Nira, Maharashtra, a town in southwestern Maharashtra state in India
Pandharpur, Baramati, Morgaon, Akluj, Gangapur, Indapur, Nira, Satara, Wai, Bijapur, Valchandnagar, Sangvi, Murum, Patas, Aasu, Sangola.
The settlement of Gan Chefer, founded in 1940, and Nira, founded in 1941, were merged in 1953 to form a single, large settlement named Shaar Chefer; this settlement covers part of the village land.
Senator Robert F. Wagner, co-author of the NIRA, had begun to write new legislation in the fall of 1933 to more fully lay out the rights of workers in the U.S. and establish a new agency to enforce these rights.
Historian John A. Garraty said that the NIRA was similar to experiments in Mussolini's Italy and Hitler's Germany.
Passage of the National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA) on June 16, 1933, sparked widespread union organizing throughout the country, even in the steel industry.
According to Nira, based on their request to TÜV SÜD to do a pre-test according to similar requirements of the EU legislation, the iTPMS system passed that pre-test.