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"Norwegian POW Museum (Krigsfangemuseet i Schildberg) is a Norwegian museum devoted to the history of Norwegian World War II Prisoners of War once interned in the German prisoner of war camp in Schildberg during the Nazi occupation of Norway. The museum is located in OstrzeszĂłw, Poland. Background A prisoner-of-war camp, Stalag XXI-A, was established in some of the town buildings in Schildberg, in Nazi occupied Poland during 1940. In 1943, the camp was renamed Oflag XXI-C for the imprisonment of 1,150 military officers transferred from Norway. On August 16, 1943 the German Wehrmacht arrested all Norwegian officers who were still in Norway. Of the approximately 1,500 officers who were detained, probably one third were sent home the following week because of age, illness, etc. The remainder were to become prisoners of the Nazis in Poland. Beginnings In 1982, Eyvind Grundt from Moss, Norway, was sent to Poland on a mission for the Norwegian Red Cross. After completing his work, he began a search for the town where his father had spent two years as a Prisoner of War (POW) during World War II. It was a difficult task, since he only knew the German name of the town, Schildberg. After many inquiries, Grundt found that Schildberg was a small Polish city of OstrzeszĂłw. In OstrzeszĂłw, by chance, he made contact with Lechoslaw Nowakowski, a language professor at the local college. Nowakowski had a good knowledge of the history of the town and shared Grundt's interest in the fate of the 1,150 Norwegian POWs once interned there at Stalag XXI-A. They discovered that Grundtâs father had been interned in the building that now houses the townâs largest technical school. In the cellar of the school, several Norwegian artifacts were discovered, including a dented tin plate engraved âKaptein Vagn Engerâ. Grundt contacted the manager of the local museum, Josef Janas and they agreed to create a small Norwegian collection in the museum. Initially, it was in the right drawer of the managerâs desk. Exhibits Since 1982, a number of objects connected to the Norwegian POWs have been collected, in both Norway and Poland. Several special exhibitions to present them were arranged at first, but from 1996 onwards, the Norwegian collection has had a permanent exhibition area in the newly renovated OstrzeszĂłw museum. The collection of objects continues, and the museum has developed into an information and competence centre concerning Norwegian POWs in general. The museum is engaged in collecting the abundant literature relating to the subject. What makes the Norwegian POW Museum especially unique is photographic collection of one of the former POWs of the OstrzeszĂłw camp. After managing to smuggle a small camera into the camp, the prisoner used chocolate and cigarettes from his Red Cross parcels to âbuyâ film from the German guards. Thus he could document many aspects of POW life in a unique way. Many of his photographs have been enlarged and cover the walls in the museum. It is rather unusual to find a Norwegian museum far outside the borders of the country. The inhabitants of Schildberg (OstrzeszĂłw) are proud of being able to display the unique history that they and Norway share. In 2003 more than 6000 persons visited the POW museum; including Polish and Norwegian families and individuals. The museum intends to publish several booklets covering the fate of the POWs. Information will also be published on the internet. Scope The museum covers the military POWs in the local Stalag XXI-A, as well as sub-camps of the Oflag XXI C (Oflag XXI-C in Schokken, Oflag XXI-C/Z in Grune bei Lissa and Stalag III-A and Oflag III-A of Luckenwalde). The museum has future plans to cover POWs in Stalag Luft III (Sagan) and Marlag und Milag Nord (Tarmstedt an der Timke). Later still, other groups of prisoners, such as interned civilians, police prisoners and students will be covered. Prisoners in KZ- and NN-camps, in hard labour camps and jails (political prisoners and âcriminalsâ), as well as prisoners in Norway, will not be included. References External links *Schildberg Oflagu XXI C Norwegian POW Museum Norwegian POW Museum Category:Defunct prisons in Poland Category:OstrzeszĂłw County Category:Museums in Greater Poland Voivodeship Category:Norway in World War II "
"LDAP Account Manager is a web application for managing various account types in an LDAP directory. It is written in PHP. In contrast to tools like PhpLDAPadmin the focus is account based and to give the user a more abstract view of a directory. This aims to allow people with little technical background to manage LDAP data. The base application is licensed under the GNU General Public License, and there is an extended version available under a commercial license. History The LDAP Account Manager (LAM) project was founded in February 2003. The first developers were Michael DĂŒrgner, Roland Gruber, Tilo Lutz and Leonhard WalchshĂ€usl. The goal was to create an application to manage Samba software accounts. At this time Samba supported LDAP in its 2.x releases and version 3 was at alpha stage. But there was no GUI to manage them. Until LAM version 0.4.10 only Samba accounts could be managed. In the year 2004 the project started to develop a plugin architecture to support more account types. The first stable release with the new code was LAM 0.5.0 in September 2005. There is a commercial variant (LAM Pro) since 1.0.4 that supports a user self-service (e.g. to change own password, telephone number, ...). It also supports additional LDAP objects (e.g. Zarafa, Kerberos, PPolicy, ...). Features The most important account types which are supported by LAM are Samba, Unix, Zarafa and PPolicy. The user can define profiles for all account types to set default values. Account information can be exported as PDF files. There is also the possibility to create users via file upload. It also includes the tree view of PhpLDAPadmin to access the raw LDAP attributes. LAM is translated to 16 languages. Supported account types: * Unix * Samba 3,4 * Kolab * Address book entries * Asterisk (incl. voicemail and Asterisk extensions) * Mail routing * IMAP mailboxes (non-LDAP, via IMAP protocol) * Hosts * FreeRadius * Authorized services * SSH keys * File system quota (in LDAP (systemQuotas) and via external script) * DHCP entries * NIS netgroups The commercial version also includes a user self-service. This allows users to edit their own data, register accounts or reset passwords themselves. Related software *Samba software *Kolab See also * List of LDAP software External links * Category:2003 software Category:Database administration tools Category:Free software programmed in PHP "
"Lui (French for "Him") is a French adult entertainment magazine created in November 1963 by Daniel Filipacchi, a fashion photographer turned publisher, Jacques Lanzmann, a jack of all trades turned novelist, and Frank TĂ©not, a press agent, pataphysician and jazz critic. The objective was to bring some charm "Ă la française" to the market of men's magazines, following the success of Playboy in the United States, launched just a decade before. France, indeed, in the first half of 20th century had an outstanding reputation for erotic publications, feeding also foreign market and inspiring also ersatz French-flavoured magazines abroad, when, for example, US publishers used French-sounding titles like ChĂšre and DreamĂ© or placed tricolour flags on the covers, attempting to attract the casual buyer.Jacques Lanzmann â Novelist, lyricist and editor of Lui, The Independent, 4 July 2006 It was anyway a semi- clandestine circulating material, not allowed to be freely displayed or openly bought. In this sense Playboy changed the way 'soft pornography' (become more respectfully 'adult entertainment'), can be publicly circulated. This magazine was particularly successful from its origins to the early 1980s, afterwards it began a long decline. It was published regularly until November 1987 (the final issue of this first series was the number 285). After 1987 there was a further attempt to relaunch the title but the publication ceased again in 1994. Passed into the hands of the media group of Michel Birnbaum, after a transient stimulus, it became a pornographic magazine with episodic dissemination. It was published every three months. After the purchase of the title by Jean-Yves Le Fur, Lui was relaunched on 5 September 2013 as a high- end magazine with FrĂ©dĂ©ric Beigbeder at its helm. Lui published by Filipacchi group (1963â1994) =First series (1963â1987)= This magazine successful recipe was combining content with depth articles and beautiful naked women, featuring many B-List but also celebrities, often prominent French actresses, such as Brigitte Bardot, Mireille Darc, Jane Birkin or MarlĂšne Jobert. It featured a monthly pin-up by Aslan. The first girl to pose on the cover was ValĂ©rie Lagrange (the number 1 appeared on 11 January 1963) photographed by Francis Giacobetti, future director of the soft-core movie Emmanuelle 2. The magazine hosted also a cartoon by Lauzier: Les Sextraordinaires Aventures de Zizi et Peter Panpan. Among the first collaborators are Jean-Louis Bory, RenĂ© Chateau, Philippe Labro, Francis Dumoulin, Francis Giacobetti, SinĂ©, Michel Mardore, Gilles Sandier and many others. The magazine motto was Lui, le magazine de l'homme moderne (The Magazine of the Modern Man). In the beginning, it had also a mascot, a cat's head, similarly to the magazine Playboy Bunny, but it disappeared in the early 1970s. =Second series (1987â1994)= The second series was published by the Filipacchi group from 1987 to 1994. It has been published 69 numbers. Its editor was StĂ©phane de Rosnay in 1989, Brice Couturier 1990 to 1992. Initially, its specificity (compared to the first series) was that it was published in a two separate books, but from number 27, ""Lui"" returned to be a single book magazine with the new slogan "Le magazine de l'homme civilisĂ©" (The Magazine of civilized man). The circulation that was in early 1980 of 350,000 copies dropped to 70,000 copies in 1993. In early 1993, the magazine abandoned the monthly release and became bimonthly. The Filipacchi group stopped publication in June 1994. Lui published by Michel Birnbaum (1995â2010) =Le Nouveau Lui (1995â1997)= The title was taken from 1995 to 1997 (14 issues) and named Le Nouveau Lui by Michel Birnbaum, a radiotherapist physician turned publisher as founder and owner of the holding company Altinea, specialized in magazines about vintage cars.Place au «Lui» new-look. Le «magazine de l'homme moderne» va reparaĂźtre â LibĂ©ration â 21 September 1995 â Philippe Bonnet The goal was to return to the basics (and success) of the primitive publication, intending a more glamour-oriented publication. The coverage of the first issue was dedicated to Miss Agnes. The magazine had again a monthly issue and the design of the title was upgraded. In this series, for the first time, the cover picture was devoted to one man alone, without accompanying female model. This attempt to revive the magazine failed. The final issue was published in February 1997 with Eva HerzigovĂĄ as cover girl. =Lui pornographic magazine (2001â2010)= The magazine published quarterly from 2001 to 2010 had a pornographic nature. Its slogan was "L'officiel de la photo de charme" or (as on the online edition) "Le charme des filles d'aujourd hui." It was published by the company 1633 whose president and sole shareholder is Michael Birnbaum. Patrick GuĂ©rinet was the managing editor until 2010, when substituted by Francis Guillebon in July. Lui published by Jean-Yves Le Fur (2013â ) The magazine was relaunched in 2013 with LĂ©a Seydoux as its first cover girl. Its editor-in-chief was FrĂ©dĂ©ric Beigbeder. In March 2017, the magazine went from monthly to quarterly and FrĂ©dĂ©ric TaddeĂŻ succeeded FrĂ©dĂ©ric Beigbeder as its editor-in- chief.Arbrun, ClĂ©ment (11 March 2017) "FrĂ©dĂ©ric Taddei prend la tĂȘte du magazine Lui: Ce qui est Ă©rotique, c'est le rĂ©el!". Les Inrockuptiles (in French). Retrieved 12 September 2020. Covergirls since the first issue have (as of January 2016) included Rihanna, Gisele Bundchen, Rita Ora, Monica Bellucci, Alessandra Ambrosio, Virginie Ledoyen, Naomi Campbell, Kate Moss, Jourdan Dunn, Carolyn Murphy, Joan Smalls, and others. With the exception of Bellucci who appeared semi-clothed, all have appeared topless or fully naked inside their issues. National editions * French edition (1963 â ) * German edition (1977â1992) * Italian edition (1970â1986?) * Spanish edition (1977â1978?) * Brazilian edition (1976â?) * American edition (1972â2007) as Oui See also *List of Lui magazine cover models Notes and references External links * Category:1963 establishments in France Category:French- language magazines Category:Men's magazines published in France Category:Magazines established in 1963 Category:Monthly magazines published in France Category:Pornographic men's magazines "