Eight Street Latin

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Eight Street Latin
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Warning This home has a pending offer.
One of a kind home in a wonderful neighborhood on 8th! This home has all of the charm and character one could ask for with a new addition featuring a large, open family/dining room, a Fujitsu mini split for efficient heating and cooling and tons of natural light. Eco's Paint, newer Bosch dishwasher and LG refrigerator (less than a year), and new LG range. Red oak, cork (bedrooms), and easy to care for LVP flooring. The large, beautiful backyard is a gardener's dream with established perennials, raspberries, asparagus, and fruit trees. Newer Old Hickory shed (2019) and new roof in 2020. Short walk to East City Park and others. Lena Whitmore school district.
New lg range Efficient heating Red oak Established perennials Newer bosch dishwasher
Bedrooms and bathrooms Bedrooms : 3 Bathrooms : 2 Main level bathrooms : 1 Main level bedrooms : 1
Heating Heating features : Electric, Heat Pump, Wall Furnace
Appliances Appliances included : Electric Water Heater, Dishwasher, Oven/Range Freestanding, Refrigerator
Interior Features Interior features : Number of Baths Main Level: 1, Number of Baths Upper Level: 1
Other interior features Total structure area : 2,146 Total interior livable area : 2,146 sqft Finished area above ground : 2,146 Finished area below ground : 0 Fireplace features : Wood Burning Stove
Lot Lot size : 0.25 Acres Lot size dimensions : 220.5 x 50 Lot features : 10000 SF - .49 AC, Garden
Other property information Parcel number : RPM08600090270A
Type and style Home type : SingleFamily Property subType : Single Family Residence
Material information Construction materials : Frame Roof : Composition
Utility Water information : Community Service
Other financial information Annual tax amount : $1,379 Buyer agency compensation : 2.5%
Other facts Listing Terms : Cash,Conventional Ownership : Fee Simple
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Customs officials at Moscow's Vnukovo Airport.
Andrei Nikerichev / Moskva News Agency
Moscow's Sheremetyevo Airport.
Sergei Vedyashkin / Moskva News Agency
Police at Moscow's Vnukovo Airport.
Alexander Avilov / Moskva News Agency
Moscow's Domodedovo Airport.
Alexander Avilov / Moskva News Agency
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Rabbi Goldschmidt said in early May he did not know when he would return to Russia.
The Russian army was still seeking to establish control over Severodonetsk’s industrial zone.
Some Europeans and U.S. citizens living in Russia refused to leave despite an exodus following the invasion of Ukraine.
The governor of Russia’s Novosibirsk region has signed a law banning migrant workers from working in a wide range of professions, including as teachers...
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Before being allowed to enter Russia last month, a business owner from a European Union member state was forced to give border officials at Moscow’s Sheremetyevo Airport the name of every Ukrainian in his cell phone contact list.
“He [the border guard] searched my phone and wrote down about eight or nine Ukrainian numbers on a sheet of paper,” he told The Moscow Times.
“They took me to a special room and started asking me if I have any friends in Ukraine, why I’m in Russia, what my job is here, if I have Russian relatives,” he said.
The Moscow Times spoke with six Westerners who have been interrogated by security officials after flying into Russia since the beginning of the war in Ukraine, adding to growing evidence that foreigners – particularly those from Europe or the U.S. – are being singled out for questioning.
Their accounts come as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has caused relations between Moscow and the West to plummet to near-historic lows. Russian officials have said repeatedly that they believe they are fighting a proxy war against U.S.-led military alliance NATO.
Of the three Westerners that agreed to talk in detail about their experiences, requesting anonymity to speak freely, all told similar stories of hours-long questioning, searches of their cellphones and attempts to establish whether they had ties to Ukraine.
The EU national, who was questioned for three hours after arriving in Moscow from the Armenian capital of Yerevan, said this was the first time he had experienced such a level of interest from border officials, despite having lived in Russia his whole life.
“I’m guessing their logic was to see if I said something that would expose me as being the enemy,” said a U.K. citizen who was questioned when he arrived in Moscow from Dubai for an April work visit to the Russian capital.
“They took me down into this room at Domodedovo and there were lots of different security, FSB, and different people coming in over the course of the five hours,” he said.
Most European countries were included on a Russian list of countries officially designated as “unfriendly” that was published less than two weeks after the start of the invasion.
According to a Russian migration lawyer who spoke to The Moscow Times on condition of anonymity, Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB), which manages border security, has been instructed to pull aside those who hold passports from “unfriendly” countries.
All interviewees told a similar story of being directed away from normal passport control booths to a waiting area full of foreigners. From there, individuals were taken into separate rooms for questioning.
“My sense was that there was an evolution from random airport security to higher-level people and then towards the end I suspect it was people who knew exactly who I was,” the U.K. citizen said of his experience. “The questions were about everything: me, my work, family, my attitude towards the ‘special operation,’ all sorts of things.”
Each foreigner interviewed by The Moscow Times reported having their phone confiscated by officials, who then took the device into a separate room – apparently to examine it.
“I asked if he had the right to do that and he cited some law,” the EU business owner said.
When the U.K. national asked why they wanted his phone, he said officials told him that they were “interested in what I read and what media I look at.”
The U.S. Embassy in Moscow earlier this month warned that a number of its citizens traveling to Russia have had their electronic devices searched at the border.
“U.S. citizens are reminded there is no reasonable expectation of privacy when using electronics in Russia,” the embassy said.
Another British national, who has worked in Moscow as a teacher for three years, reported a similar experience at the capital’s Vnukovo Airport after arriving on a flight from the Armenian capital of Yerevan.
Border officials held him for an hour and a half, he said, during which time they confiscated his cellphone and apparently went through his messages on WhatsApp.
“You don't know if they're going to try and put some kind of software onto your phone, or what they’re looking at. It's like having someone go through your house whilst you're outside,” he said in an interview.
Despite the apparent increase in checks, there is no obvious logic to who has been stopped at the border, or for how long.
All three interviewees said that it was the first time they had experienced such extensive questioning at the Russian border.
The FSB at Moscow airports Domodedovo, Sheremetyevo and Vnukovo airports did not respond to a written request for comment about a change in border policy.
The targeting of Westerners is likely a result of heightened national security amid the “current situation,” as well as an act of reciprocity for Russian nationals traveling abroad who experienced “similar cases,” according to Timur Beslangurov, a migration lawyer at Moscow’s VISTA Foreign Business Support.
Beslangurov added that his firm did not have any advice for foreigners stopped at the border other than to follow the requests of officials.
The increased scrutiny comes despite a dramatic fall in the number of Westerners traveling to Russia following the invasion of Ukraine.
Many foreigners residing in Russia chose to leave amid a drastic reduction in the number of international flights, an imminent recession and an exodus of European and U.S. companies from the Russian market.
While some of those departures are likely to be temporary, growing hostility toward foreigners at the border – and increasingly belligerent anti-Western rhetoric from officials – look set to ensure that many never return.
“It would dissuade anyone from wanting to go through the immigration here,” said the British teacher of his recent experience at the border.
He said he was planning to leave Russia this summer and move to the South Caucasus.
“I think it could be the last straw for some people,” he said.
At least 10 independent media outlets have been blocked or closed down over their coverage of the war in Ukraine.
The Moscow Times needs your help more than ever as we cover this devastating invasion and its sweeping impacts on Russian society.
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8th Street Latinas (TV Series 2002- ) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.
Tantalizing Teaser. Rate. Know what this is about? Be the first one to add a plot. S8, Ep12. 27 Mar. 2009. Banging Beach Body. Rate.
Nearby homes. $414,900. -- bd -- ba -- sqft. 860 E 8th St, Moscow, ID 83843. Off Market. Neighborhood stats provided by third party data sources. IDX information is provided exclusively for consumers' personal, non-commercial use, that it may not be used for any purpose other than to identify prospective properties consumers may be interested ...
Moscow and St. Petersburg held nighttime World War II victory parade rehearsals late Thursday as Russian forces continued their push to capture territory in eastern Ukraine. Russia marks 77 years ...
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8th Street Latinas (TV Series 2002- ) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.
Tantalizing Teaser. Rate. Know what this is about? Be the first one to add a plot. S8, Ep12. 27 Mar. 2009. Banging Beach Body. Rate.
Nearby homes. $414,900. -- bd -- ba -- sqft. 860 E 8th St, Moscow, ID 83843. Off Market. Neighborhood stats provided by third party data sources. IDX information is provided exclusively for consumers' personal, non-commercial use, that it may not be used for any purpose other than to identify prospective properties consumers may be interested ...
Moscow and St. Petersburg held nighttime World War II victory parade rehearsals late Thursday as Russian forces continued their push to capture territory in eastern Ukraine. Russia marks 77 years ...
Help your friends and family join the Duck Side!
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