he does not have to pay them. (although he does have to pay a nominal fee to the SS for them)
Other than being slightly flattened at the poles, no parts of the world are perfectly flat. We perceive the ground we stand on as being flat rather than curved, though.
15 poles.
Yes, they did.They were mostly carved from stone, usually limestone. The poles featured depictions of great battles, historic events and the gods they worshipped.Related questions:Why are totem poles made, who made them and when were they first made?How are totem poles made?
They made totem poles, they held potlatch
totem poles
He didn't exactly "hide" them. In the movie Schindler's List, he starts out wanting to buy an enamelware factory so he can continue his lifestyle of money, wine, and women.Schindler hires Jews because his account, Stern, tells him, "They're cheaper than Poles." Schindler didn't want to spend a ton of money on workers, but after seeing the ghetto being liquidated (emptied) and the horrible, nauseating treatment Amon Goeth bestows upon the Jews, he begins to find ways to bring as many Jews into his factory as he can.It's a really great movie, and it really helps you understand the Holocaust from a different point of view. I would suggest it if you're interested.
this is text only, so I will do my best here are all of the poles: A. 2 fiberglass bendy poles, 4 segments each, held together with elastic, 77" long assembled B. 2 thin metal poles, 3x20" segments, with a point at one end, 56" long assembled originally labeled with green dots. C. 1 thin metal pole, 3x25" segments, with a point at one end, 70" long assembled originally labeled with yellow dots D. 2 short metal poles with plastic connectors on one end, 26.5" long originally labeled with red dots E. 2 metal poles, 3x19" segments connected with wire and elastic, 54" long assembled originally labeled with red dots F. 2 metal poles with bends at the end, 2 segments connected with wire and elastic. These connect to make one long pole with bends at each end originally labeled with red dots G. 4 metal poles 3x22" segments connected with wire and elastic, 62" long assembled each has a metal loop near the top originally labeled with blue dots H. 4 elbow connectors. The 4 (G) poles go to the corners, with the elbow connectors (H) on top The 2 (A) poles go between, over the top, connecting into the elbows (H). The curved pole (F) goes into the peak of the tent, supported by the (E) poles, inserted into the (D) poles. Adjust these to tension The (B) pole is for the center of the front eave, with the (A) poles supporting the sides of the eave.
Many Poles moved to Wisconsin. Some moved to Milwaukee for factory jobs. Others bought dairy farms.
SOME Electromagnet like permanent magnets have two poles(north/south). Likewise the rules for SOME Electromagnets are the same as those of a permanent magnet(same poles repel, different poles attract).
Originally it was a rotating liquid mass, which led to a sphere which is swelled at the equator and flattened at the poles.
An antiferromagnet is any material which is antiferromagnetic - in which a magnet with two identical poles attracts rather than repels.
Hook all the positive poles together, and all the negative poles. This is "parallel" wiring, and it increases the amps rather than the volts.
An antiferroquadrupole is another name for an antiferromagnetic quadrupole - in which a magnet with two identical poles attracts rather than repels.
If you mean Oskar Schindler then it basically means this: During WWII as we all know it (or should) the Germans hated the Poles/Gays/Jews/Gypsies etc...but this one man (along with Stern; Oskar's accountant/profit man) managed to save up to 1,200 Jews. So every one of those 1,200 Jews (Precise numbers aren't known) were put on this list. To put it straightforward he rebelled against Germany.
When flying, skis & poles (normally packed together) and your boot bag, are normally considered one piece of luggage. You pay your airline's normal bag fare, if they even charge one. Each airline luggage charges differ.
entryway poles, ridicule poles and shame poles.
It means "a rude wild Boy or Girl" originally applied to Polish (Poles). Common enough in the 1700's that it is found in a slang dictionary of that time.