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  2. Animal welfare in Nazi Germany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_welfare_in_Nazi_Germany

    In 1934, Nazi Germany hosted an international conference on animal welfare in Berlin. [ 22] On March 27, 1936, an order on the slaughter of living fish and other poikilotherms was enacted. On March 18 the same year, an order was passed on afforestation and on protection of animals in the wild. [ 13] On September 9, 1937, a decree was published ...

  3. Jo-Ann Stores - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jo-Ann_Stores

    In 1943, German immigrants Hilda and Berthold Reich, Sigmund and Mathilda Rohrbach, and Justin and Alma Zimmerman opened the Cleveland Fabric Shop in Cleveland, Ohio.. After further expansion, in 1963, the name was changed to Jo-Ann Fa

  4. Holocaust analogy in animal rights - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holocaust_analogy_in...

    The analogies began soon after the end of World War II, when literary figures, many of them Holocaust survivors, Jewish or both, began to draw parallels between the treatment of animals by humans and the treatments of prisoners in Nazi death camps. The Letter Writer, a 1968 short story by Isaac Bashevis Singer, is a literary work often cited as ...

  5. Cleveland, Georgia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cleveland,_Georgia

    706. FIPS code. 13-16824 [3] GNIS feature ID. 0355189 [2] Website. www.cityofclevelandga.org. Cleveland is a city in White County, Georgia, located 90 miles (140 km) northeast of Atlanta and 128 miles (206 km) southeast of Chattanooga, Tennessee. Its population was 3,514 at the 2020 census. [4]

  6. Cleveland Museum of Art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cleveland_Museum_of_Art

    The Cleveland Museum of Art was founded as a trust in 1913 with an endowment from prominent Cleveland industrialists Hinman Hurlbut, John Huntington, and Horace Kelley. [ 6 ] The neoclassical, white Georgian Marble, Beaux-Arts building was constructed on the southern edge of Wade Park, at the cost of $1.25 million. [ 7 ]

  7. Art in Nazi Germany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Art_in_Nazi_Germany

    Art of Nazi Germany was characterized by a style of Romantic realism based on classical models. While banning modern styles as degenerate, the Nazis promoted paintings that were narrowly traditional in manner and that exalted the "blood and soil" values of racial purity, militarism, and obedience.

  8. Statue of Balto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statue_of_Balto

    A bronze statue of Balto by Frederick Roth is installed in Central Park, Manhattan, New York. Balto (1919 – March 14, 1933) was an Alaskan husky and sled dog belonging to musher and breeder Leonhard Seppala. [1] [2] He achieved fame when he reportedly led a team of sled dogs on the final leg of the 1925 serum run to Nome, in which diphtheria ...

  9. Cleveland Museum of Natural History - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cleveland_Museum_of...

    The Cleveland Museum of Natural History is a natural history museum located approximately five miles (8 km) east of downtown Cleveland, Ohio in University Circle, a 550-acre (220 ha) concentration of educational, cultural and medical institutions. The museum was established in 1920 by Cyrus S. Eaton to perform research, education and ...