Ship's letter () is, in German law, the official document issued by the registry court as evidence that an inland vessel has been entered in the inland shipping register. The document reproduces the full content of the register entries relating to the vessel. Under the Schiffsregisterordnung (Shipping Register Ordinance), the equivalent document for a seagoing ship is called a Schiffszertifikat (ship's certificate).
The Old Pier, Spiekeroog (German: Alter Anleger) was a former landing pier on the East Frisian island of Spiekeroog, in Lower Saxony, Germany. It served as part of the island's historic ferry infrastructure and was connected to the village by the Spiekeroog island railway, including its earlier horse-drawn phase. After the opening of the modern harbour of Spiekeroog in 1981, the former landing place lost its transport function and became known as the “Old Pier”.
Dr. D. Arulbalachandran Dhanarajan, Assistant Professor in the Department of Botany, School of Life Sciences, Periyar University, Salem, TN, India. His academic and research interests focus on plant molecular breeding, mutation breeding, and abiotic stress physiology in crop plants. His research is primarily directed toward the development of improved and resilient crop varieties through the application of physical and chemical mutagens. He has developed strong expertise in cytogenetical, molecular, and biochemical approaches to elucidate plant responses to environmental stresses, with particular emphasis on drought tolerance. His work significantly contributes to sustainable agriculture by enhancing crop productivity by mutation and improving stress adaptability under changing climatic conditions. He is actively involved in teaching, research supervision, and collaborative research in the fields of plant science and crop improvement.
Career
D. Arulbalachandran completed his B.Sc. in Botany from the University of Madras (1999) and awarded Master of Science (2001) and Doctoral degree (2006) in Botany from Annamalai University. Following the completion of his doctoral studies, he served as an ad-hoc faculty member in a college before joining as an Assistant Professor in Botany at the School of Life Sciences, Periyar University, in 2013. In 2026, he was elected as a Fellow of the Linnean Society of London, one of the world’s oldest and most prestigious scientific societies dedicated to natural history and biological sciences. This distinguished honour recognizes his significant contributions to plant science, particularly in plant breeding and stress physiology, and reflects his sustained commitment to advancing research in crop improvement and sustainable agriculture.
Academic Recognition
Fellow of The Linnean Society of London, UK 2026
Travel Awardee - American Society of Plant Biologists (ASPB-2023), Savannah, Georgia, USA.
The Will Lammert Prize () was an East German art award named after the sculptor Will Lammert. Between 1962 and 1992, it was awarded at irregular intervals to young sculptors by the (East) German Academy of Arts. There were 13 laureates in total.
The prize, which was donated by Lammert's widow in 1957, was awarded for the first time on 5 January 1962, to Werner Stötzer. This made the Will Lammert Prize the first privately sponsored award in East Germany. According to its provisions, only sculptors under the age of 30 were eligible for the prize. The age restriction was later lifted, however.