1,142 Matching Annotations
  1. Jan 2025
    1. "It is inevitable that all history is a human construction. Any attempt to explain or derive a narrative from the evidence of the past is a subjective, selective activity. What two individuals would explain the modern world in the same way today, even with all the evidence to hand and an understanding of the cultural references of that material?"

      While the authors suggest historical interpretation is inherently subjective, one could argue that rigorous methodologies and standardized analytical approaches could lead to more objective understandings of the past, even if perfect objectivity remains unattainable.

    2. "The interaction between humans and their environment operates over a number of differ- ent spatial and temporal scales (Table 1.1). Long-term processes that lead to the evolution of plants and animals, the extinction of particu- lar organisms and changes within biotic communities include climate (e.g. glacial- interglacial cycles), soil development (e.g. pod- zolization), succession (e.g. arctic-tundra to woodland) and human impact (e.g. since the inception of prehistoric agricultural practices to the present day)."

      This excerpt is important because it establishes the fundamental framework for understanding environmental archaeology. It emphasizes how human-environment interactions must be studied across multiple scales, from short-term local changes to long-term global processes. This multi-scale perspective is crucial for properly interpreting archaeological evidence and understanding how human societies both shaped and were shaped by their environments over time.

  2. Dec 2024
    1. There are different forms of energy, five primary forms and five secondary forms of energy, and they flow in channels in the body. And at the time of death, there, there's a certain kind of configuration of those energies that occur and you can actually, you can, in a sense, force those energies— maybe that's not the right term, but some people would agree with that metaphor— you can force those energies to enter into that configuration through various forms of yogic practices.

      for - Buddhism - Tibetan - clear light meditation practice - 5 primary and 5 secondary flows of energy in channels in the body - meditators practice a desired flow configuration at time of death - from Youtube - Between Life and Death: Understanding Tukdam - John D. Dunne

    1. there are 490.000 babies born each day. That is 5 to 6 babies that are born every second of the day.

      for - stats - birth - 490,000 babies born every day - 5 to 6 every second - Anna Veerwal - Doula - birth educator

    1. less than 5% of the world's population stewarding more than 80% of the world's biodiversity.

      for - stats - biodiversity stewardship - 5% of the world's population - stewarding 80% of the world's biodiversity - Post Capitalist Philanthropy - Alnoor Ladha - Lynn Murphy - 2023

    2. also what it requires is to recast the individual as a non individual

      for - adjacency - post Capitalist spiral - 5 Element Mandala - the individual as non-individual - Michael Levin's - Multi-Scale Competency Architecture - Post Capitalist Philanthropy - Alnoor Ladha - Lynn Murphy - 2023 - Stop Reset Go - Deep Humanity - Individual / Collective Gestalt

    3. I want to get into the Five Elements Mandala

      for - definition - spiral of the - 5 Elements Mandala - Post Capitalist Philanthropy Webinar 1 - Alnoor Ladha - Lynn Murphy - 2023 - need to move - from linear pyramid, neoliberal logic - to trends logic - multi-dimensional - reflexive - feedbacks - intertwingled - need to know what you stand for and - what you stand against ( the dominant neoliberal culture)

    1. Ensure inclusive design anddemocratic innovation processes

      Puntos de acción

      Implementar medidas de codiseño que involucren a las comunidades marginadas y otros stakeholders relevantes a lo largo del ciclo de vida de la IA.

      Involucrar a las comunidades marginadas en la identificación de problemas, la formulación de problemas, el diseño y la toma de decisiones en materia de gobernanza de la IA.

      Integrar perspectivas diversas en el diseño y desarrollo de la IA para evitar sesgos sistémicos y resultados discriminatorios.

      Asegúrese de que los procesos de información y consulta sean accesibles e inclusivos para los grupos marginados. Crear y distribuir materiales de fácil lectura con antelación para garantizar que las personas sin educación formal o conocimientos de inteligencia artificial puedan comprender los temas clave. Evitar la jerga técnica cuando sea suficiente con un lenguaje sencillo.

      Incorporar principios de diseño inclusivos y transformadores y metodologías participativas en las estrategias nacionales o regionales de IA para garantizar que los sistemas de IA respeten la autonomía, la dignidad y los valores culturales de los grupos marginados.

      Aplicar políticas de protección, incluidos mecanismos para denunciar casos de discriminación, situaciones de violencia y otras situaciones que dificulten la participación de las mujeres y otros grupos marginados en el lugar de trabajo en igualdad de condiciones con los demás. Garantizar el acceso a estos mecanismos para permitir la denuncia y la reparación de agravios.

    1. If we are underestimating, then does that mean our carbon budget figures are too high and we don't have 5 years of carbon budget remaining at the BAU rate, but significantly less?

      for - climate crisis - models are underestimating as much as 4x - question - does our current remaining carbon budget of 5 years BAU need to be reduced?

  3. Nov 2024
  4. Oct 2024
    1. If the "Hanks Effect" was really so prominent, then we should see the commensurate rise in price of 5 Series Smith Coronas and particularly the Clipper and the Silent which he's also mentioned several times. In fact, he's said these would be the typewriter he'd keep if he had to get rid of all others. Given this fact, it has to be, in part, a variety of other factors which inflates the prices.

      Personally I think that it's a combination of the fact that they were manufactured at the peak of typewriter use and manufacturing and before companies began using more plastic and cheaper manufacturing methods, but were also done in a later timeperiod when exterior design and color were on the rise as a differentiator in the marketplace. Quality, form, and function become part of a trifecta which drive desire and collectability.

    1. donations from individuals, joint fundraising committees, political action committees (PACs), and super PACs

      1) Explain each of these terms ("individuals," "joint fundraising committees," etc.), 2) How many $$$ has each campaign (Trump, Harris) raised and spent on their campaigns for this election? Cite your source(s).

  5. Sep 2024
  6. Aug 2024
    1. Long time lurker, first time poster...

      I picked up a British branded Orga Privat 5 (circa 1931) this past week. I've repaired enough of it now that I'm sure I can get it fully functioning again. It's going to take some serious cleaning and polishing to bring it back to its original glory. It was missing the original metal spools which I'd like to try to replace with period metal ones. I'd also like to replace the spool nuts and find one missing spool cover.

      The spools (my Olympia machines' spools work) and nuts may be easiest to track down if folks have suggestions for sourcing. The tougher part will be finding an original or replica black enamel ribbon cover unless someone has an Orga they're parting out. It appears that almost all of the Orgas used the same spool set up and covers (2.25 inches / 5.8mm O.D.) through most of their manufacture so the Orga Privat 1-7 and Modell 8-Modell 10 will probably work. My German is almost non-existent, or I'd start by calling shops in Europe.

      Its also missing its wooden base and metal cover, but I have less hope of finding replacements for these, particularly British rebranded ones from the Durable Trading Company. I've added my example to the Typewriter Database and it appears to be the only English branded model there across multiple examplars of 10 different models of the machine from the company.

      For the curious collectors, I've documented some details and photos of the machine here: https://boffosocko.com/.../acquisition-1928-1933-new.../

      Post to Antique Typewriter Maintenance Group

    1. Reviewer #5 (Public Review):

      After reading the manuscript and the concerns raised by reviewer 2 I see both sides of the argument - the relative location of trigeminal nucleus versus the inferior olive is quite different in elephants (and different from previous studies in elephants), but when there is a large disproportionate magnification of a behaviorally relevant body part at most levels of the nervous system (certainly in the cortex and thalamus), you can get major shifting in the location of different structures. In the case of the elephant, it looks like there may be a lot of shifting. Something that is compelling is that the number of modules separated but the myelin bands correspond to the number of trunk folds which is different in the different elephants. This sort of modular division based on body parts is a general principle of mammalian brain organization (demonstrated beautifully for the cuneate and gracile nucleus in primates, VP in most of species, S1 in a variety of mammals such as the star nosed mole and duck-billed platypus). I don't think these relative changes in the brainstem would require major genetic programming - although some surely exist. Rodents and elephants have been independently evolving for over 60 million years so there is a substantial amount of time for changes in each l lineage to occur.

      I agree that the authors have identified the trigeminal nucleus correctly, although comparisons with more out-groups would be needed to confirm this (although I'm not suggesting that the authors do this). I also think the new figure (which shows previous divisions of the brainstem versus their own) allows the reader to consider these issues for themselves. When reviewing this paper, I actually took the time to go through atlases of other species and even look at some of my own data from highly derived species. Establishing homology across groups based only on relative location is tough especially when there appears to be large shifts in the relative location of structures. My thoughts are that the authors did an extraordinary amount of work on obtaining, processing and analyzing this extremely valuable tissue. They document their work with images of the tissue and their arguments for their divisions are solid. I feel that they have earned the right to speculate - with qualifications - which they provide.

    1. Degradation ofecosystem services could be significantly slowed down or even reversed if the role ofbiodiversity and its full contribution to economic production were an integrated part ofdecisions made by governmental entities, companies, and other stakeholders (Paul et al2020)20

      for - biodiversity - impact of monoculture diet

      biodiversity - impact of monoculture diet - FAO study done before 2000 and often cited shows that 75% of the global diet comes from 12 plant and 5 animal food sources

      to - stats - progress trap - monoculture - table of 12 plant and 5 animal species that make up 75% of world's diet - https://hyp.is/iznepFWoEe-umbNyOGVqrg/thefuturemarket.com/biodiversity

    1. The challenge and the problem is that  emergency to our neural ancestral wiring meant a saber toothed  tiger or something like that. And these risks are complex. They're in  the future. They're abstract. There are no easy solutions. the famous people on  TV aren't talking about them. so it's, really difficult.

      for - planetary emergency - psychological factors - the 5 Ds

      planetary emergency - psychological factors - the 5 Ds - Nate brings up the psychological challenges. These are summarized nicely by Per Espen Stokes interview on the Al Jazeera documentary below, where he discusses the 5 Ds:

      reference - Per Espen Stokes psychological factors that make climate action difficult - the 5 Ds - https://hyp.is/UgWKRlNcEe-sPqcIvC-9Aw/www.youtube.com/watch?v=fqXys5VluIQ

    2. we are at an urgency  point. I mean, we know we need to cut global emissions by half within the next five  years, by 2030, and we're not near to that.

      for - stats - climate crisis intervention - urgency - reduce emissions by 50% in 5 years!

    1. the 5Ds

      for - Climate change psychology - Per Espen Stokes - the 5 Ds

      Climate change psychology - Per Espen Stokes - the 5 Ds - Distance - far away in spatial distance and time - also consider hyperobjects - Timothy Morton - Doom - crying wolf makes us discredit the alarm message - second time we hear a doom message, 40% less salience - avoidance behavior - discredit climate activists - Dissonance - disconnect between belief and action - Denial - we can make lots of excuses - blame others - compare our footprint to others with much larger ones - temporary concern but quickly move on to other topics - iDentity - spend many years to build up my identity - factual inputs are compared to my identity's values - identity values usually trump facts when our identity is threatened

      climate crisis intervention - Any psychology-based climate intervention needs to leverage a combination of the 5 Ds.

    1. Smith-Corona Series 5 and 6 typewriters had a small piece of rubber around a portion of the escapement which can wear out or become damaged. This in turn causes the escapement to not work properly and cause the dogs to get jammed resulting in large movements of the carriage while typing or spacing.

      Joe Van Cleave calls it the "return silencer" and replaced his by tracing out the damaged piece on a sheet of 1/32" rubber and cutting it out as a replacement.

      Duane at Phoenix typewriter describes replacing it with rubber tubing (possibly something like heat shrink?) instead. See: https://hypothes.is/a/tG4BWk77Ee-jczsjoM8SzA

  7. Jul 2024
    1. Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center

      DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-05317-5

      Resource: Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center (RRID:SCR_006457)

      Curator: @anisehay

      SciCrunch record: RRID:SCR_006457


      What is this?

    1. there was a paper that came out a few years ago showing that five degrees at the pace we're doing would be 00:40:13 is like easily sufficient to reproduce some of these catastrophes in Earth history

      for - climate crisis - 5 deg C could reproduce similar levels of catastrophes as those in early earth history

    1. flies were either purchased from the Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center or previously described

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-47278-5

      Resource: Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center (RRID:SCR_006457)

      Curator: @bandrow

      SciCrunch record: RRID:SCR_006457


      What is this?

    1. BL #8699

      DOI: 10.1186/s12915-024-01858-5

      Resource: (BDSC Cat# 8699,RRID:BDSC_8699)

      Curator: @DavidDeutsch

      SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_8699


      What is this?

    2. BL #30,139

      DOI: 10.1186/s12915-024-01858-5

      Resource: (BDSC Cat# 30139,RRID:BDSC_30139)

      Curator: @DavidDeutsch

      SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_30139


      What is this?

    3. BL #8641

      DOI: 10.1186/s12915-024-01858-5

      Resource: RRID:BDSC_8641

      Curator: @DavidDeutsch

      SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_8641


      What is this?

  8. Jun 2024
    1. Reviewer #5 (Public Review):

      After reading the manuscript and the concerns raised by reviewer 2 I see both sides of the argument - the relative location of trigeminal nucleus versus the inferior olive is quite different in elephants (and different from previous studies in elephants), but when there is a large disproportionate magnification of a behaviorally relevant body part at most levels of the nervous system (certainly in the cortex and thalamus), you can get major shifting in location of different structures. In the case of the elephant, it looks like there may be a lot of shifting. Something that is compelling is that the number of modules separated but the myelin bands correspond to the number of trunk folds which is different in the different elephants. This sort of modular division based on body parts is a general principle of mammalian brain organization (demonstrated beautifully for the cuneate and gracile nucleus in primates, VP in most of species, S1 in a variety of mammals such as the star nosed mole and duck-billed platypus). I don't think these relative changes in the brainstem would require major genetic programming - although some surely exists. Rodents and elephants have been independently evolving for over 60 million years so there is a substantial amount of time for changes in each l lineage to occur.

      I agree that the authors have identified the trigeminal nucleus correctly, although comparisons with more out groups would be needed to confirm this (although I'm not suggesting that the authors do this). I also think the new figure (which shows previous divisions of the brainstem versus their own) allows the reader to consider these issues for themselves. When reviewing this paper, I actually took the time to go through atlases of other species and even look at some of my own data from highly derived species. Establishing homology across groups based only on relative location is tough especially when there appears to be large shifts in relative location of structures. My thoughts are that the authors did an extraordinary amount of work on obtaining, processing and analyzing this extremely valuable tissue. They document their work with images of the tissue and their arguments for their divisions are solid. I feel that they have earned the right to speculate - with qualifications - which they provide.

    1. if this scale up 00:20:14 doesn't get us to AGI in the next 5 to 10 years it might be a long way out

      for - key insight - AGI in next 5 to 10 years or bust

      key insight - AGI in next 5 to 10 years or bust - As we start approaching billion, hundred billion and trillion dollar clusters, hardware improvements will slow down due to - cost - ecological impact - Moore's Law limits - If AGI doesn't emerge by then, then we will need to have major breakthrough in - architecture or - algorithms

    1. Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-42864-5

      Resource: Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center (RRID:SCR_006457)

      Curator: @maulamb

      SciCrunch record: RRID:SCR_006457


      What is this?

    2. BDSC 42748

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-42864-5

      Resource: (BDSC Cat# 42748,RRID:BDSC_42748)

      Curator: @maulamb

      SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_42748


      What is this?

    3. BDSC 86755

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-42864-5

      Resource: BDSC_86755

      Curator: @maulamb

      SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_86755


      What is this?

    4. BDSC 76030

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-42864-5

      Resource: (BDSC Cat# 76030,RRID:BDSC_76030)

      Curator: @maulamb

      SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_76030


      What is this?

    5. BDSC 55136

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-42864-5

      Resource: (BDSC Cat# 55136,RRID:BDSC_55136)

      Curator: @maulamb

      SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_55136


      What is this?

    6. BDSC 33064

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-42864-5

      Resource: (BDSC Cat# 33064,RRID:BDSC_33064)

      Curator: @maulamb

      SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_33064


      What is this?

    7. BDSC 55138

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-42864-5

      Resource: (BDSC Cat# 55138,RRID:BDSC_55138)

      Curator: @maulamb

      SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_55138


      What is this?

    8. BDSC 75885

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-42864-5

      Resource: BDSC_75885

      Curator: @maulamb

      SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_75885


      What is this?

    9. BDSC 32186

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-42864-5

      Resource: (BDSC Cat# 32186,RRID:BDSC_32186)

      Curator: @maulamb

      SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_32186


      What is this?

    10. BDSC 48974

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-42864-5

      Resource: (BDSC Cat# 48974,RRID:BDSC_48974)

      Curator: @maulamb

      SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_48974


      What is this?

    11. BDSC 23130

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-42864-5

      Resource: (BDSC Cat# 23130,RRID:BDSC_23130)

      Curator: @maulamb

      SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_23130


      What is this?

    12. BDSC 75903

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-42864-5

      Resource: (BDSC Cat# 75903,RRID:BDSC_75903)

      Curator: @maulamb

      SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_75903


      What is this?

    1. RRID: CVCL_1344

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-48096-5

      Resource: (RRID:CVCL_1344)

      Curator: @evieth

      SciCrunch record: RRID:CVCL_1344


      What is this?

    2. RRID: CVCL_5983

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-48096-5

      Resource: CVCL_5983

      Curator: @evieth

      SciCrunch record: RRID:CVCL_5983


      What is this?

    3. RRID: CVCL_1048

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-48096-5

      Resource: (RRID:CVCL_1048)

      Curator: @evieth

      SciCrunch record: RRID:CVCL_1048


      What is this?

    4. RRID: CVCL_7940

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-48096-5

      Resource: CVCL_7940

      Curator: @evieth

      SciCrunch record: RRID:CVCL_7940


      What is this?

    5. RRID: CVCL_1670

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-48096-5

      Resource: (CLS Cat# 300324/p10280_RT-112, RRID:CVCL_1670)

      Curator: @evieth

      SciCrunch record: RRID:CVCL_1670


      What is this?

    6. RRID: CVCL_7935

      DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-48096-5

      Resource: (RRID:CVCL_7935)

      Curator: @evieth

      SciCrunch record: RRID:CVCL_7935


      What is this?

  9. May 2024
    1. RRID: CVCL_7933

      DOI: 10.1038/s41416-024-02697-5

      Resource: CVCL_7933

      Curator: @AniH

      SciCrunch record: RRID: CVCL_7933


      What is this?

    2. RRID: CVCL_7931

      DOI: 10.1038/s41416-024-02697-5

      Resource: CVCL_7931

      Curator: @AniH

      SciCrunch record: RRID: CVCL_7931


      What is this?

    3. RRID: CVCL_0553

      DOI: 10.1038/s41416-024-02697-5

      Resource: CVCL_0553

      Curator: @AniH

      SciCrunch record: RRID: CVCL_0553


      What is this?

    4. RRID: CVCL_0179

      DOI: 10.1038/s41416-024-02697-5

      Resource: CVCL_0179

      Curator: @AniH

      SciCrunch record: RRID: CVCL_0179


      What is this?

    5. RRID: CVCL_3422

      DOI: 10.1038/s41416-024-02697-5

      Resource: (RRID:CVCL_3422)

      Curator: @AniH

      SciCrunch record: RRID:CVCL_3422


      What is this?

    6. RRID: CVCL_0062

      DOI: 10.1038/s41416-024-02697-5

      Resource: CVCL_0062

      Curator: @AniH

      SciCrunch record: RRID: CVCL_0062


      What is this?

    7. RRID: CVCL_0419

      DOI: 10.1038/s41416-024-02697-5

      Resource: CVCL_0419

      Curator: @AniH

      SciCrunch record: RRID: CVCL_0419


      What is this?

    8. RRID: AB_2129055

      DOI: 10.1038/s41416-024-02697-5

      Resource: (Cell Signaling Technology Cat# 3876, RRID:AB_2129055)

      Curator: @AniH

      SciCrunch record: RRID:AB_2129055


      What is this?

    9. RRID: AB_2798737

      DOI: 10.1038/s41416-024-02697-5

      Resource: (Cell Signaling Technology Cat# 15327, RRID:AB_2798737)

      Curator: @AniH

      SciCrunch record: RRID:AB_2798737


      What is this?

    10. RRID: IMSR_JAX:003553

      DOI: 10.1038/s41416-024-02697-5

      Resource: (IMSR Cat# JAX_003553,RRID:IMSR_JAX:003553)

      Curator: @AniH

      SciCrunch record: RRID:IMSR_JAX:003553


      What is this?

    1. Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center line 8149

      DOI: 10.1038/s41586-023-06701-5

      Resource: RRID:BDSC_8149

      Curator: @maulamb

      SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_8149


      What is this?

    2. Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center

      DOI: 10.1038/s41586-023-06701-5

      Resource: Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center (RRID:SCR_006457)

      Curator: @maulamb

      SciCrunch record: RRID:SCR_006457


      What is this?

    3. Bloomington line 458

      DOI: 10.1038/s41586-023-06701-5

      Resource: (BDSC Cat# 458,RRID:BDSC_458)

      Curator: @maulamb

      SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_458


      What is this?

    1. I have run across Jeff Shelton's Analog system (originally via Kickstarter) before. Thanks for the reminder.

      There's also a slew of others, especially for folks looking at commercially preprinted cards (though I tend to think they're overpriced compared to blank cards): - The Hipster PDA (Parietal Disgorgement Aid) https://web.archive.org/web/20040906150523/https://merlin.blogs.com/43folders/2004/09/introducing_the.html - Pile of Index Cards (PoIC) https://www.flickr.com/photos/hawkexpress/albums/72157594200490122/ - Levenger https://www.levenger.com/products/triple-decker-pocket-planner?variant=42485422424213 (among others they carry including pocket briefcases) - Notsu https://notsubrand.com/ - Baronfig / Strategist: https://baronfig.com/products/strategist?variant=39787199529043 - Jeff Shelton's Analog system https://ugmonk.com/ - 3x5 Life https://www.3x5life.com/ - Foglietto https://www.nerosnotes.co.uk/collections/foglietto - Jot & Mark https://amzn.to/3Qs26Je

      Am I missing any significant or influential examples, particularly branded ones?

      Hubnote for 3 x 5" index cards for productivity

  10. Apr 2024
    1. Ocean productivity is essentially the same process occurring as in our previous plant example, except different organisms are involved in the transfer of energy.

      "ocean productivity is the same process, except different organisms are involved in the transfer of energy."

      Add ing a words to know section up top might be helpful for making it easier for the reader to refer to one section rather than having to find the phrases in the text

    2. In regards to the plant example, GPP would be the total energy incorporated into the plant that will be dedicated to metabolism or growth. NPP is obtained when looking at GPP rate after factoring in the rate of loss of energy to metabolism and other necessary organism maintenance processes.

      make a new paragraph that just includes the plant example instead of referencing it retroactively.

    3. Productivity can be defined

      "Productivity is defined as"

    1. mindful of your alcohol and caffeine

      for - sleep hygiene - 5 - mindful of alcohol and caffeine

      advice - sleep hygiene - 5 - mindful of alcohol and caffeine - cut out 10 hours before bedtime. - so no afternoon coffee - only morning coffee

    2. five things that you can start doing tonight to try to improve your sleep

      for - wellness - physical - sleep - sleep hygiene - sleep hygiene - 5 aspects

  11. Mar 2024
    1. La Défenseure des droits a été saisie de plusieurs réclamations concernant lesdifficultés d’accès au lycée rencontrées par de jeunes filles musulmanes portantdes vêtements correspondant ou assimilés à des abayas
  12. Feb 2024