Windows 10 allows you to quickly sign in with a numeric PIN instead of a longer password. If you have a keyboard with a number pad, you can use that number pad to enter the PIN–after you enable Num Lock. Here’s how to enable Num Lock at boot so you don’t have to press the key every time. NUM is one of the leading public universities in Cambodia and is conveniently located in the city center of Phnom Penh. Our vision statement is “Excellence in Academics.” This vision represents our strong commitment to the importance of quality based education and research which will help to facilitate our country’s transition to a.
Paying our respects to those who lost their lives in the Oaks Disaster.
- This page allows you to roll virtual dice using true randomness, which for many purposes is better than the pseudo-random number algorithms typically used in computer programs.
- Overview This library implements arbitrary-precision arithmetic on big integers and on rationals. This is a legacy library. It used to be part of the core OCaml distribution (in otherlibs/num) but is now distributed separately.
OAKS MEMORIAL REMEMBRANCE 12TH DEC 2020 12th – 13th December 1866 saw the largest loss of life in an English Colliery -“the Oaks” whereby 361 souls lost their lives. Following a marvellous fund raising effort the money was raised to erect the “Oaks Memorial” in Barnsley,in 2016, the occasion was marked by a full Memorial
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The Miners Federation of Great Britain was formed in 1889 and became the National Union of Mineworkers from 1944
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The Miners Federation of Great Britain (MFGB) formed in 1889 and subsequently became the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) in 1944 and is still a functioning organisation today. The closure of Kellingley Colliery in 2015, the last major deep mine in the UK, brought to an end deep coal mining on an industrial scale in the UK. The motto of the NUM is “The Past We Inherit The Future We Build”. The immediate past is what remains of the coal industry and the miners and their families who worked in the industry. The NUM has consistently fought for the terms and conditions of its members including wages, holidays, pensions, fuel allowances and a host of social welfare benefits. It has also fought to have industrial diseases recognised and benefits from disablement paid. There have been many thousands of personal injury settlements pursued and settled by the NUM indeed there are cases that remain ongoing. The rapid removal of coal mines from our landscapes have followed a sort of “scorched earth” policy designed to remove any trace of those who built communities and hope for future generations. Whilst the NUM is able to it will continue to fight on into the future, representing, protecting and speaking up for the many gains that miners and their communities have made. There are still wrongs to put right, agreements to protect and our ongoing belief that coal is a safe fuel that can benefit the UK and is best produced by miners in the UK will be a constant reminder to those who have placed the UK at the mercy of imports that we have not gone away quite yet. More on the History of the N.U.M