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31 result(s) for "Simkin, Peter"
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OnWeb: Hosts Gone Mobile
Pricing for OnWeb 7.2 remains at US$8,000 per server or $150 per concurrent user. [Peter Havart-Simkin] described the developer experience using the tools, which plug into Visual Studio .NET or JBuilder: \"Let's say I want to provide a connection to CICS, SAP and PeopleSoft.
Trade Publication Article
Simkins wrong on Hundred Days campaign
In 1918, Field Marshal Sir Douglas Haig had lost his nerve and nearly advised the Government to sue for peace, while ordering more grinding frontal attacks which cost Britain and the Commonwealth a further...
General interest
The popular view that the generals were donkeys who sent brave British lions to their deaths is still strong. In his talk Mr [Peter Simkins] will talk about the careers of a few outstanding men who were definitely not donkeys.
Expert to speak on bloody conflict of world war I
The August meeting of the Scotland (North) Branch of the Western Front Association will see Peter Simkins visit Elgin to present a talk entitled The Performance of New Army Divisions...
your LIFE: Can YOU avoid the operation that every woman dreads? ; ONE IN FIVE WOMEN ARE LIKELY TO HAVE A HYSTERECTOMY - EVEN THOUGH EXPERTS SAY MANY OF THESE OPERATIONS AREN'T EVEN NECESSARY
Hysterectomies - which remove all or part of the womb, or uterus, and may also involve the Fallopian tubes, ovaries, cervix and part of the vagina - have declined from 55,000 in 1998 to 40,000 in 2005. You may need a hysterectomy for endometriosis, where the lining of the womb grows outside the uterus, causing pain and heavy bleeding. Large fibroids (growths in the uterus) is another reason, especially if they cause pain or bleeding. Sufferers of uterine prolapse, where the uterus falls through into the vagina also have the op, and occasionally, a hysterectomy is done as emergency surgery when the womb has been ruptured during other surgery, with uncontrollable bleeding after childbirth, or cancer of the womb.
YourLIFE: Can YOU avoid the operation that every woman dread? ; ONE IN FIVE WOMEN ARE LIKELY TO HAVE A HYSTERECTOMY - EVEN THOUGH EXPERTS SAY MANY OF THESE OPERATIONS AREN'T EVEN NECESSARY
Hysterectomies - which remove all or part of the womb, or uterus, and may also involve the Fallopian tubes, ovaries, cervix and part of the vagina - have declined from 55,000 in 1998 to 40,000 in 2005. You may need a hysterectomy for endometriosis, where the lining of the womb grows outside the uterus, causing pain and heavy bleeding. Large fibroids (growths in the uterus) is another reason, especially if they cause pain or bleeding. Sufferers of uterine prolapse, where the uterus falls through into the vagina also have the op, and occasionally, a hysterectomy is done as emergency surgery when the womb has been ruptured during other surgery, with uncontrollable bleeding after childbirth, or cancer of the womb.
Military historians at the DLI
Major Gordon Corrigan, who served with the Royal Gurkha Rifles, and Peter Simkins, who was senior historian at the Imperial War Museum, will be at the Durham Light Infantry Museum and Durham Art Gallery later this month. Peter Simkins will be at the DLI on Saturday, June 30 with his talk The Meritocrats, Some Outstanding but Largely Forgotten British and Dominion Generals of the Great War.
Mabel (Krepshan) Pulda, 93
[Mabel] was born in Brooklyn, NY, and moved with her parents, Harry and Minne Krepshan, sister, and brother Sidney to New Britain, CT. She graduated from New Britain State Teachers (now Central Connecticut State University) and became a teacher in elementary school until she married [Louis] and moved to Worcester in 1939. In Worcester she was an active and valued member and supporter of many civic, religious, and charitable organizations, including Hadassah, of which she was a Life Member and special honoree in 2005, Rachel's Table, the Worcester Public Library, past president of the Congregation Beth Israel Sisterhood, member of the Worcester Democratic City Committee, a volunteer in the Palliative Care Unit of UMass Hospital, and a volunteer Home Visitor for the Jewish Family Service. She was also a foster parent and host to friends and relatives; her dinner table was always open to guests and strangers.
Mabel (Krepshan) Pulda, 93
WORCESTER Mabel Pulda, 93, died peacefully on Saturday, August 23, surrounded by family members and friends. Mabel, known to all as Mary, experienced 93 years of life well and fully lived. She was the matriarch of a large and loving family that includes daughters Margery Blonder and her husband Fred, Elizabeth Tapper and her partner Peter Simkin, and Harriet Ben Ner and her husband Avner; sons Arnold and his wife Patricia, and Robert and his wife [Kathy Pulda], her son-in-law Howard Rifkin, and her sister Carolyn Sumner. She is predeceased by her husband, Louis, and her daughter, Ruth. Mabel also had 15 grandchildren and 5 great-grandchildren, many nieces, grand-nieces, nephews, grand-nephews, and countless friends.
Reviews of Books: Modern Europe--Kitchener's Army
John Morton Osborne reviews \"Kitchener's Army: The Raising of the New Armies, 1914-16,\" by Peter Simkins.