Empire At War Executor [CRACKED]
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at the bottom of the executor unit xml.Then go to starbases.xml and scroll nearly to the bottom.There are the "Tactical Production Options" for each starbase lvl 1-5 and just add Executor_Star_Dreadnought_Skirmish to the list.
Don't know if you are going to read this, but I installed eaw remake yesterday on my notebook and forgot to add the 4gb patch, spawning the executor crashed the game after adding the patch it worked for me.
The StarCraft II: Wings of Liberty "The Story so Far" lore article identifies Artanis as the executor from Episode III and doesn't mention this executor in its section about Episode IV.[1] StarCraft: Brood War refers to Artanis as a Praetor, and this Executor is a separate character.[2] It may be possible that this Executor has been retconned out of continuity, and Artanis fulfills their role in the story. Alternatively, this executor could be Selendis, as she currently holds the title of executor, was active in a command role during the events of Enslavers II, and was a student of Artanis.[3] In Wings of Liberty, Selendis appeared to know Jim Raynor from his services to Aiur.[4]
Orokin society was highly stratified, with only those at the very top being regarded as actual Orokin. From what we know, the empire was led by multiple Emperors[11] whose names and details are unknown.[12] The Orokin's judicial body was a council known as The Seven.[13] It is implied that these seven were of Executor rank and included Ballas,[14][15] though there was a Congress of Executors beyond that.[16] Classes beneath them include Archimedeans (scientists and scholars), Lorists (healers)[17], Sectarus (navigators or ship operators)[18] and Enginus (an unknown role)[18]. It is unclear to what extent these were regarded as Orokin rather than servants or underlings of the Orokin. In addition, the Orokin constructed a caste of genetically engineered slaves to serve their most basic industrial and military needs, while the rest of the empire was made up of less wealthy and advanced populations performing technological and economic services which would eventually congeal into the Corpus, following the teachings of Parvos Granum. A small conclave of warriors known as the Dax served as the Orokin's most elite soldiers. The Dax were enhanced with technology to be more lethal and agile in combat, while also made mentally unable to disobey their masters.
In his introduction, Walter Hudson (PhD, Kansas State Univ.), an Army judge advocate, succinctly explains his reason for writing, answers the "so what" question, and outlines the book's structure. He writes that "in the immediate aftermath of World War II, the US Army became the principal executor of American postwar governance policy throughout the world" (1), supervising occupations of conquered and liberated nations throughout the northern hemisphere. These responsibilities placed over 300 million non-Americans under US military government. The author notes that the manner and the very idea of undertaking to rule over foreign populations had already been hotly debated for decades within the American foreign policy establishment. President Franklin Roosevelt had himself initially had misgivings about the army taking the lead in such endeavors. The central question as the Second World War drew to a close was who exactly should supervise any occupations after the ongoing war.
Marie Solban has found a treasure which would be welcomed by the Veterans History Project of the Library of Congress. A similar find came to me via my mother, who had been the executor of the will of a World War I Army veteran who was my great-great-uncle. He had been a newspaper reporter at 18 and those skills produced a diary of his experiences in France. The photos, letters and personal articles for Henry Edwin Kunath that I sent to the Library of Congress were digitized and are now available to all at loc.gov. I was told World War I veteran histories are few and welcomed.
Most of the men who created Germany'sindustrial empires were prolific biologically as well as financially.Result: a complexity of heirs who often have neither the managerialability nor the foresight as shareholders to guide the companies leftin their hands. More than one company has withered after its founder'sdeath, and a fewthe Stinnes plastics and machinery network is themost recent examplehave actually died. To remedy this situation andto avoid huge inheritance taxes, many German firms are turning overownership to corporate foundations. Last week, in the biggest such moveso far, a foundation took over... To continue reading: responsiveAd({className: "subscribe-link",ads: [{type: "desktop",size: "142x70",cm: { position: "subscribebtn", type: "text"}},{type: "tablet",size: "142x70",cm: { position: "subscribebtn", type: "text"}},{// Mobile 300type: "mobile",size: "142x70",config: {zone: "219200",site: "28275",size_x: "142", size_y: "70",type: "-1"}}]}); or Log-In
Fiction and Poetry / World War II / Politics / Nonfiction BiographiesAnyone wanting to know more about the widow of German newspaper magnate Axel Springer should read this book. Springer turned the Bild Zeitung into Europe's biggest tabloid newspaper but at the end of his life lost control of his own publishing group. In her biography "Friede Springer", FAZ editor Inge Kloepfer tells with much sympathy and plenty of factual information the uncanny story of Friede Riewerts' fairytale metamorphosisfrom nursemaid to newspaper mogul's wife, and finally to one ofGermany's most influential women today as head of the Springer group,writes the NZZ. After her husband's death, Friede Springermanaged to buy back the majority of shares in the Springer group andprevent the fall of the empire. Kloepfer's biography received positivereviews throughout the German press: The NZZ was not bored, even though, or perhaps because, some passages border on homey storytelling. Die Zeit was not put out by the apparent closeness of author and subject. Only when Bernhard Servatius, the executor of Springer's will, is criticised on the basis of bare allegations, does it voice its concern.Oliver Gehr's "Der Spiegel Komplex" (The Mirror complex) appeared on March 18. It tells the story of Stefan Aust, editor-in-chief of Der Spiegel, Germany's major political magazine. To this day the book has been reviewed by none of the major newspapers. Only the Berliner Zeitunghas dared review it, praising the book but asking whether Aust "wouldhave enough influence to prevent anything being said about the book?Kuno Haberbusch, head of the NDR media programme Zapp, says he does not believe in a conspiracy. But when Zapp wanted to do an report on the book last week and 25 people were asked for statements, no one said a thing. Haberbusch, who once shared a flat with Aust, says he can't remember anything like it." (Here is an interview with Aust from 1998, here a brief history of the Spiegel)Jörg Magenau's extensive biography of Martin Walser, the first of its kind, was nodded through by the critics. Walseris a central figure in post-war German literary history, as a writer ofvery entertaining novels, and because of his infallible nose for themost painful historical debates. These ranged from theAuschwitz debates in the early 1970s to the Walser-Bubis debate at theturn of the century, when Walser was at loggerheads with Ignatz Bubis,President of the Central Council of Jews in Germany, on the question ofGerman guilt. While people familiar with the author will discoverlittle new in this work, the SZ attributes this less to a lack of thoroughness that to Martin Walser's high public profile. But it is interested to note that Walser is so clearly recognisable as Suhrkamp author. The FR finds "mood-avantgardist" a fitting label but resents Magenau's partisanship which overly narrows the scope of the book. (Until 1 May there will be an exhibition about Walser at the Münchner Literaturhaus in Munich)PhilosophyIs Peter Sloterdijk's latest book, "Im Weltinnenraum des Kapitals" (inside the internal space of world capital), "Sectarian mutterings" as the taz would have it, or "a dizzying plethora of ideas" as the SZ gushes? One thing at least is clear: the philosopher is not economical with words. His last three-volume work, "Sphären" (Spheres),filled 2,500 pages. The new book deals with what he calls the "internalspace" of globalisation. But some reviewers follow him therereluctantly. Die Zeit calls the work "instructive and important", while the FAZ has no patience for Sloterdijk's loquaciousness, which, it writes, reflects one sole principle, "I need room to expand".Fiction and Poetry / World War II / Politics / Nonfiction
It is common to hear about families fighting over wealth and assets after an influential individual dies. Family members start having debates and heated arguments over money and assets distribution. One member wants the maximum share, while the other wants to be an executor without the consent of others. This situation leads to an ugly family war and may reach court. 2b1af7f3a8