Dmitri (Dmitry) of Uglich, known also as Tsarevich Dmitri or Dmitri Ivanovich, was the youngest son of the first Tsar of All the Russias, Ivan IV Vasilyevich, more commonly known as Ivan Grozny or Ivan the Terrible. There is not much that can be said about the life of Dmitri of Uglich, as he died at the extremely young age of eight.
Media Assets and Official New Relic Logos
I wasn't even born when this LA3ZA QSL-card was issued in 1949. This is because I am second generation LA3ZA after my father. When the callsign was reissued to me in 2001 it had been inactive for 40 years or so. I still have the Hallicrafters S40A receiver which my father used with a 2 W input homemade tube transmitter. The S40A (image below) was what introduced me to shortwave listening during the good conditions of the solar peak in the late sixties, despite its mediocre performance I would say. The card confirms a 2-way low power morse contact (CW QRP QSO) from Oslo to Sandnes (400-500 km). It took place in the 80 m band on November 17, 1949. The text, which is in a mixture of Norwegian and CW abbreviations, reads: "Takk for fb qso m/qrp, es cul!" which in plain English reads "Thanks for nice contact with low power and see you later!" The first LA3ZA was active from 1946 and for some 10-15 years. Thanks to LA5DB, Kjell (Silent Key in 2011) for providing this card. He responded to an advertisement I had in the Norwegian Radio Amateur Bulletin some years ago. He used a 5 W transmitter and a 40 m longwire antenna on his side for this contact.
This art print was inspired/recreated from the original artwork created by Pamela Colman Smith for the Rider-Waite Tarot. 【Title】16. THE TOWER 【Size】8”×10" (20.3 x 25.4cm) 【Medium】Ink on Fine Art Paper (270g/㎡) *This is an open edition. *Each print will be signed on the back. *It has a backing board and individually wrapped in a clear plastic sleeve. *The colors on actual print may vary slightly from what you see on your computer monitor. ---Copyright ©Naoshi / ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.---
Fun and engaging ESL activities, games and worksheets in printable PDF format with full teacher's notes and answers for English teachers to use in class.
Here's a 1979 shopping carrier bag from W. Smith, a leading newsagent, stationers and music shop. When Winston Smith retired from the Records Department at the Ministry of Truth, he decided to open his own high-street Records Department in Scarfolk. Daily newspapers were updated every 3 minutes and anyone possessing an out-of-date edition was arrested, prosecuted for dissent, and declared a "Scarfnot" (An "unperson" in Scarfolk). Books were also constantly rewritten and "unbook" tokens were available. These tokens could be exchanged for any given book's amended pages. Indeed, some books were corrected so frequently that maintaining a single book could run into hundreds if not thousands of pounds. A book's contents could change drastically. For example, by 1979, the erotic sci-fi thriller, "Affordable Brothel of the 9th Moon of Jupiter," bore little resemblance to its first edition, which was originally titled the "New Testament," a story about a Galilean carpenter who opens a budget furniture store in Sweden. Most people found it easier not to buy or read books. Items for sale week of 06/11/1979: All magazines/comics - 65p: Women Weakly (Highlighting the disruptive and damaging role of women in society). Telescreen Fun (A weekly cartoon strip singling out individual children and deriding them for personal indiscretions). Rats 'n' Laughs (Hilarious images of people's expressions when hungry rats in cages are attached to their faces. Plus prisoners' letters). Music dept: "It's Inner Party Time!" and other public confession LPs & tapes - £3.99.