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"Signpost in Semer Semer is a small village and civil parish in Suffolk, England. Located adjacent to a bridge over the River Brett on the B1115 between Hadleigh and Stowmarket, it is part of Babergh district. The parish also contains the hamlets of Ash Street and Drakestone Green. The parish was recorded in the 2011 census as having a population of 130, down from 158 in the previous census. History Semer is recorded in the Domesday Book as belonging to Bury St Edmunds Abbey in both 1066 and 1086. The abbey acted as both Lord of the Manor and Tenant-In-Chief. The village is recorded as home to 20 households: six villagers, 13 small holders and one slave. It is recorded as having enough ploughland for 3 lord's plough teams and 3 men's plough teems; and the village also had 12 acres of meadow, a mill, a church, 0.25 acres of church land, 16 cattle, 2 cobs, 24 pigs and 97 sheep. In 1086 the village is valued as worth £6 a year to its lord, Bury St Edmunds Abbey, a £1 increase on its value in 1066. Its taxable value is recorded as 3.8 geld units and 2.5 villtax. All Saints Church The small church is set a few hundred yards off of a minor road across a meadow beside the River Brett, It is almost entirely Victorianised with a chancel that was rebuilt in 1870. One notable feature of the graveyard, to the east of the church, is a marble Edwardian angel scattering roses. The church has a plain square-cut font which is thought to be 14th-century, as is the nave. There is also a Royal Arms of King George III, painted before the union with Ireland. The church has three bells. The bell nearest to Church Lane is dated 1621 but is unused; the other two working bells, nearest to the East end, are used weekly; the middle one dated 1618 and cast at Bury. The bells seem to originally have swung, but the clappers are now tied to the rope and swing against the interior of the bell. The inscriptions on the bells are: * 1st Bell Johannes me fecit, T.G. 1618 ("John made me") * 2nd Bell Meritis Edmundi scimus a crimine mundi ("Through the merits of Edmund may we be clean from guilt") * 3rd Bell Thomas Cheese me fecit, 1621 ("Thomas Cheese made me") Hamlets =Ash Street= The small hamlet of Ash Street is centred approximately east of Semer church; it is located to the north of a bridge over the River Brett. Ash Street is recorded in the Domesday Book as a very small settlement of just five smallholders, with of meadow and a mill; the hamlet had a taxable value of 1.5 geld units. Prior to the Norman Conquest of 1066, the hamlet was owned by an unnamed "Free Woman". After the Conquest it is recorded as under the Lordship of William the Conqueror's half-brother: Robert, Count of Mortain. =Drakestone Green= The small hamlet of Drakestone Green is centred approximately south of Semer church. References External links Category:Villages in Suffolk Category:Babergh Category:Civil parishes in Suffolk "
"Television in Honduras consists of both local channels and foreign television, normally distributed through cable. History Honduras had initially adopted ATSC Standards for digital terrestrial television broadcasting, but later decided to adopt the ISDB-T International standard used in many other Latin American nations. The Comisión Nacional de Telecomunicaciones (CONATEL) decided on January 9, 2007 to adopt the ATSC standard, which went into effect on January 16, 2007, when it was published in the "Diario Oficial La Gaceta". The first Digital High Definition TV Station, CampusTv, was founded by Universidad de San Pedro Sula. Honduran TV channels The following are some of the tv channels produced in Honduras. *gotv *Canal 11 * Cholusat Sur Canal 36 * Maya TV Canal 66 * Teleceiba Canal 7 *Televicentro (Honduras) *Televisión Nacional de Honduras *MundoTV Canal 42 *Telecentro *Enlace Honduras Canal 57 *Roatan Travel Network *CANETTV (VOD) See also * Media of Honduras References "
"The Eiffel Forum License (EFL) is a free software license written by NICE, the Non-Profit International Consortium for Eiffel. Version 2 of the license, the latest , is the first version to be GPL compatible. EFLv2 has been approved by the OSI, and is approved as a free software license by the FSF. The Eiffel Forum License is one of the shortest licenses that is OSI approved. License text Eiffel Forum License, version 2 1\. Permission is hereby granted to use, copy, modify and/or distribute this package, provided that: * copyright notices are retained unchanged, * any distribution of this package, whether modified or not, includes this license text. 2\. Permission is hereby also granted to distribute binary programs which depend on this package. If the binary program depends on a modified version of this package, you are encouraged to publicly release the modified version of this package. THIS PACKAGE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND WITHOUT WARRANTY. ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS BE LIABLE TO ANY PARTY FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS PACKAGE. Example application Since this is a published licence it may be referenced from a work using the following simple statement: Copyright 2008, Author Name, example.org Licensed under the Eiffel Forum License 2. References External links * The Eiffel Forum License, Versions 1 and 2, eiffel-nice.org * Eiffel Forum License, version 2, fsf.org * Eiffel Forum License, version 2, opensource.org * Discussion on license-discuss, ml.osdir.com * Feedback from OSI legal affairs, teameiffel.blogspot.com Category:Free and open-source software licenses Category:Permissive software licenses "