Naeimeh eshraghi biography sample paper
Grzondziel won karpik 2015 /Poland
Grzondziel won karpik 2015
XIII International Drawing Competition Satirical "Karpik" 2015 - Protocol
The jury at the meeting on 2 October 2015., Composed by Zbigniew Wozniak - chairman, Michael Graczyk, Jaroslaw Stojko, Margaret Biedroń, Anna Olczyk, established as follows:
GRAND PRIX -Krzysztof Grzondziel (Poland)
Prizes:Lubomir Lichy (Czech Republic)
Thomas Voloshin (Germany)
Dariusz Pietrzak (Poland)
Mayor's Award Niemodlin - Wieslaw Lipecki (Poland)
Companies Award Ornament of Nyssa -Jacek Frąckiewicz (Poland)
Companies Hasan prize of Nyssa -Bretislav Kovarik (Czech Republic)
Traffic Association Award for Regional Development Nysa -Henryk Onions (Poland)
Award of the Museum of Caricature in Warsaw -Tomasz Rzeszutek (Poland)
Prizes Agricultural Market Agency Regional Branch in Opole
First Prize - Daniel Strzelczyk (Poland)
Second prize - Jiri Novak (Czech Republic)
Third Prize - Janusz Grysiewicz (Poland)
Honorable (diplomas)Anon Anindito (Indonesia)
Chiorean Cornel-Marin (Rumunia)
Ricardo Ferreira (Portugalia)
Galym Boranbayev (Kazakhstan)
Zbigniew Piszczako (Poland)
LITTLE karpik 2015ProtocolThe jury at the meeting on 2 October 2015., Composed by
Zbigniew Wozniak - chairman, Michael Graczyk, Jaroslaw Stojko, Margaret Biedroń, Anna Olczyk, established as follows:GRAND PRIX - Milena Cempa, SP nr 1 w Niemodlinie, kl.
IVAngle.Class V-VIPrizes Agricultural Market Agency Regional Branch in OpoleI place - Joanna
Paluszkiewicz, SP No.1 in Niemodlin, cl.VSecond place - Dominica Krzemińska, SP No.3
in Ozimek, cl.VIThird place - Oliver Owl, SP Popiels, cl.
VCompanies Award Ornament from Nysa -Emilia Łukawska, SP No.1 in Niemodlin, cl.
VIPrize founded by Margaret and Mariusz Nieckarzów - Catherine Dolák, SP No.1 in Niemodlin, cl.VAngle.
Class 0-IVPrizes Agricultural Market Agency Regional Branch in OpoleI place - Kaja Wojtas, SP No.3 in Ozimek, cl.IISecond place - Matthew CEMP, SP No.1 in Niemodlin, cl.
Jianbo Jin, Huan Yang, Yujing Liu, Junjie Yang, Kunmao Li, Yanliang Yi, Dongchu Chen, Wencai Zhang, Shengfeng Zhou. Microstructure and enhanced strength-ductility of TiNbCu alloys produced by laser powder bed fusion. Materials Science and Engineering: A 2024; 890: 145889 doi: 10.1016/j.msea.2023.145889
Christian C. Schreib, Maria I. Jarvis, Tanguy Terlier, Jacob Goell, Sudip Mukherjee, Michael D. Doerfert, Taylor Anne Wilson, Michael Beauregard, Kevin N. Martins, Jared Lee, Leonardo D. Sanchez Solis, Esperanza Vazquez, Matthias A. Oberli, Brian W. Hanak, Michael Diehl, Isaac Hilton, Omid Veiseh. Lipid Deposition Profiles Influence Foreign Body Responses. Advanced Materials 2023; 35(21) doi: 10.1002/adma.202205709
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Tanushree Sarkar, Harit Jha. Industrial Microbiology and Biotechnology. 2024; : 387 doi: 10.1007/978-981-97-1912-9_16
Karina M Zaniolo, Sonia R Biaggio, Joni A Cirelli, Mariana A Cominotte, Nerilso Bocchi, Romeu C Rocha-Filho. Physical characterization and biological tests of bioactive titanium surfaces prepared by short-time micro-arc oxidation in green electrolyte. Materials Research Express 2022; 9(2): 025401 doi: 10.1088/2053-1591/ac4d53
Yue‐Houng Hu, Wan Chan Tseung Hok Seum, Ashley Hunzeker, Olivia Muller, Robert L. Foote, Daniel W. Mundy. The effect of common dental fixtures on treatment planning and delivery for head and neck intensity modulated pro
Making a Pass at the Mullahs’ Clans: A Love Story among the Iranian Mullahs’ Governing Clans, Canadian Government, and Academia
May 5, 2015, Toronto, 1 PM – May 18, 2015, Toronto, 12.41 PM Making a Pass at the Mullahs’ Clans: A Love Story among the Iranian Mullahs’ Governing Clans, Canadian Government, and Academia By Sirus Kashefi s.kashefi@hotmail.com Due to many victims and documents uncovering the Mullahs’ criminality and corruption in all existential directions, we acknowledge that the Islamic Republic of Iran is one of the most terrible pariah States founded upon internal and external terrorism and violence, against humanity as well as the environment, since the 1979 Islamist Revolution overthrowing the Pahlavi dynasty and dictatorship. For its crimes, see KASHEFI (Sirus), The Iranian State’s Crimes Against Humanity and Nature, Academia.edu, Oct. 7, 2013. In spite of Western oligarchies’ “sanctions” (often touted as “smart sanctions” targeting apparently the Islamist regime and its nuclear program when causing also “anti-sanctions”, “corruption”, and “get-rich-quick”) About this form of sanctions and its results, see RUBENFELD (Samuel), Corruption Currents: Vancouver Emerges as Money Laundering Hub, The Wall Street Journal, Apr. 30, 2015; Iranian President Lauds Nuclear Deal, The Voice of America, Apr. 3, 2015; OTTOLENGHI (Emanuele) & GHASSEMINEJA (Saeed), Who’s Afraid of Babak Zanjani?, The Hürriyet Daily News, Jan. 19, 2014; Tajik National Bank Denies Link with Iranian Businessman, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, Dec. 30, 2013; GORDON (Joy), The Human Costs of the Iran Sanctions, Foreign Policy, Oct. 18, 2013; GORDON (Joy), ‘Smart Sanctions’ on Iran Are Dumb, Foreign Policy in Focus, Sep. 9, 2010; ERDBRINK (Thomas), To This Tycoon, Iran Sanctions Were Like Gold, The New York Times, Oct. 4, 2013; LEVERETT (Hillary Mann), America’s Iran Policy and the Undermining of International Order, The World Financial Review, July-Aug. 2013, pp. 38-42; GLADSTONE Nayereh Tohidi Women's status and rights in contemporary Iran and thereby the trajectory of Iranian women's activism and feminist movements are paradoxical and complicated. 1 Many factors have shaped this contradictory status, including the patriarchal and patrimonial patterns in Iranian history and culture, be it secular or religious (Islamic), the state policy and state ideology, or the influential ideological or intellectual trends such as nationalism, socialism, Islamism, and more recently liberalism and a human rights framework. Another set of factors, of increased influence in more recent years, has to do with increased processes of globalization and the international currency of the discourses of human/women's rights spreading through transnational feminist activism and new communication technology such as the Internet and satellite TV. Increased globalization has intensified " glocal " dialectic, meaning the interplay of local-national factors with the global-international factors. This chapter provides an overview of the current women's movement and feminism in Iran from a glocal perspective. First, a brief review of the historical background of this movement is presented. Then, to illustrate predominant characteristics of leading feminist activists in Iran, a glance is cast over two prominent women, Sedigheh Dowlatabadi and Shirin Ebadi, who represent different generations of Iranian feminisms. This is followed by a brief discussion on methodological and theoretical issues concerning the women's movement in Iran. Then the trajectory of women's activism after the 1979 Revolution and the ironic and paradoxical aspects of the emergence of a growing women's movement and feminist discourse und
Struggle for Equality: From the constitutional revolution to cyber feminism with a focus on the role of new media in the women’s movement in Iran
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