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A new film tells the remarkable story of a female Jewish high jumper banned by the Nazis from the 1936 Olympics in Berlin – and whose team mate, it later turned out, was a man in disguise.
Berlin 36, due out this week, recounts how Gretel Bergmann was tipped for Olympic glory but was bumped off the German team at the last minute for fear that a gold-medal winning Jewish athlete would embarrass Hitler.
Instead, her “weird” room-mate Dora Ratjen competed. Dora gained only fourth place, but caused controversy two years later when a doctor discovered “she” was actually a he.
Gretel Bergmann emigrated to the US in 1937 and married a doctor, Bruno Lambert. Now aged 95, she still lives in New York, as Margaret Bergmann Lambert.
Until recently the economic crisis which has swept across the world did not concern the citizens of Serbia – they believed that was something happening to others far away.
Since the beginning of the year however, the crisis has spread across all aspects of the Serbian economy and society.
The value of Serbia’s currency, the dinar, has fallen, salaries have been frozen, prices have soared and bank loans have become expensive.
Although they acknowledge the serious nature of the downturn, Serbians – who faced economic sanctions during the 1990s – do not consider the current crisis to be tragic.
Bank loans and savings from years of work abroad, especially in the Gulf States, are now being ploughed into privately-owned building projects.
The prices of the newly-built modern properties are very high and out of reach for most local residents.
A one bedroom flat in the new developments costs about $120,000 (£72,500), while the cost per square metre of a plot of land in a good location could reach more than $1000.
Many of the buyers are very rich people, expatriates living and working abroad, or locals who sold their old houses which were located in desirable neighbourhoods in order to downsize to smaller but more luxurious and modern properties.
Now, many Sudanese companies are joining in, as are foreign investors from the Gulf States and south east Asia.
A decade ago, James Yang upgraded his taxi to a seven-seater maxi cab to target Singapore’s corporate sector.
And for a while it worked out well, “bringing in more money”, he says.
“Travel agents asked me to pick up their clients, or I did big corporate events.
“But now, companies are spending less on taxis. My [corporate] revenue has fallen almost 90% since last year.”
So recently, Mr Yang has been scouting for passengers on the streets
For centuries, workers from many parts of the globe have been coming to the US to find work and support themselves.
Many migrant workers have families back in their native countries who depend on them for remittances.
But for some, a difficult economic climate, triggered by a collapse in the housing market, is causing the dream to evaporate.
The worst US recession in decades has eliminated job opportunities for many immigrants, slowing the flow of money back home down to a trickle.
That’s especially true of the traditionally high-paying construction industry, often manned by Mexican workers.
Tepeyac, a Hispanic community centre, has its offices on West 14th Street in Manhattan.
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Similar T-Shirts are being developed that will allow people to play other instruments including the tambourine.
Even though there are questions concerning the wear and care of these T-Shirts , they are easy to slip on and off and will allow anyone who can move around the chance to sound like their favourite rock star.
There are a few places where the shirts are not welcome, however. Air guitar championships, for example, will not let anyone wearing the shirt become a contestant because it is an unfair advantage.
But for those who just want to know what it feels like to make great music and jump around a lot while doing it will love these shirts.
Photographer and painter Judy Seigel, has been taking pictures of political T-Shirts and other kinds of shirts for many years now. It all started when she spotted a political t-shirt on the subway in New York, USA in the 1970’s. Even though she thought the t-shirts should be photographed, she didn’t decide to photograph them until years later. Now Seigel has hundreds of photographs of t-shirts and recently released a book of these photographs titled, “[Read My T-shirt] for President . . . a True History of the Political Front and Back.”
Originally, a book that chronicled different types of t-shirts, Seigel found that she had taken pictures of mostly political T-Shirts. “The political T-shirts would overpower the other types of T-shirts,” Seigel said. She didn’t want the message of the political t-shirts to be overshadowed by humorous or offensive slogans and sayings, so she didn’t include other types of t-shirts.
The mother of a boy who died last summer from being struck by lightening with his friend at Montvale’s Memorial Field has created a wall sized quilt of his T-Shirts as a memorial to his life. Both Lee Weisbrod and Steven Fagan were from Pascack Valley High School, and are fondly missed by everyone in the town. The death had shocked everyone. Lee Weisbrod’s mother had decided to create this quilt made from special T-Shirts that her son had worn such as ones from his graduation from elementary school and his Pascack Valley senior high school shirt. She had seen a similar quilt that had been made for a local seamstress’s daughter and decided to create one for her son. “The quilt chronicles his life and all the great one-time events that happened in his life,” said Nancy Weisbrod. The quilt contains a total of twenty T-Shirts that Lee had worn from when he was nine years old and had attended the Camp Schodack to the his jersey of the University of Miami, he had just completed his freshman year.