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- Published: 16 Jun 2009
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- Author: 05HK09
Colour | powderblue |
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Name | Hitler |
Ethnicity | Austrian |
Early forms | Hiedler |
Origin | Austria |
Members | Adolf Hitler, Alois Hitler, Paula Hitler, Angela Hitler, William Patrick Hitler, Heinz Hitler |
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Name | William Lundigan |
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Caption | Lundigan in The Fabulous Dorseys |
Birthdate | June 12, 1914 |
Birthplace | Syracuse, New York, U.S. |
Deathdate | |
Deathplace | Duarte, California, U.S. |
Occupation | Actor |
Yearsactive | 1937–1971 |
From September 30, 1959, to September 7, 1960, Lundigan portrayed Col. Edward McCauley in the CBS television series, Men Into Space.
In 1963 and 1964, Lundigan joined fellow actors Walter Brennan, Chill Wills, and Efrem Zimbalist, Jr., in making appearances on behalf of U.S. Senator Barry M. Goldwater, the Republican nominee in the campaign against U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson.
Category:1914 births Category:1975 deaths Category:California Republicans Category:American television actors Category:American film actors Category:People from Los Angeles, California Category:People from Syracuse, New York Category:Burials at Holy Cross Cemetery
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Caption | William Moseley as Peter Pevensie in the 2005 film, . |
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Name | Peter Pevensie |
Race | Human |
Nation | England |
Gender | Male |
Title | King Peter the Magnificent/ High King of Narnia, Emperor of the Lone Islands, Lord of Cair Paravel, Knight of the Most Noble Order of the Lion, Sir Peter Wolf's-Bane |
Birthplace | Finchley, England, Earth |
Parents | Mr Pevensie & Helen Pevensie |
Siblings | Susan, Edmund and Lucy |
Otherfamily | Eustace Scrubb (cousin) |
Major1 | The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe |
Major2 | Prince Caspian |
Film1 | 1988 BBC miniseries: Richard Dempsey (younger), Christopher Bramwell (older) |
Film2 | : William Moseley (younger), Noah Huntley (older) |
Film3 | : William Moseley |
In Disney's live-action films, and , Peter is portrayed by English actor William Moseley. Actor Noah Huntley portrays an older Peter at the end of the first film.
Peter is the eldest of the four Pevensie children and shares his adventures in Narnia with his sisters Susan and Lucy and with his brother Edmund. As the High King of Narnia, Peter has authority over all other Kings and Queens the country will ever have. Peter is described in the book as having black hair, dark eyes and dimples like his siblings.
When Lucy first stumbles on the wardrobe, Peter doesn't believe her, thinking it is just her imagination until he and the other Pevensies enter the wardrobe themselves; "A jolly good hoax, Lu". He later apologizes to Lucy for not believing her and is quite angry with Edmund for earlier denying Narnia's existence (Lucy had seen Edmund in Narnia before, but he had lied that they were just "pretending"); "Well, of all the poisonous little beasts". This is caused by Edmund's revelation of his deceit when, upon entering Narnia, he says; "I say ... oughtn't we to be bearing a bit more to the left, that is, if we are aiming for the lamp-post?".. Peter had already been angry with Edmund before he knew that Edmund was telling lies; while not believing that Lucy had been in Narnia, he did not believe that Edmund was doing Lucy any good by jeering at her and encouraging her about her claim to have found a country in the wardrobe. During the period between Lucy claiming to have got into Narnia through the wardrobe a second time and all four siblings finally making it into Narnia together, Peter negotiates a truce between Edmund and Lucy, although his annoyance with Edmund is still visible.
Edmund later strays to the White Witch (having met her when he first came into Narnia and been seduced by her promises of power) and Peter later confesses to Aslan that his anger towards Edmund (for trying to make out that Lucy was a liar) probably helped him to go wrong. Peter and his siblings had been under the protection of Mr and Mrs. Beaver after arriving in Narnia, and Mr. Beaver had suspected Edmund was a traitor from the moment he set eyes on him, but did not mention anything to the others about it until it was too late. Edmund is then rescued on Aslan's orders.
Peter received his sword (Rhindon) and shield from Father Christmas during the journey to find Aslan, and is later knighted "Sir Peter Wolf's-Bane" by Aslan after he kills Maugrim the wolf, chief of the White Witch's secret police, who was trying to kill Susan and Lucy. In the American editions of the books on which the 1979 animated film was based, Lewis changed the chief wolf's name to Fenris-Ulf, after a figure from Norse mythology. In those versions, Peter is given the epithet "Fenris-bane".
Wilst the great battle is being planned, he is appointed head General of Aslan's army. After the defeat of the White Witch Jadis, self-styled Queen of Narnia, and her evil allies in the Battle of Beruna Ford, he is crowned to the Clear Northern Sky by Aslan as His Majesty King Peter the Magnificent, High King of Narnia, Emperor of the Lone Islands, Lord of Cair Paravel, Knight of the Most Noble Order of the Lion. The ancient prophecy of two Sons of Adam and two Daughters of Eve coming to sit on the four thrones at Cair Paravel then comes to fruition. This marks the end of the hundred years of winter and the reign of the White Witch, and is the beginning of Narnia's Golden Age.
He and his siblings finally return to their own world (where they find themselves as children once again) 15 years later, to find that only a few hours had passed by there.
When the children are forced to make a decision, Peter, as High King, has the final word. Buying time for Aslan to awaken the other Narnians and stall the war, Caspian suggested that Peter would fight Miraz in a one-on-one duel. After the Pevensie children help defeat the Telmarines, Peter formally gives authority to Caspian to rule Narnia as king. Aslan gives Caspian the authority to "rule under Us and under the High King". Peter later confided to Lucy and Edmund that he was told by Aslan that he and Susan will never return to Narnia, as they are now too old, and have learned all that they can from that world.
The four children returned to their world, in which they were waiting for their trains to go to their respective boarding schools.
It is learned in this book that Lucy was his favorite sister.
Peter and Edmund went to London to retrieve the magic rings that Professor Kirke buried in The Magician's Nephew in the Ketterley's yard dressed as workmen, hoping to use its power and allow Eustace and Jill to reach Narnia. Both were waiting for Lucy, Eustace, Jill, Digory, and Polly at the station platform when the train crashed and killed them and everyone else, transporting them to Narnia.
Peter is described by Tirian as having the face of a king and a warrior. After Tirian passed through the stable door and saw Tash for the first time, Peter calmly ordered the demon to leave with his prey. As Aslan brought about the final destruction of Narnia, Peter was asked by Aslan to close the door, which he then locked with a golden key, and was one of the many people admitted in Aslan's country.
There are similarities between Peter Pevensie and St. Peter, who was one of Jesus's original twelve disciples. Like St. Peter, who was given that name from Christ, Peter Pevensie is given the name Sir Peter Wolfsbane by Aslan. As the traditional first Bishop of Rome, St. Peter and his successors, are primus inter pares, or first-among-equals with the other leaders of the church. Similarly, Peter Pevensie is given the title of High King. Lastly the biblical St. Peter, according to Catholic tradition, was given the "keys to the kingdom of heaven" and Peter Pevensie shut the door, locking it with a golden key, sealing the destroyed Narnia after the judgment in The Last Battle.
Category:The Chronicles of Narnia characters Category:Kings and Queens of Narnia Category:Characters in written fiction Category:Fictional sword fighters Category:Child characters in written fiction
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Name | Alioune Mbaye Nder |
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Background | solo_singer |
Alias | The Prince of Mbalax |
Born | 1969 |
Origin | Dakar, Senegal |
Genre | mbalakh and international |
Occupation | Singer, songwriter, musician |
Years active | 1990s–present |
Associated acts | Lemzo Diamonon ages ago |
Nder, whose music until very recently was mostly available only on cassette, is regarded in Senegal as a modern day griot and a super star of the new (Boul Falé) generation after Youssou N'Dour and Baaba Maal. He is known in Senegal as The Prince of Mbalax, and by some hardcore fans - The King of Mbalax.
Mbalax is a genre of African popular music developed in Senegal and Gambia. Evolving from the traditional rhythms of the Wolof people, and absorbing a Cuban influence, and later western pop, funk, and reggae influences. It incorporates traditional percussion instruments and singing (in Wolof, French, and sometimes English), with modern electric instruments such as electric guitar, electric bass, synthesizer, drum set, and also typically brass section. It was made popular by Senegalese pop star Youssou N'Dour, who Nder has great respect for.
Two of Nder's heroes are Bob Marley and Michael Jackson.
With Lemzo Diamono:
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Name | Hedy Lamarr |
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Caption | Lamarr in The Conspirators (1944) |
Birth name | Hedwig Eva Maria Kiesler |
Birth date | November 09, 1913 |
Birth place | Vienna, Austria |
Death date | January 19, 2000 |
Death place | Orlando, Florida, U.S. |
Years active | 1930–1958, 1990 |
Spouse | Fritz Mandl (1933–1937; divorced)Gene Markey (1939–1941; divorced; 1 child)John Loder (1943–1947; divorced; 2 children)Teddy Stauffer (1951–1952; divorced)W. Howard Lee (1953–1960; divorced)Lewis J. Boies (1963–1965; divorced) |
Hedy Lamarr (; November 9, 1913 – January 19, 2000) was an Austrian-American actress. Though known primarily for her extraordinary beauty and her celebrity in a film career as a major contract star of MGM's "Golden Age", Lamarr was a scientist, inventor and mathematician who co-invented an early technique for spread spectrum communications, a key to many forms of wireless communication from the pre-computer age to the present day.
On 10 August 1933 she married Friedrich Mandl, a Vienna-based arms manufacturer 13 years her senior. In her autobiography Ecstasy and Me, Lamarr described Mandl as an extremely controlling man who sometimes tried to keep her shut up in their mansion. The Austrian bought as many copies of Ecstasy as he could possibly find, objecting to her in the film, and "the expression on her face" (Lamarr later claimed the looks of passion were the result of the director poking her in the bottom with a safety pin).
Mandl prevented her from pursuing her acting career, and instead took her to meetings with technicians and business partners. In these meetings, the mathematically talented Lamarr learned about military technology. Otherwise she had to stay at the castle Schloss Schwarzenau. She later related that, even though Mandl was part-Jewish, he was consorting with Nazi industrialists, which infuriated her. In Ecstasy and Me, Lamarr wrote that dictators Benito Mussolini and Adolf Hitler both attended Mandl's grand parties. She related that in 1937 she disguised herself as one of her maids and fled to Paris, where she obtained a divorce, and then moved on to London. According to another version of the episode, she persuaded Mandl to allow her to attend a party wearing all her expensive jewelry, later drugged him with the help of her maid, and made her escape out of the country with the jewelry.
Together, Antheil and Lamarr submitted the idea of a secret communication system in June 1941. On August 11, 1942, US Patent 2,292,387 was granted to Antheil and "Hedy Kiesler Markey", Lamarr's married name at the time. This early version of frequency hopping used a piano roll to change between 88 frequencies and was intended to make radio-guided torpedoes harder for enemies to detect or jam.
The idea was not implemented in the USA until 1962, when it was used by U.S. military ships during a blockade of Cuba after the patent had expired. Perhaps owing to this lag in development, the patent was little-known until 1997, when the Electronic Frontier Foundation gave Lamarr an award for this contribution. Antheil had died in 1959.
Lamarr's and Antheil's frequency-hopping idea serves as a basis for modern spread-spectrum communication technology, such as COFDM used in Wi-Fi network connections and CDMA used in some cordless and wireless telephones. Blackwell, Martin, and Vernam's 1920 patent Secrecy Communication System (1598673) seems to lay the communications groundwork for Kiesler and Antheil's patent which employed the techniques in the autonomous control of torpedoes.
Lamarr wanted to join the National Inventors Council, but she was told that she could better help the war effort by using her celebrity status to sell War Bonds. She once raised $7,000,000 at just one event.
For several years during the 1990s, the boxes of the current CorelDRAW software suites were graced by a large Corel-drawn image of Hedy Lamarr, in tribute to her pre-computer scientific discoveries. These pictures were winners in CorelDRAW's yearly software suite cover design contests. Far from being flattered, however, Lamarr sued Corel for using the image without her permission. Corel countered that she did not own rights to the image. They reached an undisclosed settlement in 1999.
For her contribution to the motion picture industry, Hedy Lamarr has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6247 Hollywood Blvd.
The final affair mentioned in Ecstasy and Me is when Lamarr is around 50 and is with a much younger man, an artist called Pierre who Lamarr describes as "a very handsome young man ... he was a sensitive man; I liked him immediately." During this affair, Lamarr collaborated with Pierre on his paintings and lived a somewhat bohemian lifestyle. "In the new house we didn't have electricity or gas and it was freezing cold. We found a few candles and we sat near them trying to keep warm... we just painted, made love and ate once in a while."
According to her autobiography, Ecstasy and Me (1966), once while running away from Friedrich Mandl, she slipped into a brothel and hid in an empty room. While her husband searched the brothel, a man entered the room and she had sex with him so she could remain hidden. She was finally successful in escaping when she hired a new maid who resembled her; she drugged the maid and used her uniform as a disguise to escape. Lamarr later sued the publisher claiming that many of the anecdotes in the book, which was described by a judge as "filthy, nauseating, and revolting", were fabricated by its ghost writer, Leo Guild.
In an interview included in the DVD release of Blazing Saddles (1974), Mel Brooks claims that Hedy Lamarr threatened to sue the producers. He says she believed the film's running "Hedley Lamarr" joke infringed her right of publicity. In one scene, Brooks' character tells Hedley Lamarr, "This is 1874 - you'll be able to sue her!" Brooks says they settled out of court for a small sum.
Lamarr died in Casselberry, Florida (near Orlando) on January 19, 2000. Her son Anthony Loder took her ashes to Austria and spread them in the Wienerwald forest, in accordance with her wishes.
In 2004, the game Half-Life 2, which contains many references to important names, situations and facts in science, made an homage to Hedy, by giving the name Lamarr to Dr. Kleiner's beloved pet headcrab. Later on in the game, Dr. Kleiner specifically refers to the pet as Hedy.
In 2005, the first Inventor's Day in German-speaking countries was held in her honor on November 9, on what would have been her 92nd birthday.
The 2010 New York Public Library's exhibit: “Thirty Years of Photography at the New York Public Library” includes a photo of topless Lamarr (ca. 1930) by Austrian-born American photographer Trude Fleischmann.
Category:Jewish actors Category:Austrian film actors Category:American film actors Category:Radio pioneers Category:Jewish inventors Category:Austrian scientists Category:Austro-Hungarian scientists Category:American inventors Category:Women engineers Category:Austrian immigrants to the United States Category:Naturalized citizens of the United States Category:American people of Austrian-Jewish descent Category:Austrian Jews Category:People from Vienna Category:1914 births Category:2000 deaths
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Name | Saint Teresia Benedicta of the Cross |
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Birth date | October 12, 1891 |
Death date | August 09, 1942 |
Feast day | August 9 |
Venerated in | Roman Catholicism |
Birth place | Breslau, German Empire |
Death place | Auschwitz concentration camp, Nazi-occupied Poland |
Titles | Virgin, Martyr |
Beatified date | May 1, 1987 |
Beatified place | Cologne, Germany |
Beatified by | Pope John Paul II |
Canonized date | October 11, 1998 |
Canonized by | Pope John Paul II |
Attributes | Yellow Star of David, flames, a book |
Patronage | Europe; loss of parents; martyrs; World Youth Day |
She is one of the six patron saints of Europe, together with Saint Benedict of Nursia, Saints Cyril and Methodius, Saint Bridget of Sweden and Saint Catherine of Siena.
In 1916, she received a doctorate of philosophy from the University of Göttingen, with a dissertation under Edmund Husserl, Zum Problem der Einfühlung (On the Problem of Empathy). She then became a member of the faculty in Freiburg. In the previous year she had worked with Martin Heidegger in editing Husserl's papers for publication, Heidegger being appointed similarly as a teaching assistant to Husserl at Freiburg in October 1916. But she was rejected as a woman with further habilitational studies at the University of Freiburg and failed to successfully reach in a habilitational study "Psychische Kausalität" (Psychic Causality) at the University of Göttingen in 1919.
While Stein had earlier contacts with Catholicism, it was her reading of the autobiography of the mystic St. Teresa of Ávila on a holiday in Göttingen in 1921 that caused her conversion. Baptized on January 1, 1922, she gave up her assistantship with Husserl to teach at a Dominican girls' school in Speyer from 1922 to 1932. While there, she translated Thomas Aquinas' De Veritate (On Truth) into German and familiarized herself with Catholic philosophy in general and abandoned the phenomenology of her former teacher Husserl for Thomism. She visited Husserl and Heidegger at Freiburg in April 1929, in the same month that Heidegger gave a speech to Husserl (like Stein, a Jewish convert to Christianity) on his 70th birthday. In 1932 she became a lecturer at the Institute for Pedagogy at Münster, but anti-Semitic legislation passed by the Nazi government forced her to resign the post in 1933: the same year in which her former colleague Martin Heidegger became Rector at Freiburg and stated that "The Führer, and he alone, is the present and future law of Germany." In a letter to Pope Pius XI, she denounced the Nazi regime and asked the Pope to openly denounce the regime "to put a stop to this abuse of Christ's name."
Stein's letter received no answer, and it is not known for sure whether Pius XI even read it. However, in 1937, Pope Pius XI issued an encyclical written in German, Mit brennender Sorge, in which he criticized Nazism, listed breaches of an agreement signed between Germany and the Church and condemned anti-semitism.
She entered the Discalced Carmelite monastery St. Maria vom Frieden (Our Lady of Peace) at Cologne in 1933 and took the name Teresia Benedicta a cruce (Teresia Benedicta of the Cross). There she wrote her metaphysical book Endliches und ewiges Sein, which tries to combine the philosophies of Aquinas and Husserl.
To avoid the growing Nazi threat, her order transferred Sr. Teresia Benedicta to the Carmelite monastery at Echt in the Netherlands . There she wrote Studie über Joannes a Cruce: Kreuzeswissenschaft (The Science of the Cross: Studies on John of the Cross). Her testament of June 6, 1939 states, "I beg the Lord to take my life and my death … for all concerns of the sacred hearts of Jesus and Mary and the holy church, especially for the preservation of our holy order, in particular the Carmelite monasteries of Cologne and Echt, as atonement for the unbelief of the Jewish People and that the Lord will be received by his own people and his kingdom shall come in glory, for the salvation of Germany and the peace of the world, at last for my loved ones, living or dead, and for all God gave to me: that none of them shall go astray."
However, Sr. Teresia Benedicta was not safe in the Netherlands—the Dutch Bishops' Conference had a public statement read in all the churches of the country on July 20, 1942, condemning Nazi racism. In a retaliatory response on July 26, 1942, the Reichskommissar of the Netherlands, Arthur Seyss-Inquart, ordered the arrest of all Jewish converts, who had previously been spared. Sr. Teresia Benedicta and her sister Rosa, also a convert, were captured and shipped to the Auschwitz concentration camp, where they were gassed on August 9, 1942 when Edith was 50. They received no numbers, as these were only for prisoners who were to be kept alive to work.
The philosopher Alasdair MacIntyre published a book in 2006 entitled, Edith Stein: A Philosophical Prologue, 1913-1922, in which he contrasted Stein's living out of her own personal philosophy with Martin Heidegger, whose actions during the Nazi era according to MacIntyre suggested a "bifurcation of personality."
In 2009, her bust was introduced to the Walhalla temple near Regensburg.
The position of the Catholic Church hierarchy is that Edith Stein also died because of the Dutch episcopacy's public condemnation of Nazi racism in 1942; in other words, that she died to uphold the moral position of the Church, and is thus a true martyr.
Category:1891 births Category:1942 deaths Category:20th-century Christian saints Category:20th-century Christian female saints Category:20th-century philosophers Category:20th-century Roman Catholic martyrs Category:Auschwitz concentration camp victims Category:Carmelite nuns Category:Carmelite spirituality Category:Continental philosophers Category:Converts to Roman Catholicism from atheism or agnosticism Category:Converts to Roman Catholicism from Judaism Category:German hermits Category:German Jews Category:German philosophers Category:German Roman Catholic nuns Category:German Roman Catholic saints Category:German saints Category:German theologians Category:German-language philosophers Category:Latin–German translators Category:People from Wrocław Category:Phenomenologists Category:Religious workers who died in Nazi concentration camps Category:Roman Catholic philosophers Category:University of Breslau alumni Category:University of Freiburg alumni Category:University of Freiburg faculty Category:University of Göttingen alumni Category:Women essayists Category:Women philosophers Category:Christian mystics
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