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April and 2003
In April 2003, AFI re-opened the 1938 AFI Silver theatre in Silver Spring, Maryland just north of Washington.
* Leandro Alfonso Luis Ruíz y Moragas ( born 26 April 1929 ), officially recognized by Spanish Courts on 21 May 2003 as Leandro Alfonso Luis de Borbón y Ruíz Moragas
A new cabinet was set up in 1 April 2003.
Arias thus remained barred from a second term as president ; however, in April 2003 – by which time two of the four judges who had voted against the change in 2000 had been replaced – the Court reconsidered the issue and, with the only dissenters being the two anti-reelection judges remaining from 2000, declared the 1969 amendment null and thus opened the way to reelection for former presidents – which in practice meant Arias.
The prohibition was officially recognized as unconstitutional in April 2003, allowing Óscar Arias to run for President a second time in the 2006 Costa Rican presidential elections, which he won with approximately a 1 % margin.
In 2003, the NZBS further extended restrictions to preclude permanently donors who had received a blood transfusion in the United Kingdom since January 1980, and in April 2006, restrictions were further extended to include the Republic of Ireland and France.
In April 2011, Limehouse Library having closed in 2003, the Attlee statue was unveiled in its new home at Queen Mary University of London.
President Mohamed Bacar of Anjouan formed his 13-member government at the end of April, 2003.
October 2003: January – February – March – April – May – June – July – August – September – October – November – December
In April 2003, the Supernova Legacy Survey observed a type Ia supernova, designated SNLS-03D3bb, in a galaxy approximately 4 billion light years away.
Image: Hong Kong Central Plaza. jpeg | Central Plaza, 20 April 2003
image: central-plaza2. jpg | Triangular shaped floor plan of Central Plaza, 20 April 2003
image: central-plaza3. jpg | Vertical shot of Central Plaza, 20 April 2003
By December 2001, it was ratified by the ECMA, with ISO standardization following in April 2003.
On March 15, 2004, Amiga, Inc. announced that on April 23, 2003 it had transferred its rights over past and future versions of the Amiga OS ( but not over other intellectual property ) to Itec, LLC, later acquired by KMOS, Inc., a Delaware company.
Sight and Sound April, 2003. http :// www. bfi. org. uk / sightandsound / feature / 94
( April 1, 2003 ).
These recommendations were implemented — not uncontroversially at the time — within the Criminal Justice Act 2003, and this provision came into force in April 2005.
In Northern Ireland the Criminal Justice Act 2003, effective 18 April 2005, makes certain " qualifying offence " ( including murder, rape, kidnapping, specified sexual acts with young children, specified drug offences, defined acts of terrorism, as well as in certain cases attempts or conspiracies to commit the foregoing ) subject to retrial after acquittal ( including acquittals obtained before passage of the Act ) if there is a finding by the Court of Appeals that there is " new and compelling evidence.
* From Many Imaginations, One Fearsome Creature, New York Times, April 29, 2003
The source code to the Duke Nukem 3D v1. 5 executable, which uses the Build engine, was released as free software under the GPL on April 1, 2003.
On April 2002 The Commission released its decision ( with a clarification in 2003 ).
As of April 2011, the only definitional statement issued by the IAU that pertains to exoplanets is a working definition issued in 2001 and modified in 2003.
* Fiction Writers and Other Well-Intentioned Frauds by Eileen Pollack, in the March / April 2003 issue of AWP Writers Chronicle
In 20 April 2003, chancellor Schröder announced massive labor market reforms, called Agenda 2010, that cut in unemployment benefits.

April and BEA
* 1 April 1961: BEA began operating half its London – Paris flights from Gatwick.
BEA was chartered to continue its Malta operations, this time for Air Malta, until Air Malta's first flight on 1 April 1974.
On 18 April 1953, BEA commenced using its newly delivered Vickers Viscount 701 on their scheduled service from London to Rome and Athens.
On 5 April 1960, BEA introduced de Havilland Comet 4B aircraft on the Nicosia, Athens, Rome, and London routes.
Having established its main operating base at Northolt, BEA operated its first service from Heathrow in April 1950 ; by late-1954, all Northolt operations had moved to Heathrow, which remained the airline's main operating base until the merger with BOAC in 1974.
On 1 April 1964, it became the first to operate the DH121 Trident ; on 10 June 1965, a BEA Trident 1C performed the world's first automatic landing during a scheduled commercial air service.
BEA ceased to exist as a legal entity on 1 April 1974 when the merger with BOAC to form British Airways ( BA ) took effect.
In April 1950, BEA operated its first service from London ( Heathrow ) Airport.
The first of these " Discovery " class aircraft entered commercial service in a 47-seat, mixed-class configuration in April 1953, and the first production aircraft ( G-AMAV ) went on to win the transport class of the 1953 London to Christchurch, New Zealand, air race, with BEA MD Peter Masefield as team manager and co-pilot.
On 1 April 1960, BEA began commercial jet operations with its new Comet 4Bs.
On 1 April 1961, BEA began operating half its London – Paris flights from Gatwick in accordance with the wishes of the British government to develop the airport.
In line with the recommendations of the 1969 Edwards Report, the British Airways Board was constituted on 1 April 1972 to take managerial control of BEA and BOAC.
BEA ceased operations on 1 April 1974 when it merged with BOAC to form British Airways.
However, even after the merger, a British Airways European Division, which incorporated the former BEA Mainline operation, the erstwhile Super One-Eleven and Cargo divisions, as well as British Airtours, continued to exist alongside a British Airways Overseas, a British Airways Regional and four other divisions until 1 April 1977 when these were replaced by a unified operating structure organised into a number of departments, including commercial operations, flight operations, engineering, planning, catering and personnel.
BEA operated its first commercial Herald service on 16 April 1962 on the Northern Isles route from Glasgow to Sumburgh via Wick, Aberdeen and Kirkwall.
BEA acquired a presence in the Channel Islands as a result of the takeover of Channel Islands Airways on 1 April 1947.
On 28 April 1950, BEA launched a summer service from Gatwick to Alderney, the airline's first scheduled route from Gatwick as well as its first scheduled service from there to the Channel Islands.
In April 1952, a new Exeter – Jersey route launched, which BEA contracted to its new independent associate Jersey Airlines.
In April 1963, most of the corporation's London – Channel Island flights transferred back to Heathrow as a result of the new competitive relationship between BEA and its former associate Jersey Airlines.
On 1 April 1966, BEA resumed Southampton – Jersey services following the replacement of Southampton's grass runways with a paved runway suitable for bigger, heavier aircraft types such as the Viscount and Vanguard.
On 24 April 1969, BEA formed BEA Airtours as a wholly owned, non-IATA subsidiary to provide it with a low-cost platform to participate in the then rapidly growing IT holiday flights market, which until then had been the exclusive domain of the independent airlines.
By the time of the aircraft's first flight on the 14 April 1964 the company had become Hawker Siddeley Aviation, and Papa India was delivered to BEA on 2 May 1964.
BEA Systems, Inc. specialized in enterprise infrastructure software products known as " middleware ", which connect software applications to databases and was acquired by Oracle Corporation on April 29, 2008.

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