The cast of Adama Hamah - 1984 includes: Alexis Dupont Yitzhak Goren Dalia Malka Miriam Nataf Jacques Ovadiah Laurence Sanderovich Meir Suissa
He isfrom hamah Syria.
yes
Krishan Mohan has written: 'Hamah rang'
The cast of 616 - 2014 includes: Simon Birks as Eadward Jon Campling as Edward Grahame Edwards as Harold Erica Emm as Frida Nathaniel Francis as Bruce Joseph Gale as Liam Gabriella Grace Elliot as Sarah Peter Kyei as Office Worker Ross Lanham as Office Worker Ollie Malam as Andy Joana Nastari as Jenna Ryan Spencer Wilson as Alfred Stefan Stuart as Richard Ian Weichardt as Jack Hamah White as Oona
There are over one hundred hotels in the Syria region. These include, but are not limited to, the Candels in Damascus, the Carlton Citadel Hotel in Aleppo, and the Cairo Hotel Hamah in Hama.
Meir Suissa has: Played Bazooka in "Ha-Lahaka" in 1978. Played Moshon in "Dizengoff 99" in 1979. Performed in "Hamsin" in 1982. Played Yaacov Ben Naim in "Adon Leon" in 1982. Performed in "Ha-Pachdanim" in 1983. Performed in "Adama Hamah" in 1984. Performed in "Shovrim" in 1985. Played Udi in "Nadia" in 1986. Performed in "Ha-Tov, HaRa, VeHaLo-Nora" in 1987. Played Herzel in "Shevet Cohen" in 1991. Performed in "Ein Shemot Al Hadlatot" in 1997. Played Marco in "Zbeng" in 1998. Performed in "Doch Ivgi Swissa" in 1999. Played Effi Yerushalmi in "Shabatot VeHagim" in 1999. Played Guru in "Chunt Lee" in 2002. Played himself in "About Life and Death" in 2005. Played Haim in "Ein La Elohim" in 2007. Played Eliezer Borozovski in "Marriage Agreement" in 2008. Played Rafael in "Hatsuya" in 2009.
The cast of Invalid Debris - 2010 includes: Thea Adams as Usher Remi Adenaike as Schoolboy Pamela Banks as Librarian Francesca Bradley as Jennifer Lewis-Simpson Vijay Chudasama as Teacher in Library Cristina Cidrao as Gaia Mariesa Clarke as Hatton Adriana Dias as Library Schoolgirl Jennifer Etherington as Mourner Nick Ewans as Richard Newman Naomi Fawcett as Fifi Claudine Gatt as Jules Marshall Jonnie Gatt as Nathan Marshall Marios Georgiou as Southwark Extra Rob Hind as Southwark Police Yujxel Jati as Shopkeeper Jessica Martenson as Court Clerk Sofia Matos as Hannah Erim Metto as Judge Kandice Morris as Kaya Matthews JoJo Provatidou as Woman in Trendy Cafe Leon Qyqalia as Schoolboy Ian Rixon as Derek Bryant Duarte Santana as DCI Yarnam Nelio Santana as Luca Calvechi Faye Sarah Hammond as Courtroom Observer Diana Stainton as Courtroom Journalist Robbi Stevens as Crazy Tube Lady Stephanie Sukar as Venus Raphael Scott Sur as Steve Farah Targino as Mourner Bianca Turner as Woman in Trendy Cafe Murat Ucar as Markaiu Nadia Volodina as Mourner Hamah White as Yvette Nadine Woodley as WPC Frasier
"35° 10' north latitude" is the description of a circle that goes all around the Earth, parallel to the equator and about 2,430 miles from it. A few of the population centers that are on or very close to that line include -- Nador, Morocco -- Sidi Bel Abbes, Algeria -- Kasserine, Tunisia -- Nicosia, Cyprus -- Hamah, Syria -- Kirkuk, Iraq -- Sanandaj, Iran -- Mahamud-e Eraqi, Afghanistan -- Zaozhuang, China -- Kwangju, Korea -- Nagoya, Japan -- Pismo Beach, California -- Laughlin, Arizona -- Tucumcari, New Mexico -- Amarillo, Texas -- Norman, Oklahoma -- Morrilton, Arkansas -- Memphis, Tennessee -- Charlotte, North Carolina -- Landrum, South Carolina
The Romans named the planet after the fleet-footed messenger god Mercury, probably for its fast apparent motion in the twilight sky. The astronomical symbol for Mercury, is a stylized version of the god's head and winged hat atop his caduceus, an ancient astrological symbol. The Greeks called it Stilbon ("the gleaming") and Hermaon. Before the 5th century BC, Greek astronomers believed the planet to be two separate objects: one visible only at sunrise, the other only at sunset. In India, the planet was named Budha , after the son of Chandra (the Moon). The Chinese, Korean, Japanese, and Vietnamese cultures refer to the planet as the water star , based on the Five Elements. The Hebrews named it Kokhav Hamah , "the star of the hot one" ("the hot one" being the Sun). Mercury is smaller than several of the natural satellites or moons in our solar system.
In theory it should be technically possible by using the Chunnel, driving completely around the Mediterranean, and coming into western Africa from the east side. Political realities mean there's a slight lack of connecting roads in some places... most notably, you can't really get there without going through Israel, which on the map at least looks like it could be difficult. It's 2714 miles from London to Yayladagi, Turkey, right on the border with Syria. From there it gets difficult... the map indicates that there are roads, but it won't give directions across the border. Even between points in Syria, it refuses to provide directions... Aleppo to Hamah, two cities that are clearly connected by a major road identified on the map as "5" (the main reason I picked those two) produces the result "We could not calculate directions", and from that point onward, getting it to cross borders is sometimes problematic even when it happily gives directions within the countries on either side and when it looks like there are actually roads (Egypt/Libya, in particular; I can get directions from cities in Libya all the way to Marrakesh, and between any two cities in Egypt, but it doesn't like crossing that border). It looks like Yayladagi would be, roughly speaking, the halfway point in driving from London to Marrakesh (you didn't say where in West Africa) meaning the total trip would be on the high side of 5000 miles if you could make it. If by "drive" you include "a ferry trip of about an hour", you could do a lot better by driving to south Spain... say, Tarifa, a bit under 1500 miles... and crossing to say Tanger, Algeria, about 25 miles away, by ferry. At that point you'd be in west Africa already.
Mercury is the innermost and smallest planet in the solar system, orbiting the Sun once every 88 days. It ranges in brightness from about −2.0 to 5.5 in apparent magnitude, but is not easily seen as its greatest angular separation from the Sun (greatest elongation) is only 28.3°. It can only be seen in morning or evening twilight. Comparatively little is known about the planet: the only spacecraft to approach Mercury was Mariner 10 from 1974 to 1975, which mapped only 40%–45% of the planet’s surface. Physically, Mercury is similar in appearance to the Moon as it is heavily cratered. It has no natural satellites and no substantial atmosphere. The planet has a large iron core which generates a magnetic field about 0.1% as strong as that of the Earth[1]. Surface temperatures on Mercury range from about 90 to 700 K (−180 to 430°C, −292 to 806°F), with the subsolar point being the hottest and the bottoms of craters near the poles being the coldest. The Romans named the planet after the fleet-footed messenger god Mercury, probably for its fast apparent motion in the twilight sky. The astronomical symbol for Mercury, displayed at the top of the infobox, is a stylized version of the god’s head and winged hat atop his caduceus, an ancient astrological symbol. The Greeks called it Στίλβων Stilbon (“the gleaming”) and Hermaon. Before the 5th century BC, Greek astronomers believed the planet to be two separate objects: one visible only at sunrise, the other only at sunset. In India, the planet was named Budha (बुध), after the son of Chandra (the Moon). The Chinese, Korean, Japanese, and Vietnamese cultures refer to the planet as the water star , based on the Five Elements. The Hebrews named it Kokhav Hamah (כוכב חמה), “the star of the hot one” (“the hot one” being the Sun). Mercury is smaller than several of the natural satellites or moons in our solar system. MERCURY - is the closest planet to the Sun and so is also the fastest moving (that gravity!), orbiting our star four times faster than the Earth. Because it is so close to the Sun the intense heat doesn't allow any atmosphere to exist, so the daytime temperatures can reach 400°C whilst at night the thermometer plunges to -170°C. Diameter: 4,878 kilometres Distance from the Sun: 57.9 million kilometres Orbits the Sun in (one Mercurian year): 88 days Rotates in (one day): 58 days 15 hours 30 minutes Rank: 2nd smallest planet - 8th in size Looks: Like the Moon - lots of craters OBSERVING MERCURY: Mercury is quite a small planet and the word 'elusive' is often used in terms of trying to find it. This is because it stays close to the Sun and so it never appears far above the horizon. Even some astronomers have not seen Mercury!, but if you know where and exactly when to look, Mercury can be fairly easily found. A small telescope will show the phases, but not any details on Mercury's scorching surface. Due to it's tilted orbit the best times to see Mercury are the evening skies of spring or the morning skies during autumn.