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Topic: Luigi Carnera


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In the News (Tue 15 Dec 09)

  
  Primo Carnera Information - TextSheet.com   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Carnera in his time off boxing went to Hollywood and tried his fortune there, and he did well in the city of the stars, participating in a number of movies, his starring job in A Kid For Two Farthings being critically acclaimed.
Carnera died in 1967, of a combination of diabetes complications and liver disease.
Carnera's record was of 87 wins, 14 losses and 1 no-decision, his 69 wins by knockout making him a member of the exclusive club of boxers that won 50 or more bouts by knockout.
www.search-mesothelioma.com /encyclopedia/p/pr/primo_carnera.html   (954 words)

  
 Luigi Carnera - Encyclopedia Glossary Meaning Explanation Luigi Carnera   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Luigi Carnera (April 14 1875 – July 30 1962) was an Italian astronomer.
In his early career he worked as Max Wolf's assistant at Heidelberg, Germany and discovered a number of asteroids.
In 1943 during World War II, the observatory was temporarily occupied by American and British troops in order to install a radar station.
www.encyclopedia-glossary.com /en/Luigi-Carnera.html   (184 words)

  
 OAT History
In 1919, after the fall of the Austrian-Hungarian Empire, Trieste was annexed to Italy, and this, together with the separation of the Astronomical Observatory from the Seismic and Meteorological Sections, marks the end of the first phase of the history.
The official foundation of the Astronomical Observatory of Trieste as a scientific institution devoted exclusively to Astronomy, took place in 1919 when Luigi Carnera was nominated as permanent director.
In 1923 it became one of the Royal Astronomical Observatories of Italy, and in 1925 it was officially inaugurated.
www.ts.astro.it /overview/history.html   (1237 words)

  
 CGTalk - Modeling with a mirrored instance/reference
Luigi, yes you have to erase those faces but there is still a visible seam on the mirror plane that only disappear once you weld the vertices.
Yes, it's possible to live with that but still that can be annoying as you don't see the final result while modelling.
Thanks Luigi, I was just playing around a little bit testing my discovery out, but I think that I will develop this model into a full-out character.
forums.cgsociety.org /showthread.php?t=6645   (1185 words)

  
 "A LIFE FOR THE CINEMA"
This volume is a voyage through over 50 years of experience, with more than 130 photographs, many previously unpublished, of famous persons from 1910 through 1993.
Primo Carnera is captured visiting Amedeo Nazzari on the set of "Caravaggio" (1940), as is Errol Flynn on his arrival in Rome in 1952 to play "Il Maestro di Don Giovanni".
Also featured are Gina Lollobrigida embracing Anna Magnani, Sergio Leone without his celebrated beard, and other famous figures such as Giuliano Montaldo, Dario Argento, Alberto Sordi, Rod Steiger, and other famous actors, actresses, directors, writers and producers, immortalized alongside Ferraù.
www.sinequanon.it /En/Bo/Re/00000088.html   (336 words)

  
 Foro Italico: Current Amazon U.S.A. One-Edition Data   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
He wrote the introduction to Italy Observed (1991), and authored the widely acclaimed 1994 book Il Terzo Gode, published in English and The Cadence Of A Neighboring Tribe.; Michelangelo Sabatino (essay) was trained as an architect and architectural historian in Venice.
Luigi Ballerini's long (6 pages) piece was so long-winded and convoluted, I had to read it three times and I still don't understand what he was trying to say.
The Boxer is certainly one of the most impressive and is featured not only on the book cover but by two photographs inside the book showing the statue of heayweight champion Primo Carnera from two views.
www.usaflightinsurance.com /books-reviewed/157687169X.html   (1291 words)

  
 Instruments catalogue   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
The competent authorities in Italy and France at the Compensation Committee continued to follow the situation.
In April 1925, Bianchi and Luigi Carnera, director of the Observatory of Trieste, went to Munich to check the progress of the work in person at the Zeiss factory, and their report was decidedly negative.
Later, however, the relationship between Bianchi and Zeiss improved to the point where it became close cooperation.
albinoni.brera.unimi.it /old/HEAVENS/MUSEO/Schede/sch41.html   (763 words)

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