UHF Superturnstile Antennas Stand January 2020
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
A New Species of Bristletails of the Genus Charimachilis (Microcoryphia: Machilidae) from Crimea
Russian Entomol. J. 30(2): 123–128 © RUSSIAN ENTOMOLOGICAL JOURNAL, 2021 A new species of bristletails of the genus Charimachilis (Microcoryphia: Machilidae) from Crimea Íîâûé âèä ùåòèíîõâîñòîê ðîäà Charimachilis (Microcoryphia: Machilidae) èç Êðûìà Vladimir G. Kaplin Âëàäèìèð Ã. Êàïëèí All-Russian Institute of Plant Protection, St Petersburg, Pushkin 196608 Russia. E-mail: [email protected] Всероссийский НИИ защиты растений, Санкт-Петербург, Пушкин 196608, Россия KEY WORDS: Southwestern Palaearctic, Staryi Krym, Machilinae, Charimachilis, taxonomy. КЛЮЧЕВЫЕ СЛОВА: Юго-Западная Палеарктика, Старый Крым, Machilinae, Charimachilis, таксономия. ABSTRACT. Charimachilis taurica sp.n. from the Introduction vicinity of the city Staryi Krym is described and illus- trated. It is compared with parthenogenetic congeners The genus Charimachilis Wygodzinsky, 1939 com- from the Kiev region of Ukraine (C. ukrainensis Stach, prises 14 described species that are distributed in the 1958), as well as from Rostov (C. rostoviensis Kaplin, mountainous landscapes within the subtropical and tem- 2020) and Belgorod (C. morozovi Kaplin, 2019) re- perate belts of the Southwestern Palaearctic: between 31° gions of the Russian Federation. C. taurica sp.n. can be to 50°N (from Israel in the south to the Belgorod region distinguished from all these species by a larger distance of Russia in the north) and between 11° and 41°E (from between paired ocelli and the shape of apical palpomere Austria in the west to Abkhazia in the east) [Kaplin, of labial palp. It also differs from C. ukrainensis and C. 2019]. The position of this genus in the superfamily rostoviensis in the structure of compound eyes and Machiliodea is not clear, primarly because of the specific urocoxites VIII and IX; and from C. -
International Crimes in Crimea
International Crimes in Crimea: An Assessment of Two and a Half Years of Russian Occupation SEPTEMBER 2016 Contents I. Introduction 6 A. Executive summary 6 B. The authors 7 C. Sources of information and methodology of documentation 7 II. Factual Background 8 A. A brief history of the Crimean Peninsula 8 B. Euromaidan 12 C. The invasion of Crimea 15 D. Two and a half years of occupation and the war in Donbas 23 III. Jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court 27 IV. Contextual elements of international crimes 28 A. War crimes 28 B. Crimes against humanity 34 V. Willful killing, murder and enforced disappearances 38 A. Overview 38 B. The law 38 C. Summary of the evidence 39 D. Documented cases 41 E. Analysis 45 F. Conclusion 45 VI. Torture and other forms of inhuman treatment 46 A. Overview 46 B. The law 46 C. Summary of the evidence 47 D. Documented cases of torture and other forms of inhuman treatment 50 E. Analysis 59 F. Conclusion 59 VII. Illegal detention 60 A. Overview 60 B. The law 60 C. Summary of the evidence 62 D. Documented cases of illegal detention 66 E. Analysis 87 F. Conclusion 87 VIII. Forced displacement 88 A. Overview 88 B. The law 88 C. Summary of evidence 90 D. Analysis 93 E. Conclusion 93 IX. Crimes against public, private and cultural property 94 A. Overview 94 B. The law 94 C. Summary of evidence 96 D. Documented cases 99 E. Analysis 110 F. Conclusion 110 X. Persecution and collective punishment 111 A. Overview 111 B. -
Geographical Index
GEOGRAPHICAL INDEX Adrianople, 1444–1445 3506–3512; underground well in, 3517–25; Akhtiyar. See Sevastopol visit of Ḥ akham Szapszal to, 2931; visit of Akkerman. See Belgorod-Dnestrovskiy Tsar Alexander II to, 1858 (Bessarabia) Constantinople, 1075, 3171, 3314, 3847 Ak-Sheikh (Crimean village), 1978 Crimea, 49, 2019, 2176, 2179, 2200–2201, 2235, Aleppo, 785, 788 2264, 2550, 2972–3753; and Alim, the Tatar Algeria, 1337–38 Robin Hood, 7054; and Jerusalem, 3606; Amsterdam, people with K-like views in, 6575, archaeology, general, 3112–13; arrival of 6580–81 Ks in, 3288; bibliography, 2972–76; current Armenia, 4429–31 affairs of Ks in, 3360–3424; education in, Armyansk, 3448, 7865 7791–7857; ethnography, 2977; folk literature Armyanskiy Bazar. See Armyansk of, 7668; folklore in, 7608–12; folksongs of, Arab countries, 732 7733–35; history of, 3210, 3265–3324; in the Ashdod, 1678 press, 3264; in WWII, 2060; legal status of Ks Ashkelon, 1075 in, 2136; music in, 7927–40; national identity Austria, 4408 of Ks in, 2986, 3260; Pesaḥ customs of Ks Azerbaijan, 4433 in, 5107; religion of Ks in, 3326–41; Soviet Period, 3295; statistics of Ks in, 2131, Babylonia, 734–736 2133–34, 3005; tombstone inscriptions in, Baghdad, Ks of, 735 1897, 3114; travelers’ accounts of, 3115–3263; Bakhchisaray, 3168, 3181, 3191, 3224–28, 3239, War in, 2086, 3318–24 3244, 3248, 3291, 3449–56; archives in, 129; Crimean War. See Crimea, War in in art, 7045; in literature, 7045; in poetry, Cyprus, 1349 7049–50, 7052, 7573–74, 7592–93 Balaklava, 3457–58 Damascus, 49, 785, 787, 789, 1075, 6629; Bay Area. -
Professional TV Broadcast Antennas UHF Band IV/V 470 - 862 Mhz (Analogue TV) As It Stands Per January 2020
References Professional TV Broadcast Antennas UHF Band IV/V 470 - 862 MHz (Analogue TV) KATHREIN Broadcast GmbH Ing.-Anton-Kathrein-Str. 1-7, 83101 Rohrdorf, Germany Telephone +49 8031 6193 100, E-mail: [email protected] www.kathrein-bca.com References Professional TV Broadcast Antennas UHF Band IV/V 470 - 862 MHz (Analogue TV) as it stands per January 2020 Country Station Country Station Country Station Albania Tirana Brazil Anhanguera Canada Vaughan 1, ON Araraquara Vaughan 2, ON Algeria Akfadou Belo Horizonte Victoria Algier Cabo Branco Wawa Morro di Pena Wharncliffe Angola Luanda 1 Sao Paulo Windsor Luanda 2 Luanda 3 Bulgaria Petrohan Chile Santiago de Chile Argentina Antina Cambodia Bantea Meanchey China Beijing Buenos Aires Kampong Thom Beijing Buenos Aires Koh Kong Canton Mondulkiri Dongguan Australia Gosford Phnom Penh 1 Guangsong Phnom Penh 2 Guangzhou Austria Dobratsch Henan TV Tower 1 Dünserberg Cameroon Ekondo Titi Henan TV Tower 2 Freinberg Huiyang Gaisberg Canada Abbotsford, BC Jedong Galgenberg Alanwater Jiangmen Goldeck Barrie Maoming Hauser-Kaibling Barry's Bay Ningxia Hirschenstein Baton Windsor Shantou Hohe Salve Brethour Shenyang Jauerling Calgary Shenzhen 1 Katrin Charlottetown Shenzhen 2 Kitzbühler Horn Chilliwack, BC Shijiazhuang Koralpe Duck Lake Swatow Linz Edmonton Tianjin Mattersburg-Heub. Evansville Yin Chuan Mugl Evanturel Zhuhai Neumarkt-Kulmera. Fort Erie Patscherkofel Grand Fonds Cyprus Selvilitepe Pfänder Gravelbourg Saalfelden Harris Township Czech Republic Brno-Hady Schöckl 1 Hawk Junction Brno-Kojal Schöckl 2 Kenogami Lake Bukova Hora Sonnwendstein 1 Lac Ste Therese Hradec Kralove Sonnwendstein 2 Longlac Klatovy Steyr Manotick Olomouc-Radikov Wachberg Mount Royal Pilsen Zugspitze Orilllia Prag-Cukrak Osnaburgh Pribram Barbados Sturges Ottawa Radikov Parry Sound Rychnov Belgium Brüssel 1 Pays Plat Susice Brüssel 2 Penetanguis Svitavy Brüssel-Everberg Peterborough 1 Tabor Brüssel-Financiet. -
UHF Superturnstile Antennas Corr V2 Stand
References UHF - Superturnstile Antennas installed by KATHREIN as it stands per February 2021 Country Station Power Country Station Power Austria Gaisberg 3 x 20 kW Denmark Hadsten 1 7 x 4.5 kW Jauerling 3 x 20 kW Hadsten 2 2 x 40 kW Lichtenberg 2 x 20 kW Hedensted 2 x 40 kW Schöckl 2 x 20 kW Jyderup 3 x 40 kW Kopenhagen 3 x 40 kW Belgium Egem 4 x 20 kW Nakskov 2 x 10 kW Genk 2 x 35 kW Nibe 1 7 x 4.5 kW Leglise Vlessart 3 x 10 kW Nibe 2 2 x 40 kW Schoten 3 x 20 kW Ro 2 x 40 kW Wavre 3 x 20 kW Svenborg 3 x 20 kW Tolne 2 x 10 kW Benin Banikoara 5 kW Tommerup 3 x 40 kW Bante 5 kW Viborg 1 7 x 4.5 kW Bassila 5 kW Viborg 2 2 x 40 kW Bembereke 5 kW Boukoumbe 5 kW Finland Videbaek 1 7 x 4.5 kW Kandi 5 kW Videbaek 2 2 x 40 kW Kouande 5 kW Vordingborg 1 7 x 4.5 kW Natitingou 5 kW Vordingborg 2 2 x 40 kW Tchaaourou 5 kW Ahvenanmaa 20 kW Äthäri 20 kW Brazil Bauru 5 kW Espoo 40 kW Belo Horizonte 15 kW Haapavesi 1 5 x 5 kW Blumenau 5 kW Haapavesi 2 5 x 5 kW Cabo Frio 7.5 kW Haapavesi 3 20 kW City of Manaus 7.5 kW Inari 2 x 40 kW Curitiba 7.5 kW Jisalmi 20 kW Florianopolis 7.5 kW Karigasn. -
The Northern Black Sea Region in Classical Antiquity 4
The Northern Black Sea Region by Kerstin Susanne Jobst In historical studies, the Black Sea region is viewed as a separate historical region which has been shaped in particular by vast migration and acculturation processes. Another prominent feature of the region's history is the great diversity of religions and cultures which existed there up to the 20th century. The region is understood as a complex interwoven entity. This article focuses on the northern Black Sea region, which in the present day is primarily inhabited by Slavic people. Most of this region currently belongs to Ukraine, which has been an independent state since 1991. It consists primarily of the former imperial Russian administrative province of Novorossiia (not including Bessarabia, which for a time was administered as part of Novorossiia) and the Crimean Peninsula, including the adjoining areas to the north. The article also discusses how the region, which has been inhabited by Scythians, Sarmatians, Greeks, Romans, Goths, Huns, Khazars, Italians, Tatars, East Slavs and others, fitted into broader geographical and political contexts. TABLE OF CONTENTS 1. Introduction 2. Space of Myths and Legends 3. The Northern Black Sea Region in Classical Antiquity 4. From the Khazar Empire to the Crimean Khanate and the Ottomans 5. Russian Rule: The Region as Novorossiia 6. World War, Revolutions and Soviet Rule 7. From the Second World War until the End of the Soviet Union 8. Summary and Future Perspective 9. Appendix 1. Sources 2. Literature 3. Notes Indices Citation Introduction -
The Brown Travelers Presents
THE BROWN TRAVELERS PRESENTS CRUISING THE NEW EUROPE ALONG UUKRAINEKRAINE’’SS DDNIEPERNIEPER RRIVERIVER K IEV TO O DESSA CRIMEAN PENINSULA ◆ BLACK SEA Aboard the M.S. DNIEPER PRINCESS July 13 to 25, 2006 Featuring Patricia Herlihy, Emerita Professor of History and Research Professor at the Watson Institute for International Studies O Y B OK L IN R Reserve on A or before G E December 15, 2005 SAVE $1000 per couple! S AVIN G S Dear Graduates, Parents and Friends of Brown: Like America’s Mississippi River or Germany’s Rhine, Ukraine’s Dnieper River has defined a nation. Sweeping across the Ukrainian countryside, it has traced a broad course through Ukrainian history. Intrepid Viking warrior-merchants once plied its waters, seeking trade routes to the Black Sea and Constantinople. Along its banks rose the stately city of Kiev, and across the Dnieper’s fertile plains Cossack horsemen once rode. Join us on an 11-night voyage on the Dnieper River and the Black Sea aboard the M.S. DNIEPER PRINCESS, the finest ship cruising Ukrainian waterways. From ancient Kiev, a thriving political, religious, cultural and commercial center when Moscow was little more than a village, sail south along the Dnieper through a landscape of tranquil beauty, passing through wooded hills, endless steppes and lush farmlands. Cross the Black Sea to the Crimean Peninsula, a popular retreat since the days of the czars, and to the cosmopolitan seaport of Odessa, Ukraine’s gateway to Turkey and the lands of the Eastern Mediterranean. This unique itinerary introduces you to the seldom-seen treasures of a nation reasserting its identity and reclaiming its roots as it rises from seven decades of Soviet domination. -
Ukraine and NATO: Deadlock Or Re-Start? Ukraineukraine and and NATO: NATO: Ukraine Has Over the Past Ten Years Developed a Very Close Partnership with NATO
Ukraine and NATO: Deadlock or Re-start? UkraineUkraine and and NATO: NATO: Ukraine has over the past ten years developed a very close partnership with NATO. Key areas of Deadlock or Re-start? consultation and co-operation include, for instance, peacekeeping operations, and defence and Deadlock or Re-start? security sector reform. NATO’s engagement serves two vital purposes for Ukraine. First, it enhan- Jakob Hedenskog ces Ukraine’s long-term security and serves as a guarantee for the independence of the state; and JAKOB HEDENSKOG second, it promotes and encourages democratic institutionalisation and spreading of democratic norms and values in the country. JAKOB HEDENSKOG Ukraine and NATO: Deadlock or Re-start NATO’s door for Ukraine remains open. The future development of the integration depends on Ukraine’s correspondence to the standards of NATO membership, on the determination of its political leadership, and on an effective mobilisation of public opinion on NATO membership. This report shows that Ukraine has made progress in reaching the standards for NATO membership, especially in the spheres of military contribution and interoperability. However the absence of national consensus and lack of political will and strategic management of the government hamper any effective implementation of Ukraine’s Euro-Atlantic integration. It is also crucial to neutralise Russia’s influence, which seriously hampers Ukraine’s Euro-Atlantic course. Leading representati- ves of the current leadership, especially Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych and his Party of Regions of Ukraine, prefer for the moment continued stable relations with Russia rather than NATO mem- ? bership. Jakob Hedenskog is a security policy analyst at the Swedish Defence Re- search Agency (FOI) specialised on Ukraine. -
Table of Contents
Table of Contents Introduction 2 Oleg Popov, CEO of SCM 2 Maxim Timchenko, CEO of DTEK 4 DTEK Group at a glance 8 15 facts about DTEK Group 10 Mission, vision, values 12 Development Strategy until 2030 13 DTEK Group corporate governance structure 16 Key performance indicators of 2019 17 Location of DTEK Group production enterprises 18 Key Events in 2019 20 Top management of the DTEK Group 24 An overview of Ukraine’s industries and macroeconomic indicators 28 Electricity Market 30 Natural Gas Market 40 Ukraine’s macroeconomic indicators 44 Performance results 48 Production activity 50 Investment projects 62 Analysis of financial results 72 Corporate governance 74 Corporate governance structure 76 Supervisory Boards of the operating holdings companies 77 Risk management system 82 Compliance and corporate ethics 83 Dividend policy 85 Sustainability 86 Sustainability 88 Environmental protection 92 Society 100 Employees 110 Annex 1 122 Annex 2 124 Annex 3 128 2 Integrated report 2019 Integrated report 2019 3 Introduction Dear colleagues and partners, please find hereby the annual report ted itself to achieving the UN Sustainable Development Goals. As of DTEK Group. a result, our actions have remain consistent and our commitment to the principles of ESG (Environmental, Social and corporate Gov- In 2020, DTEK celebrated its 15th anniversary. This year has been a ernance) unwavering, as we strive to support the interests of socie- challenge for all of us because of the global coronavirus pandem- ty. For this purpose, we adopted our ESG Strategy. The 12 UN Sus- ic, which has reignited the discussion about the role and purpose tainable Development Goals were subsequently integrated into this of business for society. -
1 Introduction
State Service of Geodesy, Cartography and Cadastre State Scientific Production Enterprise “Kartographia” TOPONYMIC GUIDELINES For map and other editors For international use Ukraine Kyiv “Kartographia” 2011 TOPONYMIC GUIDELINES FOR MAP AND OTHER EDITORS, FOR INTERNATIONAL USE UKRAINE State Service of Geodesy, Cartography and Cadastre State Scientific Production Enterprise “Kartographia” ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Prepared by Nina Syvak, Valerii Ponomarenko, Olha Khodzinska, Iryna Lakeichuk Scientific Consultant Iryna Rudenko Reviewed by Nataliia Kizilowa Translated by Olha Khodzinska Editor Lesia Veklych ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ © Kartographia, 2011 ISBN 978-966-475-839-7 TABLE OF CONTENTS 1 Introduction ................................................................ 5 2 The Ukrainian Language............................................ 5 2.1 General Remarks.............................................. 5 2.2 The Ukrainian Alphabet and Romanization of the Ukrainian Alphabet ............................... 6 2.3 Pronunciation of Ukrainian Geographical Names............................................................... 9 2.4 Stress .............................................................. 11 3 Spelling Rules for the Ukrainian Geographical Names....................................................................... 11 4 Spelling of Generic Terms ....................................... 13 5 Place Names in Minority Languages -
International Workshop for CEE Countries
International Workshop for CEE Countries “Tourism in Mountain Areas and the Convention on Biological Diversity" 1st – 5th October, 2002 Sucha Beskidzka, Babia Gora National Park, Poland Organized by Ecological Tourism in Europe, Bonn/Germany Academy of Sciences, Institute of Tourism, Krakow/Poland Supported by The Federal Agency for Nature Conservation and the German Federal Ministry of Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety. International Workshop for CEE Countries ''TOURISM IN MOUNTAIN AREAS'' 1st – 5th October, 2002 Sucha Beskidzka, Babia Gora National Park, Poland Case Study Results and prospects of development of ecological tourism in Crimea by the example of the Yalta mountain - wood natural reserve and other objects of natural-reserved fund of Ukraine Natalija Kornilova – Senior scientific employee of The Yalta Mountain - Forest Nature Reserve, vice-president NGO – The Yalta regional branch of the Crimean republican Association "Ecology and Peace" Yuri Rasin – Assistant to the general director of Open Company "The Crimean Institute of Ecology and Projecting" (Yalta). Ukraine, Autonomous republic Crimea, the city of Yalta Ph. +38(0654) 38-69-46, 38-71-86 Fax: +38(0654) 32-30-43 E-mail: [email protected] General Introduction Problems of ecotourism development in Ukraine got recently urgent, in particular in Crimea Region, which is a unique southern Black Sea region of Ukraine. These special problems are connected to the general processes of integration of our state in the world community, ratification of some basic international documents on biodiversity, and transboundary influences on environment. On the one hand, there are given all conditions for the development of ecotourism as most "sparing" form of this economic activity, on the other hand, the given development restrains a number of factors, including economic and natural. -
Crimea______9 3.1
CONTENTS Page Page 1. Introduction _____________________________________ 4 6. Transport complex ______________________________ 35 1.1. Brief description of the region ______________________ 4 1.2. Geographical location ____________________________ 5 7. Communications ________________________________ 38 1.3. Historical background ____________________________ 6 1.4. Natural resource potential _________________________ 7 8. Industry _______________________________________ 41 2. Strategic priorities of development __________________ 8 9. Energy sector ___________________________________ 44 3. Economic review 10. Construction sector _____________________________ 46 of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea ________________ 9 3.1. The main indicators of socio-economic development ____ 9 11. Education and science ___________________________ 48 3.2. Budget _______________________________________ 18 3.3. International cooperation _________________________ 20 12. Culture and cultural heritage protection ___________ 50 3.4. Investment activity _____________________________ 21 3.5. Monetary market _______________________________ 22 13. Public health care ______________________________ 52 3.6. Innovation development __________________________ 23 14. Regions of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea _____ 54 4. Health-resort and tourism complex_________________ 24 5. Agro-industrial complex __________________________ 29 5.1. Agriculture ____________________________________ 29 5.2. Food industry __________________________________ 31 5.3. Land resources _________________________________