Latest news with #Moravia


Russia Today
4 days ago
- Politics
- Russia Today
EU state bans ‘communist propaganda'
The Czech Republic has amended its criminal code to outlaw the promotion of communism, placing it on par with Nazi ideology. The legislation was signed on Thursday by President Petr Pavel, himself a former Communist Party member. The amendment introduces prison terms of one to five years for anyone who 'establishes, supports or promotes Nazi, communist, or other movements which demonstrably aim to suppress human rights and freedoms or incite racial, ethnic, national, religious, or class-based hatred.' The change follows calls from the Czech government-funded Institute for the Study of Totalitarian Regimes, with co-author Michael Rataj claiming that it is 'illogical and unfair' to treat the two ideologies differently. 'Part of Czech society still perceives Nazism as the crime of a foreign, German nation, while communism is frequently excused as 'our own' ideology just because it took root in this country,' Rataj said. The Czech Republic, once part of communist Czechoslovakia and a Soviet-aligned Eastern Bloc member, became independent in 1993 after the 1989 Velvet Revolution. Its current president, Petr Pavel, referred to his past membership in the Communist Party as a mistake. The Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia (KSCM) has strongly opposed the change, calling it politically motivated. The party is part of the 'Stacilo' ('Enough') alliance and currently polls at around 5%, which could allow it to return to parliament in the October 2025 elections. 'This is yet another failed attempt to push KSCM outside the law and intimidate critics of the current regime,' the party said in a statement. Prague has removed or altered hundreds of Soviet-era monuments, with another wave of removals following the 2014 Western-backed coup in Kiev. Several countries in Eastern Europe – including Poland, Latvia, and Lithuania – have joined Kiev's decommunization drive in recent years, passing various laws that effectively equate communism with Nazism, moves that Moscow describes as politically driven attempts to rewrite history. Russia argues that such measures distort the truth about World War II, during which the Soviet Union lost 27 million lives fighting to liberate Europe from the Nazis. In July 2021, President Vladimir Putin signed a law prohibiting 'publicly equating the USSR with Nazi Germany' and banning the 'denial of the decisive role of the Soviet people in the victory over fascism.'

ABC News
18-06-2025
- Entertainment
- ABC News
Vale concert pianist Alfred Brendel, who has died aged 94
His was perhaps the most famous wrinkled brow in classical music, framing the bespectacled eyes of a pianist who penetrated to the very heart of the Austro-Germanic tradition like few others have ever done. Now, following his death at the age of 94, Alfred Brendel leaves behind a peerless recording legacy and a style of intelligent, insightful, and, above all, lyrical piano playing that continues in the work of his successful students. Born in Moravia, now part of the Czech Republic, and spending his formative years mainly in Graz and Vienna, Alfred Brendel was destined to become a master of the Central European piano classics. His discography on Vox, Decca and Philips among other major labels, says it all. He recorded three sets of the Beethoven sonatas and concertos, two each of Schubert's later piano works and the Brahms concertos, one of the complete Mozart concertos, with plenty of Haydn, Liszt and Schumann thrown into the mix. A man of conspicuous intellectual acumen, Alfred Brendel's journey toward his stellar musical career was unusual, coming as he did from a not-especially-musical family and effectively having few real piano lessons beyond his mid-teens. But his was an individual voice from the start, helped by an early interest in composition. At his professional recital debut at the age of 17 in Graz, he performed his own Piano Sonata which included a fearsome double fugue. That youthful interest in composition informed his later piano playing, giving him what he called "musical understanding". It also helped him to establish his trademark desire to eschew personal glory in the interests of getting to the heart of what composers wanted and the music itself demanded. Alfred Brendel's recording career began inauspiciously in the early 1950s, when he was handed a reel-to-reel tape recorder and asked to perform the Prokofiev Fifth Piano Concerto, which he didn't know, with a modestly-credentialed orchestra. From then on, he became such a prodigious recording artist that modern listeners are still just as familiar with his sound as his contemporaries were. The Brendel piano style featured remarkable finesse, a majestic sense of control and penetrating intelligence, imparting a sense of definitiveness to his interpretations. Just as with the man himself, some sensed a kind of aloof austerity in his performances, but both the man and the musician were far from that. Filled with wide-eyed curiosity and with interests that went well beyond music (poetry, painting and philosophy were lifelong passions), Brendel was also an inspiring teacher. Modern British pianist Paul Lewis who, along with Imogen Cooper, studied with Brendel, recalls: "Alfred was never interested in pianism for pianism's sake. For him, the piano was always a means to an end." "In his own way he was very exacting as a teacher, but he was never interested in anything technical," Lewis says. Brendel lived in North London during the second half of his life but never lost his Central European accent. Having played in all the world's great concert halls and with all the major orchestras over a 60-year-plus career, he gave up performing on the professional concert stage in 2008. Brendel continued to appear as a public-speaker, lecturer, and commentator. His writings on music have been justly lauded. Married twice, he has four children, including cellist Adrian Brendel, co-founder of the Plush Music Festival in Dorset, where Alfred Brendel kept a country home.

Yahoo
27-05-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Hendersons keep moving Honey Creek forward
MORAVIA — When Terry and Beth Henderson, as part of Achieva Inc., took over as concessionaires of the state-owned Honey Creek Resort two years ago, they knew the task at hand. Reflecting on the time since, Beth Henderson didn't mince words. "When we got it, it was the Titanic," she said in her office just off the lobby of the resort, which has seen vast improvements since the couple took over. "It was a sinking ship, and we were expected to keep sailing this ship with all the holes in it. "So we've been plugging the holes while we've been building the business." Honey Creek Resort, a few miles west of Moravia, has seen ebbs and flows much like the waters of Rathbun Lake, which is just outside the windows of the resort. The resort is owned by the State of Iowa, but federal land surrounds it. That balancing act has been delicate, but the Hendersons are still pushing to own the property outright. "So the resort sits on U.S. Army Corps of Engineers property, and the lake is a Corps lake. The land around the lake is federally owned," Beth Henderson said. "So, in order for it to be privatized, the lease has to be changed from a public lease to a private lease. That's in process, from what we understand. "It will be a complicated process, but it's not impossible." The improvements to the resort seemed almost impossible as well, but through a combination of $6.8 million in deferred maintenance funding from the state, as well as some out-of-pocket costs from the Hendersons, Honey Creek is taking the shape they envisioned. "It takes time to get the visibility out there and the awareness of where we are today compared to two years ago, five years ago," she said. "But we're making strides in the right direction. "Terry and I have been very hands-on as far as working with local vendors and making sure we price things out and getting the most bang for our buck," she said. "We're managing every dollar so we can make it stretch and then we'll have some funds left over to do the things we need to do, not only to fix things, but improve some areas of the resort." Indeed, the resort has come a long way in two years. All 28 cabins outside the main premises of the resort have been redone, a project that took about a year, Terry Henderson said. The cabins are various sizes, but have new flooring, furniture, countertop spaces and other amenities. Outside the resort, one of the Hendersons' first priority areas is complete. A new general store and bourbon bar will be opening for the season soon, and this fall, the resort will be undergoing a roofing project and the dock on the lake will get some needed repairs. The 106 guest rooms — 99 of which are named after Iowa's counties — have been renovated after water pipes burst just before the Hendersons took over. In the waterpark area, a soda fountain that's a throwback to the 1950s and has a Betty Boop mannequin has been a big hit. In short, the resort has a fresher look, as all of the dated elements have been removed from when the building was originally constructed. "We're a destination, and we've really had to embrace that," Terry Henderson said. "When Beth kind of set the vision three or four years ago, we knew we were going to need to also get businesses to come use this as a conference center and not only a place to bring their employees, but also their customers. And we're seeing a really nice uptick. "We hear it all the time that people weren't going to come down any longer after what they saw and experienced three or four years ago, but they were glad they did," Terry Henderson said. "Everything shows that we're going in the right direction." Beth Henderson mentioned the word "challenges" several times, and two of the examples are the Prairie Rose restaurant, as well as the waterpark. However, Terry Henderson said they are "between 80 and 90 percent" finished with the major improvements that were needed. "The Prairie Rose has been an interesting journey, and interesting beast for sure. But I think we're finally figuring that out," she said. "We've pared down the menu and we've introduced fried chicken, which has been something on my list that I've wanted to do from the beginning. "We've added a salad bar, which kind of became obsolete during covid," she said. "Our food quality is so much better than it was when we first started. We've had quite a bit of turnover in the restaurant, but I think that's pretty typical in the restaurant business." The waterpark is also a challenge the Hendersons will soon be tackling, though they declined to get into specifics. Both lamented that it targets a demographic from about 2 to 13 years old, and the key is to attract a more adult demographic, as well. Also, two years ago, Beth Henderson hoped to install an indoor miniature golf course, but that is still on the to-do list. However, she also has other ideas on what could draw more adults to the resort. "We're still working on the best way to accomplish that (the miniature golf course), but it's still in the plan," she said. "You know, new ideas come every single day. Pickleball is a huge draw, so we're talking about maybe having an indoor pickleball court. We're trying to be creative, and we have to continue to be." With the nearness of summer, rising attendance figures at the resort appear to be close at hand as well. Still, two main goals remain: finding a way to be profitable in the winter months from November to February, and taking control of the resort themselves as the state tries to divest itself from those kinds of properties. For now, the Hendersons will be concessionaires until their contract runs out in 2029. "The winter time is an obstacle. Is there enough to do in the wintertime to draw conferences, conventions and groups like that. We're trying to work that out," Beth Henderson said. "We've learned a lot in the last two years." Still, the Hendersons have strong relationships with Appanoose County as well as the governor's office. The state wanted to gift the resort with the county as a pass-through, but Henderson said that "is not going to come to fruition." "They worked really hard to make that happen, but there were a lot of obstacles bertween the state and county, and the county just didn't want to take on that risk without any guarantees," she said. "And that's fine. It'll work out the way it's supposed to work out, and we'll let the state and federal government work out all the details. "Regardless, we'll be running this resort for the next four years, and we're just continuing to try to make improvements and add amenities. We're going to make this place what it could be, and we're not slowing down with what our vision is."
Yahoo
22-03-2025
- Health
- Yahoo
Upstate medical student matches with top choice for pediatrics residency
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (WSYR-TV)—For fourth-year medical students nationwide, Match Day is a moment of excitement and anticipation. Moravia falls to Honeoye in Class C Semifinals Sanders-AOC rallies setting stage for protest movement: Activist Upstate medical student matches with top choice for pediatrics residency Major League Baseball removes references to 'diversity' from MLB Careers home page Syracuse firefighters battle massive fire at Maria Regina campus At Upstate Medical University, students filled out the Oncenter, waiting for the exact moment they could open their envelopes and discover where they would start their residencies. One of the students, Nathan Ihemeremadu, the 2025 class president, said his experience was overwhelming. 'I was yelling, screaming. I was on the floor. It was a lot. I don't think I've ever yelled that loud in a while. It was electric, blinding, ecstatic. I can't say the words. I feel so full,' said Nathan. Nathan began the match process back in the fall, filling out applications, getting recommendations, and completing interviews with various programs across the country. From there, students and programs rate each other on a list from best to least, and both are surprised on Match Day. 'A different whirlwind experience for everyone, which is cool because now you get surprised, along with the programs. They also get surprised by who's coming to see them for residency in June,' Nathan said. When the clock struck noon, and Nathan could finally open this letter, all the handwork and dedication showed right here. When he opened it, he found out he was going to his number one choice—Northwestern! When breaking down the options, he felt welcome and at home in the program. He knew that he wanted to be there, and now, finally attending in June, practicing pediatrics, he's making a big difference in a small life. 'There is a lot of power and fulfillment working with such a small population because you really get to be that first person or one of the many people in that child's life that is a positive role model,' said Nathan. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
22-03-2025
- General
- Yahoo
Syracuse firefighters battle massive fire at Maria Regina campus
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (WSYR-TV) — Syracuse firefighters were called to a fire at the abandoned Maria Regina College campus on the city's Northside around 6:30 p.m. on Friday, March 21. Moravia falls to Honeoye in Class C Semifinals Sanders-AOC rallies setting stage for protest movement: Activist Upstate medical student matches with top choice for pediatrics residency Major League Baseball removes references to 'diversity' from MLB Careers home page Syracuse firefighters battle massive fire at Maria Regina campus Syracuse police and AMR Ambulance were also called to the scene. There is no word on the details of the fire at this time. NewsChannel 9 will keep you updated as we learn more. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.