Ferenc Gabriel JOACHIM (1920–1989), was a Hungarian-born American who was a poet by avocation writing under the nom de plume Ferenc Karpati, and a biologist and entomologist by profession. Ferenc G. Joachim is the second of three children of the Hungarian (Magyar) artist painter Ferenc JOACHIM (1882-1964) and his wife born Margit GRAF (1892-1965). Ferenc G. Joachim was a son, husband, father. His profession was as a research biologist and entomologist graduated from the University of Budapest and researcher at the United States Department of Agriculture, Radiation and Metabolism Research Laboratory, North Dakota State University, Fargo, North Dakota. [1]
Ferenc Gabriel JOACHIM was the second of three children of the Hungarian (Magyar) artist painter Ferenc JOACHIM (1882-1964) and his wife born Margit GRÁF (1892-1965), with an older sister Piroska Joachim, and a younger brother Attila Joachim. Present in this photograph are also Tibor Porkoláb and Miklós Porkoláb who are two of the three sons of Piroska Joachim and her husband Tivadar Porkoláb. Photograph recorded on 20 August 1944, in Budapest, Hungary.
Ferenc Gabriel JOACHIM is referred to by his father the Hungarian (Magyar) artist painter Ferenc JOACHIM (1882-1964) who was interviewed in the Budapest, Hungary daily afternoon newspaper "Esti Kurir" on 15 March 1935 on page 9. The topic of the interview is how in the middle of the Great Depression the family has fallen into abject hopeless poverty and hunger with his wife Margit, and children Piroska, Ferenc Gabriel, and Attila, and how the despair has driven his daughter Piroska to attempted suicide and who is now being treated at the Rókus Hospital. The newspaper article identifies the father Ferenc Joachim as a founding member of the Nemzeti Szalon, a contributor to the Nemzeti Muzeum, and a recognized artist in Paris, Rome and Berlin. Article from "Esti Kurir," 15 March 1935, page 9. Ferenc Gabriel Joachim (17 February 1920–23 April 1989), also Ferenc G. Joachim, also Frank G. Joachim, also F. G. Joachim, who also used the nom de plume Ferenc Karpati, was a Hungarian-born American who was a poet by avocation and a biologist and entomologist by profession. Ferenc G. Joachim, also Frank G. Joachim, using the nom de plume of Ferenc Karpati had some of his poems published in the anthology listed in REFERENCE 1. It appears that he constructed his nom de plume by using for a first name his own actual first name of “Ferenc” and then using for a surname “Karpati” which translates from the Hungarian as “of the Carpathian mountains,” where the Carpathian mountains have a historically mythical and spiritual resonance in the Hungarian (Magyar) literature and psyche. The most likely reason for him to use a nom de plume was to separate his poetry writing from his professional job as a federal government scientist. The themes of his poem had their genesis in his living through the Great Depression circa 1929 to 1939 encompassing his teenage years in Budapest, Hungary, in his viewing of the senseless slaughter of innocent persons in Budapest, Hungary during World War II by the mass murder machinery of the German nazis and their Hungarian collaborators during his university student days, and living through the arbitrary and senseless brutalization by the Russian communists and their Hungarian collaborators during the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 during his young manhood years. Image File history File links Information_icon. ...
A pen name or nom de plume is a pseudonym adopted by an author. ...
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This article is about Eötvös Loránd University, which is often referred to as University of Budapest. ...
Image File history File links Download high resolution version (12120x10800, 4692 KB) DESCRIPTION: Photograph (black and white) of Ferenc JOACHIM (1882-1964, Hungarian (Magyar) artist painter, and his wife born Margit GRAF and their three children, daughter Piroska and sons Ferenc G and Attila and two of their nine grandchildren...
Image File history File links Download high resolution version (12120x10800, 4692 KB) DESCRIPTION: Photograph (black and white) of Ferenc JOACHIM (1882-1964, Hungarian (Magyar) artist painter, and his wife born Margit GRAF and their three children, daughter Piroska and sons Ferenc G and Attila and two of their nine grandchildren...
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Image File history File linksMetadata Download high resolution version (1808x2736, 2050 KB) Summary Ferenc JOACHIM (1882-1964), Hungarian (Magyar) artist painter was interviewed in the Budapest, Hungary daily afternoon newspaper Esti Kurir on 15 March 1935 on page 9. ...
Image File history File linksMetadata Download high resolution version (1808x2736, 2050 KB) Summary Ferenc JOACHIM (1882-1964), Hungarian (Magyar) artist painter was interviewed in the Budapest, Hungary daily afternoon newspaper Esti Kurir on 15 March 1935 on page 9. ...
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February 17 is the 48th day of the year in the Gregorian calendar. ...
Year 1920 (MCMXX) was a leap year starting on Thursday. ...
April 23 is the 113th day of the year in the Gregorian calendar (114th in leap years). ...
1989 (MCMLXXXIX) was a common year starting on Sunday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
A pen name or nom de plume is a pseudonym adopted by an author. ...
A pen name or nom de plume is a pseudonym adopted by an author. ...
A pen name or nom de plume is a pseudonym adopted by an author. ...
A pen name or nom de plume is a pseudonym adopted by an author. ...
Ferenc G. Joachim was born in 1920 in Budapest, Hungary as the second of three children of the Hungarian (Magyar) artist painter Ferenc Joachim (1882-1964) and his wife born Margit Graf (1892-1965), which was a Roman Catholic family. His older sister born Piroska Joachim (1913-) at age 93 still survives him and is the one remembering him at the time of this writing in October of 2006. Their younger brother Attila Joachim (1923-1947), had studied at the "Képzőművészeti Főiskola" ( "Hungarian Academy of Fine Arts," [2], [3]) and graduated in 1946, [4], and also began teaching there when died at approximately age 24 due to accumulated internal bodily injuries suffered from repeated beatings by the Hungarian (Magyar) collaborators of the German nazis. All three of these Joachim children were also aware of the cold blooded murder of their mother’s two sisters, Julia Graf, Rozsa Graf, and three brothers Moritz Graf, Marton Graf, Karoly Graf and their spouses and children by the Hungarian (Magyar) collaborators of the German nazis during the 1943 or 1944 Budapest holocaust. See Budapest (band) for the British melancholic post-grunge band. ...
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Ferenc G. Joachim graduated from the University of Budapest in biology specializing in entomology. [5] Ferenc G. Joachim married the born Éva Grosz (1925-1992) of Szeged, Hungary and they had a total of six children namely two daughters Éva and Erika, and four sons Tamás, János, Gábor and Michael. Following the ill-fated Hungarian Revolution of 1956, Ferenc G. Joachim and his wife the born Éva Grosz and at that time their four children born in Hungary, Éva, Erika, Tamás, János, were refugees because the parents had an overwhelmingly intense desire that their children grow up and be educated in the free world and to live in peace and justice. The family was granted asylum by Canada. Their fifth child Gábor was born in Canada when they all moved on to the USA where Ferenc G. Joachim accepted a job with the United States Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Radiation and Metabolism Research Laboratory located on the campus of the North Dakota State University in Fargo, North Dakota. Their sixth child Michael Joachim was born in the USA. Ferenc G. Joachim, or also Frank G. Joachim, was a research biologist and entomologist for almost 30 years with the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA). He was a coauthor on at least two scientific papers shown in REFERENCE 2 and REFERENCE 3. This article is about Eötvös Loránd University, which is often referred to as University of Budapest. ...
Szeged and the Tisza river. ...
The United States Department of Agriculture (also called the Agriculture Department, or USDA) is a United States Federal Executive Department (or Cabinet Department). ...
North Dakota State University (NDSU) is a public university in Fargo, North Dakota, USA. It is the second largest school in the eleven campus North Dakota University System. ...
Location in North Dakota Coordinates: Country United States State North Dakota County Cass County Founded 1871 Mayor Dennis Walaker Area - City 98. ...
The United States Department of Agriculture (also called the Agriculture Department, or USDA) is a United States Federal Executive Department (or Cabinet Department). ...
Ferenc G. Joachim died in 1989 in Fargo, North Dakota and his wife Eva died three years later in 1992 in Fargo. They both had their bodies cremated and had their ashes cast into the Red River near Fargo. Location in North Dakota Coordinates: Country United States State North Dakota County Cass County Founded 1871 Mayor Dennis Walaker Area - City 98. ...
See also the Red River disambiguation page. ...
References
POETRY Ferenc G. Joachim under his nom de plume of Ferenc Karpati had four of his poems published in the following 800 page anthology. A pen name or nom de plume is a pseudonym adopted by an author. ...
[1] “Our world’s most beloved poems,” John Campbell editor and publisher, Eddie-Lou Cole editor, Julie Joy art director, World of Poetry Press, 800 pages, copyright 1984. OCLC 12041712 OCLC Online Computer Library Center was founded in 1967 and originally named the Ohio College Library Center (OCLC). ...
Page 86: “The Warlord” by Ferenc Karpati who is actually Ferenc G. Joachim Page323: “Do you know who I am?” by Ferenc Karpati who is actually Ferenc G. Joachim Page 667: “Remembrance” by Ferenc Karpati who is actually Ferenc G. Joachim Page 682: “Village in Winter” by Ferenc Karpati who is actually Ferenc G. Joachim
BIOLOGY ENTOMOLOGY Ferenc G. Joachim was a co-author on at least two technical publications arising from his job as a research biologist and entomologist with the United States Department of Agriculture. [2] R. A. Bell and F. G. Joachim, (Metabolism and Radiation Research Laboratory, Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), Fargo, North Dakota, [6]), "Techniques for rearing laboratory colonies of tobacco hornworms and pink bollworms, " Annals Entomological Society of America, vol. 69, no. 2, pp. 365-372, 1976. [3] R. A. Bell, C. G. Rasul and F. G. Joachim, (Metabolism and Radiation Research Laboratory, Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), Fargo, North Dakota, [7]), "Photoperiodic induction of the pupal diapause in the tobacco hornworm Manduca sexta," Journal of Insect Physiology, vol. 21, pp. 1471-1480, August 1975.
PERSONAL [4] Piroska Joachim (1913-) remembering her brother Ferenc Gabriel Joachim in conversations during October of 2006. Piroska Joachim’s married name is Mrs. Piroska Porkolab or in the Hungarian (Magyar) language usage Porkolab Tivadar-ne. |