younger users such as Hana, The symptoms are severe case of hallucinations, nightmares and a state of psychosis, In Louisia’s case, It can result in death via painful seizures and convulsions.
The symptoms can also vary from person to person.
This ability is rarely used due to the potential lethality of it, especially with older Krause women and Louisia in general.
Drawbacks include severe headaches and nosebleeds caused by extended suspended animation, nosebleeds can occur in younger Krause girls due to poor ability control and the vulnerability of the body while sleeping and in astral form.
- Doctor Colress of Neo Team Plasma.
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spacetimewithstuartgary · 19 days ago
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New infrared space telescope with MPIA participation in sight
Kick-off for the PRIMA space telescope concept study
NASA recently selected the PRIMA (PRobe far-Infrared Mission for Astrophysics) project as one of two candidates for its new Probe Explorers mission class. PRIMA is designed as a space telescope that will observe in the far-infrared spectral range. MPIA contributes opto-mechanical components, including control electronics, for the two scientific instruments. The international PRIMA team has now met to kick off the conceptual design study phase, which will take about a year and a half. The study will serve as a basis for deciding whether PRIMA will be the one of the two space telescopes to be built and launched into space, presumably in 2031.
PRIMA is being developed as a NASA space telescope with an actively cooled 1.8-metre primary mirror made of aluminium. The two scientific instruments, a camera (PRIMAger) and a spectrograph (FIRESS), cover the spectral range between 24 and 261 micrometres. PRIMA is more than a hundred times more sensitive than previous missions, such as the Spitzer and Herschel space telescopes. To achieve this goal, the telescope and the measuring instruments must be cooled to –269 degrees Celsius.
The PRIMA consortium members anticipate a wealth of new insights that could deepen our understanding of the Universe. While PRIMA will serve as a tool for all astronomers worldwide in their own diverse research, the main research topics will be the conditions for planet and star formation and the evolution of galaxies.
Prima MPIA
“We are proud that MPIA is once again involved in a groundbreaking NASA space telescope thanks to its expertise,” says Oliver Krause, head of the Infrared Space Astronomy Group at the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy (MPIA) in Heidelberg. Krause and Thomas Henning are the two PRIMA Co-Investigators (Co-I) based at MPIA. “PRIMA will provide valuable observations for several key research areas at our institute, which we will be able to access quickly and without restriction thanks to our contribution to the hardware.”
MPIA’s technical contribution to PRIMA consists of two high-precision, actively controlled beam-steering mirrors, so-called two-axis focal plane choppers – one each for PRIMAger (PRIMA Imager) and FIRESS (Far-InfraRed Enhanced Survey Spectrometer). Their task is to quickly and precisely align and stabilise the instrument's field of view through the telescope to different areas of the sky.
The new elements are being developed at MPIA with support from the industry and tested for the required specifications. MPIA experts will also work on the electronics that control these mirrors.
Many years of experience pay off
For MPIA, PRIMA is the latest in a long line of successful infrared space telescope participation. Starting with the ISO (Infrared Space Observatory) space telescope launched by ESA (European Space Agency) in 1995, whose Isophot camera was designed and built under MPIA leadership, Herschel and James Webb followed. Furthermore, the launch of the Nancy Grace Roman Telescope is planned for 2026, for which MPIA is also contributing critical technical components. Across all these projects, MPIA has consistently demonstrated its ability to develop and construct mechanisms to operate optical elements for cameras and spectrographs, earning an international reputation for its contributions to space exploration.
Phase A begins
The PRIMA team’s meeting on 8 November 2024 at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, USA, marks the official start of the project phase for the creation of a concrete concept study, known as Phase A. Alongside PRIMA, the AXIS (Advanced X-ray Imaging Satellite) X-ray telescope project is also in the running. NASA will decide which project to award in about a year and a half based on the two studies.
PRIMA is particularly convincing due to the unprecedented sensitivity of the detectors for infrared astronomy, which can reliably determine the chemical composition of planet-forming discs and distant galaxies as never before. The detectors used are KIDs (Kinetic Inductance Detectors), superconducting sensors that can count individual photons and simultaneously measure their energy and arrival time with high precision. These devices operate at temperatures close to absolute zero.
The new class of missions, the Probe Explorers, is designed to fill a gap in NASA’s exploration of the secrets of the Universe between smaller and flagship missions. NASA has capped the costs at 1 billion US dollars each, not including the expenses for the rocket, launch services and external contributions.
IMAGE: An artist’s concept of the PRIMA space telescope. PRIMA is being developed as a NASA space telescope with an actively cooled 1.8-metre primary mirror made of aluminium and two scientific instruments. Credit: Spacecraft: NASA/JPL-Caltech; Background: ESO/S. Brunier
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harmoniasdissonance · 2 months ago
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The death of Lord Eisenhut Gropius by arsenic poisoning by his own son Ghetsis was written off as natural causes as Carol refused to give up her own nephew to the authorities as she took delight in her brother in law’s death.
The only witness to Ghetsis poisoning his father’s supper did not come forward as he fled the estate afterwards, that witness was the grandfather of Hugh and Hanako Mishima, Max Krause.
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best-series-forever · 2 years ago
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sethsings · 2 months ago
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-- Five Ways to Die - Water Prayer --
“Water Prayer” Water struggles with the inherent loss and destruction of maintaining Earth’s tenuous balance. Libretto Marcella Murray Composition Seong Ae Kim Cast: Alize Francheska Rozsnyai, soprano Rose Hegele, soprano Melisa Bonetti Luna, mezzo-soprano Lisa Neher, mezzo-soprano Kannan Vasudevan, tenor Seth Gilman, baritone Musicians: Clarinet/bass clarinet: Eileen Mack Electric guitar: James Moore Acoustic/Electric bass: Tristan Kastin-Krause Vibraphone/Percussion: Joe Bergen Drumset: Matt Evans Production: Conductor: Dmitry Glivinskiy Stage Direction: Shannon Sindelar Scenic Design: Efren Delgadillo Costume Design: Normandy Sherwood Lighting Design: Christina Tang Technical Director: Sarah Schetter Stage Manager: Max Mooney Sound Engineer: Nathaniel Butler
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goalhofer · 3 months ago
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2024 olympics Germany roster
Archery
Florian Unruh (Rendsburg)
Katharina Bauer (Berlin)
Michelle Kroppen (Kevelaer)
Charline Schwarz (Nürnberg)
Athletics
Velten Schneider (Leonberg)
Yannick Wolf (Munich)
Owen Ansah (Hamburg)
Joshua Hartmann (Siegen)
Jean Bredau (Potsdam)
Robert Farken (Leipzig)
Marius Probst (Herne)
Manuel Mordi (Hamburg)
Joshua Abuaku (Oberhausen)
Emil Agyekum (Berlin)
Constantin Preis (Munich)
Karl Bebendorf (Dresden)
Frederik Ruppert (Aachen)
Lucas Ansah-Peprah (Stuttgart)
Kevin Kranz (Frankfurt)
Marc Koch (Berlin)
Manuel Sanders (Duelman)
Samuel Fitwi-Sibhatu (Stadtkyll)
Amanal Petros (Nürnberg)
Richard Ringer (Überlingen)
Leo Köpp (Konstanz)
Christopher Linke (Potsdam)
Tobias Potye (Munich)
Bo Lita-Baehre (Düsseldorf)
Torben Blech (Siegen)
Oleg Zernikel (Landau)
Simon Batz (Offendorf)
Max Hess (Chemnitz)
Henrik Janssen (Norden)
Clemens Prüfer (Potsdam)
Miká Sosna (Hamburg)
Max Dehning (Leverkusen)
Julian Weber (Mainz)
Merlin Hummel (Kronach)
Sören Klose (Porta Westfalica)
Mona Mayer (Munich)
Skadi Schier (L��bben)
Domenika Mayer (Böblingen)
Rebekka Haase (Zschopau)
Gina Lückenkemper (Hamm)
Majtie Kolberg (Ahrweiler)
Nele Wessel (Annaberg-Buchholz)
Hanna Klein (Landau In Der Pfalz)
Carolina Krafzik (Niefern-Öschelbronn)
Olivia Gürth (Diez)
Gesa Krause (Ehringshausen)
Lea Meyer (Löningen)
Alexandra Burghardt (Mühldorf Am Inn)
Sophia Junk (Trier)
Lisa Mayer (Giessen)
Eileen Demes (Neu-Isenburg)
Alicia Schmidt (Ingolstadt)
Laura Hottenrott (Heilbad Heiligenstadt)
Melat Kejeta (Baunatal)
Saskia Feige (Potsdam)
Christina Honsel (Dorsten)
Imke Onnen (Langenhagen)
Anjuli Knäsche (Preetz)
Mikaelle Assani (Pforzheim)
Malaika Mihambo (Heidelberg)
Laura Müller (Verrenberg)
Alina Kenzel (Konstanz)
Katharina Maisch (Bad Urach)
Yemisi Ogunleye (Bellheim)
Kristin Pudenz (Herford)
Marike Steinacker (Wermelskirchen)
Claudine Vita (Frankfurt)
Christin Hussong (Zweibrücken)
Till Steinforth (Magdeburg)
Niklas Kaul (Mainz)
Leo Neugebauer (Stuttgart)
Carolin Schäfer (Bad Wildungen)
Sophie Weissenberg (Neubrandenburg)
Badminton
Fabian Roth (Saarbrücken)
Max Lamsfuss (Saarbrücken)
Marvin Seidel (St. Ingbert)
Yvonne Li (Mülheim An Der Ruhr)
Basketball
Isaac Bonga (Neuwid)
Oscar Da Silva (Munich)
Maodo Lô (Berlin)
Niels Giffey (Berlin)
Nick Weiler-Babb (Arlington, Texas)
Johannes Voigtmann (Eisenach)
Franz Wagner (Berlin)
Victor Wagner (Berlin)
Daniel Theis (Salzgitter)
Dennis Schröder (Braunschwieg)
Johannes Thiemann (Trier)
Andreas Obst (Halle)
Satou Sabally (Freiburg Im Breisgau)
Nyara Sabally (Freiburg Im Breisgau)
Alexis Peterson (Columbus, Ohio)
Alexandra Wilke (Berlin)
Marie Gülich (Altenkirchen)
Leonie Fiebich (Landserg Am Lech)
Luisa Geiselsöder (Ansbach)
Alina Hartmann (Bamberg)
Frieda Bühner (Georgsmarienhütte)
Emily Bessoir (Berlin)
Lina Sontag (Kleinmachnow)
Romy Bär (Chemnitz)
Svejna Brunckhorst (Berlin)
Sonja Greinacher (Essen)
Elisa Mevius (Rendsburg)
Stella Reichert (Kassel)
Boxing
Magomed Schachidov (Munich)
Nelvie Tiafack (Cologne)
Maxine Kloetzer (Chemnitz)
Canoeing
Sideris Tasiadis (Augsburg)
Noah Hegge (Augsburg)
Stefan Hengst (Hamm)
Jakob Thordsen (Hamburg)
Anton Winkelmann (Berlin)
Max Lemke (Heppelheim)
Jacob Schopf (Potsdam)
Tom Liebscher-Lucz (Dresden)
Max Rendschmidt (Bonn)
Sebastian Brendel (Schwedt)
Tim Hecker (Berlin)
Peter Kretschmer (Schwerin)
Enja Roesseling (Berlin)
Maike Jakob (Magdeburg)
Hedi Kliemke (Haldensleben)
Elena Lillik (Weimar)
Ricarda Funk (Bad Neuenahr-Ahrweiler)
Jule Hake (Olfen)
Paulina Paszek (Munich)
Pauline Jagsch (Berlin)
Lisa Jahn (Berlin)
Climbing
Yannick Flohé (Essen)
Alexander Megos (Erlangen)
Lucia Dörffel (Chemnitz)
Cycling
Philip Schaub (Ludwigsburg)
Nils Politt (Cologne)
Max Schachmann (Berlin)
Maximilian Dörnbach (Heilbad Heiligenstadt)
Luca Spiegel (Kaiserslautern)
Stefan Bötticher (Leinefelde-Worbis)
Tobias Buck-Gramcko (Göttingen)
Roger Kluge (Eisenhüttenstadt)
Theo Reinhardt (Berlin)
Tim Teutenberg (Mettmann)
Julian Schelb (Breisach)
Luca Schwarzbauer (Nürtingen)
Alina Beck (Garmisch-Partenkirchen)
Franziska Koch (Mettmann)
Liane Lippert (Friedrichshafen)
Antonia Nidermaier (Bruckmühl)
Mieke Kröger (Bielefeld)
Lea Friedrich (Dassow)
Emma Hinze (Hildesheim)
Pauline Grabosch (Magdeburg)
Franziska Brausse (Metzingen)
Lisa Klein (Saarbrücken)
Laura Süssemilch (Weingarten)
Lena Reissner (Gera)
Nina Graf (Berlin)
Kim Müller (Remscheld)
Diving
Lars Rüdiger (Berlin)
Moritz Wesemann (Halle)
Timo Bartel (Würselen)
Jaden Eichermann-Gregorchuk (Munich)
Saskia Oettinghaus (Rostock)
Pauline Pfeif (Berlin)
Jette Müller (Rostock)
Lena Hentschel (Berlin)
Christina Wassen (Eschweiler)
Equestrian
Frederic Wandres (Kehl)
Michael Jung (Bad Soden)
Christoph Wahler (Uelzen)
Philipp Weishaupt (Augsburg)
Christian Kukuk (Warendorf)
Richard Vogel (Mannheim)
Jessica Von Bredow-Werndl (Rosenheim)
Isabell Wurth (Issum)
Julia Krajewski (Langenhagen)
Fencing
Szabó Mátyás (Dormagen)
Anne Sauer (Bonn)
Field hockey
Mathias Müller (Hamburg)
Mats Grambusch (Mönchengladbach)
Tom Grambusch (Mönchengladbach)
Lukas Windfeder (Mülheim An Der Ruhr)
Niklas Wellen (Krefeld)
Johannes Grosse (Berlin)
Thies Prinz (Berlin)
Paul-Philipp Kaufmann (Mannheim)
Teo Hinrichs (Mannheim)
Gonzalo Peillat (Mannheim)
Jan Rühr (Düsseldorf)
Justus Weigand (Nürnberg)
Marco Miltkau (Hamburg)
Martin Zwicker (Köthen)
Hannes Müller (Köthen)
Malte Hellwig (Mülheim An Der Ruhr)
Moritz Ludwig (Berlin)
Jean-Paul Danneberg (Cologne)
Alexander Stadler (Heidelberg)
Emma Davidsmeyer (Bremen)
Kira Horn (Hamburg)
Amelie Wortmann (Hamburg)
Nike Lorenz (Berlin)
Selin Oruz (Krefeld)
Benedetta Wenzel (Berlin)
Anne Schröder (Düsseldorf)
Lisa Nolte (Düsseldorf)
Lena Micheel (Berlin)
Charlotte Stapenhorst (Berlin)
Nathalie Kubalski (Dinslaken)
Sonja Zimmermann (Grünstadt)
Cécile Pieper (Heidelberg)
Viktoria Huse (Braunschweig)
Felicia Wiedermann (Hamburg)
Stine Kurz (Stuttgart)
Jette Fleschütz (Hamburg)
Linnea Weidemann (Berlin)
Golf
Stephan Jäger (Chattanooga, Tennessee)
Matthias Schmid (Regensberg)
Esther Henseleit (Hamburg)
Lexi Försterling (Berlin)
Gymnastics
Pascal Brendel (Hochtaunuskreis)
Lukas Dauser (Ebersberg)
Nils Dunkel (Berlin)
Timo Eder (Ludwigsburg)
Andreas Toba (Hanover)
Fabian Vogel (Düsseldorf)
Helen Kevrić (Stuttgart)
Pauline Schäfer-Bach (Chemnitz)
Sarah Voss (Dormagen)
Magarita Kolosov (Fellbach-Schmiden)
Darja Varfolomeev (Fellbach-Schmiden)
Anja Kosan (Fellbach-Schmiden)
Daniella Kromm (Fellbach-Schmiden)
Alina Oganesyan (Fellbach-Schmiden)
Hannah Vester (Zornheim)
Emilia Wickert (Ulm)
Handball
David Späth (Kaiserslautern)
Johannes Golla (Weisbaden)
Luca Witzke (Kempen)
Sebastian Heymann (Heilbronn)
Justus Fischer (Hanover)
Juri Knorr (Flensburg)
Julian Köster (Bielefeld)
Renārs Uščins (Magdeburg)
Kai Häfner (Schwäbisch Gmünd)
Tim Hornke (Hanover)
Andreas Wolff (Euskirchen)
Rune Dahmke (Kiel)
Lukas Mertens (Wilhelmshaven)
Christoph Steinert (Berlin)
Marko Grgić (Eisenach)
Jannik Kohlbacher (Bensheim)
Alina Grijseels (Wesel)
Meike Schmelzer (Weisbaden)
Lisa Antl (Ingolstadt)
Xenia Smits (Antwerp, Belgium)
Emily Bölk (Buxtehude)
Annika Lott (Henstedt-Ulzburg)
Sarah Wachter (Berlin)
Julia Maidhof (Aschaffenburg)
Antje Döll (Haldensleben)
Jenny Behrend (Rendsburg)
Katharina Filter (Hamburg)
Viola Leuchter (Hamburg)
Julia Behnke (Mannheim)
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ultraheydudemestuff · 4 months ago
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Krause Building-Otto Moser's Cafe
2042-2044 E. 4th St.
Cleveland, OH
Beginning in 1893, and for nearly 100 years hence, Otto Moser’s was East 4th Street’s hippest hole in the wall—a cramped see-and-be-seen hangout featuring heavy food, boundless booze, and walls dripping with celebrity photos and theatrical playbills. Otto Moser was a crusty Canton, Ohio, native born in 1865. He came to Cleveland as a boy, lived most of his life on East 73rd Street (known as Otis Avenue until 1906) and launched his famous restaurant before the age of 30. His timing was perfect and his restaurant’s location was ideal. Until the 1920s, the area around East 4th Street (called Sheriff Street until 1906) was the heart of Cleveland's theatrical district, featuring a dozen or more theaters. For nearly 50 years Otto’s restaurant, located at 2044 E. 4th St. in the still extant Krause Building, fed and watered untold thousands of actors, comedians, musicians, acrobats, mimes, and impersonators, in addition to show patrons and other downtown denizens. The Krause Building, incidentally, was built by William Krause, who sold and rented theatrical costumes—another example of “right place, right time.”
Two of Moser's longtime employees--Max A. Joseph and Max B. Joseph--owned the restaurant in the 1950s and 1960s. The pair made some minor changes, but the restaurant maintained its relationship with show business celebrities and regularly closed its doors to the public, and opened only for performers for a few nights while the Metropolitan Opera was in town. In the mid-1970s, a second location opened briefly in downtown Cleveland's Park Center. Otto Moser's changed hands again when the restaurant was purchased by Dan Bir and Steve Dimotsis in 1977. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on November 14, 1985. Business continued to decline around the E. 4th St. location, and the successful renovations in the Playhouse Square district renewed Bir and Dimotsis' desire to be near the theater district. After a seventy-plus year separation from the heart of the city's thriving theater district, the restaurant--with its 1,200 autographs pictures, six mounted animal heads (including a moose named Bullwinkle), and waitress Norma Bunner (who came to work at the restaurant in 1955) -- moved to the Bulkley Bldg. (1425 Euclid) at Playhouse Square early in 1994.
The new location was nearly three times the size of the original, and the relocation soon proved to be a resounding success. Within a few weeks of opening, Dimotsis told the Plain Dealer that they were serving crowds in a single seating that outnumbered an entire day's traffic in the old location. By 2004, Otto Moser's continued to serve lunch -- during the week overseen by Norma Bunner who was then going on her fiftieth-year at the restaurant -- and dinner to theatergoers, entertainers, downtown residents, and tourists. Otto Moser’s, one of Cleveland's best known restaurants, located in the Krause Building on East Fourth Street for just over a century before moving to Playhouse Square, closed in 2018 after 125 years of service in Cleveland. The restaurant was replaced by Republic Food and Drink in 2019 which displays many of the original signed photographs from Otto Moser’s.
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