Malta was awarded the George Cross and the medal is currently on display in the War Museum in Valletta.
The Pacific Ocean
On April 17, 1955, the great mathematician and physicist Albert Einstein was admitted to Princeton Hospital complaining of chest pains. He died early the next morning (April 18) of a burst aortic aneurysm. He was cremated, and his ashes were scattered in an undisclosed location. Before the cremation, however, his brain was removed by Dr. Thomas Harvey, a pathologist at the hospital who wanted to know what it was that made Einstein a genius. Harvey did not have permission to remove the brain, and when the fact came to light and he refused to return the specimen, he was dismissed from the hospital. For almost three decades, Harvey kept Einstein's brain in his home, constantly on the lookout for researchers willing to study it. Most, however, dismissed the idea that Einstein's brain was physiologically different in any meaningful way. In the early 1980s, however, Harvey was contacted by Marian Diamond, a neuroscientist from UCLA who proposed to count certain cells in the scientist's brain and compare them with normal specimens. Although other scientists questioned the validity of her methods, she found that Einstein did indeed have an unusual neuron-to-glial-cell ratio in one key area of his brain. Finally, in 1997, Harvey embarked on a cross-country road trip to return the brain to Einstein's granddaughter in California. Ironically, she didn't want it and the great scientist's brain was eventually returned to the same pathology lab at Princeton Hospital where it's strange journey had begun more than forty years earlier.
The first European settler was Hardy Ivy, who built a cabin there in 1833. He laid out the streets of the original town site. Peachtree was the main street. The four original cross streets were named for Hardy Ivy's four son-in-laws. One of those, Ellis street, named for James M. Ellis, husband to Mary E. Ivy, one of Hardy Ivy's daughters. The graves of this early family are located in the Oakland Cemetery, except for Hardy himself. His grave has been lost.
Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross was created on 1939-09-01.
Ellis island
Immigrants had to go to Ellis Island because they had to take a test, check if their sick, and get the papers this usually took a really long time.
Either a brilliant guy who is full of holes or an idiot with crazy hair.
Ellis Royal Cross has written: 'Underwater photography and television'
Albert Francis Cross has written: 'The River Anker in Poetry and Prose'
Albert G. Love has written: 'The Geneva Red Cross movement' -- subject(s): Red Cross
Cross Island Parkway was created in 1940.
Einstein was a theoretical physicist as apposed to an experimental one. People like Einstein generally work with a pen and paper, or chalkboard. Assistants are rare, although exchanging ideas with peers and publishing their work is common. Experimental physicists design experiments, and collect data and often have many assistants. Some cross over into theoretic physics, some to engineering. Usually theoretical physicists don't cross over to other fields. Usually both theoretical and experimental physicists have teaching resonsibilities, but this varies.
because he wanted to ha ha not really
No is Island Saint Cross
8 billion light-years.
Rennie Ellis has written: 'Kings Cross Sydney' -- subject(s): Description and travel 'We Live in Australia (Living Here)'