In January 1939 the authorities forced the district rabbi of Würzburg
who had meanwhile been detained in a concentration camp
who was to be the last rabbi of the community in Würzburg before its destruction
From the deportation album of the Jews of Mainfranken (part of Lower Franconia).The handwritten captions under the photographs is at times of an anti-Semitic nature. "The Jewish Mischpoche (family) arrives in herds at the evacuation point…""The Jewish scum is being loaded…""The later the hour
the more handsome the guests…""On foot and by car the Jews stream in…"
Courtesy of the Würzburg State Archives (Staatsarchiv Würzburg)Yad Vashem Photo Archives 7900/94-99
Jews from Würzburg were among those deported
From the deportation album of the Jews of Mainfranken (part of Lower Franconia)
Yad Vashem Photo Archives 7900/111Courtesy of the Würzburg State Archives (Staatsarchiv Würzburg)
Yad Vashem Photo Archives 7900/112Courtesy of the Würzburg State Archives (Staatsarchiv Würzburg)
Yad Vashem Photo Archives 7900/110Courtesy of the Würzburg State Archives (Staatsarchiv Würzburg)
Yad Vashem Photo Archives 1014/5/27Courtesy of the BPK photo archive (Bildarchiv Preussischer Kulturbesitz)
In September 1941 the Jews of Germany were made to wear the "yellow badge" on their clothes; all Jews from the age of six were to wear a yellow star on their outer garments
In October 1941 Jews were prohibited from crossing the Reich borders
and November 1941 was the first occasion on which Jews from Würzburg were deported to Riga
At the beginning of 1942 the authorities dictated that all Jewish apartments in Würzburg be vacated
Their owners were concentrated in the buildings of the Jewish cemetery
under extremely crowded conditions and without any privacy: families were quartered in the mourning room
and several families were also placed on the second floor
Jews who had been sent to Würzburg from other communities in Franconia were concentrated in the Jewish hospital
were conscripted to serve as force laborers in factories
Strict regulations controlled the movement of Jews in the city
among them Jews who had immigrated to the city or been deported to it from other communities in Germany
A quarter of the emigrants from Würzburg resettled elsewhere Germany; the rest left the country
According to a Gestapo report from Würzburg
Before boarding the transports the deportees were required to hand in all their valuables
They were only allowed to take a few belongings with them on the trains
Before boarding the transports they were registered and meticulously searched for contraband objects and other goods which were not allowed to be taken
from where about a third of them were transported to Theresienstadt and the rest – "to the East"
the Gestapo officer in charge of the deportations from Würzburg
assigned German policemen the task of documenting three of the transports
Other photography of the deportation process was strictly forbidden
208 Jews were deported from Kitzingen to Izbica
The Deportation of the Jews of KitzingenOn the 24th of March 1942
From Kitzingen and its environs toward the East
In the two days which preceded the deportation
the Jews of Kitzingen and Ochsenfurt were concentrated in the Fränkischer Hof hotel in Kitzingen
They were sent by train to Nuremberg and from there to Izbica
Some 1,000 Jews were deported in this transport
208 Jews from Kitzingen and its surroundings
Kitzingen had held a large and organized Jewish community
In 1933 there were 360 Jews living in the city
who amounted to 3.3 percent of the population
there remained only two Jews living in Kitzingen
one of whom was married to a non-Jewish man
This deportation from Kitzingen was photographed by German policemen
and collected in album form for Michael Völkl
documents two other transports from Würzburg to the East
Also depicted is the deportation of Jews from small German towns
and the complicity of different authorities in the process: the local police
The photos are not always arranged chronologically
The handwritten captions under several photos are of an antisemitic nature
The deportation is referred to as an "evacuation" (Evakuierung)
10 September 1942, 177 Jews were deported from Würzburg to Theresienstadt
This transport included some 1,000 Jews from Nuremberg
The deportees were later transported from Theresienstadt to Treblinka and Auschwitz
Only 51 people from this transport survived
562 Jews were deported from Würzburg to Theresienstadt
562 Jews were deported from Würzburg on the 23rd of September
Some of the elderly Jews had been collected from across Lower Franconia
and concentrated at the Platz’schen-Garten in Würzburg
On the morning of September 23rd they were driven by busses to the train station
From Theresienstadt to Treblinka and Auschwitz
Only 41 people from this transport survived
seven Jews were deported from Würzburg to Theresienstadt
The last transport of Jews from Würzburg took place on the 17th of June
and from there to Theresienstadt and Auschwitz
On the 18th of June a transport carrying 36 Jews
The transport to Auschwitz contained 73 Jews
The community was officially liquidated on September 22
the remaining Jews brought a wooden crate containing 25 Torah scrolls to the Jewish cemetery
The incident went unnoticed by the authorities
as at the time there were many deaths and suicides among the Jews in Würzburg
Following the final deportation 29 Jews remained in Würzburg
of them 14 were originally residents of the city; the rest were Jews who had been brought in from surrounding communities
Five of the Jews were the children of mixed marriages
considered Jews according to Nazi racial law (Geltungsjuden); the others were Jews married to Germans
The Yad Vashem website had recently undergone a major upgrade
The page you are looking for has apparently been moved
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For any questions/clarifications/problems, please contact: webmaster@yadvashem.org.il
.st1{fill-rule:evenodd;clip-rule:evenodd;fill:#2a2a2a}By John Serba | jserba@mlive.comGRAND RAPIDS
MI - Rommie and Linda Bailey have sold novelty T-shirts
owned a mortgage company and manufactured identification labels for pet-store aquariums
They now do something closer to Rommie's heart: brewing beer and serving it to their Wyoming neighbors
They've quietly been doing it for the past week, during the soft opening of their Kitzingen Brewery
nestled into the corner of a strip mall at 1760 44th St
The Grand Rapids area's newest craft-beer spot will open Tuesday
and the Baileys are preparing for a significant influx of curious brew aficionados and neighborhood friends
brightly lit space decorated with photos and paraphernalia from Rommie's tour of duty with the Army's 3rd Infantry from 1985-87 in Kitzingen
one of the United States' strategic points during the Cold War
Rommie was primarily a motor pool clerk and mechanic
and fondly remembers assisting American soldiers in connecting with German families when they couldn't return home for the holidays
He also developed his beer palate overseas
native's military buddies drank American beers
he grew to love classical German pilsners and hefeweizens
he met lifelong Wyoming resident Linda in 1991
and together pursued their unusual variety of business ventures
They traveled to craft shows selling T-shirts
sold their aquarium stickers to businesses as big as Wal-Mart
they're quietly exiting their mortgage business
which they've run for nearly 15 years
hoping to retire on a true passion project
"This is my mid-life crisis," Rommie said with a smile
"I didn't get the Corvette or the Harley."
Rommie shows off photos of the Leaning Tower
chatting candidly about his past work and goals for the new business
A light trickle of customers who caught wind of the soft opening enter the brewery
eyeballing the board advertising five beers
and it's friendly," said Mike Harmsen
one of Kitzingen's first mug-clubbers
sipping a brew from a special German stein reserved for members
"The beer isn't something you can just get anywhere."
Although Rommie's proud of all his concoctions
he's most enthusiastic about the German styles he's brewed: the Easy Company pilsner
a rye beer - "raggenbier" in German - that forgoes other brews in that style and downplays the hops for a remarkably low 13.7 IBUs
Rommie makes his beer via four small brewers and three fermenters
a "home brewing system on steroids" manufactured by Greenville's Psycho Brew
everyday beers," an alternative to the hop-heavy or ultra-dark brews that tend to dominate the industry these days
He hopes to lure serious beer folk in with his American styles
and maybe turn them on to his beloved German brews
A board on the wall lists beers coming soon - "reinforcements," it reads - including an oatmeal stout
American IPA and a German Kitzinger signature
Although Rommie's beer appreciation stretches back 30 years
his brewing interest didn't begin until a decade ago
"He ended up doing it," she said
devouring information on the brewing process
"He just remembers everything," she said
He toyed with the idea of returning to Germany to study brewing for six months
"All my neighbors are drunks now," he jokes
But he's serious about his perfectionism: "I've thrown out so many beers because they're not up to my standards."
Now he's the head brewer at Kitzingen
drawing occasional help from an Army buddy from Illinois
and helped Rommie prepare for Kitzingen's opening
The Baileys' business idea germinated first as a private club for German beer lovers
then a German restaurant before they ventured into craft-beer brewing
and financed Kitzingen entirely on their own - they choose not to indulge the dollar amount
but Rommie said they've "done it cheaper than most
That includes much of the taproom construction. He hired others to build a bar and assist with some projects, but contributed the majority of elbow grease himself. On the business end, he offered to hire his friends at Railtown Brewing Company in Dutton as consultants
but they "paid it forward" and gave the Baileys free advice
"That was a real learning curve for me," Rommie said
"This industry is upside-down in terms of cooperation between businesses
Other breweries told us about their own mistakes
I'm sure it saved us a lot of money."
The Baileys' future plans for Kitzingen are modest
They don't intend to package or distribute their beer
They love the idea of catering heavily to Wyoming
which has not had a craft brewery to call its own until now
Rommie wants to expand his brewing equipment so he can make German double bocks
They'll add a small kitchen with the intention of serving bratwurst
a "Berlin street food." Until then
they'll happily call in and fetch a pizza for you from the neighboring Russo's Pizza
or welcome patrons bringing in a sandwich from the nearby Subway
The couple will work the bar's regular hours
They'll host groups of veterans and their charity fundraisers
give discounts on "Dog Tag Tuesdays." And then
"I love doing this," Rommie said
leaning on an area of the bar near a high shelf where his veteran father's Honor Guard flag proudly sits
"This is like a vacation to me," he said
Brewing - that's like going fishing."
John Serba is film critic and entertainment reporter for MLive and The Grand Rapids Press. Email him at jserba@mlive.com or follow him on Twitter or Facebook
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This article first appeared in print in the Stars and Stripes European edition Jan
It is republished unedited in its original form
Additional images taken that day were also published Jan
Huebner today surveyed the Kitzingen Basic Training Center for Negro troops
the Army's only experimental school of its kind
The deputy EUCOM commander toured the extensive former air base with 20 general and staff officers from Frankfurt and the 1st Mil
"is the spark plug of the whole Negro population in the European Command."
which expects to reach full operation by May 1
plans eventually to train every Negro soldier in the EC
Every three months 900 new men will pass through its classrooms and field exercises
though rifle outfits will stay only one month
Classroom instruction ranges from literacy training to courses on high school level
Each soldier will receive 10 hours instruction a week in English
"There are 14,000,000 Negroes in the U.S.," Huebner stated
"If the Nation is to utilize this manpower in the Army
we must develop its leadership potential."
the deputy EUCOM chief saw preparations for a vast recreation hall with two basketball courts
He visited a class on the M1 rifle and several other classes
"We are seeking a high standard of soldiering," Huebner said
"and we want to give these men the best available instruction in other subjects
It is estimated that more than a year will be needed to pass through the school all the Negro units now in the theater
Among the ranking officers accompanying Huebner were Maj
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A heat wave blasting through Europe smashed the German record
the 104.5-degree temperature recorded Sunday in Kitzingen the hottest in the nation since record keeping began in 1881
Sunday's heat nudged out the previous record of 104.3 degrees Fahrenheit set in July 1983 and again in August 2003, meteorologists told the Stuttgarter Nachrichten newspaper
Kitzingen is a town of about 20,000 people in southern Bavaria
Europe has experienced extreme heat since last week, with scorching temperatures saddling England, France, Poland, Portugal, Spain and other nations, AccuWeather reported
Britain last week saw a record high for a July day, and forecasters were warning that month's end could bring an all-time record to that nation, as well, The Telegraph reported
Forecasters there said temps will normalize for the next couple weeks
but that "by the end of July and beginning of August a second wave of very hot air is expected to push up from central and southern Europe bringing sweltering heat," the Telegraph said
Britain's all-time high of 101 degrees was set at Brogdale
had put 47 regions on Orange Alert after several cities hit record-high temperatures Tuesday
The weather service forecast an "enduring heat wave of significant intensity requiring particular vigilance."
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She was a life member of VFW Ladies Auxiliary #10281
Katharina Flickinger & Heinrich Most; and a brother
Visitation will be from 12:00 PM until 1:00 PM Tuesday at Coffey & Chism Funeral Home
Burial will follow in the Kentucky Veterans Cemetery Central
In lieu of flowers the family request that donations be made to VFW Ladies Auxiliary Cancer Aide and Research Fund
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a centuries-old German construction and engineering company
says it has acquired the PV manufacturing facilities of organic solar film developer Asca
The previous owners of the facilities describe Asca as a “largely loss-making” venture lacking in sales
Hering Group said in a press release this week that it will become a PV manufacturer through the acquisition of Asca BmbG’s solar manufacturing facilities in Kitzingen
French manufacturer Armor Group previously owned Asca BmBG
Hering Group subsequently bought Asca and renamed it ASCA GmbH & Co
Asca produces organic PV from facilities in France and Germany
The business claims on its website to have a production capacity of 1 million square meters of film annually
The acquisition by Hering Group – a centuries-old German construction and engineering company – consists of the Kitzingen production facilities
The Asca team will continue to “take care” of the technological developments in Kitzingen
Hering Group said it intends to expand the Kitzingen site and “identify potential synergies in the product and construction sectors” which may include projects with railroad companies
According to an Armor Group press release from Jun
Following extensive research and development
roughly €100 million ($100.7 million) in investment
such as the 64 OPV modules installed on the roof at the Dubai World Expo in 2021
Armor Group said that the cost and return mix of Asca was “not favorable” and that at the end of June
it had concluded that the conditions “were not ripe” to continue developing OPV-based solar solutions
CSA’s French and German operations would be “restructured,” the press release said
More articles from Angela Skujins
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Sergeant Major Lonnie Dunbar III became the Senior Enlisted Leader for the Space and Missile Defense Center of Excellence on 10 August 2022
He enlisted in the Army in August 2000 as a Microwave Systems Operator and Maintainer
completing Basic Combat Training at Fort Jackson
South Carolina and Advanced Individual Training at Fort Gordon
SGM Dunbar’s assignments include the 121st Signal Battalion
Maryland); White House Communications Agency (Washington
Kuwait); 53rd Signal Battalion (Satellite Control)
Japan); and 304th Expeditionary Signal Battalion-Enhanced
1st Theater Signal Brigade (Camp Humphreys
SGM Dunbar also holds the following certifications: Security+; Network+; Cisco Certified Network Associate; and the General Radiotelephone Operator License from the Federal Communications Commission
SGM Dunbar’s awards and decorations include the Defense Meritorious Service Medal (1OLC)
Global War on Terrorism Expeditionary Medal
Military Outstanding Volunteer Service Medal
Aviva Investors has added a newly developed logistics hub in Germany to its Perpetual Capital portfolio
The hub is based in the Kitzingen region of Bavaria and was purchased from the US-based developer Scannell Properties
the 12,000 sq m property is also fossil fuel-free
aligning with Aviva Investors strategy to decarbonise its property portfolio
Aviva Investors launches global equity fund
Sustainable funds in Germany grow despite outflows
Nor is Aviva the only real estate investment firm to acquire German commercial property
Germany-based Sirius Real Estate has acquired two business parks in Cologne and Göppingen for a total of €40 million (US$43.10 million)
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© 2024 Funds Europe Limited, a wholly owned subsidiary of Definite Article Media Limited. All Rights Reserved. Website design by 71 Media Limited
Political party (unless seeking nonpartisan office): Democrat
Number of years living in the district you seek to represent: 58
Family: Husband Gerard Fraher; Daughter Suzanne Fraher
Education: Cum Laude BS in Elementary Education
Current occupation/employer: Retired Teacher
United States Department of Defence Kitzingen
Please list all public offices to which you’ve been elected
when and where: Elected twice to the Chichester School Board
Please list any unsuccessful runs for public office and when: State Senate District 17 2012
Key endorsements you’ve received: Lucy Edwards
President of the New Hampshire Alliance of Retired Americans
Professional Firefighters of New Hampshire
National Education Association of New Hampshire
American Federation of Teachers-New Hampshire
International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers
Campaign contributions on hand and campaign expenditures to date: No answer
Top contributors to your campaign fund: No answer
Please limit your response to each of the following questions to about 75 words
I offer common sense bipartisan leadership as opposed to my opponent’s ideological agenda
experience crafting and maintaining a budget while holding the line on taxes are what District 17 needs
My priorities are to stimulate the economy and job creation as opposed to focusing on social agenda’s
I don’t bring a history of partisan politics and will focus on bipartisan solutions to challenges
in contrast to my opponents social agenda of voting against Equal Pay for Equal Work and trying to legislate a woman’s private medical decisions
I share the priorities of the voters of District 17
What are the three most important issues you would address if elected
Budget: I will work for a responsible bipartisan budget that invest in economic development
and preserving New Hampshire’s natural resources
I believe downshifting and rising property taxes are hurting our economy
We must have fiscal responsibility and balanced budget to build a strong New Hampshire
Economy and Jobs: I will work to keep the economy moving forward
I will support policies that foster a vibrant and diverse business climate and economy with job creation and training
Education: Guaranteeing every student a quality education is the most important investment we can make in our state
Students should be able to attend university or community colleges without crippling debt
We need to invest in our future by ensuring we have a well educated population that will attract new business to our state
I support Medicaid Expansion and will wok to improve it
New Hampshire needs a proactive long energy plan
to reduce the cost of energy for families and business
We need to create energy corridors to deal with projects such a Northern Pass and create green jobs to help our growing economy
We need to honor our comments to our retires
What specific steps will you take to make government more open and accessible to the public
I will always respond and help constituents and will hold monthly meetings in the district
Have you ever been convicted of a crime (felony)
been disciplined by a professional licensing board or organization or had an ethics violation filed against you
Are there any personal details about you that voters would be interested in knowing
I worked for The Department of Defense in Kitzingen
My daughter is a freshman at the University of New Hampshire
Many old regional chicken breeds in Germany are at risk of extinction
Keeping them is economically not viable even for organic farms
because the market is dominated by a few modern high-performance hybrids specialized on either laying performance or meat production
In addition to loss of biodiversity in case of extinction of those old breeds
there is the ethical problem of killing male chicks from the laying lines
Solutions to these problems are now being sought by the "RegioHuhn" project funded under the Federal Programme for Organic Farming and Other Forms of Sustainable Agriculture (BÖLN)
The Information and Coordination Centre for Biological Diversity (IBV) of the Federal Office for Agriculture and Food (BLE) has supported the project development by bringing various stakeholders together
The three-year project will investigate the performance of six local and endangered chicken breeds
such as the Ostfriesische Möwe or the Mechelner Chicken
new dual-purpose chicken will be created allowing an economically interesting poultry production in a regional agricultural context
the Friedrich-Loeffler-Institute for Farm Animal Genetics in Mariensee (FLI-ING)
together with the Bavarian State Institute for Agriculture (LfL/BaySG Kitzingen)
the University of Bonn and the expert advisory service for Naturland
want to show new ways for a more sustainable regional production
Preserving the diversity of regional breeds - ensuring the sustainability of poultry farming
"The diversity of local chicken breeds can best be preserved by using them," emphasizes project leader Prof
Steffen Weigend from the Friedrich-Loeffler-Institute
the focus of the investigations is on the local breeds of Ostfriesiche Möwen and Ramelsloher chicken
at LfL Kitzingen on the Altsteirer and Augsburger breeds
and at the University of Bonn on the Bielefelder Kennhuhn and the Mechelner
Private breeders support the project by providing hatching eggs
These old breeds of chicken are characterized above all by their greater robustness
they lag far behind modern laying and fattening lines in terms of performance
by crossing with animals from high performing lines
so-called utility crosses are to be created
The crossbred animals will undergo performance testing for traits related to both laying and meat performance
Testing husbandry and regional marketing in practice
"We hope to find dual-purpose chicken that perform well and are easy to keep"
explains Werner Vogt-Kaute from the Naturland advisory service
In order to ensure that the project has practical relevance
various Naturland farms with poultry farming and direct marketing will be involved in the project
Naturland's farms are to test the performance of the animals and the marketing of regional products in practice
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Nach Unterfranken sind laut Bayerischer Landesanstalt für Wald und Forstwirtschaft (LWF) nun auch Mittelfranken und Oberfranken betroffen
Bei Menschen kann die Baumkrankheit Entzündungen in der Lunge auslösen und zu Reizhusten
Das Gesundheitsamt des Landkreises Würzburg rät Spaziergängern, Verdachtsgebiete zu meiden. Hinweise auf betroffene Regionen erhielten Bürger in den Amtsblättern und auf den Internetseiten der Gemeinden. Bei Symptomen wie Atemnot und Fieber sollten Patienten den Arzt auf eventuelle Waldbesuche und Baumkontakte hinweisen.
Grund für die Ausbreitung ist das warme Klima. Ob dabei die Dürre oder die Wärme entscheidend ist, ist laut LWF noch unbekannt. Ohnehin sei die aus Amerika eingeschleppte Krankheit kaum erforscht. In Bayern ist sie 2018 zum ersten Mal aufgetaucht, in Deutschland im Jahr 2005. Auch das Entsorgen der betroffenen Bäume stellt ein Risiko dar. Die Pilzsporen könnten sich beim Zersägen weiter ausbreiten.
Schimmelpilze: Nicht nur im Essen eine Gefahr
Der Name Rußrindenkrankheit rührt daher, dass die Sporen schwarz sind. Der Pilz wächst unter der Rinde bis jene aufreißt. Derzeit setzen auch Schädlinge wie Schwammspinner, Fichtenborkenkäfer und Eichenprozessionsspinner den Bäumen im Freistaat zu.
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