“Fascists out, fascists out!” yelled hecklers. But the speaker of the German Reich Party meeting in Hamburg last week went right on with his hoarse oratory. “It is not historical,” he cried, “to accuse the Germans of starting the war against Poland in 1939.” Wrote Die Zeit’s reporter: “The man next to me covered his face with his hands and said, ‘It can’t be true.’ “
It was not true, but the outbreak of anti-Semitic incidents after the Christmas smearing of swastikas on the Cologne synagogue jolted West Germany into taking a new and disgusted look at the neo-Nazi Deutsche Reichs-Partei.
Odysseus and Loki. Capitan Jack Sparrow and Mary Poppins. It would seem that they’re all such different characters, but in fact, they’re all tricksters — characters who don’t abide by the generally accepted norms and who break the rules. Their deeds may be good or may lead to catastrophic consequences, but at the same time, the tricksters themselves are always much more complicated than any completely positive or negative characters.
We at Bright Side decided to find out who these tricksters are and why they very often become the favorites of both readers and viewers alike.
Peter Park was deemed an "FBoy" in Season 1 of 'FBoy Island' and was sent home during the first episode. Could Peter walk away with true love in Season 2?
Source: Instagram/@thekoreanpapiThree single ladies attempt to weed out the 'FBoys' from the nice guys on the addictive HBO Max reality series FBoy Island. The first two episodes of FBoy Island Season 2 just dropped, and the show is back in fine form with some interesting new twists.
By speaking someone's language you learn about them, their culture and their ideas. Breaking down the language barrier bridges cultural differences, fosters a world of inclusion and is a first step in helping to address humanity’s challenges. For us, language knows no boundaries. ncG1vNJzZmivp6x7rbXNoKadmV6YvK57waWmoGeVo3ykrdOenqiqqWSwtrjTrqmeZZyarrO6jKynmqaZqLVuucCipWg%3D
Facebook is giving its Portal video chat device a number of updates that turn it into more of a full-fledged smart display: Amazon’s Prime Video service is coming to Portal later this year, the social networking giant announced at its f8 developer conference in San Jose, Calif.
Born Christian Akridge and known to his online fans as Christian Leave, this popular internet personality was a part of the Press Play Tour in 2014. He has over 230,000 subscribers to his YouTube channel. He has posted multiple music videos on his YouTube channel. He was initially popular on Vine with over 800,000 followers.
Before Fame He posted his first Vine, "I Hate Myself," on July 8, 2014.
Trivia He joined YouTube in mid 2014 and, by early 2016, he had earned over 65,000 subscribers.
A Federal High Court on Wednesday restored Mahdi Gusau as the deputy governor of Zamfara following his impeachment by the state’s House of Assembly on February 23, 2022, inspite of a subsisting court order.
Naija News reports that the impeachment was set aside by Justice Inyang Ekwo, in a judgement.
The judge dismissed all the steps and actions taken by the House of Assembly, former Governor Bello Matawalle and the state’s chief judge in the purported impeachment of Gusau during the pendency of the suit in court.
As founder of The Pinky Promise, an organization that promotes honoring God, she challenges teens, young adults, and women to rise above cultural pressures regardless of circumstances.
Before Fame She founded the organization in January of 2012 and has grown the Pinky Promise community to more than 50,000 women in almost 4 years.
Trivia She is an international speaker and bestselling author. She previously worked at Universal Music Group - IDJ and on Wall Street.
At the beginning of the HBO series, she's a spunky high-born girl who wants to learn how to fight with a sword instead of how to make a dress. But some time after witnessing her father's execution, Arya begins a list of the people she wants to kill that she repeats to herself every night. We've known for a while that Arya would become a full-blown assassin one day, and now we're here.
In London’s Jazz Cafe, the sound of Egyptian legend Umm Kulthum’s song Alf Leila Wleila is reverberating around an atmosphere of anticipation. Fragments of light are reflecting off the Camden venue’s rotating disco ball—lighting up the faces of an intimate crowd who are waiting, drinks in hand, for Berlin record label Habibi Funk’s first live music show to start.
It’s late August and this diverse group of music lovers doesn’t seem entirely sure what they’re in for.