Tio nobel: Pacheco y Tio Nobel | Puerto rico, Puerto ricans, My heritage

Capitán de la comedia y del bienestar infantil: La memorable vida artística de Tío Nobel

Tiempo de lectura: 3 minutos

Nota: Este escrito se publicó hace más de 90 días.

Recordar a Nobel Vega, mejor conocido en la década del 1980 como “Tío Nobel” es remontarse a una infancia inocente, llena de alegría, risas y obediencia a personajes que, a través de la televisión, no solo entretenían, sino también educaban a los niños. Tío Nobel era uno de ellos, pues, su aparición en Telemundo ha sido cariñosamente recordada en la actualidad por la sociedad puertorriqueña.

Sin embargo, la experiencia artística de Nobel Vega data de antes de su llegada a la televisión infantil. Para 1954, cuando apenas se iniciaba la televisión en Puerto Rico, este actor tenía destacada trayectoria como comediante en Cuba. No es para menos, si su chispa y naturalidad resplandecían en las pantallas.

El nacimiento de “Tío Nobel”

La llegada de Nobel a Puerto Rico, data alrededor de los años 60. Su participación en telenovelas fueron uno de sus primeros pasos en este país, con su papel en Conciencia Culpable. Además, dio vida al Payaso Bozo, televisado por Wapa Televisión.

Es posteriormente, con su llegada a Telemundo, cuando Nobel Vega se transforma en el querido y recordado Tío Nobel. Un capitán con chaqueta roja, pantalón blanco y gorra de marinero que le aportaba un muy particular estilo. Pero, además, por lo que muchos recordarán a este insigne personaje, es seguramente por su dedicación en cada programa.

A través de sus chistes y cientos de habilidades, tío Nobel, guardaba la intención de fomentar el desarrollo cognitivo en cada uno de los segmentos. Y con la naturalidad y desenvolvimiento de su personaje, esto lo hacía sin mucho esfuerzo.

Desde motivación, autoestima, hasta bienestar infantil, cada fase del programa podía educar y alentar a la población infantil en diversos aspectos. Nutriendo a los más pequeños de la época con la dosis justa de fantasía, buenos hábitos e inteligencia.

Esta gran combinación fue precisamente lo que le aportó valor en la memoria y el sentimiento de los puertorriqueños a Tío Nobel. Entre su popular tocadiscos con aguja invisible y el libro de oro, como recompensa a la persistencia y empeño en la búsqueda de la excelencia, marcó una diferencia no solo en los niños, sino también en los padres que veían una transformación en la conducta de sus hijos, gracias a las instrucciones de este tío de la televisión.

La trayectoria de tío Nobel, no solo representa un sinónimo de amor y dedicación, sino también de humildad. Pues más allá de su personaje, Nobel Vega era genuinamente espontáneo, gracioso y alegre. Lo que cabía justo dentro de la descripción del Tío Nobel, que, posiblemente muchos niños de los 70 y 80 darían de este personaje particular.

Como muestra de ello, pese a los años transcurridos Tío Nobel, no se retira de los gratos recuerdos de los puertorriqueños; que aún conservan en su sentimentalismo, una memoria de este personaje que formó parte importante de su formación.

Nobel Vega, continuará siendo recordado como ícono de la televisión infantil; y dueño absoluto de la página principal en el libro de oro de las memorias puertorriqueñas.

Home | Tio2 World Summit

TiO2 World Summit 2023

October 2023 | Cleveland, Ohio

​The TiO2 World Summit will be back face-to-face in Cleveland, Ohio in October 2023! The industry is clearly excited to come together and find ways to move forward through today’s uncertainty. 

Combining more than 25 years of experience in working with the industrial pigments and colorants sectors and titanium dioxide supply chain, Smithers co-located TiO2 World Summit and Pigment & Color Science Forum regularly unites key players from across the entire value chain for 2-days of the latest market insights, imformative presentations, collaborative discussions, and valuable networking opportunities that build on the inherent synergies between the TiO2 and pigments industries.

This key event will cover the latest info on supply and demand, pricing, feedstocks, sustainability and innovation in production processes. Book your ticket today to join the likes of Kronos, Akzo Nobel, Venator, Tronox, TDMA, Nordic Mining, Iluka, TNG, IMCD, IKEA, LB Group, Jaguar Land Rover and Lavollee who have already confirmed their attendance.



 


“The diversity of functions, topics and quality of speakers across the value chain was excellent, enabled high value networking & collaboration opportunities throughout the conference”

– Director, PPG Industries Inc.






Robert Gibney



General Manager Titanium Dioxide (TiO2) Sales
at
Iluka Resources






Aziza Gazieva



Vice President
at
Fermium Research






Francois Farion



Design Director, Color & Trim
at
Renault






Dr.

Karin Tynelius



Director, Market Intelligence
at
MINERAL MARKETS





Russ Snider



VP – Global Marketing and R&D
at
Tronox






Rebecca Major



Partner
at
Herbert Smith Freehills LLP




General Manager Titanium Dioxide (TiO2) Sales
at
Iluka Resources


Robert Gibney is General Manager Titanium Dioxide (TiO2) Sales for Iluka Resources, based in Raleigh, North Carolina, United States.

Mr. Gibney has over 35 years of pigment industry experience, having spent over 21 years with Tronox/Kerr-McGee Chemical in a wide variety of senior management positions, including Vice President Global Pigment Marketing, Vice President Investor Relations and Corporate Affairs, Senior Vice President Global Supply Chain and Chief Administrative Officer.

Having joined Iluka on February 1, 2014, Mr. Gibney is focused on developing Iluka’s TiO2
feedstock sale strategies along with increasing the TiO2 expertise within the company.


Vice President
at
Fermium Research


Aziza Gazieva is a Vice President at Fermium Research, having co-founded the company in 2018 following 6 years at Wells Fargo Securities. In early 2016, Aziza transitioned from corporate banking to chemicals equity research as an Associate Analyst on Frank Mitsch’s team and was a key contributor to help the team rank in the 2017 and 2018 Institutional Investor’s All-America Research Surveys. Ms. Gazieva is a graduate of New York University with a major in Economics.


Design Director, Color & Trim
at
Renault


After holding positions in graphic design for Landor associates and product planning in the Office furniture industry for Haworth, FRANCOIS FARION joined his long-time industry of choice, automotive, in year 2000 for PSA-Peugeot Citroën, then joined Nissan North America in 2005 for 13 years, including responsibility for Bodycolors for the Nissan group in Atsugi, Japan from 2015 to 2018.
He has been Director of CMF (Color Material & Finishes) for Groupe Renault since 2018, based in Technocenter near Paris.

He’s married to Nathalie, with whom he had a daughter Anaïs, 22, a bachelor in Neurology, Physiology & Behavior of UC Davis, who now studies Cosmetics formulation in Italy.

Their son Mahé just started engineering at McGill in Montreal.

He’s an avid photographer, cyclist and skier. Among other Italian cars, he has owned and enjoyed a Bianco Fuji 2005 Maserati GranSport.


Director, Market Intelligence
at
MINERAL MARKETS


Dr. Karin Tynelius holds a MS and a PhD in Metallurgy and Materials Engineering. She is the Director of Mineral Markets and provides consultancy, training and market intelligence on titanium-dioxide (TiO2) and the mineral sands industry. She has 30+ years of experience in the metals and mining industry and was in charge of the market research for TiZir until 2018.

Karin also holds a Director’s Certificate (IDP-C) from INSEAD and is a Non-Executive Director of Keliber.


VP – Global Marketing and R&D
at
Tronox


J. Russ Snider joined Tronox in April 2019 as part of the Cristal acquisition. He leads a team of Marketing professionals and is responsible for global marketing strategy, margin improvement, segment portfolio optimization, new product direction, product promotions and branding. He has 25 years of titanium dioxide experience including international assignments in Switzerland and the Netherlands. He previously held roles in Sales, Sales and Operations Planning, R&D and Engineering. Mr. Snider holds a B.S. in Chemical Engineering from the University of Tennessee.


Partner
at
Herbert Smith Freehills LLP


Rebecca Major is a lawyer and partner at Herbert Smith Freehills LLP. She runs the Energy And Natural Resources team in our Paris office. She is a British and French national and has worked in Paris, London and Tokyo. She advises on international commercial contracts, disposals, acquisitions and project developments both under English and French law. She was voted “Best Mining Lawyer in France” by Best Lawyers in 2021.

LCD Nobelevsky – prices on the website from the official developer of Ak Bars Dom Group of Companies, planning of a residential complex, mortgage, shares of a new building – Republic of Tatarstan, Kazan, Novatorov Street

from 7.85 million ₽ to 12.29 million ₽

from 170,000 up to 250 000 ₽/m²

Real estate in Kazan

new buildings

new buildings in Kazan

Soviet

Cuba

Metro area TUKA

View 1 share

Docation

9,000

Republic of Tatarstan, Kazan, Novator Street

Serving term

2021

Class

Comfort

Formation

1

Corps

3 Corps

Type

Monolithic-Kirpichi

Ceres 9000

Finishing options

Pre-finishing

Parking

Separate multi-level guest room

Completion date 2021

Home class Comfort

number of storeys19

Corps 3 buildings 3 hull

Type Domonolite-Kirpichny

Disciplinary Department

Objects on the territory of residential complex

kindergarten

Playgrounds 9000

Guest room

Security

Video surveillance

No queue

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About the residential complex “Nobelevsky”

Smart life planning is an important part of success. The new residential complex “Nobelevsky” in the historical part of Kazan at the intersection of Ershov and Novatorov streets overlooking the Kazanka water area will be an excellent stepping stone for development.

Three tall houses in a single laconic style, built using modern housing construction technologies: a reinforced concrete frame filled with ceramic tiles, ventilated facades, a barrier-free entrance group, noiseless elevators. nine0003

Apartments in houses are rented out with high-quality pre-finishing finishes: floor screed, electrical wiring, installation of switches and sockets, metal front door, meters with automatic transmission of readings.

Everything you need for inspiration, movement, growth, emotions and comfort you will find here. Developing and winning at the pace of a modern metropolis is another achievement.

  • All buildings

  • Building 65B Building 1 2021

  • House 65B Building 2

    2021

1-room

dated 31 m²

7. 8–7.9 million ₽

2 Offers

1-room house 65B Corps 1

Rented

31.9 m² 9000

7, 7, 7, 7, 9 million ₽

See all offers

2-room

from 52 m²

9.8–11.1 million ₽

4 offers

2-room

Building 65B Building 1

003

52.0 m²

9.8 million ₽

2-room

house 65B Corps 1

Rented

53.3 m²

10.1 million ₽

2-room

House 65B Corps 1

Rent

58.8 m²

11.1 million ₽

View all sentences

3-room

dated 72 m²

12.2–12.2 million ₽

9000 3 SPRIENTS

3-room

House 65B Building 1

Commissioned

72.3 m²

12.2 million ₽

Watch all offers

only 9 apartments in the LCD

shares in the residential complex “Nobel”

Mortgage offers and accredited banks

Real estate cost

Original contribution

20% 9000

Banks and builders

Banks and builders

Banks and builders

Amount

Term

Monthly payment

Mortgage for IT specialists up to 5%

State support

Get online

5%to

18 million

₽30 chronet

41 445

₽/month

Family mortgage up to 6%

Modern

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6%until 9000 million

million

₽30 Chronet

44 992

₽/month

Preferential mortgage 6. 9%

SOCCOMBANK

Get online

6.9% to

million

₽ – OO

9000 48 313

9000 ₽/month

Preferential mortgage up to 7%

Read completely

Why are there no apartments with neither finishing either at least pre -low (?

Read completely

  • Particular

Developer

CA AK BARS Dom

9000

We build not just , we create projects from scratch: we produce, design, introduce new technologies every day.We say: “Home is where we are!”.

This means that the main values ​​of our company are customer focus, manufacturability, innovation and const…

Learn more about developer 2023

4 min.

Ak Bars Dom

Residential complex “Sun City Super”

Commissioned

4 min.

GK Ak Bars Dom

Residential complex “Novy Svet”

Delivery in 4 sq. 2023

12 min.

Ak Bars House

Tulpar Residential Complex

Commissioned

6 min.

View all residential complexes from the developer

Construction of the residential complex “Nobel”

Updated July 1, 2021

Watch all albums

Project declaration Corps 3

Permission to Corps 3

Project declaration building for commissioning Building 65B Building 1

Design declaration Building 2

Building permit Building 2

Permit for commissioning Building 65B Building 2

Developer GK Ak Bars Dom. Project declaration on the website of our.house.rf

  • Delivery in 2022-2024, completed

    Residential complex “My Rhythm”

    from 6. 71 million ₽ for 1-room. 32.91 m²

    Republic of Tatarstan, Kazan, Sovetsky district, Pobeda avenue

  • Delivery in 2023—2024

    Aquamarine residential complex

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    Republic of Tatarstan, Kazan, Achinskaya street

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    Residential complex “Komos on Gubkina”

    from 7.22 million ₽ for 1-room. 37.5 m²

    Republic of Tatarstan, Kazan, Academician Gubkin street

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    LCD SIBEROVA

    from 4.25 million ₽ for the studio 22 m²

    Republic of Tatarstan, Kazan, Khalitova Street, 4

  • LCD “Unicum for Kutuy Adele”

    dated 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8 49 million ₽ for a 1-room apartment 46.69m²

    Republic of Tatarstan, Kazan, Adel Kutuya street

  • 2023, completed

    LCD “ART City”

    38.41 m²

    Republic of Tatarstan, Kazan, Nikolai Ershov street

  • 2024

    Residential complex “Knoxa Park”

    from 3. 23 million rubles for a studio of 19.5 m²

    Republic of Tatarstan, Kazan, residential complex Knoxa Park

  • Delivery in Q4 2023

    LCD “Rocket”

    9000

    from 4.95 million ₽ for the studio 24.81 m²

    Republic of Tatarstan, Kazan, Cosmonauts

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    9000

    9000

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    9000

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    9000

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    9000

    9000

    9000

    from 6.42 million ₽ for a studio of 25.7 m²

    18 min

    Republic of Tatarstan, Kazan, Chetaeva street

  • Delivery in 2 sq. 2024

    Residential complex “Unicum on Ershova”

    from 7.87 million ₽ for 1-room. 39,3 m²

    Republic of Tatarstan, Kazan, Nikolai Ershov street

  • Lease in 1 sq. 2024

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    Republic of Tatarstan, Kazan, Adel Kutuya street

  • LCD “Zhuravli”

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    12 min

    Republic of Tatarstan, Kazan, Daurskaya street

up to 8 million ₽

11 LCD

Apartments up to 6 million ₽

5 LCD

Photo sources: https://arof.com.ua, https://i2.multilisting.su, https://i3.multilisting .su, https://img.tourister.ru, https://kazanreporter.ru, https://topparki.ru.

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“I would consider myself happy.” As a Nobel laureate, Ivan Pavlov asked to work in Siberia

December 10 is Alfred Nobel’s memorial day. On the same day, the Nobel Prize established by him is awarded. Last year, editor-in-chief of Novaya Gazeta Dmitry Muratov became the thirty-first Nobel laureate from Russia in the entire 120-year history of the award. Purely statistically, this is not a great result for a great power, given that the “thirty” includes natives of Poland and Finland, who were citizens of the Russian Empire until 1917 years old. For example, the writer Henryk Sienkiewicz, the poet Czeslaw Miloš and other foreigners. But even with their “help” in the Nobel rating of the 21st century, Russia occupies a modest sixth place between Sweden and Switzerland. And in the first place – the absolute leader of the race for the “Nobel” – the United States with 383 laureates.

Almost all the winners of the most prestigious award in the world, who came to Stockholm and Oslo under the Russian or Soviet flag, were born in the European part of the country. The entire vast territory from the Urals to the Pacific Ocean gave the world only one Nobel laureate – Igor Tamm (Nobel Prize in Physics 1958 years old), who was born in Vladivostok. However, the “Siberian trace” (if we consider the Far East as Siberia) in the scientist’s biography is the result of chance. The father of the future laureate supervised the construction of the coastal section of the Trans-Siberian Railway, and shortly after the birth of Igor, the Tamm family moved to Ukraine. Nevertheless, in Vladivostok they are proud of their kinship, and a monument to Academician Tamm was erected there in front of the building of the Institute of Physics.

Memorial sign to Igor Tamm. Vladivostok

It turns out that Siberia and the Nobel Prize are incompatible things? This is not entirely true. In the annals of Siberian universities there are several big names. nine0003

Extraordinary Pavlov

Nobel Prize winner in 1904 “for his work on the physiology of digestion” Ivan Pavlov was a professor of pharmacology at Tomsk University for almost three months. About his desire to go to Siberia to study science, Pavlov wrote to the trustee of the West Siberian District V.M. Florinsky back in 1887 – a year before the opening of the first university in the Asian part of Russia.

Ivan Pavlov

“I would consider myself happy if the Siberian University would give me shelter within its walls. I hope that I, for my part, would not remain indebted to him.” Ivan Pavlov – Vasily Florinsky

Florinsky petitioned the Ministry of Public Education to appoint Pavlov as head of the Department of Physiology. However, Minister Delyanov did not approve his candidacy, giving this place to the little-known scientist V. Veliky.

The Vrach newspaper, published in St. Petersburg, reacted sharply critically to this decision of the minister:

for some reason, Pavlov, a private lecturer in physiology, did not succeed in this department. in addition, for many years he constantly worked and helped others work in the clinic of S. P. Botkin. nine0578

Monument to I. Pavlov in Tomsk

The Ministry of Education, of course, did not care about the opinion of the scientific community. It took officials another three years to finally offer the future Nobel Prize winner a position as an extraordinary professor of pharmacology in Tomsk. “Extraordinary” meant lower status and less salary than an ordinary professor. But Pavlov, who at that time was going through, in his own words, “desperate years”, when “in terms of money it was constantly very tight,” agreed to this. May 189At the age of 0, he received a certificate for traveling with his family from St. Petersburg to Tomsk and was already preparing for the journey, when fortune suddenly began to smile at him – the news came that, simultaneously with his appointment in Tomsk, he had been elected a professor at Warsaw University. However, in the end, Ivan Petrovich did not go to either Tomsk or Warsaw, since in the same spring of 1890 he was offered a chair and a laboratory at the Military Medical Academy of St. Petersburg, where he also sent his resume at one time.

If the metropolitan bureaucrats from education made decisions a little faster, the Siberian school of physiology, thanks to Pavlov, would be ahead of the rest. The professor certainly would not have remained in debt. nine0003

On the centenary of the birth of the great physiologist, his memory was immortalized in Tomsk by the installation of a gilded monument in front of the building of the regional psychiatric hospital.

A deserter from science

Nikolai Semyonov, a graduate of Petrograd University (1917), the first and only Russian Nobel Prize winner in chemistry (1956), happened to be in Siberia during the Civil War. In the summer of 1918, he was visiting his parents in Samara, when the uprising of the Czechoslovak corps began, the power in the city changed, and red Petrograd remained on the other side of the front. Semenov was mobilized into the White Army, with which he went beyond the Urals. nine0003

Nikolai Semenov

Passing along the Trans-Siberian Railway through the Taiga station, a young scientist deserted from a military unit to get to university Tomsk, located a hundred kilometers to the north, “hoping to devote himself to scientific work again,” as he later writes in his autobiography. The risky venture was crowned with success – Semenov was hired at TSU, and soon he was elected to the position of junior assistant at the Faculty of Physics and Mathematics. A year later, a deserter from science was found by the Kolchak military registration and enlistment office, and Nikolai Nikolayevich again had a real chance to lay down his head at the front. But Tomsk scientists proved to the army command that the talent of their colleague in the rear would be much more useful than on the front lines. Semenov was enrolled in the radio detachment at the Tomsk Technological Institute (now TPU), in whose ranks he served until the end of the Civil War. nine0003

In 1920, Nikolai Semyonov returned to Petrograd, where he began working in the same laboratory with his friend Peter Kapitsa. In their free time from scientific research, young people led a bohemian lifestyle. In particular, they posed for Boris Kustodiev for a pair portrait.

Boris Kustodiev. “Portrait of professors Kapitsa and Semenov”. 1921

They say that the venerable artist was not at all eager to paint unknown scientists – they persuaded him, explaining that they were going to make great scientific discoveries in the foreseeable future and receive the Nobel Prize for them. Kapitsa fulfilled his “promise” at 1978, Semenov – more than twenty years earlier, having received a prize for the discovery and description of the chemical mechanism of chain reactions, a special case of which is a nuclear explosion.

And Boris Kustodiev, as a fee for his painting, received from scientists a live chicken and a sack of oats, which was not bad at all for the hungry post-revolutionary Petrograd.

Who ordered a taxi to Nobelevka?

The only Nobel laureate who nevertheless reached Siberia, unlike Pavlov, and did it of his own free will, unlike Semenov, was the mathematician and economist Leonid Kantorovich, who worked in the Novosibirsk Academgorodok from 1957th through the early 1970s.

Leonid Kantorovich. 1975 Photo: Andrey Bogdanov

Kantorovich received his “Nobel” in economics in 1975 with the wording “for his contribution to the theory of optimal allocation of resources.” In practice, this meant a lot of useful things. For example, the scientific taxi fare developed by Kantorovich and his Novosibirsk students in the mid-60s, when the USSR introduced a landing fee and at the same time reduced the fare, which led to an increase in the profitability of transportation and the profitability of short trips for customers and drivers. This elegant economic solution was only one of the examples of linear programming, the principles of which Kantorovich formulated even before the war in the monograph Mathematical Methods for Organization and Planning of Production. nine0003

Kantorovich should be recognized as the first who discovered that a wide class of the most important production problems lends itself to a clear mathematical formulation, which, in his opinion, makes it possible to approach problems from a quantitative side and solve them by numerical methods … “- assessed the scientific contribution of his Soviet colleague, American economist George Danzig, who developed the principles of linear programming in the United States.

In the USSR, Kantorovich’s economic ideas were subjected to “Marxist-Leninist criticism” for “dragging” capitalist principles into Soviet science. Kantorovich himself did not care much for these “critics”. Especially after the Nobel Prize. nine0003

NSU professor Semyon Kutateladze recalled his meeting with the laureate in the early eighties:

It was a damp and cold autumn, and at lunchtime Leonid Vitalievich came to our house, where, together with my father, they quite energetically began to warm themselves with Siberian vodka. Osmelev , I directly asked Leonid Vitalievich what he considers the most important scientific achievement of his life. Without hesitation, he replied: “The most important linear programming.” Since the technical essence of this scientific subject did not seem to me to be large enough for a mathematician of his strength, I continued to inquire: “And for the soul?” Leonid Vitalievich (a thin person and well versed in interlocutors) smiled and said the expected: “But for the soul, of course, K-space “.

K-spaces, or “Kantorovich spaces”, is a complex mathematical model that is now used to build the “picture” in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).

Novosibirsk Academgorodok, interior of the House of Scientists, 1960s

This, unfortunately, is the end of the short list of Nobel laureates whose fate somehow turned out to be connected with Siberia. In the 21st century, rich federal universities in Siberia and the Far East invite Nobel laureates from different countries as “honorary professors” in order to increase their ratings.

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