Ltivariate Methods in Aquaculture Research: F* Case Studies of Tilapias in Experimental and Commercial Systems

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Ltivariate Methods in Aquaculture Research: F* Case Studies of Tilapias in Experimental and Commercial Systems ltivariate Methods in Aquaculture Research: f* Case Studies of Tilapias in Experimental and Commercial Systems Edited by M. Prein G. data D. Pauly INTERNATIONAL CENTER FOR LIVING AQUATIC RESOURCES MANAGEMENT PHILIPPINES AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH ORGANIZATION BUNDESMINISTERIUM FUR WIRTSCHAFTLICHE ZUSAMMENARBEIT UND ENTWICKLUNG (BMZ) ISRAEL FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF GERMANY 207 Multivariate Methods in Aquaculture Research: Case Studies of Tilapias SF -7k in Experimental and Commercial Systems itfz~ &, 1 Published by the International Center for Living Aquatic Resources Management (ICLARM), MCPO Box 2631, 0718 Makati, Metro Manila, Philippines; Agricultural Research Organization (ARO), The Volcani Center, P.O. Box 6, Bet Dagan 50250, Israel; and Bundesministerium fiir Wirtschaftliche Zusammenarbeit und Entwicklung (BMZ), Karl-Marx-Strasse 4-6, D-5300 Bonn, Federal Republic of Germany. Printed in Manila, Philippines Prein, M., G. Hulata and D. Pauly, Editors. 1993. Multivariate methods in aquaculture research: case studies of tilapias in experimental and commercial systems. ICLARM Stud. Rev. 20, 221 p. ISSN 0115-4389 ISBN 971-1022-85-0 Cover design by Mark Prein and Angela Egold. Picture of Nile tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus) is a computerized image of this species as provided in FishBase, ICLARM's comprehensive database on fishes of the world (digitization artist: Robbie Cada). ICLARM Contribution No. 669 Dedicated to the memory of Dr. Balfour Hepher (1925- 1 988) Contents .. ICLARM Foreword R.S.V. Pullin ........................................................................................................... vu ... ARO Foreword Y. Folman ...................................................................................................................... vu BMZ Foreword H.-J. de Haas .................................................................................................................. ix On the Use of Multivariate Statistical Methods in Aquaculture Research M. Prein, G. Hulata and D. Pauly ................................................................................................... 1 Methods of Multivariate Analysis Multiple Regression Analysis of Aquaculture Experiments Based on the "Extended Gulland-and-Holt Plot": Model Derivation, Data Requirements and Recommended Procedures D. Pauly, M. Prein and K.D. Hopkins ...................................................................................13 Factor and Canonical Correlation Analyses: Basic Concepts, Data Requirements and Recommended Procedures A. Milstein ............................................ 24 Two New Approaches for Examining Multivariate Aquaculture Growth Data: the "Extended Bayley Plot" and Path Analysis M. Prein and D. Pauly ............................................................................................................. 32 Applications of Multivariate Analysis to Experimental Data Multiple Regression and Path Analysis of Nile Tilapia Growth in Integrated Livestock-Fish Culture in the Philippines M. Prein ......................................... 50 Factor and Canonical Correlation Analysis of Nile Tilapia Production in Integrated Livestock-Fish Culture in the Philippines A. Milstein and M. Prein .................................................................................................. 67 Multivariate Analysis of Tilapia Growth Experiments in Israel, Zambia and Peru M. Prein ...............................................................................................75 Multiple Regression Analysis of Growth of Tilapia rendalli in Polyculture with Oreochromis shiranus as Affected by Water Quality and Pond Inputs B.A. Costa-Pierce, A.A. van Dam and M.V. Kapeleta ........................................................... 88 Multivariate Analysis of Growth of Juvenile Tilapia Oreochromis aureus and 0. niloticus, Cichlidae, Reared in Recirculating Systems G. Mair and D. Pauly .............................................................................................................. 97 Instantaneous Mortalities and Multivariate Models: Applications to Tilapia Culture in Saline Water K.D. Hopkins and D. Pauly ........................................................ 105 Multiple Regression Analysis of Relationships Between Management Inputs and Fish Yield or Profit in Fish Polyculture Experimental Ponds G. Hulata, A. Milstein and A. Goldman ................................................................................ 112 Applications of Multivariate Analysis to Commercial Systems Factor Analysis and Canonical Correlation Analysis of Fish Production in Commercial Farms in Israel A. Milstein and G. Hulata ................................................... 119 Multiple Regression Analysis of Fish Yield and Profit in Commercial Fish Farms in Israel A. Milstein, A. Goldman and G. Hulata ........................................ 161 Multiple Regression and Path Analysis of Tilapia Growth in Commercial Fish Farms in Israel M. Prein and A. Milstein ..................................................................... 178 Multiple Regression Analysis of Growth and Production of Oreochromis niloticus in Net Cages in Lake Sampaloc, Philippines L.V. Aquino-Nielsen, A.S. Manrique-Pempengco and M. Prein ............................................ 189 Appendices I Reprint of: A method for the analysis of pond growth experiments D. Pauly and K.D. Hopkins (ICLARM Newsletter 6(1):10-12; 1983),with comments by L. Lovshin and reply by D. Pauly (ICLARM Newsletter 7(2):30; 1984) ............... 199 I1 Documentation of Available 5-114" MS-DOS Data Diskettes on the Analyzed Data ................. 204 I11 Indexes Prepared by F.S.B. Torres, Jr. Author Index .........................................................................................................................21 7 Geographic Index ..................................................................................................................219 Species Index ....................................................................................................................... 220 ICLARM Foreword One of the goals of ICLARM is the development of appropriate quantitative methods for the general area of tropical fisheries and aquaculture research. Outside of ICLARM, the need for the development of such methods is widely acknowledged with regard to fisheries, but this is not so for aquaculture, perhaps because it is often perceived as requiring methods and approaches that are site- or species-specific. The present volume, the result of fruitful cooperation between the Agricultural Research Organization (ARO) and ICLARM, and of generous support by the German Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ), may help redress the methodological imbalance between fisheries and aquaculture research, and initiate more work on methods applicable to both fields. This volume emphasizes the following points: Although aquaculture can be very site-specific, there are many questions that can be tackled on a comparative basis, across sites - given that suitable concepts and quantitative methods are applied. Aquaculture experiments and commercial production systems generate a large amount of data that are not only suitable for computer-based quantitative analysis, but actually require such analysis, just as with the massive catch and catch composition datasets generated by commercial fisheries. The standard methods used by aquaculturists to analyze their experimental results - Latin square and related designs for the experimental layout, ANOVA for analysis of yields, absolute or relative growth rates for analysis of fish growth in ponds, etc. - may generally fail to extract important information, mainly because they cannot account for the multifactor, synergistic effects which only the analysis of large datasets with multivariate methods can make visible. ICLARM has given much emphasis, in its various aquaculture projects, to the tilapias, both as crucial elements in aquaculture-agriculture integration schemes, and as test animals for genetic improvement of organisms used in tropical aquaculture. I am therefore particularly pleased to see that this book documents our emphasis on both methodology development and on tilapias in one volume. I hope that the methods illustrated in this book will find wide application and be further developed. To encourage this, a set of four diskettes has been assembled, which contains the data files used by the authors of the various contributions assembled here. These diskettes are available for a nominal fee from ICLARM. Finally, I take this opportunity to thank ARO, particularly Gideon Hulata and Ana Milstein, for their cooperation in this project and BMZ for its unflagging support of the project which led to this book. DR. ROGERS.V. PULLIN Director Aquaculture Program ICLARM vii ARO Foreword It is generally considered that aquaculture has the potential to generate additional, diverse sources of protein for the growing human population, particularly in developing countries. With the aim to strengthen the research base on tropical pond aquaculture systems, ARO of Israel's Ministry of Agriculture joined in with ICLARM. On the Israeli side, this work was performed by the staff ofthe Fish and Aquaculture Research Station at Dor. This work was part of a larger Aquaculture Project, funded by the Federal Republic of Germany-Israel Fund for Agricultural Research in Third World Countries (GIARA), which is financed by BMZ. The aim of the project was to retrieve available
Recommended publications
  • Details of Aquaculture Fish Farms in the Desert and Arid Lands of Israel
    85 An overview on desert aquaculture in Israel Gideon Hulata Department of Poultry and Aquaculture Institute of Animal Science Agricultural Research Organization Bet Dagan, Israel E-mail: [email protected] Yitzhak Simon Ministry of Agriculture Extension Service Aquaculture Division Bet Dagan, Israel E-mail: [email protected] Hulata, G. & Simon, Y. 2011. An overview on desert aquaculture in Israel. In V. Crespi & A. Lovatelli, eds. Aquaculture in desert and arid lands: development constraints and opportunities. FAO Technical Workshop. 6–9 July 2010, Hermosillo, Mexico. FAO Fisheries and Aquaculture Proceedings No. 20. Rome, FAO. 2011. pp. 85–112. SUMMARY The State of Israel has a very diverse climate. Most of the country is in a semi-arid zone, with distinct short winter (wet) and long summer (dry) seasons, and a low annual rainfall of around 500 mm (an overall multi-annual average). The country can be divided into two climatic regions: (1) the southern arid/semi-arid areas have very low annual precipitation (<100 mm) and consist of the Negev Desert and the Arava Valley; this arid zone extends also to the Jordan Valley where annual rainfall is below 300 mm; (2) the central-north of the country that has a temperate, Mediterranean climate and a relatively high annual rainfall (>600 mm). Israel has suffered from a chronic water shortage for years. In recent years, however, the situation has developed into a severe crisis; since 1998, the country has suffered from drought, and the annual rainfall was short of the multi-annual average in most of the years.
    [Show full text]
  • View Annual Report
    CAESARSTONE SDOT-YAM LTD. FORM 20-F (Annual and Transition Report (foreign private issuer)) Filed 03/07/16 for the Period Ending 12/31/15 Telephone 972 4 636 4555 CIK 0001504379 Symbol CSTE SIC Code 3281 - Cut Stone and Stone Products Industry Constr. - Supplies & Fixtures Sector Capital Goods http://www.edgar-online.com © Copyright 2016, EDGAR Online, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Distribution and use of this document restricted under EDGAR Online, Inc. Terms of Use. UNITED STATES SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION Washington, D.C. 20549 Form 20-F (Mark One) o REGISTRATION STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 12(b) OR (g) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 OR x ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 For the fiscal year ended December 31, 2015 OR o TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 For the transition period from ______ to ______ OR o SHELL COMPANY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 or 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 Date of event requiring this shell company report…………………………………. Commission File Number 001-35464 CAESARSTONE SDOT-YAM LTD. (Exact Name of Registrant as specified in its charter) ISRAEL (Jurisdiction of incorporation or organization) Kibbutz Sdot-Yam MP Menashe, 3780400 Israel (Address of principal executive offices) Yosef Shiran Chief Executive Officer Caesarstone Sdot-Yam Ltd. MP Menashe, 3780400 Israel Telephone: +972 (4) 636-4555 Facsimile: +972 (4) 636-4400 (Name, telephone, email and/or facsimile number and address of
    [Show full text]
  • Israeli Settler-Colonialism and Apartheid Over Palestine
    Metula Majdal Shams Abil al-Qamh ! Neve Ativ Misgav Am Yuval Nimrod ! Al-Sanbariyya Kfar Gil'adi ZZ Ma'ayan Baruch ! MM Ein Qiniyye ! Dan Sanir Israeli Settler-Colonialism and Apartheid over Palestine Al-Sanbariyya DD Al-Manshiyya ! Dafna ! Mas'ada ! Al-Khisas Khan Al-Duwayr ¥ Huneen Al-Zuq Al-tahtani ! ! ! HaGoshrim Al Mansoura Margaliot Kiryat !Shmona al-Madahel G GLazGzaGza!G G G ! Al Khalsa Buq'ata Ethnic Cleansing and Population Transfer (1948 – present) G GBeGit GHil!GlelG Gal-'A!bisiyya Menara G G G G G G G Odem Qaytiyya Kfar Szold In order to establish exclusive Jewish-Israeli control, Israel has carried out a policy of population transfer. By fostering Jewish G G G!G SG dGe NG ehemia G AGl-NGa'iGmaG G G immigration and settlements, and forcibly displacing indigenous Palestinians, Israel has changed the demographic composition of the ¥ G G G G G G G !Al-Dawwara El-Rom G G G G G GAmG ir country. Today, 70% of Palestinians are refugees and internally displaced persons and approximately one half of the people are in exile G G GKfGar GB!lGumG G G G G G G SGalihiya abroad. None of them are allowed to return. L e b a n o n Shamir U N D ii s e n g a g e m e n tt O b s e rr v a tt ii o n F o rr c e s Al Buwayziyya! NeoG t MG oGrdGecGhaGi G ! G G G!G G G G Al-Hamra G GAl-GZawG iyGa G G ! Khiyam Al Walid Forcible transfer of Palestinians continues until today, mainly in the Southern District (Beersheba Region), the historical, coastal G G G G GAl-GMuGftskhara ! G G G G G G G Lehavot HaBashan Palestinian towns ("mixed towns") and in the occupied West Bank, in particular in the Israeli-prolaimed “greater Jerusalem”, the Jordan G G G G G G G Merom Golan Yiftah G G G G G G G Valley and the southern Hebron District.
    [Show full text]
  • NIUERSITY * )')N-')Fl Nlj'ol)'JIN G ~ OR S
    TEL AUIU UNIUERSITY * )')N-')fl nlJ'Ol)'JIN G ~ OR S. \v1S " F~-\ CLLI Y OF LIrE SCIENCES Till .0 ' ;nl'.~ ~ " lJ O"nil 'lJlni illJ/lj79il D ,1'. \ RTi\fE IT F ZOOLOGY iV;\171NIT7 ilj77nYlil Boaz AyaJon Program Specialist U.S. Embassy Tel Aviv, Israel Dear Mr Ayalon, Subject: Completion of Grant No. TA-MOU-06-M2S-078 This letter is to acknowledge the formal close-out and completion of the USAid MERC Grant No. TA-MOU-06-M2S-07B. As such, we are here within submitting the Final Report and final payment voucher. With this final report we have fulfilled all the requirements of the grant to the best of our knowledge. The project did not accrue non-expendable property (equipment), or patents, copyrights, and/or royalties. Thank you for this opportunity to further our research and strengthen our ties with scientists and other partners within the region. Sincerely, Dr. Yossi Leshem 6409012 · 03 ,6409812 ,70 6409 4 03· 03 : 0j79 , 69978 ::l ' ::l~·7n ::l'::l~·n),)i , i'lOIOi::l'll~i1 n"ij7 '1' 1': 1. .\\'1 \ ' U~I\TILJTY. R.\\[ \T .\\. 1\' (,')1)7 x, I.' R\FL. 1:\:\ : 'J/2· :1-(,40')411'. I'l l.: 1) 7 2· .' - (14U'JR12, (1-1,1)1)1112 1':- .\ f \ 1L /. () 0 L () c; Y ~. U : s <. ; . T \ I ' . \ <: . 1 l. TEL AUIU UNIUERSITY *::l'::lN- ')1111U'01::l'JIN RESEARCH AUTHORITY lj7nOi) nllUl Development Experience Clearing House MjCIOjKM, RRB 2.12-001 U.S. Agency for International Development 1300 Pennsylvania Ave,NW Washington, D.C.
    [Show full text]
  • Israel a History
    Index Compiled by the author Aaron: objects, 294 near, 45; an accidental death near, Aaronsohn family: spies, 33 209; a villager from, killed by a suicide Aaronsohn, Aaron: 33-4, 37 bomb, 614 Aaronsohn, Sarah: 33 Abu Jihad: assassinated, 528 Abadiah (Gulf of Suez): and the Abu Nidal: heads a 'Liberation October War, 458 Movement', 503 Abandoned Areas Ordinance (948): Abu Rudeis (Sinai): bombed, 441; 256 evacuated by Israel, 468 Abasan (Arab village): attacked, 244 Abu Zaid, Raid: killed, 632 Abbas, Doa: killed by a Hizballah Academy of the Hebrew Language: rocket, 641 established, 299-300 Abbas Mahmoud: becomes Palestinian Accra (Ghana): 332 Prime Minister (2003), 627; launches Acre: 3,80, 126, 172, 199, 205, 266, 344, Road Map, 628; succeeds Arafat 345; rocket deaths in (2006), 641 (2004), 630; meets Sharon, 632; Acre Prison: executions in, 143, 148 challenges Hamas, 638, 639; outlaws Adam Institute: 604 Hamas armed Executive Force, 644; Adamit: founded, 331-2 dissolves Hamas-led government, 647; Adan, Major-General Avraham: and the meets repeatedly with Olmert, 647, October War, 437 648,649,653; at Annapolis, 654; to Adar, Zvi: teaches, 91 continue to meet Olmert, 655 Adas, Shafiq: hanged, 225 Abdul Hamid, Sultan (of Turkey): Herzl Addis Ababa (Ethiopia): Jewish contacts, 10; his sovereignty to receive emigrants gather in, 537 'absolute respect', 17; Herzl appeals Aden: 154, 260 to, 20 Adenauer, Konrad: and reparations from Abdul Huda, Tawfiq: negotiates, 253 Abdullah, Emir: 52,87, 149-50, 172, Germany, 279-80, 283-4; and German 178-80,230,
    [Show full text]
  • Dress Culture in the Young State of Israel Anat Helman
    ——————————————————— iNTRODUCTION ——————————————————— A Coat of Many Colors: Dress Culture in the Young State of Israel — 1 — ISRAEL: SOCIETY, CULTURE, AND HISTORY Series Editor: Yaacov Yadgar, Political Studies, Bar-Ilan University Editorial Board: Alan Dowty, Political Science and Middle Eastern Studies, University of Notre Dame Tamar Katriel, Communication Ethnography, University of Haifa Avi Sagi, Hermeneutics, Cultural studies, and Philosophy, Bar-Ilan University Allan Silver, Sociology, Columbia University Anthony D. Smith, Nationalism and Ethnicity, London School of Economics Yael Zerubavel, Jewish Studies and History, Rutgers University ——————————————————— iNTRODUCTION ——————————————————— A Coat of Many Colors: Dress Culture in the Young State of Israel Anat Helman Boston 2011 — 3 — Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Helman, Anat. A coat of many colors : dress culture in the young state of Israel / Anat Helman. p. cm. -- (Israel: society, culture, and history) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-1-934843-88-8 (hardback) 1. Clothing and dress--Israel--History--20th century. 2. Israel--Politics and government-- 20th century. 3. Israel--Social life and customs--20th century. I. Title. GT1430.I8H45 2011 391.0095694'0904--dc22 2011006281 Copyright © 2011 Academic Studies Press All rights reserved Book design by Adell Medovoy Published by Academic Studies Press in 2011 28 Montfern Avenue Brighton, MA 02135, USA [email protected] www.academicstudiespress.com An electronic version of this book is freely available, thanks to the support of libraries working with Knowledge Unlatched. KU is a collaborative initiative designed to make high quality books Open Access for the public good. The Open Access ISBN for this book is 978-1-644-69326-1.
    [Show full text]
  • Birds As Peacemakers in the Middle East: 15 Years of Regional Cooperation
    BIRDS AS PEACEMAKERS IN THE MIDDLE EAST: 15 YEARS OF REGIONAL COOPERATION June 13, 2010: A Jordanian farmer holding a Barn Owl next to a nest box in Kibbutz Sde Eliyahu, Israel (Photo: Hagai Aharon) ֱקרן יוסף וֱקריסטינה ֱקסירר “Yea, the stork in the heaven Knoweth her appointed times; And the turtle dove and the swift and the crane Observe the time of their coming” (Jeremiah 8:7) MIGRATING BIRDS KNOW NO BOUNDARIES Between 1998 to 2004: Palestinian, Israelis and Jordanian schools learned about bird migration by following 120 German White Storks that were carrying satellite transmitters. Palestinian, Israelis and Jordanians also developed joint activities such as bird banding stations and much more. ציפורים כמוביֹלות שֹלום במזרח התיכון BIRDS AS PEACEMAKERS IN THE MIDDLE EAST: 15 YEARS OF REGIONAL COOPERATION PROJECT LEADERS Israel: Yossi Leshem, Dan Alon, Shaul Aviel, Zev Labinger, Motti Charter Palestinian Authority: Imad Atrash, Ibrahim Kosyeh, Nadar El Khatib Jordan: Gen (Ret.) Mansour Abu Rashed, Khaled Irani, Mohammed Yousef February 1999: Jewish and Muslim students watching cranes at the Hula Valley as part of the USAID MERC project, " Migrating Birds Know No Boundaries"(Photo: Ephi Sharir) . ֱקרן יוסף וֱקריסטינה ֱקסירר The booklet was published for the 25th Ornithological Congress (IOC) Brazil, August 2010. “The path no eagle knoweth, neither hath the Honey Buzzard’s eye seen it.” (Job, 28:7) Table of Contents 1. Introductions: Israel/Jordan/Palestinian Authority Projects 3 2. Migrating Birds Know No Boundaries, US-AID MERC Project (1998-2004) 8 3. For Birds and People in the Jordan Valley (BirdLife International) EU Project (2000-2002) 28 4.
    [Show full text]
  • PARSHAS SHEMOT Program Guide Breakdown
    A Weekly Publication of the National Council of Young Israel Achva Youth Department PARSHAS SHEMOT Program Guide Breakdown Parsha Review - Each week group leaders will have the opportunity to roundup the Parsha in two or three paragraphs. By giving over the Parsha in a short and simple way, group participants will be able to grasp the Parsha as a whole and to get them to think globally and conceptually. Parsha Questions - No Shabbat morning group is complete without a list of Parsha questions. These questions allow group participants the opportunity to win fun prizes while increasing their Torah knowledge. Questions vary from basic understanding of story line to challenging source-based material. The answers are provided as well. Tefillah Treasure - Many youth directors have asked for help when it comes to teaching Tefillah to children. This is a problem that not only shuls are dealing with. Schools, camps, and youth organizations are having trouble developing creative ideas to help children understand Tefillah. Over the course of the year, this section will highlight one aspect of Davening by providing both the Hebrew and English text, and one explanatory idea. The older the age group, the more we delve into the idea. This section is designed to help group participants follow the flow of Tefillah while understanding what they are saying. Group Activity - Now the fun begins! We start off with a GOAL. Each game has a purpose. The youth leaders should familiarize themselves with the goal before implementing the game. Discussion Portion - After the game is over and the participants are settled down, the youth leaders should facilitate a discussion.
    [Show full text]
  • מ"יבנה" לירושלים to Jerusalem
    ”From ”Yavne מ"יבנה" לירושלים to Jerusalem מ"יבנה" לירושלים The Isaac Kaplan Old Yishuv Court Museum מוזיאון חצר הישוב הישן ע"ש יצחק קפלן קופסת קק"ל עם ידית נשיאה, שנות ה־40' באדיבות תמי טליסמן A JNF charity box with carrying handle, 1940s Courtesy of Tamar Talisman ספרון עלילות קופסון בן חיל, ספר וצייר: מרדכי ורהפט, הוצאת ראובן מס, שנות ה־40' באדיבות ד"ר חיים גרוסמן Kufson Ben Hayil adventure booklet, author and illustrator: Mordechai Warhaft , Reuven Mass Publishers, 1940s Courtesy of Dr. Haim Grossman משחק דומינו המתעד את גלגולו של המטבע שנתרם לקרן הקיימת לישראל מהקופסה ועד הקמת ישוב פורח בארץ ישראל, שנות ה־40' תעודת קק"ל העתק מאוסף מיכה ברעם | תיעוד ותחקיר- גדי כפיר רמת השרון באדיבות ד"ר חיים גרוסמן A JNF certificate Cover | Domino game documenting the development of the JNF coin, from a box to the establishment of a flourishing community in Eretz Israel, 1940s Courtesy of Tamar Talisman A copy from the collection of Micha Baram | Documenting and research: Gadi Kfir, Ramat Hasharon מ"יבנה" לירושלים From ”Yavne” to Jerusalem ילדי העיר העתיקה כותבים הביתה מרודגס, 1941/2 צילום | יהושוע מרקוביץ | באדיבות משפחת מרקוביץ Old City children write home from Rodges, 1941/2 Photographer | Yehoshua Markowitz | Courtesy of the Markowitz family מוזיאון חצר הישוב הישן ע"ש יצחק קפלן The Isaac Kaplan Old Yishuv Court Museum עיריית ירושלים עיריית ירושלים משרד התרבות תנועת הקיבוץ הדתי אגף תרבות ארכיון העיר והספורט Tzabari־Ora Pikel ׀ Curator אוצרת | אורה פיקל־צברי Director | Almog Sharav מנהל | אלמוג שרב The Isaac Kaplan Old Yishuv Court Museum מוזיאון חצר היישוב הישן ע"ש יצחק קפלן ,Members of the Board | Chairman: Adv.
    [Show full text]
  • Tel Aviv Stamps Auction #46
    Tel Aviv Stamps Auction #46 ARGENTINA Lot #: 1 1891 Tierra Del Fuego- 10c stp by Julius Popper complete sheet of 100 w/serial no. 855 at bottom right; orig gum u/m, light gum wrinkles & some marginal perf separations & missing tiny piece of margin, f - vf, 1st cpl sheet that we have seen, Mi €60 for a hinged stp & note + 100% for u/m so total €12,000 + premium for sheet [**] Start: $400 FINLAND Lot #: 2 1867 - 1 M light Brown on White paper, used; f - vf, Mi €1500 [O] Start: $150 FRANCE (see also #37/39 & 194/198) Lot #: 3 1861 (27 AVRIL) commerc. letter, 2 pages message Marseille to Salonique 4 colors franking Yv 13, 14, 16 & 17 Empire ND total 1.50fr, 40c stp 4 margins others 3 margins, tied by P.C. 1896 - MARSEILLE (12), arrival pmk on back; fine [CV] Start: $180 Lot #: 4 Incoming Siege of Paris Mail, Boules de Moulins. franked 1 Fr, the correct rate, France 20c Blue (Ceres #44 Bordeaux good 4 margins) horizontal strip of 3 + 2x20c (#29 Lauree), tied to folded letter by "532" Gros Chiffres & "BORDEAUX 5 (JAN) 71" double-circle datestamp, addressed to Paris - no arrival pmk, manuscript "Paris par Moulins (Allier)" directive at bottom; slight water damage as expected, message faded, fine & scarce [CV] Start: $700 Lot #: 5 1937 Auguste Rodin Yv #344 Epreuve in Black 90+10c on sunken card total size 11x9½ cm; vf [PROOF] Start: $150 GERMANY (see also #40/43) Lot #: 6 1951 Posthorn the 3 high values 70, 80 & 90 Pf; u/m, vf (x3), Mi 136/8, € 1550 [**] Start: $180 Lot #: 7 Allied Occup.
    [Show full text]
  • The National-Religious Party, the Rabbinate, and the Arab-Israeli Peace Process: Principle and Pragmatism in Religious-Zionist Statecraft (1974–1977)
    The National-Religious Party, the Rabbinate, and the Arab-Israeli Peace Process: Principle and Pragmatism in Religious-Zionist Statecraft (1974–1977) A Dissertation Presented to The Faculty of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Brandeis University Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies Yehudah Mirsky, Advisor Ilan Troen, Advisor In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy by Ari Moshkovski February 2021 The signed version of this form is on file in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. This dissertation, directed and approved by Ari Moshkovski’s Committee, has been accepted and approved by the Faculty of Brandeis University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of: DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Eric Chasalow, Dean Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Dissertation Committee: Yehudah Mirsky, Near Eastern and Judaic Studies Ilan Troen, Near Eastern and Judaic Studies Arye Naor, Public Policy and Administration, Ben Gurion University of the Negev Copyright by Ari Moshkovski 2021 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS עמ״י ע ש ״ ו After years of study, research, and writing, I now face the happy task of recognizing those who enabled me to complete this dissertation. The education I received at Queens College, CUNY continues to serve me in good stead. I thank all my instructors, and acknowledge Kristina Richardson, Miryam Segal, Julia Sneeringer, and Bobby Wintermute for preparing me for the rigors of post-graduate studies. Studying and working with Mark Rosenblum was the centerpiece of my experience at Queens. I thank Prof. Rosenblum for supervising my master’s thesis, for the adventures, and for the comic relief.
    [Show full text]
  • Campaign Brings in More Than $540000 We Mourn Together With
    Jewish Federation of Reading Non-Profit Organization Jewish Cultural Center U.S. Postage PAID PO Box 14925, Reading, PA 19612-4925 Permit No. 2 www.ReadingJewishCommunity.org Reading, PA Change Service Requested Jewish Federation of Reading Non-Profit Organization Jewish Cultural Center U.S. Postage PAID JewishPO Box Federation 14925, Reading, of Reading PA 19612-4925 Non-Profit OrganizationPermit No. 2 Jewishwww.ReadingJewishCommunity.org Cultural Center U.S. PostageReading, PAID PA POChange Box 14925, Service Reading, Requested PA 19612-4925 Permit No. 2 www.ReadingJewishCommunity.org Reading, PA Change Service RequestedSHALOM The Journal of the Reading Jewish Community Published as a community service by the Jewish Federation of Reading, Pa. JewishVolume Federation 40 of No.Reading 3 MARCH 2010 Adar-NisanNon-Profit Organization 5770 Jewish Cultural Center U.S. Postage PAID PO Box 14925, Reading, PA 19612-4925 Permit No. 2 www.ReadingJewishCommunity.orgINSIDE Reading, PA Change Service RequestedSHALOM1100 Berkshire Boulevard The Journal ofSHALOM the Reading JewishIt’s been Community an Publishedincredible as a community year. service Hope by you’ve the Jewish beenFederation here! of Reading, Pa. TThehe JJournalournal ofof the ReadingIt is hardJewish to believe Community.Community that a year Published Published has gone as as by a a since community community we relocated service service to the by by Jewish the the Jewish Jewish Cultural Federation Federation Center at of1100 of Reading, Reading, Berkshire Pa. Pa. Volume 40 No.Boulevard 5 in Wyomissing. If you haven’tMAY been here,2010 we hope to see you in the very near future.Iyar-Sivan For those of you 5770 who VolumeVolume 45, 40 No.
    [Show full text]