Us Army Garrison Ansbach

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Us Army Garrison Ansbach U.S. ARMY GARRISON ANSBACH “The BEST Hometown in Europe” U.S. ARMY GARRISON ANSBACH NEWS, EVENTS AND COMMUNITY HIGHLIGHTS Oct. 19, 2018 Oct. 1 – 6, 2018 COMMUNITY HIGHLIGHT SUBSCRIBE RETIREE APPRECIATION ANSBACH DAY: USAG Ansbach hosted their HOMETOWN HERALD annual Retiree Appreciation Day (RAD) Oct. 17, 2018. Representatives of Veteran Affairs, FRANCONIAN NEWS Retirees in Europe, Foreign Medical Program, Customs and Army Emergency Relief Fund spoke to ANSBACH FMWR the attendees. Other participating organizations included Health & Dental Clinic, Legal Services, PHONE BOOK Customs, F&MWR and many more. COMMUNITY FLYERS NEWS & ANNOUNCEMENTS WAS IST LOS IN FRANKEN? HOST NATION VISITORS: Members of the German-American Association of West Middle Franconia recently visited U.S. Army Garrison Ansbach. After being greeted at the gate by Garrison Commander Col. Steven M. Pierce and Command Sgt. Major Philson Tavernier, the visitors ENVIRONMENTAL NEWS received a briefing by 12th Combat Aviation Brigade personnel at one of the hangars on Katterbach Kaserne. The visit continued with an installation tour via bus through Katterbach and Bismarck Kaserne, as SAFETY NEWS well as Urlas. ENERGY ACTION MONTH: The Army observes Energy Action Month (EAM) each October to promote energy security initiatives and to CLIF emphasize operational and installation energy resilience. EAM provides an opportunity to reinforce key messages that secure and reliable access to energy is vital for the Army to perform its mission and support global ICE operations. FIRE PREVENTION WEEK PHOTOS: The USAG Ansbach Fire ROAD CONDITIONS Department hosted several events and drills during the annual Fire Prevention Week Oct. 8 - 12, 2018, to highlight the importance of fire safety. Locations included an office building on Barton Barracks, Ansbach Elementary and Middle High Schools, as well as the Urlas shopping mall. NEWCOMERS INFO COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS: Find hot topics, news and short announcements of interest to the community in the Ansbach Hometown MK & NOVO SELO NEWS Herald’s “Announcements” U.S. ARMY GARRISON ANSBACH “The BEST Hometown in Europe” C A L E N D A R E V E N T S OCTOBER 2018 NOVEMBER 2018 18: German-American Bowling Night - 1: All Saints Day - German Holiday Outreach-KONTAKT Franken 1-3: “Seussical Kids” Performances 20: Pumpkin Festival Trip - Ludwigsburg 2: Training Holiday 24: Applied Suicide Intervention Skills 3: Europa Park: Halloween Training (ASIST) 4: Daylight Saving Time ends (USA) 25: “Look at me for me” Disability Awareness 5: Auditions: “A Dickens Christmas Carol” 25: Latin Night 6: Auditions: “A Dickens Christmas Carol” 26: Boo Bash 2018! 6: Outreach-KONTAKT Franken - Stammtisch 27: Unit Cross Country 10k 6: Country Night 27: Pre-season Basketball Tournament 7: CLIF 27: Trick or Treat 11: Veterans Day 28: Daylight Saving Time ends (Germany) 11: Veterans Day - Storck Observance 29: Red Ribbon Week 12: Veterans Day observed 30: Pumpkin Painting w/friends 15: Latin Night 31: AWAG seminar 16: German Hunting Course 17: “Girls' Weekend” Performance 17: Gobble Wobble 5k 18: “Girls' Weekend” Performance 20: Outreach-KONTAKT Franken - Stammtisch 20: Country Night 21: Thanksgiving Meal DFAC 22: Thanksgiving Ski & Snowboard Trip 22: Thanksgiving Day 23: Training Holiday 29: Latin Night 29: “Girls' Weekend” Performance Garrison Commander COL Steven Pierce +49 (0)981-183-1500 USAG Ansbach Public Affairs Office +49 (0)981-183-1600 Garrison CSM CSM Philson Tavernier +49 (0)981-183-1500 MK/NSTA CDR LTC Christopher Marquez +40-241-83-5202 Deputy to GC Ms. Kathleen Gavle +49 (0)981-183-1500 MK/NSTA SGM SGM Matakiah Fogle +40-241-83-5202 Page 2 .
Recommended publications
  • 18347 Workshop of Tilman Riemenschneider the Twelve Disciples Germany, Middle Franconia, Abenberg? C
    18347 Workshop of Tilman Riemenschneider The Twelve Disciples Germany, Middle Franconia, Abenberg? c. 1510 - 20 Central panel: 33 x 115 cm, Side panels: 30 x 55 cm Provenance By repute from the Marienkapelle in Abenberg, Middle Franconia; Bayerisches Nationalmuseum, Munich (Inv. MA 1797-99); Sold to the Bernheimer Gallery in 1951; Christie's London, 14 December 1999, lot 48. Published Graf, Hugo. Katalog des Bayerischen Nationalmuseums. M. Rieger: Munich, 1896, pp. 72. Weniger, Matthias. Tilman Riemenschneider: Die Werke im Bayerischen Nationalmuseum, Munich, 2017, Fig. 7.16. Description These three masterfully carved panels originally belonged to a predella supporting a monumental altarpiece. Depicting the twelve disciples, the panels are attributed to Tilman Riemenschneider’s workshop or his close circle. They are reputed to come from a church in Abenberg and were housed at the Bavarian National Museum until 1951. The figures of disciples on the long panel are divided into two groups of three. They include Matthias with an axe, Paul with two swords, Peter with the keys, John with a chalice, Thomas with an axe, and James, the son of Alphaeus, with a fuller’s club. The first short panel includes Simon with the saw, Jude with the club, and Andrew with the saltire. The second short panel includes Bartholomew with a knife, Philip with a cross, and St James with the scallop shell on his hat. The figures wear contemporary 16th century dress. The reliefs are set in against a flat background crowned by ornate tracery above. The back of the longer panel supporting the figures appears to have been cut down.
    [Show full text]
  • Regional Monitor the Metropolitan Region of Nuremberg Facts
    Regional Monitor The Metropolitan Region of Nuremberg Facts. Figures. Maps. 2006 metropolitan region of nuremberg SEE IT. FEEL IT. STAY. metropolitan region of nuremberg SEE IT. FEEL IT. STAY. EUROPEAN METROPOLITAN REGION OF NUREMBERG (EMN) REGIONAL MONITOR 2006 Sources: Federal Statistical Office, Germany Federal Office for Building and Regional Planning Federal Employment Agency Federal Motor Transport Authority Bavarian State Office for Statistics and Data Processing GfK Marktforschung GmbH internal data and calculations Published by: European Metropolitan Region of Nuremberg City of Nuremberg – Mayor's Office Secretariat of the European Metropolitan Region of Nuremberg Rathausplatz 2 D – 90403 Nuremberg Edited by: Office for Urban Research and Statistics for Nuremberg and Fürth Unschlittplatz 7a D – 90403 Nuremberg Dr. Henning Schirner, Marco Beierlein, Roland Schmittfull co-operating with: Dr. Christa Standecker, City of Nuremberg, EMN Secretariat Dr. Thomas Goller, City of Bamberg, Harald Heinlein, Rural District of Neustadt a.d.Aisch-Bad Windsheim, Rainer Keis, Rural District of Bamberg, Frank Richartz, Rural District of Nürnberger Land Internet: http://www.mr-n.eu http://www.statistik.nuernberg.de E-mail: [email protected] [email protected] Information and orders: Nuremberg, Unschlittplatz 7a, Room 01 Telephone: +49 (0)911 231 2843 Fax: +49 (0)911 231 7460 ISBN 978-3-929922-64-9 Printed by: W. Tümmels, Buchdruckerei und Verlag GmbH & Co.KG Gundelfinger Strasse 20, D – 90451 Nuremberg Layout and design: Office for Urban Research and Statistics with kind support for Nuremberg and Fürth from: Unschlittplatz 7a TBN Public Relations GmbH 90403 Nuremberg Michael-Vogel-Str. 3 D – 91052 Erlangen All rights reserved.
    [Show full text]
  • Information on Studying in Nuremberg
    Master “International Business Studies” Information on studying at the FAU School of Business and Economics in Nuremberg Welcome! Dear Students, The decision to study abroad is a big step to take. It means a new language, a new culture, or- ganizing somewhere to live, and quite a few other everyday things. The teaching staff in the Masters program have all more or less experienced this, and know the sort of questions that students have, particularly at the outset of their Masters course. We have put together this bro- chure to help you and to make living and studying in Nuremberg easier for you. The School of Business and Economics (formerly WiSo) is one of the biggest and most distin- guished of its kind. Thirty-four chairs cater to over 5,000 students providing a wide range of ex- cellent degree programs of international academic renown. Testimony to this are not only former and current faculty members such as the former Chancellor Ludwig Erhard, the former Minister for Economic Affairs, Helmut Haussmann and the former Chairman of the Executive Board of Siemens, Heinrich von Pierer, but also our graduates who are in leading positions at Adidas, BMW, Leoni or Voith. Studying at the “elite school” WiSo is therefore the best prerequisite for a successful career in a global company according to a recent edition of the magazine Wirtschaftswoche. Nuremberg is not just a great choice of university. The city offers a great work-life balance. A historic place, Nuremberg, city of human rights, is home to people from many corners of the world.
    [Show full text]
  • From Noble Dress to Jewish Attire: Jewish Appearances in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth and the Holy Roman Empire
    Cornelia Aust From Noble Dress to Jewish Attire: Jewish Appearances in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth and the Holy Roman Empire Abstract: This article examines the different styles of attire that had emerged by the eighteenth century among Jews in Poland and German-speaking lands. It ar- gues that Jews in both regions developed their attire from older styles of dress that had fallen out of fashion among German burghers and Polish noblemen, re- spectively. Nevertheless, the distinguishability of Jews and Christians and distinc- tions among Jews according to social status, gender, and geographic origin were never clear-cut issues. Picturing a Hasidic Jew in Jerusalem or New York today, with a long black coat, a silk or satin caftan on Sabbath, and a black (fur) hat, many believe that this or similar attire has been the typical dress of (East European) Jews throughout time.1 However, dress and appearance have always undergone continual change and are a rather fluid marker of identity and belonging. Though Jewish law traditionally prescribes that Jews be distinguishable from their non-Jewish neighbors, and Christian and Jewish authorities have since the thirteenth century explicitly stipulated distinctive dress, such normative prescriptions do not allow for the conclusion that Jewish men and women have always been recognizable by their dress. Likewise, the fact that Jews were sometimes forced to wear distinctive signs does not mean that they were other- wise invisible as Jews or could pass as Christians when not wearing a discrimi- natory sign.2 Nevertheless, by the end of the eighteenth century there seems to have been a clear sense of a “Jewish attire”.
    [Show full text]
  • Beschreibungen Unterkunftverzeichnis Gemeinden Und Allgemeine Texte Ob Preisgünstige Pension Oder Schickes Hotel, Familienfreun
    Beschreibungen Unterkunftverzeichnis Gemeinden und allgemeine Texte Ob preisgünstige Pension oder schickes Hotel, familienfreundliche Ferienwohnung oder Campingplatz mit Seeblick - im Landkreis Roth finden Sie immer die passende Unterkunft. Die Onlinesuche gibt Ihnen die Möglichkeit, nach Orten oder nach Kategorien zu suchen. Gerne helfen wir Ihnen aber auch telefonisch unter 09171 81-1329 oder per E-Mail an tourismus@landratsamt- roth.de, die passende Unterkunft zu finden. BITTE BEACHTEN SIE: Sollten Sie freie Unterkünfte für den Challenge 2017 suchen, raten wir Ihnen, nicht online nach Zimmern zu suchen, da die Liste der freien Unterkünfte systembedingt nur einmal täglich aktualisiert werden kann. Aktuelle Auskünfte zu Unterkunftsmöglichkeiten erfragen Sie am einfachsten und zuverlässigsten per E-Mail an [email protected]. HIER können Sie in unserem neuen BLÄTTERKATALOG das aktuelle Unterkunftsverzeichnis durchschmökern: Whether you are looking for an inexpensive guest house or a fancy hotel, a holiday home suitable for the whole family or a campsite with a sea-view- in the district of Roth you will always find the perfect accomodation for you. The online search gives you the oppurtunity to search by place or by category. If you have any further questions please call us using the number 09171 81 1329 or send us an email using the address- [email protected], so that we can help you to find accomodation that suits you. PLEASE TAKE NOTE: If you are looking for available accomadation for the Challenge Roth 2017, we would advise you not to search for available rooms online, because the list of available accomodation can only be updated once per day.
    [Show full text]
  • Discover & Experience
    DISCOVER & EXPERIENCE • SIGHTSEEING • TOWN WALKS • THINGS TO DO Contents Out and about on a discovery tour This tour of Schwabach, the town of the gold-beaters, is designed to introduce you to our town, its sights, its history and its stories. Step into our past, learn about our gold, and enjoy our art. Choose which stops to visit and create your own personal tour starting from any point on the map. A good first stop is the Town Hall, where you’ll also find our tourist in- formation desk. The staff here will be happy to provide you with advice and assistance. H = Historical G = Gold A = Art Discovery tour · 27 must-see sights in Schwabach ............................. 3 1. Town Hall H · G · A Town centre map ........................................................................... 18 The Town Hall stands cheek-by-jowl with the Town Church. Together they cast an unmistakeable shadow on the Schwabach market square Guided tours of Schwabach, the gold-beating town ....................... 21 (Königsplatz), their outline instantly recognisable as an emblem of the Town museum ................................................................................ 22 entire town. Schwabach’s town hall has a new lustre following renova- tion completed in 2002. Jewish Museum of Franconia in Schwabach ................................... 27 Today’s building was built in 1528/29 Gold leaf production and points of interest .................................... 28 when it not only provided a meeting place for the council. Its arcades also Sport and leisure ............................................................................ 30 housed bakers' stalls and six little shops Cycling in Schwabach .................................................................... 33 selling local crafts. Over the centuries, several extensions and changes of use Walking and running ..................................................................... 34 have reshaped the town hall.
    [Show full text]
  • Invest in Bavaria
    Support for medium-sized enterprises Regional support Support for environmental protection projects Support for innovation and technology Labor market policy aids Guarantees Investment capital Federal support Invest in Bavaria Support programs in Bavaria Bavarian Ministry of Economic Affairs, Infrastructure, Transport and Technology NNVBA_Foerderbroschuere_englisch_11_tabs.inddVBA_Foerderbroschuere_englisch_11_tabs.indd 1 229.02.20089.02.2008 112:54:362:54:36 UUhrhr content 1. Introduction 3. Foreword Important general information 2. Support for medium-sized enterprises 5. Start-up loan (Startkredit) and investment funding (Investivkredit) from the Bavarian Small and Medium-Sized Business Credit Program (Mittelstandskreditprogramm MKP) 3. Regional support 6. Bavarian regional support programs for commercial enterprises (BRF] Joint Task “Improvement of regional economic structure” (Gemeinschaftsaufgabe GA) 4. Support for environmental protection projects 8. Environmental protection loan (Ökokredit) from Bavarian Environmental Funding Programs (UKP) 5. Support for innovation and technology 9. Bavarian technology support programs (BayTP) Support for technology-oriented business start-ups (BayTOU) Micro-system technology program Bavaria New materials program Information and communication technology program Support by the Bavarian Research Foundation 6. Labor market policy aids 14. LfA Förderbank Bayern – grants for trainee programs (Ausbilderkredit) Integration subsidies 7. Guarantees 16. Sureties by LfA Förderbank Bayern Sureties by Bürgschaftsbank
    [Show full text]
  • A Roadmap to Life in Germany Frisch!
    Issue 2018 frisch! international: a roadmap to life in Germany frisch! baked: guide to starting your studies frisch! and lively: living in Erlangen-Nuremberg frisch! challenge: abroad, master’s degree, job prospects www.fau.de ongratulations! You’ve decided to study at Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen- CNürnberg. That’s a great choice! Plus, you’ve just found the perfect companion to show you around: our magazine frisch! an der FAU can tell you (almost) everything you need to know about life at FAU – like how you can make the best start on your course, where Welcome to FAU you can get help and advice if you need it, how you can arrange a semester abroad, and what career opportuni- ties are on offer in the Nuremberg Metropolitan Region. And, of course, we can give you loads of tips about all the important stuff that has nothing to do with your course. By that we mean accommodation, food, and fun – and how to afford it all. You should also know that FAU has all kinds of great further training courses and recreational activities on offer. You can take language courses at the Language Centre, take up a sport at the Hochschulsport, dive into the world of music, or be part of FAU’s campus media crew. If you’re interested in being politically active and helping to shape FAU, a whole host of university committees would love you to get involved. And if, after graduating, you can’t bear the thought of leaving, FAU’s doors are always open to talented young researchers.
    [Show full text]
  • Nobles and Nuremberg's Churches
    Durham E-Theses Relations between Townspeople and Rural Nobles in late medieval Germany: A Study of Nuremberg in the 1440s POPE, BENJAMIN, JOHN How to cite: POPE, BENJAMIN, JOHN (2016) Relations between Townspeople and Rural Nobles in late medieval Germany: A Study of Nuremberg in the 1440s, Durham theses, Durham University. Available at Durham E-Theses Online: http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/11492/ Use policy The full-text may be used and/or reproduced, and given to third parties in any format or medium, without prior permission or charge, for personal research or study, educational, or not-for-prot purposes provided that: • a full bibliographic reference is made to the original source • a link is made to the metadata record in Durham E-Theses • the full-text is not changed in any way The full-text must not be sold in any format or medium without the formal permission of the copyright holders. Please consult the full Durham E-Theses policy for further details. Academic Support Oce, Durham University, University Oce, Old Elvet, Durham DH1 3HP e-mail: [email protected] Tel: +44 0191 334 6107 http://etheses.dur.ac.uk 2 Relations between Townspeople and Rural Nobles in late medieval Germany A Study of Nuremberg in the 1440s Benjamin John Pope Thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of History, Durham University 2015 1 CONTENTS 1. Introduction . 7 The Medieval Debate. 9 ‘Not exactly established’: Historians, Towns and Nobility. .18 Liberals and Romantics . .20 The ‘Crisis’ of the Nobility . 25 Erasing the Divide .
    [Show full text]
  • City of Nuremberg Implementation of the „Ten-Point Plan of Action
    City of Nuremberg Implementation of the „Ten-Point Plan of Action against Racism“ 2017 – 2018 Content General Information 1. Greater Vigilance Against Racism Round Table Human Rights Alliance Against Right-Wing Extremism 2. Assessing Racism and Discrimination and Monitoring Municipal Policies Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity in the Cities of Nuremberg and Erlangen Education Monitoring Cooperation in greater Nuremberg region in competence area human rights 3. Better Support for the Victims of Racism and Discrimination Officer in charge of anti-discrimination Officer in charge of women’s issues Contact person for men LGBTI Coordination Admission of refugees 4. More Participation and Better Informed City Dwellers Structure Integration Updating Guidelines for Nuremberg’s integration policy Integreat International Weeks Against Racism 5. The City as an Active Supporter of Equal Opportunity Practices Elternpower – Accompanying Letters NORIS Inklusion / Rent-A-Huhn Noris-Arbeit Nuremberg Award for Company Culture without Discrimination 6. The City as an Equal Opportunities Employer and Service Provider Intercultural Opening of municipal administration Intercultural training programme 7. Fair Access to Housing Situation 8. Challenging Racism and Discrimination Through Education Oh I see ?! Human Rights Education Putting Remembrance in Young Hands 9. Promoting Cultural Diversity Partnership for Democracy “Gutmensch” - Music video against discrimination Nuremberg Peace Table Intercultural and Sociocultural Offers Participation in Culture and Sports 10. Hate Crimes and Conficts Monagement Threat Management Programme Community Mediation Preventive Network against Religiously Motivated Radicalisation Annex Nuremberg - A City Faces Its History Guidelines on Integration Policy 1 General information With around 535,000 inhabitants, Nuremberg is the second largest city of the Free State of Bavaria.
    [Show full text]
  • Your Army Home
    www.total-lokal.de U.S. Army Garrison Ansbach Your Army Home Community Guide Community Guide www.total-lokal.de www.total-lokal.de Welcome 1 Welcome! Dear Newcomer, Welcome to Your Army new commissary, a new already is, and I assure you Home—US Army Garrison post exchange and other that this is one of the best Ansbach! recreational facilities at assignments a Soldier can I think you’ll find Urlas, and a new $25 ask for. You just can’t beat Ansbach a wonderful area million fitness center on the warm, friendly atmo- to live, train, work and play. Katterbach. sphere, the tremendous Throughout the garrison You’ll find that we have history of this area and, and the surrounding com- wonderful schools here in with our being right in the munities, you’ll find the Ansbach with teachers and middle of the country, there people are friendly and staff that truly go above are many opportunities to always willing to lend a and beyond in making sure travel throughout Europe. helping hand—and local children receive a top- I ask you to get involved officials and agencies notch education. With the with our great team that we stand at the ready to help small size of our schools, have here—volunteerism is make life wonderful for combined with the caring alive and well at Ansbach, our Soldiers, Civilians and natures of those who work and the entire garrison Family members. in them, children also and community benefits This garrison is on the receive personalized help from people helping rise to becoming the gar- in dealing with issues such people.
    [Show full text]
  • Returning Home After the Holocaust
    Dr. Stefanie Fischer Visiting Research Associate Professor, University of Notre Dame Postdoctoral Fellow, Center for Jewish Studies, University of Potsdam Economic Trust in the ‘Racial State’. A Case Study from the German Countryside Recent research has shown that categorizing actors into a victim–perpetrator–bystander triad does not help us grasp the complexity of agency within genocidal settings. Holocaust studies have, instead, shifted towards understanding the Holocaust as a social process and have taken to examining the various nuances in between the categories of victim, perpetrator and bystander. These studies offer a view of the Holocaust as a multilayered process of actions performed by Jews and non-Jews alike at various times and places.1 Such an approach casts the Holocaust as a history of relationships between members of both groups, all participating in very different ways. Specifically, it erases the black-and-white picture of Jews as passive victims and their Nazi tormentors as the sole executors of evil. This way of looking at the Holocaust allows us to see it as a social process mutually carried out by people with agency across Nazi-occupied Europe – in the streets, in schools, in pubs, in parks, in private homes, or simply wherever Jews and non- Jews met and communicated at different levels of engagement. 1 In order to understand the Holocaust as a social process, we must ask who the actors in the events that unfolded actually were, and what specific roles these actors played in the exclusion, persecution and eventual murder of Europe’s Jews. We also need to enquire into the social dynamics and changes influencing developments.
    [Show full text]