2021 Real Property Tax List Proof Copy Page 1 Taxing
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39. Silvesterlauf Zürich 2015 Zeit: 11:19:26 Seite: 1
Datum: 08.06.18 39. Silvesterlauf Zürich 2015 Zeit: 11:19:26 Seite: 1 (30) 5.0km Run for Fun Läuferinnen en ordre alphabetique Name und Vorname Jg Land/Ort Zeit Overall Team Rückstand Ø/km Stnr Abdurahman Meryem 2001 Forch 40.24,1 --- 17.29,7 22.54,4 Zentrum 17.08,8 8.04,8 2298 40.24,1 Aboud Conny 1981 Neuenhof 37.43,0 --- 18.38,8 19.04,2 14.27,7 7.32,6 7511 37.43,0 Acar Selin 1998 Adliswil 38.45,6 --- 17.53,2 20.52,4 15.30,3 7.45,1 7515 38.45,6 Ackermann Jasmin 1987 Sargans 32.34,2 --- 17.28,0 15.06,2 9.18,9 6.30,8 7529 32.34,2 Ademoglu Amara 1989 Zürich 34.50,1 --- 17.42,2 17.07,9 11.34,8 6.58,0 7540 34.50,1 Aebli Margrith 1967 Zürich 37.22,8 --- 18.28,2 18.54,6 14.07,5 7.28,5 7552 37.22,8 Aebli Vanessa 1989 Zürich 37.11,8 --- 19.24,5 17.47,3 Bevölkerungsamt Stadt Zürich 13.56,5 7.26,3 2903 37.11,8 Aeschbacher Brigitte 1965 Wettingen 34.06,6 --- 17.02,5 17.04,1 10.51,3 6.49,3 7562 34.06,6 Aeschimann Joëlle 1995 Wädenswil 36.07,4 --- 19.00,9 17.06,5 12.52,1 7.13,4 7564 36.07,4 Agosti Monn Theres 1961 Turbenthal 28.47,4 --- 14.03,1 14.44,3 5.32,1 5.45,4 7579 28.47,4 Aguilar Ruiz Kathrin 1967 Zürich 38.09,4 --- 19.13,0 18.56,4 14.54,1 7.37,8 7584 38.09,4 Aguilar Ruiz Sophia Ainoa 2000 Zürich 37.06,3 --- 19.20,0 17.46,3 13.51,0 7.25,2 7585 37.06,3 Ahron Stefanie 1993 Turbenthal 36.53,8 --- 18.41,2 18.12,6 13.38,5 7.22,7 7588 36.53,8 Ajvazi Sanela 1982 Beringen 26.16,8 --- 12.28,3 13.48,5 3.01,5 5.15,3 7592 26.16,8 Akamp Eva 1982 Zürich 38.39,7 --- 18.49,7 19.50,0 15.24,4 7.43,9 7593 38.39,7 Albers Luciana 1958 Zürich 33.04,1 --- 16.27,1 -
Meeting of the Board of Trustees of the William Paterson University of New Jersey
MEETING OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE WILLIAM PATERSON UNIVERSITY OF NEW JERSEY Friday, March 23, 2007 The meeting was called to order at approximately 9:10 a.m. in the College Hall Board Room. BOARD MEMBERS PRESENT: Mr. Adzima, Mr. Campbell, Dr. Fan, Mr. Gruel, Mr. Mazzola, Mr. Pesce, Dr. Pruitt, Mr. Taylor, and President Speert ABSENT: Ms. Ellis, Mr. Jackson, Ms. Olmos, Ms. Temple OTHERS PRESENT: Provost and Senior Vice President Weil, Vice President Bolyai, Vice President Deller, Vice President Martone, DAG Cheryl Clarke, Dr. Schaeffer, Mrs. Santaniello, administrators, faculty, and others. ANNOUNCEMENT CONCERNING ADEQUATE NOTICE OF MEETING: In accordance with the “Open Public Meetings Act,” the Chairperson publicly announced and had entered into the minutes that “adequate notice” of this meeting was provided. In compliance with the Statute, this notice was posted on the University’s web page and distributed to The Herald News, The Record, and The Star Ledger more than 48 hours prior to this meeting. It was moved and seconded to adopt the following resolution: 3-07-1 - RESOLUTION, TO MOVE INTO EXECUTIVE SESSION (Appendix 1) The resolution was unanimously adopted. At approximately 10:55 a.m., the Public Session resumed. MINUTES OF THE DECEMBER 2, 2006, DECEMBER 8, 2006, AND JANUARY 19, 2007 BOARD MEETINGS: The minutes of the December 2, 2006, December 8, 2006 and January 19, 2007 minutes were approved with the corrections noted to the December 8, 2006 minutes, which included correcting the ranks of Drs. Ian Marshall and Michael Innis-Jimenez from Instructors to Assistant Professors and inserting the correct managerial reappointment list attachment in the minutes. -
ESU-Newsletter-05.Pdf (223.3 Kib)
Volume I - Issue 5 The Voice of the Syriacs Volume 1 - Issue 5 page 4 ESU is scrutinized. ple. The campaign will continue in the coming May 2006 The Voice of the months in other countries of Europe too. Syriacs The ESU, with this campaign, aims to enlighten the Syriacs in these two areas and to inform them about the institution of ESU. This campaign is supervised IMPRINT by the members of the Executive Board Mr. Fikri Aygur (the Vice Chairman) and Mr. Evgil Turker. Information bulletin about the Each of the two subjects is covered in a session of social position of the Syriacs in five hours; and at the end of these sessions in order and outside the Middle East. to further enlighten the attendees their questions are It appears periodically, published answered. by the European Syriac Union Chairman’s message (ESU) in Brussels-Belgium. The first sessions of the campaign were held in ESU MEETS THE CHAIRMAN OF THE TURKISH Brussels. Nearly, 80 people attended the courses given in Brussels. Thereafter, the educational pro- Today 91 years passed after PARLIAMENT Contact: grams were held in Wiesbaden, Giessen, the genocide (Seyfo), which th In order to solve these disputes the local Phone: 0032 2 523 4181 Tauberbisschofsheim, Göppingen, Bietigheim, has been made in 1915 against On 9 May 2006, the Syriac delegation, com- Feudal Aghas acting as intermediaries and Fax: 0032 2 523 6201 Heilbron and Augsburg towns of Germany. Also, the Syriacs by the Ottoman prising the ESU, Suroyo TV representatives that they take big sums of money in bribes Internet: www.esu.cc each of these sessions was attended by 45-60 peo- Empire and the Kurdish forces. -
Turoyo Neo-Aramaic in Northern New Jersey
IJSL 2016; 237: 19–36 Christina Michelle Weaver* and George A. Kiraz Turoyo Neo-Aramaic in northern New Jersey DOI 10.1515/ijsl-2015-0033 Abstract: Turoyo, an endangered Neo-Aramaic language that originated in the area of Tur Abdin in southeastern Turkey and had not been written prior to this century, is spoken today by around 50,000 people scattered worldwide. Spurred on by persecution, Turoyo-speaking immigrants began to arrive in the US as early as the late 1890s. We focus our study on a northern New Jersey community in which Turoyo is spoken. This tight-knit community, whose religious and social center is the Mor Gabriel Syriac Orthodox Church, is made up of around 200 families. The community is working hard to pass the language on to their children through speaking Turoyo in the home and in church, and also through programs including a specially created Sunday school curriculum, a weekly Aramaic school, and a summer day camp. However, despite the community’s best efforts, language shift is taking place. We use a sociolinguistic approach involving sociolinguistic methods and inter- views to show that family, social networks, and religion influence who is most likely to be a proficient speaker of Turoyo in this community, but that identity is the one sociolinguistic variable that can best account for the variety of cases in which language shift is taking place. Keywords: Neo-Aramaic, family, social networks, religion, identity 1 Introduction The endangered Neo-Aramaic language of Turoyo was originally spoken in southeastern Turkey, but is now mostly spoken by the diaspora. -
The University of Chicago a Multi-Generational
THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO A MULTI-GENERATIONAL ACOUSTIC AND SOCIOLINGUISTIC STUDY OF EMPHASIS IN TUROYO A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF THE DIVISION OF THE HUMANITIES IN CANDIDACY FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY DEPARTMENT OF LINGUISTICS BY CHRISTINA MICHELLE WEAVER CHICAGO, ILLINOIS AUGUST 2019 Copyright c 2019 by Christina Michelle Weaver All Rights Reserved for the Mor Gabriel community and for my children CONTENTS LIST OF FIGURES . vii LIST OF TABLES . x ACKNOWLEDGMENTS . xi ABSTRACT . xiii 1 INTRODUCTION AND MOTIVATION . 1 2 LITERATURE REVIEW . 4 2.1 Turoyo . 4 2.1.1 Language . 4 2.1.2 People . 9 2.2 Emphasis . 15 2.2.1 What Is Emphasis? . 15 2.2.2 Reported Instances of Emphasis . 16 2.2.3 Previous Experiments . 22 2.3 Heritage Speakers . 31 3 METHODOLOGY . 34 3.1 Methodology for the Acoustic Experiment . 34 3.1.1 Materials . 34 3.1.2 Participants . 36 3.1.3 Procedure . 37 3.1.4 Measurements . 37 3.1.5 Statistical Analysis . 38 3.1.6 Hypothesis . 39 3.2 Methodology for the Sociolinguistic Study . 40 3.2.1 Stimuli . 41 3.2.2 Participants . 42 3.2.3 Conducting the Interviews . 43 3.2.4 Analyzing the Data . 44 4 INTRODUCTION TO THREE GENERATIONS IN THE MOR GABRIEL COMMU- NITY . 45 4.1 Introduction to the Three Generations . 48 4.1.1 Grandparent Generation . 49 4.1.2 Parent Generation . 51 4.1.3 Child Generation . 52 4.2 Comparing Generations Through Their Answers to the Sociolinguistic Questionnaire 53 4.2.1 Basic Information . -
ESU-Newsletter-09.Pdf (282.9 Kib)
Volume I - Issue 9 June 2007 Chairman’s Message THE 2nd CONGRESS OF ESU HELD IN BRUSSELS Dear friends, It has been three years now The General Council of ESU held its second since the foundation of ESU (the Congress on 19-20 May 2007 in Brussels. European Syriac Union). When The second congress that has been held we look back at the past three years, we see that ESU has three years after the foundation of ESU was acquired an important place attended by more than a hundred members. among the Syriac people. The level that ESU has reached is The program of the first day of the Congress very important. Firstly, ESU has started with the opening speech of the been institutionalised and made new members in many of the European coun- Member of the Executive Board Miss Rima tries. Secondly, ESU has continuously raised Tuzun. Thereafter, in remembrance of the the problems of the Syriacs living in the Middle Syriac Martyrs a national Poem was read and East to the international agenda. Accordingly, the attendees stood up a minute of silence. some of these problems that have been contin- The second Guest speaker was a Coptic per- uously shouldered by ESU are the constant attacks against the Syriacs living in Iraq and son, namely Mr. Ayad Mossad, who is one of their security issues, as well as the problems the first friends of ESU. Mr. Mossad in his faced by the Syriac people living in Turkey. speech stated that ESU has made a very Thirdly, ESU has continuously carried the good progress during the last three years and Syriac issues to the European Commission and has a very strong management. -
ESU Newsletter No 11:Layout 1.Qxd
Volume I - Issue 11 December 2007 An educational day on Turkey-EU subject in Hamburg Chairman’s Message The Catholic Academy in Hamburg, the Mar Dear readers, Gabriel Association and the Syriac Orthodox Association held an educational day on 27th A few months back Turkey October. The subject of the day was the reached the peak of the interna- Turkey-EU relations and the situation of the tional politics. Parliamentary elec- Syriacs within these relations. The head of tions, presidency elections, secularism vs. reli- the German Oriental Institute Prof. Dr. Udo giosity debates, veiling, constitutional changes, Steinbach, Prof. Dr. Martin Tamcke from and armed incursion of the Turkish army into Göttingen University, the vice president of Iraq were being discussed around the world. ESU Fikri Aygur and responsible official of the Finally Turkey came under the spotlight regard- religious affairs in Turkey Associate Prof. Dr. ing the Syriac issues too. Ali Dere attended the day as speakers. fact that the number of the Christian popula- Two issues regarding the Syriacs drew the The opening speeches of the day were made tion in Turkey has been decreasing ever since attention to Turkey. Firstly, whilst Turkey threat- by the Catholic Rev. Fr. Wilm Sanders and the the Ottomans conquered Istanbul in 1453 AD. ened the Northern Iraq, its army shelled a few provincial MP Reinhard Stuth. Mostly Christian (Chaldean-Assyrian-Syriac) villages German, around one hundred people attend- The subject of the speech held by the Vice situated just behind the Turkey-Iraq border and ed the meeting. President of ESU Fikri Aygur was `what are as a result of these shelling their residents were the risks and opportunities that the Christians forced to flee their villages.