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+Student lifeThe Career Center offers a unique experience for the students that choose to attend it.
+Theatre attractionsThe Empire presented variety, revues, musicals and dance, including Pavlova, winter circus, pantomimes and ice spectaculars especially those produced by Tom Arnold.
+Carter Township may refer to: Carter Township, Ashley County, Arkansas Carter Township, Spencer County, Indiana Carter Township, Carter County, Missouri Carter Township, Burke County, North Dakota Carter Township, Tripp County, South DakotaSee alsoCarter (disambiguation)Category:Township name disambiguation pages
+WWIL may refer to:WWIL (AM), a radio station (1490 AM) licensed to Wilmington, North Carolina, United StatesWWIL-FM, a radio station (90.5 FM) licensed to Wilmington, North Carolina, United States
+is a hockey arcade game developed and released by Namco for Japan only in 1988.
+Laura Gotti (born 14 June 1991) is a female Italian long-distance runner who won a silver medal at the 2018 European Athletics Championships.
+Arab Mahalleh (, also Romanized as ‘Arab Maḩalleh) is a village in Rudpey-ye Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Sari County, Mazandaran Province, Iran.
+The "RBH-303 Classic" PASGT-shaped ballistic helmet made by Rabintex Industries Ltd. of Israel was selected and adopted in 2000 for Chilean Army usage as the "Rabintex 303 GOLFO."
+See also Transactions per secondReferences Category:Units of frequencyCategory:Information retrieval evaluation
+Fortress Warsaw may refer to:Warsaw Citadel - the main part of Russian fortifications in Warsaw built in the 19th centuryWarsaw Fortress - the 19th century Russian fortress built in Warsaw and areaFestung Warschau - the German name for defended city of Warsaw during World War II
+playersCategory:Southern Football League playersCategory:1887 births
+playersCategory:Huddersfield Town A.F.C.
+Her manga Mary Lou is thought to have opened up the idea of shōjo manga telling stories about ordinary teenagers.
+DescriptionDistributionReferencesExternal linksCategory:TerebridaeCategory:Gastropods described in 1860
+Multiple winnersThe following clubs have won the league more than once:League placingsThe final placings in the league since its interception:Key S = No of seasons in league (as of 2011-12)Notes 1 In 2003, the TSV Gerbrunn withdrew from the Bayernliga.
+Personal lifeStephen R. Smith got married on December 28, 1873 to Mary Cough.
+The first five Chimes are honored or remembered by their fellow Chimes with Orchestra seats dedicated in their names, in the Gonda Theatre at the Royden B. Davis, S.J.
+By 1879, the creek was flowing through the Waggoner Ranch established by Daniel Waggoner.
+Chérif Moumina Sy (born 17 May 1960) is a Mauritanian-born Burkinabé politician who served as the transitional Head of Parliament from 2014 to 2015.
+Tripotamos (, Macedonian Slavic: Петорак, Petorak) is a village in Florina regional unit, Greece.
+Category:Languages of Himachal PradeshCategory:Kinnaur districtCategory:Bodish languagesCategory:Endangered Indian languages
+Common names Arctic brome – English [Bromus inermis subsp.
+EmbeddedXEN results from several Years of Research in the field of ARM-based CPUs and hypervisor technology based on XEN.
+PersonnelRosterCoaching StaffSchedule & ResultsAll rankings from Collegiate Baseball.
+In Greek mythology, Bisaltes (), son of Helios and Gaia, was the eponymous hero of the Bisaltae and Bisaltia in Thracian Macedonia.
+On 24 March 2011, six months after the incident, the jet successfully took off from Izhma to fly to Ukhta Airport for refuelling and inspection, and then on to Samara Airport for further repairs.
+Notable playersMwayi Kumwenda is the only player from the country to play on an international team.
+ReferencesAu, Susan (2012).
+This often leads to relaxation and fearlessness in working with others.
+Concord Management and Consulting () is a member of the Concord company group, which is half owned by Yevgeny Prigozhin.
+Several daily EuroCity trains call at the airport station en route from Zürich Hauptbahnhof to Bregenz, in Austria, and various German cities as far as Munich.
+Her third solo album, Lacuna, was announced on January 4, 2019, and released on March 29.
+Events from the year 1720 in Canada.
+The hindwings have a dark brown hindmargin.
+He is a prominent editor in the Telugu film industry.
+The England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) pays £1,100 less to a county for each County Championship game and £275 less for each One Day match per Kolpak player who plays instead of a domestic cricketer.
+Vanyel surrounds himself with beautiful but empty-headed court maidens.
+It is one of several units for timekeeping on Mars.
+His daughter Harriet Maria married Hugh Johnston.
+Notable people with the surname include:Gerald Kargl (born 1953), Austrian film directorMario Kargl (born 1986), Austrian tennis playerMartin Kargl (1912–1946), Austrian footballer
+It was described by Gottlieb August Wilhelm Herrich-Schäffer in 1856.
+ComasVilla El SalvadorSan Juan de LuriganchoCono Surall around panamerican highway naming as examples : ica / cañete / Nueva cañete / chilca chincha and also near pucusana and Asia outskirts of cuscoSee also List of slumsSlumsPeru*
+Rogers had a lifelong fascination with the sky and astronomy, obtained a pilot's license while still in high school—also produced with the Carnegie Science Center a planetarium show called The Sky above Mister Rogers' Neighborhood, which is still shown at many planetariums across the United States.
+Once they reached Tunisia two things halted them.
+State Route 220 (SR 220) is a state highway that travels entirely within Carroll County in West Tennessee.
+über der Kirche Georgiens" (Audio) Radio Interview - BeO-Kirchenfenster: Orthodoxe Weihnacht (Audio) Patriarchate TV: "Kviriake - Georgians for Georgia: Irakli Jinjolava" (Video)ReferencesOnline sources Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich and Irakli Jinjolava Interview with Irakli Jinjolava Irakli Jinjolava - ipress.ge „New Education“ - Gast: Irakli Jinjolava „Gast by Fr Guram“ – Issue: Discussion with Theologian Irakli Jinjolava (06.02.2016)External links Wikipedia: ირაკლი ჯინჯოლავაCategory:Living peopleCategory:1990 birthsCategory:21st-century theologiansCategory:Eastern Orthodox theologians
+ReferencesFounded by Alessandro IngramCategory:Populated places established in 1887Category:Unincorporated communities in Riverside County, CaliforniaCategory:Unincorporated communities in CaliforniaCategory:1887 establishments in California
+The Ugly People Vs The Beautiful People is the fourth album by the American band The Czars, released on October 16, 2001, on the Bella Union label.
+Chart positionsReferencesExternal linksCategory:1979 singlesCategory:1979 songsCategory:Electric Light Orchestra songsCategory:Jet Records singlesCategory:Song recordings produced by Jeff LynneCategory:Songs written by Jeff LynneCategory:Songs about fictional male characters
+GalleryReferencesExternal linksCategory:Buenos Aires Underground stationsCategory:1937 establishments in Argentina
+This enzyme belongs to the family of transferases, specifically those transferring one-carbon group methyltransferases.
+The congregation purchased land for a cemetery in 1851 and in 1874 dedicated the striking, Moorish Revival Vine Street Temple.
+ReferencesCategory:MayfliesCategory:Articles created by QbugbotCategory:Insects described in 1932
+No-cloning in logic In logic, the idea of no-cloning and no-deleting correspond to the notion of disallowing two rules of inference: the rule of weakening (monotonicity of entailment) and the rule of contraction (idempotency of entailment).
+Giriboy competed on season three of the TV show Show Me the Money in 2014.
+While competing on the international circuit, Ilahi played one Davis Cup tie for Pakistan, when they played India in Patna in 1970.
+Strike Force Pollwood was subsequently formed.
+USCHOUSA TodayReferencesExternal links www.example.comCategory:2016–17 NCAA Division I women's hockey seasonCategory:College women's ice hockey rankings in the United States
+References Category:Archaeological sites on the National Register of Historic Places in OklahomaCategory:Cimarron County, OklahomaCategory:Historic districts on the National Register of Historic Places in OklahomaCategory:National Register of Historic Places in Cimarron County, Oklahoma
+Soon after, she then released her debut single "My Boy" which reached number 7 on the Oricon indies chart.
+The District has one rural district (dehestan): Rudhaleh Rural District.
+But King Ferdinand II of León soon set it to garrison the southern frontiers of León against the Almohads of al-Andalus.
+Landrat of the district Heidelberg 1945–1972:1945–1946: Hermann Specht (provisional)1946–1947: Erich Reimann1947–1954: Herbert Klotz1954–1972: Georg SteinbrennerLandrat of the district Mannheim 1945–1972:1945: Richard Freudenberg (appointed)1945–1946: Karl Geppert (appointed)1946: Dr. Valentin Gaa (appointed)1946–1948: Ernst Becherer1948–1970: Dr. Valentin Gaa1970–1972: Albert NeckenauerLandrat of the district Sinsheim 1945–1972:1945–1946: Roman Großmann (appointed)1946: Gottlob Barth und Dr. Kurt von Kirchenheim (both appointed)1946: Wolfgang Rutschke (appointed to oversee businesses)1946–1947: Hermann Lindner (appointed)1947–1948: Dr. Johann Gutermann1948: Dr. Ludwig Bernheim1948–1949: Georg Steinbrenner (appointed to oversee businesses)1949–1950: Dr. Walther Reidel (appointed)1950–1972: Dr. Paul HerrmannLandrat of Rhein-Neckar-Kreis since 1973:1973 Georg Steinbrenner, Amtsverweser1973–1986: Albert Neckenauer1986 to present: Dr. Jürgen SchützCoat of armsCities and townsSightsInternational relationsTwin towns – Sister citiesRhein-Neckar-Kreis is twinned with: Vichy, France (since 1965)ReferencesExternal links (German)Category:Karlsruhe (region)Category:Districts of Baden-Württemberg
+RoutesFurther readingReferencesCategory:Disused railway stations in County CorkCategory:Railway stations opened in 1877Category:Railway stations closed in 1961Category:Buildings and structures in Skibbereen
+Moot Court Starting in the 2016-2017 season, the NCFCA began offering moot court, but only at national level tournaments.
+In 1835, he moved to Green County, Wisconsin.
+Di-tert-butyl ether is a tertiary ether that is used as a solvent.
+The town takes its name from the Ivy Creek.
+The round ended with Lashley landing a barrage of punches to Thompson by the side of the cage.
+In 1999 Tim released his most recent album Karla's Fire.
+Prajwol Giri, born as Bishnu Giri on 23 August 1987 is a Nepali film actor who has appeared in Nepali language films.
+Her song "Perenperen", from the album "Massa", was selected for Putumayo's compilation "African Party" (2008).
+(1984-1999)Traffic (2004 miniseries)Twin Peaks (1990–1991 TV series and 1992 movie, set in northeast Washington, was filmed in the towns of North Bend and Snoqualmie, about a half-hour outside of Seattle.
+On club level she played for Suzuyo Shimizu F.C.
+NotesReferencesExternal links Category:Turbulence models
+Career Tarsem Antil began his career producing programmes for Doordarshan.
+In SICAVs, it is the articles of association and the investment regulations.
+A marble plaque dating from 1576 in the castle yard documents this request.
+The corresponding homology (resp.
+Wendy Leech, Armstrong's wife, served as Capshaw's stunt double.
+Personal life She was the wife of Leo Campbell Waters.
+The U2-3 Tour was a concert tour by Irish rock band U2 that took place in 1979 and 1980 to support the band's first EP, Three, which was released in September 1979.
+References Category:1814 birthsCategory:1897 deathsCategory:German entomologistsCategory:HymenopteristsCategory:DipteristsCategory:People from GdańskCategory:People from West Prussia
+ReferencesCategory:Cities and towns in Grieskirchen District
+ReferencesCategory:Constituent Assembly of IndiaCategory:KeralaCategory:Indian awardsCategory:Dalit
+Ben Wainwright may refer to:Ben Wainwright, character in The Accused (1988 film)Ben Wainwright, character in Feast of JulyBen Wainwright (snowboarder) in FIS Snowboard World Cup
+ReferencesKarczewo
+Mecklenburg-Strelitz may refer to:Duchy of Mecklenburg-Strelitz (1701–1815), a duchy of the Holy Roman Empire and the Confederation of the RhineGrand Duchy of Mecklenburg-Strelitz (1815–1918), a Grand Duchy of the German Confederation and the North German Confederation, that later became part of the German EmpireFree State of Mecklenburg-Strelitz (1918–1933), part of the Weimar Republic and Nazi GermanyMecklenburg-Strelitz (district) (1994–2011), a district in the southern part of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania
+Lampi stated that renovation costs were estimated to be approximately $3 million.
+The show is now syndicated in 38 markets throughout the United States.
+FacilitiesThe airport resides at an elevation of above mean sea level.
+References Category:Rural localities in BuryatiaCategory:Rural localities in Selenginsky District
+The Hayseeds' Back-blocks Show is a 1917 Australian rural comedy from director Beaumont Smith.
+Included in this category are run-off-road collisions, collisions with fallen rocks or debris in the road, rollover crashes within the roadway, and collisions with animals.
+He released his debut LP "I Don't Usually Like MC's But..." on Manchester drum n bass label Soul:R. The album featured production from a host of drum n bass names including dBridge, Lynx, Marcus Intalex, Genotype, Dub Phizix, S.P.Y and Enei His second LP "Mid Mic Crisis" was also released on Soul:R.ReferencesCategory:British hip hop musiciansCategory:Living peopleCategory:Year of birth missing (living people)
+While there her friend Gaukur Úlfarsson introduced her to comedian Jón Gnarr.
+Notable peopleAdolf Scheuber, Wisconsin State Assemblyman, merchant, and farmer, lived here.
+ClimateFuxian Lake has humid subtropical climate (Köppen climate classification Cwa) with humid summers and mild dry winters.
+She has two older brothers, Amedeo (b.
+The journal is currently edited by Pauric Travers.
+The S9 connects Zürich and Schaffhausen, using the Bülach-Regensberg Railway south of Bülach.
+Critical receptionMary Stofflet of ArtWeek stated, “Breuer…studied under Rothko and Diebenkorn.
+Later in the century, Newtonian optics and increased understanding of the structure of the eye rendered the old concept invalid, but it was revived as an aspect of monstrous superhuman capabilities in popular culture of the 20th century.
+At maturity, H. lactifluorum thoroughly covers its host, rendering it unidentifiable.
+Rogans Hill is also sometimes referred to as Oakhill.
+Design and featuresThe phone introduces a new button in the Cyber-shot line: on the right side a switch allows choosing between photo, video and playback mode.
+The Welsh Netball Association is based in the Sport Wales National Centre, Sophia Gardens, Cardiff.
+Variations on the Wheatstone bridge can be used to measure capacitance, inductance, impedance and other quantities, such as the amount of combustible gases in a sample, with an explosimeter.
+In 2014, The state-owned stadium has been handed over to Clube Desportivo da Huila for management and tenancy purposes.
+Category:Villages in FinlandCategory:Landforms of Lapland (Finland)Category:Geography of Lapland (Finland)Category:Lakes of Norrbotten CountyCategory:Lakes of Enontekiö
+In the end, Miranda has to face herself and her actions.
+Assistant Chief positions and mattersIn 2002, Chief Ramsey promoted Newsham to Assistant Chief and placed him in charge of the Office of Professional Responsibility, which includes the Internal Affairs Division, Civil Rights Division, and the Force Investigation Team.
+FilmographyDouglas Fairbanks Jr., Presents as Yelitsa (1 episode, 1953)BBC Sunday Night Theatre as Annie Worgan (1 episode, 1959)The Vise' as Alice (1 episode, 1960)The Four Just Men as Maria (1 episode, 1960)International Detective as Donna Alicia (1 episode, 1960)Studio 4 (1 episode, 1962)Compact (1962) TV series as Diana FieldingDetective as Ann Walsing (1 episode, 1964)The Plane Makers as Harriet Evans (7 episodes, 1964–1965)The Man in Room 17 as Laura Bedford (1 episode, 1965)Theatre 625 as Jill Lincoln (2 episodes, 1964–1966)Dr. Finlay's Casebook as Lizzy Fairbanks (3 episodes, 1964–1966)The Troubleshooters as Myra Johnson (1 episode, 1966)The Man Who Never Was (1 episode, 1966)The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe as the White Witch (7 episodes, 1967)Tom Brown's Schooldays as Mrs. Flashman (1 episode, 1971)Number 10'' as Lady Jersey (1 episode, 1983)ReferencesExternal linksCategory:British television actressesCategory:Year of birth missingCategory:2011 deaths
+NotesCategory:1940 birthsCategory:2003 deathsCategory:People from Shelbyville, IndianaCategory:Indiana University alumniCategory:Indiana RepublicansCategory:Indiana city council membersCategory:Members of the Indiana House of RepresentativesCategory:Road incident deaths in IndianaCategory:20th-century American politicians
+Androstanediol may refer to: 3α-Androstanediol (5α-androstane-3α,17β-diol) – an endogenous neurosteroid, weak androgen and estrogen, and intermediate to androsterone 3β-Androstanediol (5α-androstane-3β,17β-diol) – an endogenous estrogen and intermediate to epiandrosterone 3α-Etiocholanediol (5β-androstane-3α,17β-diol; etiocholane-3α,17β-diol) – an endogenous intermediate to etiocholanolone 3β-Etiocholanediol (5β-androstane-3β,17β-diol; etiocholane-3β,17β-diol) – an endogenous intermediate to epietiocholanoloneSee also Etiocholanediol Androstenediol Androstanedione Androstenedione Androstanolone AndrostenoloneCategory:Androstanes
+ReferencesExternal links The ShivsenaCategory:Shiv Sena politiciansCategory:Living peopleCategory:Maharashtra MLAs 1999–2004Category:1972 births
+Prize law fully developed between the Seven Years' War of 1756–63 and the American Civil War of 1861–65.
+He previously played football on the Saskatoon Hilltops junior football team.
+Clubs Ganaderas de Hatillo (1994) Marche Metalli Castelfidardo (2004–2005) Gigantes de Carolina (2006) Criollas de Caguas (2007–2008) Gigantes de Carolina (2009)AwardsIndividuals 2009 Liga de Voleibol Superior Femenino "All-Star" 2006 Pan-American Cup "Best Defender"College 1999 SEC Player of the Week, (Week 2 and Week 10) 1999 AVCA All-District 4/All-Region First Team 1998 AVCA All-District 4/All-Region Second Team 1997 AVCA All-District 4/All-Region First Team 1999 All Southeastern Conference First Team 1998 All Southeastern Conference Second Team 1997 All Southeastern Conference First Team 1997–1999 SEC All-Tournament Team 1997 Asics/Volleyball Division I Freshman of the yearNational Team NORCECA Beach Volleyball Circuit Nicaragua 2009 Gold Medal NORCECA Beach Volleyball Circuit Jamaica 2009 Silver MedalBeach 2008 Circuito de Voleibol Playero Profesional – Champion 2008 Circuito de Voleibol Playero Profesional – Runner-UpClubs Liga de Voleibol Superior Femenino 2008 – Runner-Up, with Criollas de Caguas Liga de Voleibol Superior Femenino 2007 – Runner-Up, with Criollas de Caguas Liga de Voleibol Superior Femenino 2006 – Champion, with Gigantes de CarolinaReferencesExternal links Italian League ProfileCategory:Living peopleCategory:1978 birthsCategory:Beach volleyball players at the 2011 Pan American GamesCategory:Expatriate volleyball players in the United StatesCategory:Arkansas Razorbacks women's volleyball playersCategory:Pan American Games bronze medalists for Puerto RicoCategory:Pan American Games medalists in volleyballCategory:People from Arecibo, Puerto RicoCategory:Puerto Rican women's beach volleyball playersCategory:Puerto Rican women's volleyball players
+Each sponson, one above the gun ports and one on each side of the turret, mounted a light gun, probably a Engstrem gun, for defense against torpedo boats.
+It was one of a series of six Australian plays produced by the ABC in 1962.
+Beutenbergia is a Gram-positive, non-spore-forming and non-motile genus of bacteria from the family of Beutenbergiaceae with one known species (Beutenbergia cavernae).
+Scrobipalpa occulta is a moth in the family Gelechiidae.
+The incubation time is thirteen to fifteen days and the young are fully fledged after eleven to sixteen days.
+See also List of New South Wales representative cricketersReferencesExternal links Category:1840 birthsCategory:1924 deathsCategory:Australian cricketersCategory:New South Wales cricketersCategory:Cricketers from Tasmania
+REDIRECT Kenneth Muir Mackenzie, 1st Baron Muir Mackenzie
+The bank occupied the building until 1914, after which it housed the public library until 1977.
+Sequence similarity between the cysteine-rich domain of Frizzled and several receptor tyrosine kinases, which have roles in development, include the muscle-specific receptor tyrosine kinase (MuSK), the neuronal-specific kinase (NSK2), and ROR1 and ROR2.
+Hillemacher", adopting the name Paul-Lucien Hillemacher.
+He once offered an amicus brief to the Supreme Court of Israel—which took six years to decide the case, in the process declining his offer.
+He has toured worldwide for more than forty years.
+Cast Domenico Gambino as Dorrit Truus Van Aalten as Tommy Lydia Potechina Robert Garrison Philipp Manning Karl Harbacher Karl Junge-Swinburne Margarete SachseReferencesBibliography Alfred Krautz.
+In 2004 it had 51,481 members in 310 congregations and 309 ordained clergy.
+In March 2010, the album was released through iTunes worldwide by the Finnish record label Symbolic Records.
+Use sort function to rank by parameter.
+From March 1787 to his death he led the Sønnenfjelske gevorbne Infanteriregiment, and when the Theater War broke out in 1788 he led the Fourth Field Brigade.
+Sixteen protesters from the Christian Defense Coalition were arrested for demonstrating without a permit when they crossed police barricades into the area designated for the March.
+ReferencesCategory:Melanthiini
+Strawbs by Choice is a compilation album of songs by Strawbs.
+Walden is a dale and hamlet in the Yorkshire Dales, North Yorkshire, England.
+Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1995.
+REDIRECT Huntington County, Indiana
+Track listingChartsReferencesCategory:2007 albumsCategory:Anime soundtracksCategory:Kirarin RevolutionCategory:Hello!
+Michael Somare was the only occupant of the position and he remained as Prime Minister after independence.
+Examples of free Knittelvers in German include Fastnachtspiele (Shrovetide plays) written in the 15th century by Hans Folz and , and post-revival work by Goethe and Friedrich Schiller.
+See also Broadcast spreaderHoneywagonLiquid manureList of agricultural machineryReuse of excretaReferencesBibliography U.S. Patent Office, Patent No.
+Once he realises that, Lachie softens and decides to stay on and have his picture taken in his uniform with the men, happy to be with true friends at last in his last few days.
+It was painted white with two red bands near the top.
+BooksExternal links www.whiterosechess.co.ukCategory:1965 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Chess grandmastersCategory:English chess playersCategory:English sportswritersCategory:British chess writersCategory:English male non-fiction writers
+On Saturday, December 13, 2014 Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid filed a motion to invoke cloture on the nomination.
+In 1660, he was elected MP for Lostwithiel in the Convention Parliament.
+(2006).
+Notable people with the surname include:Adam Wolanin (1919–1987), Polish American soccer forwardChristian Wolanin (born 1995), Canadian-born American ice hockey defensemenCraig Wolanin (born 1967), American ice hockey defensemenWhitney Wolanin (born 1990), American singer and songwriter
+He was confirmed by the United States Senate on December 19, 1927, and received his commission the same day.
+In the late 1990s, there were two former Tower of Power members in its lineup.
+The elder Leake published the first quartos of Anthony Munday's two plays about Robin Hood, The Downfall and The Death of Robert Earl of Huntington (both 1601).
+It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1991.
+Visa on arrivalVisitors to Cambodia can obtain a visa on arrival for tourism (US$30) or business purposes (US$35), for a maximum stay of 30 days.
+It demonstrates the frugal and simple nature of his boyhood and evokes the cultural and musical influences of the Nulla Nulla community and its bush environment that were the inspiration for his songs.
+Ministers of Interior of Slovenia Igor Bavčar, Slovenian Democratic Union / Slovenian Democratic Party (16 May 1990 – 25 January 1993) Ivan Bizjak, Slovene Christian Democrats (25 January 1993 – 8 June 1994) Andrej Šter, Slovene Christian Democrats (8 June 1994 – 28 February 1997) Mirko Bandelj, Liberal Democracy of Slovenia (28 February 1997 – 16 February 1999) Borut Šuklje, Liberal Democracy of Slovenia (24 March 1999 – 8 June 2000) Peter Jambrek, Independent (8 June 2000 – 5 December 2000) Rado Bohinc, Social Democrats (5 December 2000 – 6 December 2004) Dragutin Mate, Slovenian Democratic Party (6 December 2004 – 24 November 2008) Katarina Kresal, Liberal Democracy of Slovenia (24 November 2008 – 19 August 2011) Aleš Zalar, Liberal Democracy of Slovenia (2 September 2011 – 11 February 2012), minister pro tempore Vinko Gorenak, Slovenian Democratic Party (11 February 2012 – 20 March 2013) Gregor Virant, Civic List (20 March 2013 – 18 September 2014) Vesna Györkös Žnidar, Modern Centre Party (18 September 2014 – 13 September 2018) Boštjan Poklukar (13 September 2018 –)See also Slovenian National Police ForceExternal links Ministry of the Interior homepageCategory:Government of SloveniaInteriorSloveniaCategory:Organizations based in Ljubljana
+Karl Malone (54,852), Dirk Nowitzki (51,368), Jason Kidd (50,111), Kevin Garnett (50,052), and Elvin Hayes (50,000) are the only other players with 50,000 or more minutes played in a career.
+Club statisticsUpdated to 18 February 2019.
+ReferencesNotesSourcesSee also List of fajãs in the AzoresCategory:Calheta, AzoresTijolos
+Surviving Titles and FragmentsThe following eight titles, along with fifteen associated fragments, are all that has survived of Aristophon's work: Babias Twin Girls, or Pyraunos The Physician Callonides Perithous Plato The Pythagorean PhilonidesReferences Rudolf Kassel and Colin Austin, Poetae Comici Graeci, Vol.
+A number of cichlids feed on other fish, either entirely or in part.
+BackgroundWilson was born in Kingston upon Hull, Humberside.
+The village is administered under Gasmata Rural LLG in East New Britain Province.
+Cluny, Aberdeenshire, 15 km (9 miles) south-west of Inverurie, near Sauchen, ScotlandCluny Castle, in the parish of Cluny, 3 km (2 miles) north-north-west of Sauchen, AberdeenshireCluny Harbour, Buckie, Moray, as well as the Cluny Square, the central square in Buckie, containing the Cluny HotelWilliam Douglas of Cluny (1430-1475), Scottish noblemanLoch Cluanie and its eponymous dam, Northwest Highlands, Scotland The MacPherson of Cluny, the chief of Clan MacPhersonThe Cluny, a live music venue and pub in Newcastle upon Tyne, EnglandCluny the Scourge, an anthropomorphic rat and antagonist in the novel RedwallCluny – La Sorbonne (Paris Métro), a metro station in the 5th arrondissement of Paris, named for the Hôtel de ClunySee alsoThe Cluny (disambiguation)Henry Cluney, guitarist with Stiff Little FingersClooney (disambiguation)
+Wangnitzsee is a lake in the Mecklenburg Lake District, in the German state of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern.
+Destruction of templesSeveral Buddhist and Hindu temples were demolished by the govt with excuse that those are quatting on the govt land, while mosques squatting on the govt land are now only allowed to remain but taxpayer's money is misused to build mosques and Islamic institutes to facilitate coerced conversion of buddhists to Islam through bigoted laws, policies and institutionalised mechanism.
+Category:Royal commissions in CanadaCategory:History of rail transport in CanadaCategory:Post-Confederation Canada (1867–1914)
+KICT may refer to: KICT-FM, a radio station (95.1 FM) licensed to Wichita, Kansas, United States The ICAO code for Wichita Dwight D. Eisenhower National Airport Karachi International Container Terminal, Pakistan
+However, none of the three players scored goals in the 33rd round, except for Lanzafame who scored a free-kick goal against Vasas SC.
+Linguaglossa () is a town and comune in the Metropolitan City of Catania in Sicily, located on the northern side of Mount Etna where there is also a ski resort with view on the Ionian sea.
+Marcos Baghdatis defeated Ivan Ljubičić 7–6(7–4), 4–6, 6–4 to win the 2007 PBZ Zagreb Indoors singles tennis tournament.
+ReferencesCategory:GracillariinaeCategory:Moths of AfricaCategory:Moths described in 1961
+It is linked to the south bank by footbridge.
+ReferencesCategory:Youth wings of communist partiesCategory:Jewish political partiesCategory:Jews and Judaism in the Soviet UnionCategory:Jewish communist movements
+Airline operatorsReferencesoperatorsAirbus A310el:Χρήστες του Airbus A310
+WorksPoetryIn Castilian Animales interiores (2006 Asturias Joven Award, Trabe 2007) Últimas cartas a Kansas (2007 Pablo García Baena Award, La Bella Varsovia 2008) La noche así (Ya lo dijo Casimiro Parker, 2012) La otra hija (Suburbia Ediciones, 2013) Prohibido silbar (Baile del Sol, 2014)In Asturian Tiempu de render (2009 Nené Losada Award, Trabe 2010) Destruimientu del xardín (Hesperya, 2012)Anthologies Hank Over/Resaca (Caballo de Troya, 2008) 23 Pandoras (Baile del Sol, 2009) Poetas asturianos para el siglo XXI (Trea, 2009) Por partida doble (Trabe, 2009) El libro del voyeur (anthologist and illustrator: , Ediciones del Viento, 2010) Esto no rima (Origami, 2012) Gente de Nod (anthologist: , photographs: Alejandro Nafría; KRK, 2016)Booklets La sombra de Peter Pan (2009) Culpa de Pavlov (2008 Jóvenes Creadores del Ayto Award of Madrid, Colección Resurrección 2012)Documentaries Se dice poeta (2014).
+The rice can also be cooked with plain white rice or rice cooked using turmeric.
+The first is the biological fact of being animal, and the second is the ability to initiate self-movement.
+Adrian Claver in his ship Castel del Rey was sent to catch Davy but failed; upon his return, Claver set out again after Davy, this time with Penniston alongside in the sloop Setty.
+At the age of 23, Sablone entered her first X Games, placing 2nd in Skateboard Street at X Games XV.
+She left her home at age 14, so she had to work in family gardens and later as a maid in Ambato.
+Surrounding areaSee alsoList of railway stations in JapanReferencesExternal links Uzen-Kanazawa Station (JR East) Category:Railway stations in Yamagata PrefectureCategory:Aterazawa Line Category:Railway stations opened in 1951Category:1951 establishments in JapanCategory:Nakayama, Yamagata
+Summit Fire (2008) - A 2008 wildfire in the Santa Cruz Mountains Summit Fire (2013) - A 2013 wildfire in Riverside County
+The 48th was at Voronezh, the 51st at Bryansk, and the 220th at Yelets.
+It is part of the religious movement called Irvingism.
+The woman receives a letter from her husband (Keith Eden) which was intended for another woman.
+It is a member of the chaparral plant community.
+The show continue to air on Replacement Channel of Life OK which is STAR Bharat from 28 August.
+(presently named as: State Institution AMN Russian abbreviation Ukraine Neurology, Psychiatry and Narcology Institute)Scientific worksIn 1984 A.R.
+Every time a canavanine molecule runs through the canaline-urea cycle, the two terminal nitrogen atoms are released as urea.
+Several other established local businesses moved into the mall as initial tenants, including Maud Muller Candy Shop, Marianne Shop and Taylor Drugstore.
+End of an eraFollowing the war years, the closure of the railway station, the decline of the area as a fashionable tourist destination and the availability of cheap package holidays abroad, the hotel closed it doors.
+CYA or CyA can refer to:CiclosporinCzapek yeast agar
+It is found in North America.
+References Category:1979 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:German male rowersCategory:World Rowing Championships medalists for Germany
+El Enemigo, Spanish for "The Enemy", may refer to:El Enemigo (1961 telenovela), a Mexican telenovelaEl Enemigo (1979 telenovela), a remake of the 1961 telenovelaSee alsoEnemy (disambiguation)Los Enemigos (disambiguation)
+See alsoà ã : Latin letter ÃCyrillic characters in UnicodeReferencesCategory:Cyrillic letters with diacriticsCategory:Letters with tilde
+Even though the aircraft was marketed in the United States, by January 2014 no examples were registered with the Federal Aviation Administration.
+Kangos is a locality situated in Pajala Municipality, Norrbotten County, Sweden with 252 inhabitants in 2010.
+Evidence from the charters of Inchaffray Abbey shows that he was bishop-elect by some date between the years 1210 and 1214.
+ReferencesExternal linksCategory:Public high schools in ArizonaCategory:Charter schools in Arizona
+Columbia wanted Holiday to do an album of songs she had never recorded before, so the song material for Lady in Satin derived from the usual sources for Holiday in her three-decade career, that of the Great American Songbook of classic pop.
+The original restored "Rythm" spelling will be used for this gig to avoid confusion with another band in Ohio using the same name using "Rhythm".
+He played for the Indianapolis Hoosiers during the season.
+Islam: Empire of Faith is a documentary series, made in 2000, that details the history of Islam, from the birth of the Islamic Prophet, Muhammad to the Ottoman Empire.
+In 1886, Feliu i Codina moved to Madrid where he became fluent in Spanish.
+Pinky M. M. Bass (born 1936) is an American photographer, known for her work in pinhole photography.
+Participating teamsPreliminary roundIn the Preliminary Round, the twelve teams were allocated in two groups of six teams each.
+In Glik's case, the criminal complaint stated that he had "openly record[ed] the police officers", the recording was not made in secret, and that therefore the officers had no probable cause to arrest Glik.
+He released another single that year on HMV.
+References Category:Members of the House of Commons of Canada from OntarioCategory:Liberal Party of Canada MPsCategory:1846 birthsCategory:1937 deaths
+The set-up is basically triangular, with three main lines: shin the central axis symbolising "truth"; soe the supporting branch, and tai, which are branches placed near the base to balance everything.
+Aglaoschema is a genus of beetles in the family Cerambycidae, containing the following species: Aglaoschema acauna Napp, 2008 Aglaoschema albicorne (Fabricius, 1801) Aglaoschema apixara Napp, 2007 Aglaoschema basale (Melzer, 1933) Aglaoschema camusi Dalens, Tavakilian, & Touroult, 2010 Aglaoschema collorata (Napp, 1993) Aglaoschema concolor (Gounelle, 1911) Aglaoschema cyaneum (Pascoe, 1860) Aglaoschema dulce (Napp & Martins, 1988) Aglaoschema erythrocephala (Napp & Martins, 1988) Aglaoschema geoffroyi Dalens, Tavakilian, & Touroult, 2010 Aglaoschema haemorrhoidale (Germar, 1824) Aglaoschema inca Napp, 2007 Aglaoschema mimos Napp, 2008 Aglaoschema mourei (Napp, 1993) Aglaoschema potiguassu Napp, 2008 Aglaoschema prasinipenne (Lucas, 1857) Aglaoschema prasiniventre (Gounelle, 1911) Aglaoschema quieci Dalens, Tavakilian, & Touroult, 2010 Aglaoschema rondoniense Napp, 2008 Aglaoschema ruficeps (Bates, 1870) Aglaoschema rufiventre (Germar, 1824) Aglaoschema tarnieri (Bates, 1870) Aglaoschema ventrale (Germar, 1824) Aglaoschema vinolenta Dalens, Tavakilian, & Touroult, 2010 Aglaoschema violaceipenne (Aurivillius, 1897) Aglaoschema viridipenne Thomson, 1860ReferencesCategory:Compsocerini
+The station opened on 18 December 1843 and is located on the Amsterdam–Arnhem railway.
+The Sunar use Soni, Seth, Swarnkar, Shah, Bhutani, Sonik, Verma etc.
+Jointly developed by FAO, the French Research Centre CIRAD and Tuscia University of Italy, the GlobAllomeTree platform provides a consistent and harmonized database of tree and stand volume and biomass allometric equations; software to compare equations and assess variables of interests, such as volume, biomass and carbon stocks; access to scientific research information on allometric equations; and access to tutorials, manuals and documentation supporting the development and use of tree allometric equations.
+Radovan Pavlik (born February 18, 1998) is a Czech ice hockey player.
+At the 2006 census, its population was 2,372, in 458 families.
+Bagnall-Oakeley is a double-barrelled name.
+List of managers ?
+Louis ("Loet") Geutjes (born August 12, 1943 in Amersfoort, Utrecht) is a former water polo player from The Netherlands, who finished in seventh position with the Dutch Men's Team at the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City.
+Pool A of the 2017 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I was one of two pools in the Asia/Oceania zone of the 2017 Fed Cup.
+More controversy occurred after Sebastian took aim at contestant Mitchell Callaway's attitude to the competition following his performance of "Run to Paradise" on the third live performance show.
+Bollingstedt () is a municipality in the district of Schleswig-Flensburg, in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany.
+The 1950–51 Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey team represented the University of Michigan in intercollegiate college ice hockey during the 1950–51 NCAA men's ice hockey season.
+The 2017 PSAC football season was the 53rd year of college football in the Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference.
+There were 716 housing units at an average density of .
+DescriptionThe concerts typically consisted of Knopfler and his band performing a sixteen-song set, drawing from each period in the artist's thirty-seven year career, including songs he wrote and recorded for Dire Straits.
+ReferencesTageoCategory:Populated places in Ardabil Province
+Erkki Järvinen (15 October 1904 – 9 June 1991) was a Finnish athlete.
+It was used as law offices by William L. Hurst, a Union veteran of the Civil War, who moved to the area in the 1870s and practiced law into the 1900s.
+Coenosia tigrina is a species of fly in the family Muscidae.
+The eligibility criteria to be candidate of a political party in the Senate was residence in the country for three years continuously before the elections, ownership of real estate and should be 25 years of age.
+A promotional DVD, also titled Hearts on Fire, was released by Nuclear Blast on November 4, 2002.
+He joined the War Office in 1887, being promoted to Principal Clerk in 1900 and Assistant Financial Secretary, in charge of the Finance Department, in 1908.
+In Jhalod, 16% of the population was under 6 years of age.
+Batoscelis is a genus of beetles in the family Carabidae, containing the following species: Batoscelis clivinoides (Alluaud, 1897) Batoscelis discipennis (Dejean, 1831) Batoscelis gerardi (Burgeon, 1935) Batoscelis hellmichi (Jedlicka, 1965) Batoscelis leontovitchi Basilewsky, 1951 Batoscelis luctuosa (Peringuey, 1896) Batoscelis luticola (Alluaud, 1897) Batoscelis nigra (Basilewsky, 1946) Batoscelis oblongus (Dejean, 1831) Batoscelis perrieri Jeannel, 1948 Batoscelis porosus (Putzeys, 1863) Batoscelis promontorii (Peringuey, 1896)ReferencesCategory:Harpalinae
+Publications Elasticity, Plasticity and Structure of Matter, 1937, Cambridge University Press, LondonReferences Category:Polymer scientists and engineersCategory:Dutch chemistsCategory:Delft University of Technology alumniCategory:1897 birthsCategory:1988 deaths
+Since the altitude of the north or south celestial pole (whichever is visible) equals the absolute value of the observer's latitude, any star whose angular distance from the visible celestial pole is less than the absolute latitude will be circumpolar.
+The forewings are pale brown intermixed with brown scales.
+See also List of communities in Nova ScotiaReferencesExternal linksCrowell on Destination Nova ScotiaCategory:Communities in Shelburne County, Nova ScotiaCategory:General Service Areas in Nova Scotia
+For a complete list see :Category:Football clubs in DjiboutiAAli SabiehAS PortAS TadjourahCCDE ColasDFC DikhilGGandaranGuelleh BatalHHôpital BalbalaKKartileh-Al GamilSSheraton HôtelTTotal (football club)Djibouti Category:Djibouti-related lists
+On December 17, 2016, Hamas, through a statement on its website, confirmed Mohamed Zouari's membership in the Izz al-Din al-Qassam Brigades and the role he played in the development of the Ababil drone.
+That Old Feeling may refer to:"That Old Feeling" (song), a 1937 popular songThat Old Feeling (Al Cohn album), a 1956 album by saxophonist Al Cohn featuring the above songThat Old Feeling (Albert Dailey album), a 1956 album by pianist Albert Dailey featuring the above songThat Old Feeling (Bud Shank album), a 1986 album by saxophonist Bud Shank featuring the above songThat Old Feeling (film), a 1997 romantic comedyThat Old Feeling, an album by Billy Eckstine
+Australia) the law requires every diver to prove basic certification before unsupervised diving activity.
+The river is only 55 kilometres in length, and runs from headwaters in the Aizkorri Mountains, near the town of Legazpi to its outflow into the Cantabrian Sea at the town of Zumaia on the Bay of Biscay .
+Kevin Hunter Sharp (born January 22, 1963) is a former United States District Judge of the United States District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee.
+Jamaabad-e Haji Noormohammad () is a village in Cheshmeh Ziarat Rural District, in the Mirjaveh of Zahedan County, Sistan and Baluchestan Province, Iran.
+Esfajerd (, also Romanized as Esfājerd; also known as Isfajird and Safājerd) is a village in Kenarrudkhaneh Rural District, in the Central District of Golpayegan County, Isfahan Province, Iran.
+Under second-year manager John Felske, the Phillies stayed just below the .500 mark for roughly two-thirds of the season, until a charge after the All-Star break pushed the club past the St. Louis Cardinals and Montreal Expos into second place in the NL East.
+He is the author of State Politics in Zimbabwe (Perspectives on Southern Africa) and States and Power in Africa: Comparative Lessons in Authority and Control (Princeton University Press, 2000), which received the 2001 Luebbert Best Book Award in comparative politics for the year 2000 from the American Political Science Association.
+Rolf Andersen (25 July 1897 – 25 July 1980) was a Norwegian diplomat.
+In 2006, Dr. David C. Lai, a scholar and historian of the area, contributed material salvaged from the alley's original gate to the Six String Nation project.
+The site's critical consensus reads, "Ophüls' graceful camerawork and visual portrayal of luxury and loss make Earrings a powerful French drama."
+ReferencesNotesBibliographyEnglish JapaneseExternal links Category:Japanese filmsCategory:1972 filmsCategory:Films directed by Tatsumi KumashiroCategory:Nikkatsu filmsCategory:Pink films
+It is part of Tirana County.
+A. Rami Reddi obtained 19,002 votes (41.63% of the votes in the constituency).
+Władysław was lenient towards Protestants and encouraged religious tolerance, while Albrycht was an outspoken opponent of all non-Catholics, sometimes even refusing to stamp documents with his Chancellor's seal granting them rights and privileges.
+It is now only used for freight between Brunswick and Wendezelle.
+In the 440s, Yazdegerd II had a mudbrick defensive system constructed at Derbent to fend off incursions from the north.
+1335), župan.
+ScheduleReference:PlayersThe inaugural 1891 roster featured fourteen lettermen.
+ReferencesCategory:Villages in Rawicz County
+Because the geotope is part of the Hassberge Castle Trail, information boards have been erected here.
+New species and new records of Danilia (Gastropoda: Chilodontidae) from the Western Pacific.
+The recording features six number one United States Billboard Hot Latin Songs chart singles by the singer—"Buenos Amigos", "Donde Quiera Que Estés", "Amor Prohibido", "Bidi Bidi Bom Bom", "No Me Queda Más", "Fotos y Recuerdos", and the US Billboard Latin Pop Airplay chart single "I Could Fall in Love".
+Men's resultsRifle eventsPistol eventsShotgun eventsWomen's resultsRifle eventsPistol eventsShotgun eventsExternal links Shooting Sport Federation ResultsCategory:ISSF World CupWorld Cup
+It was inspired by an accident during a big surf where Jack Johnson wiped out and nearly drowned.
+Vaksdal is a village in Vaksdal municipality in Hordaland county, Norway.
+Kahan Hai Kanoon is a 1989 Bollywood film starring Aditya Pancholi, Kimi Katkar and Mandakini.
+However Davies beat Long with a majority of 2,692 votes.
+Teddy is a masculine nickname or given name.
+Objections were raised based upon Health Ministry statements that the film presented a slanted viewpoint, but there was concession that even if the film's examples were not typical, it was believed that they were "unlikely to be the only exceptions to an otherwise admirable system" and, even if atypical, that they exist at all "is a matter of grave concern."
+2011 (31 July): A.D. Belén begins competing in Torneo de Invierno Campeonato Nacional de Invierno, the Winter National Championship Tournament, now under the name Belén Bridgestone F.C.
+Category:Languages of PeruCategory:Catacaoan languages
+In September 2008, SOASTA raised USD $6.4 M in financing from Formative Ventures, Canaan Partners, and The Entrepreneur's Fund.
+Nicolás Maximiliano Altamirano Acuña (, born 1 April 1990) is a Chilean footballer who currently plays for C.D.
+It is found in North America.
+In Mongolian it is called khainag (хайнаг).
+Blame It on You may refer to:"Blame It on You" (Charli XCX song), 2017 song by Charli XCX from her mixtape Number 1 Angel"Blame It on You" (Jason Aldean song), 2019 song by American Jason Aldean from his album 9"Blame It on You" (Poison song), 1986 song by Poison from their album Look What the Cat Dragged In"Blame It on You" (Youngblood song), 2011 song by Swedish boy band Youngblood from their album Running Home to YouSee also"Blame It on Yourself", song by American band Ivy"Blame It on Your Heart", song by Patty Loveless"Blame It on Your Love", song by Charli XCX featuring Lizzo"Blame It on Your Truck", song by Canadian country singer Kira Isabella
+#REDIRECT Photoelectron photoion coincidence spectroscopy
+ReferencesExternal links Ellington Airport web site Aerial image as of April 1990 from USGS The National Map Category:Airports in ConnecticutCategory:Ellington, ConnecticutCategory:Transportation buildings and structures in Tolland County, Connecticut
+Annapurna in Nepal, where her family had been despondent over her sudden disappearance.
+Documents - Photographs - Sound Archive Czech Radio: Milan Munclinger's recordings WorldCat Libraries, Milan Munclinger J.S.Bach Home Page Muzikus.cz: Jean-Pierre Rampal and Milan Munclinger Benda, Stamitz, Rosetti: Flute Concertos, Supraphon, 2002 Johann Sebastian Bach: Concertos, reconstruction Milan Munclinger, Jean-Pierre Rampal, Ars Rediviva Radio Prague: Ilja Hurník, Milan Munclinger, Ars Rediviva The Czech Museum of Music, Recording LibraryReferences Category:1923 birthsCategory:1986 deathsCategory:20th-century Czech peopleCategory:Czech people of German descentCategory:Czech classical flautistsCategory:Czech classical musiciansCategory:Czech conductors (music)Category:People from KošiceCategory:Czech performers of early musicCategory:20th-century conductors (music)
+In 1988, she sang The Beatles' anthem, Across the Universe and was the first Slovene to be featured on MTV.
+He deployed his infantry in line from McDowell south along the river for about 800 yards.
+Cannibals is the nineteenth album by guitarist/vocalist Richie Kotzen.
+The population density was 244.9 people per square mile (94.1/km²).
+The JPX PUL 425, also called simply the JPX 425, is a French twin-cylinder, horizontally opposed, two-stroke aircraft engine.
+Scheele may refer to:Carl Wilhelm Scheele (1742–1786), German-Swedish pharmaceutical chemistGeorge Heinrich Adolf Scheele (1808–1864), German botanistKarin Scheele (b.
+Slave of Love could refer to the following: Aido: Slave of Love, 1969 Japanese film A Slave of Love, 1976 Russian film Slave to Love, 1985 Bryan Ferry song Slave of Love, 2014 Armenian TV series
+Biography Suvendra Nath Bhattacharyya, born on 4 October 1975 in the Indian state of West Bengal, did his early schooling at Harinavi DVAS High School.
+Platysphinx vicaria is a moth of the family Sphingidae.
+ReferencesExternal links BlondeStreak - Victoria Tom Tom Club - TimelineCategory:Living peopleCategory:Tom Tom Club membersCategory:American female singersCategory:Female new wave singersCategory:Year of birth missing (living people)
+In the presidential election, incumbent William Tubman of the True Whig Party was the only candidate, and was re-elected unopposed.
+Other subjects include David Cameron, James Blunt and ready meals.
+In 1963 he migrated to Australia where he joined the Bureau of Mineral Resources in Canberra.
+The two tributaries of the Johnston River are Fox River and Duerdin Creek.
+It was written by Steve van Velvet, Yasemin Kaldirim and produced by Jeo and Lalo Titenkov for her third studio album Unterwegs (2005).
+Antipode or Antipodes may refer to:Mathematics Antipodal point, the diametrically opposite point on a circle or n-sphere, also known as an antipode Antipode, the convolution inverse of the identity on a Hopf algebraGeography Antipodes, points on the Earth's surface that are diametrically opposed Antipodes Islands, inhospitable volcanic islands south of New Zealand Antipodes, a term for Australia and New Zealand, roughly the area known as Australasia, based on their rough proximity to the antipodes of BritainArts and media Antipode (journal), progressive social science general Antipodes (sculpture) by Jim Sanborn The Antipodes, a c. 1640 stage play by Richard Brome Antipodes, journal of the American Association for Australian Literary Studies Risley (circus act), a circus skill that involves juggling with one's feet while lying on one's back, also known as antipodeOther uses Antipodes (submarine), a commercial submarine built in 1973 Antipodes Water Company, a premium bottled water brand Enantiomer, a molecule that has a mirror image of itself, formerly known as antipode Antipode, a supersonic business aircraft concept by Charles Bombardier Antipodes, mental states described by Aldous Huxley in the essay "Heaven and Hell"See also Antipodean (disambiguation)
+Captain John Haggin (1753 – 1 March 1825) was one of the earliest settlers of Kentucky, arriving in the spring of 1775 with his wife's uncle, Col. John Hinkston.
+A Riker mount is a flat container used for mounting a specimen (typically plant or insect) on cotton wool or other backing material, often with transparent glass or plastic cover as protection.
+It has a surface of 63.99 km2.
+Robert de Sablé can refer to: Robert I de Sablé (1035–1098), seigneur de Craon, father of Robert II de Sablé Robert II de Sablé (1065–1110), seigneur de Sablé, grandfather of Robert III de Sablé Robert III de Sablé (1122–1152), seigneur de Sablé, father of Robert IV de Sablé Robert IV de Sablé (1150–1193), Grand Master of the Knights Templar
+Terence Cao holds the record for the most nominations without a win, with six.
+HVS may refer to: Croatian Rowing Federation (Croatian: ) Hartsville Regional Airport, South Carolina, US, IATA code Haversine, a trigonometric function Heaviside function Helenium virus S High vaginal swab High Voltage Software Hilversum railway station, Netherlands, station code Human visual system model HVS Global Hospitality Services Hypervelocity star Hyperventilation syndrome Hard Very Severe, a British climbing grade
+State Road 162 (FL 162) is a state highway in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida, that connects Florida State Road 61 and U.S. Route 319 south of Interstate 10 in northern Tallahassee.
+The Mason–Dixon line at Selbyville, Delaware, is to the north.
+Community councilThe council is made up of 17 council members, including the extraofficial mayor (Bürgermeister), who were elected in a municipal election on 7 June 2009.
+Liga playersCategory:Footballers from North Rhine-Westphalia
+Langerová won the Česko hledá SuperStar competition with a 79 percent vote share in June 2004.
+Massachusetts Hall is the oldest surviving building at Harvard College, the first institution of higher learning in the British colonies in America, and second oldest academic building in the United States after the Wren Building at the College of William & Mary.
+The film's art direction was by Andrej Andrejew.
+In Mexico, major exhibitions include the Bienal Mexicana Contenporánea in 1960, the Salón de Invierno, Galería Plástica Mexiana in 1956, the Salón de Arte Mexicano in 1958 and the first Salón de Pintura y Escultura Contemporánea Jalisciense in 1964.
+At the outbreak of the Spanish–American War, he tried to join the war effort but he was turned down.
+The king dwarf gecko (Lygodactylus rex) is a rare species of dwarf gecko native to southeast Africa (Malawi, Mozambique).
+It lives in Argentina and Paraguay.
+Its extent included the parishes of L'Acadie, Lacolle, St. Luc, St. Valentin, and St. Jean as well as the city and county seat of Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu.
+Henry Bright may refer to:Henry Bright (schoolmaster, born 1562) (1562–1627), English priest and schoolmaster at the King's School, WorcesterHenry Bright (schoolmaster, born 1724) (1724–1803), English priest and schoolmaster at Abingdon School and New College SchoolHenry Bright (MP) (1784–1869), MP for BristolHenry Bright (painter) (1810–1873), English painterHenry Arthur Bright (1830–1884), English merchant and authorHenry Edward Bright (1819–1904), member of the South Australian colonial parliament
+Continuous snow cover lasts eighty-two days, and the frost-free period lasts 177 days.
+Jaganath Temple railway station (Code: JGE) is a railway station in Kannur District, Kerala and falls under the Palakkad railway division of the Southern Railway Zone, Indian Railways.
+He trained Jan Baptist Santvoort.
+On that day, most of it was added to the City of Senneterre and a smaller portion to the City of Val-d'Or.
+It marked the introduction of Buddhism to the island and with it came the formal establishment of kingship and monarchy.
+Southfield is a village located at the junction of Norfolk and East Hill Roads within the town of New Marlborough, Massachusetts.
+These were based in Dooagh and provided local employment for women of the area for fifty years.
+The novel was originally serialized in four parts in the magazine Wonder Stories beginning in December 1931.
+It was released in mainland Europe only.
+Open skies is to an international Air Transport Agreement.
+Catalogue of the Lepidoptera Phalaenae in the British Museum 2: plate 26, fig.18Category:CyanaCategory:Moths described in 1879Category:Lepidoptera of MadagascarCategory:Moths of MadagascarCategory:Moths of Africa
+List of events named IntifadaIntifada may refer to these events:Iraqi Intifada, a series of strikes and riots in Iraq in 1952, aimed against the Hashemite monarchy ruleOctober Revolution, a series of strikes, riots, and demonstrations in Sudan, that ended with the dissolution of the Abbud military regime and the beginning of second civilian rule in 1964March Intifada, a leftist uprising against the British colonial presence in Bahrain in March 1965Zemla Intifada, against Spanish colonial rule in then Spanish Sahara, in June 1970In Lebanese internal conflicts:February 6 Intifada (1984), during the Lebanese Civil WarCedar Revolution or "Intifada of Independence", the events in Lebanon after Rafic Hariri's 2005 assassinationIn the Israeli–Palestine conflict:First Intifada, a Palestinian uprising against the Israeli occupation lasting from December 1987 to 1993Al-Aqsa Intifada, a period of intensified Israeli-Palestinian violence, which began in late September 2000 and ended around 20052014 Jerusalem unrest, a series of violent acts and attacks in Jerusalem in 2014 sometimes referred to as "Intifada"Israeli–Palestinian conflict (2015) – 2015 escalation in Israeli–Palestinian conflict, sometimes referred to as "Al-Quds Intifada" or "Jerusalem Intifada" or "Knife Intifada"1990s uprising in Bahrain, an uprising demanding a return to democratic rule, also known as the "1990s Intifada"1991 uprisings in Iraq, an armed uprising against Saddam Hussein in Iraq, also known as "Iraqi Intifada of 1991"In the Western Sahara conflict:First Sahrawi Intifada, protests by Sahrawi activists in the Western Sahara, south of Morocco (1999–2004)Independence Intifada (Western Sahara) or Second Sahrawi Intifada, demonstrations and riots in Western Sahara, south of Morocco, beginning in May 2005Gdeim Izik protests, also referred as Third Sahrawi Intifada or simply Third Inifada2005 French riots often referred as "French Intifada" Arab Spring, a revolutionary wave which began on 18 December 2010 in Tunisia, sometimes referred to as "Intifada":Tunisian Revolution, or Tunisian Intifada2011 Yemeni Revolution, or Yemeni IntifadaEgyptian Revolution of 2011, or Egyptian IntifadaProtests in Sudan (2011–13), or Sudanese Intifada2018–19 Arab protests 2019–20 Lebanese protests, nicknamed the Tax IntifadaOctober 2019 Iraqi protests, nicknamed Iraqi IntifadaSee also The Electronic Intifada, an online publication which covers the Israeli–Palestinian conflict from a Palestinian perspectiveReferencesExternal links Andrew Hussey, book 'The French Intifada: how the Arab banlieues are fighting the French state,' The Guardian 23 February 2014
+ReferencesExternal links Category:1955 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Members of the Executive Council of QuebecCategory:Politicians from MontrealCategory:Quebec Liberal Party MNAsCategory:Canadian people of Italian descentCategory:21st-century Canadian politicians
+The band members were all schooled in jazz and blues: the jazz background allows each member to be comfortable with the improvisation which is evident in their live performance.
+There are 5 streets.
+In fact, the two bodies came to represent distinct factions within the early movement: ABCUL represented industrial credit unions exclusively, while NATFED affiliates were drawn from community credit unions.
+In 1918, Wentworth was appointed as athletic director at the Marine Aeronautic Training Camp in Miami, Florida.
+ReferencesCategory:Villages in Harju County
+Jahanabad (, also Romanized as Jahānābād) is a village in Baqerabad Rural District, in the Central District of Mahallat County, Markazi Province, Iran.
+John Bilson was a Ghanaian doctor and politician.
+Very closely related nouns can be drawn into a closer grammatical relationship by the addition of a pronominal suffix.
+Miguel Moreno (1596–1655) was a Golden Age Spanish poet and writer.
+The towns fell easily, partly because their fortifications had been destroyed due to their conquest by Sultan Agung about 50 years earlier.
+Her supervisors were Maurits van Loon from Amsterdam and Edith Porada from Columbia University.
+Compsoscorpius is an extinct genus of scorpions from the Carboniferous of France and the United Kingdom.
+They are durable, and (van Rensselaer notes) "excellent for slow, even cooking in even heat, such as slow baking".
+The men's 50 kilometres walk event at the 2014 Asian Games was held on the streets of Incheon, South Korea on 1 October.
+The route became known to westward-bound American emigrants after it was traveled by a party of Forty-Niners led by John Coffee Hays in 1849.
+The Northern Lights have decided to disband during early spring 2010.
+The Bietigheim Horse Market begins on the Friday before the first Monday in September and ends the following Tuesday.
+In the 2019 New Year Honours, Crossan was appointed a Dame Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit, for services to the State.
+The report proposed a mechanic that earned local critics, since it established a two-step referendum where the status alternatives were "cluttered together", the territorial Commonwealth and statehood in a "sovereignty remains in Congress" and "free association and independence" in a "Puerto Rico reclaims it sovereignty" option.
+Professor of Civil Law in the University of Granada, Sánchez Román represented the late in the Spanish Senate from 1893 to 1902.
+For their first album's recording sessions - and to the shock and surprise of the band - metal producer Mikko Karmila, who has worked, among other bands, with Nightwish and Sentenced was attached.
+Nighttime "owl" service operates every 15 minutes or more.
+However, she plans to improve herself through education.
+The Ministry is headed by the Minister of Social Affairs and Employment, currently Wouter Koolmees.
+He ran Sure Hand Records and the influential How We Rock Fanzine in the 90's.
+ReferencesCategory:1976 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Armenian female alpine skiersCategory:Olympic alpine skiers of ArmeniaCategory:Alpine skiers at the 2002 Winter OlympicsCategory:Sportspeople from MarseilleCategory:French Armenians
+Other major grains grown included einkorn wheat and emmer wheat, grown to make bread.
+On this occasion Championnet was made chef de brigade (colonel).
+Eugene Daniel Jr. (born May 4, 1961) is a former professional American football cornerback who played 14 seasons in the National Football League (NFL) for the Indianapolis Colts and Baltimore Ravens from 1984 to 1997.
+He also appeared in the 2017 Annual as a non-speaking character.
+ReferencesExternal links Terengganu official website Mo,sooncup.com Umno-terrenganu.net Worldmatchracingtour.com TheStar.com TheStar.com Bernama.comCategory:1956 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Malaysian people of Malay descentCategory:Malaysian businesspeopleCategory:Alumni of the University of East AngliaCategory:Malaysian MuslimsCategory:Members of the Order of the Defender of the RealmCategory:People from TerengganuCategory:Members of the Terengganu State Legislative AssemblyCategory:Terengganu state executive councillors
+In 1933 he became a Justice of the New York Supreme Court (1st D.), and served until 1950.
+Humanity+ Press.
+The Evangelical Fellowship of Thailand (EFT) is an evangelical umbrella organization that includes many smaller denominations, churches, missionary organizations, and parachurch ministries.
+He competed at the 1988 Summer Olympics and the 1992 Summer Olympics.
+Howard Williams (b 1935) is a New Zealand ceramicist and art writer.
+Notable people with the surname include: Alison Borrows (born 1992), Australian slalom canoeist Brian Borrows (born 1960), English footballer Chester Borrows (born 1957), New Zealand politician Edward Borrows, founder of Edward Borrows and Sons Simon Borrows (born 1959), British investment bankerSee also Borrowes, surname Borrow (disambiguation)
+See also List of ranches and stationsReferencesCategory:Pastoral leases in Western AustraliaCategory:PilbaraCategory:Stations (Australian agriculture)Category:1891 establishments in Australia
+As an author, George wrote The History of Music in Columbus Ohio as well as The Daniel Marshall Family with A Sketch of the Aaron Marshall Family on April 7, 1949.
+See also List of defunct airlines of the United StatesReferencesCategory:Defunct airlines of the United StatesCategory:Airlines established in 1981Category:Airlines disestablished in 1989
+These snails are predatory and venomous.
+My Body may refer to:"My Body" (Hadise song)"My Body" (LSG song)"My Body" (Paloma Faith song)"My Body" (Young the Giant song)"My Body (feat.
+During her career, she collaborated with such jazz musicians as Johnny Răducanu, Stanley Jordan, Benny Rietveld, Theodosii Spassov, Burton Greene, Lars Danielsson, Darius Brubeck, Cătălin Târcolea, Guido Manusardi, Ion Baciu Jr., Lucian Maxim, Marius Mihalache, Joca Perpignan, Călin Grigoriu, Răzvan Suma.
+Next mirrored the great organ/guitar/sax era of the 60's, and built upon that 60's feel with reminiscent songs like "Tuesday Night's Squad" and "Alkime".
+She is a two-time bronze medalist on the ISU Junior Grand Prix series, the 2016 U.S Junior silver medalist, and the 2014 U.S Novice champion.
+Faragher comments that "This is for Cthulhu completists only, and even he or she will be disappointed to find that they may have already bought half the material."
+Coleti's collection was based on that of Labbe, though he used Baluze and Hardouin.
+See also Apollo ProgramApollo 11 in popular cultureReferencesExternal linksCategory:BBC Television programmesCategory:2009 British television series debutsCategory:2000s British television seriesCategory:Documentary films about the space program of the United StatesCategory:Films about NASA
+AftermathSince the 2003 invasion various U.S. Marine units had been stationed at the dam, as well as a small detachment of soldiers from Azerbaijan.
+Track listing"Insane Savagery" by Ollie and Mike Pearson"Turning Black""Dig Up, Dig In""Asphyxiate on Blood" by Ollie and Jason Jad Davies"Life Of Gore""Inhuman""Another Obscene Publication""Death You'll Face""Killer Row""A Message to the Censor"Category:2000 albumsCategory:Desecration (band) albums
+ReferencesCategory:1975 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:People from MäntyharjuCategory:Finns Party politiciansCategory:Members of the Parliament of Finland (2015–19)Category:Members of the Parliament of Finland (2019–23)
+NotesReferencesEvans, E. Raymond & Smith, Gerald, Test Excavations at Citico (40HA65) Hamilton County, Tennessee 1988Moore, Clarence B., The Tennessee, Green, and Lower Ohio River Expeditions of Clarence Bloomfield Moore.
+This windows give a good look to the mosque.
+Yaqublu or Yagublu may refer to:Gugark, ArmeniaYaqublu, Gadabay, AzerbaijanYaqublu, Oghuz, Azerbaijan
+Bagrino () is a rural locality (a village) in Novlenskoye Rural Settlement, Vologodsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia.
+Personnel PMtodayConnor Brogan - lead vocals, guitarsKevin Middleton - guitars, vocals (tracks 2-4, 6, 9), lead vocals (track 11)Nick Hargett - bass guitarRyan Brogan - drums, percussion, vocals (tracks 2-10)ProductionProduced, mastered and mixed by Andrew Maysilles.
+Some sources attributed the loss to a scandal surrounding the indictment in Hawaii of Christian's son-in-law, Master Halbert, an official in the FSM's Department of Transportation, Communication and Infrastructure, for receiving bribes.
+In 2005 the stadium was used as the headquarters of the National Piraeus team.
+In cryptography, the strong RSA assumption states that the RSA problem is intractable even when the solver is allowed to choose the public exponent e (for e ≥ 3).
+When genes are placed near a region of constitutive heterochromatin, their transcription is usually silenced.
+ReferencesExternal linksCategory:1969 birthsCategory:American bodybuildersCategory:American male film actorsCategory:Male models from MissouriCategory:American male television actorsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Male actors from DallasCategory:Male actors from MissouriCategory:21st-century American male actorsCategory:Male models from Texas
+VRM or vrm may refer to:Science and technology Virtual Resource Manager, a microkernel for the IBM RT PC workstations Viscous remanent magnetization, a kind of magnetization of ferromagnets Voltage regulator module, a buck converter (electronics) Variable Range Marker, a feature of radar screensOther uses Vrm (župa), a historical region of Trebinje, Bosnia Vendor relationship management, a category of business activity Vehicle registration mark, the number on a vehicle registration plate
+He grew up in Casamance, West Africa, living with his blind father Serif.
+Cygnus X may refer to: Cygnus-X (star complex), a giant star formation region Cygnus X (music group)See also Cygnus X-1 (disambiguation) Cygnus X-3
+, also known as Key of Keys, is a 1965 Japanese comedy-spy film directed by Senkichi Taniguchi.
+Programs (with Bouquet)Results (with Bouquet)ReferencesExternal links Category:French female ice dancersCategory:Living peopleCategory:1988 birthsCategory:Sportspeople from Grenoble
+It was established in 1904, and the inaugural running was won by Palmy Boy.
+Writing in the fifth century, his Life of Mashtots contains many details about the evangelization of Armenia and the invention of the Armenian alphabet by Mesrop Mashtots.
+In 1935, he published a book titled ABC of Metaphysics, Being a Compilation From Radio Talks on Philosophical Subjects by the Author During 1934 to 1935 ...
+Kernaghan has since had 34 number one hits on the Australian country music charts, won 36 Golden Guitars and has sold over two million albums in Australia.
+Technical Career Institutes, also known as TCI College, was a private, for-profit college in New York City that offered two year associate degrees and certificates for education in technology, business, engineering, healthcare and other career paths.
+ReferencesExternal links National team data Category:1991 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Sportspeople from LisbonCategory:Portuguese footballersCategory:Association football midfieldersCategory:LigaPro playersCategory:Portuguese Second Division playersCategory:Real S.C. playersCategory:Sporting CP B playersCategory:Leixões S.C. playersCategory:Casa Pia A.C. playersCategory:Liga I playersCategory:FC Rapid București playersCategory:Segunda División B playersCategory:Recreativo de Huelva playersCategory:Portugal youth international footballersCategory:Portuguese expatriate footballersCategory:Expatriate footballers in RomaniaCategory:Expatriate footballers in SpainCategory:Portuguese expatriate sportspeople in RomaniaCategory:Portuguese expatriate sportspeople in Spain
+He averaged 25.1 PPG, 8.3 RPG, 4.8 APG, 1.1 SPG, and 1.6 BPG.
+DistributionDescriptionEcologyReferencesCategory:DiscodorididaeCategory:Gastropods described in 1969
+However, in the lung, extensive caseous necrosis with confluent cheesy tan granulomas is typical.
+Correbidia is a genus of moths in the subfamily Arctiinae.
+this bacteria genus is named after the German microbiologist Hans Reichenbach.
+Nowadays, he is coach of the Iran wushu team.
+Next up is "Charger" from the Jabberjaw compilation.
+Plot Eddie is a former Marine Corps Delta Captain who has been unable to find decent job since retiring from the corps and consequentially grown distant from his wife and daughter.
+The flowers are white.
+Mir-2, Russian spacecraft project of Salyut program in 2000 Zvezda (ISS module), the final destination of the Russian DOS-8 moduleSee also 86-DOS DOS (disambiguation) DOS 7 (disambiguation) DOS 10 (disambiguation)
+The election resulted in the Labour Party retaining control of the council, with a majority of 27 seats.
+It was recorded by Mark Richardson at Triclops Sound Studios and Ricky Keller at Southern Living Studio in Atlanta, Georgia with horns recorded by Lynn Fuston at Classic Recording Nashville, Tennessee.
+The lifespan of biohybrid solar cells is also really short, lasting from a few weeks to nine months.
+He himself became a merchant and was admitted to the Newcastle companies of *Merchant Adventurers in December 1721 and Hostmen in March 1722.
+He served in the Australian Army during World War One.
+They were saturated for 12 days at 198 fsw breathing 3.9% oxygen, 6.5% nitrogen and 89.6% helium.
+Single information"Tsunagu" was released in two editions: a regular edition and a limited edition.
+These clips are presented in tandem with his shorter digital new-media works and his more recent Super-8 tone poems.
+HistoryÁcs was a settlement in Roman times, in the province of Pannonia.
+Music institutions and venues Music institutions and venues Iowa is also home to the Des Moines Symphony Orchestra, Des Moines Metro Opera, Quad City Symphony Orchestra, Dubuque Symphony Orchestra, Cedar Rapids Opera, Orchestra Iowa (Cedar Rapids), Sioux City Symphony Orchestra, Waterloo/Cedar Falls Symphony Orchestra, Southeast Iowa Symphony Orchestra, and the Northwest Iowa Symphony Orchestra.
+They tear down so many assumptions about what the form can handle (in this case, what the form of the novel can handle) that there is no way to re-create your mind before your encounter with them."
+In mathematics, a left (or right) quaternionic vector space is a left (or right) H-module where H denotes the noncommutative ring of the quaternions.
+DemographicsAt the 2011 census, the village comprised 316 households.
+Claudius Agretti, canon of Bruges and minister apostolic in Belgium, sent by Pope Clement IX on a mission to examine Catholic affairs in England in 1669, stated in his report that Ellis was anxious for the confirmation of the status of the chapter; and was willing that the Pope should create afresh a new dean and chapter.
+Wisdom teeth are not included because pericoronitis and tooth impaction may cause isolated periodontal defects which do not represent the general periodontal condition of the rest of the mouth.
+Downloaded on 7 August 2007.
+BiographyRodriguez attended high school in her hometown, Barceloneta, Puerto Rico.
+Fritz Dietrich (August 6, 1898 – October 22, 1948) was a German SS officer and member of the Nazi Party.
+It has the ability to inhibit of test bacterial growth, especially Escherichia coli and Salmonella enteritidis.
+Citing the accessible price point, the service earned praise from members of the music technology community following its launch.
+Alfred McClelland (18 April 1886 – 29 January 1969) was an Australian politician.
+Offenders in custody and those supervised in the community are assessed for relevant interventions to reduce their risks of re-offending.
+Quercymegapodiidae is an extinct group of stem Galliformes birds with fossils found in France and Brazil.
+The second verse is sung, followed by another chorus.
+After he resignation, he lived in obscurity, and is believed to have died around 1947.
+Springfield, New Jersey may refer to: Springfield Township, Burlington County, New Jersey Springfield Township, Union County, New Jersey Springfield/Belmont, Newark, New Jersey, a neighborhood of NewarkSee alsoSpringfield (disambiguation)
+The first occupiers took possession of their new abodes in May 1824, accompanied by bands of music, etc.’.
+FilmographyExternal links Category:1921 birthsCategory:1980 deathsCategory:Argentine male film actorsCategory:People from Buenos AiresCategory:20th-century Argentine male actors
+The muscle fiber cells are arranged in 5 to 7 layers of circular and longitudinal smooth muscle with about 50μ in length and contain well-marked, rod-shaped nuclei, which are often slightly curved.
+Abacetus duvivieri is a species of ground beetle in the subfamily Pterostichinae.
+He retired early due to injury.
+Foxfire may also refer to:Entertainment Foxfire (1955 film), a Western directed by Joseph Pevney Foxfire (comics), a fictional character from Marvel Comics' Squadron Supreme series Foxfire (magazine), and books, a quarterly magazine started in 1966 by students in the US state of Georgia Foxfire (play), a 1982 play based on the Foxfire project, written by Susan Cooper and Hume Cronyn, and starring Jessica Tandy Foxfire (1987 film), a 1987 TV movie starring John Denver, based on the 1982 play Foxfire: Confessions of a Girl Gang, a 1993 novel by Joyce Carol Oates Foxfire (1996 film), based on the Oates novel Foxfire: Confessions of a Girl Gang (2012 film), based on the same novelPlaces Foxfire, North Carolina, a small U.S. townOther uses Code Name: Foxfire, TV series Fox-fire, (kitsunebi) glowing balls carried by kitsune, or foxes, in Japanese folklore Diavik Foxfire diamond, 187.7 carat The literal translation for the Finnish word for Aurora, Revontulet, is Fox fire.
+ReferencesCategory:1680s birthsCategory:1744 deathsCategory:British MPs 1734–1741Category:British MPs 1741–1747Category:Members of the Parliament of Great Britain for English constituenciesCategory:Baronets in the Baronetage of Great Britain
+The Hawazin tribe and Muhammad are considered ‘Adnani Arabs.
+To lower the height, the front tower was tilted to a 45-degree angle and the reverse tower lowered to .
+Wisse Dekker (26 April 1924 – 25 August 2012) was a Dutch businessman.
+There were 422 households of which 35.1% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 68.7% were married couples living together, 6.2% had a female householder with no husband present, and 20.6% were non-families.
+ReferencesSources Governor Marks Next Step for Florence House RealEstateRama, January 28, 2009.
+Adam Edward Nicholas Riley (born 23 March 1992) is an English former professional cricketer who played for Kent County Cricket Club between 2011 and 2019.
+He asks her to deliver their mother and grandmother the news.
+It has undergone one major expansion in 2009 and recently renovated all rooms in the major wing.
+Morán Valverde may refer to:Rafael Morán Valverde, an officer of the Ecuadorian Navy, commander of ship Calderón in the Ecuadorian–Peruvian WarBAE Morán Valverde, the name of several shipsMorán Valverde station on the Quito Metro
+See alsoList of rivers of ChileReferences EVALUACION DE LOS RECURSOS HIDRICOS SUPERFICIALES EN LA CUENCA DEL RIO BIO BIOCategory:Rivers of ChileCategory:Rivers of Los Ríos Region
+Rf1 f4 62.
+Information of interestIt hosts over 120 trade shows, congresses and corporate events per year with 30,000 exhibitors, both direct and represented, and receives 2 million visitors from over 200 countries.
+Cool-A-Coo was a vanilla ice cream sandwich made with oatmeal cookies and dipped in chocolate.
+References Category:Types of climbingCategory:Mountaineering
+The parish was established as a result of the October 2004 political elections when the city was divided into 19 urban electoral parishes.
+Draft picksRosterRegular seasonSeason standingsz - clinched division titley - clinched division titlex - clinched playoff spotRecord vs. opponentsGame log|-style="background:#fcc;"| 3 || November 7, 1995 || @ Houston| L 89–106|Vin Baker (21)||| The Summit15,095| 1–2|-style="background:#fcc;"| 4 || November 9, 1995 || @ Dallas| L 94–104|||| Reunion Arena15,095| 1–3|-style="background:#bbffbb;"| 6 || November 14, 1995 || San Antonio| W 98–84|||| Bradley Center13,464| 2–4|-style="background:#bbffbb;"| 9 || November 22, 1995 || Toronto| W 96–86|||| Bradley Center14,959| 3–6|-style="background:#fcc;"| 14 || December 1, 1995 || @ Seattle| L 99–110|||| KeyArena17,072| 4–10|-style="background:#fcc;"| 17 || December 9, 1995 || Chicago| L 106–118|||| Bradley Center18,633| 6–11|-style="background:#bbffbb;"| 24 || December 23, 1995 || Atlanta| W 96–86|||| Bradley Center15,658| 9–15|-style="background:#bbffbb;"| 42 || February 1, 1996 || Denver| W 108–102|||| Bradley Center13,389| 16–26|-style="background:#fcc;"| 43 || February 3, 1996 || Cleveland| L 88–111|||| Bradley Center17,979| 16–27|-style="background:#bbffbb;"| 44 || February 6, 1996 || Dallas| W 114–111|||| Bradley Center13,854| 17–27|-style="background:#fcc;"| 79 || April 16, 1996 || Chicago| L 80–86|||| Bradley Center18,633| 24–55Player statisticsAwards and recordsTransactionsOverviewTradesFree agentsReferencesSee also1995-96 NBA seasonCategory:Milwaukee Bucks seasonsMilwaukee BucksMilwaukee BucksMilwaukee
+Based in urban Fremantle, the district was first contested at the 1911 state election, being an amalgam of the former districts of North Fremantle and East Fremantle.
+In 1988 Jobson won an Emmy for his production of sailing at the Olympic Games in South Korea, and won an Emmy for the 2005–06 Volvo Ocean Race on PBS.
+ReferencesCategory:SophronicaCategory:Beetles described in 1966
+A new scenario was written in 2008 but rejected by most of the actors.
+Carl Gustav Calwer (11 November 1821, Stuttgart — 19 August 1874, Mineralbad Berg) was a German entomologist who specialised in Coleoptera.
+It is hoped that the IBA helps to find new strategies to deal with this phenomenon.
+DistributionIt is endemic to western Riverside County, California, where it grows in the coastal sage scrub of the local hills and mountains at elevations of 400–900 m. It is known from only about fifteen occurrences and it is threatened by development of its habitat for human uses such as citrus agriculture and urbanization.
+Cast Priti Gandwani Bhuvnesh Mann Rakesh Pandit Bhavna Khanna Preity Sahay Suni Barve NIshant Shokeen Nimay Bali Aarti Dave Geeta Tyagi Trishika Tiwari Savita Prabhune Tanya MIrza Sujata Thakker Arrup Paul Gaurav Choudhary Harsh ChaayaReferences Category:2009 Indian television series debuts
+Codine is a 1963 French-Romanian crime film directed by Henri Colpi.
+See also List of fossiliferous stratigraphic units in FranceReferences Category:Devonian France
+Whether the company has written guidance available to employees as to the procedures they must follow where a facilitation payment is requested or expected.
+The general requirements for eligibility were as follows:Car making the qualifying attempt must be a current model year car.
+Guam is the only nation other than Australia and New Zealand to win a silver medal at the FIBA Oceania Championship.
+Writing systemThe Lydian script, which is strictly alphabetic, is related to or derived from that of Greek as well as its western Anatolian neighbours, the exact relationship still remaining unclear.
+Kłębanowice wieś w Polsce położona w województwie dolnośląskim, w powiecie Legnica County Gmina Legnickie Pole, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland.
+The sections are ordered alphabetically by the English name of the radioisotope.
+Chrysalis rebranded the station as Galaxy 102 in 1997.
+Damon Cummings may refer to:Damon M. Cummings (1910-1942), a United States Navy officer and Navy Cross recipientUSS Damon Cummings (DE-756), a United States Navy destroyer escort cancelled in 1943USS Damon M. Cummings (DE-643), a United States Navy destroyer escort in commission from 1944 to 1947
+Perraud is a surname.
+Špičnik () is a dispersed settlement in the western Slovene Hills () in the Municipality of Kungota in northeastern Slovenia, next to the border with Austria.
+Alan D. Taylor, "Social Choice and the Mathematics of Manipulation", Cambridge University Press, 1st edition (2005), .
+West Serbia or Western Serbia may refer to: in geography, western regions of the modern Republic of Serbia in administration, statistical region of Šumadija and Western SerbiaSee also Serbia (disambiguation) North Serbia (disambiguation) East Serbia (disambiguation) South Serbia (disambiguation)
+Hon.
+Arturo Javier Ledesma Pérez (born May 25, 1988 in Guadalajara) is a Mexican footballer.
+Some cowboys he encounters on the road point him towards the town of Crossfire, California.
+He was previously a professor of Physics and Director of the Science Center at the University of Johannesburg.
+Spinning Song: Duck Baker Plays the Music of Herbie Nichols is an album by American guitarist Duck Baker, released in 1996.
+ReferencesCategory:1938 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Japanese male rowersCategory:Olympic rowers of JapanCategory:Rowers at the 1960 Summer OlympicsCategory:Sportspeople from Miyagi Prefecture
+ReferencesCategory:Villages in Siedlce County
+References Category:1986 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Baseball players at the 2010 Asian GamesCategory:Pakistani baseball playersCategory:Asian Games competitors for Pakistan
+Station LayoutVinicityExit 1: S-oilExit 2: Exit 3: Geumjeong FurnitureExit 4: Geumsa Bus StopExternal links Cyber station information from Busan Transportation CorporationCategory:Busan Metro stationsCategory:Geumjeong DistrictCategory:Railway stations opened in 2011
+At this intersection, MD 63 joins MD 68 in a concurrency to continue through the Williamsport Historic District.
+6 Years or Six Years may refer to:6 Years, 2015 filmSix Years, novel by Harlan Coben Six years, play by Sharr White 2007
+Spring Branch was named for the fact a spring flows into its headwaters.
+The prep school, Agincourt, was added in 1997.
+The CB650SC (also called the Nighthawk 650) is a Honda standard motorcycle sold in the US from 1982 to 1985.
+Hudson Lake is a small lake in Otsego County, New York.
+781–805.
+Hasse as Doctor Fritz Böhler Eva Bartok as Captain Alexandra Kasalinskaja Hannes Messemer as Oberleutnant Pjotr Markow Mario Adorf as Pelz, Sanitäter Walter Reyer as Doctor Sellnow Vera Tschechowa as Tamara Paul Bösiger as Fähnrich Peter Schultheiß Leonard Steckel as Major Dr. Kresin, Distriktarzt Valéry Inkijinoff as Oberstleutnant Worotilow, Lagerkommandant Michael Ande as Sergej, Worotilows Sohn Siegfried Lowitz as Walter Grosse Til Kiwe as Sauerbrunn Wilmut Borell as Pastor Rolf von Nauckhoff as Oberst Eklund, Swedish Red CrossReferencesBibliographyExternal linksCategory:1958 filmsCategory:West German filmsCategory:German war drama filmsCategory:German-language filmsCategory:Russian-language filmsCategory:Eastern Front of World War II filmsCategory:World War II prisoner of war filmsCategory:Films directed by Géza von RadványiCategory:Films based on German novelsCategory:Films set in the 1940sCategory:Films set in the 1950sCategory:Films set in 1958Category:Films about the Battle of StalingradCategory:Medical-themed filmsCategory:Gloria Film films
+It includes the league(s) they play for, and championships won.
+She was renamed Emerald in December 1757 and commissioned into the Royal Navy in April 1758 under the command of Captain Thomas Cornwall.
+GPL is the GNU General Public License, a free software license.
+Middle Mountain is located west of Beech Hill.
+Jarit (, also Romanized as Jarīt) is a village in Surak Rural District, Lirdaf District, Jask County, Hormozgan Province, Iran.
+Sclavia was proposed by who estimated the number of Archean cratons to ca.
+He negotiated Australia's first trade treaty with Canada, and was rewarded with a parliamentary ovation.
+Born in Fairfield County, Connecticut, Hubbell was educated at the Oneida Institute; he then moved to Bradford, Iowa in Chickasaw County, Iowa, in 1859, where he worked in business.
+Antigua and Barbuda is expected to compete at the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo.
+Turlupin can mean: The turlupins, a 14th- and 15th-century French religious sect Turlupin (actor), late 16th- and early 17th-century French actor
+It is found in Nepal and Vietnam.
+Karate Raja is an Indian film actor who has appeared in Tamil, Telugu and Malayalam language films.
+– 02:41 "Peligro" – 03:09 "Welcome to Tijuana" – 02:50 "El Viento" – 02:41 "Casa Babylon" – 02:34 "Por el Suelo" – 03:55 "Blood and Fire" – 02:35 "EZLN... Para Tod@s Todo..." – 01:41 "Mr. Bobby" – 03:36 "Bongo Bong" – 01:05 "Radio Bemba" – 00:20 "Qué Pasó Qué Pasó" – 00:54 "Pinocchio (Viaggio In Groppa Al Tonno)" – 00:45 "Cahí en la Trampa" – 02:10 "Clandestino" – 02:59 "Rumba de Barcelona" – 03:31 "La Despedida" – 04:02 "Mala Vida" – 02:26 "Radio Bemba" – 00:34 "Qué Pasó Qué Pasó" – 01:10 "Pinocchio (Viaggio In Groppa Al Tonno)" – 00:45 "La Primavera" – 03:32 "The Monkey" – 01:59 "King Kong Five" – 02:44 "Minha Galera" – 03:17 "Promiscuity" – 01:44PersonnelRadio Bemba Sound System is also the name of Manu Chao's backing band, named for the communication system used in the Sierra Maestra by the Castro-and-Guevara-led rebels in the Cuban Revolution.
+ReferencesExternal linksPhoto gallery at navsource.orgCategory:Victory shipsCategory:Ships built in Los AngelesCategory:Haskell-class attack transportsCategory:World War II amphibious warfare vessels of the United StatesCategory:Troop shipsCategory:1944 ships
+External linksCategory:1964 filmsCategory:Spede PasanenCategory:Finnish filmsCategory:Finnish-language filmsCategory:1960s comedy filmsCategory:Finnish comedy films
+External links http://www.tilburguniversity.nl/ticomhttp://www.hiil.org/index.php?page=national-resistance-against-the-europeanisation-of-private-lawCategory:2008 establishments in the NetherlandsCategory:Organizations established in 2008Category:Tilburg University
+5 for solo viola mark Hindemith's decision to abandon playing the violin in favor of its larger cousin.
+Head coaching recordFootballReferencesExternal links Category:1884 birthsCategory:1970 deathsCategory:American football fullbacksCategory:American football tacklesCategory:American men's basketball playersCategory:Denison Big Red athletic directorsCategory:Denison Big Red baseball playersCategory:Denison Big Red football coachesCategory:Denison Big Red football playersCategory:Denison Big Red men's basketball coachesCategory:Denison Big Red men's basketball playersCategory:College track and field coaches in the United States
+This method is now being used in different areas of South America where farming is difficult, such as the altiplano and the Amazon basin.
+He resigned for 2011 Albanian local elections.
+Pulmonary Pharmacology & Therapeutics is a medical journal published by Elsevier that covers research on the pharmacotherapy of lung diseases.
+The specific epithet (littorale) is derived from the Latin word littus meaning "shore".
+One example of the latter is Santiago, the street kid Buddy Garrity took in, who in season 3 is evidently no longer living there and is not seen or mentioned again.
+DescriptionDistributionReferencesExternal linksCategory:BuccinidaeCategory:Gastropods described in 2003
+Starting in 2013, Seidell began writing for the ABC sitcom Trophy Wife.
+T80 or T-80 may refer to: Bishop's Landing Airport, an airport in Celina, Collin County, Texas, United States with an FAA location identifier of T80 Canon T80, a 1985 35mm SLR camera Mercedes-Benz T80, a vehicle designed to break the world land speed record Pir Panjal Railway Tunnel, also known as T-80.
+The game released on April 20, 1990.
+Mehdiabad-e Aminiyan (, also Romanized as Mehdīābād-e Amīnīyān) is a village in Qasemabad Rural District, in the Central District of Rafsanjan County, Kerman Province, Iran.
+The movie was produced by KNR Productions and Benetone Films.
+Cornell University Library Online Exhibition The Columbian Exposition, 1893 Introduction to Bailey's volume of poetry, WIND AND WEATHERCategory:PteridologistsCategory:1858 birthsCategory:1954 deathsCategory:American botanical writersCategory:American garden writersCategory:American science writersCategory:American agrarianistsCategory:Fellows of the American Academy of Arts and SciencesCategory:Members of the United States National Academy of SciencesCategory:Veitch Memorial Medal recipientsCategory:Cornell University facultyCategory:Michigan State University alumniCategory:Michigan State University facultyCategory:Scientists from Ithaca, New YorkCategory:People from South Haven, MichiganCategory:19th-century American male writersCategory:19th-century American botanistsCategory:20th-century American botanistsCategory:19th-century American writersCategory:20th-century American non-fiction writersCategory:20th-century American male writersCategory:American male non-fiction writers
+Education in minority languages involve the so called national curriculum in which students learn their language for the same number of hours per week as Croatian, while in social science and humanistic subjects such as history, geography, arts and music their national curriculum accounts for one third of the entire studied curriculum, Croatian national content accounts for the second third while European or wider international content covers the last third of the curriculum.
+ReferencesCategory:GlaphyriinaeCategory:Moths described in 1965
+LifeNext to nothing is known for certain about his life, but some information can be inferred from his music.
+Two major gold mining periods ensued between 1861 through the early 20th century.
+The 1953 Southern League was the second season of the regional third tier of speedway racing in the United Kingdom for Southern British teams.
+Small power conditioners are rated in volt-amperes (V·A) while larger units are rated in kilovolt-amperes (kV·A).
+The apple was supposed to be a cross between two North American cultivars, the 'McIntosh' and the 'Newtown Pippin', but recently, genetic analysis showed the 'Newtown Pippin' was not one of the parents and its identity remains a mystery.
+Both school districts involved have declared they view the matter as closed.
+ResultsPlayers statisticsExternal linksJapan Football AssociationCategory:Japan national football team resultsCategory:1969 in Japanese footballJapan
+Bill left in 2006 to go to competitor Y100.
+Among his most renowned articles: "The Price of Options Illiquidity".
+The development of the sand dunes In the late Pleistocene, just before the end of the last ice age and during the short summers, sand-drifts were blown from the Rhine Valley into the area of the present dunes, forming this unique geology.
+References Category:Populated places in Tabas County
+2004.
+Ann Eva Margareta Melander (born 18 June 1961) is a Swedish former alpine skier who competed in the 1980 and 1984 Winter Olympics.
+ClimateDemographicsIn the , Pilar had a population of .
+Several hundred people lined the streets as her coffin was led from the Methodist Church to Newark Cemetery, where her body was interred.
+In the semifinals he was stopped by Bulgaria's eventual runner-up Daniel Petrov.
+At the age of 64, he finished third in the 2013 Berenberg Masters and he continued playing on the tour into his 70s.
+Romanians formed the majority; 26% were Serbs, 8.6% were Roma and 4.4% Czechs.
+Yaroslav Askarov (born 16 June 2002) is a Russian professional ice hockey goaltender currently playing for SKA Saint Petersburg of the Kontinental Hockey League (KHL).
+These neural cadherin-like cell adhesion proteins are integral plasma membrane proteins that most likely play a critical role in the establishment and function of specific cell-cell connections in the brain.
+The school building was opened in 1967 as York Humber High School by the Board of Education for the City of York when the board merged into the Toronto District School Board in which the school is leased to the MSSB/TCDSB since 1989.
+It added 7,300m2 to Burnside Village and increase their parking to 1,156, taking the centre to 120 shops, and about 20,000m2 of retail space, including Adelaide's first Zara store.
+In 2006 the province had a population of 330,342.
+Southern porch13.
+External linksJean-Luc Sadourny International MatchesCategory:1966 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:French rugby union playersCategory:French rugby union coachesCategory:Rugby union fullbacksCategory:France international rugby union players
+She also runs her own record label Giraffa Records.
+Veteran actor Kamal Hassan was the chief guest.
+ReferencesExternal linksCategory:Villages in West Godavari district
+Leigh Scott Loveday (born 1973 in Port Talbot) is a Welsh-born video game writer and designer.
+Le Troncq is a commune in the Eure department in Normandy in northern France.
+It was first described by E. B. Bryant in 1945, and is found on Hispaniola.
+40External linkshttp://www.answers.com/topic/aldateSee also St Aldate's, OxfordCategory:Southwestern Brythonic saintsCategory:577 deathsCategory:Year of birth unknown
+Scotia-Glenville High School has a total enrollment of 782 students across 4 grades, and an 89% graduation rate.
+Category:Populated places in Belgium
+In his 4 List A matches, he scored 64 runs at a batting average of 32.00, with a high score of 37*.
+The quantity transported is also comparable to that deposited by atmospheric dust.
+From May 2012 to August 2014 he coached the Central African Republic national football team.
+Kimber was acquitted.
+At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, the album received an average score of 83, based on 24 reviews, indicating "universal acclaim".
+Critical reception Website The Shotgun Seat gave the album a three-star review, saying that "Consistency is key, and Chase Bryant is a solid set of five songs that work perfectly together.
+References Category:Populated places in Farashband County
+One commentator has aptly said:”Nav Sarga gate maghe Navsshabda Na Vidyate”It means that even one reads up to the ninth canto of his work, one finds that no new word of Sanskrit is left to be discovered.
+Associated publication: Brecon and Radnor County Times.
+It portrays the artists sailing across the sea by boat, afterwards in a mansion with a pool surrounded by women throughout the clip.
+External links Category:Lakes of Schleswig-Holstein
+Roman Wall Blues is the first solo album by Alex Harvey made after the Soul Band, and his time in the Hair pit band.
+Ronald Edwards (1 April 1917 – 26 February 2013) was a South African cricketer.
+Larrea may refer to:Larrea Cav.
+Leessang, Special Jungin is the compilation album by South Korean hip-hop duo Leessang.
+Critics praised the concept, but noted the game was not designed to be "fun".
+Nossiter is a surname of English origin.
+For her work in the film, Asada was awarded Best New Actress, third place at the Pink Grand Prix.
+BiographyLameda is educated at UPEL Instituto Pedagógico de Barquisimeto.
+Neighbouring settlements include:Labas eastKemantan southKelupu northMaradong westReferencesCategory:Populated places in Sarawak
+List of major earthquakesSee alsoEnriquillo–Plantain Garden fault zoneGeology of HaitiLists of earthquakesReferencesSources HaitiEarthquakes
+The Broncos used him in practice to imitate Greg Olsen, tight end for their Super Bowl 50 opponent, the Carolina Panthers.
+This species is endemic to Costa Rica.
+ReferencesExternal links Category:1996 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Romanian footballersCategory:Association football defendersCategory:Liga I playersCategory:FC Viitorul Constanța playersCategory:Liga II playersCategory:SR Brașov playersCategory:FC Academica Clinceni playersCategory:CS Afumați playersCategory:SCM Gloria Buzău players
+He was the son of Mirza Ghiyas Beg and brother to Empress Nur Jahan.
+External linksCategory:1960s Hindi-language filmsCategory:1969 filmsCategory:Indian filmsCategory:Films scored by Shankar JaikishanCategory:Films directed by K. Shankar
+Schönborn is the origin of the Counts of Schönborn.
+Odites tinactella is a moth in the family Depressariidae.
+Track listing (original issue) Side oneSide twoTrack listing (re-issue)Personnel Caravan Pye Hastings – guitar, vocals Geoff Richardson – electric viola Dave Sinclair – electric piano, organ, synthesizer John G. Perry – bass guitar, vocals Richard Coughlan – drums The New Symphonia OrchestraBacking vocals Liza Strike Vicki Brown Margot Newman Helen Chappelle Tony Burrows Robert Lindop Danny StreetThe New SymphoniaMartyn Ford (conductor), Richard Studt (leader), Irvine Arditti, Paul Beer, Ted Chance, Andrew Cauthery, Roger Chase, Lynden Cranham, Michael Crowther, Robin Davies, Rita Eddowes, Liz Edwards, Wilfred Gibson, Lucy Finch, Jo Frohlich, Wilf Gibson, Roy Gillard, Michael Harris, Tony Harris, Jimmy Hastings, Terry Johns, Skaila Kanda, Skaila Kanga, Garry Kettell, Chris Laurence, Helen Liebmann, Stephen May, Donald McVay, Dee Partridge, Geoff Perkins, Morris Pert, Mike Perton, Martin Robinson, Godfrey Salmon, Jan Schlapp, Colin Walker, Cathy Weiss, Robin Williams, Dave Woodcock, Nick Worters, Gavyn Wright.
+HistoryThe village of Dollingstown is on the old road from Moira to Lurgan, in the townland of Taughrane, which may come from Irish Tóchar Rathain ("causeway of bracken") or Teach Raithin ("house of bracken").
+See also Jean CharpentierReferencesCategory:1897 birthsCategory:2001 deathsCategory:Canadian centenariansCategory:Ambassadors of Canada to HaitiCategory:Canadian military personnel of World War ICategory:Franco-Ontarian peopleCategory:Journalists from OntarioCategory:Officers of the Order of CanadaCategory:Ottawa controllers
+Atriplex amnicola, commonly known as river saltbush or swamp saltbush, is a species of shrub in the family Amaranthaceae.
+Partial list of Thesaurus programsDinner HourMusical ClockPaul Wing, the Story ManRadio Night ClubReferences Category:Media companies established in 1935Category:1935 establishments in New York (state)Category:Radio syndication
+A remix featuring soul singer Darien Brockington and a different beat was recorded.
+She died on 22 January 1960.
+1984, № 143. with.
+PromotionThe song's music video was directed by Mike Ross and produced by Ali Newling.
+His first league game back at the club saw Murphy feature in the starting line-up in the goalless draw with Chesterfield on 11 August 2007, with his first two goals back at the club coming in a 4–0 demolition of Dagenham & Redbridge a fortnight later.
+Justynów is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Młodzieszyn, within Sochaczew County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland.
+Routledge, 2015.
+playersCategory:Rochdale A.F.C.
+But Esther reminds each of them in turn that the five of them are "a four."
+South Westfield Township is one of fifteen townships in Surry County, North Carolina.
+As a result of his perceived interest in Spain, he was commissioned by ICEX, the Spanish Embassy Commercial Office in London, to write the trade/press textbook for Spanish wines The Spanish Wine Education Notes, which appeared bi-annually from 1989 to 2001, after which ICEX took it in-house and it went online.
+The protein encoded by this gene is one of two proteins that are required to form the DQ heterodimer, a cell surface receptor essential to the function of the immune system.
+BattleUnion cavalry under Brig.
+ReferencesFurther reading Category:FliesCategory:Articles created by Qbugbot
+Notter may refer to: Notter, Cornwall, a hamlet in England Notter, Netherlands, a hamlet Notter (Unstrut), a river in Thuringia, Germany, tributary of the Unstrut Notter Point, a rocky point in AntarcticaPeople with that surnameJoe Notter (1890-1973), American jockeyJohn L. Notter (born 1935), financier and developerHeinrich Notter, Swiss bobsledderKastor Notter (1903–1950), Swiss racing cyclist
+There are 9 properties and districts listed on the National Register in the county.
+A transdermal patch containing lidocaine is available commercially in some countries.
+The Czech Chess Federation subsequently cancelled his membership, and the FIDE Ethics Commission stripped him of his Grandmaster title and gave him a 6 year ban.
+in the final by the score of 8-2.
+ReceptionThe Allmusic review by Scott Yanow awarded the album 3 stars stating "The influences of Latin jazz, bossa nova, and the avant-garde are mixed into the unusual musical blend".
+ScheduleGame notesReferencesPro Football Archives: 1919 Rock Island Independents seasonCategory:Rock Island Independents seasonsRock IslandRock Island
+He was a supporter of Irish nationalism.
+AwardsMark Summers has received many nominations and awards for his work.
+He played in two games in his major league career, with no at bats.
+See also List of Corymbia speciesReferenceschartaceaCategory:Myrtales of AustraliaCategory:Flora of the Northern TerritoryCategory:Plants described in 1995
+Calculations showed that the lighthouse would have to be some tall if built on the highest point to be effective.
+On February 1, 2018, Aryzta announced that it had sold the Big Texas and Cloverhill brands to Hostess Brands.
+It is surrounded by Somogyviszló and Vásárosbéc on the north, Csertő on the east, Basal on the northeast, Patapoklosi on the south, Merenye on the southwest and Somogyhatvan on the west.
+The ships had two compound steam engines, each driving one propeller shaft, rated at a total power of .
+Gábor Eperjesi (born 12 January 1994) is a Hungarian professional footballer who plays for Mezőkövesdi SE.
+Hay, Bahay!
+In his first University year he was a freshman Double Blue in rugby football and cricket.
+Člunek lies approximately south-east of Jindřichův Hradec, east of České Budějovice, and south-east of Prague.
+FilmographyStage productionsBroadwayDiscographyReferencesExternal links Sedona Now Network websiteCategory:1966 birthsCategory:American male television actorsCategory:American male child actorsCategory:Living peopleCategory:People from Staten IslandCategory:American people of Italian descentCategory:People from Sedona, ArizonaCategory:Gay actorsCategory:LGBT entertainers from the United StatesCategory:LGBT people from New York (state)Category:LGBT people from ArizonaCategory:Male actors of Italian descent
+In 1928 he was made a Bard of the Cornish Gorseth at Boscawen-Un, taking the bardic name Map Hendra ('Son of Antquity').
+Frederick Drimmer (August 7, 1916 – December 24, 2000) is the author of The Elephant Man, a book about Joseph Merrick, who suffered from Proteus Syndrome.
+Kraussia is a flowering plant genus in the family Rubiaceae.
+Françoise Pollet (born 10 September 1949 in Boulogne Billancourt), is a French soprano.
+He fought in the disastrous Battle of Pliska in 811, and was taken prisoner along with 50 other officers by the Bulgars.
+Some additional contemporary covers also graced this set, like Los Lobos' "Evangeline" and Bruce Cockburn's "Waiting for a Miracle", as well as a unique cover of the Dylan/Band classic "Tears of Rage".
+Barra may refer to:Places Barra, Scotland, United Kingdom Barra (Naples), Italy Barra de Mira, Portugal Barra, Gambia Barra Beach, Inhambane Province, Mozambique Barra, Macau, MacauBrazil Barra, Bahia, a municipality in Bahia Barra (neighborhood), a neighborhood of the city of SalvadorOrganisations Barra, Inc., a financial services firm Isle of Barra distillery, a whisky distillerySport Barra brava, a name for organized supporter groups of football teams in Latin America Barra Futebol Clube, a Brazilian soccer club Barra Mansa Futebol Clube, a Brazilian soccer clubPeople Barra binte Samawal Francisco León de la Barra (1863–1939) Joseph Bara (1779–1793), a hero of the French Revolution whose name is often written "Barra" Mary Barra (born 1961), CEO of General Motors Pasquale Barra (1942–2015), former NCO hitman and pentito Ray Barra (born 1930), ballet dancer and ballet director Robert Barra (born 1960), New York politicianOther uses Barra system, passive solar building technology Ford Barra engine, an engine produced by Ford Australia for its Falcon range French ship Barra (1794), a 74-gun Ship of the line, captured and served in the Royal Navy as HMS Donegal (1798)See also Barracuda, a fish Barramundi, a fish Barra, slang term for the British town of Barrow-in-Furness, also as to reflect the local accent Burra (disambiguation) Barra Bonita (disambiguation), several places Barra da Lagoa, a district of the city of Florianópolis in Santa Catarina, Brazil Barra da Tijuca, a neighborhood of the city of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Barra de Santo Antônio, a municipality in Alagoas, Brazil Barra de São Francisco, a municipality in Espírito Santo, Brazil Barra de São Miguel (disambiguation), multiple places Barra do Chapéu, a municipality in São Paulo, Brazil Barra do Garças, a city in Mato Grosso, Brazil Barra do Piraí, a city in the state of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Barra do Quaraí, a town in Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil Barra do Ribeiro, a municipality in the state of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil Barra do Turvo, a municipality in the state of São Paulo, Brazil Barra Mansa, a municipality in the state of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Barra de Navidad, Mexico Gougane Barra, a settlement in County Cork, Ireland Barra Brui, New South Wales, Australia Gracie Barra, a Brazilian jiu-jitsu association La Barra Brava, an independent supporters' group for Major League Soccer's D.C. United and the United States
+More specifically, it is estimated to have a Sq spectral type, which would also agree with its family classification.
+This Way is an album by Acoustic Alchemy, released on May 14, 2007 in the United Kingdom.
+References Category:Rivers of Massachusetts
+He also contributed to more than a dozen other American and English journals, as well as writing genealogical notes in the Boston Evening Transcript for a period of 30 years.
+To prepare it, the dough is wrapped around a cheesestick and formed into a breadstick so it can be fried in oil for 6 minutes at or sometimes oven-baked.
+They contended with the military group, the Soriya, who supported the successors of the war leader Ibrahim Sori.
+Here they participated in the Battle of Kasserine Pass and several of the other early battles with units of the US Army, newly committed to the war.
+Cerithium crassilabrum is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Cerithiidae.
+Roszków may refer to the following places in Poland: Roszków, Greater Poland Voivodeship Roszków, Silesian Voivodeship
+Rogozche is a village in Dzhebel Municipality, Kardzhali Province, southern Bulgaria.
+ReferencesCategory:Villages in Pajęczno County
+Nyathi was a teacher who joined the Zimbabwe African People's Union of Joshua Nkomo, fighting against the white-minority government of Ian Smith.
+ReferencesCategory:1883 birthsCategory:Year of death missingCategory:Portuguese male fencersCategory:Olympic fencers of PortugalCategory:Fencers at the 1924 Summer Olympics
+ReferencesSteinway Pianos, LondonInternational Musicians' Seminar, Prussia CoveCategory:Classical piano duosCategory:Hungarian classical pianistsCategory:Hungarian women pianistsCategory:1947 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:21st-century classical pianistsCategory:21st-century women musiciansCategory:Women classical pianists
+Rhodes also acted in regional theater, including Playhouse on the Mall in Paramus, New Jersey, and the Forrest Theatre in Philadelphia.
+Along with prof. dr. ir.
+The 2014 Dhaka Senior Division League started on 12 September 2014 where 7 clubs competed with each other.
+The incumbent at Finglas, he became a Canon of Killala in 1693; was Archdeacon of Clogher from 1704 to 1705; Chancellor of Clogher in 1705; and Chancellor of Armagh in 1706.
+Fig refers to Mount Judi where Prophet Nuh's Ark landed, while At-Teen referring to Prophet Noah, the location where his Ark ship landed, az-Zaytoon referring to Jesus who was born in Palestine where olives grow or Al-Aqsa Mosque in Palestine.
+Yeelirrie lies in Western Australia's Mulga Zone rangeland.
+During the Ottoman wars the village was destroyed and in 1746 re-founded.
+Homeward bound, she was at Saugor on 3 January 1803.
+He was given more first-class opportunities in 2006 and 2007 playing a total of 15 matches, taking 29 wickets at an average of 45.03.
+AwardsNational Team NORCECA Beach Volleyball Circuit Boca Chica 2009 Gold Medal NORCECA Beach Volleyball Circuit Guatemala 2009 Silver Medal NORCECA Beach Volleyball Circuit Cayman Islands 2009 Silver Medal IV Olimpiada Nacional del Deporte Cubano Silver MedalReferences Karell Pena at the Beach Volleyball Database FIVB Beach ProfileCategory:1988 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Cuban beach volleyball playersCategory:Men's beach volleyball players
+GenomicsThe gene is located at chromosome 17p13.3 on the Watson (plus) strand.
+Their children were styled Count (or Countess) of Lippe-Biesterfeld: Simon John (7 July 1655 – 8 May 1656) Juliane Elisabeth (15 June 1656 – 29 April 1709) John Augustus (15 October 1657 – 9 September 1709) Charlotte Sophie (16 September 1658 – 25 April 1672) Simon Christian (8 October 1659 – 9 November 1660) Theodore Adolph (22 October 1660 – 9 March 1709) Christine Mary (12 February 1662 – 14 June 1710) Stillborn son (10 June 1663) Christiane Ernestine (12 July 1664 – 28 December 1686) Anna Auguste (14 September 1665 – 25 August 1730) John Frederick (6 November 1666 – 21 February 1712) Magdalene Emilie (30 November 1667 – 25 June 1677) Concordia Dorothea (18 December 1668 – 25 June 1677) John George Louis (12 January 1670 – 22 January 1693) Rudolph Ferdinand (17 March 1671 – 12 June 1736); his son, Count Ferdinand founded the Lippe-Weissenfeld line of the family and his granddaughter, Countess Henriette of Lippe-Weissenfeld (1753-1795) married Albert (1750-1811), son of Leopold II, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau William Christian (November 1672 – 6 May 1674) Simon Christian (4 March 1674 – 23 June 1677) Elisabeth Charlotte (21 March 1675 – 22 August 1676) Juliane Sophie (6 December 1676 – 2 June 1705) Justine Hermione (20 May 1679 – 15 June 1704)Category:Counts of LippeCategory:House of LippeCategory:1625 birthsCategory:1678 deathsCategory:17th-century German people
+Six years later, he took a trip to Dresden, where he spent two months studying with the noted animal painter Johann Siegwald Dahl (1827-1902).
+The caterpillar is known to feed on Neolitsea zeylanica.
+They joined the Golden City Football League (GCFL) in 1960 and won a premiership in their first season, with a one-point grand final win over White HillsThe GCFL merged with the BFL before the 1981 season to form the Bendigo-Golden City Football League and Kangaroo Flat were admitted into the second division.
+L.D.Benson – Mearns' sumacRhus virens var.
+Many of the first bandsmen had no musical education, which resulted in the Ministry of the Interior founding a three-year early morning music school, which was mandatory for all bandsmen.
+Schooling and adolescence Cosima and Blandine remained with Anna Liszt until 1850, joined eventually by Daniel.
+Columbia City Historic District may refer to:Columbia City Historic District (Columbia City, Indiana), listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Whitley County, IndianaColumbia City Historic District (Seattle, Washington), listed on the National Register of Historic Places in King County, Washington
+The Antigua and Barbuda Davis Cup team represents Antigua and Barbuda in Davis Cup tennis competition and is governed by the Antigua and Barbuda Tennis Association.
+In any case, Leonti Mroveli as chronicler shifted the balance of Georgian literature from the ecclesiastic to the secular.
+seasonsBradford City
+He competed in the men's light heavyweight event at the 1988 Summer Olympics.
+It was released in September 1994 as the first single from the album George Ducas.
+ReferencesCategory:ÅlCategory:Mountains of Viken
+The length of the forewings is 3.9–4.1 mm for males and 4-4.8 mm for females.
+He studied Torah with his grandfather, Rabbi Menachem of Amshinov.
+Before that He was Director Marketing at Vodafone Global.
+Professional careerDemirtaş made his debut for Gençlerbirliği in a 1-0 Süper Lig win over Bursaspor on 18 May 2018.International careerDemirtaş has represented the Turkish Football Federation at the U15 and U16 levels.
+Sotiris Ventas (born 15 March 1945) is a Greek wrestler.
+All three men were arrested and there were no injuries.
+He became Clerk of the Justiciary in 1783.
+The slave trade was facilitated on the European end by the Portuguese, the Dutch, the French and the British.
+"Big Ideas" is a song by LCD Soundsystem, released as a single on August 11, 2008.
+Robinson's partner was Csaba Szirmai, one of the show's resident professional dancers.
+While it received generally positive ratings from critics, Pitchfork gave it a more critical review, describing it as "disappointing."
+The conclusion reached is that statements in a laboratory routinely travel up and down this continuum, and the main purpose of a laboratory is to take statements of one level of facticity and transform them to another level.
+Birk may refer to: Birk (market place), a demarcated area with its own laws and privileges, the Bjarkey laws Reykjavík Airport's ICAO code "BIRK" Birk (name), a given name and surname Birk, the German name for Petelea Commune, Mureș County, RomaniaSee also Birks (disambiguation) Berk (disambiguation) Burk (disambiguation)
+It was released on LP and CD via Cold Chillin' Records in 1996 but is made up of the classic diss records KRS-One/Boogie Down Productions and MC Shan/The Juice Crew took shots at each other with during the infamous "Bridge Wars" in the late '80s and what is often considered the most memorable (as well as one of the first) hip-hop beefs that ever happened.
+After a full season at Northwich, Ball joined National League North club Stalybridge Celtic on a free transfer ahead of the 2016–17 season.
+Ronaldus Cornelis "Ron" Stevens (born February 15, 1959 in Lienden, Gelderland) is a Dutch sprint canoer who competed in the early to mid-1980s.
+He was a member (MP) of the Parliament of England for Knaresborough in April 1554, Hedon in November 1554, Shaftesbury in 1563 and Newcastle-under-Lyme in 1571.
+In 2011, Hampi University conferred the Nadoja Award upon V.S.
+Background and history Anspach created Anti-Monopoly in part as a response to the lessons taught by the mainstream game, which he believed created the impression that monopolies were something desirable.
+As mentioned earlier these two Sections provide for the declaration of services by the ACCC and impose standard access obligations, terms and conditions which include the monetary price bracket limiting what Telstra is allowed to charge its competitors for access to declared services.
+In 1844 Morton Above, along with part of the neighbouring township of Dynhinlle Ucha, became part of the newly created parish of Rhosllanerchrugog.
+Born in Samarkand, Khojaeva graduated from Samarkand State University in 1963, with a degree in Tajik language and literature; she then began teaching in schools in Samarkand.
+HistoryFaasos was founded by Jaydeep Barman and Kallol Banerjee and incorporated in 2011.
+Referencesgrey crested titgrey crested titCategory:Birds of Central ChinaCategory:Birds of YunnanCategory:Birds of the Himalayasgrey crested titCategory:Taxonomy articles created by Polbot
+Other census subdivisionsOther places Canol CampDiscoveryFort ConfidenceOld Fort ProvidencePine PointPort RadiumRayrockTungstenRegional populationsSee also List of cities in CanadaList of municipalities in the Northwest TerritoriesReferencesExternal linksPlace names in the NWT*Communities
+Wynne discusses the history of anthropomorphism through George Henry Lewes, George Romanes, and Charles Darwin to elaborate on pitfalls, limitations, and the arguably nonscientific status of anthropomorphism.
+He was selected 67th overall in the 1992 NHL Entry Draft by the Pittsburgh Penguins.
+Thomas Travers may refer to:Thomas Otho Travers (1785–1844), soldierThomas Travers (MP), for Lancashire Sir Thomas Travers (ophthalmologist), Australian ophthalmologist
+ReferencesExternal links Official website FAA Food Plan Category:Addiction organizations in the United StatesCategory:Eating disordersCategory:Organizations established in 1987Category:Twelve-step programs
+During an episode of the 2013 BBC2 series The Story of Music, when presenter Howard Goodall was discussing the style galant popularised by composers such as Mozart, the song was performed by a string quartet and classical singer.
+Andy Crump of Paste gave the episode an 8.6 rating and wrote, "'Ava' lets its characters be the best part of who they are, while flying through every holiday episode trope imaginable, but if the plot elements here feel familiar, they end up working because they're used in earnest.
+SpeciesThere are currently two recognized species in this genus: Corematodus shiranus Boulenger, 1897 Corematodus taeniatus Trewavas, 1935ReferencesCategory:HaplochrominiCategory:Cichlid generaCategory:Taxa named by George Albert Boulenger
+Wake Forest could only manage 205 yards of offense against the Tigers.
+This book won a research prize organized by these institutions, enjoyed extraordinary attention by the lawyers and made a high impact at the time within the academic field of European law.
+Sugar Loaf Hill January 19.
+She said she found that concentration camps were hard to close; how she found that authorities found them so convenient, that they were re-used for other groups.
+Svartskog is a village in Akershus, Norway.
+See also List of JingūNotesReferences Ponsonby-Fane, Richard.
+OperationsFares in Wächtersbach are set and services are managed by the Rhein-Main-Verkehrsverbund (Rhine-Main Transport Association).
+FamilyAmong his ancestors were Isaac, rabbi at Cracow; the grandson of the latter,Phinehas Selig, author of the "'Aṭeret Paz"; and the latter's son, Aryeh Löw, a well-known Talmudist, who was the father of Eleazar Löw, the author of "Shemen Roḳeaḥ."
+There are limits on how much money users can add to their Wallet Balance, withdraw from the linked account or card, or send and receive to other individuals.
+), Irish footballerGeorge Forbes, 3rd Earl of Granard (1685–1765), Anglo-Irish naval commander and diplomatistGeorge Forbes, 4th Earl of Granard (1710–1769), MP for St Johnstown (County Longford) and MullingarGeorge Forbes, 5th Earl of Granard (1740–1780), MP for St Johnstown (County Longford)George Forbes, 6th Earl of Granard (1760–1837), Earl of GranardGeorge Forbes, 7th Earl of Granard (1833–1889), Irish peer and soldierGeorge Forbes, Viscount Forbes (1785–1836), MP for LongfordUnited Kingdom George Forbes (businessman) (born 1945), Scottish farmer and property developer, former chairman of Newcastle United F.C.
+Assuming the astronaut urinates, the diaper would only need to be changed every eight to ten hours.
+The double-banded courser lives and breeds in flat, stony or gravelly, semi-desert terrains with firm, sandy soil and tufty grass or thorn scrub.
+On February 14 2004, the final took place at the Universal Hall in Skopje and hosted by Aneta Andonova and Karolina Petkovska.
+In 2004, it was released internationally by Floppy Cow Records and in the US by Suburban Home Records.
+Category:English entomologistsCategory:English lepidopteristsCategory:1858 birthsCategory:1947 deathsCategory:Fellows of the Royal Entomological SocietyCategory:Fellows of the Zoological Society of London
+However, active grass-roots opposition from local supporters of the house, organized by the 'Friends of Arundells', led by Tony Burnside, prompted the Charity Commission to rule in September 2011 that any sale would be premature, with the Foundation asked to make more vigorous efforts to meet the central objective of Heath's will.
+Milejovice lies approximately south of Strakonice, north-west of České Budějovice, and south of Prague.
+ReferencesCategory:Villages in Banaskantha district
+References|-Category:1965 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Members of the Western Australian Legislative AssemblyCategory:Women members of the Western Australian Legislative AssemblyCategory:Australian Labor Party members of the Parliament of Western AustraliaCategory:21st-century Australian politiciansCategory:21st-century Australian women politicians
+Fáinní but often "Fáinnes" in English) is the name of a pin badge worn to show fluency in, or a willingness to speak, the Irish Language.
+Governor Rodrigues may refer to:Diogo Rodrigues (died 1577), Governor of Salsette from 1535 to 1548Sarmento Rodrigues (1899–1979), Governor of Portuguese Guinea from 1946 to 1949, Governor General of Salazar from, 1950 to 1951, Governor General of Portuguese Mozambique from 1961 to 1964
+Cambridge 105 broadcast live from three separate locations in the centre of the city.
+Notable people with the surname include:Austin Berkley (born 1973), former English professional footballerElizabeth Berkley (born 1972), American TV and film actressGeorge Berkley (engineer) (died 1893), British civil engineerRichard L. Berkley (born 1931), mayor of Kansas City, Missouri (1979–1991)Robyn Berkley, fashion publicistSeth Berkley (born 1956), American epidemiologistShelley Berkley (born 1951), U.S. CongresswomanTheresa Berkley (died 1836), 19th century London dominatrixW.R. Berkley (born 1946), Insurance Tycoon.
+He has also worked extensively in contemporary dance, composing music for choreographers Viola Farber, Sarah Fahie and Andreja Rauch.
+The Jubilee Hills Check Post Metro Station is located on the Blue Line of the Hyderabad Metro..
+In 1796, he managed the Jefferson campaign in Pennsylvania, blanketing the state with agents who passed out 30,000 hand-written tickets, naming all 15 electors (printed tickets were not allowed).
+It is used specifically to refer to Judgment of Solomon ("Solomonic wisdom") Solomonic column in architecture Solomonic dynasty in Ethiopian history
+Some residences were converted into hostels to house the students.
+Sacred Heart Church Ayavana, St. Mary's Jacobite Church Kalampoor, St. Mary's Church Karimattom etc.
+In this legislation, states could choose to establish their own health insurance exchanges; if they choose not to do so, the federal government would run one for the state.
+For local government purposes, it falls within the district of King's Lynn and West Norfolk.
+Schools, health centres, and roads linking Suket and Mandi to Delhi were constructed during his reign.
+redirect Ontario Highway 8
+Habitat and ecologyCoolia is found globally in coastal marine regions of both temperate and tropical waters.
+Chizuru Miyawaki is directing the new season with previous season's director Yoichi Fujita supervising.
+He received 75,862 votes and defeated Syed Javed Ali Shah Jillani.
+Their main roles are to protect Sultan of Johor, his royal family and properties.
+Promoted again, this time to Air Vice-Marshal in 1936, he was appointed Deputy Chief of the Air Staff and Director of Operations and Intelligence in January 1937.
+KingGee (formerly known as King Gee) is an Australian work wear brand.
+ReferencesExternal links University Park Mall - Simon.comCategory:Shopping malls in IndianaCategory:Simon Property GroupCategory:Buildings and structures in South Bend, IndianaCategory:Shopping malls established in 1979Category:Tourist attractions in South Bend, IndianaCategory:Mishawaka, Indiana
+Works L'Arche ensevelie, 1959 La Terre de la gazelle Marie Casse-croûte, 1985, Prix RTL grand public 1985 Le Jaune, 1988 La cavale irlandaise, 1991 Au Fil du fleuve, 1994Notes Category:1918 birthsCategory:2006 deathsCategory:Auschwitz concentration camp survivorsCategory:French Resistance membersCategory:Holocaust survivorsCategory:Writers from Paris
+She moved to a ranch near Willcox, Arizona in 1943.
+The station was originally called Lia.
+Work Hadjithomas and Joreige are known to work over several years on a single project, and often revisit earlier works in retrospection.
+Many of his screenplays were written under the pen name Henry Wilson.
+History The original Victorian school was built in 1895 and is now used as the school hall.
+It is not regarded as a separate populated place in census, but as part of village of Čenej, some 10 km away.
+CareerYahyahoui, alias Ettounsi, founded and edited one of the first open discussion forums on the Internet, the satirical website TUNeZINE (which has since been shut down).
+Accessory breasts, also known as polymastia, supernumerary breasts, or mammae erraticae, is the condition of having an additional breast.
+playersCategory:PAS Giannina F.C.
+2007Daniel Bell won 11 gold medals in the Australasian Tri-Series Swimming Championships and was judged male swimmer of the meet.
+We could only wish for it.
+Michalis Vakalopoulos (born 26 June 1990 in Leiderdorp) is a Dutch-Greek professional footballer who used to play as a defender for SC Veendam in the Dutch Eerste Divisie.
+is a vast improvement over 'A Fistful of Meg' in almost every way, primarily because it’s actually more reminiscent of one of my favorite episodes of Family Guy: 'Road to Rupert.'
+The Urban Code is applied in the entire District of Rafaela.
+He was able to carry 190 kg in the snatch, and 225 kg in the clean and jerk, for a total of 415 kg, finishing only in tenth place.
+Epidendrum paniculatum (gloss: paniculate upon a tree) is a species of orchid in the genus Epidendrum.
+Additionally, following the attack, investigators found small piles of rocks near to where the shots had been fired, the type of formations that can be used to scout firing positions.
+TheaterFilmographyReferencesExternal links Category:1963 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Conservatoire de Paris alumniCategory:20th-century French male actorsCategory:21st-century French male actorsCategory:French male film actorsCategory:French male television actorsCategory:French male stage actorsCategory:French theatre directorsCategory:National Rally (France) politicians
+In 1330, Robert had him appointed bishop of Giovinazzo.
+Some of the other Guests of antiquity were Thomas' sons Walter and Leonard, referred to in 1194 and 1280; and Henry, son of Leonard, 1240.
+Zwei Ärzte sind einer zu viel is a German television series.
+CareerClubIn January 2011, he joined Ukrainian Premier League side Tavriya Simferopol on a two-year contract.
+Ivanovskaya, Nikulinskaya, Leushinskaya are the nearest rural localities.
+In 2006, Cogen was elected to the Multnomah County Board of Commissioners as Commissioner for District 2, representing North and Northeast Portland.
+This article contains a list of national archives.
+Each square tile is worth a number of victory points, and each octagonal tile contains a number of each player's influence markers.
+Category:Dobele MunicipalityCategory:Towns and villages in Latvia
+Stromerius is larger than the contemporary Saghacetus but smaller than the older Dorudon.
+DisbandmentRegiment Highveld was disbanded in 1997.
+Track listingBig Sky PresenceRide OnDesolate ChileStop Bombing Each Other!
+It is endemic to Japan.
+In November 1936, Gauleiter Fritz Wächtler dedicated the Hauzenberg district house.
+It was designed by Jony Ive, and used clear plastic to match the aesthetic of Apple's product line at the time.
+Hsinchu Science Park: Hsinchu City and Hsinchu County, Taiwan is the dominant area worldwide for pure-play semiconductor foundry market.
+24 Qore-24 Impala, scoring one top 5 and four top ten finishes to finish 14th in points.
+Peek-a-Boo's teleportation powers can create dangerous implosions at their exit point if she isn't careful.
+In the 2000s the freight segment was deregulated and a number of freight companies have started competing with the NSB partial subsidiary CargoNet.
+In those days the line from Farnham to Alton was double track.
+Normal heights are heights above sea level, one of several types of height which are all computed slightly differently.
+David Schwarz may refer to: David M. Schwarz, American New Classical architect David Schwarz (aviation inventor) (1852–1897), Hungarian aviation pioneer David Schwarz (footballer) (born 1972), Australian rules footballerSee also David Schwartz (disambiguation) Schwarz (disambiguation)
+For the history of the region, see History of Pomerania.
+Coligny regrouped, marched east into the Rhone and, months later, marched towards Paris.
+Pete Sampras was the two-time defending champion, but lost in the final to Andre Agassi, 2–6, 4–6.
+Its portfolio of brands includes Lay's, Cheetos, Fritos, and Doritos, as well as local brands such as Lucky, Stiksy, and Baconzitos snacks in Brazil and ManiMoto in Colombia.
+Spach may refer to: Édouard Spach (1801–1879), French botanist Stephen Spach (born 1982), American football player
+It was for that work that he was placed on the cover of the November 14, 1938 issue of Time.
+This mutation is present in Sebright Bantams and probably other bantams.
+The station is located on the Hanover–Brunswick railway.
+She competed in the women's tournament at the 1980 Summer Olympics.
+From 2010 to 2011, a second six-issue comic book limited series, titled Wolfskin: Hundredth Dream was published.
+He worked as a professor at the College of the Holy Cross.
+1997: Michael Peart, also to Kiribati, Nauru, Tuvalu1997–2000: Michael Dibben, also to Kiribati, Nauru, Tuvalu2000–2002: Michael Anthony Price, also to Kiribati, Nauru, Tuvalu2002–2006: Charles Mochan, also to Kiribati, Nauru, Tuvalu2006–2009: Roger Sykes, also to Kiribati, Nauru, Tonga, Tuvalu, Vanuatu2009–2011: Malcolm McLachlan, also to Kiribati, Nauru, Tonga, Tuvalu, Vanuatu2011–2012: Timothy Smart (acting), also to Kiribati, Nauru, Tonga, Tuvalu, Vanuatu 2012–2013: Martin Fidler (acting), also to Kiribati, Nauru, Tonga, Tuvalu, Vanuatu2013: Steven Chandler (acting), also to Kiribati, Nauru, Tonga, Tuvalu2013–2016: Roderick Drummond, also to Kiribati, Micronesia, Marshall Islands, Tonga, Tuvalu2016–: Melanie Hopkins, also to Kiribati, Micronesia, Marshall Islands, Tonga, TuvaluReferencesExternal linksUK and Fiji, gov.ukFiji United Kingdom High CommissionersUnited KingdomFijiUnited Kingdom
+It was used to a small extent in Europe and Asia and saw some use in the US, notably by the Fox News Channel, but was a commercial failure compared with Digital Betacam.
+I Am Ruined We Sing In Time ArrowsAccoladesReferences Category:2011 albumsCategory:The Lonely Forest albums
+The southern terminus of SR 625 is at U.S. Route 224 (US 224) near Boardman, and its northern terminus is at US 62 in the southwestern portion of Youngstown.
+Sweatbees is a compilation album by Louisville, Kentucky rock band My Morning Jacket.
+In 2016, Perrett was the first woman appointed to referee men's teams in Australia's National Rugby Championship, after becoming the first female assistant referee in Super Rugby three months earlier.
+Through his company, he wrote several educational books, including Bring Out Your Dead: Recreating the Black Death in the Classroom, Mouldering in the Grave: A Dramatic Approach to Teaching About John Brown and The Constitution: A Cooperative Learning Approach.
+The District ranked second in McKean County for average teacher salary in 2007.
+Avengers Campus (Disney California Adventure) The version at Disney California Adventure will be taking up the space previously occupied by A Bug's Land and will be anchored by the nearby Guardians of the Galaxy – Mission: Breakout!
+Democratic nominee Daniel T. McCarty defeated Republican nominee Harry S. Swan with 74.83% of the vote.
+82–87.
+1990s2000s2010sReferences Category:Record label discographies
+It is located within the locality of Butler.
+Paradores in Puerto RicoPonce The Fox Hotel Hotel Meliá Hotel Ponce Intercontinental Ponce Plaza Hotel & Casino Solace by the SeaSan Juan Caribe Hilton Hotel Condado Vanderbilt Hotel Hotel El Convento La Concha Resort Normandie Hotel (closed) San Juan Marriott Resort & Stellaris CasinoSee also List of casinos in Puerto Rico List of companies of Puerto Rico List of hotels – indexed by country Lists of hotels – hotel list articles on WikipediaReferencesExternal links *Puerto RicoPuerto RicoHotelsHotels
+On December 13, 2004 K10CM changed the K10CM call letters from K10CM to KNEE-LP calls.
+He went on hunger strike because his repeated requests to provide for his needs had gone unheeded by prison authorities.
+Mauricio Eduardo Lagos González (born 5 April 1984) is a Chilean footballer.
+ReferencesCategory:Villages in Chełm County
+After that, Motemn was active in photography, filming, and documenting.
+External linksCategory:Villages in Shropshire
+He was posthumously mentioned in dispatches on 5 November 1915.
+The most successful team in the competition to date is University of the Free State koshuis Vishuis, who won the competition on four occasions.
+Powdered dried lime is also used as an ingredient in Arab States of the Persian Gulf-style baharat (a spice mixture which is also called kabsa or kebsa).
+On many machines, particularly those without hardware support for division, division is a slower operation than multiplication, so this approach can yield a considerable speedup.
+ReferencesExternal links Category:CirrhitidaeCategory:Monotypic fish generaCategory:Fish described in 1874
+BiographyBorn in Duquesne, Pennsylvania, he officiated in the World Series in 1951 (outfield only), 1954, 1960 and 1967, serving as crew chief in 1967, and in the All-Star Game in 1950, 1953, 1957, 1960 (both games) and 1965, working behind the plate in 1965 and for the second half of the 1957 game; he also worked behind the plate for Game 1 of the 1970 American League Championship Series during a labor strike, after having begun working primarily as an assistant league supervisor and substitute umpire in 1968.
+It includes Saurolophus (from Canada and Mongolia), Augustynolophus (from the United States), and Prosaurolophus (from Alberta, Canada, and Montana, U.S.).
+Biography Kevin Patrick Grant completed his Bachelor of Arts (BA) degree at the University of California, Berkeley, in 1988; he then completed a Master of Arts (MA) degree at the University of Chicago in 1991 before returning to Berkeley to carry out his doctoral studies (earning him a PhD in 1997).
+The superyacht Joy was launched at the Feadship yard at the Kaag Island.
+Yogender Chandolia is the current standing committee chairperson of the Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD).
+List of ATP Race championsSee also ATP World Tour records ATP World Tour Awards ATP World Tour Masters 1000 List of ATP number 1 ranked players Tennis statistics Tennis male players statisticsExternal links ATP Rankings+raceCategory:Association of Tennis ProfessionalsCategory:Tennis rankings
+Inspired by the strike, she joined the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union (ILGWU) in 1983 and began working on the ILGWU Immigration Project in 1984.
+Sveti Križ (literally, 'Holy Cross' in Croatian and Slovene) may refer to several places:In Austria:Heiligenkreuz im Lafnitztal, also known as Sveti Križ in SloveneIn Croatia:Sveti Križ, Budinščina, a village in the Municipality of BudinščinaSveti Križ, Tuhelj, a village in the Municipality of TuheljSveti Križ, Mala Subotica, a village in the Municipality of Mala SuboticaSveti Križ Začretje, a village and municipalityIn Slovenia:Beli Grič, a settlement in the Municipality of Mokronog–Trebelno, known as Sveti Križ until 1955Brnica, Žalec, a settlement in the Municipality of Žalec, known as Sveti Križ until 1953Gaj nad Mariborom, a settlement in the Municipality of Maribor, known as Sveti Križ until 1955Križevska Vas, Dol pri Ljubljani, a settlement in the Municipality of Dol pri Ljubljani, known as Sveti Križ until 1952Planina pod Golico, a settlement in the Municipality of Jesenice, known as Sveti Križ until 1955Podbočje, a settlement in the Municipality of Krško, known as Sveti Križ pri Kostanjevici until 1952Tlake, Grosuplje, a settlement in the Municipality of Grosuplje, where Zgornje Tlake was formerly known as Sveti KrižVipavski Križ, a settlement in the Municipality of Ajdovščina, known as Sveti Križ until 1955
+The Pennsylvania gubernatorial election of 1894 occurred on November 6, 1894.
+The San Margarita Sandstone is a geologic formation in California.
+HistoryNagpur Division was created in 1861, when the Central Provinces administrative division of British India was created by merging the Nagpur Province and the Saugor and Nerbudda Territories.
+The tree was measured with a tape after felling at tall, and in circumference.
+People Bożena Kurowska (1937-1969), Polish actress Bruno Kurowski (1879-1944), German politician Eva Kurowski (born 1965), German jazz musician Franz Kurowski (1923-2011), German author Klemens Kurowski (1340-1405), Polish nobleman Maciej Kurowski (born 1986), Polish luger Mikołaj Kurowski (died 1411), Polish nobleman Sebastian Kurowski (born 1988), Polish footballer Whitey Kurowski (1918-1999), American baseball playerSee also Kurowie, a Polish knighthood familyReferences Category:Polish-language surnamesCategory:Toponymic surnames
+Robespierre et l'art du portrait.
+After the end of construction in 1996, the lake took until 1998 to fill and begin to serve its purpose.
+HistoryA post office was established at Hughes in 1890, and remained in operation until it was discontinued in 1901.
+He has seen and learned to appreciate genuine emotions and human experiences thanks to knowing John, as has Lenina.
+ReferencesExternal linksType strain of Marinomonas balearica at BacDive - the Bacterial Diversity MetadatabaseCategory:OceanospirillalesCategory:Bacteria described in 2010
+Elemental may also refer to:People with the name Professor Elemental, steampunk hip-hop artistArts, entertainment, and mediaComics and literature "Elemental" (story), a 1984 story by Geoffrey A. Landis Elementals (Comico Comics), an American dark superhero comic book Elementals (comics), a number of different comics titles and characters of the same nameFictional entities Elemental (Dungeons & Dragons), a type of creature from the role-playing game (clearly based on the alchemical creature) Elemental (The Chronicles of Riddick), a fictional race that evolved from humans in the film The Chronicles of Riddick Elemental, a type of power armor used by the Clans in the BattleTech franchise Elemental, a species in the Mortal Kombat game universe Elementals (Crash Bandicoot), a group of renegade masks from the video game Crash Bandicoot: The Wrath of Cortex Elementals (DC Comics), a fictional team of superheroes published by DC Comics Elementals (Marvel Comics), a fictional organization in the Marvel UniverseGames Elemental (video game), a 1988 action-strategy video game by Erick Dupuis Elemental: War of Magic, a 2010 turn-based strategy video game by StardockMusic Elemental (Cesium 137 album), the second album from American band Cesium 137 Elemental (Cobalt 60 album) Elemental (Loreena McKennitt album), a 1985 album by Canadian singer and harpist Loreena McKennitt Elemental (Demdike Stare album), 2012 Elemental (Tears for Fears album), a 1993 album by British pop band Tears for Fears "Elemental" (song), the title track from that album Elemental (The Fixx album), a 1998 album by The Fixx "Elementals", a composition by Dave Brubeck for jazz combo and orchestraOther uses in arts, entertainment, and media Elemental (film), a 2012 film Elemental (music group), a Croatian hip-hop groupOther uses Elemental Technologies, Inc., a video software company in Portland, OregonSee also Element (disambiguation) Elementary (disambiguation)
+Kostyantyn Mykolayovych Bocharov (; born 11 April 1997), better known by his stage name Mélovin (Меловін) (stylised as MÉLOVIN), is a Ukrainian singer and songwriter.
+References Category:Azerbaijani cultureCategory:Equestrian team sports
+Alejandro Pierola (born 20 November 1949) is a former professional tennis player from Chile.
+The king pronounced judgement and commanded Arad-Sibitta to give the plaintiff seven slaves in compensation and this was witnessed by seven high-ranking witnesses, of whom three were of Kassite origin and one, Ammenna, the officer, a Hurrian.
+HistoryOnce Only Imagined (2004−2008)The band released their first album Once Only Imagined on August 14, 2007.
+Selected filmography Camera Operator La bestia desnuda (1967) Placer sangriento (1967) Hotel alojamiento (1966) La Venganza del sexo (1966) Las locas del conventillo (María y la otra) (1966) Con gusto a rabia (1964) El Hombre y su noche (1958)Cinematography Cargo de conciencia (2005) Adiós, abuelo (1996) Chiquilines (1991) Buen viaje (1991) Delito de corrupción (1991) Más allá del tema (1989) Atracción peculiar (1988) El Profesor Punk (1988) Galería del terror (1987) Los Colimbas al ataque (1987) Mingo y Aníbal en la mansión embrujada (1986) Camarero nocturno en Mar del Plata (1986) Rambito y Rambón, primera misión (1986) Las Minas de Salomón Rey (1986) Los Colimbas se divierten (1986) Miráme la palomita (1985) La muerte blanca (1985) Mingo y Aníbal, dos pelotazos en contra (1984) Pasajeros de una pesadilla (1984) Buenos Aires Rock (1983) Los extraterrestres (1983) Los reyes del sablazo (1983) El arreglo (1983) Plata dulce (1982) Mire que es lindo mi país (1981) Te rompo el rating (1981) Amante para dos (1981) Abierto día y noche (1981) Las Vacaciones del amor (1981) Departamento compartido (1980) Días de ilusión (1980) Desde el abismo (1980) Custodio de señoras (1979) Expertos en pinchazos (1979) La nona (1979) Los éxitos del amor (1979) El rey de los exhortos (1979) Mi mujer no es mi señora (1978) Encuentros muy cercanos con señoras de cualquier tipo (1978) Fotógrafo de señoras (1978) Los médicos (1978) Las turistas quieren guerra (1977) El gordo catástrofe (1977) Jacinta Pichimahuida se enamora (1977) Basta de mujeres (1977) El canto cuenta su historia (1976) Los hombres sólo piensan en eso (1976) El gordo de América (1976) Maridos en vacaciones (1975) Triángulo de cuatro (1975) Mi novia el...(1975) Los vampiros los prefieren gorditos (1974) La patagonia rebelde (1974) Hay que romper la rutina (1974) Argentinísima II (1973) Las venganzas de Beto Sánchez (1973) Hasta que se ponga el sol (1973) El profesor tirabombas (1972) Argentino hasta la muerte (1971) La gran ruta (1971) Simplemente una rosa (1971) Los neuróticos (1971) Argentinísima (1971) El profesor patagónico (1970) La guita (1970) La vida continúa (1969) El Profesor Hippie (1969) La fiaca (1969) Villa Cariño está que arde (1968) Una máscara para Ana (1966)See also Cinematographer Cinema of ArgentinaReferencesExternal links Category:Argentine cinematographersCategory:1927 birthsCategory:2014 deaths
+For the Columbus Astros in 1970, he hit .296 eight home runs in 137 games.
+He currently plays with Rönesans TED Ankara Kolejliler.
+The weakness of the earth, especially in the western sections, necessitated the implementation of a strong arch throughout approximately of the tunnel and a durable brick lining.
+The CD release is a double-disc that includes the accapellas and instrumentals of all of the album's tracks.
+In 2012 he won a bronze medal in sabre at the North American Cup, and the same year got a gold one for the same thing, and a silver one for épée at the 2012 U.S. Fencing National Wheelchair Championship.
+"The ocean is very different with the waves and the current which were quite strong.
+1861: 1,964; incl.
+Plant species present in the lake water include hydrilla, pondweed, bulrush, waterstar grass, American lotus, coontail, and southern naiad.
+This service allowed subscribers to access a downloadable game portal and play advanced 3D mobile games, including MMOs.
+Notable people with the surname include:Edward H. Jenison (1907–1996), American politicianMadge Jenison (1874–1960), American author, activist and bookstore ownerMatthew Jenison (1654–1734), British politicianRalph Jenison (1696–1758), British politicianRobert Jenison (1584?–1652), English Puritan cleric and academic
+Edwin Brown (died 1999) was a British actor.
+Francis Lamb (November 12, 1900 – July 26, 1975) was an American lawyer and politician.
+The book is written as a historical narrative of Berger's encounter with Chabad messianism from the time of the death of the Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson in 1994 through the book's publication in 2001.
+ReferencesCategory:1958 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:People from Chihuahua (state)Category:Members of the Chamber of Deputies (Mexico)Category:National Action Party (Mexico) politiciansCategory:21st-century Mexican politicians
+Mobile positioning may include location-based services that disclose the actual coordinates of a mobile phone, which is a technology used by telecommunication companies to approximate the location of a mobile phone, and thereby also its user.
+This is a list of Hungarian-language television channels.
+He released his debut self-titled album of jazz-samba tracks in 1972.
+Lomasuchinae was constructed in 2004 and included Lomasuchus (the type genus), and a tribe called Mahajangasuchini, which included Mahajangasuchus and Uberabasuchus.
+Land of Hypocrisy (, translit.
+Victory Theatre or Victory Theater may refer to:Victory Theater, a theater in Holyoke, MassachusettsVictory Theatre, a theater in Evansville, IndianaNational Theatre, Melbourne, in Melbourne, Australia, which opened in 1920 as the Victory Theatre Victoria Theatre (Dayton, Ohio), which re-opened in 1919 as the Victory TheatreVictory Theatre, a theatre in Toronto which opened as the Standard Theatre in 1921 and operated as the Victory Theatre (later Victory Burlesque) from 1941 until 1975.
+Breland may refer to:PlacesBreland, a village in Marnardal municipality in Vest-Agder county, NorwayBreland Station, a railway station in Marnardal municipality in Vest-Agder county, NorwayPeopleJessica Breland (born 1988), an American basketball player for the Chicago Sky WNBA teamJim Breland (born 1944), a former American football player who was an All-American center for Georgia Tech Marian Breland Bailey (1920–2001), an American psychologist and applied behavior analystMark Breland (born 1963), a former world champion boxer from New YorkPascal Breland, a famous 19th-century pre-confederation Canadian Métis farmer and politicianPatrice Breland (1837–1908), a fur trader and political figure in Manitoba, CanadaOtherBreland, a fictional place in Khorvaire in the Dungeons and Dragons universe
+On December 18, Chowdhury was found dead along with other intellectuals at Rayer Bazar mass grave.
+{ "type": "FeatureCollection", "features": [ { "type": "Feature", "properties": { "marker-symbol": "monument", "title": "Naura", "description": "Identified with modern Kannur" }, "geometry": { "type": "Point", "coordinates": [75.3703662, 11.8744775] } }, { "type": "Feature", "properties": { "marker-symbol": "monument", "title": "Tyndis", "description": "Identified with modern Ponnani" }, "geometry": { "type": "Point", "coordinates": [75.9259013, 10.7677201] } }, { "type": "Feature", "properties": { "marker-symbol": "monument", "title": "Kanyakumari" }, "geometry": { "type": "Point", "coordinates": [77.5384507, 8.0883064] } } ]}Limyrikê is a historical region of present-day India, mentioned in the ancient Greco-Roman texts.
+Category:Goniodorididae
+ResultsThe elections resulted in the pro-government National Unity Party led by Prime Minister Ali Jawdat al-Aiyubi winning a majority of seats.
+playersCategory:Aldershot F.C.
+Located in the centre of the city, it is near the site of the First Battle of St Albans.
+SeedsDrawFinalsTop HalfBottom HalfReferences Main Draw Qualifying DrawAegon Nottingham Challengeandnbsp;- Singles2013 Men's Singles
+Victor Sanchez Union Field (formerly Toledo Union Field) is a football stadium in Punta Gorda, Toledo District, Belize.
+EtymologyRead literally, the characters in Shinbashi mean "new bridge".
+Cosmochelys is an extinct genus of sea turtle from the Eocene of Africa.
+Ankhesenamun is the delicate link between scheming factions.
+Columbia Chronologies of Asian History and Culture.
+ReferencesCategory:1924 birthsCategory:2018 deathsCategory:Members of the Maryland House of DelegatesCategory:Maryland DemocratsCategory:People from Cumberland, Maryland
+ResultsReferencesWest Virginia1932Category:1932 West Virginia elections
+and the US documentary Breaking Their Silence: Women on the Frontline of the Poaching WarReferences Category:Vietnamese activistsCategory:Women conservationistsCategory:Wildlife Conservation Society peopleCategory:1990 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:BBC 100 Women
+She also writes paranormal mysteries under the pseudonym Heather Blake.
+She married Willis Benjamin Gibbs, a Georgia attorney and politician, and together they had two children.
+The moths (mostly nocturnal) and butterflies (mostly diurnal) together make up the taxonomic order Lepidoptera.
+Transportation and Communications in Mexico may refer to: Communications in Mexico Transportation in Mexico
+It may come from the words and (end) and art (land).
+He also wrote on the literary movement known as the New Apocalyptics.
+Research contributionsIn his Ph.D. dissertation, Willems worked on input/output stability.
+See alsoNational Register of Historic Places listings in Essex County, MassachusettsReferencesCategory:Houses in Essex, MassachusettsCategory:Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in Essex County, Massachusetts
+They are able to reconcile and express their love for one another and live happily thereafter with their child.
+Club informationCurrent club : ASW BejaiaReferencesALG/Algeria - Team Composition at the International Volleyball FederationCategory:1994 birthsCategory:Volleyball players from BéjaïaCategory:Living peopleCategory:Algerian women's volleyball playersCategory:Setters
+He has written and produced over 150 hours of prime time television shows and directed the feature films Boat Trip, Van Wilder 2: The Rise of Taj, and Bag Boy.
+It is most likely of Babylonian and Assyrian origin from the word "nukhu" meaning repose or rest, which is possible in view of the Sumerian/Babylonian source of the flood story.
+UAB may stand for:Uždaroji akcinė bendrovė, a type of limited liability company in LithuaniaOrganizationsUniversity of Alabama at Birmingham, a public research university in Birmingham, Alabama, USA UAB Blazers, the athletic program of the above schoolAutonomous University of Barcelona, a public university in Barcelona, Catalonia, SpainUnemployment Assistance Board, a British governmental authority that operated from 1934 to 1940Underwater Archaeology Branch, Naval History & Heritage Command, a United States Navy unit devoted to underwater archaeology
+REDIRECT Active_suspension#Principle
+On 17 February 2011, the ‘Lets Get Lyrical’ festival in Edinburgh, featured a show called ‘Rebel Shenanigans’, which was an event which would “re-create the sounds of the Bo’ness Rebels Ceilidhs of the 1950s, a movement in favour of a Scottish Republic.”In 2016, a show called “From Thurso to Berwick” celebrating the songs and poetry of Morris Blythman (aka Thurso Berwick) who wrote many of the songs in the Ceilidh Songbooks was put on at the Scottish Storytelling centre in .
+The players in italics qualified through more than one method.
+Men's singles main draw entrantsSeeds1 Rankings are as of June 27, 2016Other entrantsThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw: Félix Auger-Aliassime Kevin Kylar Brayden Schnur Benjamin SigouinThe following player entered the singles main draw with a protected ranking: Blaž KavčičThe following players received entry from the qualifying draw: Dayne Kelly James McGee Cameron Norrie Aleksandar VukicWomen's singles main draw entrantsSeeds1 Rankings are as of June 27, 2016Other entrantsThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw: Bianca Andreescu Isabelle Boulais Marie-Alexandre Leduc Carol ZhaoThe following players received entry from the qualifying draw: Jessie Aney Francesca Di Lorenzo Jessica Failla Catherine Leduc Erin Routliffe Kennedy Shaffer Kristina Smith Ronit YurovskyChampionsMen's singles Go Soeda def.
+Patrick Bühlmann (born 16 August 1971) is a retired Swiss football midfielder.
+He was interred in the “Mater Dolorosa” cemetery in Bytom.
+She wrote in her opinion, "It is the technology itself at issue, not the uses to which the copyrighted material may be put...Legal downstream use of the copyrighted material by customers is not a defense to the software manufacturer's violation of the provisions [of copyright law]."
+He was born in Torquay, Devon.
+Losing My Religion is the eleventh studio album from Kirk Franklin.
+References Category:Ghanaian MPs 2017–Category:1959 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:New Patriotic Party politicians
+Conversely, energy could actually be released by breaking apart nuclei heavier than iron.
+Conway and M.J.T.
+It is the one-story, double-pen, masonry wing.
+It was described by Dillon and Dillon in 1945.
+Party breakdownSenateHouse of RepresentativesOfficersSenatePresiding OfficerHouse of RepresentativesPresiding OfficerMembers of the Mississippi State Senate, 2004-2008Members of the Mississippi State House of Representatives, 2004-2008ReferencesState of Mississippi Legislature websiteLegislatureCategory:2007 U.S. legislative sessionsCategory:2008 U.S. legislative sessions
+Myllys played 27 games with the Sharks during the 1991–1992 season.
+The census was conducted by the High Planning Commission.
+The name "Napanee" is possibly of Choctaw language origin; it's purported to mean "something to twist or braid".
+Peter tries to delve deeper but Bree avoids his questions.
+Trinidad Navarro is an American politician who serves as the Delaware Insurance Commissioner.
+Nicolaas Beets (13 September 1814 – 13 March 1903) was a Dutch theologian, writer and poet.
+Playing careerJohnston made his Super League début for the Castleford Tigers against the London Broncos in 2012.
+Mosi Reeves of Spin gave the album a 6 out of 10, saying, "Firewire is chaotically sequenced, like the Bay Area rapper scoured his hard drive for usable material without checking whether the songs actually blended together logically."
+Owners and claimants who have not joined the alliance include Wi-LAN and Qualcomm.
+"Go Tell Aunt Rhody" is an English language folk song of nineteenth-century American origin.
+Oldřich Kubišta (born 22 July 1960) is a Czech fencer.
+In February 91, he was defeated by Geng Kui during the Battle of the Altai Mountains, on an expedition sent by Dou Xian, and thence vanished from history.
+Also added were a ring modulator, OSC 1 sync-able with the white noise generator, Sine waveform added for OSC 1, increased LFO and arpeggiator waveforms and patterns, distortion and 4 individual outputs.
+The act comprises several separate titles with varying subject issues.
+Sammy is an American animated television series that aired on NBC from August 8 until August 15, 2000.
+Frat House won two Sundance Film Festival awards in 1998, but has been attacked for containing sequences that were staged for the cameras.
+In addition to the flagship branch located near the center of Salt Lake City, there are additional locations in Midvale and West Valley City.
+His name is the same as that of the Gaulish thunder-god, Taranis.
+ReferencesCategory:1913 elections in EuropeCategory:1913 in BulgariaCategory:Parliamentary elections in Bulgaria
+Counts of Fürstenberg-Baar (1441 - 1559)Conrad V (1441 - 1484)Henry IX (1484 - 1499)Wolfgang (1499 - 1509)Frederick III (1509 - 1559)Category:Fürstenberg (princely family)Category:Counties of the Holy Roman EmpireCategory:States and territories established in 1441
+Former operators Netherlands, over 2,000 vehicles.
+Sakharam Bapu Bokil was one full wise man while Nana Phadnis was a half wise man.
+References Category:Rural localities in Altai Krai
+However, some new businesses have taken over these storefronts recently, with the addition of the Hillsboro cafe and The Idea Shop.
+They were based on the 3 network and offered mainly pay as you go SIMs, although they also offered a rolling contract of £9.99 a month for one gigabyte of data.
+He had been rumoured to be involved in the Gregor killings, and died on the dray as he was being transported back to Brisbane.
+United Nations Security Council resolution 996, adopted unanimously on 30 May 1995, after considering a report by the Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali regarding the United Nations Disengagement Observer Force (UNDOF), the Council noted its efforts to establish a durable and just peace in the Middle East.
+playersCategory:Scottish Football League playersCategory:Living peopleCategory:Association football midfielders
+at US$7,575 each.
+There have been several American Express Buildings, named for the American Express company, including the following: Three World Financial Center, New York City (current headquarters) 65 Broadway, New York City Amex House, the former European headquarters in the Carlton Hill area of Brighton
+In January 2012, Edberg played a one-set exhibition against Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in Doha, Qatar, and lost 5–7.
+Status quo ante may refer to: Status quo ante, Latin for "the way things were before" and incorporates the term status quo Status quo ante bellum, Latin for "the way things were before the war" Status Quo Ante Synagogue, Trnava, SlovakiaSee also Reset button technique, a technique in fiction writingCategory:Latin words and phrases
+Gorgeous and beautiful outwardly from within ( Inner and Outer Beauty ) S mart : A Miss Indonesia to be smart .
+Mastered at The Mastering Lab (Hollywood, CA).
+Vinu.
+In December of the same year it was announced that drummer Rob Hewins had been replaced by Dave Wagstaffe (ex-John Wetton, Ken Hensley).
+Mark van de Wiel (born 1958, Northampton) is an English clarinettist, principal clarinettist of the Philharmonia Orchestra and the London Sinfonietta, and an academic teacher at the Royal Academy of Music.
+He died while in office in 1969.
+Officially he died of epilepsy, although a fall from his cart, leading him to be trampled under the hooves of his own oxen contributed to his death.
+The album sold four million copies and was nominated for Grammy Album of the Year.
+They lost to Miami (FL) in the first round.
+The Roman Catholic Diocese of Zamość-Lubaczów () is a suffragan Latin diocese in the Ecclesiastical province of Przemyśl in Poland.
+When she was a baby, her mother remarked in a letter that "little sister Maly" bore a strong resemblance to her dead brother Friedrich ("Frittie") at the same age "with such quick eyes and two deep dimples in her cheeks."
+ReferencesCategory:Villages in Olecko County
+Irma () is a village and comune in the province of Brescia, in Lombardy.
+SchoolsLutz is served by Hillsborough & Pasco County Public Schools through the following:Schwarzkopf Elementary SchoolLutz Elementary SchoolManiscalco Elementary SchoolMckitrick Elementary SchoolMiles Elementary SchoolBuchanan Middle SchoolMartinez Middle SchoolWalker Middle SchoolBen Hill K-8Freedom High SchoolGaither High SchoolSteinbrenner High SchoolSickles High SchoolSunlake High SchoolReferencesExternal linksLutz Civic AssociationHistory of LutzCategory:Census-designated places in Hillsborough County, FloridaCategory:Census-designated places in Florida
+Karpiński (feminine: Karpińska) is a Polish noble family name ( of Karpiński family).
+It also owns two citrus processing plants which manufacture juice, oils, pulp and peels.
+ReferencesExternal linksCategory:1979 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Swiss ice hockey defencemenCategory:ZSC Lions playersCategory:EHC Kloten playersCategory:SC Rapperswil-Jona Lakers playersCategory:EHC Basel playersCategory:EHC Olten players
+References Category:RhodobacteraceaeCategory:Bacteria described in 2007
+Selected filmography It Was I!
+One day, his father wrote him a song called "Jesus is the Rock".
+Xiguan Airport may refer to the following airports in China:Xi'an Xiguan Airport, former airport serving Xi'an, ShaanxiHanzhong Xiguan Airport, former airport serving Hanzhong, ShaanxiFuyang Xiguan Airport, airport serving Fuyang, Anhui
+Alfred A. DelliBovi (born February 1, 1946) is an American banker and political figure who has been President of the Federal Home Loan Bank of New York since 1992.
+BiographyMichele Tricca won a medal at the 2013 Mediterranean Games.
+ReferencesCategory:1685 birthsCategory:1740 deathsWilliamCategory:Barons Dudley
+For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 107.3 males.
+The male pair in a set of castanets is lower in pitch than the female.
+His position is midfield.
+In August 1895, Yamaji's title was elevated to viscount (shishaku).
+Creighton received 45.2%, Toth 23.7%, Bunch 21.8%, and Galloway 9.3%.
+"Turkish lessons with Turkish-English explanation[s] for foreigners".
+She participated on further two European Championships (2008, 2010) as well as two World Championships (2007, 2009).
+The March 17 performance was broadcast internationally.
+Osbornoceras in the Paleobiology database Sepkoski's Online Genus Database (CEPHALOPODA) Category:Prehistoric nautiloid genera
+Timeattack may refer to: Timeattack, a misspelling of time attack or time trial Timeattack, an alternative but now largely unused term for tool-assisted speedrun
+This later became known as St. Thomas Aquinas-Mercy after merging with Mercy High School in University City in September 1985.
+Witchi-Tai-To is an album by the Jan Garbarek-Bobo Stenson Quartet released on the ECM label and performed by Garbarek, Stenson, Palle Danielsson, and Jon Christensen.
+Other types of orbit in a 1:1 resonance with the planet include horseshoe orbits and tadpole orbits around the Lagrangian points, but objects in these orbits do not stay near the planet's longitude over many revolutions about the star.
+There is a museum inside the stadium, called Museu de Esportes Edvaldo Santa Rosa, named after an Alagoan footballer nicknamed Dida, who played for Clube de Regatas do Flamengo and the Brazil national football team.
+John Fulljames (born 1976) is an English opera director and Associate Director of Opera at The Royal Opera since 2011.
+Tyresö centre (Tyresö centrum) is the municipal centre of Tyresö Municipality, Sweden, located in the Bollmora district.
+Ashoka Changemaker SchoolAshoka Innovators for Public, as a part of its global initiative "Changemaker Schools program" has selected R. N. Podar School (CBSE) as a changemaker school.
+As war is a leading cause of illness and death, there are those in the field of public health who argue "war epidemiology" should be a more prominent component of the field of public health.
+Clubs VTV Bình Điền Long An (2000 – 2018) Ayutthaya A.T.C.C (2013 – 2014) Bangkok Glass VC (2014 – 2017)AwardsIndividual 2004 VTV International Cup "Best Middle Blocker" 2005 VTV International Cup "Best Middle Blocker" 2007 VTV International Cup "Best Blocker" 2007 VTV International Cup "Best Spiker" 2007 Asian Club Championship "Best Blocker" 2007 Asian Club Championship "Best Scorer" 2009 VTV International Cup "Most Valuable Player" 2012 VTV International Cup "Best Blocker" 2012 VTV International Cup "Best Spiker" 2013 VTV International Cup "Most Valuable Player" 2013–14 Thailand League "Best Middle Blocker" 2014 VTV International Cup "Most Valuable Player" 2015 VTV International Cup "Best Middle Blocker" 2015 Asian Club Championship "Best Middle Blocker" 2017 Vietnam League "Best Middle Blocker" 2017 Vietnam League "Most Valuable Player" 2017 VTV International Cup "Best Middle Blocker" 2018 Vietnam League "Best Middle Blocker"Clubs 2009 Vietnam League - Champion, with VTV Bình Điền Long An 2011 Vietnam League - Champion, with VTV Bình Điền Long An 2013 Thai-Denmark Super League - Bronze medal, with Ayutthaya A.T.C.C 2013–14 Thailand League - Bronze medal, with Ayutthaya A.T.C.C 2014 Thai-Denmark Super League - Champion, with Ayutthaya A.T.C.C 2014–15 Thailand League - Champion, with Bangkok Glass 2015 Asian Club Championship - Champion, with Bangkok Glass 2015 Vietnam League - Bronze medal, with VTV Bình Điền Long An 2015–16 Thailand League - Champion, with Bangkok Glass 2016 Asian Club Championship - Bronze medal, with Bangkok Glass 2016 Vietnam League - Bronze medal, with VTV Bình Điền Long An 2016–17 Thailand League - Runner-Up, with Bangkok Glass 2017 Vietnam League - Champion, with VTV Bình Điền Long An 2018 Vietnam League - Champion, with VTV Bình Điền Long AnReferencesCategory:1987 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Vietnamese women's volleyball playersCategory:Volleyball players at the 2006 Asian GamesCategory:Vietnamese expatriates in ThailandCategory:People from Long An ProvinceCategory:Vietnam women's international volleyball playersCategory:Southeast Asian Games silver medalists for VietnamCategory:Southeast Asian Games medalists in volleyballCategory:Competitors at the 2009 Southeast Asian GamesCategory:Asian Games competitors for Vietnam
+Like the earlier game, the plotline was authored by acclaimed Australian science fiction writer Terry Dowling.
+The gadget reviews and other snippets from the show are available for viewing on Tech2.
+Cimolus obscurus is a species of leaf-footed bug in the family Coreidae.
+Puru is a village in Jõhvi Parish, Ida-Viru County in northeastern Estonia.
+It is oriented with its main facade to the south, away from the road, and is separated from the road by a fence.
+ReferencesCategory:1890 birthsCategory:1963 deathsCategory:Welsh Labour Party MPsCategory:UK MPs 1929–1931Category:UK MPs 1931–1935Category:UK MPs 1935–1945Category:High Commissioners of the United Kingdom to AustraliaCategory:Members of the Privy Council of the United KingdomCategory:Miners' Federation of Great Britain-sponsored MPsCategory:National Union of Mineworkers-sponsored MPsCategory:Knights Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George
+BCA course was introduced in 2008.
+Category:XiphocolapteswoodcreeperwoodcreeperwoodcreeperCategory:Birds described in 1824Category:Taxonomy articles created by Polbot
+WBGW may refer to: WBGW (AM), a radio station (1330 AM) licensed to serve Evansville, Indiana, United States WBGW-FM, a radio station (101.5 FM) licensed to serve Fort Branch, Indiana WBFB, a radio station (97.1 FM) licensed to serve Bangor, Maine, United States, which held the call sign WBGW from 1973 to 1986 Lawas Airport (ICAO code WBGW)
+Before joining Rodeph Shalom, Rabbi Fuchs served as senior rabbi of the Isaac M. Wise Temple in Cincinnati, Ohio.
+LSN also maintained the ITV Sport archive and was the production partner (with Central) on ITV's football coverage, as well as other sports.
+See alsoCommunes of the Lot-et-Garonne departmentReferences INSEE commune fileSaintvincentdelamontjoie
+There were 999 households out of which 31.2% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 40.2% were married couples living together, 16.4% had a female householder with no husband present, and 39.0% were non-families.
+However, after a while, the two become best friends.
+Glenea pulchella is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae.
+The dock itself still exists and is accessible to ships, although its western entrance has been filled in and it is now used chiefly for watersports.
+AchievementsNiger Premier League: 1 (2008)Niger Cup: 1 (2008)Performance in CAF competitionsCAF Champions League: 1 appearance2009: Preliminary RoundReferencesCategory:Law enforcement in NigerCategory:Football clubs in NigerCategory:Niger Premier League clubsCategory:Sport in NiameyCategory:Association football clubs established in 1993Category:1993 establishments in NigerCategory:Police association football clubs
+McKennie made his first start in September 2017 and signed a five-year contract shortly after.
+ReferencesExternal linksCategory:Fish described in 1837Category:Cyprinid fish of EuropeCategory:Endemic fauna of ItalyCategory:Leuciscinae
+Enhagen-Ekbacken is a locality situated in Västerås Municipality, Västmanland County, Sweden with 1,012 inhabitants in 2010.
+"Haiku", Kalisz: Kropka, 1997.
+Thief ants do not appear to be attracted to sweets, unlike most other ants.
+Montrouge may refer to: Montrouge, a commune in the southern Parisian suburbs Montrouge (born Louis Émile Hesnard), a French actor and theatre manager
+The Gall-Gaidhel (the Norse Gaels or "foreign Gaels"), who gave their name to the area, appear to have settled in the ninth and tenth centuries.
+Niyaz or Niaz Hasan Khan was an Indian National Congress leader and former MLA of Kunda (Vidhan Sabha constituency) of Pratapgarh, Uttar Pradesh.
+He traveled to the Soviet Union and graduated from the M. V. Frunze Military Academy in 1969, and then graduated from JNA War College in 1973.
+The Truman Doctrine became the foundation of American foreign policy, and led, in 1949, to the formation of NATO, a military alliance that is still in effect.
+Starting the 5/4 favourite in a seven-runner field he took the lead from the start and maintained his advantage until the last 150 metres when he was overtaken and beaten one and a half lengths by Vison Celebre.
+While the film is a dramatic narrative, it is based on true events and depicts life inside the internment camps, where baseball was one of the major diversions from the reality of the internees' lives.
+Re-enactors who re-create the next period of history - 7th to 11th centuries - often refer to this as Early medieval.
+External links ProfileCategory:1895 birthsCategory:1961 deathsCategory:Russian footballersCategory:Russia international footballersCategory:Association football midfielders
+He was elected in Meghalaya Legislative Assembly election in 1993 from Nongpoh constituency as candidate of Hill State People's Democratic Party where he defeated Chief Minister of Meghalaya D. D. Lapang.
+He is buried in Elmwood Cemetery.
+Kunigal Nagabhushan was an Indian film actor in the Kannada film industry.
+ReferencesCategory:1933 birthsCategory:1990 deathsCategory:20th-century astronomersCategory:American astronomersCategory:American people of Romanian descentCategory:Case Western Reserve University alumniCategory:20th-century American scientists
+Winning nations advance to Main Draw, losing nations play in Consolation Qualifying round.
+See also Timeline of the Assyrian Empire Early Period of Assyria List of Assyrian kings Assyrian continuity Assyrian peopleReferencesCategory:21st-century BC Assyrian kingsCategory:Assyrian kingsCategory:21st-century BC rulers
+Among those who were born in the London Borough of Barnet, or have dwelt within the border of the modern borough are (alphabetical order, within category):Notable residentsAcademia and researchArts and entertainmentCrime Owen Suffolk – Australian transported convict and bushranger (born in Finchley in c.1830)Design Harry Beck – designer of the original Tube mapTravel and explorationJudiciary Sir William Shee, the first Roman Catholic judge to sit in England and Wales since the ReformationLiteratureJournalism and the mediaPolitics and governmentSport and gamesReferencesBarnetCategory:People from the London Borough of Barnet
+Wrony () is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Giżycko, within Giżycko County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland.
+Matema Island or Matema is of one of the Reef Islands, of the independent nation of the Solomon Islands; it is located in Temotu Province.
+EcologyThe diet of this species is not known.
+Doljani (Cyrillic: Дољани) is a village in the municipality of Konjic, Bosnia and Herzegovina.
+Overt takes on social issues are seldom found in Sud's art, and her figures are often self-absorbed and brooding.
+See alsoNational Register of Historic Places listings in Little Rock, ArkansasReferencesCategory:Industrial buildings and structures on the National Register of Historic Places in ArkansasCategory:Buildings and structures completed in 1947Category:Buildings and structures in Little Rock, ArkansasCategory:National Register of Historic Places in Little Rock, Arkansas
+Prior to MileIQ, Dietrich worked at Marc Benioff's Salesforce.com and was the CEO at SlideRocket before facilitating its sale to VMWare and its eventual divestment to ClearSlide.
+, 2005: World Catalogue of Insects volume 5 Tortricidae.
+External linksBoston College Eagles bioCategory:1922 birthsCategory:1998 deathsCategory:Sportspeople from Newburyport, MassachusettsCategory:Players of American football from MassachusettsCategory:American football centersCategory:American football linebackersCategory:Boston College Eagles football playersCategory:United States Navy personnelCategory:American military personnel of World War IICategory:Los Angeles Rams players
+From 1933 to January 1948 he had Exequatur as Consul General in Rosario, Santa Fe (Argentina).
+Final classificationSourceReferencesWomen's Time TrialCategory:UCI Road World Championships – Women's time trialRoad World Championships - Women's Time TrialCategory:2006 in women's road cycling
+Mavai-ye Sofla () may refer to:Mavai-ye Sofla, KermanMavai-ye Sofla, Kermanshah
+Willie Humphrey was born in a musical family, the son of prominent local clarinetist and music teacher Willie Eli Humphrey; his brothers Earl Humphrey and Percy Humphrey also became well known professional musicians.
+According to research by Ineke van der Valk, an author and researcher at the University of Amsterdam, a third of mosques in the Netherlands have experienced at least one incident of vandalism, threatening letters, attempted arson, or other aggressive actions in the past 10 years.
+Altana is a German chemical company.
+There is 1 street.
+A Mississippi legislative act named the proposed bridge after Dean in 1999.
+The reserve is drained by tributaries of the Pacaás Novos River.
+HistoryIn historical records the village was first mentioned in 1363.
+In June 1942 the 18th Brigade, having been rushed over to North Africa from Mosul, and was attached to the 10th Indian Infantry Division, had only two days to prepare defensive positions, was overrun by Erwin Rommel's tanks at Deir el Shein in front of the Ruweisat Ridge.
+Events English poet John Milton loses the last of his eyesight during the year; his first wife Mary (née Powell, 1625) dies on May 5.
+He played sixteen first-class matches for Otago between 1989 and 1992.
+After the album release, Seize toured, with shows including the Wave-Gotik-Treffen festival in Leipzig.
+Jim McLeod's Jazz Tracks is a compilation album of jazz music recorded for Jim McLeod's long running ABC-FM radio show Jazztrack.
+See alsoCommunes of the Loire-Atlantique departmentCategory:Communes of Loire-Atlantique
+He was an uncle of parliamentarian Nils Lavik and journalist Herbrand Lavik.
+Career statisticsLast update: 2 December 2018Reserves performanceLast Updated: 2 December 2018ReferencesExternal linksCategory:1999 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Association football people from Fukuoka PrefectureCategory:People from KitakyushuCategory:Japanese footballersCategory:J1 League playersCategory:J3 League playersCategory:Gamba Osaka playersCategory:Gamba Osaka U-23 playersCategory:Association football midfielders
+His teams won conference championships in every season of his tenure except for 1992 and 1997.
+Mature leaves are rounded in cross-section, though with grooved channel on the inner side, dark green and usually range between 0.5 and 1.5 m in length and 2.45 and 8.0 cm in width.
+Other features: Consonant changes like h-dropping or th-stopping are common.
+The passenger-to-crew ratio is also high, at 1.31 to 1.
+Vietnam WarIn September 1960, Colonel Potts returned to the U.S. to attend the National War College, Fort McNair, Washington, D.C. After graduating in June 1961 he was a moderator for the National Defense Strategy Seminar in July and then assigned to the Office, Assistant Chief of Staff for Intelligence, Department of the Army.
+In his will he bequethed his lands and property to his wife and children, and left ten dollars to the poor of the Augusta parish.
+Katherine or Catherine Casey may refer to:Kathryn Casey, American writerCatherine Casey, the pseudonym of Fanny Jackson Coppin
+She had a brief career in the league because of assorted injuries.
+Members of Legislative AssemblyResults2019 Maharashtra Legislative Assembly electionSee also Yeola List of constituencies of Maharashtra Vidhan SabhaReferencesCategory:Assembly constituencies of Nashik district
+500 BCPhrygia is the name of Spartacus’ wife in Aram Kachaturian’s 1954 ballet Spartacus.
+The Alexander Dennis Enviro350H was a hybrid-electric powered single-decker bus manufactured by Alexander Dennis between 2010 and 2013.
+Zaynab accompanied him, as did most of his household.
+Nosratabad (, also Romanized as Noşratābād) is a village in Pachehlak-e Gharbi Rural District, in the Central District of Azna County, Lorestan Province, Iran.
+ReferencesThe Bulbophyllum-ChecklistThe Internet Orchid Species Photo Encyclopediarecurvilabre
+21.
+But it remained an organization for obtaining the political supremacy of the Cape Dutch.
+Manufacturing of the ODW have been discontinued in favour for EFIKA.
+See also World Values Survey Values scalesReferencesExternal links Cultural Dynamics Take the values questionnaireCategory:1973 introductionsCategory:Demographics of the United KingdomCategory:Market researchCategory:Market segmentationCategory:PsychometricsCategory:Social class in the United KingdomCategory:Social researchCategory:Statistical classificationCategory:Survey methodology
+He was the youngest brother of Khushwant Singh.
+SeedsDrawFinalsTop HalfSection 1Section 2Bottom HalfSection 3Section 4External links Main drawMen's doublesCategory:US Open (tennis) by year – Men's Doubles
+Euphrasia may refer to:Euphrasia, a genus of flowering plantsSaint Euphrasia of ConstantinopleSaint Euphrasia Eluvathingal
+On April 25, 1941,the Grand Mufti Haj Amin al-Husseini of Jerusalem was made chief architect of the Nazi German offensive in Bosnia.With the invasion of Yugoslavia in April 1941 by the Nazis and their Allies, Bosnia and Herzegovina came under the control of the Independent State of Croatia, a Nazi puppet-state.
+From then on, younger sons would mostly embark on military careers, for example, in the imperial army, or in friendly nations.
+Manuwa or Manuva may refer to the following peopleJimi Manuwa (born 1980), English mixed martial artistRoots Manuva (born 1972), English rapper and producerSamuel Manuwa (1903–1976), Nigerian surgeonCategory:Surnames of African origin
+Also in 1974, the former Brown-Dunkin, Blass, Pfeifer and Mayer & Schmidt stores were fully renamed Dillard's.
+Besides the plays he wrote in collaboration for the Parisian scenes, he also authored two novels in the style of the 1830s, where elegant young leading a "fashionable" life are experiencing a "Wertherian fever".
+Cary voters elected Weinbrecht to an at-large town council seat in 1999.
+Hindustan Photo Films Ltd, which employed over 714 employees as of 31 March 2012, was declared bankrupt by the Board for Industrial and Financial Reconstruction in 1996.
+Example: "I read newspapers at home."
+References Category:1909 birthsCategory:1995 deathsCategory:Soviet women scientistsCategory:Soviet botanists
+He published several collections of poetry, a.o.
+In January–February 1929, V-4 underwent a series of trials off Provincetown, Massachusetts.
+Aliabad-e Sadat (, also Romanized as ‘Alīābād-e Sādāt; also known as ‘Alīābād) is a village in Koshkuiyeh Rural District, Koshkuiyeh District, Rafsanjan County, Kerman Province, Iran.
+It was composed of Joseph Fogerty Sr. and his son Robert Fogerty.
+Wedbush also acquired First Capitol Ag, a full service brokerage specializing in agricultural hedging.
+To determine the best route across a network, routers, on which a distance-vector protocol is implemented, exchange information with one another, usually routing tables plus hop counts for destination networks and possibly other traffic information.
+A carimañola is a South American meat-pie in a torpedo-shaped yuca fritter, stuffed with cheese, seasoned ground meat or shredded chicken and fried.
+He was replaced by John Lawton, as bassist Trevor Bolder also joined during the same period, following Wetton's departure.
+Andrew Ahyim Aplin (born March 21, 1991) is an American professional baseball outfielder who is a free agent.
+He is credited with translating a number of medical texts from Arabic, including works by Ibn Sina Avicenna, Abu-l-Salt, and Galen.
+Harry had two daughters, Leanne and Elisha and one son, RichardHe worked at the Southern Cross Health Club (SCHC), Canberra Australia, as a Physical Culture Consultant and Personal Trainer helping to train others who share his passion for body building.
+Notes Category:Canons of WindsorCategory:Archdeacons of London
+ReferencesIvan Mance: Kosinj izvorište hrvatske tiskane riječi, Split, 2013.
+This is intended to be a complete list of the districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Skagway, Alaska, United States.
+In their 15th and final season under head coach Walter Halas (brother of George Halas, the Dragons compiled a 4–2–1 record.
+From August 28, 2011 to March 18, 2012, the following skiing events took place at various locations around the world.
+NK Nehaj is a Croatian football club based in the town of Senj.
+He was a member of the New York State Water Supply Commission from 1905 to 1911.
+The 4.0-liter engine produced and and was mated with a new six-speed automatic transmission (the base engine continued with the four-speed unit) which allowed a respectable 0-60 mph time of 7.4 seconds.
+Over 185 stained glass windows provide beauty and illumination.
+They may also be used to treat acute coronary syndromes, without percutaneous coronary intervention, depending on TIMI risk.
+As of 2016, he serves as a senior research scholar at the "Kazi Nazrul Islam and Abbasuddin Research and Study Centre" of Independent University, Bangladesh.
+BackgroundTommy Taylor was born in Fitzwilliam, West Riding of Yorkshire, England, he was married with three sons, and he was a miner for all of his working life.
+Further reading • Jane G. Ferrigno, Alison J. Cook, Amy M. Mathie, Richard S. Williams, Jr., Charles Swithinbank, Kevin M. Foley, Adrian J.
+Career statisticsRegular season and playoffsInternationalReferencesExternal linksCategory:1973 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Kokkolan Hermes playersCategory:Jokipojat playersCategory:Latvian ice hockey coachesCategory:Latvian ice hockey forwardsCategory:Latvian sports coachesCategory:Latvian sportspeopleCategory:HK Liepājas Metalurgs playersCategory:Nyköpings Hockey playersCategory:Odense Bulldogs playersCategory:Dinamo Riga coachesCategory:HK Riga 2000 playersCategory:Sportspeople from RigaCategory:Vojens IK players
+style="width: 230px; text-align: left;" |Role|- style="text-align: left;"|Rupert Julian||Ebenezer Scrooge|-|John Cook||Bob Cratchit|-|Claire McDowell||Mrs.
+There is also a road named after her in Wandsworth, South London: Tessa Sanderson Place.
+More than half of the school is involved in Choir and Band, both offered as classes.
+His products: classical portraits of T. V. Granatova (1789), Praskovya Ivanovna Zhemchugova in a red shawl (1802-1803) - both in the Museum of ceramics in Kuskovo.
+3 #26–27, "Tick Tock" (with Will Conrad, July–August 2005)JSA Classified #8–9, "The Spear and the Dragon" (with Don Kramer, February 2006) collected in JSA Classified: Honor Among Thieves (tpb, 125 pages, 2007, )Black Adam: The Dark Age (six–issue limited series, with Doug Mahnke, August 2007 – January 2008, collected in Black Adam: The Dark Age, tpb, 144 pages, 2008, )Infinite Halloween Special, one-shot, "The 13 Stories of Halloween" (with among other artists, October 2007)Green Lantern Corps vol.
+Demographics India census, Meenad had a population of 29497 with 14087 males and 15410 females.
+ReferencesExternal linksCategory:Roman Catholic churches in PangasinanCategory:Spanish Colonial architecture in the PhilippinesCategory:Neoclassical architecture in the PhilippinesCategory:Buildings and structures in Dagupan
+CareerHe is a Georgetown University emeritus professor of government.
+Notable people with the surname include:Martti Ketelä (1944–2002), Finnish modern pentathleteToni Ketelä (born 1988), Finnish cross country skierCategory:Finnish-language surnames
+USS Murphy may refer to: , was a Benson-class destroyer launched in 1942 and sold for scrap in 1971.
+This same size factor also makes them very popular for sport fishing.
+Teatro Rossini may refer to:Teatro Rossini, a theatre in Bahía Blanca, Buenos Aires, ArgentinaTeatro Rossini (Lugo), an 18th-century opera house in Lugo, ItalyTeatro Rossini (Pesaro), a 19th-century opera house in Pesaro, ItalyTeatro Rossini, originally called the Teatro San Benedetto, a theatre in Venice, Italy, currently undergoing restoration
+{{DISPLAYTITLE:C4H8O3}}The molecular formula C4H8O3 may refer to:Hydroxybutyric acids: 2-Hydroxybutyric acid (alpha-hydroxybutyric acid) beta-Hydroxybutyric acid (3-hydroxybutyric acid) gamma-Hydroxybutyric acid (4-hydroxybutyric acid, GHB) 3-Hydroxyisobutyric acid Methyl lactate
+Early in her career she considered herself primarily a swing trader.
+The brothers' main mode of transport was "The Chuckmobile", a quadracycle with a red-and-white striped roof.
+'Soerries' is a hybrid cultivar of the genus Cryptanthus in the Bromeliad family.
+It is located in the heart of the university's campus in Knoxville, Tennessee.
+Ryan plays series regular Dan alongside Kimberly Wyatt, Emily Atack, Colin Hoult and Michelle Gayle.
+The next feature film from Disney Russia was The Last Warrior released in 2017.
+CastRamarajanSeethaNizhalgal RaviGoundamaniVinu ChakravarthySenthilMadhuriChinni JayanthPeeli SivamThideer Kannaiah Master Haja SheriffSeethalakshmiJokker ThulasiGirishAzhaguK. K. SamiSenchi KrishnanThirai Needhi SelvamN. PallavanSoundtrackThe music was composed by Deva.
+Jennifer Vineyard from MTV noticed that "Jump" sounded like a sequel to Madonna's 1990 single "Keep It Together".
+CareerMorina has been capped for the Albania national team, appearing for the team during the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup qualifying cycle.
+Atlantic Fleet, 1946–1972Over the next 26 years, she carried out a variety of missions for the United States Atlantic Fleet.
+The 1947 Washington and Lee Generals football team was an American football team that represented Washington and Lee University as a member of the Southern Conference during the 1947 college football season.
+It is not known to feed on oak; however, one entomologist (Brues, 1924) is quoted as saying: Larvae can be infected by a virus that changes their behaviour, causing them to climb out of the protection of low scrub and leave them open to predation, facilitating the spread of the infection.
+FilmsSee alsoPersian cinemaList of Iranian filmsReferencesExternal linksCategory:Abbas KiarostamiKiarostami, AbbasFilms directed by Abbas Kiarostami
+The Times.
+Issues in the election included plans for a new supermarket and traffic congestion.
+As a politician, he is remembered as a member of Giovine Italia and a patriot during the period of Italian unification.
+Her racquets are provided by Babolat.
+It is from the Usti section.
+More than 90 percent of the company’s supply chain is US-based.
+A year later, Max Brod included it in Beim Bau der Chinesischen Mauer, the first posthumous collection of short stories by Franz Kafka.
+Andrew York may refer to: Andrew York, (born 1930), one of many pseudonyms of British writer Christopher Robin Nicole Andrew York (guitarist) (born 1958), American classical guitarist and composer Andy York (1894–1977), English footballerSee also Andy Yorke, musician Prince Andrew, Duke of York
+Greene served in China in the 1930s, in the South Pacific in World War II, and was commandant during the military buildup in Southeast Asia and when the first United States troops entered South Vietnam.
+Johannes placed 12th out of 65 candidates with a campaign budget of just $18, and was noted as winning early debates against Ford and other major candidates including former Toronto budget chief David Soknacki.
+The 1993 World Junior Figure Skating Championships were held December 1–6, 1992 in Seoul, South Korea.
+This is the only Buckingham County in the United States.
+The Academy is a Hong Kong TVB modern drama focusing on two young men (played by Ron Ng and Sammul Chan) from entering and training at the police academy to joining the police force and solving crime.
+Electric Dreams Software was a video game publisher established in 1985 by former managing director of Quicksilva Rod Cousens and former Software Manager of Quicksilva Paul Cooper.
+A. R. Wylie
+This locale was already established in the early 40s out of parts of the Tayuman Congregation, under which an extension was established to serve the brethen in northeastern Manila.
+Steven Brown later replaced Phillips.
+The show originally aired on Sunday evenings, but it was quickly moved to Friday nights, taking the same time-slot as Pivot's previous literary talk show Apostrophes (1975–1990) which it had replaced.
+In 1921 a 440 yards cinder track for foot racing was constructed and races were held modelled on the Powderhall Sprint.
+Many of the illnesses and deaths were initially attributed to asthma.
+Much of the original Newbank housing, including the fine old Belvedere Hospital nearby off London Road, has been demolished.
+See also List of modern universities in Europe (1801–1945)ReferencesExternal links Category:Universities in ArmeniaCategory:Educational institutions established in 1930Category:1930 establishments in Armenia
+The median income for a household in the city was $17,105, and the median income for a family was $19,792.
+Sowunmi is a surname.
+See also Lower Dir DistrictExternal linksKhyber-Pakhtunkhwa Government website section on Lower DirUnited NationsCategory:Lower Dir DistrictCategory:Union Councils of Lower Dir DistrictCategory:Union councils of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
+Today, several Fortune 500 companies are using SEMANTICA to combat fraud, comply with anti-money laundering regulations, conduct corporate due diligence investigations, and to identify and analyze security threats.
+Cuban wanted to listen to the basketball games of his alma mater, Indiana University.
+ExamplesAn example of tambour in popular music occurs at the beginning of the second verse of Your Time Is Gonna Come by Led Zeppelin.
+A cliff painting (the "Supernova Pictograph") nearby may record the sighting of a supernova on July 5, 1054 AD.
+DesignExisting stock of French-built weapons was modernized before World War II in the Greek State Military Material Facility (EYP) of Athens.
+This is thought by some to present a problem, for the Supreme Leader needs to be elected by the Assembly of Experts from among senior Shia Islamic scholars, but it has been noted that the previous incumbent, Ruhollah Khomeini, exerted a strong influence in favor of the choice of Khameini's father.
+Nations that won their play-off ties entered the 2009 World Group II, while losing nations joined their respective zonal groups.
+9 July – Théophile Tilmant, violinist (died 1878)Deaths 19 February – Jean-Charles de Borda, mathematician (born 1733) 5 April – Honoré Fragonard, anatomist (born 1732) 28 April – François Giroust, composer (born 1737) 9 May – Claude Balbastre, composer (born 1724) 18 May – Pierre Beaumarchais, playwright, watchmaker, satirist and revolutionary (born 1732) 31 May – Pierre Charles Le Monnier, astronomer (born 1715) 7 September – Louis-Guillaume Le Monnier, scientist (born 1717) 17 October – Louis Claude Cadet de Gassicourt, chemist (born 1731) 9 December – Guillaume Voiriot, portrait painter (born 1712) 18 December – Jean-Étienne Montucla, mathematician (born 1725) 31 December – Louis-Jean-Marie Daubenton, naturalist (born 1716) 31 December – Jean-François Marmontel, historian (born 1723)See alsoReferencesLinks Category:Years of the 18th century in France
+He started the season in Nassaji's line up and scored 4 times until mid-season.
+It is only known from the province of Tucuman, in northern Argentina at an elevation of 800 meters.
+The Boston crowds gave the show an enthusiastic reception.
+Frances Langford worked with White during the time, and he convinced her to go to Hollywood.
+The castle is listed in the National Cultural Heritage list of the Monuments Board of the Slovak Republic.
+Here comes Nisha's brother Kishore (Karan), who is still haunted by her death, and he promises to seek revenge from the person who was the cause of his sister's death.
+In the BUCS competitions they have numerous teams - and currently fields a first, second, third & Women's team in this competition.
+European club competitionsWith FC Spartak Moscow.
+CBC2 may be: CBC Radio 2, FM radio network in Canada CBC-2, a proposed (but never aired) second English-language Canadian TV service that was to be operated by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Ford Bay Airport, CBC2 ICAO airport code, in the Northwest Territories, Canada
+However, it had been marked on a private survey in 1851 as Mount Ohlssen-Bagge, after a business partner of the surveyor's.
+Mag.
+Green Technologies The versatile and variable nature of cosolvents has allowed them to be used in many applications regarding green technology.
+External links Trains of Turkey on E43000 TÜLOMSAŞ page on E43000Category:Electric locomotives of TurkeyCategory:Tülomsaş locomotivesCategory:Bo-Bo-Bo locomotivesCategory:25 kV AC locomotivesCategory:Railway locomotives introduced in 1987Category:Standard gauge locomotives of Turkey
+Early lifePradhan was born in Hesal village in tribal heartland Khunti, roughly 60 kilometres from Ranchi, Jharkhand, on 8 December 1993, to Soma Pradhan, a Bihar police constable, and his wife, Jitan Devi, a homemaker.
+1996Werner Israel1993Allan Sandage1987Joseph Hooton Taylor, Jr.1984Andrei Sakharov - for his fundamental contribution to the problem of the matter - antimatter asymmetry in the Universe and his new ideas on gravity at a fundamental level (induced gravity).
+The "Passa calle" was featured in the ending scene of Sherlock Holmes and the Case of the Silk Stocking.
+He was president in 1880 of the anthropological department of the British Association, in 1887–1889 of the Geologists' Association, and in 1898–1899 of the Royal Anthropological Institute.
+ReferencesCategory:Parishes of Barcelos, Portugal
+Notable people with the surname include:, Japanese swordsman, Japanese stunt man, Japanese drummer and vocalist, Japanese wrestler, Japanese actress, voice actress and singer, Japanese welterweight shoot boxerFictional characters:, a character from The Prince of Tennis Tomi Shishido, a character from Marvel Comics WolverineSee alsoShishido DomainShishido StationCategory:Japanese-language surnamesja:宍戸氏
+Seneca Niagara Casino & Hotel is a casino in Niagara Falls, New York.
+Growing up, Carvacho preferred playing soccer to basketball, which he began playing at the age of nine.
+Four group or Group of Four may refer to:Klein four-groupFour note groupG4 nationsLucky Four GroupClause Four Group
+Category:Streets in Warsaw
+It is closely paired with The Royal Scots Dragoon Guards, (SCOTSDG) based in Leuchars, Fife.
+The racial makeup of the CDP was 44.29% White, 53.30% African American, 0.14% Native American, 1.47% from other races, and 0.81% from two or more races.
+Darko Kostić ( ; Belgrade, 1980) is a famous Serbian fashion designer.
+He attended Carroll University and Marquette University Law School.
+The abolition of Slavery in the United States led to the breakdown of the Atlantic slave trade, which was already suffering from the abolition of slavery in most of Europe in the late 1820s and 1830s.
+The pilot project was launched on April 7, 2017 in the villages of Vaghadi and Charoti in the Palghar District of Maharashtra which has a combined population of over 2000.
+The company's first factory in Liniers employed over one hundred people and was located in the workshops of the Sarmiento Railway.
+Morphologically, archaic female and Neanderthal females are more similar to modern females than their male counterparts are to modern males.
+In February 2007 he was quoted about the Taliban's capture of Musa Qala.
+The same year in French by Herbert Léonard "Quelque chose en moi tient mon cœur".
+ReferencesCategory:Populated places in the City of Tshwane
+Melendez was suspended one year, effective from the date of his last bout.
+Personal life Hunt grew up in a football family and was the brother of Ralph Hunt and the nephew of Douglas Hunt.
+See alsoBorracho beansCowboy beans, a similar US dish.
+Subsequently, the Governor of Donetsk Oblast Oleksandr Kikhtenko adopted a resolution moving the administrative center of the Novoazovsk Raion to the urban-type settlement of Vynohradne; the administrative center of the Telmanove Raion to the urban-type settlement of Myrne; and the administrative center of the Yasynuvata Raion to the urban-type settlement of Ocheretyne.
+In the following parliament William Tresham was elected speaker; however, on 26 February 1444 Burley was again voted to the chair, and continued to preside over the house until the dissolution of that parliament.
+Raleigh was transferred back to the Royal Navy in July 1944 to continue training seamen.
+In particular his multiple-volume Historien om Sverige (1992–2002) has become very popular, but has also drawn criticism for allegedly lacking historical accuracy.
+Notable people with the surname include:, Japanese music conductorCategory:Japanese-language surnames
+It is found in China, Japan, Korea and Russia.
+ReferencesExternal links Profile at DFB.de Profile at kicker.deCategory:2002 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Sportspeople from BielefeldCategory:Footballers from North Rhine-WestphaliaCategory:German footballersCategory:Germany youth international footballersCategory:Association football midfieldersCategory:Arminia Bielefeld playersCategory:2.
+He served as Cornell University's vice president in charge of research from 1948 to 1960 and served as acting president of Cornell University in 1951.
+Broadband InfoVision 2011 Award at Broadband World Forum 2011, September 28, 2011; ASSIA won the award for Broadband Access Network Technologies and Services – Fixed, with its flagship product, ASSIA DSL Expresse.
+Administrative tribunal may also refer to:Administrative Tribunal of the International Labour OrganizationAdministrative Appeals TribunalUnited Nations Administrative TribunalVictorian Civil and Administrative TribunalSee also Administrative courtTribunals in the United Kingdomfr:Tribunal administratif
+In 1883 occurred a characteristic Grand Marshal's election night on May 26.
+According to the United States Census Bureau, Pine Level has a total area of , all of it land.
+For the 2019-2020 Concert Season Guest Violinist Midori, will perform a special recital with pianist Özgür Aydin.
+Hrabyně () is a village in the Moravian-Silesian Region of the Czech Republic, approx.
+Albert Ramos-Viñolas, 7–6(2), 6–2Doubles Treat Conrad Huey / Harsh Mankad def.
+SpeciesDicnecidia cataclasta Diakonoff, 1982Dicnecidia fumidana Kuznetzov, 1997See alsoList of Tortricidae generaReferencesExternal linkstortricidae.comCategory:Tortricidae generaCategory:OlethreutinaeCategory:Taxa named by Alexey Diakonoff
+Early life and education Stephan Klapproth's mother is journalist, his father a German language teacher.
+The judiciary operates independent of the executive and the legislature but remains involved in the political process.
+External linksA map of Sassanid Persia showing Kitharizon, situated south of Theodosiopolis, north of Amida, east of Arsamosata and west of Manazkert: MapReferencesCategory:Catholic titular sees in Asia
+"La muerte de Ollantay".
+Vikramjit may refer to: Vikramaditya, legendary king of ancient India Vikramjit (Tomara dynasty), 16th century Indian ruler who died in the First Battle of Panipat Vikramjit Sahney, Indian entrepreneur, educationist and social worker Vikramjit Singh, Indian film director Vikramjit Singh Rooprai, Indian activist and educationist
+He was interred in Grandview Cemetery, Chillicothe, Ross County, Ohio, USA.
+Waylla (Aymara Stipa obtusa, a kind of feather grass, hispanicized spelling Guailla, Huailla) is a mountain in the Andes located on the border of Bolivia and Chile in the Cordillera Occidental.
+Live at Billy Bob's Texas is a 2004 album by country singer Willie Nelson.
+He also won a silver medal with the United States at the 2007 IIHF World U18 Championships.
+If a link is modded down with six more down votes than up votes, the submitter will be docked 1.5 karma and the QL will disappear from the site (but still be available in the archive).
+The eleventh round of talks were held from January 9–11, 2017 where Trade in Goods, Trade in Services, and Investment were discussed.
+Cohen syndrome is mostly characterized by obesity, mental retardation and craniofacial dysmorphism due to genetic mutation at locus 8q22–23.
+WBOW may refer to: WBOW (FM), a radio station (102.7 FM) licensed to serve Terre Haute, Indiana, United States, which held the WBOW-FM callsign from 2003 to 2012 and has held the WBOW callsign since 2017 WBOW (1230 AM), a defunct radio station (1230 AM) formerly licensed to serve Terre Haute, Indiana, which held the call sign WBOW from 1927 to 1993 WBOW (640 AM), a defunct radio station (640 AM) formerly licensed to serve Terre Haute, Indiana, which operated from 1993 to 2001 WZZQ (FM), a defunct radio station (107.5 FM) formerly licensed to serve Terre Haute, Indiana, which held the call sign WBOW-FM 1968 to 1971, and again from 1971 to 1974 WIBQ, a radio station (1300 AM) licensed to serve Terre Haute, Indiana, which held the call sign WBOW from 2002 to 2014 WWVR (FM), a radio station (98.5 FM) licensed to serve Paris, Illinois, which held the call sign WBOW from 2014 to 2017 WIBU, a radio station (1440 AM) licensed to serve Paris, Illinois, United States, which held the call sign WBOW in 2017
+Abay (, Abaı) or Imeni Abaya is a village in the Aktobe Region of western Kazakhstan.
+The tank was armed with a 90mm gun and carried 68 rounds of ammunition.
+He was division commander from September 1942 until December 1942.
+Episode statusAs with most DuMont Network programs, no episodes of Trash or Treasure are known to survive today.
+His text, which relied on the assumption that Döring had been killed by Greek agents and formed part of a Legionnaire press campaign, read:... the protectors and defenders of this Greek-origin assassin are: Eugen Cristescu, chief of the [Romanian] secret service and a former confidant of Armand Călinescu [the former Prime Minister and Iron Guard adversary, assassinated by the Legionnaries in 1939] and Alexandru Rioșanu, the man of the Jews and of the Greeks .... We demand the replacement of all Jew-turned [jidovite] persons inside the government.
+Rheden is a village and a former municipality in the district of Hildesheim in Lower Saxony, Germany.
+2.
+External linksReferencesCategory:Bridges in OdishaCategory:Bridges completed in 2018Category:Mahanadi RiverCategory:Cuttack districtCategory:2018 establishments in India
+In Euskal Herria, this passion for the birds has led to a new hobby called birding, which is popular in some other countries of Europe.
+Overlook Park may refer to:Overlook Park (Chino Hills, California)Overlook Park (Montgomery, Alabama)Overlook Park (Oviedo, Florida)Overlook Park (Portland, Oregon)Overlook Park station, Portland, Oregon
+2 Station - All Weather Boats (Beach/Surf)Inshore lifeboatsReferencesExternal linksAberdeen Lifeboat StationCategory:Lifeboat stations in ScotlandCategory:Aberdeen
+Subhash K. Jha is a veteran Indian film critic, journalist based in Patna, Bihar.
+"On My Way" is a song by Swedish dance music duo Axwell Λ Ingrosso.
+ReferencesCategory:Populated places in Oruro Department
+ReferencesCategory:HydridaeCategory:Animals described in 1766
+The eastern end of the Rosedale Valley Bridge is situated at the west end of Castle Frank station.
+Aggregate resultsReferencesCategory:1992 Scottish local elections
+Realizing the need for additional care for pregnant women, The Salvation Army opened rescue homes across the globe.
+Ferrere is a comune (municipality) in the Province of Asti in the Italian region Piedmont, located about southeast of Turin and about west of Asti.
+Political careerOn 11 December 1994 he was an independent candidate in the local elections for the mayoral position of Nyíradony, and was elected ahead of five candidates.
+regional representative for former United States Senator Carl Levin.
+Luckily she meets Joe, played by Roger Danuarta and little by little her attitude improves.
+Featuring model Ashley Graham as Jonas' love interest, the video has received praise for presenting a body-positive image.
+The Nkoya (also Shinkoya) people are a Bantu people native to Zambia, living mostly in the Western and Southern provinces and the Mankoya area.
+), rugby league footballer of the 1930s for Wales and Rochdale Hornets J. J. Williams (born 1948), Welsh rugby union winger J. P. R. Williams (born 1949), Welsh rugby union fullback Johnny Williams (rugby player, born 1982), British rugby union playerOther Johnny Williams (boxer) (1926–2007), British boxer John Williams (snooker referee) (born 1937), Welsh snooker referee John Williams (motorcyclist) (1946–1978), British Grand Prix motorbike racer John Williams (cricketer, born 1878) (1878–1915), English cricketer John Williams (cricketer, born 1911) (1911–1964), English cricketer John Williams (cricketer, born 1980), former English cricketerUnited States Johnnie Williams (baseball) (1889–1963), Major League Baseball pitcher Johnny Williams (American football) (1927–2005), American football player John M. Williams (born c. 1935), American football coach John Williams (mixed martial artist) (born 1940), Canadian martial artist known as Gray Wolf John Williams (offensive lineman) (1945–2012), American football player John Williams (archer) (born 1953), American archer John Williams (running back) (born 1960), American football player John "Hot Rod" Williams (1962–2015), American basketball player John L. Williams (American football) (born 1964), American football player John Williams (equestrian) (born 1965), American equestrian John Williams (basketball, born 1966), American basketball player John Henry Williams (baseball) (1968–2004), son of baseball player Ted Williams Ian Rotten (John Benson Williams, born 1970), American wrestlerWriters John Williams (satirist) (1761–1818), English poet, satirist, and journalist John Francon Williams (1854–1911), Welsh journalist, writer, geographer, historian, cartographer and inventor John Richard Williams (poet) (1867–1924), Welsh poet, also known as J. R. Tryfanwy John James Williams (poet) (1869–1954), Welsh poet John Edward Williams (1922–1994), American author, editor and professor, known for novels Augustus and Stoner John Ellis Williams (1924–2008), Welsh novelist John A. Williams (1925–2015), American novelist John Hartley Williams (1942–2014), English poetJohn Williams (born 1961), Welsh novelist John Sibley Williams (born 1978), American poet and fiction writerOthers John Williams (barrister) (1757–1810), Welsh barrister and legal writer John Williams, engineer of the Montgomery Canal John Constantine Williams Sr. (died 1892), cofounder of St. Petersburg, Florida John W. Williams (Virginia) (1869–1934), American lawyer, clerk of the Virginia House of Delegates John Eddie Williams, American attorneyShips List of ships named John WilliamsStructures John Williams House (disambiguation)See also John William (disambiguation) John Williamson (disambiguation) Jonathan Williams (disambiguation) Jack Williams (disambiguation)
+Isopogon buxifolius is a small shrub that is endemic to the south coast of Western Australia in the vicinity of Albany.
+It was described by Putzeys in 1846.
+David Dalrymple may refer to:Sir David Dalrymple, 1st Baronet (1665–1721)David Dalrymple, Lord Westhall (1719-1784) Scottish law lordDavid Dalrymple, Lord Hailes (1726–1792), baronet and Lord AdvocateDavid Dalrymple (computer scientist) (born 1991), graduate student in computer scienceDavid Dalrymple (Canadian Mechanical Engineer) (born 1996), Graduate of Dalhousie UniversityDavid Dalrymple (Australian politician) (1840–1912), Member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly
+The follow-up, "Looking With My Eyes", was prominently featured on the dance show "Hullabaloo", but did not make the chart either.
+During the Ming treasure voyages of the 15th century, the Chinese fleet led by Admiral Zheng He made use of this geographical feature in their navigation to Sri Lanka, as the mountain is the first visible landmark of Sri Lanka after departing from Sumatra.
+ReferencesExternal linksList of upcoming train arrival and departure times from MTAIndividual Station Report, July 2003, by Urbitran for Connecticut Department of TransportationNew Canaan Station - The Subway NutNew Canaan Train Station (New Canaan Railroad) Station House from Google Maps Street View Station from Park Avenue from Google Maps Street View http://www.ct.gov/dot/lib/dot/documents/dpt/1_Station_Inspection_Summary_Report.pdfCategory:Metro-North Railroad stations in ConnecticutCategory:Stations along New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad linesCategory:Railroad stations in Fairfield County, ConnecticutCategory:Buildings and structures in New Canaan, ConnecticutCategory:Railway stations in the United States opened in 1868
+Senior careerDespite coming through the youth ranks at North Harbour, Pleasants-Tate made his senior ITM Cup debut with the Steamers during the 2011 season.
+PlotThe novel tells the story of a math professor who struggles against urges to commit suicide.
+At the 2006 census, its population was 161, in 31 families.
+Other activitiesCorporate boards Stadtwerke Bielefeld, Member of the Supervisory Board Stadtwerke Gütersloh, Member of the Supervisory BoardNon-profit organizations Education and Science Workers' Union (GEW), Member IG Metall, MemberReferencesExternal links Personal homepageCategory:1984 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Social Democratic Party of Germany politiciansCategory:Members of the Bundestag 2017–2021Category:Members of the Bundestag for North Rhine-Westphalia
+CourseThe Okanagan River rises in southern British Columbia, issuing out of the southern end of Okanagan Lake, which is on the north side of the city of Penticton.
+ReferencesExternal linksJames Jones at ESPNcricinfoCategory:1870 birthsCategory:1960 deathsCategory:Sportspeople from LiverpoolCategory:English cricketersCategory:Cheshire cricketersCategory:Lancashire cricketers
+Years later he regained some of his father's seized estates and that were illegally sold by the Turks.
+Established in 2002, the college offers bachelor's degree in the field of Homeopathic Medicine (BHMS) and is recognised by M.P.
+On the back his victory in the one-day classic and 3 other stage wins, he was included in the Spanish squad to ride at the World Championships in Geelong.
+Club careerBorn in Palma, Majorca, Cifré graduated from local RCD Mallorca's youth system, and made his senior debuts while on loan at CD Llosetense in the 2012–13 campaign, in Tercera División.
+The broad-tipped hermit (Anopetia gounellei) is a species of hummingbird found in northeast Brazil that has been placed in a monotypic genus Anopetia.
+References Category:Rural localities in Perm Krai
+The limited pre-order edition of the album also came with a CD-R containing the demo version of "The Bungled & the Botched" and the original version of "Absorbed in You".
+Such value is weighted by the extent of sustainability as established by BCI Asia’s comprehensive project research and confirmed green building ratings awarded through WGBC-accredited certifications.
+Sever, a 2002 movieOther Ballistics (novel), a novel by D. W. Wilson
+It was recorded in Muscle Shoals, Alabama and produced by Jimmy Johnson.
+SpeciesSpecies within the genus Coelotrochus include: † Coelotrochus avarus (Suter, 1917) † Coelotrochus bibaphus (Bartrum & Powell, 1928) † Coelotrochus browni (C. A. Fleming, 1943) Coelotrochus carinatus (B.
+Mabel joins in the fight then reveals to Charlie that it is just a dummy.
+Rémilly () is a commune in the Moselle department in Grand Est in north-eastern France.
+The cultivar 'Indigo' with violet blue flowers has gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.
+Volume one.
+References Category:IctidosuchidsCategory:Therocephalia generaCategory:Lopingian synapsids of EuropeCategory:Fossils of RussiaCategory:Fossil taxa described in 2000
+In the novelChandramukhi is a courtesan who lives in Calcutta also known as Kolkata.
+ReferencesCategory:Unincorporated communities in Clearfield County, PennsylvaniaCategory:Unincorporated communities in Pennsylvania
+It was Artillery's last album before they disbanded in 1991 and the release of their next album, B.A.C.K., in 1999.
+During his tenue with the team, he won 5 Bulgarian championships and 3 Bulgarian Cups.
+Dysschema brunnea is a moth of the family Erebidae.
+He is signed to Epic Records.
+Anggun, who composes mainly in English, enlisted the help from several well-known French songwriters, such as Jean Fauque, Lionel Florence, Tété and Evelyn Kral to adapt her English songs into French.
+YunagayaIzumiDewa ProvinceKubota – Based in modern-day Akita City; held by the Satake clan.
+The 2013–14 Columbus Blue Jackets season was the 14th season for the National Hockey League franchise that was established on June 25, 1997.
+They went on to collaborate with Miryo (Brown Eyed Girls) on her first solo album in the song "Revenger".
+USA-MMA is a mixed martial arts (MMA) organization based in the United States that was created in 2007 by Gil Guillory, a twenty-year veteran of Mixed Martial Arts.
+Synthetic tests must be scripted in advance, so it is not feasible to measure performance for every permutation of a navigational path an end-user might take.
+"Quite simply, I investigated whether chronically anxious individuals would classically condition more rapidly that less anxious individuals,” she explained.
+DiscographyStudio albums Foundation (Atlantic, 1989) UK #22 State of Mind (Atlantic, 1990) No House Big Enough (EastWest Records America, 1992) That Was Then, This is Now (Columbia, 1994)Compilation albums The Best of Ten City (Ibadan, 2001)Singles "Devotion" (1987) "Right Back to You" (1988) UK #80 "Funny Love" (1989) "That's the Way Love Is" (1989) UK #8 "Devotion" (1989) (re-release) UK #29 "Where Do We Go?"
+She attended the school of performing arts at United States International University in San Diego and later studied at its satellite campus at Ashdown Park, England.
+ReferencesExternal links The Earwig Research Centre's Parisolabis database Source for references: type Parisolabis in the "genus" field and click "search".
+He explains that Rockseia killed his royal parents and took the throne for himself.
+He enrolled at the University of Hartford and played for their soccer team from 2011 to 2014.
+Natasha visits her but argues with Faye, telling her that Mark would still be alive if she hadn't come to the village.
+It is under the jurisdiction of Sealdah railway division in Eastern Railway zone of Indian Railways.
+During the exhibition, on June 23, a paper was presented by Guillaume Apollinaire, entitled Le sublime modern.
+On 28 June 2012, Cesena sold Del Pivo and followed by Ferri on 29 June.
+ReferencesCategory:1951 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:South Korean men's volleyball playersCategory:Olympic volleyball players of South KoreaCategory:Volleyball players at the 1976 Summer OlympicsCategory:Asian Games medalists in volleyballCategory:Volleyball players at the 1970 Asian GamesCategory:Volleyball players at the 1974 Asian GamesCategory:Medalists at the 1970 Asian GamesCategory:Medalists at the 1974 Asian GamesCategory:Asian Games silver medalists for South Korea
+Medal summaryMedal tableEventsReferencesCategory:2011 Summer Universiade events 2011
+Parliamentary elections were held in Estonia between 5 and 7 May 1923.
+See also Review of Signs of Life Interview with Dennis Tyhacz & Luke McCartney Binge Records website List of record labelsCategory:American record labelsCategory:Record labels established in 2004Category:Indie rock record labels
+The tube serves as the “Gateway to the North”, as the entrance foyer is at the southern end and guests head north when coming in.
+Albert Sammons, meanwhile, was building a solo career and had less time for essential rehearsals.
+Never averaging above 5 points in a season, his last year in British speedway was 1979.
+Carlton E. Davidson (June 26, 1905 – July 20, 1984) was a member of the Ohio House of Representatives.
+Diego Bermúdez may refer to:Diego Bermúdez (singer) (1850–1923), Spanish flamenco singerDiego Bermúdez (footballer) (born 1982), Spanish footballer
+He continued as Collector for 15 years until New Bedford became a city, then served the city as Treasurer and Collector of taxes for two or three years.
+As of 2014 she served as Deputy of the LIX Legislature of the Mexican Congress representing Oaxaca as replacement of Elpidio Concha.
+ReferencesExternal links Category:1987 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Syrian footballersCategory:Association football forwardsCategory:Al-Jaish Damascus playersCategory:Sportspeople from Aleppo
+"When It Rain" is a song by American hip hop recording artist Danny Brown, released as the lead single from his fourth studio album Atrocity Exhibition.
+Led by head coach Bobby Johnson in his first year as the head coach, the Commodores finished with a 2–10 record for the season.
+BPOs and IT firms, as well as retailing, are the fastest rising industries.
+Midnight Manhunt is a 1945 film noir crime film mystery directed by William C. Thomas and written by David Lang.
+Victor Samuel Johnson Sr. (February 6, 1882 – August 29, 1943) was an American businessman who founded Aladdin Industries, best known as manufacturers of kerosene mantle lamps.
+Between 1980 and 1990, Kravitz’s term as editor, Polygon, the former University of Edinburgh student imprint, came to lead the field in publishing new Scottish fiction, while his overlapping editorship of the Edinburgh Review, between 1984 and 1990, supplied a direct "feed" of fresh talent.
+Leila won the 100-meter backstroke at the US National Championships in 2006, earning a spot at the Pan Pacific Championships in Victoria, British Columbia.
+It is found on and within churches as well as monasteries built in early medieval Kingdom of Croatia between the 9th and beginning of the 12th century.
+This is a list of Malaysian states and federal territories by Human Development Index as of 2018.
+Specific influences vary: Blur and Oasis drew from the Kinks, early Pink Floyd and the Beatles, respectively, while Elastica had a fondness for arty punk rock, notably Wire.
+In 1963, Johnston and Lemon purchased the franchise from Elwood Richard Quesada.
+We would meet and have long talks in which everyone offered his point of view, and I would approve the cast and the distribution (Jack Hayes, Abby Dalton, and some of my actors would be there), but once the decision was made, I would say, “Go for it,” and I would pull back.
+“Sasala Vila “ is the first novel of this kind which revolves around the character of a so-called ‘Spiritual Healer' who claims to have healing powers.
+Ladas of Aegium was an ancient Greek athlete listed by Eusebius of Caesarea as a victor in the stadion race of the 125th Olympiad (280 BC).
+Gouleta is a genus of beetles in the family Carabidae, containing the following species: Gouleta cayennensis (Dejean, 1831) Gouleta gentryi Erwin, 1994 Gouleta notiophiloides (Erwin, 1973) Gouleta spangleri (Erwin, 1973)ReferencesCategory:Trechinae
+In 1914 there were more than 20 villages surrounding the town of Hivniv.
+The community was named for Thomas J. Nary, a businessperson in the lumber industry.
+It runs from Houston Street to 14th Street, where it continues into a loop road in Stuyvesant Town, connecting to Avenue B.
+ReferencesCategory:Classical Japan
+(2014) On a Gloomy Night (2015) Memoirs of Amorous Gentlemen (2015) SSSS.Gridman (2018)Movie works Musa (2001) Casshern (2004) The Restless (2006) Attack on Titan (2015) Shin Godzilla (2016)Wotakoi (2020)TV works Love Quotient (2002) Tomehane!
+The succession of the senior line after this time is unknown.
+It is also known as Timbiriche "Somos Amigos".
+International careerHe made his debut for Bermuda in a May 1999 Caribbean Cup match against Bahamas and earned a total of 6 caps, scoring 2 goals.
+In Premier League in the season 2019–20, with the club got the 4th place, through the play-offs for the Championship round table, scoring 14 goals.
+Robin Wagner (born 8 February 1993) is a Czech professional racing cyclist.
+Performance Anxiety, or stage fright, is an anxiety or phobia aroused in a person when required to perform in front of an audience.
+The parades were attended by Anglicans and Methodists, and eventually by the Salvation Army as well.
+The amygdala senses fear and it orchestrates physical actions and emotions.
+ReferencesCategory:Corticosteroid estersCategory:GlucocorticoidsCategory:Phosphate esters
+It won Bell a Grammy Award for Best Americana Album.
+1961 - begins.
+At the 2006 census, its population was 25, in 7 families.
+And you’re a lot younger!
+The 14 edition of Rencontres de Calenzana 2012 brought Bucharest Symphony Orchestra as guest invitee.
+Mead.
+Rajang (; also known as Rajīng) is a village in Nimbeluk Rural District, Nimbeluk District, Qaen County, South Khorasan Province, Iran.
+Galaxy reviewer Floyd C. Gale praised the novel as a "powerful and sensitive opus."
+The album was Cable's third for the label and released in commemoration of the fiftieth anniversary of Gershwin's death.
+ReferencesCategory:Moths described in 1874Category:Calpinae
+The former GNR services were diverted via the Northern City Line to Moorgate in 1976, and in 1988 the cross-London route reopened for Thameslink.
+Music directors/conductors 1947-1967 Boris Sirpo1967-1970 John Trudeau1970-1992 Paul Bellam1992 Sylvan Fremaux guest conductor1992 Charles Schneider guest conductor1993 Anthony Armore guest conductor1993-1996 Charles Schneider1996-2002 Anthony Armore2002–present Yaacov BergmanExternal links Portland Chamber Orchestra (official website)Category:Musical groups from Portland, OregonCategory:American orchestrasCategory:Musical groups established in 1947Category:1947 establishments in OregonCategory:Orchestras based in Oregon
+Track listingPersonnelMusicianJohn Frusciante – all instruments, engineering, mixing, mastering, producingArtworkAura T-09 – cover art, designReferences Category:2015 albumsCategory:John Frusciante albums
+The 1932 Stanford varsity team was soundly defeated by the USC Trojans (USC).
+On November 8, 1897, there were heavy rains in the parish, which nearly flooded the Gouyave River.
+District 34 of the Oregon House of Representatives is one of 60 House legislative districts in the state of Oregon.
+In popular culture Fresh Off the Boat: A Memoir, book by Eddie Huang Fresh Off the Boat, a 2015 TV series FOB (play) by David Henry HwangSee also Culture shock Ellis Island Vietnamese boat people Seasoning (colonialism) Stereotypes of South Asians Stereotypes of Lebanese people Stereotypes of Arabs and Muslims in the United States Stereotypes of AmericansReferencesCategory:SlangCategory:Asian-American issuesCategory:Asian-American cultureCategory:Ethnic and religious slurs
+Paractaea is a genus of crabs in the family Xanthidae, containing the following species:Paractaea excentrica Guinot, 1969Paractaea garretti (Rathbun, 1906)Paractaea indica Deb, 1985Paractaea margaritaria (A. Milne-Edwards, 1868)Paractaea monodi Guinot, 1969Paractaea nodosa (Stimpson, 1860)Paractaea philippinensis (Ward, 1942)Paractaea rebieri Guinot, 1969Paractaea retusa (Nobili, 1905)Paractaea rufopunctata (H. Milne-Edwards, 1834)Paractaea secundarathbunae Guinot, 1969Paractaea sulcata (Stimpson, 1860)Paractaea tumulosa (Odhner, 1925)Paractaea typica Deb, 1989ReferencesCategory:Xanthoidea
+The 2008–09 OB I bajnokság season was the 72nd season of the OB I bajnokság, the top level of ice hockey in Hungary.
+This goes in his favour as she then chooses him.
+From 1975 to 1998 the village was in Słupsk Voivodeship.
+Killingsworth is a surname.
+The Jamieson-Fausset-Brown Bible Commentary reads:The Ammonite god is said to do what they do, namely, occupy the Israelite land of Gad.
+Pell was a right-handed batsman who bowled leg break googly.
+It premiered on the network's Telebabad line up and worldwide via GMA Pinoy TV on April 22, 2019, replacing TODA One I Love.
+Population: The district extends due north from Kitai-gorod to Kamer-Kollezhsky Val.
+The Linnet and the Eagle is a Native American myth.
+The population at the 2011 census was 1,753.Notable people Koca Sinan Pasha- Ottoman Grand VizierReferencesCategory:Former municipalities in Kukës CountyCategory:Administrative units of KukësCategory:Villages in Kukës County
+Jérémy Lecroq (born 7 April 1995) is a French cyclist, who currently rides for UCI ProTeam .
+Assemblage Entertainment is an Indian animation studio based out of Mumbai, founded in December 2013, by industry veteran AK Madhavan (fondly known as Madmax).
+The town has a population of 1,066.
+A right arm fast medium bowler, he took 16 wickets at 34.06 each, with a best of 4 for 61 and, as a right-handed lower order batsman, scored 141 runs at 14.1, with a best of 32 and one catch.
+The company’s product portfolio includes beer, bottled water, natural fruit drinks, juices and other beverages.
+Maryland Line is an unincorporated town in Baltimore County Maryland, United States, located just south of the Mason–Dixon line below York County, Pennsylvania.
+At the 2006 census, its population was 581, in 122 families.
+They played their home games in the Savannah Civic Center.
+MedalistsResultsHeatsThe 10 best riders advanced to the final.
+BiographySchültge received classical guitar lessons in his youth, but developed a growing interest in noise music.
+The list is complete through 1960.
+NangkitaAn area of , of which is swamp, nestled between two hills, about 5 km east of Mount Compass.
+Karppinen was born in Iisalmi, Finland.
+He is sadistic when it comes to Satou.
+San Polo may refer to several places in Italy:San Polo, a quarter of Venice, VenetoSan Polo, a quarter of Brescia, LombardySan Polo, a hamlet municipal seat of Torrile, in the Province of Parma, Emilia-RomagnaSan Polo dei Cavalieri, a municipality in the Province of Rome, LazioSan Polo d'Enza, a municipality in the Province of Reggio Emilia, Emilia-RomagnaSan Polo di Piave, a municipality in the Province of Treviso, VenetoSan Polo Matese, a municipality in the Province of Campobasso, Molise
+See also Mask Masquerade ball (a European dance) Maskarada (carnival of Soule) Traditional African masks :Category:Masquerade ceremonies in AfricaReferencesExternal linksMaske: World's Haunting Masquerades – slideshow by Life magazineBaba Alawoye.com Baba'Awo Awoyinfa Ifaloju, showcasing Ifa using web media 2.0 (blogs, podcasting, video & photocasting)Category:African dances Category:Traditional African religions
+He is a member of Rajya sabha from Tamil Nadu for two terms.
+After his loan expired, he moved to another reserve team, Real Zaragoza B also in the third tier.
+Paullus, consul 255 BC Lucius Aemilius Paullus (consul 219 BC), killed at Battle of Cannae Lucius Aemilius Paullus Macedonicus, consul and victor in Battle of Pydna Lucius Aemilius Lepidus Paullus, consul 50 BC Lucius Aemilius Lepidus Paullus (consul 34 BC), suffect consul 34 BC Paullus Fabius Maximus, consul 11 BC Lucius Aemilius Paullus (consul 1), consul 1 AD Paullus Fabius Persicus, consul 34 AD Lucius Sergius Paulus, consul 168See also Scipio-Paullus-Gracchus family treeCategory:Ancient Roman familiesCategory:Ancient Roman prosopographical lists
+It is fed by Stag Brook at the extreme eastern end of the lake and by numerous waterfalls cascading from the plateau above.
+They finished 24th for their performance of "They Can't Stop The Spring".
+At the 2015 local government reform it became part of the municipality Korçë.
+Singh was sworn in for his second term on 12 December 2008.
+It was described by Galileo and Martins in 2004.
+LegendsAccording to legend, the castle was built in a night by a cock and a hen.
+Cloud Pub/Sub - Scalable event ingestion service based on message queues.
+NameThe Slovene name of the settlement is derived from the identical standard German name, Inlauf.
+It was described in 1891 by George Charles Champion.
+A rose was added to the team's cap logo to signify Portland's nickname, the "Rose City."
+History The journal was originally established by Adalbert Kuhn in 1852, and consequently known colloquially as Kuhns Zeitschrift (Journal de Kuhn, "Kuhn's Journal").
+He worked as a teacher in many rural schools and soon started to publish in both Dutch and the newly emerging Afrikaans language.
+.
+Phemonoides ochreosticticus is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae, and the only species in the genus Phemonoides.
+Character properties Every character in Unicode is defined by a large and growing set of properties.
+Next to the Sulejman Pasha mosque was the Sulejman Pasha Tomb.
+This may be explained by the fact that sperm banks only accept donors who have good semen quality, and because of the rigorous screening procedures which they adopt, including a typical age limitation on sperm donors, often limiting sperm donors to the ages of 21–39 (see paternal age effect), and genetic and health screening of donors.
+One son, David, died during the Yom Kippur War, whilst the other Eliezer, also became a member of the Knesset for Agudat Yisrael.
+When completed in 1939, it was hailed in the contemporary press as "the most modern building in the Midwest".
+ReferencesCategory:1967 birthsCategory:2013 deathsCategory:People from SinaloaCategory:Members of the Chamber of Deputies (Mexico)Category:Institutional Revolutionary Party politiciansCategory:21st-century Mexican politicians
+The Second Vice President during that interval was Luis Liberman.
+Corduroy is a woven fabric.
+R. Madhie is an Indian film cinematographer.
+NotesExternal links Category:1884 birthsCategory:1958 deathsCategory:Australian rules footballers from Victoria (Australia)Category:Geelong Football Club playersCategory:Australian military personnel of World War II
+In the final, Ernests Gulbis defeated Mardy Fish in a close match, 5–7, 6–4, 6–4, becoming the first unseeded player to win this tournament since Radek Štěpánek in 2007.
+It lies approximately south-east of Wiązów, east of Strzelin, and south of the regional capital Wrocław.
+ScheduleReferencesLsu TigersCategory:LSU Tigers football seasonsLSU Tigers football
+Professional careerHaving graduated, he earned a place on the Sunshine Tour at the first attempt, finishing third at the 2009 qualifying school while still an amateur.
+It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1985 Cannes Film Festival.
+Vladislav Đukić (; also transliterated Djukić; born 7 September 1962) is a retired Serbian football striker.
+James J. McGillivray (June 16, 1848 – 1925) was a member of the Wisconsin State Assembly and the Wisconsin State Senate.
+In Dubai, he met Dawood Ibrahim and began helping him buy real estate in Mumbai.
+Bortoft died on 29 December 2012 at his home in Matlaske, Norfolk.
+The site of California in England was originally excavated by John Walter for he building of Bearwood House.
+The film is produced by Arulnidhi's father and M. Karunanidhi's youngest son, M. K. Thamizharasu, and features Jayaprakash, Ganja Karuppu, Kishore, Anupama Kumar among others in supporting roles.
+Grammatobothus is a genus of small lefteye flounders native to the Indo-Pacific.
+The area became a National Forest on March 4, 1907.
+References Category:Bundaberg RegionCategory:Localities in Queensland
+He was a professor at the University of Liège en became known for his publication of several dictionaries containing the dialect of Liège.
+Hercus signed a contract at the start of 2008 to play for Japanese club IBM Big Blue.
+Life She became member of the bundestag after the 2009 German federal election.
+Scientific Institutions, Observatories, and National Scientific SocietiesScientific institutions and Observatories List of astronomical observatories (not only outreach) IAU Office for Astronomy Outreach European Southern Observatory (ESO) ESO Science Outreach Network (ESON) European Space Agency (ESA) CERN outreach Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias (IAC, Spain) Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía (IAA-CSIC, Spain) Spanish National Observatory Centre of AstroBiology (CAB-CSIC, Spain) University of La Rioja (Spain) Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies (Ireland) Queen Mary Astronomical Observatory (UK) University of Oxford Dept of Physics (UK) Nottingham Trend University Observatory (UK) University of Glasgow A&A group (UK) Observatoire de Paris Observatoire de Bordeaux Institut de Radioastronomie Millimétrique (IRAM) GLObal Robotic-telescopes Intelligent Array (GLORIA Project) EU-HOU network of demonstration radio telescopes Italian National Institute for Astrophysics (INAF) Educational resources of INAF (work in progress) Osservatorio Astronomico di Cagliari (Italy) Onsala Space Observatory (Sweden)National Astronomical Societies List of astronomical societies AstroWeb Sociedad Española de Astronomía (SEA) Royal Astronomical Society (UK) Swedish Astronomical Society (Sweden)Science Museums and Planetaria International Planetarium Society Haus der Astronomie Heidelberg CosmoCaixa Barcelona (Spain) The Observatory (Greenwich) Science Centre (UK) The Jodrell Bank Discovery Centre (UK) NUI Galway Centre for Astronomy (UK) University of Cambridge Centre for Astronomy (UK) Herschel Museum of Astronomy (UK) National Museums Scotland (UK) Deutsches Museum (Germany) Cité de l’Espace ToulouseProjects Hands on Universe (EU-HoU) EU Universe Awareness (UNAWE) Europlanet EuroVO AIDA project Creative Space (UK)Amateur astronomy groups List of Amateur astronomy groups in Europe AstroWeb (2007) List of Amateur astronomy groups in SpainMagazines, publications, and resources on the webPublications The ESO Messenger Revista AstronomíA (Spain) Astronomy Now (UK) Astronomie Magazine (France) Populär Astronomi (Sweden)Blogs, social networks, and resources on the web Space and Astronomy websites UNAWE Space Scoop Henrietta Leawitt (videos, Spanish) SpaceWeather Blogs in Spanish Radioastronomy from Home Beginners Guide to AstronomyCampaigns Globe at nightCommercial companies, astronomical lodging, star parties Astronomy events calendar Turismo estelar (Spain) European AstroFest 2015 (UK) EducaCiencia.es (Spain)Other resources IAU network of contact points for outreach IAU directory IAU “Why is Astronomy important?” Astronomy resources in Europe Map of astronomical resources in project Radionet FP7References Category:Astronomy in EuropeCategory:Science in society
+For the special elections in Zamboanga City and Bohol, the election period and gun ban went into effect from October 26 to December 10, 2013, filing of COCs was November 7–13, 2013, and the campaign period was one week, November 15–23, 2013.
+Notable AlumniReferences Category:Educational institutions with year of establishment missingCategory:High schools in Hernando County, FloridaCategory:Public high schools in Florida
+He represents the Seine-Saint-Denis department, and is a member of the Union for a Popular Movement.
+Littledown is a suburb of Bournemouth, in Dorset, England.
+At the 2006 census, its population was 63, in 16 families.
+Following her graduation from law school, she was a law clerk to Judge Barbara Brandriff Crabb of the United States District Court for the Western District of Wisconsin.
+He finds one, but because of his demanding behaviour, he is soon alone again.
+Sporting achievementsNational team 2019 Men's European Volleyball ChampionshipReferencesExternal linksFIVB 2016 StatsPlayer DetailsFIVB 2015 ProfileWorld Of Volley profileACH Volley Again Better Category:1996 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Slovenian men's volleyball playersCategory:Sportspeople from Slovenj Gradec
+Megacephala johnnydeppi is a species of ground beetle in the subfamily of Carabinae.
+Ports of call included Marseilles, Port Said, Djibouti, Colombo, Penang, Singapore, Saigon, Hong Kong, Shanghai, and Kobe.
+ReferencesExternal linksLepiforum.deLépidoptères de France méridionale et de Corse Category:Moths described in 1822Category:CuculliinaeCategory:Moths of EuropeCategory:Taxa named by Jacob Hübner
+Murders were not limited to these camps.
+While he is staying there, two unexpected things happen: firstly, Anglo-Bulgarian novelist and essayist Gustav Slavorigin, the star of the festival, is murdered; and secondly, to his great surprise, Adair discovers Evadne Mount, the inspiration for his protagonist and the sharer of royalties from the two novels, sitting among the audience.
+He played for 1.
+Lepidogma rufescens is a species of snout moth in the genus Lepidogma.
+Partial filmographyUnder Two Flags (1936) - (uncredited)Wyoming (1940) - Cavalryman (uncredited)Barbary Coast Gent (1944) - Townsman (uncredited)West of the Pecos (1945) - Vigilante (uncredited)Code of the West (1947) - Cowboy (uncredited)Ambush (1950) - Trooper (uncredited)Annie Get Your Gun (1950) - Cowboy (uncredited)Westward the Women (1951) - Outrider (uncredited)Archie Butler and the Dream Machine (1952) - Archie Butler (uncredited)Arena (1953) - Cowboy (uncredited)Ride, Vaquero!
+Returning home Samar gets to know that his family is massacred by his father's rival including his 8 year old nephew due to someone from Samar's own man backstabbing him.
+ParishesBiedesL'EscampleruSantuyanuSotuTresmonteValdunuPoliticsNotable peopleRamón González (1888–1952), socialist trade union leaderReferencesExternal linksFederación Asturiana de Concejos Quesería Artesanal Llazana Category:Municipalities in Asturias*
+He graduated from Oakland Technical High School in 1934 at the age of 16.
+Anpara Thermal Power Station 3830 MW Obra Thermal Power Station 1288 MW Panki Thermal Power Station 210 MW Parichha Thermal Power Station 1140 MW Harduaganj Thermal Power Station 665 MWThough installed capacity is 5933 MW but UPRVUNL is not able to utilize its full capacity ever due poor maintenance, lack of funds, aging plants & frequent units tripping.
+ReferencesExternal links Category:Russian footballersCategory:FC Dynamo Moscow reserves playersCategory:Russian expatriate footballersCategory:Expatriate footballers in UkraineCategory:Russian expatriate sportspeople in UkraineCategory:FC Rostov playersCategory:FC Torpedo Moscow playersCategory:1986 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Russian Premier League playersCategory:FC Chornomorets Odesa playersCategory:Ukrainian Premier League playersCategory:FC Vityaz Podolsk playersCategory:Association football defendersCategory:FC Spartak Moscow playersCategory:FC Moscow players
+Liverpool 3–3 Petrolul Ploiești on aggregate.
+: mede seer nut ende bequaem voor alle beminders der pennen.
+ReceptionEssentially considered a Ronald Isley solo album and co-conceived by his manager and then-girlfriend Angela Winbush, the album also included a guest rap by Kool Moe Dee on the song "Come Together" and spawned three top 30 R&B chart hits.
+The two most common methods are the World Bank Residual Model and the DOTS-based Trade Mispricing Model, which uses the IMF's Direction of Trade Statistics (DOTS) database to analyze discrepancies in trade statistics between partner countries.
+ReferencesCategory:American Viticultural AreasCategory:Ohio wineCategory:Geography of Ottawa County, Ohio
+Roland af Hällström made his first Fenno-Filmi effort Houkutuslintu in 1946.
+Selected filmography Current (1963) The Falcons (1970) Cserepek (1980)ReferencesExternal linksCategory:1933 birthsCategory:2007 deathsCategory:Hungarian film directorsCategory:Hungarian film editorsCategory:Hungarian screenwritersCategory:Male screenwritersCategory:Hungarian male writersCategory:People from Salgótarján
+It emphasizes that the government depends on a centralized and orderly overview which must be well informed in order to function effectively.
+References Greater Good of South Africa group Information from the University of PretoriaExternal links SASVO's parent organization Sasvo's old websiteCategory:Student societies in South AfricaCategory:University of Pretoria
+Reception The Penguin Guide to Jazz notes "Stefan is probably the trumpeter's masterpiece ... a masterful record".
+In 2014 he became more powerful in politics, being chosen for a position in the Council of Ministers instead of Lenur Islyamov.
+During the war, lots of military supplies including can tins were imported.
+See also Greek Catholic Apostolic Exarchate of IstanbulReferencesSources Category:Greek Eastern Catholic bishopsCategory:People from Pyrgos, ElisCategory:Converts to Eastern Catholicism from Eastern OrthodoxyCategory:Former Greek Orthodox ChristiansCategory:Greek Eastern CatholicsCategory:1855 birthsCategory:1932 deathsCategory:Place of death missing
+The adipose fin is large and the tail, or caudal fin, is forked.
+There are five district capitals on the island being Bulagi, Tataba, Liang, Salakan and Sambiut.
+The Complete Index to Literary Sources in Film''.
+Moon Lunar comes with a small moon buggy.
+In Chabařovice it connects the already built cycling path KČT (Club of Czech Tourists) with the same marking, then it goes around lake, diverges across paths in the area and finally it leads to Stadice.
+Hanerahu (also called Anerahu) is an uninhabited Estonian islet with surface area of 1.2 hectares.
+The running time of the restored film is seventeen seconds; the accompanying cylinder contains approximately two minutes of sound, including twenty-three seconds of violin music, encompassing the film's soundtrack.
+It is the only Italian breed to be officially denominated a pony.
+Robinson died in early June 2019, at the age of 83.
+Peagler's supporters established a website to publicize her cause.
+Critic from The Hindu remarked that the book was "sprinkled with fine wit and represent great cultural commentary."
+External links Career history at 90minut.plCategory:1984 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Lithuanian footballersCategory:Lithuania international footballersCategory:FC Vilnius playersCategory:Widzew Łódź playersCategory:Ruch Chorzów playersCategory:Hapoel Ironi Kiryat Shmona F.C.
+Nicole Bass is a British reality television personality from Essex, known primarily for appearing in the ITVBe reality series The Only Way Is Essex.
+External linksCategory:1976 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Baseball people from Tokushima PrefectureCategory:Japanese baseball playersCategory:Nippon Professional Baseball pitchersCategory:Nippon Ham Fighters playersCategory:Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters players
+The Veltex Shizuoka is a professional basketball team that competes in the third division of the Japanese B.League.
+ReferencesExternal linksJigsaw on IMDbCategory:Seven Network showsCategory:1965 Australian television series debutsCategory:1965 Australian television series endingsCategory:1960s Australian game showsCategory:Black-and-white Australian television programsCategory:English-language television programs
+Related topics Applied behavior analysis Behaviour therapy Behavior modification Behavior management Professional practice of behavior analysisReferencesCategory:BehaviorismCategory:Behavioral concepts Category:Applied psychology
+In 2012, Englund left the band to join Six Feet Under; Peter Hallgren joined as a replacement.
+Career statisticsHonoursAjaxEredivisie (7): 1959–60, 1965–66, 1966–67, 1967–68, 1969–70, 1971–72, 1972–73KNVB Cup (5): 1960–61, 1966–67, 1969–70, 1970–71, 1971–72European Cup (3): 1970–71, 1971–72, 1972–73Intertoto Cup: 1962European Supercup: 1972, 1973Intercontinental Cup: 1972See alsoList of select Jewish association football playersReferencesCategory:1938 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Footballers from AmsterdamCategory:Association football wingersCategory:Dutch footballersCategory:Jewish footballersCategory:Dutch sports agentsCategory:Association football agentsCategory:Dutch JewsCategory:Netherlands international footballersCategory:Jewish Dutch sportspeopleCategory:Eredivisie playersCategory:AFC Ajax playersCategory:UEFA Champions League winning players
+Downloaded on 20 July 2007.berterianaCategory:Flora of ChileCategory:Critically endangered plantsCategory:Taxonomy articles created by Polbot
+While there, they are each captivated by hearing the other singing Mass.
+Edward Conolly may refer to: Edward Conolly (judge) (1822–1908), New Zealand politician and judge Edward Michael Conolly (1786–1849), Irish Member of ParliamentSee also Edward Connolly (disambiguation)
+"After a Halloween episode that ended up getting panned by a lot of offended parties, I thought the latest installment of MoFam had a good message: support your partner."
+Bob Baker or Bobby Baker may refer to: Bob Baker (actor) (1910–1975), American singer and actor Bob Baker (basketball) (1919–1950), American professional basketball player Bob Baker (boxer) (1926–2002), American heavyweight boxer Bob Baker (ice hockey) (1926–2012), American ice hockey player Bob Baker (politician) (1917–1985), Australian politician Bob Baker (scriptwriter) (born 1939), British television and film writer Bobby Baker (1928–2017), American political advisor to Lyndon Johnson Bobby Baker (performance artist) (born 1950), English performance artist Bobby Baker (racing driver), American NASCAR driverSee also Bob Baker Memorial Airport, a public airport in Alaska Bob Baker Marionette Theater, founded by Bob Baker and Alton Wood in 1963, the oldest children's theater company in Los Angeles Robert Baker (disambiguation)
+Pleistodontes astrabocheilus is a species of fig wasp which is native to Australia.
+The span wing employs a Göttingen Gö 549 airfoil and features dive brakes.
+Mean is the fifth and final album by the California-based hard rock band Montrose and released in 1987.
+Tinejdad (; ) is a city in Errachidia Province, Drâa-Tafilalet, Morocco.
+ReferencesExternal links FIBA Europe profileCategory:1986 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:BK Jūrmala playersCategory:BK Liepājas Lauvas playersCategory:BK VEF Rīga playersCategory:BK Ventspils playersCategory:Latvian men's basketball playersCategory:MBC Mykolaiv playersCategory:Norrköping Dolphins playersCategory:People from SaldusCategory:Point guards
+São Domingos do Maranhão is a municipality in the state of Maranhão in the Northeast region of Brazil.
+Joseph Florimond, Duke of Loubat (1831–1927), yachtsman, bibliophile, antiquarian, and philanthropist Anthony Dryden Marshall (1924–2014), theatrical producer, C.I.A.
+Many formats exist for players' selection of golfers and point scoring.
+Tawala may be,Tawala languageAbdul Tawala Ibn Ali Alishtari
+This medal table ranks the competing National Paralympic Committees (NPCs) by the number of gold medals won by their athletes.
+In 1823 he moved to Munich (to the Academy, as the University was still in Landshut at this time).
+The original game was announced for a download release on Xbox Live Arcade, but it was later cancelled.
+The windows are sheltered by hoodmolds, and the upper and lower sections of the facade are separated by a stone belt course.
+The Battle of Ware Bottom Church was fought on May 20, 1864, between Union and Confederate forces during the American Civil War.
+(1941) - CrandallThe Lady from Cheyenne (1941) - Jerry StoverI'll Sell My Life (1941) - Bochini (final film role)ReferencesExternal links Category:1883 birthsCategory:1941 deathsCategory:American male film actorsCategory:American male boxersCategory:20th-century American male actors
+For this reasons Navekmisal and her sister were sent to live with her at Istanbul.
+6 wide receiver prospect of the class of 2009.
+Location The station is located on the Saint-Germain-des-Fossés–Nîmes, Clermont-Ferrand-Saint-Just-sur-Loire and Eygurande-Merlines-Clermont-Ferrand railways.
+http://gabriela_p.tripod.com/1-orgprofile/principles.html The webpage of GABRIELA.
+The Mare Island Navy Yard used her as a construction and repair launch.
+Sixty-five extracts from Macer's works appear in the Digest.
+Thanks for everyone who stood by us & supported us.
+Milan, 1818.
+During 2005, the band toured the United States (with openers The Chelsea Smiles & Crash Kelly) and Europe alongside Social Distortion.
+He competed in the marathon at the 1932 Summer Olympics.
+Proposals for new relationships are requested by city staff, of their own volition or on behalf of a third party.
+The park is a favourite for strolling, relaxation and walking.
+Lazy Afternoon Among the Crocodiles is an album that experimental music and classical minimalism pioneer Terry Riley and contrabassist Stefano Scodanibbio recorded in 1997.
+See also List of Northern Lighthouse Board lighthouses Northern Lighthouse BoardReferencesExternal links Northern Lighthouse Board Category:Lighthouses completed in 1902Category:Lighthouses of Scottish islandsCategory:Category C listed lighthousesCategory:Category C listed buildings in East LothianCategory:Tourist attractions in East LothianCategory:North Berwick
+Anjirak (, also Romanized as Anjīrak) is a village in Howmeh Rural District, in the Central District of Harsin County, Kermanshah Province, Iran.
+References Category:Unincorporated communities in Graves County, KentuckyCategory:Unincorporated communities in Kentucky
+Challengers and Futures finalsDoubles: 1 (1 title)Junior Grand Slam finalsDoubles: 3 (3 titles)ReferencesExternal links Category:1999 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Taiwanese male tennis playersCategory:Australian Open (tennis) junior championsCategory:Wimbledon junior championsCategory:US Open (tennis) junior championsCategory:People from Changhua CountyCategory:Grand Slam (tennis) champions in boys' doubles
+The 2006–07 Welsh League Cup season was won by Caersws FC, beating Rhyl FC in the final.
+They have been described as the hospitality industry's equivalent of the Oscars.
+ReferencesCategory:2012 establishments in WalesCategory:Wards of Anglesey
+He served as professor and Chair of the Department of Chemistry of Wuhan University.
+The family has the honour of being one of the founding families of Pakistan as Sardar Muhammad Hussain along with a cousin hailing from the famous Burj Jewa Khan family, both MLA's in the undivided India, cast two votes in favour of the creation of Pakistan.
+Conus floridulus is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Conidae, the cone snails and their allies.
+After the Korean War, the first major Cold War crisis began on 13 August 1961, when Berliners woke up to find they lived in a divided city.
+ReferencesCategory:OedipodinaeCategory:Articles created by QbugbotCategory:Insects described in 1977
+A few species, such as the common furniture beetle, Anobium punctatum, are pests, causing damage to wooden furniture and house structures.
+He won the PGA Tour of Australasia's Order of Merit in 1997/8.
+June 3 — The Opryland USA country music theme park opens in Nashville.
+It allowed for greater variety and experimentation of design and form.
+In 1979, he was the first cellist to receive the Doctor of Musical Arts degree from Yale.
+Species brought into synonymy Strioterebrum angelli J. Gibson-Smith & W. Gibson-Smith, 1984: synonym of Euterebra angelli (J. Gibson-Smith & W. Gibson-Smith, 1984) Strioterebrum arabellum (Thiele, 1925): synonym of Punctoterebra arabella (Thiele, 1925) Strioterebrum ballina (Hedley, 1915): synonym of Punctoterebra ballina (Hedley, 1915) Strioterebrum caliginosum (Deshayes, 1859): synonym of Punctoterebra caliginosa (Deshayes, 1859) Strioterebrum fuscotaeniatum (Thiele, 1925): synonym of Punctoterebra fuscotaeniata (Thiele, 1925) Strioterebrum grayi (E.A.
+Seeds Martina Navratilova / Pam Shriver (Champions) Anne Hobbs / Wendy Turnbull (Second round) Kathy Horvath / Virginia Ruzici (First round) Barbara Potter / Sharon Walsh (Semifinals) Rosalyn Fairbank / Candy Reynolds (Quarterfinals) Jo Durie / Ann Kiyomura-Hayashi (Semifinals) Kathy Jordan / Anne Smith (Final) Claudia Kohde-Kilsch / Hana Mandlíková (Quarterfinals) Andrea Leand / Mary-Lou Piatek (Second round) Christiane Jolissaint / Marcella Mesker (Second round) Leslie Allen / Anne White (Third round) Mima Jaušovec / Virginia Wade (Third round) Barbara Jordan / Elizabeth Sayers (Second round) Bettina Bunge / Eva Pfaff (First round) n/a Zina Garrison / Lori McNeil (Second round, withdrew)DrawFinalsTop halfSection 1Section 2Bottom halfSection 3Section 4ReferencesExternal linksWomen's DoublesCategory:Wimbledon Championship by year – Women's DoublesWimbledon ChampionshipsWimbledon Championships
+StandingsTop scorersReferencesRSSSF PageCategory:1. deild karla (football) seasonsIcelandIceland2
+Volume 24, 336 – 339 (1918)BibliographySchmitt, Ulrich T. "Walther Nernst."
+Drymodromia plurabella is a species of dance flies, in the fly family Empididae.
+The Federation of Swiss Bandy co-arranged the four nation tournament for the Coupe Norsel in Davos on 6 January 2014, which was a centenary celebration of the European Championship of 1913, which was held in the same town.
+John Fenn may refer to:John Fenn (antiquarian) (1739–1794), English antiquarian who edited and published the Paston LettersJohn Fenn (chemist) (1917–2010), American co-recipient of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 2002John Fenn (pirate) (died 1723), English pirateJohn Fenn (priest) (died 1615), English Roman Catholic priest and writer
+With the decline of the sulfur mining industry in the 20th century many townspeople opted for emigration.
+Some medieval Arab travellers such as Ibn Batuta called the islands "Mahal Dibiyat" from the Arabic word Mahal ("palace")."
+Jim Hanna may refer to: Jim Hanna (writer), American television comedy writer Jim Hanna (actor) (born 1967), American actor Jim Hanna (loyalist) (1947–1974), senior member of the Northern Irish loyalist paramilitary organisation, the Ulster Volunteer Force
+In December 1977 it initiated the publication Manifiesto.
+He defeated Japan's Nobuyuki Sato (2:08:48).
+Each DCP Zone is further divided into ACP Zones.
+Track listingChartsReferencesExternal linksATL's Finest by J-Bo at AllMusicATL's Finest by J-Bo at DiscogsCategory:J-Bo albumsCategory:2008 debut albumsCategory:Real Talk Entertainment albumsCategory:Southern hip hop albumsCategory:Crunk albumsCategory:Albums produced by Big Hollis
+Further, facilities would be designated by level of care and referrals would be required to obtain more complex care.
+Maximum RAM of 104MB.
+On November 24, Koskotas and his family were apprehended by the Federal Bureau of Investigation in Bedford, Massachusetts after landing in a private jet at Hanscom Field.
+FilmographyTelevision seriesFilmVariety showTheaterBroadcastingAlbumOfficialOSTAwards and nominationsReferencesExternal linksNa Hyun-hee at Daum Na Hyun-hee at Naver Movies Category:South Korean actressesCategory:South Korean film actressesCategory:South Korean television actressesCategory:South Korean television personalitiesCategory:South Korean female singersCategory:Living peopleCategory:1970 birthsCategory:People from BusanCategory:University of Suwon alumniCategory:20th-century South Korean actressesCategory:20th-century South Korean singersCategory:21st-century South Korean actressesCategory:21st-century South Korean singersCategory:20th-century women singersCategory:21st-century women singers
+Balandin is circular with a somewhat unusual hummocky interior floor, similar to the nearby Kosberg, to Barbier F within Barbier, or to Van den Bos.
+In a season filled with injuries and controversy, which also saw a tearful Michael Irvin promising change following a tough loss to the New York Giants in the final regular season game, Switzer would later resign after the season.
+Higher is a 2003 album by the Canadian hard rock band Harem Scarem.
+Lower and Upper Paleolithic tools were unearthed in the sum in the mid 1980s.
+ReferencesExternal linksFIFA profileCategory:1910 birthsCategory:Year of death missingCategory:Peruvian footballersCategory:Peru international footballersCategory:1930 FIFA World Cup playersCategory:Association football forwards
+Amblyseius omaloensis is a species of mite in the family Phytoseiidae.
+Diqing Shangri-La Airport is an airport serving Shangri-La City, Diqing Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, Yunnan Province, China.
+Temperance Crew (d. 18 October 1728), married firstly to Rowland, son and heir of Sir Alston Bart of Odell and secondly to Sir John Wolstenholme, 3rd Baronet of Enfield.
+Muirodelphax atralabis is a species of delphacid planthopper in the family Delphacidae.
+1s were "Black & White" and "An Old Fashioned Love Song."
+FilmographyFilmsTV FictionReferencesCategory:1976 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Bangladeshi film directorsCategory:Bangladeshi screenwriters
+Despite divisions of rank, economic, political, sexuality, or class, loneliness was a unilateral phenomenon among soldiers and officers during the Second World War.
+Category:Bays of South KoreaCategory:Changwon
+Its hub is the city of Abu Ghraib.
+References and notes Category:Populated places in Anosy Region
+Dastjerdeh () is a village in Jolgeh Rural District, in the Central District of Golpayegan County, Isfahan Province, Iran.
+ReferencesCategory:Cities and towns in Kurnool district
+Aradus acutus is a species of flat bug in the family Aradidae.
+It is found in North America, where it has been recorded from Ohio and New Jersey.
+SourcesCategory:Gempylidae
+An elementary school was established in a house in Munford, Tennessee and was christened Tipton Academy, after the county in which the school then resided.
+Melanella baldra is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Eulimidae.
+His constituency of Bolpur had already been reserved for the Scheduled Castes, meaning he would have been unable to contest the seat in the next election; he announced in August 2008, following his expulsion from the CPI(M), that he would retire from politics at the time of the next election in 2009.
+ReferencesCategory:1914 birthsCategory:Year of death missingCategory:Egyptian male weightliftersCategory:Olympic weightlifters of EgyptCategory:Weightlifters at the 1936 Summer OlympicsCategory:Place of birth missing
+That summer, Sarah Ruhl's Eurydice and Stew's Passing Strange both enjoyed extended off-Broadway runs.
+Ten players who had featured for the India national team and who did not play in the ISL last season were available to be purchased by the eight teams.
+They had no men and joined with their neighbors, killed the sons and educated the daughters of whom the teats were burnt so that they could discharge the arrows more rapidly.
+Some formats, such as CMX3600, can represent simple editing decisions only.
+Inside the Actors Studio is a series on the Bravo cable television channel, hosted by James Lipton from 1994 to 2018, and on Ovation since 2019 with an alternating list of hosts.
+Lalila may refer to:CharactersLalila, a character the novel Hadon of Ancient Opar by Philip José FarmerLalila, a character in the Mouk TV seriesPeopleLalila El Basiouny ranked 37 for Egypt at the 2011 World Aquatics ChampionshipsSee alsoLeila (name)
+Headquartered in Mumbai, its operational focus on India is supported by additional offices in New Delhi and Kolkata.
+Two new car parks were built which replaced an old park which became the site of a new school facility.
+2011 State Basketball League season may refer to:2011 MSBL season, Men's SBL season2011 WSBL season, Women's SBL season
+Robert Edward Webster (1928–1999), US plastics technician who defected to the Soviet Union in 1959, returning in 1962 Robert Grant Webster, British Member of the UK Parliament for St Pancras East Bob Webster (born 1938), American Olympic diving champion
+ReferencesCategory:Living peopleCategory:21st-century Indian politiciansCategory:Lok Sabha members from JharkhandCategory:People from Simdega districtCategory:Indian National Congress politicians from JharkhandCategory:Date of birth missing (living people)Category:Place of birth missing (living people)
+RWF may refer to: Rainer Werner Fassbinder, German film director Rassemblement Wallonie-France, a minor Belgian political party Royal Welch Fusiliers, a British Army regiment Rwandan franc, in ISO 4217 code, a currency Royal Agricultural Winter Fair, Toronto, often abbreviated to Royal Winter Fair Republic of West Florida, a short-lived republic Rail Wheel Factory, Bangalore, India
+Kementerian Kesihatan may refer to: Ministry of Health (Brunei), a government ministry in Brunei Ministry of Health (Malaysia), a federal government ministry in Malaysia Ministry of Health (Singapore), a government ministry in Singapore
+Category:Nunataks of Marie Byrd Land
+Third place in the championship was decided in a run-off at the final round of the season at Torún in Poland.
+Notable gravesCemetery No 2 holds Corporal Alfred George Drake (1893–1915), who was posthumously awarded the Victoria Cross for bravery.
+Peripheral blood cells are the cellular components of blood, consisting of red blood cells (erythrocytes), white blood cells (leucocytes), and platelets, which are found within the circulating pool of blood and not sequestered within the lymphatic system, spleen, liver, or bone marrow.
+At least 75 people were killed and five people were injured in the attack; the victims included prisoners, police officers, and assailants.
+Águas de Santa Bárbara is a municipality in São Paulo, Brazil.
+As of 2019, he plays for Slutsk.
+They played newly composed and traditional pan-African-style music, blended with Latin, reggae, and some rock sounds.
+Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (see Territorial changes of Poland after World War II).
+It is found in North America.
+While returning Ananthan understands that someone has entered his mansion, while crossing the river with ponni the boat overturns and she dies.
+It rises in the eastern extremity of the mountains called Tetas de Cerro Gordo, flowing first northwest, and then west, through the town of its name and thence to the sea."
+"tutelary shrine").
+St. George's survived the Reformation, though the property reverted to the crown at some point, and was later administered by a superintendent appointed by the Copenhagen city council.
+He has served as a referee in 2014 World Cup qualifiers.
+In 2013, Parker retired from professional racing after winning the New York City Triathlon and finishing third at the Beijing International Triathlon.
+Mordellistena opalescenticeps is a species of beetle in the genus Mordellistena of the family Mordellidae, which is part of the superfamily Tenebrionoidea.
+H. aurea may refer to: Halydaia aurea, a tachinid fly species Hypseleotris aurea, the golden gudgeon, a fish species endemic to AustraliaSynonyms Heliconia aurea, a synonym for Heliconia bihai, the red palulu, an erect herb species native to South America, specially Brazil and GuianasSee also Aurea (disambiguation)
+K-League Rookie of the YearThe K-League Rookie of the Year award was won by Lee Seung-ki (Gwangju FC).
+Room 304 () is a 2011 Danish drama film directed by Birgitte Stærmose.
+It starts in Russia, where the player finds out who they are working for and the basics of the game.
+These include nitrogen, phosphorus, and sulfur as the nucleophilic component, with boron and germanium analogous known as the electrophilic component.
+A boggy uterus is a finding upon physical examination where the uterus is more flaccid than would be expected.
+A hydroelectric plant, the log structure still standing at the willowed bend in the pond, generated power for the IRMC, providing the first electricity in the Sawtooth Valley.
+Undergraduate degreesBachelor of Arts Business Administration (Administración de Empresas) Hospitality Management (Administración de Empresas de Hospitalidad) Digital Animation (Animación Digital) Contemporary Art (Arte Contemporáneo) Contemporary Music (Música Contemporanea) Culinary Art (Arte Culinario) Food and Beverages Management (Administración de Alimentos y Bebidas) Liberal Arts (Artes Liberales) Cinema and Video (Cine y Video) Environmental Communication (Comunicación Ambiental) Organizational Communication and Public Relations (Comunicación Organizacional y Relaciones Públicas) Advertising (Comunicación Publicitaria) Communication Design (Diseño Comunicacional) Economics (Economía) Education (Educación) Finance (Finanzas) Interactivity and Multimedia (Interactividad y Multimedia) Marketing (Mercadotecnia) Multimedia Journalism (Periodismo Multimedios) Musical Production and Sound (Producción Musical y Sonido) International Relations (Relaciones Internacionales) Psicology (Sicología) Psicology and Human Resources (Sicología y Recursos Humanos)Bachelor of Science Applied Ecology (Ecología Aplicada) Biology (Biología) Biotechnology (Biotecnología) Marine Ecology (Ecología Marina) Mathematics (Matemáticas) Human Nutrition (Nutrición Humana) Physics (Física) Chemistry (Química)Professional degrees Architect (Arquitecto) Clinical Psicologist (Sicólogo Clínico) Dentist (Odontólogo) Interior Designer (Diseñador de Interiores) Lawyer (Abogado); Typically in South American Civil Law tradition countries, a professional degree will be given in the undergraduate term.
+Enneapterygius altipinnis also known as the highfin triplefin is a species of triplefin blenny in the genus Enneapterygius.
+During the early stages of the project it was envisioned that it would constitute a new capital city.
+Men's 400 Free--Final results from the official website of the 2006 Central American and Caribbean Games; retrieved 2009-06-29.
+The median income for a household in the CDP was $67,292, and the median income for a family was $81,414.
+See alsoList of Medal of Honor recipientsList of Philippine–American War Medal of Honor recipientsReferencesCategory:United States Navy Medal of Honor recipientsCategory:United States Navy sailorsCategory:People from Cape Girardeau County, MissouriCategory:American military personnel of the Philippine–American WarCategory:1890 birthsCategory:1958 deathsCategory:Philippine–American War recipients of the Medal of Honor
+Among other reasons, this was precipitated by trouble at the label and Benzel's desire to work on other projects.
+ReferencesCategory:1967 birthsCategory:2007 deathsCategory:Indian male field hockey playersCategory:Olympic field hockey players of IndiaCategory:Field hockey players at the 1988 Summer OlympicsCategory:Sportspeople from Varanasi
+ReferencesCategory:16th-century historiansCategory:16th-century indigenous people of the AmericasCategory:History of the AztecsCategory:Aztec peopleCategory:16th-century women
+Minier has a daughter from a previous relationship.
+He also achieved two top-ten finishes at the Junior World Championships in 2006 and in 2007.
+30.1 million viewers tuned in on Christmas Day in 1986 to witness Den handing Angie her divorce papers, giving the soap its highest ever episode rating, which has yet to be beaten by any other plotline from any other soap in the UK.
+In the 2001 census the population was 291.
+DescriptionDistributionReferencesfrailensisCategory:Gastropods described in 2001
+G. libycus has a trimitic hyphal system, with generative, skeletal, and binding hyphae.
+Final tableGroup AGroup BReferencesExternal links 1991-1992 rankingCategory:Rugby league competitions in FranceFrench Championship seasonFrench Championship seasonChampionship season (rugby league)
+Raag Gyaankali: Inspired by Raag Gorakh Kalyan, created by Jaiwant Singhji.
+A poinsettia cocktail is a mixture of champagne, Cointreau (or Triple Sec), and cranberry juice.
+Even if there is a sound justification for the retroactive rule, courts should be reluctant to find a permissible basis.
+Two years later, it was mediatised to Württemberg.
+It has an area of 50.83 square kilometres and a population of 40,700.
+We hope he will work with WakeUpWalMart.com and help our efforts to create a better Wal-Mart and build a better America."
+Shadow Theatre is one of the two managing partners in the Varscona Theatre Alliance.
+HistoryThe road follows former turnpike roads from Chapel-en-le-Frith to Whaley Bridge, built in 1727, and from Whaley Bridge to Macclesfield, built in 1770.
+Group A of the 2011 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II was one of two pools in the Asia/Oceania zone of the 2011 Fed Cup.
+Arthur Conan Doyle publishes "An Alpine Pass on "Ski"" in The Strand Magazine (London), popularizing skiing as a sport in Switzerland.
+I Would Set Myself on Fire for You was an American experimental screamo band from Atlanta, Georgia, that formed in 2001 and broke up for unknown reasons in 2007.
+The attribution apparently dates from the thirteenth century, long after he allegedly lived.
+Site was located 3 1/2 miles north of the site of the original Fort Pierre Chouteau near Pierre, South Dakota.
+In March 1919, an announcement was made by the Prime Minister of Australia, William Morris Hughes, of a Great Air Race for the "first successful flight to Australia from Great Britain in a machine manned by Australians".
+Atheronals are biologically relevant oxysterols formed in the reaction of cholesterol with ozone.
+He was the son of Johann Jakob Sulzer senior, founder of Sulzer (manufacturer).
+Sandrasagra was president of the National Association and the Ceylon National Congress.
+ReferencesExternal linksLokarje at GeopediaCategory:Populated places in the Municipality of Šentjur
+Bernardo Cardoso de Resende Alves (born November 20, 1974, Belo Horizonte) is a show jumping rider from Brazil.
+(Edison – 1913) The Substitute Stenographer.
+Attempts and crashes September 2004 – At the International Speed Trials by BUB, the Ack Attack, ridden by Jimmy Odom, was hit by a crosswind while pushing .
+Joseph Lambert may refer to:Joseph Hamilton Lambert (1825–1909), American pioneer of OregonJoseph Malet Lambert, British clergyman, historian and educatorJoseph Lambert (judge) (born 1948), former Chief Justice of the Kentucky Supreme CourtJoseph B. Lambert (born 1940), American educator and chemistAdrien Lambert (Joseph Adrien Henri Lambert, 1913–2003), member of the Canadian House of CommonsJerome Lambert (Joseph Jerome Lambert, 1971–2007), American basketball player
+Wo die Stelle der 1290 zerstörten Semgallerburg Sydobre wohl zu suchen sein dürfte.
+When Willis resigned as Leader, Maddison announced his intention to contest the vacant leadership against David Arblaster, Peter Coleman and Kevin Rozzoli, thereby resigning as Deputy Leader.
+The Cheshire Cat is a fictional character from Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and derived works.
+Goalscorers Most goals in a season: Bruno Fornaroli, 28 goals (in the 2015–16 season) Most league goals in a season: Bruno Fornaroli, 25 goals in the A-League, 2015–16 Youngest goalscorer: Denis Genreau, 18 years, 100 days (against Hakoah Sydney City East, FFA Cup Round of 16, 29 August 2017) Oldest goalscorer: Tim Cahill, 37 years, 131 days (against Perth Glory, A-League, 16 April 2017)Top goalscorersCompetitive matches only.
+Diadexia argyropasta is a moth in the family Crambidae.
+When the bill was debated in the House on January 13, 1851, New York Congressman William Duer indicated that he felt both coin and stamp should be denominated at 2 cents, and his fellow New Yorker, Orsamus Matteson, offered an amendment to that effect.
+The seventh Pan American Games were held in Mexico City, Mexico, from October 12 to October 26, 1975, exactly twenty years after the second Pan American Games were held there.
+Philipsburg Historic District may refer to:Philipsburg Historic District (Philipsburg, Montana), listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Granite County, MontanaPhilipsburg Historic District (Philipsburg, Pennsylvania), listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Centre County, Pennsylvania
+He was ranked 54th on ESNPU's list of the top 100 players in his high school class.
+Species Hemipachnobia monochromatea (Morrison, 1874) Hemipachnobia subporphyrea (Walker, 1858)ReferencesNatural History Museum Lepidoptera genus databaseHemipachnobia at funetCategory:Noctuinae
+The following is a partial list of his books: झुंबरजुईली सोबत देवकी कातळ समर्पण पांघरूण उत्तरायण काळवीट लागेबांधे हृदयंगम संधिकाल सनद/सूर्यफूल माहिमची खाडी शाळेबाहेरील सौंगडी कॅलिफोर्नियात कोकण जगन नाथ आणि कंपनी गवळण आणि इतर कथा शब्दांनो, मागुती या (काव्यसंग्रह)ReferencesExternal links https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xzBBQIN-G_I http://news.oneindia.in/2006/04/28/madhu-mangesh-karnik-appointed-president-of-cultureliterary-board-1146240352.htmlCategory:Marathi-language writersCategory:1931 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Recipients of the Padma Shri in literature & educationCategory:Presidents of the Akhil Bharatiya Marathi Sahitya Sammelan
+The gear box provided three forward speeds and one reverse speed for road use, and for off-road use a lower “crawler” ratio was available.
+In 2008 the size of the National Barrier Asset was tripled to meet expected demands.
+(hosts) Nanjing University Liaoning Volleyball Club April 25 Sports ClubPreliminary round|}|}|}|}|}|}Fixtures: Thể Thao Việt NamFinal roundBracketSemifinals|}5th place|}3rd place|}Final|}Final standing|}AwardsMost Valuable Player Jong Jin SimBest Outside Spikers Chatchu-on Moksri Ajcharaporn KongyotBest Setter Lao MeiqiBest Opposite Spiker Ju Un HyangBest Middle Blockers Thatdao Nuekjang Nguyễn Thị Ngọc HoaBest Libero Gong MeiziMiss VTV Cup 2015 Nguyễn Linh ChiReferencesCategory:VTV International Women's Volleyball CupVTV CupVTV Cup
+O'Malley and Harris both had an interest in horse racing - Harris owned two racehorses - Cromwell and A Tramp Shining, and O'Malley owned two, Mustang Prince and Running Deer, a filly named after a character in Harris's film A Man Called Horse.
+Its latin namesake roughly translates to: "Val Kilmer was the best Batman".
+Thomas (1925, 1927) recognised the Bantu affinities of the Nigerian Jarawan Bantu languages, but Doke (1947) and Guthrie (1969–71) make no reference to Jarawan Bantu, and the latest reference book on Bantu also exclude it (Nurse & Philippson 2003).
+ReferencesCategory:2-4-0 locomotivesCategory:5 ft 3 in gauge locomotivesKCategory:Railway locomotives introduced in 1893Category:Scrapped locomotives
+From 1940 until his retirement in 1972, Cotterill worked as public relations director of the Canadian Steelworkers and was also an occasional columnist for the Toronto Star.
+Locality 1A yielded a radiocarbon date of about 650 BCE, and tool finds there included fragments of a drill bit made of green chert.
+But after each state amended its divorce statutes to permit such divorces, court decisions in each state upheld the validity of these statutes.
+RB Leipzig is one of the first clubs in history to qualify for the Champions League so soon (eight years) after its creation.
+He was an exponent of auto-suggestion.
+Despite assurance of restitution in the 1783 Treaty of Paris no compensation to the Morrises was ever forthcoming from either the state of New York or American government.
+Iemasa fought on the side of Tokugawa Ieyasu at the Battle of Sekigahara, and was allowed to retain his fief for his service there.
+Mangroves have also been used by local communities for centuries for their charcoal, long lasting fuel wood, poles, bark, and are still an important part of the local communities to this day.
+William Jacobs may refer to:W. W. Jacobs (1863–1943), short story writerWilliam H. Jacobs (1831–1882), Wisconsin legislator and bankerWill Jacobs (born 1955), American comics writerWilliam Elmer Jacobs, baseball playerWilliam Jacobs (producer) (1887–1953), film producerWilliam R. Jacobs Jr. (born 1955), professor of microbiology, immunology and geneticsSee alsoWilliam Jacob (disambiguation)
+Mykhailo ( ) is a male first name, the Ukrainian form of Michael.
+Clayton, Victoria, Australia: CSIRO Publishing.
+HonoursDyskobolia Grodzisk Wlkp Ekstraklasa Cup:Winner (1): 2007CareerClubIn January 2011, he was loaned to Warta Poznań on a half year deal.
+The pitchfork has three prongs representing the three rivers that run through the municipality: Nitelva, Leira, and Glomma.
+People with the name Haki include:Haki Abaz Skuqi (1958– 1986), Albanian military officer and aviator Haki Doku (born 1969), Albanian para-cyclistHaki Korça (born 1919), Albanian footballer Haki Madhubuti (born 1942), American author, educator, and poetHaki Stërmilli (1895–1953), Albanian writer and journalistHaki Toska (born 1920), Albanian politicianReferencesCategory:Albanian masculine given names
+In 2016, she was awarded the of the Stifterverband für die Deutsche Wissenschaft and German Rectors' Conference for excellence in teaching mathematics.
+After many seasons in Vammala Ojansivu made contract with Pielaveden Sampo.
+This is a qualifying tournament for the upcoming 2016 Summer Olympics.
+The band's setlists would include a number of well-known songs from the Germs' archives, as well as newly written material.
+SeedsDrawDrawExternal linksDrawCategory:Bavarian International Tennis ChampionshipsCategory:2005 ATP TourCategory:2005 BMW Open
+Shanhe () may refer to these places in China:Shanhe Subdistrict, a subdistrict of Shuangyang District, Changchun, JilinShanhe Township, a township of Longde County, NingxiaTownsShanhe, Gansu, in Zhengning County, GansuShanhe, Heilongjiang, in Wuchang, HeilongjiangShanhe, Shanxi, in Zezhou County, ShanxiSee alsoSanhe (disambiguation)
+In 2018, Hupfield was awarded the Hnatyshyn Foundation prize for outstanding achievement by a Canadian mid-career artist.
+Juan Sebastián Cabal and Robert Farah were the defending Champions, but both decided not to participate.
+In a three-year career spanning 340 games, Kanehl batted .241 and accrued six home runs, 47 RBI, 103 runs, 23 doubles and 17 stolen bases.
+He retired to Penticton, British Columbia later in his life, and died there in 2019 at the age of 77.
+GFP was isolated from the jelly fish Aequorea victoria.
+In the 2014 retrospective book Designers & Dragons: The 80s, Shannon Appelcline noted that despite the bad reviews, this game was noteworthy as "the earliest notable RPG to really take a solid look at historical roleplaying."
+Series F were produced until 1966 and are in a red leather box.
+They were replaced by three teams promoted from the Botswana First Division, the winners of the Northern group TAFIC F.C., the winners of the Southern group Sharps Shooting Stars, and playoff winners Uniao Flamengo Santos.
+Group C of the EuroBasket Women 2019 took place between 27 and 30 June 2019.
+The impulse current generator comprises many capacitors that are also charged in parallel by a high-voltage, low-current, direct-current source, but it is discharged in parallel through resistances, inductances, and a test object by a spark gap.
+ReferencesfiliformisCategory:Flora of the Kuril IslandsCategory:Flora of JapanCategory:Flora of the Ryukyu IslandsCategory:Flora of KoreaCategory:Flora of MyanmarCategory:Flora of the PhilippinesCategory:Flora of VietnamCategory:Plants described in 1784
+Its site was at present day Bergenhus Fortress.
+In this process, a model of the finished vessel, complete with décor, is made of clay and left to harden, next a negative of this is made by adding a layer of wet clay to the completed model, and allowed to harden to the point where it can still be cut away from it.
+OffseasonDeparturesIncoming transfersClass of 2018 recruitsClass of 2019 recruitsRosterSchedule and results|-!colspan=9 style=|Non-conference regular season|-!colspan=9 style=| Conference USA regular season|-!colspan=9 style=| Conference USA TournamentReferencesCategory:UTSA Roadrunners men's basketball seasonsUTSAUTSA RoadrunnersUTSA Roadrunners
+King Hin Court King Hin Court () is a Home Ownership Scheme court in Diamond Hill, near Fu Shan Estate.
+By this time some of Courtenay’s followers had escaped.
+At this time, Reformed Presbyterians were mostly concentrated in eastern Pennsylvania and northern South Carolina, but small groups of Reformed Presbyterians existed in Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York, western Pennsylvania, North Carolina, and Georgia.
+This record was named in the Guinness Book of Records.
+This information is aggregated, and the raw data is destroyed.
+ReferencesCategory:1994 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Mongolian male taekwondo practitionersCategory:Olympic taekwondo practitioners of MongoliaCategory:Taekwondo practitioners at the 2016 Summer OlympicsCategory:Taekwondo practitioners at the 2014 Asian GamesCategory:Taekwondo practitioners at the 2018 Asian GamesCategory:Asian Games competitors for Mongolia
+Current roster Coaching staff Head Coach: Dante Alinsunurin Assistant Coach(s): Ariel "Dong" dela Cruz Ruel PascualTeam Staff Team Manager: Jun Abcede Team Utility: Richard EstacloMedical Staff Team Physician: Emilo Lee Physical Therapist: Ricol GonizalesPrevious rosterFor the Premier Volleyball League 1st Season Open Conference: Coaching staff Head Coach: Dante Alinsunurin Assistant Coach(s): Ariel "Dong" dela CruzTeam Staff Team Manager: Jun Abcede Team Utility: Medical Staff Team Physician: Physical Therapist:HonorsTeamPremier Volleyball LeagueIndividualPremier Volleyball LeagueTeam Captains Francis Philipp Saura (2017)Coaches Dante Alinsunurin (2017)ReferencesCategory:Premier Volleyball League (Philippines)Category:Volleyball clubs in the PhilippinesCategory:Sports teams in Metro ManilaCategory:2017 establishments in the Philippines
+The major wine producing countries use barrels extensively and have developed standards at variance with the traditional English volumes are commonly used in the wine and wine cooperage industries.
+The public refused to allocate more funding when they discovered about US$1 million had already been spent, so the project was also abandoned.
+Track list"Intro R.E.D."
+Since the Lumia Denim mobile phone series, launched in October 2014, active listening was added to Cortana, enabling it to be invoked with the phrase: "Hey Cortana"; it can then be controlled as usual.
+Following graduation, she continued independent studies of language, music, chemistry, algebra, and calculus.
+ReferencesExternal links Hendry County listings at National Register of Historic PlacesCategory:Streamline Moderne architecture in the United StatesCategory:Geography of Hendry County, FloridaCategory:Historic districts on the National Register of Historic Places in FloridaCategory:National Register of Historic Places in Hendry County, Florida
+Phaeoacremonium is a fungus genus associated with wilt and decline diseases of woody hosts and human infections.
+This adjustment is rarely possible as it requires data on within-area distribution of the exposure and confounder variables.
+It reached number four on the Hot Country Songs chart and number 51 on the US Billboard Hot 100.
+He graduated from Los Angeles (Calif.) High School, after which he joined the Army.
+REDIRECT Virginia State Route 7#Purcellville business route
+Ebenshausen is a village and a former municipality in the Wartburgkreis district of Thuringia, Germany.
+Agus Durmaturia (born August 14, 1992) is an Indonesian footballer that currently plays for Perseru Serui in the Indonesia Super League.
+{{DISPLAYTITLE:C21H24O11}}The molecular formula C21H24O11 (molar mass: 452.41 g/mol, exact mass: 452.131862 u) may refer to: Aspalathin, a dihydrochalcone glucoside Catechin-5-O-glucoside, a flavan-3-ol glucoside Catechin-7-O-glucoside, a flavan-3-ol glucoside
+), Scottish football player (Stoke, Southampton)Willie Naughton (footballer, born 1962), Scottish football player (Preston North End, Walsall)Category:Human name disambiguation pages
+It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2000 as the South Gilboa Railroad Station.
+He was educated at St Cyprian's School, Eastbourne, Harrow and Trinity College, Cambridge, and also at the Prince of Wales Royal Indian Military College, Dehradun.
+The features of the park include a skate park, three tennis courts, one cricket pitch and wicket, one bowling green, three netball courts and two five-a-side pitches.
+Before the KTX opened services at this station, there was high-leveled platform which had no use.
+ReferencesCategory:1977 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Spanish film directorsCategory:Date of birth missing (living people)
+He also developed a new method based on the molecular Zeeman effect for measurements of molecular quadrupole moments and magnetic susceptibility anisotropies.
+Ore from Channar, like that from Brockman, Mount Tom Price, Paraburdoo, Eastern Range, Marandoo and Yandicoogina, is transported as lump and fines ore product from the mines to Dampier via rail.
+Alata may refer to:Alata, Corse-du-Sud, FranceAlata, MaliAlata Research Institute of Horticulture, a research institute in Mersin Province, Turkey
+Trail descriptions are available from a number of commercial and non-commercial sources, and a complete guidebook is published by the Connecticut Forest and Park AssociationWeather along the route is typical of Connecticut.
+ReferencesalbicansCategory:Flora of New ZealandCategory:Plants described in 1926
+The Plastic Revolution has toured all over the United States and FranceDiscographyAlbumsPlanning for Chaos, 2007, Mannequin Vanity RecordsPostmodern Medicine, 2010, Mannequin Vanity RecordsSinglesI States, 2007, Mannequin Vanity RecordsSex Crazed, 2007, Mannequin Vanity RecordsSwimming Away, 2007, Mannequin Vanity RecordsDomino, 2010, Mannequin Vanity RecordsWasted Darling, 2010, Mannequin Vanity RecordsDynamite by Taio Cruz, 2011, Mannequin Vanity RecordsHighway Sailor, 2013, Mannequin Vanity RecordsStay by Taylor Swift, 2013, Mannequin Vanity RecordsReferencesExternal linkshttp://www.theplasticrevolution.comhttp://www.reverbnation.com/theplasticrevolutionhttp://www.sandiegoreader.com/bands/plastic-revolutionhttp://www.sdcitybeat.com/sandiego/article-13359-the-plastic-revolution-a-trolley-show.htmlhttp://www.mannequinvanityrecords.com/artist/the-plastic-revolution-tprhttp://theindiesd.com/2013/04/15/the-plastic-revolution-its-not-rock-n-roll-without-a-little-bloodCategory:Musical groups from San Diego
+As of early 2007, the previous conductor Mr. Stephen Shone is no longer conducting the band and the position is being filled by Chris Fox, brother of Rodger Fox (Rodger Fox Big Band) with help from Raewyn Hunt.
+Jel – writing, production, performance, recording, arrangement Odd Nosdam – additional recording, mixing, editing, song arrangement, sounds, filter play, drone (8) Yoni Wolf – piano (2), synthesizer (2) Josiah Wolf – bass guitar (2) Andrew Broder – guitar (3) Dosh – Rhodes piano (3), sampler (3) Alexander Kort – cello (3) Stefanie Böhm – words (4), vocals (4, 7), guitar (4) Harvey Salters – synthesizer (4), keyboards (8) Pedestrian – words (7) Wise Intelligent – words (9), vocals (9) Adam Drucker – cover art design, sculpture, photography Erin Perry – cover art design, sculpture, photography Wes Winship – font, layoutReferencesExternal links Category:2006 albumsCategory:Jel albumsCategory:Anticon albums
+See alsoCommunes of the Pyrénées-Atlantiques departmentReferencesINSEECategory:Communes of Pyrénées-Atlantiques
+The house was known as ‘Madhukothi’ or ‘Balipokharikothi’, later on used as the state office of the Kasturba National Memorial Trust, in a part of which was running the Anganabadi, Balbadi.
+References
+Pete and Caroline decide to follow after John to the university.
+In the ensuing battle, the militia companies put up stiff resistance before they were flanked and driven off.
+Belvaux-Soleuvre railway station (, , ) is a railway station serving the towns of Belvaux and Soleuvre, in the commune of Sanem, in south-western Luxembourg.
+Solomon has represented Australia in ten Chess Olympiads between 1984 and 2012, usually on board 3 (four times), or board 4 (four times), although he played top board in the 1998 Olympiad in Elista.
+ReferencesCategory:1948 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Brazilian footballersCategory:Brazil international footballersCategory:Olympic footballers of BrazilCategory:Footballers at the 1968 Summer OlympicsCategory:People from Vitória, Espírito SantoCategory:Association football forwards
+Pregerson was regarded as one of the judiciary's most liberal judges, attracting both praise and criticism for his insistence on placing his conscience above court precedent.
+Swope enlisted and served during the First World War as captain of Infantry.
+The Secretary of Labor appoints the members based upon their qualifications and competence in matters within the board's authority.
+It preserves fossils dating back to the Paleogene period.
+From 2004-2008, she served on the Board of Directors of the Association of Writers & Writing Programs (AWP).
+It was the follow-up to 2002's Zoloft Smile.
+He completed his formal education with a Ph.D. in psychology from the University of Chicago in 1926.
+Saint-Romain-de-Lerps is a commune in the Ardèche department in southern France.
+Santorini (Thira) National Airport's IATA code in GreeceJoint Travel Regulations
+The Public Interest Oversight Board oversees the work of the IAASB.
+On 9 February 2006, he was appointed Titular Archbishop of Pelusium of Melkite Greeks and appointed Vicar Apostolic of Jerusalem.
+Jon Anders Ekborg (born 9 October 1960) is a Swedish actor and singer who has performed the roles of Karl Oskar in Kristina från Duvemåla and Freddie Trumper in Chess, two musicals that were written by former ABBA members Benny Andersson and Björn Ulvaeus.
+The primary participants in the parade come from the Qatar Armed Forces, the Internal Security Force, the Ministry of Interior, and Amiri Guard.
+Genk playersCategory:K.A.A.
+It may be rendered in Chinese as (Taiwan Province) Taiwan Province, Republic of China, a current administrative division of the Republic of China Taiwan Province, People's Republic of China, a hypothetical administrative division claimed by the People's Republic of China Taiwan under Japanese rule, a former administrative division of Empire of Japan Taiwan under Qing rule, a former administrative division of Qing DynastySee also Political status of Taiwan Chinese Taipei Taiwan (disambiguation)
+Educated at St. Lawrence College, Ramsgate, he was captain of the First XI there for both cricket, rugby and hockey.
+The church building was listed the National Register of Historic Places in 2014.
+15 Illinois, No.
+AftermathFollowing the invasion, a German-protected Crimean Regional Government was established under Maciej Sulkiewicz and, later, Solomon Krym.
+He was a member of the Russian Academy of Art-Sciences and of the State Institute of Musical Science.
+At the age of sixteen, he was captured along with his older cousin as part of a large group of 120 soldiers near Kunduz, and transferred to Shiberghan prison for six weeks, before being flown to Guantanamo on January 16, 2002.
+It is owned by the Mahupu family, and there are a number of tuckshops, and a bar which opens during the festive season only.
+In these conditions, lines can form which are suppressed at normal densities.
+Sainte-Christine is the name of several places: Sainte-Christine, a commune of the Maine-et-Loire department of France Sainte-Christine, a commune of the Puy-de-Dôme department of France Sainte-Christine, a former commune of the Vendée department of France, now part of Benet Sainte-Christine, a parish municipality in the Montéregie region of Quebec, Canada Sainte-Christine-d'Auvergne, a municipality in the Capitale-Nationale region of Quebec, Canada
+The recipients of the Lubwa's and Uganda 1897-98 clasps included several women who nursed the sick.
+Darden Hotel or Hotel Darden may refer to:Darden Hotel (Hamilton, North Carolina), listed on the National Register of Historic PlacesCity Hotel (Marthaville, Louisiana), also known as "Hotel Darden", listed on the National Register of Historic Places
+55–60 metres), an accuracy bar appears at the bottom of the screen.
+Contents"Introduction to a Very Large Subject" (Darrell Schweitzer)"Campbell and 'The Sandman': Reminding Us of the Sacred" (Stephen Rauch)"Dreams and Fairy Tales: The Theme of Rationality in 'A Midsummer Night's Dream' and 'The Sandman'" (Julie Myers Saxton)"The King Forsakes His Throne: Campbellian Hero Icons in Neil Gaiman's 'Sandman'" (Peter S. Rawlik, Jr.)"Blue and Pink: Gender in Neil Gaiman's Work" (Mary Borsellino)"Gods and Other Monsters: A Sandman Exit Interview and Philosophical Omnibus" (Robert K. Elder)"Neil Gaiman in Words and Pictures" (Ben P. Indick)"Pay Attention: There May or May Not Be a Man Behind the Curtain, An Analysis of Neil Gaiman and Dave McKean's 'Violent Cases'" (JaNell Golden)"An Autopsy of Storytelling: Metafiction and Neil Gaiman" (Chris Dowd)"Tapdancing on the Shoulders of Giants: Neil Gaiman's 'Stardust' and its Antecedents" (Darrell Schweitzer)"The Old Switcheroo: A Study in Neil Gaiman's Use of Character Reversal" (Jason Erik Lundberg)"Backstage" (William Alexander)"No Need to Choose: A Magnificent Anarchy of Belief" (Bethany Alexander)"The Thin Line Between" (Marilyn 'Mattie' Brahen)"On the Death of Mad King Sweeny: Irish Lore and Literature in 'American Gods'" (William Alexander)"Catharsis and the American God: Neil Gaiman" (Baba Singh)"The Frame and the Flashback: Analyzing Neil Gaiman's Story 'Murder Mysteries'" (Marilyn "Mattie" Brahen)"'Coraline' – A Quest for Identity" (Mike Ashley)"Another Interview with Neil Gaiman" (Darrell Schweitzer)"Neil Gaiman: An Incomplete Bibliography" (Davey Snyder)NotesExternal linksEntry at Wildside PressEntry at Neil Gaiman Visual BibliographyReview at the Green Man Review websiteCategory:2007 non-fiction booksCategory:Books by Darrell SchweitzerCategory:Books of literary criticismCategory:Books about writersCategory:Essay collectionsCategory:Essays about literature
+Mother Albania may refer to:Mother Albania (statue)Mother Albania (poem) by Dritëro AgolliMother Albania (opera) by Avni Mula
+ReferencesCategory:Villages in Nowy Targ County
+The methods prescribed by law are hanging and firing squad, although hanging has been the predominant method throughout Lebanese history.
+The Vanuatu Daily Post describes him as "a ni-Vanuatu of Vietnamese parentage".
+CareerAs a Director1911 - The Bully of Bingo Gulch, A Romance of the Rio Grande, Circumstantial Evidence1912 - An Equine Hero, The Whiskey Runners, A Cowboy's Mother, The Wayfarer, The Boob, An Unexpected Fortune, The Peculiar Nature of the White Man's Burden, The Double Cross, Murray the Masher, The Adopted Son, The Mystery of Room 29, A Citizen in the Making, The Vagabonds, According to Law, Jack and Jingles, Driftwood, His Chance to Make Good, All on Account of Checkers, The Slip, Hypnotized, The 'Diamond S' Ranch, The Horseshoe, The Girl He Left Behind, , A Cowboy's Best Girl, A Modern Ananias, Two Men and a Girl1913 - Saved by the Juvenile Court1914 - Across the Border, Bringing in the Law, The Romance of Copper Gulch, Pirates of the Plains, The Ace of Diamonds, The Range War1915 - Montana Blunt, Out of the Silence, The Word, Told in the Rockies, The Parasite's Double, The Cost, The Greater Barrier1916 - The Unborn, The Awakening of Bess Morton, The Sins That Ye Sin1917 - The Love of Princess Olga, The Prodigal's Return, The Mystery of No.
+Subtaxa included in the Arcida are shown below.
+She was originally ordered during the American War of Independence but was completed too late to see service during the conflict.
+Oda and his wife, Nancy, have three children.
+Stork married Alice, the widow of John Petyr.
+Top CommandersCategory:Military of China
+John Edward Marquis (born 16 May 1992) is an English professional footballer who plays as a striker for League One club Portsmouth.
+The 12th European Badminton Championships were held in Moscow, Soviet Union, between 8 and 14 April 1990, and hosted by the European Badminton Union and the Sovietic Badminton Federation.
+Peasiella infracostata is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Littorinidae, the winkles or periwinkles.
+Species Poecilosoma annulatum Draudt, 1915 Poecilosoma chrysis Hübner, 1823 Poecilosoma eone (Hübner, 1824) Poecilosoma eusebia (Druce, 1883) Poecilosoma mapirense Strand, 1915 Poecilosoma marginatum (Walker, 1856) Poecilosoma misionum Strand, 1915 Poecilosoma nigerrima (Walker, 1865) Poecilosoma vespoides Schaus, 1905ReferencesCategory:ArctiinaeCategory:Taxa named by Jacob Hübner
+He is also interested in art, music, cooking and interior design.
+HauensteinHauensteinCategory:Mountain passes of Basel-LandschaftCategory:Mountain passes of the canton of Solothurn
+Campanulorchis is a genus of orchids.
+The club went on a 'signing spree' purchasing Neville Costigan, Darius Boyd and Luke Priddis among others, but lost flyer Josh Morris (Bulldogs), Mark Gasnier (French Rugby), Jason Ryles (French league), Rangi Chase (ESL), Lagi Setu (Broncos) and Simon Woolford & Kirk Reynoldson with retirement.
+It was described by Fedorenko in 1996.
+The district is one of 87 districts mandated to return a single member (MLA) to the Legislative Assembly of Alberta using the first past the post method of voting.
+The Official Live Bootleg is a one-sided live promotional LP by Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers issued by Shelter Records in 1977.
+This capacity is due to a screw joint that connects the base of metacoxa to the head of trochanter.
+She participated at the 2008 Summer Olympics in China, where the Swedish team placed eight, and the 2012 Summer Olympics, where Sweden came 11th.
+by Irvine/Burke/Daly/Foley) – 3:38 "Spanking Maggie From The Ross" (song) (Words: Trad./Music: Andy Irvine) – 4:11 "The Winding Stairs"/"Ride A Mile" (slip jigs) (Trad./Arr.
+Obed may refer to:GeographyObed, Alberta, a hamlet in west-central Alberta, CanadaObed, Arizona, a ghost town in northern Arizona, U.S.Obed, Croatia, a settlement in Orle, CroatiaLittle Obed River, a ten mile long stream in the Cumberland Plateau, in Cumberland County, TennesseeObed Lake Provincial Park, a provincial park in Alberta, CanadaObed River, a stream draining a part of the Cumberland Plateau in TennesseeObed Wild and Scenic River, a stream draining a part of the Cumberland Plateau in TennesseePeopleObed (biblical figure) (Hebrew: עובד, Oved), son of Boaz and RuthObed (name)Obed-Edom, servant of Edom's
+While in exile, Bartolomé Mitre helped him to go back to his wife's native city of Corrientes, where he would die a few years later.
+From 1969 until 2004 it was housed in what was Lebanon Junior High School on 160 Miller Road.
+On club level she played with TV Fischbek.
+Parks JC (1969) Simple technique for demonstrating chromosomal coils using Tradescantia pollen mother cells.
+Poshteh () is a village in Shahu Rural District, in the Central District of Kamyaran County, Kurdistan Province, Iran.
+They had a length overall of and a beam of , and were powered by two Vickers eight-cylinder two-stroke diesel engines and two electric motors.
+This album marks the first time they wrote and composed entirely original material, unlike on previous albums and EPs.
+Roddick, a resident of Austin, said, "The fans and team in Springfield were great to me, and I really appreciate their support.
+Krummendiek is a municipality in the district of Steinburg, in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany.
+Kavir (, also Romanized as Kavīr) is a village in Chahardangeh Rural District, Hurand District, Ahar County, East Azerbaijan Province, Iran.
+ReferencesNotesSourcesCategory:Rural localities in Dagestan
+Ekti Katha is a Bengali album of the Indian singer Shreya Ghoshal, released in 1999 by Indian label Sagarika.
+Those who came forward were immediately arrested and imprisoned while several were subjected to flogging in an effort to extract information about the rebels plans and organization.
+Pope Francis beatified him and six other Romanian bishop martyrs on 2 June 2019 in Blaj.
+ReferencesExternal links103.9 The Fish official websiteKFSCategory:Christian radio stations in the United StatesCategory:Radio stations established in 1974Category:Salem Media Group propertiesCategory:1974 establishments in California
+After leaving the Army, Miller then reported briefly for the Wall Street Journal in 1954 and then the News Leader in Richmond, Virginia from 1954 to 1957.
+Al Fawwārah is a village in Makkah Province, in western Saudi Arabia.
+Astanjin (, also Romanized as Āstanjīn, Astānjīn, and Āstānajīn; also known as Asnānjīn, Astaniya, and Āstatjīn) is a village in Kaghazkonan-e Markazi Rural District, Kaghazkonan District, Meyaneh County, East Azerbaijan Province, Iran.
+It is a protected wetland area, as recognized by the Ramsar Convention, The Kotychi lagoon is an important areas for waterbirds in Greece.
+It was also referred to as St. Joseph's Seminary.
+References Trasee turistice – județul Dolj Category:Rivers of RomaniaCategory:Rivers of Dolj County
+The band released their self-titled debut album in 1998 for Jetset Records.
+She received a B.F.A.
+See also List of Western Australia first-class cricketersReferencesExternal links Category:1971 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Australian cricketersCategory:Western Australia cricketersCategory:Cricketers from Perth, Western Australia
+Students take college PE classes to fulfill their physical education classes.
+Nieuwe Pekela is a village in the Dutch province of Groningen.
+The World Series of Pro Football was a name applied to two professional football events:World Series of Football (1902), a multiple-game tournament held from 1902 to 1903World Series of Pro Football (1950), the unofficial AAFC-NFL unified championship held in September 1950
+ReferencesFurther readingExternal links PDBe-KB provides an overview of all the structure information available in the PDB for Human Meiosis regulator and mRNA stability factor 1 (KIAA0430)
+ReferencesExternal links To USNM Invertebrate Zoology Mollusca Collection To World Register of Marine SpeciesbuttoniCategory:Gastropods described in 1912
+Sergeant Gallagher finds out that disarmament talks are taking place in Chicago.
+R. minichi, on the other hand, had a maxilla with fewer (23) and more well-spaced teeth and no ridge under the eye socket.
+They were runners-up in Division One (then the highest level of the football league system in South Wales) in the 1948–49 season.
+Mount Pikapene is a national park located in New South Wales, Australia.
+The municipality includes the settlements of Montpellier and Lac-Schryer.
+The graves of the daimyō all have a similar gravestone, but only that of Suwa Tadatsune, the second daimyō has a wooden chapel.
+The game is the sequel to Genpei Tōma Den, and is the first game in the series to be released outside Japan.
+Peregrine the martyr was an early Christian martyr who died because he and others refused to worship the Roman Emperor Commodus on his birthday.
+The eighth general election of the 45-seat Regional Council of the North Caribbean Coast, one of the two autonomous regions of Nicaragua, took place on 3 March 2019.
+Scour was a serious issue at this location, and redesign was necessary on that account.
+On November 6, 2018, in his first college game against Winthrop, Garland led all scorers with 24 points.
+After each player was selected, his team was allowed to remove one exposed player from their list.
+Together with Sophie Adlersparre (1823-1895) and Molly Rohtlieb (1836-1914), Hanna Winge was the co-founder of the association Friends of Handicraft (Handarbetets vänner) which was founded in 1874 with the purpose of the development and refinement of Swedish textile art.
+Temptation and scandal still hound Rosario as she continues to defy the moral restrictions of her time.
+ProgramsWith BartholomayWith TothSingle skatingCompetitive highlights GP: Grand Prix; JGP: Junior Grand PrixPair skating with BartholomayPair skating with TothSingle skatingReferencesExternal links Felicia Zhang / Nathan Bartholomay at Ice Network Category:American female pair skatersCategory:American female single skatersCategory:1993 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Sportspeople from the BronxCategory:American sportspeople of Chinese descentCategory:American people of Chinese descentCategory:People from Plainsboro Township, New JerseyCategory:Sportspeople from Middlesex County, New JerseyCategory:West Windsor-Plainsboro High School South alumniCategory:Figure skaters at the 2014 Winter OlympicsCategory:Olympic figure skaters of the United StatesCategory:American women of Chinese descent
+The French journal of popular music studies, an academic journalMusicVolume may refer to:AmplitudeLoudnessDynamics (music)The Volumes, a 1960s American musical groupVolumes, an American progressive metalcore bandOther usesVolume (finance), the number of shares or contracts traded in a security or an entire market during a given period of timeVolume (film), a 2012 short film directed by Mahalia BeloSee also"Twenty volumes", a non-scientific description of the concentration of a solution of hydrogen peroxideVolumography, the science, art and practice of creating three-dimensional space imagesVolume form, used in mathematicsVolume One (disambiguation)Volume Two (disambiguation)
+DiscographySoloRedpoint (1997)The Door of Saints (2001)Farrar (2008)Canaich (2010)Affric (2012)Live at Celtic Connections (2013)Sandwood (2018)with WolfstoneUnleashed (1991)The Chase (1992)Year of the Dog (1994)The Half Tail (1996)Pick of the Litter (1997)Seven (1999)Not Enough Shouting (2000)Almost an Island (2002)Terra Firma (2007)Guest appearancesAcross the City and the World – Donnie Munro (2002)Proterra – Runrig (2003)Day of Days – Runrig (2004)Heart of America – Donnie Munro (2006)Everything You See – Runrig (2007)Uam – Julie Fowlis (2009)The Beat of You – Coast (2010)Live at Perthshire Amber – Julie Fowlis (2011)"Uncovered" - Beth Nielsen Chapman (2013)"Party on the Moor" - Runrig (2014)"Gach Sgeul" - Julie Fowlis (2014)"Alterum" - Julie Fowlis (2017)AwardsMG Alba Scots Trad Music Awards – Album of the Year 2008 – Farrar Herald Angel – Edinburgh Festival – for multi-media production Kin Scots Trad Music Awards – Musician of the Year 2012 Scots Trad Music Awards – Album of the Year 2014 – Live at Celtic Connections''ReferencesCategory:1968 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Scottish fiddlersCategory:British male violinistsCategory:People from InvernessCategory:Wolfstone membersCategory:Blazin' Fiddles membersCategory:21st-century violinistsCategory:21st-century British male musicians
+The planet appears briefly in Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker.
+Preussia can refer to:Preussia (fungus), a genus of fungiPreussia (katydids), a genus of bush crickets or katydids in the family Tettigoniidae, subfamily Phaneropterinae
+Because of LiveStub's high profile, LiveStub was viewed by users and media as an alternative voice to the traditional secondary ticket market players.
+The image of Our Lady of Guadalupe placed on the main altar was sculpted by Maximo Vicente of Manila.
+Ochrus is a genus of beetles in the family Cerambycidae, containing the following species: Ochrus chapadense Napp & Martins, 1982 Ochrus duplicatus Napp & Martins, 1982 Ochrus grammoderus Lacordaire, 1869 Ochrus ornatus (Fisher, 1935) Ochrus tippmanni (Lane, 1956) Ochrus trifasciatus Dalens & Touroult, 2011ReferencesCategory:Hesperophanini
+Part One, Part Two, Part Three, Part Four, Part Five, Part Six.
+Goniurosaurus huuliensis is a gecko endemic to Vietnam.
+Munktorp is a locality situated in Köping Municipality, Västmanland County, Sweden with 455 inhabitants in 2010.
+Upon returning the Resolute to her home port in England, the manuscript paper was printed in London in 1852.
+There are 15 spiraled skyscrapers, and 13 more are under construction.
+Political careerShe was elected to the Provincial Assembly of Sindh as a candidate of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) on a reserved seat for women in 2018 Pakistani general election.
+John's || align="center"|2 || align="center"|– || 145 || 1,787 || 210 || 162 || 821 || 12.3 || 1.4 || 1.1 || 5.7 || align=center||-|align="left"| || align="center"|G || align="left"|Lincoln (MO) || align="center"|1 || align="center"| || 53 || 505 || 47 || 103 || 165 || 9.5 || 0.9 || 1.9 || 3.1 || align=center||-|align="left"| || align="center"|F || align="left"|VMI || align="center"|1 || align="center"| || 3 || 17 || 0 || 1 || 11 || 5.7 || 0.0 || 0.3 || 3.7 || align=center||-|align="left"| || align="center"|G || align="left"|North Carolina || align="center"|3 || align="center"|– || 162 || 2,358 || 247 || 351 || 913 || 14.6 || 1.5 || 2.2 || 5.6 || align=center||-|align="left"| || align="center"|C || align="left"|Cincinnati || align="center"|1 || align="center"| || 77 || 1,236 || 470 || 56 || 467 || 16.1 || 6.1 || 0.7 || 6.1 || align=center||-|align="left"| || align="center"|G || align="left"|North Texas || align="center"|4 || align="center"|– || 277 || 5,477 || 635 || 803 || 2,402 || 19.8 || 2.3 || 2.9 || 8.7 || align=center||-|align="left"| || align="center"|G/F || align="left"|Georgetown || align="center"|4 || align="center"|– || 184 || 2,179 || 209 || 177 || 615 || 11.8 || 1.1 || 1.0 || 3.3 || align=center||-|align="left"| || align="center"|F || align="left"|Cincinnati || align="center"|1 || align="center"| || 20 || 81 || 30 || 3 || 46 || 4.1 || 1.5 || 0.2 || 2.3 || align=center||-|align="left"| || align="center"|F || align="left"|Drake || align="center"|1 || align="center"| || 2 || 10 || 3 || 0 || 1 || 5.0 || 1.5 || 0.0 || 0.5 || align=center||-|align="left"| || align="center"|F || align="left"|Argentina || align="center"|1 || align="center"| || 34 || 305 || 46 || 3 || 75 || 9.0 || 1.4 || 0.1 || 2.2 || align=center||-|align="left"| || align="center"|G/F || align="left"|North Carolina || align="center"|3 || align="center"|– || 239 || 6,530 || 798 || 516 || 3,265 || 27.3 || 3.3 || 2.2 || 13.7 || align=center||-|align="left"| || align="center"|F/C || align="left"|Indiana || align="center"|1 || align="center"| || 77 || 931 || 218 || 36 || 303 || 12.1 || 2.8 || 0.5 || 3.9 || align=center||-|align="left"| || align="center"|G || align="left"|Wake Forest || align="center"|4 || align="center"|– || 235 || 4,358 || 311 || 876 || 1,167 || 18.5 || 1.3 || 3.7 || 5.0 || align=center||-|align="left"| || align="center"|C || align="left"|UCLA || align="center"|1 || align="center"| || 6 || 22 || 4 || 1 || 11 || 3.7 || 0.7 || 0.2 || 1.8 || align=center||}ReferencesExternal links Oklahoma City Thunder all-time rosterCategory:National Basketball Association all-time rosters Category:Oklahoma City Thunder lists
+Marie, Ontario, Canada.
+On the World Curling Tour, she has won two career bonspiels, the 2013 Stroud Sleeman Cash Spiel and the 2016 CookstownCash presented by Comco Canada Inc..She qualified for her first Ontario Scotties Tournament of Hearts in 2017.
+Pool B of the 2020 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group I was one of two pools in the Americas zone of the 2020 Fed Cup.
+Biosynthesis Phosphoenolpyruvate and erythrose-4-phosphate react to form 3-deoxy-D-arabinoheptulosonate-7-phosphate (DAHP), in a reaction catalyzed by the enzyme DAHP synthase.
+LA 15 overlaps both LA 33 and LA 2 in Farmerville.
+Born in Franklin, Ohio, pastor of First Pentecostal Church, founder of Good News Outreach Ministries and WYGE Christian Radio.
+Founded in 1938, the Tree Care Industry Association, formerly the National Arborist Association, is a US public and professional resource organization on trees and arboriculture.
+ReferencesCategory:Municipalities in Schleswig-HolsteinCategory:Schleswig-Flensburg
+There are 2 streets.
+This equipment is managed and run by the UCPA on behalf of the town of Feyzin.
+Spring Stakes may refer to:SAJC Spring Stakes, Morphettville Racecourse, Adelaide, AustraliaSpring Stakes (Japan), Nakayama RacecourseSpring Stakes (NJC), Broadmeadow Racecourse, Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia
+It is a covers record and the first release from the group to feature vocals and verse-chorus-verse song structures.
+It was described by Philipp Christoph Zeller in 1854.
+Like the county, the city is named for 19th-century North Carolina Supreme Court Chief Justice Leonard Henderson.
+Season three saw a more serialized approach to the series.
+Five further unused sub appearances followed in 2012–13 in all competitions, prior to him making his professional debut on 16 February 2014 in an away league win over Boca Juniors at La Bombonera.
+Accolades2018 James Beard Foundation Broadcast Media Documentary Finalist, Blind Sushi White House Champion of Change for Sustainable Seafood Award2013 James Beard Foundation Nominee: Best Chef Northeast An EcoSalon 11 Most Influential Chefs in the U.S.New Haven 50 Most Influential PersonHuffington Post's Greatest Person of the DayRecipient of the Yale Elm-Ivy Award.
+ReferencesAlexandra Gillespie, ‘Pepwell , Henry (d. 1539/40)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004, accessed 25 Oct 2007External links Category:1540 deathsCategory:English printersCategory:Year of birth unknownCategory:People from Birmingham, West MidlandsCategory:People of the Tudor periodCategory:16th-century English businesspeople
+This publication preceded James Lind's celebrated experiment on scurvy by 13 years and Lind's publication A treatise of the scurvy by 19 years, and he has been called "the one light of the era who, more than any other writer for centuries before or decades after, truly understood scurvy as a deficiency disease."
+In 1999, Rector became a firefighter in his hometown of Thomaston.
+SeedsChampion seeds are indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which those seeds were eliminated.
+The Raiders waived Nix on August 26, 2014.
+See also Romanian Cultural InstituteExternal linksRomanian Cultural InstituteCategory:Romanian languageCategory:Cultural promotion organizations
+ReferencesCategory:Organizations based in Seattle
+He plays hurling with his local club Cratloe and has been a member of the Clare senior inter-county team since 2011, making his Championship debut when coming on as a substitute against Galway on 2 July 2011.
+Earth Force may refer to: Earth Force (Marvel Comics), a fictional superhuman team within the Marvel Comics universe consisting of three humans granted elemental powers by Seth EarthForce, the military of Babylon 5 Earth Force (fictional power), a fictional power in Dengeki Sentai Changeman E.A.R.T.H.
+The Copa Rommel Fernández 2013 season (officially "XVII Copa Rommel Fernández") starts on November 17, 2013.
+HistoryConstruction on the original part of the coquina shellstone mansion was begun by New York doctor Andrew Anderson Sr. in 1839, just prior to his death in a yellow fever epidemic.
+In S. cerevisiae, the copper uptake genes CTR1, CTR2, and CTR3 have been identified, and in human the CTR1 and CTR2 (MIM 603088) genes have been identified.
+In 1863, Ivan (John) Hoŕky using the Celtic alias James "Bohemia" Johnson, originally from Bohemia in central Europe, and George Ramsey found lode gold while 'dressing out a deer on lamb from the law for killing an American Indian'.
+Roy is currently on tour in 2016 with Ministry (band).
+Tokumoto (written: 徳元) is a Japanese surname.
+He is a veteran of the Pro Cup Series and the Automobile Racing Club of America Series.
+ReferencesExternal linksCategory:BuccinidaeCategory:Gastropods described in 2009
+It is located in the Vale of Neath, in the electoral ward of Resolven, near the town of Neath.
+Tom Bundy (1881–1945), American tennis playerWilliam Bundy (1917–2000), a foreign affairs advisor to Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. JohnsonNicknameAllen Christensen (footballer) (born 1991), Australian rules footballerArt, entertainment, and mediaFictional charactersBundy, the surname of a dysfunctional family on the sitcom Married... with ChildrenAl Bundy, head of the familyMusic"Bundy" (song), by Animal AlphaBiologyBundy, a common name for the tree species Eucalyptus goniocalyxBrands and enterprisesBundy (DNS server), the successor version of the BIND 9 DNS server softwareBundy, colloquial name for Australia's Bundaberg Rum"Bundy", a slang term for a time clock, named for its inventor, Willard L. Bundy, or for the Bundy Manufacturing CompanyBundy, a line of musical instruments manufactured by The Selmer CompanyBundy Manufacturing Company, one of the four companies amalgamated (via stock acquisition) to form a fifth company, the Computing-Tabulating-Recording Company, later renamed IBMLawBundy standoff, A 20-year legal dispute between Cliven Bundy and the U.S.A. BLM divisionLloyds Bank Ltd v Bundy, a leading English contract case on unequal bargaining powerSee also Bundey (disambiguation)
+An explanation of the conflict's causes reveals that the installation of an open cut copper mine at Panguna had initially offered promise of economic prosperity for the region.
+According to the accounts of the king's war treasurer, Jean de Pressy, he was a banneret leading a "chamber" of ten squires within a company of the duke of Burgundy's men at Bourges in 1412.
+Agouza was established in 1990 with grades 10 to 12.
+MedalistsResultsHeatsWind: Heat 1: +2.1 m/s, Heat 2: +0.6 m/sFinalWind: +1.9 m/sReferencesHeats resultsFinal resultsCategory:2007 Asian Athletics ChampionshipsCategory:200 metres at the Asian Athletics ChampionshipsCategory:2007 in women's athletics
+The members of this society will show a suffix, ISC with their name in film credits.
+The 2017 UCI Africa Tour is the 13th season of the UCI Africa Tour.
+The first significant text published in Tocodede was Peneer meselo laa Literatura kidia-laa Timór, translated by João Paulo T. Esperança, Fernanda Correia, and Cesaltina Campos from an article by João Paulo T. Esperança entitled "A Brief Look at the Literature of Timor".
+2018 supernovaSN 2018zd, a type II supernova (possibly type IIn), was discovered on 2 March 2018 by Koichi Itagaki.
+Category:Propositional calculusCategory:Concepts in logicCategory:Logic symbols
+See also List of railway stations in Pakistan Pakistan RailwaysReferencesExternal linksOfficial Web Site of Pakistan RailwaysCategory:Railway stations in Lahore DistrictCategory:Railway stations on Lahore–Wagah Branch Line
+In 1678, Bishop François de Laval requested that he become judge of the county of Saint-Laurents (Île d’Orléans) and of the shore of Beaupré.
+Plot introductionFourth Mansions was inspired by Teresa of Ávila's Interior Castle, and contains quotations from the book, which Lafferty uses as chapter headings.
+The inlet is also referenced in Death Cab for Cutie's song 'Northern Lights' on their ninth studio album Thank You for Today.
+This is about , by road, south of Kamuli.
+At the 2006 census, its population was 37, in 10 families.
+The following are the Telugu Pancha Kaavyas, the five great books of Telugu Literature.
+Track listingPersonnelArturo Bassick (Arthur Billingsley) - bass, vocalsBilly Gilbert - guitarNelly Drums (Robert Hunter) - drumsReferencesCategory:2003 albumsCategory:The Lurkers albumsCategory:Captain Oi!
+Between 17 August and 26 September, they gave 50 concerts around England which were generally unsuccessful, having an average attendance of 140.
+The hindwings are light grey.
+Argyle Airport is at Lake Argyle, Western Australia, Australia (IATA: GYL, ICAO: YARG).
+See also List of Streptomyces speciesReferencesExternal linksType strain of Streptomyces spongiicola at BacDive - the Bacterial Diversity MetadatabasespongiicolaCategory:Bacteria described in 2016
+More than 40 different activities counting on one hundred roles.
+QualificationA total of up to 310 cross-country skiers qualified across all eleven events.
+Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington and London.
+While Poe's wife Virginia was sick, Chivers had to carry Poe home after a night of excess.
+ReferencesCategory:Agricultural labor
+Wash the right hand up to the wrist (and between the fingers) three times, then similarly for the left hand.
+Dessar began his career by painting the portraits of New York City's high society.
+Donald Gillen (born December 24, 1960) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey right winger who played in 35 National Hockey League (NHL) games with the Philadelphia Flyers and Hartford Whalers.
+Gallus (the cockerel) was a constellation introduced in 1612 (or 1613) by Petrus Plancius.
+Notable people with the surname include:Josh McRoberts (born 1987), National Basketball Association playerJustin McRoberts (born 1971), American singer and songwriterLeslie McRobert, on the list of World War I aces credited with 6 victoriesMike McRoberts (born 1966), New Zealand television and radio journalistStuart McRobert (born 1958), writer on strength trainingWilliam J. McRoberts (died 1933), New York assemblymanSee alsoMcRoberts, Kentucky, census-designated placeMcRoberts maneuver, used in childbirthMacRobert (disambiguation)
+LIMS offers a Certification Program in Laban Movement Studies, as well as Applied Laban in Communication and Hands-on and Re-Patterning.
+A rood is a Christian cross or crucifix.
+ReferencesCategory:Railway stations in TianjinCategory:Railway stations in China opened in 2013Category:Tianjin Metro stations
+ReferencesExternal links Category:Disused railway stations in the Scottish BordersCategory:Railway stations opened in 1850Category:Railway stations closed in 1969Category:Beeching closures in ScotlandCategory:Former North British Railway stationsCategory:1850 establishments in ScotlandCategory: 1969 disestablishments in Scotland
+A hill near the village, called Santon, was a strategic location for Napoleon's army, being occupied by the French general Clapared and his 17th regiment.
+It is a narrow beam canal, the maximum length of boats is 72 feet (21.9 metres) and the width of the locks is 7 feet (2.13 metres).
+See also List of United States Supreme Court cases, volume 342ReferencesCategory:United States Supreme Court casesCategory:United States Supreme Court cases of the Vinson CourtCategory:United States administrative case lawCategory:United States federal sovereign immunity case lawCategory:1951 in United States case law
+In 2011, she moved to Telstar.
+Background The vocals of the song were recorded before the incarceration of ASAP Rocky, due to an altercation in the streets of Stockholm, in Sweden, on 30 July.
+At the 2002 census, 60.6% were Reformed, 34.6% Romanian Orthodox, 2.4% Seventh-day Adventist and 1.1% Pentecostal.
+Codreanu served as general inspector of theatres in 1924, and returned to head the theatre on an interim basis from January to November 1928.
+ReferencesExternal links Official website Hamburg Kammerspiele LogensaalCategory:Theatres in HamburgCategory:Buildings and structures in Eimsbüttel
+I've seen it twice and felt exhilarated, informed, enriched, absorbed and optimistic both times.
+Shock Treatment is a 1981 American dark comedy musical film, a follow-up to The Rocky Horror Picture Show.
+Nearby is New Lüshun Port Station of the extension of Dalian's 202 railway.
+That connection was later removed on September 10, 1923.
+In contrast to depot medroxyprogesterone acetate, no increase in VTE risk has been observed with moderately high doses of the related progestin chlormadinone acetate, though based on limited data.
+References Category:Impact craters on the Moon
+Finally it was captured by British in 1818.
+Following its completion, it was renamed in memory of the 75th anniversary of the foundation of the Turkish Republic (1923).
+Boogaerts may refer to:Frank Boogaerts (born 1944), Belgian politicianMathieu Boogaerts (born 1970), French singer-songwriter
+In 1820 the classicistic Church of Nativity of Virgin Mary was built.
+Grundman may refer to:Bernie Grundman, American audio engineerClare Grundman, American band composer and arrangerHelen G. Grundman, professor of mathematics at Bryn Mawr CollegeIrving Grundman, former general manager of the Montreal CanadiensYa'akov Grundman, Israeli footballer and managerSee alsoGrundmannGrundig (surname)Category:Jewish surnamesCategory:Germanic-language surnames
+See also Leningrad School of Painting List of 20th-century Russian painters List of painters of Saint Petersburg Union of Artists List of the Russian Landscape painters Saint Petersburg Union of ArtistsReferencesSources Matthew C. Bown.
+It is native to the State of Chiapas in southern Mexico.
+The Nokdong Seowon in Urok-ri, Gachang-myeon, Daegu, South-Korea was erected in 1789 to worship the memory of Kim Chung-seon (1571–1642), a Japanese general who defected to Korea during the Japanese invasion (1592–1598).
+As a singer, Vassar has reached number one on the country music charts twice.
+33% of the total municipal area was undergoing some type of construction.
+ReferencesPrzedlesie
+A hogshead was also used for the measurement of herring fished for sardines in Blacks Harbour, New Brunswick.
+Kazakhstan competed at the 2014 Summer Youth Olympics, in Nanjing, China from 16 August to 28 August 2014.
+ReferencesCategory:Bezirk Neubrandenburg
+Mark IV served as Greek Patriarch of Alexandria between 1385 and 1389.
+The record was released via Universal Music in April 2010.
+ReferencesGyőri ETO FC Official websiteCategory:1987 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Hungarian footballersCategory:Győri ETO FC playersCategory:People from MosonmagyaróvárCategory:Association football midfielders
+It was described by Villiers in 1980.
+She was sold in 1931 to the Waratah Tug and Salvage Co Pty Ltd, Sydney.
+ReferencesCategory:Populated places in Sonora
+References Category:Towns and villages in Aligudarz County
+Capturing the Political Imagination: Think Tanks and the Policy Process, London: Frank Cass, 1996.
+Railway Correspondence and Travel Society.
+The most recent 158s arrived in Moscow in February 1970 to the 10-bus fleet.
+AlbumsStudio albumsLive albumsExtended playsSinglesA "Greed" (Duff McKagan's Loaded) / "I's the Blues" (The Loyalties) is a split 7" vynil single released with the band The Loyalties containing previously unreleased songs from each band and limited to 666 copies.
+They have a daughter, Andrea, born in 1993.
+RecordsPrior to this competition, the existing world and CISM record were as follows:ScheduleMedalistsResultsRound 1Qualification: First 3 in each heat (Q) and next 6 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.
+After university, Li abandoned his area of focus to write television dramas.
+External links2019 ALL FOR JAPAN TEAMCategory:1966 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Japanese rugby union playersCategory:Rugby union flankersCategory:Sportspeople from Osaka PrefectureCategory:Rugby union coachesCategory:Toshiba Brave Lupus playersCategory:Japan international rugby union players
+ScheduleAll times are Almaty Time (UTC+06:00)ResultsQualificationSemifinalsHeat 1Heat 2FinalReferencesResults FISExternal linksOfficial websiteMen sprint
+The Tegua living east of Guatavita paid tribute to the Muisca.
+The Gartempe River flows through the middle of the commune.
+OH-6 may refer to: OH-6 Cayuse, a U.S. military helicopter Ohio's 6th congressional district
+The Woodrow Post Office has the ZIP Code 80757.
+The cup winner qualifies to the first qualifying round of the 2017–18 UEFA Europa League.
+He was named Northeast Conference Player of the Year in 1996.
+Nkoya is a Bantu language of Zambia.
+Serials and Series: A World Filmography, 1912–1956.
+References Category:1685 birthsCategory:1752 deathsCategory:Alumni of Trinity College, OxfordCategory:Members of Lincoln's InnCategory:Members of the Parliament of Great Britain for English constituenciesCategory:British MPs 1713–1715
+In early to mid-2011, the group departed from their sexy image and released "Shy Boy".
+Frequency capping is a feature within ad serving that allows to limit the maximum number of impressions/views a visitor can see a specific ad within a period of time.
+Medical personnel are part of almost all Army exercises and operations, and personnel work in conjunction with personnel from the Royal New Zealand Dental Corps and the Royal New Zealand Nursing Corps.
+It was formed by comic artist Joe Madureira and David Adams and based in Austin, Texas.
+After the restoration of Poland in 1920 and the Peace of Riga with USSR, the edifice housed displaced Polish families from the Eastern Borderlands.
+Acantholycosa altaiensis is a species of wolf spider only known from the Tigiretsky Mountain Range in the Russian part of the Altai Mountains.
+Tables and pieces can be mixed and customized to create new games, which can then be saved to share and play with others.
+BiographyDonahoe was born and raised in the Pittsburgh suburb of Mt.
+ScheduleReferencesYaleCategory:Yale Bulldogs football seasonsYale Football
+Sources and references Jean-Michel Roche, Dictionnaire des Bâtiments de la flotte de guerre française de Colbert à nos jours, tome I Category:Frigates of FranceCategory:Ships built in FranceCategory:Frigates of the French NavyCategory:1841 shipsCategory:Second French intervention in MexicoCategory:Crimean War naval ships of France
+I Need a Girl may refer to: "I Need a Girl (Part One)" (2002), a song by P. Diddy featuring Usher and Loon "I Need a Girl (Part Two)" (2002), a song by P. Diddy featuring Tammy Ruggeri, Ginuwine, Loon and Mario Winans "I Need a Girl (Trey Songz song)" (2009), a song by Trey Songz "I Need a Girl (Taeyang song)" (2010), a song by Taeyang featuring G-Dragon "I Need a Girl (Part Three)" (2012), a song by Kay One featuring Mario Winans
+Célestin Sieur (La Chapelle-en-Lafaye, 27 December 1860 – Paris, 12 June 1955) was a French physician specializing in ENT surgery.
+The Skira is the setting for Aristophanes' comedy Ecclesiazusae (393 BCE), in which the women seize the opportunity afforded by the festival, to hatch their plot to overthrow male domination.
+Upsets include Stanislas defeating Tom Rolfe in 1966 and Nodouble in 1968 beating the reigning American Horse of the Year, Damascus.
+In a revised version it was included by Chekhov into Volume 4 of his Collected Works published in 1899–1901 by Adolf Marks.
+Tamagawa Village was formed on March 31, 1955 by the merger of the two villages.
+His debut for Boca was in a 0–0 draw on 16 February 2004 against Gimnasia y Esgrima de La Plata.
+The election is being conducted as a traditional delegated leadership convention with delegates being selected by each electoral district and affiliated trade union who will then attend the convention and vote in ballots until one candidate wins 50% + 1 of the vote.
+Saitoella is a genus of two species of yeast in the family Protomycetaceae.
+By the late 1990s, basketball had slowly rose to prominence once again, reaching the Sac Joaquin playoffs numerous times.
+They had one daughter.
+It is part of the Ramapo Mountains.
+241 when President Ferdinand Marcos signed it into law on November 11, 1982.
+His television work included 31 movies of the week, 19 series, 15 specials and 27 pilots.
+In 2001 they recorded their debut album.
+League participationsNamibia Premier League: 2012–14; 2015–Namibia First Division: ????
+SummaryParticipation detailsReferencesExternal links Category:Basketball competitions in Asia between national teamsCategory:International basketball competitions hosted by ChinaCategory:Recurring sporting events established in 2005Category:2005 establishments in China
+Since then, it has won several awards including the San Francisco Chronicle Rising Star Chef 2016, San Francisco Rising Star Chef, and One Michelin Star.
+NINTCAMS funds the NETP as one of ten Aboriginal Human Resources Development Societies in British Columbia and one of seven represented by the BCAHRDS (BCAHRDS, 2008b).
+The festivities in honor of the patron Saint Atilano, were declared of Regional Interest in 1998 and National Interest in 2009.
+The Finn was a sailing event on the Sailing at the 1952 Summer Olympics program in Harmaja.
+He join BJP on 9 August 2019..He Was Elected Unopposed To Rajya Sabha On 18 March As A Bharatiya Janata Party CandidateHe has completed Masters in Arts in 1974 and L.L.B.in 1978 from Gauhati University.
+IncumbentsMonarch: Peter VPrime Minister: Nuno José Severo de Mendoça Rolim de Moura Barreto, 1st Duke of LouléEvents 2 May - Legislative election.
+The single was included Reece's debutalbum, So Far, which was released in September 1996.
+TransportThe Gifhorn rail station is in the southern part of the town.
+If I Were You may refer to:Literature If I Were You (Wodehouse novel), a 1931 novel by P.G.
+ReferencesExternal links Global Security.Org entry on the Combat Aviation Brigade, 34th Infantry DivisionCAB034Category:Military units and formations in MinnesotaCategory:Aviation Brigades of the United States Army
+Iain Murray may refer to:Iain Murray (author) (born 1931), British pastor and authorIain Murray, 10th Duke of Atholl (1931–1996), Scottish peer and landownerIain Murray (sailor) (born 1958), Australian sailorSee also Ian Murray (disambiguation)
+He suffers from post-concussion syndrome.
+He was a dual citizen of the United Kingdom and the United States.
+First final round|}Final fourSemifinals|}3rd place match|}Final|}Final standing12-man Roster for Final Round
Marcelinho, André Heller, Giba, Murilo, André, Sérgio, Anderson, Samuel, Gustavo, Rodrigão, Ricardo, DanteHead CoachBernardinhoAwardsMost Valuable Player Ivan MiljkovicBest Scorer Ivan MiljkovicBest Spiker Henry Bell CisneroBest Blocker Dante AmaralBest Server Ivan MiljkovicBest Setter Yoandry DiazBest Libero Marko SamardzićReferencesExternal linksOfficial websiteCategory:FIVB Volleyball World LeagueFIVB World LeagueVolleyballVolleyball
+LifeMary Fleming was the youngest child of Malcolm Fleming, 3rd Lord Fleming and Lady Janet Stewart.
+When the heroes are placed in a trap, they finally met Nathan, who is chained, and then immediately learned of Darcy's plan to freeze everyone, including the deceived Maura, who had not fallen into the trap.
+Interactions Endothelin receptor type A has been shown to interact with HDAC7A and HTATIP.
+In the early 1920s, Daniel helped start The Ring with Nat Fleischer.
+Since 2014, he has been Professor of Early Modern History at the University of York.
+Lactococcus fujiensis is a Gram-positive and facultatively anaerobic bacterium from the genus of Lactococcus which has been isolated from the leaves of Chinese cabbage from Fujinomiya in Japan.
+The development plan was approved in September 2009 and production started on 22 August 2011 by PetroVietnam jack-up platform PVD-II.
+It was described by Vandyke in 1953.
+The models are each named for their relative size.
+ReferencesCategory:PhaegopterinaCategory:Moths described in 1917
+Recently, Alejandro Garcia Reidy has discovered an unpublished play by Claramonte, Las dos columnas de San Carlos, in which is shown Charles Borromeo's life, a play that has the particularity to have in the first scene the character of Marin Luther.
+During this Ottoman period, Islam spread and many mosques, Turkish baths, madrasah, bridges and Ottoman houses were built.
+ReferencesCategory:Unincorporated communities in Perry County, KentuckyCategory:Unincorporated communities in KentuckyCategory:Coal towns in Kentucky
+ReferencesCategory:1998 non-fiction booksCategory:Sex manuals
+Inger Krogh is a Norwegian exchange student coming to America after World War II, and this account begins when James Sites (a merchant mariner for the United States at the time) first meets her at sea following a shipwreck.
+She currently lives in Newfoundland.
+Beinn Chorranach lies at the head of lower Glen Kinglas and is located between Loch Fyne (the biggest sea loch in Scotland) and Loch Lomond (the biggest freshwater loch in Scotland).
+The community library is on Knight Street and is part of the King Edward Village condo-shopping project.
+See alsoTurkish Radio and Television CorporationList of television stations in TurkeyExternal linksTRT's Official Website TRT INT Broadcasting ScheduleWatch TRT INT live OnlineTRT INT at LyngSat AddressReferencesCategory:Defunct television channels in TurkeyCategory:Turkish-language television stationsCategory:Television channels and stations established in 1990Category:Television channels and stations disestablished in 2009Category:International broadcastersCategory:1990 establishments in TurkeyCategory:Turkish Radio and Television Corporation
+NotesExternal links Category:1909 birthsCategory:1963 deathsCategory:Australian rules footballers from Victoria (Australia)Category:North Melbourne Football Club players
+8 May9 May10 May11 May12 May13 May14 May15 May16 May17 May18 May19 May20 May21 May22 May23 May24 May25 May26 May27 May28 May29 May30 May31 MayUnknown dateReferences1944-05
+He was only fourteen when his father procured for him the bishopric of Montauban, and Louis XI appointed him one of his almoners.
+The race restarted on lap 266 and it remained green for 10 laps, The seventh caution of the race flew on lap 276 for Hamlin cutting a tire down after a few laps earlier he and Elliott slammed into the wall.
+In his view there are some people who, though not sufficiently innocent to not be bona fide purchasers for value, they may not be sufficiently guilty or knowledgeable to be knowing recipients.
+ReferencesExternal linksInterview at the National Book Festival with Albright on Facism, September 1, 2018Category:2018 non-fiction booksCategory:Books about fascismCategory:Books by Madeleine AlbrightCategory:HarperCollins books
+In Louis Vierne's biography Mes Souvenirs, he describes Alexandre Cellier as a "cultivated musician" with skills in improvisation.
+This is an elected position, with a four-year term (three years prior to the elections in November 2014).
+The main road from Mathura to Aligarh also passes through Mangarhi.
+The book's introduction lists some of the major rule changes from the Immortals Rules box set, also noting that these rules also supplant those in the Rules Cyclopedia regarding immortals.
+Goalscorers9 goals Margrét Lára Viðarsdóttir Isabell Herlovsen7 goals Fanny Vágó6 goals Hólmfríður Magnúsdóttir4 goals Annaelle Wiard Tessa Wullaert Aline Zeler Hege Hansen Maren Mjelde3 goals Lilla Sipos Sara Björk Gunnarsdóttir Gry Tofte Ims Ingvild Stensland2 goals Janice Cayman Audrey Demoustier Zsófia Rácz Dagný Brynjarsdóttir Katrín Jónsdóttir Dóra María Lárusdóttir Ashley Hutton Kirsty McGuinness Julie Nelson Marita Skammelsrud Lund Cecilie Pedersen Elise Thorsnes1 goal Lien Mermans Stéphanie van Gils Valentina Gospodinova Zsanett Jakabfi Anett Dombai-Nagy Anita Pádár Szabina Tálosi Bernadett Zágor Kristín Ýr Bjarnadóttir Fanndís Friðriksdóttir Sandra Jessen Katrín Ómarsdóttir Rachel Furness Simone Magill Caragh Milligan Catherine O'Hagan Jessica Stephens Solfrid Andersen Marit Christensen Caroline Hansen Mari Knudsen Lene Mykjåland1 own goal Borislava Kireva (playing against Northern Ireland) Ashley Hutton (playing against Hungary)ReferencesGroup 33Category:2011–12 in Bulgarian footballCategory:2012–13 in Bulgarian footballCategory:2011–12 in Northern Ireland association footballCategory:2012–13 in Northern Ireland association footballCategory:2011 in Norwegian women's footballCategory:2012 in Norwegian women's footballCategory:2011 in Icelandic footballCategory:2012 in Icelandic footballCategory:2011–12 in Belgian footballCategory:2012–13 in Belgian footballCategory:2011–12 in Hungarian footballCategory:2012–13 in Hungarian footballqual
+In the 1980s it was merged with Mannesmann as Mannesmann-Kienzle, and in 1991 it was sold to the Digital Equipment GmbH and was renamed Digital-Kienzle Computer Systeme.
+It deals with a plot by a group of criminals to rob a luxury apartment building.
+ReferencesExternal linksDelias at Markku Savela's Lepidoptera and Some Other Life FormsbakeriCategory:Butterflies described in 1909
+It is often found growing alongside another barnacle, Balanus crenatus.
+The club caters for players at all age levels in hurling, Gaelic football, camogie and ladies football.
+References Category:Populated places in Fasa County
+Oz, the Musical sold out both nights.
+ReferencesCategory:EkebergCategory:Oslo Tramway stations in OsloCategory:Railway stations opened in 1917Category:1917 establishments in Norway
+ReferencesExternal linksTV Channell at IMDbCategory:1956 Australian television series debutsCategory:1957 Australian television series endingsCategory:1950s Australian television seriesCategory:Australian variety television showsCategory:English-language television programsCategory:Black-and-white Australian television programsCategory:Australian live television seriesCategory:Australian Broadcasting Corporation shows
+Del Turco (or del Turco) may refer to: Rosselli del Turco, a historic noble family from Florence, ItalyPeople Flaminio del Turco (died 1634), Italian architect and sculptor Stefano Rosselli del Turco, Marquis, (1877–1947), Italian chess player, writer and publisher Riccardo Del Turco (born 1939), Italian singer Ottaviano Del Turco (born 1944), Italian politicianBuildings Palazzo Rosselli del Turco (Sassatelli branch), a historical palace located in Florence, Italy Palazzo Borgherini-Rosselli del Turco, a Renaissance-style palace located in central Florence, Italy
+He died on 13 April 2008 in Dublin, Ireland.
+ReferencesCategory:Gewogs of BhutanCategory:Mongar District
+Notable people with the name include: Sabine Appelmans (born 1972), Belgian former tennis player Sabine Auken (born 1965), German bridge player Sabine Azéma (born 1949), French actress and director Sabine Baeß (born 1961), German pair skater Sabine Baring-Gould (1834–1924), English Victorian hagiographer, antiquarian, novelist and eclectic scholar Sabine Bätzing-Lichtenthäler (born 1975), German politician Sabine Becker (born 1959), German speed skater Sabine Bergmann-Pohl (born 1946), East German head of state Sabine Bethmann (born 1931), German movie actress Sabine Bohlmann (born 1969), German actress Sabine Bothe (born 1960), German handball goalkeeper Sabine Bramhoff (born 1964), German high jumper Sabine Braun (born 1965), track and field athlete Sabine Busch (born 1962), German athlete Sabine Christiansen (born 1957), German journalist and television presenter Sabine Dardenne (born 1983), Belgian kidnap victim Sabine de Bethune (born 1958), Belgian politician Sabine Egger (born 1977), Austrian alpine skier Sabine Eichenberger (born 1968), Swiss sprint canoeist Sabine Engel (born 1954), German discus thrower Sabine Everts (born 1961), German heptathlete Sabine Gaspersz, Dutch singer and swimmer Sabine Getty, English jewelry designer Sabine Ginther (born 1970), Austrian alpine skier Sabine Günther (born 1963), German sprinter Sabine Hack (born 1969), German tennis player Sabine Hark (born 1962), German feminist and sociologist Sabine Haudepin (born 1955), French actress Sabine Hazboun (born 1994), Palestinian swimmer Sabine Heinrich (born 1976), German radio and television presenter Sabine Heitling (born 1987), Brazilian athlete Sabine Herbst (born 1974), German swimmer Sabine Herold (born 1981), French political activist Sabine Hossenfelder, German Theoretical Physicist Sabine John (born 1957), German heptathlete Sabine Jünger (born 1973), German politician Sabine Kalter (1890–1957), Polish opera singer Sabine Karsenti, French-Canadian actress Sabine Klaschka (born 1980), German tennis player Sabine Krantz (born 1981), German race walker Sabine Kratze (c. 1970–1995), German protester by self-immolation Sabine Kuegler (born 1972), German author Sabine Laruelle (born 1965), Belgian politician Sabine Lepsius (1864–1942), German painter Sabine Leutheusser-Schnarrenberger (born 1951), German politician Sabine Lisicki (born 1989), German tennis player Sabine Meyer (born 1959), German classical clarinetist Sabine Moritz (born 1969), German painter and graphic designer Sabine Moussier (born 1966), German-Mexican actress.
+It lies approximately north-east of Domanice, south-west of Siedlce, and east of Warsaw.
+The band continues to tour throughout Canada and the United States.
+The race was won by Wilfried Nelissen.
+Pippalada tells Satyakama Jabala that the status of the seeker depends on the depth of meditation, he uses two significant words, Abhidhyanam (dhyana) and Mātrā (degree), also used by Patanjali; meditation has three matras or levels, the one who has gone beyond Vaikhari and Madhyama and reached the Pashyanti stage of meditation can become one with the Absolute and need not be born.
+The gorge itself contains many walking tracks, waterfalls and a variety of Australian flora, and is a popular spot for hikers, cyclists and rock climbers.
+References Category:Rural localities in BashkortostanCategory:Rural localities in Belokataysky District
+Syzygium paniculatum, the magenta lilly pilly or magenta cherry, is a species of flowering plant in the myrtle family Myrtaceae, native to New South Wales, Australia.
+Organization 4th Light Tank Brigade 5th Tank Brigade 1st Motor Rifle BrigadeCategory:Tank corps of the Soviet Union
+AthleticsKeyNote–Ranks given for track events are within the athlete's heat onlyWomenTrackFieldCyclingRoadMenReferences 2006Category:Nations at the 2006 Commonwealth GamesCommonwealth Games
+References Category:Populated places in Birjand County
+See alsoList of wind farmsList of offshore wind farms in the Irish SeaRenewable energy in the Republic of IrelandRenewable energyWind turbineNuclear energy in IrelandRenewable energy by countryReferencesExternal linkswww.sei.ie - Sustainable Energy Ireland, Ireland's national energy agency.
+The population of the town was 4,031 at the 2000 census.
+It represents all police superintendents and chief superintendents in the country.
+However, judge Dr Rick Gekoski said although he was disappointed that le Carré wanted to withdraw, his name would remain on the list.
+Krohns Lake, is a spring-fed lake southwest of Algoma, Wisconsin, in Kewaunee County.
+Notable people with the surname include:A. Wilcocks, British rugby union playerAlexander Wilcocks (1741—1801), American lawyer and Revolutionary War supporterJoseph Wilcocks (1673–1756), British Anglican bishopPhilip Wilcocks (born 1953), British Royal Navy admiralSee alsoWillcocksWilcox
+He was named MVP of the 1984 USFL Championship Game.
+NHL FaceOff 98 is a video game developed by Killer Game and published by Sony Computer Entertainment of America for the PlayStation.
+List of MPsReferencesCategory:Constituencies of the National Assembly of ZambiaCategory:1968 establishments in ZambiaCategory:Constituencies established in 1968
+Owing to Cowan's commitments to contracts with School Publications they returned to Wellington, setting up a studio.
+It is broadcast by the ORF, and the programs from Radio Burgenland are made in the ORF Burgenland Studio.
+He placed 21st and 19th in the Melbourne and Rome Olympic marathons, respectively.
+George of Antioch may refer to:George of Antioch (d. 1151/1152)George the Confessor, Bishop of Antioch in Pisidia (d. 814)George I of Antioch, Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch (r. 640-656)George I of Antioch, Syriac Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch (r. 758-790)George II of Antioch, Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch (r. 690–695)George III of Antioch, Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch (r. 902–917)Ignatius George II, Syriac Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch (r. 1687-1708)Ignatius George III, Syriac Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch (r. 1745–1768)Ignatius George IV, Syriac Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch (r. 1768–1781)Ignatius George V, Syriac Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch (r. 1819–1837)Ignatius George V Shelhot, Syriac Catholic Patriarch of Antioch (r. 1874-1891)
+It is the third most important rugby union cup competition in Hampshire, behind the Hampshire Cup and Hampshire Bowl.
+Athabasca Oil Corporation is a Canadian energy company with a focused strategy on the development of thermal and light oil assets.
+She grew up in Edappally, a town near Ernakulam.
+CareerEarly years Garabedian began skating in 2002.
+The second mode grabs an area or window of the screen.
+ZamindariBelonging to one of the most elite, enlightened and aristocratic landed families, he opposed the abolition of zamindari, along with Kameshwar Singh of Raj Darbhanga.
+The term g0y comes from the Hebrew goy, with the o replaced by a 0 to represent "departure from stereotype".
+SynopsisThe drama tells the story of people who buy and sell secondhand items online.
+Juan Domingo Suárez (born 1 May 1952) is an Argentine boxer.
+He competed in the men's freestyle 52 kg at the 1968 Summer Olympics.
+At birth, rams weigh and ewes weigh .
+Federal politicsFollowing the election of J. C. Watts as the Congressman for Oklahoma's 4th congressional district, Hunter was appointed as Watts' chief of staff in 1995, serving until 1999.
+HistoryFollowing the demise of the BGTCS in 1935 the Blackburn Stadium management decide to remain independent (unaffiliated to a governing body), a status that was retained for the next fifty years.
+Loosely based on the movie The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, the game also shares some sequences with the original book.
+Iosif Gavrilovich Yesman (1868–1955) was a Russian scientist in the field of hydraulics.
+The novel takes place in New York City.
+ReferencesExternal linksType strain of Flavobacterium branchiicola at BacDive - the Bacterial Diversity Metadatabase branchiicolaCategory:Bacteria described in 2016
+There is an electoral ward of the same name whose population at the above census was 1,870.
+References Category:Populated places in Rudbar-e Jonubi County
+Tonkhil () is a sum (district) of Govi-Altai Province in western Mongolia.
+Walker also writes under pen name J C Daniels.
+Respectable may refer to:Having significant social status"Respectable" (Rolling Stones song), 1978 single "Respectable" (Mel and Kim song), 1987 single "Respectable", a 1960 single by The Isley Brothers, a 1965 album cover by the Yardbirds on Having a Rave Up with The Yardbirds, and a 1966 cover by The Outsiders"Respectable", a song by Don McLean from the album TapestryRespectable (TV series), set in a brothel, broadcast by Five in the UK in 2006See alsoRespect (disambiguation)ja:クリケット (曖昧さ回避)
+At the center of the flower are many whiskery stamens.
+Keith Davis (born 5 December 1935) was an English cricketer.
+Dioryctria peyerimhoffi is a species of snout moth in the genus Dioryctria.
+Koerner, Baden-Baden 2007, Thomas Gilbhard: Warburg more bibliographico, in: Nouvelles de la République des Lettres, 2008/2.
+Acalyptris bovicorneus is a moth of the family Nepticulidae.
+He is one of the honorees in the California Social Work Hall of Distinction.
+Further readingReferencesCategory:CarpoxylinaeCategory:Endemic flora of VanuatuCategory:Trees of VanuatuCategory:Critically endangered flora of OceaniaCategory:Monotypic Arecaceae generaCategory:Taxonomy articles created by PolbotCategory:Plants described in 1875Category:Taxa named by Hermann Wendland
+Famous residents Frank Hasenfratz (1935-), Hungarian-born Canadian billionaire businessman, founder of LinamarExternal links Street map Category:Populated places in Fejér County
+Further to this, zircon minerals can be subject to Hf and O isotope ratio analysis.
+See also List of rivers of Puerto RicoReferencesExternal links USGS Hydrologic Unit Map – Caribbean Region (1974) Rios de Puerto RicoCategory:Rivers of Puerto Rico
+Serixia khasiana is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae.
+Located on the northwest corner of Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard and Louisville Road in the city's historic downtown, the red brick passenger terminal of the CofG complex houses the Savannah Visitor Center and the Savannah History Museum.
+There are 5 streets.
+She represented the Côtes-d'Armor department, and was a member of the Socialist Party.
+ReferencesCategory:Italian DOCCategory:Sparkling winesCategory:Wines of Trentino
+She was married to Eudes I, Duke of Burgundy in 1080.
+ReferencesCategory:AttelabidaeCategory:Beetles described in 1933
+CITYCOT is a leading career college in Somalia, offering diploma programs and certificate courses in Business, Information Technology, Telecommunication and Health Science.
+1995 Division of pre-war municipality of Kupres Following the Dayton Agreement, which split Bosnia and Herzegovina following the War in Bosnia and Herzegovina according to ethnic lines and war frontlines, the town has evolved into a Croat-dominated town.
+The award can be made to an individual or a team of scientists.
+David () (30 April 1819 – 24 September 1888) was a Georgian royal prince (batonishvili) of the Bagrationi dynasty.
+In March 2012, the new Miami Trolley system inaugurated its first route which passes through Civic Center on its way to Marlins Park.
+Third round|colspan="3" style="background-color:#99CCCC"|9 July 2011|-|colspan="3" style="background-color:#99CCCC"|10 July 2011|-|colspan="3" style="background-color:#99CCCC"|16 July 2011|-|colspan="3" style="background-color:#99CCCC"|17 July 2011|-|colspan="3" style="background-color:#99CCCC"|20 July 2011|-|colspan="3" style="background-color:#99CCCC"|27 July 2011|-|colspan="3" style="background-color:#99CCCC"|17 August 2011|-|colspan="3" style="background-color:#99CCCC"|19 October 2011 4 (C) is Champion in last season.
+Javier Alejandro Almirón (born February 9, 1980 in Lanús) is an Argentine professional football player who last played for FC Luch-Energiya Vladivostok.
+He sits on its Committee on Agriculture and Rural Development.
+In a unique arrangement in the state, this is the only state park to be managed jointly by the state and an American Indian band.
+The post office was established with the name Falsen in 1913, but the name was changed in 1925 to honor Pierre de la Verendrye, an early French-Canadian explorer who was the earliest known European to tour the North Dakota prairies.
+According to the Catholic News Agency (CNA), Bishop Raul Vera Lopez of Saltillo, Mexico will meet with Cardinal Marc Ouellet, the Cardinal Prefect of the Congregation for Bishops in the Vatican's Roman Curia, "to discuss Bishop Vera's support for the San Elredo Community, an organization that embraces homosexuality."
+The Institute for Religious Research is a United States Christian apologetics and counter-cult organization based in Cedar Springs, Michigan.
+Achievements in African Americans' being elected mayor in majority-European American and other municipalities made their political participation one of daily life in many localities.
+Track listing"Long Distance Letter" (Gary Chapman, Tim Marsh, Keith Thomas) - 3:13"Yes And Know" (Chapman, Marsh, Thomas) - 3:55"Bittersweetness" (Brown Bannister, Phil Madeira, Michael W. Smith) - 3:54"Mighty Lord" (Phil Madeira) - 5:02"Open My Eyes" (Pam Mark Hall, Michael W. Smith, Amy Grant) - 4:27"Holy, Holy" (Deborah D. Smith, Michael W. Smith, Brown and Debbie Bannister) - 5:01"Hearts of Fire" (Billy Sprague, Brown Bannister, Michael W. Smith) - 4:00"I Belong To You" (James Ward, Mark Gersmehl) - 4:16"Island of Love" (Chris Eaton) - 3:54Production Producer – Brown Bannister Executive Producers – Dan Harrell and Michael Blanton Engineered and Mixed by Jack Joseph Puig Assistant Engineers – Jim Baird, Don Cobb, Steve Ford and Mike Psanos.
+Ab Damil () may refer to: Ab Damil, Hormozgan Ab Damil, Kerman
+He was denounced by members of the Nazi party as a liberal, but was protected by Joachim Von Ribbentrop, who valued his knowledge of Great Britain.
+Glipa pici is a species of beetle in the genus Glipa.
+The Dominica Liberation Movement Alliance was a political party in Dominica.
+At that time, the British 10th Army was part Paiforce (formerly Iraqforce) under the Persia and Iraq Command.
+The route serves as a direct connection between the Pontiac region and the Upper Gatineau region.
+The communities of Shamattawa, Manitoba, and Fort Severn and Peawanuck, Ontario, on the Wapusk Trail, are mostly Cree.
+Sergei Gennadyevich Breyev (; born 22 April 1987) is a Russian professional football player.
+Computing codesSee also Ш ш : Cyrillic letter ShaCyrillic characters in UnicodeCategory:Cyrillic letters
+See alsoBhutanese refugeesReferencesCategory:Refugee camps in NepalCategory:Bhutanese refugee camps
+It has a population of 904.
+Bob McCaslin may refer to: Bob McCaslin Sr. (1926–2011), American politician Bob McCaslin Jr. (born 1957), American politician
+Category:Book publishing company imprints
+With his bushy eyebrows and balding pate, he was easily cast in a wide variety of middle-aged "everyman" roles: cops, small-time crooks, judges, jurors, bartenders, repairmen, neighbors, shopkeepers, etc.
+By 16 August, the French naval commander, Admiral de Lapeyrère, took the bulk of the French fleet from Malta to the entrance of the Adriatic to keep the Austro-Hungarian Navy bottled up.
+Neuillé is a commune in the Maine-et-Loire department in western France.
+In flight steering is accomplished via foot pedals that actuate the canopy brakes, creating roll and yaw.
+The county administration was able to build stone bridges at a lower cost than then-conventional steel beam bridges because of the availability of experienced stone workers, and the federal subsidy to the wages they were paid.
+Veena, a sardarni, married Hindu businessman, Prem Gupta, owner of The International Angora Breeding Farm.
+See alsoMaojian teaXinyang cityReferencesExternal linksOfficial Website of XSHS* Facebook of XSHSCategory:Education in XinyangCategory:Education in HenanCategory:High schools in HenanCategory:Educational institutions established in 1938
+As of 2011 Census, the village's population was 6.
+He supervises a group, whose research focuses on theoretical and computational chemistry as well as theoretical and computational physics, particularly on the development and applications of many-body methods for accurate quantum calculations for molecular systems and atomic nuclei, including methods based on coupled cluster theory, mathematical methods of chemistry and physics, and theory of intermolecular forces.
+By marrying Elizabeth of Kuyavia, Stephen received from Charles the lands to the west formerly held by Mladen I Šubić of Bribir and Usora and Soli in the north formerly held by Vladislav, King of Syrmia.
+An outline of Igede grammarCategory:Languages of NigeriaCategory:Volta–Niger languages
+The commission launched SSM e-Info Services to allow information on companies and businesses obtainable via its website.
+Antelope Valley Conservancy is a public-benefit corporation that preserves natural habitats and watershed resources.
+Spalacopsis howdeni is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae.
+On the front, the dual cameras of the V40 and V50 have been omitted in favor of a singular front-facing camera, which reduces the size of the display notch.
+Hitoshi Morishita may refer to:, Japanese footballer and manager, Japanese footballer
+Lars Karlsson may refer to: Lars Karlsson (handballer) (born 1948), Swedish handball player Lars Erik Karlsson, Swedish darts player (born 1955), Swedish Grandmaster Lars Karlsson (ice hockey) (born 1960), Swedish ice hockey player Lars Peter Karlsson (born 1966), Swedish ice hockey player
+He is most known for inventing the ouija board.
+}}Keith Paskett is a former wide receiver in the National Football League.
+He became professor of natural science at Northwestern University in 1862 and taught there for 37 years and held a number of faculty posts.
+Hind Kesari is an Indian-style wrestling championship, established in 1958.
+Anchor tenants Belk (formerly McRae's) Dillard's Fitness Depot United Artists TheatresFormer tenants Goody's JCPenney (closed in 2017) Sears (closed in 2018)Bonita Lakes CrossingBonita Lakes Crossing is a shopping center located outside of the mall.
+Further south it flows through the Trombetas State Forest from north to south.
+Meridarchis monopa is a moth in the Carposinidae family.
+Irena Eichlerówna (19 April 1908 - 12 July 1990) was a Polish actress.
+Election Commissioner of India Arora assumed office as one of the two Election Commissioners of India on 31 August 2017, Arora assumed the office of Election Commissioner on 1 September 2017.
+In 2015 she was awarded the Vyas Samman by the K.K.
+Jono may refer to:Jono Bacon, a musicianJono, a character in Star Trek'' mediaCategory:Disambiguation pages
+His Stoic tome Meditations, written in Greek while on campaign between 170 and 180, is still revered as a literary monument to a philosophy of service and duty, describing how to find and preserve equanimity in the midst of conflict by following nature as a source of guidance and inspiration.
+Portugal–United States relations are bilateral relations between Portugal and the United States.
+Wins67th Venice International Film FestivalSpecial Jury PrizeCoppa Volpi for the Best Actor: Vincent GalloCinemAvvenire Award: Best Film In Competition25th Mar del Plata Film FestivalGolden Astor for Best FilmSilver Astor for Best Actor: Vincent GalloACCA Award (Argentine Film Reviewers Association): Best Film in the International Competition13th Polish Film AwardsEagle for Best FilmEagle for Best Director: Jerzy SkolimowskiEagle for Best Music: Paweł MykietynEagle for Best Editing: Réka Lemhényi/Maciej Pawliński36th Polish Film FestivalGolden Lion for Best FilmBest Director: Jerzy SkolimowskiBest Cinematography: Adam SikoraBest Music: Paweł MykietynBest Editing: Réka Lemhényi/Maciej Pawliński'11th Sopot Film FestivalGrand PrixSee also The One That Got Away (1957) 49th Parallel'' (1941)ReferencesExternal links Essential Killing in Rotten Tomatoes Essential Killing at culture.pl Essential Killing North American premiere at the 35th Toronto International Film Festival Movie City News video interview with Jerzy Skolimowski on the making of Essential Killing.
+Exhibits The main museum building has three levels.
+V-STOL Aircraft was preceded by Turner's earlier company, Starflight Manufacturing Inc, which was a pioneering ultralight manufacturer founded in 1980.
+Continuity is a stronger condition: the continuity of in the natural topology (discussed below), also called multivariable continuity, which is sufficient for continuity of the composition .
+A central position is occupied by the collection of Greek vases and sculptures and the Ancient Egyptian section.
+Đula Mešter (; , born 3 April 1972) is a Serbian volleyball player of Hungarian ethnicity who won the gold medal with the Yugoslav Men's National Team at the 2000 Summer Olympics.
+HistoryIn the 1963 election for New Jersey Assembly a number of candidates ran as "Conservative".
+Colombia was the nineteenth of 82 delegations to enter the BC Place stadium, after China and before Croatia.
+Windows 98 also has built-in support for browsing Distributed File System trees on Server Message Block shares such as Windows NT servers.
+He died in 1791, with an insolvent estate.
+Armando Vieira (born 11 April 1925) is a retired Brazilian tennis player.
+In 1978, a second primary school was established in Cambridge Park and given the name Cambridge Gardens Public School.
+He was drafted 152nd overall by the Pittsburgh Penguins in the 1997 NHL Entry Draft.
+OJSC Kremenchukm'yaso () is a Ukrainian Open Joint Stock Company that belongs to a Finances and Credit Group.
+Gadwall may refer to:Ducks:Gadwall (Anas strepera), a duck of the family AnatidaeCoues's gadwall or Washington Island gadwall (Anas strepera couesi), an extinct dabbling duckOther:Gadwall, California, a former settlement in Merced County, California, United StatesUSS Gadwall (AM-362), was an Admirable-class minesweeper built for the U.S. Navy during World War IISee alsoGertrude Gadwall, a fictional duck character in Disney films
+The association was founded in 1932 and holds annual meetings and regional postgraduate continuing education courses, establishes research grants, and publishes The American Journal of Gastroenterology, Clinical and Translational Gastroenterology and The ACG Case Reports Journal.
+In December 2016 and January 2017 Bonas played the female lead role of Daisy Buchanan in the musical play Gatsby, at the Leicester Square Theatre, based on F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby.
+It was gained in just two years rather than the normal three, because the Bottens had not used chemicals for the previous three years prior to starting certification.
+ReferencesCategory:Moths described in 1971Category:Rectiostoma
+Huning is a surname.
+It is a left tributary of the Rott near the district Hörbering of Neumarkt-Sankt Veit.
+ManagementSasha Toophanie is the current General Manager and the longtime faculty adviser is Professor Rodger Smith.
+He married Anna Magdalena Saluz from Chur in 1802.
+Mary Curtis may refer to:Mary Curtis Richardson (née Curtis, 1848–1931).
+Rejection of same-sex civil partnershipsIn December 2015, the Golden Dawn was one of the main groups to reject a bill to allow civil partnerships for same-sex couples in Greece.
+SalicinaeB.
+Jinfeng Township () is a mountain indigenous township in Taitung County, Taiwan.
+It is located within Central Province.
+In June 2015, TFES completed work on its largest project, a 12-finger inlet slug catcher weighing nearly 378,000 pounds, destined for BP's Shah Deniz natural gas project in Azerbaijan.
+It was described by Yoshiyasu in 1987.
+It is on the west side of the Muskingum River, opposite McConnelsville.
+These houses demonstrate that it is possible to build a sustainable home using currently available materials and traditional methods of construction.
+In antiquity the city was in Isauria (Ἰσαυρία) district of Lycaonia in today's southern Turkey (modern Konya Province).
+Its three-year rolling average for A Level A*-B results is 75% and the school's value-add score for academic attainment puts it in the top 6% tier of schools worldwide and top 44% of UK Independent Schools.
+SeedsDrawFinalsTop HalfBottom HalfReferences Main DrawCategory:Seoul OpenCategory:1992 ATP TourCategory:1992 Seoul Open
+Critical receptionFor his AllMusic review, critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine notes the album is rare "star-studded" release, featuring "British classic rock royalty" with artists like "Roger Waters, the Who, The Rolling Stones and Eric Clapton".
+The second discal stigma is small and dark grey and there is a slight oblique grey strigula from the costa before the middle, where a very oblique series of several cloudy dark fuscous dots runs to the disc beyond the cell.
+Christopher Paul Roberts (12 October 1951 - 9 June 1977) was an English first-class cricketer who played one first-class and one List A game for Worcestershire in 1974.
+Niantic may refer to: Niantic people, tribe of American Indians Niantic, Inc., mobile app developer known for the mobile games Ingress and Pokémon GOShips Niantic (whaling vessel), relic of San Francisco Gold RushUSS Niantic Victory, Victory ship later renamed USNS Watertown (T-AGM-6)USS Niantic (CVE-46), US aircraft carrier later renamed HMS Ranee (D03)Places Niantic, Connecticut Niantic River Niantic, Illinois
+Muhammad Niaz is a retired heavyweight freestyle wrestler from Pakistan.
+AwardsHanger Western was named to Inc. magazine’s Inc. magazine's "30 Under 30 Coolest Young Entrepreneurs" for 2010, Glamour magazine's "20 Amazing Young Women", and The Boston Globe's "25 Most Stylish Bostonians for 2010 Hanger Western was the 2016 winner of Target Magazine’s Target Marketer of the Year.
+Märska is buried at the Rahumäe cemetery in Tallinn.
+The long-time Executive Director Carmen Mauk also stepped down in 2015 and handed over the position to Christopher Breedlove.
+Eyewitness premiered on USA Network on October 16, 2016.
+Longino Welch was an American track and field athlete for Georgia Tech.
+Bezonvaux is a commune in the Meuse department in the Grand Est region in northeastern France.
+The genus was erected by William Dewitt Field in 1950.
+Joe Russo may refer to:Joe Russo (director) (born 1971), American film and television directorJoe Russo (musician) (born 1976), American jazz/rock drummerJoe Russo (racing driver) (1901–1934), American racecar driver active in the 1930s
+Hasanabad (, also Romanized as Ḩasanābād) is a village in Shandiz Rural District, Shandiz District, Torqabeh and Shandiz County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran.
+After the end of monarchy in 2008, the new government adapted the award, "Nepal Ratna Man Padavi".
+The also restored the gate and placed a triangular lift on the rear side of the building.
+Chloroclystis perissa is a moth in the family Geometridae.
+Gork, the Teenage Dragon is the debut novel by American writer Gabe Hudson.
+Koshino is a village in Municipality of Dolneni, central North Macedonia.
+From 1899-1905, he played with the Frankfurt Philharmonic, the Gürzenich Orchestra in Cologne (where he played in the premiere performance of Gustav Mahler's Fifth Symphony in 1904), and with the Liszt Society.
+It was held on the weekend of the 16 to 18 November at Symmons Plains Raceway in Tasmania.
+The gospel version of "Loves Me Like a Rock" by the Dixie Hummingbirds reached number 72 on the Billboard R&B chart and won the group a Grammy for Best Soul Gospel performance in 1974.
+"I Die: You Die" is a song by the British musician Gary Numan, released as a single in August 1980.
+Amy Fawsitt (1836 – December 26, 1876) also known as Mrs. Menzies, was an English actress.
+WVNE (760 AM) is a radio station broadcasting a Christian radio format.
+Semi-PlayoffPlayoffPromotion-Relegation PlayoffsFirst legSecond leg''Suwon FC secure promotion to the 2016 K League Classic season, 3–0 on aggregate.
+ReferencesCategory:Unincorporated communities in Alexander County, IllinoisCategory:Unincorporated communities in IllinoisCategory:Cape Girardeau–Jackson metropolitan area
+__TOC__HoHoa-Hog|- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoaden| class="adr" | Kent| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoar Cross| class="adr" | Staffordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoar Oak Water| class="adr" | Devon| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoarwithy| class="adr" | Herefordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoath| class="adr" | Kent| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoath Corner| class="adr" | Kent| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hobarris| class="adr" | Shropshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hobble End| class="adr" | Staffordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hobbles Green| class="adr" | Suffolk| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hobbs Cross, Matching| class="adr" | Essex| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hobbs Cross, Theydon Garnon| class="adr" | Essex| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hobbs Wall| class="adr" | Somerset| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hob Hill| class="adr" | Cheshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hobhole Drain| class="adr" | Lincolnshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hobkirk| class="adr" | Scottish Borders| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hobroyd| class="adr" | Derbyshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hobson| class="adr" | Durham| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoby| class="adr" | Leicestershire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoccombe| class="adr" | Somerset| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hockenden| class="adr" | Bromley| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hockerill| class="adr" | Hertfordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hockering| class="adr" | Norfolk| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hockering Heath| class="adr" | Norfolk| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hockerton| class="adr" | Nottinghamshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hockholler| class="adr" | North Somerset| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hockholler Green| class="adr" | South Somerset| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hockley| class="adr" | Solihull| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hockley| class="adr" | Essex| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hockley| class="adr" | Kent| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hockley| class="adr" | Cheshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hockley| class="adr" | Staffordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hockley Heath| class="adr" | Warwickshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hockliffe| class="adr" | Bedfordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hockwold cum Wilton| class="adr" | Norfolk| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hockworthy| class="adr" | Devon| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hocombe| class="adr" | Hampshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hodder| class="adr" | Lancashire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoddesdon| class="adr" | Hertfordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoddlesden| class="adr" | Lancashire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoden| class="adr" | Worcestershire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hodge Beck| class="adr" | North Yorkshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hodgefield| class="adr" | Staffordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hodgehill| class="adr" | Birmingham| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hodgehill| class="adr" | Cheshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hodgeston| class="adr" | Pembrokeshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hodgeton| class="adr" | Angus| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hodley| class="adr" | Powys| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hodnet| class="adr" | Shropshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hodnetheath| class="adr" | Shropshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hodsock| class="adr" | Nottinghamshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hodsoll Street| class="adr" | Kent| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hodson| class="adr" | Swindon| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hodthorpe| class="adr" | Derbyshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoe| class="adr" | Surrey| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoe| class="adr" | Hampshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoe| class="adr" | Norfolk| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoe Benham| class="adr" | Berkshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoe Gate| class="adr" | Hampshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoff| class="adr" | Cumbria| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoffleet Stow| class="adr" | Lincolnshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hogaland| class="adr" | Shetland Islands| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hogalee Burn| class="adr" | Shetland Islands| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hogben's Hill| class="adr" | Kent| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hogganfield| class="adr" | City of Glasgow| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoggard's Green| class="adr" | Suffolk| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoggeston| class="adr" | Buckinghamshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoggington| class="adr" | Wiltshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoggrill's End| class="adr" | Warwickshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hog Hatch| class="adr" | Surrey| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoghton| class="adr" | Lancashire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoghton Bottoms| class="adr" | Lancashire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hogley Green| class="adr" | Kirklees| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hognaston| class="adr" | Derbyshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hogpits Bottom| class="adr" | Hertfordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hogsthorpe| class="adr" | Lincolnshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hogstock| class="adr" | Dorset| class="note" | | class="note" | |}Hol|- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holbeach| class="adr" | Lincolnshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holbeach Bank| class="adr" | Lincolnshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holbeach Clough| class="adr" | Lincolnshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holbeach Drove| class="adr" | Lincolnshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holbeache| class="adr" | Worcestershire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holbeach Hurn| class="adr" | Lincolnshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holbeach St Johns| class="adr" | Lincolnshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holbeach St Marks| class="adr" | Lincolnshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holbeach St Matthew| class="adr" | Lincolnshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holbeck| class="adr" | Leeds| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holbeck| class="adr" | North Yorkshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holbeck| class="adr" | Nottinghamshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holbeck Woodhouse| class="adr" | Nottinghamshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holberrow Green| class="adr" | Worcestershire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holbeton| class="adr" | Devon| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holborn| class="adr" | Camden| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holborough| class="adr" | Kent| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holbrook| class="adr" | Suffolk| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holbrook| class="adr" | Sheffield| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holbrook| class="adr" | Derbyshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holbrook Common| class="adr" | South Gloucestershire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holbrook Moor| class="adr" | Derbyshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holbrooks| class="adr" | Coventry| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holburn| class="adr" | Northumberland| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holbury| class="adr" | Hampshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holcombe| class="adr" | Somerset| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holcombe| class="adr" | Devon| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holcombe| class="adr" | Devon| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holcombe| class="adr" | Bury| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holcombe Brook| class="adr" | Bury| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holcombe Rogus| class="adr" | Devon| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holcot| class="adr" | Northamptonshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holdbrook| class="adr" | Enfield| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holden| class="adr" | Lancashire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holdenby| class="adr" | Northamptonshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holden Fold| class="adr" | Oldham| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holdenhurst| class="adr" | Bournemouth| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holderness Drain| class="adr" | City of Kingston upon Hull| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holder's Green| class="adr" | Essex| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holders Hill| class="adr" | Barnet| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holdfast| class="adr" | Worcestershire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holdgate| class="adr" | Shropshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holdingham| class="adr" | Lincolnshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holditch| class="adr" | Dorset| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holdsworth| class="adr" | Calderdale| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holdworth| class="adr" | Sheffield| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hole| class="adr" | Devon| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hole| class="adr" | Bradford| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hole Bottom| class="adr" | Calderdale| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holefield| class="adr" | Scottish Borders| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holehills| class="adr" | North Lanarkshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holehouse| class="adr" | Derbyshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hole-in-the-Wall| class="adr" | Herefordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holemill| class="adr" | Angus| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holemoor| class="adr" | Devon| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hole's Hole| class="adr" | Cornwall| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holestone| class="adr" | Derbyshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hole Street| class="adr" | West Sussex| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holewater| class="adr" | Devon| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holford| class="adr" | Somerset| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holgate| class="adr" | York| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holker| class="adr" | Cumbria| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holkham| class="adr" | Norfolk| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollacombe (Torridge)| class="adr" | Devon| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollacombe (Mid Devon)| class="adr" | Devon| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollacombe Hill| class="adr" | Devon| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holland| class="adr" | Surrey| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holland| class="adr" | Orkney Islands| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holland Fen| class="adr" | Lincolnshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holland Lees| class="adr" | Lancashire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holland-on-Sea| class="adr" | Essex| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollands| class="adr" | Somerset| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollandstoun| class="adr" | Orkney Islands| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollee| class="adr" | Dumfries and Galloway| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollesley| class="adr" | Suffolk| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollicombe| class="adr" | Devon| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollies Common| class="adr" | Staffordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollinfare| class="adr" | Cheshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollingbourne| class="adr" | Kent| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollingbury| class="adr" | Brighton and Hove| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollingdean| class="adr" | Brighton and Hove| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollingdon| class="adr" | Buckinghamshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollingrove| class="adr" | East Sussex| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollingthorpe| class="adr" | Wakefield| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollington| class="adr" | East Sussex| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollington| class="adr" | Hampshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollington| class="adr" | Derbyshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollington| class="adr" | Staffordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollington Cross| class="adr" | Hampshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollington Grove| class="adr" | Derbyshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollingwood| class="adr" | Derbyshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollingworth| class="adr" | Tameside| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollin Hall| class="adr" | Lancashire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollin Park| class="adr" | Leeds| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollins| class="adr" | Cumbria| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollins| class="adr" | Bolton| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollins| class="adr" | Bury| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollins| class="adr" | Rochdale| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollins| class="adr" | near Biddulph Moor, Staffordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollins| class="adr" | near Kingsley, Staffordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollins| class="adr" | Staffordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollins| class="adr" | Derbyshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollinsclough| class="adr" | Staffordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollins End| class="adr" | Sheffield| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollins Green| class="adr" | Cheshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollinsgreen| class="adr" | Cheshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollins Lane| class="adr" | Lancashire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollins Lane| class="adr" | Shropshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollinswood| class="adr" | Shropshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollinthorpe| class="adr" | Leeds| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollinwood| class="adr" | Oldham| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollinwood| class="adr" | Shropshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollis Green| class="adr" | Devon| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollis Head| class="adr" | Devon| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollocombe| class="adr" | Devon| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollocombe Town| class="adr" | Devon| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holloway| class="adr" | Wiltshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holloway| class="adr" | Berkshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holloway| class="adr" | Derbyshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holloway Hill| class="adr" | Surrey| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollow Brook| class="adr" | Bath and North East Somerset| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollowell| class="adr" | Northamptonshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollow Meadows| class="adr" | Sheffield| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollowmoor Heath| class="adr" | Cheshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollow Oak| class="adr" | Dorset| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollows| class="adr" | Dumfries and Galloway| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollow Street| class="adr" | Kent| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holly Bank| class="adr" | Walsall| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollyberry End| class="adr" | Solihull| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holly Brook| class="adr" | Somerset| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollybush| class="adr" | Worcestershire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollybush| class="adr" | Torfaen| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollybush| class="adr" | Caerphilly| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollybush| class="adr" | South Ayrshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holly Bush| class="adr" | Wrexham| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollybush| class="adr" | City of Stoke-on-Trent| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollybush Corner| class="adr" | Suffolk| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollybush Corner| class="adr" | Buckinghamshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollybushes| class="adr" | Kent| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollybush Hill| class="adr" | Essex| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollybush Hill| class="adr" | Buckinghamshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollycroft| class="adr" | Leicestershire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holly Cross| class="adr" | Berkshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holly End| class="adr" | Norfolk| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holly Green| class="adr" | Buckinghamshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holly Green| class="adr" | Worcestershire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holly Hill| class="adr" | North Yorkshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollyhurst| class="adr" | Shropshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollyhurst| class="adr" | Warwickshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollym| class="adr" | East Riding of Yorkshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollywaste| class="adr" | Shropshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollywater| class="adr" | Hampshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hollywood| class="adr" | Worcestershire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holmacott| class="adr" | Devon| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holman Clavel| class="adr" | Somerset| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holmbridge| class="adr" | Kirklees| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holmbury St Mary| class="adr" | Surrey| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holmbush| class="adr" | Dorset| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holmbush| class="adr" | Cornwall| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holmcroft| class="adr" | Staffordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holme| class="adr" | Bedfordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holme| class="adr" | Bradford| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holme| class="adr" | Cambridgeshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holme| class="adr" | Cumbria| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holme| class="adr" | Derbyshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holme| class="adr" | Kirklees| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holme| class="adr" | Kirklees| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holme| class="adr" | Kirklees| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holme| class="adr" | North Lincolnshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holme| class="adr" | North Yorkshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holme| class="adr" | Nottinghamshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holmebridge| class="adr" | Dorset| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holme Chapel| class="adr" | Lancashire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holme Green| class="adr" | Bedfordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holme Green| class="adr" | Berkshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holme Green| class="adr" | North Yorkshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holme Hale| class="adr" | Norfolk| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holme Hill| class="adr" | North East Lincolnshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holme Lacy| class="adr" | Herefordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holme Lane| class="adr" | Nottinghamshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holme Marsh| class="adr" | Herefordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holme Mills| class="adr" | Cumbria| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holme-next-the-Sea| class="adr" | Norfolk| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holme-on-Spalding-Moor| class="adr" | East Riding of Yorkshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holme on the Wolds| class="adr" | East Riding of Yorkshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holme Pierrepont| class="adr" | Nottinghamshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holmer| class="adr" | Herefordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holmer Green| class="adr" | Buckinghamshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holmes| class="adr" | Lancashire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holmes Chapel| class="adr" | Cheshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holmesdale| class="adr" | Derbyshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holmesfield| class="adr" | Derbyshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holme Slack| class="adr" | Lancashire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holmes's Hill| class="adr" | East Sussex| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holme St Cuthbert| class="adr" | Cumbria| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holmeswood| class="adr" | Lancashire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holmethorpe| class="adr" | Surrey| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holme Wood| class="adr" | Bradford| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holmewood| class="adr" | Derbyshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holmfield| class="adr" | Calderdale| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holmfirth| class="adr" | Kirklees| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holmhead| class="adr" | East Ayrshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holmhill| class="adr" | Dumfries and Galloway| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holmisdale| class="adr" | Highland| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holmley Common| class="adr" | Derbyshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holm of Faray| class="adr" | Orkney Islands| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holm of Grimbister| class="adr" | Orkney Islands| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holm of Houton| class="adr" | Orkney Islands| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holm of Huip| class="adr" | Orkney Islands| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holm of Melby| class="adr" | Shetland Islands| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holm of Skaw| class="adr" | Shetland Islands| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holm of West Sandwick| class="adr" | Shetland Islands| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holmpton| class="adr" | East Riding of Yorkshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holmrook| class="adr" | Cumbria| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holmsgarth| class="adr" | Shetland Islands| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holmside| class="adr" | Durham| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holmsleigh Green| class="adr" | Devon| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holms of Ire| class="adr" | Orkney Islands| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holmston| class="adr" | South Ayrshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holmwood Corner| class="adr" | Surrey| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holmwrangle| class="adr" | Cumbria| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holne| class="adr" | Devon| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holnest| class="adr" | Dorset| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holnicote| class="adr" | Somerset| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holsworthy| class="adr" | Devon| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holsworthy Beacon| class="adr" | Devon| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holt| class="adr" | Dorset| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holt| class="adr" | Worcestershire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holt| class="adr" | Hampshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holt| class="adr" | Wiltshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holt| class="adr" | St Helens| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holt| class="adr" | Norfolk| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holt| class="adr" | Wrexham| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holtby| class="adr" | York| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holt End| class="adr" | Hampshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holt End| class="adr" | Worcestershire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holt Fleet| class="adr" | Worcestershire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holt Green| class="adr" | Lancashire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holt Head| class="adr" | Kirklees| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holt Heath| class="adr" | Dorset| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holt Heath| class="adr" | Worcestershire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holt Hill| class="adr" | Kent| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holt Hill| class="adr" | Staffordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holton| class="adr" | Somerset| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holton| class="adr" | Suffolk| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holton| class="adr" | Oxfordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holton cum Beckering| class="adr" | Lincolnshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holton-le-Clay| class="adr" | Lincolnshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holton le Moor| class="adr" | Lincolnshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holton St Mary| class="adr" | Suffolk| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holt Park| class="adr" | Leeds| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holt Pound| class="adr" | Hampshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holts| class="adr" | Oldham| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holtspur| class="adr" | Buckinghamshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holt Wood| class="adr" | Dorset| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holtye| class="adr" | East Sussex| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holway| class="adr" | Dorset| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holway| class="adr" | Somerset| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holway| class="adr" | Dorset| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holway| class="adr" | Flintshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holwell| class="adr" | Somerset| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holwell| class="adr" | Dorset| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holwell| class="adr" | Oxfordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holwell| class="adr" | Bedfordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holwell| class="adr" | Leicestershire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holwellbury| class="adr" | Bedfordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holwick| class="adr" | Durham| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holybourne| class="adr" | Hampshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holy City| class="adr" | Devon| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holy Cross| class="adr" | Worcestershire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holy Cross| class="adr" | North Tyneside| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holyfield| class="adr" | Essex| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holyford| class="adr" | Devon| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holyhead (Caergybi)| class="adr" | Isle of Anglesey| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holy Island| class="adr" | Northumberland| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holy Island| class="adr" | Isle of Anglesey| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holy Island | class="adr" | Northumberland| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holy Isle| class="adr" | North Ayrshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holylee| class="adr" | Scottish Borders| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holymoorside| class="adr" | Derbyshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holyport| class="adr" | Berkshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holystone| class="adr" | Northumberland| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holytown| class="adr" | North Lanarkshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holy Vale| class="adr" | Isles of Scilly| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holywell| class="adr" | Bedfordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holywell| class="adr" | Cambridgeshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holywell| class="adr" | Cornwall| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holywell| class="adr" | Dorset| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holywell (Treffynnon)| class="adr" | Flintshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holywell| class="adr" | Gloucestershire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holywell| class="adr" | Herefordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holywell| class="adr" | Hertfordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holywell| class="adr" | Northumberland| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holywell| class="adr" | Somerset| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holywell| class="adr" | Warwickshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holywell Green| class="adr" | Calderdale| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holywell Lake| class="adr" | Somerset| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holywell Row| class="adr" | Suffolk| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holywood| class="adr" | Dumfries and Galloway| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Holywood| class="adr" | Down, Northern Ireland| class="note" | ||}Hom-Hoo|- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Homedowns| class="adr" | Gloucestershire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Homer| class="adr" | Shropshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Homer Green| class="adr" | Sefton| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Homersfield| class="adr" | Norfolk| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Homerton| class="adr" | Hackney| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hom Green| class="adr" | Herefordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Homington| class="adr" | Wiltshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Honddu| class="adr" | Monmouthshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Honddu| class="adr" | Powys| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Honddu| class="adr" | Herefordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Honeybourne| class="adr" | Worcestershire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Honeychurch| class="adr" | Devon| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Honeydon| class="adr" | Bedfordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Honey Hall| class="adr" | North Somerset| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Honey Hill| class="adr" | Berkshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Honey Hill| class="adr" | Kent| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Honeystreet| class="adr" | Wiltshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Honey Tye| class="adr" | Suffolk| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Honeywick| class="adr" | Bedfordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Honicknowle| class="adr" | Devon| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Honiley| class="adr" | Warwickshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Honing| class="adr" | Norfolk| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Honingham| class="adr" | Norfolk| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Honington| class="adr" | Suffolk| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Honington| class="adr" | Warwickshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Honington| class="adr" | Lincolnshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Honiton| class="adr" | Devon| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Honkley| class="adr" | Wrexham| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Honley| class="adr" | Kirklees| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Honley Moor| class="adr" | Kirklees| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Honnington| class="adr" | Shropshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Honor Oak| class="adr" | Lewisham| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Honor Oak Park| class="adr" | Lewisham| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Honresfeld| class="adr" | Rochdale| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoo| class="adr" | Kent| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoo| class="adr" | Kent| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoober| class="adr" | Rotherham| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoobrook| class="adr" | Worcestershire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hood Green| class="adr" | Barnsley| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hood Hill| class="adr" | Sheffield| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hood Manor| class="adr" | Cheshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hooe| class="adr" | East Sussex| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hooe| class="adr" | Devon| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hooe Common| class="adr" | East Sussex| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoo End| class="adr" | Hertfordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoofield| class="adr" | Cheshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoo Green| class="adr" | Cheshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoohill| class="adr" | Lancashire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoo Hole| class="adr" | Calderdale| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hook| class="adr" | Devon| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hook| class="adr" | Cambridgeshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hook| class="adr" | Pembrokeshire| 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class="adr" | Essex| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hook End| class="adr" | Oxfordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hooker Gate| class="adr" | Gateshead| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hookgate| class="adr" | Staffordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hook Green| class="adr" | Kent| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hook Green| class="adr" | Kent| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hook Green| class="adr" | Kent| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hook Heath| class="adr" | Surrey| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hook Norton| class="adr" | Oxfordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hook Park| class="adr" | Hampshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hook's Cross| class="adr" | Hertfordshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hook Street| class="adr" | Gloucestershire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hook Street| class="adr" | Wiltshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hooksway| class="adr" | West Sussex| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hookway| class="adr" | Devon| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hookwood| class="adr" | Surrey| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoole| class="adr" | Cheshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hoole Bank| class="adr" | Cheshire| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hooley| class="adr" | Surrey| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hooley Bridge| class="adr" | Rochdale| class="note" | | 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class="adr" | Doncaster| class="note" | | class="note" | |- class="vcard"| class="fn org" | Hooton Roberts| class="adr" | Rotherham| class="note" | | class="note" | |}
+habil.
+The star has a high peculiar velocity of and thus is a probable runaway star.
+They were also translated to other languages like English and French.
+The purchase contained more than of land in northeast Florida including the Ponte Vedra Inn and Club.
+Long Scraggy Peak is a mountain in Jefferson County, Colorado.
+ReferencesCategory:Townships in Cass County, North DakotaCategory:Townships in North Dakota
+"Gamma Ray" is a song by American rock musician Beck.
+According to Wycliffe Bible Translators, in October 2017, 3,312 languages had access to at least a book of the Bible, including 1,121 languages with a book or more, 1,521 language groups with access to the New Testament in their native language and 670 the full Bible.
+Gritė Maruškevičiūtė (born 18 June 1989, in Šiauliai) is Miss Lithuania 2010.
+Folksong collectorBesides his career as a classical violinist, Darley had a lifelong interest in the traditional music of Ireland.
+Row houses account for another one out of every six (16%) and duplexes account for one in twelve (8%) of residences.
+Category:Oecophoridae
+National League:Chicago Cubs 9, New York Mets 5The Cubs clinch home-field advantage throughout the NL playoffs and deal the Mets' hopes of winning the NL East a serious blow.
+He is remembered in relation to the history of ideas and concepts of the pluralist state.
+They can be also used in order to upgrade small stable towers (like watertowers) with a long antenna mast for FM and TV broadcasting.
+One explanation for the suite's structure, presented by Holst scholar Raymond Head, is the ruling of astrological signs of the zodiac by the planets: if the signs are listed along with their ruling planets in the traditional order starting with Aries, ignoring duplication and the luminaries (the Sun and Moon), the order of the movements corresponds.
+The following is a list of county routes in Union County in the U.S. state of New Jersey.
+is a five-member Japanese alternative rock band from Okinawa formed in 2008.
+Originally, it was a form of bullfighting where the rider rode the bull to death, but evolved into a form where the rider simply tries to ride the animal until it stops bucking.
+Cacozelia is a genus of snout moths.
+The ATSB raised concerns about risks posed by unregulated operation of UAVs.
+It was such a crushing defeat that the raids from Mohnyin ended for the rest of Swa's reign.
+The Men's 56 kg competition at the 2017 World Weightlifting Championships was held on 29 November 2017.
+(1905).
+References Coloma, L.A., Ron, S., Yánez-Muñoz, M. & Almeida, D. 2004.
+See alsoBattle of Tres de AbrilBattle of Sapong HillsCategory:Battles of the Philippine RevolutionCategory:History of Capiz
+The headquarters of the OCA is located at Kuwait City.
+HistoryThe post office in the community was variously called Powhattan, Powhatan, and Reubens before it closed in 1884.
+Description and photos of The Telephone Pavilion which was adjacent to the Theme complex on Ile Sainte-Hélène.
+As a member of the EPRI (Electric Power Research Institute) working council, the company is working to develop industry standards for truck stop electrification systems and electric vehicle supply equipment.
+The locations of National Register properties and districts for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in a Google map.
+The Bakhuis mountain range is an area of 2800 km² and contains a large concession area for mining bauxite, in which both the Surinamese company and foreign exploitation companies are interested.
+There were 391 households, out of which 125 (32.0%) had children under the age of 18 living in them, 217 (55.5%) were opposite-sex married couples living together, 39 (10.0%) had a female householder with no husband present, 21 (5.4%) had a male householder with no wife present.
+Following his father's direction he studied accounting but gave up that pursuit as he became enamored with the theater and acting.
+In 2019, Willems was named the Kennedy Center's first education artist-in-residence.
+ChampionsFirst TierSecond TierFirst TierThird TierFifth TierReferencesCategory:Sport in Tehran Province5
+The ATP site will also soon house extensive film and television production facilities including a new digital film making studio built by production company Kennedy Miller Mitchell for the filming of Mad Max 4 and Happy Feet 2.
+People have adopted their own uses for the gum.
+Inasmuch: Christian Social Responsibility in the Twentieth Century (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans, 1965).
+By design, all economic and non-economic benefits and liabilities of the cooperative are shared equally among its members.
+Mystical Marriage of St Catherine of Alexandria with St Lucy, Pinacoteca and Museo Civico, Volterra.
+PublicationsThe Sculpture of the Parthenon, 1959Greek Gods and Heroes, 1974Articles in the Journal of Hellenic Studies, Hesperia, The Annual of the British School at Athens, British Museum Quarterly, and the Bulletin of the Institute of Classical StudiesReferencesCategory:1920 birthsCategory:1992 deathsCategory:People educated at Bedford SchoolCategory:Alumni of St John's College, OxfordCategory:Classical scholars of the University of LondonCategory:English classical scholarsCategory:Employees of the British MuseumCategory:English art historiansCategory:Academics of University College LondonCategory:Royal Air Force personnel of World War IICategory:20th-century English historiansCategory:English male non-fiction writers
+13.1% of all households were made up of individuals and 5.4% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older.
+Its episodes connect assorted circus acts and variety acts by means of simple storylines, all of which emerge from the premise that a diverse group of extraterrestrial creatures with transformative powers have arrived on Earth.
+The chimp Böbe educational and exhibition hall houses summer camps and school sessions, while the exhibition area shows a display relating to issues of environmental protection.
+The pudendal plexus is a term used for a compound structure consisting of sacral spinal nerves.
+BackgroundCrittall was born at Braintree, the son of Essex businessman Francis Henry Crittall, founder of the Crittall window company, and Ellen Laura Carter.
+He later competed with Natalia Dongauzer (Pavlova), winning the silver medal at the 1973 Prize of Moscow News.
+Shurikenjutsu was usually taught among the sogo-bugei, or comprehensive martial arts systems of Japan, as a supplemental art to those more commonly practiced such as kenjutsu, sojutsu, bōjutsu and battlefield grappling kumi-uchi (old form jujutsu), and is much less prevalent today than it was in the feudal era.
+It is blessed with lot of agriculture land, and the main channel of water from Chalakudy Puzha passes through this village.
+With the restoration of absolutism, this territorial division was revoked 1 October 1823.
+See also List of Oregon state parksReferencesCategory:State parks of OregonCategory:Parks in Wallowa County, Oregon
+Males had a median income of $23,716 versus $16,694 for females.
+Category:Municipalities in the Province of HuescaCategory:Populated places in the Province of Huesca
+Women's Writing in India.
+The pink ones were signed and lettered A-Z.
+The station is currently owned by St. Gabriel Communications Ltd..ReferencesExternal links FHCCategory:Catholic radio stationsCategory:Religious radio stations in the United StatesCategory:Radio stations established in 1984
+CommandersGeneral officers commanding included:Headquarters Wales1972–1973 Major-General John Woodrow1973–1976 Major-General Peter Leuchars1976–1978 Major-General John Graham1978–1980 Major-General Arthur Stewart-Cox1980–1983 Major-General Lennox Napier1983–1985 Major-General Peter Chiswell1985–1987 Major-General Peter de la Billière1987–1990 Major-General Morgan Llewellyn1990–1991 Major-General Peter DaviesWales and Western District1991–1994 Major-General Michael Regan1994–1995 Major-General Ian FreerReferencesCategory:Districts of the British ArmyCategory:Military units and formations established in 1972Category:Military units and formations disestablished in 1995
+Josip Balić (born 8 July 1993) is a Croatian football midfielder who plays for Thanh Hóa in the V.League 1.
+Upon discovering a record of Patsy Montana's "I Want to Be a Cowboy's Sweetheart", Bogguss learned the song's yodel by working on it repeatedly until she eventually imitated it.
+Private companies can be exempted from holding AGMs if they send their financial statements to their members within five months after the financial year end (FYE).
+ReferencesFurther readingExternal linksBotterill, George Steven at olimpbase.orgGeorge Botterill profile page at University of SheffieldCategory:1949 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Welsh chess playersCategory:English chess playersCategory:British chess writersCategory:Chess International MastersCategory:Welsh philosophersCategory:Academics of Aberystwyth UniversityCategory:People from BradfordCategory:Sportspeople from YorkshireCategory:20th-century British philosophersCategory:20th-century Welsh writersCategory:20th-century Welsh educatorsCategory:21st-century British philosophersCategory:21st-century Welsh writersCategory:21st-century Welsh educators
+Language The vaDoma speak the Dema language, closely related to the dominant Shona language of Zimbabwe and highly comprehensible to Korekore and Tande Shona dialects.
+Participation in the Manitoba barAlso in 1941, Freedman was elected to the executive of the Manitoba Bar Association, representing the Eastern Judicial District.
+On leaving the Senate, Doles was from 1956 to 1957 the president of the Louisiana Bankers Association.
+Club called it "a fun cold war relic".
+The title Bhatt is given to learned Brahmins.
+Acmaeodera prorsa is a species of metallic wood-boring beetle in the family Buprestidae.
+1950), American actorManesh, Iran, a village in Sistan and Baluchestan Province, IranManesh, North Khorasan, a village in North Khorasan Province, Iran
+It began as one of six founding teams of the Eastern Professional Basketball League (EPBL) for the 1946-47 season.
+ReferencesExternal links Professional home pageCategory:Information retrieval researchersCategory:Human–computer interaction researchersCategory:American women computer scientistsCategory:Microsoft employeesCategory:Living peopleCategory:Yale University alumniCategory:Massachusetts Institute of Technology alumniCategory:University of Washington facultyCategory:1976 births
+Lois Weaver is a performing artist whose work is recognized as seminal in creating a template for lesbian performance methodologies.
+Niall Mitchell(born 1997) is an Irish hurler who plays as a centre-forward for the Westmeath senior team.
+The original section measures 82 feet deep and 42 feet wide.
+John Douglas Harrower (born 16 October 1947) was the eleventh Bishop of Tasmania.
+He was unable to settle down for all his life.
+References Category:Jesuit secondary schoolsCategory:Catholic secondary schools in IndiaCategory:Jesuit schools in IndiaCategory:Boys' schools in IndiaCategory:Christian schools in KarnatakaCategory:Private schools in KarnatakaCategory:High schools and secondary schools in KarnatakaCategory:Schools in Raichur districtCategory:Educational institutions established in 2004Category:2004 establishments in India
+Adrian Johnston may refer to: Adrian Johnston (musician) (born 1961), British musician and composer Adrian Johnston (philosopher), American philosopher
+Beekman died on October 16, 1861.
+It was built in 1794 as a coaching inn, and still stands there today, although it is now known as the Two Bridges Hotel.
+Between 1984 and 1991 he won seven national championships in motor-paced racing.
+References Category:Populated places in Kavar County
+He was also the Swiss National Road Race champion in 1931.
+Seip received an honorary doctorate at the University of Bergen from 1975.
+Second, enlarged, ed.
+It can be demonstrated that for any finite graph an optimal mixed search strategy exists that results in a finite payoff.
+FWD may refer to: Falling weight deflectometer Far Western District of the Barbershop Harmony Society Fear the Walking Dead, an American television series Fixed wireless data Four-wheel drive, usually abbreviated 4WD Four Wheel Drive, an American vehicle manufacturer Free World Dialup, a non-commercial Voice over IP network Front-wheel drive FWD.us, an American lobby groupSee also Forward (disambiguation)
+GeographyNeighboring districts are (from the east clockwise): Khuan Niang, Bang Klam, and Hat Yai of Songkhla Province; Khuan Kalong of Satun Province; and Pa Bon of Phatthalung Province.
+The name is derived from cicerone, a type of guide.
+He plays for FC Langenegg.
+Space Adventures claims it advised Enomoto to treat the kidney stones aggressively and when he did not, they had to disqualify him from spaceflight.
+Hence on 14 November 1987 the Sri Lankan Parliament passed the 13th Amendment to the 1978 Constitution of Sri Lanka and the Provincial Councils Act No 42 of 1987 to establish provincial councils.
+Cailliet also enjoyed a prolific career creating music for films.
+References Category:Rivers of Rize Province
+KHCV may refer to: KHCV (FM), a radio station (104.3 FM) licensed to serve Mecca, California, United States KWPS-FM, a radio station (99.7 FM) licensed to serve Caddo Valley, Arkansas, United States, which held the call sign KHCV in 2013 KFFV, a television station (channel 44) licensed to serve Seattle, Washington, United States, which held the call sign KHCV from 1999 to 2009
+HonoursIn the 1998 Queen's Birthday Honours, Walker was appointed a Companion of the Order of the Bath (CB) in recognition of his service as Director-General of the Immigration and Nationality Directorate.
+The book was a finalist for the Barnes and Noble Discover Great New Writers award and won the Gold Medal of the Washington Institute Book Prize, a literary award established to highlight nonfiction books about the Middle East.
+Hartman, who is originally seen playing guitar from a window in an apartment block, brings his portable radio down to the scene and begins performing the song.
+ReferencesCategory:UlvalesCategory:Ulvophyceae families
+These therapists have been trained to monitor a patient's breathing, provide treatments to help their breathing and evaluate for respiratory improvement.
+The building houses student classrooms, tutorial and storage rooms, and an auditorium with raked audience seating for over 300 people.
+ReferencesCategory:Maricola
+It was reissued on CD in 2002.
+See alsoPolitics of ThailandReferencesCategory:2013 deathsCategory:Thai politiciansCategory:Year of birth missing
+After David Hartsock, a skydiving instructor, saved a woman's life after a parachute failure and became a quadriplegic, he raised over $150,000 on GiveForward.
+Levrone has been in 13 Mr. Olympia competitions (including the 2016 edition).
+References Category:Rural localities in BashkortostanCategory:Rural localities in Ufimsky District
+As in many other war cemeteries looked after by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission, a Cross of Sacrifice stands in the corner of Lijssenthoek Military Cemetery, and there is also a Stone of Remembrance.
+The Hillfoots Villages are the villages and small towns which lie at the base of the southern scarp face of the Ochil Hills, formed by the Ochil Fault, in Stirlingshire and Clackmannanshire in central Scotland.
+Location It is located in Murshidabad district, from Sealdah railway station.
+James Docherty was a Scottish amateur football left half who played in the Scottish League for Queen's Park and Airdrieonians.
+Princess Husn al-Ujud Gouta (born 1918).
+The finale is 32 miniature variations on the cadenza material of the slow movement.
+High School Levels & Sections Class section names are based by name of Flowers (Grade 7), Trees (Grade 8), Philippine national heroes (Grade 9) and Planets (Grade 10).
+Before Uday can fire Venky, he is stopped by his father.
+Darj () may refer to: Darj-e Olya Darj-e Sofla
+Quarry Wood may refer to:Quarry Wood, HinstockQuarry Wood, Stockton-on-TeesQuarry Wood, Kent
+In particular, his skillful drawings of ancient architectural details, of real Roman ruins and imaginary ones, helped form the taste of young architects like Robert Adam in the 1750s and his brother James Adam, in 1760-63.
+ReferencesExternal links Profile - FSHF Category:1983 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:People from LaçCategory:Albanian footballersCategory:Association football forwardsCategory:KF Laçi playersCategory:KS Kastrioti playersCategory:KS Burreli playersCategory:KS Pogradeci playersCategory:KF Adriatiku Mamurrasi playersCategory:Albanian Superliga playersCategory:Albanian First Division players
+ResearchGate, an online repository of scientific articles, has listed 156 of his articles and they are reported to have been cited over 2000 times, with an h-index of 18.
+There is a melanistic form which is all black except for the white barred flight feathers on the underwing.
+After the death of Reuvens in 1835, Blussé lived with her parents' family in Leiden, and they collaborated on the creation of a pocket dictionary in two volumes, English-Dutch and Dutch-English, which were published in the years 1843 and 1845 respectively.
+In the southwest part of the Central African Republic, alluvial gold is accompanied by small quantities of alluvial diamonds in streams which drain Cretaceous sandstone and conglomerates exposed further east.
+Sale and transport are punishable by imprisonment from 3 to 12 years.
+Luigi Ruspoli (born 14 March 1908, date of death unknown) was an Italian sports shooter.
+Dicamay people also celebrates the Banana “Saba” festival in the month of May.
+Geir Botnen (born 27 February 1959 in Kvam) is a Norwegian pianist.
+This is a list of rivers of the former Netherlands Antilles.
+Tanaecia cocytus, the lavender count, is a species of nymphalid butterfly found in South and Southeast Asia.
+Mareuil-lès-Meaux is a commune in the Seine-et-Marne department in the Île-de-France region in north-central France.
+On 1 July 1960, a United States RB-47H spy plane was shot down by the Soviet Air Defence Forces while performing signals intelligence in the Barents Sea, near the Kola Peninsula, off the Arctic coast of the Soviet Union.
+Third-seeded Bonnie Gadusek won the singles title.
+C. arvense may refer to: Cerastium arvense, the field chickweed, a flowering plant species Cirsium arvense, a plant species native throughout Europe and northern Asia and widely introduced elsewhereSee also Arvense (disambiguation)
+It may also refer to the following locations in China:Tiantai MountainTiantai County, ZhejiangTiantai, Guizhou, town in Chishui CityTiantai, Jiangxi, town in Yuanzhou District, YichunTiantai, Jilin, town in DehuiTiantai Township, Xuanhan County, Sichuan
+As chief surgical consultant, he played an important role in obtaining blood from the U.S. for use in treating the wounded.
+Supporters of the PDP are mainly concerned with issues such as labor rights, civil rights, LGBT rights, immigration, and environmental protection.
+Sheykhabad (, also Romanized as Sheykhābād, Shaikhābād, and Sheikh Abad) is a village in Jolgeh-e Mazhan Rural District, Jolgeh-e Mazhan District, Khusf County, South Khorasan Province, Iran.
+.
+Club careerAfter spending years playing for several Chinese clubs, Wang Fei signed for Frauen-Bundesliga side Turbine Potsdam in December 2014.
+ReferencesCategory:LibellulidaeCategory:Odonata of North AmericaCategory:Insects of CanadaCategory:Insects of the United StatesCategory:Insects described in 1861
+The monument was inaugurated on March 27, 2007 (the 30th anniversary of the disaster), in the presence of many relatives of those killed in the accident.
+Netease Entertainment also deemed the movie "high concept", and Ye Qianyun and Tong Yao's performances were praised.
+She is married to the actor Stefan Roos and together they have a daughter.
+Erik Baška (born 12 January 1994) is a Slovak road racing cyclist, who currently rides for UCI WorldTeam .
+He also designed water schemes at Bridgend, West Indies, Egypt, Austria, Denmark, Italy, and Switzerland.
+The magnetic field perturbation in these modes is negligible.
+Heat 1Heat 2RepechagesFirst two of each heat qualify to the finals, remainder goes to the Final B.Repechage 1Repechage 2FinalsFinal BFinal AMen's single sculls
+The name is a combination of their name "Bonner" and "ray", which they said in a 2017 interview symbolizes the light of hope they hope to bring through their music.
+ThusThen, by left-multiplying equation (5) by :Or by changing the name of the indices:To find , use the fact that:implies:Summary for infinitesimal and (the high order terms in (3) being negligible)ResultsThis means it is possible to efficiently do a sensitivity analysis on as a function of changes in the entries of the matrices.
+TUCEMEMS also participated in the organizing of Dies Medievales, the biannual conference of Finnish medievalists in Turku.
+Mads Pedersen (born 17 January 1993) is a Danish footballer who last played for Sandefjord.
+Malappuram has a sex ratio of 1098 women to 1000 men, and it's literacy rate is 93.57 percent, which is almost equal to the average literacy rate of the state (93.91%).
+McCloud's photography and job at the Capitol were both put on hold during World War II, when he went to fight in the Pacific.
+In Parliament, Robinson denounced "fraudulent schemes" of joint-stock companies, voted against the Duke of Clarence's grant, for Catholic emancipation, for revision of the Corn Laws, and against increased protection for barley.
+This has resulted in 46 IPOs, 129 acquisitions, and 19 companies with values over $1 billion.
+He served as marshal of Newhaven in 1546, and in 1547 was a plaintiff in a court case for trespass in the Great Park of Brigstock.
+Sakura Hotel Ikebukuro visitor reviewsCategory:Hotels in Tokyo
+The agency is based in Dushanbe and started a weekly paper, Asia Plus in 2000.
+The term may also refer to: "Red Lipstick", a song by Rihanna from Talk That Talk "Red Lipstick", a song by Nomo, a band that included David Batteau "Red Lipstick", a song by Trey Songz from Passion, Pain & Pleasure "Red Lipstick", a song by Skint & Demoralised from Love and Other Catastrophes Red Lipstick, a 2000 independent filmSee also Lipstick (disambiguation)
+His archaeological writings are related to the site of Kellia in Lower Egypt.
+There is a primary school in Islam Pur Lokari.
+Toward the end of the song, the words change, and the male voice concludes by saying: "If Madonna calls…actually, if she calls, just disconnect her.
+Slatina is a village situated in Novi Pazar municipality in Serbia.
+The museum's building, which was originally home to the Houston Fire Department's Fire Station No.
+Kaset may refer to:Amphoe Kaset Sombun (Thai: เกษตรสมบูรณ์) is a district in Chaiyaphum Province, ThailandAmphoe Kaset Wisai (Thai: เกษตรวิสัย) is a district in Roi Et Province, ThailandKaset Green Hawk, aerial display team of the Bureau of Royal Rainmaking and Agricultural Aviation (KASET) of ThailandKaset Rojananil, Commander of the Royal Thai Air ForceKaset Sat Station (proposed) in Chatuchak District, Bangkok, ThailandKaset is also the word for cassette in Indonesian and Turkish.
+Hughes went on to reverse position and submit Trigg by rear naked choke later in the first round in what is considered one of the great comebacks in UFC history.
+After standing out of football for a year, Watson crossed to a different country club, Maryborough, without a clearance, and the Ballarat Football League was disqualified by the VFL as a consequence.
+In 1961 Pavek married veteran musical theatre actor Joe Cusanelli and that same year made her operatic debut with the New York City Opera.
+In 2006 the village completed the construction of Ishkanadzor Clinic with financial backing from Tufenkian Foundation.
+Franklin connects to the Phalanx ship in orbit and, upon finding out that they attempt to destroy and assimilate all life on Earth, deems them "evil" and destroys their ship.
+He was High Sheriff of Merionethshire in 1697–8 and High Sheriff of Carnarvonshire in 1699–1700.
+Category:1999 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Indian footballersCategory:Kerala Blasters FC playersCategory:Association football forwardsCategory:I-League 2nd Division playersCategory:Indian Super League playersCategory:India youth international footballers
+ReferencesCategory:Bahr el GhazalCategory:Populated places in South Sudan
+The 10 mm Auto cartridge case was used for this since it has the capability to operate with relative high chamber pressures for its case capacity which, combined with smaller and hence lighter bullets result in very high muzzle velocities.
+Thompson hired Richard H. Marr, a well-known Detroit architect, to design the building.
+He ran in Nebraska at-large for the Forty-sixth and Forty-seventh congress, being elected as a Republican both times.
+Ajaz is a male given name.
+The Yuma Territorial Prison is a former prison located in Yuma, Arizona, United States.
+However, the hunting style is different from the one used by, for example, the Ibizan Hound.
+It flows into the Sebiș near the town Sebiș.
+It was a novel appointment and her new department established an international reputation.
+In addition to incorporating old Labor areas, demographic change in the former Liberal strongholds of Maylands and Inglewood as young, educated and largely single working people moved in to replace an older, more affluent population has ensured the Labor vote over several decades.
+He has directed the music videos for rapper Antwon's "Helicopter" and "Living Every Dream", as well as producer RL Grime's "Heard Me".
+On 1 July 1923, the station was renamed Hertford North, but did not last long under that name.
+In the newspaper's blog posting announcing the show, Jett was quoted as saying The next day, station producer J.D.
+CareerAndrews was elected superintendent of schools of Ringgold County, Iowa in 1879.
+At the 1984 Games he joined the Swedish coxless fours team and finished sixth.
+For these services he was knighted and then created a Baronet in the 1922 New Year Honours.
+Enel may refer to: Enel SpA, an Italian electricity company Enel (One Piece), a fictional villain in the One Piece manga and anime series Enel, meaning third in the fiction of J. R. R. Tolkien, cf.
+Club A.V.
+Formed in 1955 out of the Contingent's Gurkha officers, it includes officers trained as Pipers, Drummers and Buglers.
+The collaboration between Misia and Foster came about as Foster was looking for an Asian singer to participate in his latest compilation album David Foster Presents Love, Again.
+Prince Masino Bonkat (born 22 May 1996) is a Nigerian football player who plays for CDC Montalegre.
+Once that all passed he was at last ordained as a priest on 27 May 1866 which he received from the Bishop of Pamplona Bonifacio Antonio Tozcano.
+He worked on films Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines (2003), Pan's Labyrinth (2006), Terminator Salvation (2009), Iron Man 2, The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 1 (2011), Maleficent (2014), Wonder (2017) and Welcome to Marwen (2018).
+General reference Pronunciation: Common name in English: Belize (etymology) Official name in English: Belize Common endonym(s): Belize Official endonym(s): Belize Demonym(s): Belizean International rankings ISO country codes: BZ, BLZ, 084 ISO region codes: see ISO 3166-2:BZ Internet country code top-level domain: .bzGeography of Belize Geography of Belize Belize is... a country a nation state a Commonwealth realm Location: Northern Hemisphere and Western Hemisphere Americas North America Middle America Central America Western Caribbean Zone Time zone: Central Standard Time (UTC-06) Extreme points of Belize High: Doyle's Delight Low: Caribbean Sea 0 m Land boundaries: 516 km 266 km 250 km Coastline: 386 km Population of Belize: 301,270(2008) - 174th most populous country Area of Belize: - 150th largest country Atlas of BelizeEnvironment of Belize Climate of Belize Environmental issues in Belize Renewable energy in Belize Geology of Belize Protected areas of Belize Biosphere reserves in Belize National parks of Belize Wildlife of Belize Flora of Belize Fauna of Belize Birds of Belize Mammals of BelizeNatural geographic features of Belize Atoll Barrier reef Fjords of Belize Glaciers of Belize Islands of Belize Lakes of Belize Mountains of Belize Volcanoes in Belize Rivers of Belize Waterfalls of Belize Submarine sinkhole Valleys of Belize World Heritage Sites in BelizeRegions of Belize Regions of BelizeEcoregions of Belize List of ecoregions in BelizeAdministrative divisions of Belize Administrative divisions of Belize Districts of Belize Constituencies of BelizeDistricts of Belize Districts of BelizeBelizeCayoCorozalOrange WalkStann CreekToledoConstituencies of BelizeThe constituencies of Belize by District:Belize District:AlbertBelize Rural CentralBelize Rural NorthBelize Rural SouthCaribbean ShoresColletFort GeorgeFreetownLake IndependenceMesopotamiaPickstockPort LoyolaQueen's SquareCayo DistrictBelmopanCayo CentralCayo NorthCayo North EastCayo SouthCayo WestCorozal DistrictCorozal BayCorozal NorthCorozal South EastCorozal South WestOrange Walk DistrictOrange Walk CentralOrange Walk EastOrange Walk NorthOrange Walk SouthStann Creek DistrictDangrigaStann Creek WestToledo DistrictToledo EastToledo WestMunicipalities of BelizeCapital: BelmopanCities: Cities of BelizeDemography of Belize Demographics of BelizeGovernment and politics of Belize Politics of Belize Form of government: parliamentary representative democratic monarchy Capital of Belize: Belmopan Elections in Belize Political parties in BelizeBranches of governmentGovernment of BelizeExecutive branch of the government of Belize Head of state: Monarch of Belize, Elizabeth II Her Majesty's representative: Governor-General of Belize, Colville Young Head of government: Prime Minister of Belize, Dean Barrow Cabinet of BelizeLegislative branch of the government of Belize National Assembly of Belize (bicameral) Upper house: Senate of Belize Lower house: House of Representatives of BelizeJudicial branch of the government of Belize Court system of Belize Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Supreme Court of Belize Magistrates' Court of BelizeForeign relations of Belize Foreign relations of Belize Diplomatic missions in Belize Diplomatic missions of BelizeInternational organization membership Belize is a member of:African, Caribbean, and Pacific Group of States (ACP)Agency for the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons in Latin America and the Caribbean (OPANAL)Caribbean Community and Common Market (Caricom)Caribbean Development Bank (CDB)Central American Integration System (SICA)Commonwealth of NationsFood and Agriculture Organization (FAO)Group of 77 (G77)Inter-American Development Bank (IADB)International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD)International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO)International Criminal Court (ICCt)International Criminal Police Organization (Interpol)International Development Association (IDA)International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRCS)International Finance Corporation (IFC)International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD)International Labour Organization (ILO)International Maritime Organization (IMO)International Monetary Fund (IMF)International Olympic Committee (IOC)International Organization for Migration (IOM)International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement (ICRM)International Telecommunication Union (ITU)International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC)Latin American Economic System (LAES)Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA)Nonaligned Movement (NAM)Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW)Organization of American States (OAS)Permanent Court of Arbitration (PCA)Rio Group (RG)United Nations (UN)United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD)United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO)United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO)Universal Postal Union (UPU)World Confederation of Labour (WCL)World Customs Organization (WCO)World Federation of Trade Unions (WFTU)World Health Organization (WHO)World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO)World Meteorological Organization (WMO)World Trade Organization (WTO)Law and order in Belize Law of Belize Constitution of Belize Crime in Belize Human rights in Belize LGBT rights in Belize Freedom of religion in Belize Law enforcement in BelizeMilitary of Belize Military of Belize Command Commander-in-chief Ministry of Defence of Belize Forces Army of Belize Navy of Belize Air Force of Belize Special forces of Belize Military history of Belize Military ranks of BelizeLocal government in Belize Local government in BelizeHistory of Belize History of BelizeTimeline of the history of BelizeCurrent events of Belize Military history of BelizeCulture of Belize Culture of Belize Architecture of Belize Cuisine of Belize Festivals in Belize Languages of Belize Media in Belize Newspapers Radio stations Television stations National symbols of Belize Coat of arms of Belize Flag of Belize National Anthem: "Land of the Free" People of Belize Belizean Creole people Prostitution in Belize Public holidays in Belize Records of Belize Religion in Belize Buddhism in Belize Christianity in Belize Catholic Church in Belize Hinduism in Belize Islam in Belize Judaism in Belize Sikhism in Belize World Heritage Sites in BelizeArt in Belize Art in Belize Cinema of Belize Literature of Belize Music of Belize Theatre in BelizeSports in Belize Sports in Belize Football in Belize Belize at the OlympicsEconomy and infrastructure of BelizeEconomy of Belize Economic rank, by nominal GDP (2007): 163rd (one hundred and sixty third) Central Bank of Belize Communications in Belize Internet in Belize Companies of BelizeCurrency of Belize: DollarISO 4217: BZD Energy in Belize Belize Stock Exchange Tourism in Belize Visa policy of Belize Transport in Belize Airports in Belize Ports of Belize Rail transport in Belize Roads in BelizeEducation in Belize Education in Belize University of BelizeHealth Healthcare in BelizeSee alsoBelize Index of Belize-related articlesList of Belize-related topicsList of international rankingsMember state of the Commonwealth of NationsMember state of the United NationsOutline of Central AmericaOutline of geographyOutline of North AmericaReferencesExternal linksGovernment of Belize - Official governmental siteBelize National Emergency Management Organization - Official governmental siteBelize Tourism Board - Official Tourism siteEncyclopædia Britannica Belize's Country PageBelize information on globalEDGEBelize
+In May 1571 he conveyed his estates to his eldest son, Hamon, and moved to King's Lynn.
+The two story Second Empire house was built in 1870–71 for Charles Ellis and Emma Claflin Ellis, the daughter of William Claflin, then Governor of Massachusetts, whose own home (no longer extant) was in Newtonville.
+The show was later renamed Seinfeld to avoid confusion with the short-lived teen sitcom The Marshall Chronicles.
+Mohammad Saad (born 24 March 1990) is a Pakistani first-class cricketer who plays for Water and Power Development Authority.
+Ex-Arsenal caretaker manager Stewart Houston took over the reins with former Arsenal manager Bruce Rioch as his assistant.
+This loss was surprising to many commentators, as the Otago region has traditionally regarded as a safely in National hands.
+Justin Fojo (born December 7, 1988) is a Trinidadian footballer.
+Annals of Cambridge.
+The Los Angeles Times has described the group as an "internet and publishing phenomenon that may or may not be completely serious".
+Bloc|-|| 6| 12|| 18|-| 12|| 5|| 17|-| 8| 5||| 13|-|| 3||| 3|-| colspan="2" style="text-align:left;" | Total| 20| 14| 17|| 51|}Broken down by province:Marginal seats – analysis by province/territory|-!
+NotesFIFA international players from CataloniaAll of the players listed were either born or raised in Catalonia, with most meeting both criteria.
+Cymindis ruficollis is a species of ground beetle in the subfamily Harpalinae.
+Its mission is to gather the most of international consultants and Ukrainian specialists to solve industry's problems in the DTT field.
+Track listing "De Mí Enamórate" "Cómo Te Va Mi Amor" "Devorame Otra Vez" "Maldita Primavera" "Cheque En Blanco" "El Me Mintio" "No Controles" "Mentiras" "Acariciame" "Me Gustas Mucho" "Quién Como Tú" "Abrazame"Category:Patricia Manterola albumsCategory:2006 albums
+ReferencesCategory:Glaciers of Oates Land
+It was described by Gaudant in 1978.
+The Knights, in the program's 44th season of basketball, were led by third-year head coach Donnie Jones, and played their home games at the UCF Arena on the university's main campus in Orlando, Florida.
+Johnny Turbo is a superhero character created to advertise the Turbo Duo, a hybrid of the Turbografx-16 console and its add-on, the TurboGrafx CD, in North America.
+Karol Beck and Jaroslav Levinský were the defending champions; however, Beck chose to compete in Ostrava instead and Levinský chose not to compete this year.Dustin Brown and Simon Stadler won in the final 7-6(4), 6-7(4), [10-7] against Jonathan Marray and Jamie Murray.
+Compared to that earlier model from 2012 and flagship OM-D E-M1 released in 2013, both of which are claimed to have 4 f-stops of shake compensation when shooting handheld, Olympus claims the OM-D E-M5 II can compensate 5 f-stops.
+I guess I was thinking about my younger days when I was writing this song and how I was.
+Gheorghe Avramescu (26 January 1884 – 3 March 1945) was a Romanian Lieutenant General during World War II.
+Tissa leaves Zinkyaik MountainThe hermits became well-known and the area surrounding the mountain became crowded.
+The material can be classified PB 125 with a minimum required strength (MRS) of 12.5 MPa.
+Birmingham metropolitan area may refer to:Birmingham metropolitan area, Alabama, United StatesBirmingham metropolitan area, West Midlands, United Kingdom
+External linksCategory:1989 birthsCategory:Belarusian ice hockey defencemenCategory:HC Dinamo Minsk playersCategory:HK Neman Grodno playersCategory:Living peopleCategory:Sportspeople from Grodno
+From 1961 to 1989 Baumschulenweg was crossed by the Berlin Wall due to its position on East Berlin partially bounded by West Berlin.
+Although most U.S. airports use the same three-letter location identifier for the FAA and IATA, Wadena Municipal Airport is assigned ADC by the FAA but has no designation from the IATA (which assigned ADC to Andakombe, Papua New Guinea).
+The present house was rebuilt in 1671 by William Roberts of Monmouth, whilst serving as Receiver and Paymaster of the King's Works at Windsor Castle.
+Donald Clarke may refer to: Donald Henderson Clarke (1887–1958), American writer and journalist Donald Clarke (GC) (1923–1942), British recipient of the George Cross Donald Clarke (cricketer) (born 1926), English cricketer Don Clarke (1933–2002), New Zealand rugby union player Donald Clarke (writer) (born 1940), American writer on music Don R. Clarke (born 1945), general authority of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Donald C. Clarke, American expert on Chinese lawSee also Don Clark (disambiguation)
+PARM presidentsJuan Barragán (1957–74)Carlos Cantú RosasRosa María Martínez DenegriCarlos Guzmán Pérez (1999-2000)PARM candidates(1958): Adolfo López Mateos (allied with PRI and PPS)(1964): Gustavo Díaz Ordaz (allied with PRI and PPS)(1970): Luis Echeverría Álvarez (allied with PRI and PPS)(1976): José López Portillo (allied with PRI and PPS)(1982): Miguel de la Madrid (allied with PRI and PPS)(1988): Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas Solórzano (allied with PPS, PFCRN and PMS to form National Democratic Front)(1994): Álvaro Pérez Treviño(2000): Porfirio Muñoz LedoReferencesSee alsoList of political parties in MexicoCategory:Political parties established in 1955Category:Political parties disestablished in 2000Category:Defunct political parties in MexicoCategory:Socialist parties in MexicoCategory:1955 establishments in Mexico
+ο Pegasi, Latinized as Omicron Pegasi, is a suspected astrometric binary star system in the northern constellation of Pegasus.
+ReferencesThe Bulbophyllum-ChecklistThe Internet Orchid Species Photo Encyclopediasilentvalliensis
+ReferencesCategory:1980 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Athletes (track and field) at the 2004 Summer OlympicsCategory:Turkish female long-distance runnersCategory:Olympic athletes of TurkeyCategory:Place of birth missing (living people)
+Emperor Maximilian may refer to: Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor (1459–1519) Maximilian II, Holy Roman Emperor (1564–1576) Maximilian I of Mexico, Austrian-born Emperor of Mexico (1861–1867)See alsoMaximilian (disambiguation)
+Served as USS Sapphire (SP-710) in 1917-1918NavSource Online: Section Patrol Craft Photo Archive Sapphire (SP 710)Category:1900 shipsCategory:Individual yachtsCategory:Patrol vessels of the United States NavyCategory:Ships built in Bristol, Rhode IslandCategory:World War I patrol vessels of the United States
+The team challenged the players of arcades across the country and attempted to challenge other countries through visits to foreign embassies.
+The 1920 Michigan Agricultural Aggies football team was an American football team that represented Michigan Agricultural College (MAC) as an independent during the 1920 college football season.
+On a hot, weekend day, the potholes attract people of all ages.
+Crossroads of Laredo is a Western film compiled by extant silent footage of the unfinished Streets of Laredo (c. 1948), the first known film project of Ed Wood.
+Drift to the north is a term used in New Zealand to refer to the internal migration of people from the South Island to the country's main metropolitan area, Auckland, in the northern North Island.
+He made his List A debut for Border in the 2018–19 CSA Provincial One-Day Challenge on 13 January 2019.
+It is situated between Bamber Bridge and Leyland, and had a population of 77 in 2001.
+The 1963 College Football All-America team is composed of college football players who were selected as All-Americans by various organizations and writers that chose College Football All-America Teams in 1963.
+The larvae have been recorded feeding on decaying animal matter in the web of social spiders of the genus Stegodyphus.
+References Category:EnteromiusCategory:Fish described in 1987
+The film was screened at the Berlinale in the Generation 14plus section.
+The Zenith System's influence over the fate of its people gave rise to the design motif of cogs, creating a "world of clockwork".
+Often considered one of the best pelotaris of the history of Álava, in 1979 a professional fronton, the Frontón Ogueta, was named after him in Vitoria, the capital city of the province.
+Its natural habitat is subtropical or tropical moist montane forests.
+See also List of steamed foodsReferencesCategory:Maharashtrian cuisineCategory:Konkani cuisineCategory:Rice dishesCategory:Indian snack foodsCategory:Deep fried foodsCategory:Steamed foods
+Fresh Cream may refer to:Fresh Cream - The debut album by British blues-rock band Cream.
+Sapieha Palace may refer to: Sapieha Palace, Lviv Sapieha Palace, Warsaw Sapieha Palace, Vilnius
+Preliminary heats swam in the morning session of 20 July, with the top-16 finishers advancing to semifinal heats that evening.
+TheatreFilmographyReferencesExternal linksCategory:French film actressesCategory:20th-century French actressesCategory:21st-century French actressesCategory:Actresses from ParisCategory:Living peopleCategory:French stage actressesCategory:French television actressesCategory:Year of birth missing (living people)
+In 2007 a release for China was in development, and it launched on November 10, 2008 by Shanghai Everstar.
+Primary industries include fishing and the extraction of stone.
+His wife, Lilian, was the only woman on the Allied side to visit Gallipoli during the campaign, when she went to lay a wreath on his grave on 17 November 1915.
+Michelangelo's Night, Day, Dusk and DawnCanova's The Three GracesReferencesCategory:Art schools in Italy
+The Mutharika administration though has denied that she is the nation's Vice President.
+It is found in the United States and Canada.
+Track listingAll songs written by H.P.
+"The End" was selected for New Music Friday on Spotify across multiple countries in Asia, including Malaysia, Singapore, Vietnam, Indonesia, Thailand and Philippines, and also made it to the Top Hits Malaysia playlist.
+Eleven years after previously earning his card at the school, he was once again successful in ensuring a place on the tour for 2012.
+PowerCLI is a PowerShell-based command-line interface for managing VMware vSphere.
+Its summit is cut off from communication and is surrounded by a deep, natural chasm that is about wide and deep.
+ReferencesCategory:Mountain ranges of Palmer Land
+Google Developers Live is the live, streaming content for the developers and Google developers on many of Google's platforms.
+HistoryThe firm was a partnership between George Reid (1893-1984) and James Smith Forbes.
+ReferencesCategory:1937 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:People from Novokhopyorsky DistrictCategory:Soviet female cyclistsCategory:Russian female cyclistsCategory:UCI Track Cycling World Champions (women)Category:Russian track cyclists
+Trained as a pharmacologist, he first deciphered the mode of action of modafinil, amphetamines, and antidepressants on narcolepsy symptoms, work that was done in close collaboration with Dr. Seiji Nishino.
+Major intersectionsSee alsoList of highways in Puerto RicoList of highways numbered 178References178
+Gala Group may refer to:Gala Group (geology), a series of rock strata in southern ScotlandGala Coral Group, a commercial betting and gambling company
+She is a founding ensemble member of Collaboraction and an ensemble member of Teatro Vista (associate artistic director from 2006-2008).
+The total area is 29.27 km² (11.30 sq mi) which gives a population density of 496 inhabitants per km² (1,284/sq mi).
+Chloris cubensis is a species of grass native to the islands of the Caribbean.
+Career statisticsHonoursClubBarcelonaSupercopa de España: 2010InternationalSpain U19UEFA European Under-19 Championship: 2011Spain U17'FIFA U-17 World Cup: Third place 2009ReferencesExternal linksFC Barcelona official profileCategory:1992 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:People from MaresmeCategory:Spanish footballersCategory:Catalan footballersCategory:Association football defendersCategory:La Liga playersCategory:Segunda División playersCategory:Segunda División B playersCategory:CE Mataró playersCategory:FC Barcelona B playersCategory:FC Barcelona playersCategory:RC Celta de Vigo playersCategory:Sevilla FC playersCategory:Spain youth international footballersCategory:Spain under-21 international footballersCategory:Catalonia international footballers
+Stereo FM radio with support for Visual Radio and RDS.
+Comedy Warehouse — A nightclub which featured an improv comedy troupe.
+He simultaneously served as the federation's Regional President for the Americas, as well as a delegate to the United Nations Economic and Social Council representing the Federation as a special consultant.
+Meckler or Mekler is a surname of German origin that may refer to:Alan Meckler (born 1945), American businessmanDavid Meckler (born 1987), American ice hockey playerGabriel Mekler (1942–1977), American musicianJackie Mekler (born 1932), South African athleteMark Meckler (born 1962), American political activistNancy Meckler (born 1947), American theatre directorRuth Meckler (1937–2005), American pianistSee also Meckler-Allen 1912 BiplaneMacklerCategory:German-language surnames
+World Championship resultsBDO 2018: 1st Round (lost to Conan Whitehead 1-3)ReferencesExternal linksCategory:1989 birthsCategory:Scottish darts playersCategory:Living peopleCategory:British Darts Organisation playersCategory:Professional Darts Corporation players
+The Wye and its Associations: a Picturesque Ramble, 1841.
+The Ahmadiyya Muslim community claims 350 members in the country.
+References Category:Princesses of the Fifth Dynasty of EgyptCategory:26th-century BC womenCategory:25th-century BC women
+Un procès de sorcellerie sous Louis XIII, Paris, Hachette, 1968.
+The FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 1932 were held 4–6 February in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy.
+From 2008 to 2011, the club has played in the sixth-tier Verbandsliga Württemberg, but was relegated again at the end of the 2010–11 season.
+Collapse during construction The mid-span section of the bridge collapsed on .
+See also List of fossiliferous stratigraphic units in MexicoExternal links Category:Geologic formations of MexicoCategory:Cretaceous Mexico
+This is a list of bridges documented by the Historic American Engineering Record in the U.S. state of New York.
+#REDIRECT Systemically important financial institution
+ReferencesExternal linksCategory:1998 filmsCategory:Indian filmsCategory:1990s Malayalam-language films
+He was a pupil of Baldassare Franceschini (Il Volterrano)WorksFrescoes and paintings in:Pažaislis Monastery in Kaunas, LithuaniaKrasiński Palace, Warsaw, Poland The Open and Closed Galleries of Wilanów Palace (1688), Warsaw, PolandChapel of St. Casimir in Vilnius Cathedral (1692), LithuaniaSapieha Palace in Vilnius, LithuaniaChurches in Łowicz (1695) and in Węgrów (1706–08), PolandReferences Category:1637 birthsCategory:1712 deathsCategory:People from Campi BisenzioCategory:Italian Baroque paintersCategory:17th-century Italian paintersCategory:Italian male paintersCategory:18th-century Italian paintersCategory:Court painters of Polish KingsCategory:Italian expatriates in PolandCategory:Florentine paintersCategory:Place of death unknown
+In 1805, he travelled with him again; this time to Neuchâtel, where he helped him edit the Voyage pittoresque de Genève à Milan par le Simplon.
+Obscuring the faces of the prostitutes could be seen as Brown objectifying them, and with a feeling the book lacks a female perspective, "especially since all we see of them is their frequently naked bodies."
+ReferencesCategory:Unincorporated communities in VirginiaCategory:Unincorporated communities in Albemarle County, Virginia
+Chan began to be appointed by the government in various public offices.
+KnapenGilda Rivero Mendoza was de Thuin's wife and one complainant in 1947 asserted that R.G.
+ReferencesExternal linksPiz de Molinera on SummitpostCategory:Mountains of SwitzerlandCategory:Mountains of GraubündenCategory:Mountains of TicinoCategory:Mountains of the AlpsCategory:Graubünden–Ticino borderCategory:Lepontine AlpsCategory:Two-thousanders of Switzerland
+The Watcher was one of five series that aired on UPN during its first year, joining other drama series Star Trek: Voyager and Marker and the sitcoms Pig Sty and Platypus Man.
+It is owned by chef Paul Wahlberg and his brothers, actors Donnie Wahlberg and Mark Wahlberg.
+Although these write-ups were superficial and rather insignificant as far as content is concerned, below the surface they had great importance because the identity and cohesion of the ethnic Germans who emigrated from Russia was thereby maintained for nearly fifty years."
+Out of a total of 22 households that answered this question, 36.4% were households made up of just one person and 2 were adults who lived with their parents.
+and studied graphic design at the University of Ghent.
+SettingWithin the fictional universe of Impire, the player assumes the persona of Baʿal-Abaddon, a primordial evil summoned from Tartarus and imprisoned in the physical form of a demonic imp, initially forced to serve the incompetent sorcerer Oscar van Fairweather.
+Player statisticsGoaltending averagesScoring leadersSee also1915 in sports1916 in sports1915–16 NHA seasonList of pre-NHL seasonsReferences Category:Pacific Coast Hockey Association seasonsPCHAPCHA
+Nimaijan Prathamik Vidyalaya (primary school).
+According to the 2002 census, the ward has a total population of 7,333.
+Meucci is a surname of Italian origin that may refer to:Antonio Meucci (1808–1889), Italian-American inventor sometimes credited with invention of the telephoneAttilio Meucci (born 1970), Italian mathematician and financial engineerDaniele Meucci (born 1985), Italian long-distance runnerMichaelangelo Meucci (1840–1890), Italian painterVincenzo Meucci (1694–1766), Italian late-Baroque painterSee alsoGaribaldi-Meucci Museum
+Cast Tina Pica - Adelaide Harold Memmo Carotenuto - Jack Carlone Elke Sommer - Rossana Matteo Spinola - Lorenzo Silvio Bagolini - Adone Ugo Tognazzi - Roberto De NobelReferencesExternal linksCategory:1959 filmsCategory:1950s comedy filmsCategory:Italian filmsCategory:Italian-language filmsCategory:Films directed by Roberto Bianchi MonteroCategory:Italian comedy filmsCategory:Films with screenplays by Roberto Bianchi Montero
+The median income for a household in the county was $33,967, and the median income for a family was $40,589.
+The restoration was carried out by Bouwbedrijf Hiemsta of Arum.
+HurlingFootballCategory:Gaelic football competitions in IrelandCategory:1984 in Gaelic footballCategory:Hurling competitions in IrelandCategory:1984 in hurling
+ReferencesSourcesCategory:Ottoman dynastyCategory:Wives of Ottoman SultansCategory:Year of birth unknownCategory:Year of death unknown
+References Category:Towns and villages in Bijar County
+Mitake Station is the name of two train stations in Japan: Mitake Station (Gifu) Mitake Station (Tokyo) ja:御嵩駅
+ReferencesExternal linksCategory:Populated places in Tajikistan
+S. aureus may refer to: Scleropages aureus, a proposed species of the Asian arowana, a fish species native to Southeast Asia Senecio aureus, the golden ragwort, a perennial flowering plant species native to eastern North America Sericulus aureus, the flame bowerbird, a bird species endemic to rainforests of New Guinea Somatogyrus aureus, the golden pebblesnail, a minute freshwater snail species endemic to the United States Staphylococcus aureus, a facultatively anaerobic, Gram-positive coccus species and the most common cause of staph infectionsSee also Aureus (disambiguation)
+E. metallica may refer to: Epicyrtica metallica, a moth species found in Australia Eupanacra metallica, a moth species found from north-western India across Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh and northern Myanmar to south-western ChinaSee also Metallica (disambiguation)
+Selected resultsSki mountaineering 2003: 1st, German Championship 1st, Dammkarwurm 2nd, Mountain Attack marathon 4th, European Championship team race (together with Judith Graßl) 7th, European Championship combination ranking 8th, European Championship single race 2004: 3rd, Mountain Attack marathon 3rd, Dammkarwurm 2009: 1st, Wildsaurennen (literally: wild sow race) relay rece (together with Christine Gürtler, Regina Regina and Anita Vogelsberger)Mountain running 2004: 1st, Lauf Los Tyrol (women class 1) 2006: 1st, Lauf Los Tyrol (women class 1) 3rd, Zugspitzlauf (Zugspitze run) 2007: 1st, Lauf Los Tyrol (women class 1) 5th, ZugspitzlaufReferences Category:1961 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:German female ski mountaineersCategory:German female long-distance runnersCategory:People from Garmisch-Partenkirchen (district)
+Canada's role was to construct airfields alongside the military highway and send ship convoys to supply the various outposts of the northwest, while Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF) patrol bombers and lookouts keep a constant vigil.
+Finally, the Upper Purico Ignimbrite is a moderately to densely welded flow that occurs particularly close to the summit of the Purico complex, where it forms six flow units that contain fiamme textures.
+In 2016, she won the Academy Award for Best Makeup and Hairstyling at the 88th Academy Awards and a BAFTA Award for Best Makeup and Hair in the 69th British Academy Film Awards for her work overseeing hair and makeup on the movie Mad Max: Fury Road.
+Four regiments of the British Army have been numbered the 93rd Regiment of Foot:93rd Regiment of Foot (1760), raised in 176093rd Regiment of Foot (1780), raised in 178093rd Regiment of Foot (1793), raised in 179393rd (Sutherland Highlanders) Regiment of Foot, raised in 1799
+The Monkey HouseIn September 2015 the company announced they had set up their own premises "The Monkey House" on Seven Sisters Road near Finsbury Park where they plan to stay permanently, having previously taught in locations such as Jacksons Lane.
+However, the Continental Congress declined to act on Transylvania Co.'s petition without the consent of Virginia and North Carolina, which laid claim to the disputed lands.
+playersCategory:A.C. Prato playersCategory:Cosenza Calcio 1914 playersCategory:Como 1907 playersCategory:F.C.
+Background The Scots Covenanters had landed an army in Ulster in 1642, to protect the Scottish settlers there from the massacres that followed the Irish Rebellion of 1641.
+It was first described by Pekka T. Lehtinen in 1981, and is found in Sri Lanka.
+At Savenay in December, 1793, succumbed the remains of the Vendean army, already defeated in the battle of Cholet.
+The Games were hosted from October 11, 1964 to October 24, 1964.
+Giovanni de Natali () was admitted to the Ragusan Great Council on 30 July 1667.Notable members include:Gerolimo Natali ( 1735–37), Ragusan military officer in Russian service.
+Unable to allow for this, the Holy Empire decided to extend its influence over Transylvania, to get rid of the faint young Prince.
+According to the United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of , all land.
+The film was written and directed by Claude Bernard-Aubert, and starred Françoise Giret, Gordon Heath and Aram Stephan, with music by Michel Magne.
+The Ministry may not have more than four of them.
+FacultiesMidwifePublic healthMedical recordsReferencesCategory:Universities in IndonesiaCategory:Educational institutions established in 1959
+He is a one-time national champion (1995) in the men's 5,000 metres.
+As the marriage was childless, his brother, Peter succeeded him upon his death in 1331.
+ServicesMergers and Acquisitions Sagent provided buy side advisory services, sell-side advisory services, defense advisory services and corporate transactions and reorganizations.
+He captained the Indian squad at the 2016 Men's Hockey Junior World Cup that went unbeaten throughout the tournament, eventually winning a Gold medal.
+In 1825, Odessky Uyezd and in 1834, Ananyevsky Uyezd were added into the territorial division of the Kherson Governorate.
+The Junior Museum of Bay County opened in 1981.
+The village forms part of the municipality of Göyəm.
+He participated in the capture of Fricourt, on the opening day of the Battle of the Somme, and was wounded two weeks later during the Battle of Bazentin Ridge.
+Platinum Airport is a state-owned public-use airport located in Platinum, in the Bethel Census Area of the U.S. state of Alaska.
+The droplet cluster is typologically similar to colloidal crystals.
+Section between I-275 and 4th StreetAfter being shelved for decades, largely due to a lack of funding, the Gandy Freeway section from just east of 4th Street N to the I-275 interchange was finally built at a cost of $83 million.
+David Graeme ( – 14 March 1726) was a Scottish politician.
+In Denmark Kiwi primarily operates in Jutland and Funen.
+Yu Seung-hun (born 9 October 1969) is a South Korean water polo player.
+As a rule frame numbers (which are repeated on the engine) start with 8B on the MSR (Competition Model) and 8C for the "street model" which had lights, muffler and a high front fender.
+Surrounding them were the usual suspects of 1980's long hurdling.
+In 1980 he moved to East Perth where he played a single season.
+"Suburbia Streets" is the third single released by New Zealand hip hop group Fast Crew, released in 2005.
+Its fossils can be found in Spain and Israel.
+Halla Bol!
+It is part of the Paraná River basin.
+Theodor Dimitrie Speranția (; born Theodor Dimitrie Nădejde ; May 4, 1856 – March 9, 1929) was a Romanian playwright, humorist, folklorist and journalist.
+The novel is highly organised despite its length.
+In 1844-1848 he was also in Dagestan and participated in the battles of Salta and Gergebil, including the battle against Haji Murad.
+This was also the site of an accident reported in the Bangor Daily News in 2009.
+Leiria playersCategory:Primeira Liga playersCategory:Sharjah FC playersCategory:Al-Mesaimeer SC playersCategory:Drogheda United F.C.
+Hankendi may refer to: Stepanakert, capital and the largest city of Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, also called Khankendi Hankendi, Elazığ, a town in the district of Elazığ, Elazığ Province, Turkey
+The school is affiliated to the CISCE.
+The Mandelbrot curves are of degree 2n+1.
+American Beetles, Volume I: Archostemata, Myxophaga, Adephaga, Polyphaga: Staphyliniformia.
+Harald IV of Norway (died 1136), also known as Harald Gille.
+He left the club in 1985 after two successive relegations, and later managed Stenhousemuir from 1987 to 1989.
+- LafferThe album was hailed as 'album of the year' by several Triple J presenters and generated critical acclaim around Australia and internationally.
+ReferencesSources Category:1766 birthsCategory:1826 deathsCategory:18th-century American judgesCategory:Judges of the United States circuit courtsCategory:Mayors of Burlington, New JerseyCategory:Members of the New Jersey General AssemblyCategory:New Jersey city council membersCategory:People from Bound Brook, New JerseyCategory:People from Burlington, New JerseyCategory:United States federal judges appointed by John AdamsCategory:United States federal judges admitted to the practice of law by reading law
+Actinodoria cuprea is a species of tachinid flies in the genus Actinodoria of the family Tachinidae.
+Holman was a lumber retail dealer and lived in North Dakota and South Dakota.
+References Category:Theatre-related listsCategory:Lists of Belgian people by occupationCategory:Brussels-related lists
+On a hilltop a few hundred metres to the west of the hall ruins is the family graveyard, restored by North West Water in the 1980s.
+Using 16s rRNA sequencing as a basis of comparison, D. frigens has been found to have a 97.3% similarity with D. saxicola and a 96.6% similarity to D. marmoris.
+Located on the boundaries of the Jezreel and Beit She'an Valleys between the cities of Afula and Beit She'an, it falls under the jurisdiction of Gilboa Regional Council.
+Category:1989 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Austrian male lugers
+Pickmere is a civil parish in Cheshire East, England.
+Category:Lakes of Sicily
+The 2010 Louisville Cardinals football team represented the University of Louisville in the 2010 NCAA Division I FBS football season.
+Xiaoping may refer to:People Emperor Ping (孝平, Xiaoping), posthumous name of the Han emperor Deng Xiaoping (邓小平), former paramount leader of China, Chinese communist leader Li Xiaoping (李小平), Chinese gymnast Ren Xiaoping (任晓平), Chinese orthopedic surgeon Zhang Xiaoping (张小平), Mongol Chinese boxerPlaces Xiaoping, Chenxi (孝坪镇, Xiàopíng), a town in Hunan, China; of Chenxi County Xiaoping, Zhijiang County (晓坪乡, Xiǎopíng), a township in Hunan, China; of Zhijiang Dong Autonomous CountySee also Xiaopeng (disambiguation) Xiaopin (disambiguation)
+Scaria may refer to: A frazione of the comune of Alta Valle Intelvi Scaria (grasshopper), a genus of grasshoppers in the family Tetrigidae
+The collection was first published in 1926.
+Gayatri who lives with Singhanias after her parents death, realises her love for Kartik who stays with Maheshwaris and work for Naitik and Kartik realises that he loves Naira.
+TaxonomyJohn Gould described the little eagle in 1841.
+Connections made in the queen's household were strengthened in 1637 when her niece Beatrice Annesley, Francis Annesley's daughter, married James Zouch the son of Dorothea Silking, her Danish colleague in the queen's bedchamber, and Sir Edward Zouch of Woking.
+Other appearancesAs well as appearing in Beauty School Cop Outs, some of the cast members have competed in other reality TV shows including Celebrity Big Brother and I'm a Celebrity...Get Me Out of Here!.
+Results and fixturesPre-season and friendliesMalaysia Super LeagueLeague tableFA CupMalaysia CupGroup stageQuarter-finalsPlayersFirst team squadSquad goals statisticsCorrect as of match played on 21 September 2016TransfersSee list of transfers first window transfers and second window transfersReferencesExternal links Official WebsiteCategory:Malaysian football clubs 2016 season
+Kaganovichesky District was formed in 1936.
+It was inactivated in 1944 in a general reorganization of Army Air Forces training units..HistoryThe 396th Bombardment Group was activated at Mountain Home Army Air Field, Idaho on 16 February 1943 with the 592d, 593d, 594th and 595th Bombardment Squadrons assigned.
+Masnan may refer to: Masnàn, a mountain in Switzerland Mahsnan, a village in Iran
+Quality In general, the fact that a whisky was produced by an independent bottler does not, by itself, provide any indication of quality.
+Exceptions The law makes vacancy and time limitation provisions applicable to any affected office for which an advice and consent appointment is required unless:another statutory provision expressly supersedes such provisions; a statutory provision in effect on this Act's enactment date expressly authorizes the President, a court, or the head of an executive department to designate an officer to perform the functions of a specified office temporarily in an acting capacity or designates an officer to perform functions of a specified office in such temporary acting capacity; or the President makes an appointment to fill a vacancy during a Senate recess.
+A third anthology, Firebirds Soaring, was published in Spring 2009.
+See also :Category:Rivers of the Netherlands and :Category:Rhine-Meuse-Scheldt delta.
+2015: Debut with Once Upon a TimeUnicorn was first revealed to the public in August 2015 through Naver TV Cast's web miniseries I Am a Girl Group, a five-episode sitcom that “revolves around various topics concerning K-pop idols, such as dating and dieting.” On September 3, the group released their debut EP titled Unicorn 'Once Upon a Time'''.
+He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1894 to the Fifty-fourth Congress.
+Iranattti is a village in Belgaum district in the southern state of Karnataka, India.
+PlotCastProsenjit Chatterjee as RahulRituparna Sengupta as PayelShakti Kapoor as Major (Rahul's Uncle)Biplab Chatterjee as Aziz (Rahul's Friend)Subhendu Chatterjee as Rahul's FatherDilip Ray as Payel's FatherSoundtrackReferencesExternal links Moner Manush (1997) in GomoloCategory:1997 filmsCategory:Bengali-language filmsCategory:Indian filmsCategory:1990s Bengali-language filmsCategory:Films directed by Sujit Guha
+Nathan Rabin, in his My Year of Flops segment for The A.V.
+It is included in the National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems for 2017–2021, which categorized it as a local general aviation facility.
+Bacsik may refer to: Elek Bacsik (1926–1993), jazz violinist and guitarist Mike Bacsik (left-handed pitcher) (born 1977) Mike Bacsik (right-handed pitcher) (born 1952)See also Bacs (disambiguation)Category:Hungarian-language surnames
+Skælingur () is a village on the west of the main Faroese island of Streymoy in the Kvívík Municipality.
+In 1630 he was sent to Leipzig as a delegate to a convention in behalf of the Augsburg Confession, and in 1645 he took a leading position at the colloquy of Thorn.
+He is known for his work on social network analysis, mathematical sociology, network science and multidimensional network.
+The tree has therefore protected northern India from a flood of styrofoam and plastic plates that would have caused tremendous pollution.
+"Moroccan Christmas" received generally mixed reviews.
+She was married to the journalist, diplomat and founder of the Austrian newspaper Die Presse, Ernst Molden, and had two sons, the publicist and federalist Otto Molden (1918–2002), and the journalist (1924–2014).
+List of representativesReferences Category:Ambassadors of Burundi to ChinaChinaBurundi
+The Iori Plateau (, ivris zegani), also known as Gare-Kakheti Plateau (გარე კახეთის ზეგანი, gare kakhet'is zegani) is a plateau between the Kura and Alazani rivers in southeastern Georgia, transected by the Iori River.
+Adapted from the 1932 novel of the same name buy Jim Tully, the film was inspired in part by I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang and was part of a series of films depicting men in chain gangs following the success of that film.
+Metro’s Board of Directors approved advancing a mostly street-running route with some variations for more study as part of the project’s Draft Environmental Impact Report (DEIR).
+KDLP may refer to: Democratic Labor Party (South Korea) KDLP-LP, a low-power radio station (104.7 FM) licensed to Ace, Texas, United States
+Camponotus mendax is a species of carpenter ant (genus Camponotus).
+They also had interviews with Iranian media such as BBC Persian, VOA Persian, Farsi1, Gem TV and Manoto.
+Battles take place in a 3D environment with 2D character sprites.
+This kinase has been shown to directly phosphorylate and activate IkappaB kinases, and thus plays a role in NF-kappa B signaling pathway.
+playersCategory:Sliema Wanderers F.C.
+Yaméogo was forced to resign after a general strike on January 3, 1966, giving power to General Sangoulé Lamizana on the demonstrators' demand.
+The Hohhot Pumped Storage Power Station, also known by Huhehaote, is located north of Hohhot in Inner Mongolia, China.
+ReferencesCategory:Unincorporated communities in Tehama County, California
+A660 may refer to: A660 road, road in England A660 autoroute in France, which connects to the A63 autoroute
+Khan garnered 38,327 votes while his closest rival secured 31,893 votes.
+ReferencesCategory:1934 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:French male rowersCategory:Olympic rowers of FranceCategory:Rowers at the 1956 Summer Olympics
+Draper Professor of Aeronautics and Astronautics at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and has been awarded honorary doctorates by Milwaukee School of Engineering, Lane College and Old Dominion University.
+Ministry of Transport and Civil Aviation may refer to:Ministry of Transport and Civil Aviation (Afghanistan), the aviation regulation body in AfghanistanMinistry of Transport and Civil Aviation (Sri Lanka), the central government ministry of Sri Lanka responsible for transportMinistry of Transport and Civil Aviation (United Kingdom), in existence from 1953 to 1959, now the Department for Transport
+Return to baseballIn June 2010 the Assistant Secretary of the Army, Thomas R. Lamont, gave White an early release from his 5-year active-duty commitment.
+Graduated in Science with Distinction from the University of Calcutta in 1946, briefly taught Mathmetics at Jessore Zila School 1947–1948, then studied Law at Dhaka University with Sheikh Mujibur Rahman and Mollah Jalaluddin.
+Monash may refer to:__NOTOC__PlacesAustraliaAustralian Capital Territory Monash, Australian Capital Territory, a suburb of CanberraSouth Australia Monash, South Australia, a townVictoria City of Monash, a municipality Division of Monash, an Australian Electoral Division Monash College, Melbourne Monash Freeway, a road linking Melbourne to Gippsland Monash Medical Centre, a hospital and research centre in Melbourne Monash Province, an electorate of the Victorian Legislative Council until 2006 Monash Special Developmental School, a school Monash University, a public research university located in MelbourneIsrael Kfar Monash, an agricultural settlement in central IsraelPeople John Monash (1865–1931), Australian World War I general Paul Monash (1917–2003), American producer and screenwriterOther uses .monash, an Internet top-level domain Australian Army ship John Monash (AS 3051)See also
+Marie Gahéry (1867–1932) was a French Catholic social worker and educationalist.
+ReleaseFollowing their founding in 2009, the group released a two-song demo and a short EP titled We Are All Alone under the name The Hotel Year.
+(Sir Thomas Hohler, the British ambassador in Mexico, claimed to have been "Mr. H" or at least involved with the interception in his autobiography.)
+Rotrude of Hesbaye was possibly his sister.
+ReferencesCategory:ConcertsCategory:Genesis (band)
+He was also on the board of directors of the Writers Guild of America.
+1971–1976, he studied at Yeghennadzor Art School, in Van Yeghyan's class, who played great role in the formation of the artist's aesthetic taste and the love towards the abstract painting.
+ReferencesBibliography Category:Roman lawCategory:82 BCCategory:1st century BC in lawCategory:1st century BC in the Roman Republic
+Gregorka also made an appearance on ABC's Winter Wipeout, Season 4, Episode 1, where she won a $1,000 bonus for remaining on "The Ski Lift" the longest.
+Sheykhalijan (, also Romanized as Sheykh‘alījān; also known as Sheykhlajān) is a village in Chaybasar-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Maku County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran.
+He got eight caps for the Yugoslavia national team.
+Central Corridor can refer to the following:METRO Green Line, a light rail line between Minneapolis and St. Paul that was known as the Central Corridor during the planning and early construction phasean informal nickname for the office developments on Central Avenue, Phoenix, Arizona Central Corridor (Union Pacific Railroad), a rail line between Denver, Colorado and central NevadaCentral Corridor Rail Line, a proposed passenger rail line through Connecticut, Massachusetts, and VermontCentral Corridor (Africa), a transport and trading route from Burundi, Rwanda, the DRC and Tanzania to the port of Dar es Salaam
+Despite the large amount of genera and species of this subfamily, very little is known about every species' biology.
+In 1857, with letters of introduction from Harriet Beecher Stowe and The Duchess of Suthereland, Warburg traveled to Italy, eventually settling permanently in Rome with his wife, Louise Ernestine.
+Change in scale Réaumur’s thermometer contained diluted alcohol (ethanol) and was constructed on the principle of using 0° for the freezing temperature of water, and graduating the tube into degrees, each of which was one-thousandth of the volume contained by the bulb and tube up to the zero mark.
+The band then added power rock elements and emotive backing vocals similar to those used in R&B ballads at the time.
+The other families were split into three different orders, placed among the Hamamelidae.
+Direct insolation is equal to the solar irradiance above the atmosphere minus the atmospheric losses due to absorption and scattering.
+In the last chapter Amiran saves Balkh from a demon that devastates the city and marries a daughter of the local king, returning home with fame and glory.
+Berglind is a Swedish surname.
+Mutations primarily manifest in the PDHA1 gene.
+The catalogue praised his depictions of fish which look as if they have just been caught, with beautiful scales and water droplets you can almost touch.
+CourseThe course consisted of 15 laps a 12 km circuit.
+In 1987, the paper was acquired by Hollinger.
+Jessica McHugh is an American author of speculative fiction, member of the Maryland Writers Association, and an affiliate member of the Horror Writers Association.
+Isidor Schneider (1896–1976) was an American and Imagist poet and a radical during the Great Depression.
+First time briefly in 2001, and later from the end of the 2005–06 season till March 2007.
+Theory and Research in Education is a triannual peer-reviewed academic journal that covers field of education.
+In 1972 he also won the Tour du Maroc and Tour de la Province de Namur.
+PO4 may refer to:Phosphate PO4: an EEG electrode site according to the 10-20 system
+One unique facet of this book is that the author uses a property rights—public choice approach—part of the New Institutional Economics—to provide a unifying theoretical framework to explain such diverse exchange institutions as contract law, ethnic trading networks, and gift-exchange, In addition, it goes beyond the New Institutional Economics paradigm by incorporating some crucial concepts from sociology, anthropology, and bioeconomics, such as social structure, social norms, culture, reciprocity, and kin-related altruism.
+The following United States highways are numbered 701:United States U.S. Route 701 Georgia State Route 701 (former) Ohio State Route 701 Puerto Rico Highway 701
+Category:1987 American novelsCategory:Pentagonia novelsCategory:Hispanic and Latino American novelsCategory:Novels set in CubaCategory:Novels about writersCategory:Gay male literature
+ReferencesCategory:EC 3.2.1Category:GH familyCategory:Protein families
+The song has a graduation theme and the single released at the time of MAMI and TOMOMI's high school graduation.
+Teneal Attard (born 16 March 1985) is an Australian field hockey player who competed in the 2008 Summer Olympics and 2012 Summer Olympics.
+On 22 July 2019 it was announced that The Best Footballer award for last season was conferred to Arijit Bagui for his excellent performance as a Right Back.
+In addition to the main line of the Interurban trail between Tukwila and Fife the Interurban Trail will connect to the planned northerly extension of the Foothills Trail through Puyallup and Sumner.
+Sam Snead owned the first round lead at 71 (+1), while Bobby Locke led after the second round at 144 (+4) and shared the lead with Demaret after the third at 218 (+8).
+See also International Federation of Football History & StatisticsReferences Category:IFFHS
+He won the Ronde van Overijssel in 1954, the Olympia's Tour in 1961, and one stage of the Tour de Tunisie in 1960.
+Too Short & Mr. Lucci) "Chicken Head Hoes" (skit) "Oh No, Pt.
+It was engraved with the words "City of Louisville" at the top and "Perseverando" at the bottom.
+International careerHe made his T20I debut for South Africa against India in early 2012.
+After this, Palmer moved to Australia and played two seasons with Port Melbourne Slavia in the Victorian State League.
+Prize money and ranking pointsFor 2013, the prize purse was $50,000.
+NotesCitationsReferencesExternal linksType 37 on German Navy.deCategory:Type 37 torpedo boatsCategory:1940 ships
+Television Boogie Woogie Kids Championship Dance India Dance Li'l Masters 2 Dance Ke Superkids DID Supermoms (episodic appearance) Dance Ka TashanReferencesCategory:Living peopleCategory:Hip hop dancersCategory:Indian female dancersCategory:Dancers from West BengalCategory:Year of birth missing (living people)
+However, the association failed to develop a strong organizational foundation.
+After having branded with its call letters and channel number for virtually its entire history, KUED announced on November 4, 2019 that it would rebrand as "PBS Utah" on November 25, adopting the updated national PBS logo and branding that was unveiled the same day.
+The result has been described as "...a combination of raw emotional power with sophisticated melodic beauty" (and more prosaically as "Kurt Cobain meets Leonard Bernstein").
+ReferencesCategory:Villages in Białystok County
+ReferencesCategory:1974 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Cypriot footballersCategory:AEL Limassol playersCategory:Anorthosis Famagusta FC playersCategory:Association football midfieldersCategory:Cypriot First Division playersCategory:Cyprus international footballers
+This plan was quickly rejected by the government of Paul Martin and by federal Conservative Party leader Stephen Harper.
+An extant print of the film is maintained by the China Film Archives.
+ReferencesCategory:1973 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Brazilian male rowersCategory:Olympic rowers of BrazilCategory:Rowers at the 1996 Summer OlympicsCategory:People from PelotasCategory:Pan American Games medalists in rowingCategory:Pan American Games silver medalists for BrazilCategory:Pan American Games bronze medalists for BrazilCategory:Rowers at the 1995 Pan American GamesCategory:Rowers at the 2003 Pan American GamesCategory:Rowers at the 2007 Pan American Games
+Myiacerapis is a subgenus of the hoverfly genus Microdon.
+ReferencesCategory:Norwegian cartographersCategory:Norwegian orienteersCategory:Male orienteersCategory:Norwegian environmentalistsCategory:Asker politiciansCategory:Norwegian College of Agriculture alumniCategory:Orienteering innovatorsCategory:Orienteering in NorwayCategory:1938 birthsCategory:Living people
+With the loss, the Colts dropped down to 0–11.
+This track was not as popular as its predecessor.
+The frame model is spatial rather than character based, so that text, graphics and images may always be placed anywhere in the frame, even overlapping one another.
+He was appointed on 1 March 1922, succeeding Wilfrid Wentworth Woods, and held the office until 25 June 1931.
+It was released the United States and Australia in mass market paperback format in January 1999 and September 2000 respectively.
+NCMAD sponsors research, publications, and academic conferences on various related topics.
+The Summit may refer to:Places The Summit, Queensland, town in AustraliaStructures The Summit (Wheatfield, New York), shopping center The Summit (Birmingham, Alabama), shopping center The Summit (Bukit Mertajam), shopping center in Bukit Mertajam, Penang The Summit of Louisville, the original name of a Kentucky shopping center now known as the Paddock Shops The Summit (Reno, Nevada), shopping center The Summit (San Francisco), condominium The Summit (Hong Kong) The Summit (Houston), Texas; an indoor arena now known as the Lakewood Church Central Campus "The Summitt", the name given to the basketball court at Thompson–Boling Arena in honor of longtime coach Pat SummittFilm and television The Summit Show, Canadian reality programme aired by OLN The Summit (TV miniseries), 2008 Canadian two-part miniseries, starring Bruce Greenwood, James Purefoy, Christopher Plummer and others The Summit (2012 film), a 2012 film about the mountain K2 by Nick Ryan The Summit (2017 film), a 2017 Argentine filmOther The Summit (Easthampton), weekly newspaper in Easthampton, Massachusetts, published by the Daily Hampshire Gazette Altamont, California, formerly The Summit Summit League, NCAA Division I athletics conference (aka The Summit) The Summit Bechtel Family National Scout Reserve, Boy Scouts Of America National Jamboree Site WAPS (FM), branded 91.3 The Summit, a non-commercial radio station in Akron, OhioSee alsoSummit (disambiguation)
+It is a part of the municipality of Nissewaard, and lies about 6 km west of Spijkenisse.
+External links Category:1929 birthsCategory:2001 deathsCategory:Canadian ice hockey forwardsCategory:Canadian people of English descentCategory:Cincinnati Mohawks (AHL) playersCategory:Sportspeople from TorontoCategory:Montreal Canadiens playersCategory:Montreal Royals (QHL) playersCategory:Quebec Senior Hockey League playersCategory:Ice hockey people from OntarioCategory:Canadian expatriate ice hockey players in the United States
+Racineux is a two time bronze medalist in the Summer Paralympics; she won her first bronze medal in 1996 with Oristelle Marx and won her second bronze medal with Florence Gravellier.
+Population: It borders the Fontanka River in the north, Moskovsky Avenue in the east, Malaya Mitrofanevskaya Street in the south, and Mitrofanevskoye Highway and Lermontovsky Avenue in the west.
+ReferencesExternal linksCategory:1986 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Association football defendersCategory:Algerian footballersCategory:CR Belouizdad players
+In the US, donor tissue must be recovered and processed adhering to the Current Good Tissue Practices rule.
+The album also has a second disc with minus-one songs.
+TheGenealogist has a number of different family trees available to view in its articles section which includes those of celebrities featured on the well known BBC TV programme Who Do You Think You Are?, such as Hugh Quarshie, Emilia Fox, Patrick Stewart and Len Goodman.
+It covers 156 906 km², and it borders Agadez Region to the north, Chad to the east, Nigeria to the south, and Zinder Region to the west.
+Of the rest of the population, there were 8 members of an Orthodox church (or about 0.48% of the population), and there were 10 individuals (or about 0.60% of the population) who belonged to another Christian church.
+Although a two seater like the Brochet MB.50, it was distinguished by an airfoil without sweep-back, a raised upper deck of the rear fuselage and a fixed landing gear with split axle.
+NotesReferencesExternal linksCategory:1995 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Japanese footballersCategory:Association football goalkeepersCategory:J3 League playersCategory:YSCC Yokohama playersCategory:Tokyo United FC players
+Maraea Morete (24 July 1844–8 October 1907) was a New Zealand tribal leader and writer.
+Strejești is a commune in Olt County, Romania.
+The longest-running show on the list is The Today Show, which has aired since 1952.
+Further readingSee also List of Streptomyces speciesReferencesExternal linksType strain of Streptomyces flavoviridis at BacDive - the Bacterial Diversity MetadatabaseflavoviridisCategory:Bacteria described in 1986
+Ken Flach and Robert Seguso won the final 3���6, 6–3, 6–3 against Sammy Giammalva Jr. and David Pate.
+An 18-player squad was announced on 8 January 2014.
+The two presenters share duties, with Fidler usually presenting on Monday to Wednesday and Kanowski on Thursday and Friday.
+William Heard may refer to: William Wright Heard (1853–1926), Governor of Louisiana, 1900–1904 William Theodore Heard (1884–1973), cardinal in the Roman Catholic Church William H. Heard, malacologist William Henry Heard (1850–1937), American clergyman and diplomat
+Heidwiller () is a commune in the Haut-Rhin department in Alsace in north-eastern France.
+She is widely renowned for her Sanskrit translation of Raghunatha's Ramayana kavya.
+Hur In-hoi (; born 24 July 1987) is a South Korean professional golfer.
+Although "I Love You" was sung at the end of Barney Goes to School and Barney in Concert, and later frequently sung at the end of all episodes of Barney & Friends, it was not featured at the end of Rock with Barney.
+Retratos de afrodescendientes de los siglos XIX y XX (2007)Afrodescendientes en México, una historia de silencio y discriminación (2012)ReferencesCategory:Living peopleCategory:Mexican anthropologistsCategory:Women anthropologistsCategory:Year of birth missing (living people)
+In response to this petition, Pope Gregory XVI, in 1840, created the Diocese of the Two Californias and appointed Francisco Garcia Diego y Moreno (then president of the missions of the Californias) as the first bishop of the diocese.
+SpeciesHyalorbilia arcuata Baral, M.L.Wu & Y.C.Su 2007Hyalorbilia berberidis (Velen.)
+Molloy left Kansas in 1888, after she and her daughter, Cora Lee, were cleared of the charges.
+The race has taken place on the island of La Palma since 2009, with the participation of many international runners.
+Cast Zach Galifianakis as George Judy Greer as Michelle Mia Maestro as Charisma Missi Pyle as Sahra James LeGros as Julieen D. W. Moffett as Jeffers Aubrey Morris as Old Jeffers Matthew Glave as Rodger Chris Coppola as Todd Fay Masterson as Cindy John Keister as Dr. Knob Pat Cashman as Bern Goodman Ryan McCann as Mack Luster Anthony L. Fuller Jr. as Missionary #2 Joe Rosati as Jeffers Agent #1 Mycol Comolli as Jeffers Agent #2ReleaseAfter being screened extensively at various festivals, Visioneers secured a release.
+ReferencesCategory:Rivers of Nebraska
+It is part of Rajampet Lok Sabha constituency along with other six Vidhan Sabha segments, namely, Kodur, Rayachoti, in Kadapa district and Thamballapalle Pileru, Madanapalle, Punganur in Chittor district.
+His best innings, a knock of 37*, came against Nottinghamshire.
+A modular software music studio consists of a plugin architecture that allows the audio to be routed from one plugin to another in many ways, similar to how cables carry an audio signal between physical pieces of hardware.
+Stanley Mountain, , el.
+Miaphysites condemned Eutychianism.
+This has no ties to RB Cranes which holds all of the original machine information & drawingsRuston-Bucyrus Ltd eraGradually Universal Excavators designed by Bucyrus-Erie replaced Ruston and Hornsby designed models.
+In 1992, Computer Gaming World retrospectively described it as "Another of the Nintendo-style, single-character CRPGs, with a plot heavily borrowed from Star Wars" but with "Fast-paced arcade fighting".
+It is classified by Deutsche Bahn as a category 6 station.
+ReferencesCategory:Chitral DistrictCategory:Tehsils of Chitral DistrictCategory:Union councils of Khyber PakhtunkhwaCategory:Populated places in Chitral DistrictCategory:Union councils of Chitral District
+The more recently reported mode starts at a different origin within the D-loop region and uses coupled-strand replication with simultaneous synthesis of both strands.
+De Molay could refer to:Jacques de Molay, the last Grand Master of the Knights TemplarsDeMolay International, Masonic youth organization for males.
+The corporation has stated that the publication New Country Star is currently on hiatus, disabling the website in early June, 2015.
+The German women's football league system looks like the following.
+The first recorded use of Persian red as a color name in English was in 1895.
+Mounira Solh (19 September 1911 – 27 November 2010) was a pioneer advocate for the rights of women and people with disabilities in Lebanon.
+Made from hewn stones, the facade has a bell in the sail-type tympanum.
+Order of Work Merit (), Moldova.
+Nuits de la Fondation Maeght relates to the following albums recorded at Fondation Maeght and released on the French Shandar labelNuits de la Fondation Maeght (Albert Ayler album), released as two volumesNuits de la Fondation Maeght (Sun Ra album), released as two volumesThe Great Concert of Cecil Taylor originally released as Nuits de la Fondation Maeght 3 LP box setCategory:Shandar albums
+He was also instrumental in bringing celebrated visiting scholars to UC Irvine, including Jacques Derrida, Jerzy Grotowski, and Robert Weimann.
+Instrumental Quarter is an Italian instrumental post-rock band, formed in 1999 in Cuneo.
+They are affiliated to the Jersey Football Association and play in the Jersey Football Combination Championship.
+She married Leroy Burrell, American sprinter, who broke the world 100 m record twice, 9.90s (1991) and 9.85s (1994).
+The label was a joke and I'll say that on the record.
+Arcade Building may refer to:in Canada Arcade Building (Toronto), Toronto, Canadain the United States(by state) Arcade Building (Fort Pierce, Florida), listed on the NRHP in Florida Arcade Building (Brookline, Massachusetts), listed on the NRHP in Massachusetts Arcade Building (St. Louis, Missouri), listed on the NRHP in Missouri Arcade Building (Asheville, North Carolina), listed on the NRHP in Buncombe County, North Carolina Westminster Arcade, Providence, Rhode Island Arcade Building (Columbia, South Carolina), listed on the NRHP in South CarolinaSee alsoArcade Hotel (disambiguation)
+ReferencesCategory:Ethnic groups in IndiaCategory:Ethnic groups in Nepal
+The film stars Leyla Shikhlinskaya, Hasan Mammadov and Hasanagha Turabov.The film was produced by the film studio "Azerbaijanfilm" named after Jafar Jabbarli.
+The 100 metres freestyle is often considered to be the highlight (blue riband event) of the sport of swimming, like 100 metres in the sport of Athletics.
+He graduated from Hart High School in Newhall, California.
+After graduating, Maria became a district geologist during the second World War.
+He was educated at Keystone Academy in Factoryville, Pennsylvania.
+This site is made up of three small caves, ranging from .
+The site is itself a spur hill of Auchengibbert Hill, and reaches in height.
+Grand Slam performance timelineSee also Performance timelines for all female tennis players who reached at least one Grand Slam finalReferencesExternal links Category:1863 birthsCategory:1946 deathsCategory:19th-century English peopleCategory:19th-century female tennis playersCategory:English female tennis playersCategory:People from EalingCategory:Wimbledon champions (pre-Open Era)Category:Grand Slam (tennis) champions in women's singlesCategory:International Tennis Hall of Fame inducteesCategory:Tennis people from Greater LondonCategory:British female tennis players
+Cornman may refer to: Cornman: American Vegetable Hero, a 2001 film directed by Barak Epstein "Cornman," a song on the album Kinky by Kinky Evans v. Cornman (1970), United States Supreme Court case
+HistoryIn the 9th century, the territory of Dunajský Klátov became part of the Kingdom of Hungary.In historical records the village was first mentioned in 1393.
+ReferencesExternal linksCategory:Living peopleCategory:English sculptorsCategory:English male sculptorsCategory:People from Preston, LancashireCategory:Modern sculptorsCategory:Year of birth missing (living people)
+External linksCategory:1965 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Sportspeople from Kōchi PrefectureCategory:Nippon Professional Baseball pitchersCategory:Nippon Ham Fighters playersCategory:Hiroshima Toyo Carp playersCategory:Chunichi Dragons playersCategory:Chiba Lotte Marines players
+His singing style is as a belter.
+Prado, who is close to the Catholic Church, participated in the Continental Youth and Young Adult Gathering in 1998.
+ReferencesSources GBIF entryumbrosa
+At the release of Cibola Burn, Orbit Books announced that James S. A. Corey would write three additional books in the series (adding to two that were already planned) to bring the series to nine novels and various short stories.
+"Zhongzhou Road" is not the name of any particular road; it refers to the trunk road from Beichen Bridge on the northern 4th Ring Road through to Zhonglou North Bridge on the northern 2nd Ring Road (north stretch) and south of Yongdingmen (south stretch).
+SpeciesThere are currently three recognized species in this genus: Bathylaco macrophthalmus J. G. Nielsen & Larsen, 1968 Bathylaco nielseni Sazonov & Ivanov, 1980 Bathylaco nigricans Goode & T. H. Bean, 1896 (Black warrior)ReferencesCategory:AlepocephalidaeCategory:Ray-finned fish generaCategory:Marine fish generaCategory:Taxa named by George Brown GoodeCategory:Taxa named by Tarleton Hoffman Bean
+Bavaria (1:173) 8.
+For every 100 females, there were 100.2 males.
+Although there is no national SIPLA body, either self endowed or sponsored by a national association, independent student chapters have materialized due to the need to organize intellectual property related events and provide networking and learning opportunities to students.
+Promotion To promote the EP, Johnson visited Mililani Mauka Elementary School in Hawaii on Earth-Day 2014.
+The plastic that fills the cold runner cools as the part cools and is then ejected with the part as a sprue.
+Before this match England and the West Indies had played each other in two ICC finals – the final of the 1979 World Cup at Lord's and the final of the 2004 Champions Trophy final at the Oval – both of which the West Indies won.
+Reigning world champions or Diamond League champions (in events where there is no reigning world champion) received a wild card entry to the World Championships, and they did not count against the maximum number of three athletes per event.
+The magazine is published by Brunico Communications, and was launched in 1989.
+The film's musical score was by V. Manohar.
+Max Smethurst (6 December 1914 – 22 November 1991) was an Australian rules footballer who played with Hawthorn in the Victorian Football League (VFL).
+Microsveltia procerula is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Cancellariidae, the nutmeg snails.
+ReferencesExternal links Mandarin Oriental Manila website—(archived)Category:Hotels in Metro ManilaCategory:Demolished hotelsCategory:Mandarin Oriental Hotel GroupCategory:Buildings and structures in MakatiCategory:Hotels established in 1976Category:Hotels disestablished in 2014Category:Hotel buildings completed in 1976Category:Buildings and structures demolished in 2016Category:1976 establishments in the PhilippinesCategory:2014 disestablishments in the PhilippinesCategory:Leandro Locsin buildingsCategory:Modernist architecture in the Philippines
+These points were based on years of service, rank and number of dependents.
+As of 2017, it is in phase II clinical trials for acne vulgaris.
+This, along with his opposition to the creation of an independent environmental protection agency and his support for nuclear power, led the Green Party to condemn Wilson's "deeply irresponsible message" and give him the 'Green Wash' award for being the MLA most likely to damage the environment.
+He scored the only goal for Charlton Athletic in extra time in the 1947 FA Cup Final, against Burnley.
+The club plays in the Languedoc-Rousillon regional National Division 2 league.
+First prize in Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod 2010 with new composition by Teng Mah Seng, "Facets of Life".
+34 deutsche Bands und Solo-Künstler im Interview.
+The album was Durham's first released via Pye Records in June 1974.
+During the First World War Thynne was twice wounded in the Battle of the Somme in 1916 and awarded the Distinguished Service Order and the Croix de Guerre.
+After the season he declared for the NBA draft, but ultimately returned to college.
+64 in April 2007.
+3 constituency.
+playersCategory:Scottish league football top scorers
+Robert Manzanárez Sandoval (born December 17, 1994 in Phoenix, Arizona) is an American professional boxer in the Lightweight division and fights out of Los Mochis, Sinaloa, Mexico.
+Windows Fax and Scan is an integrated faxing and scanning application included in some versions of the Windows Vista operating system and all versions of Windows 7, Windows 8 and Windows 10.
+BiographyOn 30 Nov 1654, he was consecrated bishop by Francesco Peretti di Montalto, Archbishop of Monreale, with Giovan Battista Foppa, Archbishop of Benevento, and Giovanni Battista Scanaroli, Titular Bishop of Sidon, serving as co-consecrators.
+The name may refer to:Laima Adlytė (born 1971), Lithuanian draughts playerLaima Andersone-Silāre (born 1929), Latvian opera singerLaima Andrikienė (born 1958), Lithuanian politicianLaima Bernatavičiūtė (born 1985), Lithuanian handballerLaima Leyton (born 1976), Brazilian musicianLaima Muktupāvela (born 1962), Latvian authorLaima Vaikule (born 1954), Latvian actressLaima Zilporytė (born 1967), Lithuanian cyclistReferencesCategory:Latvian feminine given namesCategory:Lithuanian feminine given names
+ReferencesCategory:Villages in Kardzhali Province
+Article 47 of the state constitution says that:In the case of an absolute lack of governor, happened in both first years of the respective period, if the Congress is in session, it will be elevated immediately in Electoral School and concurring at least the two third parts of the total number of his members, will name, in a secret ballot and by an absolute majority of votes, to a temporary Governor.The same Congress, will send within the five following days to the one of the designation of temporary Governor, the call for the election of Governor who must conclude the respective period; having to mediate between the date of the call and the one that is indicated to carry out elections, greater a nonsmaller term of three months nor of six.If the Congress is not in session, the Permanent Commission will name, of course, to a provisional Governor and will summon to extraordinary sessions the Congress so that this one designates to the temporary Governor and sends the call for the election of governor in the terms of the previous paragraph.When the lack of Governor happened after the second year of the respective period, if the Congress were in sessions will designate to the Governing Substitute that will have to conclude the period.
+Chrysallida vanbruggeni is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Pyramidellidae, the pyrams and their allies.
+4, by Franz Schubert (1828)See alsoList of masses by Joseph HaydnList of masses by Wolfgang Amadeus MozartMass in C minor (disambiguation)
+He was greatly impressed with Hitler's leadership and the discipline he observed in Germany.
+Organization 98th Rifle Division 112th Rifle Division 153rd Rifle DivisionCommanders Category:Rifle corps of the Soviet Union
+Freelancing (1998–2018)He used the promotional names "USO" (all caps version of the Japanese word for "lie"), "Jado" ("evil ways"; not to be confused with the wrestler of the same name), "Onita Pro" and "Project X."
+Discography 2009 - Wilderness (Frog Stand Records) 2014 - Lapland (The Lights Label)Other recordings and appearances Singer Gretchen Parlato recorded Mease's song "Me and You" for her album The Lost and Found (2011, Obliqsound).
+Events in 2016 in Japanese television.
+The district is thickly forested.
+He was the team's starter his final two and a half years and helped the Ragin' Cajuns to 27 wins.
+Depending on the exact species, they inhabit small seasonal channels in the Atlantic rainforest or temporary pools in open habitats.
+The original shire included both the towns of Eidsvold and Monto, and in the late 1920s, its administrative centre moved to Watt Street, Monto.
+At the 2010 US Open, Federer reached the semifinals, where he lost a five-set match to Novak Djokovic after holding two match points.
+Recruitment, selection and training All members of the Albanian land forces can be considered for special forces training.
+Arts and literatureCompletion of the neoclassical summer retreat at Castle Coole to the design of James Wyatt.
+After January Uprising (1863–64) quite all catholic monasteries and many churches in modern Belarus and Ukraine were closed, so in 1864 Mozyr franciscan church was transferred to the orthodox church.
+In September 2014, the band embarked on an anniversary tour called Tokio 20th Anniversary Live Tour Heart.
+ReferencesCategory:Populated places in ancient MacedoniaCategory:Former populated places in the BalkansCategory:PelagoniaCategory:Upper Macedonia
+93-117.
+BarangaysTarragona is politically subdivided into 10 barangays.
+Size and cement can also be made from it.
+4 (SP-8), an armed motorboat that served in the United States Navy as a patrol vessel from 1917 to 1919
+Adel Mechaal (born 5 December 1990) is a Morocco-born Spanish middle-distance runner.
+Its design includes winding roads in a wooded landscape, with many cul-de-sacs, and pedestrian paths for connecting residential areas to recreational amenities.
+Besides the title track, the EP also contained 'Minuet For A Cheap Piano Number One' (an outtake from the A Winged Victory for the Sullen album sessions) and a reinterpretation of 'Atomos VII' by Australian composer Ben Frost.
+CareerFC KallonMohamaed Kamanor was recruited to top Sierra Leone National Premier League club FC Kallon by popular Sierra Leonean football agent Chernor Musa Jalloh, who is well known for recruited many talented young Sierra Leonean footballers.
+Luigi Tarantino (born 10 November 1972) is an Italian fencer and Olympic medalist in the sabre competition.
+Bardin may refer to;Bardin, Florida American cityBardin (surname)See alsoBrandeis-Bardin Institute American college
+Named by Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names (US-ACAN) (1999) after Ian Gordon Speden, New Zealand Geological Survey, DSIR, who, accompanied by A.C. Beck, collected fossiliferous deposits here, December 22, 1958.
+Restrepo began the season as the Strikers' main playmaker, occupying the hole behind the forwards.
+Virginia Rae "Ginny" Starcher (February 23, 1930 – December 19, 2012) was an American politician and schoolteacher from West Virginia, who represented Jackson County and part of Mason County from 1987–1991.
+First self-driving train in UK was launched in London Thameslink route.
+Databus may refer to: Bus (computing), a communication system that transfers data between different components in a computer or between different computers Memory bus, a bus between the computer and the memory PCI bus, a bus between motherboard and peripherals that uses the Peripheral Component Interconnect standard USB (Universal Serial Bus), a standard protocol used by many portable devices, computer peripherals and storage media Programming Language for Business, a business-oriented programming language originally called DATABUS
+ReferencesExternal links and additional sources (for Chronology of Bishops) (for Chronology of Bishops) (for Chronology of Bishops) (for Chronology of Bishops) Category:17th-century Roman Catholic bishopsCategory:Bishops appointed by Pope Gregory XIIICategory:1609 deaths
+They finished in 18th place.
+Using a virtual Vélo'v, emblematic means of transport in Lyon, the visitors become players and are invited to gain typical candels, going through all the main places highlighted during the festival.
+Antennae thickened and flattened.
+In 2003, she was moved to Waikerie, South Australia, running dinner cruises and occasional longer trips until 2012.
+He himself composed a Life of St Eadburh of Winchester for Pershore Abbey and a Life of St Æthelberht of East Anglia, dedicated to Gilbert Foliot sometime after 1148. Letters, ed.
+Administrative divisions of Northern Cyprus Districts of Northern Cyprus Lefkoşa District Gazimağusa District Girne District Güzelyurt District İskele DistrictMunicipalities of Northern Cyprus Capital of Northern Cyprus: Nicosia Cities of Northern Cyprus: Famagusta, Kyrenia, Morphou, TrikomoDemography of Northern Cyprus Demographics of Northern CyprusGovernment and politics of Northern Cyprus Politics of Northern Cyprus Form of government: Capital of Northern Cyprus: Nicosia Elections in Northern Cyprus Political parties in Northern CyprusBranches of the government of Northern Cyprus Government of Northern CyprusExecutive branch of the government of Northern Cyprus Head of state: President of Northern Cyprus, Derviş Eroğlu Head of government: Prime Minister of Northern Cyprus, İrsen Küçük List of Prime Ministers of Northern CyprusLegislative branch of the government of Northern Cyprus Parliament of Northern Cyprus (unicameral) Assembly of the RepublicForeign relations of Northern Cyprus Foreign relations of Northern Cyprus List of diplomatic missions in Northern Cyprus List of diplomatic missions of Northern CyprusInternational organization membership The Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus is a member of:Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC)Law and order in Northern Cyprus Constitution of Northern Cyprus Human rights in Northern Cyprus LGBT rights in Northern Cyprus Freedom of religion in Northern Cyprus Law enforcement in Northern CyprusMilitary of Northern Cyprus Military of Northern Cyprus Turkish Armed Forces in the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus Forces Army of Northern Cyprus Navy of Northern Cyprus Air Force of Northern Cyprus Special forces of Northern Cyprus Military history of Northern CyprusHistory of Northern Cyprus History of Northern Cyprus Military history of Northern CyprusCulture of Northern Cyprus Cuisine of Northern Cyprus National symbols of Northern Cyprus Coat of arms of Northern Cyprus Flag of Northern Cyprus Public holidays in Northern Cyprus Turkish Cypriot diaspora World Heritage Sites in Northern Cyprus: NoneArt in Northern Cyprus Television in Northern CyprusSports in Northern Cyprus Football in Northern CyprusEconomy and infrastructure of Northern CyprusEconomy of Northern Cyprus Economic rank, by nominal GDP (2007): 89th (eighty-ninth)Currency of Northern Cyprus: LiraISO 4217: TRY Transportation in Northern Cyprus Rail transport in Northern CyprusEducation in Northern Cyprus Education in Northern CyprusAirport of Northern Cyprus Ercan Airport - http://www.flyercan.comSee also Outline of CyprusReferencesExternal links Official linksOffice Of The President, Turkish Republic of Northern CyprusNorthern Cypriot Tourism OfficeTRNC Public Information OfficeTRNC Central Bank in Turkish language Other links ATCA News, Association of Turkish Cypriots Abroad"Islamic Conference's Parliaments to Call TRNC 'Cyprus Turkish State'" JTW Multi-lingial Tourism Portal for Northern CyprusUseful Information on TRNCInternational Expert Panel for a European Solution in Cyprus North Cyprus Tourism CentreAssembly of Turkish American AssociationsChronology - Cyprus Issue Turkish Cypriots of Australia - Historical BookMünüse, Folk MusicTIKAEU task-force on Turkish Cypriot communityNorthern Cyprus a refuge for British fugitivesAttorney-General v. Ibrahim ("Principle of necessity")Orams v. Apostiledes (Enforceability in England of Republic of Cyprus Judgment against purchaser of real property in Northern Cyprus; case has been referred to the European Court of Justice for a preliminary ruling)Caglar v. Billingham (status and taxability of official representative in London of the Northern Cyprus government)Northern Cyprus
+A surcingle passing over the seat of the saddle is also used to provide additional safety.
+The river starts from a place between villages Lidzyany (Лідзяны, Лидяны) and Kulyavichy (Кулявічы, Кулёвичи) in Svislach district and further flows through Hrodna Voblast and Brest Voblast (Vawkavysk district, Pruzhany district, Zel’va district, Masty district).
+It forms the southeastern corner of Sutton Park around Wyndley Pool.
+ReferencesFurther reading Category:DipluraCategory:Animals described in 1998
+There was a small tailwheel at the extreme tail, where the tailplane was placed on the upper fuselage.
+The main party of the film unit will leave for New Guinea on June 11.
+Track listingSide AThe songs recorded on the side A are all performed in foreign languages, with the musical background played by band Chervona Ruta, directed by Anatoliy Evdokimenko.
+On his death-bed he bequeathed his books and papers to the Sorbonne, "together with six pounds for the purpose of purchasing a rent to celebrate his anniversary."
+He composed multiple symphonies as well as concertos and songs.
+Eskimonæsset is the peninsula's northeasternmost point where there are archaeological remains of ancient Inuit dwellings found by the ill-fated Denmark Expedition.
+ReferencesExternal links Category:Year of birth missing (living people)Category:Living peopleCategory:Sri Lankan cricketersCategory:Kilinochchi District cricketersCategory:Place of birth missing (living people)
+The shout is "say ya, soi ya, sah, sorya... etc".
+On 30 July, the government began to deploy troops to enforce quarantines.
+Eupsenius glaber is a species of ant-loving beetle in the family Staphylinidae.
+ResearchThe main focus of Yaffe's research is decoding natural cell signaling pathway behavior using bioinformatics, combinatorial chemistry, cell biology, physical biochemistry, structural biology and molecular genetics.
+He shaped the Iranian oil policy under Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi.
+The team was coached by Andy Olson and played their home games at the Spokane Veterans Memorial Arena.
+Maine's 5th congressional district was a congressional district in Maine.
+He made himself a golden hat, of which an Italien observer of the time said that “it seemed like a king's crown”.
+James Cowan (28 September 1856 – 7 August 1943) was a British sports shooter.
+ReferencesExternal links movie reviewCategory:2007 filmsCategory:Indian filmsCategory:2000s Kannada-language filmsCategory:Kannada remakes of Tamil filmsCategory:Films scored by A. R. Rahman
+F3 or the Enter key also advances to the next occurrence of your search string.
+376, a municipality located west of the city of Saskatoon in Saskatchewan Eagle Creek (Burnaby), in British ColumbiaUnited States Eagle Creek Formation, a geologic formation in AlaskaEagle Creek (Arizona), a river at the base of the White Mountain Range in ArizonaEagle Creek State Recreation Area, a state park in Shelby County, IllinoisEagle Creek Township, Gallatin County, Illinois, a township in Gallatin County, IllinoisEagle Creek Township, Lake County, Indiana, a township in Lake County, IndianaEagle Creek Airpark, a public use airport in Indianapolis, IndianaEagle Creek Park, a city park in Indianapolis, Indiana located along the Eagle Creek in IndianaEagle Creek (Kentucky), a tributary of the Kentucky River in KentuckyEagle Creek (Multnomah County, Oregon), a tributary of the Columbia River in OregonEagle Creek, Oregon, an unincorporated community in Clackamas County, OregonEagle Creek waterfalls, waterfalls on a tributary of the Columbia River in OregonEagle Creek (South Carolina), a tributary of the Ashley River (South Carolina)Businesses Eagle Creek (company), a luggage manufacturing company in Carlsbad, CaliforniaEagle Creek Golf Club, an eighteen-hole golf course in Orlando, FloridaSee also Eagle River (disambiguation) Eagle Lake (disambiguation) Eagle (disambiguation)
+Wheatfields may refer to: Wheatfields, Gila County, Arizona, a Census-designated place Wheatfields, Apache County, Arizona, a populated placeSee alsoWheatfield (disambiguation)
+At the 2006 census, its population was 24, in 5 families.
+Kappa Island () is an island, nearly long, lying immediately south of Beta Island and close east of the Theta Islands in the Melchior Islands of the Palmer Archipelago, Antarctica.
+Also, a track from their 2006 album Siberia is titled Parthenon Drive.
+The Gowers review of Intellectual Property stated that "is not clear that extension of term would benefit musicians and performers very much in practice."
+ReferencesExternal links Category:Aardman Animations peopleCategory:British animatorsCategory:Commanders of the Order of the British EmpireCategory:Alumni of Collingwood College, DurhamCategory:Living peopleCategory:British animated film producersCategory:Royal Photographic SocietyCategory:1954 births
+1930 - Chr.
+Ferguson was adopted at the late age of 12 by Roy and Margaret Ferguson in San Luis Obispo, California.
+At St. Thomas More Catholic Secondary School, Romaniw was a four sport star in track and cross country where he was the MVP on both teams, badminton and was the captain of the hockey team three times.
+It connects Khulna with Mongla via Khan Jahan Ali Bridge.
+ReferencesCategory:RemipediaCategory:Arthropods of the Canary IslandsCategory:Crustaceans described in 2009
+Her contributions helped Harvard rank fifth in the nation in scoring defense.
+It was released on 12 July 2010, featuring a remix of the track by Sparks.
+Bronze medal matchAll times are CEST (UTC+2).
+Their son Gordon was born in 1997.
+Initially jailed in the Kolbassino camp for about a month, with about 22 000 to 28 000 Jews from nearby communities, the Ostrino Jews were sent to the Auschwitz extermination camp at the end of November 1942.
+On September 3, 2016, he was released by the Texans.
+DemographicsAs of Census 2011, Andrangi has population of 2056 of which 1035 were males while 1021 were females, sex ratio is 986.
+Fairview Peak may refer toFairview Peak (Colorado), a high mountain summit in Colorado, U.S.Fairview Peak (Oregon), in Lane County, Oregon, U.S. () Fairview Peak (Churchill County, Nevada), in the Clan Alpine Mountains ()Fairview Peak (Lincoln County, Nevada), in the Fairview Range ()
+ReferencesCategory:Populated places in Ilidža
+The lateral surface is smooth, and affords insertion to the temporalis and masseter muscles.
+Literature Polish tradition of secular movement PNA.
+2001 Census Ravernet is classified as a small village or hamlet by the Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency (NISRA) (i.e.
+Since Turkey dropped from 11th to 15th place in the UEFA association coefficient rankings at the end of the 2005–06 season, the cup winner (or the third-placed team if the domestic cup winner already qualified for UEFA Champions League) will not directly be entered into the first round of the UEFA Cup, but would begin in the second qualification round.
+The crew of the Trieste noted that the floor consisted of diatomaceous ooze and reported observing "some type of flatfish, resembling a sole, about 1 foot long and 6 inches across" lying on the seabed.
+ReferencesCategory:OperasCategory:1905 operasCategory:French-language operasCategory:Operas by Alfred Bruneau
+She went on to study modern dance at Jooss Modern Dance School on full scholarship after it relocated to London.
+Neighboring municipalitiesIwate PrefectureNinoheKarumaiKuzumakiIchinoheKujiClimateKunohe has a humid continental climate (Köppen climate classification Dfa ) characterized by mild summers and cold winters with heavy snowfall.
+She employed German born Maximilian Behrends (1839–1903) as her assistant until he opened his own studio in the city in 1867.
+The constitution banned the proselytization of religious groups, allowed people to practice their existing religious rites, and promoted the spread of atheistic propaganda.
+Schedule All times are local (UTC−3).
+Ganilau said that the government's previous attempt at a national reconciliation, during Fiji Week (4–11 October 2004 had been a failure, and thought it "ridiculous" that the government was now trying another scheme to "excuse people involved in the coup."
+Mr. Clinton?
+If a global reference frame (such as WGS84, for example) is used, the longitude of a place on the surface will change from year to year.
+The following is a list of massacres that have occurred against Hazara people, who are overwhelmingly Twelver Shia Muslims and make up the third largest ethnic group in Afghanistan:See alsoList of massacres in AfghanistanReferencesAfghanistanMassacres*Masscres
+George Low may also refer to:G. David Low (1956–2008), American astronautGeorge Low (Medal of Honor) (1847–1912), United States Navy sailor, recipient of the Medal of HonorGeorge MacRitchie Low (1849–1922), Scottish actuaryGeorge Carmichael Low (1872–1952), Scottish parasitologistGeorge Low Sr. (1874–1950), Scottish golferGeorge Low Jr. (1912–1995), American golfer, son of George Low Sr.See alsoGeorge Lowe (disambiguation)
+Nowe Gagowy is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Lubień Kujawski, within Włocławek County, Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-central Poland.
+During the Armenian Genocide, Said Halim signed his signature on deportation orders for the Armenian population.
+Playing careerSladden made his first grade debut for South Sydney in 1956.
+A fourth camera, the Kodak Pixpro Astro Zoom AZ651, announced in January with a maximum focal length of 1560mm, has yet to make it to market, as of February 2015.
+ReferencesCategory:Villages in Radziejów County
+Female Aphidius nigripes emit pheromones soon after emerging from their pupa to attract winged males.
+The seeds remain dormant while buried in the forest floor, sometimes for centuries, until a fire removes the organic litter and exposes the seeds to sunlight.
+In its natural range U. densa overlaps with U. pumila.
+In 2013 in Oklahoma, a kangaroo was reportedly recorded by hunters in a field.
+Dave Green (born September 21, 1949 in Mason City, Iowa) is a former punter and placekicker in the National Football League.
+He retired from Harvard in 1960 or 1961.
+Lawrence Butler is a former US ambassador.
+Its abdomen is pruinosed with blue color up to segment 8; last two segments are black.
+He was often seen at the Winona High School football practices helping to develop young athletes.
+89-91, Rua Direita Carlos Eugénio for developing a complete primary schoolEnvironment Ground floor: hall, playground, teachers’ office, principal’s office 1st floor: Kindergarten, Primary 1, music room 2nd floor: Primary 2-5 3rd floor: Primary 6, library, computer roomServed principalFamous alumni José Lai: current Roman Catholic Bishop of the Diocese of Macao, graduated in 1958See alsoReferencesExternal links Roman Catholic Diocese of MacauCategory:Schools in MacauCategory:Educational institutions established in 1911
+In 1925, when the New Cape Central Railway was amalgamated into the South African Railways, the two Garratts were renumbered and designated .
+See alsoList of municipalities in Mato GrossoReferencesCategory:Municipalities in Mato Grosso
+degree in 1948.
+Al Arabi SC is the only team to go to the final 11 consecutive times since 1962 up to 1973 holding the record.
+ChartsReferencesCategory:Ramones songsCategory:1977 singlesCategory:Songs with feminist themesCategory:Songs written by Joey RamoneCategory:Song recordings produced by Tony BongioviCategory:Song recordings produced by Tommy RamoneCategory:Surf rock songsCategory:1977 songsCategory:Songs about comicsCategory:Songs about fictional female characters
+Early yearsEliza was originally born in Dunkirk, France as Eliza Ware Rotch to Benjamin and Elizabeth Rotch who were a family of successful whaling merchants.
+Several civilian openings are given each year, such as managerial and supportive positions.
+It is known from the Iberian Peninsula, France, Austria, Croatia, Hungary, the southern part of the Balkan Peninsula, Ukraine, southern Russia and Georgia.
+The Casamance is the principal river of the Kolda, Sédhiou, and Ziguinchor Regions in the southern portion of Senegal between the Gambia and Guinea-Bissau.
+ReferencesCategory:Aichach-Friedberg
+Indiana also entered the NCAA Tournament, defeating the Georgetown Hoyas in the 2012 College Cup Final 1–0 and winning the national championship.
+ReferencesCategory:DorylinaeCategory:Hymenoptera of AsiaCategory:Insects described in 1901
+Most of the route was in a pair of tunnels, with at the western end constructed above ground.
+Pseudotomoxia rufoabdominalis is a species of beetle in the genus Pseudotomoxia of the family Mordellidae, which is part of the superfamily Tenebrionoidea.
+He has translated numerous hymns and songs into Cornish, and also the lyrics of Die Zauberflöte.
+It includes the species Oxyphysis oxytoides.
+ReferencesCategory:HydrologyCategory:Physical geographyCategory:Soil scienceCategory:Hydrogeology
+Felipe Manuel Campos Mosqueira (born 8 November 1993), known as Felipe Campos, is a Chilean footballer that currently plays for Primera División club Colo-Colo as defender.
+Billy Murray may refer to: Billy Murray (actor) (born 1941), English actor Billy Murray (baseball) (1864–1937), American baseball manager Billy Murray (singer) (1877–1954), American singer Billy Murray (boxer) (1892–1926), American boxer Billy Murray (footballer) (1922–1992), English footballerSee also Bill Murray (born 1950), American film actor William Murray (disambiguation)
+They also lent their efforts to help the golden eagle as well.
+Balmain ferry wharf (also known as Thames Street ferry wharf) is located on Sydney Harbour serving the Sydney suburb of Balmain.
+The Ukrainian frigate Mykolaiv was a former Soviet frigate (guard ship) Bezukoriznennyy of the (NATO codename: Krivak I) ship built for the Soviet Navy in the late 1970s.
+He played for Al-Arabi in the 2007 AFC Champions League group stage.
+Josephine Rathbone may refer to: Josephine Adams Rathbone, American librarian Josephine Langworthy Rathbone, American physiologist
+La Fare may refer to:Places La Fare-en-Champsaur, a commune in the Hautes-Alpes department in southeastern France La Fare-les-Oliviers, a commune in the Bouches-du-Rhône department in southern FrancePeople Anne Louis Henri de La Fare (1752–1829), French Roman Catholic cardinal and counter-revolutionaryCharles Auguste de la Fare conte of Laugères, baron of Balazu (1644–1712), French poet memorialistPhilippe Charles de La Fare, 4th marquis of Monclar, Conte of Laugères (1687–1752), Marshal of France
+- (Watch out) – 2:46 "WWW" – 4:14 "Мне бы в небо" - Mne by v nebo - (I want to go to the sky) – 4:57 "День рождения" - Den rozhdeniya - (Birthday) – 2:10 "Терминатор" - Terminator – 3:24"Новый год" - Novy god - (New Year) – 2:43Category:Leningrad (band) albumsCategory:2003 live albums
+The lances had crimson over white pennons although none were initially intended for issue, and many troopers were lacking these also.
+Alvarado's story is told in the best selling book translated and edited by Medea Benjamin, Don't Be Afraid Gringo: A Honduran Woman Speaks from the Heart: The Story of Elvia Alvarado (), as well as in the PBS documentary Elvia and the Fight for Land and Liberty.
+A long civil war caused Syria to fragment as pretenders from the royal family fought for the throne.
+Willoughby may refer to:PlacesAntiguaWilloughby Bay (Antigua), on the southeast coast of AntiguaAustraliaWilloughby, New South Wales, a suburb of SydneyWilloughby Girls High SchoolCity of Willoughby, a local government area of New South WalesElectoral district of Willoughby, New South WalesParish of Willoughby, Cumberland, New South WalesWilloughby, South Australia, a locality on Kangaroo IslandCape Willoughby, a headland in South AustraliaCanadaWilloughby, Langley, British Columbia, a community within the Township of LangleyWilloughby Township, OntarioEnglandWilloughby, Lincolnshire, a villageWilloughby railway stationWilloughby, Warwickshire, a village and civil parishUnited StatesWilloughby, Ohio, a city and a suburb of ClevelandWilloughby, Albemarle County, Virginia, an unincorporated communityWilloughby Condominium, Friendship Heights, Maryland, a high-rise condominium buildingWilloughby Park, Friendship Heights, Washington, D.C.Willoughby Run, a waterway in Adams County, PennsylvaniaWilloughby Spit, a peninsula in Norfolk, VirginiaWilloughby State Forest, VermontLake Willoughby, Westmore, VermontElsewhereWilloughby's Land, elusive islands thought to be north of the Barents SeaHydronymsWilloughby River, Vermont, United StatesPeople Willoughby (surname), a list Willoughby (given name), a listFiction Willoughby the Dog, an animated character from Looney Tunes Inspector Willoughby, an animated character from The Woody Woodpecker Show John Willoughby, one of the main characters in Jane Austen's novel Sense and Sensibility the title character of the short-lived 1999 British sitcom Dr Willoughby Willoughby, Texas, a fictional town featured in the TV series RevolutionA Stop at Willoughby, an episode from the first season of The Twilight Zone, which features a town called Willoughby A character in the novel Evelina by Fanny Burney A character in Celestina (novel) by Charlotte Smith.
+The mature miRNA is incorporated into a RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC), which recognizes target mRNAs through imperfect base pairing with the miRNA and most commonly results in translational inhibition or destabilization of the target mRNA.
+SubspeciesL. m. meges Sumatra, Java, BorneoL. m. ennius (C. & R. Felder, 1865) northern Sulawesi, central SulawesiL. m. akirai Tsukada & Nishiyama, 1980 southern SulawesiL. m. virescens (Butler, [1870]) Burma, Vietnam, Thailand, Peninsular Malaysia, HainaL. m. annamiticus (Fruhstorfer, 1909) southeastern Thailand, southern VietnamL. m. pallidus (Fruhstorfer, 1909) northern VietnamL. m. niasicus (Fruhstorfer, 1909) NiasL. m. decius (C. & R. Felder, 1862) PhilippinesL. m. pessimus Fruhstorfer, 1909 Philippines (Palawan, Balabac, Dumaran)L. m. amplifascia Tytler, 1939 Yunnan, BurmaStatusThe green dragontail is not known to be threatened in most of its range but is considered vulnerable and in need of protection in peninsular Malaysia.
+Album cover artwork is taken from Joan Miró's "Black and Red" series.
+Muhammad Asghar ibn Ali (briefly: Muhammad ibn Ali) is one of Ali ibn Abi Talib's sons.
+Lewis G. Gorton (November 18, 1859 – January 3, 1933) was president of the U.S. state of Michigan's State Agricultural College (now Michigan State University) from 1893 to 1895.
+SpecificationsMechanical The board has nominal dimensions of 84 mm x 95 mmElectrical The to-host connector is a 220-pin AMP/Tyco 3-6318490-6, which provides all I/O and power requirements.
+Silent Movies are 13 solo guitar compositions by Marc Ribot released September 28, 2010 on Pi Recordings.
+Francisc Horvat (Hungarian: Ferenc Horváth; born 19 October 1928) is a retired Greco-Roman wrestler from Romania.
+This is a list of the Sites of Special Scientific Interest (SSSIs) in the Cardiff Area of Search (AoS).
+Ilisoni Vonomateiratu is a professional rugby league footballer.
+References Category:Convents in GermanyCategory:Organisations based in BonnCategory:1917 establishments in GermanyCategory:2005 disestablishments in Germany
+Three of the cardinal electors were from the Eastern Catholic Churches: Ignace Moussa I Daoud (Syriac), Varkey Vithayathil (Syro-Malabar) and Lubomyr Husar (Ukrainian).
+It reached the top 20 of some European charts, but only reached #34 in Australia.
+ReferencesExternal linksUN map of the municipalities of Salyan DistrictCategory:Populated places in Salyan District (Nepal)
+It replaced the Congolese franc at par and was consequently initially equal to the Belgian franc.
+Laurel Run may refer to the following places in the United StatesCommunitiesLaurel Run Park, in Church Hill, TennesseeLaurel Run, Maryland, in St. Mary's CountyLaurel Run, Pennsylvania, in Luzerne CountyLaurel Run, West Virginia, in Preston CountyStreamsLaurel Run (Bald Eagle Creek) (4 streams by this name are tributaries of Bald Eagle Creek)Laurel Run (Bennett Branch Sinnemahoning Creek)Laurel Run (Clearfield Creek) (2 streams by this name are tributaries of Clearfield Creek)Laurel Run (Conemaugh River)Laurel Run (Conewago Creek)Laurel Run (East Branch Millstone Creek)Laurel Run (Elk Creek)Laurel Run (Georges Creek)Laurel Run (Huntington Creek)Laurel Run (Jacobs Creek)Laurel Run (Lackawanna River)Laurel Run (Little Brush Creek)Laurel Run (Little Conemaugh River)Laurel Run (Little Muncy Creek)Laurel Run (Marsh Creek)Laurel Run (Middle Branch Brodhead Creek)Laurel Run (Mill Creek)Laurel Run (Moshannon Creek) (2 streams by this name are tributaries of Moshannon Creek)Laurel Run (Mud Run)Laurel Run (Muddy Run)Laurel Run (Muncy Run)Laurel Run (Penns Creek)Laurel Run (Phoenix Run)Laurel Run (Powdermill Run)Laurel Run (Roaring Run)Laurel Run (Schuylkill River)Laurel Run (Sherman Creek)Laurel Run (South Fork Little Conemaugh River)Laurel Run (Susquehanna River)Laurel Run (Toby Creek)Laurel Run (West Branch Fishing Creek)Laurel Run (West Branch Susquehanna River) (2 streams by this name are tributaries of the West Branch Susquehanna River)See also
+ReferencesExternal links Category:1995 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Canadian male cyclistsCategory:Place of birth missing (living people)Category:Canadian track cyclistsCategory:Pan American Games medalists in cyclingCategory:Pan American Games bronze medalists for CanadaCategory:Cyclists at the 2015 Pan American Games
+Flem-Ath has written numerous fiction and non-fiction where he advances what is known as the pole shift hypothesis.
+On October 7, 1902, the Kansas State team played University of Kansas Jayhawks at McCook Field in Lawrence, KS, in the first meeting of a series that became the Kansas–Kansas State football rivalry.
+Clinton Township is a township in Ringgold County, Iowa, USA.
+At the last legislative elections, 15 May 2005, the party was part of the Coalition for Unity and Democracy, that won 109 out of 527 seats in the Council of People's Representatives.
+Its length is 1.6 kilometres.
+He was drafted by the Winnipeg Blue Bombers in the third round with the 17th overall pick in the 1999 CFL Draft.
+Ilia Zhilin (born ) is a Russian male volleyball player.
+This was their 10th championship title overall and their second title in succession.
+Piya-Kwonci (Piya, Pia, Wurkum) is a minor West Chadic language cluster of Nigeria consisting of Piya and Kwonci.
+Tore Cervin (born 2 August 1950 in Malmö) is a former Swedish footballer.
+Bady died at Jouy-sur-Eure in northern France.
+During the Battle of Ratan, Wachtmeister managed to hold off Kamensky, who afterwards retreated north towards Piteå.
+Patricia Drake (born June 10, 1957) is a Canadian actress and voice actress working on TV and in animated shows, mostly with Ocean Studios in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
+Current listings|}Former listings|}See alsoList of National Historic Landmarks in South CarolinaNational Register of Historic Places listings in South CarolinaReferencesJasper County*
+Lena's best friend, Hana, is prettier, more popular and richer than Lena.
+There is lots of dub mixing, delays, reverbs, and repeats flying left and right, and the music appears improvised in places.
+), German for respectively or i.e.
+It contains a prominent sample from the "Canon in D Major" (1919) which was composed by Johann Pachelbel.
+Specimens were caught throughout the year but is most common in inshore waters during the summer months and moves further offshore to the trawling grounds in October–December.
+It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1989.
+It is located at around , in the elevation of around 3597 metres.
+Suddenly, they hear loud gunfire and see the flock of seagulls flee the fortress but Almitra insists that Mustafa is all right.
+Andrew Schär (born 14 December 1981) is a South African-born film composer, actor, and musician.
+They also presented a group rendition of the patriotic song “Purbo digontey shurjo uthechhey.” The final performances were staged by the four finalists.
+In June 2018 BIA acquired a stake in Draper Esprit for £20 million.
+She was married to writer/director Pastor Vega until his death in Havana, Cuba.
+Greatest Hits 1976–1986 is a collection of hits by Elton John released in the United States only by MCA Records in 1992.
+13" (Johann Sebastian Bach) – 0:59 Bonus track on CD reissuePersonnel Warne Marsh – tenor saxophoneGary Foster – alto saxophoneDave Parlato – bassJohn Tirabasso – drumsReferences Category:Warne Marsh live albumsCategory:1970 live albumsCategory:Revelation Records (jazz) live albumsCategory:Hathut Records live albums
+Memberships Media Kashigar was a member of the association of Mahmoud Ostad Mahmoud for the contribution of awards in theater.
+ReferencesCategory:Living peopleCategory:1952 birthsCategory:French footballersCategory:Association football defendersCategory:Ligue 1 playersCategory:FC Metz playersCategory:OGC Nice playersCategory:Olympique Lyonnais playersCategory:French football managersCategory:FC Metz managersCategory:RC Lens managersCategory:Ligue 1 managersCategory:USL Dunkerque players
+After the match a photograph emerged on social media showing him posing with Wales fans with his elbow on to the head of one of the fans and he was not considered for a World Cup semi-final the week after.
+The race was first run in 1965 and was sponsored by Scaffolding Great Britain and known as the SGB Chase until 1992.
+Bafia is a Cameroonian town and commune in the Centre Province region.
+It was a number of dramatised documentaries Power made for Australian TV.
+She also is identified as the consort of Fárbauti.
+The goal of the company is to provide imagery data globally at the highest quality standards.
+Built as a luxurious residence for families of senators and members of the House of Representatives, the estate opened in 1979.
+The elder Shannon attempted to take the blame for the death threat, but in view of Angela's fingerprints having been found on the letter, Angela was convicted and sentenced to 46 months' incarceration in 1997.
+External links Category:1986 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Czech male tennis playersCategory:Sportspeople from Prague
+ReferencesCategory:Natural history of FloridaGeography of Florida
+1983United States Hot 100 Top 10
+Days of Our Own is a 2016 Chinese coming-of-age drama film directed by Joe Ma and Liu Hai and starring Zhao Liying, Qiao Renliang, Emma Wu, , Van Fan and Feng Mingchao.
+Capricorn Seamount is not the first seamount there to be subducted into the Tonga Trench, and previous subduction events may have deformed the trench.
+With World Bank: 1997, Senior Economic Adviser, Development Prospects, Development Economics; 1999-2010, Regional Chief Economist and Director, Social and Economic Development Group, Middle East and North Africa; 2010 - Jan. 2011, Senior Adviser to the World Bank Chief Economist.
+See also Astronomical transit Latitude/longitude observation, vertical deflection Positional astronomy, astro-geodesyReferences Wolf, Paul R and Russell C. Brinker.
+The station is unattended.
+He scored an important goal against Lanús for the Copa Libertadores 2009, being the historic victory's goal 2–1, being Everton the first Chilean team on win to an Argentine team.
+ReceptionThe Allmusic review awarded the album 3 stars.
+Head: frons shining ochreous-white with greenish reflection, vertex and neck tufts greyish brown with greenish and reddish gloss, lined white medially and laterally, collar greyish brown; labial palpus first segment very short, white, second segment three-quarters of the length of third, greyish brown with white longitudinal lines laterally and ventrally, third segment white, lined brown laterally, extreme apex white; scape dorsally dark brown with a white anterior line, ventrally white, antenna dark brown with a very short white line at base, in middle a short, partly annulate, section, followed towards apex by four dark brown segments, two white, two dark brown, two white, ten dark brown, six white and one dark brown segment at apex.
+Cross Hands Public Hall is one of only three of its kind in Wales.
+As a result, the V4 sequences can differ by only a few nucleotides, leaving reference databases unable to reliably classify these bacteria at lower taxonomic levels.
+RatingsHome mediaThe DVD release of season three was released in Region 1 on September 13, 2016.
+Apolo may refer to: Apolo, La Paz, a town in the La Paz Department in Bolivia Apolo Anton Ohno, a US-American Olympic gold medal–winning short track speed skater who also won Dancing with the Stars in 2007 Apolo Kivebulaya, Ugandan Anglican priest and evangelist Germán Figueroa, also known as Apolo—a Puerto Rican professional wrestlerSee also Apollo (disambiguation) Appolo (disambiguation) Appollo (disambiguation)
+Its natural habitats are subtropical or tropical dry shrubland, subtropical or tropical seasonally wet or flooded lowland grassland, intermittent rivers, and intermittent freshwater marshes.
+ReferencesExternal links Category:Songs about footwearCategory:Traffic (band) songsCategory:1967 singlesCategory:1984 singlesCategory:Irish Singles Chart number-one singlesCategory:Songs written by Dave MasonCategory:Song recordings produced by Jimmy MillerCategory:1967 songsCategory:Island Records singlesCategory:United Artists Records singlesCategory:Musical parodies
+Royal New Zealand College may refer to: Royal New Zealand College of General Practitioners Royal New Zealand Police College Royal New Zealand Naval CollegeSee also Royal Australian and New Zealand College (disambiguation) Royal College (disambiguation)
+It is a left tributary of the river Allier.
+Donald, David, editor.
+After an hour's chase Racoon captured her quarry, which proved to be the Vrai Decide, of 14 guns and four swivel guns.
+He was born in Timișoara, Romania.
+ReferencesFurther readingExternal links Kingman County Maps: Current, Historic, KDOTCategory:Populated places in Kingman County, Kansas
+The most recent exhibits are Serbian Army helmets with holes in them, proof of the execution in cold blood of Serb soldiers by UÇK fighters.
+Neighbouring gminasGmina Jaśliska is bordered by the gminas of Dukla, Komańcza and Rymanów.
+The Volunteers lost by a score of 40–14.
+It is a basically square structure, 2.5 stories high.
+190, province of Saskatchewan, Canada.
+Administrative and municipal statusWithin the framework of administrative divisions, Ramenskoye serves as the administrative center of Ramensky District.
+Burmese amber has been radiometrically dated using U-Pb isotopes, yielding an age of approximately 99 million years old, close to the Aptian – Cenomanian boundary.
+It features "hundreds" of sheep simply standing in fields with very little additional action; each shot lasts between 30 minutes to over 60 minutes.
+Józefów is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Lipsko, within Lipsko County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland.
+KMM Interactive Entertainment was shut down in April 2013, following Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment's withdrawal from the Whore of the Orient project as its publisher, with the game, despite receiving government funding after the studio's closure, was cancelled shortly after.
+It may refer to:Warringah Council, formerly Warringah Shire from 1906–1993, a local government area covering Sydney's Northern Beaches until it was amalgamated into Northern Beaches Council in 2016Warringah Shire Hall, the meeting place of Warringah Shire from 1910–1973Warringah Civic Centre, the meeting place of Warringah Council from 1973–2016 and Northern Beaches Council from 2016Division of Warringah, an electoral division of the Australian House of Representatives created in 1922Electoral district of Warringah, an electoral district of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly from 1894 to 1904Warringa Ward, a ward of the Municipality of North Sydney from 1891 to 1955Warringah Freeway, a north-south freeway from the northern approach of the Sydney Harbour Bridge, North Sydney, to Willoughby Road, Naremburn, opened in 1968Warringah Mall, a large indoor/outdoor shopping centre in the suburb of Brookvale, on Sydney's Northern Beaches opened in 1963Category:Place name disambiguation pages
+However, the influence of Harry J. Anslinger and his Canadian counterpart Charles Henry Ludovic Sharman, both narcotics control officials, could be seen in the decision to allow the Commission to select some members (thus allowing law enforcement officials to be appointed to the Supervisory Body).
+The translator began operations in 2011, and is listed in the FCC database as a repeater of WCMW-FM Harbor Springs.
+playersCategory:Stenhousemuir F.C.
+ReferencesCategory:1972 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Politicians from JaliscoCategory:Members of the Chamber of Deputies (Mexico)Category:National Action Party (Mexico) politiciansCategory:21st-century Mexican politicians
+Hasanabad-e Sofla () may refer to: Hasanabad-e Sofla, Fars Hasanabad-e Sofla, Nain, Isfahan Province Hasanabad-e Sofla, Semirom, Isfahan Province Hasanabad-e Sofla, Kerman Hasanabad-e Sofla, KermanshahSee alsoHasanabad-e Pain
+Austroargiolestes aureus is a medium-sized to large, black and yellow damselfly, without pruinescence.
+State Route 796 (SR 796) in the U.S. state of Virginia is a secondary route designation applied to multiple discontinuous road segments among the many counties.
+Many others escaped, including the supreme leader Ante Pavelić, most to Latin America.
+Post-war decommissioning, sale, and civilian career She decommissioned 7 July 1865 and was sold at Mound City, Illinois, 17 August 1865 to Henry H. Semmes.
+The group has claimed responsibility for hacking institutions which include the Council of Higher Education, Turkish police forces, the Turkish Army, Türk Telekom, and the National Intelligence Organization and many other websites.
+References Category:Populated places in Zarand County
+When Mahmud of Ghazni sent an ambassador to her to ask her to surrender, she answered:Her smart answer change Mahmud's decision for attack and he didn't attack Rey till end of his life.
+This is a List of members of the Old Southportonians Association being notable old boys of the Anglican The Southport School, in , Queensland, Australia.
+Heer's best finish at the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships was fifth in the 4 x 5 km team event at Sapporo in 2007 while his best individual finish was 14th in the 10 km individual normal hill event at Liberec two years later.
+It was probably built about 1840–1850, and is a one-story, wooden meeting house in the Greek Revival style.
+WDOS (730 AM) is a radio station broadcasting a Sports and News/talk format.
+CastSemyon Treskunov – Kolya SmirnovMikhail Yefremov – Vladimir DronovKonstantin Khabensky – Alexander SmirnovAnastasia Bogatyryova – Ksysha DronovaIeva Andreevajte – Alisa DenisovnaAleksandr Pal — Stanislav IlyichProductionSemyon Treskunov auditioned for the film The Good Boy for the first time when he was 11, and this was the third casting in his life.
+In 2013, they opened for Avenged Sevenfold, Van Halen, Godsmack, Chevelle, Buckcherry, Saliva, Sevendust at major rock festival, Rock USA.
+Yaka mein (Ya-Ka-Mein, often pronounced Yakamee) is a type of beef noodle soup (Simplified Chinese: 牛肉面,Traditional Chinese:牛肉麵) found in many Creole Restaurants in New Orleans.
+At this time, 423 ABG headquarters officially moved to RAF Alconbury.
+In February 2014, the US FDA granted an orphan drug designation to doxofylline for the treatment of bronchiectasis following the submission of an application by Alitair Pharmaceuticals, in May 2013.
+At a diocesan synod in 1130 hosted by Godebold, the Margrave Conrad I of Meissen was present with his sons Otto (later Otto II of Meissen), Dietrich (later Margrave of Lusatia), Henry (later Henry I of Wettin), Dedi (later Dedi III of Lusatia), and Frederick (later Frederick I of Brehna).
+Merkerson attended Ed W. Clark High School in Las Vegas before playing football at the University of Colorado.
+Dorodoca anthophoba is a moth in the family Cosmopterigidae.
+595 BC—Psamtik II succeeds Necho II as king of Egypt.
+Fujieda Soccer Stadium has floodlights and has a main stand equipped to seat 5000- evidently on par with some J1 League stadia.
+__NOTOC__Wishart is a suburb in the Northern Territory of Australia located in Darwin about east of Darwin City.
+State Minority Financial Corp. Ltd., Govt.of A.P.1985Personal lifeHe was survived by wife Shadan Tahniyat and four sons :Dr Sarib Rasool Khan,Dr Saqib Rasool Khan,Azib Rasool Khan,Shah Alam Rasool Khan.
+Since 1994, Thompson has created and produced several television series and movies, including The Enid Blyton Adventure Series, The Enid Blyton Secret Series, The Adventures of Swiss Family Robinson (starring Richard Thomas), Return to Treasure Island, The Legend of William Tell (created by Thompson), William Shatner's A Twist in the Tale (also created by Thompson).
+After uprising, khởi nghĩa Nam Kỳ, her husband was arrested (January 1941) by the French and executed.
+Bobrów may refer to the following places in Poland:Bobrów in Gmina Miłkowice, Legnica County in Lower Silesian Voivodeship (SW Poland)Other places called Bobrów (listed in Polish Wikipedia)
+References Category:Mountains of Italy
+He competed at the 2015 European Games in Baku.
+DirectionThe solar apex is in the constellation of Hercules, southwest of Vega, northeast of his "outstretched foot", Omicron Hercules.
+Phengodes mexicana is a species of glowworm beetle in the family Phengodidae.
+Negotiations, which had been going on prior to the Prix Royal-Oak, saw American Rex Ellsworth purchase Prince Royal for a reported US$400,000 who turned him over to French trainer, Georges Bridgland.
+It is a variant of Katherine.
+Montcada may refer to: Montcada i Reixac, municipality containing the town of Montcada, near Barcelona House of Montcada, aristocratic dynasty linked to Montcada i ReixacMargaret of Montcada viscountess of Béarn (from 1290 to 1310) Moncada, Valencia or Montcada, town near Valencia, Spain
+According to the film excerpt, the Waffle term appears to have originated with Jim Laxer when he stated, "in terms of the proposed manifesto, that if it doesn't talk about nationalization of key industries, it becomes a 'waffle document.'"
+Category:Argentine women writersCategory:People from Jujuy ProvinceCategory:1938 birthsCategory:2008 deaths
+In this confrontation, one of Graves’ men is shot and killed.
+Zeus entrusted the infant god Dionysus to their care, and the Nysiads raised him with the assistance of the old satyr-god Seilenos.
+However, Tucker pulled out of the fight in early October citing an undisclosed injury and was replaced by promotional newcomer Jonathan Martinez.
+It is located in the town of Ponce de Leon, a half mile south of U.S. 90 on C.R 181A.
+While listlessly accepting an honorary medal from the ship's captain for her creation of the beam-screen, the Mimarobe notices that his wrists are bandaged.
+She had a recurring role in season 2 of the Disney Channel comedy series A.N.T.
+Telestes polylepis.
+The film had Musical score by Anu Malik and audio is available on Tips Music Films.
+References"Sudanese lawyer Salih Mahmoud Osman wins EU human rights award", International Herald-Tribune, Oct. 25, 2007"Human Rights Watch Honors Sudanese Activist", Human Rights Watch, Oct. 27, 2005"Sudanese Government Forces Detain Rights Advocate for Defending Human Rights in Darfur", Human Rights First, July 8, 2004 "International Human Rights Award," American Bar Association "European of the Year 2007" European Voices.
+Release Initially, at the time of announcement of the film in 2017 was planned to be released in 2018 but due to work in development the release date of the film was shifted to 15 March 2019.
+This was the first time the Xpress-on name was used since the Nokia Lumia 710 in 2012.
+However, just nine minutes after coming on, Pizzuto broke his fibula and dislocated his ankle after getting his foot caught in the pitch.
+In 2016 the Alberta format switched over to a country format, aligning itself with new station Wild 95.3 New Country.
+Federal Water Resources Agency (Rosvodresursy) ( is the federal executive body, held by the Ministry of Natural Resources.
+Prefects of Sisak-Moslavina County (1993–present)See alsoSisak-Moslavina CountyNotesExternal linksWorld Statesmen - Sisak-Moslavina County*Category:Sisak-Moslavina County
+McConnell Scholarship in Science & Engineering, McGill UniversityMember Gene Therapy & Inborn Errors Review GroupMember, Editorial Board, Human Gene TherapyMcGill University Dean's Honors' listPublicationsChatterjee has made contributions in 38 publications, many she has been the lead researcher and author.
+Because of these developments, the area's population exploded, and Fordham Road evolved into a major commercial district by the early 1900s.
+He was elected as Lisbon's mayor on 15 July 2007 and reelected in 2009 and 2013, with a bigger majority each time.
+Holík (feminine Holíková) is a Czech surname.
+I have never seen his equal."
+As a member of the National Democratic Congress (NDC), Adamafio rose to be vice-chairman of the party.
+Neolamprologus caudopunctatus is a species of cichlid endemic to Lake Tanganyika, where it occurs along the Zambian shores.
+Official Roster of the Soldiers of the State of Ohio in the War on the Rebellion, 1861–1865, Compiled Under the Direction of the Roster Commission (Akron, OH: Werner Co.), 1886-1895.
+That season, the club ran second last on the table.
+Tennessee TechSenior Brandon Banks became the 12th player in NCAA history, including the first Big 12 player, to return two kickoffs for touchdowns in the same game, as Kansas State rolled past Tennessee Tech, 49-7 Bill Snyder Family Stadium.
+Byrne worked as an electrician and joined the Electrical Trades Union (ETU).
+The General Counsel of the Army (also known as the Army General Counsel, abbreviated AGC) is the chief legal officer of the U.S. Department of the Army and senior legal advisor to the Secretary of the Army.
+The station is 134.4 rail kilometers from the terminus of the line at Kameyama Station.
+It flows into the Olt near Buciumeni.
+Jiquiriçá is a municipality in the state of Bahia in the North-East region of Brazil.
+(1891): 390-436, pl.
+He is best known for his images of the Vietnam War.
+It is the Latin word for cliff.
+Then the corresponding density operator equalsThe expectation value of the measurement can be calculated by extending from the case of pure states (see Measurement in quantum mechanics):where denotes trace.
+The defending champion was Iyama Yuta.
+This is said to be one of the best pre-Reformation brasses in the county.
+The find was only analysed in 2013 and is believed to be the world's oldest known lunar calendar.
+Kuala Sawah is a small town located in Rantau State Constituency (DUN Rantau) District of Seremban, Negeri Sembilan, state of Malaysia.
+The district is noted for Tanda Terricot clothes based in nearby Tanda.
+The President hopes to use the situation to his political advantage, while the Secretary of State, his deputy, the United Nations and other factions debate their next move under pressure from the American public, which Sidi knows had tied their hands.
+Renovation was completed in 2007.
+The main city and bastion of the province was Bauterna (Khuzdar/Quzdar).
+ReferencesSee alsoList of localities in Wales by population Category:Villages in Ceredigion
+Równe is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Strachówka, within Wołomin County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland.
+When the Stars Were Red () is a 1991 Czech drama film directed by Dušan Trančík.
+ReferencesCategory:Unincorporated communities in Walker County, GeorgiaCategory:Unincorporated communities in Georgia (U.S. state)
+Elvenking may refer to:Elvenking, a character in J. R. R. Tolkien's legendarium; see List of The Hobbit characters#ElvesElvenking (band), an Italian folk/power metal bandErlking, a german/danish folklore fairy Erlkönig, a poem by Goethe
+It was their first release to hit number 1 on the Gaon Albums Chart, and their most successful release to date.
+Music videoThe music video was directed by Keven McAllester.
+Grow (1822-1903), an early surveyor's marker, and a 1930s Veterans' memorial).
+In 1987 he joined FEMSA, the holding company of Cervecería Cuauhtémoc Moctezuma, and in 1995 became its general director and CEO.
+The weather is ideal in the spring, summer, and fall months with average temperatures ranging from eighty to ninety degrees.
+In 2008, RWM obtained a lease for a farm near Mpophomeni township where they would be able to build a training facility.
+To the east of the Guozijian, lies the Confucius Temple, the second largest Confucius temple in all of China, and the Yonghegong Temple, the largest Lama Temple in Beijing.
+ReferencesExternal links Category:1993 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Indian cricketersCategory:Puducherry cricketersCategory:Place of birth missing (living people)
+Brestovec Orehovički is a village in Hrvatsko Zagorje region of Croatia.
+In horse racing, the form of a horse is a record of significant events, mainly its performance in previous races.
+Bin may refer to:Abbreviations Bank Identification Number Business identification number Believe in Nothing Belgian Institute for Normalization British India (FIFA country code: BIN), the portions of present-day India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, and Myanmar that were under British colonial rule Badan Intelijen Negara, Indonesia's state intelligence agencyPhysical containers Waste container Recycling bin Bulk box, a pallet-size box used for storage and shipping of bulk quantities Coal binPeople Bin Uehara, a Japanese singer, Japanese footballer and manager Bianca Bin, a Brazilian actressPlaces Bin (city), a settlement in Xia- and Shang-dynasty China Bin, Iran, a village in Mazandaran Province, Iran Bin County, Shaanxi in Xianyang, Shaanxi, China Bin County, Heilongjiang in Harbin, Heilongjiang, ChinaScience and mathematics an interval (mathematics), a mesh, or another partition of a topological space, used in different applications fields: Histogram bin Data binning, a data pre-processing technique Bin (computational geometry), space partitioning data structure to enable fast region queries and nearest neighbor searchOther uses Sin bin, an informal name for a penalty box in sports In Arabic personal names, "son of", e.g.
+WPPT may refer to:WPPT (TV), a television station (channel 9, virtual channel 35) licensed to serve Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United StatesWPPT (AM), a radio station (1230 AM) formerly licensed to serve Talladega, Alabama, United StatesWIKG, a radio station (92.1 FM) licensed to serve Mercerburg, Pennsylvania, United States, which used the call sign WPPT from 2005 to 2012WFLF-FM, a radio station (94.5 FM) licensed to serve Parker, Florida, United States, which used the call sign WPPT from 1999 to 2002WOFX-FM, a radio station (92.5 FM) licensed to serve Cincinnati, Ohio, United States, which used the call sign WPPT from 1994 to 1995WIPO Performances and Phonograms Treaty, an international treaty
+During a two years residency with Sidetrack Theatre, touring extensively, he performed in six plays, having co-devised five of them.
+At the second round in Spain he narrowly missed the podium with a 4th-place finish.
+ReferencesCategory:Populated places in the Centre-Est RegionCategory:Boulgou Province
+The cities shown in bold are international.
+ReferencesCategory:1984 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Irish male cyclists
+Schedule All times are Korea Standard Time (UTC+09:00)ResultsHeats Qualification: 1 → Final A (FA), 2–6 → Repechage (R)Heat 1Heat 2Repechages Qualification: 1–2 → Final A (FA), 3–5 → Final B (FB)Heat AHeat BFinalsFinal BFinal AReferences 2002 Asian Games Official Reports, Pages 530–535ResultsExternal links Official WebsiteCategory:Rowing at the 2002 Asian Games
+Irish college may refer to:Irish colleges, immersive Irish-language courses run during the summerIrish Colleges, centers for educating Irish Catholic clergyThird-level education in the Republic of Ireland
+In the 1970s, 50% of its musical instrument export products were supplied to the Soviet Union.
+146) in 1975.
+John Colin Ashworth (born 15 October 1949) is a New Zealand former rugby union player.
+Country Soviet Bandy World Championship: 1957, 1963, 1965, 1967, 1969, 1971, 1973External links Press portrait Category:1934 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Soviet bandy playersCategory:SKA-Sverdlovsk playersCategory:Sportspeople from YekaterinburgCategory:People from Yekaterinburg
+The statistical area "Altforst", which also can include the peripheral parts of the village, as well as the surrounding countryside, has a population of around 540.
+Other complaints against both publications regarding inaccuracy in their articles were upheld.
+Rabbi Epstein was also the author of numerous scholarly books relating to Judaism.
+Sneath may refer to:People Bob Sneath (born 1949), Australian politician H. Rochester Sneath (c.
+ReferencesCategory:Moths described in 2000Category:AcrolepiidaeCategory:Moths of Japan
+No1SU and CDCN were both housed in bunkers within the quarry complex, which also included an RAF Regional Command Centre for the South West of England.
+Hockey, originally played by both boys and girls, had become "ladies only" by 1948, just two years after the introduction of rugby.
+Opening narrationThe title sequence featured a dolly-in through the corridors of a house to a safe-lighted darkroom in a crawlspace under the stairs.
+FK Bačka may refer to: FK Bačka Bačka Palanka, a Serbian football club based in Bačka Palanka FK Bačka 1901, a Serbian football club based in Subotica FK Bačka Topola, a Serbian football club based in Bačka Topola
+Category:1886 birthsCategory:1961 deathsCategory:People from Stockton-on-TeesCategory:British neurologistsCategory:British surgeonsCategory:Academics of the Victoria University of ManchesterCategory:Fellows of the Royal SocietyCategory:Knights BachelorCategory:Commanders of the Order of the British Empire
+She is the Charter President of Rotary Club of Kampala-Impala.
+The play was later expanded and revised as The Gandhi Nonviolent Soccer Club.
+Traditionally focused on English language books, it has recently expanded into the Chinese language market.
+He was a member of the Garda Síochána from 1961 to 1972.
+ReferencesCategory:Rivers of New York (state)Category:Rivers of Herkimer County, New York
+ReproductionVipera lotievi is viviparous.
+The Democrat began his term in 2013.
+Further readingReferencesExternal links Category:Fringe festivals in New ZealandCategory:Festivals in DunedinCategory:Autumn events in New Zealand
+Pat Tabler (1976) - baseball player (MLB) Bob Wiesenhahn (1957) - basketball player (NBA and Cincinnati Bearcats - National Championship Team)ReferencesExternal linksArchbishop McNicholas High SchoolCategory:Educational institutions established in 1951Category:High schools in Hamilton County, OhioCategory:Private schools in CincinnatiCategory:Catholic secondary schools in OhioCategory:Roman Catholic Archdiocese of CincinnatiCategory:Sisters of Saint Joseph schools
+The Turkey national futsal team represents Turkey in international futsal competitions such as the FIFA Futsal World Cup and the European Championships and is controlled by the Turkish Football Federation, which founded the national team in 2006.
+HabitatMinimum recorded depth is 9 m. Maximum recorded depth is 240 m.ReferencesCategory:NaticidaeCategory:Gastropods described in 1791
+However, from the late 17th century there was another residential house on the Kalte Birke.
+CareerThanks to her work in the laboratory, she soon became Kristine Bonnevie's most important collaborator, a position she maintained for several years.
+"Concerning the origins of Tibetan brgi̯ad and Chinese 八 'pwât'."
+A similar method, by which the cartilage is left intact, is the so-called Stitch method.
+In 2016, three Korean players joined Višnjevac, and were the target of purchase of a Korean businessman.
+Airline Competition."
+JFK conspiracy allegationsIn 1977, Lorenz told Paul Meskil of the New York Daily News that she met Oswald in the fall of 1963 at an Operation 40 safe house in the Little Havana section of Miami.
+This is a List of notable Old Olavians, these being former pupils of St Olave's and St Saviour's Grammar School and its predecessors, St Olave's and St Saviour's.
+Notes and references Category:Fortification (architectural elements)
+Cambraster is an extinct genus of edrioasteroids with species that existed during the Cambrian.
+It was designated as Ventura Historic Landmark No.
+HistoryThe building, located on Lowside, Bowness, dates from around 1650.
+Beginning in 2016, the award was renamed the Southern Book Award and named on honor of southern writer Pat Conroy.
+Ivan Gulev (born 12 December 1957) is a Bulgarian sports shooter.
+After leaving the Che in 1974, Claramunt continued to compete in his native region until his retirement, representing CD Castellón in the second level and amateurs Villarreal CF.
+Kaylie and the man make love, but when she asks him to stab her while they have sex, he becomes disturbed and goes outside to think.
+Its administrative area contained parts of modern Guangdong, as well as both modern Hong Kong and Macau.
+His style was influenced by Tranquillo Cremona, and was mainly known for his elegant portraits.
+The Indonesian artist Yana Julio, also covered the song and it appeared on his 1998 album, Kucinta, which was accompanied by an official video directed by Jose Poernomo.
+It contains 21 species divided into six species groups:H. aeta groupBeaded wood mouse, Hylomyscus aeta Mount Oku wood mouse, Hylomyscus grandis H. alleni groupAllen's wood mouse, Hylomyscus alleni Angolan wood mouse, Hylomyscus carillus Hylomyscus pamfi Flat-nosed wood mouse, Hylomyscus simus Stella wood mouse, Hylomyscus stella Walter Verheyen's mouse, Hylomyscus walterverheyeni H. anselli groupAnsell's wood mouse, Hylomyscus anselli Arc Mountain wood mouse, Hylomyscus arcimontensis Heinrich's wood mouse, Hylomyscus heinrichorum Kerbis Peterhans's wood mouse, Hylomyscus kerbispeterhansi 2014Mahale wood mouse, Hylomyscus mpungamachagorum Pygmy wood mouse, Hylomyscus pygmaeus Stanley’s wood mouse, Hylomyscus stanleyi Mother Ellen’s wood mouse, Hylomyscus thornesmithae H. baeri groupBaer's wood mouse, Hylomyscus baeri H. denniae groupMontane wood mouse, Hylomyscus denniae Small-footed forest mouse, Hylomyscus endorobae Volcano wood mouse, Hylomyscus vulcanorum H. parvus groupLittle wood mouse, Hylomyscus parvusReferences Category:Rodent generaCategory:Taxa named by Oldfield ThomasCategory:Taxonomy articles created by Polbot
+At the 2006 census, its population was 136, in 24 families.
+External links Polish Literature in English Translation: Holy Cross SermonsCategory:History of Christianity in PolandCategory:ManuscriptsCategory:Christian sermonsCategory:Old Polish literatureCategory:History of Lesser Poland
+Biography Born and raised in Rome, he founded the hip hop crew "WFK" in 2016 and released his debut EP WFK.1 on 5 July 2018.
+Cast Harry Baur as Porphyre Pierre Blanchar as Raskolnikov Madeleine Ozeray as Sonia Lucienne Le Marchand as Dounia Marcelle Géniat as Mme Raskolnikov Alexandre Rignault as Razoumikhine Sylvie as Catherine Ivanova Aimé Clariond as Loujine Magdeleine Bérubet as Aliona Georges Douking as Nicolas Marcel Delaître as Marmeladov Catherine Hessling as Elisabeth Daniel Gilbert as Zamiatov Paulette Élambert as Polia Paul Asselin as Le lieutenant Poudre Eugène Chevalier as Le Borgne Geno Ferny as L'adjoint du commissaire Claire Gérard as Nastassia Léon Larive as Koch Charles Lemontier as PestriakovReferencesBibliography Andrews, Dudley.
+NotesReferences Gordon, Raymond G., Jr.
+This is considered a "chop block."
+There is also one non-policing organisation under the command of the RSVGPF Fire Brigade, which is currently directed by Inspector Joseph Jack.
+The White paper "A National Health Service" was published on 17 February 1944.
+Zachary Alex West (born April 27, 1984) is a former American football defensive end.
+Dmitry Kochkin (; born 25 April 1934 in Kirov) was a former Soviet Nordic combined skier who competed in the early 1960s.
+He is the nephew of Jacques Félix Emmanuel Hamelin, a successful rear admiral in the French Navy of the Napoleonic era.
+However, the group mutually decided with Laurie Records—who were no longer going to seriously advertise the band—to void their recording contract, which left the two songs, "Snow" and "Slightest Possibility", unreleased.
+PDFCategory:ZodariidaeCategory:Spiders of AfricaCategory:Araneomorphae genera
+WomenReferencesCategory:Nations at the 2017 World Aquatics ChampionshipsCategory:Great Britain at the World Aquatics ChampionshipsCategory:2017 in British sport
+ClassificationThe three varieties are very close.
+At the 2006 census, its population was 316, in 59 families.
+Tanner's thesis was published in 1965 as the book Reign of Wonder, and, on the strength of its merits, he was appointed to a post in the English faculty.
+Lazarevo () is a rural locality (a village) in Vereshchaginsky District, Perm Krai, Russia.
+On May 19, 2016, he was waived by the Buccaneers.
+Considerable progress toward that end was made during (and in extensive archival research prior to) the 2009 expedition.
+Waldock, Julianne M. "A new species of peacock spider, Maratus proszynskii sp.
+A third candidate takes as basis an anonymous Homeric hymn of unknown date to Artemis which relates that the goddess, "having watered her horses in deep-reeded Meles, drove swiftly through Smyrna to Klaros rich in vines".
+It is unique in Sitamarhi as the only place that celebrates ganapati puja.
+Odalric was made Archbishop of Reims in 962.
+See also National Parks of JapanReferencesCategory:Parks and gardens in Kagoshima PrefectureCategory:Protected areas established in 1977Category:1977 establishments in Japan
+Attica Group maintains its presence in the Baltic Sea with the operation of its two RoRo vessels, which trade between Rostock, Germany and Uusikaupunki, Finland.
+References Category:Motorsport venues in FranceCategory:Sports venues in Yvelines
+Notable eventsOn 19 March 1964, The Rolling Stones performed there.
+He made his first-class debut for Easterns in the 2017–18 Sunfoil 3-Day Cup on 26 October 2017.
+Taxonomy and namingDiuris porrifolia was first formally described in 1840 by John Lindley and the description was published in A Sketch of the Vegetation of the Swan River Colony as an appendix to Edwards's Botanical Register.
+It came into effect on 20 messidor V (8 July 1797).
+The 51st Writers Guild of America Awards, given in 1999, honored the film and television best writers of 1998.
+A separately available shoulder stock (which Crosman designates model 1399) converts the rather long pistol into a carbine.
+However, she did not make the Olympic team, coming fourth and seventh respectively.
+Atenango del Río is one of the 81 municipalities of Guerrero, in south-western Mexico.
+Kentucky Route 69 (KY 69) is a state highway in Kentucky that runs from Bluff Lane near Central City to Indiana State Road 237 on the Bob Cummings – Lincoln Trail Bridge at the Kentucky-Indiana state line just northeast of Hawesville via Centertown, Hartford, Dundee, Fordsville, and Hawesville.
+Ayi played college football at the University of Massachusetts and attended Nashua High School in Nashua, New Hampshire.
+ReferencesExternal links Profile at worldfootball.netCategory:1997 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:People from SarcellesCategory:French people of Haitian descentCategory:Association football midfieldersCategory:Haitian footballersCategory:French footballersCategory:Ligue 2 playersCategory:Valenciennes FC playersCategory:S.V.
+HJ may refer to:Science, technology, and mathematics Hall–Janko group, a mathematical group Heterojunction, the interface between two layers of dissimilar crystalline semiconductors U.S. code for a cryptographic key change; see cryptoperiodOther uses , a two-letter combination used in some languages hj-reduction, a process affecting the pronunciation of English words like human in some dialects Holden HJ, An Australian full sized car produced between 1974 & 1976 Hajji (Hj.
+Hi-Life is a 1998 American Christmas romantic comedy film written and directed by Roger Hedden and starring Katrin Cartlidge, Charles Durning, Daryl Hannah, Moira Kelly, Peter Riegert, Campbell Scott and Eric Stoltz.
+9 October - Faisal Zaid.
+The village has a population of 60.
+He has also written many satirical works criticizing the social and political shortcomings of Luxembourg life and has frequently contributed articles to Luxembourg newspapers and periodicals.
+At the time of the 1991 Nepal census it had a population of 3,194 and had 614 houses in the town.
+They probably included the manors of Ulnaby and Carlbury.
+Alco locomotives using this engine include the S-2, S-4, RS-1, RSC-1, RSD-1, DL-105, DL-107, DL-108, DL-109, and DL-110.
+Personal lifeBonfire was a prolific hiker in Southern California for many years.
+Billy Kennedy was in his first season as head coach after the position was vacated by Mark Turgeon in May 2011.
+She believes in textbook romances inspired by her father's devotion to her mother Rohini who he still loves, seventeen years after her death.
+He was born at Chausa Bhojpur district.
+The gate is now a heritage site maintained by the Archaeological Survey of India.
+NotesExternal links Category:1952 birthsCategory:Australian rules footballers from Victoria (Australia)Category:Collingwood Football Club playersCategory:Coleraine Football Club playersCategory:Living people
+See also Communes of the Haut-Rhin départementReferencesINSEECategory:Communes of Haut-Rhin
+A typical example is Proposition 31 of Book 7, in which Euclid proves that every composite integer is divided (in Euclid's terminology "measured") by some prime number.
+The radar is passive and bistatic; there are receivers located at the University of Washington as well as at Manastash Ridge, which are synchronized to permit coherent operation.
+This is the list of films produced in Yugoslavia in the 1970s.
+Quiterons and similar superconducting switching devices.
+in 1516; MA in 1518; and B.D.
+Hypericum gnidiifolium is a species of flowering plant in the family Hypericaceae.
+The newly formed group originally had five brigades under its control (hence its name), but currently commands only three.
+He sold it to the crown, and Frederick VI donated it to Sorø Academy in 1827.
+Krimstein has published in Forbes Magazine, Forward, The New York Observer, among others, and has authored two books: Kvetch as Kvetch Can: Jewish Cartoons (2010) and The Three Escapes of Hannah Arendt (2018).
+Jørgen Skov (12 November 1925 – 28 March 2001) was a Danish cinematographer.
+Tat Ali is a low Holocene shield volcano located in the northern part of the Afar Region of Ethiopia.
+It lies approximately east of Kije, north-east of Pińczów, and south of the regional capital Kielce.
+External links Category:1917 filmsCategory:1910s drama filmsCategory:English-language filmsCategory:American filmsCategory:American silent feature filmsCategory:American drama filmsCategory:American black-and-white filmsCategory:Films directed by Harry F. MillardeCategory:Fox Film films
+Lysandre is a French spelling of the Greek name Lysander, and may refer to:Lysandre, a character in les Amours de Lysandre et Caliste, by Vital d'Audiguier Paris, 1615Lysandre, a character in Corneille's comedy La Galerie du Palais, 1632Lysandre, a fictional character and the main antagonist in Pokémon X and YLysandre (Christopher Owens album), the debut solo album of Christopher OwensSee also Lysander (disambiguation)
+The corolla has five double-lobed, notched, or heart-shaped lobes.
+Discussed in the 1964 Venice Charter, values and the question 'why conserve?'
+Celestaphone (born 1996) is an American hip hop music producerCelestaphone may also refer to: Celestaphone (instrument), a musical instrument of the zither family.
+He is remembered for his extensive biochemical research of several amino acids, especially tryptophan.
+RosterSchedule|-!colspan=9| Exhibition|-!colspan=9| Regular Season|-!colspan=9| 2012 Sun Belt Conference Men's Basketball Tournament|-!colspan=9| 2012 NITReferencesCategory:Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders men's basketball seasonsMiddle TennesseeMiddle TennesseeMiddle Tennessee Blue RaidersMiddle Tennessee Blue Raiders
+Rosanoff arrives unexpectedly, in case Shubin has further instructions before the pilot returns to Russia with more important dispatches.
+Megachile rufohirtula is a species of bee in the family Megachilidae.
+In 1996, Rivelli gave birth to Akash, the result of a brief relationship.
+ClassificationRaceStarting Grid PositionsExternal linksCategory:German Grand PrixGerman Grand PrixGrand Prix
+Webster was born in Tyersal, Bradford on 28 October 1917 and died in Guiting Power, Gloucestershire on 25 October 1997, three days short of his 80th birthday.
+Cast Tracy Scoggins as Judith Gray Bentley Mitchum as Mark Wayne Daniel Cerny as "The Kid" Michael Russo as Lincoln Barry Lynch as Hesse Ellen Dunning as Anne Pete Schrum as Charneski Jeff Weston as Matt Cable William Thorne as Fair-Haired Boy Richard Speight Jr. as Andy Larry Cedar as Peterson Jim Mercer as Dr. Michaels Pat Crawford Brown as Mrs. Michaels Christopher Robin as Skeleton Kid Kristine Rose as Miss July Robert Stockele as Man-Devil Crystal Carlson as Little Girl June C. Ellis as Old WomanAdditional Voices Linda O. Cook as Baby Oopsy Daisy Edwin Cook as Grizzly Teddy Tim Dornberg as Jack Attack Brigitte Lynn as Mr. StaticReceptionCritical reception for Demonic Toys has been mostly negative.
+He died at the age of 31.
+La Joya is a census-designated place in Socorro County, New Mexico, United States.
+According to the liner notes later on, Marvin's performance there was a success, however, an ongoing feud between Gaye and his brother-in-law, Motown recording boss Gordy, was said to have been one of the reasons why the album was eventually shelved with the duo fighting over how the album was to be produced.
+ReferencesCategory:Villages in Wyszków County
+The design discharge of the power station is .
+Legum is an English surname, and may refer to: Colin Legum (1919-2003), British anti-apartheid activist Margaret Legum (1933-2007), British anti-apartheid activistSee also Legume
+He was named to the PCL All-Star Team and participated Triple-A All-Star Game.
+Published worksThe Knesset and Me (1979)See alsoNewspapers of IsraelReferencesExternal links Category:1901 birthsCategory:1994 deathsCategory:Polish JewsCategory:Jews from Galicia (Eastern Europe)Category:Jagiellonian University alumniCategory:Polish emigrants to Mandatory PalestineCategory:Jews in Mandatory PalestineCategory:Irgun membersCategory:Herut politiciansCategory:Gahal politiciansCategory:Members of the 1st Knesset (1949–1951)Category:Members of the 2nd Knesset (1951–1955)Category:Members of the 3rd Knesset (1955–1959)Category:Members of the 4th Knesset (1959–1961)Category:Members of the 5th Knesset (1961–1965)Category:Members of the 6th Knesset (1965–1969)Category:Members of the 7th Knesset (1969–1974)Category:Members of the 8th Knesset (1974–1977)Category:Israeli lawyersCategory:Polish lawyersCategory:Israeli journalistsCategory:Polish journalistsCategory:Polish military personnel of World War IICategory:Bundists
+Some telescopes employ adaptive optics to reduce this effect.
+The Train of Pain – Memorial to Victims of Stalinist Repression () is a monument in Chișinău, Moldova.
+Musaabad (, also Romanized as Mūsáābād and Mūsī Ābād) is a village in Kheyrud Kenar Rural District, in the Central District of Nowshahr County, Mazandaran Province, Iran.
+In 2006 Shimamoto dropped out of Rikkyo University to pursue her writing full-time.
+Vitaliy Romanyuk (born 22 February 1984 in Keszthely, Hungary) is a professional Ukrainian football defender who plays for FC Lviv in the Ukrainian Premier League.
+To Frank and Flynn, however, it is a closed case, and they are content to be done with Nick.
+Following "When You Wish Upon A Star" from Pinocchio at No.
+The editors were Yan Fu (a.k.a.
+Khosrow () in Iran may refer to:Khosrow, Andika, Khuzestan ProvinceKhosrow, Dezful, Khuzestan ProvinceKhosrow Beyg, Markazi ProvinceKhosrow Beyk Rural District, in Markazi ProvinceKhosrow, Tehran
+In the meantime, Klaus finds out that Damon still follows them, trying to find Stefan.
+A cessation and reversal of all acts by Israel was urged, while the safety of Palestinians was called for and the resumption of negotiations.
+As such, Larimer would not compel Paterson to call the election before November 2.
+Aisake is a Melanesian name.
+It lies approximately north of Krasnystaw and south-east of the regional capital Lublin.
+Abdel Rahman Magdy (; born 12 September 1997), is an Egyptian footballer who plays for Egyptian Premier League side Ismaily and the Egyptian national team as a winger.
+It is now included in the Drava Statistical Region.
+Traditional Ostforschung has fallen into disrepute with modern German historians as it often reflected Western European prejudices of the time towards Poles.
+From both NSB and Klæburuten the city had agreed to take over eleven buses.
+Most of the carved stone facades of the ancient structures were removed in the 18th through mid−20th centuries for reuse in new construction work.
+The first overall selection was Marcus Campbell who had played collegiately at Mississippi State.
+His business practices were dubious, but usually within the very loose legal framework of business regulation of the time.
+Ophiochloa is closely related to Axonopus, and some authorities consider the two groups to be a single genus.
+It lies in the Junín Region, Yauli Province, Yauli District.
+Early life and familyTouré was born on July 11, 1957 in Duékoué, a town in the western region.
+Notable people with this name include: George Stavropoulos (1920–1990), American fashion designer Ilias Stavropoulos (born 1995), Greek football right winger Nikos Stavropoulos (born 1959), former Greek professional basketball player Xaris Stavropoulos (1920-1981), Distinguished entrepreneur, alleged rapistReferences Category:Greek-language surnamesCategory:Surnames
+Notable people with the name include:Ayvaz Gökdemir (1942–2008), Turkish politicianAyvaz Water, Turkish Spa townKazım Ayvaz (born 1938), Turkish sport wrestlerSee alsoAyvaz Water, Turkish Spa townCategory:Turkish-language surnamesCategory:Turkish masculine given names
+B is a scaling factor and is a function of the project size.
+Çiçekli (literally "with flowers" or "place with flowers") is a Turkish place name and may refer to: Çiçekli, Ceyhan, a village in Ceyhan district of Adana Province, Turkey Çiçekli, Gercüş, a village in Gercüş district of Batman Province, Turkey Çiçekli, Tarsus, a village in Tarsus district of Mersin Province, Turkey Çiçekli, Yüreğir, a village in Yüreğir district of Adana Province, TurkeySee also Çiçeklidağ, Hanak, ("flower mountain"), a village in Hanak district of Ardahan Province, TurkeyCicekli is also a village near Akincilar- Sivas Turkey
+It has had memorials to previous and subsequent conflicts added to it.
+The Homesmine, a commercial presentation, is produced in-house at Channel M by Michael Wray & Hannah Loughlin.
+Of the films Kostetskiy appeared in towards the end of his life, the most famous roles were in films directed by Vladimir Vorobyov: Including, Wedding Krechinsky, Truffaldino from Bergamo and Treasure Island.
+External links Category:Bahraini footballersCategory:Bahrain international footballersCategory:1987 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:2011 AFC Asian Cup playersCategory:Footballers at the 2006 Asian GamesCategory:Association football defendersCategory:Asian Games competitors for Bahrain
+The business closed at the outbreak of World War II in 1939 and Dunlop never returned to work due to ill health.
+"Sweet Revenge" quotes a line from Hunter S. Thompson's Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail and reflects some of Prine's frustrations with how his second album was received, commenting in the Great Days: The John Prine Anthology liner notes, "I'd quit my job at the post office, I had this album out that got incredible reviews, and then this second one where the critics started to hit me.
+It is unmentioned in the track listing on the release, but referred to in the credit prints.
+Tamara Faith Berger is a Canadian author and novelist.
+White Point, Nova Scotia could be the following places in Nova Scotia: White Point, Queens, Nova Scotia in the Region of Queens Municipality White Point (Victoria), Nova Scotia in Victoria County
+The population in 2011 was 12,145, in an area of 34.11 km².
+The film, which has music by Ilaiyaraaja, released in April 1998.
+Spanish CastClaudio Rodriguez as Narrator Ana Angeles Garcia as RuyMatilde Vilarino as JimenaTeofilo Martinez as Fray AmadeoJapanese Cast Naoko Watanabe as Ruy Akiko Tsuboi as Teresa Kinpei Azusa as King FernandoEpisode listReferencesExternal linksCategory:1980 Spanish television series debutsCategory:1980 Spanish television series endingsCategory:Animation based on real peopleCategory:TV Tokyo showsCategory:Spanish children's television seriesCategory:RTVE showsCategory:1980 anime television seriesCategory:Television series set in the 11th centuryCategory:Historical anime and mangaCategory:Adventure anime and mangaCategory:Spanish animated television series
+The research was published in form of Problems in Advertising, a book of advertising case studies, in 1927.
+The audits, representative legislative, legal, academic and professional are of extensive quality and are recognized by the Peruvian people and their various institutions that have given many honorary degrees.
+In homological algebra, the relationship between currying and uncurrying is known as tensor-hom adjunction.
+This was demonstrated in the tragedy Rienzi, (1868) which was inspired by Edward Bulwer-Lytton, and later Lăpușneanu-vodă (1878–1879),BibliographyAcademia Republicii Popular Române, Dicționar Enciclopedic Român, Editura Politică, București, 1962–1964Category:Romanian poetsCategory:Romanian male poetsCategory:Romanian philosophersCategory:1840 birthsCategory:1902 deathsCategory:19th-century poetsCategory:19th-century male writers
+He lost his seat in 1982 and returned to real estate.
+Hiram Patterson, a media mogul in the sci-fi book The Light of Other Days by Sir Arthur C. Clarke and Stephen Baxter Sebastian Hiram Shaw, a supervillain by Marvel Comics Reverend Hiram Shaw, Sorcerer Supreme and supervillain by Marvel Comics Hiram Worchester, a character from the book series Wild Cards Hiram Yeager, a character in the Dirk Pitt book series Hiram Flagston, a character in the comic Hi and Lois by Greg & Brian Walker Hiram, aka "Hymie", a baby in the TV show Shameless'' Hiram Wolfe the adoptive grandfather wolf of Heffer Wolfe from Rocko's Modern LifeSee also Hiram (disambiguation) for other uses of Hiram'''Similar spelling Hyrum Smith, several people with this name Category:Jewish given namesCategory:Jewish masculine given names
+After the Second World War, the German NSU factory battled English machines (Vincent HRD, Triumph) for top speed honors through the 1960s, when Japanese-engined streamliner motorcycles appeared, and alternated with Harley-Davidson-engined machines through 1990.
+He was recruited from the Mildura Football Club and is the brother of Brendan and Nathan Bower, who also played for Richmond.
+1972/73, S. 385–541Category:People executed for witchcraftCategory:1734 birthsCategory:Executed Austrian womenCategory:1750 deathsCategory:18th-century Austrian peopleCategory:Executed Austrian peopleCategory:People executed by Germany by decapitationCategory:18th-century executions in Germany
+Beatriz Haddad Maia and Nadia Podoroska were the defending champions, but Haddad Maia could not participate this year due to a right wrist injury.
+It was alleged that instead of accepting free property from the government of Japan for the embassy, 1.6 billion shillings was withheld from the sale of Kenyan property in Nigeria and used to buy a less suitable property.
+He is mentioned in the Zadonshchina and Pushkin's Ruslan and Ludmila.
+He was brought by Mumbai Indians for the 2012 Indian Premier League (IPL) and the Delhi Daredevils for the 2013 IPL.
+Edgar Allan Poe for a time used the alias "Henri Le Rennet", a name inspired by Henry.
+References Category:Year of birth missing (living people)Category:Living peopleCategory:Historians of scienceCategory:Worcester Polytechnic Institute facultyCategory:Case Western Reserve University alumni
+As a 17-year-old, she won the silver medal in the 400-metre individual medley at the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich, Germany.
+greatly improving his overall muscle mass.
+): 7.81 (2013) Highest average yard per carry, game (min 10 att.
+2009 Washington Metro train collision may refer to: June 2009 Washington Metro train collision, between two revenue trains on the Red Line between Fort Totten and Takoma stations November 29, 2009 Washington Metro train collision, between two non-revenue trains at the Falls Church rail yard
+In March 2010, Langhelle was cast in The Thing, the 2011 prequel to John Carpenter's 1982 horror classic of the same title.
+With the receipt of a letter from Argentina, Bauer learns that Eichmann lives there under a different name.
+The median age in the village was 39.7 years.
+GreenWorld claims it strives to 'clean up the world', but actually they kidnap homeless people and mental patients to enslave in a trancer army.
+From 1958 to 1974, he was town Justice, and from 1974 until his retirement in 1983 he was the Supervisor of the town of North Elba.
+Cederna is a passionate about mountaineering and is also a writer.
+She then taught art classes in the San Antonio, Texas public schools for several years, before moving to Paris to continue her art studies with M. Ingelbert.
+At the high school level and below, working for a school's television station is often an extracurricular activity but often included in a journalism class taught at the school, in which students learn about the journalistic profession and produce school news reports.
+Mirninsky (masculine), Mirninskaya (feminine), or Mirninksoye (neuter) may refer to:Mirninsky District, a district of the Sakha Republic, RussiaMirninskoye Urban Settlement, several municipal urban settlements in Russia
+It preserves fossils dating back to the Neogene period.
+playersCategory:Manchester City F.C.
+Hertford may refer to: Marquess of Hertford, a title in the Peerage of England Hertford, the county town of Hertfordshire Hertford Castle Hertford College, Oxford Hertford County, North Carolina Hertford, North Carolina, a town not located in Hertford County.
+Miguelito may refer to:Miguelito (artist) (born 1999), Puerto Rican reggaetonMiguelito (footballer, born 1981), Portuguese football wingbackMiguelito (Spanish footballer) (born 1991), Spanish football midfielderMiguelito (footballer, born 1990), Portuguese footballerMiguelitos, a type of cake
+PreservationFour locomotives of the class have been preserved:ReferencesCategory:0-6-0 locomotivesCategory:Beyer, Peacock locomotivesCategory:Railway locomotives introduced in 1877Category:Standard gauge locomotives of Australia19
+ReferencesCategory:Villages in Azamgarh district
+2020, album.
+Two days later, NYPD officers Waverly Jones and Joseph Piagentini were shot and killed outside a housing project in Harlem.
+The Hollinger Mine backfilled the lake with mine tailings and it was eventually beautified into one of the City's finest parks.
+Louis Miller may refer to: Louis Miller (1866-1927), Russian-Jewish-American political activist and newspaper editor Louis Miller (baseball), African-American Negro League baseball player Louis E. Miller (1899-1952), American politician from Missouri who served in the U.S. Congress from 1943-1945.
+ReferencesCategory:1864 birthsCategory:1939 deaths
+It is one of the most prestigious schools in Tunisia, known for its high quality education and its highly competitive environment : it enjoys a success rate of 100% at the Baccalaureate exam.
+Later, he appeared on a number of television shows, including Everybody Loves Raymond, Just Shoot Me!, ER, No Ordinary Family, Cousin Skeeter, and Justified.
+EAST ASIA 1800-1949.
+Xenotilapia boulengeri is a species of cichlid endemic to Lake Tanganyika where it occurs in schools in areas with sandy substrates.
+At the 2006 census, its population was 118, in 29 families.
+Nine of the tree species are associated with ancient woodland.
+It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Mędrzechów.
+One of the best known features of Emmanuel Episcopal Church is a mistake.
+Matondo is a surname.
+DeathHoward died in the summer of 1939 at the age of 48 in Tyringham, Massachusetts while working on his 700-acre farm.
+Innocent is one of the first ever feature-length films to be shot in one take, and it is a kidnapping thriller that circumnavigates downtown Chicago on foot and by car.
+The topography is mountainous, but of lower elevations, always under .
+It is located inside the Cittadella di Scienze della Natura at the summit of the Campo dei Fiori di Varese (elevation ), in the Province of Varese, Lombardy.
+Since about 2007, the march audience has been about 1,000 women, and the permit ensures the streets are clear for marching.
+The funicular was constructed in 2008, in order to replace a previous cable car that was used between 1968 and 2006.
+He won a gold medal at the 1936 World Table Tennis Championships in the team event.
+He starts the movie with Nalini as Anarkali.
+It eventually moved to a new location nearer downtown, and was renamed the Eleanor Gerson School, after a woman who had for many years served on its board of trustees.
+It was composed of parts of the City of Montreal prior to the January 1, 2002 municipal mergers, and the formerly independent municipality of Montréal-Est, Quebec.
+Al-Hudood Sports Club () is an Iraqi sports club based in Falastin Street, East Districts of the Tigris River, Baghdad.
+Bill, feeling sorry for his partner who "has a wife and daughter depending on him," decides to apply to James Alden for help, because his partner John Grant stated he worked for him for years.
+He was also one of the legal advisors, who contributed to the drafting of the new Syrian constitution.
+Unfortunately for Pilař, he suffered a relapse of the heart condition that had plagued him three years earlier, forcing him to miss the majority of the next two seasons.
+Parliamentary elections were held in Hungary between 17 and 26 July 1887.
+At the 2006 census, its population was 39, in 12 families.
+Betty Willis may refer to:Betty Willis (artist) (1923–2015), American artist and graphic designerBetty Willis (singer) (1941–2018), American soul singer
+Chemical Dependency Treatment Program The chemical Dependency program is structured for adolescents and adults with the need for supervised detoxification or for rehabilitation program.
+The prevalence of such valuable artifacts, and the natives' apparent ignorance of their value, inspired speculation as to a plentiful source for them.
+In 2000 there were 206 households, of which 16.5% have children under the age of 18 living with them, 66.0% were married couples living together, 1.9% had a female householder with no husband present, and 29.1% were non-families.
+Newcastle upon Tyne: Tyne and Wear Museums, 1995.
+Vanhoffen (or Vanhöffen) may refer to:Ernst Vanhöffen (1858–1918), German zoologistVanhoffen Bluff, a feature of Heard Island in the Antarctic, named for Ernst Vanhöffen
+The venue was built as only the second full size synthetic pitch in South Australia.
+Flaveria anomala is a Mexican plant species of yellowtops within the sunflower family.
+Yellow copper is a colloquial name for various minerals and alloys with high copper content.
+The St. Paul Slam!
+ACTIVE MEMBERS: All regular and volunteer commissioned officers of the United States Army, Navy and Marine Corps, Acting Assistant Surgeons and authorized Volunteer Staff Officers, who served as such, or as an enlisted man, in North China or in the Gulf of Pechili in connection with or as a part of any military operation and under the orders of the respective Army and Navy Commanders thereof between June 15 and December 31, 1900, and all members of the Diplomatic and Consular services of the United States in Tientsin and Peking during said period shall be eligible as Active Members in the Order, and shall become such upon payment of the fees and dues hereinafter provided.
+The Home also operates a shelter for children removed from their homes due to violence or neglect, support services for pregnant teenagers, transitional housing for teenage mothers and their children and housing for severely emotionally disturbed teenagers so they can stay in their home community.
+See also Tor NaamGameReferencesExternal linksCategory:2010s Bengali-language filmsCategory:2013 filmsCategory:Bengali remakes of Tamil filmsCategory:Indian filmsCategory:Films directed by Raj Chakraborty
+The genealogy of the steam engine is then examined: Thomas Newcomen's engine for pumping water out of mines (1712); Abraham Darby's cheap iron from coke, James Watt's addition of a second condensing cylinder (for cooling) to the engine (1763); John Wilkinson's improving of cannon boring (for the French military) and cylinder making (for Watt; 1773–75).
+Changes made to the sport by the late 1960s brought an end to the "strictly stock" vehicles of the 1950s.
+The team mascot, a jackalope, quickly became one of the most popular in hockey's minor leagues, and team merchandise featuring the snarling, antlered rabbit, has sold well throughout the United States and Canada.
+At the 2006 census, its population was 555, in 146 families.
+ReferencesCategory:1859 birthsCategory:1930 deathsCategory:People from the Bay of Plenty RegionCategory:Ngāti AwaCategory:Ngāti TūwharetoaCategory:New Zealand Ringatū clergy
+Co-op Radio is the short name of some radio stations operated by cooperatives:Imagesound's in-store audio for stores in the British Co-op grocery store chainKootenay Co-op Radio CJLY-FM in Nelson, British Columbia, CanadaUNW Co-op Radio in Keston, Kent, United KingdomVancouver Co-operative Radio CFRO-FM in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
+They had reached that point by relying solely on the Coutinho's sextant with its artificial horizon.
+Tohumluk Deresi is one of two main tributaries of Yağlıdere Stream borns in Kurtbeli highland of Alucra district of Giresun Province of Turkey.
+Bigg exhibited regularly at the Royal Academy and the British Institution until his death.
+See alsoCommunes of the Tarn-et-Garonne departmentReferencesINSEECategory:Communes of Tarn-et-Garonne
+Prosopea is a genus of flies in the family Tachinidae.
+The first post office was established in 1891.
+Sprenger and ʿAbd Ḥaḳḳ, Calcutta 1848, repr.
+In 1988, Hikaru Genji became the second artist in history to monopolize the top three spots on the Oricon singles chart and the third artist in history to dominate the top two spots on the charts.
+86-97.
+ReferencesFurther reading Category:Pattali Makkal Katchi politiciansCategory:Living peopleCategory:National Democratic Alliance candidates in the 2014 Indian general electionCategory:Members of the 11th Tamil Nadu Legislative AssemblyCategory:Members of the 12th Tamil Nadu Legislative AssemblyCategory:Members of the 13th Tamil Nadu Legislative AssemblyCategory:People from Salem districtCategory:Year of birth missing (living people)
+James Blazes Leonardo (February 3, 1889–February 5, 1962) was an American businessman and politician.
+See also ThangkaReferencesCategory:Buddhist artCategory:Korean painting
+ReferencesCategory:1934 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Olympic wrestlers of SwedenCategory:Wrestlers at the 1960 Summer OlympicsCategory:Swedish male sport wrestlersCategory:Olympic bronze medalists for SwedenCategory:Olympic medalists in wrestlingCategory:Medalists at the 1960 Summer Olympics
+External linksSouth Carolina State Election CommissionSouth Carolina State Races in 2012 campaign finance data for state races from Follow the MoneyBallotpedia pages on South Carolina State Senate elections and South Carolina State House electionsReferences
+ReferencesCategory:F-type main-sequence starsCategory:Aquarius (constellation)Category:Durchmusterung objects2115751100918507
+In September 2016, the Board of Trustees voted for her to be the new president at the University of West Florida upon the retirement of Judith A. Bense.
+In 1993 he was Dell's Senior Vice President in charge of products.
+The main architect was the American Kenneth MacKenzie Murchison, who was inspired by a decorative style Spanish planteresque, which are clearly visible in the elements of the shields and shells of the facade.
+A second pole piece in turn surrounds the voice coil.
+The Photo-Matic Code-O-Graph, although not distributed until 1942, was manufactured prior to the Pearl Harbor attack.
+He had long suffered from Alzheimer's disease and had suffered three strokes.
+However, in 1951, a Frenchman named Roger Courteville claimed to have seen an apeman at the same Tarra River where de Loys said he had seen his creatures.
+A native of Shreveport, Louisiana, Clarke originally self-published his first two books via the Internet and independent books stores like Book Soup in Los Angeles, BookPeople in Austin, and Elliott Bay Book Company in Seattle.
+See also Belemnite List of belemnitesReferencesCategory:Belemnites
+Later she made a series of drawings of dancers at the Covent Garden Opera and some landscape sketches of Regents Park in London.
+It also set the stage for the love triangle between Kate, Sawyer, and Jack.
+Referencesmontivagus montivagusCategory:Beetles described in 1825
+"Maybe I Like It" is a song by Danish singer Ida.
+In 1860 he was appointed head of the chemical laboratory of the Jakob Hospital in Leipzig.
+AchievementsReferencesCategory:1933 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:West German male racewalkersCategory:Sportspeople from MagdeburgCategory:Athletes (track and field) at the 1968 Summer OlympicsCategory:Athletes (track and field) at the 1972 Summer OlympicsCategory:Athletes (track and field) at the 1976 Summer OlympicsCategory:Olympic athletes of East Germany
+Soldiers Yearbook 1971, p 189thOfficer strain list of royal Prussian 3rd Foot Guards on foot.
+Her personal bests are 11.44 seconds in the 100 metres (+1.7 m/s, Fukushima 2011) and 23.35 seconds in the 200 metres (+0.4 m/s, Fukuroi 2013).
+Union of African Muslim Scholars (UAMS), is an organization of African Muslim scholars headed by Said Bourhane, founded in 2011, and headquartered in Mali.
+Many people upload their cinnamon challenge to YouTube.
+During the period from 1958 to 1983 Vija Rožlapa participated without interruption in all Latvian women's chess championships.
+In 2011 their song "Wacky's Tackle" was featured in the show True Blood - season 4, episode 8, in a scene described as "Sam apologizes to Luna and Emma asks him to stay"In 2016 they released their 4th CD "Hello Friend" featuring such originals as "What Do You Want on Your Taco?"
+At the 2006 census, its population was 22, in 4 families.
+ReferencesCategory:Tourist attractions in PeshawarCategory:Mughal architecture
+The foundation stone for this bridge was laid in 1827.
+It is administered under Tuni mandal.
+Segala may refer to:Ségala (Midi-Pyrénees), a geographic region around Requista, in the departements of Aveyron and Tarn, southern FranceSegala, TanzaniaSégala, Mali, town and communeSee also Sigala (musician), English DJ and producer Sigala, Hiiu County, village in Hiiu Parish, Hiiu County, Estonia
+Palazzo Torlonia-Bolognetti, at Piazza Venezia (demolished).
+She has represented the Brazilian national team in two Olympics.
+Every area of the store was devoted to Haring's work including floor-to-ceiling murals, which provided a clubhouse atmosphere.
+The story occurs in the vicinity of the Mexico–United States border in 1980 and concerns an illegal drug deal gone awry in the Texas desert back country.
+Masacre Musical () is the debut studio album by American reggaeton performer De La Ghetto, released on October 14, 2008 by Sony Music.
+She won the points race gold and the bronze medals in 3000m Individual Pursuit and road race during the 1998 Central American and Caribbean Games, but failed the doping control with Pseudoephedrine and her medals were stripped.
+You should also not forget that none is above the law” In January 2020, his son Fidel Saba was booked under section 279 and 338 (grievous hurt to any person by doing any act so rashly or negligently as to endanger human life) of IPC for ramming his Honda Jazz car numbered UP16 BJ0537 in a passing woman.
+The attendance on average was 19,600 people in 2004–05, while the average attendance rose to 20,004 in 2006–07.
+Bala Nagamma (Kannada: ಬಾಲ ನಾಗಮ್ಮ) is a 1966 Indian Kannada film, directed by P. R. Kaundinya and produced by Vikram Srinivas.
+From 60% to 80% of Ukrainian-language dwellers communicate through so-called Surzhyk, due to the large influence of Russian culture.
+On one day, 22d October, the group flew 84 Sorties with a total of 104 flying hours.
+Thomas More was also ranked as one of the Best Colleges (Regional Universities – South) by U.S. News & World Report for 2014.
+Saint-Germain-le-Fouilloux is a commune in the Mayenne department in north-western France.
+He played college football at Illinois State.
+The company manufactures and sells sponge iron, mild steel slabs, ferro chrome, iron ore, mild steel, structural, hot rolled plates and coils and coal-based sponge iron plant.
+ReferencesCategory:Rivers of Baden-WürttembergCategory:Rivers of Germany
+ReferencesExternal linksMaplandia World GazetteerCategory:Populated places in Hkamti DistrictCategory:Homalin Township
+For this reason, some of the drawings have been vandalised and there are scratches on the walls.
+At the 2006 census, its population was 68, in 16 families.
+HistoryFOSWAL launched its vision of cultural bonding among the neighboring SAARC countries in 1987, and emerged as the first and the only non government organization working in the specific area of culture, for creating cultural connectivity through a think tank of intellectuals and writers, creative fraternity and peace activities, who have common sensitivities and common concerns for the socio-cultural-political-economic-tribal-gender issues of the region.
+All aspects of life, from perception to reflection to action, are characterised as interpretative and constructional and constituted by signs.
+), 3387 pp.
+At the end of the film, Jimmy runs seemingly aimlessly in different directions in what appears to be him either on the verge of nervous breakdown or spiritual awakening.
+This is a list of the German Media Control Top100 Singles Chart number-ones of 1997.
+Paula Spencer may refer to: Paula Spencer (journalist), American journalist and author Paula Spencer (novel), a 2006 novel by Roddy Doyle
+The whole Act, so far as unrepealed, was repealed by section 1(1) of, and Part IV of the Schedule to, the Statute Law (Repeals) Act 1969.
+ReferencesCategory:Living peopleCategory:New Hampshire DemocratsCategory:Members of the New Hampshire House of RepresentativesCategory:LGBT state legislators in New HampshireCategory:Gay politiciansCategory:21st-century American politiciansCategory:People from Manchester, New HampshireCategory:Year of birth missing (living people)
+BracketIn the round of 16, the winners of one group played the runners-up of another group in the same zone, with the group winners hosting the match.
+She was also nominated for a National Magazine Award for her story on Arianna and Michael Huffington, "Arianna's Virtual Candidate," for Vanity Fair in 1994.
+Hierden has an original distribution because of its country houses in the north of Veluwe.
+U-118 may refer to one of the following German submarines: , a Type UE II submarine launched in 1918 that served in World War I and was surrendered in 1919 During World War I, Germany also had this submarine with a similar name: , a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and surrendered in 1918, a Type XB submarine that served in World War II and was sunk on 12 June 1943Category:Submarines of Germany
+Lake Biržulis is a lake in the Telšiai District of western Lithuania.
+Harold Ernest Thomas Lawrence (1920–1994) was a Canadian naval officer and author.
+As the senior partner in the new coalition, the PSdeG nominated its leader, Emilio Perez Touriño, to serve as Galicia's new president.
+Venue This tournament was held at the Jakarta Convention Center Plenary Hall because the Istora Gelora Bung Karno was being renovated for the 2018 Asian Games.
+In 2014, Stride Rite initiated a campaign in their retail stores in which they collected over 70,000 pairs of shoes to benefit Soles4Souls.
+See also The département of Cher Arrondissements of the Cher department Cantons of the Cher department Communes of the Cher departmentReferencesExternal linksThe canton of Vierzon-1 on the Insee website Vierzon-1
+Stampersgat is a village situated in the municipality of Halderberge, in the north-west of the North Brabant province in the Netherlands.
+The album also reunited him with Tom Shapiro, who had co-produced his first two albums.
+John Beauchamp, 1st Baron Beauchamp (d. 1475) (great-great grandson of Walter de Beauchamp (died 1303/6))Richard Beauchamp, 2nd Baron Beauchamp (1435–1503)Seymour familyViscount Beauchamp, first creation ("of Hache") (1536–1552)The Seymour family inherited the capital manor of Hatch Beauchamp (anciently Hache) due to the marriage of Roger Seymour (d.c.1361) to Cecily Beauchamp (d.1393), the aunt and heiress of John IV de Beauchamp, 3rd Baron Beauchamp (1330-1361), feudal baron of Hatch Beauchamp.
+He represented the 7th Massachusetts congressional district from March 4, 1899, until March 3, 1913, and, after redistricting, represented the 9th Massachusetts congressional district from March 4, 1913 to March 3, 1917.
+The property's landscaping includes mature plantings, some of which may date to its early days.
+Raju Rijal (born 26 September 1996) is a Nepalese cricketer.
+Gray is an inner-city suburb of Palmerston.
+Prior to working at the FAO, he worked as an intern in the Office of the President at the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) in Rome, Italy.
+The following night in their first championship appearance, Rensselaer was facing a Minnesota team that had just set an NCAA record with a 14-1 win in their semifinal game.
+Effects are strained after rather than happened upon.
+ReferencesmontanaCategory:Trees of SumatraCategory:Trees of Peninsular MalaysiaCategory:Trees of BorneoCategory:Critically endangered flora of AsiaCategory:Taxonomy articles created by Polbot
+Stern has also participated in the IRS Commissioner's Art Advisory Panel.
+His surviving works are predominantly Biblical subjects and still-life paintings, although older references note he "was esteemed a good painter especially of portraits".
+In 1893 it was moved to a special annex built at the Museum's Harris Street site.
+During a few months in her teens she dated True Talent coach and singer Danny Saucedo, though during the competition Irewald chose Tommy Körbergs team.
+Track listingAll compositions by Mal Waldron except as indicated Announcement — 1:30 "Blues For F.P."
+UK CD single "That's the Way (My Love Is)" – 3:48 "Stellar" – 6:27 "Daydream" (Live)" – 2:547" vinyl and US CD single "That's the Way (My Love Is)" – 3:48 "Daydream" (Live)" – 2:54ChartsReferencesCategory:The Smashing Pumpkins songsCategory:2007 singlesCategory:Songs written by Billy CorganCategory:Song recordings produced by Billy CorganCategory:Reprise Records singlesCategory:2007 songsCategory:Song recordings produced by Terry DateCategory:Dream pop songs
+The Amazing Spider-Man 2 is a 2014 American film.
+Kanigan is a locality split between the Fraser Coast Region and the Gympie Region, in Queensland, Australia.
+References Category:Populated places in Sirjan County
+He competed in the men's half-heavyweight event at the 1988 Summer Olympics.
+Originally coined "ergosomes" in 1963, they were further characterized by Jonathan Warner, Paul M. Knopf, and Alex Rich.
+It is one of a family of similar studies that were set up at around the same time in six countries across Europe, known as the European Longitudinal Study of Pregnancy and Childhood (ELSPAC).
+AFC Ajax won the championship.
+The company's operations are mainly concentrated on the markets in North- West Europe, Brazil and Indian Pacific, with offices in Norway, Scotland, Australia, Singapore and Brazil.
+Christian "Chris" James Hopkins (born February 26, 1985) is a former American football tight end.
+Other members of the Normalisation Committee include former football players and managers: Faruk Hadžibegić, Dušan Bajević, Sergej Barbarez and Jasmin Baković.
+The Royal Army Pay Corps moved into the barracks in 1987.
+The 2006–07 season saw Spurr hold down a regular place in the starting eleven at left back ahead of the more experienced Peter Gilbert and John Hills.
+She earlier served in the Indiana House of Representatives from 1982 through 1990.
+technology that work on Windows 98, ME, NT, and 2000.
+Published books Homes by Hiawatha 1974 Prize homes 1978, 1981 eds Ranch & modern homes 1978Category:20th-century American architectsCategory:Chickasaw peopleCategory:University of Oklahoma alumniCategory:2003 deathsCategory:1918 births
+The family was knighted in Sweden in 1693 and was immatriculated in to the Finnish nobility in 1818.
+HonoursBarcelonaUEFA Cup Winners' Cup: 1978–79, 1981–82Spanish League: 1984–85Spanish Cup: 1980–81, 1982–83, 1987–88Spanish Superup: 1983Spanish League Cup: 1982–83, 1985–86Personal life His son José Manel (born 1992) is a soccer player for the VCU Rams men's soccer team and for National Premier Soccer League side RVA Football Club.
+By 1884, little remained of Bondevennerne.
+Disc 2: "Gun Cupboard Love" (Thorn) "Alfie" (Burt Bacharach, Hal David) "Take Me" (Cecil Womack, Linda Womack) "Pigeons in the Attic Room" (Thorn, Watt)DVD Videos "Missing" (Todd Terry Remix) "Single" "The Only Living Boy in New York" "Temperamental" "Love is Here Where I Live" "Five Fathoms" "Each and Every One" "Driving" "Walking Wounded"Live "Before Today" "Temperamental" "Protection"Demos "Frozen River" "Mirrorball" "Flipside"Extras include: Photo gallery, interactive video mix of "Temperamental"ReferencesCategory:2002 greatest hits albumsCategory:Everything but the Girl compilation albums
+Before they could warn the inhabitants of the town they heard a loud bang and a wave of tailings and water flooded the town.
+Teresa Clarís is a housewife, married with a prestigious Barcelona lawyer.
+The anterior spinal cord is at increased risk for infarction because it is supplied by the single anterior spinal artery, which has few collateral unlike the posterior spinal cord which is supplied by two posterior spinal arteries.
+15415 sample description (Lunar and Planetary Institute)Category:Lunar scienceCategory:Igneous rocksCategory:Apollo 15Category:Lunar samplesCategory:David ScottCategory:James Irwin
+ReferencesExternal links Official Website of Pierrette Herzberger-FofanaCategory:1949 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Alliance 90/The Greens MEPsCategory:MEPs for Germany 2019–2024Category:21st-century women MEPs for Germany
+ReferencesCategory:1880 birthsCategory:1963 deathsCategory:Athletes (track and field) at the 1908 Summer OlympicsCategory:British male racewalkersCategory:Olympic athletes of Great BritainCategory:Place of birth missing
+ReferencesCategory:PleosporaceaeCategory:Monotypic Dothideomycetes genera
+David was the third king of the united Kingdom of Israel and JudeahKing David may also refer to:People David I (disambiguation) David II (disambiguation) David III of Tao David IV of Georgia (1073–1125) David V of Georgia (died 1155) David VI of Georgia (1225–1293) David VII of Georgia (1215–1270) David VIII of Georgia (1273–1311) David IX of Georgia (died 1360) David X of Kartli (1482–1526) Capleton (born 1967), Jamaican reggae artist also known as King David Kalākaua (1836–1891), born David Laʻamea Kamanakapuʻu Mahinulani Nalaiaehuokalani Lumialani Kalākaua, the penultimate Hawaiian monarchOther uses King David (film), 1985 biographical film starring Richard Gere King David (musical), 1997 musical created by Tim Rice and Alan Menken Le roi David, composition by Arthur Honegger The King David Hotel in JerusalemSee also David King (disambiguation) King David School (disambiguation)
+In 1940, he took command of the 11th Infantry Regiment.
+ListA partial listing of former non-decimal currencies (giving only units of account):Ancient Greece — 1 drachma = 6 obols Denmark — 1 Krone = 8 Marks = 128 Skillings = 1536 Pfennigs; also 6 Marks = 1 Rigsbank DalerFrance — 1 livre = 20 sols = 240 deniers; also 20 francs = 1 Napoléon (and other less common denominations)German CoinsFrankfurt — 1 Reichstaler = 90 Kreuzer = 360 Pfennige OR 1 Reichsgulden = 60 Kreuzer = 240 PfennigeHanover — 1 Thaler = 36 Mariengroschen = 288 PfennigeHamburg — 1 Thaler = 3 Mark = 48 Schillinge = 96 Pfennige; later 12 Pfennige = 1 Schilling Prussia — 1 Thaler = 30 Silbergroschen India Calcutta and Madras — 1 rupee = 16 annas = 64 paise = 192 pies Also, 1 gold mohur = 15 silver rupees Bombay — 1 rupee = 4 quarters = 400 reas Iran- 1 Rial = 20 ShahiJapan — separate gold, silver, and copper currencies, but linked during the Edo periodGold: 1 ryō = 4 bu = 16 shuSilver: 1 momme = 10 fun = 100 rin (1 ryō = officially 50 momme, market rates fluctuated with supply and demand and the value of the metal minted see Japan's Currency at Marteau)Copper: 1 kan = 1000 mon (1 ryō = 4000 mon; hence, 1 bu = 1 kan)Netherlands — 1 gulden = 20 stuivers = 160 duit = 320 penningenOttoman Empire — 1 kuruş = 40 para = 120 akçePoland — 1 złoty = 30 groschenPortugal — 1 real = 840 dinheirosRoman Empire — 1 aureus = 25 denarii = 100 sestertii = 400 asses = 1600 quadrantesSiam (now Thailand) — 1 tical = 4 salung = 8 fuang = 16 song phai = 32 phai = 64 att = 128 solotSpanish Empire — 1 peso = 8 reales (de plata fuerte) = 680 maravedíes (the pesos are the "pieces of eight" often referred to in stories about pirates, such as Treasure Island, vellon means the coin minted of an alloy with a low silver content.)
+Jane and Sir Edward Stradling had three sons and a daughter, Katherine.
+They played at the Stade Dunlop, which has a capacity of 9,000.
+SpeciesC. aequalis (Walker, 1848)C. aequicellulatus (Frey, 1954)C. alaskaensis Hardy, 1949C. albobasalis Brunetti, 1920C. albopictus Brunetti, 1909C. aldrichi James, 1936C. alpicola (Pokorny, 1886)C. alternatus Brunetti, 1920C. amamiensis Nagatomi, 1968C. americanus (Schiner, 1868)C. amurensis Soboleva, 1986C. andersoni Leonard, 1930C. andicola Lindner, 1924C. andringitrensis Stuckenberg, 1965C. androgynus Paramonov, 1962C. angustifacies Hardy, 1949C. angustifrons Frey, 1954C. ankaratrae Stuckenberg, 1965C. anthracinus Bigot, 1887C. antipoda Bigot, 1887C. antongilensis Stuckenberg, 1965C. apicalis Wulp, 1882C. apicimaculatus Yang & Yang, 1991C. apyros Séguy, 1948C. arctica (Frey, 1918)C. arctiventris James, 1936C. argenteofasciatus (Bromley, 1931)C. argenteus Paramonov, 1962C. argyrophorus (Schiner, 1868)C. asiaticus Lindner, 1923C. asiliformis Preyssler, 1791C. ater (Williston, 1896)C. aterrimus (Williston, 1901)C. atricornis Stuckenberg, 1965C. auratus (Fabricius, 1805)C. aymara Lindner, 1924C. azurinus Frey, 1954C. basalis Walker, 1860C. basifasciatus Paramonov, 1962C. basiflavus Yang & Yang, 1992C. basilaris (Say, 1823)C. beameri Hardy, 1949C. bequaerti Curran, 1931C. betsileorum Stuckenberg, 1965C. binoculatus Edwards, 1915C. binotatus Loew, 1871C. birmanensis Brunetti, 1920C. bisectus Oldroyd, 1939C. bistriatipennis Brunetti, 1927C. boettcheri Frey, 1954C. brunneifrons Kertész, 1902C. caducus (Wiedemann, 1828)C. calchaqui Coscaron & Coscaron, 1995C. calopterus (Schiner, 1868)C. choui Yang & Yang, 1989C. chrysopiliformis (Lindner, 1924)C. clarapex Frey, 1954C. claricinctus Lindner, 1923C. clarus (Walker, 1852)C. clemendoti Stuckenberg, 1965C. cochinensis Brunetti, 1920C. coeruleothorax Lindner, 1925C. cognatus Stuckenberg, 1965C. collesi Paramonov, 1962C. commoni Paramonov, 1962C. connexus Johnson, 1912C. consanguineus Schiner, 1868C. correctus Osten Sacken, 1882C. cricosphaerota Speiser, 1914C. cubensis Curran, 1931C. dauricus Frey, 1954C. davisi Johnson, 1912C. decisus (Walker, 1857)C. decoratus de Meijere, 1911C. depressiconus Frey, 1954C. dilatus Cresson, 1919C. diplostigma Bezzi, 1917C. ditissimis Bezzi, 1912C. dives Loew, 1871C. divisus Hardy, 1949C. donato Curran, 1931C. edgari Paramonov, 1962C. egregius de Meijere, 1919C. elegans Schiner, 1868C. erythrophthalmus Loew, 1840C. facetticus Paramonov, 1962C. fasciatus (Say, 1823)C. fascipennis (Brunetti, 1920)C. fasciventris Curran, 1931C. ferruginosus (Wiedemann, 1819)C. fimbriatus Stuckenberg, 1997C. flaveolus (Meigen, 1820)C. flavibarbus Adams, 1904C. flaviscutellus Yang & Yang, 1989C. flavopilosus Brunetti, 1920C. flavopunctatus Brunetti, 1909C. foedus Loew, 1861C. fulvidus Bigot, 1891C. fuscicinctus Brunetti, 1927C. fuscipes Bigot, 1887C. gansuensis Yang & Yang, 1991C. gemmiferus Frey, 1954C. georgianus Hardy, 1949C. gilvipennis Edwards, 1919C. golbachi Coscaron & Coscaron, 1995C. grandis Yang & Yang, 1993C. gratiosus Paramonov, 1962C. gravelyi Brunetti, 1920C. griffithi Johnson, 1897C. griseipennis Bezzi, 1912C. griveaudi Stuckenberg, 1965C. guangxiensis Yang & Yang, 1992C. guianicus Curran, 1931C. guttipennis Walker, 1861C. guttulatus de Meijere, 1914C. hakusanus Nagatomi, 1978C. hardyi Nagatomi & Evenhuis, 1989C. helvolus (Meigen, 1820)C. heroicus Paramonov, 1962C. howei Paramonov, 1962C. huashanus Yang & Yang, 1989C. hubeiensis Yang & Yang, 1991C. humeralis Brunetti, 1912C. humilis Loew, 1874C. hybridus Lindner, 1924C. iani Paramonov, 1962C. illustris Frey, 1954C. imitator Paramonov, 1962C. impar Walker, 1861C. incidens Curran, 1927C. indris Stuckenberg, 1965C. inka Lindner, 1924C. insularis Schiner, 1868C. intermedius Bezzi, 1895C. invalidus Williston, 1901C. irroratus Schiner, 1868C. itoi Nagatomi, 1958C. ivontakae Stuckenberg, 1965C. jamaicensis (Johnson, 1894)C. keiseri Stuckenberg, 1965C. kimoroensis Stuckenberg, 1965C. kincaidi Hardy, 1949C. komurae Matsumura, 1911C. kyotoensis Frey, 1954C. laetus Zetterstedt, 1842C. lateralis Oldroyd, 1939C. latifrons Bezzi, 1898C. latipennis Stuckenberg, 1965C. latistigma Curran, 1931C. latus Brunetti, 1920C. lemur Stuckenberg, 1965C. leonardi Curran, 1931C. leptiformis Kertész, 1902C. lii Yang.
+External linksDark Shadows - Blood Dance"Blood Dance Recording Photos on David Selby's Official Website""Blood Dance on writer Stephen Mark Rainey's website"ReferencesCategory:Dark Shadows audio playsCategory:2010 audio playsCategory:Fiction set in 1929Category:Chicago in fiction
+Preliminary roundTies† – After extra timeReplays† – After extra timeFirst roundTiesReplays† – After extra timeSecond roundTiesReplays† – After extra timeFourth roundTiesReplaysFifth roundTiesReplaysSixth roundTiesReplays† After Extra TimeSemi-finalsFirst legSecond legGrays Athletic win 7–0 on aggregateHucknall Town win 5–3 on aggregateFinalReferences Football Club History Database: FA Trophy 2004-05SpecificCategory:2004–05 domestic association football cupsLeague2004-05
+Victor Gustav Bloede may refer to:Victor Gustav Bloede (chemist) (1849–1937), chemist, manufacturer and businessmanVictor Gustav Bloede (advertising) (1920–1999), advertising executive
+Mike or Michael Keith may refer to: Mike Keith (sportscaster), American sports announcer, play by play voice of the Tennessee Titans Mike Keith (mathematician) (born 1955), American mathematician and writer Michael C. Keith (born 1945), American media historian and author Michael Keith, musician in 112See also Michael Edwin Keefe (1844–1933), building contractor and political figure in Nova Scotia, Canada Michael O'Keefe (disambiguation)
+His parents were Andrew MacGregor and Mary Dove, and he arrived in New South Wales around 1878, settling in Broken Hill.
+Sjors Verdellen (born 29 November 1981) is a Dutch former professional footballer who played as a centre back.
+This feature was later implemented in Windows Phone as a part of Bing Mobile.
+Sokolniki () is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Maszewo, within Goleniów County, West Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-western Poland.
+Bennett appeared on Ken Reid's TV Guidance Counselor podcast on February 24, 2016.
+He scored his record extending 10th SCCA Pro Racing Drivers’ Championship on the strength of two race victories.
+Baba Nazar (, also Romanized as Bābā Naz̧ar; also known as Bābā Nazar) is a village in Chaman Rural District, Takht-e Soleyman District, Takab County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran.
+Shanuka Dulaj (born 4 March 1995) is a Sri Lankan cricketer.
+Critical responseNew Zealand criticsLocal reviews were mixed.
+Adèle's family worried for her well-being, and tried to track her whereabouts by letters: In 1866, Pinson was stationed to Barbados, the British colonial centre in the Caribbean region.
+It is found in North America.
+It can change its color and texture to simulate flesh, clothing, and other nonmetallic materials.
+He then conceals himself with the other attendants in a sort of alcove at the top of the mount.
+A little later Col. Estill established Estill's Station about two miles east of the Fort.
+The station has been part of the Bremen S-Bahn since December 2010.
+SeedsChampion seeds are indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which those seeds were eliminated.
+St. John the Baptist may refer to:People John the Baptist, a religious figure in Christianity, Islam, and MandaeanismArt Saint John the Baptist, also known as Youth with Ram, an oil painting by the Caravaggio St. John the Baptist, an oil painting by Leonardo da VinciChurches St. John the Baptist, Milton, an Episcopal church in Sussex County, Delaware St. John the Baptist Roman Catholic Church (Wilder, Kentucky) St. John the Baptist Church, Pottsville, PA, a Roman Catholic church in Pottsville, PA St. John the Baptist, New Brighton, Minnesota St. John the Baptist Ukrainian Catholic National Shrine, a prominent Ukrainian Catholic church in Ottawa, Canada St. John the Baptist Church, Coventry in West Midlands, England St John the Baptist's Church, Hove, EnglandSee also Saint-Jean-Baptiste (disambiguation) San Juan Bautista (disambiguation) Saint John (disambiguation) Baptist (disambiguation)
+() "Solutions for a Cleaner, Greener Planet: Environmental Chemistry."
+The song was first performed live on December 3rd, 1999 during McCartney's interview on Parkinson with David Gilmour playing the guitar solo.
+The Miss Universo Uruguay 2014 was held on January 19, 2014.
+There were twelve teams who played two-round match for the title.
+Chah-e Shirkhan () may refer to: Chah-e Shirkhan, Iranshahr Chah-e Shirkhan, Sib and Suran
+The team participates in the Atlantic Division of the Atlantic Coast Conference.
+Peter Wayne Goode, Jr. (born August 20, 1937) is an American former politician in the state of Missouri.
+The current structure features a mixture of Middle Eastern and European architectural styles.
+It contains a canvas depicting an Adoration by the Shepherds attributed to Carlo Maratta, and another depicting the Madonna and Child with Saints Joseph and Aloyisus Gonzaga painted in 1784 by B. Raoni.
+Edmund Hastings may refer to:Edmund Hastings, 1st Baron HastingsEdmund Hastings (MP) for Yorkshire and Northumberland
+Another monument stands in the town plaza of Pidigan, Abra, as a reminder of the heroine, whom the town claims as a native.
+ReferencesCategory:Energy companies of South AfricaCategory:2003 establishments in South AfricaCategory:Renewable energy companies of Africa
+Started his career as Assistant surgeon in Government of Tamil Nadu Medical services.
+Yedidia Vital () born 2 October 1984 in Ramallah, Israel is an actor and protagonist of the Israeli television series Split and HaShminiya.
+He is currently involved in teaching AIDS awareness to children and education in the use of condoms, travelling to schools all over South Africa to spread the message of safe, responsible sex.
+After Szymczyk convinced King that he could improve his sound to make him more appealing to a wider audience, King himself agreed to let Szymczyk produce for him.
+Legislative Assembly elections were held in Sikkim in 1985 to elect the 32 members of the second Legislative Assembly.
+The work done at Kütralkura is being used as template for a similar initiative in Palena Province.
+John Breeden was one among the five delegates who visited England.
+The Diemech TP 100 is an American turboprop and turboshaft aircraft engine under development by Diemech Turbine Solutions of DeLand, Florida.
+Treasurer Eric Roozendaal said it represented a rise in extremism in the party and called for Spence to be disendorsed as a candidate.
+Apex is acute to acuminate, base cuneate to broadly cuneate.
+It is an example of Brutalist architecture in Israel.
+By August 15, WGBA and WACY's channel slots on Time Warner Cable were replaced with a simulcast of GSN, with Starz Kids & Family airing on the channel 994 subchannel slot usually carrying MeTV.
+8,522,719).
+HeatsFinal The final was held on March 21.
+The most successful composer so far is Mikhail Marandyuk of Ukraine, who won ten gold medals and two silver medals.
+Carpobrotus ("Sour-fig") species are generally coastal plants, and of the seven species which occur in South Africa, this is the only species which naturally occurs inland in mountain fynbos.
+Faruk Bihorac (, born 12 May 1996) is a Serbian professional footballer who plays as a centre-back for Bosnian Premier League club Velež Mostar.
+Berry van Driel (born December 26, 1984) is a Dutch professional baseball player.
+Fish species present in the reservoir are smallmouth bass, white sucker, northern pike, yellow perch, rock bass, and walleye.
+She competed as a student at Concord High School.
+Wet wings are common among most civilian designs, from large transport aircraft, such as airliners, to small general aviation aircraft.
+Eoophyla basilissa is a moth in the family Crambidae.
+The book is based on an extensive diary maintained by his aide de camp, Chester B. Hansen, who ghost wrote the book using that diary.
+Dwight Schultz gets to act as two different characters in the same skin, as Barclay, and as the hologram based on Barclay.
+On 4 June 2007 the festival's website announced that the festival was sold out.
+The both species Actinosporangium violaceum and Actinosporangium vitaminophilum are now Streptomyces paradoxus and Streptomyces vitaminophilus.
+The racial makeup of the city was 98.6% White, 0.1% African American, 0.8% Native American, and 0.4% from two or more races.
+The maneuver can be done at any time during the respiratory cycle and it does not inhibit venous return to the heart.
+In 2003, she won another World Single Distance silver on the 1500 m.In addition, Tabata has won numerous titles and medals at the Asian Championships that are used to qualify for the World Allround Championships, at the Asian Single Distance Championships, and at Japanese Championships (both in Allround and Single Distance).
+All these institutions come under the guidance of the director, IHRD, Trivandrum.
+The resolution was adopted by ten votes to none, with the United Kingdom abstaining.
+Kulu may refer to:Places Kulu, Iran, a village in Lorestan Province, Iran Kulu, Konya, a town in Konya Province, Turkey Kulu, Nallıhan, a village in Ankara Province, Turkey Kulu, Suluova, a village in Amasya Province, Turkey Kulu Bay Resort, a resort on Beqa island, FijiOther Kulū Isfandiyār, a Persian king of the 14th century Kulu language, a Benue-Congo language of NigeriaSee also Kullu (disambiguation)
+Matthias Lehmann (born 28 May 1983) is a German former professional football who played as a midfielder.
+Service1934 Commanding Officer 205th Regiment, 103rd Brigade, 35th DivisionCommanding Officer 103rd Brigade, 35th Division1937–1943 Chief of Staff 81st Army1943–1946 General Officer Commanding 35th Division, 81st Army1946–1947 General Officer Commanding 81st Division1947–1948 Commander in Chief Haigu Army Group1948–1949 General Officer Commanding 81st Army1949 Revolts against the Nationalist Government1949 Joins the People's Liberation ArmySee also Ma cliqueNotesReferences The Generals of WWII, Generals from China, Lieutenant-General Ma Duijing Hutchings, Graham.
+Granica is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Leśnica, within Strzelce County, Opole Voivodeship, in south-western Poland.
+The 1993 Grand National was void because the recall flag to signal a false start was not unfurled, so that most jockeys continued to race.
+After his retirement, he founded Vizcarra Consulting Group, which focuses on helping chief executive officers develop business strategy.
+Lepidanthrax disjunctus is a species of bee flies in the family Bombyliidae.
+Some historians believe that it was the site of an already existing chaitya, which was then reconstructed and named Yudagana Chaitya.
+This page contains the list of Indonesian animals.
+Iceland's current ambassador to Finland is Árni Þór Sigurðsson.
+Track listing "I Wait for You (By the Telephone)" – 3:26 "F>I>G>U>R>I>N>E" – 1:10 "New Mate" – 4:14 "An Electronic Address" – 4:09 "S.O.S."
+Previous to 2012, Brussels formed together with half of the province of Flemish Brabant the Brussels-Halle-Vilvoorde constituency.
+Category:Villages in Cheb District
+People with that name include: Allen Spraggett (born 1932), Canadian writer and broadcaster Kevin Spraggett (born 1954), Canadian chess grandmasterSee also
+He has worked with many renowned conductors including Frédéric Chaslin, Zubin Mehta and Bramwell Tovey.
+People such as Janko Gagić, Arsenije Loma, Konda Bimbaša, Zeka Buljubaša, Veljko Petrović and Petar Dobrnjac had the rank of buljubaša in the prelude and during the Serbian Revolution.
+He died in 1938.
+The Canadian Journal of Civil Engineering is the official journal of the Canadian Society for Civil Engineering.
+Non-Indian scholars Col. Colin McKenzi - Later 18th century, for the first time he studied Kannada inscriptions.
+ReferencesExternal linksCategory:Living peopleCategory:ShowrunnersCategory:Television program creatorsCategory:Australian screenwritersCategory:Australian television producersCategory:Women television producersCategory:Australian film producersCategory:Women television writersCategory:Year of birth missing (living people)
+References Category:Rural localities in Vologda Oblast
+As the most of the land in Vojvodina is being used for extensive agriculture for centuries, Kinđa represents a genetic reserve for the original steppe and meadow flora.
+The team won their first non-friendly match on 8 February 1994 when they defeated Georgia 1–0 in the 1994 Rothmans International Tournament.
+Mohammad Nouri may refer to: Mohammad Nouri (singer), Iranian folk and pop singer Mohammad Nouri (footballer), Iranian footballer
+Singles main draw entrantsSeeds 1 Rankings are as of May 25, 2015.
+Because of summer heat, chilled sweetened drink made from milk, sugar, essence and water, called chhabeel is freely distributed in Gurdwaras and in neighbourhoods to everybody irrespective of their religious beliefs.
+Albert Falls is a town in Umgungundlovu District Municipality in the KwaZulu-Natal province of South Africa.
+GallerySee also List of NGC objects Planetary nebulaReferencesExternal links The Hubble European Space Agency Information Centre – Hubble picture and information on NGC 3242 NGC3242 on astro-pics.com FLIERs in NGC 3242Category:Planetary nebulae3242059b17850207Category:Hydra (constellation)
+Joe and Transformers fictional universe as seen in Marvel Comics Biggles, Ontario Carl Barât, an English musician known for Dirty Pretty Things and The Libertines, nicknamed 'Biggles' by Peter Doherty The Biggles, Billy and Ruby Biggle, the main characters of the Kidsongs videos and TV showSee also Boggle (disambiguation)
+Seattle's former Denny Hill was named after him; it was flattened in a series of regrading projects and its former site is now known as the Denny Regrade.
+ReferencesCategory:1925 birthsCategory:Canadian people of English descentCategory:Canadian rugby union playersCategory:England international rugby union playersCategory:English people of Canadian descentCategory:English rugby union playersCategory:2014 deathsCategory:Sportspeople from VancouverCategory:People educated at St John's School, Leatherhead
+She was a college dean and public high school teacher.
+Kinnison is a surname.
+Publishers Weekly called the book an "occasionally frustrating yet often dazzling travel memoir".
+He graduated from the King George Medical College where he was admitted after his fifth attempt.
+It was named by the Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names (US-ACAN) after Rossman W. Smith, an ionospheric physicist at Eights Station, Antarctica in 1965, the Station Scientific Leader at Byrd Station, Antarctica in 1967, and a glaciologist on the Queen Maud Land Traverse, Antarctica in 1968, when it was still "Terra Incognita".
+This marked the 4th meeting between the two conference rivals this season, with Oregon State leading the series 2–1.
+There is also an engraving in the cave, which reads H.K.
+Dave Simpson of The Guardian wrote: "Santigold gives 'Don't Play No Game That I Can't Win' some instantly infectious pop reggae sunshine."
+Equitable Life may refer to: The Equitable Life Assurance Society, a life insurance company in the United Kingdom AXA Equitable Life Insurance Company, formerly The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United StatesSee also Equitable Life Building (disambiguation)
+REDIRECT 1991 United States House of Representatives electionsPennsylvania 1991 02Pennsylvania 1991 021991 02Pennsylvania 02United States House of Representatives 1991 02
+As minister of this chapel Ashworth was brought into close contact with the poorest people of a great factory town.
+Engineering and Research Corporation (ERCO) was started by Henry Berliner in 1930.
+Brandell left the Wolverines to play in the minor leagues for the Newark Bears, a Double-A Team in the International League, for at least one year before most baseball players were called off to fight in World War I.
+Keddy Lesporis (born 27 December 1988) is a St Lucian cricketer from a fishing town called Laboire.
+However, the response from Benedict is considered to be a forgery.
+Track listing Either Way – 2:16 Darden Road – 4:20 Where Losers Do – 3:24 Hello Lovely – 2:01 Brother, Sister – 5:49 Khima – 2:23 Borderline – 3:42 Highlight on the Hill – 3:23 Pleiades – 2:54 A Place for Me – 5:27 Return to Darden Road – 3:21 The Man Grows – 3:30 Widow at the Wake – 4:41ReferencesCategory:2011 albumsCategory:Beta Radio albums
+Lines servicedHokkaido Railway CompanySōya Main LineAdjacent stationsExternal linksEkikara Time Table - JR Toyoshimizu StationCategory:Railway stations in Hokkaido PrefectureCategory:Railway stations opened in 1950
+AdministrationThe tehsil of Bhakkar is subdivided into 26 Union Councils.
+It lies approximately east of Bydgoszcz and north-west of Toruń.
+Viel is a given name and a surname.
+ReferencesSources Category:1917 birthsCategory:2004 deathsCategory:Illinois state court judgesCategory:Judges of the United States District Court for the Northern District of IllinoisCategory:United States district court judges appointed by Gerald FordCategory:20th-century American judgesCategory:United States Army officersCategory:University of Illinois College of Law alumni
+CareerBorn in Montebelluna, Gatto left at the end of the 2013 season, and joined for the 2014 season.
+Reproduction is the debut novel by Canadian writer Ian Williams, published in 2019 by Penguin Random House Canada.
+H.R.
+These are the results for the 34th edition of the Ronde van Nederland cycling race, which was held from August 15 to August 19, 1994.
+ReferencesCategory:Railway stations in ShaanxiCategory:Railway stations in China opened in 2013Category:Xi'an Metro stations
+ReferencesCategory:Gewogs of BhutanCategory:Sarpang District
+The End of Major Combat OperationsPublished in April 2010, Mc Donell's fourth book reports about the war in Iraq.
+He resigned his commission and studied music in France, with Jules Massenet, and later in Italy (Milan) between 1886 and 1890.
+He was elected as a Federalist candidate to the Tenth United States Congress and to the four succeeding Congresses, serving from March 4, 1807 to March 3, 1817.
+Chapoli is a village in Belgaum district in the southern state of Karnataka, India.
+The student was told at the interview that he was to be awarded the PhD degree and was subsequently mailed a degree certificate.
+Background & educationAnup Singh was born on 13 August 1949 to Tarlok Singh and Narinder Kaur in Masaka, Uganda.
+Ohrobec is a village and municipality in Prague-West District in the Central Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic.
+If the clinical trial results show that therapeutic effect of the drug outweighs negative side effects then the sponsor cab then to file a New Drug Submission.
+Petola Visitor Centre, Kuhmo was founded to provide information about large carnivores in Finland.
+They competed in the Hazfi Cup.
+The artwork of unique decorative metal and terra cotta is by Rene Paul Chambellan.
+Kumaresan gives two more chicks as replacement.
+Junri Namigata and Kotomi Takahata were the defending champions, but both players chose to participate with different partners.
+It has a population of 133.
+The site's critics consensus reads, "Sebergs frustratingly superficial treatment of a fascinating true story does a disservice to its subject -- and Kristen Stewart's performance in the central role."
+Pirozhkov (, from пирожок meaning pirozhok, a small pie) is a Russian masculine surname, its feminine counterpart is Pirozhkova.
+According to the 2002 census, the village has a population of 70 people.
+He was buried at the Glenwood Cemetery in Lockport.
+The square of size 8 composed of gnomons looks like this:To transform from the n-square (the square of size n) to the (n + 1)-square, one adjoins 2n + 1 elements: one to the end of each row (n elements), one to the end of each column (n elements), and a single one to the corner.
+By late 1984, Models relocated to Sydney and Duffield – with his crucial influence on the band's sound – was forced out under acrimonious circumstances to be replaced by Roger Mason (ex- James Freud's Berlin) on keyboards and James Valentine on saxophone.
+On 14 July 2012 the suspension was lifted and Kuwaiti athletes were allowed to participate in the 2012 Summer Olympics under their own flag.
+ReferencesCategory:1959 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Spanish male equestriansCategory:Olympic equestrians of SpainCategory:Equestrians at the 1984 Summer OlympicsCategory:Equestrians at the 1988 Summer OlympicsCategory:Equestrians at the 1992 Summer OlympicsCategory:Equestrians at the 2000 Summer OlympicsCategory:Sportspeople from Seville
+1, pp.
+Newport City F.C.
+comparable to then available fiber-optic counterparts.
+Those Episcopalian 'Non-Jurors' who refused were branded as Jacobites and ejected from their livings, and Skye tradition records Rev.
+Later life In 1988 Geller retired from radio, selling his station for $1 million.
+__NOTOC__This is a list of the first five seasons of what is now the Tulsa Golden Hurricane football program.
+His highest first-class score and only century was 146 against Canterbury in 1967–68 (he also took 6 for 68 and 1 for 13 in the same match).
+The goal of the new institute was to reinvigorate formal architectural education with a keener sense of social conscience.
+As a result it is often used as a kind of national anthem by nationalist Aromanians.
+At Chancellorsville, Johnston was given command of the 12th North Carolina Infantry, after that unit had lost all of its field officers.
+The soil in lake area is silty clay loam to clay loam.
+Ford Motor Company sponsors all three of the season-ending races; the races have the names Ford 400, Ford 300 and Ford 200, respectively, and the weekend is marketed as Ford Championship Weekend.
+The plant blooms between March and August producing brown flowers.
+List of architects involved in the Gothic Revival.
+Episode list – indicates the candidate won – indicates the celebrity wonUnbroadcast pilotSeries 1Series 2Series 2 began on 19 April 2009 and contains seven episodes.
+Shringverpur is mentioned as the capital of the famous kingdom of Nishadraj or the 'King of Fishermen'.
+History After the establishment of the first Sinhalese temple called Bodhi Langka Ram Vihar in Perak of British Malaya in 1889, a second temple was proposed by the Sinhalese community in 1894 to be construct in an area within the administration capital of Kuala Lumpur where large numbers of their community civil servants are living and working.
+C. bombi’s dominant route of infection into Bombus individuals is by ingestion of the infectious agents.
+According to Simonds d'Ewes, who attended his lectures on Demosthenes and gives a slight sketch of his personality, Downes was accounted "the ablest Grecian of Christendom."
+The Second Serbian Uprising (1815–1817) under the leadership of Miloš Obrenović started in this village.
+In basketball, he averaged 10.5 points per game as a senior.
+Brand realizes Kristin herself is being stalked and needs protection from the invisible threat.
+Hugo André Rodrigues Seco (born 17 June 1988) is a Portuguese professional footballer who plays for S.C. Farense as a winger.
+Exotic flavors of Indonesian spices such as nutmeg, cloves and cinnamon have attracted traders.
+It is similar to Pinheyschna subpupillata and Zosteraeschna usambarica, but has an anchor- or T-shaped mark on the frons.
+He was governor of Mosul during the reign of Rashidun Caliph Umar.
+See alsoList of rivers of BavariaReferencesCategory:Rivers of BavariaCategory:Rivers of Germany
+CBS 42 may refer to: KEYE-TV, Austin, Texas WIAT, Birmingham, Alabama
+ReferencesFurther reading Christensen, Thomas The Cambridge History of Western Music Theory (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002), Grout, Donald J. et.
+Vahlde is a municipality in the district of Rotenburg, in Lower Saxony, Germany.
+The Judean Mountains can be separated to a number of sub-regions, including the Mount Hebron ridge, the Jerusalem ridge and the Judean slopes.
+Four Hearts may refer to:Four Hearts (1939 film), a 1939 Argentine filmFour Hearts (1941 film), a 1941 Soviet film4 Hearts, a 2009 Portuguese film
+Cırdaxan or Dzhirdakhan or Dzhyrdakhan may refer to:Cırdaxan, Barda, AzerbaijanCırdaxan, Samukh, AzerbaijanCırdaxan, Yevlakh, Azerbaijan
+Notable people with the surname include:Andrés Venegas García (1848–1939), Costa Rican politicianCharlie Venegas (born 1967), American speedway riderErika Venegas (born 1988), Mexican footballerFrancisco Venegas (1525-1595), Spanish painterFrancisco Eduardo Venegas (born 1998), Mexican footballerFrancisco Javier Venegas (1754–1838), Spanish military officer and viceroyGuillermo Venegas Lloveras (1915–1993), Puerto Rican songwriterJuan Evangelista Venegas (1929–1980s), Puerto Rican boxerJulieta Venegas (born 1970), Mexican musician and singer Karen Paulina Rojo Venegas, alcaldessa of AntofagastaKevin Venegas (born 1989), American soccer playerLuis Gerardo Venegas (born 1984), Mexican footballerLuis Venegas (born 1979), Spanish magazine publisherLuis Venegas de Henestrosa (c. 1510–1570), Spanish composerMiguel Venegas (1680–1764), Mexican jesuitPascual Venegas Filardo (1911–2003), Venezuelan poet, writer and journalistRosa Venegas, Peruvian politicianSocorro Venegas (born 1972), Mexican writerCategory:Spanish-language surnames
+Woodworth returned to Florida Gulf Coast and served as their pitching coach in 2015 and 2016.
+Bulletin of the Faculty of Education & Human Sciences, Yamanashi University, Volume 1, number 1, 24-30.
+In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB).
+ReferencesCategory:Union councils of Khushab DistrictCategory:Populated places in Khushab District
+For example, the outermost eight circles of holes include uniformly spaced holes, in which the number of holes increases along a harmonic series, so that the eight notes of a musical scale can be played by directing an air jet sequentially at each circle.
+The technique, developed by Mark Duchaineau, involved writing the data on spiralling paths on the disk rather than in concentric circles.
+See alsoReferencesExternal links 18th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry WebsiteTouch the Elbow – Blogging the Civil War by researchers of the 18th MassachusettsCategory:1831 birthsCategory:1904 deathsCategory:Boston University alumniCategory:Anglican priest converts to Roman CatholicismCategory:American Episcopal priestsCategory:19th-century American historiansCategory:American magazine editorsCategory:19th-century American novelistsCategory:Union Army chaplainsCategory:American male novelistsCategory:19th-century American male writersCategory:American male non-fiction writers
+Dowlatabad (, also Romanized as Dowlatābād) is a village in Kuh Panj Rural District, in the Central District of Bardsir County, Kerman Province, Iran.
+Nearest placesNeighbouring towns and villages are Egham, Wraysbury, Ashford, Stanwell, Laleham and Chertsey.
+The film was released on Blu-ray and DVD by Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment in North America as Wings of Life on April 16, 2013.
+This is a list of Bien de Interés Cultural landmarks in the Province of Palencia, Spain.
+Alois Löcherer (14 August 1815 – 15 July 1862) was a professional German photographer active in the mid-nineteenth century.
+Characters is the main character of the series.
+The Iron Horsemen Motorcycle Club is an American outlaw motorcycle club that was founded in Cincinnati, Ohio in the mid-1960s.
+Production of all variants was discontinued shortly thereafter.
+Dirty Pretty Things may refer to: Dirty Pretty Things (band), a band formed in the United Kingdom in 2005, by two former members of The Libertines Dirty Pretty Things (film), a movie released in 2002
+The economic activity that gave rise to the occupation of the place was the cultivation of sugarcane.
+The Oshawa Generals won four in 1939, 1940, 1944 & 1990, the Quebec Remparts won two in 1971 & 2006, the Kelowna Rockets won in 2004, and the Rimouski Océanic won in 2000.
+ReferencesCategory:NitrobenzenesCategory:O-Methylated phenolsCategory:VanilloidsCategory:Aromatic ketones
+The buildings appear to be modelled partly after southern Italian architecture.
+His grandfather, Henry Roll, played a first-class match for Warwickshire in 1927.
+It is endemic to Yemen.
+Clare de kitchen old folks young folksClare de kitchen old folks young folksOld Virginny never tire.
+References Category:Rural localities in BashkortostanCategory:Rural localities in Yanaulsky District
+On February 11, 2006, the station changed its call sign to WCVX and adopted the Victory 1050 slogan.
+It is found in Suriname and the Amazon region.
+Census InformationDirectories- Hutchinson's Directory of 1864 lists one person under Fair Island: William Pickett, Sr. - Planter- Lovell's Directory describes Fair Island as an island on the west side of Bonavista Bay, distant from Greenspond by 9 miles by boat with a population of 212.
+“The Ugly Duckling” was first published in Copenhagen, Denmark 11 November 1843 in New Fairy Tales.
+Tsurtsumia's songs are covered in other countries.
+HonourHonour of Malaysia : Commander of the Order of Loyalty to the Crown of Malaysia (P.S.M.)
+It is also one of the 7 state legislative assembly constituencies included in the Kottayam Lok Sabha constituency.
+Baiyangwan Subdistrict () is a township-level division of Gusu District, Suzhou, Jiangsu, China.
+Poet and fiction writer, his literary debut was with the Concept of Poem in 1972.
+It was followed by the "Crystal Clear" single on April 18, 2015, which included a cover of the Misfits' "She" as one of the two B-sides.
+"Gonna Fly Now"While Ferguson was known to have an uncanny ability to change with the times, no one suspected that in the Spring of 1977, he would pull off the coup of his life.
+Aughnacloy College is a secondary school in Aughnacloy, County Tyrone, Northern Ireland.
+It was abolished in 1974, under the Local Government Act 1972.
+The United Artists Story (New York: Crown).
+Zēṛōk () is the main town of Zerok District in Paktika Province, Afghanistan.
+ReferencesCategory:Unstrut-Hainich-KreisCategory:Bezirk Erfurt
+At the 2006 census, its existence was noted, but its population was not reported.
+The 638th Aero Squadron was ordered to proceed to the 1st Air Depot at Colombey-les-Belles Airdrome, France for subsequent demobilization.
+Pacific Blue may refer to:Pacific Blue (TV series)Pacific blue, a shade of azure manufactured by the Crayola companyPacific Blue (dye), a dye used in cell biologyVirgin Australia Airlines (NZ) and Virgin Australia operated under brand Pacific Blue Airlines in New Zealand between 2003 and 2014
+A proportion of 19.3% of the buildings were condominiums or apartments, and 19.3% of the housing was used for renting.
+See alsoList of Italian television seriesExternal links Category:Italian television series
+This is also the only disc where Roger plays drums.
+However, for the R40 Live Tour in 2015, the band played the entire song with the rhythm guitar included.
+Oslo Bus Terminal () is the main bus station serving Oslo, Norway.
+On 26 October 1838 under the provincial government of José María Martinez Salinas, the province of Honduras had declared itself a separate state.
+Dr. Peterson's first veterinary clinic was built at 28 Valley Street, in Pasadena.
+Stemming from that reunion, a Players Association was formed in 1987 and many former AAGPBL players continued to enjoy reunions, which became annual events in 1998.
+Adam Frame has pioneered the new generation of Circular External Fixators while remaining faithful to Ilizarov’s principles.
+ReferencesExternal links Official websiteCategory:Cities and towns in Sicily
+This species can reach a maximum length of TL.
+She later spent time at A/S Palladium and Valby.
+Akoustic Piano is now a Macintosh Universal Binary.
+The report also recommended further powers be devolved from ministers to chief executives.
+Kalenjin may refer to: Kalenjin people of Kenya Elgeyo people Kipsigis people Marakwet people Nandi people Pokot people Terik people Tugen people Sebei people Kalenjin language Kalenjin languagesCategory:Language and nationality disambiguation pages
+He moved to Danish 1st Division club BK Frem, making his Frem debut in March 2000.
+He did his internship and residency in internal medicine at the University of Colorado Hospital in his home town of Denver, and later relocated to the Los Angeles area.
+In 2017, it closed its savings operation to new customers.
+1 female tennis player, Jelena Janković.
+Road to the playoffsEastern ConferenceWestern ConferenceNote:Teams with an "X" clinched playoff spots.
+Earned all-district honors his junior and senior seasons and was named all-eastern region in his final year.
+After the World War II it was refounded in Belgrade in 1948.
+It is also used for dusting confections in a manner similar to powdered sugar.
+Vincent Terrace wrote in his book, Radio Programs, 1924-1984: A Catalog of More Than 1800 Shows, "Stories relate Tarzan's efforts to protect his adopted homeland from evildoers."
+Enes irritans is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae.
+Welch remained a partner in the H.E.
+It became one of the most downloaded hip hop mixtapes of all time.
+Prior to her move to Los Angeles in 1990, Cronin worked thirty-five years of her career in theatre based in Chicago.
+Music Row is a historical district located to the southwest of downtown Nashville, Tennessee that is home to numerous businesses related to music, predominantly the country music, gospel music, and contemporary Christian music industries.
+Category:Populated places in Béjaïa ProvinceCategory:Communes of Algeria
+Ashu Cyprian Besongo is a German football manager of Cameroonian descent.
+In 1991, 3 volumes of the History of Bangladesh (political, economic and socio-cultural), published by Asiatic Society, came out in his editorship.
+Ar Rujum District is a district of the Al Mahwit Governorate, Yemen.
+SuccessThe 24th locomotive by the manufacturer, Beuth ended up being a great success, and its valve design became de facto standard for locomotives for decades to come.
+On August 3, 2019, Harris worked in relief, in a no-hit shutout of the Seattle Mariners.
+Phoma draconis is a fungal plant pathogen.
+The attack was very successful, as four of the five kamikazes struck their targets and inflicted heavy damage: USS Kalinin Bay (CVE-68): Four diving planes attacked from astern.
+Rulers very rarely exempted subjects from the trinoda necessitas, because these services were the lifeblood of an Anglo-Saxon kingdom.
+The first element of the old name comes from the male name Arna or "Arne", the second element staða means "home" or "farm", and the last element fjǫrðr is identical with the word for "fjord".
+“abroad”.
+Therefore, TF units were split in August and September 1914 into 1st Line (liable for overseas service) and 2nd Line (home service for those unable or unwilling to serve overseas) units.
+Zaklepica is a settlement in the Ivanić-Grad town of Zagreb County, Croatia.
+FM transmitter may refer to: A transmitter sending out a frequency modulated signal A personal FM transmitter, a very short range device to enable the listening of music from a music device through the speakers of a regular FM radio.
+See alsoCommunes of the Landes departmentCategory:Communes of Landes (department)
+DescriptionDudleya nesiotica bears a few pointed or rounded leaves during the winter months when moisture is available, and it goes dormant during the summer, leaving behind only its tough caudex.
+List of Asterales of Montana (Order Asterales) List of Ranunculales of Montana (Order Ranunculales) List of Rubiales of Montana (Order Rubiales) List of Campanulales of Montana (Order Campanulales) List of Fagales of Montana (Order Fagales) List of Lamiales of Montana (Order Lamiales) List of Rhamnales of Montana (Order Rhamnales) List of Polygonales of Montana (Order Polygonales) List of Capparales of Montana (Order Capparales) List of Caryophyllales of Montana (Order Caryophyllales) Celastrales (Order Celastrales)Celastrus scandens, bittersweetPaxistima myrsinites, mountain-lover or Oregon boxleaf List of Dipsacales of Montana (Order Dipsacales) List of Gentianales of Montana (Order Gentianales) Dogwood (Order Cornales)Cornus canadensis, Bunchberry dogwoodCornus sericea, Red-osier dogwood List of Santalales of Montana (Order Santalales) List of Myrtales of Montana (Order Myrtales) Flax (Order Linales)Linum australe, southern flaxLinum lewisii, prairie flaxLinum rigidum, stiff-stem flaxLinum rigidum var.
+Cyclopentadienylthallium, also known as thallium cyclopentadienide, is an organothallium compound with formula C5H5Tl.
+RefereesExternal links"Façade of the Cour Carrée (Wing Lescot)" at the Web Gallery of Art.
+Under this Ministry, is also the Immigration Department.
+His son Jesse has also played senior football for Norwood.
+The phrase now commonly refers to the compounds present in cannabis supposedly working in concert to create “the sum of all the parts that leads to the magic or power of cannabis”.
+On examination Shipov takes out money from Boets's tunic in view of everyone thereby setting everyone else against him.
+You can make lots of money for winter sports.."Pyeongchang’s slogan is ��New Horizons.” The bid's logo suggests the winter scenery of Pyeongchang with snow on the mountains.
+Daniel is the frontman of the pop rock band Remission Theory, but has also launched a career as an independent record producer where he has produced, engineered, mixed or written tracks for various bands such as For Our Hero, The Paperkites, Simple Plan, Antiskeptic, Declan Sykes, Michael Paynter, Have You Seen This Boy, Hometown, Dylan Joel, and Delamare.
+His parents divorced when Al was a child and he was raised by his mother in suburban Jamaica, New York.
+4 Butler, and No.
+The is an electric multiple unit (EMU) commuter train type operated by the Hokuso Railway on the Hokuso Line in Japan since 2006.
+ONF performed the main theme for the series "So Pretty" (예뻐죽겠다), released on July 14.
+Prior to that he was a lecturer at the University of Michigan for a year.
+He was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
+PopulationSee also Communes of the Somme departmentReferences INSEEExternal links Érondelle on the Quid website Section patrimoine des Amis du CIS d'Hallencourt Category:Communes of Somme (department)
+Derebucak is a town and district of Konya Province in the Mediterranean region of Turkey.
+External links Hrvatska riječ Šest novih knjiga u hrvatskom kulturnom mozaiku Hrvatska riječ Roman u književnosti vojvođanskih Hrvata, February 13, 2009 Radio Subotica Predstavljanje romana Dražena Prćića "Lijepe stvari", March 25, 2009 Subotica.info Milovan Miković: Putovanje kao metafora o nasiljuCategory:Croatian novelistsCategory:Croatian male writersCategory:Male novelistsCategory:Croats of VojvodinaCategory:Living peopleCategory:1967 birthsCategory:Serbian emigrants to Croatia
+Remixed by Gerard Harmon, Armando Colon, & Ralph Rolle at Battery Studios for Phat Kat Productions Guitar: Patricia Halligan Drums: Ralph Rolle Keyboards: Armando Colon Little Girl's Voice: IndiaChartsWeekly chartsYear-end chartsAll-time chartsSee alsoList of Billboard Hot 100 number-one singles of the 1990sList of number-one R&B singles of 1991 (U.S.)ReferencesExternal links Category:1990 songsCategory:1991 singlesCategory:Billboard Hot 100 number-one singlesCategory:Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs number-one singlesCategory:Hi-Five songsCategory:Song recordings produced by Teddy RileyCategory:Songs written by Teddy RileyCategory:Songs written by Bernard BelleCategory:Jive Records singles
+In Lawrence County, the highest tax relief went to New Castle Area School District which was set at $222.
+See also Administrative divisions of South KoreaReferencesExternal linksEunpyeong-gu official website Eunpyeong-gu map at the Eunpyeong-gu official website Eungam 1-dong resident office websiteCategory:Neighbourhoods of Eunpyeong District
+Eamon Collins (later killed by the IRA) quoted a conversation he had with McGee and Scappaticci in his book, Killing Rage:I asked whether they always told people that they were going to be shot.
+July 2009–August 2012, Chief of Warfighting Integration and Chief Information Officer, Office of the Secretary of the Air Force, the Pentagon, Washington, D.C.
+StandingsResultsAll times are local (UTC+2).
+The Kerala State Film Award for Best Costume Designer is an honour, presented annually at the Kerala State Film Awards for the outstanding contribution in a Malayalam cinema through costume design.
+See also Right to dieBioethicsReferences Category:Assisted suicide in the United StatesCategory:1967 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Death in California
+Major supporters included The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, ExxonMobil and Ashoka's Start Empathy Initiative, as well as founding collaborator, XQ: The Super School Project.
+However, Wineberg ran the first leg for the U.S. Women's 4 × 400 metres relay team that won the gold medal at the Games.
+At a later stage, it will be considered to reactivate the Te Kauwhata railway station.
+Matthew Teed (1828–1904) was a member of the Los Angeles Common Council, the governing body of that city, in various time periods between 1870 and 1888.
+References Category:Populated places in the Zambezi Region
+ReferencesCategory:Kondoa DistrictCategory:Populated places in Dodoma RegionCategory:Wards of Tanzania
+.
+Senior missed selection for the USA tour in May 2005 to make way for developing players but was recalled to the side for the Champions Challenge in Virginia Beach in July.
+In 2005, Black Enterprise magazine named him one of the "75 Most Powerful Black Men in American Business."
+Its centre in Kawali become the court capital until the 15th century when Sri Baduga Maharaja shifted the capital to Pakuan Pajajaran.
+Awards and honoursRadford was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society (FRS) in 2014; her nomination reads:Radford was elected a Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences (FMedSci) in 2010.
+Between the first ("La tregua"), and the last one ("Il commiato") the ideal of a Summer spent within sentimental joy and poetical accomplishment outlines.
+Location The summit of Ball Hill lies at the eastern end of a short ridge running from east to west.
+ReferencesExternal linksPictures of Bers slicesPictures of Maskit slicesMaskit sliceBers slice for square torusBers slice for hexagonal torusCategory:Kleinian groups
+In 1889, he was appointed Inspector of Schools in the Dungog region.
+BackgroundSenegal participated in three Winter Olympics between its debut at the 1984 Winter Olympics in Sarajevo, Yugoslavia, and the 1994 Winter Olympics in Lillehammer, Norway.
+PopulationTwin towns — sister citiesJonquières-Saint-Vincent is twinned with: Vezza d'Alba, FranceSee alsoCommunes of the Gard department Costières de Nîmes AOCReferencesINSEECategory:Communes of Gard
+The area was traditionally part of Lower Carniola.
+Gerry McInerney (born 1961 in Sixmilebridge, County Clare) is an Irish sportsperson.
+Leveillula leguminosarum f. lentis is a plant.
+He is currently professor of psychology at Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM), McGill University, and professor emeritus of cognitive science at the University of Southampton.
+To date over 5 million ServSafe Food Protection Manager Certifications have been awarded.
+is a railway station in Moseushi, Uryū District, Hokkaidō, Japan.
+Kevin Ross may refer to: Kevin Ross (American football) (born 1962), American football player Kevin A. Ross (born 1963), television host of America's Court with Judge Ross Kevin M. Ross, academic and president of Lynn University Kevin Ross (kickboxer) (born 1980), American kickboxer Kevin Ross (musical artist), American recording artist and songwriter
+Ghabou is a town and commune in Mauritania.
+Konstantinovo may refer to:Konstantinovo, Burgas Province, a village in Burgas Province, BulgariaKonstantinovo, Haskovo Province, a village in Haskovo Province, BulgariaKonstantinovo, Varna Province, a village in Varna Province, BulgariaKonstantinovo, Russia, several rural localities in Russia
+Post-amendment to the Tamil Nadu Entertainments Tax Act 1939 on 1 April 1958, Gross jumped to 140 per cent of Nett Commercial Taxes Department disclosed 61 crore in entertainment tax revenue for the year.
+Bromsgrove Road Cutting is a 0.2 hectare (0.5 acre) geological site of Special Scientific Interest in the West Midlands.
+Personal life She was previously married to football player Daisuke Oku, though that marriage ended in divorce.
+It came with the prize of a place in the 2007 Cricket World Cup (and together with it a share of US$2,500,000 for future development) for the five top-ranked teams, and with the prize of official One Day International status from 1 January 2006 (until the 2009 ICC Trophy) for the five top-ranked teams along with Kenya, who had already been given official one-day status till the 2009 Trophy.
+All members of the group have the government issued name "Alex", and thus took on the name "The A'z" because of their first initial.
+District Factor Groups organize districts statewide to allow comparison by common socioeconomic characteristics of the local districts.
+By mimicking the demiurge, the individual is returned to the cosmos to implement the will of the divine mind.
+He was born in Bologna in 1675.
+See also Skin dimple List of cutaneous conditionsReferences Category:Cutaneous congenital anomalies
+Pomroy may refer to:David Pomroy (born 23 June 1983), professional poker player from London, EnglandShelly Pomroy, a fictional character in Veronica Mars (season 1)Pomroy Lake, a lake in MinnesotaPomroy Township, Minnesota (disambiguation): Pomroy Township, Itasca County, Minnesota Pomroy Township, Kanabec County, MinnesotaColonel Benjamin Pomroy, founder of Eastern Townships BankColin Pomroy, co-founder of Tempo Records (UK)
+Shenandoah may refer to:People Senedo people, a Native American tribe in Virginia Skenandoa or Shenandoah (1710–1816), Oneida Iroquois chief Joanne Shenandoah (born 1958), Oneida Iroquois singer and acoustic guitaristPlacesUnited StatesVirginia and West Virginia Shenandoah, Virginia, a town in the state of Virginia Shenandoah County, Virginia, a county in the state of Virginia Shenandoah River, a river in Virginia and West Virginia Shenandoah Valley, the valley through which the aforementioned river runs Shenandoah Valley AVA, an American Viticultural Area in Virginia and West Virginia Shenandoah Mountain, a mountain in Virginia and West Virginia Shenandoah National Park, a national park east of the Shenandoah Valley Shenandoah Historic DistrictOther US places Shenandoah (Miami), a neighborhood within the city of Miami, Florida Shenandoah, Iowa Shenandoah, Louisiana Shenandoah, New York Shenandoah, Pennsylvania Shenandoah Creek, a tributary of Mahanoy Creek in Pennsylvania Shenandoah, Texas Shenandoah, Houston, neighborhood of Houston, Texas California Shenandoah Valley AVA, an American Viticultural Area in California Shenandoah Peak, in Nevada, US Shenandoah station, an historic building located in Shenandoah, Iowa, United StatesNew Zealand Shenandoah River (New Zealand), a river in the South Island Shenandoah Highway or State Highway 65, in the South IslandTransportationShips USS Shenandoah, several ships USNS Shenandoah (T-AO-181), an oiler laid down in 1964, renamed USNS Potomac (T-AO-181) CSS Shenandoah, an 1863 Confederate Navy screw steamer Shenandoah (schooner), a 1964 topsail schooner run by The Black Dog Shenandoah (1902), a schooner built in New York in 1902Airships USS Shenandoah (ZR-1), an American naval rigid airship, broken up in a storm in 1925Trains Shenandoah (B&O train), an American passenger train Shenandoah (Amtrak train), an American passenger train between Washington, DC, and Cincinnati, OhioArts and media "Oh Shenandoah", an episode of The Newsroom HBO series Shenandoah (film), a 1965 film starring Jimmy Stewart Shenandoah (musical), a 1974 Broadway musical based on the film Shenandoah (magazine), a literary magazine published by Washington and Lee University Shenandoah (video game) A Man Called Shenandoah, a Western television seriesMusic "Oh Shenandoah", a popular American folk song or sea shanty Shenandoah (band), a country music group Shenandoah (album), their 1987 self-titled debut album Shenandoah, a band formed by Arlo Guthrie "Shen-an-doah", the closing song on Pitchshifter's 2002 album PSIOrganizations Shenandoah Valley Academy, a parochial, college-preparatory boarding school in New Market, Virginia, US Confederate Army of the Shenandoah, during the American Civil War, US Union Army of the Shenandoah, during the American Civil War, US Shenandoah University, a university in Winchester, Virginia, US Museum of the Shenandoah Valley, also in Winchester, Virginia, USOther uses Shenandoah (beard), a type of beard Shenandoah Circuit, a race track at Summit Point Motorsports Park, West Virginia, USSee also Shenandoah-Dives Mill, a former ore mill Operation Shenandoah, a 1966 operation in the Vietnam war Army of the Shenandoah (disambiguation)
+A cover version is sometimes referred to as a sound-alike, but in the stricter sense, a sound-alike must contain differences that are significant enough to suggest to a listener that those recording the song sought to perform a work different from the work to which it sounds similar.
+Tina Mrazik for Associated Content labelled it "ultimate", while Ann Hornaday for The Washington Post picked "You Haven't Seen the Last of Me" as well as "Bound to You" as the two power ballads that "[land] with such powerful force".
+School Library Journal similarly noted, "The story line flows from chapter to chapter even though there are two different points of view."
+Nutritional information According to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, edible insects such as crickets, mealworms and grasshoppers are nutrient-rich food sources.
+His first appearance on Brazilian radio was in 1927 on Rádio Educadora Paulista and Rádio Cruzeiro do Sul; that same year, he made his first recordings on Brasilphone, with the songs "Segura o Coco, Maria" b/w "Verde e Amarelo."
+Casque was one of a dozen s built for the French Navy in the first decade of the 20th century.
+Dhanmondi Cricket Stadium is a major public ground hosting matches of domestic and inter-collegiate cricket in Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh.It is the home of Dhaka division cricket team.
+Jamerson played wide receiver first with the Badgers before switching to cornerback and later safety.
+Houston then left to take command of the volunteers that Colonel James C. Neill and Major R.M.
+Wesley JaMarr Johnson (born July 11, 1987) is an American professional basketball player for Panathinaikos of the Greek Basket League and the EuroLeague.
+1 on the VG-lista Norwegian Albums Chart on week 23 of 2005 staying at the top of the charts for 1 week.
+Siridapha is a genus of flies in the family Pyrgotidae.
+Masks Full face masks: AirFit F20, AirTouch F20, AirFit F30i Nasal masks: AirFit N20, AirFit N30i Nasal pillows masks: AirFit P10, AirFit P30iReferences Category:Companies based in San DiegoCategory:Companies established in 1989Category:Companies listed on the New York Stock ExchangeCategory:Companies listed on the Australian Securities Exchange
+Local Government Officials Development Institute (LOGODI) () is a training institute under the Ministry of the Interior and Safety in the Republic of Korea.
+There is one described species in Eusomalia, E. lecontei.
+It happens after Billroth II surgery and the mechanism involved is the inadequate removal of the distal antrum and pylorus during resection of the antrum and gastrojejunostomy.
+The undertail is white with black barring, and the wings are black, vermiculated with white.
+SubspeciesChazara heydenreichi heydenreichiChazara heydenreichi hegesander Fruhstorfer, 1910 (Dzhungarsky Alatau, Tian-Shan)Chazara heydenreichi nana Rühl, 1895 (western Pamirs, Ghissar, southern Ghissar, Darvaz, Alai)External links Satyrinae of the Western Palearctic - Chazara heydenreichiCategory:ChazaraCategory:Butterflies described in 1853
+After obtaining M.A.
+BWV or bwv may also refer to: Bayerischer Wald-Verein, the Bavarian Forest Club Bahau River Kenyah (obsolete ISO 639:b code: bwv), a language Body worn videoSee also Buxtehude-Werke-Verzeichnis (BuxWV) BWB (disambiguation)
+In 2019, Waugh directed the third installment in the Has Fallen film series, titled Angel Has Fallen.
+Gombojavyn Ochirbat (; born 15 November 1929) is a Mongolian Communist political figure.
+She had a very strict piano teacher who suffered from alcoholism, and would sometimes leave her classes crying and in fear.
+Personal lifeHe lives with his mother in Edge Hill, Liverpool.
+PopulationTwin towns – sister citiesLes Pennes-Mirabeau is twinned with: Martuni, Nagorno-Karabakh: Les Pennes-Mirabeau and Khojavend became sister cities on 11 June 2013.
+As well, the lake is several hundred feet deep.
+He joined the LTTE in 1986, a year before his brother joined.
+Its site is unlocated.
+Kailash Surendranath is an Indian advertising filmmaker.
+Peggy Knudsen (April 22, 1923 – July 11, 1980) was an American character actress.
+On 20 August 1974, she was assigned for display as a memorial submarine in Freedom Park at the Greater Omaha Marina at 2000 North 25th Street, in Omaha, Nebraska.
+This logo follows the design used by the White House logo.
+The New York City Council selected Golden to serve as interim borough president until the next election.
+He played for the Jacksonville Suns, their Double-A affiliate, for the whole season.
+Paulo Garcia may refer to: Paulo Garcia (Brazilian politician) (1959–2017), Brazilian neurosurgeon, physician and politician from the Workers' Party Paulo Garcia (New Zealand politician), Member of Parliament in the New Zealand House of Representatives
+Thomas Lennon may also refer to: Thomas Lennon (filmmaker) (born 1951), American documentary filmmaker Thomas Lennon (screenwriter, born 1896) (1896–1963), American screenwriter Thomas J. Lennon (1866–1926), California Supreme Court Justice
+In the film Dunston Checks In, a young boy befriends a larcenous orangutan in a luxury hotel.
+Dr. CiderTalk’84 is no ordinary doctor… while normal doctors have a PhD in medicine, economics, physics or other similar fields, CiderTalk has a PhD in everything.
+Fanco is an unincorporated community in Logan County, West Virginia.
+Moreover, he also went to the seminary of Mashhad, where he studied for several years.
+Medals and DecorationsJordan Globe Grand Cordon-First Degree (Arabic: وسام الكوكب الاردني من الدرجة الأولى), it is considered one of the most prestigious Medals and Decorations in Jordan.
+Aman Sinaya later on chose to dwell underneath the ocean while Amihan chose to travel the middleworld.
+See also List of Bengal cricketersReferencesExternal links Category:1916 birthsCategory:1971 deathsCategory:Indian cricketersCategory:Bengal cricketersCategory:Delhi cricketersCategory:Northern India cricketersCategory:United Provinces cricketersCategory:Cricketers from Lahore
+CareerBorn in Yerevan, he has played club football for Pyunik.
+Chris Cates (born April 15, 1985) is a former minor league shortstop selected by the Minnesota Twins in the 38th round of the 2007 Major League Baseball Draft.
+In 1904 Jules Renard was elected mayor of the town.
+Celtic eventually ran away with the league championship, but Hibs continued to challenge for second place until a losing run in March effectively ended their chances of finishing above Rangers.
+The star has double the mass of the Sun and has expanded to 11 times the Sun's radius.
+Smart Girls at the Party started around 2007 by Poehler and Walker and their first video was posted on YouTube in 2008.
+PopulationSee alsoCommunes of the Aude departmentExternal linksINSEECategory:Communes of Aude
+He was one of three Britons to medal at the event, the others being Ken Matthews and Don Thompson – both went on to win Olympic titles.
+This last has been substantially modified with one third of the sill cut out and the wall below cut down to form a new door opening within the window form to provide access to the mail room extension.
+The first Sacred Heart Church was built at Baby's Point around 1825.
+Aikoku ("patriotism" in English) were motorcycles which were manufactured by Tetsui Makita in Japan in the mid-1930s, featuring 50cc side valve engines by JAC and HMS, and Meguro gearboxes.
+Vol.
+It will be the nation's fourteenth appearance at the Summer Olympics.
+Victoria Building may refer to: Victoria Building (Ottawa), Canada Victoria Building, University of Liverpool, United Kingdom Victoria Building, St. Louis, Missouri
+At the 2006 census, its population was 41, in 9 families.
+However, due to the need for understanding the potential losses associated with a building, crude loss estimation techniques were developed in the 1970s.
+Korbeek-Dijle is a village in the Belgian province Flemish Brabant and is part of the municipality of Bertem.
+His uncle, Morris "Butch" Stewart was a successful musician and producer.
+ReferencesExternal linksSatellite map at Maplandia.comCategory:Populated places in Kachin StateCategory:Hsawlaw Township
+🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩जय श्री महाकाल🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏जय श्री राम🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🕉🕉🕉🕉🕉🕉जय श्री कृष्णा🕉🕉🕉🕉🕉🕉 🇮🇳🇮🇳बिरवाही में आपका स्वागत है।🇮🇳🇮🇳BIRWAHI Village Birwahi Block Panna District Panna State Madhya Pradesh Country India Continent Asia Time Zone IST(UTC+05:30) Currency INR Dialing Code +91 Date format dd/mm/yyyy Driving side left Internet cTLD in Language Hindi Time difference 9 minutes Latitude 24.5909766 Longitude 80.3519443बिरवाही की स्थिति बिरवाही, भारत🇮🇳 के मध्य प्रदेश राज्य के पन्ना (Diamond city🔺) जिले में स्थित एक ग्राम पंचायत है। अक्षांश 24.5909766 और देशांतर 80.3519443 बिरवाही के भू-गर्भ हैं। बिरवाही गाँव के लिए भोपाल राज्य की राजधानी है। बिरवाही से अन्य राजधानियों की दूरी भोपाल बिरवाही से लगभग 335.5 KM है। लखनऊ बिरवाही से लगभग 219.1 KM है। पटना बिरवाही से लगभग 494.5 KM है। रांची बिरवाही से लगभग 523.9 KM हैं।आसपास के गाँव और बिरवाही से इसकी दूरी डड़वरिया 3.5 KM, खप्टहा 3.2 KM, फुलवारी 8.9 KM, सकरिया 10 KM, सुंदरा 10.8 KM, गिरवारा 11.3 KM, मोहनपुरवा 11.6 KM, समाना 14 KM, सिल्गी 13.2 KM, रनवा 14.7 KM मकरिकुठर 15.0 KM, जनवार 15.3 KM, बाराछ 17.9 KM, लक्ष्मीपुर 18.1 KM, कृष्णकल्याणपुर 18.7 KM, बिलखुरा 18.8 KM, जनकपुर 20.3 KM, पन्ना 25 KM, पुरुषोत्तमपुर 26 KM, कोहनी 22.1 KM, बग्गड़ी खुर्द 22.2 KM, पुराना पन्ना 26 KM, जामुनहाई 18 KM, बारबसपुरा 23.8 KM, जर्धोबा 24.6 KM, बृजपुर 26.1 KM, गुनौर 20 KM, तारा 27.3 KM, रामखिरिया 30 KM, कुदर 27.9 KM, गहरा 29.5 KM, राहुणिया 29.5 KM, सिमरिया 29.5 KM,बिरवाही की आधिकारिक भाषा बिरवाही की मूल भाषा हिंदी है और गाँव के अधिकांश लोग हिंदी बोलते हैं। बिरवाही लोग संचार के लिए हिंदी भाषा का उपयोग करते हैं।बिरवाही कि मुद्रा बिरवाही गाँव मानक समय (आईएसटी) का अनुसरण करता है। बिरवाही सूरज उगने का समय IST से 9 मिनट भिन्न होता है। बीरवाही में वाहन चलाने वाले पक्ष को छोड़ दिया गया है, सभी वाहनों को ड्राइविंग के दौरान बाईं ओर ले जाना चाहिए। बिरवाही लोग अपनी राष्ट्रीय मुद्रा का उपयोग कर रहे हैं जो भारतीय रुपया है और इसका इंटर्नशिपल मुद्रा कोड INR है। विदेशों से भारतीय देश डायलिंग कोड +91 जोड़कर बिरवाही फोन और मोबाइल फोन का उपयोग किया जा सकता है। बिरवाही लोग दिन-प्रतिदिन के जीवन में dd / mm / yyyy तिथि प्रारूप का अनुसरण कर रहे हैं। बिरवाही डोमेन नाम एक्सटेंशन (cTLD) .in है।बिरवाही से निकटतम रेलवे स्टेशन सतना बिरवाही के लिए निकटतम रेलवे स्टेशन सतना है जो लगभग 47.4 किलोमीटर की दूरी पर स्थित है।
+Urist is a surname.
+He graduated from Cheongwon High School.
+GallerySee also Kotayk ProvinceReferences World Gazeteer: Armenia – World-Gazetteer.comCategory:Populated places in Kotayk ProvinceCategory:Assyrian settlementsCategory:Assyrians in ArmeniaCategory:Mountain resorts in Armenia
+Sabanilla town lies about by road north of the centre of Alajuela.
+It may be a myrmecophile.
+The Mystery Science Theater 3000 version of the film was released by Rhino Home Video as part of the Mystery Science Theater 3000 Collection, Vol.
+She was one of the four children of Saint Waltrude, also known as Waldetrude, her siblings being Saint Landericus, a bishop of Paris; Saint Dentelin who died very young; and Saint Madelberta, who was also abbess of Maubeuge.
+In his two seasons with the Lobos, he made a total of 29 appearances and tallied four goals and three assists and helped lead them to the College Cup semifinals in 2013.
+Impact damage to a fibre can appear as a small dent on the reinforced composite surface but the underlying damage can be much more extensive.
+According to the new information provided by the stela, Setnakhte's reign certainly lasted for four years, and may have continued for [a little] longer."
+In 1856, Ludwig Knoop acquired the whole island and founded a textile factory there which was known as the Krenholm Manufacturing Company.
+Sophia and her husband had four surviving children, three daughters and a son: Adelaide Augusta Willhelmina Sydney, married her first cousin, Frederick Charles George FitzClarence-Hunloke, son of George FitzClarence, 1st Earl of Munster, no issue Ernestine Wellington Sidney, married Philip Perceval; mother of Major Sir Philip Hunloke, who was the father of Lt.-Col. Henry Philip Hunloke Sophia Philippa Sidney, married Alexander, Graf von Kielmannsegg, a great-grandson of Johann Ludwig, Reichsgraf von Wallmoden-Gimborn (illegitimate son of George II of Great Britain) Philip Sidney, 2nd Baron of De L'Isle and Dudley of Penshurst (1828–1898), grandfather of the 1st Viscount De L'IsleLater lifeIn May 1831 Sophia, like her sisters, was raised to the status of a daughter of a marquess.
+The hindwings have a brown mark on the margin.
+See alsoCanada men's national basketball teamCanada national under-17 basketball teamCanada women's national under-19 basketball teamReferencesExternal links Canada Basketball official website Archived records of Canada team participationsCategory:National under-19 basketball teamsunder
+Visors and shields, made of a high impact-resistant plastic, offer better overall vision than the wire cages available, which can obscure vision in certain areas.
+The 83rd Battalion (Queen's Own Rifles of Canada), CEF was an infantry battalion of the Canadian Expeditionary Force during the Great War.
+Early lifeLovro von Matačić was born in Sušak to a family that was granted a noble title in the early 17th century.
+Other EntrantsThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw: Yumi Miyazaki Emi Mutaguchi Aiko Nakamura Yumi NakanoThe following players received entry from the qualifying draw: Chinami Ogi Akiko Omae Varatchaya Wongteanchai Akiko YonemuraThe following players received entry by a lucky loser spot: Akari Inoue Hirono WatanabeChampionsSingles Rika Fujiwara def.
+Currently it plays in Eccellenza Piedmont and Aosta Valley.
+Duane G. Nutt (born September 6, 1933) is a former American football player and coach.
+ReferencesCategory:Massively multiplayer online role-playing games
+ReferencesExternal linksMatt Bertani's profile at Eliteprospects.comCategory:1976 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:American Hockey League coachesCategory:American ice hockey coachesCategory:New York Islanders coachesCategory:South Korea men's national ice hockey team coaches
+Pacific Pearl Airways has also inquired about space at Mactan-Cebu International Airport to commence service from Cebu to various Asian countries and Regional Philippine Destinations.
+Most of brands are there.
+The NWCC brings a rich athletic history and fierce competition.
+Michael K. Brust, Gerald Höfer: Tief im Schoße des Kyffhäusers.
+ReferencesCategory:1942 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Foreign ministers of TogoCategory:Government ministers of TogoCategory:Democratic Convention of African Peoples politicians
+Kimberly Couts (born May 9, 1989 in Princeton) is a retired professional American tennis player.
+Spanning the 23rd to the 39th km of the Route 1 (also known as the "Brigadier General Manuel Oribe Highway"), Ciudad del Plata forms part of the conurbation of the capital Montevideo.
+In 2004, there was a referendum to decide whether Hull would remain in Gatineau.
+In the lane to her left, Hayes zoomed away from the field unabated, challenged by American teammate Melissa Morrison through the first four hurdles, which Morrison clipped, almost turned sideways to keep her balance and slowing through the next two hurdles.
+References Category:Populated places in Larestan County
+Commenced on November 5 end on 15 November 2015 at SM Town theater with 7 shows in total.
+Built between 1910 and 1929 by Portland General Electric (PGE), it was added to the register in 1985.
+Ivo Danilevič (born 10 April 1970 in Jablonec nad Nisou) is a Czech bobsledder who has competed since 1996.
+denotes players with international caps.
+VineyardsVineyards spanning 27 hectares, of which half are classified as Grand Cru and Premier Cru: Grand Cru (6.25 Ha) : Ay, Le Mesnil et Avize 1er Cru (7.01 Ha) : Dizy, Cumières, Pierry et TauxièreSee also List of Champagne housesReferencesExternal links Official websiteCategory:Champagne producers
+ResultsMedal tableAs a Summer Universiade sportReferencesExternal linksSoftball fisu.netCategory:Softball competitionsSoftball
+Merseyrail UnitsScottish UnitsReferencesSources936Category:British Rail Departmental UnitsCategory:Rail transport in MerseysideCategory:Train-related introductions in 1984Category:Train-related introductions in 1994
+The 2009 President's Cup was a professional tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts.
+He also founded Stebbing Studios in Auckland.
+Each of the five tiers leaves room for a word of a certain number of letters.
+Beginning in the 1970s, there have been some efforts to breed back the Alpine Mastiff, mainly by using breeds such as the Saint Bernard, Great Dane, Great Pyrenees and Bernese Mountain Dog.
+This is a list of ambassadors to Liechtenstein.
+In return for supporting the cost of renovation works, property owners provide the Irish Landmark Trust with a long term lease on the property – which later reverts to the owner.
+He is thought to have worked out a deal that made him the Sinaloa Cartel's top transporter, helping the Mexican group move drugs that arrived via Pacific routes.
+See alsoList of rivers of MontanaReferencesCategory:Rivers of Beaverhead County, MontanaCategory:Rivers of Montana
+Tyler E. Higgins (born April 22, 1991) is an American professional baseball pitcher for the Orix Buffaloes of the Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB).
+The specific epithet lineatus is Latin for "lined" referring to the color pattern of this fish.
+CareerThe idea for Box originated as a college business project that Levie was working on in 2004.
+The is an award given at the Mainichi Film Awards.
+It was first climbed on July 23, 2019 by the group of Russian climbers Markevich Konstantin, Sushko Denis and Anton Ivanov.
+He competed in the men's quadruple sculls event at the 1992 Summer Olympics.
+CTV Building may also refer to one of the following buildings associated with the CTV Television Network in Canada:299 Queen Street West in downtown Toronto9 Channel Nine Court in the Scarborough district of Toronto750 Burrard Street in VancouverMasonic Temple (Toronto) in midtown Toronto, formerly a CTV studio
+The novel was edited by Erick Berry and illustrated by the artist Richard Floethe (1901-1988).
+The group's newspaper interests were sold off as were the firm's radio operations in Ireland.
+The Redskins won the 1937 and 1942 Championship games, as well as Super Bowl XVII, XXII, and XXVI.
+ReferencesCategory:Mountains of Spitsbergen
+It is found in China (Ningxia).
+The Long Hot Satsuma is a radio comedy sketch show from 1989 featuring Graeme Garden, Barry Cryer, Alison Steadman, Paul B. Davies and Julia Hills.
+WRON may refer to: WRON (AM), a radio station (1400 AM) licensed to serve Ronceverte, West Virginia, United States WRON-FM, a radio station (103.1 FM) licensed to serve Lewisburg, West Virginia Military Council of National Salvation, a military junta in Poland
+(di) (1880).
+He commanded Peruvian forces during a border dispute with Ecuador.
+The history of the mining is preserved at Orkla Industrial Museum at Løkken Verk.
+Mayor's Cup may refer to: Guyana Mayors Cup, the top knockout tournament of the Guyana football Mayor's Cup, a traveling trophy awarded to the winner of the Missouri and South Carolina college football game Mayor's Cup, a traveling trophy awarded to the winner of the Rensselaer and Union college ice hockey game Mayor's Cup, a traveling trophy awarded to the winner of the Brown and Providence college ice hockey game Mayor's Cup, a traveling trophy awarded to the winner of the Oral Roberts–Tulsa basketball rivalry Mayor's Cup, a traveling trophy awarded to the winner of the Rice–SMU football rivalry Mayor's Cup (Temple–Villanova), a traveling trophy awarded to the winner of the football game between Temple University and Villanova University Osaka Mayor's Cup, an annually held ITF Grade A junior tennis tournament Rowdies Cup, formerly Mayor's Cup, a traveling trophy awarded to the winner of the college soccer game between USF Bulls and Tampa Spartans
+He traced his ancestry back to Ibrahim Aga, from Korca, Albania, who had moved to Kavala.
+He also played on the 2000 Palmer Cup team.
+Diver or divers may refer to:Diving (sport), the sport of performing acrobatics while jumping or falling into waterUnderwater divingPeopleDiver (surname)Edward Divers (1837–1912), British chemist"Diver", nickname of Tom Derrick (1914–1945), Australian Second World War recipient of the Victoria CrossMilitaryV-1 flying bomb, code named "diver" by the British World War II armed forcesOperation Diver, the British countermeasures against the German V-1 flying bomb campaignAUM-N-4 Diver, a proposed U.S. Navy torpedo-carrying missile of the late 1940s.
+He also finished second in steals per game, behind Chris Paul.
+1: The Century of Discovery (Book 1 of 2), Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press, 1965, pp.
+A dentist and a wounded war veteran are among the group.
+In 1998, he began training in the combined Internal Medicine and Psychiatry program at the University of Virginia School of Medicine, Carilion Health System Program (Carilion Clinic) in Roanoke and Salem, Virginia.
+The plant used to be co-owned by Duke Energy and Dayton Power & Light (DP&L).
+It is also addressing the question of health care worker migration and alternative approaches to preventing excess brain drain from developing countries.
+It was built by the Johnson, Parker & Wallwork architecture firm in 1921, and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on August 29, 1979.
+Therefore, activation of the L-type calcium channel, via an action potential, activates the RyR directly, causing calcium release (see calcium sparks for more details).
+In 1998 the commune had a population of 10,535.
+His nephew is Bill McCreary Jr..
+Nicolas Grenier is a French poet and songwriter.
+Silver Surfer is armed with silver pellets that shoot out of his hands to destroy enemies and their projectiles.
+At 3am, the 1st West Virginia Cavalry were ordered to assist Custer.
+The position's official title is Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of Great Britain to Ukraine.
+of National Highway No.
+Le Caire, 2000 et Beyrouth, 2003).
+External links Category:Geography of Potsdam
+Category:1590s paintingsCategory:Paintings by CaravaggioBarberini, MaffeoBarberini
+CareerRapping career Chingo first gained exposure through his first mixtape release Duro en la pintura and other mixtapes such as The Air Chingo Mixtape and El Mero Chingon, in 2004 through his Independent Record label, Big Chile Enterprises he released his first album The Tamale Kingpin Featuring hit records like Walk like Cleto and American Pie featuring Mike Jones (rapper) and Paul Wall followed this up by releasing His second album Running 4 President in 2005, his Unique style of music and Great self promotion had major labels wanting to sign him, and in 2006 he signed a Distribution deal with Asylum Records, that same year he released a double disc album named They all want him but who can afford him?
+According to the Constitution, the election must be held in the form of secret ballot, with the 315 senators, the 630 deputies and the 58 regional representatives all voting.
+He competed in the men's 15 kilometre event at the 1976 Winter Olympics.
+Briargrove Park is located north of Westheimer Road and inside of Beltway 8.
+It features prominently collaborations and remixes between electronic musicians and rappers.
+It lies approximately north of Ustrzyki Dolne and south-east of the regional capital Rzeszów.
+ReferencesCategory:Costellariidae
+See alsoNew London School explosionReferencesExternal linksWest Rusk ISDCategory:School districts in TexasCategory:School districts in Rusk County, Texas
+It was established in 1984 and is published by John Wiley & Sons.
+In 1895 he created the Calendrier Magique which was an occult-themed calendar.
+Nyanduma Ward is made up of Nyanduma, Gachoire and Kagwe sub locations.
+The median income for a household in the town was $26,875, and the median income for a family was $33,750.
+On 22 February 1881 at Wesselstroom, South Africa, Private Osborne rode out under heavy fire, picked up a private who was lying wounded and carried him safely into camp.
+References Category:Districts of Costa RicaCategory:Populated places in Puntarenas Province
+Reyes goes to visit Jeb's sister, Katha, and learns he did not know Bob Harvey.
+Catinella is a genus of small air-breathing land snails, terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusks in the family Succineidae, the amber snails.
+And they were like, 'Yes, he's really funny.'
+Athanasius of Alexandria may have stayed at her house in Rome.
+A26 or A-26 may refer to:Roads List of A26 roadsTransportation Douglas A-26 Invader, a light attack bomber built by Douglas Aero A.26, a Czech reconnaissance aircraft of the 1920s Focke-Wulf A 26, a German Focke-Wulf aircraft Blekinge-class submarine, also known as the A26 submarine, the next generation of Swedish submarines equipped with stirling engines The FAA location identifier for Adin AirportOther uses HLA-A26, an HLA-A serotype The English Opening, in the Encyclopaedia of Chess Openings The file extension for Starpath Supercharger cassette images
+In the township the population was spread out, with 22.8% under the age of 18, 6.3% from 18 to 24, 29.1% from 25 to 44, 27.4% from 45 to 64, and 14.4% who were 65 years of age or older.
+This is a list of administrators and Governors of Zamfara State, Nigeria.
+Since WPBN was already operating at the maximum power allowed, Biederman signed-on WTOM-TV''' in Cheboygan on May 16, 1959.
+Station LayoutReferences Category:Railway stations under construction in ChinaCategory:Beijing Subway stations in Fengtai District
+Katzsohlbach is a stream in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany.
+Changing gallery spacesThe gallery has approximately of spaces to host international travelling exhibitions.
+There are also four marshal ranks above this: chasu (vice marshal), wonsu (marshal of the KPA), konghwaguk wonsu (marshal of the DPRK) and dae wonsu (grand marshal).
+"Brother Is Gone" is poignantly styled as a sad folktale and features a haunting mandolin riff, a rueful tone, and wounded vocals.
+Method to integrate thresholds into cumulative effects assessment and management in Canada's North.
+At the 1915 election, it was recreated as a House of Assembly seat returning two members, being abolished again at the 1938 election when single-member districts were introduced.
+The early evening newscast was moved up to 4:00 p.m. during September 2012.
+Realignment and format changesArmstrong State moved its athletic program back to NCAA Division II.
+He presented his credentials in Tel Aviv in January 1950.
+At the 2006 census, its population was 393, in 88 families.
+John W. Hulbert Jr. (also John Hurlbert) (September 1867 in Auburn, New York – February 22, 1929 in Auburn, New York) was the executioner for the states of New York, New Jersey and Massachusetts from 1913 to 1926.
+They dissolved at 2012.
+On 27 January 2012, it was announced that Paul Schellekens was appointed to the post of Netherlands ambassador to Dublin in Ireland.
+, then Wiener’s attack can not be applied regardless of how small is.
+Wu Chaomei (born ) is a Chinese female track cyclist.
+Publications La fiancée américaine by Eric Dupont (Prix des libraries du Québec, Prix des Collégiens) La femme qui fuit by Anaïs Barbeau-Lavalette (Prix des libraires du Québec) HKPQ by Michèle Plomer (Prix France Québec) Sèna by Françosie de Luca (Shortlisted Governor General's Awards) Traité des peaux by Catherine Harton (Finalist Prix des Cinq Continents) Le phyto-analyste by Bertrand Busson (Grand Prix littéraire Archambault) Journal d'un étudiant en histoire de l'art by Maxime Olivier Moutier Douce détresse by Anna Leventhal Les filles peintes by Cathy Marie Buchanan L'Angoisse du paradis by Yann Fortier Dans sa bulle by Suzanne Myre Attends-moi by Arjun Basu Jardin sabiler by Michèle Plomer (Anne Hébert prize) Un vélo dans la tête by Mathieu Meunier Le géranium by Melinda Josie Mélanie Tellier (TD Canadana prize)ReferencesExternal links Marchand de feuilles 10 best Canadian books of the decade, Radio-Canada.
+Category:Villages in Põlva County
+Simpi is a village in the Rallawn Village Tract in Falam Township, Falam District, Chin State, Myanmar, about south-east of the town of Falam.
+The opened in Kyōto, Japan, in 2001.
+George Dyott - British pioneer aviator and explorer of the AmazonRichard Dyott (disambiguation) -any of four different British politicians
+Grigori (Geliy) Lazarevich Aronov (Григо́рий (Ге́лий) Ла́заревич Аро́нов, born January 1, 1923 in Pochep, died July 1, 1984 in Pochep) was a Soviet film director actor and screenwriter.
+Water for Chocolate is the second studio album by Deni Hines.
+SOSI is a much used geospatial vector data format for predominantly used for exchange of geographical information in Norway.
+Unidá Nacionalista Asturiana, leftist nationalist political party formed by Izquierda Asturiana and other organizations.
+Kumar sings the Doon School song 'Lab Pe Aati Hai' in the soundtrack as well as Howly is Krishna which was improvised during a music recording session in Goa.
+Streptomyces tanashiensis produces luteomycin, mithramycin, phosphoramidon and kalafungin.
+It is named after Cardinal Nicholas Wiseman.
+T. dubia may refer to: Tabebuia dubia, a plant species endemic to Cuba Thladiantha dubia, the goldencreeper, Manchu tuber-gourd, wild potato, thladianthe douteuse, a fieldweed and a rarely used ornamental plant species Trypeta dubia, a fruit fly speciesSee also Dubia (disambiguation)
+Category:Populated places in Nógrád County
+Landaulet may refer to: Landaulet (carriage), horse-drawn carriage Landaulet (car), automobile
+James Crosbie may refer to: James Crosbie (senator), Irish barrister, journalist and Fine Gael politician, senator 1938–51 and 1954–57 James Crosbie (Kerry politician) (c1760–1836), MP for County Kerry 1798–1806, 1812–26See also Crosbie (disambiguation)
+AfterShip received $1 million series A investment from IDG Capital Partners (IDG-Accel) in May 2014.
+The total area of the town of Yaese is .
+Track listingSide one "Mama, Open Up" — 4:10 (Volman/Kaylan) "The Love You Gave Away" — 3:31 (Volman/Kaylan) "Hot" — 3:25 (Volman/Kaylan) "Best Friends (Theme From The Unsold T.V.
+He won a silver medal at the 1948 Winter Olympics.
+St Andrews, ScotlandJones had a unique relationship with the town of St Andrews.
+He was subsequently re-elected in 1908, 1911, and 1917.
+External linksBaseball ReferenceRetrosheetCategory:1918 birthsCategory:1979 deathsCategory:Atlanta Crackers playersCategory:Baseball players from North CarolinaCategory:Cedar Rapids Raiders playersCategory:Flint Gems playersCategory:Leaksville-Draper-Spray Triplets playersCategory:Major League Baseball pitchersCategory:Newton-Conover Twins playersCategory:Oakland Oaks (baseball) playersCategory:People from Mooresville, North CarolinaCategory:Tyler Trojans playersCategory:Washington Senators (1901–60) players
+Grant Union High School may refer to:Grant Union High School (John Day, Oregon)Grant Union High School (Sacramento, California)
+There are 6 streets.
+OffseasonThe Fort Wayne Komets joined the league as an expansion team after departing from the IHL.
+She attended the Blind Asylum School (later the Royal Blind Asylum and School), and later taught there.
+ReferencesCategory:Populated places in Chuy Region
+After the elections in 2006, "Zubr" ceased its existence.
+Week 14: at San Francisco 49ersAfter their win over the Panthers the Seahawks flew to Candlestick Park for an NFC West rivalry match against the 49ers.
+Steven Vandeput (born 30 March 1967 in Hasselt) is a Belgian politician and is affiliated to the N-VA.
+On June 13, 2016, the company launched the Active Light, supplied by the Aurora Group, which users can control remotely to turn the bulb on and off and program lighting schedules.
+Players namedGame summaryTeam White skaters Jess Jones and Jillian Saulnier became the first competitors to score a hat trick in CWHL All-Star Game history.
+He founded the Great Method of the Jade Hall School ()ReferencesCategory:Chinese TaoistsCategory:ExorcistsCategory:12th-century Chinese people
+Century Studios burned down in 1926.
+For example, the tectosilicate feldspar can be described as a solid solution of the endmembers K-feldspar [KAlSi3O8], albite [NaAlSi3O8] and anorthite [CaAl2Si2O8].
+Romanian TACAM and Mareșal tank destroyersThe Romanians modified 34 captured T-60s into TACAM T-60 tank destroyers in 1943.
+ReferencesLiterature Jürgen Lieb: Dampf und Diesel auf der Nebenstrecke Jossa – Bad Brückenau – Wildflecken.
+Pyle opened the scoring in Lincoln's next game, a 2–2 draw with Small Heath, and his third and last senior goal came on the opening day of the 1899–1900 Football League season, in a 3–0 defeat of Middlesbrough.
+CompetitionsDivizia AResults by roundResults summaryMatchesCupa RomânieiPlayersTransfersInOutSee also 1997–98 Divizia A 1997–98 Cupa României 1997–98 UEFA CupReferencesCategory:ASC Oțelul Galați seasonsOțelul, Galați, ACS
+He also spoke with individuals at the National Day Laborer Organizing Network to inform his piece.
+Prince of Orange Mall is a regional enclosed shopping mall in Orangeburg, South Carolina, United States.
+His vessel Maximum Exposure – a "converted rowing boat" "likened to a glorified sailboard" with a sail "canibalized" from a windsurfing board – was considered by many, including the Coastguard and RNLI, to be under-equipped and "unfit" for such a journey.
+Danilo Pennone (born July 14, 1963 in Rome) is an Italian writer.
+Dresdner Schnauzen is a German television series.
+He was appointed as Minister of Irrigation (Water Resources) for Andhra Pradesh in India on 8 June 2019.
+ResultsFinalReferencesCork Intermediate Hurling ChampionshipCategory:Cork Intermediate Hurling Championship
+PersiaSYS has started to provide a VoIP service in 2009 under the UltraTone brand.
+They encounter a figure in clockwork armor, who is revealed to be another version of Patrick, from 2001, who traveled forward in time to recover his initial machine from the Men of the Machine; they, however, go separate ways, hoping to stop Gordon.
+The trailhead for Devils Garden is located at the end of the main park road.
+Notable people with the surname include: Charles Hallgarten (1838-1908), German-American banker, philanthropist and social reformer Fritz Hallgarten (1865-1925), chemist, co-founder and honorary citizen of the University of Frankfurt, the son of Charles Hallgarten.
+People Abu'l-Mawahib al-Shinnawi, Muslim scholar Kamal el-Shennawi, Egyptian actor Tarek El Shennawi, Egyptian film criticCategory:Arabic-language surnames
+It had fallen into ruins by 1708 and, during the French Revolution, it became a farm.
+Li Xin (Chinese: 李鑫; born 5 November 1991 in Shenyang, Liaoning) is a Chinese football player who currently plays for China League Two side Qingdao Jonoon.
+He leads KBR from its global headquarters in Houston, Texas.
+In addition there are nearly 100 other contributors.
+Published since 1942, she started publishing mainly contemporary doctor nurse romances, before writing also gothic romances, and when the market for gothic novels softened, she wrote historical mystery romances.
+The Delaware International Speedway is a 1/2 mile clay oval track.
+The operating profit margin went from 10% to 16% within the three years.
+Its population was 887 as of the Canada 2011 Census.
+During the 2017–18 season, Weise was frequently a healthy scratch.
+EducationDuncan is a part of the Garner-Hayfield-Ventura Community School District.
+The charges were that he was leaking naval secrets which turned out to be his own PhD thesis which was a document available freely in libraries of reputed institutions of Nuclear Research.
+The most famous is Lascaux near Montignac (15 minutes from Plazac) where the famous cave paintings were discovered by some children.
+After the overthrow of Milošević, Vojislav Koštunica became the President of Yugoslavia.
+B Blizzard - A costumed villain with a suit that enables him to produce ice and cold and a former Stark employee who was fired for robbery.
+Thackeray was a right-handed batsman who bowled right-arm medium pace.
+Elizabeth Cornelia (died unmarried, 1903)ArmsDeathLord Radstock died in 1857 and was succeeded in his title by his eldest son.
+During this invasion, an important step in the retaking of the Philippines, Holt's gunfire protected her supply convoy and shot down several planes attempting to attack the invasion forces during the landings on 15 December.
+Location Located to the south of the municipality, California is bounded to the north and east by San Pascual, to the west by San Francisco, and to the south by Ilihan.
+Methodist minister the Rev'd Kathleen Richardson took as her title ’Baroness Richardson of Calow’, after the village, when she was created a life peer in 1998.
+He also competed at the European Youth Olympic Festival that year and he won the gold medal in the 800 metres.
+Bear Creek is a stream in Boone County in the U.S. state of Missouri.
+ReunionsAnnette Funicello and Tim Considine were reunited on The New Mickey Mouse Club in 1977.
+Dance career Mukherjee began formal dance training at age 12.
+Leadership Vincent Signorello has served as both President and CEO of FECI since April 2009.
+ReferencesExternal linksCaspian Sea Biodiversity ProjectCategory:Islands of the Caspian SeaCategory:Islands of KazakhstanCategory:Atyrau Region
+The population was 5 as of 2010.
+album) This Means War!, an album by Petra This Means War (Tank album) "This Means War", a song by AC/DC on the album Blow Up Your Video "This Means War" (Avenged Sevenfold song) "This Means War" (Marianas Trench song) "This Means War" (Nickelback song) "This Means War," a song by Joan Jett from her album Good Music (1986) and the soundtrack for the film Light of Day (1987) "This Means War!!"
+External links Website from Ingo Schmitt Biography by German Bundestag Biography by CDU/CSUCategory:Year of birth missing (living people)Category:Living peopleCategory:Members of the Bundestag for BerlinCategory:MEPs for Germany 1999–2004Category:Christian Democratic Union of Germany MEPsCategory:MEPs for Germany 2004–2009Category:Pupils of Karlheinz StockhausenCategory:Members of the Bundestag 2005–2009
+Bacon substitutesSee also List of bacon dishes List of meat substitutes Meat analogueReferencesBacon substitutesBaconSubstitutes
+The Court of Aldermen forms part of the senior governance of the City of London Corporation.
+Personal lifeNarz's first wife was Mary Lou Roemheld, daughter of Oscar-winning composer Heinz Roemheld and the sister of Bill Cullen's wife, Ann.
+Buon fratello e Amico Thailandia-Italia : 140 Anni Di Relazioni Italo-Thailandesi - ภราดามหามิตร ไทย-อิตาลี : 140 ปี ความสัมพันธ์ไทย-อิตาลี.
+4.5!
+Spinifex is a genus of perennial coastal plants in the grass family.
+The Heroine of Mons is a 1914 British silent war film directed by Wilfred Noy (the maternal uncle of Leslie Howard) and starring Dorothy Bellew, Leslie Howard and Bert Wynne.
+ReferencesCategory:Political parties in Kyrgyzstan
+He was reelected to the Court in December 2017, and took office for his second term on 6 February 2018.
+In 2017, Landi moved from WOGA to the World Champions Centre, where he is currently head coach to Simone Biles.
+He and Constance later traveled to many places throughout the world and immersed themselves in the culture of every country they visited.
+C.A.
+The Mauritshuis version omits the shoulder and hand and shows a more severe facial expression.
+ReferencesCategory:1869 birthsCategory:1954 deathsCategory:20th-century Anglican bishopsCategory:20th-century English Anglican priests
+The following ships of the Indian Navy have been named INS Nirbhik: was a of the Indian Navy which served in the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971 is a , currently in active service with the Indian NavyCategory:Indian Navy ship names
+Delaware elected its member October 3, 1826.
+The design worked as a network of pavilions connected by a large central corridor that ran through the site.
+Past winners1975 : Proud Tobin1976 : Sound Reason1977 : Overskate1978 : Medaille d'Or1979 : Allan Blue1980 : Bayford1981 : Deputy Minister1982 : Sunny's Halo1983 : Prince Avatar1984 : Dauphin Fabuleux1985 : Grey Classic1986 : Blue Finn1987 : Regal Classic1988 : Mercedes Won1989 : Sky Classic1990 : Rainbows For Life1991 : Free at Last1992 : Truth of It All1993 : Comet Shine1994 : Talkin Man1995 : Gomtuu1996 : Cash Deposit1997 : Dawson's Legacy1998 : Riddell's Creek1999 : Exciting Story2000 : Highland Legacy2001 : Rare Friends2002 : Added Edge2003 : Judiths Wild Rush2004 : Wholelottabourbon2005 : Edenwold2006 : Leonnatus Anteas2007 : Kodiak Kowboy2008 : Mine That Bird2009 : Hollinger2010 : Madman Diaries2011 : Maritimer2012 : Uncaptured2013 : Go Greeley2014 : Conquest Typhoon2015 : Riker2016 : King and His Court2017 : Admiralty Pier2018 : Avie’s FlatterReferencesThe Sovereign Awards at the Jockey Club of Canada websiteCategory:Sovereign Award winnersCategory:Horse racing awardsCategory:Horse racing in Canada
+Correspondence with the Saṃyukta ĀgamaThe Samyutta Nikaya corresponds to the Saṃyukta Āgama found in the Sutra Pitikas of various Sanskritic early Buddhists schools, fragments of which survive in Sanskrit and in Tibetan translation.
+Chylismia brevipes is a species of wildflower native to the American desert southwest known by the common names yellow cups, Mojave suncup, and golden suncup.
+Aleksandr Markov (born 26 May 1985) is a Russian Olympic eventing rider.
+ReferencesguineensisCategory:Plants described in 1844Category:Plants used in traditional African medicineCategory:Flora of Africa
+At the 2006 census, its existence was noted, but its population was not reported.
+Erminio Piserchia (born 12 January 1964) is a retired Italian-Swiss football defender and later manager.
+Sawlogs most often come from the "butt end" of the stem and are the most financially valuable part of the tree.
+Subsequently, Ashman wrote the song's lyrics.
+This variant of surname is mainly found in Portugal along with a very small distribution in former Portuguese colonies like Brazil, India (Costal Kerala and Goa), Angola, Mozambique and other places.
+Cast Goldie Hawn as Glenda Gardenia Parks Chevy Chase as Nicholas 'Nick' J. Gardenia Charles Grodin as Ira J.
+Mark London also co-write the soundtrack for seven series of animation films, for children 1 to 6 years old.
+Triaenogenius is a genus of beetles in the family Carabidae, containing the following species: Triaenogenius arabicus Gestro, 1889 Triaenogenius carinulatus (Fairmaire, 1887) Triaenogenius congoensis Basilewsky, 1959 Triaenogenius corpulentus Chaudoir, 1877 Triaenogenius denticulatus Basilewsky, 1959 Triaenogenius ferox (Erichson, 1843) Triaenogenius gerstaeckeri (Chaudoir, 1877) Triaenogenius kochi Basilewsky, 1964 Triaenogenius lugubrinus (Boheman, 1860) Triaenogenius lugubris (Schaum, 1863) Triaenogenius sculpturatus (Gerstaecker, 1867)ReferencesCategory:Anthiinae (beetle)
+Extrait des Annales des Sciences Naturelles, April 1850.
+However, his loneliness is interrupted with an unexpected appearance of an unfamiliar girl, whose story is closely interwoven with that of Lorenzo and his family.
+Sheridan High School is a public high school in Thornville, Ohio.
+Jessie's nephew, Ken, was played by a young Mark Hamill.
+This is a list of cathedrals in the state of Ohio, United States:See alsoList of cathedrals in the United StatesReferences OhioCathedrals in OhioOhioCathedrals
+The Cyrano IVM-R radar has extra ground- and contour-mapping modules.
+W Lusty & Sons became The Lusty Furniture Company in July 2008, backed by private investors interested in preserving the legacy of Marshall B Lloyd, the inventor of Lloyd Loom.
+Gazetteer referenceThe Geographic Names Information System lists Bartonville, a.k.a.
+Christian Smith is a Swedish DJ, record producer and remixer.
+Guerreros de Acapulco were founding members of the new second division, Primera División A, and played in its inaugural 1994–95 season.
+The debut episode will be presented in virtual reality, with one episode airing each day during Comic-Con International 2016 via smartphone VR viewers to be handed out at the show.
+Fresco is the sixth studio album recorded by Puerto Rican salsa singer Jerry Rivera released on August 20, 1996.
+It closed for passengers on 2 December 1935.
+The story follows the last days as well as the historic moments in the life of the Ruler of Mysore, Tipu Sultan, (1750–1799) through the eyes of an Indian court historian and a British Oriental scholar.
+Bonus tracksPersonnelMick Jones - producer (tracks: 1, 2, 5 to 7, 9, 10, 12, 13)Bernard Butler - producer (tracks: 3, 4, 8, 11)Chart performanceReferencesCategory:The Libertines albumsCategory:2007 greatest hits albumsCategory:Rough Trade Records compilation albums
+In South KoreaIn South Korea, tetraphobia is less extreme; the number 4 sounds like "decease" and "died" (사), but the floor number 4 or room number 4 is almost always skipped in hospitals, funeral halls, and similar public buildings.
+As of 2008, he lives in Coconut Grove, Florida.
+Minié or Minie may refer to: Claude-Étienne Minié (1804-1879), French Army officer and weapons designer Minié rifle, designed by Claude-Étienne Minié Minié ball, a rifle bullet designed by Claude-Étienne Minié Minie Brinkhoff (born 1952), retired Dutch cyclistSee also Mini (disambiguation) Minni (disambiguation) Minnie (disambiguation)
+Thus, since the costs are usually easier to measure than benefits, and economic benefits and costs are easier to measure than social benefits and costs, efficiency as a goal leads to economising whenever the decrease of benefit is not noticeable (Mintzberg gives an example when administrator of university cuts costs of a study program, as he cannot measure how much the training will worsen), and ignoring of social benefits and costs.
+See also Victoria County HistoryReferencesFurther readingExternal links Cambridge County GeographiesCategory:Cambridge University Press booksCategory:Geography booksCategory:Series of booksCategory:Books about the United KingdomCategory:Counties of the United Kingdom
+Jones in the #98 Entry with Brazilian duo Bruno Junqueira and Cristiano da Matta in the #99 car.
+He was a member of the Democratic party.
+David Anderson describes it as Bromfield's best work but one, like many after the author's early successes, too little appreciated.
+See also List of tallest buildings in the United Kingdom List of tallest structures in the United Kingdom List of tallest buildings and structures in the United Kingdom by usageReferences
+After the withdrawal of the Roman rule, the region was crossed by different migratory peoples of Slavic (from the 7th century) and Turkic origin, who left names in the local toponymy (e.g.
+This was the school's only CISAA championship for first-team football.
+William Morice (c. 1500 – 17 January 1554) was an English politician.
+Democratic nominee Cal Rampton defeated Republican nominee Mitchell Melich with 56.99% of the vote.
+María taught her children English and at one time produced a radio program called Abuelita Borinqueña (Puerto Rican Grandmother).
+Ravet is a village in Raigarh district, Maharashtra, India.
+ReferencesExternal linksMLSZHLSZCategory:1994 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Sportspeople from BudapestCategory:Hungarian footballersCategory:Association football defendersCategory:Újpest FC playersCategory:BKV Előre SC footballersCategory:FC Dabas footballersCategory:Nemzeti Bajnokság I playersCategory:Nemzeti Bajnokság II players
+In December 2019, he was named in the One Day International (ODI) squad for the 2019 United Arab Emirates Tri-Nation Series.
+Design and constructionIn 1938, the Australian Commonwealth Naval Board (ACNB) identified the need for a general purpose 'local defence vessel' capable of both anti-submarine and mine-warfare duties, while easy to construct and operate.
+He was sworn in on January 14, 2012, following the second week of the 2012 legislative session.
+See alsoSan Andrés (disambiguation)St Andrews (disambiguation)
+The municipality of Westvoorne was formed on 1 January 1980, through the merger of the former municipalities of Oostvoorne and Rockanje.
+His Father was Prime Minister of A King of South India.
+He went to Lord Beaverbrook High School in Calgary, Alberta and played college football for the University of Calgary Dinos.
+Dextellia is a genus of moths in the family Gracillariidae.
+The Division Street Historic District is a historic residential district in Platteville, Wisconsin, United States.
+Ancherythroculter kurematsui is a species of cyprinid in the genus Ancherythroculter.
+Five Star Bank bought 4 HSBC branches and four First Niagara Branches in 2012.
+Cast Ram Kapoor as Ram Ahuja; Anandita's husband and widower; Disha's and Aarav's father.
+Plot summaryThe story's protagonist, Charles Prentice, ventures to Estrella de Mar in order to rescue his jailed brother, Frank who has been arrested for instigating an arson attack which killed 5 people.
+Chen Ningning is the founder and president of Pioneer Metals Holdings Co., Ltd. She is a self-made billionaire, her net worth is $1.8 billion as of 2011.
+Cast Caterin Escobar as Armida López María José Vargas as young Armida López Diego Trujillo as Ismael Herrera Sandra Reyes as Gertrudis López Karen Novoa as young Gertrudis López Christian Tappan as Felicito Yanequé Linda Lucía Callejas as Josefa Méndez Diego Garzón as Miguel Yanequé Norma Nivia as Magdalena Herrera Juan Manuel Lenis as Ignacio "Escobita" Herrera José Daniel Cristancho as Tiburcio Yanequé Freddy Ordóñez as Sergeant Carlos Alberto Lituma Víctor Hugo Morant as Captain Óscar Silva Fernando Lara as Father Pepín Odonoban Kimberly Reyes as Mabel Barraza Muñoz Gary Forero as Foncho Martínez Ana Victoria Beltrán as Martha Contreras Tatiana Rentería as Lucila Juan Carlos Messier as Claudio Luis Fernando Salas as Narciso Veranda Juan Pablo Obregón as Albeiro Jaramillo Alex Adames as Gerardo Tatiana Arango as Johanna Rodríguez Laura Peñuela as Aurora Santiago Moure as Orlando Camargo Inés Oviedo as Briggith Juan David Galindo as Rigoberto Luz Stella Luengas Díaz as Dalila Romero Zulma Muñoz Ruiz as Constanza Alberto León Jaramillo as Francisco "Don Pacho" Martínez Alejandro Gutiérrez as Colorado Bignolo Katherine Castrillón as Margarita Manrique Lady Noriega as the muse Juana del Río as "La Silenciosa" Diego Armando Landaeta as Luis Veranda Shirley Gómez as Andrea Isabel Cristina Villarreal Ana Sofía Jiménez María Irene ToroAwards and nominationsReferencesExternal links Category:2016 telenovelasCategory:2016 Colombian television series debutsCategory:2017 Colombian television series endingsCategory:Caracol Televisión telenovelasCategory:Colombian telenovelasCategory:Spanish-language telenovelasCategory:Television shows set in Bogotá
+ReferencesCategory:1972 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:15th Lok Sabha membersCategory:Lok Sabha members from BiharCategory:Janata Dal (United) politiciansCategory:Babasaheb Bhimrao Ambedkar Bihar University alumniCategory:Bihar MLAs 2005–2010
+In 2009, Little Joe took first place at the International Blues Challenge held each year in Memphis, Tennessee by the Blues Foundation.
+The 1910 Chicago Maroons football team was an American football team that represented the University of Chicago during the 1910 college football season.
+John Clute, David Langford, Peter Nicholls and Graham Sleight.
+It was the third edition of the tournament which was part of the 2017 ATP Challenger Tour.
+At that time there were 11 single-engine aircraft based at this airport.
+There are landed proprietors bearing the name Coates in England, Wales and Ireland.
+Hailing from different areas of the United States—Boulder, Colorado (Danson); Eindhoven, The Netherlands (Hume); and Detroit, Michigan (Smith) -- the band integrate genres as varied as punk rock, indie rock, and alternative country.
+He married Anna Bissell (1834-1898) on January 24, 1855 in St. Louis.
+In 2008, he received the Governor General's Performing Arts Award for Lifetime Artistic Achievement, Canada's highest honour in the performing arts.
+See alsoGeorge Barris, another auto customizer.
+Four Aces In the early thirties Howard Schenken, later author of the Schenken system, formed a successful team called the "Four Aces", together with Oswald Jacoby, Michael T. Gottlieb (later replaced by Richard Frey) and David Burnstine (who later changed his name to David Bruce).
+Adolf Möller (25 October 1877 – 10 November 1968) was a German rower who competed in the 1900 Summer Olympics.
+Notable players Edgars Adamovičs Jānis Brakšs Andrejs Ignatovičs Aleksandrs Kerčs Sr. Vladislavs VodolažskisCurrent rosterHead Coach Leonīds BeresņevsExternal linksplayers in season 2005/2006players in season 2004/2005player statistics in season 2003/2004Category:Ogre, LatviaCategory:Latvian Hockey League teamsCategory:Ice hockey teams in LatviaCategory:Belarusian Extraleague teamsCategory:Eastern European Hockey League teamsCategory:2003 establishments in LatviaCategory:2009 disestablishments in LatviaCategory:Ice hockey clubs established in 2003Category:Ice hockey clubs disestablished in 2009
+TitleholdersColor keyMiss International IcelandBest resultsPageant notes Unnur Steinsson was Miss Iceland 1983 and finished in the top five positions at the Miss World finals the same year.
+Beyond individuals, it has renowned organizational members, such as Arup Foresight, the Foresight Alliance, the Institute for the Future-Palo Alto, Institute for Futures Research-Stellenbosch, Kantar Foresight, Kairos Futures, Kedge, Leading Futurists LLC, OCAD University, SAMI Consulting, Shaping Tomorrow, and Tamkang University.
+In 1961 (1964?)
+The Xiamen Open (China Tour), a men's golf tournament on the China Tour.
+The wings of the butterfly are located on either side of this junction, the left wing bounded on the south by Interstate 84 and Walnut Street, and the right wing bounded on the south by Winthrop Street.
+The second defendant "LMN" is described as a single mother on disability benefits who wished to sell a story relating to the claimants to The Sunday Mirror newspaper.
+ReferencesCategory:CerithiopsidaeCategory:Gastropods described in 1914
+The awards tend to be for a career of instrument development rather than a single specific device; the lists of inventions below are taken from press releases from the recipients' institutions.
+Warner & Sons also created many designs for the Ministry of Works destined for public spaces such as schools and polytechnics.
+Being lipophilic, Mirex is strongly adsorbed on sediments.
+Also, explaining the different roles of those forces to the local population and briefing of the troops on the complexities of the region was a major task.
+They looked apologetic.
+They consist mainly of brick two story row houses with one apartment per floor and three story tenements with two apartments per floor.
+Phytoecia somereni is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae.
+He was born at Rochdale, Lancashire.
+ReferencesCategory:Hamlets in Cornwall
+It is significant due to its archaeological resources of American Indian settlement.
+Inna German (born 17 January 1983) is a Kazakhstani female volleyball player.
+Her current research focuses on the effects of endocrine disrupting chemicals from the environment on hypothalamus development which can alter psychological and social outcomes as well as generational effects in children and adults.
+At the 2006 census, its population was 20, in 5 families.
+Abu Ali al-Farmadi Khwaja Ali Hallaj Abubakr Abdullah TusiReferences Category:Iranian SufisCategory:People from GorganCategory:380 birthsCategory:450 deaths
+The Glasgow and Aberdeen Universities by-election of 1874 was fought on 14 March 1874.
+Other transmission installations have been built not far to the north-northeast of the tower.
+CastReferencesExternal links Category:2010 filmsCategory:2010 comedy filmsCategory:German comedy filmsCategory:German filmsCategory:Films set in 1968Category:Films set in Berlin
+Fefferman was the editor of the national journal of the Unification Church in 1989, and served as chief editor of the first edition of Divine Principle in English, as well as other church publications.
+(9346 women - 8972 men) 2010 census DATE OF CANTONIZATION: December 8, 1962 LIMITS: To the North: Canton Morona, To the South: Cantones Logroño and Santiago, To the East: Canton Morona, To the West: Province of CañarLANGUAGES: Spanish, ShuarTourist attractions Río Upano Río tutanangoza Piedra del mono Cascadas de Arapicos Parque Botánico Petroglifos del Abuelo Mirador de Huambinimi Carnaval Culturizado Parque Ecuador Amazonico Museo de Sucua Tuntiak Nunkee Mirador de Piura Mirador Río Upano Cascadas Kintia Panki Cascadas del Río Umpuankas-Kumpas Balneario Cabañas Panki Las TaguasTourist activities RaftingSightseeingCampingJungle exploration tripsNote: It is recommended to find an experienced tourist guide for any of these activitiesParties and Holidays Fiesta de Cantonizacion de Sucua -December 8 El Carnaval Culturizado (Carnival Celebration) -February Fiesta de Maria Auxiliadora -May 24.
+Members included Cheryl Jewell (lead singer), Heli Sterner (lead and rhythm guitars), Brynn Beltran (keyboards), Jennifer York (bass), and Jennifer "Sparky" Sparks (drums).
+47 may refer to at least several different "Now That's What I Call Music!"
+Article VI, Section 3 of the 2001 Constitution laid out certain positions as non-negotiable:[S]truggle for the unity of the working class, against all forms of national oppression, national chauvinism, discrimination and segregation, against all racist ideologies and practices, [...] against all manifestations of male supremacy and discrimination against women, [...] against homophobia and all manifestations of discrimination against gays, lesbians, bisexuals, and transgender people.
+DemographyPopulationIn the period 1801 to 1901 the population of Midloe was recorded every ten years by the UK census.
+However, it was delayed.
+Track listingCreditsMark Spybey - composer, performer, artwork, producerDarryl Neudorf - sounds (tracks 1 - 8)Sugarpill (Tracy Pillsworth) - Moog synthesizer (track 1), ARP Chroma (tracks 1, 4, 5), Roland Rhythm 77 (track 3), outro voice (track 2), vocals (tracks 4, 8)Abintra (Darryl Neudorf and Sugarpill) - co-producer (tracks 1 - 8)Finn Manniche - cello (tracks 3, 4, 6)Alexander Varty - guitar (tracks 1 - 3, 5, 7, 8)Thomas Anselmi - guitar (track 1)Chris Houston - guitar (track 1)Ryan Moore - drums (tracks 1, 2), bass (tracks 5, 7)Peter Bourne - drums (track 7)ReferencesCategory:1999 albums
+To date, 36 visits have been made to the United Kingdom and eleven to Ireland.
+List |}KeySee also List of listed buildings in FifeNotesReferences All entries, addresses and coordinates are based on data from Historic Scotland.
+On May 18, 2015, China Academy of Agricultural Sciences announced that its Institute of Animal Science had entered into an agreement to transfer the entirety of its research achievements and all relevant patents on WZSP to Beijing Grand Life Science & Technology Co., Ltd., which will be the exclusive owner to industrialize the Wuzhishan pigs.
+Currently he is serving as Minister For Law, Parliamentary Affairs & Legislation and Minister For Minor Irrigation from Water Resources department in B.S.
+It is currently represented by Democrat Bill Monning of Carmel.
+Her cycle of paintings Lorraine Images (Lothringer Bilder), created after a trip to the nearby Lorraine region of France, is ranked among her best work.
+Group AIndiaCoach: Islam Akhmedov''The AIFF sent the India U-20 team for this tournament, therefore no caps at any level are displayed.
+Category:UttlesfordCategory:Hamlets in Essex
+Lake Bernhardsthal (also: Bernhardsthaler Teich) is located in the very north east corner of Lower Austria near the border with the Czech Republic.
+Christopher "Chris" Lee Rawlinson (born 19 May 1972) is a track and field athlete who competes in the 400 metre hurdles.
+Politically, the publication supported the Cadets.
+BiographyHe was born May 25, 1889 (although at least one text puts his birth year as 1891) in Nishihara, Okinawa.
+In 1848 he made his debut as an actor at a theater in Vienna, according to the ÖBL.
+Later in his career, he did not have the size or power to compete at the upper echelon of the heavyweight division when he moved up in weight class.
+Political careerShe was elected to the Provincial Assembly of Sindh as a candidate of Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) on a reserved seat for women in 2013 Pakistani general election.
+This was triggered by the death of Labour MP Henry Beard.
+Fderîck or F'dérick () is a town in the Tiris Zemmour Region of northern Mauritania.
+The largest money market mutual fund is Vanguard Federal Money Market Fund (Nasdaq:VMFXX), with assets exceeding US$120 billion.
+(1st edition, reissued 1934 New York: E. P. Dutton; 1966 New Hyde Park, N.Y.: University Books; 1973 Secaucus, N.J.: Citadel Press; 2003 Mineola, N.Y.: Dover, with new title The Werewolf in Lore and Legend).
+Yugo-Zapadnaya has four entrances, all grouped around the intersection of Vernadskogo Avenue and Pokryshkina Street.
+It is the lone Bee aircraft to survive an arson fire at the museum.
+Emergent leaves are bright orange, and turn dark green with age, somewhat similar to Zamia integrifolia by coincidence.
+References Category:Populated places in Izeh County
+LL Cool J and Puff Daddy each attained nine number-one hits on the Hot Rap Singles chart during its first 11 years, the most for any artist during this period.
+ReferencesCategory:1961 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Athletes (track and field) at the 1988 Summer OlympicsCategory:German male sprintersCategory:Olympic athletes of West GermanyCategory:Place of birth missing (living people)Category:Universiade bronze medalists for West GermanyCategory:Universiade medalists in athletics (track and field)
+Kanakanavu can refer to: the Kanakanavu people the Kanakanavu language
+It "received long and favourable reviews in The Guardian (Hermione Lee), The Spectator (Francis King), The Sunday Times (Penelope Lively) and The Times Literary Supplement (Mark Cries).
+Boston: Globe Pequot Press, 1987.
+Quincy Airport may refer to: Quincy Regional Airport in Quincy, Illinois, United States (FAA: UIN) Quincy Municipal Airport (Florida) in Quincy, Florida, United States (FAA: 2J9) Quincy Municipal Airport (Washington) in Quincy, Washington, United States (FAA: 80T) Gansner Field in Quincy, California, United States (FAA: 2O1)See also Quincy Municipal Airport (disambiguation)
+Simulator for certain electronic peripherals like LEDs, LED displays, LED matrices, LCD displays, etc.
+Meanwhile, Kinchela and Duff abduct Arte and Moya, planning to take them away with them.
+UOG may refer to:University of GuamUniversity of GujratPapua New Guinea University Of Goroka
+The gang fought initially in the Chilean War of Independence as royalist guerrillas during the Guerra a muerte phase.
+SourcesCategory:1821 birthsCategory:1871 deathsCategory:People from Salisbury, ConnecticutCategory:Delegates to the United States House of Representatives from Nebraska TerritoryCategory:19th-century American politicians
+April 16: Bob McKimson's The Hole Idea is released, an animated short he directed and animated nearly entirely on his own.
+See alsoReferencesExternal links Uganda National Roads Authority: Fifth Annual Joint Transport Sector Review - 27 October 2009Category:Roads in UgandaCategory:Masaka District
+This is a list of Australian twin towns and sister cities in the country of Australia — that is, pairs of towns or cities in different countries which have town twinning arrangements.
+Smoke Rise may refer to: Smoke Rise, Alabama, location in Blount County, Alabama, USA Smoke Rise (band), American progressive rock band Smoke Rise (community), gated community in Kinnelon, New Jersey, USA Smoke Rise, Georgia, a suburb of Atlanta, GA
+This belief in the dual ideals – human and divine – had to be surrounded by a deep feeling of inner peacefulness and glory.
+It is the third largest village in pattukkottai taluk,after Thamarankottai,Thambikkottai.It is the first largest village in musugundhan community.Alathur is an Agricultural community, Commercial market and Centres.
+His acting debut was in Sunjata by Mark Fleishman.
+After a thrilling air "battle," Bill and Jimmy land safely.
+WDMS (100.7 FM) is an American radio station licensed to Greenville, Mississippi, United States.
+Ashby's Mill, often referred to as simply Brixton Windmill, is a restored grade II* listed tower mill at Brixton in the London Borough of Lambeth.
+The brand unveiled a marketing exercise in Bulgaria, aiming to make young athletes look like the biggest stars in the business.
+Career statisticsInternationalReferencesCategory:2001 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:São Tomé and Príncipe footballersCategory:São Tomé and Príncipe international footballersCategory:Association football forwardsCategory:UDRA players
+Querré is a former commune in the Maine-et-Loire department in western France.
+Typically, the area of contact is elliptical, of the order of 15 mm across.
+External links Category:1982 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Sportspeople from KievCategory:Ukrainian footballersCategory:Ukraine student international footballersCategory:Association football midfieldersCategory:Ukrainian Premier League playersCategory:Ukrainian expatriate footballersCategory:Expatriate footballers in BelarusCategory:Ukrainian expatriate sportspeople in BelarusCategory:FC Dynamo-3 Kyiv playersCategory:FC Dynamo-2 Kyiv playersCategory:FC Systema-Boreks Borodianka playersCategory:FC Naftovyk-Ukrnafta Okhtyrka playersCategory:SC Tavriya Simferopol playersCategory:FC Krymteplytsia Molodizhne playersCategory:FC Arsenal Kyiv playersCategory:FC Chornomorets Odesa playersCategory:FC Shakhtyor Soligorsk playersCategory:FC Vitebsk playersCategory:Universiade gold medalists for UkraineCategory:Universiade medalists in football
+Mounts Baths, Northampton, England, designed by James Caldwell Prestwich, built.
+The seat of the Verbandsgemeinde is in Freyburg.
+The main use of the panela in Colombia is for aguapanela, one of the most widely consumed beverages in Colombia.
+Category:1965 non-fiction booksCategory:Books about the far rightCategory:Anti-fascist booksCategory:Pantheon Books books
+Military exploits of the Ezhavas are recorded in folk songs such as the "Vadukkan Pattukal".
+On 13 April 1914, Lieutenant Colonel Paul Emil von Lettow-Vorbeck assumed command in German East Africa.
+See also List of United States Supreme Court cases Lists of United States Supreme Court cases by volume List of United States Supreme Court cases by the Roberts CourtReferencesExternal links Category:United States Supreme Court casesCategory:United States Supreme Court cases of the Roberts CourtCategory:2016 in United States case lawCategory:Statutes of limitations
+The first version of the Salon of Colombian Artists was set up during the presidency of Enrique Olaya Herrera whose administration tried to organize an official gallery.
+References Category:Rivers of Penza Oblast
+During the 1896 season a rule was introduced for North Adelaide and the Natives (West Torrens) allowing them to field an extra three players to be more competitive with the three more established clubs.
+Its name translates roughly as "three thousand crocodiles" presumably it is because in the past the abundance of crocodiles [or may mean three species of crocodiles] .
+Bestandsaufnahme, Massnahmen, Investitionsmöglichkeiten.
+References Category:Animals described in 1910
+On 7 December it was announced that ARA F.C.
+epidermata (de Gregorio, 1884) Dolium (Dolium) galea var.
+Tracks Gli occhi che ci guardano (4'12") La decima porta (4'52") Il regalo (3'54") Tre passi indietro (4'31") Il doppio segreto (5'10") Amelia Earhart (3'24") Eresia d'amore (4'14") Zone di confine (4'41") Scomposta (4'36") Il canto dell'amante (5'53") La decima porta (3'19"; così com'è nata nella notte del 16 luglio 1998 alle ore 2,30)External links official siteReferences Category:Susanna Parigi albumsCategory:1999 albums
+East MalaysiaThe following are the extreme physical land mass points in East Malaysia inclusive of islands.
+ReferencesWojmiany
+Evžen Rošický (15 October 1914 Olomouc - 25 June 1942 Prague) was a Czech athlete and journalist.
+He served as the head coach at Louisiana State University for two seasons from 1894 to 1895, the second and third seasons in the LSU Tigers football program's existence, compiling a record of 5–1.
+Nine High may refer to: Nine High (band), a hip-hop group Nine High a Pallet, an album by brute
+IssueGün Temür KhanÖrüg Temür KhanSamur GunjSee also List of khans of the Northern Yuan dynastyReferencesJack Weatherford - The Secret History of the Mongol Queens: How the Daughters of Genghis Khan Rescued His Empire Crown 2010Category:1361 birthsCategory:1399 deathsCategory:Northern Yuan rulersCategory:14th-century Mongol rulersCategory:Filicides
+Fromberg can refer to: Richard Fromberg, tennis player Fromberg, Montana Fromberg (Netherlands), a village in the province of Limburg
+album "Here's Johnny", a 1993 song by Dutch hardcore group Hocus Pocus Here's Johnny, a 2000 documentary film about John HicklentonSee alsoNow Here's Johnny Cash (1961), the tenth album by Johnny Cash
+DrawFinalsTop HalfBottom HalfExternal links Draw Qualifying drawSingles
+Accessed on 28 Sep 2011.
+This is followed by questions designed to help promote the recognitions of relationships and patterns in the data, leading toward some concept development.
+Earlier in his career, during 1971, he lost 3–6, 6–2, 6–4 to Jan Písecký in the final of the Siracusa Open, a tournament not part of the circuit.
+"Atest".
+Military Band of the General Staff Command: The band serves during ceremonial duties in connection with the battalion.
+Parishes within this countyA full list of parishes found within this county; their current LGA and mapping coordinates to the approximate centre of each location is as follows:ReferencesCategory:Counties of New South Wales
+ActivitiesMajor activities related to military acquisition are: Project management/program management Risk management Earned value management Product management Product life cycle management Contract management Systems engineering Software engineering Computer engineering Human factors Modeling and simulation Security ProcurementIn the European UnionEU member states' procurement of arms, munitions, war material and related works and services acquired for defence purposes and procurement of sensitive supplies, works and services required for security purposes are subject to EU Directive 2009/81/EC on Defence and Sensitive Security Procurement.
+ProgrammesThe two stations operated with separate breakfast shows and other programmes were networked from either site to both transmitters.
+They clinched a berth in the Mountain West Championship Game with a 14-11 over San Diego State on November 23, 2019.
+It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979.
+The hymn has also been sung to the melody "Moab" (John Roberts, 1870) and "St Dunstans" (Charles W. Douglas, 1917).
+Crystal Palace (fourth spell; 1999–2000)Following the resignation of manager Terry Venables in January 1999, Coppell once again returned as the manager of Palace.
+Luigi Mistò (born 24 June 1952) was the secretary of the Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See from his appointment by Pope Benedict XVI on 7 July 2011 until 2015.
+There was no female auxiliary.
+Henry Westenra, father of the second Baron, represented County Monaghan in the Irish Parliament.
+References EcuadorEcuadorPolicy
+At the 2006 census, its existence was noted, but its population was not reported.
+OffseasonNFL DraftPersonnelStaffNFL replacement playersAfter the league decided to use replacement players during the NFLPA strike, the following team was assembled:RosterRegular seasonScheduleStandingsReferencesExternal links 1987 Atlanta Falcons at Pro-Football-Reference.comAtlantaCategory:Atlanta Falcons seasonsAtlanta
+In 2007, the unedited original series with bilingual soundtrack (Thai & Japanese) was aired on X-ZYTE channel on TrueVisions cable TV every Sunday and rerun several times throughout a week.
+It was based on an idea from Brooker's 2001 series Unnovations in which a pair of glasses showed homeless people as cartoon characters.
+The casino covers and includes a race and sports book.
+He was subsequently Deputy Prime Minister.
+Created by Harry Mace on October 2, 1961, it was originally syndicated by the Register and Tribune Syndicate.
+There are about 670 rural woreda and about 100 urban woreda.
+FloristAfter the war Hudson trained as a florist under Constance Spry, and arranged flowers at Claridge's and the Savoy hotels.
+Kontaga is the name of several settlements in Burkina Faso.
+colspan="9" bgcolor="#B0D3FB" align="left" ||----- bgcolor="#DFEDFD"|-----!
+ReferencesCategory:Political theoriesCategory:Liberalism
+Krishna Astami On the eve of Krishna Janmashtami (or Lord Krishna' Birthday), a fancy dress competition called Bala-Gokulam is organised for kids in the morning.
+In 1980, the firm merged with a larger firm in Salt Lake City.
+Ahsham-e Shomali (, also Romanized as Aḩshām-e Shomālī) is a village in Angali Rural District, in the Central District of Bushehr County, Bushehr Province, Iran.
+Although Brougham did not think that she was personally in fear for her life from domestic violence, he did conclude the letter with I rely for my view on the universal fear of violence which constrains all parties.
+She added, "It's more like a movie.
+Automatic data processing (ADP) may refer to: Automatic Data Processing, a computing services company.
+CompositionThe communauté d'agglomération consists of the following 22 communes:BaincthunBoulogne-sur-MerLa Capelle-lès-BoulogneCondetteConteville-lès-BoulogneDannesEchinghenÉquihen-PlageHesdigneul-lès-BoulogneHesdin-l'AbbéIsquesNeslesNeufchâtel-HardelotOutreauPernes-lès-BoulognePittefauxLe PortelSaint-Étienne-au-MontSaint-LéonardSaint-Martin-BoulogneWimereuxWimilleSee also Côte d'Opale Le BoulonnaisReferencesExternal links Official website: Communauté d'agglomération du Boulonnais (in French) Official website: Tourism in Boulogne sur Mer and the Boulonnais area (in English)BoulonnaisBoulonnais
+Dobrzec () is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Dębnica Kaszubska, within Słupsk County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, in northern Poland.
+See alsoList of lakes of EstoniaCategory:Lakes of EstoniaCategory:Võru ParishCategory:Lakes of Võru County
+Similarly, they wrote to the Japanese ambassador in 1998 after Toyota ran an advertisement showing a Range Rover with the words "Don't worry, Your Majesty, you're not the only British export that's had its day", resulting in Toyota withdrawing the advertisement; and in 2008 complained to both the Coopers Brewery and the Advertising Standards Bureau after Coopers ran an advertisement stating "Forget the monarchy, support the publicans", forcing its withdrawal.
+Bonnell may refer to: Bonnell (name) Bonnell, Indiana, United States Mount Bonnell, a prominent point alongside Lake Austin in Austin, Texas Bonnell (microarchitecture), used in Intel Atom processorsSee also Bonel Bonnel Bunnell (disambiguation)
+The team was led by head coach Don Reed, in his second year, and played home games at Veterans Stadium adjacent to the campus of Long Beach City College in Long Beach, California.
+Reddy was replaced by former Perth Reds coach Dean Lance.
+He ate nails for lunch, never took a bath or laughed, and would jump for joy when a little boy would trip and fall.
+In 2005, Gardenburger filed for bankruptcy, though it continued operation by becoming privately held.
+Designs Chevrolet La Jolla (1951), based on the Bel Air, owned and driven by Bradley Hot Wheels model cars (1968) Oscar Mayer Wienermobile (1995 version) Dodge Deora (1967)ReferencesCategory:General Motors designersCategory:1939 birthsCategory:American automobile designersCategory:Living people
+This is a list of articles that have something substantive to do with the county of Bács-Kiskun.
+See alsoList of rivers of AlbertaReferencesCategory:Rivers of Alberta
+The 1950–51 Cypriot Cup was the 14th edition of the Cypriot Cup.
+In 2020, Dassù was appointed by NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg to join a group of experts to support his work in a reflection process to further strengthen NATO's political dimension.
+The 1924 United States presidential election in New Jersey took place on November 4, 1924.
+SourcesExternal linksFotóCategory:Landforms of HungaryCategory:Valleys of Europe
+When the scarf has wrapped around, fold the scarf half the width, starting from the nape, leaving the open edge facing up and then continuing.
+Two useful methods evolved during the 18th century and are still practised today: lunar distance, which does not involve the use of a chronometer, and use of an accurate timepiece or chronometer.
+Michael Fanafel (born 23 January 1983), is a retired Micronesian footballer who played as a forward.
+Tiszaladány is a village in Borsod-Abaúj-Zemplén County in northeastern Hungary.
+EarthquakesSee also List of earthquakes in 1966 List of earthquakes in ChinaReferencesCategory:Earthquakes in ChinaXingtaiXingtai
+He also served as a Member of the Parliament of Scotland for Perth in 1661-63, 1665, 1667, 1669-74.
+Aleyrodidae is a large hemipteran family comprising the whiteflies.
+See alsoFoster careAdoption in the United StatesChild Protective ServicesChild abandonmentChild custodyChild abuseOrphanageResidential Child Care CommunityTeaching-family modelCongregate CareCottage HomesSubstance dependenceSupported livingSupported housingReferences*Category:Child welfare in the United StatesCategory:Family law in the United States
+There are at least two described species in Gonzalezodoria.
+As of 2 February 2020, 20 stores have closed, with the store in Earlville, Cairns, being spared from closure, leaving 45 stores, being 3 in Australian Capital Territory, 3 in Queensland, 5 in Tasmania, 5 in New South Wales, 8 in South Australia and 21 in Victoria.
+To this end, they formed the "College Homestead Association" and purchased 160 acres (65 hectares) of land north of Oakland on a site that is part of the City of Berkeley today.
+Team summariesPromotion and relegation Teams promoted from Algerian Division 2 1999–2000 ASM Oran AS Aïn M'lila USM El Harrach CS ConstantineTeams relegated to Algerian Division 2 2000–2001 No relegatedLeague tableResult tableSeason statisticsTop scorersReferencesExternal links1999–2000 Algerian Championnat NationalAlgerian Championnat NationalChampionnat NationalCategory:Algerian Ligue Professionnelle 1 seasons
+The CD release featured both the album and the single version, along with a dub remix of "Come Home" and an original song called "All My Sons".
+It lies approximately west of Kowale Oleckie, north-west of Olecko, and east of the regional capital Olsztyn.
+After his death the new principal conductor was Ataúlfo Argenta, who was in the orchestra from 1945 as the keyboard instruments player.
+Air Force Distinguished Service Medal with oak leaf cluster Defense Superior Service Medal with oak leaf cluster Legion of Merit Meritorious Service Medal with silver oak leaf cluster Air Force Commendation MedalReferencesExternal linksCategory:Living peopleCategory:United States Air Force Academy alumniCategory:Superintendents of the United States Air Force AcademyCategory:United States Air Force generalsCategory:Recipients of the Air Force Distinguished Service MedalCategory:Recipients of the Legion of MeritCategory:1952 birthsCategory:Recipients of the Defense Superior Service Medal
+ReferencesExternal linksCategory:1989 filmsCategory:Indian filmsCategory:1980s Malayalam-language filmsCategory:Films directed by Joshiy
+Walter pursues Erika into a lavatory immediately after she secretly injured Anna.
+Other regional and national newspapers such as The Plains Producer, The Advertiser and The Australian are also available.
+The steps are located at the corner of Prospect St and 36th St NW, leading down to M Street NW, and were built in 1895 during construction of the adjacent Car Barn.
+The son of William Robert McPhee and Martha Hannah Hart, he was born in Atherley, Mara township and was educated in Orillia and at the University of Toronto.
+ReferencesCategory:Unincorporated communities in Greenbrier County, West VirginiaCategory:Unincorporated communities in West Virginia
+", was released on June 15, 2010.
+a dissertation on the singers of the Temple.
+In arithmetic geometry, the Tate–Shafarevich group , introduced by and , of an abelian variety (or more generally a group scheme) defined over a number field consists of the elements of the Weil–Châtelet group that become trivial in all of the completions of (i.e.
+The route traversed along Harper Avenue entirely.
+For the first time ever, some titles were accompanied by string and brass, which gave the album a somewhat poppier character.
+However, a gale came up and at daybreak they saw that the gale had moved the vessels too far apart.
+2003 Rhif 932 (W.122)) The Health and Social Care Act 2001 (Commencement No.
+Bryan Miller may refer to:Bryan Q. Miller, American television and comic writerBryan Miller (ice hockey) (born 1983), American ice hockey playerBryan Miller (athlete) (born 1989), American sprinterBryan E. Miller (born 1965), American film composer, pianist, and music producerSee alsoBrian Miller (disambiguation)Miller (name)
+REDIRECT 1927 United States House of Representatives electionsNew York 1927 35New York 1927 351927 35New York 35United States House of Representatives 35
+captured her in 1800, and she was taken into service as HMS Hardi.
+These two rivers provide irrigation for the vegetables and grain produced in the valley.
+On March 23, 2020, Linden Labs announced the sale of Sansar to San Francisco based technology company Wookey Project Corp, who will continue Sansar's current event based strategy.
+ReferencesCategory:1955 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Technical University of Lisbon alumniCategory:Alumni of the University of East AngliaCategory:University of Lisbon facultyCategory:Portuguese mycologistsCategory:Women botanists
+The line's private operator, TBA, had its concessions to operate the Mitre and Sarmiento lines revoked on May 24, 2012.
+SpecificationsSee alsoList of glidersReferencesCategory:Glider aircraftCategory:Glasflügel aircraftCategory:1980s German sailplanes
+Personal lifeCecilia was born on 30 September 1913 in Bogotá to Julio Caballero Barrera and Mary Blanco Barroso.
+The series had Sinbad as a teenager with an exotic cat cub (Kulak) and a young boy (Hakeem) as constant companions.
+It airs an evangelical, interdenominational Spanish language Religious radio format.
+ScheduleAll times are Western Indonesia Time (UTC+07:00)ResultsMain bracketFinalTop halfBottom halfRepechageReferencesExternal linksOfficial websiteOfficial websiteWomen's 52
+Each year the artists suggestions must conform to a previously agreed upon theme, such as "The Colours of Michelangelo", or "The Designs of Bernini".
+The Roman Catholic Diocese of Kahama () is a diocese located in Kahama in the Ecclesiastical province of Tabora in Tanzania.
+A live version by Jerry Garcia appears on his Garcia Plays Dylan Again album.
+Abdul Hadi was one of five high-ranking officers who were charged with negligence and forced to retire.
+This is a companion volume to Old Witch Boneyleg.
+2.
+This is the discography of English singer Elkie Brooks.
+On 2 April it was announced that she was to be succeeded by John Chalmers, the Principal Clerk to the General Assembly.
+Grootes and J. den Haan (Eds.
+Although Henrik lives in a sexual relationship with Frida, a waitress, Anna seduces him and proposes an engagement.
+Referencesglaucifolia
+TeamsSouth Korea - the men's national rugby union team7s - the national men's rugby union seven-a-side team.
+It is known from South Africa.
+This led to selection for the U.S. team at the 1995 Pan American Games.
+Oyster Bay is said to have some of the healthiest waters in the Long Island Sound; they are classified SA - signifying the highest and best water quality.
+The Lee Konitz Duets is an album by American saxophonist Lee Konitz, recorded in 1967 and released in 1968 on the Milestone label.
+It has existed continuously since, although its remit changed somewhat over time.
+Types of submission software Software submission - allows to submit software products either through the use of PAD files or by filling the websites submission forms Article submission - submits articles to article directories or online magazines Website submission - submits website addresses to all kind of directories Press release submission - applications that allow users to submit press releases to PR websites RSS submission - submits RSS feeds to RSS publishing sitesReferencesSee also Portable Application Description Search engine submissionCategory:Publishing software
+Romania has participated in the Eurovision Young Dancers 2 times since its debut in 2003.
+Co-workers are distracted by drama, gossip and by choosing sides in the ongoing animosity.
+This is the results breakdown of the 2015 District Council elections in Hong Kong.
+The Neon Feather remix has a BPM of 140.
+The Fall of Phaeton (Rubens), a painting by Peter Paul RubensThe Seduction of Phaeton Black (2012) The Seduction of Phaeton Black, a steampunk novel by Jillian Stone
+There were two notable events in this game.
+External linksCategory:1986 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:People from KamagayaCategory:Baseball people from Chiba PrefectureCategory:Toyo University alumniCategory:Japanese baseball playersCategory:Chiba Lotte Marines players
+The song was written by Hugh Hopper and originally recorded by The Wilde Flowers with vocals by Robert Wyatt.
+Heated humidified high-flow (HHHF) therapy, often also high flow nasal cannula(e) (HFNC) or high flow nasal oxygen (HFNO), is a type of respiratory support method that delivers a high flow (liters per minute) of medical gas to a patient through an interface (nasal cannulae) intended to create a wash-out of the upper airway.
+Barnesville is an unincorporated community in Clinton County, in the U.S. state of Missouri.
+Gulladurthy is a village located in Koilkuntla mandal of Kurnool district in Andhra Pradesh, India.In this place were in 19th century there are 101 temples are present as the history saying and now those temples are gradually decreased to about 5 dozens and now st present the temples present in this place are1.Vinayaka Temple Situated in the Village2.Anjineya Swamy Temple 3.Veerabadra Swamy Temple4.Moulali Swamy Dargha5.Chennakeshava Swamy Temple 6.Sivalamam Temple7.Nukalolla Devalam8.Dasthagiri Swamy Dargha9.Peddama Talli10.Narasimha Swamy Temple11.Sitharamula Asramam in this place there are 5 temples present12.Nagula putta 13.Another Anjineya Swamy Temple at Near to Govt High School14.And One More Temple Situated at Entrance of the Village15.Sai Baba Temple at Exit of the Village16 Chandrudi Devalam17.Church18.Kariamma thalli Temple 19.Masthan Swamy DarghaReferencesCategory:Villages in Kurnool district
+Group, Bausch & Lomb, Adidas and Forever Mark.
+Skaters who have trained at this rink include Michelle Kwan, Timothy Goebel, Evan Lysacek, Beatrisa Liang, Gracie Gold, and Mirai Nagasu.
+A study published in 2007 used a figure of approximately 700 for the total breeding stock, of which approximately 200 were cocks.
+Gwen Grant Mellon (July 22, 1911 – November 29, 2000) was an American medical missionary and the founder and administrator of Hôpital Albert Schweitzer Haiti in Deschapelles, Haiti.
+News was the only entertainment news show on the channel for much of its history until 2006, when the channel launched The Daily 10, hosted by Sal Masekela and Catt Sadler (Debbie Matenopoulos also co-hosted from the show's inception until 2008); the series was cancelled in September 2010 after E!
+(Aruba)Kollision Band (St.Kitts & Nevis)Grupo Extra (Dominican Republic)9 August 2014N'klabe - Salsa (Puerto Rico)Fuego - Merengue (Dominican Republic)]]Gente D'zona - Reggaeton (Cuba)Bunji-Garlin - Soca (Trinidad)Burning Flames - Soca (Antigua)Carimi Ft Mikabem - Compas (Haïti, USA)Palenka Soultribe - electronic sounds with Afro-Colombian rhythms and melodies (Colombia)The Skints - Reggae(United Kingdom)Aptijt (Suriname)Herencia De Timbiqui (Colombia)Mr. Black (Colombia)David Kada (Dominican Republic)20139 August 2013 Daddy YankeeGuayacanCubaton All StarsFulanitoRikki Jai The SelecterKumbia Queers Rebels BandBomba EstéreoFreddy Loco feat.
+Johann Andreas Klindworth (11 November 1742, in Göttingen – 1813) was an eighteenth-century mechanic and maker of astronomical instruments.
+Loman was appointed a member of the Order of Canada in 2015.
+Pieter Bergman () was a Swedish-born officer of the Imperial Russian Navy in 1698 - 1706, cartographer.
+In 1961, following the success of the Bedford to St Neots race, Viking Kayak Club was established by canoeing friends Brian Sidaway, David Green and John Mathers and moved into premises shared with Star Rowing Club.
+An eagle brought him a branch of a cherry tree, he touched the lady with it, and she came to.
+Skyscrapers – A History of the World's Most Extraordinary Buildings.
+FSQ may refer to A number of computers ("Army Navy / Fixed Special eQuipment") manufactured by IBM:AN/FSQ-7AN/FSQ-8AN/FSQ-31VAN/FSQ-32It may also refer to:Football Stewarding QualificationFry Street QuartetFree Sale Quota, a term connected to coffee production in IndiaFast Simple QSO - digital mode used in Amateur Radio
+Close games and shutoutsFootball games between Baylor and TCU have been decided by 7 points or less 43 times, including 7 ties.
+Cosmisomopsis viridis is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae, the only species in the genus Cosmisomopsis.
+Gradignan is a commune in the Gironde department in southwestern France.
+Poland competed at the 2005 World Championships in Athletics in Helsinki, Finland, from 6 – 14 August 2005.
+In his study of oil shale deposits, Gil-Av developed complex-forming stationary phases employing silver(I) ions for selective olefin separations by gas chromatography (GC).
+Ricks was one of the original members of the Rens.
+La parada de Maimós is a 1968 book by Venezuelan critic and writer Alfredo Armas Alfonzo.
+Qalat Airport is a military airport under the control of Marine Expeditionary Brigade, located 2 miles north west of the town of Qalat, Afghanistan.
+Species Viviennea ardesiaca Rothschild, 1909 Viviennea dolens Druce, 1904 Viviennea euricosilvai Travassos & Travassos, 1954 Viviennea flavicincta Herrich-Schäffer, 1855 Viviennea griseonitens Rothschild, 1909 Viviennea gyrata Schaus, 1920 Viviennea moma Schaus, 1905 Viviennea momyra Gaede, 1928 Viviennea salma Druce, 1896 Viviennea superba Druce, 1883 Viviennea tegyra Druce, 1896 Viviennea zonana Schaus, 1905ReferencesCategory:Moth generaCategory:Phaegopterina
+in film direction and screenwriting from New York University, Tisch School of the Arts.
+References Category:Rural Districts of East Azerbaijan ProvinceCategory:Maragheh County
+The Allmusic review by Scott Yanow states: "The West Coast jazz chamber music generally holds one's interest".
+Child Sex Ratio detailsThe village population of children with an age group from 0-6 is 36 which makes up 6.67% of total population of village.
+He graduated as M.A.
+Together with friends and colleagues Torsten Stenzel (York (group)) and Ralph-Armand Beck (DJ Taucher), Ingo - as Ayla - released two singles in 2015 'Kings & Queens' and 'Free Yourself'.
+Walter Camp's son, Walter C. Camp, Jr., played at the halfback position for the 1911 Bulldogs and received second-team All-America honors from his father and from Wilton S. Farnsworth.
+Interviu cu Sorin Alexandrescu, Raluca Alexandrescu, Observator cultural - numărul 52, februarie 2001 „Nu numai în cultura romană, ci și pentru ea” (II).
+Henderson and colleagues (1995) considered C. concolor to be a synonym of Coccothrinax miraguama.
+The 1988–89 Minnesota Golden Gophers men's basketball team represented the University of Minnesota during the 1988–89 NCAA Division I men's basketball season.
+Okharbot is a village development committee in Myagdi District in the Dhaulagiri Zone of western-central Nepal.
+Initial Intrgrator of HP's use of ARPA-net and Windows TCP/IPStub: Talk about engagement to resolve integration conflict with the TCP/IP stacks of Hewlett-Packard HP 3000 and Windows/DOS/and other widely used TCI/IP drivers.
+Music videoIn 2009, while the song was still intended for release under Courtney Love, Love revealed that David LaChapelle would direct the promotional music videos for singles from her then-forthcoming album and mentioned "i miss videos so happy Lachapelle is doing mine!"
+The church was made a Grade II listed building in July 1982.
+(Irving Berlin) - 3:54 "Just One of Those Things" (Cole Porter) - 4:35 "Have You Met Miss Jones?"
+Its distinctive arrow-like shape derives from the way it includes condition-unique (0,n) or (n,0) points into the plot via an epsilon factor.
+ITX may refer to: Isopropyl thioxanthone Information Technology eXtended computer form factors: Mini-ITX, Nano-ITX, Pico-ITX, Mobile-ITX ITX-Saemaeul, Intercity Train Express, South Korea
+However due to constant ninth-place finishes at the World Rowing Championships, the Irish Amateur Rowing Union voted against her being allowed to represent Ireland at the Olympics again as it was felt she had had her chance and due to her refusal to move to Dublin to train.
+The Yellow Moon Band have garnered many favourable reviews for their infrequent gigs, and were invited to headline the inaugural Lewes Psychedelic Festival in March 2009.
+He competed in the Men's floor event at the 2014 Commonwealth Games where he won the bronze medal.
+Articles Krauss, Michael E. (1973).
+Brumadinho () is a Brazilian municipality located in the state of Minas Gerais.
+1921) 2 August: Syed A.
+The date of the volcanoes' last eruption is unknown, but the existence of lava flows overlaying glacial moraines implies Papayo erupted after the end of the Ice Age.
+His research interests included the dynamics of ultracold atomic vapour confined in tight de Broglie waveguides; and the behaviour of identical particles including fermions, bosons, and anyons.
+With many relatives living in the North America he moved to the United States early where he graduated from an art high-school.
+Rokeach or Rokach (Hebrew for "apothecary", "perfume", "perfumer" or "pharmacist") is the surname of: Aharon Rokeach (1877–1957), the fourth Belzer rebbe Elazar Rokeach (c. 1176 – 1238), Talmudist and kabbalist Elazar Rokeach of Amsterdam, (c. 1665—1742), rabbi Israel Rokach (1886–1959), Israeli politician Joel Rokach (1909–1965), Italian–Israeli physicist and mathematician Lucy Rokach, English professional poker player Malka Rokeach, the first Belzer rebbetzin Milton Rokeach (1918–1988), Professor of social psychology Sholom Rokeach (1779–1855), the first Belzer rebbe Yehoshua Rokeach (1825–1894), the second Belzer rebbe Yehoshua Rokeach of Machnovka (born 1949), current Machnovka Rebbe Yissachar Dov Rokeach (born 1948), the fifth Belzer rebbe Yissachar Dov Rokeach (1854–1926), the third Belzer rebbeCategory:Jewish surnamesCategory:Occupational surnamesCategory:Jewish familiesCategory:Hebrew-language surnames
+Within close quarters many activities continued successfully after the fire.
+Less than a year after signing for Free State Stars, Nkhatha was loaned out to Carara Kicks.
+ReferencesExternal links Category:1984 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Cyclo-cross cyclistsCategory:Belgian female cyclistsCategory:Place of birth missing (living people)Category:Belgian cyclo-cross champions
+DemographicsThe 2010 United States Census reported that Volcano had a population of 115.
+Gameplay and plotOsiris: New Dawn is an open world Sci-fi Survival set in the year 2078, during which humans are starting to venture into interstellar travel.
+The main altar dates to 1717.Notable peopleNotable people that were born or lived in Jazbine include:Tone Demšar (1902–1942), Partisan and commandant of the Škofja Loka CompanyReferencesExternal links Jazbine on GeopediaCategory:Populated places in the Municipality of Gorenja vas-Poljane
+Most often, a spray bottle is used.
+Morebilus is a genus of spiders in the Trochanteriidae family found in southern and western Australia, first described by Norman I. Platnick in 2002.
+Two type of RAM card are available, a 4 or 8 MB card, and the "XP Cache" card, incorporating up to 8 MB with an 82385 cache controller and 32 KB of cache SRAM.
+Places Several places in New South Wales, Australia, named for Lachlan Macquarie.
+The album was recorded by John John (John Katsafanas) at Red Light Studios in St. Louis.
+The omphalos represents the stone which Rhea wrapped in swaddling clothes, pretending it was Zeus, in order to deceive Cronus.
+Her mother played the role of Jean McAlpine and she took the role of Mattie.
+Like so many other monuments in the park, it's made of bronze, and it was donated to the park by the Balto Monument Committee to the City of New York.
+Each work is given with an identifying incipit, printed on a single musical line.
+In 2018, the asteroid 334756 Leövey, discovered by Krisztián Sárneczky and Brigitta Sipőcz at the Piszkéstető Station in 2003, was named after her.
+Megachile hoffmanseggiae is a species of bee in the family Megachilidae.
+Her best World Cup finish was 18th in the women's event at Park City, Utah in November 2009.
+Volume 1, 1873.
+Crystal King may refer to: Crystal King, a Japanese rock band active since 1979, known for performing the original theme song for the anime television series Fist of the North Star A fictional character in Paper Mario
+ReferencesCategory:1966 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:French footballersCategory:Stade Brestois 29 playersCategory:En Avant de Guingamp playersCategory:Tours FC playersCategory:Stade Lavallois playersCategory:Nîmes Olympique playersCategory:Canet Roussillon FC playersCategory:Association football defendersCategory:Ligue 1 playersCategory:Ligue 2 players
+The term speculum, Latin for "mirror", and its plural specula, may refer to: Specula (watchtower), a Roman watchtower Speculum (medical), a medical tool used for examining body cavities Speculum (journal), a journal of medieval studies published by the Medieval Academy of America Speculum literature, a medieval genre Speculum, magical telescopic device used by the mythical Prester John Speculum feathers, the secondary feathers on the inner part of a duck's wing which are often brightly coloured Speculum metal, an alloy containing copper and tin used for making all-metal mirrors Speculum (butterfly), a skipper butterfly genus in the tribe Erynnini Ophrys speculum, a species of ground orchid in the genus Ophrys Specula (gastropod), genus of sea snails in the family Cerithiopsidae "Speculum", a song by Adema from Adema (album) The Speculum a newsletter published by the College of Veterinary Medicine of The Ohio State UniversitySee alsoSpiculum, a Roman weapon
+Pal.
+This plant is valued as groundcover in cultivation in temperate regions.
+Le Lam, former Mayor of Auburn Wellington Lee, former Deputy Lord Mayor of Melbourne Cr.
+John holds a Bachelor's degree and a Master's degree in tuba performance from the University of Southern California, where he studied with Tommy Johnson.
+managersCategory:1886 birthsCategory:1926 deathsCategory:Association football forwards
+Gaywood is an upscale subdivision in the Memorial area in West Houston.
+MDP-Collagen Interactions The binding interaction between collagen and MDP was studied by saturation transfer difference (STD) NMR spectroscopy.
+It is found in eastern Venezuela.
+The rod was constructed and grounded according to the direct specifications of its inventor, Benjamin Franklin.
+Vasyl Havrylovych Andriychuk, Doctor of Economic Sciences Volodymyr Andriyovych Andriychuk, Doctor of Technical Sciences Viktor Hryhorovych Andriychuk, Doctor of Economic Sciences Ivan Hnatovych Andriychuk, Ukrainian sculptor Kesar Omelyanovych Andriychuk, Ukrainian poet Mykhailo Mykolayovych Andriychuk, writer and journalist of the United States Mykhailo Omelyanovych Andriychuk, Distinguished artist of Ukraine (SSR) Tamara Hryhorivna Andriychuk, Distinguished teacher of Ukraine (SSR)Category:Ukrainian-language surnames
+See alsoPre-Roman peoples of the Iberian PeninsulaExternal linksDetailed map of the Pre-Roman Peoples of Iberia (around 200 BC)Category:Tribes of GallaeciaCategory:Galician Celtic tribesCategory:Tribes conquered by Rome
+The land is rocky, but able to support large numbers of sheep.
+Associated companies Max Factory Phat!
+2000.
+Costing about US$6 million, the bridge was manufactured by the Urssa steel fabrication conglomerate in the city of Vitoria-Gasteiz in the Basque Country of northern Spain.
+Southern State College is the former name of at least two educational institutions in the United States:Southern Arkansas UniversityUniversity of South Dakota–Springfield
+Calcimitra triplicata is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Mitridae, the miters or miter snails.
+Chanupally is a village and Gram panchayat of Ananthagiri mandal, Suryapet district, in Telangana state.
+He competed in the team foil event at the 1988 Summer Olympics.
+In this form it was widely reproduced during the 19th century, having entered the canon of Shakespeare portraits.
+Does Nuclear Power Have a Place in a Sustainable Energy Future?
+"Wonderland" is a single-only release from Scottish band Big Country, released in the UK on 9 January 1984 between their first and second albums.
+After her graduation, she worked for a short time at the North End Health Clinic.
+It runs from the Connecticut border in Wales north to an intersection with Massachusetts Route 9 and Massachusetts Route 67 in the town of West Brookfield.
+The CL had a policy of advancing into leadership women, national minorities and workers and therefore had a leadership grouping different from other groups on the left.
+ResultsNote: * Party did not nominate candidates in previous election.
+The establishment of Siddhartha Educational Institutions followed by the establishment of other educational institutions in the last 28 years transformed this city into one of the major educational centres.
+Q114 or Q-114 may refer to: Quran 114, the last chapter of the Islamic Holy book Jamaica–Far Rockaway line, which consists partially of the Q114 bus line
+Operation Aloha is the first and only album released by a supergroup of 14 musicians of the same name.
+It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2005.
+She drops a grenade on their position as she leaves.
+__NOTOC__Shen may refer to: Shen (Chinese religion) (神), a central word in Chinese philosophy, religion, and traditional Chinese medicine; term for god or spirit Shen (clam-monster) (蜃), a shapeshifting Chinese dragon believed to create mirages Shenendehowa Central School District, abbreviated as Shen Shen ring, an Ancient Egyptian hieroglyphic symbol, a form of cartoucheSurnames Shěn (surname), the most common Chinese surname Shen (沈) Shēn (surname), Chinese surname Shen (申) Shèn (surname), Chinese surname Shen (慎)Places Shen County (莘县), in Shandong, China State of Shen, (申国) Chinese vassal state during the Zhou dynasty Shen (申) or Shēnchéng (申城, City of Shen), an alternate name of Shanghai Shenyang (沈阳), a city in Liaoning, ChinaEntertainment Shen, Eye of Twilight, a playable champion character in the multiplayer online battle arena video game League of Legends Shen (character), a character in Ender's Game Shén, a fictional race from the world of Tékumel Shen, a character from Blade: The Series Shen, Original Shen or OriginalShen, video game broadcaster on Twitch Lord Shen, a character from Kung Fu Panda 2 Tang Shen, a character from the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles franchiseSee alsoSheng (disambiguation)
+VariantsThis table shows the variants of the FCMOV instructions.
+Close to the station, and also in Haren, is Haren-South railway station, on line 36.
+It was described by Turner in 1911.
+The airport consists of a long dirt-and-gravel airstrip, on which aircraft have been known to suffer punctures.
+Epicephala pyrrhogastra is a moth of the family Gracillariidae.
+Osteoglossomorpha.
+The SGroup European Universities' Network (SGroup) is a non-for-profit founded in 1992 composed of over 30 higher education institutions from 15 European countries.
+Nacala's airport was inaugurated by Mozambique President Armando Guebuza in December 2014.
+Canada sent an all-star team in 1928 and 1932; Great Britain send an all-star team in 1928 and 1948.
+Combined with his two Stanley Cup championships in NHL play, he is a member of the Triple Gold Club and the only Swede who has won each of the three competitions twice.
+Diri may refer to: Diri, an Enochian angel Diri language, a language of Nigeria Douye Diri (born 1959), Nigerian politician Diri Baba, religious leader to whom the Diri Baba Mausoleum is dedicatedSee also Dirie
+Ashdod Light (), is a lighthouse in Ashdod, Israel.
+Mito Fabie (born 1993), better known as Curtismith, is a Filipino indie singer, rapper and songwriter.
+Apa Roșie River may refer to: Apa Roșie, another name for the upper course of the Bărzăuța in Covasna County Apa Roșie, a tributary of the Ozunca in Covasna County
+Sebastião de Freitas Couto Júnior, better known as Sebá (born June 8, 1992) is a Brazilian professional footballer who plays mainly as a winger for Saudi Professional League side Al-Shabab.
+There are five sub-weapons and each has a different use.
+Bronze sectionWithin the SPG another unit was formed and given the name "Bronze section".
+Approving of all four games' graphics and gameplay, the magazine concluded that "it's unusual titles like this that keep us fascinated with computer gaming year after year!"
+Riljac is a village in the municipality of Trstenik, Serbia.
+It premiered on Showtime on December 14, 2014.
+Willie McGee ('76) played for the St. Louis Cardinals and was named National League Most Valuable Player in 1985.
+Each week's chart was compiled by the Official Charts Company (OCC) and was first published on Monday afternoon on their official website.
+See also Aphrodite hillsReferencesExternal links http://www.coral-bay-cyprus.com/Category:Bays of CyprusCategory:PaphosCoral Bay
+EventsRecurveMedal tableReferencesExternal linksWorld Archery websiteComplete resultsWorld ChampionshipWorld ArcheryArchCategory:World Archery ChampionshipsWorld Archery ChampionshipWorld Archery ChampionshipCategory:International archery competitions hosted by the United Kingdom
+Every self-balancing vehicle must be fully redundant.
+It is located in the south-eastern transitway section on Frobisher Lane near Smyth Road.
+MCF-7 is a breast cancer cell line isolated in 1970 from a 69-year-old Caucasian woman.
+The album included the Peniston two number one hits scored in the US Dance chart, Finally" and "Keep On Walkin'", which charted also in the US Hot 100, and her cover version of a Donna Summer's number three hit from 1978, "Last Dance".
+In 1908, the Sierra National Forest was divided into five units and as time went on, more divisions, additions, and combinations were worked out so that presently, Tahoe is one of eight national forests along the Sierra Nevada Mountain Range.
+The Holyrood estate is a housing estate in Southampton, England.
+He was educated at Scotch College Melbourne and completed his post-school studies in Melbourne, acquiring a bachelor's degree in mechanical engineeringfrom the University of Melbourne in 1975, and a master's of business administration from RMIT in 1985.
+She competed on balance beam in the qualifications round but unfortunately she did not make the final due to a fall on one of her elements.
+The most important crop is rice, while other important products are beans, maize, cassava and sweet potatoes.
+The following highways are numbered 460:Australia Strzelecki HighwayCanada New Brunswick Route 460 Newfoundland and Labrador Route 460IrelandR460 road (Ireland)Japan Japan National Route 460United States U.S. Route 460 Louisiana Highway 460 Maryland Route 460 New Mexico State Road 460 Puerto Rico Highway 460 South Carolina Highway 460 Tennessee State Route 460 (proposed)
+Strnad joined Gambrinus liga side FC Baník Ostrava in 2009, signing a two-year contract making it his first spell at a top-flight club.
+An immigrant from Austria-Hungary to the United States, he worked with Alfred Bettman on the City Plan for Cincinnati.
+The United States Department of State Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons ranks Armenia as a 'Tier 2' country.
+The genus is named after the Russian dipterist Igor Shamshev.
+It is nocturnal, remaining hidden among the vegetation by day, and emerging at night to feed on plankton.
+The film has musical score by Johnson.
+He was appointed Colonial Treasurer of Hong Kong from 1897 to 1898.
+2012 Tokyo Gate Bridge opens.
+She is an associate professor at the University of Ottawa and holds a University Research Chair there.
+Kolman is a name, used both as a surname and given name.
+It was an active fire station until 1976 and housed Engines 1 and 2, when it was replaced by a station built on Kelly Blvd (Rte 152).
+Category:ExmoorCategory:Villages in Mid Devon District
+Cheleri is a village in Kannur district in the Indian state of Kerala.
+It has a population of about 342 people.
+The seven-bay central section, built later, comes to a full four stories.
+League Cup: 1998 Juventude Copa do Brasil: 1999ReferencesExternal linksCategory:1944 birthsCategory:2015 deathsCategory:Sportspeople from Porto AlegreCategory:Brazilian footballersCategory:Brazilian football managersCategory:Expatriate football managers in JapanCategory:Campeonato Brasileiro Série A playersCategory:Campeonato Brasileiro Série A managersCategory:Campeonato Brasileiro Série B managersCategory:J1 League managersCategory:Esporte Clube Pelotas playersCategory:Sociedade Esportiva Palmeiras playersCategory:Sport Club Internacional playersCategory:Centro Sportivo Alagoano playersCategory:Esporte Clube Juventude managersCategory:Esporte Clube Pelotas managersCategory:Centro Sportivo Alagoano managersCategory:Grêmio Esportivo Brasil managersCategory:Londrina Esporte Clube managersCategory:Tuna Luso Brasileira managersCategory:Esporte Clube Vitória managersCategory:Clube Náutico Capibaribe managersCategory:Santa Cruz Futebol Clube managersCategory:Paysandu Sport Club managersCategory:Júbilo Iwata managersCategory:Sport Club Internacional managersCategory:Figueirense FC managersCategory:Vila Nova Futebol Clube managersCategory:São José Esporte Clube managersCategory:Al-Ahli Saudi FC managersCategory:Duque de Caxias Futebol Clube managersCategory:Clube de Regatas Brasil managersCategory:Association football defenders
+She won a silver medal in the 4x400m relay at the 1995 World Championships in Athletics by virtue of running for her team in the preliminary rounds.
+The first models of Saegheh lacked the frontal air intake of the Simorgh/RQ-170.
+In 1996 the unit also received LANTIRN capable F-14s and went on cruise in September 1997 in support of Operation Southern Watch, spending four months in the Persian Gulf.
+The 2008 Rally d'Italia Sardegna is the sixth round of 2008 World Rally Championship season.
+NVC is an abbreviation for: National Visa Center, a center that is part of the U.S. Department of State that holds immigrant visa petitions till they can be processed and then arranges for a visa interview for the beneficiaries of the petition.
+Records of the Australian Museum supplement 4: 1-221 Spencer, H.; Marshall.
+ReferencesGuardian's Stats CentreCategory:1980 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Norwegian footballersCategory:Rosenborg BK playersCategory:Bryne FK playersCategory:FK Haugesund playersCategory:SK Vard Haugesund playersCategory:Eliteserien playersCategory:1. divisjon playersCategory:Association football midfielders
+In Dawkins' satirical description, users are often introduced to the "drug" at social gatherings such as weddings and funerals.
+His projects from the 1950s and 1960s include the Grace Moore Library branch (1950) and Fern Hill Library (1950) branches of the Tacoma Public Library system, "an International Style addition to the main Tacoma library (1952), the Tacoma City Light Administration Building (1953), and a Student Center (1959)".
+List of winners by category (Boys)Prior to 1999After 1999Boys' champions by country since 1999As of 2020 edition.
+JapanThe Japanese corporate statute of 2006 provides that "no foreign company having its main office in Japan or the primary purpose of which is to carry on business in Japan may engage in transactions on a continuous basis in Japan" and that "any person who has engaged in transactions in violation of the provision of the preceding paragraph shall be jointly and severally liable with the foreign company to any counterparty for such transactions."
+ReferencesExternal links Category:2000s American legal television seriesCategory:2001 American television series debutsCategory:2002 American television series endingsCategory:Court showsCategory:First-run syndicated television programs in the United StatesCategory:Television series by 20th Century Fox Television
+On March 11, 2008, the Rays continued to move forward with plans for a downtown stadium by submitting a preliminary design consideration document to St. Petersburg officials.
+Ifa Sudewi is Chief Judge of Purwakarta Regency, Indonesia.
+About 18.9% of families and 20.8% of the population were below the poverty line, including 28.2% of those under age 18 and 17.6% of those age 65 or over.
+They were listed in the 1938 edition of Jane's Fighting Ships as battleships, though they were not designed as such, nor capable of fighting true battleships one on one.
+Beat!
+Eilidh MacQueen (born 20 May 1986 in Troon, Scotland) is a Thailand-based Scottish actress.
+NameKodangallu's name came because of a big stone lying there.
+Mission San Antonio or San Antonio Mission may refer to:Alamo Mission in San Antonio (Mission San Antonio de Valero), site of the Battle of the AlamoMission San Antonio de Padua, third of the 21 Franciscan missions in CaliforniaMission San Antonio de Pala, asistencia to Mission San Luis Rey in CaliforniaMission San Antonio de Senecu, defunct mission in present-day Senecu, Chihuahua San Antonio Missions, minor league baseball teamSan Antonio Missions National Historical Park, encompassing five missions in San Antonio, TexasSan Antonio Missions (World Heritage Site)USNS Mission San Antonio (T-AO-119), oil tanker named after Mission San Antonio de Padua
+SD Nimble was a Twin Tractor Unit Tug operated by Serco Marine Services in support of the United Kingdom's Naval Service.
+At the 2006 census, its population was 282, in 52 families.
+He finished in a tie for second in his first event, the Swiss Challenge, and won the third event he played in, the Le Vaudreuil Golf Challenge.
+The winner qualified for the 2011 FIVB Women's World Cup, in Japan.
+It was led by the country's 12th Prime Minister, Robert Menzies.
+MenWomenReferencesExternal links Cycling Australia web site Australian Cycling Records – Men Australian Cycling Records – WomenAustraliaTrack cyclingRecords
+The top four teams qualified for the title play-offs.
+The network is also the official broadcaster of the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020, and will telecast the upcoming international multi-sport event.
+30 June 1942: I-10 sank the freighter Express.
+Ramaswamy Iyer was wounded.
+After the game, Gators players carried head coach Doug Dickey from the field, and Gators athletic director Ray Graves described the victory as "one of the greatest moments in University of Florida football history."
+They are social animals, and up to five may share a single nest, especially during the breeding season.
+In the mathematical field of complex analysis, a meromorphic function on an open subset D of the complex plane is a function that is holomorphic on all of D except for a set of isolated points, which are poles of the function.
+He was selected in the sixth round with the 51st pick by the Montreal Alouettes in the 2003 CFL Draft.
+Kalahu (, also Romanized as Kalāhū) is a village in Gowharan Rural District, Gowharan District, Bashagard County, Hormozgan Province, Iran.
+It was hosted by Dee Snider (Twisted Sister frontman) or special guests host of bands at the time.
+The year 1913 was marked, in science fiction, by the following events.
+Zhou Jian'an () is a Chinese former volleyball player and current volleyball coach.
+Tom Re (2 February 1913 – 5 February 1996) was a former Australian rules footballer who played with Fitzroy in the Victorian Football League (VFL).
+playersCategory:Esteghlal F.C.
+Chalvignac is a commune in the Cantal department in south-central France.
+ReferencesExternal linksPreženjske Njive on GeopediaCategory:Populated places in the Municipality of Litija
+Since its establishment in 2011, it has been one of two regions in Zanzan District.
+Noting its faithfulness to pulp magazine artwork and tropes, Tafoya concludes his assessment by describing the film as "a sweltering collage of beautiful ruin, like D'Amato put everying put everything burning a hole on Italian movie screens into a pan and boiled them into a delicious reduction.
+It was one of the leading women's nationwide organizations of the 19th-century Dutch women's movement.
+Coat of arms or arms in the Italian languageA family tree or recorded genealogy Stemmata refers to a class of simple eyes in arthropods Kind of empire crown in the late Roman, the Byzantine and the Bulgarian empires
+, in more archaic context transliterated as (, abbreviated as ), anglicized as Tagmatarch, is used in the Greek language to mean "Major".
+ReferencesCategory:Scottish nationalist organisationsCategory:1950s in ScotlandCategory:1960s in ScotlandCategory:Organizations established in 1950Category:Organizations disestablished in 1964Category:1950 establishments in ScotlandCategory:1964 disestablishments in Scotland
+Previously Broome had a Saturday weekly newspaper, published from 1912 to 1930, The Nor-West Echo, the successor to the Broome Chronicle, established in 1908.
+Epiperipatus diadenoproctus is a species of velvet worm in the Peripatidae family.
+It was added to the Register on April 11, 2005.
+Plot "Living without Cellphones, Television and Internet" is the theme for the 4-episode pilot.
+ReferencesNotesSourcesCategory:Districts of Tatarstan
+She is best known for her negative role as Sara in 2012 series Humsafar.
+Antje Dijkstra-Schaap (29 April 1920 – 26 January 2004) was Dutch female speed skater.
+He won a bronze medal in the C-2 team event at the 1963 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships in Spittal.
+See alsoQuantumTwo-state quantum systemNonlinear systemDynamical systemThermodynamic systemPhysical systemQuantum stateQuantum numberGround stateExcited stateEnergy levelsDegenerate energy levelsCategory:Quantum mechanics
+A few years later, he opened a four-room boutique hotel in the same location: Il Palazzetto Il Palazzetto.
+It is found in North America.
+Places nearbyReferencesCategory:Railway stations in ShanghaiCategory:Shanghai Metro stations in Changning DistrictCategory:Shanghai Metro stations in Xuhui DistrictCategory:Railway stations in China opened in 2010Category:Line 10, Shanghai MetroCategory:Line 11, Shanghai Metro
+AfricaAdal Sultanate – Muhammad ibn Badlay (1445–1471)Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt – Inal (1453–1461)Ethiopian Empire – Zara Yaqob (1434–1468)AsiaAq Qoyunlu (White Sheep Turkomans) – Uzun Hassan (1435–1478) Ayutthaya Kingdom (Siam) – Borommatrailokkanat (1448–1488)China (Ming dynasty) - Jingtai Emperor (1449–1457)Japan (Muromachi period) Monarch – Emperor Go-Hanazono (1428–1464) Ashikaga shogunate - Ashikaga Yoshimasa (1449–1473)Joseon (Korea) – Danjong (1452–1455) Sejo (1455–1468)Ryukyu Kingdom – Shō Taikyū (1454–1460)EuropeKingdom of Aragon – Alfonso V (1416–1458)Duchy of Burgundy – Philip III, the Good (1419–1467)Crown of Castile – Henry IV of Castile (1454–1474)Crimean Khanate –Kingdom of Cyprus – John II (1432–1458)Denmark and Norway – Christian I, King of Denmark (1448–1481), King of Norway (1450–1481)Kingdom of England (House of Lancaster) - Henry VI (1422–1461 and 1470–1471)Kingdom of France (House of Valois) - Charles VII (1422–1461)Kingdom of Hungary – Ladislaus V (1444–1457)Khanate of Kazan – Mäxmüd of Kazan (1445–1466)Ottoman (Turkish) Empire – Mehmed II, the Conqueror, Ottoman Sultan (1451–1481)Polish–Lithuanian union – Casimir IV Jagiellon, Grand Duke of Lithuania (1440–1492), King of Poland (1447–1492)Kingdom of Portugal and the Algarves – Afonso V (1438–1481)Kingdom of Scotland – James II (1437–1460)Kingdom of Sweden – Charles VIII of Sweden (1448–1457, 1464–1465, and 1467–1470)Republic of Venice – Francesco Foscari, Doge of Venice (1423–1457)North AmericaAztec Empire – Moctezuma I (1440–1469)South AmericaInca Empire – Pachacuti (1438–1471)Muisca Confederation zaque Hunzahúa (~1450-1470) zipa Meicuchuca (~1450-1470)
+The combined company was headquartered in San Diego.
+The C-terminus domain of MSMB contains two two-stranded β-sheets; these have no resemblance to other structural motifs.
+Mendham Priory was a priory in Suffolk, England.
+Perry High School may refer to:Perry High School (Gilbert, Arizona) — Gilbert, ArizonaPerry High School (Georgia) — Perry, GeorgiaPerry High School (Iowa) — Perry, IowaPerry High School (Michigan) — Perry, MichiganPerry High School (New York) — Perry, New YorkPerry High School (Lima, Ohio) — Lima, OhioPerry High School (Stark County, Ohio) — Perry Township, OhioPerry High School (Perry, Ohio) — Perry, OhioPerry High School (Oklahoma) — Perry, OklahomaIt may also refer to:Perry-Casa High School — Casa, ArkansasGriggsville-Perry High School — Griggsville, IllinoisMary B. Perry High School — Camarillo, CaliforniaPerry Meridian High School — Indianapolis, IndianaPerry Central Junior-Senior High School — Leopold, IndianaPerry Lecompton High School — Perry, KansasPerry County Central High School — Hazard, KentuckyPerry Hall High School — Baltimore, MarylandPerry Central High School — New Augusta, MississippiFayetteville-Perry High School — Fayetteville, OhioPort Perry High School — Port Perry, OntarioWest Perry High School — Elliottsburg, PennsylvaniaCommodore Perry Junior/Senior High School — Hadley, PennsylvaniaPerry Traditional Academy — Pittsburgh, PennsylvaniaPerry County High School — Linden, Tennessee
+She was commissioned as USS Nirvana II (SP-204) the same day with Lieutenant, junior grade, Frederic M. Gardner in command.
+In Western Australia, plants previously known as W. senifolia var.
+In the UK, 44 Members of Parliament voted against the Act, including 24 Conservative and 16 Labour MPs, citing concerns over Canada's past mistreatment of Quebec and Aboriginal peoples (as recalled with frustration by Jean Chrétien in his memoirs Straight from the Heart); overall there was little opposition from the British government to passing the Act.
+References SealifeBase PaleoDB Category:LimidaeCategory:Bivalves of New ZealandCategory:Bivalves of AustraliaCategory:Molluscs described in 1904
+DiscographySolo recordings So Fa So Good (MCA Master Series, 1985) Something Constructive (MCA Master Series, 1986) Whatever Works (CD) (MCA Master Series, 1988) Pure Contours (MCA Master Series, 1990) Balancing Act (Liberty Records, 1993) View From a Southern Porch (Barlotone Productions, 2003ReferencesExternal links John Barlow Jarvis on Twitter John Jarvis Discography at Discogs John Barlow Jarvis at AllMusic John Barlow Jarvis at CMTCategory:1954 birthsCategory:American country pianistsCategory:American male pianistsCategory:Grammy Award winnersCategory:Living peopleCategory:American session musiciansCategory:Musicians from Nashville, TennesseeCategory:Musicians from Pasadena, CaliforniaCategory:American country songwritersCategory:American male songwritersCategory:American rock pianistsCategory:American organistsCategory:Male organistsCategory:American rock keyboardistsCategory:American male composersCategory:20th-century American composersCategory:Songwriters from CaliforniaCategory:Songwriters from TennesseeCategory:20th-century American pianistsCategory:Country musicians from CaliforniaCategory:Country musicians from TennesseeCategory:21st-century American pianistsCategory:21st-century organistsCategory:20th-century American male musiciansCategory:21st-century American male musiciansCategory:21st-century American keyboardistsCategory:20th-century American keyboardists
+Shagdaryn Chanrav (20 November 1948 – 10 August 2007) was a Mongolian judoka.
+Bartlett, North Dakota is an unincorporated community in Ramsey County, North Dakota.
+Specific sieges are: Siege of Ciudad Rodrigo (1370) Siege of Ciudad Rodrigo (1707) Siege of Ciudad Rodrigo (1810) Siege of Ciudad Rodrigo (1812)Category:Battles of the Peninsular WarCategory:Former disambiguation pages converted to set index articles
+His wife is a sister of Johnny Giles and they were introduced to each other around the time they were teammates at Manchester United.
+She studied music in India 2008-2009.
+Vladan is deployed as a defensive or central midfielder.
+The director King Hu used methods of framing to show action scenes in detail.
+His work has been praised by today’s most distinguished intellectuals, such as Italo Calvino, William Kennedy, Norman Mailer and Gabriel García Márquez.
+Isos () may refer to:Isos (Boeotia), a town of ancient Boeotia, GreeceIsos (Megaris), a town of ancient Megaris, GreeceSee alsoISOS (disambiguation)
+Demos of "Waste of Time and Money", "Rubbin' Me the Wrong Way" and "I Belong in a Factory" were subsequently released on The Dick Valentine Raw Collection.
+Nivea is a brand of cosmetics.
+Mazibuko was held in solitary confinement for 18 months in Number Four at the Fort Prison in Braamfontein before being charged, tried, and sent to Robben Island for seven years where he studied English and obtained his B. Ed.
+He attended Tanks Upper Secondary School.
+Her early career involved voluntary work, where she simultaneously served on the committee of the Walkerville Church of England Boys' Home from between 1927 to 1952, the executive of the Kindergarten Union of South Australia from between 1928 and 1938, and acted as a transport officer for the South Australian division of the Australian Red Cross Society from between 1939 to 1941.
+His professional decisions appear to based at least as much on how the public perceives him as on what is truly the right course of action.
+Fiona Benson (born 1978) is an English poet.
+He was moved up to assistant GM in October 2007.
+Hodge and his family lived in the property until his death in a plane crash in 1966.
+Fenusa ulmi, the elm leafminer, is a species of common sawfly in the family Tenthredinidae.
+This is a list of supermarket chains in Ukraine.
+ReferencesExternal linksCategory:1994 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Admiral Vladivostok playersCategory:Kuznetskie Medvedi playersCategory:Metallurg Novokuznetsk playersCategory:HC Yugra playersCategory:Zauralie Kurgan playersCategory:Russian ice hockey defencemen
+In 1997, a rest garden in the estate was reconstructed to a public housing building, King Man House.
+Kaina Lake is south of Kaina Mountain.
+Though he continued making films through 1960, many of his later roles were minor and often went un-credited.
+FN initially selected the 20mm Hispano case as a basis and necked it down to 15mm for the FN-BRG (15x115).
+Antônio Firmino Monteiro (22 February 1855, Rio de Janeiro – 3 July 1888, Niterói) was an Afro-Brazilian painter.
+A two-rupee postage stamp bearing his image was issued by Pakistan Post in December 2003; 500,000 were printed.
+They formed a new incarnation of Hetch Hetchy and released Swollen in 1990, with Tim Sommer and Hahn Rowe producing.
+Jessamyn West may refer to: Jessamyn West (writer) (1902–1984), American writer Jessamyn West (librarian) (born 1968), American librarian and blogger
+It lies approximately east of Rząśnia, north-east of Pajęczno, and south of the regional capital Łódź.
+It is found in Brazil and Peru.
+Priyanka Bidye plays the lead role well, a bit dramatised for the effect.
+ReferencesCategory:Bikont subfamiliesCategory:Conoidasida
+Males had a median income of $35,167 versus $23,125 for females.
+, a cargo ship which was scuttled by her crew on 2 April 1941 after being intercepted by .
+BiographyGeorge Howes was born in Montpelier, Vermont on November 14, 1814, the son of Martha and Joseph Howes (d. 1863).
+Hassel is a name derived from Norwegian, meaning "hazel".
+Majuwa is a Village Development Committee in Ramechhap District in the Janakpur Zone of north-eastern Nepal.
+ReferencesExternal linksKilsyth ChronicleCumbernauld NewsFalkirk HeraldJohnstone Press PLCCategory:Newspapers published in ScotlandCategory:CumbernauldCategory:Newspapers published by Johnston Press
+DRP&E: Directorate of Radiation Protection & Environment9.
+They prefer brushy habitats, often near water.
+MembershipReferencesExternal links Official websiteCategory:Northern Ireland Assembly
+She departed Balboa on 9 July and arrived at Pearl Harbor on 25 July.
+Sarah Churchill may refer to:Sarah Churchill, Duchess of Marlborough (1660–1744), wife of John Churchill, Queen Anne's agentSarah Churchill (actress) (1914–1982), British actress
+However, a judicial recount in September ended with MacNeil being declared the winner by three votes.
+The 1993–94 Whitbread Round the World Race was the sixth edition of the around-the-world sailing event.
+External links Category:School districts in California
+Glenys, a Welsh female given name meaning "clean, holy", may refer to:Glenys Bakker (born 1962), Canadian curler from Calgary, AlbertaGlenys Barton, sculptor working mainly in ceramic and bronzeGlenys Fowles AM (born 1941), Australian operatic sopranoGlenys Kinnock, Baroness Kinnock of Holyhead (born 1944), British politicianGlenys Page (1940–2012), New Zealand cricketerGlenys Quick (born 1957), retired long-distance runner from New ZealandGlenys Thornton, Baroness Thornton (born 1952), Labour and Co-operative member of the UK House of LordsThis name is also spelled Glennis and may refer to: Glennis Grace (b.
+Michael Foley (born 12 January 1999) is a Canadian racing cyclist.
+The other listed building is a farmhouse.
+Keys N Krates is a Canadian electronic music band formed in 2008 out of Toronto, Ontario.
+2010sReferencesExternal links Magritte Awards official website Magritte Award for Best Cinematography at AlloCinéCinematographyCategory:Awards for best cinematography
+Publications More than seventy scholarly articles written by Dodge can be found between 1918 and 1982.
+Anderson was a pupil of James Jardine.
+AthleticsCyclingAustria qualified a girls' combined team based on its ranking in the Youth Olympic Games Junior Nation Rankings.
+Scipio Township may refer to:Indiana Scipio Township, Allen County, Indiana Scipio Township, LaPorte County, IndianaMichigan Scipio Township, MichiganOhio Scipio Township, Meigs County, Ohio Scipio Township, Seneca County, OhioCategory:Township name disambiguation pages
+Annexation brought Dry Bridge School into the Martinsville School District in 1948, and a freestanding school addition was built beside Dry Bridge School in 1958.
+Track listingChart performanceWeekly chartsRelease historyReferencesCategory:2013 singlesCategory:R.I.O.
+The Raiders played in the NCAA Division I Baseball Championship four times, reaching the College World Series in 1955.
+Niels Hintermann (born 5 May 1995) is a Swiss World Cup alpine ski racer.
+Emil Wilhelm Cohen (12 October 1842 – 13 April 1905) was a German mineralogist, born in Jutland.
+All of the splittails were taken by fishermen or have been eaten by catfish and large mouth bass.
+Clara Amoateng Benson popularly known as Maame Serwaa is a young Ghanaian actress and brand ambassador.
+Governor Henderson may refer to:Charles Henderson (Alabama politician) (1860–1937), 35th Governor of AlabamaJames Pinckney Henderson (1808–1858), 1st Governor of TexasJames W. Henderson (1817–1880), 4th Governor of Texas
+It is yellow-brown in color.
+Their reputation would also lead D. H. Lawrence to warn David Garnett they were "unclean".
+Hastings is a town in the United Kingdom, most famous for the Battle of Hastings in 1066.
+syndactyla
+ReferencesCategory:Banks of the NetherlandsCategory:Banks established in 1960Category:1960 establishments in the Netherlands
+A day later they agreed to discuss the issue at dinner on the Garland.
+It includes the Galliani Polyptych by Albertino Piazza (1520), and has, on the façade, a rose window decorated with polychrome majolica.
+ReferencesExternal links Category:Living peopleCategory:1994 birthsCategory:Adelaide Football Club (AFLW) playersCategory:Australian rules footballers from the Australian Capital TerritoryCategory:Sportswomen from the Australian Capital Territory
+She competed in six events at the 1968 Summer Olympics.
+She died of cancer on July 3, 2012 in San Francisco.
+Stafford House may also refer to:in CanadaJoseph Stafford House, listed on the Canadian Register of Historic Placesin the United Kingdom Stafford House College, a school in Canterbury, Englandin the United States Francis M. Stafford House, Paintsville, KentuckyFrederick H. and Elizabeth Stafford House, Port Hope, MichiganWilliam R. Stafford House, Port Hope, MichiganCaptain John H. Stafford House, Bronx, New York, a New York City LandmarkJohn Stafford House, Columbus, Texas, formerly listed on the National Register of Historic Places
+References Category:Revenue blocks of Virudhunagar district
+He was appointed High Sheriff of Mayo for 1798, the year of the Irish Rebellion.
+Mohamed Diakité (born 10 July 1958) is a Guinean sprinter.
+Track listingPersonnel Masami Akita – performer Goffe Struiksma – photographyReferencesCategory:Merzbow EPsCategory:Film soundtracksCategory:1995 soundtracks
+About 332 Icelandic women married foreign soldiers.
+Strumigenys inopinata is a species in the genus Strumigenys.
+The Desert Mountains are a mountain range located in west-central Nevada south of the Lahontan Reservoir and north of the town of Yerington.
+EducationPentecostal School are divided seven, students aged 13 to 18.
+Greenville Public Library is a public library at 573 Putnam Pike in the village of Greenville in the town of Smithfield, Rhode Island directly across from the William Winsor School.
+Buenoa burtsa is a species of backswimmer first found in Colombia's Pacific coast.
+Mautino died in Spring Valley, Illinois of a heart attack.
+He participated at the 1961 World Men's Handball Championship.
+China Venture is a 1953 film directed by Don Siegel.
+Years later, I saw that there was a lot more subtlety and intensity to his music than I first realized.
+He later became the Harvard Harry C. Dudley Professor of Economic Geology.
+In addition, the later novella A War of Gifts (2007) and novel Ender's Shadow (1999), plus other novels in the Shadow saga, take place during the same time period as the original.
+At the 2006 census, its population was 40,916, in 9,800 families.
+It includes the counties of Lewis, Pacific, Wahkiakum, Cowlitz, Clark, Skamania, and Klickitat, as well as a small sliver of southern Thurston county.
+Originally elected to Hackney South as a Liberal, he remained popular and had come back in 1918 as an Independent MP.
+The group performed for the first time together in May 2008 and opened in 2009 for Passion Pit in Copenhagen.
+It was described by Caspar Stoll in 1781.
+The airport is used solely for general aviation purposes.
+In the summer of 1944, Rzepka was commandant of the Home Army field forces around Rzeszów, which took part in Operation Tempest.
+ReferencesCategory:MesosiniCategory:Beetles described in 1938
+See alsoList of George Cross recipientsReferencesCategory:1915 birthsCategory:1941 deathsCategory:People from KetteringCategory:Royal Air Force officersCategory:People educated at St Edward's School, OxfordCategory:British recipients of the George CrossCategory:Royal Air Force personnel of World War II
+It was part of Australian Playhouse.
+Mortimer has twice played in All-Ireland senior finals (2004 and 2006), losing both.
+Richard Jacob may also refer to:Richard Taylor Jacob, American politician and attorneySee alsoRichard Jacobs (disambiguation)
+: 'La meunerie de Barbegal (France) et les roues hydrauliques chez les anciens et au moyen age', Isis, Vol.
+It was reported that she would not suffer long-term problems, but faced weeks of recuperation.
+She co-anchored her first SportsCenter broadcast in February 2001 alongside her future husband, Steve Berthiaume.
+Robert John Nussbaumer (April 23, 1924 – July 26, 1997) was an American football halfback and end in the National Football League (NFL) for the Washington Redskins, Green Bay Packers, and the Chicago Cardinals.
+The definitive treaty was signed on 18 October, Sardinia alone refusing to accede, because the Treaty of Worms (1743) was not guaranteed.
+Consani's marble masterpiece statue Vittoria (1859) is in the Pitti Palace in Florence.
+The songs were "Bleed for Me", "Life, Birth, Blood, Doom", "Demise of Sanity", an alternate piano version of "Bridge to Cross", and a demo presumably called "I'll Find the Way".
+Train servicesThe following services serve the station:Local services (RER C) Saint-Martin d'Étampes–Juvisy–Paris–Issy–Versailles-Chantiers–Saint-Quentin-en-YvelinesLocal services (RER C) Dourdan–Juvisy–Paris–Issy–Versailles-Chantiers–Saint-Quentin-en-YvelinesLocal services (RER C) Dourdan–Juvisy–Paris–Ermont Eaubonne–MontignyLocal services (RER C) Brétigny–Juvisy–Paris–Ermont Eaubonne–MontignySee also List of stations of the Paris RERExternal links Category:Railway stations in EssonneCategory:Réseau Express Régional stationsCategory:Railway stations opened in 1843Category:1843 establishments in France
+The Anglian Bus services manage public transport in the area.
+Notable contributing buildings include the Town Hall (1878), Holy Family Church (1862), First Corpus Christi Church, Second Corpus Christi Church, Cemetery Chapel (c. 1880), Convent Chapel (1889-1901), Convent of the Immaculate Conception (1889-1901), Franciscan Monastery (1894), Stone Church (1846-1848), Waechter's Cradle Shop (1845), Oldenburg Lumber Company (c. 1885), Brockman House (c. 1890), George Holtel House (c. 1865), Fischer Tavern (c. 1850), Burdick Building, Hackman Store (1861-1862), Roell Farm House (c. 1865), and Kellerman House (c. 1860, 1902).
+The magazine was established by Ivor Trueman and was co-edited and published, variously, by Trueman (issues 1–17, 1983–), Andy Mabbett (issues 2–60, 1983–1993), Bruno MacDonald (issues 24–60, 1987–1993), and Dave Walker (issues 13–60, –1993), for ten years and 60 issues.
+Hannah and Ammie – First appeared in Trese #1 case 2.
+Shadows referenced this when talking about Sullivan before playing So Far Away at Rock am Ring 2014.
+Terrón died on May 12, 2019 in Benidorm at the age of 79 from an illness.
+List of works (selected) "Die flüchtige Evidenz" ("The Ephemeral Evidence", 2012), viola and electronics "Pour Annette" (2011), loudspeaker orchestra "Ad multos annos" (“Anniversary Overture”, 2009), orchestra "Loslassen" ("Let It Go", 2007), sound installation "Schenk mir dein Ohr" ("Lend Me Your Ears", 2006), loudspeaker orchestra "Sieben" ("Seven", 2005), percussion and electronics "Ein Ruheraum im Gebirge/Wellen" ("A Relaxation Area in the Mountains/Waves", 2003), sound installation "Crater Music" (2002), loudspeaker orchestra "Kadenz" ("Cadence", 2001), chamber orchestra and electronics "Concert for Electric Quartet and Noise Orchestra" (2001) "The Voice of the Guarani" (2000), performance, installation and radio art "Der Kuss" ("The Kiss", 1999), ensemble and electronics "Allein" ("Alone", 1995), guitar "Umformung" ("Transformation", 1994), loudspeaker orchestra "Triflauto" (1994), flute and UPIC (electronic sounds) "Trugklang" (1993), viola and electronics "Jede Frau trägt einen Schrei" ("Each Woman Carries a Cry", 1991), trombone and multimedia "Tropical Birds in the Pet Shop" (1991), loudspeaker orchestra "Durch unsre Stadt zum Tor hinaus" (1990), loudspeaker orchestra "Früher gab es keine Welt" ("Formerly there was no world", 1989), loudspeaker orchestra "Epifania - Draft II about shouting and extermination" (1987–88), loudspeaker orchestra "Muirte claus - to the memory of the victims of AIDS" (1983–85), voice and electronics "Another View of Delft" (1982), fluteRecordings "Coletânea de Música Eletroacústica Brasileira" (CD SBME 007, 2009) "ISMEAM '97" (CD HEAR 103, 1997) "Música Eletroacústica Brasileira" (CD RioArte Digital RD003, 1995) CD audio-appendix of "Sampling" (ed.
+The Jana family () launched a rebellion against the king in 1592.
+There was a resident population of five persons as of the 2000 census.
+Still Live may refer to: Still Live (The Clarks album), 2006 Still Live (Keith Jarrett album), 1986
+Conversely, a theory proposed by Revonsuo states that when people experience negative emotions or negative events, when they sleep the REM-sleep replays such events, which is known as rehearsal.
+HonoursNavbahor Uzbek Cup winner (2): 1992, 1995ReferencesExtremal links Category:1966 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Soviet footballersCategory:Uzbekistani footballersCategory:Uzbekistan international footballersCategory:Uzbekistani expatriate footballersCategory:CSKA Pamir Dushanbe playersCategory:FC Shinnik Yaroslavl playersCategory:FC Rubin Kazan playersCategory:SV Meppen playersCategory:Vakhsh Qurghonteppa playersCategory:Footballers at the 1998 Asian GamesCategory:Association football forwardsCategory:Expatriate footballers in IndiaCategory:Expatriate footballers in RussiaCategory:Expatriate footballers in GermanyCategory:Uzbekistani expatriate sportspeople in IndiaCategory:Uzbekistani expatriate sportspeople in RussiaCategory:Uzbekistani expatriate sportspeople in GermanyCategory:Asian Games competitors for Uzbekistan
+ReferencesCategory:Populated places in HaitiCategory:Grand'Anse (department)
+While in Syracuse and Richfield, he held bank positions, specifically that of a cashier.
+His record was eventually beaten by German martial artist Kerim Duygu, who managed to break 65 bats in 2017.
+The three crew and one passenger on the Argentine aircraft died; the Soviet pilot was able to eject to safety.
+ReferencesCategory:College sports trophies and awards in the United StatesCategory:Sports in IndianaCategory:Purdue Boilermakers footballCategory:Rose–Hulman Fightin' Engineers footballCategory:Butler Bulldogs footballCategory:Hanover Panthers footballCategory:DePauw Tigers football
+It is the location of the Monmouth County 9-11 Memorial.
+Comparing the song with "Moment of Surrender" on the same album, NME reviewer Ben Patashnik described "Cedars of Lebanon" as "similarly downbeat but no-less-enthralling", and said that the song "is buoyed by Larry Mullen Jr's martial drumming and a twinkling guitar".
+He was elected to the 25th Seanad as a Senator for the Labour Panel in April 2011.
+Kyrmyzykena is a village in the Tartar Rayon of Azerbaijan.
+Early lifeFlinn was born in Davison, Mich., to Milton G. Flinn Sr., a foreman for General Motors' AC Spark Plug plant in Flint, Mich.
+Its natural habitat is temperate forests.
+François-Marie-Casimir Négrier (27 April 1788 in Le Mans – 25 June 1848 in Lille) was a French general who fought in the Napoleonic Wars and the 1848 Revolution.
+Other derivative variants sold by Springfield Armory, Inc., are unique to the American market.
+The manual states that "Larry is the newest addition to the Activision design team."
+The Kamasutra chocolate was invented in 2007 by Florin Balan and distributed by the chocolate factory SC Pralin SRL at Cisnădie in Sibiu County.
+The Puri - Tirupati Express is an express train belonging to South Coast Railway zone that runs between Puri and Tirupati in India.
+Work began in 1894, with the two bores meeting on 18 April 1895.
+In 2005, a summer version of the clinic was founded, with more than 30 veterans attending, and it has since become an twice-annual event.
+He was the fourth and last husband of actress Joan Crawford (married May 10, 1955, in Las Vegas).
+ReferencesExternal links Category:Engineering colleges in GoaCategory:Education in North Goa districtCategory:2001 establishments in IndiaCategory:Educational institutions established in 2001
+The mixtape album "Lady Stardust" put Lady Gaga songs together with David Bowie tracks.
+Election in Chomutov was held on 13 and 14 April while in Přerov on 27-28 April.
+G. Keith Bryant (born 1960) is an American firefighter and the current head of the US Fire Administration.
+After Riyadh, it leads to Al-Qassim Province, where it runs concurrently with Highway 60 from the exit to Highway 535 near Al Ghat for approximately 54 kilometres after which they are separated by an interchange.
+The citadel is square and high, surrounded by a ditch now almost undistinguishable, and having a central tower in height.
+He was already at the age of 16 highly admired in cities across Europe like Rome, Prague, Genoa, Paris and Venice.
+A 2016 re-evaluation by Pablo Ariel Gallina reclassified Amargatitanis as a dicraeosaurid.
+(Mouse Works, 1998) (as DiCicco Digital Arts) (illustrator) A Honey of a Day (Mouse Works, 1998) (as DiCicco Digital Arts) (illustrator) Happy Days (Mouse Works, 1998) (as DiCicco Digital Arts) (illustrator) Walt Disney's Minnie Mysteries "The Flower Prowler" (Golden Books Publishing, 1998) (as DiCicco Digital Arts) (illustrator) Sesame Street Let's Count (Publications International, 1998) (illustrator) Sesame Street Hide and Seek, Near and Far (Publications International, 1998) (as DiCicco Digital Arts) (illustrator) Star Wars Episode 1 (Publications International, 1999) (as DiCicco Digital Arts) (illustrator) Disney/Pixar Toy Story 2 (Publications International) (as DiCicco Digital Arts) (illustrator) Sesame Street Elmo Makes Music (Publications International, 1999) (as DiCicco Digital Arts) (illustrator) Blue's Clues (Publications International, 1999) (as DiCicco Digital Arts) (illustrator) Dragon Tales Whole Lott' Maracas Goin' On (Reader's Digest) (illustrator) Jim Henson's Bear in the Big Blue House "Taking Care of Snowbear" (Reader's Digest, 2000) (illustrator) Jim Henson's Bear in the Big Blue House "Where is Tutter's Cheese?"
+The show picked up again on Newstalk 1010 Sunday, October 3, 2010 in the 1pm - 5pm timeslot.
+See alsoList of fossil sitesReferencesExternal linksFree Images and resources about "Australopithecus sediba" and Malapa for Educators and StudentsCategory:Archaeological sites in South AfricaCategory:PlioceneCategory:Caves of South AfricaCategory:Limestone cavesCategory:Landforms of GautengCategory:Paleoanthropological sites
+Limited editionsOn August 15, 2011, UK retailer Zavvi secured the exclusive right to sell the Metal Gear Solid: Ultimate HD Collection, exclusively available for the PS3, which was set to see only 4,000 copies manufactured worldwide and would be released on November 25.
+Untamed may refer to:BooksUntamed, a 1993 novel by Elizabeth LowellUntamed (Cast novel), by P. C. Cast and Kristin CastUntamed (Humphreys novel), 2012 book by Sara HumphreysFilm and TVUntamed (1929 film), featuring Joan Crawford and Robert MontgomeryUntamed (1940 film), with Ray MillandUntamed (1955 film), starring Tyrone Power and Susan HaywardUntamed (1957 film), Japanese film directed by Mikio NaruseThe Untamed, British title of the film The Man from Snowy River IIThe Untamed (1920 film), silent American filmThe Untamed (2016 film), a Mexican filmThe Untamed (web series), Chinese web seriesMusicUntamed (Cam album), 2015Untamed (Heather Myles album), 1995Untamed (Yankee Grey album), 1999Other usesUntamed (roller coaster), a steel roller coaster in Canobie Lake Park in Salem, New HampshireUntamed (Walibi Holland), a Rocky Mountain Construction hybrid steel-wood roller coasterHMS Untamed, a 1942 Royal Navy U-class submarine
+Honors and awards Sinclair's honors and awards include: Fellow, American Psychological Society (2016) Fellow, Society for Personality and Social Psychology (2012) Fellow, Society for Psychological Study of Social Issues (2007) Fellow, Society of Experimental Social Psychology (2006) National Science Foundation Pre-doctoral Minority Fellowship (1992-1996)Research In her publications, Sinclair focuses on intergroup attitudes and implicit biases.
+Aksenovo () is a rural locality (a village) in Lavrovskoye Rural Settlement, Sudogodsky District, Vladimir Oblast, Russia.
+The signs were later removed.
+ReferencesSee alsoBrocklebank (surname)Category:1899 birthsCategory:1953 deathsCategory:People educated at Eton CollegeCategory:Alumni of Trinity College, CambridgeCategory:English cricketersCategory:Cambridge University cricketersCategory:Baronets in the Baronetage of the United KingdomCategory:Cheshire cricketers
+BNP Paribas Peregrine is headquartered in Hong Kong SAR China, with a presence in all major East Asian countries, as well as sales teams in London, Paris and Milan.
+It was created on 12 December 1665 for William Oglander, Member of Parliament for Yarmouth and Newport.
+He was a student of the sculptor R. Mogensen in Svendborg.
+She has appeared several times on the Howard Stern TV and radio shows, and she has been in a Rolling Stones video shoot in Las Vegas at the request of one of her fans, Keith Richards.
+TAE1 is also responsible for methylating a number of ribosomal proteins.
+From his time in these camps Anna Murià (wife of Agustí Bartra) wrote in her biographical notes on Bartra: "Pere Puig was a leader, mentor and protector, brother and father of the Catalans in the concentration camps.
+ProspectingSoon after Rice moved to The Pas, there was word of gold being discovered north on Beaver Lake.
+"Never" eventually came second during the show's on-site voting, and received praise for its exceptional stage performance.
+It is endemic to New Zealand.
+This list of defunct medical schools in the United States includes former medical schools that previously awarded either the Doctor of Medicine (MD) or Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine (DO) degree, either of which is required to become a physician in the United States.
+Protein capicua homolog is a protein that in humans is encoded by the CIC gene.
+ReferencesBibliography JeokjinpoCategory:Yi Sun-sin
+Schedule 25.11.2000 – Men's and Women's Fighting System, Women's Duo System – Classic, Mixed Duo System – Classic26.11.2000 – Men's and Women's Fighting System, Men's Duo System – ClassicEuropean Ju-JitsuFighting SystemMen's eventsWomen's eventsDuo SystemDuo Classic eventsLinksReferencesExternal linksTOP3 results from DJJV.de site (PDF)
+The Portuguese Tomb of the Unknown Soldier (pt: Túmulo do Soldado Desconhecido) is located in the Sala do Capitulo at the Monastery of Batalha, near Leiria.
+Area Control – also known as area majority or influence, this involves controlling a game element or board space through allocation of resources.
+It serves clients in New England, the US and internationally.
+See also List of programs broadcast by Hum TV 2017 in Pakistani televisionReferencesExternal links Official Website MD ProductionsCategory:Pakistani television dramas based on novelsCategory:2017 Pakistani television series debutsCategory:Pakistani drama television seriesCategory:Urdu-language television programsCategory:Hum TV series
+The very construction of wildlife preservations and reserves as a means to conserve environmental biodiversity is, in and of itself, somewhat of a contradiction as it involves the commercial destruction of that unspoiled area to exist.
+He regained his seat in 1710, and served as Treasurer of the Navy in the Earl of Oxford's administration from 1711 to 1714, being turned out of office on the Hanoverian succession.
+Divine worship or Divine Worship may refer to: Worship of God or gods Christian worship in particular Liturgy, customary public worship performed by a religious group Christian liturgy in particular Anglican Use, rite of former Anglican parishes in the Catholic Church Book of Divine Worship, former Anglican Use missal Divine Worship: The Missal, current Anglican Use missal Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments, dicastery of the Roman CuriaSee also Divine Service (disambiguation)
+Zowie!"
+References Library of CongressSee also Operation CondorCategory:Political history of BrazilCategory:Brazilian intelligence agencies
+__NOTOC__Great Jones Street is a street in New York City's NoHo district in Manhattan, essentially another name for 3rd Street between Broadway and the Bowery.
+Frederick, Elector Palatine may refer to:Frederick I, Elector Palatine (1425–1476)Frederick II, Elector Palatine (1482–1556)Frederick III, Elector Palatine (1515–1576)Frederick IV, Elector Palatine (1574–1610)Frederick V, Elector Palatine (1596–1632)
+At the 2006 census, its population was 73, in 28 families.
+The only thing we have to know is when it will happen".
+The GWR was opened from here to on 31 May 1841, but the temporary station remained in use here until 30 June 1841 and the locomotive facilities until sometime the following year.
+Career statisticsClubReferencesExternal linksCategory:1995 birthsCategory:People from Harju CountyCategory:Living peopleCategory:Russian footballersCategory:Association football midfieldersCategory:Russian expatriate footballersCategory:Expatriate footballers in EstoniaCategory:FCI Tallinn playersCategory:FCI Levadia Tallinn playersCategory:FC Akhmat Grozny playersCategory:Meistriliiga playersCategory:Russian Premier League players
+Godbold is a surname.
+Club careerFaouzi started playing football on the streets of his village, Al Attaouia (El Kelaa des Sraghna).
+In Greek mythology, Peirous or Peiroos (Ancient Greek: Πείροος) was a Thracian war leader from the city of Aenus and an ally of King Priam during the Trojan War.
+He competed in the men's tournament at the 1964 Summer Olympics.
+In 2005 it had a population of 5,336.
+It was officially opened on 30 December 2018.
+It lies approximately south-west of Kock, north-west of Lubartów, and north of the regional capital Lublin.
+In 2014, Rezabek decided to challenge incumbent Representative Roland Winburn for a seat in the Ohio House of Representatives.
+Zone 9 (3 digits)Zone 9 (4 digits)9
+Dhari told his neighbours that he was an employee at Stockholm mosque, a position he received via the Swedish Public Employment Service, though mosque leadership denied knowing who he was, since so many are sent to the mosque by both the Prison and Probation Service and the employment service.
+While in college, a writing assignment found its way into the hands of Paul Gallotta of Circus Magazine.
+Petite Suite may refer to the following musical compositions:Petite Suite (Bartók)Petite Suite (Borodin)Petite Suite (Debussy)
+AchievementsReferencesExternal links Category:1984 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:American male high jumpersCategory:African-American male track and field athletesCategory:Olympic track and field athletes of the United StatesCategory:Athletes (track and field) at the 2008 Summer OlympicsCategory:People from Brenham, Texas
+The fjord flows from the southern part of the Folgefonna National Park, draining the huge Folgefonna glacier.
+Clynderwen (; ) is a rural linear village and community, historically in Carmarthenshire in Wales, but administered as part of Pembrokeshire.
+It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1985.
+References369
+the lawyer will forfeit the dispute in the event of an unsuccessful case outcome).
+Elections to Buckinghamshire County Council were held on 5 May 2005, alongside the 2005 UK General Election and other local elections in England and Northern Ireland.
+NotesCategory:Buildings and structures in Bloomington–NormalCategory:National Register of Historic Places in McLean County, IllinoisCategory:Commercial buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in Illinois
+The Indians ran two more running plays followed by timeouts to get to the 14-yard-line with 16 seconds left, and Garcia successfully kicked a 31-yard field goal to give Stanford a 13–12 upset.
+She won a silver medal at the 2018 Ibero-American Championships.
+They typically vote for the candidates of the party that nominated them.
+Also mentioned in this stele is the previous ruler of the kingdom before Balitung.
+Udispattu is a village in Sri Lanka.
+References 2002 men's skeleton results 2006 men's skeleton results Skeletonsport.com profileExternal links Category:1978 birthsCategory:Japanese male skeleton racersCategory:Living peopleCategory:Olympic skeleton racers of JapanCategory:Skeleton racers at the 2002 Winter OlympicsCategory:Skeleton racers at the 2006 Winter OlympicsCategory:Sportspeople from Sapporo
+Career Hardeman was selected by the All-America Board, the International News Service and the Sporting News as a first-team player on their respective 1952 College Football All-America Teams.
+The 1968–69 Toronto Maple Leafs season was the Toronto Maple Leafs 52nd season of the franchise, 42nd season as the Maple Leafs.
+"Had 2 Gat Ya" contains samples from Deep Cover by Snoop Dogg and Dr. Dre ("187 on the..." as said by Snoop Dogg) and How I Could Just Kill a Man by Cypress Hill ("Ya know I had to gat ya" said by Sen Dog).
+and A. Holba, et al.
+It is often found in valley woodland areas at around 2000 meters in altitude.
+Top goalscorersReferencesExternal linksToppserien - Norges FotballforbundSeason on soccerway.comCategory:Toppserien seasonsCategory:Top level Norwegian women's football league seasonsNorwayNorway1
+EtymologyAgeratina is derived from Greek meaning 'un-aging', in reference to the flowers keeping their color for a long time.
+Bidhan Lama, won a bronze medal in taekwondo which was then an exhibition sport.
+He trained as a lawyer in nearby Edinburgh.
+The revenue stamps of communist China: 1929-1955.
+The Old Testament books, though based upon the Hebrew Bible, follow the order of the Septuagint and the Church Slavonic Bible.
+Sorbas is a municipality of Almería province, in the autonomous community of Andalusia, Spain.
+Her name was struck from the Navy List 30 October 1943.
+PersonalTheus is married to Elaine.
+The gate next gained national attention during the Mutiny of 1857.
+ExtracurricularThe school's newspaper The Red and Black was first published in 1920, but ceased regular publication in the early 2000s.
+It is a triangularly shaped and bounded by the streets of Bačka on the east, Ugrinovačka on the north and Pazovački put on the south, it is mostly inhabited by the Romani people.
+Upon Theolinda’s death in 628, her crown was donated to the Church at Monza, where it still remains.
+Silas was organist at the Catholic Chapel of Kingston upon Thames and Professor of Harmony at the Guildhall School of Music.
+The series' first season became available on the streaming service in the winter of 2019-2020 and announced that the series has been renewed for a second season.
+It lies directly to the south of Trindade.
+It is also traded illegally in the pet trade.
+In For the Megalopolitans, Demosthenes argues for the Athenians to give the Megalopolis the support it requested against Spartan aggression.
+There were a total of 176 episodes over the show's seven seasons, which are listed here in chronological order by original airdate, which match the episode order in each season's DVD set.
+Jefferson took the gold in the second race of the 3 to 10 ton.
+The genus is native to Europe, Asia and north Africa, with one species (P. alpinum) also in North and South America.
+Bridge accomplishmentsHonors ACBL Hall of Fame, Blackwood Award 1996 ACBL Honorary Member of the Year 1946Awards IBPA Bridge Book of the Year 1966Wins Schwab Cup (1) 1934Runners-up North American Bridge Championships (1) Chicago (now Reisinger) (1) 1935ReferencesExternal links "A Tribute to Albert H. Morehead" subsite at Phil & Pat Morehead Category:1909 birthsCategory:1966 deathsCategory:American contract bridge playersCategory:Contract bridge writersCategory:American columnistsCategory:American PresbyteriansCategory:American magazine editorsCategory:American book editorsCategory:The New York Times writersCategory:Writers from Georgia (U.S. state)Category:Writers from New York (state)Category:Harvard University alumniCategory:People from ManhattanCategory:People from Taylor County, GeorgiaCategory:20th-century American non-fiction writers
+Dorney joined the team during the 1905 championship and became a regular player over the next decade.
+The population of Yavaros is 4,058.
+This allows the rider to apply pressure and effect a "heelside" turn.
+ReferencesBaseball Reference -Hazlehurst-BaxleyCategory:Baseball teams established in 1946Category:Baseball teams disestablished in 1950Category:Defunct Georgia-Alabama League teamsCategory:Professional baseball teams in Georgia (U.S. state)Category:1946 establishments in Georgia (U.S. state)Category:1950 disestablishments in Georgia (U.S. state)Category:Carroll County, Georgia
+Track listingChartsRelease historyReferencesExternal links Category:2012 singlesCategory:The Vaccines songsCategory:2012 songsCategory:Columbia Records singles
+Barretter may refer to: Hot wire barretter, an early form of radio demodulator Iron-hydrogen resistor or barretter, a hydrogen-filled glass bulb in which an iron wire is locatedSee also Baretta (disambiguation) Bereta (disambiguation) Beretta Biretta
+See also List of steroid metabolism modulatorsCytochrome P450 modulators
+DrawChallenge roundFinalsTop halfSection 1Section 2Bottom halfSection 3Section 4ReferencesExternal linksWomen's SinglesCategory:Wimbledon Championship by year – Women's SinglesCategory:1910 in women's tennisCategory:1910 in British women's sport
+He left 155 handwritten volumes of the diary when he died, entirely unpublished.
+Like all other songs on the EP, "Freak" was released as a free download on their official website.
+Between Penn Station and Schenectady, it operates along the Empire Corridor, a federally-designated high-speed rail corridor.
+In November 2008, 14-year-old amateur astronomer Caroline Moore from Warwick, New York, became the youngest supernova discoverer when she found SN 2008ha in UGC 12682.
+Charles IV may refer to: Charles IV of France (1294–1328), "the Fair" Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor (1316–1378) Charles IV of Navarre (1421–1461) Charles IV, Duke of Anjou (1446–1481) Charles IV, Duke of Alençon (1489–1525) Charles, Duke of Vendôme (1489–1537), also known as Charles IV de Bourbon Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor (1500–1558), King of Naples as Charles IV Charles IV, Duke of Lorraine (1604–1675) Charles VI, Holy Roman Emperor (1685–1740), Duke of Brabant and King of Sicily as Charles IV Charles Emmanuel IV of Sardinia (1751–1819), styled "Charles IV of England and Scotland" by Jacobites Charles IV of Spain (1748–1819) Charles IV of Norway (1826–1872) Charles IV of Hungary (1887–1922)See also King Charles (disambiguation) Charleseo:Karolo (regantoj)#Karolo la 4-a
+U-93 may refer to one of the following German submarines: , a Type U 93 submarine launched in 1916 and that served in the First World War until it went missing after 15 January 1918 During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names: , a Type UB III submarine launched in 1918 and surrendered on 21 November 1918; broken up at Rochester in 1922 , a Type UC III submarine launched in 1918 and surrendered on 26 November 1918; broken up at La Spezia in August 1919 , a Type VIIC submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 15 January 1942Category:Submarines of Germany
+It was described by Turner in 1940.
+Wielding a hammer and tongs, the tools of his trade, he was carried aloft by his comrades through the town.
+The College Principal is Stephen R Gale.
+Sinclair was sold in Tuscaloosa, Alabama in October 1825 and subsequently freed in March 1827 through the efforts of several Methodist ministers, Robert L. Kennon and Joshua Boucher, who filed a lawsuit on his behalf.
+Please don't delete this article because this actor or actress will play a lead or supporting role in the tokusatsu series "Uchu Sentai Kyuranger" and will continue their career and make more roles, either lead or supporting, after the end of the programme.
+Also there is state-of-the art auditorium equipped with all the modern audio-visual aids to showcase the life works of Guru Ravidass and would accommodate nearly 500 pilgrims during any function or event.
+ReferencesCategory:Valleys of NevadaCategory:Valleys of CaliforniaCategory:Valleys of Clark County, NevadaCategory:Valleys of Inyo County, CaliforniaCategory:Valleys of San Bernardino County, California
+Both Lebanon and Saudi Arabia openly supported solving the Palestinian question in favor to the Palestinian side at the peace process with Israel.
+The lower part of this valley is served by the route 381.
+Three young men from Anshan (Kunio Maruyama, Hachiro Shimpo and Masamichi Musashi) volunteered to report the situation to Japan, and met with the Japanese government in Tokyo.
+He becomes our eyes as he experiences the last few months of peace before World War One breaks out and changes the world forever.
+BiosynthesisHistoryThe isoflavonoid pathway has long been studied because of its prevalence in a wide variety of plant species, including as pigmentation in many flowers, as well as serving as signals in plants and microbes.
+See also Liberal PartySources Liberal ArchiveCategory:1829 birthsCategory:1890 deathsCategory:Belgian politicians
+Both sexes grows short black horns in a V-shaped manner compared to C-shaped horns of Bubalus bubalis.
+Modifications to the bomb bays of 42-6259 were extensive and time-consuming.
+Przyrowo is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Połczyn-Zdrój, within Świdwin County, West Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-western Poland.
+The Cattle Colony is the dairy products shopping and supply centre of Karachi.
+In this book, Gaffney shows how Neoclassical economics was designed and promoted by landowners and their hired economists to divert attention from George's extremely popular insight that since land and resources are provided by nature, and their value is given by society, they - rather than labor or capital - should provide the tax base to fund government and its expenditures.
+Like the sidecars before them, the motorcycles not only had an exceptional standard of finish, including pressed monograms, elegantly shaped fuel tanks brightly plated with nickel and cadmium and luxury leather covered saddles, but were also recognised for their innovative design features.
+The thick skins of Plassa allowed the grape to stay fresh after harvest, making it prized as a table grape, but over time it use as a table grape wine and now it is used solely for wine production.
+In the spring of 1810 the two Danish-Norwegian brigs Lougen, under the command of Captain J. N. Müller and Langeland sailed from Fredericksværn and reached Hammerfest on the 28 June where they joined with three gun-schooners - Nornen, Valkyren and Axel Thorsen, each of which was armed with a 24-pounder gun fore and aft.
+International Teekloh is a member of the Liberia national football team and has 23 caps, including the 2002 African Nations Cup and the 2008 African Nations Cup qualifiers.
+The province of Bologna covered an area of and had a total population of 1,004,323 inhabitants as of 31 December 2014, giving it a population density of 271.27 inhabitants per square kilometre.
+It is available over the counter.
+Roll of honourPrincipal UK finals Jumeirah Lolls disqualified from competing after positive samplePrincipal Irish finalsUK Category 1 & 2 competitions+ held in 2018Irish feature competitionsReferences Category:Greyhound racing in the United KingdomCategory:Greyhound racing in the Republic of IrelandGreyhound Racing YearGreyhound Racing Year
+She moved to KATU in Portland as a reporter in 2008.
+Roll of honour Cork Senior Hurling Championship Winners (2) 1918, 2011, Runners Up 1932, 1933, 1935 Cork Premier Intermediate Hurling Championship Winners (1) 2007 Runners Up: 2006 Cork Intermediate Hurling Championship Winners (3) 1909, 1949, 1950 Runners Up: 1942, 1971, 2002 Cork Junior Hurling Championship Winners (6) 1896, 1915, 1941, 1948, 1966, 1994 Runners Up: 1897, 1962, 1978 Cork Junior Football Championship Runners Up 1993 Cork Minor Hurling Championship Winners (1) 1998 Runners Up 1962, 1976, 1977, Cork Minor A Hurling Championship Winners (1) 2007 Cork Minor A Football Championship Runners-Up 1997 Cork Under-21 Hurling Championship Runners-Up 1993, 2001 East Cork Junior A Hurling Championship Winners (9) 1941, 1947, 1948, 1956, 1962, 1965, 1966, 1978, 1994 Runners-Up: 1928, 1929, 1943, 1964, 1969 East Cork Junior A Football Championship: Winners (3) 1993, 1997, 2000 Runners-Up: 1931, 1989, 1992, 2007, 2014Famous players Willie Cummins Willie John Daly Matty Fouhy Ned Grey Niall McCarthyReferencesExternal linksOfficial SiteCategory:Gaelic Athletic Association clubs in County CorkCategory:Hurling clubs in County CorkCategory:Gaelic football clubs in County Cork
+In 1892 Owens led the Harvard Peabody Museum's expedition to the Mayan city of Copán, Honduras, which began the excavation of the "Hieroglyphic Stairway" there.
+This cyst should not be confused with a nasopalatine cyst.
+The club was formed in 1859.
+They raced to prevent the execution, having realised that Brandon was himself the Seraph.
+A relatively small-scale, Generation IV nuclear station was envisaged.
+She competed at the 1994 Winter Olympics.
+Nikita Mikhailovich Melnikov (; born 28 February 1997) is a Russian football player who plays for Slavia Mozyr.
+The Serie A away match played on 7 March 1920 against Biel-Bienne in Gurzelen Stadion was the last game that Wilhelm Dietz played as he died 4 weeks later aged just 19 years old.
+External linksVictorian Football Association/Victorian Football League history (1877–2008)List of VFA premiersReferencesCategory:Victorian Football League seasonsVFL
+It is known from the Solomon Islands and Papua New Guinea.
+Tirpitz Museum (Norway), focused on the battleship of same name.
+In many legal jurisdictions a murder involving "exceptional brutality or cruelty" will attract a harsher sentence if the killing is not sanctioned by authorities or carried out by state security forces themselves.
+FF4: Hank Hennessey - A career US Army Captain in the Special Forces and Vietnam War veteran.
+The Karakoram Wildlife Sanctuary is a high altitude wildlife sanctuary located in the easternmost reaches of the Karakoram range in Leh district, in the Indian union territory of Ladakh.
+Daniel McCartan is a Gaelic football player from County Down, Northern Ireland.
+Zurella is a Thoroughbred mare trained in New Zealand by Shaune Ritchie.
+.
+Gechi Qeshlaq () may refer to: Gechi Qeshlaq Amirlu, Ardabil Province Gechi Qeshlaq Hajj Mohammadlu, Ardabil Province Gechi Qeshlaq-e Olya, East Azerbaijan Province Gechi Qeshlaq-e Sofla, East Azerbaijan Province Gechi Qeshlaq-e Vosta, East Azerbaijan Province
+His parents immigrated to Austria in 1967.
+Includes all competitive matches.
+This adventure book, as well as the rest of her novels, are recommended reading in many (IES).
+He played parts of two seasons in Major League Baseball as a catcher for the San Francisco Giants in 1992-93.
+Other worksIn 2014, Annette Lareau published Choosing Homes, Choosing Schools which she edited with Kimberly Goyette.
+2001 – Order of Culture.
+The World Group II was the second highest level of Fed Cup competition in 2009.
+May the king provide for them; [all] of the land might be in dire straits on their account.
+He won the Levstik Award in 1978 for his book Himalaja, rad te imam (Himalayas, I Love You) published after an expedition to the Himalayas in 1975, one of a total of seven journeys he made to Nepal and India.
+The Centre borders the Somenos Marsh Wildlife Refuge and Ducks Unlimited pond.
+His father berates him, and in the process, Ramu reveals that he does not want a job, rather, he want to do business.
+It comprised the localities of Alt-Hohenschönhausen (the core of the borough), Neu-Hohenschönhausen, Malchow, Wartenberg and Falkenberg.
+External links Great White Heron National Wildlife RefugeCategory:National Wildlife Refuges in Monroe County, FloridaCategory:Florida KeysCategory:Protected areas established in 1938Category:Wetlands of FloridaCategory:National Wildlife Refuges in FloridaCategory:Landforms of Monroe County, FloridaCategory:1938 establishments in Florida
+ClubsSumanourajoshi High School → Hisamitsu Springs (2001-)National team 2006-2007Honours2006 - 6th place in the FIVB Volleyball Women's World Championship in JapanReferencesExternal linksFIVB BiographyOfficialsiteCategory:Chinese emigrants to JapanCategory:Japanese people of Chinese descentCategory:Japanese women's volleyball playersCategory:Naturalized citizens of JapanCategory:Living peopleCategory:1980 birthsCategory:Asian Games medalists in volleyballCategory:Volleyball players at the 2006 Asian GamesCategory:Medalists at the 2006 Asian GamesCategory:Asian Games silver medalists for Japan
+In 2012, the building was sold to developers Jim Brady and Kevin Bunker with the aim of turning the structure into a hotel.
+Instead, he signed with BK Häcken the same year and joined their youth academy.
+In the circumstances, common sense dictated that the death and injuries had arisen from the driving of G the second defendant's truck.
+Waterproof paper is a type of paper that is good for outdoor, marine, field use and general wet environments.
+Colonel Logan.
+ReferencesExternal linksGelatinodiscus at Index FungorumCategory:HelotiaceaeCategory:Monotypic Ascomycota generaCategory:Taxa named by Alexander H. Smith
+Manuscript, 15th century; p. 9.
+FormatThe first round, or group stage, was a competition between the 6 teams in one group, where engaged in a round-robin tournament within itself.
+The British in colonial India heard Muslims chanting "Yā Hussain!
+It used a 1000-kilowatt, 742-foot (226.2 m) guyed mast that was constructed in 1977 and dedicated on August 2, 1978.
+Oktober may refer to:October, the tenth month of the Gregorian Calendar;Forlaget Oktober, a Norwegian publishing house; Oktober, a character in The Quiller Memorandum;See also Oktober Guitars, American manufacturer of musical instrument;October (disambiguation)
+Section 27 of the 1970 Act added explicit cargo preference authority, which was amended in 2008 to provide MARAD with the authority to (a) "direct agencies to require the transportation in United States-flagged vessels of cargo shipments not otherwise subject to [Cargo Preference] in equivalent amounts to cargo determined to have been shipped on foreign carriers in violation of [Cargo Preference]" and (b) "impose on any person that violates [the Cargo Preference Act or a MARAD implementing regulation], a civil penalty of not more than $25,000 for each violation willfully and knowingly committed, with each day of a continuing violation following the date of shipment to be a separate violation."
+CryptocurrenciesOn April 11, 2012, Tyler Winklevoss and Cameron Winklevoss revealed ownership of approximately 1% of bitcoins in circulation, worth about $11 million, via Winklevoss Capital.
+Tropidophoxinellus hellenicus is a species of ray-finned fish in the family Cyprinidae.
+It may refer to: Spud gun, an improvised launcher, typically made from lengths of pipe, used to project potatoes (aka "spuds"), which sometimes use compressed air as a propellant.
+Tusitala yemenica is a jumping spider that lives in Yemen.
+He made three further appearances in the 2016–17 season, prior to being loaned out for the following campaign to Primera B Nacional team Juventud Unida.
+It measures 96 feet long, and is topped by a gable roof.
+Alpine Modern alpine skiing bindings fix the boot at the toe and heel.
+HistoryThe National Football Academy was established in 2006.
+In 2008 she received 3rd prize at the Shure/Montreux Jazz Festival International Jazz Vocal Competition.
+The case of the 28 bitangents of a quartic was a celebrated piece of geometry of the nineteenth century, a relationship being shown to the 27 lines on the cubic surface.
+DistributionThis species occurs in the Caribbean Sea off Honduras.
+The track topped the charts in Ireland, Germany, and spent three weeks at number on the Australian chart.
+He said that if the Muslims were not granted a separate Pakistan then they would launch "direct action".
+A mass formula is an equation or set of equations in physics which attempts to predict the mass or mass ratios of the subatomic particles.
+Prior to 1920, no national professional football league existed, and play was scattered across semi-pro and professional leagues in the upper midwest.
+A. M. Raja may refer to:A. M. Rajah (1929–1989), Indian playback singerA. M. Raja (politician) (born 1928), Indian politicianSee alsoRaja (disambiguation)
+Each ward elects one, two or three councillors.
+SeedsA champion seed is indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which that seed was eliminated.
+His coaching record at Kalamazoo was 1–8.
+CareerJessie started her career at Chase Manhattan Bank, specifically working at its Third World Debt Restructuring Group, and later worked at American Express.
+According to legend, Castor and Pollux appeared on the battlefield as two able horsemen in aid of the Republic; and after the battle had been won they again appeared on the Forum in Rome watering their horses at the Spring of Juturna thereby announcing the victory.
+C. palustris may refer to: Calamus palustris, a rattan palm species in the genus Calamus Caltha palustris, the kingcup or marsh marigold, a plant species native to temperate regions of the Northern Hemisphere Cistothorus palustris, the marsh wren, a small songbird species found in North America Claytonia palustris, a wildflower species in the purslane family known by the common names Jonesville springbeauty and marsh claytonia Coespeletia palustris, a wildflower native to the Andes Crocodylus palustris, the mugger crocodile, Indian, Indus, Persian or marsh crocodile, a reptile species found throughout the Indian subcontinent and the surrounding countriesSee also Palustris (disambiguation)
+Bankia will contribute 10,000 euros to promote the province's tourism industry.
+A friend of the working man, he made his living as printer through the newsrooms of the Atlanta Journal and Constitution over the years.
+The top six teams from the regular season qualified for the promition/relegation round of the SM-liiga.
+In February 2009, Machado received a 15-game suspension for violating MLB-Minor League drug treatment and prevention program while trying to return to organized baseball.
+ReferencesCategory:1956 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Czech male sport shootersCategory:Olympic shooters of CzechoslovakiaCategory:Shooters at the 1980 Summer OlympicsCategory:Place of birth missing (living people)
+In later chapters, he wears an eye patch.
+He came upon her as she was about to make love when she was seventeen, and beat up the boy and called her names; they didn't talk after that.
+Donald Woods (1933–2001) was a South African journalist and activist.
+Enraged, she vows to kill him at any costs.
+References Category:Populated places in Shahrud County
+MatchesIntercontinental ShieldCategory:2009 in Ugandan cricketCategory:2009 in Bermudian cricketCategory:International cricket competitions in 20092009
+The Sarra Triangle is a strip of land, today located in the Kufra District of Libya, originally colonised by Britain and added to Anglo-Egyptian Sudan.
+Plot Julia, Martha, Elena and Alicia are four young women who become friends working at the hospital where they are voluntary.
+This exposé was one of the first featured articles about the quality of mental institutions.
+The station operated from December 1, 1959 to May 18, 1968.
+CastDeepak DobriyalPriya BathijaAnshul KatariaParu UmaAlok ChaturvediBramha MishraJagat RawatChandrahas TiwariNitin GoelShrikant VermaAnurag AroraAvtar SahniKafil ahmadSoundtrackReferencesExternal links Category:2010s Hindi-language filmsCategory:Indian comedy filmsCategory:2013 filmsCategory:Indian comedy thriller filmsCategory:Indian films
+"Join the Club" is an episode of The SopranosJoin the Club may also refer to:Join the Club (album), by Lucy Spraggan, or the title trackJoin the Club (band), a Philippine rock band"Join the Club", a 2013 song by Bring Me the Horizon from SempiternalSee also"Join Our Club", a song by Saint Etienne
+Herlitzius is a surname.
+One example of their compositions is "African Song" from their album Tempo Fugit, which was released in the 1990s.
+Patricia Pike (born October 24, 1954) is an American politician.
+PlotIn a little West African village, a boy named Kirikou is born in an unusual way.
+Bing Crosby also recorded a version of the song on January 26, 1942 with Victor Young and his Orchestra, and this briefly charted reaching the No.
+"It comes down to the size of your balls," Mottram said of his ability to pick up the pace and shake off his rivals in Oregon.
+Michelle Bigenho wrote in Intimate Distance thatGilka Cespedes wrote that Los JairasFernando Rios wrote thatWorld Music wrote thatPartial discographyLos JairasEdgar Joffre - Los Jairas Grito de Bolivia- Los Jairas (1967)Sempre con...Los Jairas (1969)Edgar "Yayo" Joffre y Los Jairas (1969)La Flute Des Andes (1970)Lo Mejor de los Jairas (1974)Los Jairas en vivo (1976)Canto a la viva (1978)Al Pueblo de mis Ancestros (1992)ReferencesExternal links Los Jairas (group website) No Hay Revolucion Sin Canciones: Bolivian Nationalism and its Journey to the World StageCategory:Bolivian musical groupsCategory:Folk music groups
+However, the same year, Grocery Outlet, an unrelated Northern California retailer, also began branding some of its stores as Lucky, claiming that Albertsons had given up rights to the Lucky trademark when it retired the brand in 1999.
+Barry Parkin (born: 1 April 1964) is a sailor from Leeds, Great Britain.
+Academic interestsHis research interests lie in the mathematics of program construction and algorithmic problem solving.
+The leaves are pinnately-divided into 20 to 25 leaflets having a smooth contour.
+See also Music of IndiaCategory:Directly struck membranophonesCategory:Indian musical instrumentsCategory:Drums
+Wilbur Dam is the site of first hydroelectric dam constructed in Tennessee (beginning in 1909), going online with power production and distribution in 1912.
+The creek then flows to the southwest into Mequon, where it joins the Milwaukee River at Bonniwell Road.
+Despite being placed in the concussion protocol, Allen returned the following week against the Tennessee Titans, completing 23 of 32 pass attempts for 219 yards, two touchdowns, and one interception in a 14–7 Bills win.
+Ternary operation, in computer science a ternary operator (sometimes incorrectly referred to as a tertiary operator), an operator that takes three arguments Tertiary color, a color made up by mixing one primary color with one secondary color, in a given color space Tertiary stress, a proposed degree of stress in linguistics A member of a third order religious group Tertiary source, a summary of primary and secondary sourcesSee also Ternary (disambiguation) Secondary (disambiguation) Quaternary (disambiguation)
+Roogoo is a downloadable puzzle video game for the Xbox Live Arcade and Microsoft Windows developed by American studio SpiderMonk Entertainment and published by SouthPeak Games.
+"Down That Road Tonight" is a song recorded by American country music group Nitty Gritty Dirt Band.
+Like the band's debut album, it was recorded at Escape Studios in Egerton, Kent, but was this time produced by David Lewis, the frontman of another North Irish rock band Andwella.
+ReferencesCategory:Populated places in Lerik District
+She and Sara Tan placed 15th in the 49erFX event at the 2016 Summer Olympics.
+Diadelia holobrunnea is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae.
+Between 1979 and 1983, Hopper ran two pilot projects, testing the use of volunteers and computer mapping for the recording of sightings of kangaroo paw and various orchids of Western Australia.
+32 in the Czech Republic.
+Arashi's Assault: Children's Dinner in Japanese.
+After he's sentenced to the electric chair, reporter Matt Fraser is assigned to speak with Dr. Renwick, who is interviewing Bogardus.
+According to the 2002 census, the village has a population of 1136 people.
+Her career spanned sixty years.
+ReferencesCategory:Rivers of Qinghai
+HonoursKnight Bachelor, 1982Hon.
+Guillaume Ignace Gibsone (8 October 1826 - 9 June 1897) was an English concert pianist and composer, born in London of Scottish and French parentage.
+ReferencesExternal links André Borel d'Hauterive on Data.bnf.fr Biographie sur le site de la bibliothèque dauphinoise Texts online on Briançon Vauban : La Noblesse du Briançonnais (1867).
+The species is endemic to Brazil.
+First-seeded Björn Borg won the singles title.
+She made her debut with the senior team in 2017, at 20, winning a gold medal in the 2017 Eurobasket: 2013 FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship (youth) 2014 FIBA Under-17 World Championship (youth)4th 2015 FIBA Under-19 World Championship (youth) 2015 FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship (youth) 2016 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship (youth) 2017 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship (youth) 2017 EurobasketReferencesCategory:1997 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Chicago Sky draft picksCategory:Expatriate basketball people in PolandCategory:Florida State Seminoles women's basketball playersCategory:Small forwardsCategory:Spanish expatriate basketball people in PolandCategory:Spanish expatriate basketball people in the United StatesCategory:Spanish women's basketball playersCategory:Sportspeople from Madrid
+Natural Care wipes available in Clutch 'N Clean, Designer Tubs, Soft Packs, Tubs, Refills, and Big Packs In 2019, Huggies introduced Special Delivery, incorporating plant-based materials and unique designs.
+2004 : King Arthur was filmed at Llanddeusant near Carmarthen starring Clive owen and kiera Knightley it was directed by Antoine Fuqua.
+Chris Townsend, Jim Perrin, David Lintern and Alex Roddie are among many regular and long-term contributors to the magazine.
+Complete results for men, junior men, medallists and the results of British athletes were published.
+Through it passes the N-301 highway that runs from Madrid to Cartagena.
+Pumpkinhead or Punkinhead may refer to:Film Pumpkinhead (film series), a 1988 horror film and its three sequels: Pumpkinhead (film) (1988) Pumpkinhead II: Blood Wings (1994)Pumpkinhead: Ashes to Ashes (2006)Pumpkinhead: Blood Feud (2007)Fictional characters Jack Pumpkinhead, from Oz book series by L. Frank Baum Jack Pumpkinhead of Oz, 1929 book, 23rd in Oz book series by L. Frank Baum Punkinhead, in the comic Tiger Merv Pumpkinhead from The Sandman comics by Neil Gaiman Sometimes incorrectly used as the name of Malibu Comics character Lord PumpkinMusicPumpkinhead (rapper), a hip hop music artistPumpkinhead (band), an alternative band from New ZealandPunkinHed, a 2007 EP by southern rap artist Boondox"The Ballad of Peter Pumpkinhead", a song by XTC from their album NonsuchArtZuccone ("The Pumpkin [head]"), 15th century sculpture by Italian Renaissance artist Donatello
+Remixes/freestylesThe official remix features Rick Ross, T.I.
+Salix chaenomeloides is a species of willow native to Japan, Korea and China.
+A systems biology approach will integrate multi-omics analyses to explore hypotheses and mechanisms underlying the development of islet autoimmunity.
+Cavendish-Bentinck is a surname associated with the Dukes of Portland and their descendants.
+It is a sub-prefecture of the department.
+NotesReferences Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric and Käthe Roth.
+"Cassy O" is a single by British singer-songwriter George Ezra.
+Leaders from all the member countries met from 18 to 19 November 2006 in Hanoi.
+James Rider (March 5, 1797 Springfield, Queens County, New York – April 30, 1876 Jamaica, Queens Co., NY) was an American politician from New York.
+The main gate in the north opened to the courtyard at this upper terrace, which contains living and service spaces, a partly-preserved Ottoman hammam and a mosque.
+English boxer Michael Cusick (born 1969), Democratic Party politician who is a member of the New York State Assembly from the 63rd DistrictRaymond Cusick (1928–2013), English art director and production designerRichie Tankersley Cusick (born 1952), American writerFred Cusick (1918–2009), American ice hockey broadcaster who served as the Boston Bruins play-by-play announcer for 45 years
+The village has a population of 180.
+He was later found guilty of sexual harassment charges in the Pretoria High Court, and quit his post as political adviser.
+ReferencesExternal links Minor Tetra Fact SheetCategory:TetrasCategory:Tropical fishCategory:Fish described in 1909
+Family Father: Zaiying (載瀅; 1861 - 1909), second son of Prince Gong (sixth son of the Daoguang Emperor).
+Michael King (1945–2004) was a New Zealand popular historian, author and biographer.
+References Category:British booksCategory:British memoirsCategory:Non-fiction crime books
+Poshtak (; also known as Poshtūk) is a village in Mah Neshan Rural District, in the Central District of Mahneshan County, Zanjan Province, Iran.
+The runners-up spot went to Kristers Sergis / Kaspars Stupelis who had a good start to the season and lead the classement in the early stages, the five-time world champion Sergis improving on last seasons disappointing seventh place.
+ReferencesCategory:Moths described in 2007pellicataCategory:Moths of Taiwan
+Malagoniella is a genus of (formerly canthonini) in the beetle family Scarabaeidae.
+He spent three seasons with Pau and scored a total of nine goals in 93 league games.
+He had 5,063 flight hours, with 4,327 of them on the Boeing 727.
+Assisted by her lover, Kristof Nast, and the Angel Trsiel, Eve sets out to hunt the Nix.
+The earliest reference to Abdy is in the 13th century in the cartulary of Monk Bretton Priory.
+The organization dropped the name 'Baghdad Pact' in favor of 'CENTO' at that time.
+Gogu Neagoe had as his master the famous Romanian cartoonist Ştefan Popa-Popas.
+proposals for diversion routes and coordination of rescue forces.
+EventsSeveral full-length films were produced during the 1900s (decade).
+Media gallerySee alsoList of churches in NordlandReferencesCategory:Rana, NorwayCategory:Churches in NordlandCategory:Wooden churches in NorwayCategory:20th-century Church of Norway church buildingsCategory:Churches completed in 1971Category:1976 establishments in Norway
+Peters made his first-class debut for the Leeward Islands in March 2008, during the 2007–08 Carib Beer Cup.
+It was released February 12th 2005 by Sony BMG in Argentina.
+On 18 March 2020, Frazer went into self-isolation during the coronavirus pandemic after a member of her family displayed coronavirus symptoms.
+ReferencesCategory:1872 birthsCategory:1945 deathsCategory:People from KamennogorskCategory:People from Viipuri Province (Grand Duchy of Finland)Category:Finnish LutheransCategory:Centre Party (Finland) politiciansCategory:Members of the Parliament of Finland (1911–13)Category:Members of the Parliament of Finland (1913–16)
+Main attractions include the church of Santa Maria del Colle (12th century), the church of San Nicola (with a 1632 bell tower) and the baronial Palace.
+For other animals commonly eaten by people, see Game (food).
+Hösbach is a river of Bavaria, Germany, at the market community Hösbach in the Aschaffenburg district in the Regierungsbezirk of Lower Franconia (Unterfranken).
+According to the 2011 census there was 612 people living in Radwinter, 25 of them aged 0–4, 125 aged 5–17, 460 ages 18–89 and 2 that are 90 and over, showing a small dependency ratio and a large working population.
+Late in life her daughter arranged for Gibson to return to Florida, where she had an operation to restore her sight.
+Some critics have labeled Ali as a racist as a reaction to his songs, although his humor seems to be heavily influenced by mainstream comedy television shows, such as South Park, Family Guy, and Chappelle's Show, and has jokingly defended his brand of humor by claiming that he's stating objective facts when he references stereotypes in his songs.
+She appeared in more than ten films since 1994.
+In May 1917, Achates formed part of the escort for the first convoy from Gibraltar to Britain.
+DemographyReferencesCategory:Islands of the Maldives
+At a given frequency ω. where Nm is the norm of the mth mode and am is the modal amplitude.
+The bells were cast during 2008/9 by the Whitechapel Bell Foundry and were consecrated by the Bishop of London on 3 March 2009 in the presence of the Lord Mayor and the ringing dedicated on 26 October 2009 by the Archdeacon of London.
+Sands didn't continue the role due to a subsequent London engagement that Sands had previously committed, the original Broadway production of The Owl and the Pussycat; co-starring Alan Alda.
+He initially found success playing African and Caribbean music with his calypso band.
+Pests and diseasesSee under Ulmus glabra.
+The Jiji Military History Park () is a historical park in Jiji Township, Nantou County, Taiwan about the Republic of China Armed Forces.
+The album contains nine covers of popular English language songs.
+The clock was installed on September 25, 2009.
+LifeBorn in Quebec, Canada, on 22 May 1834, he was son of Lt.-Col. Ralph Carr Alderson of the Royal Engineers, by his wife Maria, daughter of Henry Thorold of Cuxwold, Lincolnshire; John Alderson the physician was his grandfather.
+The centre in 1770 comprised approximately 55 buildings, and well beyond the centre there were a number of large and small farms.
+Stella Whitelaw (born 1941) is a British writer and journalist, who has published 58 novels, as well as over 400 short stories in national women's magazines.
+Caryn Seamount is a seamount, or underwater volcano in the Atlantic Ocean.
+System Commander requires either 32-bit DOS or Windows (95/98/Me/2000/XP/2003/Vista) to install.
+2014 in television may refer to:Television by country 2014 in Albanian television 2014 in American television 2014 in Australian television 2014 in Belgian television 2014 in Brazilian television 2014 in British television 2014 in Canadian television 2014 in Danish television 2014 in Dutch television 2014 in Estonian television 2014 in French television 2014 in German television 2014 in Indonesian television 2014 in Irish television 2014 in Israeli television 2014 in Italian television 2014 in Japanese television 2014 in Mexican television 2014 in New Zealand television 2014 in Norwegian television 2014 in Pakistani television 2014 in Philippine television 2014 in Polish television 2014 in Portuguese television 2014 in Scottish television 2014 in South African television 2014 in Spanish television 2014 in Swedish television 2014 in Turkish television
+After the Cultural Revolution, the PRC's leaders aimed to develop a legal system to restrain abuses of official authority and revolutionary excesses.
+He is best known for his roles as Victor in Smoke Signals, Frank Fencepost in Dance Me Outside, Tommy in Walker, Texas Ranger, Kickin' Wing in Joe Dirt, U.S. Marine Corporal Ira Hayes in Flags of Our Fathers, Private Ben Yahzee in Windtalkers, Dr. Charles Eastman (Ohiyesa) in Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee, NYPD Detective Chester Lake in Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, and Officer Jim Chee in the film adaptations of Skinwalkers, Coyote Waits, and A Thief of Time.
+He illustrated numerous science fiction book and magazine covers, some under the pseudonym S. Fantoni, and provided interior illustrations for books and magazines.
+Sompolno is a town in Konin County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, Poland, with 3,700 inhabitants (2004).
+Broughton is home to a large aircraft factory at Hawarden Airport.
+Yelena Shalygina (born 15 December 1986 in Shymkent) is a Kazakh wrestler.
+Mike Hill may refer to: Mike Hill (golfer) (born 1939), American golfer, winner on the Senior PGA Tour Mike Hill (bishop) (born 1949), English Anglican bishop Mike Hill (film editor) (born 1952), American film editor Mike Hill (American politician) (born 1958), member of the Florida House of Representatives Mike Hill (British politician) (born 1963), Member of Parliament for Hartlepool Mike Hill (sportscaster) (born 1972), American broadcaster with Fox Sports 1 Mike Hill (athletic director), American athletic director at the University of North Carolina at CharlotteSee also Michael Hill (disambiguation) Mick Hill (disambiguation)
+References Category:Appenzell Ausserrhoden
+3.
+ReferencesCategory:People from New DelhiCategory:1959 birthsCategory:Indian women social workersCategory:2015 deathsCategory:Social workers from DelhiCategory:Women educators from DelhiCategory:Educators from DelhiCategory:20th-century Indian educational theoristsCategory:20th-century Indian women scientistsCategory:21st-century Indian educational theoristsCategory:21st-century Indian women scientists
+MenWomenSwimmingMenWomenMixedReferencesWorld Aquatics Championships2019Category:Nations at the 2019 World Aquatics Championships
+Joseph Jermia (born September 18, 1981) is a boxer from Namibia, who participated in the 2004 Summer Olympics for his native African country.
+The current work is now being coded under 'The Renegade Development Team' name, which mainly includes McMillen and Palmer.
+Okonjima is a nature reserve in Namibia located in the Omboroko Mountains, overlooking a small waterfall.
+He began working as a journalist and broadcaster for Formula One F1 in 1986 and later started working as a media consultant for major sponsors.
+DiskThis spiral galaxy is notably asymmetric.
+Yūto’s school has been invaded by demons, known as "Ayakashi".
+Brampton Excelsiors may refer to:Brampton Excelsiors (MSL), a box lacrosse team from Brampton, Ontario, Canada, who compete in the Major Series Lacrosse Senior "A" Lacrosse LeagueBrampton Excelsiors Jr. A, a box lacrosse team from Brampton, Ontario, Canada, who compete in the OLA Junior A Lacrosse LeagueBrampton Excelsiors, now Mississauga Tomahawks Jr. B, a box lacrosse team from Mississauga, Ontario, Canada.
+Tom GrandinLouis Grondijs (1878–1961); covered Russo-Japanese War, World War I, the Russian Civil War, the Japanese invasion of Manchuria and the Spanish Civil War.
+For example, education acts such as IDEA or No Child Left Behind promotes inclusive schooling or mainstreaming for children with disabilities (such as Autism) so that they can be a part of the larger "typical" community.
+The festival started as a way to revitalize Star Street in the Old City of Bethlehem, one of Bethlehem's oldest commercial streets, and a traditional pilgrimage route for Christians.
+DrawFinalsTop HalfSection 1Section 2Bottom HalfSection 3Section 4References 2001 Legg Mason Tennis Classic DrawCategory:Washington Open (tennis)Category:2001 ATP Tour
+ReferencesCategory:Villages in Republika SrpskaCategory:Populated places in Čelinac
+After Jagersfontein, it intersects with the south-western terminus of the R706.
+Then implies .
+By now, Jackie Robinson had broken the Major League Baseball color line and interest in Negro league games waned dramatically.
+Shortly after, he made his First-class cricket debut against Tasmania in a Pura Cup match at Bellerive Oval in Hobart.
+The Hungarian Socialist Workers' Party (Magyar Szocialista Munkáspárt in Hungarian) (MSZMP) is a small Marxist–Leninist party in Hungary, formed after a split in the Workers' Party in 1993 with the leadership of László Fazekas, Elemér Csaba and Tamás Hirschler.
+On November 18, 1996, New Democrat MPP Gilles Bisson spoke in French in the Legislative Assembly to mark the 10th anniversary of the Act's passage.
+Before joining Zimbra in 2005, Henrikson was a leader for Federal Express, iSearch (SAAS startup), and Openwave Systems.
+Amorosa grossed P25,201,412 in 2 weeks according to Box Office Mojo.
+Sanjay Jagdale was secretary of the BCCI from MPCA.
+Dutsi may refer to:Dutsi, Nigeria, a Local Government Area in Katsina StateThe Tibetan Buddhist name for Amrita
+Frankston can refer to:Frankston, Victoria, a suburb of Melbourne, AustraliaFrankston City, a local government area in the same cityElectoral district of Frankston, an electoral district in Victoria, AustraliaFrankston, Texas, a small town in eastern Texas Bob Frankston, co-creator of the first spreadsheet program, VisiCalcSee alsoFrankeston, a breed of cattle
+De La Faille gives the location of F791 The House of Père Pilon as 18 rue Francois Villon (), midway between the Auberge Ravoux and 5 Rue de Gré.
+It provides historians with primary sources that are vital to the integration of histories.
+Finding her condition stable, he decided to check Luther Sparks' wife, another patient he had been treating, while in the community.
+The Senior Open de Portugal was a men's senior (over 50) professional golf tournament on the European Senior Tour.
+Exeristis is a genus of moths of the family Crambidae.
+Station facilities include 42 bus garages, 5 railway platforms, 50 shops, 3 restaurants, 51 ticket offices, parking lots and accessible toilets.
+The racial makeup of the town was 26.70% White, 67.98% African American, 4.45% Native American, 0.17% from other races, and 0.70% from two or more races.
+Adapted from Avirook Sen's book Aarushi, the podcast narrates the unfolding of the Noida double murder case and its subsequent investigation in the format of interviews and thematic discussions.
+ReferencesExternal linksPlayer profile from goal.comCategory:Sri Lankan footballersCategory:Living peopleCategory:Sri Lanka international footballersCategory:Sri Lanka Navy SC (football) playersCategory:1989 birthsCategory:Association football midfielders
+See also List of Otago representative cricketersReferencesExternal links Category:1850 birthsCategory:1918 deathsCategory:New Zealand cricketersCategory:Otago cricketersCategory:Cricketers from Dunedin
+The Bishop of Wakefield has oversight of the archdeaconry of Pontefract, which consists of the deaneries of Barnsley, Pontefract, and Wakefield.
+This generalizes to the Lie derivative of any tensor field along the flow generated by X.
+The following elections occurred in the year 1281.
+Karadere is a Turkic word meaning "black creek" and may refer toKaradere, Anamur, a village in Anamur district of Mersin Province, TurkeyKaradere, Aydıncık, a village in Aydıncık district of Mersin Province, TurkeyKaradere, Fethiye, a town in Fethiye district of Muğla Province, TurkeyKaradere, Gündoğmuş, a village in Gündoğmuş district of Antalya Province, TurkeyQaradere, a village in Zangilan Rayon, AzerbaijanSurnameNagihan Karadere (born 1984), Turkish female sprint runnerOther usesKaradere Dam, a dam in Kastamonu Province, TurkeySee alsoAkdere (disambiguation)Category:Turkish-language surnames
+History of the museumAlthough there were earlier approaches to founding a shipping museum in Regensburg, the club Arbeitskreis Schiffahrts-Museum Regensburg e. V. was founded 19th of January 1979 in response to the threatened scrapping of the Hungarian steam boat Érsekcsanád, constructed in Regensburg in 1923 under the name Ruthof.
+Imperatore also refereed at the 1993 FIFA U-17 World Championship, the 1995 Copa América and the 1995 King Fahd Cup.
+Nicolaus Mac Cathasaigh was a priest in Ireland during the 14th century.
+34–40.
+Ahmadabad (, also Romanized as Aḩmadābād; also known as Deh-e ‘Ābedīn) is a village in Kavir Rural District, Deyhuk District, Tabas County, South Khorasan Province, Iran.
+ReceptionIn 2010 Fernando Otero received the Latin Grammy Award for Best Classical Album for Vital.
+Derry City had no injury or suspension concerns in the build-up to the final.
+Throughout his years as an undergraduate, he went on serving the congregations in Linglestown and Rockville.
+Post-success troublesThe failure to retain stardom and success and the exposure at a young age to fame has caused many child actors to lead adult lives plagued by legal troubles, bankruptcy and drug abuse.
+The newly organized Nacionalistas won 31 seats (plus one seat as Manuel Quezon chose to run as an independent), the Independientes, 20; the Progresistas, 16; Imediatistas, 7; and other minor political parties, 5, out of 80 seats in the elections held in July 1907.
+Sri Lanka Telecom PLC (SLT) (Sinhala: ශ්රී ලංකා ටෙලිකොම් පීඑල්සී Shri Lanka Telikom Pi-El-Si) is the national telecommunications services provider in Sri Lanka and one of the country’s largest companies with an annual turnover in excess of Rs 40 billion.
+FilmographyFilmTelevisionReferencesExternal links Heidi Kozak's Official SiteCategory:Living peopleCategory:American film actressesCategory:Actresses from CopenhagenCategory:1963 births
+It was described by Meyrick in 1921.
+Naval Academy Alumni Association Distinguished Graduate Award Navy Distinguished Service Medal Legion of Merit with three award stars Meritorious Service Medal with award star Navy and Marine Corps Commendation Medal Navy and Marine Corps Achievement Medal Navy Unit Commendation.
+CharactersLi Xia - A common girl born in a poor family.
+General informationThe station opened on 29 November 1988.
+Thang was honored for his outstanding college play when he was named to the CCHA All-Rookie Team in his freshman year.
+Gabriel Despaigne said: When the Green Association of Panama in 2003 began the "Save the whales" campaign, people thought that the mammals were only in cold countries, and now it’s a rare person who doesn’t know that Panama has whales.
+There were two inaugural awards in 2003 and two again in 2005.
+Some hoped that the German reunification in 1990 would cause it to reappear, but to date it has not.
+His second full-length book, The Royal Nonesuch, was published in 2013 by Spark Wheel Press and won the Devil's Kitchen Reading Award from Southern Illinois University.
+Both teams said that they wouldn’t use him as a quarterback and he never played a down in either league.
+Lewis was Premier for only one year and looked increasingly likely to lead the state Liberals to defeat.
+Released in January 2005 in time for the Valentine's Day market, Love Songs managed to reach #57 in the US album charts.
+For example, a single domestic PV panel, on its own has no discernible effect on the operation of a power network.
+It lies approximately west of Oleszyce, west of Lubaczów, and east of the regional capital Rzeszów.
+Arianites is an extinct genus of Cephalopods belonging to the Ammonite subclass.
+After the election of 2006, Bussemaker was asked to become State Secretary for Health, Welfare and Sport in the Cabinet Balkenende IV.
+The first category includes: 1) the persons at the any military rank below that of a commissioned officer (enlisted personnel) and not reached the age of 35 years old; 2) the persons at the any rank from junior lieutenant to captain (captain-lieutenant in naval service) inclusively (junior commissioned officers) and not reached the age of 50 years old; 3) the persons at the any rank from major (captain 3rd rank in naval service) to lieutenant colonel (captain 2nd rank in naval service) inclusively and not reached the age of 55 years old; 4) the persons at the rank of colonel (captain 1st rank in naval service) and not reached the age of 60 years old; 5) the persons at the rank of major general (counter admiral in naval service) or higher (supreme officers) and not reached the age of 65 years old.
+LifeMichgell, who had probably immigrated from the north of Germany, was registered as a master carpenter in Roskilde in 1612 but he had already completed work on a cupboard and a chest.
+Placed on trial a second time, this for peculation, he again faced a courts-martial, in which he was acquitted.
+It was founded in 1932 and is empowered by the provincial Architects Act.
+Encyclopedia Iranica.
+She was the director of the Vienna Stadttheater from 1940 to 1945.
+(1996)Robin Hood: Men in Tights (1993)Spy Hard (1996)Wrongfully Accused (1998)Comedy-dramaAir Bud (1997)Forrest Gump (1994)Friday (1995)Fried Green Tomatoes (1991)Homeward Bound (1993)I Hired a Contract Killer (1993)A Man of No ImportanceMatilda (1996)Mrs. Doubtfire (1993)Muriel's Wedding (1994)Reality Bites (1994)The Sandlot (1993)The Truman Show (1998)What's Eating Gilbert Grape (1993)White Men Can't Jump (1992)ReferencesBibliography 1990s*Comedy
+The daughter of a Chinese immigrant and a Filipino small businessman, Melinda had been a victim of discrimination in the local Chinese community, being only half-Chinese.
+See alsoList of rivers of Rio de JaneiroReferencesBrazilian Ministry of TransportCategory:Rivers of Rio de Janeiro (state)
+The specific name is a reference to the non-profit group Oceana who co-discovered the species with Centro de Estudios Avanzados de Blanes (CEAB-CSIC).
+Robella borders the following municipalities: Brozolo, Cocconato, Montiglio Monferrato, Murisengo, Odalengo Grande, and Verrua Savoia.
+It was disbanded following the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015.
+HeraldryMonumentsEglise Saint-Jean-BaptisteOld MillSee alsoCommunes of the Nord departmentReferences INSEE commune fileCategory:Communes of Nord (French department)
+Barren Township, Arkansas may refer to: Barren Township, Independence County, Arkansas Barren Township, Jackson County, ArkansasSee also List of townships in Arkansas Barren Township (disambiguation)Category:Arkansas township disambiguation pages
+There are many tea plantations in the area.
+It was built in 1896, and is a two-story, three bay, Queen Anne style frame dwelling.
+(eds./Hrsg.
+It is composed of the words “flow” and “tite” (a dialect version of “tight”) and represents a steady movement of liquids through a compact and sealed medium.
+Education BA New York University, 1968.
+Isabella was forced to surrender her son's realm to Ferdinand of Habsburg in 1551.
+Operation Assistance was the name given by the Canadian Forces for military support to the civil authorities during the flooding of the Red River in April and May 1997.
+Sibřina lies on eastern border of the capital city of Prague, approximately east of its centre.
+Semantic anti-realism may refer to: Semantic anti-realism (epistemology), a position put forward by Michael Dummett Semantic anti-realism (philosophy of science), a position criticized by Stathis Psillos
+PlotThe film begins with Lord Krishna (N. T. Rama Rao) sending his brother Satyaki (Ramakrishna) as a mediator to Kalayavana (S. V. Ranga Rao) with a gift of the vessel containing a snake, which indicates dealing with him is playing with a snake.
+The Bobo use masks in three major contexts: masks appear at harvest time in annual rites called birewa dâga.
+PNG's former Health Minister Sasa Zibe also stated that the Health Department's drug supply division “is riddled with corruption and is ineffective”.
+Pettah is an urban neighbourhood of Thiruvananthapuram, the capital of the Indian state of Kerala.
+Việt Tú was also the director of 2010 Miss Vietnam, which was rated by Sports & Culture magazine as one of the most successful programs in the history of this competition.
+Most notable was that of a rock concert venue.
+Aguaviva () or Aiguaiva de Bergantes () is a municipality located in the province of Teruel, Aragon, Spain.
+Kazue Ikura has even taken her voice acting skills on stage to perform, in costume, Leni Milchstrasse during several events starting in 1998 to the present.
+Category:Reduction (complexity)
+The Basketball TournamentWilliam McDonald played for Overseas Elite in the 2018 edition of The Basketball Tournament.
+ReferencesCategory:1939 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Czech female artistic gymnastsCategory:Olympic gymnasts of CzechoslovakiaCategory:Gymnasts at the 1960 Summer OlympicsCategory:Gymnasts at the 1964 Summer OlympicsCategory:Olympic silver medalists for CzechoslovakiaCategory:Olympic medalists in gymnasticsCategory:Medalists at the 1964 Summer OlympicsCategory:Medalists at the 1960 Summer OlympicsCategory:Sportspeople from Ostrava
+Lee Jae-won (hangul: 이재원; hanja: 李在元; born 5 April 1980) is a South Korean DJ and singer.
+Naik goes on to say that Tupe as well as Sri Patange, Texas Gaekawad, and Namedeo Kamble all "are harmful in the sense that they depict life artificially and deliberately and mislead life."
+He played all five matches and scored four goals.
+The Maharashtra State Council of Examinations (MSCE) is an Indian state level authority that facilitates Scholarship examinations.
+He is best known for his debut feature film Lilting and the short films Summer and Spring.
+Aust had military training as a cadet and officer.
+She was a senior member from 1954 to 1960.
+Early lifeFeldman was born in Reseda, California, the son of a musician, Bob Feldman, and a cocktail waitress, Sheila Feldman.
+Election resultsWard resultsNeilston, Uplawmoor and Newton Mearns North (4 seats)Barrhead (4 seats)Giffnock and Thornliebank (3 seats)Netherlee, Stamperland and Williamwood (3 seats)Newton Mearns South (3 seats)Busby, Clarkston and Eaglesham (3 seats)ReferencesCategory:2007 Scottish local elections2007
+Bolland re-signed for Harrogate on a season long loan on 17 August 2012.
+ReferencesCategory:Populated places in Gulmi District
+He was skilled at calligraphy, haikai, painting and waka.
+Articles in Vapaa Sana were in the Finnish language, although a special English section called Finnish Canadian Reporter was published in most editions from 2006 until 2012.
+TeamsRegular seasonSource: volleyleague.grPlay-out6th match didn't needPlay-off (5-8)Play-off (1-4)Final standingsReferencesExternal linksGreek Volleyleague, Official PageGreek Volleyball FederationCategory:Volleyball competitions in GreeceCategory:2013 in Greek sportCategory:2014 in Greek sportCategory:2013 in volleyballCategory:2014 in volleyball
+Walter himself struggles with life outside the institution, plagued by a secret from his past and often resorting to recreational drugs.
+The endpoint can be closed when considering intervals on the extended real number line.
+Muisca myth One of the many stories of the mythology of the Muisca is the myth of the virgin maid of Guachetá.
+Principe discovered that most monsters are played by stunt performers.
+ActingIn 2003, Popović made his on screen debut in a short film, titled Dremano oko (Sleepy Eye), directed by Vladimir Perišić, which was selected for Cinefoundation at the Cannes Festival.
+The film stars Jagathy Sreekumar, Prameela, Shobha and Janardanan in the lead roles.
+He also won gold in the long jump in a combined F37/38 class, however an illegal wind reading of 2.4 m/s prevented him from setting a world record.
+There is an Apostolic Nunciature to Bangladesh as papal diplomatic representation (embassy-level).
+Bojadziev reportedly refused to communicate with the media over the financial difficulties.
+It is located at Puxing Highway and Lianyi Road.
+References Category:Cyrtopodiinae nothogenera
+He competed in the men's K-1 200 metres event at the 2016 Summer Olympics.
+Brandeville is a commune in the Meuse department in Grand Est in northeastern France.
+The hall is a brick built 3-storey building with a 5-bay frontage and is grade II listed.
+It is a center with coverage for the municipalities of the north of the island of Tenerife.
+Sunway may refer to:Places Bandar Sunway, also called Sunway or Sunway City, a township in Petaling Jaya , Selangor, MalaysiaBrands and enterprises Sunway (processor), a series of Chinese computer microprocessors Sunway Group, a Malaysian conglomerateSunway Lagoon, a theme park in Bandar SunwaySunway Pyramid, a shopping mall in Bandar SunwaySunway Putra Mall, previously known as The Mall or Putra Place, a shopping mall located along Jalan Putra in Kuala Lumpur, MalaysiaSunway Velocity Mall, connected to Cochrane MRT station by a 198-metre bridgeTransportationBRT Sunway Line m, a bus rapid transit (BRT) line that is part of the Klang Valley Integrated Transit SystemSunway Lagoon BRT station, serves the Sunway Lagoon in Bandar Sunway, on the BRT Sunway LineSunway Monorail, in Malaysia
+Pilny or Pilný is a surname.
+He won a bronze medal in the C-1 team event at the 1969 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships in Bourg St.-Maurice.
+GalleryReferencesCategory:MostarCategory:Rivers of Bosnia and Herzegovina
+Other sources Finlay, Alison (editor and translator) Fagrskinna, a Catalogue of the Kings of Norway (Brill Academic.
+In 1990 he became chamberlain to the Crown Prince couple.
+Béthencourt is a commune in the Nord department in northern France.
+He is not to be confused with his son, the English entomologist Hamilton Herbert Druce (1869 – 21 June 1922), who also worked on Lepidoptera.
+This feat was achieved in Punta del Este defeating Kris Goosens in the final.
+Shaw contributed a short story 'The Necromantic' to '13', a collection of short stories published by Soul Bay Press.
+Residency may refer to: Residency (domicile), the act of establishing or maintaining a residence in a given place Permanent residency, indefinite residence within a country despite not having citizenshipEducation Residency (medicine), a stage of postgraduate medical training Residency (pharmacy), a stage of postgraduate pharmaceutical trainingOther Artist-in-residence, a program to sponsor the residence and work of artists Concert residency.
+Mahmudabad (, also Romanized as Maḩmūdābād and Mahmood Abad; also known as Maḩmūdābād-e Moravvej and Moḩammadābād) is a village in Sharifabad Rural District, Koshkuiyeh District, Rafsanjan County, Kerman Province, Iran.
+It can be heard on Xenophonia.
+1980.
+It remained very common in depictions of the Last Judgment and Harrowing of Hell until the end of the Middle Ages, and is still sometimes used during the Renaissance and after.
+See also List of lakes in Pennsylvania List of dams and reservoirs in United States List of rivers of Pennsylvania List of tributaries of the Allegheny RiverReferencesCategory:Reservoirs in PennsylvaniaCategory:Protected areas of Armstrong County, PennsylvaniaCategory:Bodies of water of Armstrong County, Pennsylvania
+Catamount Library Network There is currently one other unified public library catalog in Vermont, the Catamount Library Network, also hosted by ByWater Solutions.
+Loon Prairie 237 is an Indian reserve of the Loon River First Nation in Alberta, located within Northern Sunrise County.
+She holds a degree in cultural anthropology from the University of Warsaw.
+It is known for the Popigay River and Popigay crater.
+Yunesabad (, also Romanized as Yūnesābād and Yūnosābād; also known as Yunusābād) is a village in Hoseynabad-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Sanandaj County, Kurdistan Province, Iran.
+Paris, 1905.
+; 1998 2.ª ed.)
+Electoral systemThe Legislative Assembly had 18 seats, of which twelve were elected in single-member constituencies, and six were appointed by the territory's Administrator, Petrus Imker Hoogenhout.
+The album also includes a "The Need to Be Naked" remix by Thunderpuss but it's not on all copies.
+She eventually moves to Houston with Guy and is revealed in the series finale that she married him.
+It has dimension of power over frequency, whose SI unit is watts per hertz (equivalent to watt-seconds).
+She was named a 2011 MacArthur Fellow.
+English pyramid pool and life pool players were the first to adopt balls with different colors.
+See alsoList of NHL seasons1926 in sports1927 in sportsCategory:Western Canada Hockey League seasonsWCHL
+He played college football at Utah.
+He participated in numerous anti-partisan operations in Croatia, notably in the Case White operation led by Alexander Löhr.
+It is endemic to Sri Lanka.
+"Time to retrain as a super" (full quote: "No ovations, please.
+A raid of his vanity car reveals the presence of face masks made of clay, representing each of the women that he had murdered and also providing the reason for the fluorescent glitter.
+GL Burr writing in 1911 refers to Hansen as "the most eminent German scholar who has... given the world the most careful book on the rise of conception..." English professor GL Kittredge writing in 1907 was arguably forwarding an anti-thetical view to that of Hansen, yet quoted him at length in untranslated German.
+The fiberglass and steel structure measures 15' 9" x 33' 10" x 17' 3".
+He made his List A debut for Prime Bank Cricket Club in the 2016–17 Dhaka Premier Division Cricket League on 1 June 2017.
+Kaypakkaya later died of his wounds as well.
+It was in this work that he popularised the term Wilde Jagd ("Wild Hunt") for the phenomenon.
+Rosita Liao Gonzales (April 18, 1929 - August 11, 1994) was a Panamanian educator and folklorist.
+Suppose m items have to be divided among n agents.
+On 11 February 1815, Governor Hunter, under the command of Captain Murrell, left Sydney for Kangaroo Island, and there was no recording of the ship being seen again until July 1816, when it was spotted by the convict ship Atlas off Cape Howe, carrying a cargo of salt and seal skins.
+ReferencesExternal links History of the Center for Community and Economic DevelopmentSee also List of community topics Community development Community economic development Community building Sustainable development Urban planning Community practice Community service Community engagement Social economy Community economic analysisCategory:Community development organizationsCategory:Economic research institutes
+Juste Une Ligne Bleue is the second Studio solo album by Christian Décamps, the leader of the French progressive rock band Ange.
+The construction started on 7 June 2016.
+BAA career statisticsRegular seasonPlayoffsReferencesExternal linksCategory:1926 birthsCategory:2018 deathsCategory:All-American college men's basketball playersCategory:American men's basketball playersCategory:Basketball players at the 1945 NCAA Men's Division I Final FourCategory:Basketball players from New York (state)Category:Boys High School (Brooklyn) alumniCategory:Guards (basketball)Category:Minneapolis Lakers playersCategory:NYU Violets men's basketball playersCategory:Sportspeople from New York City
+SpeciesOfatulena duodecemstriata (Walsingham, 1884)Ofatulena jamaicana (Walsingham, 1897)Ofatulena luminosa Heinrich, 1926See alsoList of Tortricidae generaReferencesExternal linkstortricidae.comCategory:Tortricidae generaCategory:Olethreutinae
+Major results20042nd National Road Championships, Road Race20053rd Overall Tour Cycliste Féminin Ardèche Sud Rhône-Alpes2006National Road Championships2nd Time Trial7th Road Race5th Sparkassen Giro2007National Road Championships2nd Time Trial7th Road Race2nd Boucle des Championnes2nd Criterium des Championnes2nd Trophée des Cyclistines7th Trofeo Alfredo Binda-Comune di Cittiglio9th UEC U23 European Road Championships, Time Trial20081st National Road Championships, Time Trial6th Overall Tour de Pologne Feminin1st Stage 4 (ITT)7th UEC U23 European Road Championships, Time Trial20092nd Lyon Montplaisir7th Lyon Vaise10th National Road Championships, Road Race20135th National Road Championships, Road Race20141st Slezanski Mnich - SobótkaNational Road Championships2nd Time Trial4th Road Race2nd Omnium, Athens Track Grand Prix3rd Dobromierz Kryterium2015National Road Championships1st Road Race3rd Time Trial1st Trofeo Avis SuveretoPanevezys2nd Points Race3rd Individual Pursuit2016National Road Championships1st Road Race2nd Time Trial3rd Overall Trophée d'Or Féminin3rd Gran Premio Hotel Fiera Bolzano4th Grand Prix de Plumelec6th Trofee Maarten Wynants6th SwissEver GP Cham10th Gooik - Geraardsbergen - Gooik20171st National Road Championships, Road Race1st Sprints classification Ladies Tour of Norway20181st National Road Championships, Time TrialReferencesExternal linksCategory:1986 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Lithuanian female cyclistsCategory:Sportspeople from PanevėžysCategory:Cyclists at the 2015 European GamesCategory:European Games competitors for LithuaniaCategory:Cyclists at the 2016 Summer OlympicsCategory:Olympic cyclists of Lithuania
+CastRamarajanRevathiGoundamaniRaja (actor)SenthamaraiSoundtrackThe soundtrack was composed by Ilaiyaraaja.
+Equipped armaments can be managed and controlled inflight through the onboard stores management system.
+Meinl V's mother's family also fled Austria, just managing to escape in 1940.
+Track listingUK 7" single"King in a Catholic Style" – 3.52"Blue Sea" – 4.46UK 12" single"King in a Catholic Style" (Extended Version) – 7.34"Blue Sea" – 4.46"King in a Catholic Style" – 4.48ReferencesCategory:1985 songsCategory:1985 singlesCategory:China Crisis songsCategory:Virgin Records singles
+The Bundesstraße 2 (abbr.
+WWHC may refer to: WWHC-LP, a low-power television station (channel 20) licensed to serve Olean, New York, United States WKTQ (FM), a radio station (92.3 FM) licensed to serve Oakland, Maryland, United States, which held the call sign WWHC from 1995 to 2013
+It is located in east County Limerick near the village of Bruff.
+The project did cease giving out more work, however there has been a project extension to try a fourth sea surface temperature pattern.
+Characteristics of Brändö are the numerous assembly of islands and islets, most important of which are linked by bridges and causeways.
+It is found on Madagascar.
+After his death, his widow married James Cochran (1769–1848).
+Selected & upcoming singles discographyReferences Beyoncé- I Am... Sasha Fierce Justin Bieber - My World 2.0 (Digital Booklet) Lookin' for a mix engineer!
+Ein Lebensbild in Briefen (1903) T. Hodgkin, Ernest Curtius (1905)External linksAn Olympic Excavation, a description of Curtius' excavations at OlympiaCategory:1814 birthsCategory:1896 deathsCategory:People from LübeckCategory:German archaeologistsCategory:German historiansCategory:Ancient OlympiaCategory:19th-century historiansCategory:19th-century German writersCategory:19th-century German male writersCategory:Members of the American Antiquarian SocietyCategory:Members of the Bavarian Maximilian Order for Science and ArtCategory:Recipients of the Pour le Mérite (civil class)Category:German male non-fiction writers
+ReferencesCategory:Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in North CarolinaCategory:Houses completed in 1894Category:Houses in Madison County, North CarolinaCategory:National Register of Historic Places in Madison County, North Carolina
+Unge skisser .
+GamesReferencesExternal links Category:Amusement companies of JapanCategory:Video game companies of JapanCategory:Video game development companies
+BiographyDean was born in Detroit, and attended Hamtramck High School in Hamtramck, Michigan.
+Station listHarbin–Dalian sectionBeijing–Shenyang sectionReferencesCategory:High-speed railway lines in ChinaCategory:Standard gauge railways in China
+Dr. Fuad Suleiman was the Administrator responsible for the Telecommunications function at CSU.
+The type-locality is off Japan.
+Hypoxylon tinctor is a plant pathogen.
+In a 42-point outing against Southern, Daum passed former Oral Roberts forward Caleb Green’s conference record 2,504 points.
+The Verkhoyansk Range has a higher southeastern prolongation, the Suntar-Khayata Range, that is occasionally considered as a separate range system.
+Budaun railway station is 28 KM away from the village.
+External linkshttp://library.bowdoin.edu/arch/archives/bcqg.shtmlhttp://www.library.unh.edu/special/index.php/robert-p-tristram-coffinCategory:American literary magazinesCategory:American monthly magazinesCategory:American quarterly magazinesCategory:American student magazinesCategory:American annual magazinesCategory:American biannual magazinesCategory:Bowdoin CollegeCategory:Magazines established in 1897Category:Magazines published in MaineCategory:American triannual magazines
+5| | align=center| 1| align=center| 4:40| Tokyo, Japan| |-| Loss| align=center| 4–2| Kozo Urita| KO (punch)| Pancrase: Blow 1| | align=center| 1| align=center| 0:40| Tokyo, Japan| |-| Win| align=center| 4–1| Yuta Nakamura| TKO (punches)| Pancrase: Spiral 9| | align=center| 1| align=center| 0:57| Tokyo, Japan| |-| Win| align=center| 3–1| Brandon Wolff| TKO (punches)| K-1: World Grand Prix Hawaii| | align=center| 2| align=center| 2:49| Hawaii, United States| |-| Win| align=center| 2–1| Oleg Bazayev| KO (punches)| GCM: D.O.G.
+Tatarovo, Yelizarovo, Zabolotnoye are the nearest rural localities.
+calcicola is a subspecies of Banksia prolata.
+Major features include a rusticated brownstone base, smooth brownstone bands connecting the first-floor windowsills and the rusticated arches above, a pair of oversized chimneys, a two-story tile-covered box window projecting over the Moravian Street sidewalk, a heavy articulated brick cornice, a dormer capped by a pyramidal tile roof, a calla lily which appears to support a spur wall, and exposed ironwork at the entrance.
+Category:Municipalities in the Province of Córdoba (Spain)
+DescriptionMictaceans have a brood pouch (marsupium) and biramous thoracic limbs, but lack a carapace.
+Males constitute 49% of the population and females 51%.
+Worth seeing is the neoclassical Halpert family chapel (1835), which serves the Lutheran community.
+Smithton Airport is an Australian regional airport located west of Smithton, a town in Tasmania's north-west.
+The O Smach border crossing is the least used among the Thai/Cambodian checkpoints.
+It is a lot shorter than the large red damselfly, with which it is sometimes confused.
+HistoryA post office was established in Keelville in 1868, and remained in operation until it was discontinued in 1905.
+The underside is light gray to white.
+MG Cars Thailand has diversified into the people-carrier segment with the new V80.
+Evans was also the head football coach at several Wisconsin high schools during his career and was inducted into the Wisconsin Football Coaches Hall of Fame.
+Since February 24, 1988 the center has been active full time, and since April 1 in the same year, a hotline between the center and its US counterpart, the Nuclear Risk Reduction Center, was established.
+Morton argued that this would be to George Home's own detriment.
+OverviewThe Saleban Abdalle are mainly pastoralists who depend on cattle.
+The new library formed its board the following month and opened its headquarters at the 1914 Carnegie library in Olympia.
+As fifteen year old at the 2018 Commonwealth Games, she won the silver medal in the Women's 100m T38.
+Some Canadian provinces are considering mandatory use of the service for all new homes.
+from the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University in 1995.
+Although it was a shoot style promotion, Fujiwara had agreements with SWS, W*ING and Universal Lucha Libre, whereupon he would send talent to compete in them (but not vice versa, in order to keep the shoot-style feel to his promotion).
+Kunwar family is a dynasty of Nepalese nobility of Gorkha Kingdom bearing the surname.
+George Meade Gibbs, MA was archdeacon of Saint Kitts from 1861 until 1882.
+The median age was 59 years.
+Sibnica is a village in the municipality of Blace, Serbia.
+ReferencesBartodzieje
+Hermaness was designated a national nature reserve (NNR) in 1955.
+ReferencesCategory:Members of the Arkansas House of RepresentativesCategory:Women state legislators in ArkansasCategory:20th-century American politiciansCategory:20th-century American women politicians
+Los Rios (Spanish word meaning The Rivers) may refer to:Los Ríos, Dominican Republic, a town in the Baoruco province of the Dominican RepublicLos Ríos, Distrito Nacional, Dominican RepublicLos Ríos Region, ChileLos Ríos Province, EcuadorLos Rios District, historic district in San Juan Capistrano, California, U.S.Los Rios Street Historic DistrictLos Rios, Panama, a township in the Panama Canal ZoneSee alsoRios (disambiguation) Los Rios Community College District, California, U.S.
+The UF took advantage of the victory to try to take Earth without success.
+Career His career is known through a surviving inscription, .
+Cao Qi (; born January 15, 1974) is a retired female Chinese discus thrower.
+Job Vissers (born 15 November 1984) is a Dutch cyclist.
+Walter de Gruyter, 1999.
+The Adam Carolla Show went on scheduled hiatus following the Christmas episode.
+The township has no named communities within its boundaries; all addresses in the township are rural routes assigned to the adjacent communities of South River, Sundridge, Hartfell or Pevensey.
+It was included as a contributing property in the Belle Plaine Main Street Historic District in 2013.
+During the later imperial times, when Etruria was just one of many regions controlled by Rome, the number of cities in the league increased by three.
+The most recent runners-up of the EHF Champions League edition (Larvik HK) have been also invited but withdrew before making a debut due to season's fixtures.
+The Sanskrit College is operated by Human Resource Department, Govt.
+ReferencesExternal links Category:Rivers of British Columbia
+In its first week of release in the UK, the film took a total of £38 at the box office.
+1957)See also2000 in IsraelReferencesExternal links Israeli films of 2000 at the Internet Movie DatabaseCategory:Lists of 2000 films by country or languageFilm2000
+Agricultural land bankingWhile most land banking is based on the prospect of urban areas expanding at the expense of rural areas, in various parts of the world agricultural land is expanding at the expense of virgin land.
+Natives Geo Bogza Marian Dumitru Radu TudoranReferencesBlejoi
+As of the 2014-15 school year, the district and its eight schools had an enrollment of 6,104 students and 335.2 classroom teachers (on an FTE basis), for a student–teacher ratio of 18.2:1.
+"Warm It Up" was the second single released from Kris Kross' debut album, Totally Krossed Out.
+songsCategory:Song recordings produced by Scott StorchCategory:Songs written by T.I.
+At the top of the funicular, and less than 50 meters to its east, are the steps named rue Maurice Utrillo after her son the artist.
+Takab Sheykh Abul (, also Romanized as Takāb Sheykh Ābūl) is a village in Tombi Golgir Rural District, Golgir District, Masjed Soleyman County, Khuzestan Province, Iran.
+It was described by Henry Walter Bates in 1885.
+She is sentenced to be transported to Australia.
+It is home to the Ontario Football Conference team the Windsor AKO Fratmen and Canadian Soccer League team the Windsor Stars.
+Lewis competed in the 110 metre hurdles.
+It is located within Central Province.
+Foreign consulates resumed their activities on Formosa, 2 including Russian activities in 1896.
+Configuration of the FPGA chip can be specified using the VHDL hardware description language (i.e.
+He was Member of Parliament (MP) for East Cavan from 1892 until 1918, becoming the oldest serving member of the House of Commons of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.
+The station was built by the New Haven Railroad when the line was extended beyond Yarmouth.
+RTÉ News: One O'Clock is the afternoon news bulletin from RTÉ.
+186–188).
+He worked as a Russian diplomat in Paris, Rome and Constantinople; stayed two years in Munich.
+Even with this open approach, Bush's music often expresses a "settled" quality that feels rather safe and lacking in soul...
+It is part of Anuppur district.
+He obtained his early education in a one-room schoolhouse and later attended North Sydney Technical Collegeas well as Sydney Technical Institution for Wildlife Research.
+The song was also recorded by LeAnn Rimes on her second independent album under Nor Va Jak, From My Heart to Yours, released in 1992.
+Veselé may refer to the following places:Czech Republic Veselé (Děčín District), Děčín DistrictSlovakia Veselé, Slovakia, Piešťany District Oravské Veselé, Námestovo DistrictSee alsoVeselýVeselá (disambiguation)Veselí (disambiguation)
+It is found in Bolivia.
+See also List of Gnaphosidae speciesReferencesExternal links Category:GnaphosidaeCategory:Ground spiders of EuropeCategory:Fauna of TurkeyCategory:Spiders described in 1903
+Maiestas systenos (formerly Recilia systenos) is a species of bug from the Cicadellidae family that is endemic to India.
+The Ṭabaqāt-i-Akbarī of K̲h̲wājah Nizāmuddīn Ahmad : a history of India from the early Musalman invasions to the thirty-sixth year of the reign of Akbar by Niẓām al-Dīn Aḥmad ibn Muḥammad Muqīm; Calcutta : Asiatic Society, 1927, 1973 (3 vols.)
+Roy Reinard is a former Republican member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives.
+An animator is an artist who creates multiple images that give an illusion of movement when displayed in rapid sequence.
+Bertrand obtained the qualification at the University of Bordeaux in 1912 then a in 1920 from the University of Paris and a doctorate in sciences in 1927.
+Film adaptationNew Regency optioned the rights to adapt Baltimore as a film in September 2007.
+He participated at the 2008 Summer Olympics, where Poland finished fifth.
+The median income for a household in the town was $87,794, and the median income for a family was $97,672.
+The current mayor of the district is Omar Julio Candia Aguilar.
+On November 6, 2012, as an incumbent, Haines won the election and continued serving District 43.
+What is known for definite is that there were a total of 8,336 Y chassis produced of which 7,035 were MG YA or MG YT (the exact mix was not known) and 1,301 were MG YB.
+The Imam said, "It is a container made of skin that contains the knowledge of the prophets and the executors of their wills.
+See alsoList of rivers of SaxonyCategory:Rivers of Saxony6SchlumperCategory:Rivers of Germany
+ReferencesNatural History Museum Lepidoptera generic names catalogCategory:Moths described in 1911Category:Symphlebia
+The museum was opened in May 2014.
+Some curlers competed in both the 4-person and mixed doubles tournament, therefore the numbers included on this list are the total athletes sent by each NOC to the Olympics, not how many athletes they qualified.
+The 1998–99 League of Ireland Premier Division was the 14th season of the League of Ireland Premier Division.
+In 2011, they won the hip-hop new style division of the prestigious international street dance competition Juste Debout.
+Alexander Hamilton published responses to these letters under the pseudonym "Caesar."
+Visa requirements for Gabonese citizens are administrative entry restrictions by the authorities of other states placed on citizens of the Gabon.
+The station's origins lie in a joint station of the Köln-Mindener Eisenbahn and Bergisch-Märkische Eisenbahn which was built north of the city centre in 1847.
+On the one hand, there is a significant importance of self-regulating mechanism of market in Polanyi's study.
+The cemetery was simply known as "Gray Cemetery" until 1892, when "New" Gray Cemetery was established about a mile away.
+playersCategory:Lowland Football League playersCategory:People from MaryhillCategory:BSC Glasgow F.C.
+It was established on January 19, 1978 and started offering educational services from the Elmina Castle.
+Chapman's original text (the type description) reads as follows:References This article incorporates public domain text originating from Australia from the reference.
+After finishing second in the Grade 1 Florida Derby, Pulpit dominated his next start, the $700,000 Blue Grass Stakes at Keeneland Race Course in Kentucky.
+Other positions he held include Town Clerk, Assessor and Treasurer of Princeton.
+The company is well known for its angling equipment.
+See alsoList of players who played only one game in the NHLExternal linksCategory:1954 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Canadian expatriate ice hockey players in the United StatesCategory:Canadian ice hockey defencemenCategory:Columbus Owls playersCategory:Fort Wayne Komets playersCategory:Ice hockey people from SaskatchewanCategory:Minnesota North Stars draft picksCategory:Minnesota North Stars playersCategory:New Haven Nighthawks playersCategory:Regina Pats playersCategory:Sportspeople from Regina, SaskatchewanCategory:Winnipeg Jets (WHA) draft picks
+Rao is the eldest son-in-law of N. T. Rama Rao, actor and founder of the Telugu Desam Party (TDP).
+The aircraft fuselage is made from welded 4130 steel tubing with some aluminum parts.
+A contemporary of Uday Shankar, in the 1930s she staged a number of ballets in Kolkata, including Bhookh on Bengal famine which was a pioneering work in presenting contemporary themes on stage and Omar Khayyam.
+ScheduleReferencesVanderbilt CommodoresCategory:Vanderbilt Commodores football seasonsCategory:College football undefeated seasonsVanderbilt Commodores
+At the 1896 Olympics he failed to reach the 400 m final.
+ReferencesFurther reading Category:Genes on human chromosome XCategory:Human proteins
+FacilitiesThe airport resides at an elevation of above mean sea level.
+Fleet1-2 Beyer Peacock Wilkinson Patent engines 18843-4 Thomas Green & Son Wilkinson Patent engines 18845-6 Falcon Engine & Car Works Scott Russell engines 18857 Falcon Engine & Car Works Scott Russell engine 1887 (second-hand - built for the South Staffordshire and Birmingham District Steam Tramways Company in 1885)Six trailer cars built by the Falcon Engine & Car Works in 1884 and 1885Coventry Electric Tramways CompanyThe steam tramway service was superseded by the Coventry Electric Tramways Company Ltd, which started operations in 1895.
+ReferencesCategory:Methodist churches in DelawareCategory:Churches on the National Register of Historic Places in DelawareCategory:Carpenter Gothic church buildings in DelawareCategory:Churches completed in 1871Category:19th-century Methodist church buildings in the United StatesCategory:Churches in Kent County, DelawareCategory:National Register of Historic Places in Kent County, Delaware
+In 1968 the student body was 99.1% white and 90.1% of the teachers were white.
+Louis H. Sturm Hardware Store is a historic commercial building located at Jasper, Dubois County, Indiana.
+In doing so, Koolhaas collected magazines, books and postcards from Manhattan for research and joined a postcard collectors' club.
+Some of his popular songs by 2003 were "Iwacho Awacha", "Adundo Mum", "Sella" and "Pamela Atoti" Other hits include "Dabed gi Pesa", "Isando Chunya" and "Maoni ya Raia".
+Máramaros County (; ; ; ; ; ; ) was an administrative county (comitatus) of the Kingdom of Hungary.
+He also recorded two top ten finishes in Grand Tours: he finished 8th in the 2012 Vuelta a España and 9th in the 2014 Tour de France, and won the mountains classification in the 2009 Tour de Romandie.
+The following is a list of notable people from christian background:MusicRobin GhoshAndrew Kishore Samar DasFilmsJumboCatherine Masud, directorTelevisionTony DiasMagicJewel AichPhilanthrophySamson ChowdhuryPoliticsPromode Mankin, former Minister of Social Welfare Affairs and member of parliamentJewel Areng, member of parliamentReferencesCategory:Christianity in Bangladesh
+Papers related to her work for the Panamerican Alliance can be found at the University of Texas at Austin in the Nettie Lee Benson Latin American Collection for the Alliance of Pan American Round Tables under the name Emma G. Suarez.
+It is native to western North America from British Columbia to California to Colorado, where it grows in moist and wet areas in mountain coniferous forest habitat, such as streambanks and meadows.
+Elba Guerrero is the former mayor of Huntington Park, California.
+Following the historic victory of the BJP in Karnataka in May 2008, he was appointed as Parliamentary Secretary to the Chief Minister B. S. Yeddyurappa.
+Among these later traditions opinions vary as to whether the boline is truly a magical tool or is merely of utilitarian purpose.
+For example, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported a story on October 18, 2005 about Communities Learning to Invest and Mobilize for Business (CLIMB), funded by the Annie E. Casey Foundation and the Forest County Potawatomi Community Foundation, in order to help minority communities accumulate as much as $100,000 in assets within a decade.,Local Investment ClubsThere are two types of investment clubs - those that focus nationally, such as Commercial Real Estate Online and the National Real Estate Network, and those that focus on the local neighborhood, such as Milwaukee's CLIMB program or The Power To Be Free Commercial Real Estate Club of Michigan.
+John Bellasis may refer to: John Bellasis, 1st Baron Bellasis or John Belasyse, 1st Baron Belasyse (1614–1689), English nobleman, soldier and politician John Bellasis (East India Company officer) (died 1808), British major-general who was commanding the forces at Bombay
+He is a left-handed batsman and a left-arm orthodox spinner.
+Kan became irritated at the close association between Qian and Cheng, and when Cheng tried to appease Kan by apologizing to him, Kan made him more fearful by stating, "I wanted to kill you at first.
+This period corresponds to a period of conflict between Tikal and Calakmul during which there is evidence of deliberate destruction at Río Azul.
+Teams (2001 champion) (2001 Runner-up) (Host) (2004 B-Pool Winner)GamesSemifinal3rd Place1st PlaceAll Star TeamHead Coach of the tournament: Kristian ThoreDefensive MVP of the tournament: R Biro #25 CBOffensive MVP of the tournament: J Ullrich #12 QBMVP of the tournament: CJ Björk #36 MLBFirst team selectionsOffenseDefenseSpecial TeamsReferencesExternal links Europeans ChampionshipCategory:European Championship of American footballCategory:2005 in American footballCategory:2005 in Swedish sportCategory:International sports competitions hosted by SwedenCategory:American football in SwedenCategory:International sports competitions in MalmöCategory:July 2005 sports events in EuropeCategory:2000s in Malmö
+RosterSchedule and results|-!colspan=9 style=| Non-conference regular season|-!colspan=9 style=|MEAC regular season|-!colspan=9 style=| MEAC TournamentSourceAwards and honorsReferencesCategory:Howard Bison men's basketball seasonsHoward BisonHowardHoward
+Pugo also served as chairman of the Control Commission of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union from 1988 to 1991.
+They subsequently learn that the only way Henri can get a visa to emigrate with her is under the War Brides Act as the spouse of an American soldier.
+It may refer to:Al-Yamani, a pre-messianic figure in Shia Islamic eschatologyYemenite Hebrew, dialect of the Hebrew languageYemenite JewsYemenite KaabaYemenite step, an Israeli folk dance step originating from YemenSee alsoYemen (disambiguation)Yemeni (disambiguation)
+The Boston and Lowell was then leased by the Boston and Maine Railroad in 1887, bringing the BC&M under the Boston and Maine's control.
+The building's architectural style is modern, with the building material being granite.
+References Category:1990s in RwandaCategory:Years of the 20th century in RwandaRwandaRwanda
+Carl Tourenne (born 10 June 1972) is a French former professional association football defensive midfielder, who last played for Championnat de France amateur Group C side Chamois Niortais.
+ChristianityHinduism Mihirakula – Huna rulerRajasinghe I – Sri Lankan king who conquered Kandy Rishabhadatta – Satrap viceroy Rudradaman I – Satrap ruler and conqueror of the Satavahanas Vasudeva I – Kushan king and numismatistIslam The Barmakid family – originally the guardians of the great Buddhist shrine near Balkh, upon conversion they became "the greatest family" in the early Abbasid caliphate Muhammad ibn Suri - king of the Ghurid dynasty from the 10th-century to 1011 Mahmud Ghazan – seventh ruler of the Ilkhanate Korguz – was an Uyghur governor of Khorasan during the reign of the Mongol ruler Ogedei Khan Muhammad Khodabandeh – eighth Ilkhaid dynasty ruler in Iran from 1304 to 1316 Mubarak Shah – head of the ulus of the Chagatai Khanate (1252–1260, March–September 1266) Daniel Moore – poet Donei Kalaminjaa – king of the Maldives Tarmashirin – Khan of the Chagatai Khanate following Duwa Timur Hussein Ye – Islamic scholar of Chinese descent whose lectures are frequently aired on Peace TVStanzin Saldon - Converted to Islam for marriage with Murtaza Agha.
+Before joining the 99ers for pre-season, Mancari was unable to partake in a physical, cancelling his contract with the club.
+The type specimen was collected in the Misima and Conflict Group of the Louisiade Archipelago, to the southeast of Papua New Guinea.
+Lodeizen is a surname.
+ReferencesExternal links Dinocephalia at PalaeocrittiCategory:DinocephaliansCategory:Guadalupian first appearancesCategory:Guadalupian extinctionsCategory:Prehistoric therapsid families
+The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges suggests that the tribe of Benjamin "was the most likely to offer opposition [to Abner] through fear of losing dignity and advantage by the transference of the royal house to the tribe of Judah.
+He won a league title with Deportivo Táchira, then moved to Caracas and played for Deportivo Lara and Deportivo Anzoátegui.
+Unicorn Variations is a collection of stories and essays by American author Roger Zelazny, published in 1983.
+Fortunately, they do".
+The main protagonist of The Adventures of Nero is a regular man.
+FunctionHemoproteins have diverse biological functions including the transportation of diatomic gases, chemical catalysis, diatomic gas detection, and electron transfer.
+The Pakowhai Regional Park is located on the river's south bank.
+Nowe Słone is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Dziemiany, within Kościerzyna County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, in northern Poland.
+HarperOne; 1993. .
+Maroochydore is also a venue of major surf sport carnivals, and is a popular holiday point from which to travel the rest of Queensland.
+It is located in the Malavalli taluk of Mandya district in Karnataka.
+The area has approximately 26,000 office workers in finance, insurance, real estate, health care, IT, automotive, government, education, software, and other emerging industries.
+ReferencesExternal linksCatholic Hierarchy: Archbishop Jean Émile André Marie MauryCategory:1907 birthsCategory:1994 deathsCategory:People from AgenCategory:Apostolic Nuncios to SenegalCategory:Apostolic Nuncios to the Democratic Republic of the CongoCategory:Apostolic Nuncios to RwandaCategory:Apostolic Nuncios to BurundiCategory:Archbishops of ReimsCategory:20th-century Roman Catholic archbishops
+was a daimyō and a teacher of kenjutsu and military strategy in Japan during the Edo period.
+He was the author of several books of some importance, such as, La musique en Suisse, depuis les temps les plus reculés jusqu'à la fin du XVIIIème siècle (Geneva, 1874), Pygmalion de J.J. Rousseau, Eustorg de Beaulieu, Guillaume de Guéroult, Notice sur Claude Goudimel, Aperçu sur la Chanson française.
+He has appeared in the Punjabi TV serials like ‘Yug Badal Gaya’ and ‘Dina’.
+Week 3 The rivalry between the 49ers and the Cowboys continued in traditional high-scoring fashion.
+He was succeeded in office by Bahri Oruçi.
+Valeria Fabrizi (born 20 October 1936) is an Italian actress, singer and television personality.
+CanadaUnited KingdomUnited StatesEast CoastMidwestNew EnglandSouthern United StatesSouthwest United StatesWest CoastReferencesExternal linksCalendar of Indy Wrestling Shows, Autograph Signings & Conventions at About.comConventions**
+He was also known as Federico Medem and published under this name.
+SpeciesThere are currently five recognized species in this genus: Histiophryne bougainvilli Valenciennes, 1837 (Bougainville's anglerfish) Histiophryne cryptacanthus M. C. W. Weber, 1913 (Cryptic anglerfish) Histiophryne maggiewalker R. J. Arnold & Pietsch, 2011 (Queensland frogfish) Histiophryne pogonius R. J. Arnold, 2012 Histiophryne psychedelica Pietsch, R. J. Arnold & D. J.
+Sant Guim de Freixenet is a municipality in the comarca of la Segarra in Catalonia, Spain.
+and was educated at a number of different schools, ending with Forest School, Walthamstow, which he left at age 17.
+The Rudăria-Bănia mine is a large open pit mine in the south-western Romania in Caraș-Severin County.
+Most Japanese newspapers publish the names of alleged criminals, but Akahata often declines to publish their names, unless they are related to organized crime or right-wing activities.
+He was president of both the Manchester Statistical Society (1938–1940) and the Economic History Society (1960–1963).
+On 6 February 2019, his life partner, Beata Schneider, reported his death.
+Blackwaterfoot is also home to Blackwaterfoot Hall, home to Earl Blackwood-Davidson.
+It is found in Equatorial Guinea and Gabon.
+On July 26, 1979, the building was added to the National Register of Historic Places as part of the "Cross-Tipped Churches of Ohio" multiple property submission.
+Doniyorov qualified for the Athens Games by ending up in first place at the 1st AIBA Asian 2004 Olympic Qualifying Tournament in Guangzhou, China.
+NetZero's model was free Internet access to attract an audience for highly targeted advertising.
+The municipality covers an area of and as of 2011 had a population of 42 people.
+ReferencesStation article at kolej.one.plCategory:Railway stations in West Pomeranian VoivodeshipCategory:Railway stations served by Przewozy Regionalne InterRegioRailway station
+Negative selection refers to the degradation of thymocytes, and has been found to occur through the help of lysosomes.
+In their very first slam as a team, the 2017 Boost National, the team would win the whole thing, becoming the first Scottish team to win a Grand Slam title.
+ReferencesCategory:Unincorporated communities in Mercer County, West VirginiaCategory:Unincorporated communities in West Virginia
+Rock Sound International Airport is an airport in the South Eleuthera district of the Bahamas.
+Shwebo may refer to:Shwebo, Bhamo, Kachin State, BurmaShwebo, Sagaing, Burma
+Service and deploymentType 7103 DSRV is usually carried by Type 925 Dajiang class submarine rescue / salvage ship (ASR/ARS) of PLAN, which also carries the training submersible.
+It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature.
+Old Mac is a 1961 film directed by Michael Winner.
+Matt Fink, writing for Allmusic called the compilation "an excellent overview of Fahey's tenure on the Vanguard label and also documents an impressively innovative period for the experimental guitarist.
+He secondary studied at Yali School.
+ApplicationsSpherical bearings are used in countless industrial applications, where there are heavy loads, moderate speeds and possibly misalignment.
+Perbrinckia rosae is a species of decapod in the family Gecarcinucidae.
+The new team is majority-owned by Raúl Martín Presa, the owner of Rayo Vallecano of the Spanish Segunda División, with a minority stake owned by Oklahoma native Sean Jones former owner of the Oklahoma City FC franchise, Rayo OKC was also co-founded and managed by "Sold Out Strategies," a sports management company headed by former Oklahoma City Blazers general manager Brad Lund.
+ReferencesExternal links Category:American male musical theatre actorsCategory:American tenorsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Place of birth missing (living people)Category:1955 births
+References Category:Living peopleCategory:Swedish heavy metal drummersCategory:Year of birth missing (living people)Category:Candlemass (band) members
+It stars Ramon Novarro and Alice Terry.
+The aircraft was powered by two 960 PS (947 hp, 720 kW) BMW 132K nine-cylinder air-cooled radial engines.
+The Salon is a British reality TV show where various members of the public (some famous) are invited daily to have treatments (mostly hair styles) in a studio built beauty salon situated in Balham, south-west London, and in the second series, a purpose-built studio inside the Trocadero, Piccadilly Circus.
+CanadaIn Canada, a four-year LTh is offered by Emmanuel College, Toronto.
+Past Presidents Gary Madison Jeff Mitscherling Linda Fisher Marty Fairbairn Paul Fairfield Diane Enns Ian McDonald Shannon HoffSee alsoCanadian Philosophical AssociationReferencesExternal linksOfficial websiteCategory:Philosophical societies in CanadaCategory:1984 establishments in CanadaCategory:Organizations established in 1984Category:Continental philosophy organizations
+ReferencesCategory:Cycling teams based in SwitzerlandCategory:Defunct cycling teams based in SwitzerlandCategory:1982 establishments in SwitzerlandCategory:1983 disestablishments in SwitzerlandCategory:Cycling teams established in 1982Category:Cycling teams disestablished in 1983
+"Summer" has received nominations for British Single and British Artist Video of the Year at the 2015 Brit Awards.
+NxTop provides IT control of the end-point through advanced management capabilities in NxTop Center.
+ÖVB Arena (originally Stadthalle Bremen, formerly Bremen-Arena and AWD-Dome) is the largest indoor arena in Bremen, Germany.
+Henslow, John Stevens.
+a reference to the scandal.
+Rudakov was trained as Sea Cadet Corps.
+However, they will not be able to marry, to adopt children or undergo fertility treatment.
+The 1916 Ole Miss Rebels football team represented the University of Mississippi during the 1916 college football season.
+Equilibrium gel shares the traits of all soft matter.
+They had one son: Reginar (Reginhere), a Frankish nobleman.
+Toronto FC lost the 2018 edition of the Campeones Cup.
+The primary route served by the air carrier was the short hop between Wings Field (BBX) in Blue Bell and the Philadelphia International Airport (PHL) which was a flight of less than 15 minutes.
+Democrat Curt Hanson won the election, beating Republican Stephen Burgmeier, Fourth of July Party candidate Dan Cesar, and Independent Douglas William Philips.
+is a professional Japanese baseball player.
+It is used in the Livonian language.
+They measure long, and can live for approximately 1–2 years.
+In the end, nearly all blocks were demolished at one time in the late 1990s, rather than by phases.
+Dallas Snell – Vice President of Product Development / Executive Producer (1985–1996)Head of Product Development, Producer or Executive Producer of Origin's titles between 1986 and 1995.
+James had a three-point field goal percentage of 33.7 percent during his college career.
+HistoryIn 1961 the squad claimed the silver medal at the South American Championship in Lima, Perú.
+It is found in India.
+Indiana University Press, 2015.
+Mainly a right back he can also play as a right winger.
+ReferencesCategory:Eurovision songs of BelarusCategory:Eurovision songs of 2015Category:2014 songsCategory:2014 singles
+Cast Christian Kayßler as Oberleutnant Mithoff Otto Wernicke as Oberwerkmeister Bonicke Heinz Welzel as Obergefreiter Fritz Paulsen Hermann Braun as Obergefreiter Robert Eckhard Adolf Fischer as Gefreiter Zeissler Horst Birr as Monteur Hasinger Karl Martell as Lt. Ludwig Becker Fritz Eberth as Funker Lindner Carsta Löck as Bauernmagd Lina Paul Otto as General Paul Bildt as Stabsarzt der Flugstaffel Hans Bernuth as Flieger Ernst Dernburg as Adm. beim Manöver Erich Dunskus as Bauer Heinz Engelmann as Lt. Frank Ilse Fürstenberg as Bäuerin Malte Jäger as 1.
+The night of the scheduled launch was the night that Korean Air Lines Flight 007 was shot down after accidentally intruding Soviet airspace over Kamchatka.
+Weethley is a hamlet on the B4088 road, in the civil parish of Arrow with Weethley, in the Stratford-on-Avon district, in the county of Warwickshire, England.
+Dewey is the name of two unincorporated communities in the U.S. state of Washington:Dewey, Skagit County, WashingtonDewey, Whatcom County, Washington
+It is the colossal statue of an American soldier standing guard over the remains of the loyal dead, who are buried all around him, with this inscription on the die or shaft: "Not for Themselves, but for Their Country, September 17, 1862."
+By 1989, nearly all (90 percent) of its personal computer sales were in Europe, and its stock price had fallen from a 1983 peak of $34.25 to $0.50.
+1932), and daughter Dale Elizabeth (b.
+Vihiga upset champions Gor Mahia 2-0 late in the season which nearly ensured they would avoid relegation back to the second division and ended up finishing their maiden premier league season in 12th position.
+Records show that in 1754 it was repaired and improved by its owner at that time, Colonel J. Blackburne.
+Kinghorn may refer to:Places Kinghorn, a village in Fife, Scotland Kinghorn railway station in the Scottish villageKinghorn, in Greenstone, OntarioKinghorn, in King, OntarioSurnames Barbara Kinghorn (born 1944), British actress Bill Kinghorn (1912–1977), Scottish footballer Blair Kinghorn (born 1997), Scottish rugby union player Ernest Kinghorn (1907–2001), British Labour Party politician Fred Kinghorn (1883-1971), Australian rugby league footballer Harry Kinghorn (1886–1955), Scottish footballer James Roy Kinghorn (1891–1983), Australian naturalist Joseph Kinghorn (1766–1832), English particular Baptist Samantha Kinghorn (born 1996), Scottish wheelchair racerOther Battle of Kinghorn, a battle which took place on 6 August 1332 in the Scottish village Scott of Kinghorn, shipbuilding company in the Scottish village which closed in 1909See also Edgar Kinghorn Myles
+His talent was evident even in his early 20s, and prompted his membership in the Banderas de Provincia (Flags of the Province) group, which consisted of painters, poets and writers such as Raúl Anguiano, José Guadalupe Zuno, Enrique Martínez Ulloa and Agustín Yañez .
+This ice axe is now exhibited in Jasper Yellowhead Museum.
+The Great Seal of the State of Kansas tells the history of Kansas.
+Civilizaţia greacă şi originile democraţiei I. Bucharest.
+Early yearsKnown originally as the Grafton Picture House, the cinema opened on Easter Monday, 11 April 1911, at 72 Grafton Street.
+The buff-banded tyrannulet (Mecocerculus hellmayri) is a species of bird in the family Tyrannidae.
+In the present day, St. Columbkill's Church remains an attraction in the community.
+The popular internet community Reddit has a community called /r/photoshopbattles devoted to the contests.
+At club level, he played for Newtown Excelsior.
+Complete European Le Mans Series results* Season still in progress.
+His inspiring and sometimes didactic message led him to be nicknamed "Dr Remmy".
+He attended the University of Wyoming and University of Notre Dame and worked as a lawyer.
+It contains two former explosives magazines and a laboratory building separated by earth mounds known as traverses which were built as buffers in case of explosions.
+The water polo events at the 2005 World Aquatics Championships were held from 17 to 30 July 2005, in Montréal, Canada.
+She was elected to the Storting representing Sør-Trøndelag from 1989 to her retirement in 2005.
+During his short tenure with Toronto he won the regular season title, and the CSL Championship against Montreal Impact Academy.
+The community has the name of one Mr. Smiley, a local merchant.
+The wingspan is 20–21 mm.
+This list of protected areas of Lejre Municipality''' lists protected areas of Lejre Municipality, Denmark.
+MedalistsResultsReferencesFinal56kg M
+External linksBrommapojkarna profile Category:1995 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Swedish people of Italian descentCategory:Association football forwardsCategory:IF Brommapojkarna playersCategory:IK Sirius Fotboll playersCategory:Swedish footballersCategory:Allsvenskan playersCategory:Superettan playersCategory:Vasalunds IF players
+Tim Crookall is a former Member of the House of Keys (the lower house of Tynwald, the Isle of Man parliament) for Peel from 2006 to 2015 (succeeding Hazel Hannan), and Minister for Education and Children from 2012 to 2016.
+Nahjib Guerra is a Belizean footballer who currently plays for Verdes in the Premier League of Belize and the Belize national team.
+There has also been an increase in the variety of Jobs that people from Ponsonby are working in, during 1881 many of the jobs were practical jobs and manual jobs, however there has now been a switch and the majority of people are working in 'office' jobs or terrestrial jobs.
+Team #1 played at home first.
+Marozau is an alumnus of the PACT Leadership Institute (U.S.), Fletcher School (U.S.), and Maastricht University (Germany-Netherlands) programs.
+The distance was increased to 1900 metres in 1966 before the race was run over its current distance for the first time in 1972.
+On 1 January 2006 the municipality had 6,934 inhabitants.
+Kymi is a Greek football club, based in Kymi, Euboea.
+Storebottnosi is a mountain of Buskerud, in southern Norway.
+The rally on the Saturday consists of an organised ride from Aviemore through the Scottish Highlands to Grantown on Spey.
+Bogdan Ivanov () (born July 22, 1937) is a Bulgarian sprint canoer who competed in the early to mid-1960s.
+- Tibet, Sichuan, Guizhou Aletris lutea Small - Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana Aletris megalantha F.T.Wang & Tang - Yunnan Aletris nana S.C.Chen - Tibet, Yunnan, Nepal Aletris obovata Nash - - Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, South Carolina Aletris pauciflora (Klotzsch) Hand.-Mazz - Tibet, Yunnan, Nepal, Bhutan, Assam, Myanmar, northern India Aletris pedicellata F.T.Wang & Tang - Sichuan Aletris scopulorum Dunn - Shikoku, Fujian, Guangdong, Hunan, Jiangxi, Zhejiang Aletris simpliciflora R.Li & Shu D.Zhang - Tibet Aletris spicata (Thunb.)
+is a former Japanese football player who lastly played for J1 League team Shimizu S-Pulse.
+16 April – , 72, Venezuelan comedian, singer and screenwriter, lung cancer.
+Gonzalo Sebastián Prósperi (born 3 June 1985) is an Argentine professional footballer who plays as a right back for San Martín de San Juan in the Argentine Primera División.
+In 1809 he joined the 3rd battalion of his regiment at Walcheren, and was present at the Siege of Flushing.
+Real Sociedad.
+References Category:Tourist attractions in Ubon Ratchathani ProvinceCategory:Geography of Ubon Ratchathani ProvinceExternal links Guide to Sam Phan Bok: The Grand Canyon of Thailand
+She received her commission on August 6, 2007.
+The center of the community is centered about the intersection of Deans Lane (County Route 610) and Georges Road (CR 697).
+Making the puppets sing, dance, tickle and kiss etc.
+The party has always been affiliated with the national Republican Party.
+The circuitThe circuit is 2.4 km (1.49 mi) long in distance with the width between 12m – 20m.
+The song reached number 11 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart.
+Reflective writing is an analytical practice in which the writer describes a real or imaginary scene, event, interaction, passing thought, or memory and adds a personal reflection on its meaning.
+The 2014 UCF Knights baseball team represented the University of Central Florida in the 2014 college baseball season.
+Due to the song's instant success, Kumra joined Wretch 32 to perform the song on one of the UK's only major music TV shows, Later With Jools Holland and at many of the summer's major festivals.
+On 11 June 2018, Sister Joan was made an Officer (AO) in the General Division of the Order of Australia, "for distinguished service to the international community of Thailand through humanitarian assistance programs for the disadvantaged, and to improving the lives of women, children and the elderly."
+Justice Spear may refer to:Albert Spear, a Chief Justice of the Maine Supreme Judicial CourtClay V. Spear, an Associate Justice of the Idaho Supreme CourtWilliam T. Spear, an Associate Justice of the Ohio Supreme CourtSee alsoFranklin S. Spears, an Associate Justice of the Texas Supreme Court
+Alfred Elliott Chandler (1 July 1873 – 12 February 1935) was an Australian politician.
+Pleurochrysis is a large genus of cuckoo wasps from the New World, with 36 species distributed from Mexico to Argentina.
+He was sentenced to 5 years in jail for attempted murder and for assaulting his wife.
+Lanouée () is a former commune in the Morbihan department of Brittany in north-western France.
+He died between 909 and 926.
+Upon completion the venue was opened by the Lieutenant Governor, Lord Raglan, on 19 July 1913.
+It was awarded a Green Schools Flag for Environmental Awareness by An Taisce.
+Dr Pepper Is The Taste."
+The standard form is , while the dialects of Suðuroy have jeg.
+ReferencesCategory:1989 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Russian female sailors (sport)Category:Olympic sailors of RussiaCategory:Sailors at the 2016 Summer Olympics – 470Category:Universiade medalists in sailingCategory:Universiade gold medalists for Russia
+According to VCs of the First World War: The Final Days 1918 by Gerald Gliddon, young Mr Gorle won his award on 1 October.
+The 1970 Iowa Hawkeyes football team represented the University of Iowa in the 1970 Big Ten Conference football season.
+Eggs are laid in the water.
+After the ISAF’s evaluation trials, the Olympic committee chose the 49er FX over the RS900.
+He subsequently competed for Yamaha and Husaberg until retiring from the World Enduro Championship, and concentrating on the Italian national championship.
+Heyn for 20 in the All-Ceylon vs Australia match in 1948.
+He died at Brixton Hill in February 1900.
+ReferencesCategory:National parks of the BahamasCategory:Abaco Islands
+Its seat is in Meldorf.
+On April 18, 2010 he was inducted into the USC Salkehatchie Athletic Hall of Fame.
+Chaetodon triangulum, commonly known as the triangle butterflyfish, is a fish native to the tropical Indian Ocean, from Madagascar to the Andaman Sea.
+The genus was erected by Arthur Gardiner Butler in 1877.
+During the 1989 season, he played 2 further first-class matches for the county against Derbyshire and Leicestershire, against whom he took his only five wicket haul of 5/87 in what was his final first-class match.
+References Category:Populated places in Meyaneh County
+Gogarten never joined the Nazi Party.
+Tryme is an unincorporated community located in Madison County, Virginia.
+Bramble as John Christobel Cameron Carr as Mate Marie Ault as Grannie Mickey Brantford as Nipper Benson Kleve as CaptainReferencesBibliography Chapman, Gary.
+Lee Hae-chang (; born Mat 11, 1987) is the catcher of KT Wiz of the KBO League.
+DistributionThis marine species occurs off the Philippines, New Caledonia and the Kermadec Islands.
+Warren Zanes, American musician and writer.
+Fétigny is a municipality in the district of Broye, in the canton of Fribourg, Switzerland.
+Notable people with the surname include:George Drumgoole Coleman (1795–1844), Irish architectJenny Drumgoole, American video artistJohn Christopher Drumgoole (1816–1888), Irish American Roman Catholic priestNoel Drumgoole (1931–1995), Irish hurlerSee alsoDrumgoole Plaza, a park in Manhattan, New York
+HistoryRais belonged in early times to a house which bore its name, and of which the eldest branch became extinct in the 13th century in the .
+The eastern end of the old by-pass is now the M20.
+The station is unattended.
+Leiden: Brill.
+Gustavo Couttolenc Cortés (6 December 1921 – 7 February 2015) was a Mexican writer and academic who specialized in the translation of Latin-language works into Spanish.
+Notably, evidence in Mourer's case focused primarily not on collaboration during the occupation itself but rather on the contacts he allegedly had with Germany prior to the war.
+Questions to the White House about the code name were referred to the Defense Department, which stated no disrespect was meant and that code names are generally chosen at random.
+The Reading & District Football League & Reading Combination amalgamated and in 1990 became known as the Reading Football League with its Senior Division taking on Step 7 status in the FA National League System.
+CareerJaffe began her public relations career at Rogers & Cowan working as an assistant before joining PMK as a vice president.
+A new parish church, designed by William Slater, was built on a fresh site in the village and consecrated in 1862.
+The stadium was inaugurated in 1947 and has been the home of the Cruz Azul professional soccer team since 1996.
+Whether the focal point of the visual depiction is on the child's genitalia or pubic area.
+The UV protective carotenoid pigment deinoxanthin gives them a pink colour.
+Category:LibohovëCategory:Castles in AlbaniaCategory:Houses completed in 1798Category:Buildings and structures in LibohovëCategory:Ali Pasha of Ioannina
+ReferencesExternal linksLawrence Black at CricinfoLawrence Black at CricketArchiveCategory:1881 birthsCategory:1959 deathsCategory:People from LambethCategory:Cricketers from Greater LondonCategory:English cricketersCategory:Hampshire cricketers
+The stadium has a capacity of 12,000 people and was built in 1979 and upgraded in 1998.
+The Hafelekarspitze is a mountain in the so-called North Chain (Nordkette) north of Innsbruck in Austria.
+He played college football for the Duke Blue Devils.
+Climate The region has a Humid continental climate - cool summer subtype (Koppen classification Dfc).
+He was jailed for six years in 2005 on a charge of embezzlement, but was released in 2008 having served half his sentence.
+General Media went bankrupt a few years later.
+Track listing "In Pouring Rain" – 5:42 "The Silent Witness" – 8:43 "This Inner Twist" – 8:18 "The Sun Doesn't Shine Anymore" – 10:35 "A Flower in Decay" – 8:43Credits Pim Blankenstein - Vocals Johan Kwakernaak - Rhythm guitar Martin Kwakernaak - Drums, Keyboards Gerard de Jong - Lead guitar Lawrence Meyer - Bass guitarCategory:Officium Triste albumsCategory:2004 albums
+The lizard Cnemidophorus abaetensis is a protected species found in the park.
+It was opened in 1963.
+Laurent Degos as a research manager has been elected in several evaluation commissions (Inserm, CNRS, National Council of Universities), Director of the University Institute, International Advisor (Histocompatibility), President of international congresses (EHA 1994, ISQUA 2010, Health and Tech Conference 2017).
+Airlines and destinationsReferences Category:Airports built in the Soviet UnionCategory:Airports in the ArcticCategory:Airports in the Sakha Republic
+Greenberg's 2015 TED Talk has received over 1.5 million views.
+For the history of the region, see History of Pomerania.
+Wagaung () is the fifth month of the traditional Burmese calendar.
+Upon his return to Australia in 2013 Jimmy produced and directed series 3 & 4 of River Cottage Australia broadcast on Foxtel and SBS, and taught the Shooter Producer Short Course at AFTRS - the Australian Television and Radio School from 2014 to 2016.
+The interior is now used for exhibition space and houses an elaborate baptismal font originally from the Cathedral, and some canvases by Sebastiano Conca.
+__NOTOC__This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Socorro County, New Mexico.
+ReferencesExternal links Aerial photo as of April 1998 from USGS The National Map via MSR Maps Category:Airports in New HampshireCategory:Transportation buildings and structures in Sullivan County, New HampshireCategory:Newport, New Hampshire
+The Menard Art Museum (メナード美術館) is a museum located in Komaki, Aichi Prefecture, Japan.
+The 2015 Florida Marine Raiders season was the third season for the X-League Indoor Football (X-League) franchise, and their first season in X-League.
+1690) was a Spanish painter.
+Parkton may refer to a location in the United States:Parkton, MarylandParkton, MinnesotaParkton, North Carolina
+Other clubs which had their matches transferred to different locations included SV Sandhausen (to Carl-Benz-Stadion at Mannheim) and Germania Windeck (to RheinEnergieStadion at Cologne).
+Chandwaji is a town in Jaipur district, Rajasthan, India.
+2 "Checks on Power and Authority in the New Testament" Cultic Studies Journal Vol.
+The group entered combat on 22 December 1943, and until April 1945 served primarily as a strategic bombardment organization, hitting such targets as aircraft factories in Gotha, ball-bearing plants in Berlin, an airfield at Hanau, U-boat facilities at Kiel, a chemical plant at Ludwigshafen, synthetic oil refineries at Pölitz, aircraft engine plants at Rostock, marshalling yards at Cologne, and a Buzz-bomb assembly plant at Fallersleben.
+Consequence of Sound writer Wren Graves listed it as one of the album's essential tracks.
+ReferencesCategory:2012 video gamesCategory:Dance video gamesCategory:Music video gamesCategory:ExergamesCategory:Ubisoft franchisesCategory:Ubisoft gamesCategory:Just Dance (video game series)Category:Xbox 360 gamesCategory:Kinect gamesCategory:Wii gamesCategory:Disney video gamesCategory:The Muppets video gamesCategory:Multiplayer and single-player video gamesCategory:Video games developed in Japan
+2004.
+ReferencesExternal links Category:1985 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Indian cricketersCategory:Mizoram cricketersCategory:Place of birth missing (living people)
+ReferencesCategory:Former islandsCategory:Geography of New CaledoniaCategory:Plateaus of the Pacific OceanCategory:Coral Sea
+The AGETIP's quality control procedures have been certified by the Bureau Veritas Certification.
+He was for some time employed by Lord Sheffield.
+Robert S. Laufer, PhD, Memorial Award for Outstanding Scientific AchievementThis award is given to an individual or group who has made an outstanding contribution to research in the field of traumatic stress.
+ReferencesExternal links and additional sources (for Chronology of Bishops) (for Chronology of Bishops) (for Chronology of Bishops) (for Chronology of Bishops) Category:Roman Catholic bishop stubsCategory:1641 birthsCategory:1694 deathsCategory:Bishops appointed by Pope Innocent XI
+RosterSchedule|-!colspan=12 style=|Non-Conference Regular Season|-!colspan=12 style=|Great Midwest Tournament |-!colspan=12 style=|NCAA TournamentRankingsTeam players drafted into the NBAReferencesCincinnatiCategory:Cincinnati Bearcats men's basketball seasonsCategory:NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament Final Four seasonsCincinnatiCincinnati Bearcats men's basketballCincinnati Bearcats men's basketball
+ReferencesExternal links Angelo Marasigan at worldfootball.netCategory:1992 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Filipino footballersCategory:Philippines international footballersCategory:Belgian footballersCategory:Belgian people of Filipino descentCategory:Filipino people of Belgian descentCategory:Association football midfieldersCategory:Association football defendersCategory:S.V.
+REDIRECT 1970 United States House of Representatives elections#Arkansas1970ArkansasUnited States House of Representatives
+During the Paradiso Homecoming Tour, Westenra performed "Whispers In A Dream" in concert, traveling to New Zealand, eastern Asia, and the United Kingdom.
+Category:1645 birthsCategory:1706 deathsCategory:People from Woburn, MassachusettsCategory:People of colonial MassachusettsCategory:Members of the Massachusetts General CourtCategory:Speakers of the Massachusetts House of RepresentativesCategory:Soldiers of MassachusettsCategory:Military history of New EnglandCategory:King William's WarCategory:Queen Anne's War
+Weeraratne is a Sri Lankan surname that may refer toIraj Weeraratne (born 1981), Sri Lankan rapperKaushalya Weeraratne (born 1981), Sri Lankan cricketerSangeetha Weeraratne (born 1973), Sri Lankan actress Category:Sinhalese surnames
+Anti-doping rule violationFacchini tested positive for Tuaminoheptane at the Tour of Belgium on 30 May 2014 and was subsequently handed a 10-month ban from sports by UCI.
+Many indigenous Korean artifacts and culture were transmitted to the tomb builders of early Japan, such as horsetrappings, bronze mirrors, paintings and iron-ware.
+Between 2006 and 2011, the population of the Community of Stouffville grew 100.5% from 12,411 to 24,886, or from 51% to 66% of the total population of the larger town of Whitchurch-Stouffville.
+The original church was established in 1786.
+However, sometimes common perkedel contains less or no meat at all.
+He has even written computer programs for Canon.
+Pupation takes place in a pale flesh-pink pupa which is suspended freely by the tail from an empty flower-sheath of the host plant.
+Training Course (TC): A year-long program offered every year to S.3 students who wish to join CWA.
+Roscommon won their second title in a row and, so far, their last.
+Professional careerOn November 16, 2014, Pascual posted a career-high 22 points as he led Barako Bull to its first win against Kia in the 2014–15 PBA Philippine Cup.
+Personal life He is the nephew of Bill Hallman, who also played baseball at the Major League level.
+ReferencesCategory:Villages in Gostynin County
+It was produced by Narada Michael Walden and Louis Biancaniello.
+ReferencesExternal links, including photo in 2006, at Maryland Historical TrustCategory:Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in MarylandCategory:Houses in Carroll County, MarylandCategory:Houses completed in 1790Category:Georgian architecture in MarylandCategory:New Windsor, MarylandCategory:National Register of Historic Places in Carroll County, Maryland
+The encoded name can never contain more than 6 alpha only characters.
+The session is intended to include a remote participant in a social event.
+Below the Feldsee, between the heaps of moraine, used to be another, smaller lake that, through the formation of peat has silted up to become the present-day, botanically valuable bog of Feldseemoor.
+Note: The map alongside presents some of the notable locations in the subdivision.
+Empire Airport may refer to: Empire Airport (Michigan) in Empire, Michigan, United States (FAA: Y87) Empire Airport (Nevada) in Empire, Nevada, United States (FAA: 1A8)
+The top 2 teams qualified for the semi-finals.
+Sázava () is a river in Bohemia, Czech Republic.
+The first home was leased from HUD for a $1 and has grown from a 7-person to a 210 bed shelter with 110 affordable housing units.
+Banchory in the newsIn 2008 turf lawn was laid in the sixth year common room.
+Halpin is married, and has twins.
+The report featured the works of directors Bruce Beresford, Fred Schepisi and Peter Weir.
+Remains have also been found of a civilian settlement, or vicus alongside the fort.
+Any deceased subjects in the pre-school age group would be unknown.
+Diego de Arcaya is another member of this family who served under James I of Aragon who returned later to settle in the town of Lekeitio, Biscay.
+Provides additionally instruction on religious rituals done prior to battle, and prayers to be recited upon victory.
+The last prior strong event in the region was on June 17, 1928, when a magnitude-7.8 event occurred south of Serdán.
+This film was winner of Best Short 8th Cinewest Flex International Film Festival.
+The per capita income for the town was $25,319.
+Paraperlucidibaca wandonensis is a Gram-negative, strictly aerobic, catalase-negative, oxidase-positive, rod-shaped, nonmotile bacterium of the genus Paraperlucidibaca.
+Journal and proceedings (Western Australian Historical Society) Vol.
+Sellick was the first to win both awards at the same time.
+The band's vocalist and songwriter Ichiro Yamaguchi found this frustrating, especially during a period of writer's block.
+ReferencesCategory:Moths described in 1864ferrarenella
+Golmés is a village in the province of Lleida and autonomous community of Catalonia, Spain.
+They also offered specialist software, Tomcat to legal firms.
+Top goalscorersReferences1981Saudi ArabiaCup
+Notable people with the surname include:Jake Peetz (born 1983), American football coachKaren Peetz, American bankerSee alsoPeetz, Colorado Peetz Table Wind Energy Center
+Colombia had its strongest period during the 1990s.
+The school uniform is grey and white.
+The fourth season of the American dramatic television series Touched by an Angel premiered on CBS on September 21, 1997 and concluded airing on May 17, 1998, spanning 26 episodes.
+He was buried at Dunbar on 9 December 1743.
+ReferencesCategory:OreasteridaeCategory:Animals described in 1843
+Following his party's loss at the 2015 state election, Newman soon resigned as Premier to make way for the ministry of Annastacia Palaszczuk.
+Georgi Petkov may refer to: Georgi Petkov (footballer, born 1976), Bulgarian football goalkeeper Georgi Petkov (footballer, born 1988), Bulgarian football defender Georgi Petkov (rower) (born 1956), Bulgarian Olympic rower
+Perry's breakout season came in 1966 with a tremendous start, going 20–2 into August.
+Moscufo (locally Muscùfe) is a comune and town in the province of Pescara in the Abruzzo region of Italy.
+Lars Werdelin, born 1955, is a Swedish paleontologist specializing in the evolution of mammalian carnivores.
+His win was shared with Peter Bebb, Chris Corbould and Paul Franklin.
+The first eighteen episodes of the English adaptation of the anime were aired between April and July 2003 on Cartoon Network's Toonami programming block.
+Klungkung town is easily reached from Gianyar via the highway.
+The band recorded the album with producer Dryw Owens at Little Russia Recording Studios in North Highlands, California.
+Hal H. Carleton was an Australian writer.
+It is the oldest continental championship in the world.
+Luís Carlos Pereira Carneiro (born 8 September 1988), known as Licá, is a Portuguese professional footballer who plays as a right winger for Belenenses SAD.
+Calculus on manifolds may refer to:Calculus on Manifolds, an undergraduate real analysis and differential geometry textbook by Michael SpivakThe generalization of differential and integral calculus to differentiable manifoldsSee alsoDifferential geometry
+The Europe Zone was one of the three regional zones of the 1980 Davis Cup.
+Mado Hot Spring National Park is a protected area of the Philippines located in barangay Awang in the municipality of Datu Odin Sinsuat, Maguindanao in Mindanao Island.
+At the 2006 census, its population was 97, in 22 families.
+The Ulaan Tolgoi mine is a large niobium mine located in central Mongolia.
+Walter Gorini (born 29 August 1944) is a retired Italian track cyclist who was active between 1966 and 1967.
+ReferencesSee also Communes of the Lozère departmentCategory:Communes of LozèreCategory:Populated places established in 2016Category:2016 establishments in France
+He is the grandson of former New Jersey congresswoman Millicent Fenwick, who always encouraged him to be useful.
+So for this reason, relations of ideas cannot be used to prove matters of fact.
+FilmographyDash a Lotsa Nonsents!
+Initially, the act prohibited the U.S. from changing budget deficit targets even in the event of a negative shock to the economy.
+The year 1562 in art involved some significant events and new works.
+In addition to the senior competitions, there were also under-23 events for younger athletes.
+Rafael Sandoval's character has subsequently made guest appearances in one of the Justice League titles, in which he is possessed by the spirit of an Aztec god-emperor and takes on an appearance reminiscent of the Lazarus Lane Diablo.
+The poem begins, describing Dorotheus sitting in an imperial palace, whereupon he is taken by a mystical vision.
+As of January 2016 P&O announced that they would end the Larne-Troon service provided by HSC Express, this has ended 25 years of fastcraft service between Northern Ireland and Scotland.
+The GGS-1012 class is a serie of seven harbour oil and water Transport ships of the Italian Navy.
+After Midnight () is a 2004 Italian romantic comedy film directed by Davide Ferrario.
+It is located in the Oruro Department, Sajama Province, Turco Municipality.
+On 5 February 2007 Rodríguez was named manager of the Catalans' first team in Tercera División, replacing fired Joan Carrillo, until the end of the campaign.
+ReferencesCategory:Former municipalities of Gelderland
+His older sister, Kinu, married into a distinguished family in Akasaka-juku (Nakasendō), the Yabashis that Emperor Shōwa officially visited in 1946.. Otohiko Hara (jp), formerly Otohiko Yabashi, is his nephew.
+Symptoms depend on the organ(s) affected.
+The Silver Salver is a greyhound racing competition held annually at Central Park Stadium in Sittingbourne, Kent.
+The police raid the club and arrest many gang members including Joe's henchman Karl, though Joe is not caught.
+This relates to many statements by Laozi encouraging rulers to keep their people in "ignorance", or "simple-minded".
+Golam Bahri (, also Romanized as Golām Baḩrī and Gholām Baḩrī) is a village in Nurali Rural District, in the Central District of Delfan County, Lorestan Province, Iran.
+Awards and honorsReferences Kings on Hockey DatabaseCategory:Los Angeles Kings seasonsLos Angeles Kings season, 1995-96LosLA KingsLA Kings
+This would see him gain an assistant management position at Shanghai Shenhua F.C., where he stayed with them until July 21, 2002.
+Other UtilitiesEducationThere are 12 small districts inside Batu Kawa area: Batu Kawa(石角)、Stapok(尖山)、Sin San Tu(新山肚)、Moyan(味源港)、Kim Choo Sing(金珠盛)、Luo Zhi Gan(罗知港)、Xia Sha Long(下沙垄)、Sungai Tapang (甲港)、Rantau Panjang(上湾头)、Sejijak (西里益)、Sungai Tengah(葫芦顶) 及Pangkalan Baru (新梯头).
+The dance in question is a Brazilian traditional dance, characterized by energetic individual spins, gymnastic moves, and percussive footwork.
+ReferencesCategory:Virgin goddessesCategory:Venus (mythology)
+3 Troop, No.
+ResultsTrump won the Georgia primary with about half a million votes, representing 38.8% of all votes cast.
+Serving in the naval infantry he was wounded in the foot in a battle near Shlisselburg in 1943 when he stepped on a German booby trap.
+External links Player profile at Charleston Battery Self-Made: A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man Category:1982 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:American soccer playersCategory:Charleston Battery playersCategory:People from Mount Pleasant, South CarolinaCategory:Soccer players from South CarolinaCategory:College of Charleston Cougars men's soccer playersCategory:Association football midfielders
+The habitat consists of lowland forests.
+There are a total of 50 trails with 18 chairlifts, two conveyor lifts, and two rope tows in the Landing Zone Terrain Park.
+The Audrey Sheiham Evidence-Based Health Care in Africa Leadership Award has been granted annually by the Cochrane Collaboration since 2001 to a researcher from a low to middle income country.
+(1996).
+His next opportunity came from the Florida Panthers who offered him a try out that proved successful and led to a $650,000 one-year contract.
+After the National Socialist seizure he received in November 1933 in the constituency 23 (Düsseldorf West) a mandate in the Reichstag where he served until 1945.
+As a given name for girls, Ivy first entered the Top 200 in England and Wales in 1880, when it ranked #180, and rose to a peak of #16 in England and Wales in 1904.
+Wilson Bulletin.
+Theming and layout Mediterranean Harbor's layout differs from the entry "lands" of other Disney parks as it is a large "V" shape rather than a main street that leads to a hub (as found in Disneyland's Main Street, U.S.A. or Disney's Hollywood Studios' Hollywood Boulevard").
+Knight returned to Polpo when it reopened in the new location, and continued to work there until 2015 late into her first pregnancy.
+In 1807, he made the earliest known drawing of the Engineer Button adorned with a castle motif, worn on the uniforms of the West Point cadets during the War of 1812.
+Ole Hansen (31 July 1842 – 4 November 1922) was a Norwegian army officer.
+The album was released in by 12 Tónar under Guðnadóttir's artist name Lost In Hildurness, and remastered and reissued in 2010 by Touch under her own name.
+In March 2004 the school was placed under special measures.
+Her research has focused on the prevention of HIV and AIDS, as well as violence against marginalized communities and substance abuse.
+DiscographyReferencesCategory:1939 birthsCategory:American country singer-songwritersCategory:Living peopleCategory:Singers from ArkansasCategory:People from Clay County, ArkansasCategory:Songwriters from ArkansasCategory:Country musicians from ArkansasCategory:Capitol Records artistsCategory:Epic Records artistsCategory:Polydor Records artists
+Tembo is a 1951 American documentary film which follows the travels of hunter Howard Hill through equatorial Africa.
+After some words between the two men, with Rollem speaking in broken German, Nichterlein gave one last five-minute speech to the soldiers at the fortress.
+Two Pianos Are Better Than One was released in 1994 by Telarc Records.
+The film stars Suresh Gopi, Aishwarya, Balachandramenon, Mini Nair and Siddique.
+In ecclesial architecture, it is also used of the area between the baluster of a Catholic church and the high altar (what is usually called the sanctuary or chancel).
+Blood Games can refer to:Blood Games (novel), 1992 horror novel by American author Richard LaymonBlood Games (film), 1990 slasher film directed by Tanya RosenbergBlood Games (book), a 1992 book by Jerry Bledsoe about the murder of Lieth Von Stein
+He also directed for McCartney's Adopt-A-Mine campaign.
+At the 2006 census, its population was 34, in 12 families.
+Following is a list of dams and reservoirs in Iowa.
+It has structure: RWRWRW-NH2.
+Syrtis Major may refer to: Syrtis Major Planum, ancient volcanic area on Mars Gulf of Sidra, body of water on the coast of Libya
+Sandrine Hurel (born 7 August 1968 in Lisieux, Calvados) is a member of the National Assembly of France.
+The Nursing Council of New Zealand (NCNZ) are the professional body responsible for the registration of nurses in New Zealand, setting standards for nursing education and practice.
+North Granville is a hamlet (and census-designated place) in Washington County, New York, United States.
+Major results19771st Stage 3 Giro di Puglia4th Tre Valli Varesine8th Milano-Torino19791st Stage 1 Tour of the Basque Country4th G.P.
+Two-thirds of the family's donations were made to organizations based in Michigan.
+AchievementsReferences 1981 Year RankingCategory:1957 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Cuban male javelin throwersCategory:Competitors at the 1982 Central American and Caribbean GamesCategory:Central American and Caribbean Games gold medalists for CubaCategory:Place of birth missing (living people)
+L'An 01 is emblematic of the challenge of the 1970s and covers such diverse topics as ecology, negation of authority, free love, communal living, rejection of private property and labor.
+She added: "I am most angry for George, because he is not here to defend himself.
+Official announcementUltima Online: High Seas, was announced during a UO Town Hall Meeting held on August 28, 2010 at EA Mythic/Bioware's division headquarters in Fairfax, Virginia.
+However, they missed the playoffs due to tiebreaker rules.
+{{4TeamRR-TennisWide| title-1= | title-2=RR W–L| title-3=Set W–L| title-4=Game W–L| title-5=Standings| seed-1=| team-1-abbrev= SLO| team-1=| match-w/l-1= 3–0| set-w/l-1= 13–6| game-w/l-1= 102–64| standings-1=1| seed-2=| team-2-abbrev= '''LUX| team-2=Slovenia vs. GeorgiaLuxembourg vs. PolandSlovenia vs. LuxembourgPoland vs. GeorgiaSlovenia vs. PolandLuxembourg vs. Georgia failed to win any ties in the pool, and thus was relegated to Group II in 2000, where they placed second in their pool of six.
+The name was given in reference to the Colony of Virginia, which became the "Dominion of Virginia"Old Dominion, Virginia, an unincorporated community in Albemarle County, VirginiaOrganizationsOld Dominion Brewing CompanyOld Dominion Electric CooperativeOld Dominion Freight LineOld Dominion University, a public university in Norfolk, VirginiaOld Dominion Monarchs and Lady Monarchs, the athletic teams representing Old Dominion UniversityOld Dominion Foundation, a predecessor of the Andrew W. Mellon FoundationMusicOld Dominion (band), an American country-rock bandOld Dominion (album), their third albumOld Dominion, the debut EP of Indie rock band Hotel of the Laughing Tree"Old Dominion", a song by Avail from their 2000 album One Wrench"Old Dominion", a song by Enon from their 2002 album High SocietyOthersOld Dominion (train), a former Amtrak passenger train in the United StatesOld Dominion Athletic Conference, an NCAA Division III athletic conferenceOld Dominions, commonly used as a reference to parts of the British Empire
+ReferencesCategory:Villages in Kolno County
+It is generally believed that Bʼalam is the third Yaxun Bʼalam; "6-Tun" was later added to the glyph of his name, distinguishing him from his grandson, Yaxun Bʼalam IV (also known as Bird Jaguar IV).
+Green Bank Observatory subsequently retained partial NSF funding, established private contracts, and formed a partnership with West Virginia University.
+Metrobus routes in Montgomery County, MD, have a letter followed by a number (C4, Q4, Z6, etc.).
+SeedsChampion seeds are indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which those seeds were eliminated.
+The transcripts of these dialogs can be viewed on John Paul Caponigro's website.
+ReferencesExternal links The novel's text online On Kabumpo in Oz Review/discussion of Kabumpo in Oz at Tor.comCategory:1922 American novelsCategory:1922 children's booksCategory:1922 fantasy novelsCategory:Oz (franchise) books
+At that point, the role of the modern computer animator overlaps in some respects with that of his or her predecessors in traditional animation: namely, trying to create scenes already storyboarded in rough form by a team of story artists, and synchronizing lip or mouth movements to dialogue already prepared by a screenwriter and recorded by vocal talent.
+Eastland High School is a public high school located in Eastland, Texas, United States and classified as a 3A school by the University Interscholastic League (UIL).
+He began to amass a considerable collection, but ill-health forced him to turn over the acquisition of new items to his friend Arthur H. Clark.
+The population was 527 as of 2010.
+The lead vocals of this single are Natsumi Abe and Maki Goto.
+See also List of airports in VictoriaReferencesCategory:Airports in Victoria (Australia)Category:Kyneton, Victoria
+Additional imagesReferencesCategory:Bones of the head and neck
+See alsoList of Medal of Honor recipientsList of American Civil War Medal of Honor recipients: M–PNotesReferencesCategory:1840 birthsCategory:1902 deathsCategory:United States Army Medal of Honor recipientsCategory:Union Army soldiersCategory:American Civil War recipients of the Medal of Honor
+Bell is committed to teaching and her efforts have been recognised by the Royal Academy of Engineering and University College London.
+The Vancouver Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actor is an annual award given by the Vancouver Film Critics Circle.
+ReferencesExternal links guianensis
+In the 1950 British Empire Games he represented Australia as a hammer thrower and won a bronze medal.
+Unlike the setting by Tallis, Striggio specifically indicates for the voices to be doubled by instruments.
+There are about 30 genera and 260 species represented by the family.
+The station kept its new, somewhat remote, location for more than 50 years after this, even though the main bus terminal of Frederikssund remained at the original station's location, making transfers cumbersome.
+Basaimi is a village located in the Ludhiana West tehsil, of Ludhiana district, Punjab.
+Now at the Spandau Citadel 1907: Nacht (Night), ca 200 cm, a controversial, openly erotic marble statue.
+In 1913, it had been announced that Poincaré would visit St. Petersburg in July 1914 to meet Tsar Nicholas II.
+2018 - presentSee also List of notable Canadian Courts of Appeals cases (2000-present)
+After the instrument immerses the filter into the vial, the filter is rotated to homogenize the sample.
+OrganizationThe Toronto Environmental Alliance is governed by a 9-member volunteer Board of Directors.
+Dawson is known for her innovative use of traditional forms.
+Sources lamellataCategory:Trees of SumatraCategory:Trees of Peninsular MalaysiaCategory:Critically endangered flora of AsiaCategory:Taxonomy articles created by Polbot
+The reviews were devastating.
+CompetitionsPrimeira LigaLeague tableTaça de Portugal MilleniumThird roundFourth roundFifth roundQuarter-finalsSemi-FinalsFinalTaça da LigaSecond roundReferencesAcademicaCategory:Associação Académica de Coimbra – O.A.F.
+The National Track Championships were held from 24–26 January 2020 at the Manchester Velodrome.
+He married Lucrecia Gralla, señora de Subirat y de Esponella, and had 17 children, including Gastón, his successor.
+SquadsResultsAll times are Korea Standard Time (UTC+09:00)Preliminary roundGroup AGroup BGroup CGroup D9~12 placingQuarterfinalsGroup IGroup II5~8 placing7/8 placing5/6 placingFinal roundSemifinals3/4 placingFinalFinal standingReferencesResultsExternal linksOfficial websiteMen
+On the way to the factory, Yelena explains that there was a new Alliance that planned to assault Earth and destroy its orbitals, N.O.V.A.
+Oncideres diana is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae.
+Esna is a village in Järva Parish, Järva County in northern-central Estonia.
+He was a Professor of Economics at Stanford University and a long-time director of the newly established Food Research Institute.
+In the fourth quarter both teams traded field goals with the score now 26-10.
+The breed is known for its long wings and tail and its short beak.
+Education and early careerWhish-Wilson was born in Singapore in 1968.
+GalleryReferencesExternal links Bogyoke Aung San Market with plenty of pictures and videosCategory:YangonCategory:Shopping malls and markets in MyanmarCategory:Tourist attractions in YangonCategory:Jewellery districts
+He played in the FA Cup Final replay in 1982 (replacing the suspended Glenn Roeder), was part of the Second Division Championship team in 1983 and a member of the 1986 Football League Cup Final team.
+HistoryTuscarawas Central Catholic was formed in 1970 by the merger of St. Mary High School in Dennison and St. Joseph High School in Dover.
+Another version of the album would be published in 1996.
+Original compositions with motifs inspired by the traditional music (both peasant and lăutărească music) also started to appear.
+ESPNFlanagan worked for ESPN from 2000-2006.
+At the 2006 census, its population was 134, in 39 families.
+Industrial regionsQuaid-e-Azam Industrial Estate.
+playersCategory:Walton & Hersham F.C.
+Prior to John's birth, his parents had immigrated from Scotland by way of Pennsylvania and settled near the North River in Virginia.
+playersCategory:Halifax Town A.F.C.
+There, representatives of two congregations that were formerly members of the Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod (LCMS), namely, Pilgrim Lutheran Church of Decatur, Illinois and Redeemer Lutheran Church of St. Clair Shores, Michigan, began work on establishing Confessional Lutheran congregations in the United States.
+Algeria–Japan relations are the diplomatic relations between Algeria and Japan.
+His vocal style most often alternates between soft, melodic singing, and harder, harsher, yelling.
+Ангелы революции в стране Оз Кинематографисты России создали второй союзCategory:1949 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:People from Saint PetersburgCategory:Russian film criticsCategory:Novosibirsk State University alumniCategory:Gerasimov Institute of Cinematography alumni
+However, the private areas, which are normally only open to the staff, is a true maze.
+There he competed with Lord Elgin's agents, including Giovanni Battista Lusieri, for the Parthenon marbles.
+Later that year she was injured in a robbery on the way home from Cronjé's Johannesburg home.
+He began his career in the early 1980s, appearing with the Tri-Cities Opera.
+Set listThis set list is representative of the 22 May 2019 show in Belfast.
+Long, David F. Ready to Hazard: A Biography of Commodore William Bainbridge, 1774–1833''.
+Track listingAll compositions by Daniel Carter, Roy Campbell, William Parker, Rashid Bakr "Tradition's Transitional Omissions Suite - Sailing Towards the Dark Happy Voice" - 22:58 "Ascent (My Shadow Is a Cloud)" - 16:04 "Sihu Chant for Sly Stone"- 15:27 "Spirits Rise/Fall (Dedicated to Ethel Brown Lee)" - 15:512 & 4 does not appear on original LPPersonnelDaniel Carter - alto sax, tenor sax, flute, trumpetRoy Campbell - trumpet, flugelhorn, recorderWilliam Parker - bassRashid Bakr - drumsReferencesCategory:Other Dimensions In Music albumsCategory:Silkheart Records albumsCategory:1990 debut albums
+A symbolic last school bell is rung, usually by a first-grader.
+Early yearsPatterson graduated from James S. Rickards High School in Tallahassee, Florida.
+GameplayThe game follows the adventures of David Michael Starsky and Kenneth 'Hutch' Hutchinson as they clean up Bay City in their Gran Torino.
+Sir Alfred Townsend Bucknill, OBE, PC (19 December 1880 – 22 December 1963), was an English judge and a Privy Councillor.
+It was described by Edward Meyrick in 1930.
+The song peaked at #19 on the Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles chart on December 1, 2008.
+He would make one appearance for the club during the 2016 season.
+If I Were for Real may refer to:If I Were for Real (play), a 1979 Chinese play by Sha Yexin, Li Shoucheng and Yao MingdeIf I Were for Real (film), a 1981 Taiwanese film directed by Wang Toon, based on the playIf I Were for Real (album), a 1981 Mandopop album by Teresa Teng, whose title track was the theme song of the film
+In 1813 she was converted into a prison hulk at Bermuda.
+However, the term comrade is improperly attributed to Russian speakers, since Russians do not say comrade, but rather ().
+District administration is worried about the rising fights amongst different groups for last five years.
+See also National Register of Historic Places listings in Newton, MassachusettsReferencesExternal links Evangelical Baptist Church of Newton web pageCategory:National Register of Historic Places in Newton, MassachusettsCategory:Churches on the National Register of Historic Places in MassachusettsCategory:Baptist churches in MassachusettsCategory:Gothic Revival church buildings in MassachusettsCategory:Churches completed in 1873Category:19th-century Baptist churches in the United StatesCategory:Churches in Newton, MassachusettsCategory:Stone churches in Massachusetts
+Role of Honour: The Mayors of Galway City 1485-2001.
+Pacówka is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Żmudź, within Chełm County, Lublin Voivodeship, in eastern Poland.
+SinglesReferencesExternal linksSocaNews.com: Interviews: Nookie Tonight, 3 January 2005Guardian Unlimited: Who the hell is Jamesy P?, 15 September 2005.
+Francisco Gómez (died 1854) was acting President of Honduras 1 February - 1 March 1852.
+See also Hoi Ha Wan Islands and peninsulas of Hong KongExternal links Map of Hoi Ha Wan Marine Park showing Moon Island (.pdf document)Category:Uninhabited islands of Hong KongCategory:Tai Po District
+I understand politics as a fight of ideas, not as a road to violence.» He married Cristina Torres, with whom he had four children.
+The AP Program graduates over 38 seniors each year and all seniors are admitted to select American schools.
+Playing careerClub careerKocić played in many teams such as Vlasina Vlasotince, Dubočica Leskovac, Vojvodina, Levante, Perugia, Empoli, Red Star Belgrade and Ethnikos Achnas.
+By 1987, he was the dean of the faculty, a position he would hold until 1991.
+In 1993, she recorded the soundtrack to the film about her life, What's Love Got to Do with It, producing the hit single, "I Don't Wanna Fight", her first US Top 10 hit since 1986.
+– 76 p. – In the circle of Matvey Dubrovin / comp.
+The ground color of the forewings is whitish, with blackish markings and two distinct spots at the base, as well as an oblique dark blotch from before the middle of the costa connecting with an elongated dark mark from the middle to the termen.
+It discharges into the Bahlui in the city Iași.
+1 with his brothers Adje and Crooks, for which they won a State Award.
+Compasses can be used for mathematics, drafting, navigation and other purposes.
+Additionally, each of the three blood-smeared hands poses in the shape of the number six, which is meant to symbolize the inherently evil nature of man.
+The Pennsylvania gubernatorial election of 1857 occurred on November 3, 1857.
+Harima, like his crush, Tenma, is a fan of the jidaigeki television show The Three For The Kill.
+Blu Tack can be finely shaped and worked into even very small areas.
+The genus Notoreas was reviewed in 1986 by R. C. Craw and the placement of this species within it was confirmed.
+Reclassified as salvage vesselClassified as a salvage vessel on 13 September 1941 and simultaneously redesignated ARS-12.
+After graduating from Instituto Tecnológico Santandereano, he moved to Bogotá.
+The duo drove Chevrolet Lacettis for Maurer Motorsport.
+The memory map is as follows:If RAM is not banked, then R15 (S) is just another general-purpose register.
+The Azure Swimming Pool (; ) is one of the indoor swimming pools in the abandoned city of Pripyat, Ukraine, which was affected by the Chernobyl disaster.
+ReceptionIn his review for AllMusic, Steve Loewy states "At times mournful, at others suspenseful, Lift & Poise is a performance that requires concentrated listening... A set to be savored, even cherished."
+TaxiMonstros!
+Antoni was voivode of Kiev in 1791 and briefly, starost of Guzów.
+Eventually, in 1962, planners quietly scrapped the entire reform program, reimposing most of the central controls.
+Misgar may refer to: Mazgar, a village in East Azerbaijan Province of Iran.
+Personal lifeCarolyn married Peter E. Halle on August 12, 1972.
+The current CEO is Carlos E. Santiago who replaced Joe Petrone in August 2010.
+On July 30, 2013, Williams revealed on Instagram that shooting of the music video would commence on August 1, 2013.
+Hugh Trevor-Roper, London: WEIDENFELD & NICOLSON, pp.
+Lodzinski became a suspect when she told contradictory versions about how her son went missing, and she was arrested after Wiltsey's babysitters recognized the blanket found wrapped around Wiltsey's body as coming from Lodzinski's house.
+Light Industry and Science Park is the name of a series of industrial parks owned and developed by Science Park of the Philippines.
+Category:Hills of Hesse
+ReferencesStrzeszewo
+The obverse of the medal is inscribed 'HUNGER STRIKE', while on the reverse is engraved the recipient's name.
+FilmographyFilmTheatreReferencesBibliography Wearing, J. P. (2014).
+is a Japanese screenwriter and novelist born in Shiga.
+He moved on to Cisco Junior College after graduation.
+Unser Walter is a German television series.
+ReferencesCategory:Unincorporated communities in CaliforniaCategory:Unincorporated communities in Napa County, California
+Mary Jane Symon.
+Coleman's hands became an ideal of perfection, beginning with film screen tests which revealed their beauty, and she was often a hand double in movies.
+Change in Senate compositionBefore the elections At the beginning of 1910.
+It occupies the northern half of the city.
+ReferencesSchmidt ISchmidt ICategory:1974 establishments in West GermanyCategory:1976 disestablishments in West GermanyCategory:Cabinets established in 1974Category:Cabinets disestablished in 1976Category:Helmut Schmidt
+Otto Koivula (born 1 September 1998) is a Finnish professional ice hockey forward who is currently playing with the New York Islanders organization of the National Hockey League (NHL).
+Dom Flora (born 1935), basketball player for Washington and Lee University from 1954 to 1958 who graduated as NCAA Division I's fifth–highest scorer.
+Unfortunately, Hurricane Andrew leveled the depot in 1992.
+Early yearsGingerich was raised on a 255-acre farm and at a very young age worked in the fields and sawmill.
+8 seed in the SWAC Tournament and lost to Arkansas–Pine Bluff in the quarterfinals.
+ReferencesExternal linksSpodnji Stari Grad on GeopediaCategory:Populated places in the Municipality of Krško
+Fighting alongside Rangers and regular army units (known collectively as the Desert Force), the Hurs used their knowledge of the desert to good effect and helped to blunt the Indian offensive.
+The fact that this album has gotten this sort of acclaim only reconfirms to me what a load of shit this business is.
+As KBRK, the club was successful in the nineties and noughties.
+(Ralph Freed, Burton Lane) – 2:26PersonnelPerformance Rosemary Clooney – vocal The Hi-Lo'sReferences Category:1957 albumsCategory:The Hi-Lo's albumsCategory:Rosemary Clooney albumsCategory:Columbia Records albumsCategory:Covers albums
+Before being acquired by Big Earth in 2005, Bleak House began as an independent publisher, releasing its first book in 2001.
+When the muscle is inactive, the actuator receives no power from the controller, and when the muscle is fully contracted, the actuator produces maximum torque about the joint it controls.
+PopulationSee alsoCommunes of the Calvados departmentReferencesCategory:Former communes of Calvados (department)Category:Calvados communes articles needing translation from French Wikipedia
+Bucchero no longer was exported and, at home, consumers preferred the colorful pottery of the Greek artisans with their narrative and figurative panels.
+He scored four goals in 101 Premier League appearances during his career.
+Chidley attempted suicide on 12 October 1916 and later died suddenly on 21 December 1916 of arteriosclerosis, an inmate at Callan Park Hospital for the Insane.
+It is the follow up book to his previous work The War of Art.
+Eino Oskari Uusitalo (1 December 1924 – 19 March 2015) was a Finnish politician from the Centre Party.
+CareerFootballerWon of Lino De Petrillo, Pisa player and captain for long, he started playing in the nerazzurri youth team.
+Political careerZaborski was a member of the Senate from 1955 to 1966.
+It is found in the Luculla River system and the lower Congo River in Africa.
+Patricia A. Brieschke is an American short story writer.
+colspan="9" style=| Missouri Valley TournamentPanther Sports Network (PSN) Cedar Falls Utilities Ch.
+Grand Glorious GatheringStarting in April 2005, a twelve episode "re-imagining" of the series, GaoGaiGar Final: Grand Glorious Gathering, aired on TV Tokyo.
+FacilitiesJet aircraft are unable to land at the airport, because the runway is too short, but smaller STOL airplanes (such as the DHC-6, BN-2, and helicopters) are common sights.
+Rongma is a village in the Tibet Autonomous Region of China.
+Ophiodes is a genus of lizards from South America.
+It lies approximately east of Jeziorany and north-east of the regional capital Olsztyn.
+ReferencesCategory:Populated places in the Ashanti RegionCategory:Ashanti Region
+It lies on the left bank of the Krka River just off the regional road from Žužemberk to Dvor.
+Junior Paulo may refer to: Junior Paulo (rugby league born 1983) Junior Paulo (rugby league born 1993)
+Amorbimorpha mackayiana is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae.
+Diplocanthopoda is a genus of jumping spiders that was first described by H. C. Abraham in 1925. it contains only two species, found only in Malaysia and Papua New Guinea: D. hatamensis and D. marina.
+During his travel and study he became very ill, at one point suffering from both bacillary and amoebic dysentery.
+BiographyOn 14 March 1548, Giovanni Beraldo was appointed during the papacy of Pope Paul III as Bishop of Telese o Cerreto Sannita.
+TaxonomyAcraea manca is a member of the Acraea acrita species group.
+The list of ship commissionings in 2002 includes a chronological list of all ships commissioned in 2002.
+Kalleh Gah or Kallehgah or Kaleh Gah () may refer to: Kalleh Gah, East Azerbaijan Kalleh Gah, Fars Kalleh Gah, Ilam Kalleh Gah, Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad Kalleh Gah, Boyer-Ahmad, Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad Province
+The following is a list of accredited colleges and universities in the U.S. state of Utah.
+HonoursTajik League (3): 1998, 1999, 2000Tajik Cup (2): 1998, 1999ReferencesCategory:Football clubs in TajikistanCategory:Football clubs in Dushanbe
+Mór () is a district in north-western part of Fejér County.
+She leads the programme for the practitioner doctorate (Ed.D.)
+In the following year, he created the Viceroy of Northern Rivers, which was then concurrently held by the Viceroy of Zhili.
+References Category:Rural localities in BashkortostanCategory:Rural localities in Blagovarsky District
+The territory was little populated before the arrival of Europeans.
+It consists of Rs 15 lakh, a citation and a plaque.
+James Erskine may refer to:James Erskine, 6th Earl of Buchan (died 1640)James Erskine, 7th Earl of Buchan (died 1664), Earl of BuchanSir James Erskine, 2nd Baronet (c. 1670–1693), of the Erskine baronetsJames Erskine (Aberdeen MP) (born 1671), Scottish soldier and politicianJames Erskine, Lord Grange (1679–1754), Scottish judge and JacobiteJames Erskine, Lord Alva (c. 1720–1796), Scottish judge, Knight MarischalJames St Clair-Erskine, 2nd Earl of Rosslyn (1762–1837), Scottish soldier and politicianSir James Erskine, 3rd Baronet (1772–1825), of the Erskine baronetsSir James Erskine (Royal Navy officer) (1838–1911), Admiral of the FleetJames Erskine, Earl of Mar and Kellie (born 1949), Scottish Liberal Democrat member of the House of LordsJames Malcolm Monteith Erskine (1863–1944), British Member of Parliament for Westminster St George's, 1921–1929James Erskine (director), see The Human Face
+(Available on-line.)
+Diocese of Jordan, Lebanon and SyriaIn July 1957, the Diocese of Jordan, Lebanon and Syria was carved out of the existing Diocese of Jerusalem.
+He’s a cracker-barrel philosopher…Kris’ celebrations of machismo are his most patently stupid observations.” Biographer Stephen Miller opines “While Kris produced some of his affecting poetry with characteristic cleverness, the melodies were unremarkable and with his limited vocal range, a number of the songs suffered from a dirgeful quality.” AllMusic lamented the rushed gestation of the songs, remarking “No doubt Kristofferson and Monument would have been better advised to have waited until he had a collection of songs to match his early hits; instead, he quickly began work on yet another album, Jesus Was a Capricorn, which was out before the end of the year.” Writer Michael Streissguth praises the album, maintaining it offered lyrical themes that remained “strongly individualistic and never failed to challenge Nashville’s sensibilities.” In a 2016 Rolling Stone interview with Neil Strauss, Kristofferson said he was pleasantly surprised with the box set of his work The Complete Monument & Columbia Album Collection, particularly Border Lord, admitting, "I can remember at the time being so disappointed at the reception it got."
+The school has produced six Olympic rowing medallists to date, each of whom represented Great Britain, and three of whom won Gold, and an Olympic Gold Medallist who represented Great Britain at men's hockey.
+CommemorationThe Canadian participation in the Battle of the Canal du Nord is commemorated at the Canadian Bourlon Wood Memorial, located southeast of the town of Bourlon.
+Interact may refer to: Interaction Interact Incorporated, a U.S. telecommunications company founded in 1981 InterAct, a U.S. public safety software company founded in 1975 Inter-ACT, Inter-Act, InterACT, three different subsidiaries, created in the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s, of U.S. software and consulting company Advanced Computer Techniques InterAct, a subsidiary of Recoton that owned the GameShark brand for a while interACT, trade name of Advocates for Informed Choice, a U.S. organization advocating for the civil rights of children born with intersex traits InterACT Disability Arts Festival, a three-day New Zealand event begun in 2011 Interact Home Computer, a briefly-extant 1979 U.S. personal computer InterAct Ministries, a U.S. missionary agency focusing on the North Pacific Crescent, founded in 1951 InterAct Theatre Company, a U.S. organization based in Philadelphia, founded in 1988 Rotary Interact, a service club for youths that is part of Rotary InternationalSee also Interac Interaction (disambiguation) Interactive (disambiguation)
+Thirty Days is a 1916 American silent comedy film featuring Oliver Hardy.
+Its length is and its basin size is .
+__NOTOC__The Gillioz Theatre is a historic theatre located at Springfield, Missouri, United States.
+Handmade jewelry (or handmade jewellery) is jewelry which has been assembled and formed by hand rather than through the use of machines.
+In Canada, municipal governments are creatures of the provincial governments.
+It was described by Ray in 1937.
+Springer Berlin Heidelberg.
+Marcus Thomas may refer to: Marcus Thomas (defensive tackle) (born 1985), for the Denver Broncos Marcus Thomas (running back) (born 1984), free agent Marcus Thomas (actor), film actor Marcus Thomas (boxer) (born 1970)See also Marc Thomas (1950–2017), computer scientist and mathematician
+Laithwaite is a surname which may refer to:Eric Laithwaite (1921–1997), English electrical engineerSir Gilbert Laithwaite (1894–1986), Irish-British civil servant and diplomatJames Laithwaite (born 1991), English rugby league playerTony Laithwaite, English wine merchant
+He also covered various protests of the Vietnam War, and documented the founding of the Women for Peace Organization in 1961.
+Notable people with the surname include: Edward Jackett (1878–1935), English international rugby union player, brother of Richard Kenny Jackett (born 1962), Welsh international footballer Richard Jackett, Cornish rugby union player, brother of Edward Wilbur Jackett (1912–2005), Canadian public servant and chief justiceSee also Jackett (clothing), a type of jacket
+ReferencesExternal links Bouvardia elegans at The Plant List Bouvardia elegans at TropicosCategory:Plants described in 2011Category:SpermacoceaeCategory:Flora of Mexico
+In the Pitch, Michael Vennard wrote that "even though the book glosses over the bulk of the band's later existence in favor of focusing on Pavement's development, Perfect Sound Forever is still a quick and enjoyable read for Pavement fans, casual and hardcore alike."
+Podzamek Golubski () is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Golub-Dobrzyń, within Golub-Dobrzyń County, Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-central Poland.
+Bell was a member of three National League pennant winners (1926, 1930 & 1933), winning two World Series with the 1926 Cardinals and the 1933 Giants.
+BibliographyNouvelle méthode de traiter les maladies vénériennes par la fumigation, avec les procès-verbaux des guérisons opérées par ce moyen in 1776 (translated in English in 1777).
+He has testified before congressional committees on five occasions on copyright issues and on U.S. foreign policy regarding the former Yugoslavia.
+It was established in 1902 by the Académie Royale de Belgique, Classe des Sciences, and carries a monetary award.
+Professional careerPrior to Burton beginning her career in broadcasting, she was on television on Romper Room, as a contestant on Star Search, and hosted an hour long cable TV show called Simply Elegant.
+The Steinschartenkopf is a rocky peak, 2,615 m, in the Hochlicht range in the Allgäu Alps.
+Cadena is a surname.
+Thanatos may also refer to:Arts and entertainmentMusic Thanatos (band), a Dutch extreme metal band Thanatos (US band), an American dark wave band Thanatos (album), by Relatives Menschsein, 2002 "Thanatos", a character and track on the 2008 Sound Horizon album Moira "Thanatos", a song by The Skids from the 1979 album Days in Europa "Thanatos -If I Can't Be Yours-", a song in the Neon Genesis Evangelion franchiseFictional characters Thanatos (comics), from Marvel Comics Thanatos (Saint Seiya), a manga character Thanatos, from the fantasy book Incarnations of Immortality Thanatos, from TV cartoon series Chris Colorado Thanatos, from video game Secret of Mana Thanatos, from video game Chaos LegionOther uses in arts and entertainment Thanatos (video game), 1986Other uses Thanatos (psychoanalysis), or death drive, in classical Freudian psychoanalytic theory Thanatos, a synonym for Bothriechis venomous pit vipersSee alsoXanatos (disambiguation) Thanatus, a genus of false crab spiders Thanatomorphose, a 2012 horror film
+ReferencesExternal links profile at FIVB.orgCategory:1997 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Belgian men's volleyball playersCategory:Place of birth missing (living people)
+The camp was founded in 1926 when Warren Tucker sold land to the local area YMCA.
+I like dinner (띵똥!
+He plays as a defensive midfielder or centre back for FC Rotor Volgograd.
+He died aged 71 and was succeeded by Sir Robert Lydston Newman, 2nd Baronet killed in action at the battle of Inkerman.
+At its greatest extent the property amounted to 158 hectares.
+The model designation stood for HR - High Reliability, 616 - 6 axles, 16 cylinder engine.
+Fairplay Township may refer to the following townships in the United States: Fairplay Township, Greene County, Indiana Fairplay Township, Marion County, Kansas
+Retrieved January 30, 2006.
+It was abolished in 1933 when it was merged into Inverness—Richmond riding.
+The company is privately-held and has an annual revenue of $10M - $20M US Dollars, with 51-200 employees.
+She had a double bogey at the twelfth and dropped three back, while Englehorn had seventeen pars on the way to a one-over 74 for a four-stroke win and the title.
+Sawbridge may also refer to: Samuel Elias Sawbridge, MP for Canterbury Janet Sawbridge, skater John Sawbridge, MPSee also Sawbridgeworth, Hertfordshire, England Sawridge, a First Nation in Alberta
+The story timber frame house was built c. 1730, exhibiting construction techniques that are transitional between First Period and Georgian practice.
+The team's most recent first-round selections was defensive end Marcus Davenport.
+Robert Macgeorge may refer to: Robert MacGeorge (1808–1884), Anglican priest and author Robert Forsyth Macgeorge (1796–1859), early settler of South Australia
+After season he went to French team Montpellier UC.
+Selected resultsSki mountaineering 1991: 1st, Matterhorn ski marathon, Zermatt 1997: 1st, French national ranking 1998: 1st, French national ranking 1st, Tour du Rutor (together with Alexia Zuberer) 2nd, Patrouille des Glaciers (together with Alexia Zuberer and Jana Heczková) 1999: 1st, French national rankingPierra Menta 1988: 1st, together with her sister Sylvie Trécourt 1989: 1st, together with Sylvie Trécourt 1990: 1st, together with Sylvie Trécourt 1991: 1st, together with Sylvie Trécourt 1992: 2nd, together with Sylvie Trécourt 1994: 1st, together with Sylvie Trécourt 1995: 2nd, together with Sylvie Trécourt 1997: 1st, together with Alexia Zuberer 1998: 1st, together with Alexia Zuberer 1999: 1st, together with Danièle HacquardClimbing 1991: 2nd, French Championship, BriançonReferences Category:1962 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:French female ski mountaineersCategory:French mountain climbersCategory:French schoolteachersCategory:Female climbers
+ReferencesCategory:Office buildings completed in 1981Category:Skyscrapers in Richmond, VirginiaCategory:Skyscraper office buildings in Virginia
+Don Sebastiani born February 15, 1953, in Sonoma, CA, is an American vintner and Republican politician from the state of California.
+It lies approximately south-west of Kutno and north of the regional capital Łódź.
+Cannabis legislation proposals are legislative proposals which failed (or are pending) to make it into law.
+Produced by Studio D, the women's studio of the National Film Board of Canada, the film won an Oscar at the 56th Academy Awards in 1984 for Documentary Short Subject.
+Eurois nigra, the great black dart moth, is a species of cutworm or dart moth in the family Noctuidae.
+Montoro Superiore was a town and former comune (municipality) in the province of Avellino, Campania, Italy.
+She competed in the women's 100 metre butterfly at the 1976 Summer Olympics.
+OriginsEarly in the twelfth century a Walterus le Brun flourished in Scotland.
+Later monuments are primarily of granite, and are smaller, in deference either architecturally to the more elaborate markers that preceded them, or to the ancestral founders of the family.
+Potential improvements could include a direct walking route in to the Gunwharf Quays shopping complex.
+The first was between then-Vice President George H.W.
+ReferencesCategory:Populated places in Adana ProvinceCategory:TufanbeyliCategory:Villages in Turkey
+PlotCast Stefania Orsola Garello as Cinzia France Demoulin as Cristina Michele Di Mauro as Luigi Fabrizio Monetti as Paolo Sergio Troiano as AlbertoSee also List of Italian films of 1994ReferencesExternal linksCategory:Italian filmsCategory:Italian romantic drama filmsCategory:1990s romantic drama filmsCategory:1994 directorial debut films
+The TO8 has a tape drive and Microsoft BASIC 1.0 (both a standard and a 512 KB version) on its internal ROM, and there is optionally an external floppy drive.
+BackgroundThe Festival is held annually and tours internationally.
+Giovanni Zarrella (born 4 March 1978 in Hechingen) is a German-Italian singer and TV presenter.
+It is maintained by SAE International.
+ReferencesCategory:Trechinae
+Track listingPersonnelMartyr Daniel Mongrain – lead vocals, guitar Martin Carbonneau - guitar François Mongrain - bass, death growls Patrice Hamelin drums, percussionProduction Pierre Rémillard - producer Yannick St-Amand - producer Alan Douches - masteringReferencesCategory:2006 albumsCategory:Martyr (band) albumsCategory:Galy Records albums
+The plant has been used in cultivation in wetlands, and the recent discovery of several colonies growing by a stream in Illinois demonstrates its capacity to become a noxious weed if it is introduced elsewhere.
+Work with RuskinAt the time John Ruskin was seeking to revive lively freehand stone carving of the kind typical of medieval Gothic architecture.
+He had another good season in 1926, hitting .303 with career-highs in RBI (62), hits (138), triples (5) and games played (135).
+Sancti Spíritus, who had the best regular season record, lost in the first round.
+Het vind () is the debut studio album by Swedish singer-songwriter Marie Fredriksson, originally released on LP and Cassette formats on 20 September 1984 by EMI Sweden.
+20, 42, and 43 Squadrons.
+Since 2009, he has represented Slovenia at several international tournaments, both the World Men's Handball Championships and European Men's Handball Championships.
+SSAU may refer to:Samara State Aerospace University, a Russian engineering and technical institutionState Space Agency of Ukraine
+However, he had such a chip lead that even when the dealers kept taking his blinds out every orbit, Ungar still made the final table and finished ninth pocketing $25,050.
+Farther to the south, Skyline Drive reaches Hawksbill Gap Parking, where a trail leads to Hawksbill Mountain, the highest peak in Shenandoah National Park at .
+This is the procedure for making offerings.
+The CNNA HL-6 was a civil trainer aircraft developed in Brazil in 1943.
+The clear discs, combined with the ability to filter out laser light (based on wavelength and coherence), yield a much greater signal-to-noise ratio than reflective media.
+Laaounate is a small town and rural commune in Sidi Bennour Province of the Casablanca-Settat region of Morocco.
+A minister typically sought re-election in the same constituency he had just vacated, but occasionally contested another seat which was also vacant.
+A brief statement on the club website said: "Blackburn Rovers FC can confirm that Michael Appleton has been relieved of his duties as manager along with assistant manager Ashley Westwood, first-team coach Darren Moore and head of senior recruitment Luke Dowling."
+It is found in Sichuan, China.
+Webster's siblings include an older brother named Kevin, and an older sister named Olivia.
+This was thereafter the Free Church of Scotland as most islanders sided with this more conservative view on religion.
+It was produced by FremantleMedia North America, a sister company of UFA, which produced the original.
+Two are elected in the year after the presidential election and one is elected in the year before it.
+However, no agreement was reached with the club.
+Fellay may refer to: Bernard Fellay (born 1958), Swiss bishop Raymond Fellay (1932–1994), Swiss skier
+Thomas Lovell, treasurer of our household andEdward Poynings, comptroller of our household, knights, and many others.
+Won by a Neck is a 1930 American Pre-Code comedy film directed by Fatty Arbuckle and starring Lloyd Hamilton.
+and composer Francesco Pennino (1880-1952), both of Naples, Italy.
+After making her way into the space lab's complex, Dot trades with the space monkey Buster, then pilots an American rocket and sets a course to rescue Whyka.
+MCC won by 9 wickets.
+She authored a number of books.
+It passed over five important traffic junctions including NTPC, Mehrauli-Badarpur Road, Jaitpur, Sarai Bypass and Sector 37 Faridabad.
+"Homer's Post-Classical Legacy."
+Only the First Hazinedar could approach the Sultan and other nobility, while the second, third and other hazinedars served the First Hazenidar.
+Fadime Helvacioglu (born 24 May 1979) is a German taekwondo practitioner from Bielefeld.
+Szenyér is a village in Somogy county, Hungary.
+CareerClubOn 19 July 2018, Abdumominov signed a one-year contract with FC Istiklol.
+In 1912 he left Nottinghamshire as his union and political activities meant that he could not find employment in the area.
+Shi Xiufeng (born September 16, 1987) is a Chinese basketball player for Beijing Great Wall and the Chinese national team.
+On June 24, 2014, Heidecker and Wareheim released a 12″ single, "Jambalaya", as Pusswhip Banggang.
+PoolClassificationFifth and sixth placeThird and fourth placeFinalFinal standingsReferencesExternal linksOfficial websiteSultan of Johor CupSultan of Johor CupCategory:Sultan of Johor CupSultan of Johor CupSultan of Johor Cup
+There is watered by the rivers San Juan, Ingenio and others, which are tributaries of the Papaloapan river, being outlined the renowned San Agustín and the Tecolapan.
+Prior to holding this position, he was the chief innovation officer for the state of Rhode Island and the director of the Office of Educational Technology for the U.S. Department of Education.
+A unit train, also called a block train or a trainload service, is a train in which all cars (wagons) carry the same commodity and are shipped from the same origin to the same destination, without being split up or stored en route.
+ReceptionWriting for Allmusic, music critic Bob Rusch wrote of the album: "What separated this from the average good Bill Evans date was the inclusion of Shelly Manne on drums, who inventively pushed and took unexpected chances."
+Following high school, Knight attended Butler University and Purdue University.
+On February 6, 2007, both appeared before a judge on her behalf.
+ReferencesCategory:1934 birthsCategory:1996 deathsCategory:Alpine skiers at the 1956 Winter OlympicsEinar KristjanssonEinar KristjanssonEinar KristjanssonEinar KristjanssonCategory:Association footballers not categorized by position
+Lake Forest may refer to:In communities:Lake Forest, California, in Orange CountyLake Forest, Placer County, CaliforniaLake Forest, FloridaLake Forest, IllinoisLake Forest, TexasLake Forest, a neighborhood of Louisville, KentuckyLake Forest, a neighborhood of Bridgeport, ConnecticutLake Forest Park, WashingtonIn education:Lake Forest Academy (Lake Forest, Illinois)Lake Forest College (Lake Forest, Illinois)Lake Forest Elementary School, a school of the arts in Jacksonville, FloridaIn transportation:Lake Forest (Metra Milwaukee District/North station), a railroad station on the west side of Lake Forest, IllinoisLake Forest (Metra Union Pacific/North station) a railroad station on the east side of Lake Forest, IllinoisSee alsoForest Lake (disambiguation)
+Mahmoud Ghandi (, August 25, 1945 in Tehran – June 28, 1981) was an Iranian politician, who served as the Minister of Information and Communications Technology from 1979 to 1981.
+ReferencesExternal linksHistory Detectives.
+St Dennis Association Football Club is a football club based in St Dennis, Cornwall.
+House of Barcelona, 1164–1410|Alphonse I the TroubadourEl Trobador18 July 1164 – 25 April 1196||||1-25 March 1157Huescason of Ramon Berenguer IV of Barcelona and Petronilla of Aragon||marriage agreement withMafalda of Portugal 1159-1162, not fulfilledSancha of Castile18 January 1174Zaragoza7 children||25 April 1196Perpignanaged 44|-|Peter I the CatholicEl Catòlic25 April 1196 – 13 September 1213||||July 1178Huescason of Alfons I and Sancha of Castile||Marie of Montpellier15 June 12042 children||12 September 1213Battle of Muretaged 35|-|James I the ConquerorEl Conqueridor13 September 1213 – 27 July 1276||||2 February 1208Montpellierson of Peter I the Catholic and Marie of Montpellier||marriage agreement withAurembiaix, Countess of Urgell 1209, not fulfilledEleanor of Castile6 February 1221Ágreda1 childViolant of Hungary8 September 1235Barcelona10 childrenTeresa Gil de Vidaure (lover, then wife)1255(uncanonical marriage, repudiated 1260)2 children||27 July 1276Valenciaaged 68|-|Peter II the GreatEl Gran27 July 1276 – 2 November 1285||||July or August 1240Valenciason of James I and Violant of Hungary||Constance of Sicily13 June 1262Montpellier6 children||2 November 1285Vilafranca del Penedèsaged 45|-|Alphonse II the LiberalEl Liberal2 November 1285 – 18 June 1291||||4 November 1265Valenciason of Peter II and Constance of Sicily|| Eleanor of England15 August 1290 (by proxy and not consummated; death of the groom during bride's way to Aragon)||18 June 1291Barcelonaaged 27|-|James II the FairEl Just18 June 1291 – 2 November 1327||||10 August 1267Valenciason of Peter II and Constance of Sicily||Isabella of Castile1 December 1291SoriaNo childrenBlanche of Anjou29 October or 1 November 1295Vilabertran10 childrenMarie de Lusignan15 June 1315 (by proxy)Nicosia27 November 1315 (in person)GironaNo childrenElisenda de Montcada25 December 1322TarragonaNo children||5 November 1327Barcelonaaged 60|-|Alphonse III the KindEl Benigne2 November 1327 – 24 January 1336||||2 November 1299Naplesson of James II of Aragon and Blanche of Anjou||Teresa d'Entença1314Lerida7 childrenEleanor of Castile5 February 1329Tarazona2 children||27 January 1336Barcelonaaged 37|-|Peter III the CeremoniousEl Cerimoniós24 January 1336 – 5 January 1387||||5 October 1319Balaguerson of Alphonse III and Teresa d'Entença||Maria of Navarre25 July 1337Zaragoza2 childrenLeonor of Portugal14 or 15 November 1347BarcelonaNo childrenEleanor of Sicily27 August 1349Valencia4 childrenSibila of Fortia11 October 1377Barcelona3 children||5 January 1387Barcelonaaged 68|-|John the HunterEl Caçador5 January 1387 – 19 May 1396||||27 December 1350Perpignanson of Peter III and Eleanor of Sicily||marriage agreement with Jeanne-Blanche of France 1370-1371, not fulfilledMartha of Armagnac24 June 1373Barcelona5 childrenViolant of Bar2 February 1380Perpignan7 children||19 May 1396Foixàaged 46|-|Martin the Humanistl'Humà19 May 1396 – 31 May 1410||||1356Gironason of Peter III and Eleanor of Sicily||Maria de Luna13 June 1372Barcelona4 childrenMargaret of Prades17 September 1409BarcelonaNo children||31 May 1410Barcelonaaged 54|-|}Martin was the last direct descendant of Wilfred the Hairy to rule; died without legitimate heirs (interregnum 31 May 1410 – 24 June 1412).
+Shiomi Station is the name of two train stations in Japan: Shiomi Station (Hokkaido) (汐見駅) Shiomi Station (Tokyo) (潮見駅)
+Campaign Flyer and First AmendmentIn 2006, Guetzloe was charged with 14 misdemeanors for distributing a political campaign mailer that did not identify who paid for the flyer.
+The Little White River (; formerly known as the South Fork of the White River) is a tributary of the White River, approximately 234 miles (377 km) long, in south central South Dakota in the United States.
+Supernova SN 1996ah Supernova SN 1996ah was discovered in NGC 5640 on June 6, 1996 by J. Mueller, who was using the 1.2-m Oschin Schmidt telescope in the course of the second Palomar Sky Survey.
+30 (Cannons) is a painting by Vasily Kandinsky between 1911-1913.
+The new mix of "Raindrops" called "Jaxx Club Boot" was released as a digital single on 13 November 2011.
+ReferencesCategory:Silvanidae
+Some say the name Warren derives from a local Aboriginal word, meaning "strong" or "substantial".
+The first was that "many South-Eastern people thought it was named after a sister of the late Mr. J. P. D. Laurie" who may have had "some influence with the Crown Lands Department" in respect to its name.
+The BBC announced in July 2017 that it planned to sell the site at Caversham Park and move employees to London, which took place in May 2018.
+Ak-Beyit Pass is a pass that links At-Bashi Valley andArpa Valley in Naryn Province of Kyrgyzstan.
+Playback singers are L. R. Eswari, K. Jamuna Rani, P. Leela, P. Susheela, Soolamangalam Jayalakshmi, Soolamangalam Rajalakshmi, A. M. Rajah, R. S. Mani and P. B. Srinivas.
+David AdjmiLynn AhrensSholom AleichemWoody Allen (born 1935), film director, writer, actor, and comedianJacob M. AppelGeorge AxelrodJeff BaronS. N. BehrmanDavid BelascoSaul BellowLeo BirinskiMel BrooksPaddy ChayefskyBetty Comden & Adolph GreenNorman CorwinHoward DietzEdward EinhornEve EnslerHarvey FiersteinEdna FerberHerb GardnerLarry GelbartJoel GersmannJosh GreenfeldOscar Hammerstein IIOtto HarbachYip HarburgMoss HartBen HechtLillian HellmanPeretz HirshbeinIsrael HorovitzSidney HowardGeorge JesselGeorge S. KaufmanSidney KingsleyTony KushnerJames LapineArthur LaurentsH. LeivickAlan Jay LernerIra LevinCraig LucasDavid MametDonald MarguliesArthur MillerCheryl MochBecky ModeItamar MosesClifford OdetsCarl ReinerElmer RiceMorrie RyskindPeter SagalRod SerlingIrwin ShawWallace ShawnSidney SheldonMartin ShermanNeil SimonIsaac Bashevis SingerJill Soloway, playwright, television writerAaron Sorkin (born 1961), screenwriter, producer and playwrightGertrude SteinJoseph SteinLouise Stern Jeffrey SweetAlfred UhryWendy Wasserstein (1950–2006), playwright and an Andrew Dickson White Professor-at-Large at Cornell University; recipient of the Tony Award for Best Play and the Pulitzer Prize for DramaJerome WeidmanFranz WerfelNorman Wexler, screenwriter of Saturday Night Fever, Joe, Serpico, MandingoRory Winston, playwright, poet, comedy writer, reviewerSee also List of Jewish American authorsList of Jewish American poetsMulti-Ethnic Literature of the United StatesBefore Columbus FoundationReferencesPlaywrightsJewish American JewishJewish
+ReferencesExternal linksErnest Gerard Wright – Sydney's Aldermen Category:1901 birthsCategory:1981 deathsCategory:Mayors of NewtownCategory:New South Wales local government politiciansCategory:Members of the New South Wales Legislative CouncilCategory:Australian Labor Party members of the Parliament of New South WalesCategory:20th-century Australian politicians
+Artifodina kurokoi is a moth of the family Gracillariidae.
+"King of Cards Vol.
+OverviewMaveryx is an automated testing framework designed for functional testing, regression testing, GUI testing, data-driven testing and keyword-driven testing of Desktop and Web applications on Windows, Linux and MacOS.
+They cited an agreement signed by Kibaki as part of the implementation of the Waki Commission's report in December 2008 which states "The parties shall ensure that any person holding public office or any public servant charged with a criminal offence related to 2008 post-election violence shall be suspended from duty until the matter is fully adjudicated upon".
+Tetyana Ptashkina (Cyrillic: Тетяна Пташкіна; born 10 January 1993) is a Ukrainian athlete whose specialty is the triple jump.
+ReferencesCategory:1971 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Japanese ice hockey playersCategory:Olympic ice hockey players of JapanCategory:Ice hockey players at the 1998 Winter OlympicsCategory:Sportspeople from HokkaidoCategory:Asian Games silver medalists for JapanCategory:Medalists at the 1999 Asian Winter GamesCategory:Ice hockey players at the 1999 Asian Winter GamesCategory:Asian Games medalists in ice hockey
+ReferencesCategory:Municipalities in Rhineland-PalatinateCategory:Palatinate ForestCategory:South PalatinateCategory:Südwestpfalz
+He played for the University team in the senior Wellington cricket competition as a hard-hitting right-handed batsman, and represented Wellington in two first-class matches in 1946-47.
+In the , Walhallow had a population of 10 people.
+History It was created in 2006 from parts of Grand Lake and Oromocto-Gagetown.
+Agostino Cusani, auditor general of the Apostolic Chamber – cardinal-deacon of S. Adriano, then cardinal-priest of S. Lorenzo in Panisperna (14 January 1591), cardinal-priest of SS.
+RangiersRangiersCategory:Mountain passes of the canton of Jura
+Presentation of Christ in the Temple is a small 1445 painting by the German artist Stefan Lochner, now in the Gulbenkian Foundation, Lisbon.
+He served briefly as governor of Konya Province before returning to the parliament six more terms.
+The linear, curved, dark brown seed pods with yellow margins form after flowering.
+Moore was the second son of Charles Moore, Lord Moore, son of Henry Hamilton-Moore, 3rd Earl of Drogheda, and Jane Loftus, daughter of Lord Loftus.
+Ahead of the 2009 season he took over as head coach of Kongsvinger IL's women's team.
+Ecclesiastical careerHe was ordained in the Anglican ministry a deacon on 3 April 1793 and a priest on 5 May 1805.
+Pool resultsPromotional play-offs The first placed teams of each pool were drawn in head-to-head rounds.
+Kim began his acting career appearing in short films and bit parts, and while he later became best known as a supporting actor in mainstream film and television, he has also played leading roles in indies such as One Step More to the Sea (2009), Link (2011) and Suddenly Last Summer (2012), as well as the TV dramas Love Is Over (2006), Don't Hesitate (2009) and Three Sisters (2010).
+Other racesFormula Renault has held rounds at the Monaco Grand Prix since 2003, first with the Formula Renault V6 Eurocup, which was replaced by the Formula Renault 3.5 Series from 2005-2015.
+Beaverkill may refer to:In New York:Beaverkill Bridge, a covered bridge in Sullivan CountyBeaverkill Creek, a former tributary of Esopus CreekBeaver Kill, a tributary of the East Branch of the Delaware RiverSee also
+Speakers of a language are able to have knowledge about their language and be able to reflect upon it.
+Of this, 4 dunams were irrigated or used for plantations, 5,007 were used for cereals, while 9 dunams were classified as built-up urban areas.
+Alaskan had never been intended to run as an ocean vessel, and she had been worn out by hard driving on the Columbia River.
+Stupart is on the Canadian National Railway transcontinental main line, and is passed but not served by Via Rail Canadian trains.
+FC-75 can be synthesized by the same electrochemical fluorination process used to produce PFOA.
+Walter Lowrie may refer to: Walter Lowrie (politician) (1784–1868), teacher, farmer, and politician from Butler County, Pennsylvania Walter H. Lowrie (1807–1876), Pennsylvania jurist Walter Lowrie (author) (1868–1959), Episcopal clergyman, author, and biographer
+SpeciesSpecies within the genus Pinaxia include:Pinaxia coronata (H. Adams, 1853)Pinaxia versicolor (Gray, 1839)References*
+There is a 10% threshold (10% of registered voters) needed to proceed to the second round.
+BC Palanga was a professional basketball club based in Palanga, Lithuania that played in the National Basketball League.
+Military Material Identification Division (aka Chuckwagon) is a division of the United States Department of Defense tasked with identifying and tracking the materials of war used in combat.
+The hindwing underside is rufous brown, although duller in females with a hint of blue along the dorsum.
+The emperor appointed him his historiographer, and some time afterwards conferred on him the title of Baron de Carlscroon.
+Gnaruban Vinoth is a Sri Lankan international footballer who plays as a Midfielder.
+In March 2001, Hu went to Heyuan Slalom Team with Sui from Yueyang to start his slalom canoeing career.
+ResultsPancrase: 1995 Neo-Blood Tournament Second RoundPancrase: 1995 Neo-Blood Tournament Second Round was an event held on July 23, 1995, at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan.
+The women's 3000 metres steeplechase event at the 2011 Military World Games was held on 19 July at the Estádio Olímpico João Havelange.
+Serial is produced by Babar Javed in collaboration with Zee TV Production.
+It lies at an elevation of 1988 feet (606 m).
+Mayfield School may refer to these schools:in Canada: Mayfield Secondary School, Caledon, Ontarioin England: Mayfield Grammar School, Gravesend, Kent Mayfield School, Portsmouth Mayfield School, Ilford, London Mayfield School, Mayfield, East Sussexin the United States: Mayfield High School (Mayfield, Ohio), Mayfield, Ohio Mayfield High School (Kentucky), Mayfield, Kentucky Mayfield High School (New Mexico), Las Cruces, New Mexico Mayfield Senior School, Pasadena, California
+ReferencesCategory:Football venues in NorwayCategory:Eliteserien venuesCategory:Athletics (track and field) venues in NorwayCategory:Sports venues in VestlandCategory:1960 establishments in NorwayCategory:Sports venues completed in 1960Category:Aurland
+ReferencesExternal links Category:1925 birthsCategory:1992 deathsCategory:20th-century American racing driversCategory:Deaths from cancer in FloridaCategory:NASCAR driversCategory:Sportspeople from Rocky Mount, North CarolinaCategory:Racing drivers from North Carolina
+VideosVideo albumsMusic videosSee also List of best-selling albums List of best-selling music artistsReferencesGeneral SpecificFurther readingExternal links DiscographyCategory:Discographies of Australian artists
+Malakhara matches are generally held on holidays and Fridays and are a feature of all fairs and festivals.
+Manship can refer to: The characteristics of being a man; maleness, masculinity or manlinessCharles Henry Manship, Jackson, Mississippi mayorDeborah Manship, Welsh actressPaul Manship, American sculptorJames Renwick Manship, American historianTommy Manship, English footballerDouglas Manship, Sr., former publisher of The Advocate (Baton Rouge), namesake of The Manship Theatre at Louisiana State UniversityDavid Manship, current publisher of The Advocate (Baton Rouge)Jeff Manship, American baseball player
+ReferencesExternal links US Army OneTESS systemCategory:Military education and training
+This gives it a ranking of 293rd in India (out of a total of 640).
+When first built, the house had Greek Revival styling, but it was extensively renovated and extended after its purchase in 1883 by Alfred Tufts, a Northern carpetbagger who moved to Camden after the American Civil War, married a local woman, and acquired a great deal of land.
+at King's College, Aberdeen, in 1839, became a fellow of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh, 1840, a fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 1844, and a fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons, England, 1853.
+Bailey Brooks, a six-year old School of the Air student who lives on a cattle station from Alice Springs, won a competition to draw a picture of how the satellite benefits rural Australians.
+This is a list of mayors of Houston, British Columbia.
+The farm has three contributing buildings, two contributing sites, and one contributing structure.
+After his education at home, he visited the secondary grammar school (Gymnasium) and specialised in the classical languages and natural sciences (especially in botany).
+Found in the páramo region near Bogotá at over elevation, it was described as new to science in 2011.
+However, one distinct difference is that a minister without portfolio is a member of the Council of Ministers and can vote in it, whereas a state secretary is not.
+ReferencesCategory:Villages in Świdwin County
+In 1946 it became Nudgee Beach State School.
+"Like everyone in the world I was heartbroken by that image, but I also saw a glimmer of hope,” Louie said in a press release -- “As dark as the subject matter is, the point of our 'Believer' video was to capture the resilience of youth and the hope displayed by communities coming together to save victims from the rubble.” The video has been tied to the Save the Children organization with a link to donate in the description box.
+Politics Sammy Wilson (born 1953), British MP from Northern IrelandSportsSammy Adjei (born 1980), Ghanaian retired footballerSammy Baugh (1914-2008), American college and Hall-of-Fame National Football League player and coachSammy Brooks (footballer) (1890-1960), English footballerSammy Carlson (born 1989), American freestyle skierSammy Collins (1923–1998), English footballerSamuel Day (sportsman) (1878–1950), English amateur cricketer and footballerSammy Davis (American football) (born 1980), American former National Football League playerSammy Korir (born 1971), Kenyan long-distance runnerSammy Lee (diver) (1920–2016), Korean-American diver and two-time Olympic Games championSammy Lee (footballer) (born 1959), former Liverpool footballer and former Bolton Wanderers managerSatoru Sayama (born 1957), Japanese wrestler with the stage name "Sammy Lee"Sammy Luftspring (1916-2000), Canadian boxerSammy Mandell (1904-1967), American world lightweight champion boxerSammy McIlroy (born 1954), Northern Ireland footballerSammy Price (American football) (born 1943), American former National Football League playerSammy Kibet Rotich (born 1980), Kenyan long-distance runnerSammy Solís (born 1988), American professional baseball playerSammy Sosa (born 1968), Dominican baseball playerSammy Stewart (born 1954), American former Major League Baseball pitcherSammy Stewart (footballer, born 1920) (1920–1995), Scottish footballerSammy Stewart (footballer, born 1991), Northern Irish footballerSammy Traoré (born 1976), French and Malian footballerSammy Watkins (American football) (born 1993), American National Football League playerSammy White (American football) (born 1954), American former National Football League playerFilmSammy Brooks (1891–1951), American film actorSammy Lee (choreographer), Oscar nominated choreographer of Ali Baba Goes to TownOtherSammy Albon (born 1992) British YouTuber and radio personalitySammy Davis Sr. (1900-1988), American dancer, father of Sammy Davis Jr.Sammy Tak Lee (born 1939), Hong Kong billionaire property developerSammy Lee (scientist) (1958–2012), expert in in vitro fertilisationSammy Younge Jr. (1944–1966), murdered African-American civil rights activistFictional charactersSammy Jo Carrington, on the American TV show DynastySammy, on the New Zealand/British post-apocalyptic TV series The TribeSammy the Owl, official mascot of the athletics teams of Rice UniversitySee alsoSam (disambiguation)Sammie (name)Category:Lists of people by nicknameCategory:Masculine given namesCategory:Hypocorisms
+To find the best fit line a least squares regression is recommended by using a computer program such as Microsoft Excel, Minitab, Matlab, or it can also be done using a modern graphing calculator such as a TI-84.
+Atherton also starred as cowboy Jim Lloyd in the miniseries Centennial (1978), based on the novel by James Michener.
+Panduro may refer to: Panduro, Bolivia, a canton in the province of Aroma, La Paz Department Lorenzo Hervás y Panduro (1735–1809), Spanish Jesuit and philologist Leif Panduro (1923–1977), Danish novelist and dramatistSee also Pandura, an ancient string instrument
+In 1840 Martineau was appointed Professor of Mental and Moral Philosophy and Political Economy in Manchester New College, the seminary in which he had been educated, and which had now moved from York back to Manchester.
+SpeciesAcrosemia vulpecularia Herrich-Schäffer, [1855]Acrosemia dichorda Hampson, 1904ReferencesCategory:EnnominaeCategory:Geometridae genera
+The Greek Cup 1964–65 was the 23rd edition of The Greek Football Cup, or Greek Cup for short.
+He also acquired other clay-lands, respectively figlinae Naevianae and figlinae Narnienses.
+He then moved to Spain, where his career expanded, and obtained several lead roles until the final years of the '70s.
+The station was opened on 1 March 1862 and closed on 30 April 1962.
+Junction listReferencesExternal links216Category:Transportation in New London County, ConnecticutCategory:1934 establishments in Connecticut
+It is a prime example of the Polish Cathedral style of churches in both its opulence and grand scale.
+At the 2006 census, its population was 66, in 25 families.
+José Luis Fratello) is the current leader of the Mexican gang called La Línea, which is the armed wing of the drug trafficking organization known as the Juárez Cartel and is said to be the current leader of the organization.
+The Final is played in Dublin and is normally broadcast by the Irish national television broadcaster RTÉ.
+Shades of Black may refer to: Shades of black Shades of Black (organisation), a community organisation in the Handsworth area of Birmingham, England Shades of Black (EP), an EP by Solomon
+Education Bridgeport-Spaulding Community School District operates public schools.
+HistoryConstructed between 1890-1891, the fort was built with a disappearing gun emplacement.
+It is spoken in Samap village () of Turubu Rural LLG, East Sepik Province.
+Hegel's philosophy on at least two different fronts: (1) Hegel's system and its parts; and (2) Hegel's philosophical beginnings and history as it leads up to modern theory.
+Blackwell Publishing, 2001.
+The couple had two sons, Robert W. and James M. Munley, who grew up to become a trial lawyer and a federal district court judge, respectively.
+Also, “pre-theoretical beliefs” may refer to simple intuitions.
+TelevisionFilmReferencesExternal linksCategory:Living peopleCategory:Year of birth missing (living people)Category:Indian male film actorsCategory:Indian male television actors
+'Starbrite' is a hybrid cultivar of the genus Aechmea in the Bromeliad family.
+North Wootton may refer to:North Wootton, DorsetNorth Wootton, NorfolkNorth Wootton, Somerset
+Priyank Panchal from Gujarat made 1310 runs in the 2016-17 Ranji Trophy season at an average of 87.33 from 17 innings, which is the most by any batsman this season and the third most by any batsman in a single Ranji Trophy season.
+In the first 80 metres several athletes were jostled trying to find running room.
+who are renowned for developing their players.
+"Like a Yo-Yo" is a song by Italian singer Sabrina.
+PopulationSee alsoLac de GrandvalCommunes of the Cantal departmentReferencesCategory:Former communes of CantalCategory:Populated places disestablished in 2017
+In his first year as a professional player, he also managed the Brooklyn Eckfords for a short time in 1872, losing all 11 games he managed.
+His spell finished with 4 overs, 2 maidens, four wickets for just two runs (4-2-2-4), breaking the 4-3-2-2 spell of South African Chris Morris.
+GeographyThe Bergamo Alps form the valley's northern limits, notably the Tre Signori and Diavolo di Tenda Peaks, while at south lies the plain of Bergamo.
+ReferencesExternal linksamphoe.comSong Dao
+Toêga is a town in the Koudougou Department of Boulkiemdé Province in central Burkina Faso.
+brokovalles or brokovallë) is an ancient Albanian military march that Skanderbeg's companions were already singing while going into battle.
+Charles Leslie was born Charles Edward John Leslie on 27 November 1839 in the Pentonville Road area of the Islington borough of London.
+During the 1970s Utley Puckett frequented The Golden Nugget pool hall on W. Seventh Street in Fort Worth, Texas, run by Gary Cecora.
+[1]In 2008 he conceived on behalf of the Liedts-Meessens two terraces for which its site in Ghent Zebrastraat .
+The Girl Without a Homeland () is a 1927 Austrian-German silent drama film directed by Constantin J. David and starring Jenny Hasselqvist, Henry Stuart and Oskar Homolka.
+Selected recordings of compositions by Arthur HoneggerCategory:Discographies of classical composersCategory:Discographies of Swiss artists
+Selected filmography Jaws (1975)ReferencesExternal linksCategory:Year of birth missingCategory:Possibly living peopleCategory:American audio engineersCategory:Best Sound Mixing Academy Award winners
+4| | align=center| 1| align=center| 4:17| Setagaya, Tokyo, Japan| |-| Loss| align=center| 1-1| Mamoru Yamaguchi| Decision (Unanimous)| Shooto: Renaxis 2| | align=center| 2| align=center| 5:00| Tokyo, Japan| |-| Win| align=center| 1-0| Masaki Nishizawa| Decision (Unanimous)| Shooto: Gig '99| | align=center| 2| align=center| 5:00| Tokyo, Japan|Championships and accomplishmentsDDT Pro-WrestlingIndependent World Junior Heavyweight Championship (1 time)Theater Pro-WrestlingFūryūjin Tag Team Championship (1 time, inaugural) – with Sho KarasawaVKF Pro-WrestlingVKF King of Wrestle Naniwa Champion (1 time)See alsoList of male mixed martial artistsReferencesCategory:1976 birthsCategory:Japanese male mixed martial artistsCategory:Flyweight mixed martial artistsCategory:Bantamweight mixed martial artistsCategory:Featherweight mixed martial artistsCategory:Living people
+He rowed at Oxford and was in the Oxford crew in the Boat Race in 1856 and 1857.
+Group A of the 2009 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group II was one of two pools in Group II of the Americas zone of the 2009 Fed Cup.
+There, she worked for the college paper and took on a job in advertising.
+In August 2012 Kier Property was selected to carry out the development programme.
+The first margraves were of Guy's line until his daughter Isabella died, at which time the line of Rubino inherited the throne.
+Canham is a former catcher for Oregon State and was a member of the 2006 and 2007 national championship teams.
+In 2001 the hotel was opened as a Hilton Budapest Westend, the recent name underlines its city central location and is used since 2014.
+Saeid Mahdioun () was an Iranian fighter pilot.
+Konar Esmail (, also Romanized as Konār Esmā‘īl, Kenār Esmā‘īl, Konār-e Esmā‘īl) is a village in Band-e Zarak Rural District, in the Central District of Minab County, Hormozgan Province, Iran.
+Philadelphia, a venue in Pennsylvania, US Xfinity Arena, former name of Angel of the Winds Arena, a venue in Everett, Washington, US Comcast Center (disambiguation)
+This show is particularly prominent amongst the active rock radio genre.
+Arms in 1952 she painted as Winifred L. Arms.
+The first live teleteatro was "Una noche en familia", which was broadcast in central hours in 1966.
+Runner-up Arizona was not declared the champion, as there was no way to determine if Arizona would have won had Harding not been involved.
+Wilhelm Dittenberger, Sylloge Inscriptionum Graecarum (Collection of Greek Inscriptions, abbreviated SIG), Leipzig (1883); Orientis Graeci Inscriptiones Selectae (Select Inscriptions from the Greek East, abbreviated OGIS), Leipzig (1905).
+Eupogonesthes xenicus, the Exotic snaggletooth, is a species of barbeled dragonfish found in the eastern Indian Ocean.
+Own goals in italicsPremier DivisionScottish CupLeague CupUEFA CupLeague tableReferencesSee also 1982–83 in Scottish footballCategory:Scottish football championship-winning seasonsCategory:Dundee United F.C.
+The opposition parties however claimed the election was fraudulent and boycotted this parliamentary election.
+Singles The debut and lead single, called "Some Way" featuring The Weeknd, was released as a digital download on February 16, 2017.
+Historically, during the Battle of Havant, Hilsea was the terminus of an omnibus link from Havant New, just east of Havant.
+Station layoutThe elevated station has two side platforms serving two tracks.
+ExamplesTypical values are:See also Belousov–Zhabotinsky reaction Molecular chaos Three-body problemReferencesCategory:Dynamical systems
+Chris Greene may refer to: Chris Greene (broadcaster) (born 1988), Irish broadcaster and comedian Chris H. Greene, American physicistSee alsoChristopher Greene (1737–1781), U.S. legislator and soldierChristopher Becker Greene (1901–1944)Chris Green (disambiguation)Christopher Green (disambiguation)
+On 5 January 1999, Vodafone UK connected its 5 millionth customer.
+E314 or E-314 may be: Guaiacum, a food additive European route E314, a European route class B road connecting the Belgian city of Leuven with the German city of Aachen
+Mykhailo Ilyich Bondarenko (; 8 September 1903 – 10 February 1938) was a Ukrainian and Soviet politician, who served as the Chairman of the Council of People's Commissars of Ukrainian SSR (today's equivalent of prime-minister) from August to October 1937.
+Suárez earned his first major league win on May 11, pitching a scoreless top of the 13th inning against the Toronto Blue Jays, escaping a bases-loaded jam by inducing José Bautista to pop out.
+EducationNji Oumarou Nchare was raised in Cameroon, Africa, the son of Mbouombouo Moussa and Lipainpouo Amina.
+Chief Barons of the Irish ExchequerWalter de Islip 1309William de Meones 1311Nicholas de Balscote 1313Richard le Brun 1319Adam de Harvington (or Herwynton) 1324Thomas de Montpellier 1327Roger de Birthorpe 1327John de Braideston 1329William de Tickhill 1331Robert le Poer first term 1331Thomas atte Crosse 1335Hugh de Burgh first term 1337Robert le Poer second term 1339Hugh de Burgh second term 1344Robert de Emeldon 1351John de Burnham 1355Robert de Holywood first term 1363John Keppock 1364Robert de Holywood, second term 1367Stephen Bray first term 1376Henry Mitchell 1376Stephen Bray second term 1377Thomas Bache first term 1381William de Karlell 1383Thomas Bache second term 1384William Skrene 1395William Tynbegh first term 1397Richard Rede 1399Robert Sutton 1401Thomas Bache third term 1403William Tynbegh second term 1405James Fitzwilliam 1413William Tynbegh third term 1417James Uriell 1417James Cornwalsh first term 1420Richard Sydgrave 1423James Cornwalsh second term 1426John Cornwalsh 1441Michael Gryffin or Gryffen 1441John Cornwalsh second term 1446Thomas Bathe, 1st Baron Louth 1473Henry Duffe 1478Thomas Plunket 1480Oliver FitzEustace 1482John Burnell 1482 DeputyJohn Estrete 1487 DeputyJohn Wyse 1492Clement Fitzleones 1493 DeputyWalter Ivers 1494John Topcliffe 1496Walter St. Lawrence 1496Thomas Kent 1504Richard Golding 1511Bartholomew Dillon 1514Richard Golding, second term 1515Patrick Finglas 1520Gerald Aylmer 25 June 1534Patrick Finglas, second term, 1535Richard Delahide 1537James Bathe 1540Lucas Dillon 1570Robert Napier 1593Edmund Pelham 1602Humphrey Winch 8 November 1606John Denham 1609William Methold 1612Sir John Blennerhassett 1621Richard Bolton 1625Edward Bolton 1639Miles Corbet 1655John Bysse 1660Henry Hene 1680Stephen Rice 1687John Hely 5 December 1690Sir Robert Doyne 10 May 1695Nehemiah Donnellan 27 December 1703Richard Freeman 25 June 1706Robert Rochfort 12 June 1707Joseph Deane 14 October 1714Jeffrey Gilbert 16 June 1715Bernard Hale 9 June 1722Thomas Dalton 2 September 1725Thomas Marlay 29 September 1730John Bowes 21 December 1741Edward Willes 11 March 1757Anthony Foster 5 September 1766James Dennis (afterwards Baron Tracton) 3 July 1777Walter Hussey Burgh 2 July 1782Barry Yelverton (afterwards Viscount Avonmore) 29 November 1783Standish O'Grady (afterwards Viscount Guillamore) 5 October 1805Henry Joy 6 January 1831Stephen Woulfe 20 July 1838Maziere Brady, 11 February 1840David Richard Pigot 1 September 1846Christopher Palles 10 February 1874ReferencesCategory:Lists of Irish people by occupation ExchequerIrish ExchequerIrish Exchequer
+He is a graduate of Huntington Beach High School.
+He successfully competed on Dutch tracks in the late 1940s, but died in a road accident in October 1950.
+Václav Klaus Jr. on the other hand stated that 11% is a poor result that doesn't give the party a chance to uphold its ideas and also means that ODS will remain in opposition.
+ReferencesCategory:Populated places in Khojavend District
+Andy "Kid" DePaul (born Andrew A. DiPaolo; November 22, 1928 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania – September 6, 2014) was a noted amateur and professional boxer and referee.
+The obovate leaves are long and wide with finely serrated margins.
+The third and final series was made available worldwide on Netflix on 25 March 2016.
+According to the investigators, Anmol called the landline phone around 11:30 pm, and the call lasted 34 seconds.
+ESSA-8 was a weather satellite launched by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) on December 15, 1968, from Vandenberg Air Force Base, California.
+The wooden pulpit is of the 17th century.
+This is a filmography of famous Grammy award-winning rap artist Method Man who is also an actor.
+Eagle-Tribune Publishing Company.
+References Category:Villages in Krishna district
+He was included in the squad for that tournament, playing as a substitute in two of Grenada's three group B games.
+There is a dam with hydroelectric generating capacity on the Ziz near Er Rachidia.
+Krymskoye Urban Settlement () is a municipal formation (an urban settlement) in Krymsky Municipal District of Krasnodar Krai, Russia.
+The national parks of South Korea are preserved parcels of public land on which most forms of development are prohibited.
+Tyukalinsky District () is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the thirty-two in Omsk Oblast, Russia.
+The Simeulue parrot (Psittinus (cyanurus) abbotti) is a parrot endemic to two small islands off Sumatra.
+Ottoman EmpireIn 1517, the village was incorporated into the Ottoman Empire with the rest of Palestine, and in 1596, Beit Lahia appeared in Ottoman tax registers as being in nahiya (subdistrict) of Gaza under the Gaza Sanjak.
+A list of films released in Japan in 1995 (see 1995 in film).
+How can electromagnetic energy (photons) be efficiently converted to chemical energy?
+117th and 933d Field Artillery Battalions consolidated 2 May 1959 to form the 117th Artillery, a parent regiment under the Combat Arms Regimental System, to consist of the 1st and 2d Howitzer Battalions, elements of the 31st Infantry Division.
+ReferencesCategory:Villages in Republika SrpskaCategory:Populated places in Foča
+It is known from the Philippines.
+The building was built on the same site as the bank's previous headquarters.
+ReferencesBibliography Category:Monarchs of Mrauk-UCategory:1435 birthsCategory:1494 deathsCategory:15th century in BurmaCategory:15th-century monarchs in Asia
+Hiroshi Ono can refer to: Hiroshi Ono (photographer) (born 1971), Japanese photographer Hiroshi Ono (scholar), Japanese scholar Hiroshi Ono (weightlifter) (born 1950), Japanese Olympic weightlifter
+The list of shipwrecks in October 1843 includes ships sunk, foundered, wrecked, grounded, or otherwise lost during October 1843.
+ReferencesExternal linksCategory:Chinese filmsCategory:Chinese romantic comedy filmsCategory:2013 filmsCategory:2010s romantic comedy filmsCategory:China Film Group Corporation films
+FamilyJohn married Beatrice of Saint-Pol, they had: William IV TalvasNotesReferencesPonthieu, John I ofCategory:Counts of PonthieuCategory:Year of birth uncertainCategory:12th-century Normans
+On October 19, an Emerson College poll showed McMullin leading the race in Utah by 4 points over Donald Trump and 7 points over Hillary Clinton.
+He competed in the men's coxless four event at the 1996 Summer Olympics.
+The Italian edition has as an Appendix (headed 'L'ignoto') a fuller version of the English Chapter 4, 'The Unknown', a digression that gives background historical information on the mountain.
+It was designed by Emery Roth & Sons and Vincent G. Kling (who also designed the Philadelphia Mint).
+Teragra althodes is a moth in the family Cossidae.
+2019–2020 season Making her junior international debut, Schizas placed fifth at the Volvo Open Cup in November 2019 in Riga, Latvia.
+The interior has retained much of its original woodwork, include wide floorboards on the second floor, fine carved fireplace surrounds on the ground floor, and the carved elements of the main staircase and hall.
+After graduation, he worked in the Ministry of Labour.
+The University of Cincinnati inaugurated the Elliston Poet-in-Residence Program in 1951.Notable George Elliston Poets John Ashbery Wendell Berry John Berryman Lynn Emanuel Robert Frost Alice Fulton Louise Glück Albert Goldbarth Marilyn Hacker Donald Hall Michael Harper Jane Hirshfield John Hollander Richard Howard Randall Jarrell Donald Justice Carolyn Kizer David Lehman Denise Levertov Philip Levine Robert Lowell Heather McHugh Marilyn Nelson Mary Oliver Molly Peacock David St. John Louis Simpson Gary Soto Gary Snyder Stephen Spender William Stafford Ellen Bryant Voigt David Wagoner C.D.
+Données Biographiques, Brussel, Académie Royale de Belgique, 1996, p. 159.
+The Tsunami PTSD Center will actively raise funds from the public and private sectors in order to execute its mission.
+About half of the material was original, but Bruce Woodley penned a couple of interesting collaborations with Paul Simon ("Cloudy") and Tom Paxton ("Angeline Is Always Friday").
+She stars in Hindi, Kannada, Punjabi and Gujarati films.
+Ibarra was married to his schoolmate Nora, they had two sons.
+On February 20, 2013, it was announced that Office Depot and OfficeMax would combine in an all stock deal, pending regulatory approval and stockholder approval.
+While with the Argonauts, Reed backed up CFL star Chuck Ealey.
+ReferencesCategory:AeshnidaeCategory:Insects described in 1939Category:Taxonomy articles created by Polbot
+Exelastis ebalensis is a moth of the family Pterophoridae.
+Track listingChartsSales and certificationsReferencesCategory:2002 greatest hits albumsCategory:Chayanne compilation albumsCategory:Sony Discos compilation albumsCategory:Spanish-language compilation albums
+Category:1770 birthsCategory:1827 deathsCategory:People from PsaraCategory:Greek admiralsCategory:Members of the Filiki EteriaCategory:Greek people of the Greek War of IndependenceCategory:18th-century Greek people
+ReferencesCategory:Populated places in the Junín Region
+Leng equals a Pint.
+The successful hatching was featured in Animal Planet's "BUTAAN: The Lost Dragon".
+The team's statistical leaders included Curtis Brown with 844 rushing yards, Pete Woods with 996 passing yards and 1,189 yards of total offense, Joe Stewart with 834 receiving yards, and placekicker Tim Gibbons with 62 points scored.
+2010 Winter OlympicsHe competed at the 2010 Winter Olympics in the Halfpipe.
+Personal life Smith is married to Robert C. Smith, who is a professor at John Marshall Law School.
+Caires may refer to: Caires, Portugal, a parish in Amares municipality Frank De Caires (1909–1959), British Guianese cricketer José Alfredo Caires de Nobrega (born 1951), the bishop of the Diocese of Mananjary, MadagascarSee also Caire (disambiguation)
+Finucane trialBarrett was interviewed for an episode of the BBC's documentary series Panorama'', which was examining the Finucane murder.
+Emperor Xuan of Northern Zhou (559–580), second last emperor of Northern Zhou.
+Background The album is Eno's sixth for Warp, and was recorded following the announcement of his first collaboration with Karl Hyde.
+GalleryReferencesCategory:Railway stations in Kozhikode districtCategory:Palakkad railway division
+Following his A Levels, Harri was accepted into The Queen's College, Oxford, where he studied Politics, Philosophy and Economics (PPE).
+Football was contested for men only at the 1974 Central American and Caribbean Games in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic.
+Panagiotis "Panos" Kalaitzakis (Greek: Παναγιώτης "Πάνος" Καλαϊτζάκης; born January 2, 1999) is a Greek professional basketball player for Nevėžis Kėdainiai of the Lithuanian Basketball League.
+On October 6, 2009, Tiësto released his fourth studio album, Kaleidoscope.
+Tony Pennock (2003–2008)Under 18 SquadThe FAW runs a semi-professional Under 18 squad using players primarily drawn from Welsh Premier League clubs.
+He arrived in the Philippines in 1820 andestablished the Jala Jala hacienda in Morong (present-day Rizal province).
+10 teams compete against one another and played each weekend.
+WPRM may refer to:WPRM-FM, a radio station in Puerto Rico operated by Cadena SalsoulWestern Pacific Railroad Museum, a museum in Portola, California, United StatesWorker-Peasant Red Guards, also translated as Workers and Peasants' Red Militia, North Korean paramilitary force
+ReferencesBestwiny
+Moore Hall may refer to:in EnglandMoore Hall, Cheshirein IrelandMoore Hall, Co. Mayo, the ancestral home of the Moore family in Carra, County Mayo, Irelandin the United StatesMoore Hall (Kansas State University), a dormitory, in Manhattan, KansasMoore Hall (Phoenixville, Pennsylvania), listed on the National Register of Historic Places in eastern Chester County, PennsylvaniaCategory:Architectural disambiguation pages
+The Convenors’ Award for Excellence is one of the Aurealis Awards presented annually by the Australia-based Chimaera Publications and WASFF to published works in order to "recognise the achievements of Australian science fiction, fantasy, horror writers".
+In October 1924, he sold it to brothers Henry W. and Percy W. Mathieu.
+Two of their children survived infancy:John Cecil, 5th Earl of Exeter (c. 1648–1700)Lady Frances Cecil (1652–1694), married John Scudamore, 2nd Viscount Scudamore.
+With the time of 49.64 seconds she won a bronze medal in 400 metres at the 1992 Olympic Games, Colombia's first athletics medal.
+Griffin had secured 1,157 votes compared to the 1,148 votes for Brons.
+He specialises in military adventures and spy thrillers and created the character Sam Packer.
+Besides the promoted draft, the show was billed as "Mr. McMahon Appreciation Night", a tribute of appreciation to the WWE Chairman, Vince McMahon, who was blown up in his limousine later that night.
+For his sport achievements, he received the Silver Cross of Merit in 2000.
+He mortgaged his house, paid compensation to the distributors and paid the balance fee to Pandari Bai and Mynavathi.
+Ferrières-Saint-Mary is a commune in the Cantal department in south-central France.
+The Salzachgeier has a double summit where five sharp ridges run together.
+Wellenreiter is the largest yacht ever to be launched by Jongert.
+Gest is a surname.
+For every 100 females, there were 108.6 males.
+Originally a toll bridge, it is now toll free, and is the only road bridge over the river between Conwy and Llanrwst.
+Statistics Pole Position - Teo Fabi (#4 Silk Cut Jaguar) - 1:27.188 Fastest Lap - Yannick Dalmas (#6 Peugeot Talbot Sport) - 1:30.615 Average Speed - 177.891 km/hExternal links WSPR-Racing - 1991 Autopolis resultsAutopolisAutopolis
+In June 2009, he was promoted to first team to be a third-choice goalkeeper, and received the 91 jersey.
+However, he lost his place in October 1913 and after colliding with low railings at The Old Recreation Ground on 26 January 1914 was out of action for some time.
+LISD covers of land within the City of Austin, making up 8% of the city's territory.
+Paul Volpe may refer to: Paul Volpe (mobster), Italian-Canadian mobster Paul Volpe (poker player), American poker player
+Thenniyankulam is a small town in Sri Lanka.
+Ka`lul is a village in Jizan Province, in south-western Saudi Arabia.
+Li Tchoan King (born in China on 6 May 1904; died in Toulon on 19 August 1971) was a Chinese-born draughts player and former French national champion.
+The couple plan to raise their children as Jewish.
+Ubiquinone, plastoquinone or menaquinone can act as acceptor in different species.
+ReferencesCategory:Living peopleCategory:Punjab MPAs 2013–2018Category:Pakistan Muslim League (N) politiciansCategory:1968 births
+It can also be found in the aquarium trade.
+After living in the hotel for a month, the royal family moved into a house near the government offices.
+Notable alumni Mike Payne, Former professional baseball player (Atlanta Braves) Esix Snead, Former professional baseball player (New York Mets) Max White, Professional baseball player (Colorado Rockies)ReferencesExternal links Williston Middle High School website School Board of Levy County websiteWilliston Middle High School JROTCCategory:High schools in Levy County, FloridaCategory:Public high schools in FloridaCategory:Williston, Florida
+See also Ending (linguistics) Inflection Lexical word vs. grammatical word Marker (linguistics) Multiword expression Null morpheme Root (linguistics) Stem Word familyNotesReferencesExternal links Category:Lexical units
+The case was dismissed at the government's request, and Gallagher was dismissed.
+A prisoners rights group, End the Odds, had also campaigned for his release.
+The NS-45 was also mounted on the prototype Tupolev Tu-1 night fighter after the end of World War II.
+It originally launched on August 27, 2009.
+He led the early efforts against the effects of the Irish Famine but died of typhoid on 24 August 1847 (as had his kinsman, Thomas Barnwall Martin).
+From 1984 to 1999, he worked for Computer Sciences Corporation at the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore, Maryland.
+William Burrell may also refer to:Sir William Burrell, 2nd BaronetBill Burrell, American football playerSee alsoBurrell (surname)
+It is situated right off the Mecca-Jeddah Road.
+Season 2009 flu pandemic in Thailand 2009 King's Cup 2009 PTT Thailand Open 2009 Queen's Cup 2009 Thailand National Games 2009 Thailand Standoff 2010 floods in Thailand and north Malaysia 2010 Thai political protests 2010 Thailand National Games 2017–18 Thai temple fraud investigations 2018 in Thailand 20th World Scout Jamboree 300 Years Mosque 303 Fear Faith Revenge 31st Infantry Regiment (Thailand) 3K Battery 4 Romance 4bia 5th December Stadium 6 October 1976 Massacre 60th Anniversary Celebrations of Bhumibol Adulyadej's Accession 700th Anniversary Stadium 72-years Anniversary Stadium 999-9999A Abbhantripaja Abhakara Kiartivongse Abortion in Thailand Accademia Italiana Thailand Action Coalition for Thailand Aditayadornkitikhun Ajrabarni Rajkanya AirAsia Group destinations Aircraft Accident Investigation Committee Airport Rail Link (Bangkok) Ajahn Chah Ajahn Khemadhammo Ajahn Maha Bua Achan Sobin S. Namto Ajahn Sao Kantasilo Mahathera Ajahn Sumedho Ajahn Thate Alcohol advertising in Thailand AMATA Corporation PCL Amnesty International Thailand Ancient Siam Andaman Sea Andy Ricker Animal welfare in Thailand Anjaree Anocha Panjoy Anon Nanok Anon Sangsanoi Anti-Money Laundering Office (Thailand) Anucha Chaiyawong Anucha Munjarern Anupong Paochinda Anupong Polasak Anurak Srikerd Anusorn Simee Anusorn Srichaluang Anuthin Wongsunkakon Anuwat Kaewsamrit Ao Nang Ao Phang Nga National Park Apaimanee Saga Apasiri Nitibhon Apasra Hongsakula Apichatpong Weerasethakul Apichet Puttan Apidej Sit Hrun Apinan Kaewpila Apinan Poshyananda Apinan Sukaphai Apipu Suntornpanavej Apirak Kosayodhin Apiruck Sriaroon Apiwat Ngaolamhin Apiwat Saisoi Aranya Namwong Aranyik Architecture of Thailand Areca nut Aree Wiratthaworn Areeya Chumsai Ariyavangsagatayana, 9th Supreme Patriarch of Thailand Ariyavangsagatayana, 16th Supreme Patriarch of Thailand Ariyavangsagatayana, 17th Supreme Patriarch of Thailand Ariyavangsagatayana, 18th Supreme Patriarch of Thailand Arkhom Chenglai Armed Forces Academies Preparatory School Army General Staff Plot Art of the Devil 2 Art of the Devil 3 Art of the Devil Arthit Kamlangek Arthit Sunthornpit Articerodes ohmumoi Asalha Puja Asanee-Wasan Asda Jayanama ASEAN Declaration ASEAN Asia Books Asia Times Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Asia-Pacific International University Asian Club Championship 1971 Asian elephant Asian Institute of Technology Asian University Asiatique Aslian languages Asok Station Assembly of the Poor Assets Examination Committee (Thailand) Assumption Cathedral, Bangkok Assumption College (Thailand) Assumption College Sriracha Assumption Samutprakarn School Assumption University (Thailand) Athittayawong Attaphol Buspakom Attaqwa Mosque Atthapol Poonarae Atthasit Mahitthi Australia-Thailand relations Auto rickshaw Automotive industry in Thailand AutoAlliance Thailand Auttapon Prakopkong Axis powers Ayodhya (opera) Ayothaya (town) Ayutthaya (city) Ayutthaya Historical Park Ayutthaya Kingdom Ayutthaya Railway Station Ayutthaya Stadium Ayya (Pali word)Amphoe Amphoe Bacho Amphoe Bamnet Narong Amphoe Ban Bueng Amphoe Ban Chang Amphoe Ban Dan Lan Hoi Amphoe Ban Dan Amphoe Ban Dung Amphoe Ban Fang Amphoe Ban Haet Amphoe Ban Hong Amphoe Ban Kha Amphoe Ban Khai Amphoe Ban Khok Amphoe Ban Khwao Amphoe Ban Kruat Amphoe Ban Laem Amphoe Ban Lat Amphoe Ban Luang Amphoe Ban Lueam Amphoe Ban Mai Chaiyaphot Amphoe Ban Mi Amphoe Ban Mo Amphoe Ban Muang Amphoe Ban Na Doem Amphoe Ban Na San Amphoe Ban Na Amphoe Ban Phaeng Amphoe Ban Phaeo Amphoe Ban Phai Amphoe Ban Pho Amphoe Ban Phraek Amphoe Ban Phue Amphoe Ban Pong Amphoe Ban Rai Amphoe Ban Sang Amphoe Ban Ta Khun Amphoe Ban Tak Amphoe Ban Thaen Amphoe Ban Thi Amphoe Bang Ban Amphoe Bang Bo Amphoe Bang Bua Thong Amphoe Bang Kaeo Amphoe Bang Khan Amphoe Bang Khla Amphoe Bang Khonthi Amphoe Bang Klam Amphoe Bang Krathum Amphoe Bang Kruai Amphoe Bang Lamung Amphoe Bang Len Amphoe Bang Mun Nak Amphoe Bang Nam Priao Amphoe Bang Pahan Amphoe Bang Pakong Amphoe Bang Phae Amphoe Bang Phli Amphoe Bang Pla Ma Amphoe Bang Rachan Amphoe Bang Rakam Amphoe Bang Sai (1404) Amphoe Bang Sai (1413) Amphoe Bang Sao Thong Amphoe Bang Saphan Amphoe Bang Saphan Noi Amphoe Bang Yai Amphoe Bannang Sata Amphoe Banphot Phisai Amphoe Benchalak Amphoe Betong Amphoe Bo Kluea Amphoe Bo Phloi Amphoe Bo Rai Amphoe Bo Thong Amphoe Borabue Amphoe Bua Lai Amphoe Bua Yai Amphoe Buachet Amphoe Bueng Bun Amphoe Bueng Kan Amphoe Bueng Khong Long Amphoe Bueng Na Rang Amphoe Bueng Sam Phan Amphoe Bueng Samakkhi Amphoe Bung Khla Amphoe Buntharik Amphoe Cha-uat Amphoe Chae Hom Amphoe Chai Badan Amphoe Chai Buri Amphoe Chai Prakan Amphoe Chai Wan Amphoe Chaiyo Amphoe Chakkarat Amphoe Chaloem Phra Kiat, Buriram Province Amphoe Chaloem Phra Kiat, Nakhon Ratchasima Province Amphoe Chaloem Phra Kiat, Nakhon Si Thammarat Province Amphoe Chaloem Phra Kiat, Nan Province Amphoe Chaloem Phra Kiat, Saraburi Province Amphoe Chamni Amphoe Chana Amphoe Chanae Amphoe Chang Klang Amphoe Changhan Amphoe Chanuman Amphoe Charoen Sin Amphoe Chat Trakan Amphoe Chatturat Amphoe Chaturaphak Phiman Amphoe Chawang Amphoe Chian Yai Amphoe Chiang Dao Amphoe Chiang Kham Amphoe Chiang Khan Amphoe Chiang Khong Amphoe Chiang Khwan Amphoe Chiang Klang Amphoe Chiang Muan Amphoe Chiang Saen Amphoe Chiang Yuen Amphoe Cho-airong Amphoe Chok Chai Amphoe Chom Bueng Amphoe Chom Phra Amphoe Chom Thong, Chiang Mai Province Amphoe Chon Daen Amphoe Chonnabot Amphoe Chuen Chom Amphoe Chulabhorn Amphoe Chum Phae Amphoe Chum Phuang Amphoe Chum Saeng Amphoe Chum Ta Bong Amphoe Chumphon Buri Amphoe Chun Amphoe Damnoen Saduak Amphoe Dan Chang Amphoe Dan Khun Thot Amphoe Dan Makham Tia Amphoe Dan Sai Amphoe Den Chai Amphoe Det Udom Amphoe Doem Bang Nang Buat Amphoe Doi Lo Amphoe Doi Luang Amphoe Doi Saket Amphoe Doi Tao Amphoe Dok Khamtai Amphoe Don Chan Amphoe Don Chedi Amphoe Don Mot Daeng Amphoe Don Phut Amphoe Don Sak Amphoe Don Tan Amphoe Don Tum Amphoe Dong Charoen Amphoe Dong Luang Amphoe Erawan Amphoe Fak Tha Amphoe Fang Amphoe Fao Rai Amphoe Galyani Vadhana Amphoe Hang Chat Amphoe Hang Dong Amphoe Hankha Amphoe Hat Samran Amphoe Hat Yai Amphoe Hot Amphoe Hua Sai Amphoe Hua Taphan Amphoe Huai Khot Amphoe Huai Krachao Amphoe Huai Mek Amphoe Huai Phueng Amphoe Huai Rat Amphoe Huai Thalaeng Amphoe Huai Thap Than Amphoe Huai Yot Amphoe In Buri Amphoe Omkoi Amphoe Ongkharak Amphoe Pa Bon Amphoe Pa Daet Amphoe Pa Mok Amphoe Pa Phayom Amphoe Pa Sang Amphoe Pa Tio Amphoe Pai Amphoe Pak Chom Amphoe Pak Chong Amphoe Pak Khat Amphoe Pak Kret Amphoe Pak Phanang Amphoe Pak Phayun Amphoe Pak Phli Amphoe Pak Tho Amphoe Pak Thong Chai Amphoe Pakham Amphoe Palian Amphoe Panare Amphoe Pang Mapha Amphoe Pang Sila Thong Amphoe Pathio Amphoe Pathum Rat Amphoe Pathum Ratchawongsa Amphoe Pha Khao Amphoe Phachi Amphoe Phaisali Amphoe Phak Hai Amphoe Phakdi Chumphon Amphoe Phan Thong Amphoe Phan Amphoe Phana Amphoe Phanat Nikhom Amphoe Phang Khon Amphoe Phanna Nikhom Amphoe Phanom Dong Rak Amphoe Phanom Phrai Amphoe Phanom Sarakham Amphoe Phanom Thuan Amphoe Phanom Amphoe Phato Amphoe Phatthana Nikhom Amphoe Phaya Mengrai Amphoe Phayakkhaphum Phisai Amphoe Phayu Amphoe Phayuha Khiri Amphoe Phen Amphoe Phibun Mangsahan Amphoe Phibun Rak Amphoe Phichai Amphoe Phimai Amphoe Phipun Amphoe Phlapphla Chai Amphoe Pho Chai Amphoe Pho Prathap Chang Amphoe Pho Sai Amphoe Pho Si Suwan Amphoe Pho Tak Amphoe Pho Thale Amphoe Pho Thong Amphoe Phon Charoen Amphoe Phon Na Kaeo Amphoe Phon Phisai Amphoe Phon Sai Amphoe Phon Sawan Amphoe Phon Thong Amphoe Phon Amphoe Phop Phra Amphoe Photharam Amphoe Phra Nakhon Si Ayutthaya Amphoe Phra Phrom Amphoe Phra Phutthabat Amphoe Phra Pradaeng Amphoe Phra Samut Chedi Amphoe Phra Thong Kham Amphoe Phra Yuen Amphoe Phrai Bueng Amphoe Phran Kratai Amphoe Phrao Amphoe Phrasaeng Amphoe Phrom Buri Amphoe Phrom Khiri Amphoe Phrom Phiram Amphoe Phu Kamyao Amphoe Phu Khiao Amphoe Phu Kradueng Amphoe Phu Luang Amphoe Phu Pha Man Amphoe Phu Phan Amphoe Phu Phiang Amphoe Phu Ruea Amphoe Phu Sang Amphoe Phu Sing Amphoe Phu Wiang Amphoe Phutthaisong Amphoe Phutthamonthon Amphoe Pla Pak Amphoe Plaeng Yao Amphoe Plai Phraya Amphoe Pluak Daeng Amphoe Pong Nam Ron Amphoe Pong Amphoe Prachaksinlapakhom Amphoe Prachantakham Amphoe Prakhon Chai Amphoe Pran Buri Amphoe Prang Ku Amphoe Prasat Amphoe Prathai Amphoe Pua Amphoe Pueai Noi Amphoe Ra-ngae Amphoe Raman Amphoe Ranot Amphoe Rasi Salai Amphoe Ratchasan Amphoe Ratsada Amphoe Rattanaburi Amphoe Rattanawapi Amphoe Rattaphum Amphoe Renu Nakhon Amphoe Ron Phibun Amphoe Rong Kham Amphoe Rong Kwang Amphoe Rueso Amphoe Sa Bot Amphoe Saba Yoi Amphoe Sadao Amphoe Sahatsakhan Amphoe Sai Buri Amphoe Sai Mun Amphoe Sai Ngam Amphoe Sai Noi Amphoe Sai Thong Watthana Amphoe Sai Yok Amphoe Sak Lek Amphoe Sakhrai Amphoe Sam Chai Amphoe Sam Chuk Amphoe Sam Khok Amphoe Sam Ngam Amphoe Sam Ngao Amphoe Sam Phran Amphoe Sam Roi Yot Amphoe Sam Sung Amphoe Samko Amphoe Samoeng Amphoe Samrong Thap Amphoe Samrong Amphoe San Kamphaeng Amphoe San Pa Tong Amphoe San Sai Amphoe Sanam Chai Khet Amphoe Sang Khom Amphoe Sangkha Amphoe Sangkhla Buri Amphoe Sangkhom Amphoe Sankhaburi Amphoe Sanom Amphoe Santi Suk Amphoe Sao Hai Amphoe Sap Yai Amphoe Sapphaya Amphoe Saraphi Amphoe Sathing Phra Amphoe Sattahip Amphoe Satuek Amphoe Sawaeng Ha Amphoe Sawang Arom Amphoe Sawang Daen Din Amphoe Sawang Wirawong Amphoe Sawankhalok Amphoe Sawi Amphoe Seka Amphoe Selaphum Amphoe Sena Amphoe Senangkhanikhom Amphoe Si Banphot Amphoe Si Bun Rueang Amphoe Si Chiang Mai Amphoe Si Chomphu Amphoe Si Maha Phot Amphoe Si Mahosot Amphoe Si Mueang Mai Amphoe Si Nakhon Amphoe Si Narong Amphoe Si Prachan Amphoe Si Racha Amphoe Si Rattana Amphoe Si Sakhon Amphoe Si Samrong Amphoe Si Satchanalai Amphoe Si Sawat Amphoe Si Somdet Amphoe Si Songkhram Amphoe Si That Amphoe Si Thep Amphoe Si Wilai Amphoe Sichon Amphoe Sida Amphoe Sikao Amphoe Sikhio Amphoe Sikhoraphum Amphoe Sila Lat Amphoe Singhanakhon Amphoe Sirindhorn Amphoe So Phisai Amphoe Soem Ngam Amphoe Soeng Sang Amphoe Soi Dao Amphoe Somdet Amphoe Song Dao Amphoe Song Khwae Amphoe Song Phi Nong Amphoe Song Amphoe Sop Moei Amphoe Sop Prap Amphoe Srinagarindra Amphoe Su-ngai Kolok Amphoe Su-ngai Padi Amphoe Suan Phueng Amphoe Suk Samran Amphoe Sukhirin Amphoe Sung Men Amphoe Sung Noen Amphoe Suwannakhuha Amphoe Suwannaphum Amphoe Ta Phraya Amphoe Tak Bai Amphoe Tak Fa Amphoe Takhli Amphoe Takua Pa Amphoe Takua Thung Amphoe Tamot Amphoe Tan Sum Amphoe Tao Ngoi Amphoe Tap Khlo Amphoe Taphan Hin Amphoe Tha Bo Amphoe Tha Chana Amphoe Tha Chang, Sing Buri Province Amphoe Tha Chang, Surat Thani Province Amphoe Tha Khantho Amphoe Tha Li Amphoe Tha Luang Amphoe Tha Mai Amphoe Tha Maka Amphoe Tha Muang Amphoe Tha Phae Amphoe Tha Pla Amphoe Tha Ruea Amphoe Tha Sae Amphoe Tha Sala Amphoe Tha Song Yang Amphoe Tha Takiap Amphoe Tha Tako Amphoe Tha Tum Amphoe Tha Uthen Amphoe Tha Wang Pha Amphoe Tha Wung Amphoe Tha Yang Amphoe Thai Charoen Amphoe Thai Mueang Amphoe Thalang Amphoe Tham Phannara Amphoe Than To Amphoe Thanyaburi Amphoe Thap Put Amphoe Thap Sakae Amphoe Thap Than Amphoe That Phanom Amphoe Thawat Buri Amphoe Thep Sathit Amphoe Thepha Amphoe Thepharak Amphoe Thoen Amphoe Thoeng Amphoe Thong Pha Phum Amphoe Thong Saen Khan Amphoe Thung Chang Amphoe Thung Fon Amphoe Thung Hua Chang Amphoe Thung Khao Luang Amphoe Thung Saliam Amphoe Thung Si Udom Amphoe Thung Song Amphoe Thung Tako Amphoe Thung Wa Amphoe Thung Yai Amphoe Thung Yang Daeng Amphoe Trakan Phuet Phon Amphoe Tron Amphoe U Thong Amphoe Ubolratana Amphoe Umphang Amphoe Uthai Amphoe Uthumphon Phisai Amphoe Vibhavadi Amphoe Wachirabarami Amphoe Waeng Noi Amphoe Waeng Yai Amphoe Waeng Amphoe Wan Yai Amphoe Wang Chan Amphoe Wang Chao Amphoe Wang Chin Amphoe Wang Hin Amphoe Wang Muang Amphoe Wang Nam Khiao Amphoe Wang Nam Yen Amphoe Wang Noi Amphoe Wang Nuea Amphoe Wang Pong Amphoe Wang Sai Phun Amphoe Wang Sam Mo Amphoe Wang Saphung Amphoe Wang Sombun Amphoe Wang Thong Amphoe Wang Wiset Amphoe Wang Yang Amphoe Wanon Niwat Amphoe Wapi Pathum Amphoe Warin Chamrap Amphoe Waritchaphum Amphoe Wat Bot Amphoe Wat Phleng Amphoe Wat Sing Amphoe Watthana Nakhon Amphoe Wiang Chai Amphoe Wiang Chiang Rung Amphoe Wiang Haeng Amphoe Wiang Kaen Amphoe Wiang Kao Amphoe Wiang Nong Long Amphoe Wiang Pa Pao Amphoe Wiang Sa, Nan Province Amphoe Wiang Sa, Surat Thani Province Amphoe Wichian Buri Amphoe Wihan Daeng Amphoe Wiset Chai Chan Amphoe Yaha Amphoe Yan Ta Khao Amphoe Yang Chum Noi Amphoe Yang Sisurat Amphoe Yang Talat Amphoe Yarang Amphoe Yaring Amphoe Yi-ngoB Baan Haw Mosque Bahurada Manimaya Bai Sema Bai Yi Zhuan Baiyoke Tower II Bajrakitiyabha Bakery Music Bamrung Boonprom Ban Bang Krathum Ban Bong River Ban Chiang Ban Dong Ban Dongphayom Ban Grong Greng Ban Hin Taek Ban Ho Mosque Ban Khlong Ban Khung Taphao Ban Klang (disambiguation) Ban Klang, San Pa Tong Ban Klang, Wang Thong Ban Krang Ban Laemphrathat Ban Muang Ban Mung Ban Noi Sum Khilek Ban Non Wat Ban Nong Pradu Ban Pa Ban Phachi Junction Ban Phrao Ban Pla Khao Ban Pong (town) Ban Rai Ban Sam Ruen Ban Yaeng Banchob Benchama Banchob Sripa Bandid Jaiyen Bandon Bay Bang Chak Station Bang Kham River Bang Khun Thien Museum Bang Kachao Bang Krathum Bang Kwang Central Prison Bang Lamung township Bang Lang Reservoir Bang Len River Bang Na Expressway Bang Na Station Bang Nam Phueng Floating Market Bang Pa In Bang Pa-In Royal Palace Bang Pakong River Bang Pu Bang Rachan Bang Rajan (film) Bang Rakam Bang Saen Beach Bang Saphan District Bang Saphan Noi District Bang Saphan Noi railway station Bang Sue Central Station Bang Sue District Bang Tanai Bangkok Bangkok Adventist Hospital Bangkok Airways Flight 266 Bangkok Airways Open Bangkok Airways Bangkok Aquarium Bangkok Art and Culture Centre Bangkok Bank FC Bangkok Bank Ground Bangkok Bank Bangkok Boat Express Lines Bangkok Bravo FC Bangkok BRT Bangkok Christian College FC Bangkok Christian College Bangkok Christian Hospital Bangkok City Library Bangkok Corrections Museum Bangkok Dangerous (1999 film) Bangkok Dock Company Bangkok Doll Museum Bangkok Elevated Road and Train System Bangkok Fashion City Bangkok Fashion Trend Center Bangkok Folk Museum Bangkok Glass FC 2004 Bangkok gubernatorial election 2008 Bangkok gubernatorial election 2009 Bangkok gubernatorial election Bangkok Haunted Bangkok Hospital Bangkok International Film Festival Bangkok International Trade and Exhibition Centre Bangkok Land Bangkok Loco Bangkok Love Story Bangkok Mass Transit Authority Bangkok Metro Brown Line Bangkok Metro Orange Line Bangkok Metro Pink Line Bangkok Metro Purple Line Bangkok Metro Yellow Line Bangkok Metro Bangkok Metropolitan Administration Bangkok Metropolitan Area Bangkok Metropolitan Region Bangkok Noi Museum Bangkok Opera Bangkok Patana School Bangkok Planetarium Bangkok Post Bangkok Protestant Cemetery Bangkok Soccer League Bangkok Thonburi College Bangkok United Bangkok University Gallery Bangkok University Stadium Bangkok University Bangkokian Museum Bangpakok Wittayakom School Bangrak Museum Banharn-Jamsai Tower Banharn Silpa-archa Banjerd Singkaneti Banjong Pisanthanakun Bank for Agriculture and Agricultural Co-operatives Bank of Ayudhya Bank of Thailand Museum Bank of Thailand Bannang Sata (town) Bannang Sata District Banpu Public Company Limited Banyen Rakgan Bargirl Barisan Revolusi Nasional Basilochelys Battle of Ko Chang Battle of Prachuab Khirikhan Battle of Rạch Gầm-Xoài Mút Bay of Bangkok Bearing Station Beautiful Boxer Beautiful Wonderful Perfect BEC Tero Sasana FC BEC Tero Sasana Nong Chok Stadium BEC-TERO Beef phanaeng Beer in Thailand Beetlewing Bejaratana Rajasuda Bejaratana-Suvadhana Overture Bell tower (wat) Beluga School for Life Benchamabophit National Museum Benchamaratrungsarit 2 school Benjarong Benjasiri Park Bernard Chan (politician) Bernard Trink Bersatu (separatist organisation) Betong, Thailand Bhagadatta (Langkasuka) Bhandit Rittakol Bhandit Thongdee Bhanubandhu Yugala Bhanurangsi Savangwongse Bhichit Rattakul Bhisadej Rajani Bhubing Palace Bhumi Jensen Bhumibol Adulyadej Bhumjaithai Party Bhutan–Thailand relations Big Ass Big Brother (Thailand) Big Brother Thailand (season 1) Big Brother Thailand (season 2) Big C Binlah Sonkalagiri Biodegradable Packaging for Environment BIOTEC Bira Circuit Birabongse Bhanudej Black May (1992) Black Silk Blackbirds at Bangpleng Blissfully Yours Blue Diamond Affair BNH Hospital Bo Phak Bo Pho Bo Sang Bo Thong Bodindecha (Sing Singhaseni) School Body (2007 film) Body Jumper Bodyslam (band) Boesenbergia rotunda Bongkoch Comics Bongkoj Khongmalai Boon Rawd Brewery Boonchu Rojanastien Boonmee Boonrod Boonpong Sirivejjabhandu Boonreung Buachan Boonsak Ponsana Boonsanong Punyodyana Boonsong Chaisingkananont Border Patrol Police Boriwen Born to Fight (2004 film) Boromakot Boromma Chayasiri Borommaracha I Borommaracha III Borwornsak Uwanno Boworadet Rebellion Bowring Treaty Boyd Kosiyabong Brahmic family of scripts Bromsgrove International School Thailand (BIST) Bru people BTS Group Holdings BTS Skytrain Bua Yai Junction Buakaw Por.
+The Oxford Shooting Stars are a recreational ice hockey team based in Oxford, England.
+ReferencesBooksExternal links Category:1968 birthsCategory:2013 deathsCategory:American evangelicalsCategory:American politicians of Chinese descentCategory:American political writersCategory:American male non-fiction writersCategory:Writers from Charlotte, North CarolinaCategory:Tufts University alumniCategory:Deaths from cancer in North CarolinaCategory:George W. Bush administration personnel
+This species nests in the soil of grassland on seashores and lowlands (Onoyama, 1989).
+Subfamily Loriinae and the other tribes of subfamily Psittacinae are now placed in superfamily Psittacoidea of all true parrots, which includes family Psittacidae.
+KYKC 100.1 FM is a radio station licensed to Byng, Oklahoma.
+His form resulted in him being selected for the Great Britain boxing team to represent the nation at the 1952 Summer Olympics in Helsinki, Finland at the age of 21.
+The Guardian is a hereditary office of the Baháʼí Faith that is first mentioned in the Will and Testament of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá.
+It originates in the Finisterre Range and flows for to empty into the Huon Gulf at Lae.
+ReferencesExternal links The Goldsmiths' CompanyCategory:1339 establishments in EnglandCategory:Buildings and structures completed in 1835Category:Grade I listed buildings in the City of LondonCategory:Grade I listed livery hallsCategory:Livery hallsCategory:Philip Hardwick buildings
+ReferencesCategory:1946 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:East German footballersCategory:Chemnitzer FC playersCategory:DDR-Oberliga playersCategory:Association football midfielders
+Two singles were released: "Trans-Europe Express" and "Showroom Dummies".
+Notable people with the surname include:Charles Wanstall (1912–1999), Australian politician and judgeDouglas Wanstall (1899–1974), British Anglican clergymanHaylee Wanstall (born 1992), Canadian actressNorman Wanstall (born 1935), British sound editor
+In total, she scored 15 goals and recorded 13 assists in 76 appearances for the Minutewomen.
+We're No Angels is a 1955 Christmas comedy film directed by Michael Curtiz and starring Humphrey Bogart, Peter Ustinov, Aldo Ray, Joan Bennett, Basil Rathbone, and Leo G. Carroll.
+ReferencesCategory:Hamlets in Cornwall
+There has however been controversy over the demolition of the former Games Hall at Bishopbriggs High in May 2010.
+The film is known under the titles "The Impossible Mr. Pipelet" (international English title), "Ma fille et ses amours" Belgium French title), "Mijn dochter is verliefd" (Belgium Flemish title).
+A variety of Vallader was also used in Samnaun until the late 19th century, when speakers switched to Bavarian.
+In 2011 the average local and cantonal tax rate on a married resident, with two children, of Wattenwil making 150,000 CHF was 12.7%, while an unmarried resident's rate was 18.7%.
+The two-story house was built circa 1840.
+Perennial favorite Andre Agassi was eliminated in the first round by Aaron Krickstein.
+Leif Fritjof Måsvær (born 29 January 1941) is a Norwegian politician for the Christian Democratic Party.
+Ganga Lake may refer to: Ganga Lake (Pakistan)Ganga Lake (India) Ganga Lake (Mongolia) Ganga Talao (Mauritius) - Also called Ganga lake and Grand Basin
+SpecificationsReferencesCategory:1920s Polish sailplanesCategory:Aircraft first flown in 1927
+Station layoutExitsReferencesCategory:Railway stations in China opened in 2017Category:Guangzhou Metro stations in Zengcheng District
+Sources World-Gazetteer.comCategory:Populated places in Manabí Province
+Subsequently, he completed his bachelor's in mass media, with a major in advertising, from the University of Mumbai in 2004.
+The European Games were created in response to the IQA World Cup, the biennial tournament wherein nations from across the world compete in a similar style to the FIFA World Cup.
+This list contains the listed buildings in the outer area of the town, including the suburb of Baswich; those in the central area are in Listed buildings in Stafford (Central Area).
+BiographyEarly lifeSamir Dilou was born in Tunis in 1966.
+Tour dates were released on the same day for North America, and tickets were released on November 8, 2014.
+Among its members are two Catholic saints, three bishops, and five generals.
+The Japanese Occupation of the Malay Peninsula forced the closure of both schools, as British expatriates in the region (including Griffith-Jones) were interned by the Japanese at Singapore's Changi Prison and Sime Road Camp.
+An annular solar eclipse occurs when the Moon's apparent diameter is smaller than the Sun's, blocking most of the Sun's light and causing the Sun to look like an annulus (ring).
+FaunaRecorded breeding seabird and wader species include little penguin, short-tailed shearwater, Pacific gull, silver gull and sooty oystercatcher.
+IIM-B Second campusIndian Institute of Management Bangalore has plans for a second campus in Jigani very soon.
+He has worked with Appendix Out, Palace Music, Smog, Royal Trux, the Silver Jews and Edith Frost.
+The very first chapter of the national sorority Alpha Xi Delta was also founded there in 1893.
+The US version of Practical Footwear was trimmed back to six tracks, which Allmusic's Mike DaRonco described as "dreary but mature folk-pop anthems" with "[n]othing uplifting or outgoing, but Sodastream's acoustic arrangements are pleasantly relaxing".
+Pfieffe may refer to:Pfieffe, Spangenberg, a district of Spangenberg, a town in Hesse, GermanyPfieffe (Fulda), a river of Hesse, Germany, tributary of the Fulda
+During the protest, a famous event occurred, where George Harris placed carnations into the soldiers' gun barrels.
+Morman (also spelled Morvan, Morwan, or Moruuan) (died 818) was a Breton chieftain who was declared king (rex) after the death of the Bretons' Frankish overlord Charlemagne in 814.
+The women's 3000 metres steeplechase at the 2010 African Championships in Athletics were held on July 31.
+It has become a significant tourist attraction.
+It was known as Charge of the Rurales.
+Narendran inherits a legacy of performing art.
+ReferencesCategory:1960 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Athletes (track and field) at the 1984 Summer OlympicsCategory:Irish female middle-distance runnersCategory:Olympic athletes of IrelandCategory:Place of birth missing (living people)
+References Category:United States Navy ship names
+In Grove Art Online.
+Zaječarsko pivo is a type of beer which comes in two forms, light and low-pasteurized.
+More than most things she enjoyed appearing on the BBC's children's show Blue Peter, where she brought young dancers from her classes to demonstrate.
+As far as their religious life, he wrote that they "only recognize the Code of Maimonides, and possessed no other authority or Traditional law".
+ListNotesReferencesSoundgarden*
+Henry Floyd may refer to:Henry Floyd (Jesuit) (1563–1641), English Catholic priestSir Henry Floyd, 5th Baronet (1899–1968), British Second World War generalHenry Franklin Floyd (born 1947), U.S. federal judge Henry Floyd (cricketer) (1793–1868), English cricketerSir Henry Floyd, 2nd Baronet (1793–1868), of the Floyd baronetsSir Henry Robert Peel Floyd, 4th Baronet (1855–1915), of the Floyd baronets
+Track listing "Love Letters" (Victor Young, Edward Heyman) − 6:00 "Politely" (Bill Hardman) − 6:14 "Lazybird" (John Coltrane) − 6:15 "Coral Keys" (Walter Bishop Jr.) − 9:47 "Smooch" (Charles Mingus, Miles Davis) − 8:20Personnel Bill Hardman − trumpetJunior Cook − tenor saxophoneWalter Bishop Jr. − piano Paul Brown − bassLeroy Williams − drumsReferences Category:1982 albumsCategory:Bill Hardman albumsCategory:Albums produced by Bob Porter (record producer)Category:Albums recorded at Van Gelder StudioCategory:Muse Records albums
+The gmina contains part of the protected area called Masovian Landscape Park.
+Built c. 1855, this single-story frame structure is one of the few surviving pre-Civil War structures in Benton County.
+Vladislav Bobrik (born 6 January 1971 in Novosibirsk) is a Russian former road bicycle racer.
+These are the results for the girls' 58 kg event at the 2018 Summer Youth Olympics.
+In 2016 he was involved in negotiations for British Home Stores.
+It is managed by the Tees, Esk and Wear Valleys Foundation NHS Trust.
+This species is native to Costa Rica.
+40, 1-239.
+__NOTOC__English divisionShort storyFirst Prize: “A Wilderness of Sweets” by Gilda Cordero FernandoSecond Prize: “The Dream Tiger” by Lilia Pablo AmansecThird Prize: “Mud Under the Sea” by Julian E. Dacanay Jr.PoetryFirst Prize: “A Stun of Jewels” by Carlos AngelesSecond Prize: “Becoming Dark, Sunflower by Van Gogh, Out of the Parrot Cage...” by Emmanuel TorresThird Prize: “The Lady of October and Image of the Dancer” by Rita Baltazar GaddiOne-Act PlayFirst Prize: “It's April, What are We Doing Here” by Rolando S. TinioSecond Prize: “Rise, Terraces” by Wilfrido D. NolledoThird Prize: “Out of Darkness” by Nestor Torre Jr.Filipino divisionShort storyFirst Prize: “Mga Aso sa Lagarian” by Dominador MirasolSecond Prize: “Si Ama” by Edgardo M. ReyesThird Prize: “Dugo sa Ulo ni Corbo” by Efren R. AbuegPoetryFirst Prize: “Alamat ng Pasig” by Fernando MonleonSecond Prize: “Ito ang Ating Panahon” by Bienvenido RamosThird Prize: “A Group of Poems Published in Halimuyak 101” by Vedasto SuarezOne-Act PlayFirst Prize: “Sinag sa Karimlan” by Dioisio S. SalarzanSecond Prize: “Babasagang Alon” by Orlando C. RodriguezThird Prize: “Kintin” by Benjamin P. PascualReferences Category:Palanca AwardsCategory:1964 literary awards
+The Breeze is an independent local radio station that broadcasts on 107.9 FM in Bath, Somerset, England and is owned by Bauer Radio and is part of The Breeze network of stations.
+In 2013 Boulton received an Honorary Doctorate of Business from Plymouth University.
+Music videoThe video was directed by Tobias Stretch and filmed in the Appalachian Mountains.
+CareerMends began his youth playing career at Great Ambassadors in the Tema Colts League before joining division 1 club, Tema Real Sportive in 2003/4.
+Stéphane Lebecq.
+- 2013HonoursThailand Division 1 League: 2008 with Mueang-Thong UtdExternal linksProfile at Thaipremierleague.co.thCategory:Living peopleCategory:Thai footballersCategory:Air Force United F.C.
+High and Mighty may refer to:In music: High and Mighty (album), an album by Uriah Heep High & Mighty, an album by Gov't Mule High and Mighty (band), an American rap duoIn other uses: High and Mighty (book), a nonfiction book about SUVs by Keith Bradsher High and Mighty (shop), a UK big-and-tall menswear retail outletSee also High and Mighty Color, a Japanese J-rock band The High and the Mighty (disambiguation)
+He also had a spell at Ards in the Irish League where he made 30 appearances.
+In November 2019, the company sold its portfolio of charter schools for $454 million.
+The same year a local entrepreneur applied successfully to the Commissioner of Police for a grant to build an inn to provide accommodation and victuals for the visiting magistrate and police witnesses, and the Swan Inn was established close to the courthouse.
+External links Photograph and biographyCategory:1873 birthsCategory:1931 deathsCategory:Bishops of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America
+The centrepiece of Enlighten Canberra is the illuminating of Canberra's cultural institutions after dark, including Old Parliament House, Parliament House and the National Gallery of Australia (since the 2011 event) as well as the National Portrait Gallery and Questacon (since the 2012 event).
+On December 5, 2005, Virta received a serious knee injury from a failed hip check against him in a game against Ilves, but recovered to play in the last games of the season.
+In 1914, a fourth unit, generating 8.7 MW, and the third aqueduct, were added.
+However, his disapproval rating was also very low at just 11 percent.
+She placed among the Top 10 and received the Personalidad Fraiche award.
+As the first black person to be granted such colors in South Africa, Maponya chose green, gold and black, the colors of the ANC.
+Surrounding glaciers are Richterbreen, Frysjabreen and Instebreen.
+Final list * M: Matches W: Win D: Drawn L: Lost G+: Goals earned G-: Goals got P: PointSources A magyar sport évkönyve 1979magyar bajnokságok - kezitortenelem.hu Nemzeti BajnoksagNemzeti Bajnoksag Category:Handball leagues in HungaryCategory:1979 in women's handball
+Media persons reported that team members made "catcalls and rude comments".
+Category:1924 birthsCategory:2009 deathsCategory:American jazz trumpetersCategory:American male trumpetersCategory:Musicians from New JerseyCategory:20th-century trumpetersCategory:20th-century American male musiciansCategory:Male jazz musiciansCategory:Savoy Sultans members
+Somebody's Hero may refer to: "Somebody's Hero" (song), a 2004 song by Jamie O'Neal Somebody's Hero (film), a 2012 American family feature film
+In 1820 the present pagoda was built on the site of the original pagoda.
+Members of this genus are found at depths down to about .
+In 1988, due to the growth of the student body, Friends' Central acquired the Montgomery School's property and relocated the lower school there.
+Thomas Nevers is a retired American soccer player who played professionally in the North American Soccer League and Major Indoor Soccer League.
+The height of the dome and a half meters.
+Jane Stevenson of Canoe.ca listed the performance of the number at Toronto's Molson Canadian Amphitheatre among the show's highlights.
+{{DISPLAYTITLE:C9H12O2}}The molecular formula C9H12O2 (molar mass: 152,18 g/mol, exact mass: 152.083729 u) may refer to: Cumene hydroperoxide 4-Ethylguaiacol Lanierone
+JudgesIn 2008, the judges for these contests were Brian Morton and Major Jackson.
+Paris Descartes completely merged with Paris Diderot University in 2019 to form a new University of Paris.
+McArthur also taught at the University of Exeter's Dictionary Research Centre, which was established in 1984 by Reinhard Hartmann.
+BiographyTorre graduated in Modern Literature at the University of Pisa, after training in journalism at some local radio stations.
+It has a population of 4,668.
+It was said that Li was honest and frugal, and after he became chancellor, he, with some success, tried to curb the tendency for officials to seek promotions by bribes or ingratiations.
+The newspaper is published on the first of each month and the production run is up to 35,000 copies monthly.
+The song title "Those Years", which performance by Hu Xia and 3 Hi sing participators on first round of 3 in 1 chorus that broadcast online at NetEase Music before also speedy deleted.
+Initially elected as a Progressive, he was a member of the party's rural "True Blues" faction that by 1927 had evolved into the Country Party.
+Baggaley has won 23 English National Junior titles and has been ranked England number 1 in every age group (Under 10,11,12,14,17,21) culminating in becoming England number 1 senior aged 20 (2003), the youngest at the time for 20 years.
+Powell has recorded with Rhiannon Giddens, Loretta Lynn, Irma Thomas, Tim O'Brien, Kyle Carey and Eric Clapton.
+Critics have also suggested that Harshaw is actually a stand-in for Robert Heinlein himself, based on similarities in career choice and general disposition; though Harshaw is much older than Heinlein was at the time of writing.
+WNBM (103.9 FM, branded as Radio 103.9) is a radio station licensed to Bronxville, New York.
+The "McGovern-Eagleton '72" campaign ended as Democratic vice-presidential nominee Thomas F. Eagleton resigned from the ticket.
+Voters chose five representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for President and Vice President.
+She won a silver medal in the K-4 500 m event at the 1995 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Duisburg, Germany.
+In 2003 he joined Continental in Hanover as Executive Vice President Human Resources and Labor Director and in 2007 he held the same position at Deutsche Telekom in Bonn, where he remained until 2012.
+ReceptionKasia Delgado of Radio Times praised the film for managing "to make the most powerful men in the country seem both ridiculous, and entirely human", calling it "like The Thick of It on valium".
+Borhanuddin is a town in Bhola District in the division of Barisal, Bangladesh.
+ReferencesCategory:Ghost towns in British Columbia
+playersCategory:Altrincham F.C.
+The single found decent success, having peaked at #9 on the Hot Rap Singles, #59 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks and #40 on the Hot Dance Music/Maxi-Singles Sales.
+He was Vicar of St James, Croydon from 1829 to 1865.
+Jersey accent may refer to:Channel Island EnglishNew Jersey English dialects
+ReferencesCategory:Non-profit organizations based in New York CityCategory:Organizations established in 1978Category:Domestic violence-related organizationsCategory:Child abuse-related organizationsCategory:Organizations that combat human traffickingCategory:Homeless shelters in the United StatesCategory:Women's shelters in the United StatesCategory:Charities based in New York (state)Category:Violence against women in the United StatesCategory:Human trafficking in the United StatesCategory:1978 establishments in New York (state)
+Gruntz is a puzzle/strategy game for the PC, developed and published in February 1999 by Monolith Productions.
+The chemical compound 1,2-dioxetanedione, or 1,2-dioxacyclobutane-3,4-dione, often called peroxyacid ester, is an unstable oxide of carbon (an oxocarbon) with formula CO.
+The stadium was home to the hour record from 1935 to 1967 and the one-hour tandem record of Ernest Mills and Bill Paul from 1937 to 2000.
+This is possible using the notion of q-relaxed intersection.
+It was initially planned to shift the entire complex to Madhuvana Park in Mysore.
+He received his early training in music and worked as a jazz piano player before becoming a writer.
+Yulee did not serve as Representative, being subsequently elected one of the first two Senators for Florida.
+Bârlogu may refer to several villages in Romania: Bârlogu, a village in Negrași Commune, Argeș County Bârlogu, a village in Stoenești, Vâlcea
+Bezirk St. Pölten-Land is a district of the state of Lower Austria in Austria.
+Liga playersCategory:Association football midfieldersCategory:SC Hessen Dreieich players
+However, after playing a game with the group one day, Ruggiero returned to the clubhouse find the head angry with him for neglecting his caddy duties.
+Births January?
+The singles released from this album are "Shanghai Breezes" / "What One Man Can Do" and "Seasons of the Heart."
+The 2017 LEN Super Cup was the 36th edition of the LEN Super Cup, an annual water polo match organised by LEN and contested by the reigning champions of the two main European club competitions, the LEN Champions League and the LEN Euro Cup.
+It is run over a distance of 1 mile and 2 furlongs (2,012 metres) on the Rowley Mile at Newmarket in late April or early May.
+He competed in the men's javelin throw at the 2000 Summer Olympics.
+Captain 'Boss' Young established the troop in 1907 and the group was registered with Scout HQ, London on 16 January 1908.
+.
+Kayaking there can be very dangerous because of rip currents, swells, and whirlpools.
+AFL careerKing made his AFL debut for Gold Coast against in the ninth round of the 2019 AFL season.
+Leo Hurley died on 24 November 1995.
+Volume 1: Na Srebrnym Globie (On the Silver Globe) [first edition—Lwów, 1903]On the Silver Globe is the initial book of the trilogy, setting forth in first-person narrative the odyssey and subsequent tribulations of a disastrously miscalculated expedition to the Moon with four men and one woman.
+On December 9, 2016, the service was suspended and replaced with bus.
+The Shelby Park neighborhood is known for its 17-acre park by the same name.
+Foreign relationsAbdykarimov awarded Eduard Khurshudian, the then retiring Armenian Ambassador to Kazakhstan, with a diploma on 20 July 2004 for his service as Ambassador from 1999 to 2004.
+The script was not widely used until the rise of new Semitic kingdoms in the 13th and 12th centuries BC.
+The company with 96,000 employees, is focused on designing, manufacturing and testing of aircraft engines.
+The soundtrack was very successful upon release, becoming one of the top viewed Bhojpuri music videos on YouTube with over 3 million views.
+The Awesomes is an American animated comedy series, which premiered on August 1, 2013, on Hulu.
+Justynów is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Aleksandrów, within Piotrków County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland.
+He made his debut in 2008 for the 21st Junon Superboy Contest.
+Grizzly Butte small shield volcano located in northwestern British Columbia, Canada.
+Music videoThe music video was directed by Trey Fanjoy.
+History Glazebrook East Junction–Skelton Junction line was part of Cheshire Lines Committee (CLC) as a branch line of their main Liverpool–Manchester lines.
+Athletes from the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia competed at the 1972 Winter Olympics in Sapporo, Japan.
+José Prieto (born 22 July 1949) is a Cuban cyclist.
+It was designed by architect Lorimer Rich and completed in 1936.
+Higuera de Vargas is a municipality in the province of Badajoz, Extremadura, Spain.
+ReferencesExternal links Michigan House Democrats ProfileCategory:Members of the Michigan House of RepresentativesCategory:Living peopleCategory:Michigan DemocratsCategory:21st-century American politiciansCategory:Year of birth missing (living people)Category:Wayne State University alumniCategory:UCLA School of Law alumniCategory:Michigan lawyers
+The original version of the song, which has slight structural changes, was included on the band's eighth studio album Ningen Kaika (along with another of the four vocal compositions from the Your Name soundtrack, "Sparkle").
+Ganjegan (, also Romanized as Ganjegān; also known as Ganjegāh and Ganjekān) is a village in Padena-ye Olya Rural District, Padena District, Semirom County, Isfahan Province, Iran.
+Bruce Elliott (born 30 July 1956) is a former Australian rules footballer who played with Melbourne in the Victorian Football League (VFL).
+It is still being used today (July 2012) as the city hall of Aberdeen.
+The Super Viernes events featured a varying number of professional wrestling matches, in which some wrestlers were involved in pre-existing scripted feuds or storylines and others were teamed up with no storyline reason as such.
+Giáo Dục Publisher.
+& Clarke, G.P.
+The name is always written with the "s".
+The population was 152 as of 2013.
+He competed at the 1976 and 1984 Summer Olympics.
+It was the first book published to be centered around Holocaust survivors who had recently immigrated to Israel.
+He was a member of the WWF's Australian tour in mid-1986 (the WWF's first tour to Australia under Vince McMahon's ownership), wrestling in Adelaide, Brisbane, Melbourne, Perth and Sydney, and was considered one of the toughest men in the WWF at the time.
+In consequence, he was expelled from St. John's for a time, but in 1567 he became Hebrew lecturer and preacher there.
+The province of Mauretania Tingitana was added to Albinus's governor duties by the Emperor Galba.
+Rove was reassigned from his policy development role to one focusing on strategic and tactical planning in April 2006.
+Before tango, Libedinsky transited through different genres, such as rock, pop, blues, medieval, and renaissance music.
+Three days later, police authorities traced the suspects to a local church called the Seven Angels Ministry, a compound the local authorities soon learned doubled as an isolationist cult that encouraged under age girls to have sex with the church leaders as a tribute to God.
+Hamilton is partially sighted and boarded at Exhall Grange School near Coventry.
+ReferencesCategory:Indian Air Force air marshalsCategory:Sindhi peopleCategory:Indian Air Force officers
+It has an estimated elevation of above sea level.
+Bazett's formula is based on observations from a study in 1920.
+Glee is the debut studio album by Canadian music collective Bran Van 3000.
+In his first year with Olimpia he helped the team to win Copa Libertadores, and the following season he won Recopa Sudamericana.
+Recently eruptive sites include the main caldera of Kīlauea and a more active but remote vent called Puu Ōō.
+Pro Vercelli 1892 playersCategory:S.S. Juve Stabia playersCategory:Brescia Calcio playersCategory:A.S. Cittadella playersCategory:S.S. Teramo Calcio playersCategory:Serie B playersCategory:Serie C playersCategory:Serie D players
+Watanuki (written: ) is a Japanese surname.
+Otiria railway station was a station on the Okaihau Branch in New Zealand.
+The lead singers on this record were, Kathy Dooley and Anne Dooley.
+References Category:Tantalum mines in Saudi Arabia
+The National Commission to review the working of the Constitution (NCRWC) also known as Justice Manepalli Narayana Rao Venkatachaliah Commission was set up by a resolution of the NDA Government of India led by Atal Bihari Vajpayee on 22 February 2000 for suggesting possible amendments to the Constitution of India.
+I.E.M.
+He is perhaps most recognized as the co-creator of the award-winning Nick Jr. children's television series Yo Gabba Gabba!, on which he additionally serves as a writer, director, composer and voice actor.
+The song is featured on Locke's album, One Love.
+At the 2006 census, its population was 247, in 83 families.
+CareerHuang initially played association football as a child, but after the school team was disbanded he took up athletics around the age of 14.
+The college is the first secondary school in Stoke-on-Trent (and perhaps England) to benefit from the national programme known as Building Schools for the Future.
+Richard Levett and Louisa Frances (Bagot) of Milford Hall.
+The former were removed in the spring of 1942, as were the single 4 in mountings (replaced by twins as per her sisters) and a further four 20 mm Oerlikons added.
+Bush encroachment is the growth of bushes and trees at the expense of grass and is caused by overgrazing and climate change.
+WorkManfred was a qualified architect who designed most iconic buildings and parks in Goulburn, including the town hall, the Goulburn Hospital, Belmore Park, and the St. John's Orphanage.
+ReferencesCategory:Moths described in 1916Category:Frisilia
+Geraniin is a dehydroellagitannin found in geraniums.
+The station is connected to the National Electricity Market via the 330KV Upper Tumut Switching Station, North of Cabramurra.
+Liu Dong (born 30 August 1968) is a Chinese boxer.
+By the early 1900s, however, these manuals had become obsolete.
+Good name may refer to: Good name, an alternative term for a person's given name in South Asia, used for example in Bangladeshi naming Good Name, a film directed by Evgeniy Sivokon Good Name, an album by William Onyeabor "A Good Name", an episode of the television series The Scarlet Pimpernel "A Good Name", a song by Shad from the album TSOL
+This is a list of records published by the Rak Records LabelSinglesAlbumsSource RAK - Label Discography, 45catRak Records
+League standingsNorra Norrland 1996Mellersta Norrland 1996Södra Norrland 1996Norra Svealand 1996Östra Svealand 1996Västra Svealand 1996Nordöstra Götaland 1996Nordvästra Götaland 1996Mellersta Götaland 1996Sydöstra Götaland 1996Sydvästra Götaland 1996Södra Götaland 1996FootnotesReferences Category:Swedish Football Division 3 seasons4SwedenSweden
+WorksThe Prophecy of Tau Ridoo - 1982Witchery Hill - 1984Sun God, Moon Witch - 1986False Face - 1987 (nominated for a Governor General's Award)The Third Magic - 1988 (winner of the 1988 Governor General's Award for Children's Literature)Whale Singer - 1990 (nominated for a Governor General's Award)Come Like Shadows - 1993 Time Ghost (1995, Margaret K. McElderry) Out of the Dark - 1995 (nominated for a Governor General's Award) which was also used by A & J for Lit Circles in Carnduff Education Complex in Grade 6.
+Selviytyjät Suomi 2018 is the second season of the Finnish version of Survivor which is based on the Swedish reality television show Expedition Robinson.
+HistoryIn 1932 the Leningrad animator and experimentator Mikhail Tsekhanovsky launched his most ambitious project to date: an animated opera based on the fairy tale in verse by the Russian classic Alexander Pushkin, yet with a heavy ROSTA posters influence.
+On 23 July 2013, it was placed under the Ministry of Health and Welfare.
+Yousef Mishleb - Israeli general Nada Nadim Prouty - Syrian security agent Ghassan Alian - Commander of Golani brigade in IDFSports Zidan Amar - Israeli footballer Ahad Azam - Israeli footballer Wiyam Amashe - Israeli footballer Amir Nasar A Din - Israeli footballer Sari Falah - Israeli footballer Amir Halaby - Israeli footballer Mahran Lala - Israeli footballer Nazar Mahmud - Israeli figure skater Raja Rafe - Syrian footballer Kenny Hasan Sayef - American-Israeli footballerVisual arts Farid Mansour (artist) - Lebanese Painter, and Sculptor Nabil Kanso - Lebanese-American painter Michael Netzer (Nassar) - American-Israeli graphical artistOthers Azzam Azzam - Israeli textile worker, former Israeli prisoner in Egypt Angelina Fares - Israeli beauty pageant Samir Kuntar - Lebanese militant Majdi Halabi - disappeared and discovered Israeli soldier Ali Abul-Fadl - Syrian American Professor of Electrical Engineering Amal Clooney - Lebanese-British lawyer, married to George ClooneyKhaled Camil Abou Chakra - Lebanese Architect, LEED Green Associate / Researcher in Construction & Architectural Sciences Nadia Aboulhosn - Lebanese-American plus-size model and blogger Emin Arslan - Born in current-day Lebanon (Ottoman Syria), diplomat, writer and editorSee also List of Israeli DruzeReferences Category:Druze+Druze
+The flowers, larger than those of T. americana, are produced in clusters of 10–24 together.
+Mitsuhashi played on the Japan Golf Tour, winning once.
+ResultsMedal tableExternal links Men's results Women's results Results at sportpro.it Category:UCI Road World Championships by yearUCI Road World Championships 1961Uci Road World Championships, 1961Category:Sport in BernCategory:1961 in road cycling
+At the time of the 2011 Nepal census it had a population of 3415 people living in 868 individual households.
+Hugo Perié (18 January 1944 – 15 August 2011) was an Argentine politician and member of the legislature from the year 2003 until his death on the 15 August 2011.
+He is the author of Portrait Studio (onestar press, 2009) and Flying Pictures (powerHouse books, 2009).
+They were also the first elections in which the Syrian-led Ba'ath Party ran for seats in parliament, the original Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party had been dissolved in 1966.
+References Divehiraajjege Jōgrafīge Vanavaru.
+Synclinal may refer to:Syncline, in structural geology, a syncline is a fold, with younger layers closer to the center of the structure.
+Hamon may refer to:Hamon (swordsmithing), the visual result of the tempering process used in much of Japanese swordsmithingHamon, the Japanese practice of excommunication from a dojo or apprenticeshipThe Ripple (波紋, Hamon), a supernatural ability used in the manga series JoJo's Bizarre AdventureHamon, the name for ham in Filipino cuisinePeopleAugustin Hamon (1862–1945), French anarchistBenoît Hamon (born 1967), French politicianChris Hamon (born 1970), Jersey footballerJake L. Hamon, Jr. (1902–1985), American oilmanJames Hamon (born 1995), Guernsey footballerJean-Louis Hamon (1821–1874), French painterMythologyBaʿal Hammon, the chief god of Carthage also sometimes spelled "Hamon"See alsoHammon (disambiguation)Haman (disambiguation)Jamon (disambiguation)FitzhamonCategory:Surnames of Breton originCategory:Breton-language surnames
+Males had a median income of $33,487 versus $21,324 for females.
+His country commune, Himmelhof, in Ober Sankt Veit near Vienna (1897–1899) was one of the models for the reform settlement Monte Verità in Ascona.
+Andrew Watson (24 May 1856 – 8 March 1921) is widely considered to be the world's first black person to play association football at international level.
+He competed at the 1972 Summer Olympics and the 1976 Summer Olympics.
+Tail markingThe squadron emblem of the 301st squadron is a frog wearing a scarf.
+Although English is the official language spoken at schools and government administration, Krio (language derived from English and several West African languages and is native to the Sierra Leone Krio people) is the lingua franca spoken throughout the country.
+Hydrographic Office, Sailing Directions for Northern Canada: The Coast of Labrador Northward of St. Lewis Sound, the Northern Coast of the Canadian Mainland, and the Canadian Archipelago, Second Edition, 1951 P 513ReferencesExternal links Category:Mountain ranges of Qikiqtaaluk RegionCategory:Arctic Cordillera
+July–December July 29 – Santa Marta, the first city in Colombia, is founded by Spanish conquistador Rodrigo de Bastidas.
+Beginning with the club's 31 August 1–0 victory over Ajaccio, Mbiwa appeared in every match Montpellier played including the Coupe de la Ligue and Coupe de France matches, where Montpellier reached the Round of 16 and Round of 32, respectively.
+Democratic nomination Candidates: Jame Boyd Walter Bradley Former State Senate Majority Leader Bill Bruce Jane Eskind James Foster Douglas L. Heinsohn J. D. Lee Virginia Nyabongo Charles Gordon VickIn the primary, held on August 3, Eskind won in an open primary against eight other candidates: Eskind – 196,156 (34.52%) Bruce – 170,795 (30.06%) Lee – 89,939 (15.83%) Boyd – 48,458 (8.53%) Bradley – 22,130 (3.90%) Heinsohn – 17,787 (3.13%) Foster – 10,671 (1.88%) Nyabongo – 7,682 (1.35%) Vick – 4,414 (0.78%) Write-in – 147 (0.03%)Republican nomination Candidates: Incumbent United States Senator and Senate Minority Leader Howard Baker J. Durelle Boles Harvey Howard Hubert David Patty Dayton Seiler Francis TrappIn the primary, held on August 3, Baker easily emerged as the winner: Baker – 205,680 (83.44%) Howard – 21,154 (8.58%) Boles – 8,899 (3.61%) Patty – 3,941 (1.60%) Seiler – 3,831 (1.55%) Trapp – 2,994 (1.22%)General election Baker won with a 15-point margin in the general election, held on November 7:See also United States Senate elections, 1978References 1978TennesseeUnited States Senate
+MGB may refer to: Game Boy Pocket (product code MGB-001) and Game Boy Light (product code MGB-101), portable gaming devices by Nintendo Mathematical Gymnasium Belgrade (Matematička Gimnazija), an elementary and high school for gifted students in Serbia Magandang Gabi, Bayan, a news program in the Philippines Matterhorn Gotthard Bahn, a railroad operating in the Swiss Alps Matthew Good Band, a Canadian group Medial geniculate nucleus, or medial geniculate body, a subnucleus of the thalamus in the brain Medium Girder Bridge, a modular, military bridge MG MGB, a sports car produced by the British Motor Corporation and its successors from 1962 to 1980 Ministry for State Security (Soviet Union) (Ministerstvo Gosudarstvennoi Bezopasnosti), a predecessor of the KGB Motor Gun Boat, a fast attack boat armed with cannons and guns, as opposed to the Motor Torpedo Boat Mount Gambier Airport, an airport servicing the Mount Gambier region which uses the IATA code MGB Mutual gains bargaining, an approach to collective bargaining
+She won a silver medal in the mixed C-2 event at the 1967 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships in Lipno nad Vltavou.
+ReferencesCategory:Munich S-Bahn stationsCategory:Railway stations in BavariaCategory:Railway stations opened in 1913Category:1913 establishments in GermanyCategory:Buildings and structures in Dachau (district)
+Ali Baba (c. 854) was a ruler of the Nubian kingdom of Makuria.
+He has also made good use of his secondary military specialty, applying his refined approach to bookkeeping as a finance clerk.
+The song "New Beginning" contains a quote from the I Ching Hexagram 32.
+Aron Rodrigue is the Daniel E. Koshland Professor in Jewish Culture and History at Stanford University.
+1982.
+The troupe travelled around the Eastern United States performing at colleges that had no opera departments of their own.
+He is from the BJP Party.
+For business students there is a Personality Assessment Test that identifies the personality traits and interest areas of the applicant and helps determine the profession best suited for the candidate and where he/ she is most likely to succeed in the professional career.
+WAL or Wal may refer to:Places Wał, Lublin Voivodeship, village in eastern Poland Wał, Masovian Voivodeship, village in east-central Poland Wales, constituent nation of the United Kingdom Wallonia, Walloon Region of BelgiumPeople with the name Wal Torres, Brazilian gender therapistBrands and enterprises Wal (bass), a brand of electric bass guitars, founded by Ian Waller and Pete Stevens Wal-Mart Stores, a multi-national retailer founded by Sam WaltonTechnology Wide-angle lens, photographic equipment Write-ahead logging, a database management techniqueTransport Dornier Do J Wal ("whale"), a German flying boat of the 1920s World Atlantic Airlines, an airline based in Miami, Florida, United States (ICAO WAL)Other uses Wallace Cadwallader "Wal" Footrot, the main character in the Footrot Flats comic strip Weighted-average life, in loan repayment timing
+As of 2010, his 48 losses, 772 hits given up, 510 runs allowed, and 291 earned runs allowed over that 98-game season remain single-season major-league records.
+Growth and morphologyA. caelatus has been cultivated on both Czapek yeast extract agar (CYA) plates and Malt Extract Agar Oxoid® (MEAOX) plates.
+From these scores, three finalists were whittled from the show's six contestants, and each was paired with one of the judges for the show's final round in which the Wheel of Maximum Danger was spun to determine various topics.
+Similar to BBC Prime and Granada UKTV, it carried British entertainment programming from ITV, Channel 4 and the BBC, including Parkinson, The Bill, Father Ted and My Family.
+Three were in close proximity to each other, at 3 Square Rapp, 29 Avenue Rapp, and 12 Rue Sedillot.
+Eustace wrote about the break-up of her marriage in the book "Divorce Sucks: What to do when irreconcilable differences, lawyer fees, and your ex's Hollywood wife make you miserable" which was released in October 2009.
+Georgakopoulos represented Panathinaikos in the 1989 Greek Super Cup.
+ReferencesCategory:1826 paintingsCategory:Paintings by Eugène DelacroixCategory:Paintings about the Greek War of IndependenceCategory:Allegorical paintings
+Few inhabitants of Kurtajpur have graduate degrees.
+The elementary schools are Ecole Elémentaire Les Cerisiers, Ecole Elémentaire Gambetta, and Ecole Elémentaire Les Pointes.
+It is easily separable from related Agnidra scabiosa by the colour pattern of the wings.
+It was restored in 1891, and the porch was renovated in 1932.
+Appelbee served in the Army throughout World War II.
+ResultsFinalKey: OR = Olympic record; DQ = disqualified; DNF = did not finishReferencesMCategory:Racewalking at the Olympics
+It may refer to:PlacesAustralia Lakeland, QueenslandCanada Lakeland (electoral district), a federal electoral district in AlbertaLakeland County, a former municipal district in AlbertaLakeland No.
+5 Aircraft Depot at RAAF Station Wagga, New South Wales, for repair.
+Gaharwar has published extensively in the area of nanomaterials, biomaterials, bioprinting, tissue engineering, and stem cell bioengineering.
+Astronomy Johannes Hevelius publishes the first comparatively detailed map of the Moon in his Selenographia (Danzig).
+The European Union has designated it as a Special Protection Area.
+HistoryConstruction of Nelson Airport commenced in 1937.
+FilmographyTelevisionReferencesExternal links Category:Living peopleCategory:Year of birth missing (living people)Category:Welsh male television actorsCategory:People from Abertillery
+Then he studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1837.
+ReferencesCategory:1896 birthsCategory:1975 deathsCategory:New Zealand public servantsCategory:People from PaeroaCategory:New Zealand Companions of the Order of St Michael and St GeorgeCategory:New Zealand Knights Commander of the Order of the British Empire
+Gaidouronisi (, "donkey island") is the name of the following Greek islands:Chrysi (island), CretePatroklos (Attica)
+He was a founding member of the United Goans Party and also the leader of the United Goans.
+The pilot's failure to maintain his assigned altitude allowed the airplane to descend for undetermined reasons resulting in an in-flight collision with terrainOn February 27, 2008, at about 01:41 local, a Cessna 210L, N5489V, operated as FLX 805, experienced collapse of the right main landing gear during landing at TPA.
+It is earned by taking and passing an exam delivered at test centers throughout North America.
+from 1904 until 1977 and hosted football matches during the 1948 Summer Olympics.
+ClassificationRaceReferencesCoppa AcerboCoppa Acerbo
+Elected by the State Legislative AssemblyNominated by the Prime Minister and appointed by the Yang di-Pertuan AgongDeath in office Jinuin Jimin (d. 12 July 1998) Zainol Abidin Johari (d. 20 July 1998)FootnotesReferencesCategory:Malaysian parliamentsCategory:Lists of members of the Dewan Negara
+It is a right tributary of the Osterbach in Unter-Ostern.
+Słosinko is a PKP railway station in Słosinko (Pomeranian Voivodeship), Poland.
+PopulationInhabitants of Ploëzal are called ploëzalais in French.
+He competed at the 1984 Summer Olympics and the 1988 Summer Olympics.
+Project Akagumi (by Hello!
+There are about 6 families and more than 170 described species in Licneremaeoidea.
+Pits from tree throws, together with mounds from decaying fallen trees, are part of the characteristic topography of old growth forest.
+Their name comes from having lived in the parish of Shirley found in the counties of Derbyshire, Surrey, Hampshire and the West Midlands.
+It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2003.
+HikeArizona.com "Kendrick Wilderness."
+On 14 September he netted from a wonderful long-range strike in a 3–4 defeat at Real Madrid, and added four more goals in the first 12 games; he finished his first season as the side's top scorer at 12, but they were eventually relegated as second from bottom.
+There are two cases with identical charges of conspiracy, rioting, rape, and murder against them.
+Importance of LADThe LAD of a plant canopy has a significant impact on the reflectance, transmittance and absorption of solar light in the vegetation layer, and thus also on its growth and development.
+Situated on the green it has international reputation for discovering, nurturing and producing the best new theatre writers from the widest range of backgrounds, and for presenting their work to the high standards.
+Other emergency responders may also be trained.
+Certificates of Freedom were introduced in 1810 and were generally granted to convicts, upon application to the Governor, who had served their 7, 10, or 14-year sentence.
+References Heroes V
+It is endemic to the White Mountains, a small mountain range that straddles the border between California and Nevada east of the Sierra Nevada.
+Today Nemesis is no longer commercially available; development stopped years ago.
+On retirement he became also Colonel of the 12th Lancers.
+A 33-story office building on the southwest corner, replacing the Bellevue Corporate Center, is also proposed as part of a potential future phase of construction.
+John Sheahan's daughter Ceoladh guests with her father, duetting on fiddle with him on his composition, "Among Friends".
+Houston AstrosOn August 5, Corcoran signed a minor league contract with the Houston Astros that included an invitation to spring training.
+Brezhani is a village in Simitli Municipality, in Blagoevgrad Province, in southwestern Bulgaria.
+Price was buried at Mount Hermon Cemetery in Sillery.
+HistoryA post office was opened in Keighley in 1880, and remained in operation until it was discontinued in 1943.
+In New Orleans, for example, these often take the shape of fairies, animals, people from myths, or various Medieval costumes as well as clowns and Indians (Native Americans).
+The new city was administered as part of the Prussian Rhine Province.
+Westbank is at the southern end of the municipality.
+A geyser erupted downtown at the corner of Jefferson and Monroe.
+He also built the Pasha Mosque in the city.
+SpeciesThere are currently two recognized species in this genus: Icichthys australis Haedrich, 1966 (Southern driftfish) Icichthys lockingtoni D. S. Jordan & C. H. Gilbert, 1880 (Medusafish)ReferencesCategory:Centrolophidae
+At the time, many (including noted commentator Gary McCord) predicted the start of a long rivalry between Woods and García.
+The shock closure tarnished the reputation of the company chairman Con Stevens (a major name within the industry) due to the fact that he had not given any notice to the staff and trainers.
+HTC One may refer to:HTC One series, an HTC flagship smartphone product lineHTC One (M7), a smartphone released by HTC in 2013, originally released as the HTC OneHTC One (M8), a smartphone released by HTC in 2014HTC One M9, a smartphone released by HTC in 2015HTC 10, a smartphone released by HTC in 2016HTC One Mini, a smartphone released by HTC in 2013HTC One Mini 2, a smartphone released by HTC in 2014
+Henry Crow Dog was a Rosebud Indian Reservation Sioux medicine man who resided on his land, Crow Dog's Paradise.
+Cable-mounted camera systemsSkycam is the original, elevated cable-controlled camera system that was invented by Garrett Brown in 1984; who also invented the body-mounted Steadicam system.
+Arlington Pack Trail, , el.
+See alsoThe Hundred ParishesBaron Haden-GuestReferences Category:Villages in EssexCategory:Former civil parishes in EssexCategory:Braintree District
+Unincorporated towns Willowdale(This list is based on USGS data and may include former settlements.)
+Regulation of sleep In rats, miR-138, let-7b, and miR-125a are expressed at different times and in different structures in the brain and likely play a role in the regulation of sleep.
+ReferencesCategory:Buildings and structures in LeicestershireCategory:Power stations in the East Midlands
+The year 1724 in music involved some significant musical events.
+Rowell has been appointed by Western Sydney University as a Fellow of Law.
+Sameer Industrial Park Limited, Nairobi, Kenya Sameer Business Park Limited, Nairobi, KenyaSameer Africa Limited, Nairobi, Kenya - Manufacture of tires.
+He debuted at 13 performing Ludwig van Beethoven's 1st Piano Concerto with the Berlin Philharmonic.
+ReferencesCategory:Carbon nanotubesCategory:Chemical synthesis
+If this margin is positive, the flow is locally fully liquid, while if it is zero or negative the flow is cavitating or gas.
+See also Communes of the Haut-Rhin departmentReferencesINSEECategory:Communes of Haut-Rhin
+She describes her work more in an interview with PIN-UP.
+Bago may refer to:PlacesMyanmar Bago, Myanmar, a city and the capital of the Bago Region Bago District, a district of the Bago Region Bago Region an administrative region Bago River, a river Bago Yoma or Pegu Range, a mountain rangePhilippines Bago, Negros Occidental, a city Bago, a barangay (administrative division) in the municipality Asturias Bago, a barangay (administrative division) in the municipality BatoOther places Bago, Albania, a village in Tirana County, Albania Bågø, an island of DenmarkNamesUmaru Bago Tafida, Emir or Etsu of Lapai, NigeriaMohammed Umar Bago, Nigerian PoliticianOther uses Bago (horse), a thoroughbred race horse Bago language, a Gur language of Togo Bago Palace, in Bago, Philippines
+The SEC has authority to adjudicate civil complaints arising under nine laws provided for in the State Ethics Commission Act.
+Arvid Nyberg (born 19 May 1928) is a Norwegian politician for the Labour Party.
+Rodriguez has also been arrested.
+Although such a voyage would have been illegal under the United States's Embargo Act of 1807, the hope was that the certificate would protect Nimrod from seizure by the British.
+Jory Prum (January 31, 1975 – April 22, 2016), also known as Jory K. Prum, was an American audio engineer, best known for his work in film and video games.
+Alexandra or Aleksandra Stepanova may also refer to: Alexandra Stepanova (handballer) (born 1989), Russian handball player Alexandra Stepanova (weightlifter) (born 1991), Lithuanian weightlifter
+It thus retains many of the fresh flavours and aromas that were found in the young wine, in the form of small and highly volatile molecules called aldehydes and esters.
+Skilled players use the technique of circular breathing to achieve a continuous sound, and also employ techniques for inducing multiple harmonic resonances.
+Solicitor Bobby Howes ...
+For high school, he attended the English Language School Geo Milev in Ruse, graduating in 1968.
+It can be found along the Atlantic coast of North America, ranging from Cape Cod to the West Indies.
+The International 420 Dinghy is a sailing dinghy.
+Storrington is an electoral division of West Sussex in the United Kingdom and returns one member to West Sussex County Council.
+Acts he has worked with include Loose Ends, Phyllis Hyman, Five Star, Stephanie Mills and Regina Belle.
+|}FinalSee also 1992 Armenian Premier LeagueExternal links 1992 Armenian Cup at rsssf.comCategory:Armenian Cup seasonsArmeniaArmenian Cup, 1992
+ReferencesExternal links IOM-LPIOM-LPCategory:Radio stations established in 2003
+The Stan Spirou Field House (formerly known as the SNHU Fieldhouse) is a 2,000 seat facility on the campus of Southern New Hampshire University in Manchester, New Hampshire, United States.
+References Category:Populated places in Qom Province
+Okul may refer to: Okul (film), a 2004 Turkish horror-comedy film John Okul, Papua New Guinean rugby league player Pi Capricorni, a star in the constellation Capricorn
+It was a great joy for me to be able to make it.
+ReferencesCategory:Misegian languagesCategory:Languages of Madang Province
+The Israeli Documentary Filmmakers Forum include over 450 members.
+He has written the bestselling medico-science thrillers Isolation Ward (2006) and Flawless (2007).
+The following weak form of the Krull-Schmidt theorem holds.
+See also BACTA (British Amusement Caterers Trade Association) CoinslotReferencesExternal links ATEI homepageCategory:Trade fairs in the United Kingdom
+Khuwaled Al-Harthi is a Saudi Arabian sport shooter.
+The S-Bahn was an instant success.
+The Smashing PumpkinsOn August 17, 2009, he was officially named as the new drummer for the Smashing Pumpkins.
+He also designed many buildings at Michigan State University (MSU) in East Lansing beginning with Old Botany in 1892 and continuing on his own and at the firm with Marshall Hall, Agriculture Hall, Giltner Hall (1913 portion), IM Recreative Sports Circle, and Spartan Stadium.
+Dogs Don't Tell Jokes () is a novel by children's book author Louis Sachar.
+Works The Savior / Christ Showing His Wounds and the Host to a Clarissan Nun (1460–1478) : The painting was made for the monastery of Saint Clare on Murano island and shows a rather feminine Christ holding his wounded breast.
+Examples involved middle and late transition metal complexes are either absent of β-hydrogens or use ring strain relief and aromaticity as driving forces to favor β-alkyl elimination over β-hydride elimination.
+After settling in Wagga Wagga in 1854, Gormly became a mail carrier, eventually selling out to Cobb & Co. in 1872.
+Humberto Rosa may refer to: Humberto Rosa (footballer) (1932–2017), Argentine football player and coach Humberto Rosa (painter) (1908–1948), Brazilian artist
+ReferencesCategory:HaplochrominiCategory:Fish of AfricaCategory:Monotypic fish generaCategory:Fish described in 1989Category:Taxonomy articles created by Polbot
+External linksCategory:1932 filmsCategory:British filmsCategory:British comedy filmsCategory:1930s comedy filmsCategory:English-language filmsCategory:Films directed by A. V. BrambleCategory:Quota quickiesCategory:Films shot at Elstree StudiosCategory:British black-and-white films
+ReferencesNatural History Museum Lepidoptera genus databaseCategory:Hadeninae
+performed this song live at the 1994 MTV Europe Music Awards in Berlin, And was supposed to be played at the 1994 Mercury Music Prize Awards in London.
+Opening and OfferingsBrown Academy of Music formally opened on 8 January 2016 in the Northgate Centre on Gov.
+Terumoto was in Osaka Castle defending Toyotomi Hideyori at the time and surrendered to Ieyasu soon after Sekigahara.
+The name Kikiki huna consists of two Hawaiian words that both carry the meaning 'tiny bit'.
+Election results=Members of Legislative AssemblyReferencesCategory:Assembly constituencies of BiharCategory:Politics of Sitamarhi district
+On 29 December 1940, during a major blitz on London, the surrounding area was devastated, but again the Hall survived.
+Dawida may be,Dawida languageMichael DawidaCallulina dawida, a sp.
+ReceptionFrank Guan of Vulture commented, "All Sade songs are socially engaged at some level, but of the ones that directly reference politics, this is one of the best.
+Formats and track listingsUK / Australian CD single "If You Were with Me Now" – 3:10 "I Guess I Like It like That" – 5:59 "If You Were with Me Now" (extended version) – 5:06UK / Australian cassette single "If You Were with Me Now" – 3:10 "I Guess I Like It Like That" – 3:30UK 7" vinyl single "If You Were with Me Now" – 3:10 "I Guess I Like It Like That" – 3:30UK 12" vinyl single "If You Were with Me Now" – 5:06 "I Guess I Like It Like That" – 5:59ChartsWeekly chartsEnd of year chartsReferencesExternal links Category:1991 singlesCategory:Kylie Minogue songsCategory:Pop balladsCategory:Vocal duetsCategory:Keith Washington songsCategory:Songs written by Kylie MinogueCategory:Songs written by Pete WatermanCategory:Songs written by Mike Stock (musician)Category:1991 songsCategory:Pete Waterman Entertainment singlesCategory:Songs written by Keith WashingtonCategory:Contemporary R&B balladsCategory:1990s ballads
+The population was 46 as of 2010.
+The winner was María Daniela Torrealba, and represented Venezuela in the Miss Earth 2008 beauty pageant, in Angeles City, Pampanga (Philippines) on November 9, 2008, and classified in Top 8 finalists.
+PersonnelOzzy Osbourne - vocalsZakk Wylde - guitarRob "Blasko" Nicholson - bassMike Bordin - drumsReferencesExternal links Category:2007 singlesCategory:Ozzy Osbourne songsCategory:Songs written by Ozzy OsbourneCategory:Songs written by Zakk WyldeCategory:Songs written by Kevin ChurkoCategory:Song recordings produced by Kevin ChurkoCategory:2006 songsCategory:Epic Records singles
+In 1952 he finished tenth in the 5000 metres competition and 14th in the 10000 metres event.
+Stacy Adams may refer to: Stacy Adams Shoe Company, a brand of menswear Stacy Adams (American football) (born 1966), head football coach at Valparaiso University
+The Undertones have also been the subject of two documentaries: The first documentary to be produced: The Story of the Undertones: Teenage Kicks, was recorded in 2001 and released in 2004.
+Many refugees fled to this village because the Sierra Leone Armed Forces occupied it.
+The mainland territory of Domnonée included Trégor, Dol-de-Bretagne through to Goélo, and Penthièvre.
+Cast Kyle MacLachlan as Josef K. Anthony Hopkins as Priest Jason Robards as Doctor Huld Juliet Stevenson as Fräulein Bürstner Polly Walker as Leni Alfred Molina as Titorelli David Thewlis as Franz Michael Kitchen as Block Tony Haygarth as Willem Douglas Hodge as Inspector Jirí Schwarz as Babensteiner David Schneider as Kullich Ondřej Vetchý as Kaminer Paul Brooke as Deputy bank manager Harry Burton as K's assistant Roger Lloyd-Pack as Stairman Oskar Hák as Verger Leon Lissek as Stairman Catherine Neilson as Washer woman Trevor Peacock as Examining magistrate Patrick Godfrey as Court usher Andrew Tiernan as Berthold Jirí Schmitzer as Thin defendant Don Henderson as Flogger Martin Faltyn as Clerk Robert Lang as K's uncle Jan Laibl as Chief clerk John Woodvine as Herr Deimen Jean Stapleton as Landlady (uncredited)See also The Trial, 1962 film directed by Orson Welles.
+Revolt and DeathJotapianus led a rebellion started in Syria, towards the end of Philip's rule, against the increase in taxation ordered by the rector Orientis Priscus, Philip's brother.
+Moony Luna/Luna, Lunita Lunera (bilingual), illustrated by Elizabeth Gómez, Children's Book Press (San Francisco, CA), 2005.
+References Category:1951 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Croatian footballersCategory:Yugoslav footballersCategory:Toronto Croatia playersCategory:Toronto Blizzard (1971–1984) playersCategory:Canadian National Soccer League playersCategory:North American Soccer League (1968–1984) playersCategory:Association football defenders
+Its specific name honours the French paleontologist and ichthyologist Henri Émile Sauvage (1842-1917).
+Stříbrný may refer to: Jiří StříbrnýSee also Stříbrný vítr (film), a Czech drama film, released in 1954 Plece names Stříbrná (), a village and municipality in Sokolov District Stříbrné Hory (Havlíčkův Brod District) Smogornia () Stříbrná Skalice (), a village in Prague-East District Stříbrný vítr, a Czech novel, written by Fráňa ŠrámekCategory:Czech words and phrasesCategory:Czech-language surnames
+ReferencesCategory:TipulidaeCategory:Articles created by QbugbotCategory:Insects described in 1863
+During this time, a supernatural barrier called the Olynssis barrier, which disrupts space and time, envelops all of Earth.
+The discography of Silversun Pickups, an American alternative rock band, consists of five studio albums and 19 singles.
+Kerr-Smiley's London house was at 31 Belgrave Square, and he was a member of the Carlton Club, the Marlborough Club and the Cavalry Club.
+Had Roma and Orndorff won the match, The Patriot would have been forced to remove his mask.
+Ljubomir Kerekeš (born 16 January 1960) is a Croatian theatre, television and film actor.
+Ogougouworo is a village in the commune of Bassila in the Donga Department of western Benin.The geographical coordinates are 9° 22' 0" North, 1° 29' 0" EastExternal linksSatellite map at MaplandiaCategory:Populated places in the Donga DepartmentCategory:Commune of Bassila
+There are a number of small islands in the sound, of which Eilean nan Gobhar and Samalaman Island, both near to Glenuig on the south shore, are the largest.
+Selected filmographyAll My Friends Part 2 (1982)Bianco, rosso e Verdone (1981)The Flower in His Mouth (1975)Lo chiameremo Andrea (1975)Alfredo, Alfredo (1972)Between Miracles (1971)Let's Have a Riot (1970)Ghosts – Italian Style (1968)Misunderstood (1966)I complessi (1965)A Question of Honour (1965)Marriage Italian-Style (1964)Kali Yug: Goddess of Vengeance (1963)Shivers in Summer (1963)Girl with a Suitcase (1961)The Joy of Living (1961)A Man of Straw (1958)Guendalina (1957) The Song of the Heart (1955) Orphan of the Ghetto (1954)ReferencesExternal linksCategory:1926 birthsCategory:2010 deathsCategory:Italian screenwritersCategory:People from PratoCategory:David di Donatello winnersCategory:Italian male screenwriters
+The genus was erected by Florentino Ameghino in 1895.
+Imao spent most of his childhood in the town of Pata, also in Sulu.
+See alsoList of German television seriesExternal links Category:2006 telenovelasCategory:German telenovelasCategory:2006 German television series debutsCategory:2007 German television series endingsCategory:2000s German television seriesCategory:German-language television programsCategory:ProSieben telenovelas
+He, however, is determined to see California, but promises to return when his wanderlust is satisfied.
+Track listingPersonnel Bundy K. Brown – engineeringDavid Grubbs – guitarJim O'Rourke – production, engineering, recordingDan Osborn – cover art, designReferences Category:1997 debut albumsCategory:David Grubbs albums
+Filastin reported that on 30 December, yet another Zionist raiding party had tried to blow up village houses.
+Under his influence, several members of his immediate family were made knights, baronets and peers.
+In the snatch portion Li set two junior world records and was in third place after Lü Xiaojun and Mohamed Ihab exchanged world record lifts.
+Today, he is a professor at the same institution.
+They also attacked near the South Blockhouse (located at the south end of Joseph Howe Drive), at a saw-mill on a stream flowing out of Chocolate Lake into the Northwest Arm.
+The album comes with a bonus DVD with the entire album performed live, it also comes in a special cardboard package that includes a set of lithographed pictures of the show and a guitar pic.
+HistoryThe school was founded in 1970, when court orders required public schools to be racially integrated.
+Holland CD2"Won't Take It Lying Down" (Ollie Twist Mix)"Won't Take It Lying Down" (LA Mix)"What Does She Look Like?"
+Randolph Bracy III (born April 23, 1977) is a Democratic member of the Florida Senate, representing the 11th district, which includes central and northwest Orange County, since 2016.
+Together with "Not Today", "Outro: Wings" and "A Supplementary Story: You Never Walk Alone", the four new tracks held the top four slots on the World Digital Songs chart making BTS the first K-pop act to do so.
+Disa purpurascens is a species of orchid found in South Africa (SW. Cape Prov.).
+Surat Thani may refer tothe town Surat ThaniSurat Thani ProvinceMueang Surat Thani districtthe Roman Catholic Diocese of Surat ThaniSurat Thani AirportMonthon Surat Thani, a former administrative entitySurat Thani FC
+It may also facilitate zinc uptake from the environment through interactions with the znuABC zinc transporter.
+Image gallerySee also Location shootingLocation managerLocation scoutingLocation libraryFilmmakingReferencesExternal links
+Ahmadabad (, also Romanized as Aḩmadābād-e Do; also known as Aḩmadābād) is a village in Rayen Rural District, Rayen District, Kerman County, Kerman Province, Iran.
+Recorded in Hamburg, Cologne and Berlin, Germany, Capristo had mainly collaborated with David Jost, Twin, Lamb, Julie Frost and Will Simms, among others for the album.
+It is now in the Wadsworth Atheneum collection.
+The 51st edition of the Tirreno–Adriatico cycling stage race was held from 9 to 15 March 2016.
+He played 65 different instruments; including banjos, 12-string guitar, cittern, Celtic harp, lute, and Ozark mouthbow.
+SpeciesSpecies within the genus Sermyla include: Sermyla riqueti (Grateloup, 1840) Sermyla sculpta Souleyet, 1832 Sermyla venustula (Brot, 1877)Synonyms Sermyla perakensis de Morgan, 1885 is a synonym of Brotia costula (Rafinesque, 1833)ReferencesExternal linksCategory:Thiaridae
+Beside, all members have previously worked with other bands: Botarelli and Kirsch played together in a band called Planant; she also performed with Barreto in Talma & Gadelha; Brasil played in Calistoga and, together with Figueira and Kirsch, he was part of Venice.
+ShipsMissiles 50 VT-1 Crotale NG SAMs 162 Exocet MM-40 (122 Block-1+ 40 Block-2) Exocet MM-38 Harpoon Block-II Mica-SAMElectronics MASS Ship protection system 3 x SMART-S MK-II Ship sensors 2 x MW-8 Air search radar 5 x Sting fire control radar 2 x DRBV-51C fire control radar 3 x RA-20S air search radar 4 x 9LV radar 3 x CEROS-200 radarFutureProcurementNew Research VesselThe Royal Navy of Oman (RNO) has contracted with the US Pentagon through a Foreign Military Sales (FMS) program to provide a new research vessel based on the RV F.G. Walton Smith, a University of Miami vessel.
+He was the brother of Ceno Bey Kryeziu, Albanian politician and diplomat known as a Serbian agent, as well as Said Bey and Hasan Bey, both resistance and anti-communists fighters, and son of Riza Bey Kryeziu, an influential local bey who had contributed in the League of Junik and was one of activists of Albanian national movements of early 20th century.
+The "golden era" of neppis, in the sandpits of Finnish residential areas, was the late 1970s.
+In addition to its broad long-standing industrial base, the city enjoyed notable growth in the 1840s during the construction of the feeder canal (now the Calumet Sag Channel) for the Illinois and Michigan Canal and as the center of a large brick-making industry beginning in the 1850s, which eventually gave Blue Island the status of brick-making capital of the world.
+His works were genre pieces; merry company interiors with people drinking tea or playing cards, but also kraamkamertjes, or visits to newborn baby's.
+It lies approximately north-west of Siemiątkowo, south of Żuromin, and north-west of Warsaw.
+Adam arrives to invite Shell out.
+It was created through the initiative of Benedicto Arystogogo de Mello, who had already founded the settlements of Riverlândia, in Rio Verde, and Vila Brasil, in Santa Helena de Goiás.
+Lia and her three brothers - Paolo, Nicola and Gianni - are the grandchildren of Sotirio Bulgari, an Ottoman born Greek silversmith, who was the Bulgari group founder.
+On 1 March, OMON troops fired at a border guard bus returning from Vilnius.
+The set designer Julia Trevelyan Oman (1930–2003) was her niece.
+The Labour leader Harry Holland died unexpectedly of a heart attack at his funeral.
+Together with military badges, such awards are a means to outwardly display the highlights of a service member's career.
+Departures WR Torry Holt, released on February 11, 2010.
+It is found in Malawi.
+Numerous management strategies use competition as an incentive for better productivity, however, according to the superstar effect, if agents are to rival a superstar, they may in fact reduce their efforts.
+CensusIn the 1901 census of Ireland, there was one family listed in the townland.
+He played all six matches and scored 21 goals.
+Television programsPrograms debuting in 2009References
+W. M. Leake, Travels in northern Greece, Vol.
+This was followed up by a release called Destination 6 and received 'Tune of the Week’ status on Armin van Buuren’s radio show, A State Of Trance.
+On August 17 Hughes made his debut against the San Diego Padres.
+The company redesigned their iOS app, Android app, and website to prominently feature mobile game live streaming content.
+Gréez-sur-Roc is a commune in the Sarthe department in the region of Pays-de-la-Loire in north-western France.
+in 1784 that gleans the works of François-Antoine Devaux's (1712-1796) on reclaiming of lands and the Austrian Febronianist pamphleteer Joseph Valentin Eybel's relentless and scurrilous attacks on the Roman Curia, namely the Pope.
+The line from Győr to Celldömölk is 72 km long.
+The police, the judicial system, politicians, prosecutors and citizens rely on the Chicago Crime Commission to provide advice on crime issues and to communicate vital information to the public.
+Two heats were held, both with six swimmers.
+Zenson di Piave borders the following municipalities: Fossalta di Piave, Monastier di Treviso, Noventa di Piave, Salgareda, San Biagio di Callalta.
+It was screened in the Directors' Fortnight section at the 2019 Cannes Film Festival.
+ReferencesCategory:Municipalities of PueblaCategory:Populated places in Puebla
+The Armenian community in Argentina is the largest in Latin America totaling approximately 120,000 members.
+This is a list of singles that have peaked in the Top 10 of the Billboard Hot 100 during 2005.
+Before 1945 the area was part of Germany.
+17), Queen of Femille (Ep.
+Initial release by Ding Dong was limited to 2,000 copies.
+The town has been locally referred to simply as Neelys and is often written without the apostrophe.
+StructureThe abelianization map induces a homomorphism from to the general linear group , the latter being the automorphism group of .
+He made his Super Rugby debut for the Crusaders in their 32–12 win over the Chiefs in the Semi Final, 2018.
+It is conferred for services in the fields of literature and the fine arts, education, justice, administration, and science.
+He attended the University of Nebraska and received both a bachelor's and master's degrees in electrical engineering.
+Her work was rejected 137 times for publication.
+Shells are quite elongated and laterally compressed.
+His art has won a number of awards and residencies.
+Crestview is an unincorporated community in the town of Turtle in Rock County, Wisconsin, United States.
+References Category:Mountains of AsturiasCategory:Picos de Europa
+420–391 BCE) Plato of Bactria (2nd century BCE), Greco-Bactrian king Plato (exarch) (fl.
+After seminary, Vorobkevych began an internship as a priest in the neighboring villages.
+The lake's main inflow is the estavelle Matija's Cave () out of which the water flowing from the Javornik Hills erupts.
+It aired Start this December 11, 2006 to September 5, 2008 Monday through Friday.
+ed.
+Promoted to Lieutenant on 29 March 1910, he spent the years 1910–12 in training abroad.
+SeedsDrawDrawReferences Main DrawIPP Open - Doubles2012 Doubles
+Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain opened the scoring within the first 15 minutes, before Podolski doubled their lead.
+Rowman & Littlefield, 2014.
+League tableChampions FK Partizan (Coach:Aleksandar Atanacković)player (league matches/league goals)Vladica Kovačević (28/14)Josip Pirmajer (27/7)Ljubomir Mihajlović (26/0)Milan Galić (24/15)Ivan Ćurković (23/0) (goalkeeper)Mustafa Hasanagić (20/13)Radoslav Bečejac (20/2)Jovan Miladinović (19/0)Joakim Vislavski (18/5)Fahrudin Jusufi (18/0)Branko Rašović (17/0)Velibor Vasović (15/0)Velimir Sombolac (14/0)Milan Damjanović (11/0)Milan Vukelić (10/0)Lazar Radović (8/0)Bora Milutinović (6/0)Mane Bajić (5/1)Miodrag Petrović (5/1)Milutin Šoškić (4/0) (goalkeeper)Branislav Mihajlović (2/0)Jovan Ćurčić (1/0) (goalkeeper)Vojislav Simeunović (1/0)Top scorersSee also1964–65 Yugoslav Second League1964–65 Yugoslav CupExternal linksYugoslavia Domestic Football Full TablesCategory:Yugoslav First League seasonsYugoCategory:1964–65 in Yugoslavian football
+Track listingChartsReferencesCategory:2019 albumsCategory:Ezhel albumsCategory:Ufo361 albumsCategory:Turkish-language albumsCategory:German-language albumsCategory:Collaborative albums
+Twin towns — sister citiesGranarolo dell'Emilia is twinned with: Bagnères-de-Bigorre, France (1985)ReferencesExternal links Official website Category:Cities and towns in Emilia-Romagna
+German abuses lead Erik to form a Resistance group.
+ScheduleReferencesCategory:Wake Forest Demon Deacons football seasonsWake ForestWake Forest football
+Professional careerOliveira went undrafted in the 2019 NFL Draft but was selected 14th overall in the 2019 CFL Draft by the Winnipeg Blue Bombers.
+At the beginning of the 1930s he began to be hired more and more for films with regional backgrounds, such The Forester's Daughter (1931) and Hubertus Castle (1934), usually playing huntsmen, foresters or landowners, and often in adaptations of the novels of Ludwig Ganghofer.
+This is a list of notable venues worldwide including theaters, clubs, arenas, convention centers, and stadiums, all which can host a concert (music related).
+The Unthinkable (Polish: O czym się nie myśli) is a 1926 Polish silent drama film directed by Edward Puchalski and starring Józef Węgrzyn, Igo Sym and Mira Zimińska.
+Written and directed by Manon Briand, the film stars Stéphanie Lapointe as Émilie, a coat check clerk at a Montreal nightclub who decides to return a coat left behind one night by a woman who took a drug overdose in the club, only to find herself embroiled in the city's criminal underground.
+Selected filmographyTa Paidia tis Niovis (2004) (TV Series) as Mihalakis Anastasiadis (Sarris)Megalos thimos, O (1998) (TV Series) as AsimakisDipli alithia (1996) (TV Series)Prova nifikou (1995) (TV Series) as Petros ManiasAnatomia enos eglimatos (1992) (TV Series) as NarratorFakelos Amazon (1991) (TV Series)Treis harites, Oi (1990) as Yannis AlexiouThanatos tou Timotheou Konsta, O (1986) (TV Series)Dikigoroi, Oi (1982) (TV Series)Astrofeggia (1980) (TV Series)Eleftherios Venizelos: 1910-1927 (1980)External links Category:1955 birthsCategory:Greek male soap opera actorsCategory:Greek male stage actorsCategory:Greek male television actorsCategory:Greek theatre directorsCategory:Living peopleCategory:People from Thessaloniki
+However, the council announced it would help him financially through its Student Awards system, with money for books and specialist equipment and with a disability student award grant to pay for a personal helper.
+Yanagihara was also selected as a finalist for the 2015 National Book Award in Fiction.
+Unlike previous Mitsubishi cross-country rally cars, the Racing Lancer's bodywork resembles the Mitsubishi Lancer Sportback instead of the Mitsubishi Pajero.
+"국산대작이 볼만 / -신협-제작영화도 이색 / 정초 시내 개봉관 -프로-", Kyunghyang SinmunNotesBibliography Category:1961 filmsCategory:Films directed by Shin Sang-okCategory:Korean-language filmsCategory:South Korean filmsCategory:South Korean biographical filmsCategory:South Korean historical films
+International careerThomas made his senior All Whites debut in a 3–5 against Australia on 5 November 1967, and scored 2 goals in his first start 3 days later in a 3–1 win over Singapore.
+He played on the 2001 team that won the NCAA national championship.
+He died on December 5, 2010, in Spring, Texas at age 64.
+His stand made him several enemies, and resulted in hisimprisonment for a short period for illegal possession of foreign currency after police found£26 in his home after a trip to Britain.
+Rodríguez Vega did not kill again until 21 January 1988, when Carmen Martínez González was found dead in her home.
+REDIRECT 1974 United States House of Representatives elections#IllinoisCategory:United States House of Representatives elections in IllinoisIllinoisUnited States House of Representatives
+FootnotesSources Category:Castles in BulgariaCategory:Buildings and structures in Yambol Province
+Each corallite has 12 primary septa with fine teeth which partially project from the corallite wall and which are larger than the intermediate septa.
+ScheduleRosterReferencesAir Force FalconsCategory:Air Force Falcons football seasonsAir Force
+Costello / Gleason / Flake My Favorite Martian (1964-1966) - Red / Guard / Harold Batman (1967) - Mercury Star Trek (1967-1968) - Guard / PolicemanReferencesExternal links Category:1918 birthsCategory:1998 deathsCategory:American male film actorsCategory:American male television actorsCategory:Male actors from NebraskaCategory:Male actors from San AntonioCategory:People from Banner County, NebraskaCategory:20th-century American male actorsCategory:Western (genre) television actorsCategory:American male boxersCategory:Heavyweight boxers
+Sound effects librariesThe company's first sound effects collection, the Series 1000, was released in 1979.
+KOUU (1290 AM) is a radio station broadcasting a classic country music format, as well as local high school sports events.
+Documented origins involve a carpenter and butcher.
+National ConventionAs a result of the spike in public violence and the political instability of the constitutional monarchy, a party of six members of France's Legislative Assembly was assigned the task of overseeing elections.
+Ben-Gurion kept the same coalition partners as during the previous government, i.e.
+External links Enrico Rosenbaum Biography Page at midwesttribute.com [ Gypsy] at Allmusic Gypsy 1970 at Billboard official site Gypsy at Whisky a Go GoCategory:1944 birthsCategory:1979 deathsCategory:Singers who committed suicideCategory:Male suicidesCategory:Gypsy (band) membersCategory:20th-century singers
+Harbhagat Singh a.k.a.
+CareerA product of his hometown's FC Dinamo Tbilisi and a youth international, Iluridze was scouted and signed by FC Anzhi Makhachkala in 2010, where he made his first team debut in the Russian Premier League on 6 May 2010, aged 18, in a 3-0 away loss against FC Spartak Moscow, coming in the 75th minute for Mikhail Bakayev.
+Most visited sights in Pollença town: Plaça Mayor, Plaça Vella, Can Llobera, Convent, Joan March Gardens, Calvari and Roman Bridge.
+Serbia and Romania disputed the Banat region, which led France to deploy peacekeepers to Banat until borders were fixed on 10 September 1919 in the Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye.
+Craggs was also in Wales and identified as the protester who jumped out at the Home Secretary at Llandaff Cathedral during a Royal Visit at Cathays Park saying 'it was a shame he was going about the country while suffragettes where starving in prison'In November 1910, Craggs went to the Paragon Theatre, Whitechapel at 2a.m.
+It has hundreds of active writer-members in provincial and municipal chapters as well as in overseas chapters in the mainland U.S. and Hawaii and in Greece.
+ReferencesCategory:1928 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Jiang Zemin family
+Laguna Beach Unified School District (LBUSD) is a public school district based in the City of Laguna Beach, Orange County, California, United States.
+North AmericaAlabama - United StatesAllegheny - United StatesAlsek - Canada/United StatesAltamaha - United StatesArkansas - United StatesApalachicola - United StatesChattahoochee - United StatesFlint - United StatesColorado - United States / MexicoColumbia - Canada/United StatesSnake - United StatesOkanagan - Canada/United StatesKettle - CanadaPend Oreille - United StatesKootenay - Canada/United StatesCanoe - CanadaKicking Horse - CanadaWillamette - United StatesDean - CanadaDelaware River - United StatesBrandywine River - (Pennsylvania and Delaware) United StatesLehigh River - United StatesSchuylkill River - United StatesEmbudo River - United StatesFraser - CanadaPitt - CanadaThompson - CanadaChilcotin - CanadaQuesnel - CanadaNechako - CanadaHudson River - United StatesMohawk River - United StatesLiard - CanadaMackenzie - CanadaSlave - CanadaPeace - CanadaAthabasca - CanadaMississippi - United StatesArkansas River - United StatesCanadian River - United StatesCimarron River - United StatesDes Moines River - United StatesIllinois River - United StatesMinnesota River - United StatesMissouri -United StatesYellowstone River - United StatesPlatte River - United StatesMilk - Canada/United StatesOhio - United StatesCumberland River - United StatesKanawha River - United StatesScioto River - United StatesTennessee River - United StatesRed River of the South - United StatesRock River (Mississippi River) - United StatesWisconsin River - United StatesNass - CanadaPotomac River - United StatesShenandoah River - United StatesRoanoke River - United StatesRio Grande - Mexico/United StatesSacramento - United StatesPit - United StatesFeather - United StatesSaskatchewan - CanadaSkagit - Canada/United StatesSkeena - CanadaBabine - CanadaBulkley - CanadaMorice - CanadaKitwanga - CanadaZymoetz - CanadaSquamish - CanadaSt. Johns - United StatesSt. Lawrence - Canada/United StatesCuyahoga River - United StatesDetroit River - Canada/United StatesFox River - United StatesSaginaw River - United StatesOttawa River - CanadaMorice - CanadaSusquehanna River - United StatesYukon - Canada/United StatesTanana River - United StatesCentral America and the CaribbeanCaribbeanArtibonite River - Dominican Republic, HaitiChavón River - Dominican RepublicDajabón River - Dominican Republic, HaitiHaina River - Dominican RepublicIguamo River - Dominican RepublicIsabela River - Dominican RepublicNizao River - Dominican RepublicOzama River - Dominican RepublicRivière Soliette - Dominican Republic, HaitiYaque del Norte River - Dominican RepublicYaque del Sur River - Dominican RepublicYuna River - Dominican RepublicCentral AmericaUsumacinta - Mexico, GuatemalaCahabón - GuatemalaCahaboncito - GuatemalaLankin - GuatemalaNahualate - GuatemalaLos Esclavos - GuatemalaRio Dulce - GuatemalaLempa River - El SalvadorAbangares River - Costa RicaReventazón River - Costa RicaTárcoles River - Costa RicaTempisque River - Costa Rica Ulúa River - Honduras Chamelecón River -Honduras Aguán River - Honduras Choluteca River - Honduras Coco River - border between Honduras and NicaraguaSouth AmericaAconcagua - ChileAmazon - Ecuador, Perú, Bolivia, Venezuela, Colombia, BrazilSolimoes - BrazilCaquetá - Colombia, BrazilMadeira - BrazilRio Negro - Venezuela, Colombia, BrazilPutumayo - Colombia, BrazilIçana - ColombiaTocantins - BrazilVaupés - Colombia, BrazilApure - VenezuelaAtrato - ColombiaBaudó - ColombiaBío-Bío - ChileMalleco - ChileCaroní - VenezuelaCatatumbo - Colombia, VenezuelaZulia - Venezuela, ColombiaSardinata - ColombiaCauca - ColombiaCautín - ChileChubut - ArgentinaColorado - ArgentinaElqui - ChileEssequibo - GuyanaItata - ChileÑuble - ChileLoa - ChileMagdalena - ColombiaMaipo - ChileMapocho - ChileMaule - ChileLoncomilla - ChileAchibueno - ChileAncoa - ChileLongaví - ChilePerquilauquén - ChilePurapel - ChilePutagán - ChileMelado - ChileMaullín - ChileMaroni - Suriname, French GuianaMira - ColombiaOrinoco - Colombia, VenezuelaApure - VenezuelaArauca - Colombia, VenezuelaMeta - Colombia, VenezuelaGuaviare - ColombiaMeta - ColombiaTomo - ColombiaVichada - ColombiaParnaiba - BrazilRapel - ChileReñihue - ChileRío Bueno - ChileRahue - ChileDamas - ChileRío de la Plata It is not really a river but the lower stretch of the Paraná and the estuary that forms after its confluence with the UruguayParaná - Brazil, Argentina, ParaguayUruguay - Brazil, Argentina, UruguayPalena - ChilePatía - ColombiaPetrohué - ChilePuelo - ChileSão Francisco - BrazilSan Jorge - ColombiaSan Juan - ColombiaSinú - ColombiaToltén - ChileTrancura - ChileValdivia - ChileCalle-Calle - ChileSan Pedro - ChileEnco - ChileLlanquihue - ChileHuahum - Chile, ArgentinaChapelco - ArgentinaLiquiñe - Chile Cau-Cau - ChileCruces - ChileCutipay - ChileFuta - ChileYelcho - ChileFutaleufú - ChileRelated articles and listsList of rivers in Central America and the CaribbeanList of rivers in the Great BasinList of rivers of the Americas by coastlineList of tributaries of Hudson BaySee alsoPaleo-Bell RiverList of rivers of EuropeList of rivers of AsiaList of rivers of AfricaList of rivers of OceaniaLists of riversAlphabetical list of Rivers in the WorldList of reference tables (lists other than rivers)AmericasRiversRiversRivers
+From 1928 he was in France and Switzerland.
+ReferencesCategory:Populated places in the Cascades RegionCategory:Comoé Province
+The Bible's Books of Kings state that soon after the split Pharoh "Shishaq" invaded the country plundering Jerusalem.
+B Type re-pack, which was limited to 5,000 copies, was a seasonal item for the Fall of the year with a high quality diary that has Rain's pictures undisclosed to the public.
+Lucius Cornelius Lentulus was a Roman politician in the second half of the 2nd century BC.
+The Swiss Men's Curling Championship is the national championship of men's curling in Switzerland.
+Genghis retaliated with a force of 200,000 men, launching a multi-pronged invasion.
+In Australia, he debuted his cooking career at age 18 at the Savoy Hotel.
+She was a special envoy of the Dominican government to the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom in 1953.
+William Earl Collins (born July 13, 1943) is a Canadian retired professional ice hockey centre who played in the National Hockey League (NHL) for the Minnesota North Stars, Montreal Canadiens, Detroit Red Wings, St. Louis Blues, New York Rangers, Philadelphia Flyers, and Washington Capitals.
+The southern edge of the village is bordered by the Metropolitan borough of Barnsley within the county of South Yorkshire.
+Pittsburgh SteelersWilliams was signed off the Seahawks' practice squad by the Pittsburgh Steelers on December 29, 2009.
+Galleria Duemila showed drawings from Chabet's early period in an exhibition entitled "Selected Chabet Drawings 60s-70s" at its gallery in May 2004.
+Gilbert K. Chesterton stated that "cruelty is, perhaps, the worst kind of sin.
+A state could have the right to vote in the bench if they ruled an Imperial Estate with a right to vote in the Bench, or if they ruled a significant immediate territory which a right to vote in the Bench.
+Zimbabwe also played their first test series on English soil losing 1-0.
+Chang Ming-chung (born 3 January 1943) is a Taiwanese weightlifter.
+Together with New Jersey rappers and other associates they formed the original lineup of the Outlawz.
+Both were remastered by John Golden for this release.
+Carpenter entered the 2000s with her seventh studio album Time* Sex* Love* (2001), debuting at number six on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart.
+ReferencesMrowina
+is the fourth studio album released by American country music artist Neal McCoy, released in 1995 on Atlantic Records.
+As one of King Edward I's leading commanders, he was Governor of Edinburgh Castle from 1298 to 1300 and from 1301 to at least 1305 (possibly as late as 1310).
+External linksBirdLife International: Kilum-Ijim Forest Project, CameroonCategory:Afromontane forestsCategory:Forests of CameroonCategory:Rainforests of AfricaCategory:Northwest Region (Cameroon)
+Latitude and longitude coordinates are provided for many National Register properties and districts; these locations may be seen together in a map.
+Maqsud Sultan was a member of the Kangarlu branch of the Turkoman Ustajlu tribe, one of the original Qizilbash tribes that had supplied power to the Safavids since its earliest days.
+Actress Madonna Sebastian has expressed her dislike for it, saying, "I think it is disrespectful and when people endorse it, even heroines, it becomes a dangerous trend."
+Notable people with the surname include:Adam Lehan, British guitaristJames Lehan (1856–1946), American baseball playerMichael Lehan (born 1979), American football player
+It is managed by the Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board.
+Following the release of the magazine Deerchild frequently spoke about racism, public perception, and Indigenous life in Winnipeg.
+Obradović has also been a member of the National Assembly of Serbia since 2016, serving as a non-partisan member affiliated with the governing Serbian Progressive Party.
+The house was built in the early-17th century, with mid-18th century alterations and 20th-century extensions.
+ReleaseThe film was released in the United States on August 14, 1912.
+Ehuẹun (Ekpimi) is an Edoid language of Ondo State, Nigeria.
+Besides the Satanic, Blood Angel and Satanic Blood demos, Satanic Blood Angel is the only current licensed re-release of the Von demos compiled for sale, excluding Satanic.
+Barsinella mirabilis is a moth of the subfamily Arctiinae first described by Arthur Gardiner Butler in 1878.
+Based at Boston, Massachusetts, she operated as a patrol craft off Nantucket and in Boston Harbor for the rest of World War I.
+He competed in the men's 25 metre rapid fire pistol event at the 1976 Summer Olympics.
+See alsoCommunes of the Pyrénées-Atlantiques departmentReferencesINSEECategory:Communes of Pyrénées-Atlantiques
+Brigadier General Bubenik completed the General Staff post-graduate study at the University of Defence in Brno in 2010.
+Microtransit providers build routes so as to match demand (trip) and supply (driven vehicle) and extend the efficiency and accessibility of the transit service.
+The council is nonpartisan and elected at-large for four-year terms.
+MedalistsSeedsDrawTop HalfBottom HalfReferencesITF Olympic Site1992Men's doubles
+On Jan 5, 2020 a group of masked vandals entered the campus, destroyed property and beat up several people.
+HonoursClubTorinoSerie A: 1948–49References Profile on French federation official siteCategory:1921 birthsCategory:1949 deathsCategory:French people of Italian descentCategory:French footballersCategory:France international footballersCategory:Association football forwardsCategory:Racing Club de France Football playersCategory:Ligue 1 playersCategory:Torino F.C.
+Places in the 831 area codeMajor cities within Area code 831 include: Salinas, Hollister, Monterey, Santa Cruz and the northern Central Coast.
+Elected RepresentativesReferences Category:Districts of the House of Representatives (Japan)
+Harbour City may refer to: Harbour City (Hong Kong), a shopping centre Harbor City, Los Angeles, the community in Los Angeles Harbour City Metrolink station, a tram stop in Greater Manchester Kaohsiung, nicknamed "the harbour city" for having the biggest port in Taiwan Nanaimo, British Columbia, officially called "The Harbour City" Sydney, nicknamed "the Harbour City"See also Harbour Town Harbor Town Harbour Centre
+The Certain Efficacy of the Death of Christ asserted, 1743.
+112 ran on the Plochingen–Tübingen line and 18 ran on the branch line to Urach.
+The name is a Coral and was submitted by Macao.
+Her 1998 song "Hey" became a popular dance hit in the Philippines.
+†Partula callifera was a species of air-breathing tropical land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Partulidae.
+The team is led by 2014 Winter Olympics participant Muhammad Karim.
+The two sets of nominally equal cash flows are exchanged as per the terms of the swap, which may involve an equity-based cash flow (such as from a stock asset) that is traded for a fixed-income cash flow (such as a benchmark rate), but this is not necessarily the case.
+SAMMY (SYRACUSE area music) Award for best Alternative.
+In a bid to secure the support of the Persian shah Khosrau II (r. 590–628), Maurice dispatched his eldest son and co-emperor, Theodosius, to the East, and sent Constantine Lardys to accompany him.
+ReferencesCategory:Buildings and structures in Maysville, KentuckyCategory:National Register of Historic Places in Mason County, KentuckyCategory:Richardsonian Romanesque architecture in KentuckyCategory:Commercial buildings completed in 1887Category:Masonic buildings completed in 1887
+It inhibits bacterial cell wall synthesis like other β-lactam antibiotics.
+ReferencesExternal links Category:Activist groups in Saint LouisCategory:African-American working classCategory:Organizations based in St. LouisCategory:Organizations established in 1980Category:African Americans' rights organizationsCategory:Shooting of Michael BrownCategory:Working class in the United StatesCategory:Political organizations based in St. Louis
+He was subsequently named first team All-SEC, and a second-team All-American (by AP, CBS Sports and AFCA) at the conclusion of the season.
+They are apparently absent from areas west of the Kaligandaki River.
+BiographyBorn 15 September 1797, the eldest son of Charles MacAlester and Janet Somerville, daughter of William Somerville of Kennox and Lilian Porterfield, daughter of Gabriel Porterfield of Hapland.
+According to a legend, a local tribal spotted a tribal girl taking the form of Devi to kill a demon.
+He won a number of local and regional tournaments while he was a club professional and played in five U.S.
+The performances are accompanied by elaborate stage sets, dancers and full costuming.
+ReferencesCategory:Populated places in Shahrud CountyCategory:Cities in Semnan ProvinceCategory:Qumis (region)
+Pęgów () is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Oborniki Śląskie, within Trzebnica County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland.
+See also List of South Australian representative cricketersReferencesExternal links Gordon Campbell at CricketArchiveCategory:1885 birthsCategory:1961 deathsCategory:Australian cricketersCategory:South Australia cricketersCategory:Australian recipients of the Military CrossCategory:People educated at St Peter's College, AdelaideCategory:Australian military personnel of World War I
+A modified release preparation is also available, taken once daily.
+Recognition and legacyThe Rock and Roll Hall of Fame included "Shake Your Moneymaker" on its list of the "500 Songs that Shaped Rock and Roll".
+Players Appearances and goals are composed of FIFA World Cup, Summer Olympic Games, AFC Asian Cup, and UEFA European Championship matches and each competition's required qualification matches, as well as numerous international friendly tournaments and matches.
+His daughter was actress Pamela Simpson (1905-2002).
+Radha is an example of “Lila Lekhan”, a Nepalese metaphysical novel concerned with explaining the features of reality that exist beyond the physical world and our immediate senses, for which Dharabasi is known.
+ReferencesExternal links Profile by Russian Football National LeagueCategory:1999 birthsCategory:People from NazranCategory:Living peopleCategory:Russian footballersCategory:Russia youth international footballersCategory:FC Spartak Moscow playersCategory:FC Spartak-2 Moscow playersCategory:FC Rubin Kazan playersCategory:Association football midfieldersCategory:Russian Premier League players
+The 2014 FIBA Intercontinental Cup was the 24th edition of the FIBA Intercontinental Cup for men's professional basketball clubs and the 23rd edition of the tournament being in the form of a true intercontinental tournament for clubs.
+Claremont is an unincorporated community and coal town in Fayette County, West Virginia.
+He is also known for mentoring some of the current Sri Lankan international cricketers including Angelo Mathews, Thisara Perera and Dimuth Karunaratne.
+Therefore, Hiyama Subprefecture became the only subprefecture in which there is no railway.
+Operational historyBy November 2017 four examples had been registered in the United States with the Federal Aviation Administration.
+ReferencesExternal linksMortgage Industry Standards Maintenance Organization (MISMO): electronic mortgage guidelines and recommendationsElectronic Signatures and eMortgages Who Needs Paper, Not Flagstar Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS)Category:E-commerce in the United StatesCategory:Mortgage industry of the United States
+Hôpital de Verdun () is a hospital in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
+Saskatchewan Gaming Corporation (commonly referred to as Sask Gaming) is a Crown corporation owned by the Government of Saskatchewan established in 1996 to set up and operate the Casino Regina.
+In 1909, Negresco became a French citizen.
+While singing at Slapsy Maxie's, Director Mervyn LeRoy and Producer Jesse L. Lasky signed her for movies at RKO where she made three movies, one with John Wayne.
+Though her parents are reluctant they relent after a while and take her to the zoo.
+Although all original UK singles used the spelling Suzanah, in many other countries and on later compilation albums Suzannah or Susannah was used.
+The construction was started by Peter I on 5 December 1709.
+The gigantic red granite monolith was uplifted to its present height of 1062 m more than 2 million years ago.
+It is endemic to Taiwan.
+Also released as a single was a cover of Steppenwolf's "Born to Be Wild", which was less successful.
+The away kit was unsurprisingly white with claret shorts and white socks – and has the same design as the home kit.
+Due to insufficient statistical information on the species, the IUCN redlist lists the Steindachner's sea catfish as Data Deficient.
+His father was A H M Shamsud Doha, Inspector General of Police (Pakistan) and Central Minister of Agriculture and Works (Pakistan).
+Early in the 20th century, the Enochs traded some of their timberland for stock in the newly formed Great Southern Lumber Company at Bogalusa, Louisiana, and Isaac Enochs became a director in Great Southern.
+In the township the population was spread out with 31.1% under the age of 18, 2.2% from 18 to 24, 31.1% from 25 to 44, 22.2% from 45 to 64, and 13.3% who were 65 years of age or older.
+The eastern half of the street is a private road.
+TechnologyAvatarsThe avatars in VenueGen are created using a licensed technology developed at the University of Southern California that converts a photo into a 3D model.
+Intangible cultural heritage () are elements of the cultural heritage of Georgia which are abstract and must be learned, encompassing traditional knowledge including festivals, music, performances, celebrations, handicrafts, and oral traditions.
+Mfanafuthi Prince Nxumalo (born 18 May 1990) is a South African footballer who plays for Baroka as a Forward.
+Tzvetan Todorov (The Conquest of America: The Question of the Other; 1996), Fernando Savater (Ética para Amador, 1996), José Vasconcelos (La Raza Cósmica, 1993)Category:1953 birthsCategory:2012 deathsCategory:20th-century Polish philosophersCategory:21st-century philosophersCategory:Polish philologistsCategory:Polish translatorsCategory:University of Warsaw alumniCategory:University of Warsaw facultyCategory:20th-century translatorsCategory:21st-century translators
+Camí dels Reis is a station of the Palma Metro in Palma on the island of Majorca, Spain.
+The book includes personal narratives from homeless and formerly homeless LGBT youth, as well as policy essays from service providers.
+Selected filmography1934: Judex - Roger de Trémeuse1947: Un flic - Un jeune homme chez le coiffeur (uncredited)1951: Bouquet de joie - Georges1952: Une fille sur la route - Loulou - le pianiste1952: L'amour toujours l'amour - Jacques1955: Les Diaboliques - Le soldat1955: La villa Sans-Souci1955: Cherchez la femme - Joe1955: Gas-oil - Le chauffeur de car 1955: Une fille épatante - Le trombone1955: La Meilleure Part - Raymond - un ouvrier1956: Les Indiscrètes - Laroche1956: Una aventura de Gil Blas - Scipion1956: Naughty Girl - Jérôme's pal1956: The Lebanese Mission - La Pie1956: L'Homme et l'Enfant - Albert1956: And God Created Woman - L'homme qui veut danser 1957: Le Septième Commandement - Edouard, le fils d'Amélie1957: Que les hommes sont bêtes - Francis1957: L'Ami de la famille - Le Jardinier1957: Méfiez-vous fillettes - Matz1957: Nous autres à Champignol - Un soldat romain / Un roi mérovingien / Henri III / Un mousquetaire / Le zouave du pont de l'Alma / Un homme en exode (uncredited)1957: La Polka des menottes - L'inspecteur Martial1957: Send a Woman When the Devil Fails - Fred1958: - Mauvin1958: The Amorous Corporal - Potirond1958: Tabarin - Julien1958: En légitime défense - Georges1958: La Fille de Hambourg - Georges1958: Sunday Encounter - Le réceptionniste1959: Houla-Houla - Le gendarme farfelu1962: Les Moutons de Panurge - Cameo appearance (uncredited)1962: La Belle Américaine - Chougnasse, le chef comptable1962: Les Ennemis - Le médecin du contre-espionnage1962: La Vendetta - Colombo1962: Konga Yo - Jean1962: Love on a Pillow - Armand (uncredited)1962: Gigot - Gaston1962: Le Gentleman d'Epsom - Charly le "tubeur"1962: Un clair de lune à Maubeuge - Un mineur1962: Le roi des montagnes - Basile1963: Le Coup de bambou - L'auvergnat1963: People in Luck - Le marin (segment "Le yacht")1963: Les Grands Chemins - Card Player1963: Les tontons flingueurs - Paul Volfoni1963: Chair de poule - Priest1963: Bébert et l'Omnibus - Balissard1964: Faites sauter la banque!
+The following is a list of reptiles of South Asia, primarily covering the region covered by mainland India, Pakistan, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Bhutan, parts of Myanmar and the Andaman and Nicobar Island chains.
+New Haven: Yale University Press, 2005.
+Positions held Millat has also been involved in numerous national and international organizations.
+Nadab may refer to: Nadab (son of Aaron), Biblical figure, eldest son of Aaron the High Priest of Israel Nadab of Israel (Hebrew: נדב NaDaḄ meaning "nobel"), king of the northern Kingdom of Israel, reigned c. 901-900 BCE Nădab (), a village administered by Chişineu-Criş town, Arad County, Romania
+Edward Elder may refer to:Edward Elder (headmaster) (1812–1858), English teacherEdward the Elder (c. 874-7 – 924), English kingSee also
+In September 1996, Romer elevated Martinez to the Supreme Court of Colorado.
+The game has players play a variety of minigames in single-player, cooperative multiplayer, and competitive multiplayer, with up to four players playing online or on the same Switch console.
+It contains the entire live show, as well as various bonus materials.
+As previously, all stamp projects and issues came from the British General Post Office and from its Dominions and colonies.
+John David Martin (born 1945) is an American finance and business professor and author currently holding the Carr P. Collins Chair of Finance at Baylor University.
+Iranica antiqua, 20 (1985), pp.
+Track listingPersonnel Adapted from the Mutate liner notes.
+Gonostygia is a genus of moths of the family Noctuidae.
+He was appointed Head of Defence Department FCO in 1979, becoming Assistant Under-Secretary of State in 1981.
+Later, DeCavalcante was indicted with over 50 of his associates, including Polizzi, and sentenced to five years in prison, however, with his release in the early 1970s, Riggi had taken over the family and DeCavalcante himself had relocated to Florida.
+), М., Партиздат, 1935.
+In military terms, 138th Division or 138th Infantry Division may refer to: 138th Division (Imperial Japanese Army) 138th Rifle Division (Soviet Union)
+The Clubhouse and other facilities were designed by Architect Asad I.
+Winter Moon may refer to:Winter Moon (album), a 1980 album by Art Pepper"Winter Moon", song by Bradley Joseph on the 1999 album Solo JourneyWinter Moon, revised reissue of Invasion (1975 novel), a novel by Dean Koontz
+But even if the reconstruction is still ongoing, the classes still continues.
+See alsoŞekerpareRevaniBaklavaTulumbaSambaliReferencesCategory:Arab cuisineCategory:Lebanese cuisineCategory:Lebanese dessertsCategory:Syrian cuisineCategory:CookiesCategory:Levantine cuisine
+Ortikov is a town and jamoat in north-western Tajikistan.
+ReferencesExternal linksAffidavit filed by Barbara Kulaszka on December 16, 1996Affidavit filed by Barbara Kulaszka on March 4, 1996Category:1950s birthsCategory:Date of birth missingCategory:2017 deathsCategory:Canadian women lawyersCategory:Deaths from cancer in OntarioCategory:Deaths from lung cancerCategory:Holocaust denial in CanadaCategory:Lawyers in OntarioCategory:People from Northumberland County, Ontario
+Bojan Krasić (; born 4 January 1983) is a Serbian football defender.
+During the Balkan Campaign of World War I, several bands of Albanian Tosks and Ghegs supported with their activity the armed operations of the Central Powers in the region.
+It also won the FIPRESCI Award (Competition) at the festival.
+Brooks County is the name of two counties in the United States: Brooks County, Georgia Brooks County, Texas
+Donal Murray (born 24 August 1956) is a retired Irish sportsman.
+SorbettaSorbettas are the first potato-based liqueurs to be available in the United States.
+Today, the U of S's Innovation Place business park is located there.
+It is still unclear when and how he ended up in the water.
+Hernando also confirmed Isabel’s abilities by giving her the power of attorney, naming her governor of the island of Cuba.
+By the end of the decade, PBT had cleared fiscal hurdles, become independent of Point Park College and withstood an artistic transition.
+Andreas Haider-Maurer defended his title, beating Guillaume Rufin 6–3, 6–2SeedsDrawFinalsTop HalfBottom HalfReferences Main Draw Qualifying DrawBRD Brasov Challenger - SinglesCategory:BRD Brașov ChallengerCategory:2014 in Romanian sport
+Their main crops were cotton and sorghum.
+In 2000, in possibly the biggest case of fly-tipping in British history, over one million tyres and a thousand tonnes of shredded rubber were dumped on its land, the removal of which cost several hundred thousand pounds.
+Trojan Plastics, at Britannia Mills, manufactures acrylic baths.
+Any celebratory concert at the Bolshoi Theatre or George Hall did not take place without the sanction of Vlasik".
+Example nonoses Neuraminic acid Sialic acid Legionaminic acid Pseudaminic acidReferences Category:Monosaccharides
+Club careerDeliaj was promoted to Flamurtari Vlorë senior squad during 2014–15 season where he made only one cup appearance, playing the second half of the second round match against Veleçiku Koplik on 5 November 2014.
+Brown Hill Creek is a south-eastern suburb of Adelaide in the City of Mitcham in South Australia, named in 1991 after Brown Hill Creek which flows from east to west through the locality.
+Its name "Atsadang" in honour of Prince Asdang Dejavudh, who was a son of King Chulalongkorn (Rama V) and Queen Saovabha Phongsri, includes the younger brother of King Vajiravudh (Rama VI).
+The Lady Cardinals lost their first NCAA Division I tournament match 0-1 in an on goal play.
+The median age was 41 years.
+The riding includes all of the City of Barrie.
+His travels around Scotland and later Spain and Portugal during the Peninsula War (where he served in the army under Wellington) were recorded in a diary (1809–1810) which is today kept at the University of Kansas.
+David Croly worked as a reporter for the Evening Post and The New York Herald, as well as the editor of The New York World for 12 years.
+It premiered at the 41st International Film Festival Rotterdam in January 2012.
+The municipality of Pontecchio Polesine contains the frazioni (subdivisions, mainly villages and hamlets) Borgo, Busi, Ca'Zanforlin, Chiaviche Roncagalle, L'Olmo, and Selva.
+This species grows to a length of SL.
+Two people were killed in the explosion: Gunner Richard Dunne (aged 42), of the Royal Artillery (the Barracks is just 100 yards away), and Alan Horsley (aged 20), a sales clerk.
+Sarahsville may refer to:Sarahsville, former name of Bath, CaliforniaSarahsville, former name of Clinton, CaliforniaSarahsville, Ohio
+For the third time Ahmad Fedtri Yahya hosted the series and this time the crews explore Turkey and Jordan.The show's episodes have also been released in VHS and DVD formats.
+The Mendocino AVA is known for the cultivation of Mediterranean climate grapes including Carignan, Charbono, Grenache, Petite Sirah, Syrah and Zinfandel.
+Baptista is a Portuguese surname.
+Henry Fonda (in the premiere telecast "The Decision of Arrowsmith"), Claude Rains, and Janet Gaynor made their major television dramatic debuts on this series in various 1953 episodes.
+"Bad Boy" was released as the second single in March 2007 while "It's Not Love" was released as the third single on April 27, 2007.
+Following the Meiji Restoration, the islands have been administered as part of Kagoshima Prefecture.
+Oda of Metz (ca.
+Sakla may refer to several places in Estonia:Sakla, Hiiu County, village in Pühalepa Parish, Hiiu CountySakla, Saare County, village in Valjala Parish, Saare County
+Ambikapur Part-X is a census town in Cachar district in the state of Assam, India.
+Daniel Hill or Dan Hill may refer to: Daniel Harvey Hill (18211889), American Confederate general in the Civil War Daniel Harvey Hill, Jr. (18591924), American educator and the third chancellor of North Carolina State University, son of Daniel Harvey Hill Dan Hill (American football) (19171989), American football player Daniel G. Hill (19232003), Canadian sociologist, civil servant, human rights specialist and Black Canadian historian Dan Hill (Daniel Grafton "Dan" Hill IV, born 1954), Canadian singer/songwriter Dan Hill (1975 album), the 1975 album by Dan Hill Dan Hill (1987 album), the 1987 album by Dan Hill Daniel Hill (actor) (born 1956), British actorSee also Daniel's Hill Historic District, a national historic district located in Lynchburg, Virginia Dan's Hill, a historic home located near Danville in Pittsylvania County, Virginia Danny Hill (disambiguation) Hill (surname) All pages with titles containing "Dan Hill" Hill, Daniel
+RecipientsReferencesCategory:Awards established in 1983Category:Gujarati literary awards
+Other activitiesIn addition to his hip hop career, Jason Petty has worked as a youth pastor, led a poetry team called Selah, and helped his sister's dance ministry called "Live."
+TelevisionDearman's first television appearance was as a singing customer in a KFC advert in 2005.
+ReferencesCategory:Deans of ArmaghCategory:16th-century Irish people
+It was described by Bates in 1881, and is known from Nicaragua.
+Gundurimba Shire was a local government area in the Northern Rivers region of New South Wales, Australia.
+Metropolitan Dionysius may refer to: Dionysius, Metropolitan of Kiev in 1384–1385 Dionysius, Metropolitan of Moscow in 1581–1587
+Her sister Louise Danse was also a painter-etcher who later became known for her etchings.
+In 1981 he founded the firm "Taller de Arquitectura X" with Daniel Álvarez, with whom he worked until 2002, when Álvarez left the firm.
+It is usually then cut into sections for easier handling.
+International careerIn June 2018, he was named in Tunisia’s 23-man squad for the 2018 FIFA World Cup in Russia.
+Biography Luján was born in Spain, son of Pedro de Luján and Mencia de Lago, belonging to a noble family.
+Unlike Sigma, whose position in the alphabet is between Rho and Tau, San appeared between Pi and Qoppa in alphabetic order.
+The match ended when Owens attempted a Pop Up Powerbomb but Ambrose countered the move with a Hurricanrana and executed Dirty Deeds on Owens to win the match and advance to the finals.
+He was born in Somerset West, Western Cape.
+ReferencesExternal links Category:American filmsCategory:American drama filmsCategory:Directorial debut filmsCategory:Netflix original films
+The population lived mostly of agriculture.
+|10,858| 12%| Lost|}1994 election for Maryland House of Delegates – District 3Voters to choose three:{| class="wikitable"!Name!Votes!Percent!Outcome|-|-|-|J.
+These were East Down Institute, Lisburn Institute and North Down and Ards Institute.
+Notable people with the name include:, Japanese video game designer (1913–1989), Japanese journalist (1894–1977), Japanese baseball player and managerCategory:Japanese masculine given names
+Notable alumni Don Meier, creator of Wild KingdomReferencesExternal links Garden County SchoolsCategory:Educational institutions established in 1915Category:Schools in Garden County, NebraskaCategory:Public high schools in NebraskaCategory:1915 establishments in Nebraska
+NotesReferencesExternal links DANFS: USS Hilarity NavSource Online: Mine Warfare Vessel Photo Archive - Hilarity (MSF 241) - ex-AM-241Category:Admirable-class minesweepersCategory:Ships built in SeattleCategory:1944 shipsCategory:World War II minesweepers of the United StatesCategory:Admirable-class minesweepers of the Mexican Navy
+Quoted after Duft, Johannes: Die Abtei St. Gallen.
+It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1990.
+That year proved to be Turner's last with the team and he hung up his skates for good after one final season with the Oklahoma City Warriors.
+It took place on 3 August 1997 at the Autódromo Internacional Nelson Piquet.
+Indeed, inspired by their native Brittany, six musicians don't hesitate to intervene in lead instrument bombards or various types of flutes or brass instruments besides the traditional guitars, bass and drums.
+ABCDEFGGal[-][Frozen 2)HIJKLMNO{| class="wikitable sortable"|-!
+GeneraThese 19 genera belong to the subfamily Cythereinae: Amictus Wiedemann, 1817 c g Callostoma Macquart, 1840 c g Chalcochiton Loew, 1844 c g Cyllenia Latreille, 1802 c g Cytherea Fabricius, 1794 c g Enica Macquart, 1834 c g Gyrocraspedum Becker, 1912 c g Neosardus Roberts, 1929 c g Nomalonia Rondani, 1863 c g Pantarbes Osten Sacken, 1877 i c g b Sericosoma Macquart, 1850 c g Sericothrix Hall, 1976 c g Sinaia Hermann, 1909 c g Sphenoidoptera Williston, 1901 i c g † Amictites Hennig, 1966 g † Glaesamictus Hennig, 1966 g † Palaeoamictus Meunier, 1916 g † Paleolomatia Nel, 2008 g † Praecytherea Théobald, 1937 gData sources: i = ITIS, c = Catalogue of Life, g = GBIF, b = Bugguide.netReferencesFurther reading Category:Bombyliidae
+All told, these ships spent more than 80% of their annual application time at sea, whereas the conventional ships often lay at harbor for as much as half the year.
+TransportSaumlaki is linked by air and sea to Langgur-Tual in the Kei Islands.
+Lockhart was born in San Antonio, Texas.
+ReferencesCategory:Villages in Mońki County
+He was also fined €500,000ReferencesExternal links Category:1997 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Sportspeople from MontevideoCategory:Association football defendersCategory:Uruguayan footballersCategory:Uruguayan Primera División playersCategory:Club Nacional de Football playersCategory:La Liga playersCategory:Segunda División playersCategory:Getafe CF footballersCategory:Albacete Balompié playersCategory:Uruguay youth international footballersCategory:Uruguay under-20 international footballersCategory:Uruguayan expatriate footballersCategory:Uruguayan expatriate sportspeople in SpainCategory:Expatriate footballers in Spain
+Al Maton District () is a district of the Al Jawf Governorate, Yemen.
+At the 2006 census, its population was 44, in 8 families.
+Her first novel was The Singer of All Songs, the first in the Chanters of Tremaris trilogy.
+It was renamed Scotiadock and complemented the existing graving dock for ship repair and construction.
+The Naked DJ is a 2014 Singaporean documentary film directed by Kan Lume about musician and political activist Chris Ho, also known as X' Ho.
+was a Japanese folklorist and linguist who worked on the language and culture of his home island Kakeroma, and by extension, Amami Ōshima of southwestern Japan.
+Many original sheet music editions included a bonus Lee Sims chorus for the more proficient and adventurous performers.
+Charles Le Roy may refer to: Charles-Georges Le Roy (1723–1789), French man of letters during the Age of Enlightenment Charles Le Roy (physician) (1726–1779), French physician and Encyclopédiste
+His birth name was Donald Thomas Hanyzewski.
+Steve Davis topped the table and won the tournament.
+Manosquin is permitted up to a maximum of 20% as a minor component along with Syrah, Carignan Castets, Muscat noir and Cabernet Sauvignon.
+In 2014, the USA Triathlon Age Group National Championships in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, drew 5,700 registered participants.
+These patients have low HDL cholesterol but surprisingly premature atherosclerosis is not seen.
+ReferencesFurther readingExternal links Category:1919 birthsCategory:2011 deathsCategory:Corresponding Members of the USSR Academy of SciencesCategory:Full Members of the Russian Academy of SciencesCategory:People from Yampil Raion, Sumy OblastCategory:Russian chemistsCategory:Russian physicistsCategory:Soviet military personnel of World War IICategory:Recipients of the USSR State PrizeCategory:Burials in Troyekurovskoye Cemetery
+He finished third in the 1972 Cy Young Award voting behind Gaylord Perry and Wilbur Wood.
+He made his List A cricket debut for Karnataka on 13 February 2018 versus Odisha cricket team at the Alur.
+Oreo may also refer to:Animals Oreo (spider), a genus of Australian spiders Oreo Collins, a housecat who received a high school diploma Oreosomatidae, a family of fish commonly called oreosArts, entertainment, and mediaOreo (novel), a novel by Fran RossL'Oreo, an 1838 novel by George SandThe Oreo, a sculpture on the Villanova University campusBrands and enterprisesOreo O's, a formerly discontinued cereal based on the Oreo cookieOther Real Estate Owned, or OREO, real estate a bank owns that has generally been acquired through foreclosureOther uses Android Oreo, Android Operating System 8.0 Oreo cookie, an ethnic slur for a black person who "acts white" (black on the outside, white on the inside, like an Oreo cookie)
+They first occupied Tawfiq and Ramadan, before moving further north and capturing the Balad checkpoint in Northern Mogadishu, the main one for Mogadishu and an important supply line for insurgents.
+He has authored over 175 research articles, and is the first author of the textbook, Obstetrics: Normal and Problem Pregnancies (Elsevier).
+The Box Canyon Site is a prehistoric archaeological site in Hidalgo County, New Mexico.
+The author considered Kąpiele w Lucca, a novel published in 1974, as his greatest work and regarded some of his later works as its supplements.
+On 13 April 2013 the band will played an exclusive headline show in Southampton UK, where they again played 'Evolution: Creatio Ex Nihilio' and 'Life... And All It Entails' in their entirety over the course of the evening.
+The languages spoken in this community include Alawa, Kriol and English.
+Luis Moreno may refer to:Luis Antonio Moreno, retired Colombian footballerLuis Alberto Moreno, Colombian diplomat, president of the Inter-American Development Bank Luis G. Moreno, U.S. diplomatLuis Moreno Ocampo, Argentine jurist, chief prosecutor of the International Criminal CourtLuis Moreno (footballer) (born 1981), Panamanian footballerLuis Eduardo Moreno (1934–1996), Colombian preacherLuis Gabriel Moreno (born 1998), Filipino archerSee alsoMoreno (disambiguation)
+In mathematics, the word eutactic may refer to:Eutactic latticeEutactic star
+The school's curriculum is predominantly based on the British model, with students sitting IGCSE's and A' Levels, and as such, many of the teachers are British trained.
+DescriptionDistributionReferencesExternal linksCategory:SiliquariidaeCategory:Gastropods described in 1861
+Samples would see his championship points stripped under France's policy that drivers who raced in non-NASCAR sanctioned events would be penalized; however, in the NSCRA series promoted by Weyman Milam and Bruton Smith, he would win the 1949 championship.
+It was merged with Breguzzo, Lardaro and Roncone on January 1, 2016, to form a new municipality, Sella Giudicarie.
+In their third season under head coach Don Mullison, the Rams compiled a 6–4 record (4–3 against Skyline opponents), finished fourth in the Skyline Conference, and outscored opponents by a total of 178 to 110.
+ReferencesCategory:1998 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:French female squash players
+It lies approximately south-east of Lwówek Śląski and west of the regional capital Wrocław.
+ReferencesExternal linksNBC Olympics ProfileCategory:1990 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Chilean female sport shootersCategory:Skeet shootersCategory:Olympic shooters of ChileCategory:Shooters at the 2012 Summer OlympicsCategory:Shooters at the 2016 Summer OlympicsCategory:Shooters at the 2011 Pan American GamesCategory:Pan American Games silver medalists for ChileCategory:Sportspeople from SantiagoCategory:Shooters at the 2015 Pan American GamesCategory:Chilean people of Arab descentCategory:Chilean people of Italian descentCategory:Pan American Games bronze medalists for ChileCategory:Pan American Games medalists in shootingCategory:South American Games silver medalists for ChileCategory:South American Games medalists in shootingCategory:Competitors at the 2014 South American GamesCategory:Shooters at the 2019 Pan American Games
+ReferencesCategory:MyrmeleontinaeCategory:Insects described in 1943
+Snow Show (2004)"The challenge has been to work in collaboration with an architect [Finnish architect Juhani Pallasmaa] in a completely unfamiliar material.
+Kyriakou (), sometimes transliterated as Kiriakou or Kyriacou, is a Greek Cypriot surname.
+The church was built in 1902 to provide worship services to the area's summer population; its architect was Grosvenor Atterbury.
+ReferencesExternal linksCategory:International schools in IndiaCategory:Schools in Anantapur district
+Others feature images, cartoons, advertisements and event commemorations.
+Surrounding municipalitiesNagano Prefecture Nagano Nakano ShinanoDemographics Per Japanese census data, the population of Iizuna has remained fairly stable over the past 60 years, although there is an overall declining trend since 1945.
+The following is a list of coaches who have coached the Western Bulldogs, previously known as Footscray, at a game of Australian rules football in the Australian Football League (AFL), formerly the VFL.
+Its second single, "Without You" did not make the Top 40.
+In 1977 he was the editor of the book Catalogo filatelico de Puerto Rico by assignment of the "Sociedad Filatelica de Puerto Rico".
+He was elected as Member of Parliament (MP) for West Dorset at a by-election in June 1941, and held the seat until his retirement at the February 1974 general election.
+It is found in Cambodia.
+Phineas and Ferb-Ulous: The Ultimate Album: A CD/DVD combo pack that was released in the UK, August 16, 2011.
+ReferencesCategory:LamiinaeCategory:Beetles described in 1961
+Derryclare Lough is fed from rivers from Lough Inagh, which itself is fed from several mountain streams in the area, but most importantly from the Gleninagh River that starts high up in the Gleninagh Valley on the slopes of Benbaun and Bencollaghduff, and the Tooreennacoona River.
+It lies approximately north-west of Kutno and north of the regional capital Łódź.
+CollectionsThe Multan Museum contains a fine collection of coins, medals, postage stamps of the former State of Bahawalpur, manuscripts, documented inscriptions, wood carvings, camel-skin paintings, historical models and stone carvings of the Islamic and Pre-Islamic periods.
+REDIRECT Konpeki no Kantai
+In Hochman's interpretation, "The plays are not so much about the centrality of violence in American life as about the discords at the heart of civilization itself.
+ntl:home, as the consumer division of the NTL was known (now Virgin Media), closed nthellworld.com in November 2003.
+His widow died in Bar Harbor, Maine on August 31, 1927.
+The village has a population of 291.
+The album was officially certified gold and platinum by the RIAA on June 11, 2011.
+They named it "River of St. John the Baptist."
+Nearly 350 major and medium dams and barrages had been constructed in the river basin by the year 2012.
+Montage also provides string and value manipulation, serialization, and other functions that are not directly tied to the graphical user interface.
+The album was released in late 1974, on the label Epic Records.
+ReferencesOstrowy-Cukrownia
+LegacyA chess opening variation of the Semi-Slav Defence to the Queen's Gambit is often called the Noteboom Variation: 1.d4 d5 2.c4 e6 3.Nc3 c6 4.Nf3 dxc4 5.a4 Bb4 6.e3 b5 7.Bd2 a5 8.axb5 Bxc3 9.Bxc3 cxb5 10.b3 Bb7.
+He retired as bishop in 1969.
+Tolombeh-ye Hasan Ebrahimi (, also Romanized as Tolombeh-ye Ḩasan Ebrāhīmī) is a village in Aliabad-e Malek Rural District, in the Central District of Arsanjan County, Fars Province, Iran.
+GermanyLive public screenings of association football matches, called "", became especially popular at the 2006 football World Cup in Germany.
+See also List of airports in Tasmania Official websiteReferencesCategory:Airports in Tasmania
+An alternative to the N-localizer is the Sturm-Pastyr localizer that comprises three rods wherein two diagonal rods form a V-shape and a vertical rod is positioned midway between the two diagonal rods.
+The Voice Cambodia (season 1) is a Cambodian Reality Talent Show that premiered on 3 August on Hang Meas HDTV.
+Mirov may refer to Mírov, a village and municipality in the Czech RepublicMirow, a town in GermanyMirov (surname)
+She is a member of the Finance Commission (French: Commission des Finances), the parliamentary committee that scrutinises public spending.
+Hydrographers Passage is a deep-water shipping channel through the Great Barrier Reef, that reduced the previous route by 250 miles.
+On 9 August, he was shot to death three times in the temple.
+French girl group Nossa released a cover of this song as a single in 2012.
+In the 2009-2010 season, Bonner made his Washington National Opera debut in the title role of Hamlet under the baton of Plácido Domingo and returned to the Houston Grand Opera as Belcore in L'elisir d'amore.
+Personal lifeFletcher has two children with her partner Rob Pursey, also a member of Heavenly, Talulah Gosh, Marine Research, Tender Trap and The Catenary Wires.
+The NWRA acted as the representative voice of the region and worked to promote the economic, environmental and social well-being of the North West of England.
+The ribs are sharply nodulous at the angle, the lower half of the body whorl finely transversely ridged.
+Cloud architectures are developed in on-demand fashion.
+The large butterfly family Lycaenidae contains the following genera:A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y ZReferences Genera in the family Lycaenidae starting with M at LepIndexLycaenidae MM*
+It may refer to: František Tikal, a Czechoslovak ice hockey player Václav Tikal, a Czechoslovak painter and ceramic artistCategory:Czech-language surnames
+Taxonomy and systematicsIn the first half of the century, spruce grouse were classified as two separate species in the genus Canachites: spruce grouse (C. canadensis) and Franklin's grouse (C. franklinii), a position reinstated by Birdlife International in 2014.
+See also List of butterflies of Turkey List of moths of Turkey (Noctuidae)ReferencesExternal links Official websiteCategory:Valleys of TurkeyCategory:FethiyeCategory:Landforms of Muğla ProvinceCategory:Tourism in Muğla ProvinceCategory:EcotourismCategory:Turkish RivieraCategory:Protected areas established in 1995Category:Protected areas of TurkeyCategory:1995 establishments in Turkey
+ReferencesExternal linksPage about this airport on COPA's Places to Fly airport directoryCategory:Registered aerodromes in AlbertaCategory:Municipal District of Taber
+The rice paddy fields in and around Nedumbassery were once a granery to the people of Kerala and a Japanese delegation has conducted a study on the paddy fields of Nedumbassery.
+Parallel structures may refer to: 38th parallel structures, a series of carboniferous craters of the United States, approximately lying on the 38th parallel north Parallelism (grammar), a way to organize parts of a sentence.
+Track listing"Blood-Line (Never)" – 5:49"Blood-Loss (Sometimes)" – 4:02"Blood-Stained (Give Me Your Body)" – 4:22"Blood-Money (No More)" – 4:00"Blood-Moon (Romance)" – 4:50"Blood-Diamond (See Him Running)" – 5:41"Blood-Pressure (Just For My Pleasure)" – 4:43"Blood-Shed (Dark River)" – 4:51"Blood-Game (For You)" – 4:29"Blood-Lust (Mental Island)" – 5:01"Blood-Stream (Will I Be)" – 4:18Limited 2CD Special Edition"Blood-Night" – 5:50"Blood-Thirst" – 4:35"Blood-Stained (RMX)" – 5:15"Blood-Money (RMX)" – 6:20"Blood-Line (RMX)" – 6:32Limited 2CD Special EditionLimited 2CD Deluxe Edition was strictly limited to 2,000 copies and includes:• Opulent double CD• Hardback book• Black front and rear endpapers• 40 pages, (14 x 21 cm approx)• Booklet consisting of paper and blood red, transparent foil• High grade art print on high quality art paper with durable thread stitching• Booklet includes all lyrics and additional artwork• Two exclusive tracks• Three exclusive remixesReferencesCategory:2014 albumsCategory:Project Pitchfork albums
+It was Arbuckle's third onscreen appearance.
+SculptureThe replica memorial is based on the 1941 memorial in the Tobruk War Cemetery, built by Australian soldiers during the siege, which has since been destroyed.
+3'-Fluoro-3'-deoxythymidine may refer to: Alovudine (fluorothymidine) Fluorothymidine F-18
+ReferencesCategory:Merovingian dynastyCategory:520s birthsCategory:589 deathsCategory:People from Tours, France
+Lukash is a gender-neutral Slavic surname.
+The victory improved Philadelphia to 8-7.The Eagles would go on to win the division the following week against the Giants, eliminating the Cowboys.
+She scored a team-high 19 points at the 2008 NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships to lead the Lady Tigers to their first national championship since 2004 and their 25th NCAA team title.
+From Where???
+ReferencesExternal linksCategory:1888 birthsCategory:1971 deathsCategory:Major League Baseball outfieldersCategory:Chicago White Sox playersCategory:Baseball players from MassachusettsCategory:Sportspeople from Lynn, MassachusettsCategory:Lynn Shoemakers playersCategory:Lynn Fighters playersCategory:Lynn Pirates playersCategory:Lynn Pipers playersCategory:Lawrence Barristers playersCategory:Waterbury Nattatucks players
+Chen Ti played alongside Sriram Balaji and lost in the quarterfinals to Gong Maoxin and Peng Hsien-yin.
+INCORRECT!
+DemographicsSchool districts Clay City Community Unit District 10 North Clay Community Unit School District 25Political districts Illinois' 19th congressional district State House District 108 State Senate District 54References United States Census Bureau 2007 TIGER/Line Shapefiles United States National AtlasExternal links City-Data.com Illinois State ArchivesCategory:Townships in Clay County, IllinoisCategory:Townships in Illinois
+In 1929, when MacKenzie was shaping the land into what is now Green Hills he said “When the Millbrae course is completed it will rank with the first three in the San Francisco district and will be one of the sportiest in the entire state.
+She saw extended duty with the North American Air Defense Command as a unit of the seaward extension of the DEW line, eventually completing 67 tours as a picket vessel.
+Afrasia may refer to: Afro-Eurasia, the landmass consisting of Africa and Eurasia Afrasia (primate), a fossil primate from Myanmar AfrAsia Bank, a Mauritius bank
+Dr. William Harrison Sapp (1866-1946), was a prominent local physician and farmer.
+It is threatened by habitat loss.
+The boundary between the territories of Willmars in the west and Mellrichstadt in the east runs over the summit region from north to south.
+Gotti may refer to:People with the namePeople with the surname Gotti (surname), a surname (including a list of people with the name)People with the stagename Juan Gotti, stage name of Juan Ramos, Mexican-American rapper Mwata "Gotti" Mitchell, member of the American hip-hop duo Boo & Gotti Yo Gotti, stage name of Mario Mims (born 1981), American rapper Young Gotti, stage name of Ricardo Emmanuel Brown (born 1972), American rapper, also known as KuruptArts, entertainment, and media Gotti (1996 film), a 1996 HBO television film directed by Robert Harmon Gotti (2018 film), starring John Travolta "Gotti" (song), a song by 6ix9ine Getting Gotti, a 1994 television film centered on a Brooklyn Assistant District Attorney Diane Giacalone Growing Up Gotti, an American reality television series that appeared on A&E
+They cannot meet the demand and requirement of biomedical sector, which has no option but to depend on countries like Indonesia, Singapore and Malaysia for testing their products," said a senior official from the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare.
+Sara Fanelli became an HonRDI in 2006, the first woman illustrator to be awarded this honour.
+AwardsKaledzi was awarded the Best Rural Reporter in Ghana in 2012 by the Ghana Journalists Association.
+(Archive of estlps189.net) – Official site (Archive of estlouis.stclair.k12.il.us)Category:School districts in IllinoisCategory:Education in St. Clair County, IllinoisCategory:Education in Madison County, Illinois
+Train services Ordinary train No.
+The 6th Combat Support Brigade is an Australian Army brigade.
+In 2011 this parish covered a large area mainly to the west of the town of Ellesmere.
+Tarachodes tananus is a species of praying mantis in the genus Tarachodes.
+Brennan died October 14, 1943 at Columbus.
+His best period as a professional came during the 1992–93 NBA season as a member of the Magic, appearing in 77 games and averaging 9.2 ppg.
+Select Documents on Japanese Foreign Policy, 1853-1868.
+Alyth is a village in ScotlandAlyth may also refer toAlyth (singer), also known as Alyth McCormack, from the Isle of Lewis, ScotlandAlyth Shul, or North Western Reform Synagogue, a Reform synagogue in London, EnglandAlyth/Bonnybrook/Manchester, Calgary, a neighbourhood in Calgary, Alberta, Canada
+This is not to say, however, that there is not room for quibbling....With David Hinton as our guide, Classical Chinese Poetry: An Anthology comes across as something akin to a magical artifact, full of potential energies and untapped motes of poetic inspiration.
+Rafael Godoy Lozano (24 October 1907 – 14 March 1973) was a well-known Colombian composer born in Natagaima, Tolima.
+Especially important is establishment of a well-developed, competitive network of suppliers of materials and equipment necessary for modern agricultural production.
+When the rope's grip is pulled, the rope uncoils, tensions the spring, engages the clutch and turns the crankshaft, spinning it to crank or start the engine before the end of the pull stroke.
+It was mapped by the United States Geological Survey from surveys and from U.S. Navy air photos, 1959–65, and named by the Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names for Ruben E. Barela, aviation structural mechanic, U.S. Navy, of the McMurdo Station party, 1967.
+Clarke also played for the Adelaide Thunderbirds in the ANZ Championship.
+This same production was given by Vlaamse Opera in September 2010, and by the Canadian Opera Company in February 2012.
+Winners and nomineesReferencesExternal links Lesbian poetryCategory:Lists of LGBT-related award winners and nomineesCategory:American poetry awardsCategory:LGBT poetry
+Bickett Knob was named for the local Bickett family, which settled there.
+Track listingReferencesCategory:2000 debut albumsCategory:Precious (band) albumsCategory:EMI Records albumsCategory:Albums produced by Cutfather
+Without this understanding the person is unlikely to receive a warm welcome into the community.
+The surname Figner may refer to:Aleksandr Figner (1787—1813), Russian colonelVera Figner (1852–1942), Russian revolutionaryNikolay and Medea Figner, Russian opera duoNikolay Figner (1857–1918), lyric tenorMedea Figner (1859–1952), mezzo-soprano, later sopranoFederico Figner, German-born Argentine cinematographerFred Figner, Czech-born Jewish emigrant, pioneer in recording and selling Brazilian popular music
+BS7 may refer to : BS7, a BS postcode area for Bristol, England BS7, a center drill bit size Bežigrajska soseska 7 (residential blocks in Ljubljana, Slovenia) BS 7 Dimensions of Copper Conductors Insulated Annealed, for Electric Power and Light, a British StandardBonomi BS.7 Allievo Italia, a primary glider
+Charles Munn (March 17, 1887 in Osseo, Minnesota – January 31, 1973) was a Minnesota Farmer-Laborite politician and a Speaker of the Minnesota House of Representatives.
+MotivationThe standard Gaussian measure γn on n-dimensional Euclidean space Rn is not translation-invariant.
+ReferencesCategory:Hamlets in Cornwall
+Owsthorpe is a small hamlet in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England.
+Mangla Devi Talwar was an Indian politician.
+The arrondissement of Saint-Pierre, containing 11 communes that were previously part of the arrondissement of Saint-Denis, was created in 1964.
+The Lung Yeuk Tau Heritage Trail has been established to promote and facilitate the visit of some of the historical places of the area.
+Shiren can refer to:Shi Ren (士仁), a military general serving under the warlord Liu Bei during the Eastern Han DynastyKokan Shiren (虎関師錬), a 14th-century Japanese Zen BuddhistShiren Mountain (石人山), mountain in Henan, ChinaShiren Town (石人镇), several towns in ChinaShiren, Harbin, in Hulan District, Harbin, HeilongjiangShiren, Baishan, in Jiangyuan District, Baishan, JilinSee also Shiren the Wanderer (disambiguation)
+See also National Register of Historic Places listings in northern Boston, MassachusettsReferencesCategory:Houses completed in 1795Category:Houses in BostonCategory:National Register of Historic Places in BostonCategory:North End, BostonCategory:Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in Suffolk County, Massachusetts
+In March 2013, he moved to AS Trenčín.
+Argos High School is a public high school in Argos, Indiana, United States, educating grades 9 through 12.
+Additionally, due to high rates of seismic activity in Costa Rica, the house was constructed from pre-fabricated buildings constructed from galvanized steel.
+It encodes a transcription factor (specifically a C2H2 type zinc finger protein).
+Rathcormac () is a small town in north County Cork, Ireland.
+Ojwang was born in Pader and educated at Uganda Christian University.
+Culture Complex () is a station of the Gwangju Metro Line 1 in Gwangsan-dong, Dong District, Gwangju, South Korea.
+64–113 Summary, the trial against Bühler, Law Report, United Nations War Crimes Commission, 1949 Videoclip, Part I, Bühler testifying at the Nuremberg Trials (in German) Videoclip, Part II, Bühler testifying at the Nuremberg Trials (in German) Category:1904 birthsCategory:1948 deathsCategory:People from Ravensburg (district)Category:People from the Kingdom of WürttembergCategory:German Nazi politiciansCategory:Members of the Reichstag of Nazi GermanyCategory:Nazis executed by Poland by hangingCategory:Holocaust perpetrators in PolandCategory:German people convicted of crimes against humanityCategory:Executed people from Baden-WürttembergCategory:SS-BrigadeführerCategory:Nazi lawyersCategory:20th-century German lawyersCategory:General GovernmentCategory:People executed for crimes against humanity
+He was admitted to the Bar of Manitoba in 1973.
+The Kaituma River is a river of Guyana.
+PopulationSee alsoCommunes of the Calvados departmentReferencesINSEECategory:Communes of Calvados (department)Category:Calvados communes articles needing translation from French Wikipedia
+The ergot is a small callosity on the underside of the fetlock of a horse or other equine.
+DraftReferencesCategory:AFL women's draftCategory:Women's Australian rules football drafts
+ReferencesCategory:1952 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:East German female swimmersCategory:Olympic swimmers of East GermanyCategory:Swimmers at the 1968 Summer OlympicsCategory:Female freestyle swimmers
+Zechariah Lawrence Bettis (June 12, 1816 – September 23, 1879) was an American politician who served as the Probate Judge of Clarke County, Alabama during the American Civil War.
+The meeting on August 23 was attended by about 1,000 Katipuneros and there ensued a debate on whether they should commit themselves to an uprising.
+In 1687, he was appointed governor of the region of Coahuila.
+Biography The young Jacques Peirotes, son of a carpenter working at the locomotives factory of Graffenstaden, learned the job of typographer while entering into politics.
+The champion racehorse and sire Heroic was born in the area.
+ReferencesExternal links Home page of Bad MünstereifelCategory:Euskirchen (district)
+He was promoted to Chief Naval Constructor in January 1864 and served in that capacity to the end of the U.S. Civil War, designing many of the South's domestically-built warships.
+Trilling Islands () is a three islands at the south side of Skarvsnes Foreland, lying in Trilling Bay in the east part of Lutzow-Holm Bay.
+Despite the name of this province, the city of Kraków was not included; Kraków was a free city until Kraków Uprising of 1846; the capital of the voivodeship was first Miechów, then Kielce.
+The division is often casually referred to as a "month", although it is not coordinated with the lunar cycle.
+New Galloway was a royal burgh that elected one Commissioner to the Parliament of Scotland before 1707.
+Gods of StormsA282.
+In the mid 1990s, Moon started producing instrumental albums which led to his first ʻukulele instructional video, The Magic of the Ukulele.
+It is known from Mexico.
+The driver of a motor vehicle was prone to epileptic fits, and knew as much, but nevertheless put himself behind the wheel of a motor car.
+Together with Anton Marchl he was one of the Austrian wrestlers, who qualified last for the Summer Olympic Games in Barcelona 1992.
+They drove their son into Philadelphia that night to give bedding to a homeless man who was sleeping on the sidewalk in front of the Union League in Center City.
+Ava eventually convinces Reagan to forgive Chris, because he's "one of the good ones".
+The student can watch videos in any order.
+The graphics feature 2-D sprites in a three dimensional world.
+The elevator has been unusable since the 1980s, and is now condemned because of its danger of collapse.
+Footage of the mass killings were hosted on 4chan, 8chan, LiveLeak, Voat, Zero Hedge, and KiwiFarms.
+Stone's theorem may refer to a number of theorems of Marshall Stone: Stone's representation theorem for Boolean algebras Stone–Weierstrass theorem Stone–von Neumann theorem Stone's theorem on one-parameter unitary groups
+Ballantine's was named the number one brand in Europe and the third largest in the world in 1986 with the oldest product Ballantine's Finest.
+Monge co-wrote the track "Señor...Del Pasado" with Puerto Rican singer/songwriter Lou Briel.
+Formed in 1992, the group is composed of six emcees—Imperial, Trouble, Stump, Kidd, RPD, and Jackal—and one producer, Pikihed.
+His final film, The Man in the Moon, a touching coming-of-age story filmed, as in the case of Steel Magnolias, in Natchitoches as well as Louisiana's Kisatchie National Forest, was released in October 1991, nearly a year after his death.
+"El Jardin Femenil Y Otros Ocasos."
+He went on to contest the constituency election.
+PublicationsReferencesCategory:20th-century American mathematiciansCategory:Members of the United States National Academy of SciencesCategory:Presidents of the American Mathematical SocietyCategory:TopologistsCategory:University of Texas at Austin College of Natural Sciences alumniCategory:University of Virginia facultyCategory:1904 birthsCategory:1969 deathsCategory:Mathematicians from TexasCategory:People from Lewisville, Texas
+The women's 69 kilograms event at the 2014 Asian Games took place on 24 September 2014 at Moonlight Festival Garden Weightlifting Venue in Incheon, South Korea.
+In 1986, Ellingwood joined the faculty of Johns Hopkins University, and in 1990, became the Willard and Lillian Hackerman Chair in Civil Engineering.
+= Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted inOther batters Note: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg.
+...254 BC - Tiberius Coruncanius, first plebeian to hold the office243 BC - Lucius Caecilius Metellus (died 221 BC)237 BC - Lucius Cornelius Lentulus Caudinus212 BC - Publius Licinius Crassus Dives (consul 205 BC)183 BC - Gaius Servilius Geminus180 BC - Marcus Aemilius Lepidus (consul 187 BC)152 BC - Vacant150 BC - Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasica Corculum; succeeded by his son141 BC - Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasica Serapio, the first Pontifex to leave Italy, when ordered to Asia Minor by the Senate, after he had instigated the death of his cousin Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus in a riot.
+While some men may be aroused by the feeling of being "owned", the physical feeling of stretching the ligaments that suspend the testicles has an effect similar to the more common practice of stretching one's legs and pointing the toes.
+References Category:Populated places in Eqlid County
+An airport is a location where aircraft take off and land.
+= Teams' Championship position.
+He was replaced by Giga Chikadze.
+Yi Mu is a name borne by several Korean people:Yi Mu (early Joseon) (1355–1409), a scholar-official of the early Joseon DynastyYi Mu (mid-Joseon) (1621–1703), a scholar-official of the middle Joseon Dynasty also known by his pen name NakgyeYi Mu (academic), a professor in Australia
+TurtlesThe turtle's shell is covered by scutes formed mostly of keratin.
+ReferencesCategory:Moths described in 1966Category:Euliini
+John Gollon, the author of "Chess Variations: Ancient, Regional, and Modern", received a description of a chess game in 1969 from a U.S. serviceman who claimed to have obtained the details from a Cambodian born guerrilla officer he was questioning.
+Sabrina Carpenter - vocals, songwriting Jackson Morgan - songwriting Katie Pearlman - songwriting Mauricio Rengifo - production, songwriting, programming, arrangement, engineering, studio personnel, synthesizer Andrés Torres - production, songwriting, electric guitar, programming, arrangement, engineering, studio personnel, synthesizer Tim Watt - assistant recording engineer, studio personnel Will Quinnell - assistant recording engineer, studio personnel Eric J Dubowsky - mixing, studio personnelRelease historyReferencesCategory: Sabrina Carpenter songsCategory: 2019 songsCategory: Songs written by Sabrina Carpenter
+In 1921, Weix served in the Wisconsin State Assembly and was a Republican.
+84216) escaped from Auschwitz in German-occupied Poland to Slovakia with Arnošt Rosin (no.
+In 1989, she graduated from a children's music piano school.
+While there has been speculation that his death was connected with politics, primarily over his intended developments in nuclear research, the government did not provide any clear indication that this was so.
+HistoryActivation and training missionThe squadron was first activated as the 48th Air Rescue Squadron in November 1952, when Air Rescue Service expanded its existing rescue squadrons into groups.
+Her studio was located at 894 Brandeis Building, in Omaha.
+The TRU was established in 1933.
+Cernach succeeded his brother Ailill as King of Lagore but the rule of South Brega went to a subsept of the Uí Chernaig, the Síl Conaill Graint which were based at Calatrium.
+At the extreme north (geographical east) end of the station, a single open staircase from each platform goes up to a single full height turnstile before a staircase goes up to either western corner of South Portland and Lafayette Avenues, the northwestern one for the Queens-bound platform and the southwestern one for the Church Avenue-bound platform.
+Republika Srbija, Republički zavod za statistiku Beograd 2003.
+World Cup PodiumsReferencesExternal links Category:1983 birthsCategory:Bobsledders at the 2014 Winter OlympicsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Olympic bobsledders of RussiaCategory:Russian male bobsleddersCategory:People from BratskCategory:Russian sportspeople in doping casesCategory:Doping cases in bobsleigh
+ReferencesSee alsoList of localities in Wales by populationCategory:Villages in Anglesey
+Game resultsSee alsoMajor League Baseball All-Star GameBaseball awards#JapanCategory:1951 establishments in JapanCategory:All-star gamesCategory:Nippon Professional Baseball competitionsCategory:Recurring sporting events established in 1951
+It contains the following species: Golden-tufted mountain grackle (Macroagelaius imthurni) Colombian mountain grackle (Macroagelaius subalaris)Category:GracklesCategory:IcteridaeCategory:Taxonomy articles created by Polbot
+Colen died in 2001 of complications from skin cancer.
+|-Category:1716 birthsCategory:1794 deathsCategory:British MPs 1768–1774Category:British MPs 1774–1780Category:British MPs 1784–1790Category:Members of the Parliament of Great Britain for Welsh constituenciesCategory:Baronets in the Baronetage of Great Britain
+This list covers the 52 others.
+References Category:1986 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:British speedway ridersCategory:Glasgow Tigers ridersCategory:Rye House Rockets ridersCategory:Sheffield Tigers ridersCategory:Scunthorpe Scorpions ridersCategory:Mildenhall Fen Tigers ridersCategory:Birmingham Brummies riders
+and the other as "spotted willow" (Cornus rugosa Lam.).
+POWER5, 64-bit, dual core, 2 way SMT/core, 1.6–2.0 GHz, follows the PowerPC 2.01 ISA.
+Whirling Eddy Brook is a river in Delaware County, New York.
+He served as head of the Norwegian Military Academy from 1996 to 1999.
+The stadium seats 1,800 people.
+Category:Italian-language surnames
+He has held the seat since January 2001, having won in the U.S. House Elections of 2000 to succeed retiring Congressman Thomas J. Bliley, Jr.. Cantor won the district in 2006 by 64% to 34%.
+Bay is a commune in the Haute-Saône department in the region of Bourgogne-Franche-Comté in eastern France.
+Lake Oscar may refer to the following bodies of water:Lake Oscar (Douglas County, Minnesota)Lake Oscar (Otter Tail County, Minnesota)See alsoLac-Oscar, Quebec, an unorganized territory
+It consists of a hall range, with a service wing to the south-west and a parlour cross-wing to the north, and a detached gatehouse to the east, across what would have been an unusually large entrance court.
+FootnotesReferencesCategory:Streets in Oxford
+Bathybembix is a genus of deep-water sea snails, marine gastropod molluscs in the family Eucyclidae.
+Rapid City Christian School is a private Christian middle school and high school in Rapid City, South Dakota.
+From it came the hit song "Crisis" which peaked at No.
+Under Mancuso's direction, the monks switched from being a Catholic order to an Orthodox order in 1979.
+Winners of Previous Primaries 2000: George W. Bush 1996: Steve ForbesSee also Delaware Democratic primary, 2008 Republican Party (United States) presidential primaries, 2008ReferencesExternal links State of Delaware, Commissioner of ElectionsDelawareCategory:2008 Delaware electionsCategory:2008 Super Tuesday
+It is unique in that, of all of his works, it calls the most for an unexpectedly tragic, sentimental ending.
+Christopher or Chris Wade may refer to: Chris Wade (real estate broker), real estate broker involved in the Whitewater controversy Chris Wade (fighter) (born 1987), American mixed martial artist Chris Wade (comedian)
+ReferencesCategory:Parishes of Alcobaça, Portugal
+These combine some miles downstream to form the River Derwent, flowing through Borrowdale to Derwentwater and Keswick.
+is the 2nd indie single by the Japanese female idol group Momoiro Clover, released in Japan on November 11, 2009.
+It has a population of about 850 people.
+In 1985, he played collegiate summer baseball with the Cotuit Kettleers of the Cape Cod Baseball League.
+Heaven and Earth may refer to:Film Heaven and Earth (1990 film), a Japanese samurai film Heaven & Earth (1993 film), directed by Oliver Stone, based on the memoir When Heaven and Earth Changed Places Heaven & Earth (soundtrack), the official musical score for the film Heaven and Earth, an upcoming film directed by Marleen GorrisMusic "Heaven and Earth", a song on the 1989 Kylie Minogue album Enjoy Yourself Heaven and Earth (Al Jarreau album), 1992 "Heaven and Earth", a song from the album which won the 1993 Grammy Award for Best Male R&B Vocal Performance Heaven and Earth, a 1999 album by Stuart Saunders Smith Heaven and Earth (ProjeKct X album), 2000 Heaven & Earth (Phil Wickham album), 2009 "Heaven & Earth" (song), the title song from the above album Heaven and Earth, a 2010 album by Nathan Haines Heaven and Earth (John Martyn album), a 2011 album by John Martyn Heaven & Earth (Yes album) (2014) List of Yes concert tours (2000s–10s)#Heaven & Earth Tour 2014–2015 Heaven and Earth (Kamasi Washington album), 2018 Heaven & Earth (King Crimson box set), 2019Television The Heaven and Earth Show, a BBC series running from 1998 to 2007 Heaven and Earth, a 1957 ITV "Play of the Week" scripted and directed by Peter Brook Heaven & Earth, a 2007 South Korean television seriesFiction Samurai: Heaven and Earth, a 2005 comic book Heaven and Earth, an 1821 drama by Lord ByronNon-fiction When Heaven and Earth Changed Places, by Le Ly Hayslip Heaven and Earth (book), a popular science book by Ian PlimerOther uses Heaven & Earth (video game), a 1992 video game Tenjho Tenge (English: Heaven and Earth), a Japanese manga series and anime Tiandihui or Heaven and Earth Society, Chinese secret society Holy Marriage Blessing Ceremony of the Parents of Heaven and Earth, a 2003 special Blessing ceremony of the Unification Church Yin and yang, an ancient Chinese philosophy concept Heaven and Earth, a brand of ice teas from Coca-Cola sold in South East Asia Himmel und Erde (English: Heaven and Earth), a traditional German dish
+According to the United States Census Bureau, the Mango CDP has a total area of , of which are land and , or 2.95%, are water.
+She is currently starring in the television show You Me Her as Isabelle "Izzy" Silva.
+Later, Fubini became Assistant Secretary of Defense (1963) and a major voice for the policy of technological supremacy during the Cold War.
+= Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted inOther batters Note: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg.
+The situation of the Alceste and Mercury was also rather critical, they having in the state of the wind to tack every fifteen minutes close to the end of the shoal.
+In all Australian states, with the exception of Western Australia, and in the Northern Territory, statutory ambulance services are provided by the state/territorial government, as a single-entity, third-service model, government department.
+Salazar is internationally known from his role as the nice police, Salvador, in Coral telenovela Juana la virgen.
+At this time, the gallery's name was changed from Morán Bondaroff to Morán Morán.
+Diversified Technology, Inc. was a computer hardware manufacturing company.
+Players can upgrade their commander with new weapons and modules as the game progresses.
+Erioptera septemtrionis is a species of limoniid crane fly in the family Limoniidae.
+Hi-Lo is Moola's most popular game.
+is a railway station on the Nanao Line in Nakanoto, Kashima District, Ishikawa Prefecture, Japan, operated by the West Japan Railway Company (JR West).
+On 10 October, Swiss police detained two Tunisians in the town of Chiasso near the Swiss-Italian border, including another brother of the attacker who was "known to foreign police services for his links to jihadist terrorist movements".
+A shaft cross () is a specific type of Latin or High cross, named after its method of construction.
+The haughty Tintaglia, an arrogant and magnificent creature, has only one goal, and only one use for the otherwise insignificant humans: to keep her kind from extinction.
+The estates then passed to her surviving daughter Elizabeth Calley (née Keck).
+On May 11, 2017, Nicholson signed a four-year, 3 million contract.
+The show featured a guest appearance from Jimmy Page.
+ReferencesExternal links Category:1971 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Scottish male curlersCategory:Paralympic wheelchair curlers of Great BritainCategory:Paralympic medalists in wheelchair curlingCategory:Paralympic bronze medalists for Great BritainCategory:Wheelchair curlers at the 2014 Winter ParalympicsCategory:Wheelchair curlers at the 2018 Winter ParalympicsCategory:Medalists at the 2014 Winter Paralympics
+Championships and accomplishmentsMixed martial arts Resurrection Fighting Alliance Resurrection Fighting Alliance Welterweight Champion (One time) vs. Nick BarnesSparta Combat League Sparta Combat League Welterweight Champion (One time) vs. Matt CoxPersonal life Camozzi's brother, Chris Camozzi, is a mixed martial artist who competed under the UFC banner from April 2015 to May 2017.
+The later was derived from the French President Patrice de Mac-Mahon, duc de Magenta (the descendant of an Irish soldier who had severed under Napoleon).
+Club careerHaving progressed through the academy of local club Linfield, Allen made his senior debut for the club on 27 April 2019 in a 1–1 draw with Coleraine.
+DesignBall Aerospace built the WorldView-1 satellite bus and camera using an off-axis camera design identical to Quickbird, with the instrument's focal plane being supplied by ITT Exelis.
+It was published on June 15, 2010 through Harper Collins and looks into different forms of leadership and how they can either help or hinder the people they are managing.
+He has written for more than 70 films since 1952.
+Humboldt Transit Authority (HTA) operates several transit services in Humboldt County, California:Redwood Transit SystemEureka Transit ServiceWillow Creek IntercityArcata & Mad River Transit SystemBlue Lake Rancheria Transit SystemParatransit/Dial-A-RideExternal links Humboldt Transit AuthorityCategory:Bus transportation in CaliforniaCategory:Eureka, CaliforniaCategory:Public transportation in Humboldt County, CaliforniaCategory:Transit agencies in California
+The municipality sits south of the Ranfjorden and stretches south and east toward the border with Sweden.
+Recording The album was recorded for the British label Ché and picked up by Elektra Records subsidiary Primary for release in the US.
+TrialProsecutors sought a 30-year prison term for Park, along with a fine of ().
+The poem was cited by Queen Latifah in front of the apoximately 2.5-3 billion worldwide viewers watching the memorial service.
+The men's 3000 metres event at the 1966 European Indoor Games was held on 27 March in Dortmund.
+The Day I Ran Into All My Ex Boyfriends is a 1998 short film which aired on the Sundance Channel.
+On 26 August 1934, he was promoted to Major-General, and appointed Deputy Quarter Master General and Director of Movements in India between July 1935 and February 1936.
+1966 Milan (the Leather Boy): "You Gotta Have Soul" (Milan), 1:39Category:Pebbles (series) albumsCategory:1983 compilation albums
+DemographicsPopulationLanguageSee alsoList of municipalities in Quebec Saint-MichelReferencesCategory:Incorporated places in Les Jardins-de-Napierville Regional County MunicipalityCategory:Municipalities in Quebec
+He had a hearing before the Committee on December 16, 2009.
+See cryobiology for a full discussion.
+This is a Boys school with Upper Primary with Secondary and Co-education in the Higher Secondary section having Science, Arts and Commerce streams.
+In the event that both the jury and the televoters placed the same song first, the song placed second in the televote will qualify for the final.
+HistoryThe course was opened in 1990 as a private race track for the wealthy.
+Trausch is a German surname, which is a variant of Trauschke, and derived from the Old Slavic drugu, meaning "companion".
+TelevisionMiddlemass played the philandering butcher Mr. Lyon in the final episode of the third season of the British series Upstairs, Downstairs in 1973, but it was not until 1980, when he appeared in the post-World War I drama To Serve Them All My Days, that he first took a leading role in a British series.
+Originally described from Uttar Pradesh in 1989, it is also found in Dipterocarpaceae-dominated forests in Chang Mai, northern Thailand.
+He retired in 2004 due to the army's age limit.
+The contestant was eliminated from the competition.
+The battalion was inactivated 30 January 1946 on Okinawa.
+Antoni Potocki may refer to: Antoni Potocki (1780–1850), Polish nobleman Antoni Protazy Potocki (1761–1801), Polish noble Antoni Michał Potocki (died 1766), Polish noble
+See also Demir Kapija municipalitySources Demir Kapija: From Prehistory to Today.
+History2000–2003: The arrival of Dominican styles of musicThe appearance of Dominican styles of music such as bachata and merengue in reggaetón coincided with the arrival in Puerto Rico of the Dominican-born production team of Luny Tunes—although they are not solely credited for this development.
+Thirteen works were enough to become known in Egypt by the audience.
+The resulting by-election was won by Seymour Thorne George.
+July 2017See alsoReferences 01Category:July 2017 events in the United States
+Ward 1 () is a ward of Tân Bình District, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.
+Construction of the telescopeThe mirror for the siderostat was ground mechanically by the Gautier Company (headed by Paul Gautier, 1842–1909) and took nine months to finish.
+His daughter, and Kelly's aunt, was actress Jean Forbes-Robertson, best known for portraying Peter Pan on stage.
+Erlendsson may refer to:Eysteinn Erlendsson (died 1188), Archbishop of Nidaros from 1161 to his deathHaukr Erlendsson (died 1334), the writer of the HauksbókMagnus Erlendsson, Earl of Orkney, the first Earl of Orkney to bear that name, ruled from 1108 to c. 1115
+Pleasant St.W. L. Garrett & Sons building (RTHL #9797, 1990), 1890, 102 Quitman St.See alsoNational Register of Historic Places listings in Camp County, TexasRecorded Texas Historic Landmarks in Camp CountyReferencesExternal linksCategory:National Register of Historic Places in Camp County, TexasCategory:Queen Anne architecture in TexasCategory:Neoclassical architecture in Texas
+Sometimes the frogs mistakenly lay their eggs over inappropriate bodies of water, such as swimming pools, wells, or even buckets containing rainwater.
+HistoryThe National Museum of Photography, founded in 1996, moved into its current premises when the Black Diamond was completed in 1999.
+The Okpara River is a river of Benin.
+Stremt 89, 2011ReferencesMultinational Documentaries on Eastern Europe, at the Russian and East European Institute (Indiana University)Romanian RevolutionRomanian RevolutionFilms
+Little Boxes: The Architecture of a Classic Midcentury Suburb, Advection Media.
+The district was formed out of the then Dagomba District in 1988 in the pursuance of the Government's Decentralisation and Local Government reform Policy with Saboba as the district Administrative Capital.
+Making its first appearance in 1937, it was designed by Fred Lefever and based on the design of the Colt Woodsman pistolThe Targeteer was designed as a low power BB gun for indoor target shooting.
+This group is south of the prominent asterism, Orion's Belt.
+office: the best Amiga game yet, and gave an overall score of 98%.
+Dialects are Djimi, Jimo, Malabu, Wadi, and Zumo.
+In 2003, the management of the airport was taken over by Xiamen International Airport Group, and began profiting from 2005.
+[provided by RefSeq, Jun 2013]ReferencesFurther reading Category:Genes on human chromosome 15
+Ho ChongHoe (dish)Hoengseong CountyHoeryongHoi Jeon Moo SoolHojang, a local official under the Goryeo and Joseon dynasties.
+Dewdney Peak is located east of Hatzic Prairie and north of Dewdney, British Columbia, from whence it got its name.
+The New York Times called him as a "modern soul man" on stage.
+The village is historically famous for two treaties that were concluded there, the Treaty of Altranstädt (1706) and the Treaty of Altranstädt (1707).
+EtymologyOlivier is named for Pierre-François Olivier de Vézin (April 28, 1707 – April 20, 1776) and occupies part of the Bayou Teche's delta ecosystem.
+They married within six months and formed the Lee Shaw Trio, playing pop standards in restaurants and nightclubs around Chicago.
+In a professional career spanning from 1972 – 1980, he played for the Combined Islands and the Leeward Islands in the West Indies, a season for the Border Second XI in South Africa and finished his career with a season at Somerset County Cricket Club in England.
+This term is also used to refer to a type of epidermal nevi with extensive bilateral distribution.
+McGann was part of the 2009 Rugby World Cup Sevens champion squad.
+The race started and finished in Zürich.
+They originally filed for divorce in 2013 after his affair with strip club employee, however withdrew soon after.
+Royce McKinney (born November 3, 1953) is a former American football defensive back.
+Prima Categoria: 1907External links Profile at MagliaRossonera.it Category:1883 birthsCategory:1948 deathsCategory:Italian footballersCategory:Italian football refereesCategory:Association football goalkeepersCategory:A.C. Milan players
+He dressed David Bowie and Mick Jagger while they were on tour, calling Bowie "serious, intellectual, wonderful to work with", while Jagger was "exactly the opposite".
+In May 1893, Richard Croker, a leader of New York City's Tammany Hall political machine, jumped into the newspaper field and created The Daily America devoted to politics to trumpet Tammany's views (though it also covered sports; Croker was a big horse racing enthusiast).
+It employs techniques and theories drawn from many fields within the broad areas of mathematics, statistics, information science, and computer science, in particular from the subdomains of machine learning, statistical classification, cluster analysis, data mining, databases, and visualization.
+The Romans were known to have used water flowing from a well in the area.
+References :Category:Welsh-language magazines:Category:Periodicals published in WalesCategory:Welsh-language magazinesCategory:British music magazines
+A farmers' market is held on the reserve car park each month.
+On August 25 the Mets traded former all-star closer Billy Wagner to the Boston Red Sox for minor league outfielder Chris Carter and minor league first baseman Eddie Loria.
+Brooks was assisted by the notes written in the margins of his manuscript by Dr. Elliott Coues, who had edited the 1894 edition of Biddle, and who had wide experience as an explorer of the American West.
+Sausi is a Rai Coast language spoken in Madang Province, Papua New Guinea.
+Medal tableEventsResultsMenLadiesReferences ResultsFigure skatingEuropean Youth Olympics20112011 European Youth Olympics
+Elephant Journal claimed that Zen Wrapped in Karma Dipped in Chocolate was " destined to be on my “best of ’09″ list."
+The Napoletana is one of the forty-three autochthonous Italian goat breeds of limited distribution for which a herdbook is kept by the Associazione Nazionale della Pastorizia, the Italian national association of sheep- and goat-breeders; the herdbook was established in 2002.
+Instead, military action was carried out as an endeavor, an abstract action, with success depending mainly on the military skill of the ruler and the relative strengths of the target area and the area from which the attack was launched.
+Douirane is a town and rural commune in Chichaoua Province of the Marrakech-Tensift-Al Haouz region of Morocco.
+Judy Adelman Gershon is also the Artistic Director of the Toronto Jewish Chorus.
+Lipí is a village and municipality (obec) in České Budějovice District in the South Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic.
+Art Napoleon (1920–2003) was a film director and writer from New York City.
+At the 2004 census, the district had a population of 81,213.
+In the corner six stones live but four stones die.
+kruseana often forms a single stem.
+62-77.
+Throughout the game Synbios has periodic encounters with Medion, Destonia's youngest prince, who also recognizes the truth behind the war.
+The market began in 1906, and was known for a long time for its high quality food.
+While in awe over the "flying man", others are scared and the police question him.
+Honeyball is a surname.
+Quechua is the language which the majority of the population (86.22%) learnt to speak in childhood, 13.42% of the residents started speaking using the Spanish language (2007 Peru Census).
+Species Spalacomimus aberrans (Schulthess, 1898) Spalacomimus inermis (Uvarov, 1934) Spalacomimus liberiana (La Baume, 1911) Spalacomimus magnus (La Baume, 1911) Spalacomimus stettinensis (Weidner, 1941) Spalacomimus talpa (Gerstaecker, 1869) Spalacomimus verruciferus (Karsch, 1887)References Category:Tettigoniidae genera
+References USGS Geographic Names Information System (GNIS)External links US-Counties.com City-Data.comCategory:Townships in Crawford County, IowaCategory:Townships in Iowa
+The third series of The Only Way Is Essex, a British semi-reality television programme, began airing on 25 September 2011 on ITV2.
+ParticipantsThe following 12 clubs took part in the competition:Group A Azam Vipers JKU KatorGroup B Rayon Sports Gor Mahia AS Port LLB AcadémicGroup C Simba A.P.R.
+As of 2018, he plays for Isloch Minsk Raion.
+Some Chijgamis went into Shipping business using small clipper ships.
+Its feminine counterpart is Lomova.
+& H.O.
+The team is owned by and affiliated with the National Hockey League's Edmonton Oilers.
+Career statisticsHonoursClubBotafogo Campeonato Carioca: 2018ReferencesExternal linksCategory:1996 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:People from TocantinsCategory:Brazilian footballersCategory:Association football midfieldersCategory:Campeonato Brasileiro Série A playersCategory:Campeonato Brasileiro Série B playersCategory:Atlético Clube Goianiense playersCategory:Botafogo de Futebol e Regatas
+Playing careerWalker made his first grade debut for Penrith against North Sydney at Penrith Park in Round 18 1988.
+There is red at back of the head and yellow behind the eyes.
+It was the first time that the Alliance held primary elections in its history, since its origins as the Democracy and Progress pact in 1989, joining the process just established by the law of primaries approved during 2012.]
+Category:Pacific typhoon disambiguation pages
+Overall, this was Tipperary's thirty sixth Munster Senior Hurling Championship title.
+Regular seasonHighlightsThe 1958 season is regarded as a watershed year in which the popularity of professional football in the United States began to rival that of baseball in the public imagination.
+Santa Fe: Sunstone Press, 2010. .
+He didn't have a clue about music, though he always tried to get involved in it, usually by remote control...He was a good merchandiser, though..." Once he got the green light, Bradley went "all in" on the outlaw concept.
+Following Starrett's retirement in 1953, this film became the 65th and final in the Durango Kid series.
+The 2017–18 1.
+The second-story windows, also evenly spaced, are arched.
+307; 113th Congress) reauthorized the ESAR-VHP for Fiscal years 2014–2018.
+Xintang Station may refer to: Xintang station (Guangzhou Metro), a station on the Guangzhou Metro in Guangzhou, Guangdong Xintang railway station, a station on Guangzhou–Shenzhen railway in Xintang, Zengcheng, Guangzhou, Guangdong, China Xintang South railway station (Xintangnan railway station), formerly known as Xintang railway station, a station on Guangzhou–Shenzhen intercity railway in Xintang, Zengcheng, Guangzhou, Guangdong, China Xintang station (Hangzhou Metro), a station on the Hangzhou Metro in Hangzhou, Zhejiang
+On 9 September 2013, The Collective performed the song on the fifth season of The X Factor Australia.
+It weighs and was Australia's largest floating building upon completion.
+Alane may refer to:Aluminium hydride, a chemical reagent used as a reducing agent"Alane" (song), a 1997 song recorded by Wes MadikoPeople with the surnameAnnick Alane (born 1925), French actressBernard Alane (born 1948), French actor
+Sources Distrito Nacional sectorsCategory:Populated places in the Dominican RepublicCategory:Geography of Santo Domingo
+Some Muslim groups said that they understood his concerns, but others rejected them as prejudicial.
+One dentist is in practice in the village.
+The Navy eventually arrives, official negotiations ensue, and a treaty is signed recognizing the planet under the name Langri.
+Included the work of seven members of In-Public.
+Prior to 1945 it was in Germany.
+After his spell at Thistle, Grehan moved to Stranraer.
+Track listingChart performanceWeekly chartsRelease historyReferencesCategory:2015 singlesCategory:2015 songsCategory:Chase & Status songsCategory:Songs written by Saul MiltonCategory:Songs written by Will KennardCategory:Mercury Records singles
+It lies approximately south-west of Kobylin-Borzymy, north-east of Wysokie Mazowieckie, and west of the regional capital Białystok.
+As was customary in Spain, in Puerto Rico, the municipality has a barrio called pueblo which contains a central plaza, the municipal buildings (city hall), and a Catholic church.
+Profoundly attracted to the Heart of Jesus, she opened her life to the action of divine grace and to the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, journeying with faith and courage along the path that God prepared for her.
+He was a 1953 graduate of the United States Naval Academy.
+That is where the provider marks the spot.
+The GTA was created in the beginning of the 1970s.
+The feature was partially delineated from air photos taken by the Byrd Antarctic Expedition (1928–30) on the flight of December 5, 1929.
+Category:Islands of GreeceCategory:DodecaneseCategory:Landforms of Kalymnos (regional unit)Category:Islands of the South Aegean
+Madonna and Child is a c.1435 fresco fragment by Beato Angelico in the sacra conversazione style.
+Yoel Zussman also spelled Yoel Sussman (, born 24 October 1910, died 2 March 1982) was an Israeli jurist and the fourth President of the Supreme Court of Israel.
+Vegetation consists essentially of tufts of alfa.
+In the iodate minerals iodine is always pentavalent, i.e., present as the anions.
+In the team event, Spain created an upset by overcoming France, then Russia.
+He served on several backbench committees, and on the executive of the 1922 Committee from 1984 to 1990.
+It was Hall's last movie.
+In 2001, Karaikal District had 142,453 in its district.
+It is now extinct.
+From this effort came a series of short tracks that would form MMC's collage-like first single, Contaminated Dance Step.
+Mutations in SMN2 alone do not lead to disease, although mutations in both SMN1 and SMN2 result in embryonic death.
+Notable alumni Kyle Skipworth, Baseball Player, Florida MarlinsExternal linksPatriot High School Official WebsiteReferences Category:Educational institutions established in 2007Category:High schools in Jurupa Valley, CaliforniaCategory:Jurupa Valley, CaliforniaCategory:Public high schools in CaliforniaCategory:2007 establishments in California
+The species is one of twelve known species within the Besla genus of gastropods.
+The Ginetta GT4 Supercup is a one-make racing, Sports car racing series based in the United Kingdom, using identical Ginetta G50 and G55 sports cars.
+Gartner is a born-again Christian, and was introduced to the faith during his playing days by former Washington teammate Jean Pronovost.
+See alsoTukey's range test for multiple comparisonsReferencesCategory:Analysis of varianceCategory:Statistical tests
+Mir (, ; lit.
+Sheetal Pathak (born 23 March 1974) is an Indian former cricketer.
+The Water Street District, a large part of downtown Lock Haven in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania, is an historic district added to the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) in 1973.
+Leicht verstimmt ins Rampenlicht by Daniel SiebertLaudatory reference of the jury: Wildwechsel by Gunter Deller2014Regional Feature Film: Erhobenen Hauptes by DocViewRegional Short Film: Bahar im Wunderland by Behrooz Karamizade and RE50 Richtung Wächtersbach by Leslie BauerAudience Award: The Scrapbox by Daniel Herzog (director) and Robin Wissel (creative leader)Laudatory reference of the jury: Meine Beschneidung by Arne Ahrens, Peter Rist - Idealist by Michael Schwarz, and Qasbegi by Michel Klöfkorn2015Regional Feature Film: Sin & Illy still alive by Maria Hengge and Conduct!
+ReferencesThe Bulbophyllum-ChecklistThe Internet Orchid Species Photo Encyclopedialineolatum
+These included Godfrey’s brothers and their cousin Baldwin of Le Bourg, Baldwin II of Hainaut, Rainald of Toul, Giselbert of Clermont, Warner of Grez, Baldwin of Stavelot, Peter of Stenay, Dodo of Cons, and Conon of Montaigu and his sons and heirs Gozelo II and Lambert.
+Notable people with the surname include: Beppe Bigazzi (1933–2019), Italian executive, journalist, television presenter and writer Giancarlo Bigazzi (1940–2012), Italian composer and author Luca Bigazzi (born 1958), Italian cinematographer Mirko Bigazzi (born 1989), Italian professional footballerCategory:Italian-language surnames
+It was re-released on March 21, 2002, under the Ichiban label.
+Samurai storyIn this story, after Orochi's defeat, Sakon Shima is on his way to visit Shingen Takeda when he sees the Yellow Turbans (led by Zhang Jiao) being attacked by Dong Zhuo.
+Set in the 23rd century, this series follows the further adventures of the crew of the Federation starship Enterprise.
+It elected fifteen Members of Parliament (MPs).
+External links Category:2013 in United States case lawCategory:United States Supreme Court casesCategory:United States Supreme Court cases of the Roberts Court
+Tales of Enchantment is an adventure for the 2nd edition of the Advanced Dungeons & Dragons fantasy role-playing game, published in 1993.
+Antípodas XXI.
+This record incorporated field recordings of the Siddi people of Southern India blended with his own compositions drawing from contemporary jazz and electronic music.
+Varangeh Rud (, also Romanized as Vārangeh Rūd; also known as Vārang Rūd) is a village in Nesa Rural District, Asara District, Karaj County, Alborz Province, Iran.
+Ford died suddenly at age 52 in August 1900.
+He was describe as a Marxist..ReferencesCategory:Members of the Parliament of LebanonCategory:Lebanese writersCategory:20th-century Lebanese poetsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Year of birth missing (living people)Category:Place of birth missing (living people)Category:Lebanese male poetsCategory:21st-century Lebanese poetsCategory:21st-century male writers
+See also List of foreign basketball players in SerbiaExternal links István Németh at esake.gr István Németh at legabasket.it István Németh at euroleague.netCategory:1979 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:ABA League playersCategory:AEK B.C.
+The school is located in the Atlanta metropolitan area.
+ReferencesExternal links Category:2011 songsCategory:Hollywood Undead songsCategory:A&M Records singlesCategory:Songs written by Jacob KasherCategory:Songs written by Kevin Rudolfru:Levitatesv:Levitate
+So far, the money has helped rebuild three homes that were damaged during the storm in the Houston, Texas area.
+The season started on 7 May at Hockenheim and finished on 29 October at Phillip Island after 12 rounds.
+Pius Grabher (born 11 August 1993) is an Austrian footballer who currently plays as a midfielder for Austria Lustenau.
+Today, Orfeão is directed by the Maestro António Sérgio Ferreira and derives much of its fame from its regular national television appearances and intense artistic activity at home and abroad.
+In 2017, he pitched with the Dayton Dragons and compiled a 2–4 record, a 4.36 ERA, and 54 strikeouts over 64 relief innings pitched, and in 2018, he played for the Daytona Tortugas, with whom he was named a Florida State League All-Star, going 1–4 with a 3.04 ERA in 44 games pitched out of the bullpen.
+William C. Sharpless House is a historic home located in the Germantown neighborhood of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
+This was Calcanhotto's first album for children.
+Today the museum contains displays of important artifacts of the university's history, scientific instruments and rare books.
+1 (2003) I Will Return (2004) Long May You Run, J. Tillman (2006) Minor Works (2006) Cancer and Delirium (2007) Vacilando Territory Blues (2009) Year in the Kingdom (2009) Singing Ax (2010)as Father John Misty Fear Fun (2012) I Love You, Honeybear (2015) Pure Comedy (2017) God's Favorite Customer (2018) Off-Key in Hamburg (2020)with Fleet Foxes Helplessness Blues (2011)with Saxon Shore Be a Bright Blue (2002) Four Months of Darkness (2003)Awards and nominationsA2IM Libera Awards|-| rowspan="2"|2015| Himself| Hardworking Artist of the Year| |-| rowspan="2"|I Love You, Honeybear| Album of the Year| |-| 2016| rowspan="2"|Creative Packaging Award| |-| rowspan="3"|2018| rowspan="2"|Pure Comedy| |-| Album of the Year| |-| Himself| Best Live Act |Berlin Music Video AwardsThe Berlin Music Video Awards (BMVAs) are an annual festival that puts filmmakers and the art behind music videos in the spotlight.
+ManorThe Domesday Book of 1086 records the place as Sanford.
+Track listingCreditsSusperiaAthera - vocalsCyrus - lead guitarElvorn (Christian Hagen) - rhythm guitarMemnock - bass guitarTjodalv - drumsProductionRune Tyvold - cover artRelease historyReferencesCategory:2007 albumsCategory:Susperia albums
+Histon won 5–0.
+ReferencesExternal links Category:1972 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:South African women cricketersCategory:South Africa women One Day International cricketers
+See also List of dinosaur-bearing rock formationsReferencesCategory:Cretaceous AsiaCategory:Campanian StageCategory:Geologic formations of ChinaCategory:Upper Cretaceous Series of AsiaCategory:Paleontology in China
+Found in Europe, where it grows in mixed woods, it was originally described by Christian Hendrik Persoon in 1825.
+Medalists| width="78%" align="left" valign="top" |AthleticsPritchard competed in athletics, entering five events and taking second place in two of them.
+StoryIt has been forty years since Humans fought the Akirovians, a race of aliens who had previously aided Earth's dying atmosphere as well as Human technology only to enslave mankind.
+This is a list of commercial banks in Eritrea Bank of EritreaCommercial Bank of EritreaEritrean Investment and Development BankHousing and Commerce BankSee also Banking in Eritrea List of banks in Africa List of companies based in EritreaReferences BanksEritreaEritrea
+It became part of Aachen in 1972, after all of the communities surrounding the city were reorganized administratively.
+He played college football for the Temple Owls.
+There are 272 homes located within the district, with 251 of them classified as contributing to the district's historic character.
+She was born in New York to a Yugoslav father and an Irish mother.
+In Australia, a swag is a portable sleeping unit.
+12 teams participated in the league, and Lokomotiv Moscow won the championship.
+The compound of five tetrahedra comes in two enantiomorphic versions, which together make up the compound of 10 tetrahedra.
+Kunter retired in 1976.
+It was recorded at the Park West in Chicago, Illinois.
+He made his first-class debut for South Western Districts in the 2014–15 Sunfoil 3-Day Cup on 22 January 2015.
+2000.
+Bear was eventually awarded a doctoral degree in Applied Science from the Victoria Institute of Colleges in 1978.
+They coach at the Panthers Figure Skating Club, Panthers Ice Den in Coral Springs, Florida.
+ReceptionGarnet is voiced by Estelle in the original dub of Steven Universe.
+He is also President of the European Croquet Federation and Secretary-General of the World Croquet Federation.
+AircraftReferencesExternal linksYouTube Videos of Rud Aero aircraftCategory:Aircraft manufacturers of the United States
+It is dubbed as the only underground cemetery in the country.
+The 2016 Malian Première Division was the 51st edition of the highest club level football competition in Mali.
+He competed in the men's 5000 metres at the 1960 Summer Olympics.
+He is Minister of Energy & Power and Labour in P. S. Golay CabinetReferencesCategory:1971 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Members of the Sikkim Legislative AssemblyCategory:Sikkim Krantikari Morcha politiciansCategory:People from West Sikkim districtCategory:Sikkim MLAs 2019–Category:University of North Bengal alumni
+Comonecturoides is an extinct genus of prehistoric caudate amphibians of the Morrison Formation.
+Sivapalan () is a Tamil male given name.
+British Films, 1927-1939.
+Red Meat formed in 1993 from the remains of the country/surf/polka band The Movie Stars, and the Genuine Diamelles, whose sound was described by their members as a "psychedelic glee club".
+Category:Mountains of Marie Byrd Land
+In 1862, Munn became manager of the firm's operation in Harbour Grace.
+In January 2005, he signed a two-year contract with Cruzeiro Esporte Clube, but was also loaned during that timeframe to Fortaleza Esporte Clube; in his country's Série A, other than those two teams, he also represented Guarani Futebol Clube.
+Lord Canterbury was succeeded by his eldest son, the second Viscount.
+Macay Holdings, Inc. () is a Philippines-based company engaged in the bottling and distribution of RC Cola and other soft drink beverages in the Philippines.
+ReferencesCategory:Araneomorphae generaCategory:SalticidaeCategory:Salticidae generaCategory:Spiders described in 1902Category:Spiders of South America
+Her husband Geraint Wyn Davies, followed her with their two kids.
+Radvila Astikas or Astikaitis (baptized Nicholas; ; died in 1477) was a magnate, a member of the Astikai and founder of the Radvila (Radziwiłł) family.
+Hanno may refer to:People named Hanno Hanno (, '; , Hannōn), common Carthaginian name Hanno the Elder (died 204 BC), Carthaginian general Hanno I the Great (4th century BC), Carthaginian politician and military leader Hanno II the Great (3rd century BC), wealthy Carthaginian aristocrat Hanno III the Great (2nd century BC), Carthaginian politician Hanno the Navigator, Carthaginian explorer Hanno, son of Hannibal, Carthaginian general in the First Punic War Hanno, Messana garrison commander, Carthaginian general in The First Punic War Hanno, son of Bomilcar, Carthaginian officer in the Second Punic War Hanno Balitsch (born 1981), German footballer Hanno Behrens (born 1990), German footballer Hanno Dirksen (born 1991), South African rugby player Hanno Douschan (born 1989), Austrian snowboarder Hanno Drechsler (1931–2003), political scientist Hanno Essén (born 1948), Swedish physicist Hanno Grossschmidt (born 1973), Estonian architect Hanno Kitshoff (born 1984), South African rugby player Hanno Koffler (born 1980), German actor and musician Hanno Melzer, German rower Hanno Möttölä (born 1976), Finnish basketball player Hanno Pevkur (born 1977), Estonian politician Hanno Pöschl (born 1949), Austrian television actor Hanno Rund (1925–1993), German mathematician Hanno Selg (born 1932), Estonian pentathlete Hanno Teuteberg, South African naval officer Dennis M. Hanno, U.S. college president Carl von Hanno (1901–1953), Norwegian painter Lillemor von Hanno (1900–1984), Norwegian actress, novelist and playwright Wilhelm von Hanno (1826–1882), German-born Norwegian architect, sculptor and painterFictional characters Hanno, fictional character in The Boat of a Million Years, an immortal Phoenician living to our times and beyondOther uses Hannō, Saitama, Honshū, Japan Hanno (crater), a lunar crater Hanno (elephant), the pet white elephant of Pope Leo X G-AAUD Hanno, a named Handley Page H.P.42 airlinerSee also Hanna (disambiguation) Hanni (disambiguation) Hannu (given name) Hano (disambiguation)Category:German masculine given namesCategory:Estonian masculine given names
+On May 8, 2009, the cities of Carterville, Herrin, and Marion were severely damaged by the May 2009 Southern Midwest derecho.
+He participated without winning any medals at the 1992 Barcelona Paralympics.
+A new Labour cabinet, to be led by Jens Stoltenberg, was announced by King Harald V on 17 March 2000.
+This occurs when sediments are deposited on the floor of a stream and then become resistant to erosion, perhaps by cementation.
+The list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.
+See alsoCounty Antrim ShieldMid-Ulster CupCraig Memorial CupSourcesNorthern Ireland Soccer Yearbook 2007/2008 (Ed.
+There are also 10 categories of Zo traditional dances: (1) Khaw Khai Dance (2) Saipi Khupsu Dance (3) Phiit lam (4) Doldeng Dance ( Daak lam ) (5) Daai lam (6) Khuongtung Dance (7) Khangtung Dance (8) Lumsui Dance (9) Lamguui Dance (10) Phiit kengpaih Dance.
+Category:Municipalities in the Province of TeruelCategory:Matarraña/MatarranyaCategory:Populated places in the Province of Teruel
+Candidates need to focus on gaining momentum by creating advertising campaigns, visiting states and fundraising.
+Kapas is the location where most of the research on the enigmatic Amphidromus snails is carried out (unlike all other snails, Amphidromus are amphidromine: they usually exist of clockwise and anticlockwise individuals).
+Biography Šarić began with music from elementary school and became a drummer with Jutarnje zvijezde (Morning stars).
+TaxonomyThe type and only specimen, labelled MAUL 229/1, is of an almost complete skeleton discovered in southern Italy by geologist Angelo Varola in the marine lime mudstone of the Pietra Leccese Formation near the city of Lecce.
+In practise the party functioned as the Budapest branch of the governing Unity Party.
+Beginning in the 1974–75 season, the league played a role as a sub-team to the newly introduced 2.
+The album contains the original recordings of "Sarah Victoria" and "Casino", successful Acoustic Alchemy songs co-written by James.
+His wife Mina Elizabeth Burton was the author of a novel titled Ruling the Planets (1891).
+primer alcalde reelecto en la ciudad de Yoro, Yoro (1998-2006)ReferencesCategory:1957 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:People from TegucigalpaCategory:Deputies of the National Congress of HondurasCategory:National Party of Honduras politiciansCategory:People from Yoro Department
+References Category:Towns and villages in Pol-e Dokhtar County
+The fief of Carignano had belonged to the counts of Savoy since 1418; Carignano was erected by Charles Emmanuel I, Duke of Savoy into a principality as an appanage for his third son, Thomas Francis.
+Bibliography Mother Cecily's Music Room (Belfast, Lapwing, 2005) Flying During the Hours of Darkness (Lapwing, 2009) Cooking for Gallileo, a collection of poems and stories (Pagan Publications Ireland, 2014) Our Ordinary World and Other Stories (Victoria, Canada, Trafford Publishing, 2004 - self-published) Letters from a Recalcitrant Woman (MolyM Press, 2013)ReferencesFurther reading (self-published) Official WebsiteCategory:Irish women novelistsCategory:Irish poetsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Year of birth missing (living people)
+For the settlement in Tsolwana, see Thornhill, TsolwanaThornhill is a town in Kouga Local Municipality under the Sarah Baartman District Municipality in the Eastern Cape province of South Africa.
+The journal is published eight times a year by Taylor and Francis and its joint editors-in-chief are Brenda Rapp (Johns Hopkins University) and Bradford Z. Mahon (University of Rochester).
+– 3:10 "Rock 'n' Roll Yé Yé" – 4:54 "Get a Grip" – 4:00 "The Boomtown Rats" – 5:20ChartsSee alsoList of 2020 albumsReferencesCategory:2020 albumsCategory:BMG Rights Management albumsCategory:The Boomtown Rats albums
+Many regarded the foul weather as a judgment of Heaven against Acts then passed in the Scots Parliament tending to establish Episcopacy.
+The Buddhist monastery in the valley served as the locus of the set and some of the monks appeared in the film.
+SynopsisAtom Egoyan is shown setting up several television sets in a large room.
+Douglas Lake Airport, , is located adjacent to Douglas Lake, British Columbia, Canada.
+An archaeological investigation carried out in 2001 found evidence of numerous demolished buildings contemporary with the shot tower of 1799; by 1812, the leadworks is known to have also included pipe-drawing machines and a rolling mill for producing lead sheet.
+See alsoAutonomous carUnmanned ground vehicleRadio controlReferencesCategory:Self-driving carsCategory:Automotive technologiesCategory:Harry HoudiniCategory:Unmanned ground vehicles
+ReferencesCategory:Villages in Sępólno County
+ReferencesCategory:Populated places in Bilecik ProvinceCategory:Gölpazarı DistrictCategory:Villages in Turkey
+The man asks is he fucking Tawna and asks where he is.
+Its territories were located between the Great Wall and Yin Mountains, and correspond to part of modern-day Hohhot, Baotou and Ulanqab prefectures in Inner Mongolia.
+In 1962 he composed, again with Cordell, for Ronnie Carroll, the British Eurovision entry "Ring-A-Ding Girl", which came fourth.
+Critical receptionReviews were generally negative, with critics finding the album to be an unexciting take on influences such as RJD2, DJ Shadow, N.E.R.D., and Zero 7.
+The forewings are fuscous-brownish with a narrow yellow streak along the cubital stem and single yellow scales scattered on the wings.
+Interred at Sunset Memorial Park Cemetery, St. Anthony, Minn.ReferencesCategory:American people of Irish descentCategory:Mayors of Saint Paul, MinnesotaCategory:1869 birthsCategory:1952 deathsCategory:Minnesota Farmer–Laborites
+The function of the literary language was limited; it left the scientific field first, the discerning literature later, and the administration finally.
+It lies between the centres of Belfast and Lisburn, thus making it a busy commuter station during peak hours.
+Dwight Hollier (born April 21, 1969) is a former linebacker in the NFL who played most of his career with the Miami Dolphins.
+The Rio Santa Rosa Salamander (Bolitoglossa digitigrada) is a species of salamander in the family Plethodontidae.
+Just Jay of The Hype Magazine also had positive review on the production and inspirational lyrics of the EP stating that, “As Koncept details his inspirations in rap and life, each of The Fuel's eight songs feels like a revelation, thanks in no small part to the vibrant sonic canvasses of J57”.
+This branch was commissioned on 3 April 1914.
+Tang-e Pari Olya (, also Romanized as Tang-e Parī ʿOlyā; also known as Tang-e Parī) is a village in Itivand-e Jonubi Rural District, Kakavand District, Delfan County, Lorestan Province, Iran.
+Donnie or Donny is a familiar form (hypocorism) of the masculine given name Donald, Donal or Don.
+80.2% were Romanian Orthodox, 17% Pentecostal and 1.2% Roman Catholic.
+Medal summaryMenWomenMixedTeam standingsTeams scored for every place in the top 8 with 8 points awarded for first place, 7 for second, etc.
+ReferencesCategory:Villages in Tczew County
+Scholarly acceptanceThe acceptance of the work amongst the scholarly elite is demonstrated by the numerous commentaries upon it composed by accomplished scholars including the author’s descendant, Ja’far ibn Ismā’īl al-Barzanjī (d. 1317 AH / 1899 CE), the Highest Juridical Authority (Muftī) of the Shafites in Medina.
+He was also a well known medical writer.
+From May 2016, McCann began making regular appearances on the Channel 5 chat-show Up Late with Rylan hosted by Rylan Clark-Neal.
+CareerAhmed was elected to parliament from Sunamganj-4 as a Bangladesh Nationalist Party candidate in 1996 and 2001.
+DiscographyBlanka and The Shroom Party - Psychoerotic Cabaret (1997)Neviditelná (2000)Underground (2005)Divokej Praha – Západ (2014)ReferencesCategory:1965 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Czech female singersCategory:Czech guitaristsCategory:Female guitaristsCategory:Musicians from Prague
+The Dermatologic And Ophthalmic Drugs Advisory Committee (DODAC) receives requests for technical and clinical evaluation of new drugs by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
+During this period, it was also home to the University of Kentucky Men's Club Basketball team, University of Kentucky Club Dodgeball team, and the UK Men's Club Volleyball team.
+First noticed in the early 1990s, it has received little study.
+In Utopia, Selene's plan leads to the X-Men and X-Force fighting for their lives while the island is consumed by Selene's forces.
+The facility's capacity for football is 16,324.
+The wingspan is 21–22 mm.
+It entered revenue service on December 28, 2014.
+The title information officer is not a synonymous with that of data protection officer established in the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).
+MandateThe John Humphrey Centre draws its mandate and vision from the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
+References Category:Free market
+Both the gun and the cellphone are very valuable to the CEO and detective and begins a fast-paced pursuit in order to retrieve their items back from the gang.
+The subtidal to marine sandstone preserves fossils of bivalves, gastropods, crinoids, echinoids and ammonites dating back to the Late Jurassic period (Oxfordian stage).
+HistoryThe station, originally called T'osŏng Station, was opened by the Chosen Government Railway in 1906.
+HSOB may refer to one of many things:El Obeid Airport, in Sudan, has the ICAO code HSOBHigh School Old Boys the name of many sporting and alumni organisations, among them:Cardiff HSOB RFC, a Welsh rugby union clubChristchurch High School Old Boys, a New Zealand football clubDouglas High School Old Boys A.F.C., a Manx football clubDunedin High School Old Boys, a defunct New Zealand football clubHigh School Old Boys RFC, a New Zealand rugby union clubInvercargill High School Old Boys, a defunct New Zealand football clubMelbourne High School Old Boys Association, an Australian sporting and alumni organisationNapier High School Old Boys, a defunct New Zealand football clubNewport HSOB RFC, a Welsh rugby union club
+Paectes declinata is a species of owlet moths, etc.
+History In 1976, the original founded New Zealand Rugby Football Union organised a new provincial competition, unifying the various football unions across New Zealand.
+ReferencesExternal links Dicterow's General Management Schmidt Artists InternationalCategory:1948 birthsCategory:20th-century American musiciansCategory:20th-century classical violinistsCategory:21st-century American musiciansCategory:21st-century classical violinistsCategory:American classical violinistsCategory:American male violinistsCategory:Concertmasters of the New York PhilharmonicCategory:Juilliard School alumniCategory:Juilliard School facultyCategory:Living peopleCategory:Manhattan School of Music facultyCategory:Music Academy of the West facultyCategory:Musicians from Los AngelesCategory:Thornton School of Music facultyCategory:Classical musicians from CaliforniaCategory:20th-century American male musiciansCategory:21st-century American male musicians
+BackgroundFree zones in Dubai are managed and operated by the relevant authority.
+Ricardo Enrique Silva is a Cuban doctor and dissident who was imprisoned during the Black Spring in 2003.
+Both Hunan and Sichuan cuisine are perhaps significantly oilier than the other cuisines in China, but Sichuan dishes are generally oilier than Hunan dishes.
+Mighty Oaks may refer to: Sports teams Menlo College Oaks - collegiate sports teams, Atherton, California, at times referred to as the "Mighty..." SUNY-ESF Mighty Oaks - collegiate sports teams, Syracuse, New York Oakland University's sports teams, though officially called the Golden GrizzliesMusic Mighty Oaks (band) - indie and folk band from Berlin, Germany, founded in 2010 From Mighty Oaks - record album by Ray ThomasOther Mighty Oak Brewery - brewery in Maldon, Essex, UK
+The paper was launched in 2004 but has now ceased publication.
+In 1941 the athletic field was constructed as well as the first tree on campus.
+In humans, an over production of this hormone by gastrinomas leads to Zollinger-Ellison Syndrome.
+ReferencesCategory:Epiphytic orchidsCategory:Plants described in 1918Category:Endemic flora of São Tomé and Príncipeflexuosa
+Prado is the main Spanish national art museum.
+King's Festival is TSR product number 9260.
+Hunt sustained a fractured foot during training prior to the 2015 Hong Kong Sevens, which ruled him out for the rest of the series.
+The area is part of the historical region of Lower Carniola and the Municipality of Trebnje is now included in the Southeast Slovenia Statistical Region.
+Douglas (Vancouver : University of British Columbia Press, 1988).
+ReferencesExternal links Player's Profile at UEFA Player's Profile at Football Association of Iceland/Knattspyrnusamband Íslands (KSí) Player's Profile at World FootballCategory:1997 birthsCategory:Living peopleIngibjorg SigurdardottirIngibjorg SigurdardottirCategory:Association football defendersCategory:Women's association football defendersCategory:Djurgårdens IF Fotboll (women) playersIngibjorg SigurdardottirIngibjorg SigurdardottirCategory:Damallsvenskan players
+The population is 6,486 (2015 est.)
+The bill is black.
+José Gabriel Ramírez Agudelo (born September 18, 1990 in Envigado, Colombia) is a Colombian footballer currently playing for Arsenal de Sarandí of the Primera División in Argentina.
+These cells were part of a large solar array, retrieved by ESA astronaut Claude Nicollier and brought back to Earth in 1993 with a Space Shuttle.
+MRPA may refer to: Machine-Readable Phonemic Alphabet Metropolitan River Protection Act, Georgia Code 12-5-440 et seq.
+Khosa has an outstanding civil service record, having held the most coveted bureaucratic assignments in the country.
+From its source at Herchenhainer Höhe it flows down to Bad Vilbel where it meets with the Nidda.
+He went on to become the paper's Business editor, overseeing the paper's financial news staff, from 1997 to 2003.
+From 1989 to 1995, she was the Associate Editor for the journal Inorganic Chemistry.
+He was a nutritionist for many years and holds several health and fitness related certifications (NSCA CSCS, APEX, NASM).
+Nonna Debonne is a French football defender, who spent most of her career playing for Paris Saint-Germain in French First Division.
+Kolanowski is a surname.
+The constituency has an estimated population of 14,838.
+Els continued his steady play with a one-under 71 to move into a three-way tie for fourth.
+The state's more than 1,100 listings are distributed across all of its 56 counties.
+Igor Alekseevich Gundarov (; born May 11, 1947, Maykop) is a Doctor of Medicine, professor, member of the Russian Academy of Natural Sciences, candidate of philosophical sciences, a specialist in the field of epidemiology and medical statistics.
+The remaining NEAFL clubs joined the North West Association.
+"Birdland" is a jazz/pop piece written by Joe Zawinul of the band Weather Report as a tribute to the Birdland nightclub in New York City, which appeared on the band's 1977 album Heavy Weather.
+Derek McKay (13 December 1948 – 20 April 2008) was a Scottish footballer who played as a right winger.
+Corner Boy P) "Do Right, Do Better"- 3:34 "B.C.O.O.C.N.
+Harbour cleanup may refer to: Halifax Harbour Solutions Saint John, New Brunswick harbour cleanup
+It plays like a medieval version of SimCity being like a city building game where the violence and battles take a back seat to village management like providing food, entertainment, religious amenities and transit to your peasants so you can collect taxes on them.
+They only persist for two to three days.
+See alsoEducation ActReferencesHalsbury's Statutes,Category:Department for Children, Schools and FamiliesCategory:United Kingdom Acts of Parliament 2008Category:United Kingdom Education Acts
+KunthStyloceras penninervium A.H.Gentry & G.A.AymardReferencesCategory:Eudicot genera Category:Taxonomy articles created by Polbot
+His father, also named Karl Köther, competed at the 1928 Summer Olympics.
+Her last DFID post covered Africa (on HIV/AIDS), and as Senior Health Adviser, focused on Malawi, Mozambique, Zambia and Zimbabwe.
+In his book, Medieval Siege, Jim Bradbury extensively quotes from Tarsusi concerning mangonels of various types, including Arab, Persian and Turkish, describing what could be trebuchets, but not quoted as above.
+ThenBy Möbius inversion, we haveDirichlet seriesThe von Mangoldt function plays an important role in the theory of Dirichlet series, and in particular, the Riemann zeta function.
+The hypodermium (the tissue layer directly under the pileipellis) is made of thin-walled, hyaline hyphae, 2.5–8 μm broad, with a brownish incrusting pigment.
+The Fiery Angel is The Fiery Angel (novel), a novel by the Russian poet Valery Bryusov The Fiery Angel (opera), an opera by Sergei Prokofiev based on Bryusov's novel
+The Senate of The University of Manchester comments that "there was some evidence that actions by specific Schools to underline the importance of the DLHE Survey and to encourage participation had resulted in more positive results (e.g., Chemical Engineering)."
+Neighbouring gminasGmina Buk is bordered by the gminas of Dopiewo, Duszniki, Granowo, Opalenica, Stęszew and Tarnowo Podgórne.
+Veganzones is a municipality located in the province of Segovia, Castile and León, Spain.
+She secured sixty-eight percent of the vote while her closest rival Republican Troy Lawson secured thirty-three percent.
+ReferencesExternal linksBell Laboratories, Inc: Rat IceCategory:Mammal pest controlCategory:Applications of carbon dioxideCategory:Bell Labs
+Community ServiceThe Sanders Estes Unit assists localcommunities by providing offender crews for city,county and state work projects.
+The school's team currently competes in the Northeast Conference.
+"Break the Line" is a 2004 song by the Guano Apes from their greatest hits album Planet of the Apes, released on October 24, 2004.
+Cayalti District is one of twenty districts of the province Chiclayo in Peru.
+Previously, he was associate professor of Japanese and Chinese art history at Vassar College.
+The work had its genesis as a serialization.
+It also articulates with other government agencies' press offices, the dissemination of programs, policies, acts, events, ceremonies and trips in which the President participates and provides journalistic and administrative support to the Palácio do Planalto press unit.
+Dividers, in connecting points, alludes to communication and navigation intrinsic to the Clarendon Dock area.
+Hastings Island () is located off the south coast of Western Australia near Esperance and Cape Le Grand National Park.
+The James Joyce Centre is a museum in Dublin, Ireland, dedicated to promoting an understanding of the life and works of James Joyce.
+The case p = 0 is known as the Prékopa–Leindler inequality and was re-discovered by Brascamp and Lieb in 1976, when they proved the general version below; working independently, Borell had done the same in 1975.
+There are 147 detached households, 66 semi-detached households, 102 terraced households, and 13 apartments.
+If this indicates a delay, the child should then be assessed with a developmental evaluation, done by a highly trained professional such as a developmental psychologist or paediatrician, or a paediatric neurologist.
+Category:1985 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:People from Hussein Dey (commune)Category:Algerian footballersCategory:USM Alger playersCategory:USM El Harrach playersCategory:MC Saïda playersCategory:Algeria youth international footballersCategory:Association football midfielders
+NotesFurther reading Category:Defunct software companies of the United States
+Frimpong Manso (born 15 May 1959) is a Ghanaian former international footballer who played as a defender.
+He subsequently painted a number of Schubert's portraits.
+ReferencesCategory:1928 birthsCategory:2001 deathsCategory:Turkish male long-distance runnersCategory:Olympic athletes of TurkeyCategory:Athletes (track and field) at the 1952 Summer OlympicsCategory:Mediterranean Games silver medalists for TurkeyCategory:Mediterranean Games medalists in athleticsCategory:Athletes (track and field) at the 1955 Mediterranean Games
+one idea, shape dynamics, a duality of Einstein's general relativity, that does that.
+MT 84's western terminus is at U.S. Route 287 (US 287) in the small community of Norris and the eastern terminus is at US 191 and MT 85 at Four Corners.
+ReferencesCategory:MacropolianaCategory:Moths described in 1972Category:Insects of TanzaniaCategory:Moths of Africa
+EconomyIn addition to its attraction as a tourist destination, the region around Dalyan is a highly fertile and productive agricultural zone.
+Liv offers to chip in using her inheritance but Aaron flat out refuses to use Gordon's money.
+The name may derive from the repetitive yet forward-flowing feel of the rhythm, which has been compared to the experience of driving on a motorway.
+ReferencesCategory:1970 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Canadian male rowersCategory:Olympic rowers of CanadaCategory:Rowers at the 1996 Summer OlympicsCategory:Rowers at the 2000 Summer OlympicsCategory:Sportspeople from Halifax, Nova ScotiaCategory:Pan American Games medalists in rowingCategory:Pan American Games silver medalists for CanadaCategory:Pan American Games bronze medalists for CanadaCategory:Rowers at the 1995 Pan American GamesCategory:Rowers at the 1999 Pan American Games
+There are a number of speleothem structures in the cave, known by names such as the "Lowveld Rocket", "Samson's Pillar", and the "Screaming Monster"; some have been dated to 200 million years old.
+Polymerization of globular actin (G-actin) leads to a structural filament (F-actin) in the form of a two-stranded helix.
+Ms Geven claimed this violated her right to free movement under TFEU article 45.
+Andre Levingston was named General Manager of Basketball Operations.
+Goodwin Island is one of the many uninhabited Canadian arctic islands in Qikiqtaaluk Region, Nunavut.
+See also Paleontology in South DakotaReferences South DakotaStratigraphic unitsCategory:Stratigraphy of South DakotaCategory:South Dakota geography-related listsCategory:United States geology-related lists
+The engine house fell into disrepair and was restored by the local Prince of Wales Engine House Society.
+Online Poker ads have since been reduced since the 2006 legislation that puts restrictions on online gambling in the United States.
+The US version, featuring different artwork, was released on June 13, 2006 through Immortal Records.
+(9780262730648 paperback)US residential architectural history in the context of other developments since the late 1600s.
+Jackie Lee may refer to: Jackie Lee (Irish singer) (born 1936), Irish popular music singer Jackie Lee (country singer) (born 1991), American country music singer-songwriter Jacky Lee (1938–2016), American Football League and National Football League quarterback Jackie Lee, singer, real name Earl Nelson of Bob & Earl
+While pastor of St. Mark's Church, Lyon was the only African American among 300 members of the New York Conference.
+Celebrity Mansions The band's fourth studio album, Celebrity Mansions, was released on 7 June 2019.
+Hillstad represented the club Stavanger RK.
+ReferencesBibliographyExternal links Category:York Archaeological TrustCategory:Organisations based in YorkCategory:Charities based in North YorkshireCategory:1972 establishments in England
+KFLO may refer to: The ICAO code for Florence Regional Airport in Florence, South Carolina, United States KFLO-LP, a low-power radio station (102.9 FM) licensed to Jonesboro, Arkansas, United States KFLO-FM, a radio station (89.1 FM) licensed to Blanchard, Louisiana, United States KSYB, a radio station (1300 AM) licensed to Shreveport, Louisiana, which used the call sign KFLO until July 2002
+Leopold William Jerome Fane De Salis (12 June 1845 – 3 August 1930) was an Australian politician.
+Player efficiency rating NBA records: Highest career player efficiency rating: Michael Jordan (27.91) Highest single-season player efficiency rating: Wilt Chamberlain (31.82 in 1962–63) Highest career playoff player efficiency rating: Michael Jordan (28.59) Highest single-season playoff player efficiency rating: Hakeem Olajuwon (38.96 in 1988)EuroLeague and EuroCup The EuroLeague, its second-tier level competition, the EuroCup, and several European national domestic leagues, use a different type of formula to determine the ratings and efficiency of players, called the performance index rating (PIR):(Points + Rebounds + Assists + Steals + Blocks + Fouls Drawn) - (Missed Field Goals + Missed Free Throws + Turnovers + Shots Rejected + Fouls Committed).
+He attended a Polish school in Kiev before moving with his family to Poland in 1918.
+Baxter was a member of the New York State Senate from 1931 until his death in 1934, sitting in the 154th, 155th, 156th and 157th New York State Legislatures; and was Chairman of the Committee on Revision from 1931 to 1932.
+The Last Resort's lead singer, Roi Pearce (later of The 4-Skins) liked the band and agreed to produce a two-song demo tape with them.
+ReferencesExternal links neurosurgery.med.miami.eduCategory:University of Miami facultyCategory:Year of birth missing (living people)Category:Living peopleCategory:American neurologistsCategory:American neurosurgeons
+The Flint Fuze were a professional basketball team located in Flint, Michigan, United States, in 2001.
+In the 1920s and 1930s, tourists began to be drawn to the lake and its nearby communities, Branson and Rockaway Beach.
+Immediately thereafter Dosio left to oversee the rebuilding of fortifications at Anagni, his first work as an architect, which was interrupted in 1565 with the death of Pope Pius IV; of this work, two of the rusticated portals remain, the Porta S. Maria, and the Porta S. Francesco.
+Nordgren competed at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi.
+Replication follows the double-stranded DNA bidirectional replication model.
+In 1989 Slade proved with Takashi Hara that the Aizenman–Newman triangle condition at critical percolation is valid in sufficiently high dimension.
+He was intensely interested in preserving the island’s natural beauty.
+Following the lifting of the siege, the battalion returned to Australia during 1943.
+Josep Maria Rañé (born Barcelona, Spain 15 June 1954) is a Spanish politician.
+Tamás Kovács may refer to:Tamás Kovács (judoka) (born 1978), Hungarian judokaTamás Kovács (jurist) (1940–2020), Chief Prosecutor of Hungary (2006–2010)Tamás Kovács (fencer) (born 1943), Hungarian Olympic fencerTamás Kovács (athlete) (born 1983), Hungarian Olympic long-distance runner
+Development The original plan in June 2005 was to merge back the numerous changes into Mozilla Composer's source code tree.
+Career He was elected at the Ottawa West riding in the 1972 general election and served his term in the 29th Canadian Parliament before being defeated in the 1974 election by Lloyd Francis of the Liberal party.
+Activities The initiative organizes regularly open discussion rounds, panel discussions, and workshops.
+At the beginning of the last century, San Andrés de Cuerquia had recovered much of its former importance, thanks to the fertility of its hillsides which are very conducive to all types of crops.
+Chikhaldara has an annual rainfall of 154cm.
+To keep the material air-free, it must be slowly poured in a high and narrow stream starting from the corner of the mold box, or mold, letting the material flow freely into the box or mold cavity.
+ReferencesCategory:Members of the Legislative Assembly of TongaCategory:Tongan lawyersCategory:Criminal defense lawyersCategory:Living peopleCategory:Democratic Party of the Friendly Islands politiciansCategory:Government ministers of TongaCategory:Year of birth missing (living people)
+Above the shield is a simple round window.
+ResultsThe result was (first preference votes only):All parties with over 500 votes listed.
+Following the release of the album, McClure assembled a band, including Imperial on keyboard and rhythm guitar, bassist Ian Reitz, and drummer Josh Van Hoorebeke.
+It wasn't until the adoption of the CCD (charge-coupled device) that the digital camera really took off.
+The P.V.2 first flew on 16 June 1916, and demonstrated good performance and handling.
+Cast Svein Scharffenberg as Gunnar Gørild Mauseth as Liv Zbigniew Zamachowski as Brother-in-law Kari Simonsen as Astrid Bjarte Hjelmeland as Eivind Benedikte Lindbeck as Siri Geir Kvarme as Per Arne Turid Gunnes as Kari Wieslawa Mazurkiewicz as Irina Krister Henriksson as Svensken Jerzy Nowak as OlekAwards In 2001 Cabin Fever (Nar nettene blir lange) was nominated for 3 awards.
+Es war ein Edelweiss () is a march, with music and lyrics composed by Herms Niel in 1941 for the German Army.
+See alsoEconomy of RwandaAgriculture in RwandaReferencesExternal linksSugar processing factory in Rwanda to be constructedCategory:Sugar productionCategory:Agriculture in Rwanda
+For example, financial institutions often offer asset management or brokerage services to their clients.
+His oratorio L'agonia del Redentore (1933) is considered to be one of his finer works, and his religious drama Nazareth (1925) forms a bridge between his achievements within sacred compositions and dramatic works.
+Prostitution The example of Prostitution is utilised by Patemane to explain how the patriarchy manages to create sexual capital off the sexual labour of women, using the 'story' of the sexual contract it becomes apparent that "prostitution is part of the exercise of the law of male sex-right" ensuring continued access to women's bodies.
+Zhu (string instrument), ancient Chinese string instrumentZhu (percussion instrument), ancient Chinese percussion instrumentZhu (musician), an American electronic music artistZhuhai Jinwan Airport - ZHU is the 3 letter IATA code for the airportZhu languagesHouston Air Route Traffic Control Center, known as ZHU
+Venango Township is a township in Erie County, Pennsylvania, United States.
+Ethics of natural history broadcasting Boswall is acknowledged as one of the key figures in shaping the approach to ethics in natural history broadcasting.
+In her rookie season, she participated in 33 games, averaging 10.5 minutes per game.
+However, when the amount of fluid exceeds this fill line, fluid will overflow into the pipe in the center of the cup.
+Time passes, and Addie's stepfather and two half-sisters visit less frequently than she'd like.
+In 2016 the church became a personal use parish for the Latin Mass St Stanislaus and entrusted to the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Peter.
+The following year he joined Croydon City in the Victorian State League Division 1 competition before joining then-NSL club South Melbourne in 1995.
+Shailender Singh (born 4 October 1952) is an Indian playback singer and actor.
+It is situated in the forest "Krähe" between Langendamm and Steimbke.
+A common version of this dance is Yambolsko Paidushko Horo (yahm-bohl-sko pie-doosh-ko).
+The Village hosts its own Police Department, Volunteer Fire Department (Norwood Hook, Ladder & Hose Company), Volunteer Ambulance Corps, Police Reserve, Department of Public Works, Emergency Management Commission, Public Library, Youth Board, and village television station – MalverneTV.
+The Clarence River flows through the commune.
+Rather than add to the counterweight by welding or fabrication, holes are drilled in structurally safe positions in the counterweights, and "slugs" (cylindrical dowels) of Mallory metal are inserted and fastened securely.
+ReferencesExternal links http://smotra.ru/users/misha_bryanskij/blog/171732/c_pg:1/ http://www.carstyling.ru/en/car/1990_lada_gnome/ http://www.carstyling.ru/car/2528/Category:Lada vehiclesCategory:City cars
+MenSwimmingFour swimmers represented Seychelles in 1992.
+She has led several campaigns for Sea Shepherd Global in the Mediterranean Sea, the Faroe Islands ("GrindStop" campaign)and the Indian Ocean (Réunion Island) to defend bluefin tuna, dolphins and pilot whales, and sharks.
+Holbrookia propinqua (keeled earless lizard) is a species of phrynosomatid lizard.
+Notable people with the surname include:D. D. Verni (born 1961), American bass guitaristMarco Antonio Verni (born 1976), Chilean shot putter
+Chinese racism may refer to: Racism within the People's Republic of China, including anti-Japanese sentiment in China Racism by the Han Chinese people, including Han chauvinism, the belief in the superiority of the Han Chinese people and culture to others within the Republic and People's Republic of China Sinocentrism, the belief in the superiority of Han Chinese people and culture to others throughout the world Anti-Manchuism, the historical animus against the race of the ruling class of the Qing Dynasty the Hua–Yi distinction, the historical establishment of a Chinese Huaxia people by othering those surrounding them (many of these now considered members of the Han people) Sinophobia, racism against the Chinese, including Anti-Chinese sentiment in the United States and Japan the Yellow Peril, the late-19th and early-20th century fear of a modernizing ChinaSee also Racism in Asia laowai Anti-Chinese legislation in the United States The Canadian Chinese Exclusion Act
+ReferencesExternal links Mai no Mahō to Katei no Hi official website Mai no Mahō to Katei no Hi at IMDb.com courtesy of LantisCategory:2011 anime OVAsCategory:P.A.WorksCategory:Films about families
+In humans, the stimulation of serotonin production by administration of tryptophan has an antidepressant effect and inhibition of tryptophan hydroxylase (e.g.
+Now known as the Tost Tosonbumba Nature Reserve, all the mining licences in the area have since been cancelled.
+The film was selected as the Taiwanese entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 69th Academy Awards, but was not accepted as a nominee.
+The band originates from Santa Barbara, CA.
+The community's postal zip code is 41132.
+On demand, they serve as a local store of energy and a potential source of short carbon chains that are used by the cell in its synthesis of membranes and other lipid containing structural components or secretory products.
+She stated, "I think it's important for everybody to start over in their life when it's not going properly or the way they think it should go or should be going, or if there's problems in their life."
+His hat has a letter "I".
+While watching, Michael begins noting how the film is not really very good; he steps outside and tells Holly that it is a bad film but also one that people are having fun watching.
+His essays and poems have appeared in The New Republic, New England Review, The Rumpus, Beloit Poetry Journal, The American Poetry Review, The Kenyon Review, The Southern Review, The Yale Review, and elsewhere.
+The AX element is involved in directing the efficient production and orientation-dependent formation of late RNAs.
+It is located on US 441/US 98, on the northeastern shore of Lake Okeechobee.
+TAAR1, the first of six functional human TAARs, has gained considerable interest in academic and proprietary pharmaceutical research due to its role as the endogenous receptor for the trace amines phenylethylamine, tyramine, and tryptamine – metabolic derivatives of the amino acids phenylalanine, tyrosine and tryptophan, respectively – ephedrine, as well as the synthetic psychostimulants, amphetamine, methamphetamine and methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA, ecstasy).
+It is motile by means of a single flagellum.
+Defenders repelled the slaves' attack at Durloe's, and many planters and their families escaped to St. Thomas, an estimated by sea.
+ReferencesZamienie
+ResultsHeatsFinalReferencesCategory:Athletics at the 1989 Summer Universiade
+However, the development of tourism is hampered by drought, political totalitarianism, and war.
+References Category:1871 births Category:1956 deathsCategory:People from StrasbourgCategory:French military doctorsCategory:PhthisiatristsCategory:French pulmonologists
+Provincial and municipal leaders have attached great importance to the development of SCCM.
+Drammen was the last trolleybus system in the world to use this type of current collection.
+According to legend, the temple was founded by Aeneas.
+William Leatham may refer to: William Leatham (banker) (1785–1842), British banker, Quaker and abolitionist William Henry Leatham (1815–1889), his son, British banker, poet and Liberal politician
+External links www.africa.upenn.eduInvestigator Profile: Interview with Frederick A. Murphy, Ph.D. Category:Living peopleCategory:American virologistsCategory:Year of birth missing (living people)Category:University of California, Davis facultyCategory:University of California, Davis alumni
+It was described by Zajciw in 1964.
+seasonsCeltic
+HistoryThe school was taken over by Rotherham Corporation in 1906.
+Creativity Collar by the Iraqi Story House in 2002.
+Alberto Radi (10 December 1919 – 13 July 1989) was an Italian rower who competed in the 1948 Summer Olympics.
+HistoryWithin the German Empire (1871–1918), the territory of the present-day municipality of Grabfeld was part of the Duchy of Saxe-Meiningen.
+Herman was elected as a member of the Glendora City Council in 2002 in a recall election.
+Pedro de Morales (1538–1614) was a Spanish religious writer.
+It was the 19th edition of the competition for Juniors (U18) and the 15th edition for the Under 23 category.
+Awarded by The “Labor” Order of the Republic of Azerbaijan is awarded by the relevant executive authority.
+The New Zealand Touring Car Championship was a motor racing title which was contested in New Zealand from 1984 to 2002.
+The majority 95% of the population of the commune are farmers, while an additional 5% receives their livelihood from raising livestock.
+The region's participation in the BLWS had dated back to 1968.
+After America's entry into World War I the US Navy worked alongside the Royal Navy and it was decided to mount four 6-in/53 caliber guns in two twin gun turrets fore and aft and keep the eight guns in the tiered casemates so that she would have an eight gun broadside and, due to limited arcs of fire from the casemate guns, four to six guns firing fore or aft.
+Groups of Italian Protestants had more comfortable lives in Switzerland, particularly in the Graubünden region.
+He graduated in vocal studies alongside Roberto Miranda and Eliane Sampaio from the Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro.
+The species is endemic to Greece and only known from the eastern Peloponnese.
+FloraThe ecoregion is mostly covered by xeric shrubs, which create varying associations based on elevation and soil conditions.
+Cast Leon M. Lion as Marquis Li Chung Lilian Braithwaite as Lady de la Haye Elizabeth Allan as Naomi Melsham Austin Trevor as Paul Markatel James Raglan as Sir Charles Jane Welsh as Victoria C.M.
+Wyoming Renegades is a 1954 Western film directed by Fred F. Sears and starring Phil Carey, Gene Evans and Martha Hyer.
+ReferencesCategory:Villages in Strzelce-Drezdenko County
+In this endeavour, vast ratooning potential could be more helpful in containing desirable genes in such genetically modified plants for sufficiently longer rather more faithfully.
+If instead is used to make sobrassada, has to be noted that paprika Tap de Cortí over a year is not advisable as it doesn't have the same qualities organoleptics.
+ReferencesCategory:OxyptiliniCategory:Moths described in 2006Category:Taxa named by Cees Gielis
+Said Hyder Akbar (born 1984 in Peshawar, Pakistan) is an American writer and an entrepreneur in Afghanistan.
+Dear Secret Santa (also known as Christmas Card) is a Lifetime Television romantic Christmas film, starring Tatyana Ali, Jordin Sparks, Bill Cobbs, Della Reese, Ernie Hudson and Lamorne Morris.
+Innovation-wise, it scores full marks from me.
+FestivalsKrishna JanmashtamiKrishna Janmashtami or Gokul Ashtami is a Hindu festival celebrating the birth of Lord Krishna, an avatar of Hindu deity Vishnu.
+She retired from the stage in 1939 and became a vocal teacher.
+His arms were gules three men's legs conjoined at the thighs in triangle argent.
+This is the XRI equivalent of a generic noun in the English language, for example, +flowers, +phone.number, or +table.of.contents.
+Mount Borchgrevink () is a mountain, high, standing south of the Tanngarden Peaks in the Sør Rondane Mountains.
+Iran crisis may refer toIran crisis of 1946Iran hostage crisis2009 Iranian election protests2017–18 Iranian protests
+GeneraThese 14 genera belong to the tribe Nematini: Amauronematus Konow, 1890 g b Anoplonyx Marlatt, 1896 g b Craesus Leach, 1817 g b Craterocercus Rohwer, 1911 g b Euura Newman, 1837 g b Hemichroa Stephens, 1835 i c g b Hoplocampa Hartig, 1837 i c g b Nematus Panzer, 1801 i c g b (willow sawflies) Neopareophora b Pachynematus Konow, 1890 i c g b Phyllocolpa Benson, 1960 i c g b Pikonema Ross, 1937 i c g b Pontania Costa, 1859 i c g b Pristiphora Latreille, 1810 i c g bData sources: i = ITIS, c = Catalogue of Life, g = GBIF, b = Bugguide.netReferencesFurther readingExternal links Category:Tenthredinidae
+Darlingia is a small genus of two species of rainforest tree from Northern Queensland.
+Tang Hetian (; born 23 December 1975), formerly known as Tang Yongshu (唐永淑), is a badminton player who competed internationally for China in the 1990s.
+His subjects have included Christopher Marlowe, Arthur Rimbaud, Leonardo da Vinci, Thomas Nashe and William Shakespeare.
+The closest major cities include Bukan, Zanjan, Tabriz and Ardabil.
+Tom Nightingale (born 16 May 1998) is a cricketer who plays for Guernsey.
+Amateur careerOlwine played college baseball for Morehead State University.
+He took command of the U.S. Army Medical Research and Materiel Command in November 2007.
+It was confirmed in court that he instructed a planning officer to alter the road route to benefit his own land's value to a considerable extent.
+The Huskies play college ice hockey in the Mid-American Collegiate Hockey Association (MACHA) conference of the American Collegiate Hockey Association (ACHA), ACHA Division 2 and ACHA Division 3.
+Naomi Watts stars as Jean Holloway, a psychologist who secretly infiltrates the private lives of her patients.
+To keep the Reynolds number same, the scaled-up model can use a different fluid with different viscosity or density.
+In Ashley's opinion, Unknown created the modern genre of fantasy, though commercial success for the genre had to wait until the 1970s.
+At the end of World War II in Europe, Jodl signed the German Instrument of Surrender on 7 May 1945 in Reims as the representative of Dönitz.
+An international television and print ad campaign directed users to a website where various "myths" about the Mac platform were "dispelled".
+HIH may refer to: His or Her Imperial Highness, a title used for members of an imperial family HIH Insurance, a former Australian insurance company Harstad University College (Norwegian: ) Heart in Hand (band), an English band Pamosu language's ISO code
+The annual rainfall ranges from 1.5 to 2.6 meters.
+They identify Canbisol, of which HU-243 is a methylene homologue.
+In January 2016, AMA unveiled its latest innovation Xpert Eye Mobility M1 as well as its "VAR" (Value Added Resellers) partnership with ODG (Osterhout Design Group) during the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas.
+In 2002, natural gas production was .
+External links Brudebuketten at Filmweb.no (Norwegian)Category:1953 filmsCategory:1950s comedy filmsCategory:Norwegian filmsCategory:Norwegian comedy films
+Tsukamurella sunchonensis is a bacterium from the genus of Tsukamurella which has been isolated from activated sludge in Suncheon in Korea.
+He was interred in Mechanicstown Cemetery, Mechanicstown, Ohio.
+ReferencesFurther reading Category:AndrenidaeCategory:Articles created by QbugbotCategory:Insects described in 1874
+In 1974, the L.A. Times Syndicate absorbed General Features into its own operations.
+The Volta Bureau worked in close cooperation with the American Association for the Promotion of the Teaching of Speech to the Deaf (the AAPTSD) which was organized in 1890, electing Bell as President.
+Virgil Thomson describes him as a "neo-contrapuntalist" influenced by Carl Ruggles and involved with, "rounded [ melodic ] material," but not so much with the, "personalized sentiment," involved in neoromanticism.
+The jury included senior musicians on the one hand, and IDF soldiers themselves on the other.
+Plant a Tree in Ita Ford's Memory Memorial program in El Salvador in honor of the four churchwomen; accessed December 9, 2006.
+However, nothing appears to have come of either charter, and the suspension evolved into abandonment.
+MBD3 mediates the association of metastasis-associated protein 2 (MTA2) with the core histone deacetylase complex.
+It was released on June 27, 2011 through the independent label Domino.
+The most important crops are rice and onions, while other important agricultural products are beans, cassava, sweet potatoes, and tomatoes.
+HistoryHempstead Watermill was powered by the use of a water wheel until 1905 when the wheel was removed and replaced with a more efficient turbine.
+Rowe and Bernard Lovell.
+It continued to be held into the 3rd century AD, and perhaps later.
+Pongyi thaing ( ) is a Burmese martial art created by the monk Oopali in the 9th century.
+The paper has been cited more than three thousand times and has received significant coverage in both the scientific and mainstream press.
+Groslée-Saint-Benoît is a commune in the Ain department of eastern France.
+Caprice bohémien, Op.
+Vanocur is a surname.
+ReferencesCitationsBibliographyCategory:Buildings and structures completed in 1683Category:History of GhanaCategory:Castles in GhanaCategory:Dutch Gold CoastCategory:1682 establishments in the Dutch Empire
+Four albums in four years is an impressive feat, but the band has prioritized quantity over quality."
+The post office was established in 1870 as Cousins, in honor of Eau Claire businessman Henry Cousins.
+Geography This village consists of three areas: Chupri, Nakka, and Shahnian de taki.
+There were 599 housing units at an average density of 750.0 per square mile (289.1/km²).
+Mervin is a masculine given name.
+Poesoegroenoe or Pusugrunu or Psugrunu is a Matawai village in Boven Saramacca, Sipaliwini District, central Suriname.
+The difference between the EAR and APR amounts to a difference of $64.09 per month.
+ReferencesCategory:Short stories by Franz KafkaCategory:Short stories published posthumously
+It is part of Aller Media AB.
+Abraham Moshe Hillel (1820-1920) served as Chief Rabbi of Baghdad during the years 1884, 1886–1889, and 1911–1915.
+6 teams entered the America Zone, with the winner going on to compete in the Inter-Zonal Final against the winner of the Europe Zone.
+Cast Beth Littleford as Anna Roberts Kate Mansi as Amy Ted King as Charles Roberts Valentina Novakovic as Christine Roberts Jessica Cameron as Shannon Jerry Lacy as Brian Catherine Carlen as Ellie J. Ferguson as Chuck / EMTReceptionReferencesExternal linksUnwanted Guest on IMDbUnwanted Guest on Rotten TomatoesCategory:2016 television filmsCategory:American supernatural horror filmsCategory:Ghost filmsCategory:Horror television filmsCategory:Lifetime (TV network) filmsCategory:English-language filmsCategory:American films
+HistoryGreat Soviet Russian Encyclopedia says “Kamen-Kashirskiy is on the river Zyr, a tributary of the River Pripet [or Prypiat]: the town was known already at the beginning of the 12th.
+playersCategory:Association football forwardsCategory:Association football midfielders
+ReferencesFairchild Tropical Botanic Garden: RaveneaRBG Kew: RaveneaPACSOA: Ravenea Category:Arecaceae generaCategory:Flora of the Western Indian Ocean
+Research focusLeociak deals with the analysis of various forms of recording and of representation of the Holocaust experience.
+In 1992, he moved to Lazio, which began on August 26, 1992 against Ascoli (4–0 for the biancocelesti).
+Viljo Aho (2 November 1932 – 23 February 2013) was a Finnish boxer.
+On 9 October 2006 an underground nuclear test was conducted at P'unggye-ri in Kilju County, causing the closure of the line for 3–4 months.
+In France, he coached Bordeaux, FC Nancy, Toulon, Stade Français and Rouen.
+External links Category:1951 filmsCategory:1950s black comedy filmsCategory:French black comedy filmsCategory:German black comedy filmsCategory:Swiss comedy filmsCategory:French filmsCategory:West German filmsCategory:Swiss filmsCategory:German-language filmsCategory:Films directed by Christian-JaqueCategory:German serial killer filmsCategory:Films set in the Middle AgesCategory:Films set in the 15th centuryCategory:German multilingual filmsCategory:French multilingual filmsCategory:Films based on BluebeardCategory:1950s multilingual filmsCategory:Films set in Europe
+Jenkins later served as Chief of Police of the Atlanta Police Department for 26 years, from 1947-1973.
+In integrated circuits, or ICs, the main cause of signal integrity problems is crosstalk.
+ReferenceschrysomelaCategory:Moths of Oceania
+Arthur's father's part-ownership of a mining and ranching company gave the family a comfortable living.
+Many of the supporting characters present an unflattering portrayal of colonial life in Virginia.
+Triggs and his collections article by Alan Ives, in "MARGIN: Life & Letters in Early Australia", Nov, 2003.
+Lyromma is a genus of fungi in the Ascomycota phylum.
+Admission requirements include a bachelor's degree or its equivalent from an accredited institution, essays, letters of recommendation, a GMAT or GRE score and a TOEFL or PTE score for international applicants.
+CompetitionsJ1 LeagueLeague tableResultsJ.
+191, which detailed the Confederate plan of action in Maryland.
+It is a three-story wood frame Colonial Revival structure, built in 1908 as a vacation boarding house.
+Animal Learning & Behavior, 29, 66-78.
+Eucamptognathus lafertei is a species of ground beetle in the subfamily Pterostichinae.
+History Until the opening of Budaörs, Budapest's main airport was Mátyásföld Airfield (), east of Budapest.
+Notable people with the surname include:Amanda Shires (born 1982), American singer and violinistArt Shires (1906–1967), American baseball playerDana Shires (born 1932), Doctor, co-inventor of GatoradeJim Shires (born 1945), Canadian ice hockey playerTom Shires (1925–2007), American trauma surgeon
+Tafelberg is Dutch and Afrikaans for "table mountain".
+He was also an accomplished mountaineer.
+The cloth is typically cotton, and the dye is typically indigo, so the design is usually white on blue.
+In the early 1990s, Ingersoll produced several All Hydraulic tractors known as the 3100 and 4100 Series that did away with the V-belt that formerly drove the mower decks and snow casters on other models.
+The next morning, Yakovlevich finds a nose in his bread.
+Davis' plan is revealed and most of the Defenders of Man rejoin the Dominion.
+It is the only New Zealand Music Award decided by public vote.
+BiographyPeter was born at Coimbra.
+However, he played one season with Muscat Club in Oman.
+The 1998 Giro d'Italia was the 81st edition of the Giro d'Italia, one of cycling's Grand Tours.
+They had one son, one son, The Hon.
+The name was sometimes spelled "Genn Town".
+Wheelies is a disability themed virtual nightclub on the online platform Second Life.
+It is located within Central Province.
+Claudie Weill (1945 – 29 September 2018) was a French historian.
+"Cake Eating, Chattering and Jumps: Existence Results for Variational Problems" (Econometrica 54, July 1986, pp.
+See also Pathans of Gujarat Pathans of Rajasthan Pathans of Uttar PradeshReferencesCategory:Muslim communities of Madhya PradeshMadhya PradeshCategory:Social groups of Madhya Pradesh
+PopulationSee alsoCommunes of the Gironde departmentReferencesINSEECategory:Communes of Gironde
+ReferencesCategory:Villages in Ełk County
+They also brought Dick Vs Dom to Ampthill Gala Day on 3 July 2016.
+These are then simulated using a modified version of the Gillespie algorithm, that can simulate multiple time delayed reactions (chemical reactions where each of the products is provided a time delay that determines when will it be released in the system as a "finished product").
+External links Beyer's official website (mostly German) Beyer's biography on the website of the Bundestag (German)References Category:1970 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Members of the Bundestag for North Rhine-WestphaliaCategory:University of Düsseldorf alumniCategory:University of Bonn alumniCategory:University of Virginia School of Law alumniCategory:People from RatingenCategory:Christian Democratic Union of Germany politiciansCategory:German lawyersCategory:21st-century German politiciansCategory:Members of the Bundestag 2017–2021Category:Members of the Bundestag 2013–2017Category:Members of the Bundestag 2009–2013
+External links Category:1788 birthsCategory:1857 deathsCategory:French engineersCategory:French geographers
+Rikky and Pete is a 1988 Australian film directed by Nadia Tass, written by David Parker, and starring Stephen Kearney and Nina Landis.
+John Albert Granger (1795–1870), who married Harriet Jackson (1804–1868), the daughter of Amasa Jackson, the first president of the Union Bank of New York, and Mary (née Phelps) Jackson, the only daughter and heiress of Oliver Phelps.
+About 7.4% of families and 9.4% of the population were below the poverty line, including 11.6% of those under age 18 and 15.5% of those age 65 or over.
+His productions were shown on the Dutch TV station RotterdamTV.
+The team was a member of the Big Ten Conference.
+In 1817, John or Sean O'Cleary (one of six sons of Patrick, son of Cosnahach (1693–1759), son of Cairbre, son of Diarmaid, son of Cú Choigcríche), moved to Dublin.
+Jose Reveyn (born 14 September 1947) is a Belgian long-distance runner who won the Amsterdam Marathon race in 1985 in a time of 2:19:24.
+Cast Richard Thomas as Bob Hart Hallee Hirsh as Madison Nancy McKeon as Emily Geoffrey Lewis as Hank A. J. Trauth as TimReferencesExternal linksCategory:2006 television filmsCategory:2000s drama filmsCategory:American filmsCategory:American drama filmsCategory:Hallmark Channel original filmsCategory:Films set in MontanaCategory:Films directed by Steve Boyum
+Their debut LP, The Year of Magical Drinking, was released on January 25, 2011 on Merge records.
+These units usually work in detached squads, each under the command of and attached to an infantry company, and equipped with an M113.
+The album was not as successful as its predecessors as it only entered the Dutch album charts, peaking at No.
+Specific responsibilities may include overseeing road safety, civil aviation, maritime transport, rail transport, developing government transportation policy, organizing public transport, and the maintenance and construction of infrastructural projects.
+Between 1813 and 1956 the department was known as the Department of Geology, and the head of the department as the Keeper of Geology.
+Songs from a Stolen Spring is a compilation album that mainly features duets and mashups of protest and peace songs performed by pairings of Western musicians with their contemporaries from the countries where the Arab Spring took place.
+Azeez also played for 3SC between 2012 and 2013 before leaving for North-based club Kano Pillars where he won the Nigeria Professional Football League in his first season.
+We Boom later became the best selling album released by any NCT sub-unit up until and in the year of 2019.
+The members of the 18th Manitoba Legislature were elected in the Manitoba general election held in June 1927.
+Category:1980 singlesCategory:Patti LaBelle songsCategory:Songs written by Allen ToussaintCategory:1980 songsCategory:Epic Records singles
+In 2003, Shaw appeared in the Reborn in the USA reality television series, but abruptly quit the show after just one day of filming.
+On one night, his housemaid suggests him that there are Mohini Pisachi (sex hungry lady ghosts) roaming in the night in search of able bachelors.
+Daraa GovernorateDaraa District Bosra Da'el Saham al-JawlanIzra' District HirakAl-Sanamayn District Burraq al-Harrah Inkhil Jassem Kafr Shams Khabab TubnaHoms GovernorateHoms District Al-Riqama Fairouzeh Sadad Zaidal Al-MushrifahTalkalakh District Al-Hwash Ain albardeh Marmarita Zweitina Amar al-HusnPalmyra District al-Qaryatayn al-Sukhnahal-Rastan Districtal-Qusayr DistrictLatakia GovernorateLatakia District Al-Bahluliyah Rabia, Syria Ayn al-Bayda Qastal Ma'af Kasab HanadiJableh District Ayn al-Sharqiyah Al-Qutailibiyah Ayn Shiqaq Daliyah Beit YashoutAl-Haffah District Slinfah Ayn al-Tinah Kinsabba Muzayraa Salma Kfar Delbeh Tertyah Brouma Taouma Dwairke KdeenQardaha District Bustan al-Basha Harf al-Musaytirah Al-Fakhurah Jawbat BurghalRif Dimashq GovernorateMarkaz Rif Dimashq Kiswe, Syria Babbila Jaramanah Al-Malihah Kafar Batna Arbin QudsayaDuma District Harasta Sabaa Biyar Dumeir Al-Nashabiyah Al-Ghizlaniyah Harran al-AwamidAl-Qutayfah District Jayroud Maaloula Al-Ruhaybah Ras al-KhashufahAl-Tall District Mneen Saidnaya RankousYabrud District Assal al-WardAl-Nabk District Deir Atiyah Qarah Al-SehlZabadani District Al-Dimas Ayn al-Fijeh Madaya, Syria Sirghaya Bloudan Maysalun Evra HurayraQatana District Beit Jen Saasaa ArtouzeDarayya District Sahnaya Al-Hajar al-AswadTartus GovernorateTartus District Arwad Al-Hamidiyah Khirbet al-Maazah Suda Khawabi Al-Karimah al-SafsafahBaniyas District Al-Rawda Al-Annazah Al-Qadmus Hammam Wasel Al-Tawahin TalinSafita District Bayt al-Shaykh Yunis Mashta al-Helu Al-Bariqiyah Sebei Al-Sisiniyah Ras al-KhashufahDuraykish District Junaynet Ruslan Hamin Dweir RuslanAsh-Shaykh Badr District Brummanet al-Mashayekh Al-QamsiyahQuneitra GovernorateQuneitra DistrictKhan ArnabahKhishniyahEin QiniyyeMajdal ShamsBuq'ataBeer AjamGhajar Mas'adeA Al-RiqamaAbu FarajAyn al-BardahEin ElkorumAmar al-HusnAmudaAriqahF FairouzehHHurat AmmurinHwashI ImtanK Kafr BuhumKfeir YabousKafrounKhababAl-KharitahM MarmaritaMayadinMahardahAl-MahfurahAl-MishtayaMillisMashrafet Al MriejNNahr al-BaredQ QanawatQaraR Al-RaghibS ShaqqaSuranSouq Wadi BaradaT Tel TamerZ ZweitinaReferencesCentral Bureau of Statistics of Syria Cities
+Malhar may refer to: Malhar (raga), a musical raga Malhar, Chhattisgarh, a town in India Malhar (festival), a college festival of St. Xavier's College, Mumbai, India Malhargad ("Malhar Fort"), a hill fort in Maharashtra, IndiaPeople Malhar Pandya, Indian actor Malhar Patel, Kenyan cricketer Malhar Rao Holkar, a noble of the Maratha Empire of India, founder of the dynasty that ruled the Indore State Malhar Rao Holkar II, a ruler of the Indore State of present-day India Malhar Rao Gaekwad, a ruler of the Baroda State of present-day India Malhar Thakar, Indian actor
+The grant included present-day Alamo, Danville and northern San Ramon.
+Towards the end of the game, Bristol City put Hull under a lot of attacking pressure, and Hull City needed Michael Turner to clear Lee Trundle's effort off the line with 5 minutes to go to keep their lead.
+Maile may also refer to:Maile lei, a lei made from the maile plantmaile in Samoan simply means "dog"PlacesMaile, village in the North West Province in South AfricaPeople named MaileGiven NameMaile Pearl Bowlsbey (born 2018); daughter of Tammy Duckworth, Senator (D-Il), retired Army National Guard as lieutenant colonel.
+Mostsy () is a rural locality (a selo) in Vtorovskoye Rural Settlement, Kameshkovsky District, Vladimir Oblast, Russia.
+Isthmiade macilenta is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae.
+On July 30, 2014, Senator Harry Reid motioned to invoke cloture on Pryor's nomination.
+ReferencesCategory:Cinematographers from MaharashtraCategory:Year of death missingCategory:Year of birth missing
+This is a list of the heritage sites in Richmond, Northern Cape as recognized by the South African Heritage Resource Agency.
+In 2006 it was sold off to the MFS group.
+They were introduced in 1957 and numbered D2708-D2780.
+Cast Mala SinhaMuradHelenJagdeepMusic "Nighaah-e-shauq Se" – Mohammed Rafi"Bula Lo Dar Pe Habibe-khuda" – Mohammed Rafi"Kisi Se Mili Hai Nazar" – Usha Mangeshkar"Nazar Milao Pata Chale" – Usha MangeshkarExternal links Category:1977 filmsCategory:Indian filmsCategory:Films scored by Sajjad HussainCategory:1970s Hindi-language films
+ReferencesExternal links Profile at FFU Official Site (Ukr)Category:1988 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Ukrainian footballersCategory:Association football defendersCategory:Ukrainian expatriate footballersCategory:Expatriate footballers in BelarusCategory:Expatriate footballers in MoldovaCategory:FC Chornomorets Odesa playersCategory:FC Dnister Ovidiopol playersCategory:FC Nyva Vinnytsia playersCategory:PFC Sumy playersCategory:FC Torpedo-BelAZ Zhodino playersCategory:FC Vitebsk playersCategory:FC Milsami playersCategory:Ukrainian First League playersCategory:Expatriate soccer players in Canada
+Antabamba can refer to a city, a district and a province in Peru.
+Main page: Euroleague 2007-08StandingsFixtures/ResultsAll times given below are in Central European Time.
+Another featured match was The Powers of Pain (The Barbarian & The Warlord) versus The Varsity Club (Baby Hughie & Rob Eckos).
+He was married to Ngarmchit Purachatra.
+Further readingReferencesCategory:RedistrictingCategory:GerrymanderingCategory:Political softwareCategory:Custom software projectsCategory:2010 software
+Schmid, P. C., Schmid Mast, M., Bombari, D., Mast, F. W., & Lobmaier, J. S. (2011).
+This was originally to be named Edgewood Peoples Church and also affiliated with all four denominations, but in the end would be named Edgewood United Church, affiliated with just the United Church of Christ.
+Otto Heller may refer to: Otto Heller (author) (1863 – 1941) author and academic Otto Heller (1896 – 1970) Czech cinematographer Otto Heller (ice hockey) (1914 – unknown) Swiss ice hockey player
+That new church was a hall church and still stands today on Winterfeldtplatz in the Schöneberg district.
+"I'm Just Wild About Animal Crackers" is a 1926 novelty song by Fred Rich, Harry Link, and Sam Coslow.
+Professional Jury award.
+FilmographyReferencesExternal links Category:Canadian television actressesCategory:Canadian film actressesCategory:LGBT entertainers from CanadaCategory:Living peopleCategory:1978 births
+The average household size was 2.72 and the average family size was 3.10.
+His work has also included research on mosquito-borne diseases including zika fever, yellow fever, dengue fever and malaria.
+As it was an unmanned station at the time, the light was switched on by a guard on the passing train at sundown, and off by the guard on the last train for the night.
+References Category:Populated places in Mashhad County
+Nazik Hariri () (née Audi) is the widow of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri.
+Rzędy () is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Pasłęk, within Elbląg County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland.
+He is primarily known for his study of molecular gas flow and the development of the Knudsen cell, which is a primary component of molecular beam epitaxy systems.
+Bookend or Bookends may also refer to:EndsBookend terrace, an architectural term for a terrace of identical houses, framed at each end by a pair of enlarged housesFraming device, an element of a story or musical composition occurring at its beginning and repeating at its endBook end vortices, vortices that form at the ends of a large storm system or derechoSports"Bookend", is a nickname for rugby league football's positionBook End, the finishing move of professional wrestler Booker TComputingBookends (software), reference management software for Mac OS The .bdb file format used by the softwareBooksBookstop (company), a Texas-based chain of bookstoresBookends, a 2002 novel by Jane Green, and spoken book read by Jacqueline KingMusicAlbumsBookends (album), a 1968 album by Simon & GarfunkelBookend, a 2011 album by AskaBookends, a 2002 jazz album by David Liebman and Marc CoplandSongs"Bookends" (song), a song by Simon and Garfunkel"Bookends", a song by Jerry Fuller, covered by Mark Lindsay"Bookends", or "Book Ends", a song by Joe Walsh from The Smoker You Drink, the Player You Get"Bookends", a song by Alfie from Bookends"Bookends", a song by The Boggs from Forts"Bookends", a song by Pullman from Viewfinder"Book-Ends", by Cannonball Adderley from Pyramid
+ReferencesBibliographyExternal links Category:1991 in United States case lawCategory:United States Fourteenth Amendment case lawCategory:United States Seventeenth Amendment case lawCategory:United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit casesCategory:Pennsylvania special electionsCategory:United States Senate elections in PennsylvaniaCategory:Primary elections in the United StatesCategory:1991 in Pennsylvania
+Badžula is a village located in the municipality of Zažablje, in Dubrovnik-Neretva County, Croatia.
+He opened up the first educational facility for the Santals in Jellasore in 1845, established a farming colony of Christian Santals in 1852, and whereby instrumental in introducing written systems over the local vernaculars - essential for clerical administration and missionary activities.
+He is also a member of the United States National Academy of Engineering and the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics.
+In 1994, Friendly joined Davis Entertainment as President, where he produced Daylight and Digging to China, as well as overseeing the development and production of many other Davis films.
+At the 2006 census, its population was 138, in 38 families.
+Both stands were opened by a friend of Lord, the Conservative Party leader Edward Heath.
+Computer Stew was an Internet video series about technology created by John Hargrave, founder of Zug.com, and Jay Stevens.
+Some examples of CRC facilities are: Harvard-Thorndike General Clinical Research Center in Massachusetts.
+Specifications Length: Wing Span: Height: Wing Area: 3.60 Square metresAll-Up Weight: 1,400 kgMain Engine: 1 x Mitsubishi Tokuro-1 Type 3 Rocket (240 kg)Max Speed: 550 km/hRange: 11 kmWarhead: 800 kgReferencesExternal linkshttps://www.webcitation.org/6Cz6yMom8?url=http://www.fischer-tropsch.org/primary_documents/gvt_reports/USNAVY/USNTMJ%20Reports/USNTMJ-200D-0550-0575%20Report%200-02.pdfhttp://en.valka.cz/viewtopic.php/t/12691Guided missilesCategory:World War II guided missiles
+LifeAppointed by the Porte as a result of his father's efforts (during their in exile in Istanbul), Ştefăniţă took over the throne at the age of 16.
+Azucena is a robber fleeing the scene when she is picked up by a young woman, Verónica.
+In his preface to the essays collection, Beyond Culture (1965), Trilling defended the New York Intellectuals: "As a group, it is busy and vivacious about ideas, and, even more, about attitudes.
+Seager had also designed the two earlier rest houses along the Summit Road.
+However, by crashing his car he could not compete and his place was inherited by Tarso Marques.
+It is the home stadium of the UC Irvine Anteaters baseball team.
+145.
+There were no significant German reactions to these deception operations.
+He became a councillor for the city of Orillia, Ontario for two years.
+Ryecroft may refer to:Ryecroft, Greater ManchesterRyecroft, South YorkshireRyecroft, West MidlandsRyecroft, West Yorkshire
+City Hospital may refer to: City Hospital, Aberdeen, Scotland City Hospital, Birmingham, West Midlands, England City Hospital (Roosevelt Island, New York) Saskatoon City Hospital City Hospital (Martinsburg) City Hospital (Hisar), Hisar, India City Hospital (Jabalpur), Jabalpur, India City Hospital (Kochi), Kochi, India City Hospital (Shimoga), Shimoga, India City Hospital Gujranwala, Gujranwala, Pakistan City Hospital (Gujrat), Gujrat, PakistanTelevision City Hospital (UK TV series) City Hospital (U.S. TV series)
+Cast Sidney Poitier as Nelson Mandela Michael Caine as F. W. de Klerk Tina Lifford as Winnie Madikizela-Mandela Gerry Maritz as P. W. Botha Ian Roberts as Kobie Coetsee Ben Kruger as James Gregory Jerry Mofokeng as Walter Sisulu John Carson as Willem de Klerk David Fortune as Raymond Mhlaba Farouk Valley-Omar as Ahmed Kathrada Terry Norton as Marike de Klerk Bankole Omotoso as Govan MbekiAndre Jacobs as Niel Barnard Sebata Sesiu as Aaron Motsoaledi Vuyisile Bojana as Oliver Tambo Moshidi Motshegwa as Zindzi Mandela Nomonde Gogi as Zenani Mandela-Dlamini Lentsoe Mosieleng as Peter Ndlovu Kwezi L. L. Kobus as Chris Hani Terry Norton as Marike de Klerk Hannes Horn as Quartus de Wet Regardt van den Bergh as Magnus MalanReferencesExternal links Category:Apartheid filmsCategory:1997 television filmsCategory:1990s drama filmsCategory:American television filmsCategory:American filmsCategory:American drama filmsCategory:Films about Nelson MandelaCategory:Cultural depictions of Nelson MandelaCategory:Cultural depictions of Winnie MandelaCategory:Cultural depictions of F. W. de KlerkCategory:Films shot in South AfricaCategory:Films directed by Joseph SargentCategory:Showtime (TV network) films
+There are also four curved dark lines.
+ReferencesCategory:1892 birthsCategory:1979 deathsCategory:Government ministers of NorwayCategory:Norwegian people of World War IICategory:Labour Party (Norway) politicians
+In the developing world, however, tobacco consumption continues to rise at 3.4% in 2002.
+In various countries, such as Australia and South Africa, several other biocontrol agents have been released or are under evaluation.
+In 2017, the company moved its headquarters from Loves Park, Illinois, to Rockford.
+James Bennighof, author of The Words and Music of Paul Simon, considers the churning, distorted groove and electronic instrumentation an accompanying textural element to the subject matter: suicidal suburban youth.
+Marko Antila (born 1969) is a Finnish film producer and director.
+His grandson was the preacher Girolamo Savonarola.
+; died in the Great Kantō earthquake.
+One of the things Glorimari was most focus on was making Guayama a modernized 21st century city, she created and remodeled schools and landmarks around the city which were abandoned and also created new ones so the city could grow more in tourism, economy, and modern beauty.
+MNAC may refer to:National Museum of Contemporary Art (Muzeul Naţional de Artă Contemporană) in Bucharest, RomaniaMuseu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya in Barcelona, Catalonia, SpainMnAc may refer to:Manganese(III) acetate
+Kyoya is a Blader of the Four Seasons representing Spring.
+It falls within Bainton civil parish, part of the city of Peterborough unitary authority.
+Model (conceptual), a representation of a system made of the composition of concepts Model (person), a person in a role to promote, display, or advertise (often commercial) products Model (physical), a smaller or larger physical copy of an object Scientific modelling, minimizing a complex system to better be able to solve problems model organism, a non-human species that is extensively studied to understand particular biological phenomena present in many related organisms mathematical model Model (economics), a theoretical construct representing economic processes Model (product), an identifier of a product given by its manufacturer Car model, a particular brand of vehicle sold under a marque by a manufacturerFilm and television Model, a 1974 Greek experimental movie The Model (film), a 2016 Danish thriller drama film Model (TV series), a 1997 South Korean television series Models, a 1999 Austrian drama film by Ulrich SeidlMusicGroups Model (band), a Turkish rock band Models (band), an Australian rock band The Models, an English punk rock bandSongs "Model" (Gulddreng song) "Das Model", a song by Kraftwerk "Model", a song by Avail from Dixie "Model", a song by Simply Red from StarsPlaces Model, Masovian Voivodeship, east-central Poland Model, Colorado, an unincorporated town in the United StatesPeople with the nickname Rick Martel (born 1956), professional wrestler known as "The Model" Eddie Taubensee (born 1968), baseball player who was known as "The Model"Other uses MODEL or Movement for Democracy in Liberia, a rebel group in Liberia Model (CGI), a mathematical representation of any surface of an object in three dimensions via specialized software Model (logic), a set along with a collection of finitary operations, and relations that are defined on it, satisfying a given collection of axioms Model (manga), a manga series by Lee So Young Model (mimicry), a species that is mimicked by another species Model (MVC), the central component of the model–view–controller software design pattern Modeling (NLP), the process of adopting the behaviors, language, strategies and beliefs of another person or exemplar Modeling (psychology), learning by imitating or observing a person's behavior Model (surname), a surname (and list of people with the name) Soho walk-up or model The Model, a novel by Lars Saabye ChristensenSee also Miniature faking, a photograph made to look like a photograph of a scale model Mode (disambiguation) Modell (disambiguation) Remodeling (disambiguation) Space mapping Standard model (disambiguation)
+According to the Journal of Clinical Oncology, ABT-510 is a "subcutaneously (SC) administered nonapeptide thrombospondin analogue."
+Eirene Centre: Construction of the Eirene Centre with its multi-purpose hall, Art classrooms, Film and TV classrooms and function room was completed in 2000.
+LocalChurches Together in Stevenage (CTIS)Churches Together in Stevenage (CTIS) is the gathering of Christian churches in Stevenage and surrounding Hertfordshire villages, it has 30 member churches and 6 associate member organisations.
+Ajai Raj Sharma the then Commissioner of Delhi Police told a press conference, "Organised gangs had been trying to gain a foothold in the national capital but their designs had been foiled so far.
+The Huskies played their home games at Hugh S. Greer Field House in Storrs, Connecticut, and were led by first-year head coach Burr Carlson.
+Personal lifeMitra was married to Ajanta Mitra (d. 2000).
+The HSOC focus on “online human intelligence” and “strategic influence and disruption.”The existence of the HSOC was revealed as part of the global surveillance disclosures by the former National Security Agency contractor, Edward Snowden.
+Buckland was a supporter of the United Kingdom's membership of the European Union during the 2016 referendum.
+Sonsorol () is one of the sixteen states of Palau.
+He played five times for England making his debut against Wales in 1933.
+Orthogonius thaicus is a species of ground beetle in the subfamily Orthogoniinae.
+TimelineGallerySee also Famine in India#British rule Company rule in India Drought in India Famines, Epidemics, and Public Health in the British Raj List of faminesNotesCitationsReferencesFaminesEpidemics and Public Health Category:Famines in British IndiaCategory:Famines in IndiaCategory:Indian history timelinesCategory:Pakistani history timelinesCategory:Lists of disasters in India
+Track listing"A Man With My Skills""Someplace Simple""Blue Madonnas""Seven Streams""The Hills & the Heath""Song to the Siren""Moving Up Country, Roaring the Gospel""Blue Bleezin' Blind Drunk""Sleep is the Jewel""Are You Coming Home Tonight?"
+Erastus Dalson Telford (April 23, 1874–December 4, 1936) was an American politician and lawyer.
+It is found in Turkey.
+ReferencesCategory:1844 birthsCategory:1895 deathsCategory:German academicsCategory:Chaucer scholarsCategory:People from Prudnik CountyCategory:Humboldt University of Berlin faculty
+American Cooperative School may refer to: American Cooperative School of La Paz American Cooperative School of Tunis
+In a dissolution of the partnership, Aaron Jones outbid Schwartz for the colt.
+It is also classified as "vulnerable" under the Commonwealth Government Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 (EPBC) Act.
+Ei koskaan ("Never" in Finnish) is the fourth and last single from Ruoska's fifth album, Rabies.
+GovernmentFujinomiya has a mayor-council form of government with a directly elected mayor and a unicameral city legislature of 22 members.
+In January 2008, Foundation 9 promoted David Mann (previously chief operating officer), Chris Charla and Jack Brummet to president, vice-president of business development, and vice-president of quality assurance, respectively, followed by James North-Hearn, one of Sumo Digital's founders, becoming the chief executive officer of the company in March.
+The final track, "Tenderly", had been previously released on her second 10-inch LP, An Evening with Billie Holiday (MG C-144).
+Her newspaper plant profiles were published in the book, Plant This!
+He died of colon cancer in Centralia, Wisconsin.
+Its logo represents a silhouette of a factory.
+Awards Tarjei Vesaas' debutantpris (1972), for Rottenes konge Mads Wiel Nygaard's Endowment (1981) Språklig samlings litteraturpris (1982) Rauma kommunes kulturpris (1991) Sonja Hagemanns barne- og ungdomsbokpris (1994), for Operasjon Storm Hans Heibergs minnestipend (1997) Vestfold fylkeskommunes Kunstnerpris (1999) Larvik kommunes kulturpris (2006)ReferencesExternal linksOfficial websiteCategory:1947 birthsCategory:20th-century Norwegian novelistsCategory:21st-century Norwegian novelistsCategory:Norwegian children's writersCategory:Living peopleCategory:People from Møre og Romsdal
+During the May 1, 2001 Riot in Mendiola, San Miguel Manila, he was seriously injured his head in the middle of the riot between the protesters and the authorities.
+Aleksandr Alekseyevich Sharov (; born 9 March 1981) is a former Russian professional football player.
+His recording of Bruckner's Symphony No.
+At the end of the war, Yassir played at the 2003 Arab Club Championship in Cairo, where he played against Kuwait SC, Al-Jaish and Zamalek, which would be one of his last appearances for the Police Club before he moved to Al-Zawraa.
+(Original description) The small, slender, thin shell has a blunt apex.
+He found himself down two sets to love after Benneteau's brilliant play won a break point in the first set and a tiebreak in the second set.
+Students are taught to see life from God's point of view, to take responsibility for their own learning, and to walk in Godly wisdom and character.
+El Refugio ("The Refuge") may refer to:Places El Refugio, Ahuachapán, a municipality in the Ahuachapán department of El Salvador El Refugio, Baja California, a city in the Tijuana municipality of Baja California, Mexico El Refugio, Jalisco, a town in the Tizapan El Alto municipality of Jalisco, Mexico El Refugio, Texas, a census-designated place (CDP) in Starr County, Texas, United StatesTelevision El refugio, a Mexican telenovela El Refugio (de los Sueños), an Argentine television seriesSee also Refugio (disambiguation)
+Geography The distance to Vologda is 45 km, to Striznevo is 4 km.
+ReferencesCategory:Villages in Dobrich Province
+It was the last album recorded by the original line-up.
+1970), goaltender for the Toronto Rock of the National Lacrosse LeagueKenan Thompson, from Kenan and Kel
+This is typically associated with a specific mission profile.
+ReferencesExternal linksLash Lighting / Flash Lightning at Don Markstein's Toonopedia.
+Kim Nousiainen (born November 14, 2000) is a Finnish professional ice hockey defenceman currently playing for KalPa of the Finnish Liiga.
+ReferencesExternal links Category:Companies based in MinneapolisCategory:LGBT in MinnesotaCategory:LGBT-related mass media in the United States
+Three other names played a prominent role in early fundus photography.
+Subsequently, he was the George Miller MacKee Professor and Chairman of the Ronald O. Perelman Department of Dermatology at the New York University Medical Center, New York, from 1981 through 2005.
+At Old Sarum the road connected with the Port Way to Silchester (Calleva Atrebatum) and London; and from Badbury Rings roads led to the harbour at Hamworthy (Moriconium) and to Dorchester (Durnovaria).
+It was won at that election by Joanne Duncan, the former member for Gisborne.
+OctoberOctober 3, 2006 - The draw for the Uefa Cup 2006-07 Group Stage is concluded, with Club Brugge ending up in group B together with Bayer Leverkusen, Beşiktaş, Dinamo Bucharest and Tottenham Hotspur while S.V.
+Their name was a portmanteau of "Colkinikha" and "contemode".
+Under Bishop Samuel Gobat, relations with the Eastern Orthodox Church had become strained.
+Melicytus lanceolatus, commonly called narrow-leaved māhoe or māhoe-wao, is a small tree of the family Violaceae endemic to New Zealand.
+3 Monuments of National Importance have been recognized by the ASI in Sikkim.
+Nature reserveDuring the rainy winter months the water-flow is strongest.
+Santa María Cortijo is a town and municipality in Oaxaca in south-western Mexico.
+Ames, a Republican, served three terms (1915–20) in the Maine Senate.
+On 6 September 2006 it premiered at the Venice Film Festival in Italy.
+All Grown Up!
+The Eagle Times is a daily newspaper based in Claremont, New Hampshire, US, serving the Connecticut River Valley in New Hampshire and Vermont.
+Lockdowns like what you see on this reality show are using ineffective techniques with equipment not meant to be used for this purpose, to look for something that has not been proven to exist or even defined.
+ReferencesCategory:Populated places in Zlatibor District
+Belgium was one of the 12 countries that initially negotiated and signed the Antarctic Treaty (Washington, 1959).
+History2001–2003: Early yearsStentorian's first line-up had Torsha Khan (Vocals), James Kabir (guitar), Shams Alim Biswas (bass), Golam (guitar), and Bobby Khan (drum).
+Aarschot's depressing and restrictive circumstances brought on a debilitating disease, to which he succumbed in 1640.
+"Synectics: Twenty-five Years of Research into Creativity and Group Process," American Society for Training and Development,1982.
+And one of the most frequent visitors was Stephen’ niece, Elsie Reford.
+While Søndergaard primarily works as a poet, he has also branched out into numerous other media.
+The lyrics to track number six, "The Giant's Laughter", are a translation of the poem "Jätten" written by the Swedish poet Esaias Tegnér.
+Vacancy1993During the 1993 Russian constitutional crisis, Vice President Alexander Rutskoy was named by Parliament as the Acting President when the legislature announced Yeltsin's removal from office.
+He also leads the product and services development department of the Belo Medical Group.
+109 Squadron or 109th Squadron may refer to: 109th Signals Squadron, Royal Australian Corps of Signals 109th Squadron (Iraq) 109 Squadron (Israel) 109 Squadron SAAF, South Africa No.
+As a result Daniel Cataraga was awarded the bronze medal.
+A number of countries have had a period of history during which they were a Commonwealth:Commonwealth of England (1649-1660)Commonwealth of the Philippines (1935-1946)Icelandic Commonwealth (930-1262)
+It is located at the center of a vast mountain pasture at the foot of Nuvolau (2,574 m) and dell'Averau (2,647 m) from which you can easily reach the Monte Pore (2,405 m).
+For example, a roll of 1 followed by a roll of 5 will give a total of 15, while a roll of 3 followed by a roll of 6 will give a total of 36.
+Cercocarpus ledifolius var.
+She competed in six events at the 1960 Summer Olympics.
+He built a free hospital in Mohra Sharif, where he sees patients daily.
+ReferencesCategory:Populated places in Bugojno
+(1914) Australian Fossils.
+He also worked for the Associated Press.
+The canton of Saint-Ouen-l'Aumône is an administrative division of the Val-d'Oise department, Île-de-France region, northern France.
+The Wipers Times is a play by Ian Hislop and Nick Newman, based on their 2013 BBC dramatization of the creation of The Wipers Times newspaper during World War I.
+Adam Eckersley Band are a musical group based on The Central Coast, Australia, currently signed to Lost Highway Australia.
+1891 – Almon Strowger, an undertaker in Topeka, Kansas, patents the Strowger switch, a device which led to the automation of telephone circuit switching.
+Alphabetical listingAAberdeen School District #58Academy at Roosevelt Center (ARC) #460American Falls Joint School District #381Arbon Elementary School District #383Avery School District #394Ambrose School DistrictBBasin School District #72Bear Lake County School District #33Blackfoot School District #55Blaine County School District #61Bliss Joint School District #234Boise School District #1Bonneville Joint School District #93Boundary County School District #101Bruneau-Grand View Joint School District #365Buhl Joint School District #412Butte County Joint School District #111Big Boys Busting School District #69CCaldwell School District #132Camas County School District #121Cambridge Joint School District #432Cascade School District #422Cassia County Joint School District #151Castleford School District #417Challis Joint School District #181Clark County School District #161Coeur d'Alene School District #271Coeur D' Alene Tribal SchoolCompass Public Charter Local Education Agency School #455Connections Academy #457Cottonwood Joint School District #242Council School District #13Culdesac Joint School District #342DDietrich School District #314EEmmett Independent School District #221FFalcon Ridge Public Charter Local Agency School #456Filer School District #413Firth School District #59Fremont County Joint School District #215Fruitland School District #373GGarden City Community Charter School #460Garden Valley School District #71Genesee Joint School District #282Glenns Ferry Joint School District #192Gooding Joint School District #231Grace Joint School District #148Grangeville Joint School District #241HHagerman Joint School District #233Hansen School District #415Highland Joint School District #305Homedale Joint School District #370Horseshoe Bend School District #73IIdaho Falls School District #91Idaho School for the Deaf and BlindIdaho Virtual AcademyIdaho Virtual High Charter Local Education Agency SchoolInspire Virtual Charter Local Education Agency SchoolISucceed Virtual High School #466JJefferson County Joint School District #251Jerome Joint School District #261KKamiah Joint School District #304Kaplan Academy of Idaho #469Kellogg Joint School District #391Kendrick Joint School District #283Kimberly School District #414Kootenai Bridge Academy #470Kootenai School District #274Kuna Joint School District #3LLake Pend Oreille School District #84Lakeland Joint School District #272Lapwai School District #341Lewiston Independent School District #1Liberty Charter Local Education Agency School #458MMackay Joint School District #182Madison School District #321Marsh Valley Joint School District #21Marsing Joint School District #363McCall-Donnelly Joint School District #421Meadow Valley School District #11Melba Joint School District #136Middleton School District #134Midvale School District #433Minidoka County Joint School District #331Moscow School District #281Mountain Home School District #193Mountain View School District #244Mullan School District #392Murtaugh Joint School District #418NNampa Classical Academy #471Nampa School District #131New Plymouth School District #372Nezperce Joint School District #302North Gem School District #149North Valley Academy #465Notus School District #135OOneida County School District #351Orofino Joint School District #171PPalouse Prairie School #472Parma School District #137Payette Joint School District #371Pleasant Valley School District #364Plummer-Worley Joint School District #44Pocatello/Chubbuck School District #25Post Falls School District #273Potlatch School District #285Prairie Elementary School District #191Preston Joint School District #201QQuintanaroo School District #578RRichard McKenna Charter High School #453Richfield School District #316Ririe Joint School District #252Robert Janss School #671 (Idaho Department of Correction)Rockland School District #382Rolling Hills Public Charter Local Education Agency School #454Roosevelt Center Charter Local Education Agency SchoolSSaint Maries Joint School District #41Sage International School #473Salmon River Joint School District #243Salmon School District #291Shelley Joint School District #60Shoshone Joint School District #312Snake River School District #52Soda Springs Joint School District #150South Lemhi School District #292Southern Idaho Learning Center #467Sugar-Salem Joint School District #322Swan Valley Elementary School District #92TTaylor's Crossing Public Charter Local Education Agency School #461Teton County School District #401The Academy (ARC)Three Creek Joint Elementary School District #416Troy School District #287Twin Falls School District #411UVValley School District #262Vallivue School District #139Victory Charter Local Education Agency School #451Vision Charter School #463WWallace School District #393Weiser School District #431Wendell School District #232West Ada School District #2 West Bonner County School District #83West Jefferson School District #253West Side Joint School District #202White Pine Charter School #464Whitepine Joint School District #288Wilder School District #133XXavier Charter School #462See alsoSchool districtsCategory:Education in Idaho*IdahoSchool districts
+The story concerns Miléne Hoffman ("Mylene" in the English translation), a female cyborg who works as a secret agent.
+REDIRECT EchoStar
+ReferencesExternal linksCategory:Basidiomycota classesCategory:Monotypic fungus taxaCategory:Pucciniomycotina
+Yaneth obtained an economics degree from University of Los Andes, and a master's degree from King's College London.
+He joined the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization (IMRO) and quickly became a voivoda (commander).
+Released in 2004, this was the first album to come out after the band switched labels to Supersonic/GUN.
+Xerochrysum papillosum is a herbaceous shrub in the family Asteraceae, native to southern Victoria and Tasmania.
+Menchu Lauchengco-Yulo (born July 7, 1963) is a Filipino musical theatre actress widely considered the "first lady" of Philippine musical theatre.
+Raven Rocks is in height above mean sea level with vertical cliffs measuring nearly in height.
+It is the only genus in the subfamily Anomalurinae.
+It achieved its first light in 1993.
+Committee assignmentsCommittee on Science, Space and TechnologySubcommittee on Research and TechnologyCommittee on Transportation and Infrastructure (Vice Ranking Member)Subcommittee on Highways and TransitSubcommittee on Railroads, Pipelines, and Hazardous MaterialsSubcommittee on Water Resources and EnvironmentCommittee on Veterans' AffairsSubcommittee on Disability Assistance and Memorial Affairs (Ranking Member)Caucus membershipsNew Democrat CoalitionCongressional Arts CaucusClimate Solutions CaucusPersonal lifeElizabeth Henderson married Daniel C. Esty in 1984.
+In 2006, several Tunnel Rats, working as Footsoldiers and production team Resistance, collaborated with KRS-One on his album Life, and released a mixtape and a studio album, Live This.
+Boztepe Dam may refer to: Boztepe Dam (Malatya), a dam in Turkey Boztepe Dam (Tokat), a dam in Turkey
+She was the girls' doubles silver medalists at the 2018 Asian and World Junior Championships..
+Paolo Maserati, sculptor.
+While in Spokane, she met her now ex-wife and raised a daughter together when Westbrook was 19 years old, working in construction to support the new family.
+The region is made up into the following prefectures and provinces: Berkane Province Eddriwesh Province Figuig Province Jerada Province Nador Province Prefecture of Oujda-Angad Taourirt ProvinceMunicipalities by population (2004)Oujda, Oujda-Angad: 398,131Nador, Nador Province: 124,915Taourirt, Taourirt Province: 79,664Berkane, Berkane Province: 79,570Jerada, Jerada Province: 43,870Al Aaroui, Nador Province: 36,021El Aioun Sidi Mellouk, Taourirt Province: 34,767Beni Ensar, Nador Province: 31,800Zaio, Nador Province: 29,851Bouarfa, Figuig Province: 24,527Sidi Slimane Echcharraa, Berkane Province: 22,889Zeghanghane, Nador Province: 20,134Ahfir, Berkane Province: 19,477Ain Bni Mathar, Jerada Province: 13,526Figuig, Figuig Province: 12,516Aklim, Berkane Province: 8,979Bni Drar, Oujda-Angad: 8,919Debdou, Taourirt Province: 4,575Touissit, Jerada Province: 3,429Saidia, Berkane Province: 3,338Ain Erreggada, Berkane Province: 2,975Naima, Oujda-Angad: 1,151ReferencesExternal links Oriental web portal in French Oujda entry in lexicorient Figuig in English, French and ArabCategory:Former regions of Morocco
+The first recorded spelling of Shelvock was Shelfhoc (1175), and later Sselvak and Schelfac (c. 1270).
+Although President Radovan Karadžić had signed the Vance-Owen Peace Plan on 30 April, it was rejected by the National Assembly on 6 May, and subsequently referred to a referendum.
+Track listingsChartsWeekly chartsYear-end chartsReferencesCategory:2000 singlesCategory:2000 songsCategory:Eurodance songsCategory:House music songsCategory:Trance songs
+See alsoCalifornia in the Civil WarReferencesCategory:Closed installations of the United States ArmyCategory:1862 establishments in CaliforniaCategory:History of Los Angeles County, CaliforniaCategory:California in the American Civil WarNew Camp CarletonCategory:El Monte, California
+Transport There is a railway station in Biały Bór.
+The service industry accounts for 15% of Riel's economy, followed by health and social services at 12.5%.
+The scenes were filmed in Tucson, Arizona San Remo Music Publishing, based in London and founded by Gary Barlow and Simon Moran San Remo Macaroni Company, an Australian pasta company
+In 1770 and 1777 the majority of the Volga Cossacks were relocated to the North Caucasus to form the Mozdok and Volga regiments of the Terek Cossack Host.
+Standing at 188 cm, Randall currently plays centre for the Boomers.
+The following is a list of cruisers of the Netherlands grouped by type.
+15 lk 2007: "Saaremaa 2.
+Azerbaijan Cup: 2001-02CIS Cup: 2006Khazar Lankaran2007-08ReferencesExternal links Category:1980 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Azerbaijani footballersCategory:Azerbaijan international footballersCategory:Association football forwardsCategory:Turan-Tovuz IK playersCategory:People from TovuzCategory:Khazar Lankaran FK playersCategory:Neftçi PFK players
+The tube has two lobes of different sizes and the lower one is rolled back and covered on its upper surface with a dense layer of purple hairs.
+Jeffery Smith is the name of Jeffery Smith (athlete) (born 1943), Zambian sprinter Jeffery Smith (musician) (1955-2012), American jazz singerSee alsoJeff Smith (disambiguation)Geoff Smith (disambiguation)Geoffrey Smith (disambiguation)Jefferson Smith (disambiguation)
+Minnesota students did not have to make tuition payments, however out-of-state students paid tuition.
+The habitat consists of dry pastures, heathland and fens.
+Some applications are descriptive, that is, showing data aggregated at various levels in a simple and comparative way, such as Treemapping.
+(Womack and Jones 1996 p10)History Insights relating to value streams, efficiency (reduction of "waste"), continuous improvement and standardised products can most likely be traced back to the beginning of mankind.
+It was created using the machinima technique of recording video frames from id Software's 1999 first-person shooter (FPS) video game Quake III Arena.
+References Category:Rural localities in BuryatiaCategory:Rural localities in Kurumkansky District
+He has also played supporting roles in several films, including the teen comedy Status Update, starring Ross Lynch and Olivia Holt.
+See also Cricket in World War IIReferencesCategory:International cricket competitions by seasonCategory:1939 in cricketCategory:1940 in cricket
+Malenadu is a region in the state of Karnataka in India.
+Sorkheh Dizaj (), also rendered as Sorkh Dizaj, may refer to: Sorkheh Dizaj, East Azerbaijan Sorkheh Dizaj, Abhar, Zanjan Province Sorkheh Dizaj, Tarom, Zanjan Province
+All guns have a walnut shoulder stock (with or without cheekpiece) and fore-end, some of them were decorated with engravings.
+They use it as an indicator of potential famine and drought conditions.
+ReferencesExternal links The Alberta Library TAL OnlineCategory:Library consortiaCategory:Library-related organizationsCategory:Communications in Alberta
+One more single, "When We Were Young", was released from the EP.
+Honorary presidents of the society are John Antrobus, Spike Milligan's daughter, Jane Milligan, and Michael Coveney.
+TournamentKentucky, Auburn and Arkansas did not make the tournament.
+1.
+The screen has a series of green bricks on a black background.
+He formerly served as the administrator of St. Mary's Catholic Church, South Brisbane but was removed from his position following complaints that his parish was not observing standard Roman Catholic teachings and practices.
+A total of 1,180 students attend the school, across all grade levels and magnet programs, and are instructed by 65 full-time teachers.
+The show starred the three well-known comedians: Atle Antonsen, Harald Eia and Bård Tufte Johansen.
+The capital, Mandalgovi, is connected to Ulaanbaatar by a 300 km paved road completed in 2013.
+She set up a charitable organization and opened thrift stores in Harlem, directing the proceeds, along with ten percent of her own earnings, to musicians in need.
+The second subclass is divided into two infraclasses: pouched mammals (the marsupials) and placental mammals.
+ReferencesExternal links University of Michigan School of Public HealthPublic HealthCategory:Medical and health organizations based in MichiganCategory:Schools of public health in the United StatesCategory:Educational institutions established in 1941Category:1941 establishments in MichiganCategory:University of Michigan campus
+After growing bored with his experience there (they tried to teach him to make brooms), Boone's habitual rule breaking (sneaking off at night to listen to piano music at the local barrooms) got him expelled.
+The orchestra was conducted by Tommy Tycho.
+Jerold Frakes is an American medieval literature historian, currently the SUNY Distinguished Professor at the State University of New York, Buffalo, and also a published author.
+On July 3, 2008, OneRepublic made a guest appearance on So You Think You Can Dance (U.S. season 4) for a live performance of "Say (All I Need)".
+{{Taxobox| color = lightgrey| name = Cupriavidus numazuensis| regnum = Bacteria| phylum = Proteobacteria| classis = Betaproteobacteria| ordo = Burkholderiales| familia = Burkholderiaceae| genus = Cupriavidus| species = C. numazuensis| binomial = Cupriavidus numazuensis| binomial_authority = Martínez-Aguilar et al.
+Locker is the surname of:Berl Locker (1887–1972), Zionist activist and Israeli politicianBob Locker (born 1938), retired Major League Baseball pitcherDale Locker (1929–2011), Democratic member of the Ohio House of RepresentativesEdward Hawke Locker (1777–1849), English watercolourist and administrator of the Royal Naval Hospital, GreenwichHarel Locker (born 1965), Israeli lawyer and civil servantJake Locker (born 1988), National Football League quarterbackWilliam Locker (1866–1952), English footballer and cricketerWilliam Locker (Royal Navy officer) (1731–1800), Royal Navy commodoreYohanan Locker (born 1956), Israeli general
+Kogenta is a member of the Byakko (White Tiger) family of shikigami (leading many to the conclusion that Riku is Ten-Ryū's Head).
+(13.8m)Engine Cummins BG-230 TurbochargedTransmission Allison B300HVAC Thermo KingCapacity up to 132 passengers without bags, 108 with bagsSee also Airport bus Ground support equipmentReferencesExternal links Cobus Industries website Cobus Industries LP Flyer about COBUS 3000 (de) (with dimensions) CPTDB WikiCategory:Bus manufacturers of GermanyCategory:Companies based in WiesbadenCategory:1978 establishments in West GermanyCategory:Vehicle manufacturing companies established in 1978
+Pickles Creek has the name of Frank "Pickles" Koshirak, a local rancher.
+Fourth state or Fourth State may refer to:The Fourth State, 2012 German filmThe fourth state of matterGeorgia (U.S. state), one of the original Thirteen Colonies, and the fourth to ratify the Constitution of the United States of America in 1788Puebla, admitted to the United Mexican States as its fourth state in 1823See alsoFourth Estate
+The band played at the Stampen Stampen club (The Pawn Shop) in Stockholm.
+Capacity The capacity of the binary deletion channel (as an analytical expression of the deletion rate ) is unknown.
+The 2000–01 Sporting de Gijón season was the third consecutive season of the club in Segunda División after its last relegation from La Liga.
+US 395 runs nearby and a historical marker commemorates the area's history.
+The head coach was Rick Pitino and the team finished the season with an overall record of 30-4.
+The requirements of the Polar Code are mandatory under both the International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships (MARPOL) and the International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea (SOLAS).
+GeographyThe Wu River flows through the township.
+Beastmaster may refer to: The Beast Master, a 1959 novel by Andre Norton The Beastmaster (film), a 1982 film loosely based on the novel Beastmaster 2: Through the Portal of Time Beastmaster III: The Eye of Braxus BeastMaster (TV series), a 1999 television series based on the 1982 film "Beastmaster", one of several Final Fantasy character classes Beast Master (manga), a manga created by the artist Kyousuke Motomi "Beastmaster", an X-Wild song from the album So What Ultimate Beastmaster, a Netflix reality TV show
+Though a normal pre-adolescent boy in most respects, Daryl begins to exhibit extraordinary talents after he goes to live with his new foster parents Joyce (Mary Beth Hurt) and Andy Richardson (Michael McKean).
+The Korean Workers' Party was pro-Soviet, but it also defended Stalin's legacy and was engaged in violent struggle against the capitalist South Korea and its American backers.
+Its name then changes to the Margua.
+RightScale introduced the Cloud Maturity Model with the release of its second annual State of the Cloud Report on April 25, 2013.
+.
+The larvae feed on Symphyotrichum laeve, Symphyotrichum puniceum, Symphyotrichum ericoides and Psilactis tenuis.
+In 2004, Baurusuchidae was even defined as the most recent common ancestor of Baurusuchus and Stratiotosuchus and all of its descendants; thus, the definition of Baurusuchidae relies on the inclusion of Stratiotosuchus.
+P. jishanensis can reach to 1.2m in height.
+At the 2006 census, its population was 1,287, in 302 families.
+Operation Neptune may refer to:Combat and intelligence operationsOperation Neptune, code name for the Allied Invasion of Normandy during World War IIOperation Neptune (espionage), a disinformation campaign by communist Czechoslovakia in 1964Operation Neptune (Afghanistan), 2005Operation Neptune Spear, the killing of Osama Bin LadenOther usesOperation Neptune (New Zealand), a commemoration of the 75th anniversary of the New Zealand NavyOperation Neptune (video game), a computer game
+Susan Lynette Smith (born 24 January 1951 in Ulverstone, Tasmania) was an independent member of the Tasmanian Legislative Council in the electoral division of Montgomery.
+Déri, who became chair of the local Újpest branch of the Momentum Movement by then, supported the nomination of Botond Szalma, a former member of the Fidesz-ally Christian Democratic People's Party (KDNP), along with the other opposition parties.
+In 2011, she released her solo single, "That You Like."
+They therefore remained as assistants for the remainder of their careers.
+MembersElection resultsElections in the 2010s2019201620132010Elections in the 2000s200720042001Elections in the 1990s1998199619931990Elections in the 1980s19871984References Australian Electoral Commission.
+Colin Morgan (born 12 November 1973) is a Canadian judoka.
+Ad van den Berg may refer toAdrian Vandenberg, Dutch guitarist for Vandenberg and WhitesnakeAd van den Berg, Dutch politician for the Party for Neighbourly Love, Freedom, and Diversity and chairman of Vereniging Martijn
+External linksKaga Domain on "Edo 300 HTML" (3 November 2007) Category:1729 birthsCategory:1753 deathsCategory:People of Edo-period JapanCategory:Maeda clanCategory:Tozama daimyo
+Phoenix paludosa (paludosa, Latin, swampy), also called the mangrove date palm, is a species of flowering plant in the palm family, indigenous to coastal regions of India, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Thailand, Cambodia, Sumatra, Vietnam and peninsular Malaysia.
+Amir said to 'Amr: "Will you go after the camels or will you keep cooking this game?'
+AvailabilityNOMAC (either alone (e.g., as Lutenyl) or in combination with estradiol (e.g., as Naemis)) is available for the treatment of gynecological disorders and menopausal symptoms in Argentina, Belgium, Brazil, Chile, France, Georgia, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Italy, Lebanon, Lithuania, Malta, Monaco, the Netherlands, Peru, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Taiwan, Tunisia, Turkey, and Vietnam.
+Players decide what colors to play, and who will start first.
+"Struttin' With Maria" was later used as the theme for a TV game show called Personality, hosted by Larry Blyden.
+She meets Raja Vijendra Pratap Singh, a business tycoon.
+The Cohen Baronetcy, of Highfield in the Parish of Shoreham and County of Kent, was a title in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom.
+Events from the year 1785 in the Dutch RepublicEvents - Treaty of Fontainebleau (1785)BirthsDeathsReferencesCategory:1785 in the Dutch RepublicCategory:1780s in the Dutch RepublicCategory:Years of the 18th century in the Dutch Republic
+Its population was 2,364 (2005) and its area is 35 km².
+MotiveThe book has written by the request of Allameh Al-Hilli' s son namely Fakhr Al Muhaqeqin(Died.767 lunar)StyleAllameh Al-Hilli says about his aim that he intent to express and explain the summaries of indult (Fatwa) of the jurist and rules of Scholars (Ulama) according to best explanation, the most correctness way, the most rightness style and the most confident methods.
+According to Jone Ormond:I wrote this little beginning about vaudeville dying, and Bob Lippert loved it.
+Category:Delhi Metro stationsCategory:Railway stations opened in 2011Category:Railway stations in Ghaziabad district, IndiaCategory:Transport in Ghaziabad, Uttar Pradesh
+External linksbisikoviCategory:Gastropods described in 2000
+Qualified clubs1999–2000 Slovenian PrvaLiga membersBeltinciCeljeDomžaeDravogradGoricaKorotan PrevaljeMariborMuraOlimpijaPohorjePrimorjeRudar VelenjeQualified through MNZ Regional CupsMNZ Ljubljana: Elan, Bela Krajina, LivarMNZ Maribor: Železničar Maribor, Pobrežje, PohorjeMNZ Celje: Šentjur, VranskoMNZ Koper: Korte, Jadran Hrpelje-KozinaMNZ Nova Gorica: Renče, TolminMNZ Murska Sobota: Beltinci, BakovciMNZ Lendava: Odranci, Kema PuconciMNZG-Kranj: Triglav Kranj, BledMNZ Ptuj: Boč, AluminijFirst roundRound of 16Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinalFirst legSecond legReferencesCategory:Slovenian Football Cup seasonsCupSlovenian Cup
+Former outside half Ben Farley made the locally hugely controversial move to rivals Risca RFC in the summer of 2010, the first time this has happened since 1937.Notable former players Norman Harris (7 caps for Wales rugby league) Dicky Ralph (6 caps) David 'Dai' ReesClub honours2008-09 WRU Division Five East - Champions2009-10 SWALEC Bowl - ChampionsReferencesExternal links Abercarn rugby football clubCategory:Welsh rugby union teams
+Documents from the Edo period from the local Ōkōchi clan.
+Phylogenet.
+She was purchased in 1850 and briefly named HMS Perseverance.
+Eclabium comes from the Greek word "ek" meaning "out," and the Latin word "labium" meaning "lip."
+ReferencesCategory:1959 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Cuban footballersCategory:Cuba international footballersCategory:Olympic footballers of CubaCategory:Footballers at the 1980 Summer OlympicsCategory:Place of birth missing (living people)Category:Association football midfielders
+Night leagues are held at either 5:30pm (early) or 7:30pm (late), aside from the Friday night league held at 6:00pm.
+Miragoane
+He competed in two events at the 1972 Summer Olympics.
+BiographyMiyashita was born in 1927.
+It is a film adaptation by Veber of his play Le Dîner de Cons.
+Teslui is a commune in Olt County, Romania.
+Lallemant is a French surname that may originate in the phrase "l’Allemand", meaning "the German."
+Booth Creek Ski acquired the properties in 1997.
+SpeciesEpiphthora achnias Meyrick, 1904Epiphthora acrocola Turner, 1927Epiphthora acropasta Turner, 1919Epiphthora anisaula (Meyrick, 1921)Epiphthora autoleuca Meyrick, 1904Epiphthora belonodes Meyrick, 1904Epiphthora chionocephala (Lower, 1901)Epiphthora coniombra Meyrick, 1904Epiphthora cryolopha Meyrick, 1904Epiphthora delochorda Lower, 1918Epiphthora dinota (Turner, 1933)Epiphthora drosias Meyrick, 1904Epiphthora harpastis Meyrick, 1904Epiphthora hyperaenicta Turner, 1927Epiphthora hexagramma (Meyrick, 1921)Epiphthora isonira Meyrick, 1904Epiphthora lemurella Meyrick, 1904Epiphthora leptoconia Turner, 1919Epiphthora leucomichla Meyrick, 1904Epiphthora megalornis Meyrick, 1904Epiphthora melanombra Meyrick, 1888Epiphthora miarodes Meyrick, 1904Epiphthora microtima Meyrick, 1904Epiphthora niphaula Meyrick, 1904Epiphthora nivea (Philpott, 1930)Epiphthora phantasta Meyrick, 1904Epiphthora poliopasta Turner, 1919Epiphthora psychrodes Meyrick, 1904Epiphthora spectrella Meyrick, 1904Epiphthora thyellias Meyrick, 1904Epiphthora zalias (Meyrick, 1922)ReferencesCategory:EpiphthoraCategory:Apatetrini
+Highway 298 passes through very wooded area with sparse populations, crossing over many feeder streams for Lake Ouachita.
+The DVD release of the film includes a recently rediscovered audio recording of the song, performed by Allan Jones.
+Joseph Robert Weldon (18 June 1922 – 10 August 2007) was an Australian rules footballer who played with Footscray in the Victorian Football League (VFL).
+His current interests include scientific programming environments; computer algebra systems; distributed computing; analysis of algorithms; programming and measurement of large systems; design and implementation of programming languages; and optical character recognition.
+Eulyonetia is a genus of moths in the family Lyonetiidae.
+Green End may refer to many villages in the United Kingdom:Green End, BedfordshireGreen End, BuckinghamshireGreen End, CambridgeshireGreen End, HertfordshireGreen End, LancashireGreen End, North YorkshireSee alsoGreenend, an area of Coatbridge, ScotlandGreen's End, Rhode Island, USA
+Tabkin Kwatto is remembered as the turning point in the history of the Fulani War.
+His lectures were notable for their dramatic delivery and he was known to occasionally lecture on horseback.
+The bloomery does not generate temperatures high enough to melt iron and steel, but instead reduces the iron oxide ore into particles of pure iron, which then weld into a mass of sponge iron, consisting of lumps of impurities in a matrix of relatively pure iron, which is too soft to make a good blade.
+Crainic and his traditionalist followers rejected Lovinescu's views on local "synchronism" with Western culture.
+Janssen, that was popular in the 1890s.
+In 2015, the project was recognized as one of the University of Guelph's most significant research accomplishments over the past 50 years.
+DescriptionDistributionReferencesCategory:TerebridaeCategory:Gastropods described in 1873
+The average household size was 2.57 and the average family size was 3.09.
+His nomination was shared with Siân Grigg and Duncan Jarman.
+As the multiplication of integers is a commutative operation, this is a commutative ring.
+League tablePlayoffsSemifinals IF Saab–Redbergslids IK 29–26, 22–18 (IF Saab won series 2–0) HK Drott–Irsta HF 27–23, 24–23 (HK Drott won series 2–0)Finals HK Drott–IF Saab 20–25, 22–16, 20–15, 25–16 (HK Drott won series 3-1)References Category:Swedish handball competitions
+The Baron is still standing but has sustained some war related damage from snipers and five mortars.
+The remaining rounds were held at Quicken Loans Arena, between March 12–15.
+Afzal invites Fazla for a celebration party being hosted for him to which Fazla did not appear noting the difference in their societal standards.
+After his graduation, Nunn worked as an assistant professor at the University of British Columbia before moving to Harvard University in 2007.
+He was also a general in the Myanmar Military and is the father of two sons and one daughter.
+During weekday peak times, a number of the Ipswich services skip stations between Darra and Milton, stopping only at Indooroopilly for faster travel times for commuters working in the Brisbane central business district.
+Yuliana Korolkova (; born 9 September 1994) is a Russian model and beauty pageant titleholder.
+Chen Shuren (; 1884–1948) was a Chinese painter.
+Anarchy Rulz was a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by Extreme Championship Wrestling (ECW) annually in 1999 and 2000.
+Transkeidectes multidentis, the Transkei Shieldback is a species of katydid in the family Tettigoniidae.
+With his first wife, Annie Pillow Martin, Branch had two children: George Martin and Henry Lewis.
+It was reported that choriocarcinoma cell lines and tissues failed to express this gene, which suggested the possible involvement of this gene in malignant conversion of placental trophoblasts.
+Division 2 Östra 1944–45Division 2 Västra 1944–45Division 2 Södra 1944–45ReferencesSweden - List of final tables (Clas Glenning)Category:Swedish Football Division 2 seasons2Sweden
+Qualified TeamsVenue Adelaide Oval (Capacity: 64,000)FixturesSemi FinalsThird Place Play-offChampionship of Australia Final Category:Championship of AustraliaChampions of AustraliaCategory:October 1972 sports events in Oceania
+Queer is an umbrella term for sexual and gender minorities.
+He was the brother of Johannes Hermanus Barend Koekkoek and worked in the Hague, Utrecht, Amsterdam, and London.
+Ole Rasmussen may refer to:Ole Rasmussen (footballer, born 1952), Danish footballer who played 41 Danish national team gamesOle Rasmussen (footballer, born 1960), Danish footballer who played two Danish national team games
+Matter and formThe term "matter" should be taken broadly to mean that which underlies the sacrament in a manner similar that the way in which matter underlies substance.
+Since 2010, RGSOIPL is organizing Shaastraarth, a 3 on 3 style Parliamentary debate competition during Saamanjasya, the social event organized every year by Vinod Gupta School of Management at IIT Kharagpur.
+The type and only species, Petralca austriaca, was described in 1987.
+External linksNovo Tempo EmpreendimentosReferences Category:1963 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Brazilian people of Italian descentCategory:Brazilian businesspeople
+Cosmioconcha dedonderi is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Columbellidae, the dove snails.
+In 1394, he marched against the Ráo of Junágaḍh named Mokalasimha and exacted tribute.
+A member of the Tiako I Madagasikara party, he was the First Vice-President of the Senate of Madagascar from 2008 to 2009.
+The campaign consisted of TV adverts, calendar and phone card designs, using the concept that a phone enables a person to travel free in nature and still keep in touch.
+Its inhabitants are called Rethélois.
+Isothermic annealing of the supersaturated rapidly frozen solutions of dibenzofuran in heptane was performed, and it was shown that the return of the metastable system to equilibrium in time reasonable for laboratory observation required the annealing temperature to be close to the melting temperature of the metastable frozen solution.
+Final round of the AQUA Danone Nations Cup 2018 was held in this stadium.
+This is a round-up of the 1990 Mayo Senior Football Championship.
+Kit manufacturers and shirt sponsorsPlayersSenior Team SquadTechnical staffRecordKeyTms.
+The male was first described in 2014.
+ReferencesExternal links Film of Cape RosaCategory:Headlands of South Georgia
+ArchitectureAn area of Westcliff bordering Southend town centre has been classified as a conservation area, including Prittlewell Square gardens and the Grade II listed building, Our Lady Help of Christians and St Helen's Church.
+It is director's debut short animation.
+It is in the genus Mordellistena.
+Geographic rangeC. simonyi is found only on the islands of Fuerteventura and Lanzarote in the Canary Islands.
+Once the war had ended, Antonio Coronel served as the first Los Angeles County Assessor from 1850 to 1856.
+Mayor Bolt succeeded long-term mayor Woodrow Barber.
+Stan Moon (8 January 1927 – 3 August 2012) was an Australian rules footballer who played with Collingwood in the Victorian Football League (VFL).
+Biography Shutsy-Reynolds was born in 1923 to Anna and John Shutsy in Connellsville, Pennsylvania and was the youngest of four children.
+In 2011 she was named Homophobe of the Decade by Zagreb Pride due to being the only representative of the Croatian Parliament to vote against the country's Anti-discrimination Law.
+ReferencesCategory:Villages in Tczew County
+Details Title : The Grand Moments Director: Claude Lelouch Photography : Jean Collomb Producers: Films 13, Films de la Pléiade Scenery : Robert Luchaire Format : 2,35:1 (Franscope) - Mono - 35 mm Release date : 1965StarringAmidou : Roger AmyPierre Barouh : Karl MartinJean-Pierre Kalfon : Jean MafitteJanine Magnan : JanineJacques Portet : Jacques FrammAbout the film After four attempts to destroy the negatives, Claude Lelouch eventually succeeded in 1964, within fifteen days of the success of Une fille et des fusils.
+He also initially acted for Whitehouse in her failed prosecution of the National Theatre production of Howard Brenton's play The Romans in Britain in 1980 but withdrew from the case through illness.
+Łęczyn is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Łęczyce, within Wejherowo County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, in northern Poland.
+Two other works followed, the first prefaced by the art critic Gérard-Georges Lemaire.
+In 1963, when HSV qualified for the newly created Bundesliga, they moved into the Volksparkstadion, a stadium that was both larger and more modern than Rothenbaum.
+The titular "key" was a wooden spoon-like device invented by John Haslam, the documenter of Matthew's delusions, which was used to force-feed Bedlam patients.
+initially tasked with trade protection.
+Honours 2002: Research Scholarship from the Institute of Aegean Prehistory in New York City 2009: Member of the German Archaeological Institute 1998-2001: Postdoctoral Fellowship of the German Research Foundation 1991-1996: DAAD PhD FellowshipResearch interestsPanagiotopoulos research interests include the social structures of Minoan and Mycenaean civilisations (partic.
+Moore missed the end of his senior season with a shoulder injury but still had 50 total tackles with nine pass breakups in 2017.
+When followed by a sun letter, the l in al assimilates to the initial consonant of the following noun, resulting in a doubled consonant.
+They finished eighth in the league.
+The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (also known as SOHR; ), founded in May 2006, is a United Kingdom-based information office whose stated aim is to document human rights abuses in Syria; since 2011 it has focused on the Syrian Civil War.
+His followers include Giovanni Battista Ceruti, Giovanni Rota and Giovanni Francesco Pressenda.
+The municipality had 943 localities, the largest of which (with 2010 populations in parentheses) were: Cintalapa de Figueroa (42,467), Lázaro Cárdenas (3,002), classified as urban, and Cereso 14 (El Amate) (2,243), Villamorelos (1,677), Nueva Tenochtitlán (Rizo de Oro) (1,640), Emiliano Zapata (1,507), Pomposo Castellanos (1,489), Francisco I. Madero (1,444), Mérida (1,412), and Vista Hermosa (1,149), classified as rural.
+He formerly played for the Edmonton Eskimos, BC Lions and Hamilton Tiger-Cats of the Canadian Football League (CFL).
+D.I.S.C.O.
+Wilson Carter is a Scottish retired amateur football forward who played in the Scottish League for Queen's Park.
+The Bear offense was far more, however, than Nagurski and Feathers running the ball.
+Zediker is an unincorporated community in Fresno County, California.
+A Sacred Cantata for four solo voices and chorus, interspersed with Hymns to be sung by the congregation.
+It has also been known as The House Under the Hill and Half-Way House.
+Taylor Lake may refer to: Taylor Lake (Cumberland) Taylor Lake (Guysborough) Taylor Lake (Hants) Taylor Lake (Nova Scotia) Taylor Lake (Quebec) Taylor Lake (Clay County, Arkansas), a lake in Clay County, Arkansas Taylor Lake (Texas)
+He served in government as a Lord Commissioner of the Treasury and Liberal National Chief Whip from November 1931 – October 1932, as Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Health in 1932–1936, Parliamentary Secretary to the Board of Education in 1936–1937, Parliamentary and Financial Secretary to the Admiralty in 1937–1940, Secretary for Overseas Trade from April to May 1940, Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Dominion Affairs from 1940 to 1942.
+Impact on comedy and cultureThe minimalist format, with little or no scenery and few props, sketches without any real purpose or punch line, and mixing live action and short animations directly influenced the format of Monty Python's Flying Circus.
+Piamatsina is an Oceanic language spoken in the north of Espiritu Santo Island in Vanuatu.
+PopulationInhabitants of Landebaëron are called landebaëronnais in French.
+Ilomba is an administrative ward in the Mbeya Urban district of the Mbeya Region in Tanzania.
+It depicts Saint John the Baptist as a young shepherd, wearing a sheepskin cover over his right shoulder and with the traditional attributes of a lamp and a simple wooden staff in the shape of a cross.
+Dereham is a town in Norfolk, England, sometimes called East DerehamDereham may also refer to: West Dereham, village in Norfolk, England Elias of Dereham (died 1246), English master stonemason Francis Dereham (c.1513–1541), English courtier Sir Thomas Dereham, 4th Baronet (c.1678–1739), English scientist and JacobiteSee also Derham (disambiguation) Battle of Deorham
+They were led by head coach Ernest Hawkins, who was in his 17th season at East Texas State.
+Linnaemya tessellans is a European species of fly in the family Tachinidae.
+The contractor for the project was Robert Morrison & Son of Macduff.
+He has also captained the boxing team of the University of Mumbai and turned out for Bombay Gymkhana in hockey.
+In his last years, disappointed with the reception of his works, he held the position of maestro de capella at Novara Cathedral.
+In 2005, the ground hosted two List A matches in the 2005 ICC Trophy.
+King has had dislocated left shoulder, torn labrum, calf strain, tears, multiple knee problems which cause him to get micro-fracture surgery on his left knee.
+The 1928 Cork Senior Football Championship was the 40th staging of the Cork Senior Football Championship since its establishment by the Cork County Board in 1887.
+The 1991–92 Algerian Cup is the 29th edition of the Algerian Cup.
+exists.
+DescriptionThe shell grows to a height of 3.7 mm.
+Villa Complex The excavations resulted in the discovery of a villa complex that was possibly constructed during the Late Antique period.
+CDP Awards are annual sports awards given to best Portuguese athletes by the Confederação do Desporto de Portugal.
+Coleura is a genus of sac-winged bats in the family Emballonuridae.
+HeatsHeat 1Heat 2FinalReferencesCategory:Aquatics at the 2010 Commonwealth Games
+The Clay operated in competition with other steamships and the Hudson River Railroad, which had been completed along the river's east shore to East Albany by 1851.
+Eupithecia cautin is a moth in the family Geometridae.
+ReceptionIn the Los Angeles Times, Leonard Feather said The Warm Moods showcased why Webster was "among the immortals", writing that his tenor saxophone playing "makes every song seem beautiful, whether the task is easy (as in 'Nancy,' 'There's No You,' 'But Beautiful,' 'It Was So Beautiful') or near impossible (as in 'The Sweetheart of Sigma Chi' and 'The Whiffenpoof Song')."
+Tauriac is a commune in the Tarn department in southern France.
+REDIRECT Kerry Bishop
+Tracuateua is a municipality in the state of Pará in the Northern region of Brazil.
+The locules contain the ovules or seeds.
+BiographyGiuseppe Bardari was born in Pizzo and studied in Monteleone (now Vibo Valentia) before going to Naples to study law.
+He continued his political activities and associations in North Potosi, where from 1975 to 1976 he worked as a journalist for Radio La Voz del Minero (The Miner's Voice Radio) and served as legal counsel to the Catavi and 20th-century mining unions.
+On the fields formerly belonging to Klarenthal Abbey, the housing development of Klarenthal was built in 1966, taking its name from the former monastery.
+References Category:Mountains of Cusco RegionCategory:Mountains of Peru
+In a province large enough to have regions within the province, every voter for a party winning enough votes to elect a regional MP will have, rather than only two MPs, an MP from their party elected by voters in that region, accountable to that region.
+Notable among these renovations and additions are those at Trinity Church (Boston), the only church in the United States and the only building in Boston considered by the American Institute of Architects to be one of the "Ten Most Significant Buildings in the United States"; Emmanuel Episcopal Church, Boston; and Salem, Massachusetts' John Tucker Daland House.
+That same year, he publicly protested the exclusion of Burma's ethnic minorities from Union Day celebrations.
+SynopsisThis book takes place five years after "Alice's" abduction.
+Pavlovici is a Romanian surname that may refer toCornel Pavlovici (1942–2013), Romanian football striker Dumitru Pavlovici (1912–1993), Romanian football goalkeeperFlorin Pavlovici (born 1936), Romanian writer and memoiristSee alsoPavlovići (Kakanj), a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina Category:Romanian-language surnames
+Jarosława Dąbrowskiego in Łódź.
+In 2012, FGII insured the music concert by AR Rahman for Rs 4 crore.
+PlayersFirst-team squadTransfers1st legIn:Out:2nd legIn:Out:CompetitionsMalaysia Super LeagueLeague tableMalaysia FA CupRound of 32Malaysia CupGroup stageKnockout phaseReferencesCategory:Malaysian football clubs 2015 season
+WOFE or WofE may refer to: Weight of evidence WOFE (FM), a radio station (98.9 FM) licensed to serve Byrdstown, Tennessee, United States WXRH, a radio station (580 AM) licensed to serve Rockwood, Tennessee, which held the call sign WOFE until 2008 WIHG, a radio station (105.7 FM) licensed to serve Rockwood, Tennessee, which held the call sign WOFE-FM from 1990 to 2003See also: Wholly Foreign-Owned Enterprise (WFOE)
+UsesArtemisia glacialis is historically employed in liqueurs, as well as a digestive and stomachic preparations.
+The specifications of the post-war 4L engine are similar, though not identical to, those of the pre-war R.4, whilst those of the pre-war R.4L specifications are closer to that of the post-war 4K.
+Ory or ORY may refer to:Surname:Given name:Ory Dessau (Hebrew: אורי דסאו), art curator and critic, working and living in Tel Aviv, IsraelOry Okolloh, Kenyan activist, lawyer, and bloggerOry Shihor, Israeli pianistOther:Le comte Ory, opéra written by Gioachino Rossini in 1828Orly Airport, Paris-Orly Airport (IATA: ORY, ICAO: LFPO) 7 NM (13 km; 8.1 mi) south of Paris, FranceOriya language, ISO 639 code orySee also Ori (disambiguation) Orry (disambiguation)
+from Etruscan name Tibur, which means "honest man"Some notable men known by this name include:Tibor AntalpéterTibor BenedekTibor FeheregyhaziTibor Farkas de BoldogfaTibor FischerTibor GécsekTibor KalmanTibor R. MachanTibor MičinecTibor NyilasiTibor OrdinaTibor PleißTibor RenyiTibor RadóTibor SelymesTibor StarkTibor SzaszTibor SzeleTibor Varga (ice hockey)Tibor Varga (violinist)Tibor ZsitvaySee alsoCtibor (name) Tibor is the Hungarian name for Tibru village, Cricău Commune, Alba County, Romania TIBOR is the short name for the Tokyo Interbank Offered RateCategory:Hungarian masculine given names
+Online media AX3 Battery, Asian news and events site BC Buzz with Dave Michael Garg, online TV & magazine outlet focused on the environment Cambie Report, local politics podcast Daily Hive (formerly Vancity Buzz), local news and lifestyle outlet HUSH Magazine, an editorial platform for lifestyle, social commentary and entertainment LifeVancouver, Japanese news and events site PolitiCoast, provincial politics podcast Taiyangbao.ca, a Chinese-language news website produced in association with The Vancouver Sun newspaper TheProvince.com, a news website produced in The Province newsroom The Tyee, alternative news site Vancouver Desi, a South Asian news portal produced in association with The Province newspaper The Vancouver Observer, alternative local news site Vancouver Weekly, alternative news weekly siteVancouverSun.com, a news website produced in The Vancouver Sun newsroom VIES Magazine, independent entertainment magazine in Vancouver, B.C.
+The company built a variety of housing types, including duplexes and tenements, which line some of the side streets.
+By 1958, the hospital had 98 beds and 20 bassinets.
+Village government formally dissolved in 1992.
+At approximately 1:22 p.m. CT on March 27, 2000, an explosion and fire responsible for one death and 71 injuries occurred at Phillips Petroleum's Houston Chemical Complex at 1400 Jefferson Road in Pasadena, Texas.
+(Das Kom(m)ödchen) DVD with Heiko Seidel, Maike Kühl and Christian Ehring 2013: Freaks.
+ReferencesCategory:Villages in Grodzisk Wielkopolski County
+In 2012 the Bundesliga was expanded from ten to 24 teams and the 2nd Bundesliga from 20 to 24 with the leagues divided into four regional divisions.
+Athletics The Rural Special Rebels compete in interscholastic activities within the 1A Classification—the state's smallest classification—from the 1A 2 South Conference, as administered by the Arkansas Activities Association.
+1923), Soviet/Russian writer and politicianRoza Eskenazi (mid-c. 1890–1980), Jewish-Greek singerRoza Makagonova (1927–1995), Soviet actressRoza Miletić (b.
+The hindwings are pale grey.
+In 2003, he was named an Honorary Fellow of the Israel Museum in Jerusalem.
+Bruntinge is a town in the Dutch province of Drenthe.
+The constituency is in existence since 1957 election.
+OrganA 24 set pipe mechanical Hook and Hastings organ, built in Boston, MA in 1888, was acquired for the Church at a cost of $ 250.000 and restored to working condition.
+On his retirement, the ANU appointed Molony as an Emeritus Professor of History.
+227-234.
+The most common and best studied trigger is fire, and the term serotiny is often used to refer to this specific case.
+REDIRECT 1968 United States Senate elections#Nevada1968NevadaUnited States Senate
+Chatham Township may refer to the following townships in the United States: Chatham Township, Sangamon County, Illinois Chatham Township, Wright County, Minnesota Chatham Township, New Jersey Chatham Township, Medina County, Ohio Chatham Township, Ontario Chatham Township, Tioga County, Pennsylvania
+Notable people with the name FengFeng Ba, "Emperor" (king) of the state of Northern YanFung Fung, Hong Kong actor and directorFeng Gong, Chinese Xiangsheng performerFeng Guozhang, Chinese military officer and politician during Republican ChinaFeng Hong, last "Emperor" (king) of the state of Northern YanFeng Kun, Chinese volleyball playerFeng Tianwei, China-born Singaporean Olympic table tennis playerFeng Xiaogang, Chinese film directorFeng Yuxiang, Chinese warlord during Republican ChinaFeng Xinduo, Member of Chinese girl group SNH48 and the captain of Team NIIJoyce Feng, Minister without Portfolio of the Republic of ChinaShanshan Feng (born 1989), Chinese golferNotable people with the name FungMargaret Chan Fung Fu-chun, Director-General of the World Health OrganizationFrederick Fung, Hong Kong pro-democracy politicianFung Bo Bo, Hong Kong actress, daughter of Fung FungFung Chin Pang, Hong Kong comic artistJim Fung, Hong Kong/Australian martial artistLori Fung, Canadian gymnastics coachDavid Fung (Chinese: 馮大維), Concert pianistCerezo Fung a Wing, Dutch footballerMellissa Fung, Canadian journalistStephen Fung, Hong Kong actor and directorVictor Fung, Chairman of the Airport Authority Hong KongYuan-Cheng Fung, American scientist, founding figure in bioengineering and biomechanicsInga DeCarlo Fung Marchand, known as Foxy Brown, American rapper of Trinidadian and Asian ancestryThe Fung Brothers, Comedy YouTubers consisting of David Fung and Andrew FungNotable people with the name Pang Aloysius Pang (冯伟衷), Singaporean actor, died in 2019 Alvin Pang (Chinese: 冯启明; born 1972, Singapore), Singaporean authorReferencesCategory:Chinese-language surnamesCategory:Individual Chinese surnames
+), Paul Pfeiffer (The Wonder Years), and Miles Silverberg (Murphy Brown)The What The F#?%!!!
+It is suspected that this village has undergone a name change or no longer exists, as no Azerbaijani website mentions it under this name.
+It was described by Gressitt in 1984.
+The music video was directed by Jon Stone, using photos by Jordan Curtis Hughes.
+ReferencesExternal linksCategory:1884 birthsCategory:1920 deathsCategory:Major League Baseball outfieldersCategory:Brooklyn Superbas playersCategory:Baseball players from Rhode IslandCategory:Villanova University alumniCategory:Brockton Tigers playersCategory:Lawrence Colts playersCategory:Lawrence Barristers playersCategory:Meriden Hopes playersCategory:New London Planters players
+Antonio Muñoz may refer to:Antonio Muñoz ( actor )Antonio Munoz (politician)Antonio Muñoz (tennis)Antonio Muñoz Gómez, footballer born 1968Toni Muñoz, footballer born 1982Antonio Muñoz Molina, writerAntonio Muñoz Hernández (Cuban baseball player)Dr. Antonio J. Muñoz (historian), author
+See also List of Governors of PakistanReferences Category:Governors of Gilgit-BaltistanCategory:People from Gilgit-BaltistanCategory:Living peopleCategory:Pakistan Peoples Party politiciansCategory:Year of birth missing (living people)
+Then we come back to the first, the Goat year and we repeat the same way until the twelfth and latest year of the Chinese calendar, the one of the Pig.
+The station plays music from the 1950s, 1960s, 1970s and 1980s.
+Rarely defending her title, Sable continually berated her fan Tori, leading to a feud and a match at WrestleMania XV.
+The Hathorns later donated land for the formation of Maine Central Institute and the University of Maine.
+It is a talent show that features singers, dancers, sketch artists, comedians and other performers of all ages competing for the advertised top prize of 10,000,000 Baht (approximately $325,000).
+DelayThe games in Islamabad were originally to be held in 2001, but they were inevitably rescheduled (with the location remaining unchanged) for March 29 through April 6, 2003, due to the invasion of Afghanistan.
+When he started to train in wrestling at the age of around 20 in the Chaharsoogh Aligholi Agha Zurkhaneh (), he was a young skilled carpenter owning his own shop.
+Tourism Escot Park - The grounds of Escot House are generally open to the public and offer a range of activities.
+SOST is a gene that encodes the protein sclerostin.
+ReferencesCategory:Townships in Benson County, North DakotaCategory:Townships in North Dakota
+See alsoEndemic Scottish mosses: Bryoerythrophyllum caledonicum Bryum dixonii Pohlia scoticaDidymodon mamillosusPlagiomnium mediumFlora of ScotlandReferencesCategory:SplachnalesCategory:Flora of Scotland
+ReferencesCategory:Populated places in Kharan District
+Notable people with the surname include:Brittany Binger (born 1987), American modelCarl Binger (1889–1976), American psychiatristJames H. Binger (1916–2004), American lawyer and chief executiveLouis Gustave Binger (1856–1936), French explorerMaurits Binger (1868–1923), Dutch film director, producer and screenwriterMichael Binger (born 1976), American poker playerRay Binger (1888–1970), American cinematographerSee alsoPinge (surname) Binge (disambiguation)Bing (disambiguation)Pinger (disambiguation)Dinger (disambiguation)Category:German-language surnamesCategory:Danish-language surnamesde:Binger
+Illuminationist philosophy, a doctrine according to which the process of human thought needs to be aided by divine grace Light (theology), Illumination in theological terms, is spiritual information or wisdom, as transmitted through spiritual means such as through divine presenceMusicIllumination!, 1964 album by the Elvin Jones/Jimmy Garrison SextetIllumination (Walter Davis, Jr. album), 1977 album by American jazz pianist Walter Davis, Jr.Illumination (The Pastels album), 1997 album by the Scottish band The PastelsIllumination (Paul Weller album), 2002 album by English singer Paul WellerIllumination (Earth, Wind & Fire album), 2005 album by American R&B group Earth, Wind & FireIllumination (Robert Rich album), 2007Illumination (Tristania album), 2007 album by Norwegian gothic metal band TristaniaIllumination (Miami Horror album), 2010 album by Australian group Miami Horror"Illumination", a song by Gogol Bordello from their 2005 album Gypsy Punks: Underdog World Strike"Illumination", a song by Lindsey Buckingham from his 2011 album Seeds We Sow"Illumination", a 2012 album by Jennifer ThomasFilm Illumination (company), an animated film production company owned by Universal Studios The Illumination, a 1973 film directed by Krzysztof ZanussiLiterature Illumination, UK title of the 1896 novel The Damnation of Theron Ware by American Harold FredericSee also Illuminations (disambiguation)
+Pool A of the 2015 Fed Cup Americas Group II was one of four pools in the Americas Group II of the 2015 Fed Cup.
+Hypsopygia planalis is a species of snout moth in the genus Hypsopygia.
+The series was first aired on NHK BS-2 and ran for twenty six episodes, from October 24, 2000 till May 1, 2001.
+The largest site is Rutland Water at , a Ramsar internationally important wetland site and a Special Protection Area under the European Union Directive on the Conservation of Wild Birds.
+Daiba Station is the name of two railway stations in Japan: Daiba Station (Shizuoka) (大場駅) Daiba Station (Tokyo) (台場駅)
+Chris Gerlach was introduced to public service and the military early on as a Civil Air Patrol Cadet at age 13, ultimately earning top leadership awards and rank within the cadet program.
+References Category:Unincorporated communities in West VirginiaCategory:Unincorporated communities in Monongalia County, West Virginia
+Cuenca footballersCategory:Club Blooming playersCategory:Club Real Potosí playersCategory:Santiago Wanderers footballersCategory:C.D.
+It is part of the Hamburg Metropolitan Region.
+Terramesnil is a commune in the Somme department in Hauts-de-France in northern France.
+It is located from the center of Paris.
+Music videoA lyric video for the song was also released on the band's YouTube official account on 15 June 2018.
+He also played in the first two WHA all star games.
+The DUF1874 RNA motif is a conserved nucleic acid structure that was discovered by bioinformatics.
+Examples of hybrid bills have been those to construct the Channel Tunnel, the Dartford–Thurrock crossing (the Dartford Crossing), create the London Passenger Transport Board and to build Crossrail.
+North Grove can refer to: North Grove, Indiana, United States, an unincorporated community North Grove, Saskatchewan, Canada, a resort village
+According to the 2002 census, the village has a population of 31 people.
+Our intelligence and security agencies have assessed the value of Mr. Mitrokhin's material world wide as immense."
+Magneta Lane is a Canadian indie rock music group formed in 2003 in Toronto.
+Němčice is a village and municipality (obec) in Domažlice District in the Plzeň Region of the Czech Republic.
+The company was ranked 392nd for 2008 in the Inc. 500 list, and 49th in the list of top 100 IT companies.
+Only one canal was authorised by Act of Parliament in 1790, but by 1793 it was twenty.
+ReferencesExternal linksCategory:1844 birthsCategory:1910 deathsCategory:Photographers from IllinoisCategory:19th-century American photographersCategory:20th-century American photographersCategory:People from Roscoe, Illinois
+Turkish-Persian War (1820–1823)The Ottoman–Qajar War was fought between the Ottoman Empire and Qajar Empire from 1821 to 1823.
+It lies approximately north-west of Szlichtyngowa, south-west of Wschowa, and south-east of Zielona Góra.
+Since 1992, he has been a professor of design and urban development at the Berlin University of the Arts.
+XQT may refer to: The IATA location identifier for Lichfield Trent Valley railway station - Lichfield (UK) The ISO 639-3 language code for Qatabanian A file extension for Waffle executable files or SuperCalc macro sheets.
+As per the religious census of 2011, Kurichi had 68.97% Hindus, 19.63% Muslims, 10.89% Christians, 0.04% Sikhs, 0.01% Buddhists, 0.01% Jains, 0.44% following other religions and 0.01% following no religion or did not indicate any religious preference.
+ReferencesCategory:Moths described in 1978Category:Alucitidae
+On 14 June 2017, Marinakis mutually solved his contract with Panathinaikos.
+He was a famous opponent of organised Christianity.
+Cerocala contraria is a moth of the family Erebidae.
+It is published in Burmese and the 40-page newspaper is published on a Monday.
+Weather conditions affect the speed of the different surfaces too, and grading systems have been developed to indicate the track condition (known as the "going" in the UK and Ireland).
+On the Eurochart Hot 100, it peaked at number 4.
+A member of the Belgian Académie Internationale des Sciences Religieuses Hajjar proved active in international associations in Germany and France, where he had earlier studied.
+Simple Minds covered the song in an abbreviated version on their 1984 album Sparkle in the Rain, using two verses (the first and third) from the "Waltzing Matilda" section and a verse from the "Slipaway" section.
+ReferencesExternal linksUN map of the municipalities of Siraha DistrictCategory:Populated places in Siraha District
+The leaves are long by wide, while the orange or reddish-pink coloured flowers are long.
+Vodohod is a Russian cruise company and river cruise line operator, founded in 2004 by the Volga Shipping Company and named after Ivan Kulibin’s “water-going vessel” or “water-goer”.
+The House of Representatives () is the lower house of the Somaliland autonomous region of northwestern Somalia.
+Lagunas de Teno lies at the foot of Planchón volcano.
+Jerry Hansen may also refer to:Jerry Hansen (musician), Ghanaian highlife musician
+Qeran (, also Romanized as Qerān, Qarān, and Qerrān) is a village in Naran Rural District, in the Central District of Sanandaj County, Kurdistan Province, Iran.
+Alden Mason may refer to: John Alden Mason (1885–1967), archaeological anthropologist and linguist Alden Mason (artist) (1919–2013), American painter
+Jasubhai Digital Media (JDM) was a part of Jasubhai Group, Mumbai, India.
+They eventually built a house on Main Street.
+In 1989, she translated, among other novels, Nicole Brossard's Le Désert mauve.
+The Boil(a)s were two types: internal ("great") and external ("small").
+DescriptionThe shell grows to a size of 5 mm.
+A partial list of their titles follows.
+This is a list of listed buildings in the parish of Coldstream in the Scottish Borders, Scotland.
+Post-retirementGarcía Pitarch majored in law in 1987, opening a firm in his hometown.
+It is a private residence, available for tours and events.
+In Guarani, one way of specifying abundance is by repetition of a word.
+Season-by-season recordsPlayoffs1994 season: Lost to Winnipeg 3-1 in championship.
+Large windows looked into the theaters and design shops, practice rooms, art studios, and galleries — many of which proved impractical given the activity occurring within.
+Circles is an EP album by the indie rock group Heroes & Zeros, released on May 2006.
+Viktor Ryashko may refer to: Viktor Ryashko (footballer) (born 1992), Ukrainian footballer Viktor Ryashko (football manager) (born 1964), Ukrainian retired footballer and current manager
+Critical receptionAndy Kellman of AllMusic gave the album 4 stars out of 5, saying: "The band's got the whole package, from top-shelf songcraft to soft synth-led hooks to dancefloor-ready rhythms (the bassist must know each and every Peter Hook line inside out) -- all the way down to the constant flitting between exuberance and melancholia."
+I Will Be is the debut album by Dum Dum Girls, released on March 30, 2010.
+The 1989 Ms. Olympia contest was an IFBB professional bodybuilding competition was held in 1989 in New York City, New York.
+ReferencesCategory:1906 birthsCategory:1976 deathsCategory:Politicians from ÅlesundCategory:Norwegian newspaper editorsCategory:Liberal Party (Norway) politiciansCategory:Mayors of places in Møre og RomsdalCategory:Prisoners and detainees of GermanyCategory:Norwegian prisoners and detaineesCategory:20th-century Norwegian writers
+When their munitions were exhausted, the defenders abandoned the fort and withdrew up the river towards Corumbá on board the gunship Anhambaí.
+8 on Billboards Hot Christian Songs chart.
+Upper Stillwater may refer to:Upper Stillwater, MaineUpper Stillwater Reservoir, UtahUpper Stillwater Lake, MontanaSee alsoStillwater (disambiguation)
+The Sedona Red Rock News is the flagship newspaper of the family-owned Larson Newspapers, which also owns The Camp Verde Journal and the Cottonwood Journal Extra.
+ReferencesCategory:Populated places in Aydın ProvinceCategory:İncirliova DistrictCategory:Villages in Turkey
+Final roundReferencesCategory:Athletics at the 2000 Summer Paralympics
+Hanson re-entered the cockpit and continued to fly the aircraft by hand with Fagan.
+Contemporaneous reports on the event were given in the Glasgow Herald.
+Delfan County () is a county in Lorestan province, Iran.
+Khankan founded Critical Muslims, an organisation to link religion and politics.
+After her success in Boston she was invited to throw the first pitch at a Detroit Tigers game.
+History Construction was completed in January 1925.
+It dwells in shallow waters at a maximum depth of , and inhabits sand and rock sediments.
+NotesCategory:Unincorporated communities in Dunn County, WisconsinCategory:Unincorporated communities in Wisconsin
+This spread covers operating costs for banks providing loans and deposits.
+The composition depicts a playing card of a king lying on its side, a crown and a Dutch-language mourning poem on the death of Charles I which is lying over a skull.
+The following finished their college career in 1982, were not drafted, but played in the NFL.
+1997 saw the first attempts to brand the pharmacies, as Plussapotek.
+I wrote the beat and the melody came quickly after that.
+Artists, politicians, highlight figures of our country and our people are the protagonists.
+The series followed 20 FONCA beneficiaries through their daily life and creative processes.
+GamblingAnson was also known for his excessive gambling and lavish entertaining at his Shugborough Hall seat.
+At nightfall the survivors made their way back to British lines, the division having lost over 4300 casualties, mainly among the seven attacking battalions.
+His work spans both programming languages and the theory ofcomputation.
+Fereidoon Amouzadeh Khalili is the managing editor and actress Bahareh Rahnama is among the contributors of the magazine.
+General Kitabgi successfully persuaded Wolff's friend William Knox D'Arcy, a British entrepreneur, to develop the country’s oil possibilities.
+Parks obtained his Ph.D. in 1974 from Princeton University, under the supervision of Frederick J. Almgren, Jr.
+It was the first major professional league for inline hockey.
+15 June – Carrefour open Europe's first hypermarket, in Sainte-Geneviève-des-Bois, Essonne.
+ReferencesSourcesSambrook, James.
+ProfessionalNashville Predators Wilson signed a three-year entry-level contract with Nashville on April 17, 2009, following his sophomore season.
+External links Profile on goalzz.comCategory:Living peopleCategory:Iraqi footballersCategory:Year of birth missing (living people)Category:Sportspeople from BaghdadCategory:Association football forwards
+ReferencesCategory:LamiinaeCategory:Beetles described in 1884Category:Beetles of Asia
+Tempus, 1998.
+Personal lifeIn 1964 Erwin Nievergelt married Marlies Ehrensperger.
+See also Base load Grid (electricity) Distributed generation Electric power transmission Electricity distribution Electricity retailing Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) FirstEnergy Independent System Operator Load management Northeast blackout of 2003 Smart meterReferences U.S. electric system is made up of interconnections and balancing authorities, U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA).
+In Oslo, they held assemblies with the country's inhabitants and succeeded in having the leaders recognize the king.
+Adjacent raised blocks (horsts) and down-dropped blocks (grabens) can form high escarpments.
+He read almost everything she wrote and she also became a critic of his work, whose judgement and suggestions he valued.
+Co-optionsReferencesExternal linksCategory:Politics of Galway (city)Category:City councils in the Republic of Ireland
+Kelley served as Chairman of the House Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Measures (1867–1873), Ways and Means Committee (1881–1883), and Committee on Manufactures (1889–1890).
+Despite this security breach, the airport managed to pass a security audit in 2009.
+He has permanent resident status in Qatar, and because of this was called by Qatar under-19 team in 2017, and made his debut in the same year in a friendly tournament against England under-18 national football team.
+He is also the Chairman of the Developmental Disabilities Special Investigative Committee, and Vice-chairman of the Judiciary Committee.
+The first two lengths were swum using the butterfly stroke, the second pair with the backstroke, the third pair of lengths in breaststroke, and the final two were freestyle.
+References Category:Revenue blocks of Vellore district
+Of the feature films, 147 are claimed to be world premieres.
+The surface-printed variety is prone to damage by abrasion, but can be repaired easily with a conductive paint material.
+CER-10 was designed by Tihomir Aleksić and his associates (Rajko Tomović, Vukašin Masnikosa, Ahmed Mandžić, Dušan Hristović, Petar Vrbavac and Milojko Marić) and was developed over four years.
+Rick retired at the end of the 2018 Calgary StampedeProfessional Wins2004 World Champion Chuckwagon Driver2013 World Champion Chuckwagon DriverShow Wins - Driver (20)1982 (1) Strathmore Heritage Days1983 (2) Grande Prairie Stompede, Ponoka Stampede Champion Driver2002 (2) Grande Prairie Stompede, Strathmore Heritage Days2003 (2) Medicine Hat Exhibition & Stampede, North American Chuckwagon Championship2004 (3) Rocky Mountain Turf Club Derby, Klondike Chuckwagon Derby, Strathmore Heritage Days Stmpede2005 (2) North American Chuckwagon Championship, Klondike Chuckwagon Derby2010 (1) Battle of the Rockies2011 (2) Grande Prairie Stompede, Battle of the North2013 (3) Grande Prairie Stompede, Medicine Hat Exhibition & Stampede, Battle of the North2014 (2) Guy Weadick Days, Bonnyville Chuckwagon ChampionshipMajor Wins - Outrider (11)1982 (2) Calgary Stampede Rangeland Derby Champion Outrider, Calgary Stampede Aggregate Champion Outrider1983 (1) Calgary Stampede Aggregate Champion Outrider1984 (1) Calgary Stampede Rangeland Derby Champion Outrider1988 (2) Calgary Stampede Rangeland Derby Champion Outrider, Calgary Stampede Aggregate Champion Outrider1990 (2) Calgary Stampede Rangeland Derby Champion Outrider, Ponoka Stampede Champion Outrider1992 (1) Ponoka Stampede Champion Outrider1998 (1) Calgary Stampede Rangeland Derby Champion Outrider1999 (1) Calgary Stampede Rangeland Derby Champion Outrider, Calgary Stampede Aggregate Champion OutriderAwardsWPCA Top Rookie Driver (1982)Orville Strandquist Award (1999)WPCA Showmanship Award (2001)Guy Weadick Award (2005)WPCA Equine Award Of Excellence - "NICKLE" - Champion Left Leader (2010)WPCA Equine Outfit of Excellence - "MAX" - Champion Outriding Horse (2011)Calgary Stampede Equine Outfit of Excellence - "MAX" - Champion Outriding Horse (2012)WPCA Equine Outfit of Excellence - "BEAU" - Champion Outriding Horse (2012)Calgary Stampede Equine Outfit of Excellence - "NICKLE" - Champion Left Leader (2013)WPCA Equine Outfit of Excellence - "SPIERMAN" - Champion Right Leader (2013)GMC Sierra Cup Series (2013)Calgary Stampede Equine Outfit of Excellence - "LAW" - Champion Right Wheeler (2014)WPCA Equine Outfit of Excellence - "LAW" - Champion Right Wheeler (2014)Personal lifeRick is a third generation chuckwagon driver whose grandfather Tom Dorchester was a former World and Calgary Stampede champion.
+BiographyWhile attending Excelsior High School in Jamaica, he played with Barry Biggs, Mikey "Boo" Richards, and Ernest Wilson in the Astronauts, and later played organ in the band Now Generation, and with Tommy McCook and the Supersonics, and the Meters.
+is a 1958 Japanese film directed by Seijun Suzuki.
+The front of the brooch is gold decorated with glass and garnets while the backplate is silver.
+DescriptionThe vessels in the series have an aluminium hull, and have a length of 28 meters, with beam of 6 meters and draught of 1.2 meters.
+ReferencesCategory:Unincorporated communities in Nodaway County, MissouriCategory:Unincorporated communities in Missouri
+Khan's head seemed to be clearing, but he had not regained the body movement which protected him so well earlier in the bout.
+They provide additional services in multiple locations that were previously only available in the Sydney CBD and at certain regional locations.
+The Jockey Club is not a club for jockeys, but rather exists to regulate the sport of horseracing; the Marylebone Cricket Club was until recently the regulatory body of cricket; and so on.
+The festival program features in excess of 100 events from local and international artists and includes contemporary and classical music, dance, circus, drama, visual arts and artist talks.
+Fredrik Lindström Fredrik Lindström (writer) (born 1963), Swedish linguist, historian, historian-linguist (in writing and in TV-documentaries of theses subjects), film director and presenter Fredrik Lindström (biathlete) (born 1989), Swedish biathlete Fredrik Olaus Lindström (1847–1919), Swedish architect
+Works"Friction After Patrols in Phoenix Immigrant Area", The New York Times, March 23, 2008See alsoReferencesExternal links Category:American male journalistsCategory:Pulitzer Prize for Local Reporting winnersCategory:George Polk Award recipientsCategory:University of Arizona alumniCategory:Living peopleCategory:Year of birth missing (living people)Category:Place of birth missing (living people)
+ReferencesCategory:Unincorporated communities in Riley County, KansasCategory:Unincorporated communities in Kansas
+Bonsoir goes much further and suggests that whole of modern society, not only the police, is culpable of mediocrity and moral laxity.
+, Hall holds S9 world records in the 400 m, 800 m and 1500 m freestyle events.
+This version was a 25,000 word short story titled "The Man at the Coach and Horses" which Wells was dissatisfied with, so he extended it.
+It is known from Costa Rica.
+DistributionThis species occurs in the Indo-Pacific region.
+The wettest months are July and August, while the driest months are February and March.
+ReferencesCategory:PorpoisesCategory:Mammals described in 2012Category:Pliocene mammals of AsiaCategory:Prehistoric cetacean stubs
+He was re-elected at the 1979 election.
+SAGE was a US Military program during the Cold War that used computers to monitor US airspace for Soviet invasion.
+See alsoAustralian PlateHalmahera PlateMolucca Sea PlatePhilippine Mobile BeltSangihe PlateReferencesCategory:Tectonic platesCategory:Geology of the Pacific OceanCategory:Island arcsCategory:Geology of IndonesiaCategory:Geology of the PhilippinesCategory:Molucca SeaCategory:Volcanism of the Philippines
+Before his appointment by Justinian I, he was a reader of the monastery of Salama.
+In the 2009 election he was elected to the Lok Sabha from the Shimla constituency in Himachal Pradesh.
+The Rudrón Valley () is a valley of the province of Burgos, in the autonomous community of Castilla y León, Spain, that borders the autonomous community of Cantabria.
+25 years after the series finale aired, lead actor Felix Wong who played Kin finally reveals that producer Wai Ka Fai himself stated it was really Kin's sister who came to drop off the note as Gwan had already died in Ethiopia.
+Several promotions were won over the following seasons and the club set up youth squads.
+Pearson attended Freeport High School and Illinois State University.
+Lisiec Wielki () is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Stare Miasto, within Konin County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland.
+ReferencesCategory:1995 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Sportspeople from ThièsCategory:Senegalese footballersCategory:Senegal international footballersCategory:Montpellier HSC playersCategory:US Avranches playersCategory:FC Villefranche playersCategory:Ligue 1 playersCategory:Championnat National playersCategory:Association football defendersCategory:Senegalese expatriate footballersCategory:Senegalese expatriate sportspeople in FranceCategory:Expatriate footballers in France
+Construction wall barriers can also be specifically customized to meet your project requirements, including doorways, tunnels, person-doors, and air filters.
+Retrieved on October 30, 2006.
+At the conclusion of the 2014 Southland Conference Women's Basketball Tournament the Cowgirls received an invitation to compete in the 2014 Women's Basketball Invitational tournament.
+External links Sea Slug Forum: Category:PolyceridaeCategory:Gastropods described in 1905
+ReferencesExternal linksMuhammad Hamzah at Liga IndonesiaCategory:1986 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Association football defendersCategory:Indonesian footballersCategory:Indonesian Premier Division playersCategory:Liga 1 (Indonesia) playersCategory:Persibo Bojonegoro playersCategory:Persebaya Surabaya playersCategory:Persiwa Wamena players
+He was born in Rovigo but grew up in Ferrara.
+North Central High School has been dominant in the event, winning thirteen of the last twenty-five competitions singing the Bohemian Rhapsody.
+They quickly leave for the Antarctic and arrive at the Mountains of Madness.
+Arto recorded the duo project with Ara Dinkjian "Tears of Dignity" (1994) and "Onno" (1996) homage to his brother Onno who died in a plane crash in 1996.
+It was not known which members of the 6th CC were active or even alive.
+Maigret is a surname of French origin and can refer to: Louis Maigret (grammarian), author of the first treatise on the French language (1550) Louis Désiré Maigret (1804–1882), Roman Catholic bishop of HonoluluJules Maigret is fictional detective created by Georges Simenon.
+The first such programme ever produced by British television, it drew on the full journalistic resources of the BBC.
+The show is produced by Tamsin Andersson, Regulars appearing on the show include Ugandan-born comedian David Kibuuka in the role of foreign correspondent, and political commentator Chester Missing, who is a puppet handled by ventriloquist Conrad Koch.
+With a land area of , it had a population density of in 2011.
+Hegel Bulletin (previously Bulletin of the Hegel Society of Great Britain) is a bi-annual peer-reviewed academic journal covering the thought of Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel published by Hegel Society of Great Britain.
+Its course is predominantly southward, and passes through numerous small lakes, (most notably Lake Victor, before reaching the sea at the islet Cove arm of Cunaris Sound.
+The reading of names was reinstated in 1992.
+WLRC is a radio station airing a brokered religious format licensed to Walnut, Mississippi, broadcasting on 850 kHz AM.
+In Game 2, teams may use a non-EU pitcher.
+He played in the top flight of the Czech Republic, making more than 200 top-flight appearances spanning the existence of the Czechoslovak First League and the Gambrinus liga.
+The spencer, dating from the 1790s, was originally a woolen outer tail-coat with the tails omitted.
+Match detailsSee also1980–81 Football League1980-81 FA CupReferencesCategory:FA Community ShieldCharity Shield 1981Charity Shield 1981Charity ShieldCommCharity Shield
+Pixley ka Seme Municipality may refer to: Pixley ka Seme District Municipality in Northern Cape province, South Africa Pixley ka Seme Local Municipality in Mpumalanga province, South Africa
+Strain O-BC30 produces MC21-A (3,3′,5,5′-tetrabromo-2,2′-biphenyldiol) while strain O-BC30T produces MC21-B (2,2′,3-tribromo-biphenyl-4-4′-dicarboxylic acid).
+Wuyuan may refer to:Locations in China Wuyuan County, Jiangxi (婺源县) Wuyuan County, Inner Mongolia (五原县) Wuyuan Commandery (五原郡) of ancient China Wuyuan, Shanxi (吾元), a town in Tunliu County, Shanxi Wuyuan Subdistrict (武原街道), a subdistrict in Haiyan County, ZhejiangSee alsoQifu Gangui (died 412), formally Prince Wuyuan of Henan, a prince of the Western Qin state
+In the 2015 departmental elections, Martine Berthet stood along with Hervé Gaymard in the canton of Albertville-1.
+Round competed with Fred Perry, and defeated Harry Hopman and Nell Hopman in the final, 7–5, 4–6, 6–2 to win the Mixed Doubles tennis title at the 1935 Wimbledon Championships.
+He considered the book to be his "crowning achievement".
+PopulationSee alsoCommunes of the Calvados departmentReferencesINSEECategory:Communes of Calvados (department)Category:Calvados communes articles needing translation from French Wikipedia
+2006 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.
+RLF may refer to: RLF (gene) (rearranged L-myc fusion), a human zinc finger protein Romanian Land Forces Royal Literary Fund Revolving Loan Fund Real Life Friends Retrolental fibroplasia, see Retinopathy of prematurity
+This website began in April 2007 as Live Search Club.
+WorksEmmanuel Bove : La Vie Comme une Ombre, with Raymond Cousse and Jean-Yves Reuzeau.
+(Further information: List of defunct CBC radio transmitters in Canada)ReferencesExternal linksCBC EdmontonCBX history - Canadian Communications FoundationBXBXCategory:Radio stations established in 1948Category:1948 establishments in Alberta
+In addition to the 650b models, frames designed around 26-inch and 700C wheel sizes were also available in certain sizes.
+Track listingSide one "My Heart Skips a Beat" (Buck Owens) "Close Up the Honky Tonks" (Red Simpson) "I Don't Hear You" (Owens) "Save the Last Dance for Me" (Doc Pomus, Mort Shuman) "Over and Over Again" (Owens) "Truck Drivin' Man" (Terry Fell)Side two "Together Again" (Owens) "A-11" (Hank Cochran) "Ain't it Amazing Gracie" (Owens, Glen Garrison) "Getting Used to Losing You" (Owens, Don Rich) "Storm of Love" (Harlan Howard, Owens) "Hello Trouble (Come on In)" (Orville Couch, Eddie McDuff)PersonnelBuck Owens – guitar, vocalsDon Rich – guitar, fiddle, vocalsWillie Cantu – drumsBob Morris – bassJay McDonald – pedal steel guitarDoyle Holly – bassKen Presley – drumsTom Brumley – pedal steel guitarReferencesCategory:1964 albumsCategory:Buck Owens albumsCategory:Capitol Records albumsCategory:Decca Records albums
+Rangitira Beach and Woodhill Forest are to the west, and Omokoiti Flats and the southern Kaipara Harbour are to the east.
+It has since been used as a national anthem for the country of Kekistan.
+The MSVPAC is the non-partisan political action committee of the Medical Society of Virginia, contributing to physician-friendly candidates.
+After the reception of Tim and Pete, with several critics calling him "The Last Angry Gay Man", Baker faced increasing difficulty finding a publisher for his work and his financial position became precarious.
+The winner is the competitor who achieves the longest distance on one of the 3 or 6 attempts.
+ReferencesCategory:1934 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Party List Members of the Legislative YuanCategory:Tainan Members of the Legislative YuanCategory:Members of the 2nd Legislative YuanCategory:Members of the 3rd Legislative YuanCategory:Members of the 4th Legislative YuanCategory:Members of the 5th Legislative YuanCategory:Kuomintang Members of the Legislative Yuan in TaiwanCategory:National Taiwan University alumniCategory:20th-century Taiwanese businesspeopleCategory:21st-century Taiwanese businesspeopleCategory:Magistrates of Tainan CountyCategory:Senior Advisors to President Lee Teng-huiCategory:Taiwanese Ministers of the Interior
+Alex Carter may refer to:Alex Carter (cornerback) (born 1994), American football cornerbackAlex Carter (defensive end) (born 1963), American football defensive endAlex Carter (British actor) (Hollyoaks and Emmerdale; born 1982)Alex Carter (Canadian actor) (born 1964), Canadian television and film actorAlexander Carter (1909–2002), Canadian bishopAlex Carter (Neighbours), fictional character on Australian soap opera NeighboursSee alsoAlexandra Carter (born 1987), Canadian voice actressAlexandra Carter (politician), English politician Al Carter (disambiguation)
+HistoryTerry was named after the original purchaser of the land on which it is located, James Terry, who came to the area from neighboring Chicot County, Arkansas in 1835.
+Bolnore may refer to:Bolnore Village, a new village built close to the West Sussex town of Haywards Heath in the Mid Sussex District of Sussex County, EnglandKleinwort baronets, of Bolnore, Sussex County, England, a title in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom
+References Category:Towns and villages in Hashtrud County
+Sam declares that they need support from the Marauders if their campaign is to continue.
+A three-winged complex of farm buildings from circa 1567-1663 have been listed on the Danish registry of protected buildings and places.
+ReferencesglumosaCategory:Flora of EcuadorCategory:Near threatened plantsCategory:Taxonomy articles created by Polbot
+Sarzeh-ye Charkan (, also Romanized as Sarzeh-ye Chārkān) is a village in Gafr and Parmon Rural District, Gafr and Parmon District, Bashagard County, Hormozgan Province, Iran.
+ReferencesCategory:Communes in Botoșani County
+The Orioles were also the last original team in the majors to make their first World Series appearance, as the St. Louis Browns in .
+17/08/2007.
+She was propelled by steam power during her entire service in Detroit.
+He was educated at the Merchant Taylors' School, London.
+In spite of the Jews intermarriage with the Dominican people already living there, some spouses have formalized their Judaism through conversions and participate in Jewish communal life while other Sephardic Jews converted to Catholicism, still maintaining their Sephardic culture.
+Walter Woodworth White (December 14, 1862 – July 10, 1952) was a Canadian politician.
+LifeOriginally from Oltenița, Stoican was related to celebrated violinist Ion Nomol.
+Doll's Eyes was part of a Gallagher's 2013 solo show at the Tate Modern titled "Your truths are self-evident.
+ReferencesCategory:Municipalities in Rhineland-PalatinateCategory:Mayen-Koblenz
+Before the administrative reform of 2009, Kaive Parish was one of the 21 parishes in the Cēsis District.
+While the Iñupiaq and Yup'ik Eskimos are culturally and ethnically related, separated only by language differences and, often, hundreds of miles of territory, they have developed distinct versions of similar traditional mask forms.
+WodehouseJoy in the Morning (Smith novel), a 1963 novel by Betty SmithJoy in the Morning (film), a 1965 film adaptation of Smith's novel, starring Richard ChamberlainJoy in the Morning (Kuncaitis novel), a 2006 novel by Amy Kuncaitis
+Starbucktown is an unincorporated community in Clinton County, in the U.S. state of Ohio.
+Margarete Lanner (1896–1981) was a German stage and film actress.
+See also List of communities in Puerto RicoReferencesExternal linksCategory:Barrios of Mayagüez, Puerto Rico
+ReferencesCategory:16th-century Anglican bishopsCategory:Bishops of FernsCategory:Deans of Ferns
+Young (born 1969), California judgeMark Young (1987–2009), motorcycle racer who died at the North West 200 in 2009Mark Young, bassist for Hed PE
+Coker Butte was named after one C. W. Coker.
+References New Zealand Department of Conservation Threatened Species ClassificationCategory:Powelliphanta
+36–38.
+& Little Flower 1984Hymenagaricus cylindrocystis Heinem.
+AK03, the inaugural event of the “new” Auckland Festival, opened on 20 September 2003.
+The four mains pool in this hot spring are: 1) The Temple Dome warm pool (98-100°), 2) The Hot Pool (105-110°), 3) The Meditation Pool (98-100°), 4) The Phoenix Baths (85-90°).
+Sai Dham: Sai dham is shridi sai baba temple located at NH 6 Kumhari.
+Buddle, Anne.
+ReferencesCategory:National Register of Historic Places in KentuckyCategory:Greek Revival architecture in KentuckyCategory:Buildings and structures completed in 1839Category:Bath County, Kentucky
+Eldredge may refer to Eldredge (automobile), manufactured in Belvidere, Illinois by the National Sewing Machine CompanyPeople Alma Eldredge (1841–1925), member of the Utah Territorial Legislature, mayor of Coalville, Utah Barnabas Eldredge (died 1911), American founder of the Eldridge Sewing Machine Company and National Sewing Machine Company Brett Eldredge (born 1986), American country musician Charles Eldredge (disambiguation), several people George Eldredge (1898–1977), American actor Horace S. Eldredge (1816–1888), member of the First Seven Presidents of the Seventy in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (1854–1888) John Eldredge, an American author, counselor, and lecturer of Christianity John Eldredge (actor) (1904–1961), American actor Hezekiah Eldredge (1795–1845), American architect Laurence Howard Eldredge (1902–1982), American lawyer and educator Leigh-Anne Eldredge (born 1964), American tennis player Nathaniel B. Eldredge (1813–1893), U.S. Representative from Michigan Niles Eldredge (born 1943), an American paleontologist Todd Eldredge (born 1971), an American figure skater W. Jay Eldredge (1913–2002), general superintendent of the Young Men's Mutual Improvement Association (1969–1972) Zoeth Skinner Eldredge (1846–1915), American banker and historianPlacesWest Cape May, New Jersey, formerly known as EldredgeSee also Eldridge (disambiguation)
+It was described by Stephan von Breuning in 1968.
+It was built in 1837 by the Paisley and Renfrew Railway; and, together with the station at Renfrew Wharf, was one of two terminal stations on the line.
+Rogovin authored a standard reference work on IRS pronouncements, "The Four R’s: Regulations, Rulings, Reliance, and Retroactivity: A View from Within".
+References *727
+Glaridothrips is a genus of thrips in the family Phlaeothripidae.
+Pat Matson (born July 22, 1944 in Laramie, Wyoming) was an American Football League and National Football League offensive lineman from 1966 through 1975.
+References Category:1983 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:American female judokaCategory:Judoka at the 2003 Pan American GamesCategory:Pan American Games silver medalists for the United StatesCategory:Pan American Games medalists in judo
+Taylor Ridge is an unincorporated community in Rock Island County, Illinois, United States.
+Early life and education He attended Saint Peter-Marian High School then Quinsigamond Community College and was drafted by the Oakland Athletics in the 1990 Major League Baseball Draft.
+Meanwhile, Blinov took the silver at 678.0, while his fellow marksman Lykin locked the medal haul for the Russians in a 2–3 finish with a bronze-medal score of 677.1.
+The other team car (#80 Camaro V8, Stratagraph inc.) arrives 19th.
+She is best known for her work in child health and development.
+She admitted to "unwedded cohabitation" with Rembrandt and was banned from receiving communion.
+Situated on the left margin of the Port of Santos, Tecon Santos (Santos Brasil) is considered a benchmark in matters of efficiency in South America and holds the highest average MPH (movements per hour) in Latin America: 81.86.
+Andreyevskaya is the nearest rural locality.
+After the 2012 completion of the West Hill expansion, Boler has 3 quad chairlifts, a magic carpet and a tube carpet serving 16 trails.
+They are most readily distinguished by their pen names:Ganong Yi Ik, 1579–1624, official exiled during the reign of Gwanghaegun of JoseonNongjae Yi Ik, 1629–1690, high official under Hyeonjong of Joseon and Sukjong of JoseonSeongho Yi Ik, 1681–1763, early Silhak philosopher and social critic
+ReferencesCategory:Villages in Cornwall
+Commercial performanceOn 3 September 2016, the song entered the French Singles Chart at number 178, peaking at number 15 in January 2017.
+Deh Qaed (, also Romanized as Deh Qā‘ed and Deh Qā’ed) is a village in Dalaki Rural District, in the Central District of Dashtestan County, Bushehr Province, Iran.
+ReferencesCategory:French companies established in 1998Category:Companies established in 1998Category:Engineering companies of France
+When the Thompson and Williams Brothers act ended in 1953, the brothers broke up and they went their own ways developing their own solo acts.
+Rockland Historic District may refer to: Rockland Historic District (Rockland, Delaware), listed on the NRHP in DelawareRockland Residential Historic District, Rockland, ME, listed on the NRHP in Maine Rockland Historic District (Brooklandville, Maryland), listed on the NRHP in Maryland
+On 19 February 2010 she released the deluxe edition of Sulla mia pelle.
+Early public hospitals were established for the provision of health care services for those people who could not afford private medical attention in their homes or in private institutions.
+Yngve Allan Gillis Larsson (born 3 April 1938) is a former Swedish Social Democratic politician.
+This technique can be applied to any main sequence star for which a spectrum can be recorded.
+Lists of members of China's National People's Congress may refer to:List of current standing members of the National People's CongressList of members of the 11th National People's CongressSee alsoThe lists of members of each of the 13 National People's Congresses, on Chinese Wikipedia:List of members of the 1st National People's CongressList of members of the 2nd National People's CongressList of members of the 3rd National People's CongressList of members of the 4th National People's CongressList of members of the 5th National People's CongressList of members of the 6th National People's CongressList of members of the 7th National People's CongressList of members of the 8th National People's CongressList of members of the 9th National People's CongressList of members of the 10th National People's CongressList of members of the 11th National People's CongressList of members of the 12th National People's CongressList of members of the 13th National People's CongressCategory:National People's CongressNational People's Congress members
+See also List of township-level divisions of HenanReferencesExternal links Category:Township-level divisions of Henan
+The entire area is characterized by a large moraine, which creates the natural basis for pebble beaches, sandy beaches, and large areas of Aust-Agder's best arable land.
+In the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano the 4 × 5 km relay team became 13th, which was her best result in this games.
+1!
+Their third and final full-length album, Tear The Fences Down, was released on January 18, 2011 exclusively on digital and vinyl formats.
+Also, this wellness organization gives various counselling sessions and workshops related to stress management and a healthy lifestyle.
+A catchment area may refer to: Catchment area (human geography), the area and population from which a facility or region attracts visitors or customers Drainage basin, an extent of land where water from precipitation drains into a body of water
+AppointmentsApril 22, 1975: David W. Johnson is appointed to the 18th Senatorial District.
+A barn was added in 1999, and, in 2001, a section of land with a lake was acquired.
+"Reason Rather Than Emotions Would Be the Best Indicator of What Would Be a Good Life".
+As of June 18, 2019, Brandt has been remanded at Her Majesty's Prison in Montserrat until the beginning of his trial in November 2019.
+ReferencesExternal linksCategory:Slovenian female handball playersCategory:2002 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:People from Kranj
+Heavy rain and the surging waves generated by the storm system also caused flash flooding in parts of the region, with some areas topping with 4 inches of rain.
+HistorySpring Lake is centered on an artificial lake of the same name, which was completed in about 1885.
+Club career Nkulukuta joined Mazembe from Daring Club Motema Pembe in 2006.International career The defender played for the Democratic Republic of the Congo national football team.
+Gunte () is a small settlement in the hills above the right bank of the Sava River in the Municipality of Krško in eastern Slovenia.
+BiographyKhedoori was born in Sydney of Jewish-Iraqi parentage and raised in Australia, and currently lives and works in Los Angeles, California.
+He died three months later, and she moved to working the front of the house.
+The Rafi Ahmed Kidwai Award was created in 1956 by the Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR) in 1956 to recognize Indian researchers in the agricultural field.
+Iron ore is mined in the mountains of the headwaters of the Kharkai, and there is a steel plant at Jamshedpur.
+As of 2019, this is the only Ugandan appearance in an Africa Cup of Nations final.
+He competed in the team time trial event at the 1984 Summer Olympics.
+Current destinationsReferencesCategory:Lists of airline destinations
+Ommen is a railway station at Ommen, the Netherlands.
+He served as the head coach for Davidson College's football and men's basketball teams as well as the school's athletic director.
+During the offseason, they signed free agent John Paxson.
+The festival overlaps with the classical Budapest Music Weeks in late September to early November.
+He represented Halifax township in the Nova Scotia House of Assembly from 1785 to 1806.
+Eurysops insignis is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae.
+Look at Me Now" (Joe Bushkin, John DeVries) - 2:49 "Night and Day" (Porter) - 4:00 "Witchcraft" (Cy Coleman, Leigh) - 2:53 "The Lady Is a Tramp" (Rodgers, Hart) - 3:16 "All the Way" (Sammy Cahn, Jimmy Van Heusen) - 2:53 "Come Fly with Me" (Cahn, Van Heusen) - 3:18 "Put Your Dreams Away (For Another Day)" (Paul Mann, Stephen Weiss, Ruth Lowe) - 3:13 "One for My Baby (and One More for the Road)" (Arlen, Johnny Mercer) - 4:26 "Come Dance with Me" (Cahn, Van Heusen) - 2:31 "Nice 'N' Easy" (Alan Bergman, Marilyn Bergman, Lew Spence) - 2:44Personnel Frank Sinatra - vocals Nelson Riddle - arranger, conductor Billy May Bill Miller - pianistCertificationsReferencesCategory:2000 compilation albumsCategory:Frank Sinatra compilation albums
+After players start the game, they will enter a "Select Weapon Array" screen, where they may select the types of power-ups they will use through the course of the game.
+DeVry University, Kansas City, Mo.
+Patrick Procktor, an artist who lived near and later married Kirsten Benson, provided a number of watercolours to hang on the walls of Odin's alongside the works of other artists encouraged to 'eat down' their work.
+David Prinosil (born 9 March 1973) is a former tennis player from Germany, who turned professional in 1991.
+Ein Beitrag zur Tonsilbenfrage und zur Schulmusikpropädeutik, Lahr 1930Further reading Wolfram Huschke: Richard Münnich, in Ludwig Finscher (edit.
+The locomotive and the first eight coaches were detached from the other part of the train and came to a standstill.
+This marked the beginning of mass-development for Gainesville.
+John Smith finished on the podium in 1983, but at the time, it was not yet an official Formula One world championship round.
+Terry Clarke may refer to:Terry Clarke (drummer) (born 1944), Canadian jazz drummerTerry Clarke (Ontario politician), former mayor of Huntsville, OntarioSee alsoTerri Clark (born 1968), Canadian country musicianTerry Clark (disambiguation)
+ReferencesCategory:XanthomonadalesCategory:Bacteria described in 2015
+There are no statements about any rain-related yōkai to be seen, so it's been suggested that the ameonna is simply a made-up creation by Sekien in order to satirize the Edo Period Yoshiwara Yūkaku.
+Polat Paşa is a quarter (mahalle) of Rizokarpaso in Northern Cyprus.
+The Georgian terrace of numbers 1 to 9 is made up of 4 storey houses which is symmetrical from which the centre house, number 5, stands forward and has a pediment.
+The surname Kolumbet (from Greek surname, Κολυμβητές, Kolumbetes, from κολυμβητής, kolumbetis, "swimmer") may refer toLeonid Kolumbet (1937-1983), Soviet Ukrainian Olympic cyclistMykola Kolumbet (1933 2012), Soviet Ukrainian Olympic cyclist
+About a quarter of the aircraft's line replaceable units are common between it and the HAL Tejas trainer variant.
+Dalla geon is a butterfly in the family Hesperiidae.
+'s Man - "Guns for Hire" (1959) as Leo Muller Sugarfoot - "The Desperadoes" (1959) as Sam BoltThe Detectives - "Twelve Hours to Live" (1960) as Fred Hambrough, "Secret Assignment" (1961) as Jonesy The Westerner - "Going Home" (1960) as RigdonRichard Diamond, Private Detective - "The Lovely Fraud" (1960) as Max SchillingDeath Valley Days - "Eagle in the Rocks" (1960) as Manuel GarciaBlack Saddle - "The Apprentice" (1960) as Ben WinklemanRawhide - "Canliss" (1964) as BarkeepI Spy - "Lisa" (1966) as Aram KanjarianThe Red Skelton Show - "The Bum Who Came in from the Cold" (1966) as Dr. ShnorbaThe John Forsythe Show - "Engagement, Italian Style" (1966) as Constantino Batman - "Zelda the Great" (1966) and "A Death Worse Than Fate" (1966) as Eivol EkdalBonanza - "Big Shadow on the Land" (1966), "The Deed and the Dilemma" (1967) and "The Sound of Drums" (1968) as Giorgio RossiI Spy - "The Medarra Block" (1967) as IsaacThe Mike Douglas Show (1967) as Himself Ironside - "The Macabre Mr. Micawber (1968) as McKay, "Memory of an Ice Cream Stick" (1968) as BuschDaniel Boone - "Sweet Molly Malone" (1969) as HermanHawaii Five-O - "For a Million... Why Not?"
+Supilinn has a population of 1,863 (as of 31 December 2013).
+Carlos Marcelino Zaragoza (born January 6, 1973 in Argentina) is a former Argentine footballer who played for clubs of Argentina and Chile.
+ReferencesExternal links profile at Procyclingstats.comCategory:1989 birthsCategory:Lithuanian female cyclistsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Place of birth missing (living people)Category:Universiade medalists in cyclingCategory:Universiade gold medalists for Lithuania
+In their third year under head coach Andy Smith, the team compiled a 7–2 record (2–0 against PCC opponents), won the PCC championship, and outscored its opponents by a combined total of 186 to 62.
+SVT may refer to: Superfluid vacuum theory in physics Superficial vein thrombosis in medical science Scalar-vector-tensor decomposition in cosmology Sveriges Television, public broadcaster in Sweden Ampeg SVT, a super valve technology amplifier Special Vehicle Team, division of the Ford Motor Company DRG Class SVT 877 and DRG Class SVT 137, a series of streamlined diesel trainsets of the former Deutsche Reichsbahn-Gesellschaft Sequential valve timing Seventeen, Korean boy group, stylized as SVT Supraventricular tachycardia, an abnormal heart condition SVT-40, Samozaryadnaya Vintovka Tokareva, a WW2 semi-automatic rifle SVT (band), an early-1980s American rock band Soqosoqo ni Vakavulewa ni Taukei, or the Fijian Political Party, a political party in Fiji Stolen vehicle tracking Sudbury Valley Trustees, a regional land trust in eastern Massachusetts System validation testing, a component of system testing Site-value tax or site-valuation tax, a term for land value tax Train station code for Sturtevant (Amtrak station) IATA airport code for Savuti Airport in BotswanaFord "Special Vehicle Team."
+He currently plays as a forward for A.C. Cuneo 1905.
+They finished the season 24–9, 14–4 in CAA play to finish in second place.
+The median income for a household in the town was $46,250, and the median income for a family was $53,500.
+Marie, MichiganNote: * denotes overtime period(s)ReferencesExternal links NAIA ice hockeyIce*
+John Bouchier may refer to:John Bourchier, 1st Baron Berners (d. 1474)John Bourchier, 2nd Baron Berners (1467 – 1533), English soldier, statesman and translatorJohn de Bourchier (d.circa 1330), English JudgeSee alsoJohn Boucher (disambiguation) John Bouchier-Hayes (born 1944), Irish fencer
+The overnight crossing from Plymouth on 10 February went ahead, making this her maiden voyage.
+TNN Motorsports Hardcore Heat (バギーヒート Buggy Heat in Japan and Europe) is an off-road racing video game for the Dreamcast, developed by CRI and published in the US by ASC Games.
+January2 January3 January4 January6 January8 January10 January12 January13 January14 January18 January19 January20 January21 January23 January24 January25 January26 January28 January29 January30 JanuaryFebruary1 February2 February3 February9 February10 February14 February15 February16 February17 February21 February22 February23 February24 February25 February27 February28 FebruaryMarch1 March4 March8 March9 March11 March12 March13 March14 March15 March16 March19 March20 March21 March23 March24 March27 March28 March30 March31 MarchApril2 April3 April4 April5 April7 April10 April12 April13 April14 April16 April17 April21 April28 April29 AprilUnknown dateMay1 May2 May8 May9 May10 May11 May12 May14 May15 May18 May19 May20 May21 May22 May23 May24 May25 May26 May27 May29 May31 MayJune1 June3 June5 June6 June7 June10 June11 June12 June13 June14 June15 June16 June18 June19 June20 June24 June26 June27 June28 June29 June30 JuneJuly3 July5 July10 July11 July13 July14 July15 July17 July19 July20 July22 July23 July24 July25 July27 July28 July30 July31 JulyAugust1 August2 August3 August5 August6 August7 August9 August11 August13 August14 August15 August16 August17 August21 August23 August24 August26 August28 AugustUnknown dateSeptember1 September2 September3 September4 September5 September8 September10 September14 September15 September16 September19 September21 September23 September24 September26 February25 September28 September29 SeptemberOctober2 October3 October4 October6 October8 October9 October10 October13 October14 October15 October18 October19 October21 October22 October23 October24 October26 October27 October28 October30 OctoberUnknown dateNovember1 November2 November3 November5 November6 November9 November11 November12 November15 November16 November17 November18 November19 November20 November21 November22 November23 November24 November25 November26 November27 November28 November29 November30 NovemberUnknown dateDecember1 December3 December4 December5 December6 December7 December8 December9 December10 December11 December12 December13 December15 December16 December17 December18 December20 December21 December22 December23 December24 December25 December27 December28 December29 December30 December31 DecemberUnknown dateUnknown dateReferences 1925Ships
+(His catalogue, by dividing the action into smaller beats, lists twenty tableaux within the film, a generous numbering probably devised for publicity reasons.)
+The competition was divided into 3 phases.
+The bishop's residence is The Old Deanery, Dean's Court, City of London.
+Overall Creek is situated here.
+While much the Hungarian population has relocated to the suburbs and been largely supplanted by newer immigrants, many institutions founded by the community remain active in the neighborhood, including: Magyar Bank, Magyar Reformed Church, Ascension Lutheran Church, St. Ladislaus Roman Catholic Church, St. Joseph Byzantine Catholic Church, Hungarian American Athletic Club, Aprokfalva Montessori Preschool, Széchenyi Hungarian Community School & Kindergarten, Teleki Pál Scout Home, Hungarian American Foundation, Vers Hangja, Hungarian Poetry Group, Bolyai Lecture Series on Arts and Sciences, Hungarian Alumni Association, Hungarian Radio Program, Hungarian Civic Association, Committee of Hungarian Churches and Organizations of New Brunswick, and Csűrdöngölő Folk Dance Ensemble.
+The 1902–03 season was Manchester United's 11th season in the Football League, and their first season under their new name of "Manchester United", as opposed to "Newton Heath".
+Grub Street, 1992. , .
+External linksstatistics.sk/mosmis/ via the Wayback Machine.
+The Act authorises the Corporate Officer of the House of Commons and the Corporate Officer of the House of Lords to establish, divide, amalgamate or abolish joint departments of the Houses of Parliament.
+He participate All-Japan Championships 6 times and won the bronze medal in 1982.
+It lies approximately south-east of Szadek, north of Zduńska Wola, and west of the regional capital Łódź.
+He studied under professor Izudin Bajrović and then under professor Admir Glamočak.
+WorksReferencesCategory:Vanderbilt University facultyCategory:Pontifical College Josephinum alumniCategory:1948 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:American biblical scholarsCategory:World Christianity scholars
+This involved participation in "Ethet e së premtes mbrëma" (Friday night fever; or "Krasta Show", after showman Adi Krasta), the Albanian equivalent of "Pop Idol", which in a way changed her life forever and gave her a chance to show off her values and vocal talent.
+2000External linksWomen's life in Greece and RomeCategory:1st-century RomansCategory:Ancient Romans who committed suicideCategory:Male suicidesCategory:Suicides by sharp instrument in ItalyCategory:CaecinaeCategory:42 deathsCategory:Suffect consuls of Imperial Rome
+ReferencesCategory:BatrachorhinaCategory:Beetles described in 1905
+This lent credibility to the criticism that this was a feminist translation with the need to strip the translation of as many occurrences as possible of the word ‘man’.
+There is probably one generation per year.
+Thomas Phillips Price (14 June 1844 – 28 June 1932) was a Welsh landowner, mine owner and Liberal politician.
+During the early stages of development, funds were sourced in part by the borough of Drafi.
+She is currently working on a second novel, Beta.
+The cabinet headed by Mahmoud Ahmadinejad from 2005 to 2009 included the following members:Cabinet |-!colspan=7||-References Category:2005 establishments in IranCategory:2009 disestablishments in IranIranIranAhmadinejad
+Awards27th Yokohama Film Festival 10th Best FilmReferencesExternal links Category:1996 mangaCategory:Live-action films based on mangaCategory:Films directed by Tomoyuki FurumayaCategory:Japanese filmsCategory:Japanese-language filmsCategory:Josei mangaCategory:Shodensha franchisesCategory:Shodensha manga
+They struggled last season but my job will be to create a culture where everybody enjoys rugby and ultimately starts winning again," said the 35-year-old former Dunfermline coach and SRU development officer.
+Czechy may refer to: Czechy, Środa Śląska County in Lower Silesian Voivodeship (south-west Poland) Czechy, Lower Silesian Voivodeship (south-west Poland) Czechy, Łódź Voivodeship (central Poland) Czechy, Lesser Poland Voivodeship (south Poland) Czechy, Greater Poland Voivodeship (west-central Poland) Czechy, Pomeranian Voivodeship (north Poland) Czechy, West Pomeranian Voivodeship (north-west Poland)See also Čechy (disambiguation) Csehi Czech (disambiguation) Čech (disambiguation)
+ReferencesExternal links Category:1938 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:French male cyclistsCategory:French Giro d'Italia stage winnersCategory:Giro d'Italia cyclistsCategory:Tour de France cyclistsCategory:Place of birth missing (living people)
+Writers were awarded 5,000 francs for their work.
+Gold was assigned to the 2014 World Championships in Saitama, Japan, where she placed fifth overall.
+It is endemic to Sri Lanka where it is found on the coastal lowlands of southern half of Sri Lanka below asl.
+NotesExternal links Category:1908 birthsCategory:1994 deathsCategory:Australian rules footballers from Victoria (Australia)Category:Western Bulldogs playersCategory:Richmond Football Club players
+Irish Times is the third studio album by the Irish folk band Patrick Street, released in 1990 on Green Linnet and Special Delivery Records, a division of Topic Records.
+Final classificationSourceReferencesWomen's Time TrialCategory:UCI Road World Championships – Women's time trialRoad World Championships - Women's Time TrialCategory:2001 in women's road cycling
+Fulham mathematically secured a place in the 2016–17 EFL Championship play-offs by beating fellow promotion hopefuls Reading F.C.
+Administratively it is part of the Chukotka Autonomous Okrug, Russian Federation.
+FilmographyReferencesExternal links Category:Living peopleCategory:Male actors in Tamil cinemaCategory:21st-century Indian male actorsCategory:Year of birth missing (living people)
+His personal best is 82.62 metres, achieved in May 1998 in Bryansk.
+Like Moths to Flames Chris Roetter – lead vocals Zach Huston – rhythm guitar Eli Ford – lead guitar Aaron Evans – bass, backing vocals Greg Diamond – drums, percussion Additional musicians Shane Told of Silverstein – guest vocals on track "Into the Ground" Ahren Stringer of The Amity Affliction – guest vocals on track "Lord of Bones" Additional personnel Will Putney – production, engineering, mixing, mastering, writing JJ Cassiere – booking Marco Walzel – booking Zak Cervini – engineering Andy Gomoll – editing Mike Mowery – managementReferencesCategory:2013 albumsCategory:Like Moths to Flames albumsCategory:Rise Records albumsCategory:Albums produced by Will Putney
+ReferencesExternal links Page about this airport on COPA's Places to Fly airport directoryCategory:Defunct airports in AlbertaCategory:Northern Sunrise County
+People speculate that the physician injected him with unknown drug that were not for tonsillitis.
+Hansel and Gretel Picture Garden Pocket Utopia was a contemporary art enterprise in New York City.
+List of rivers flowing in the island of Flores, East Nusa Tenggara province, Indonesia.
+He died in Gawler; she died at "Hurst", Sedlescombe, England.
+His 1977 film Lone Wolf was entered into the 28th Berlin International Film Festival and his 2008 film Birds of Paradise was shown at the 30th Moscow International Film Festival.
+It was described by George Hampson in 1901.
+It is part of Pind Dadan Khan Tehsil.
+"Descriptions of New Species of Reptiles and Amphibians in the United States National Museum".
+Selected publicationsReferencesCategory:1930 birthsCategory:2009 deathsCategory:People from Farnborough, HampshireCategory:Fellows of the Royal Historical SocietyCategory:Fellows of the Society of Antiquaries of LondonCategory:Alumni of University College, OxfordCategory:Alumni of Bedford College (London)Category:People educated at Wellington College, BerkshireCategory:20th-century English historiansCategory:Victoria County HistoryCategory:English local historiansCategory:Contributors to the Victoria County History
+It is rich in dinosaur eggs and bones, such as those of oviraptorids, troodontids, ankylosaurids, ornithopods and ornithomimids.
+He succeeded to the family baronetcy and the Scampston estate near Malton on 30 June 1723 on the death of his uncle, Sir William St Quintin, 3rd Baronet, who had never married.
+Shahrag (also spelled Shahrak) was an Iranian aristocrat, who served as the governor of Pars during the Arab invasion of Iran.
+Hannum served in that capacity until his death on April 23, 2007, in Unionville, Chester County, Pennsylvania.
+In 1982, the British current-affairs program World in Action aired an episode entitled "The Mystery of Flight 163".
+Location and historyBerkovitsa is situated on the northern slope of Kom Peak of the Berkovska Stara Planina Mountain along the valley of the Berkovitsa River, which is a tributary to the Barziya River, at an altitude above sea level 405 m. The town was mentioned for the first time in Ottoman documents of 1488.
+It is notable for being one of fourteen lakes on Mistik Creek named in numeric order in Cree.
+ReferencesExternal links Category:1949 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Soviet footballersCategory:FC SKA Rostov-on-Don playersCategory:Daugava Rīga playersCategory:Soviet football managersCategory:Ukrainian football managersCategory:Mozambique national football team managersCategory:Orlando Pirates F.C.
+He currently plays as a defender for Al-Sharjah.
+ReferencesCategory:Neighborhoods of Mecca
+Major results19961st Overall Giro Ciclistico d'Italia1st Stage 7UCI Road World Championships2nd Time trial2nd Road race6th Overall GP Tell19971st Stage 6 Giro d'Italia19994th Trofeo dello Scalatore5th Overall Giro del Trentino7th Overall Tour de Suisse8th Coppa Placci8th Giro dell'Emilia10th Overall Giro d'Italia10th Giro di Toscana20006th Overall Giro del Trentino7th GP Industria & Artigianato di Larciano8th Overall Volta a Catalunya20014th Trofeo Matteotti20044th Coppa Agostoni6th GP Industria Artigianato e Commercio Carnaghese10th Giro d'OroReferencesExternal linksCategory:1974 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Italian male cyclistsCategory:People from the Province of Reggio CalabriaCategory:Giro d'Italia cyclistsCategory:Sportspeople from Calabria
+National Highway No.966 connects to Palakkad and Coimbatore.
+Methods of studyManchester Enterprise Centre offers postgraduate enterprise degree programmes and a range of undergraduate and postgraduate units to students from any subject background.
+Kruszyna was Doenhoff's main residence; but it was inconveniently located far from the new Commonwealth capital, Warsaw.
+The society's allocation of funds for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2018, lists 78% of funds for Program Services (Patient Support 36%, Research 19%, Prevention 14%, Detection and Treatment 9%).
+References IrelandIrelandHuman Development Index
+ReferencesKrzekotowice
+The 2006-07 season of the Liga I Feminin was the 17th season of Romania's premier women's football league.
+The more acculturated the individual is, the more likely the individual has a positive attitude toward seeking help while more enculturated individuals tend to have more negative attitudes toward help-seeking.
+It was the first publication of Celan in German, and contains one of his best-known poems, "Todesfuge" (written 1944-45).
+Minuscule 706 (in the Gregory-Aland numbering), ε347 (von Soden), is a Greek minuscule manuscript of the New Testament, on parchment.
+Sunshine, Arkansas may refer to:Sunshine, Ashley County, ArkansasSunshine, Garland County, Arkansas
+He spent his entire career as a footballer at Olympique de Marseille (from 1919 to 1926) and took the club to two Coupes de Frances (in 1924 as a defender and in 1926 as a goalkeeper).
+It is associated with sepsis, endocarditis, and respiratory illness, especially in immunocompromised patients, such as asplenic or AIDS patients.
+DescriptionThe length of the shell varies between 9 mm and 12 mm.
+Personal lifeIn 1732, he married Birgitte Charlotte Kruse (1711-1781) a daughter of Major General Ulrik Christian Kruse (1666-1727).
+Francisco Álvarez may refer to:Francisco Álvarez (actor) (1892–1960), Argentine actorFrancisco Álvarez (beach volleyball) (born 1969), Cuban beach volleyball playerFrancisco Álvarez-Cascos (born 1947), Spanish civil engineer and politicianFrancisco Álvarez Martínez (born 1925), Cardinal in the Roman Catholic ChurchGeneral Francisco Álvarez, a town in the Canendiyú department of ParaguayFrancisco C. Álvarez (1903–1963), Filipino actor and playwrightFrancisco Álvares (c. 1465–1536/41), Portuguese missionary and explorerFrancisco Álvarez (footballer) (born 2000), Argentine defender for San Martín de San JuanFrancisco Jovel Álvarez (born 1982), Salvadoran footballer
+He is also known for raising Kalleviggården as his private residence in Arendal.
+GuamReferencesExternal linksCategory:CerithiidaeCategory:Gastropods described in 1841
+Saint-Réal mixes politics and love, but love appears much more important.
+Users could also draw their own backgrounds, make their own stamps and record audio.
+It "has been described… as atonal, athematic,… amotivic," and its orchestration has "been labeled subtle."
+External linksCricinfo article on Brett Hefford Category:1978 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:New Zealand cricketersCategory:Central Districts cricketersCategory:Cricketers from Blenheim, New Zealand
+Senožeče (; ) is a settlement in the Municipality of Divača in the Littoral region of Slovenia.
+"i am you" CDReferencesExternal linksStickfigure Records Official WebsiteCategory:American independent record labels
+Edward Francis Reginald Woolley ARCO (13 May 1895 - 12 January 1954) was a composer and organist based in England.
+Cruciata, a Latin adjective meaning crucified, may refer to: Cruciata, a plant genus Silvana Cruciata (born 1953), Italian middle- and long-distance runnerSee also Cruciatum Cruciatus
+is a Japanese impressionist (monomane tarento).
+There he worked regularly at his studio and owned a home with his wife, Paige Rense, Editor-in-Chief of Architectural Digest.
+Awards and accomplishmentsItalian 2nd Division Champion: (2007)FIBA EuroChallenge All-Star Day MVP: (2008)Argentine League Top Scorer: (2012)2× Brazilian League All-Star: (2013, 2014)FIBA Americas League Champion: (2013)ReferencesExternal linksEuroCup ProfileFIBA Europe ProfileFIBA Americas ProfileLatinBasket.com ProfileItalian League Profile Italian 2nd Division Profile Brazilian League Profile Category:1977 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Alabama–Huntsville Chargers men's basketball playersCategory:American expatriate basketball people in ArgentinaCategory:American expatriate basketball people in BrazilCategory:American expatriate basketball people in IsraelCategory:American expatriate basketball people in ItalyCategory:American expatriate basketball people in LatviaCategory:American expatriate basketball people in RussiaCategory:American men's basketball playersCategory:Barak Netanya B.C.
+Michael Baird may refer to: Michael Baird (footballer) (born 1983), Australian soccer player striker Mike Baird (born 1968), Australian politician Mike Baird (musician) (born 1951), American drummer
+(details in Bulgarian, basic data in English) Vazharov Peak.
+Salient research achievements Technology on the commercial farming of Pacific white shrimp (Litopenaeus vannamei) using inland saline ground water.
+The following findings are required for drugs to be placed in this schedule: The drug or other substance has a high potential for abuse.
+Burned or burnt may refer to: Anything which has undergone combustion Burned (image), quality of an image transformed with loss of detail in all portions lighter than some limit, and/or those darker than some limit Burnt (film), a 2015 drama film starring Bradley Cooper Burned (album), 1995 album by Electrafixion "Burned" (CSI: Miami), an episode of CSI: Miami "Burned" (Arrow), an episode of Arrow "Burned" (The Twilight Zone), a 2003 episode of The Twilight Zone Burned (Hopkins novel), a 2005 novel by Ellen Hopkins Burned (Cast novel), a 2010 novel by P. C. Cast Burned (TV series), 2003 MTV television series "Burned", a song written by Neil Young on the eponymous Buffalo Springfield album "Burned", a song by Hilary Duff from Dignity, 2007See also Burning (disambiguation)Burn (disambiguation)
+(Eds) (1978) The South West Book - A Tasmanian Wilderness Melbourne, Australian Conservation Foundation.
+Awards and nominations1982–19891991–1999External links Official Razzie websiteCategory:Golden Raspberry Awards by category
+DecisionChief Justice Rehnquist delivered the opinion of a unanimous Court.
+At Eurovision On the night of the final the group performed first in the running order, preceding Monaco.
+When nearby Cockatoo Island was passed to the Royal Australian Navy in 1913, Snapper Island was included in its 'naval waters', and as such subject to naval control.
+I have now learned, by bitter experience, that one must give a little too; in love one has to use one's brain just as much as in business, and perhaps even more".
+Station layoutShirousagi Station has a single side platform serving traffic in both directions.
+In 2006 his students and colleagues honoured his work with a Festschrift [言語研究の射程: 湯川恭敏先生記念論集 Gengo kenkyū no shatei: Yukawa Yasutoshi Sensei kinen ronshū.'
+Category:SinkholesCategory:Karst formationsCategory:Dinaric karst formationsCategory:Dinaric Alps
+The freguesias (civil parishes) of Portugal are listed in by municipality according to the following format: concelho freguesiasElvasAjuda, Salvador e Santo IldefonsoAlcáçovaAssunçãoBarbacenaCaia e São PedroSanta EuláliaSão Brás e São LourençoSão Vicente e VentosaTerrugemVila BoimVila FernandoEntroncamentoEntroncamentoEspinhoAntaEspinhoGuetimParamosSilvaldeEsposendeAntasApúliaBelinhoCurvosEsposendeFãoFonte BoaForjãesGandraGemesesMarMarinhasPalmeira de FaroRio TintoVila ChãEstarrejaAvancaBeduídoCanelasFermelãPardilhóSalreuVeirosEstremozArcosEstremoz (Santa Maria)Estremoz (Santo André)Évora Monte (Santa Maria)GlóriaSanta Vitória do AmeixialSanto EstêvãoSão Bento de Ana LouraSão Bento do AmeixialSão Bento do CortiçoSão Domingos de Ana LouraSão Lourenço de MamporcãoVeirosÉvoraBaceloCanaviaisÉvora (Santo Antão)Évora (São Mamede)Horta das FigueirasMalagueiraNossa Senhora da Boa FéNossa Senhora da Graça do DivorNossa Senhora da ToregaNossa Senhora de GuadalupeNossa Senhora de MachedeSão Bento do MatoSão MançosSão Miguel de MachedeSão Sebastião da GiesteiraSão Vicente do PigeiroSé e São PedroSenhora da SaúdeTorre de CoelheirosE
+He is one of six players ever to be drafted by three professional sports (the others being George Carter, Jo Jo White, Noel Jenke, Mickey McCarty and Dave Logan) and one of three athletes along with Carter and McCarty to be drafted by four leagues.
+Pimolrat Pisolyabutr () Born June3, 1983 in Bangkok Thailand is a Thai actress.
+His sons Dhilip Subbarayan and Dinesh Subbarayan are also a stunt masters.
+It mainly focused on the demand for 117th constitutional amendment bill for Reservations in Promotions be passed and Reservations be also given in the Private sector.
+1 Mm3 means one cubic megametre or the size of a cube of by by or 1018 m3, and not (106 m3)ComputingIn some fields of computing, mega may sometimes denote 1,048,576 (220) of information units, for example, a megabyte, a megaword, but denotes (106) units of other quantities, for example, transfer rates: = .
+The village includes a collection of stone and frame structures, many dating from the 18th century.
+Nuria Llagostera Vives and María José Martínez Sánchez were the defending champions, but they chose to not participate this year.Polona Hercog and Barbora Záhlavová-Strýcová won in the final 2–6, 6–1, [10–2] against Sara Errani and Roberta Vinci.
+Miles was a father figure to Max after his father Jim died.
+Despite attempts to rescue the train crew, a total of nine railway employees died of carbon monoxide poisoning, including three of the rescuers.
+NotesExternal links Essendon Football Club past player profile Category:Living peopleCategory:1947 birthsCategory:Australian rules footballers from Victoria (Australia) Category:Essendon Football Club playersCategory:Castlemaine Football Club playersCategory:Subiaco Football Club playersCategory:Preston Football Club (VFA) players
+It received a digital download single certification of Gold from the Recording Industry Association of Japan for sales of 100,000.
+They competed in the 24-team Division Three, then the third tier of English league football, finishing ninth.
+TeamsNotable occurrencesAttracted by the opening of the brand-new 4,000-seat Braehead Arena in Glasgow, Edinburgh Rocks uprooted from their aging Meadowbank venue in Edinburgh and moved 45 miles west to Scotland's largest city Glasgow, and rebranded as the Scottish Rocks.
+Settler John Smith arrived at the Piedmont area around 1883.
+The wingspan is about 26 mm.
+ReferencesCategory:MicrotusCategory:Mammals described in 1899Category:Taxonomy articles created by Polbot
+The Swedish Women's Curling Championship () is the national championship of women's curling in Sweden.
+He has represented clients such as Marilyn Monroe, Kim Novak, Clint Eastwood, and, for over 35 years, Bill Cosby.
+CLGM: Cannon launched anti-tank missile.
+ShmooCon XVI is scheduled to be held January 31 through February 2, 2020.
+Many are critically endangered or extinct in the wild.
+This list is part of Belgium's national heritage.
+ReferencesCategory:Villages in Gostyń County
+(The next would be only a year later when they sang in a trio with brother Patrick on "You Could Drive A Person Crazy", released on the live recording "Sondheim A Celebration).
+Lydia runs off to hide, only to be found by Negan who helps to comfort her and suggest she retaliate against the bullies.
+The little love-poem Alpheus and Arethusa (Anthol.
+Tox — an automation tool providing packaging, testing and deployment of Python software.
+Refugee is the only studio album from the progressive rock band Refugee, released in March 1974 on Charisma Records.
+ReferencesExternal linksPictures and facts (unofficial)Category:Indoor ice hockey venues in SwedenCategory:Sport in ÄngelholmCategory:Sports venues completed in 2008Category:Rögle BKCategory:2008 establishments in Sweden
+Harry Cleven)co-written with Harry Cleven Une liaison pornographique (1999) (dir.
+In 1969, SR-170, which ran from Clarkston via Trenton to Richmond was absorbed into SR-142, and SR-170 was deleted.
+Both were translated into German and into French.
+Inglis was formerly a band and record label manager.
+Hughes is often discussed only in relation to his contribution to the Chicago school.
+James Moody (born September 25, 1949 in Portsmouth, Virginia) is an American television and film character actor.
+Egypt–Ukraine relations are Diplomatic relations between Egypt and Ukraine.
+Clarence Francis "Heinie" Mueller (September 16, 1899 – January 23, 1975) was an American center and right fielder in Major League Baseball.
+It is built solidly on the foundations of "umunthu."
+(2011) The Secret Disco Revolution (2012) The Skyjacker's Tale (2016) There Are No Fakes (2019)ReferencesExternal linksCategory:Canadian documentary film directorsCategory:Canadian screenwritersCategory:Writers from TorontoCategory:Film directors from TorontoCategory:Living peopleCategory:Year of birth missing (living people)Category:Canadian JewsCategory:Jewish film people
+Public user interfaces were added later, providing the general public with free access to multilingual terminology in the fields of activity of the European Union.
+ReferencesExternal linksSlatnik on GeopediaCategory:Populated places in the Municipality of Ribnica
+"Some Cut" is the 2nd single from Trillville's debut album The King of Crunk & BME Present: Trillville & Lil Scrappy.
+External links Mud River railway stationCategory:Via Rail stations in OntarioCategory:Transport in Thunder Bay District
+The current head of the Villafranca-Soissons line is Count Edoardo Emanuele Filiberto (born 1945) the grandson of the first count of Villafranca-Soissons via his second son Count Giuseppe Carlo (1904–1971).
+Lissette started her career in Puerto Rico as an adolescent, then later moved to Miami.
+For the history of the region, see History of Pomerania.
+July 6 – The 17th Folk music festival of Siglufjordur start in Siglufjordur (July 6 – 10).
+The Jenkins was an American country music group comprising Nancy Jenkins and her daughters, Kacie and Brodie.
+HonorsSwiss Championships: (1) 1962National League B Championships: (3) 1960, 2011, 2014Swiss Cup: (1) 1964ReferencesExternal links EHC Visp official websiteCategory:Ice hockey teams in SwitzerlandCategory:Sport in Valais
+ReferencesBibliographyExternal linksBritish Army Officers 1939−1945Generals of World War II|-Category:1893 birthsCategory:1984 deathsCategory:British Army generals of World War IICategory:British Army personnel of World War ICategory:Companions of the Order of the BathCategory:Graduates of the Royal Military Academy, WoolwichCategory:Graduates of the Staff College, CamberleyCategory:People educated at Marlborough CollegeCategory:People from Ashford, KentCategory:People from KensingtonCategory:Recipients of the Military CrossCategory:Royal Engineers officers
+Jaafer Khalifah Al-Saeed (; born February 11, 1991) is a Saudi football player who plays a Left Defender for Al-Sadd .
+Browns Lake derives its name from Henry Brown, a pioneer settler.
+History In the , Maneroo had a population of 37 people.
+WarderBenjamin H. Warder was president of Warder, Bushnell & Glessner Company, a major manufacturer of farm machinery.
+In the educational sector there were 17 primary schools and 4 secondary schools.
+Thus, the compiler interprets this statement asstd::cout.operator<<(5); which it can resolve during normal lookup.
+He died on March 27, 1954.
+And this idea continued to play through the record in certain spots."
+Luke Joseph O'Toole (21 June 1873 – 17 July 1929) was an Irish Gaelic games administrator.
+REDIRECT Styles of house music
+Herbert Hoos (born 18 July 1965) is a retired German football player.
+Cicaré S.A. (originally Cicaré Aeronáutica S.A. and later Cicaré Helicópteros S.A.) is an Argentine helicopter manufacturer founded by Augusto Cicaré in Saladillo, Buenos Aires Province in the 1970s to develop aircraft of his own design.
+CareerKimi's film career started with a role in the film, Naseebo (1994) and was followed by a number of notable Punjabi-language films, including Qahar (1997), Jee Aayan Nu, Asa Nu Maan Watna Da & Mera Pind - My Home.
+Loures playersCategory:C.D.
+It may also refer to:Historical conflictsThe following terms are all translated from the original language:"The Great French War", a term sometimes used to collectively refer to the French Revolutionary Wars (1792–1802) and the Napoleonic Wars (1803–15)Great Patriotic War (term), the Russian name for the Eastern Front of World War II"The Great War", English translation of Guerra Grande, Paraguayan name for the Paraguayan War"The Great War", Uruguayan name for the Uruguayan Civil War"The Great War", Polish and Belarusian name for the Polish–Lithuanian–Teutonic WarThe Ten Years' War between Spain and CubaThe Great Turkish War, also known as "The War of the Holy League"The Great Northern WarFilm and TVThe Great War (1959 film), a 1959 Italian filmThe Great War (2017 film), a 2017 American documentary filmThe Great War (TV series), a 1964 BBC documentary seriesThe Great War (YouTube channel), a YouTube channel dedicated to covering the events of World War I and its aftermathThe Great War and the Shaping of the 20th Century, a 4-part 1996 PBS documentary series about World War IOtherThe Great War (novel series), an alternate history trilogy by Harry TurtledoveThe Great War (Sabaton album), 2019The Great War (Justin Currie album), 2010The Great War (battle honour), Canadian battle honor awarded for services in World War IGreat War Island, a river island in Serbia, located at the mouth of the Sava RiverSee alsoGuerra Grande (disambiguation)
+In 1965 he announced that Exeter City's force would be merged with that of Devon.
+The BDM and BPM-D variants have an ambidextrous frame-mounted safety/decocker lever, which when operated returns the pistol to the hammer down pre-cocked setting.
+During WWI he served as a private in the Canadian Army until the United States joined the war and he transferred to the US Army.
+Robert Gerry may refer to: Robert Gerry (politician) (1858–1931), American politician Robert Livingston Gerry Sr. (1877–1957), American thoroughbred horse owner and breeder Robert L. Gerry Jr. (1911–1979), American polo player Robert L. Gerry III (born 1937), American businessman and petroleum industry executive
+During the campaign, the division's 114th Infantry Regiment, borrowed from the 18th Division, was credited with shattering Merrill's Marauders in the Siege of Myitkyina in May–August 1944 and in delaying the 15:1 superior Chinese forces and inflicting heavy Chinese casualties during the Battle of Mount Song.
+Cáncer and the others returned to the caravel that evening, and on board they found Juan Munos, a sailor who had been enslaved by the Indians years before but now escaped.
+See also Poptimism Music criticism Rockism and poptimismReferencesCategory:Pop music
+Since its launch, Sean John has enjoyed critical and commercial success with revenues now exceeding $525 million annually.
+John Thorn may refer to:John Thorn, a sports historian.
+ArchosauromorphsNew taxaPterosaursNew taxaSauropterygiansNewly named plesiosaursReferencesCategory:1840s in paleontologyPaleontology
+ReferencesCategory:1940 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:German male water polo playersCategory:Olympic water polo players of the United Team of GermanyCategory:Water polo players at the 1960 Summer OlympicsCategory:Sportspeople from Duisburg
+Other notes|-| 2009 || Kamen Rider × Kamen Rider W & Decade: Movie War 2010 || Ryu Terui || Cameo (credited as the Mysterious Man)|-| rowspan="2" | 2010 || Kamen Rider W Forever: A to Z/The Gaia Memories of Fate || Ryu Terui/Kamen Rider Accel |||-|Kamen Rider × Kamen Rider OOO & W Featuring Skull: Movie War Core || Ryu Terui/Kamen Rider Accel |||-| 2011 || Kamen Rider W Returns || Ryu Terui/Kamen Rider Accel || Accel portion |-| 2013 || Kamen Rider × Kamen Rider Gaim & Wizard: The Fateful Sengoku Movie Battle || Hideyoshi || Cameo|-| 2016 || Kamen Rider Drive Saga: Chaser || Ryu Terui/Kamen Rider Accel|-| 2020 || "Kamen Rider Zi-O Next Time: Geiz, Majesty" || Ryu Terui/Kamen Rider Accel|}TVPoor Man Bombīmen – Tetsu IgarashiHomeroom on the Beachside – Akihiro WadaHandsome ★ Suits: The TV – HimselfSazae-san 40th Anniversary Special Drama – Driving school studentsKamen Rider W – Ryu TeruiSaturday Premium: I'll Teach You How to Find a Dream!''
+Just before signing, guitarist Jason Letkiewicz left the band when he got a film making scholarship.
+He played professionally as a center and guard in the National Football League (NFL) for the New York Giants and the Philadelphia Eagles.
+The Eastern North America Rift Basins are a series of sediment-filled aborted rifts created by large-scale continental extension.
+Notable people with the surname include:Adebayo Akinfenwa, English professional footballerMoji Akinfenwa, elected senator
+He is well known for his unique style of breaststroke, which incorporates a kick that is much narrower than most other swimmers, including the biggest rival of his early international career, Kosuke Kitajima.
+ReferencesCategory:Moths described in 1915Category:Sparganothis
+Spinepeira is a genus of South American orb-weaver spiders containing the single species, Spinepeira schlingeri.
+It was published by the author under his own Tala Comics Publishing in 2001, and subsequently won a Manila Critics Circle National Book Award in September 2002.
+Sheykh Koli (, also Romanized as Sheykh Kolī; also known as Sheykh Kolá) is a village in Balatajan Rural District, in the Central District of Qaem Shahr County, Mazandaran Province, Iran.
+ReferencesCategory:Rivers of Skåne County
+Max Wertheimer first described this form of apparent movement in his habilitation thesis, published 1912, marking the birth of Gestalt psychology.
+: Andreas Utnem)Personnel Anine Kruse – vocalsBenedikte Kruse – vocalsAne Carmen Roggen – vocalsIda Roggen – vocalsTora Augestad – vocalsProductionAnders Edenroth – producerReferencesExternal links Pitsj official websiteCategory:Pitsj albumsCategory:2006 albumsCategory:Grappa Music albums
+The union was founded in 1921.
+In the November 6, 2012 general election, Delaney defeated Bartlett by 59%–38%, a 21-point margin.
+The grid would then be determined by averaging the total of the two best laps set by each of the drivers.
+Suda Bay was a 14.3 ton motor boat that was one of the first boats used for a commercial tourist operation in the Houtman Abrolhos.
+1991 censusAccording to the 1991 census, settlement of Melinovac had 43 inhabitants, which were ethnically declared as this:Austro-hungarian 1910 censusAccording to the 1910 census, settlement of Melinovac had 337 inhabitants which were linguistically and religiously declared as this:Literature Savezni zavod za statistiku i evidenciju FNRJ i SFRJ, popis stanovništva 1948, 1953, 1961, 1971, 1981. i 1991. godine.
+She won gold in the women's – 45kg event at the 2015 African Games in Brazzaville, Republic of Congo.
+Sir Lewis Cohen (23 December 1849 – 24 June 1933) was a businessman who was a Member of the South Australian Parliament for 10 years and served on the Adelaide City Council for 30 years.
+Gap Band IV is the sixth album (contrary to the title) by The Gap Band, released in 1982 on Total Experience Records.
+His death date is unknown.
+EQB may refer to: Equitable Bank, a Canadian commercial bank Izz ad-Din al-Qassam Brigades, the military wing of Hamas Puerto Rico Environmental Quality Board Psalm 133, Ecce quam bonum
+He graduated from Brown University with a BA summa cum laude in American Civilization.
+Michael Hussey is an Australian former international cricketer.
+Canadian entomologist, 135: 493–548, Hawkeswood, T.J.; Makhan, D.; Turner, J.R. 2009: Cardiophorus jacquelinae sp.
+The Temple of Monthu or Montou may refer to several temples dedicated to Monthu: Temple of Monthu (Hermonthis) Temple of Monthu (Karnak) Temple of Monthu (Medamud) Temple of Monthu (Tôd)
+The project is a part of the BETL (Bangalore Elevated Tollways Ltd), project as part of the National Highways Development Project and the Elevated Highways Project.
+Search without a warrantThe police in Scotland have powers under various pieces of legislation to search individuals for prohibited items, weapons and stolen property.
+Track listing "No Tomorrow (Holdin' Court of the Eve of the Apocalypse)" – 1:36 "Cheap Wine" – 2:08 "Eulogy for a Dream" – 2:27 "Anywhere But Here (Maybe Someday)" – 2:35 "Nothing for You" – 2:29 "Livin' in Exile" – 4:13 "Still Fucked Up" – 2:44 "Ace of Spades" (Lemmy, Phil Taylor, Eddie Clarke) – 4:03 All songs written by White Trash Rob unless statedTrack 8 was an unlisted and uncredited trackPersonnel Buddha (vocals) White Trash Rob (guitar, vocals) McFarland (bass) Mike Mahoney (drums) Recorded at The Outpost in Stoughton, Massachusetts, USA Produced by Jim Siegel and White Trash Rob Mastered by Henk Kooistra at 9West Mastering, Marlborough, Massachusetts, USAExternal linksVictory RecordsCategory:1999 albumsCategory:Blood for Blood albumsCategory:Victory Records albums
+It continued to use the name 'Scottish National Orchestra' until 1991, when it briefly used the title Royal Scottish Orchestra, before changing to its present name.
+The rear side is built of rubble fieldstone.
+A clubhouse was built in 1969, new dressing rooms were built in 1983 and floodlights erected in 1987.
+The author Gavin Maxwell is a notable former resident of the square – he lived at number 9 from 1961–65 – and it is often visited by admirers of his work.
+See also AS-19 LP-12 LP-44 LP-211ReferencesCategory:Serotonin receptor agonistsCategory:PyrazolesCategory:Phenethylamines
+Taylor's Alley residents rejected the government's apology.
+Anticachexia is a drug or effect that works against cachexia (loss of body weight and muscle mass).
+ReferencesCategory:Landsberg (district)
+When he was 17 years old he worked as an auxiliary in a Bethel Institution.
+Azo or AZO may refer to: Azo compound, a functional group and class of compounds Azo dye, a class of colored compounds containing the azo group A urinary tract analgesic also known as phenazopyridine Azo of Bologna, a medieval Italian jurist Azo of Iberia, a Georgian ruler An identification code for Kalamazoo/Battle Creek International Airport, an airport in Michigan Aluminium-doped zinc oxide, a transparent conducting film Alpha Zeta Omega, a pharmaceutical fraternity The NYSE ticker symbol for AutoZone Awing language, with the ISO 639 3 code "azo"See also Asio (disambiguation) ACO (disambiguation)
+Two of the survivors are rescued by Mary, a ship homeported in Liverpool, Lancashire, whilst the third is rescued by Mary, a ship homeported in Amlwch, Anglesey.
+ReferencescingulatumCategory:Insects described in 1809
+He has won multiple awards for his artworks.
+ReferencesExternal linksMichael Dunning at ESPNcricinfoMichael Dunning at CricketArchiveCategory:1941 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Sportspeople from Windsor, BerkshireCategory:People educated at Eton CollegeCategory:King's Royal Rifle Corps officersCategory:English cricketersCategory:Combined Services cricketersCategory:Dorset cricketers
+He died in Antwerp or Brussels.
+The current position of the wreck is unknown.
+Fred had a secret marriage to another actor, Vera in 1905.
+Osteolytic lesions can cause pain, increased risk of bone fracture, and spinal cord compression.
+ReferencesExternal linksEfteløt SkoleEfteløt Bygdelag Efteløt kirke (PDF-brosjyre hos Tunsberg bispedømme) Sigrid og Håkon Christie: Efteløt kirke i «Norges kirker»Category:Villages in Buskerud
+Design and developmentThe FF.27 was a two-seat floatplane of mixed construction which had a single NAG 6-cyl 135hp piston engine mounted in the center nacelle.
+Favillea is a genus of fungi within the Sclerodermataceae family.
+A swagger or swagga is a swaggering gait.
+FacilitiesThe airport resides at an elevation of above mean sea level.
+NameStehanja Vas was attested in historical sources in 1228 as Stoychornsdorf, in 1406 as Stocheindorff, and in 1460 as Stochendarff.
+Events in 2006 in anime.
+In the 2004 MTD took part in the People's Alliance, the third front in Tamil Nadu together with Janata Dal (United), Puthiya Tamizhagam and the Dalit Panthers of India.
+As with certain other nature and weather deities, the plural form Tempestates is common.
+The premier was on October 19, 2009, and delivered the highest ratings for a series on MTV Canada.
+This component lasts for 5 minutes and is followed by a recovery period.
+The women's 126 kilometres road race competition at the 2014 Asian Games was held on 29 September.
+SSTH Ocean Arrow is a super slender twin hull (SSTH) car ferry operating in Japan.
+Ignazio Danti (1536–1586), a versatile Dominican friar who was a mathematician, astronomer, mapmaker, artist, and university professor.
+Keyes was disappointed that the opportunity for a greater success had been lost by not including the additional cruisers properly into the plan as he had originally intended.
+Hopfgarten in Defereggen is a municipality in the district of Lienz in the Austrian state of Tyrol.
+References Category:American architectsCategory:Smith College alumniCategory:Massachusetts Institute of Technology alumniCategory:1928 birthsCategory:Living people
+He retired to become coach at Crystal Palace and later manager at Leyton Orient, Millwall and Brighton, whilst also having roles at Chelsea.
+Since its creation, the association has raised funds for La République En Marche!.
+The caves contain approximately 6,000 drawings, carvings and pictographs of birds, fish, reptiles, and human figures.
+Vasek Pospisil won the title after defeating Brayden Schnur 7–6(7–2), 3–6, 6–2 in the final.
+It is on a left tributary creek just west of the Kinogama River in the James Bay drainage basin.
+His grandfather Sahak, commonly known by his nome de guerre Aslan, fought in Western Armenia and Artsakh during the Armenian national liberation movement period and was the bodyguard of General Drastamat Kanayan.
+Pigalle may refer to:PlacesParis, FranceQuartier Pigalle, an area in Paris around the Place Pigalle, on the border between the 9th and the 18th arrondissementsPlace Pigalle, public square in the Quartier Pigalle at the foot of the Montmartre hillPigalle (Paris Métro), a station on lines 2 and 12 of the Paris MétroThéâtre Pigalle, was a theatre in Paris, located in the rue Pigalle in the ninth arrondissementElsewherePigalle Club, a supper club and live music venue in Piccadilly, LondonArtsPigalle (band), French rock band formed in 1982Pigalle (documentary), a 2006 documentary by Asa MaderPigalle (film), a 1994 film by Karim DridiPersonsAnne Pigalle, French chanteuse (singer) and multimedia artistJean-Baptiste Pigalle (1714–1785), French sculptorSabine Pigalle (born 1963), French photographer
+Avançon is a commune in the Hautes-Alpes department in southeastern France.
+It is now mostly in ruins.
+CastPercy Marmont as Mark SabreArthur Metcalfe as HapgoodSidney Herbert as TwyningWallace Kolb as Harold TwyningRiley Hatch as Reverend Sebastian FortuneRaymond Bloomer as Lord TybarLeslie King as HumpoGeorge Pelzer as Old BrightJim Tenbrooke as The CoronerAnn Forrest as Nona, Lady TybarMargaret Fielding as MabelGladys Leslie as Effie BrightDorothy Allen as High JinksEleanor Daniels as Low JinksVirginia Lee as Miss WinifredEugenie Woodward as Mrs. PerchRussell Sedgwick as Young PerchSee alsoIf Winter Comes (1947)1937 Fox vault fireReferencesExternal linksJacket cover of novel, with still from the filmCategory:1923 filmsCategory:American filmsCategory:American silent feature filmsCategory:Fox Film filmsCategory:Lost American filmsCategory:American films based on playsCategory:Films based on British novelsCategory:1923 drama filmsCategory:American drama filmsCategory:American black-and-white filmsCategory:Films directed by Harry MillardeCategory:Films set in EnglandCategory:1920s lost filmsCategory:Lost drama films
+REDIRECT Virginia State Route 6
+Later in the early 1930s Louise Drake Wright, a travelling American Baháʼí, visited the country on the instructions of Shoghi Effendi on three separate occasions: the summer of 1932 (Amsterdam); March–June 1933 (Amsterdam and The Hague); January–April 1934 (The Hague).
+She married actor James Wrighten in about 1769 in Birmingham, and the couple came to London to work in Drury Lane, where she quickly became successful as a singer and actress with Garrick and Sheridan at Drury Lane and Covent Garden.
+Luis Gamarra (born 23 July 1956) is a Bolivian sports shooter.
+Junior Armando Quitirna (born 1 January 2000) is a Bissau-Guinean professional footballer who plays for club Charlton Athletic.
+He was, however, elected Radcliffe Travelling Fellow on 4 December 1800, and spent the next three years in Germany, France, and Spain.
+At the time of the goal, the player can then try to work the flippers to get the ball to go through the MIKE BOSSY lights or gates.
+Myungshin University was a university located in Suncheon, Jeollanam-do, South Korea.
+Corenflos – electric guitar Sheryl Crow – vocals on "Love Without You" Eric Darken – percussion David Davidson – strings Aubrey Haynie – fiddle, mandolin Dave Haywood – background vocals and guitar on "Wagon Wheel" Wes Hightower – background vocals Mallary Hope – vocals on "I Will Love You Still" Mike Johnson – dobro, pedal steel guitar Charles Kelley – background vocals on "Wagon Wheel" Gayle Mayes – background vocals Greg Morrow – drums Gordon Mote – Hammond B-3 organ, piano, Wurlitzer Russ Pahl – pedal steel guitar Angela Primm – background vocals Michael Rhodes – bass guitar Frank Rogers – keyboards Darius Rucker – lead vocals Hillary Scott – background vocals on "Wagon Wheel" Russell Terrell – background vocals Ilya Toshinsky – acoustic guitar, mandolin Kris Wilkinson – stringsCharts and certificationsWeekly chartsYear-end chartsSinglesCertificationsReferencesCategory:2013 albumsCategory:Darius Rucker albumsCategory:Capitol Records albumsCategory:Albums produced by Frank Rogers (record producer)
+Jacobsville may refer to:PlacesJacobsville, Evansville, a neighborhood of Evansville, IndianaJacobsville, MarylandJacobsville, MichiganOtherJacobsville Finnish Lutheran ChurchJacobsville Sandstone
+Jupiter is a planet in the Solar System, named after Jupiter (mythology), the chief god of the Ancient Roman state religion.
+However, the title means little; seeing Li as a threat to their power, the politicians have made him liaison officer to DS9 and "promoted" Kira to Bajor, where they believe she can pose them no more danger.
+It elects four Councillors.
+ResultsNew records* Not a world record at the time of the competitionReferencesResultsWomen's 55 kg
+In the European Parliament elections of 1999, the party promoted the creation of the Confederation of Feminist Organizations, that won 28,901 votes (0.14%).
+He is also an active blogger as well as a field correspondent to the vlog Rocketboom.
+PopulationSee also Communes of the Aisne departmentReferences INSEECategory:Communes of AisneCategory:Aisne communes articles needing translation from French Wikipedia
+Dascyllus marginatus (marginate dascyllus or Red Sea dascyllus) is a damselfish from the Western Indian Ocean.
+Meanwhile, Railing searches for a way to save his brother.
+It tells the story of a weatherman in the midst of a mid-life crisis.
+ReferencesCategory:Battles involving the Ottoman EmpireBattle of GiurgiuCategory:Battles involving WallachiaCategory:Battles involving TransylvaniaCategory:Battles involving MoldaviaCategory:Military history of RomaniaCategory:1595 in the Ottoman EmpireCategory:1595 in EuropeCategory:Battles of the Long Turkish War
+ReferencesExternal links Category:1762 birthsCategory:1816 deathsCategory:People from Plaistow, Newham
+ReferencesNotesBibliography Papua New Guinea Association of Australia Library : SY KometExternal links OldWeather.org transcription of ship's logbooks December 1915 to December 1917Category:Sloops of the Royal Australian NavyCategory:1911 shipsCategory:Ships built in Bremen (state)Category:Captured ships
+The popular eleven-site campground features the Green Mountain Trail, which halfway circles the lake, offering more views of the mountain, and up to the top of Green Mountain, offering outstanding views of Mount Adams and its sheer, glaciated northwest face as well as Adams Glacier, the second largest glacier in the contiguous United States.
+Neuroimage.
+In 2019, Bendorf was announced as a faculty member at the 2019 Conference on Poetry at The Frost Place.
+It was described by Sergei Alphéraky in 1897.
+In a note discovered among his papers, J.R.R.
+In the mid-1980s, the school received a new library and classroom wing.
+HistoryThe predecessor of the school was founded in 1925, and it was chartered as a university in 1961.
+The 1889 Penn Quakers football team was an American football team that represented the University of Pennsylvania in the 1889 college football season.
+There were 421 housing units at an average density of 210.0/sq mi (81.3/km²).
+These are the unofficial lyrics of "Над Отчизной величаво!
+The track titled Lean from Virtu-oso's 3rd solo project, A V-man Joint, was featured on Series 6 of the BBC's sitcom, IdealV-Man produced a track entitled, Earth, Wind, Fire, Water on Stones Throw Records artist, Homeboy Sandman's 2016 album, Kindness for Weakness (2016).http://www.undergroundhiphop.com/homeboy-sandman-kindness-for-weakness/STH2369CD/Production creditsTakeover 2006 (Persona Bars album, 2006)"Black People" (feat.
+playersCategory:Stade de Reims playersCategory:AS Nancy playersCategory:US Concarneau playersCategory:Ligue 2 playersCategory:Championnat National playersCategory:Championnat National 2 playersCategory:Championnat National 3 players
+Middle yearsBetween 1914 and 1917, Jean Prouvé spent three years in the school of fine arts of Nancy.
+Alejandro Vences Villegas (born August 20, 1990 in Toluca, State of Mexico) is a professional Mexican footballer who currently plays for Potros UAEMReferencesExternal links Category:1990 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Mexican footballersCategory:Association football goalkeepersCategory:Unión de Curtidores footballersCategory:Club Necaxa footballersCategory:Tampico Madero F.C.
+One of the stories, "Queen of the North", was also published in The Penguin Anthology of Stories by Canadian Women.
+Environmental position Encenillo is one of the best adapted trees of the sub-páramo, growing between 2500–3300 meters of altitude.
+She won a gold medal at the 1991 World Curling Championships.
+Her research spans a wide range of Roman authors and operates on the interface between classical philology and modern thought.
+The task was such a challenge that the angels did not know whether they would be able to leave the kingdom of the light to live again and again in the darkness of the earth for so long.
+These are 1. legislative powers and 2. executive powers.
+They compete at the Caribbean Volleyball Championship.
+The Davis Committee was sub-committee of the UN Human Council.
+Outside, the characteristic bell tower, dating to 1048, rises to a height of 48 meters.
+Burundi competed at the 2013 World Aquatics Championships in Barcelona, Spain from 19 July to 4 August 2013.
+ReferencesExternal links Category:1989 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Montenegrin women's footballersCategory:Montenegro women's international footballersCategory:Women's association football midfielders
+He created later the Bazar du Grenier ("The Attic Bazar") channel which is including more diversified videos (including Playthoughs or cinema critics).
+REDIRECT talimogene laherparepvec
+It replaced Hot Car magazine, a magazine that focussed on the tuned & modified car scene.
+It was cancelled in 1976.
+The men's freestyle 65 kilograms is a competition featured at the 2019 World Wrestling Championships, and was held in Nur-Sultan, Kazakhstan on 19 and 20 September.
+ReferencesExternal links Category:1838 birthsCategory:1887 deathsCategory:Members of the United States House of Representatives from MissouriCategory:Prussian emigrants to the United StatesCategory:Union Army soldiersCategory:Missouri RepublicansCategory:School board members in MissouriCategory:Republican Party members of the United States House of RepresentativesCategory:19th-century American politiciansCategory:People from CologneCategory:Politicians from St. LouisCategory:Burials at Bellefontaine Cemetery
+After this Cullinan reformed Th' Faith Healers for some concerts in early 2006 but there has been no further activity under the Quickspace label.
+As the king followed Shahrasb's guidance, became cleansed of any sin and found Khvarenah.
+New Shuttle platform A single platform on the middle of a balloon loop.
+See alsoList of German television seriesExternal links Category:German documentary television seriesCategory:1980 German television series debutsCategory:1984 German television series endingsCategory:ZDF television seriesCategory:1980s German television seriesCategory:German-language television programs
+See alsoUsed carReferencesExternal linksCategory:Auto dealerships of the United StatesCategory:Automobile associations in the United StatesCategory:Trade associations based in the United StatesCategory:Used car market
+This fermentation influences the expression of many genes within the large intestine, which affect digestive function and lipid and glucose metabolism, as well as the immune system, inflammation and more.
+He directed 48 films in the 1910s and 1920s, including the 1915 The New Adventures of J. Rufus Wallingford featuring Oliver Hardy.
+During the late 1830s and early 1840s, he worked variously as editor of the Knoxville Times, the Knoxville Register, and a Whig Party paper, The Watch Tower.
+It preserves fossils dating back to the Devonian period.
+ReferencesCategory:Ionic liquidsCategory:Trifluoromethyl compounds
+José Nozari (date of birth unknown, died 4 September 1985) was a Mexican sports shooter.
+See also Glutamate transporter Solute carrier familyReferencesFurther readingCategory:Solute carrier family
+Elsa sneezes again and finally sees more tiny snowmen that she produced.
+Her first solo show at SOHO20, in December 1973, was favorably reviewed in Arts Magazine.
+Carlos Borja Morca (May 23, 1913 – November 25, 1992) was a Mexican basketball player who competed in the 1936 Summer Olympics.
+Mambesak inspired the formation of similar Papuan musical groups.
+Common f-numbers for a pinhole camera range from to or higher, whereas zone plates are frequently and lower.
+Tsao stepped down from the position in February 2017.
+Prunus walkeri is a species of plant in the family Rosaceae.
+Characters and Events Story discusses emotional experience of the starship crew members, who faced an interesting dilemma - to blow up the distant star in an immense scientific experiment with the consequences of destroying the planet which looks like a masterpiece of Nature or to leave the star system empty-handed losing the great opportunity of giving the Earth a key to the Universe.
+Ravindra Palleguruge (born 6 April 1985) is a Sri Lankan cricketer.
+Desolation Sound Marine Provincial Park is a provincial park in British Columbia, Canada, and is located approximately 32 km north of Powell River and 150 km north of Vancouver.
+CastGeorge Hernandez as Lorenzo ToddVal Paul as Warren ToddFred Montague as Dudley Phillips (*as Frederick Montague)Myrtle Gonzalez as Virginia PhillipsJack Curtis as Oracle JackEd Brady as Wilkins (*as Edward J. Brady)Frankie Lee as Bobby (*as Francis Lee)Harry Griffith as Ira Todd (as Harvey Griffith)ReferencesExternal linksGod's Crucible at IMDb.comCategory:1917 filmsCategory:American silent feature filmsCategory:American black-and-white filmsCategory:American filmsCategory:Films directed by Lynn ReynoldsCategory:Universal Pictures filmsCategory:American drama filmsCategory:1917 drama filmsCategory:Lost American filmsCategory:1910s lost filmsCategory:Lost drama films
+Built in 1913, the library was the first public building in Upland.
+{{Album ratings| rev1 = Allmusic| rev1Score = | rev2 = BBC| rev2Score = (mixed)| rev3 = BLARE Magazine| rev3Score = | rev4 = The Guardian| rev4Score = | rev5 = Pitchfork Media| rev5Score = (8.3/10)| rev6 = PopMatters| rev6Score = | rev7 = The Skinny| rev7Score = | rev8 = Snob's Music| rev8Score = (8.5/10)| rev9 = Spin| rev9Score = | rev10 = Sputnikmusic| rev10Score = }}Forgiveness Rock Record is the fourth studio album by Canadian indie rock musical collective Broken Social Scene, released by the Arts & Crafts record label on May 4, 2010.
+Hosted by series creator Cathy Rogers and Henry Rollins, the show was very similar to Rogers' last show, Scrapheap Challenge.
+*AP does not release post-NCAA tournament rankings.
+Rhegmatobius is a genus of beetles in the family Carabidae, containing the following species: Rhegmatobius agostini Jeannel, 1937 Rhegmatobius fiorii (Ganglbauer, 1900) Rhegmatobius gigas (Krausse, 1911) Rhegmatobius paganetti Magrini & Pavesi, 1998 Rhegmatobius quadricollis (Ehlers, 1883) Rhegmatobius solarii Magrini & Sciaky, 1995 Rhegmatobius strictus Baudi di Selva, 1891ReferencesCategory:Trechinae
+Iyengar Memorial Award was instituted in 1983 by his wife Mrs Rukmani Iyengar.
+And when, redeemed from sin and hell, With all the ransomed throng I dwell, My raptured song shall ever be, God has been merciful to me.
+CTW may refer to: Sesame Workshop, formerly known as the Children's Television Workshop (or CTW) CTW, the ICAO airline designator for Cargo Three (PanAir Cargo), Panama Context tree weighting (CTW), a lossless compression and prediction algorithm Change to Win Federation, a group of United States labor unions CentralWorld, a shopping mall complex in Thailand Carat (mass) total weight, related to diamond jewellery Computer Technology Workshop activity at the Joint Statistical Meetings Crypt The Warchild, an American rapper
+1977) Czech pole vaulter Štěpán Vachoušek (b.
+Track listing Mitch Mitchell's Terrifying Experience "Get Out Of My World" Haywood "Newbie Zimbo" Muler "Caesars Palace" Helium "Honeycomb" Longstocking "Teenage Angst At 27" Flesh Vehicle "Perfect State Of Grace" Harvey Danger "Carjack Fever" Purple Ivy Shadows "Just As Soon" Home "Chicago Demonstration" Pat Irwin "Sam's Wild Thing" Semi-Gloss "Stephanie's Boy" Illyah Kuryahkin "Sundial" Marble Valley "Weezer West" Elf Power "Temporary Arm" Cagney & Lacey "Time" Varnaline "lbs."
+Today, the symbol of the swallow can mean many different things.
+Pino signed with the Minnesota Twins before the 2014 season.
+CK – Canada - CANK
+Antigüedades célticas de la isla de Menorca ("Celtic Antiquities of the Island of Menorca") is a book written by Menorcan erudite Joan Ramis i Ramis (1746–1819).
+The architects based their plans on the Petit Trianon on the grounds of the Palace of Versailles in France.
+The Church ruins () in Dashaj në Stanajt, Tepelenë District, Albania are a Cultural Monument of Albania.
+Rodrigo Pernambuco (born October 16, 1996) is a Brazilian volleyball player who plays for Sporting CP.
+1993.
+Husayn and his Samanid allies then surrounded Zarang, which Khalaf had fled to after the battle.
+Niabella aurantiaca is a Gram-negative, strictly aerobic and non-spore-forming bacterium from the genus of Niabella which has been isolated from greenhouse soil from Yeoju inn Korea.
+It was sold to the Signal Iduna Group in 2000.
+Bell was confirmed by the United States Senate on June 10, 1933, and received his commission on June 13, 1933.
+From January 2004 through December 2007, he served as chairman of the Senate Committee on Economic Development and Committee on Tourism.
+Krosno is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Gorzkowice, within Piotrków County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland.
+A total of 9 RC-12P aircraft were delivered to ESL/TRW at Moffett Federal Airfield in late 1994 and 1995, and these airframes remained there in 1999.
+Nine thousand of those stories were received in the year 2000 (the archive started in 1994/5) The archivists add anywhere from 400 - 900 stories an update and the updates happen about twice a month.
+He was a member of the Quebec Liberal Party.
+LandmarksIstana Kampong Glam (Malay Heritage Centre)Masjid SultanRaffles HospitalParkview SquareBugis JunctionNational LibraryBras Basah ComplexRaffles HotelRaffles CityCHIJMESCity Hall MRT stationCapitol BuildingSaint Andrew's CathedralPeninsula PlazaFunanThe TreasurySupreme CourtParliament HouseCategory:Roads in SingaporeCategory:Downtown Core (Singapore)Category:KallangCategory:Rochor
+Associations and clubsRungius was made a member of The Camp Fire Club in 1896 (Runguis was in Germany when the club was founded but he was elected in absentia as one of the original twenty members).
+It is equipped with an arm-mounted auto-cannon and can electrocute its victims.
+New South Wales Country went on to win the next two titles, before Perth claimed their first Australian Rugby Shield in 2003.
+He also has credits as a film writer, music director and lyricist.
+He has never played in a competitive game for them, as his contract was terminated only 15 days later.
+The aerial lift consisted of two lines, and .
+It replaced the earlier church from 1508.
+Several ships of the Swedish Navy have borne the name Hercules:Hercules (1651), a 50-gun ship, broken up in 1689.
+External linksA revision of the genus Bryolymnia Hampson in North America with descriptions of three new species (Lepidoptera, Noctuidae, Noctuinae, Elaphriini)Category:Hadeninae
+Notable alumniMoses Malone -(1974) retired NBA player Ricky Hunley - (1980) retired NFL player Mark West - retired NBA player Blair Underwood - (1982) actor Jerome Mathis - (2001) NFL/AFL player Tyra Bolling - R&B ArtistTrey Songz - (2002) R&B Artist Avis Wyatt - Professional Euro-League Basketball player Kendall Langford - (2003) NFL playerByron E. Johnson - (1984) retired NFL playerQuinton Spain - (2011) Current NFL player Frank Mason - (2012) Current NBA playerReferencesCategory:Public high schools in VirginiaCategory:Schools in Petersburg, VirginiaCategory:Buildings and structures in Petersburg, Virginia
+It lies approximately 6 miles north of Kinross, to the west of the M90 motorway, one mile south of Glenfarg.
+John Kodwo Amissah (November 27, 1922 – September 22, 1991) was a Ghanaian prelate of the Catholic Church who served as Archbishop of Cape Coast from 1959 until his death.
+Conualevia is a genus of sea slugs, a dorid nudibranch, a shell-less marine gastropod mollusc in the family Dorididae.
+There were complaints from local residents that the increased traffic on the line was causing too much noise, and neighbors demanded that noise shields be built.
+Any power attained by those who seek equality is considered an illegitimate replacement.
+Steven Alfred (born 11 October 1997) is a Nigerian football player who plays in Armenia for FC Pyunik on loan from Sochi.
+He played college football at Purdue.
+BejaBeja
+Along the way the player picks up special items to restore health and magic, special weapons to help defeat enemies, and four magic spirits found in shrines to aid Prince Ali's mission.
+A local breed known as Gaonti was cross-bred with Gir, Kankrej and Ongole, with selection for the power and size needed to plough the sticky soil of the valleys of the Krishna River and its tributaries such as the Ghatprabha and the Malaprabha.
+CareerHe qualified for the Wimbledon men's doubles for the first time in June 2011 with Sean Thornley.
+Beaton left Cambridge without a degree in 1925.
+Major results2015 5th Road race, Pan American Cycling Championships 7th Overall Tour of the Gila2017 1st Raiffeisen Grand Prix 2nd Overall Joe Martin Stage Race1st Stage 1 (ITT) 7th Overall Tour of the Gila2018 1st Stage 3 Tour de Langkawi 1st White Spot / Delta Road Race2019 1st Road race, National Road Championships 4th Classic Loire AtlantiqueReferencesExternal linksCategory:Canadian male cyclistsCategory:Canadian people of Dutch descentCategory:Cyclists from British ColumbiaCategory:Sportspeople from Victoria, British ColumbiaCategory:1993 birthsCategory:Living people
+The Wichita City Carnegie Library Building located at 220 S. Main Street in Wichita, Kansas, Sedgwick County, Kansas, United States, is a Carnegie library built in 1915.
+It is found in Brazil.
+Salvatore Ferragamo: The Shoemaker of Dreams is an upcoming Italian documentary film directed by Luca Guadagnino.
+Community The village has numerous community facilities such as a community centre, a sports pavilion and a religious centre.
+He won a bronze medal at the 1963 World Table Tennis Championships in the Swaythling Cup (men's team event) with Ernst Gomolla, Dieter Michalek, Eberhard Schöler and Elmar Stegmann.
+William Neil McDonnell (July 15, 1876 – May 11, 1941) was an American sport shooter who competed in the 1912 Summer Olympics.
+Their common name is New Guinea bush frogs, although this name may also specifically refer to Asterophrys turpicola.
+John T. Cruickshank (1985)Lou Davies (1977)Robert T. Davies (2001)Jack Diamond (1977)H. Allan Dickenson (1981)Milt Dunnell (1991)Albert E. Dyment (2001)Nathaniel Dyment (2001)Leslie Ehrlick (1985)John Ferguson (2016)Donald (Buckets) Fleming (1992)Ian Fleming (2019)Cameron J.D.
+Hugh Mackay was then in Caithness, with Earl George; but the inhabitants of Caithness understanding that his brother, William Mackay was with the clan Gun at the conflict of Auldgown, they sought for Hugh Mackay to slay him; whereupon he was forced in all haste to flee secretly into Strathnaver, thereby to eschew their present fury.
+References Category:Populated places in Rostam County
+It is situated in the Cusco Region, Quispicanchi Province, Marcapata District.
+Abraham Sanders married Margaret Jayne, daughter of William Jayne, and Abraham Sanders was the administrator of William's will.
+The Lovebeast, Deadly fallout from years of orbital nuclear testing by the world's governments is slowly killing all life on Earth.
+ReferencesCategory:1978 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Polish women's basketball playersCategory:Olympic basketball players of PolandCategory:Basketball players at the 2000 Summer OlympicsCategory:Sportspeople from Kraków
+"Dizzy"'s music video shows Reeves trying unsuccessfully to get into the building where he and The Wonder Stuff will be performing.
+By November 1903, Hubbard was the commanding officer of the gunboat operating off the Isthmus of Panama.
+Let alone the individuals that occupy its town.
+August 10 – Two Indian Air Force MiG-21 fighters shoot down a Pakistan Naval Air Arm Breguet Atlantique maritime patrol aircraft, killing all 16 men aboard the Atlantique.
+The stadium holds 2,000 spectators.
+Current squadOut on loanCompetitionsOverallOverviewLa LigaLeague tableResults summaryResult round by roundMatchesSee also2015–16 La LigaReferencesExternal links Official website Category:Levante UD seasonsLevante UD
+ReferencessepultumCategory:Endemic fauna of Eswatini
+External linksCategory:Geological type localitiesCategory:Archaeological sites in BotswanaCategory:Monuments and memorials in BotswanaCategory:History of BotswanaReferences
+Her portrait was painted by Sébastien Bourdon, whose portrait she also painted.
+Svenskane are located south of Årefjellet and north of Bydalsfjellet.
+Category:Lists of non-fiction television series episodesCategory:Channel One (UK TV channel) television programmes
+CEO of Danske Bank On 19 December 2011 it was announced that Eivind Kolding will take over the position as CEO of Danske Bank, effective 15 February 2012.
+In the mid-1930s, she began offering hand-painted copies of studio photographs.
+Category:Political parties in Burkina FasoCategory:Sankarist political parties in Burkina Faso
+Zygmuntowo is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Wilczyn, within Konin County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland.
+Luís Fernando Lojudice Martinez or simply Martinez (born April 21, 1980 in Magda), is a Brazilian midfielder.
+CareerBorn in Buenos Aires, Pacheco began his career in the youth ranks of Lanús.
+ReferencesExternal linksType strain of Gordonia jinhuaensis at BacDive - the Bacterial Diversity Metadatabase https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/Gordonia-jinhuaensis-sp-nov-a-novel-actinobacteriu-Li-Jin/72b240ce0e6eb1c74a90a16b904fbb9dad2419ef] Category:MicrococcineaeCategory:Bacteria described in 2014
+The 2015 Milex Open was a professional tennis tournament played on green clay courts.
+Ghalesard_e bälä is another village, at an elevation of 2100 meters, that people migrate there each summer.
+Here, the project's WAC Corporal sounding rocket was the first U.S. rocket to break the 50-mile altitude mark, becoming the first sounding rocket to reach space.
+PlotA reporter marries a dying girl for her money, but she recovers from her illness so he plots her murder.
+ReferencesCategory:Populated places in the Boucle du Mouhoun RegionCategory:Nayala Province
+An Anti-Motor Torpedo Boat Battery (AMTB 925), with two 90 mm guns on mobile mounts, was also at Fort Adams by December 1943.
+Well of ZamzamIslamic tradition further holds that Hagar and Ishmael found a spring in Mecca, the Zamzam well, from which the Jurhum wanted to drink, and that after their ousting by the Khuza'a tribe, the Jurhum collected the treasures dedicated to the Kaaba and destroyed the Zamzam well so that nobody would find it.
+Miller served as Assistant Manager of Vancouver Whitecaps FC during the club's 2011 inaugural season in Major League Soccer.
+Michael Saunders (born 1986) is a Canadian Major League Baseball center fielder.
+In the declaration, the leaders reiterated their commitment expressed in the “Declaration of Bariloche” of August 28, 2009, to strengthen South America as a zone of peace, upholding the decision to refrain from resorting to the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity of another UNASUR State.
+Björneborg may be: the Swedish name of Pori, city of Finland Björneborg, Sweden
+Despite finishing in a tie for second at the B.C.
+Santa convinces Grincroch to stop making fun and picking on children and to learn to love the parents once he is adopted.
+ReferencesExternal links 2008-Boundary Red Mountain Mine by Washington State Department of Natural Resources 2005-Lone Jack Mine by Washington State Department of Natural ResourcesCategory:American gold rushes
+First non-classical proposalsIn 1949, Saul Winstein observed that 2-exo-norbornyl brosylate (p-bromobenzenesulfonate) and 2-endo-norbornyl tosylate (p-toluenesulfonate) gave a racemic mixture of the same product, 2-exo-norbornyl acetate, upon acetolysis (see Figure 6).
+The only question is whether Felbinger built the Palace according to his own plans, because the 3 blueprints which are kept in the Croatian History Museum are unsigned and undated.
+Branches unequal, simple, widely spaced on stem, about 1 cm long.
+Since Louisiana, the UCAPA law has only passed in states that were not informed of the Louisiana and New Jersey reports.
+Rahul also requests Abhi to marry Anu and keep her happy.
+Two network affiliates refused to air the episode—KJAC-TV in Port Arthur, Texas and WLIO in Lima, Ohio—citing objectionable content, although the decision drew little press attention, partly due to the small size of the markets in question.
+In the spoken language, the sound of "mahapran dhonni" is absent.
+Kietlice () is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Węgorzewo, within Węgorzewo County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland, close to the border with the Kaliningrad Oblast of Russia.
+Major activities included music concert and plays.
+The hindwings are brownish gray with a diffuse brown dot on the apex of each feather or at least on the first.
+At this time, he moved his offices into the new location of the black teacher training school, Coppin Normal School, (now Coppin State University) when it relocated to Lafayette Avenue and McCulloh Streets.
+A total of 43 C-23s were in service with the U.S. Army as of November 2008 (all US C-27 aircraft were transferred to the US Coast Guard in 2012 due to budget shortfalls).
+The Schoolmistress: Elvira Guerra-The forgotten female Olympic equestrian.
+The Dean of Lismore is based at The Cathedral Church of St Carthage, Lismore in the united Diocese of Cashel and Ossory within the Church of Ireland.
+The village is approximately 3 km from the beach, Karlstrup Strand, situated in the middle of Køge Bugt (The Bay of Køge).
+Li then returned to Hebei.
+College careerShead played college football at Portland State; he redshirted as a true freshman in 2007, and was named PSU Most Outstanding Defensive Back for the next four seasons.
+Boundaries The present Mid Worcestershire constituency, has existed almost intact since 1997, covers central and south-eastern parts of the county of Worcestershire.
+Main tributaries:Left: Okos, Voch, Vol;Right: El, MichaelReferences State Water Register of RussiaCategory:Rivers of the Komi Republic
+Sources World Gazeteer: Paraguay – World-Gazetteer.comCategory:Populated places in the Alto Paraná Department
+ManagementEugene Butman, General Director of ECSAlexander Domanitsky, Managing director of ECS's subsidiary in Germany and Nordic countries.
+The village has a Serb ethnic majority and its population numbering 3,317 people (2002 census).
+Additionally 750 Polish families were similarly settled around Sandomierz, but on worse fields.
+It applies to "designated projects" instead of "projects".
+Dwarf jasmine is a container plant or trained around topiary form.
+Protection is any measure taken to guard a thing against damage caused by outside forces.
+Thymopides laurentae is only known from a single hydrothermal vent on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge at a depth of ().
+Cast Raymond McKee - Billington Biggs Oliver Hardy - Bill Jones (as Babe Hardy) Frances Ne Moyer - Jane HudsonSee also List of American films of 1915 Oliver Hardy filmographyExternal linksCategory:1915 filmsCategory:American silent short filmsCategory:American filmsCategory:American black-and-white filmsCategory:1910s comedy filmsCategory:1910s short filmsCategory:American comedy filmsCategory:Comedy short films
+16th century), a Scotsman popularised in 19th century folkloreAiléan mac Ruaidhrí, (died ×1296), Norwegian and Scottish magnateReferencesCategory:Scottish Gaelic masculine given namesCategory:Scottish given names
+Phayao Provincial Administrative Organization Stadium or Phayao Province Stadium () is a multi-purpose stadium in Phayao Province , Thailand.
+ReferencesCategory:Populated places in Zangilan District
+Records albums
+Elhamma diakonoffi is a species of moth of the family Hepialidae.
+KPB may refer to: Communist Party of Belarus (Belarusian: Kamunistychnaya Partyia Belarusi) Communist Party of Belgium (Dutch: Kommunistische Partij van België) Communist Party of Bulgaria (Bulgarian: Komunisticeska Partija na Balgarija) Kampung Bandan railway station, Jakarta, Indonesia, station code Point Baker Seaplane Base, Alaska, US, IATA and LID codes
+Abdolabad (, also Romanized as ‘Abdolābād; also known as Abdollāhābād) is a village in Sharifabad Rural District, Sharifabad District, Pakdasht County, Tehran Province, Iran.
+The plane came nearer until it pretty much filled our windscreen.
+Colonies in this family consist of separate retractable polyps growing from a horizontal, encrusting stolon or basal membrane.
+& Carrozza F., 1989: Addition to the knowledge of the Mediterranean Mollusca of Israel and Sinai; Bollettino Malacologico 25 (1-4): 63-76External links To Biodiversity Heritage Library (1 publication) To CLEMAM To Encyclopedia of Life World Register of Marine SpeciesedgariiCategory:Gastropods described in 1896
+1945)1983 – Faye Emerson, American actress (b.
+The rural district has 5 villages.
+References Category:Populated places in North SumatraCategory:Cities in North Sumatra
+He was appointed Queen's Counsel in 1988, and sat as a judge of the High Court from 2009 until 2012, when he was appointed to the bench of the Court of Appeal.
+The Gurley Historic District is a historic district in Gurley, Alabama.
+In 826 he joined the revolt of Aissó and, routed, fled to Córdoba.
+ReferencesExternal linksCategory:German photographersCategory:1924 birthsCategory:2006 deathsCategory:People from Leipzig (district)
+Echium amoenum is a biennial or perennial herb indigenous to the narrow zone of northern part of Iran and Caucasus, Russia, where it grows at an altitude ranging from 60 to 2200 m. It is one of the important medicinal herbs in traditional Iranian medicine.
+Category:Football venues in Trinidad and TobagoCategory:United Petrotrin F.C.
+In April 1988, the station opened relays in Lae, Mt.
+Skoda replaced long-time sponsors Rothmans after 9 years and this year was the last time it was played at the Hexagon.
+It has been used as a chiral oil to separate enantiomers in chromatography.
+At the age of 28, I managed to show the world that I could be on top [...].
+The Mangusta used the concept of the Vallelunga chassis, significantly re-engineered to take a Ford 302 engine, all packaged with a body by Giorgetto Giugiaro.
+However, due to ongoing problems with their label Prospect Park, the album was delayed until 2018 after they reached negotiations with the label.
+"Song No.
+They reach Cattrokk light and there, the pirate's henchmen throw the lighthouse guard overboard.
+Many of the boys take their dates here because the lumber yard is so creepy for the girls.
+Modern Chipatá was the first settlement founded by conquistador Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada and his brother, on March 8, 1537, during his expedition of conquest.
+The Los Angeles Times attributed his death to "heartache and despair" due to lack of work.
+Up until 1927, the baths were the property of the municipality of Lari.
+Fans of Haden's Liberation Music Orchestra will find the simple accessibility either surprising or disappointing, but fans of classic, romantic jazz will find joy".
+It has two runways: 04/22 with an asphalt pavement measuring and 11/29 with a grass surface measuring .
+Michael Bond (1926–2017) was an English author.
+HERE supports the work of artists at all stages in their careers through fully produced works, commissions and subsidized performance and rehearsal space.
+She was recommissioned on 20 July 1956, Captain Thomas W. South, II, in command, and completed conversion six weeks later on 1 September.
+It is presumed that the baby's mother was under twenty years old and may have been native to the area, although it is possible that she was not.
+Knudsen published research articles on Friedrich Meinecke and Christoph Friedrich Nicolai.
+The following databases comply with the MIRAGE guidelines: UniCarb-DB that stores curated data and information on glycan structures and associated fragment data characterised by LC-Tandem_mass spectrometry strategies.
+Dead Eating and Decomposing The creatures like the Eagle, Vulture and the Wooden Wolf who are dependent on the service of the news service are called dead beasts .
+Krishnagiri Fort is one of the strongest forts in the Krishnagiri district and is now one of the monuments protected by the Archaeological Survey of India.
+Especially the men's race for the global title was very close.
+Club statisticsHonours São Paulo Campeonato Paulista: 2000 Paulista Copa do Brasil: 2005 Vitória Campeonato Baiano: 2008 Sport Campeonato Pernambucano: 2010External links CBFCategory:1975 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Brazilian footballersCategory:Sportspeople from São PauloCategory:Brazilian expatriate footballersCategory:Expatriate footballers in JapanCategory:Campeonato Brasileiro Série A playersCategory:Campeonato Brasileiro Série B playersCategory:Campeonato Brasileiro Série C playersCategory:J1 League playersCategory:J2 League playersCategory:Association football midfieldersCategory:Nacional Atlético Clube (SP) playersCategory:Nagoya Grampus playersCategory:Shonan Bellmare playersCategory:São Paulo FC playersCategory:Kawasaki Frontale playersCategory:Coritiba Foot Ball Club playersCategory:Joinville Esporte Clube playersCategory:C.D.
+Computers & Education, 45(3), 337–356.
+ConversionsThe Ark Centre was one of a number of conversion programs in Victoria, existing as an alternative to the existing Melbourne Beth Din program.
+His first film appearance was in the supporting role of Shaunty in Humpty Sharma Ki Dulhania (2014).
+Mordellistena robusticollis is a species of beetle in the genus Mordellistena of the family Mordellidae.
+Some of his works were translated into German, and one drawing manual was even translated into Japanese.
+End of careerIn September 2001, Sotomayor announced that he would end his career, following yet another positive drug test during a training camp in June, this time for the anabolic steroid nandrolone.
+Climate Alliance of European Cities with Indigenous Rainforest Peoples is a network of local authorities founded in 1990 and committed to the protection of the world's climate.
+Vinci resigned from his post at Cal Poly Pomona in December 1976.
+After a further 42 km the road reaches junction 21 of the Autovía A-231.
+The young player was signed by Série A side SE Palmeiras after some stunning performances for Fortaleza EC.
+Allaire may refer to:Allaire (surname), French surnameAllaire, Morbihan, commune of the Morbihan département, in FranceAllaire, New Jersey, an unincorporated community Allaire State Park, state park in the above communityAllaire Village, living history museum in Allaire State ParkAllaire Airport or Monmouth Jet Center, New JerseyAllaire Corporation, web development company acquired by Macromedia in 2001Allaire du Pont (1913–2006), American sportswoman and racehorse ownerAllaire Iron Works, a 19th-century marine engineering company in New York CityAllaire Peak, in the Prince Olav Mountains, AntarcticaAllaire Report, 1991, recommending a transfer of powers to QuebecAllaire Studios, a former recording studio in Glen Tonche, New York
+In September 2017, at the 2017 UCI Para-cycling Road World Championships, Pietermaritzburg, South Africa, she won bronze medals in the Women's Time Trial C4 and Women's Road Race C4.
+Five months later Atkinson provided another assessment of the cast, calling it "a performance that breeds vast respect for the theatre as a mature form of expression."
+He was drafted in the army and served at the Phu Bai Combat Base during the Vietnam War.
+From 1978 to 1994, he served as Chief of the Natural and Physical Resources Cost Estimates Unit in that division.
+Tteok () means a steamed, boiled, or pan-fried cake; usually a rice cake but in this case a pancake.
+The R class was an express passenger steam locomotive that ran on Australia's Victorian Railways (VR) from 1951 to 1974.
+It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2008.
+The mycological genus Laterradea (Raspail, 1824) is named after him.
+Vexillum volae is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk, in the family Costellariidae, the ribbed miters.
+Numerous militia groups had been organized, but the threat of nearly 2,000 veteran cavalrymen riding into downtown Cincinnati prompted Mayor George Hatch to release a proclamation calling out the local citizenry into action for the defense of Cincinnati.
+Jon Murphy may refer to:Sir Jon Murphy (police officer) (born 1958), British police officer, Chief Constable of MerseysideJon Murphy (fighter) (born 1977), American mixed martial arts fighterSee alsoJonathan Murphy (disambiguation)John Murphy (disambiguation)
+Newton is the name of some places in the U.S. state of Wisconsin:Newton, Manitowoc County, Wisconsin, a townNewton (community), Manitowoc County, Wisconsin, an unincorporated communityNewton, Marquette County, Wisconsin, a townNewton, Vernon County, Wisconsin, an unincorporated communityNewtonburg, Wisconsin, an unincorporated community
+ReferencesCategory:Danish 2nd Division seasons3Danish
+(1989) Can Tropical Rainforests Be Saved?
+Early lifeGrayson grew up in Miami as a young child and then moved to St.Simons, Georgia with his family.
+Anglers try for bass weighing up to , as well as perch, catfish, crappies, bluegill, and cutthroat trout.
+Publications NovelsA Matter of Conscience Second Sailor, Other SonLifeblood - Earthblood Down Street (Winner of the MER Prize for youth literature) Homeward Bound ("Book Chat" Southern African Children's Book of the Year 1991; MNET Prize shortlisted)Remember the Whales (J. P. van Der Walt prize)Travelogues A Mountaintop Experience ("Book Chat" South African Book of the Year 1993) The Geek in Shining Armour Of Roosters, Dogs and Cardboard Boxes The Boy who Counted to a Million (Sir Percy Fitzpatrick Prize winner; MNET Prize shortlisted)Outside the Walls Venture into Russia: Three Motorcycle Journeys A Pass too Far: Travels in Central Asia There are no Fat People in Morocco The Wakhan Corridor: A Motorcycle Journey into Central Asia The Plymouth/Dakar Old Bangers ChallengeTrans - Africa by Motorcycle: a Father's DiaryBy Motorcycle through Vietnam: Reflections on a Gracious PeopleReferencesExternal links Lawrence BransbyFacebook fan pageCategory:South African writersCategory:1951 birthsCategory:Living people
+It was not the only case which became popular and galvanized the imagination of the young population of the Indian Subcontinent, there were similar such cases.
+Journal of Research on the Lepidoptera 34: 147-153.
+CollegeVogelbach began his college career at East Carolina, where he was redshirted in 2004.
+Hey, That's My Fish!
+The organization aims to "call for respect of human rights and fundamental freedoms of all citizens and residents of the Arab world; defends any individual whose human rights are subjected to violations which are contrary to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights; endeavour, regardless of political considerations, to obtain release of detained or imprisoned persons, and seek relief and assistance for persons whose freedom is restricted in any way or who are subject to coercion of any kind because of their beliefs and political convictions, or for reasons of race, sex, colour or language; protest in cases where a fair trial is not guaranteed; provide legal assistance where necessary and possible; call for improvements in conditions of prisoners of conscience; work for amnesty of persons sentenced for political reasons."
+Projekt Herz (English: Project Heart) is the first EP by German deathcore band, We Butter the Bread with Butter.
+He also played baseball and could hit further than Dandoh.
+This legislation led to the Drum Creek Treaty of 1870 with the signing of this treaty completed on September 10, 1870.
+Myers suffered from interstitial cystitis throughout her career.
+Pedigree of Lemprière, of S. TrinityExternal links A painting of John Lemprière: Dr Lempriere Head master of Abingdon School, c. 1808Category:English classical scholarsCategory:Jersey writersCategory:1765 birthsCategory:1824 deathsCategory:Jersey AnglicansCategory:People educated at Reading SchoolCategory:English male writersCategory:Heads of Abingdon SchoolCategory:Staff of Abingdon School
+Several hire firms are based on the canal or its connecting waterways.
+Bill LaRochelle (12 July 1926 – 29 April 2011) was a Canadian sprinter.
+Joseph D. Lohman (January 31, 1910 – April 26, 1968) was an American educator and politician.
+1:Localities AlbrightAspen Ridge EstatesAspen Ridge SubdivisionBad HeartBear LakeBrainardBredinBuffalo LakeClairmont Trailer CourtEldoes Trailer Park (designated place)FitzsimmonsFlying ShotFlyingshot Lake Settlement (designated place and settlement)Glen LeslieGrande Prairie AerodromeGundyHalcourtHayfieldHazelmereHermit LakeHilltop EstatesHinton TrailLocalities continuedHockey EstatesHomesteadJ D Barr SubdivisionJ.D.
+He was nominated for a Daytime Emmy Award in 1985 and 2002, and won in 2009.
+When no interest was shown in the aircraft domestically, Avia undertook a promotional tour where the aircraft was demonstrated in eighteen European countries, but this did not result in any sales either and only a few were built.
+At the 2006 census, its population was 26, in 7 families.
+The show was about a rock and roll band consisting of violent, sociopathic pieces of fruit.
+Among the most recognized groups of the Soviet era were Coldünya, Yuxu, Eksulap and Khurramids.
+From 1988 to 2000, he served as its CEO.
+WKZX was a radio station broadcasting on 950 AM in Presque Isle, Maine, that operated from 1932 to 1991.
+ReferencessexpunctaCategory:Moths described in 1894Category:Moths of Asia
+The album itself earned RIAA gold certification for sales of 500,000 copies.
+The Krishna Upanishad as well as Swami Karpatri (1907–1982) in his Shri Vishnu Tattva equate the sword to the god Shiva.
+Males guard and aerate the eggs.
+The fifth season of the Cuban National Series saw two simultaneous expansions: in the number of teams and the number of games played.
+Jan Klaassens (4 September 1931 – 12 February 1983) was a Dutch football player who played for VVV-Venlo and Feyenoord, as well as the Netherlands national team.
+She is married to former swimmer Daisuke Hosokawa.
+Chandler made two interstate appearances with Western Australia as a full-forward in 1938 and a further two as full-back the following year.
+It was the first of three popular papers to be created for those who only had the leisure to read on Sundays.
+Bewitched by the beauty and kindness of Xi Shi and Zheng Dan, Fuchai forgot all about his state affairs and at their instigation, killed his best advisor, the great general Wu Zixu.
+Category:Government of SikkimCategory:Water management authorities in India
+The tower reaches 18.3 meters high.
+Sa.
+She discovers the money and sets the car aflame.
+E2F-associated phosphoprotein is a protein that in humans is encoded by the EAPP gene.
+If the metropolitan area is designated as an air quality non-attainment or maintenance area, thenprotect air quality: transportation plans, programs, and projects must conform with the air quality plan, known as the “state implementation plan” (SIP), for the state within which the UZA lies.
+They arrived with the new governor, Brisay de Denonville who was charged with controlling the Indians and the territory belonging to France.
+References ICategory:Fish described in 1983Category:Taxa named by Ronald Fricke
+ReferencesThis article was initially translated from the Czech Wikipedia.
+ICB’s objectives are:• to promote bookkeeping as a profession• to increase recognition for bookkeeping as an integral part of the financial profession• to promote education and learning• to enable the achievement of a recognised bookkeeping qualification• to provide a trusted benchmark for the profession• to improve the career prospects of ICB membersGlobal presence Since its inception in the UK, ICB has set up international offices and agents in 19 other countries, with offices in Australia since 2002, Russia and other countries in eastern Europe and central Asia (trading as ICFM) since 2006, Ghana since 2009, India since 2010, and Ireland since 2013.
+Maximum height above river bed: .
+This would result in a total of 127 medals earned during the 2003 Games, instead of 128.
+Tim Lane may refer to:Tim Lane (journalist) (born 1951), Australian journalist and sports commentatorTim Lane (rugby union) (born 1959), Australian rugby union coach and playerTim Lane (Australian rules footballer) (1888–?
+It was released on February 26, 2013.
+Here, MetLife Stadium, home field of the New York Giants and New York Jets of the National Football League, and the Meadowlands station at the terminus of NJ Transit's Meadowlands Rail Line is on the west side of the road, while the closed Meadowlands Arena and the American Dream Meadowlands shopping and entertainment complex are on the east side of the road.
+Species Syntheta novaguinensis (Bethune-Baker, 1906) Syntheta xylitis Turner, 1902ReferencesNatural History Museum Lepidoptera genus databaseSyntheta at funetCategory:Hadeninae
+It lies approximately south-west of Czarnocin, north of Kazimierza Wielka, and south of the regional capital Kielce.
+Services and publicationsTo achieve its mission, the NA publishes historical books and research studies which serve as valuable reference and source material for students and researchers specializing in the history and heritage of the UAE and the Persian Gulf region.
+Pevsner cites the Norman arcades and narrow aisles characteristic of that era and "never enlarged to satisfy later medieval taste."
+He defeated five other candidates to win easily.
+The recognition of the sovereign authority of the Scottish Kings was connected to the influence of the ius commune in Scots law.
+It also integrates with the smart card subsystem by including a Base CSP module which implements all the standard backend cryptographic functions that developers and smart card manufacturers need, so that they do not have to write complex CSPs.
+Dutywa Stadium is a multi-use stadium in Dutywa, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
+References Category:1985 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:English female rowersCategory:British female rowersCategory:Sportspeople from GloucesterCategory:Rowers at the 2008 Summer OlympicsCategory:Rowers at the 2012 Summer OlympicsCategory:Olympic rowers of Great BritainCategory:World Rowing Championships medalists for Great Britain
+1,488 eighteenth and seventeenth century prints found their way in 1874 into the British Museum's collection.
+A year later, they made plans to take up permanent residence in Laguna Beach where they both were active with the local art association, but instead moved back to downtown Chicago where he continued his work.
+Artyom Dorofeyev (; born June 20, 1992) is a Russian professional ice hockey player.
+If we know that the number of elements of thatend up in is and this number is bigger than then we should keep looking for the element of rank in ; otherwise we should look for the element of rank in .
+Part Two (Part II) of the Constitution of Albania is the second of eighteen parts.
+(2000).
+Its population was 166 as of the 2010 census.
+Sülekler, Korkuteli is a village in the District of Korkuteli, Antalya Province, Turkey.
+He raised $100,000 of his $500,000 budget and was endorsed by the United Mine Workers of America, the first time the union had backed an independent.
+The game was designed to be best played in a single sitting, and he suggested that investigating too much of the game before playing it would cause the experience to be spoiled, comparing it to the games Journey and Firewatch.
+The Lodger may refer to:Literature and films The Lodger (novel), a 1913 horror novel about a Jack the Ripper-like serial killer by Marie Adelaide Belloc Lowndes The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog, a 1927 British silent film directed by Alfred Hitchcock and based on the novel The Lodger (1932 film), a 1932 British thriller film based on the novel The Lodger (1944 film), a 1944 American horror film about Jack the Ripper based on the novel The Lodger (2009 film), a 2009 American mystery/thriller film based on the novelOther uses The Lodger (band), an indie pop band from Leeds, England The Lodger (opera), a 1960 opera by Phyllis Tate based on the 1913 novel "The Lodger", Alfred Hitchcock associated radio adaptation for CBS that served as the first episode of Suspense "The Lodger" (Doctor Who), an episode of the British science fiction television series Doctor WhoSee also "The Lodgers", song The Lodgers (film) Lodger (disambiguation)
+Found in south-eastern China I. m. loquax- Deignan, 1940: Found in north-central and north-eastern Thailand, southern Laos I. m. griseiventer- (Robinson & Kloss, 1919): Found in southern Vietnam I. m. canescens- Riley, 1933: Originally described as a separate species.
+The next year, he drove the #64 Schneider Chevy to three top-ten finishes.
+Republican nomination processPresidential debate in Milwaukee, November 2015The Republican Party held its fourth presidential debate on November 10, 2015, in Milwaukee, at the Milwaukee Theatre.
+ReferencesCategory:StenoderiniCategory:Beetles described in 1959
+Truro station may refer to:Truro railway station, in Truro, Cornwall, England.
+As Patoski states, “His next two albums, Laying My Burdens Down and Willie Nelson and Family, were familiar stories: a new cast of studio players...good cover songs...interesting concepts...and lousy sales.
+David Arturo Alcántar García (born 19 April 1989) is a former Mexican footballer who played as a midfielder.
+Thomas Duppa was an English politician.
+The Kirkee War Cemetery is a cemetery in Khadki (formerly named Kirkee), a town near Pune (formerly Poona) in Maharashtra, India.
+Rotela is a surname.
+During his time within the Roman Catholic Church, he held many posts, ranging from the chaplain of a convent school to chairman of the Archdiocese of Southwark's Justice and Peace Coordinating Committee.
+playersCategory:Scottish Football League playersCategory:Scottish Premier League players
+Duke of Magenta (won the Travers Stakes in 1878...as well as the Withers Stakes, the Preakness Stakes, and the Belmont Stakes) General Duke (won Belmont Stakes) Harry Bassett (won Belmont Stakes and 14 consecutive races) Kentucky (owned by William Travers himself), the first Travers Stakes winner in 1864 Kingfisher (Belmont Stakes) Neecy Hale (Kentucky Oaks) Shirley (Preakness Stakes 1876) Tom Bowling (Travers Stakes, 1873) Tom Ochiltree (Preakness Stakes 1875)Lexington's three Preakness Stakes winners equaled the record of another great sire, Broomstick.
+Batheulima abbreviata is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the genus Batheulima, a minor genus within the family Eulimidae.
+The watershed receives about 46.8 in/year of precipitation, has a wetness index of 429.16 and is about 22% forested.
+Human Resources provides human resources support for DCA employees.
+HistoryWhite Breast Township was organized in 1851.
+At the 2006 census, its population was 24, in 12 families.
+Chryston Parish Church serves the villages of Chryston, Moodiesburn and Muirhead and has churches in Chryston and Moodiesburn.
+In a 2007 study, Tsai trained mice to find and remember a platform submerged in a murky pool.
+External linksCompany homepage of BlüthnerGerman Piano ImportsBluthner Pianos LondonCategory:1824 birthsCategory:1910 deathsCategory:People from MeuselwitzCategory:Piano makers
+CareerChurch started in the entertainment business as a radio personality and doing voice-over work.
+HistoryThe company was founded in 1958 by the "Diel und Faun" company, initially operating several jet and propeller aircraft and helicopters.
+In mass media Recurring character in the popular web series "Internet Comment Etiquette with Erik"Secondary sources Nerman, B. Det svenska rikets uppkomst.
+It lies approximately south-west of Konopnica, north-east of Wieluń, and south-west of the regional capital Łódź.
+ReferencesExternal linksGlaxoa at Index FungorumCategory:TubeufiaceaeCategory:Monotypic Dothideomycetes genera
+His enlistment is credited to the state of Indiana.
+The park is around in size and contains a long tree-lined access avenue, gardens of exotic species, a greenhouse, a nursery, a folly designed for children in the shape of a castle, fountains, sculpture, artificial caves and an aviary.
+Gürgenli (literally "(place) with hornbeams") is a Turkish place name that may refer to the following places in Turkey: Gürgenli, Gerger, a village in the district of Gerger, Adıyaman Province Gürgenli, Sason, a village in the district of Sason, Batman Province
+References Category:Year of birth missingCategory:Year of death missingCategory:Mayors of GrimsbyCategory:English lawyersCategory:English MPs 1407Category:Members of the Parliament of England for Great GrimsbyCategory:English MPs 1411
+The condition affects both adrenal and gonadal androgen biosynthesis and results in male pseudohermaphroditism.
+Further from the road stand two English bank barns, joined together in an L shape.
+It is the home of the Swiss Indoors men's tennis tournament.
+ReferencesCategory:1924 birthsCategory:2013 deathsCategory:Mexican men's basketball playersCategory:Olympic basketball players of MexicoCategory:Basketball players at the 1952 Summer Olympics
+JanuaryFebruaryMarchAprilMayJuneJulyAugustSeptemberOctoberNovemberDecemberUnknown dateSee also List of World War II ships1942Ship launches
+Literature Родопско горје, Опћа енциклопедија Југославенског лексикографског завода - Загреб.
+Cox Nunatak is a nunatak, high, standing south of Rankine Rock in the northeastern Dufek Massif, Pensacola Mountains.
+The FA England Awards is an award ceremony hosted by The Football Association.
+They differ in what self refers to on the receiving object (formally, in the evaluation environment of the method on the receiving object): in delegation it refers to the sending object, while in forwarding it refers to the receiving object.
+The team competed as an independent under head coach Charles P. Nott and compiled a record of 0–3–2.
+That year he played in Wimbledon and Paris, and was ranked No.
+2015) (attempting to distinguish Popcorn Time from "other software programs" by asserting, that Popcorn Time has no legitimate purposes; the only evidence cited in support of this claim was the "Popcorn Time" Wikipedia article).
+CareerThe young Dudu was considered a promising talent when playing in the junior squads of Flamengo, but was not rewarded with a contract and ended up with Corinthians Alagoano (not to be confused with the more illustrious Corinthians of São Paulo).
+It flows into the Arve in Chamonix.
+His former home that he built in 1852, Palmer House, was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1987, and is now operating as a restaurant.
+10 races produced a winner in the first round and the remaining three in the second round.
+San Juan de Salinas District is one of fifteen districts of the province Azángaro in Peru.
+Judge McCully was married on May 26, 1866, to Ellen Harvey, of Kenduskeag, Maine, who survived him, with an adopted child.
+ReferencesporsildiorumCategory:Flora of RussiaCategory:Flora of Subarctic AmericaCategory:Plants described in 1948
+GeographyLancaster Park is located at .
+They have also received substantial radio coverage as well live radio sessions, such as with John Kennedy of XFM.
+Rolling Stone listed 100 Proof as one of the five best country albums of 2012, and called Pickler "an unlikely trad-country heroine.
+Highland is an unincorporated community in Pulaski County, in the U.S. state of Virginia.
+A specification of the organ can be found on the National Pipe Organ Register.
+2007 Continental Championships may refer to:African Championships Multisport: 2007 All-Africa GamesAsian Championships Athletics: 2007 Asian Athletics Championships Baseball: 2007 Asian Baseball Championship Football (soccer): 2007 AFC Asian Cup Football (soccer): 2007 AFC Champions League Multisport: 2007 Asian Indoor Games Multisport: 2007 Asian Winter Games Weightlifting: 2007 Asian Weightlifting ChampionshipsEuropean Championships Artistic gymnastics: 2007 European Artistic Gymnastics Championships Athletics: 2007 European Indoor Championships in Athletics Basketball: EuroBasket 2007 Figure skating: 2007 European Figure Skating Championships Football (soccer): 2006–07 UEFA Champions League Football (soccer): 2006–07 UEFA Cup Football (soccer): 2007 UEFA European Under-17 Championship Football (soccer): 2006–07 UEFA Women's Cup Futsal: 2007 UEFA Futsal Championship 2007 European Rowing Championships Show jumping: 2007 European Show Jumping Championship Volleyball: 2006–07 CEV Champions League Volleyball: 2006–07 Women's CEV Champions LeagueOceanian Championships Football (soccer): 2007 OFC Champions League Football (soccer): 2007 OFC Women's ChampionshipPan American Championships / North American Championships Football (soccer): 2007 Caribbean Cup Football (soccer): 2007 CONCACAF Champions' Cup Football (soccer): 2007 CONCACAF Gold Cup Multisport: 2007 Pan American GamesSouth American Championships Athletics: 2007 South American Championships in Athletics Football (soccer): 2007 Copa AméricaSee also 2007 World Championships (disambiguation) 2007 World Junior Championships (disambiguation) 2007 World Cup (disambiguation) Continental championship (disambiguation)Category:Continental championships
+References Category:1944 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Canadian economistsCategory:Canadian women economistsCategory:Canadian feministsCategory:Canadian people of American descentCategory:Knights of the National Order of Quebec
+A dramatic effect used in horror or comedy cinematography is a key light illuminating the face from below.
+Painted scenes are placed on either the body of the vessel or the stand.
+The Prasad Bidapa Fashion Week Bangalore was held in February 2013 for the first time.
+A segment from the 1967 CBS News Special Report television broadcast The Tenement portrays the work of a local rag picker in Chicago.
+Grew.
+St. John's departed Halifax on 16 January 2018 for deployment to the Mediterranean Sea as part of Operation Reassurance.
+Because of the nature of a hold, the award is typically awarded to middle relievers or setup pitchers.
+ReferencesCategory:AcaloleptaCategory:Beetles described in 1958
+The range is considered to be a sub-range of the Jarbidge Mountains.
+Popular country music stars have performed at the festival including Garth Brooks, Tim McGraw, Reba McEntire, Neal McCoy, Brooks and Dunn, Jake Owen, Kellie Pickler, Lee Brice, and Toby Keith.
+TeamsBracket{{48TeamBracket| RD1= First Round| RD2=Second Round| RD3=Third Round| RD4=Quarterfinals| RD5=Semifinals(Women's College Cup)Spartan StadiumSan Jose, California| RD6=Championship(Women's College Cup)Spartan StadiumSan Jose, California| group1=| group2=| group3=| group4=| seed-width=20| team-width=160| score-width=25| RD1-seed01=| RD1-team01=BYU| RD1-score01=2| RD1-seed02=| RD1-team02=California| RD1-score02=0| RD1-seed03=| RD1-team03=San Diego| RD1-score03=2| RD1-seed04=| RD1-team04=San Diego State| RD1-score04=1| RD1-seed05=| RD1-team05=Dartmouth| RD1-score05=3| RD1-seed06=| RD1-team06=Colgate| RD1-score06=0| RD1-seed07=| RD1-team07=Boston College| RD1-score07=4| RD1-seed08=| RD1-team08=Fairfield| RD1-score08=1| RD1-seed09=| RD1-team09=Dayton| RD1-score09=3| RD1-seed10=| RD1-team10=Evansville| RD1-score10=2| RD1-seed11=| RD1-team11=Cal Poly| RD1-score11=2| RD1-seed12=| RD1-team12=Fresno State| RD1-score12=1| RD1-seed13=| RD1-team13=Texas A&M| RD1-score13=2| RD1-seed14=| RD1-team14=Montana| RD1-score14=1| RD1-seed15=| RD1-team15=Minnesota| RD1-score15=2| RD1-seed16=| RD1-team16=Eastern Michigan| RD1-score16=0| RD1-seed17=| RD1-team17=Hartford| RD1-score17=2| RD1-seed18=| RD1-team18=Princeton| RD1-score18=1| RD1-seed19=| RD1-team19=James Madison| RD1-score19=1| RD1-seed20=| RD1-team20=Penn| RD1-score20=0| RD1-seed21=| RD1-team21=SMU| RD1-score21=4| RD1-seed22=| RD1-team22=Baylor| RD1-score22=0| RD1-seed23=| RD1-team23=Maryland| RD1-score23=6| RD1-seed24=| RD1-team24=Long Island| RD1-score24=0| RD1-seed25=| RD1-team25=Marquette (4OT)| RD1-score25=3| RD1-seed26=| RD1-team26=Missouri| RD1-score26=2| RD1-seed27=| RD1-team27=Michigan| RD1-score27=5| RD1-seed28=| RD1-team28=Wright State| RD1-score28=0| RD1-seed29=| RD1-team29=Duke| RD1-score29=3| RD1-seed30=| RD1-team30=Elon| RD1-score30=1| RD1-seed31=| RD1-team31=Central Florida| RD1-score31=1| RD1-seed32=| RD1-team32=Furman| RD1-score32=0| RD2-seed01=*| RD2-team01=Santa Clara | RD2-score01=3| RD2-seed02=| RD2-team02=BYU| RD2-score02=0| RD2-seed03=*| RD2-team03=UCLA (OT)| RD2-score03=2| RD2-seed04=| RD2-team04=San Diego| RD2-score04=1| RD2-seed05=*| RD2-team05=Connecticut | RD2-score05=3| RD2-seed06=| RD2-team06=Dartmouth| RD2-score06=0| RD2-seed07=*| RD2-team07=Harvard| RD2-score07=0| RD2-seed08=| RD2-team08=Boston College| RD2-score08=1| RD2-seed09=*| RD2-team09=Notre Dame| RD2-score09=5| RD2-seed10=| RD2-team10=Dayton| RD2-score10=1| RD2-seed11=*| RD2-team11=Stanford| RD2-score11=3| RD2-seed12=| RD2-team12=Cal Poly| RD2-score12=1| RD2-seed13=*| RD2-team13=Kentucky (OT)| RD2-score13=2| RD2-seed14=| RD2-team14=Texas A&M| RD2-score14=3| RD2-seed15=*| RD2-team15=Nebraska| RD2-score15=5| RD2-seed16=| RD2-team16=Minnesota| RD2-score16=0| RD2-seed17=*| RD2-team17=Florida| RD2-score17=0| RD2-seed18=| RD2-team18=Hartford| RD2-score18=1| RD2-seed19=*| RD2-team19=Virginia| RD2-score19=3| RD2-seed20=| RD2-team20=James Madison| RD2-score20=1| RD2-seed21=*| RD2-team21=USC| RD2-score21=0| RD2-seed22=| RD2-team22=SMU (2OT)| RD2-score22=1| RD2-seed23=*| RD2-team23=Penn State| RD2-score23=3| RD2-seed24=| RD2-team24=Maryland| RD2-score24=2| RD2-seed25=*| RD2-team25=Clemson| RD2-score25=1| RD2-seed26=| RD2-team26=Marquette| RD2-score26=0| RD2-seed27=*| RD2-team27=Wake Forest| RD2-score27=1| RD2-seed28=| RD2-team28=Michigan| RD2-score28=0| RD2-seed29=*| RD2-team29=William & Mary| RD2-score29=3| RD2-seed30=| RD2-team30=Duke| RD2-score30=0| RD2-seed31=*| RD2-team31=North Carolina| RD2-score31=8| RD2-seed32=| RD2-team32=Central Florida| RD2-score32=0| RD3-seed01=| RD3-team01=Santa Clara| RD3-score01=7| RD3-seed02=| RD3-team02=UCLA| RD3-score02=0| RD3-seed03=| RD3-team03=Connecticut| RD3-score03=5| RD3-seed04=| RD3-team04=Boston College| RD3-score04=0| RD3-seed05=| RD3-team05=Notre Dame| RD3-score05=1| RD3-seed06=| RD3-team06=Stanford| RD3-score06=0| RD3-seed07=| RD3-team07=Texas A&M| RD3-score07=0| RD3-seed08=| RD3-team08=Nebraska| RD3-score08=1| RD3-seed09=| RD3-team09=Hartford (2OT)| RD3-score09=3| RD3-seed10=| RD3-team10=Virginia| RD3-score10=2| RD3-seed11=| RD3-team11=SMU| RD3-score11=0| RD3-seed12=| RD3-team12=Penn State| RD3-score12=5| RD3-seed13=| RD3-team13=Clemson (3-1 PK)| RD3-score13=0| RD3-seed14=| RD3-team14=Wake Forest| RD3-score14=0| RD3-seed15=| RD3-team15=William & Mary| RD3-score15=1| RD3-seed16=| RD3-team16=North Carolina| RD3-score16=5| RD4-seed01=| RD4-team01=Santa Clara| RD4-score01=3| RD4-seed02=| RD4-team02=Connecticut| RD4-score02=0| RD4-seed03=| RD4-team03=Notre Dame (4-3 PK)| RD4-score03=1| RD4-seed04=| RD4-team04=Nebraska| RD4-score04=1| RD4-seed05=| RD4-team05=Hartford| RD4-score05=0| RD4-seed06=| RD4-team06=Penn State| RD4-score06=2| RD4-seed07=| RD4-team07=Clemson| RD4-score07=0| RD4-seed08=| RD4-team08=North Carolina| RD4-score08=3| RD5-seed01=| RD5-team01=Santa Clara| RD5-score01=0| RD5-seed02=| RD5-team02=Notre Dame| RD5-score02=1| RD5-seed03=| RD5-team03=Penn State| RD5-score03=0| RD5-seed04=| RD5-team04=North Carolina| RD5-score04=2| RD6-seed01=| RD6-team01=Notre Dame| RD6-score01=0| RD6-seed02=| RD6-team02=North Carolina| RD6-score02=2}}All-tournament teamLaKeysia Beene, Notre DameSusan Bush, North Carolina (Most Outstanding Offensive Player)Lorrie Fair, North Carolina''' (Most Outstanding Defensive Player)Meredith Florance, North CarolinaJen Grubb, Notre DameJena Kluegel, North CarolinaKim Patrick, North CarolinaAnne Remy, North CarolinaNikki Serlenga, Santa ClaraDanielle Slaton, Santa ClaraJenny Streiffer, Notre DameChristie Welsh, Penn StateSee also NCAA Division II Women's Soccer Championship NCAA Division III Women's Soccer ChampionshipReferencesNCAACategory:NCAA Women's Soccer ChampionshipCategory:1999 in sports in California
+Peloquin ran for the Abolitionist Party in the 1993 Canadian federal election.
+The union was founded in 1899 to represent administrative staff of Danish State Railways, and it affiliated to the Danish Confederation of Trade Unions (LO).
+Broomella is a genus of fungi in the family Amphisphaeriaceae; according to the 2007 Outline of Ascomycota, the placement in this family is uncertain.
+He made a number of short films before directing his first feature-length movie in 2017, titled Vent du Nord (North Wind).
+ReferencesCategory:Living peopleCategory:Place of birth missing (living people)Category:Year of birth missing (living people)Category:Harvard Law School alumniCategory:Bowling Green State University alumniCategory:American women judgesCategory:Judges of the Superior Court of the District of ColumbiaCategory:21st-century American judges
+He taught at the Blue Hill Consolidated School, the University of Maine at Orono and the University of Maine at Machias.
+In 2017 the Agency change the name to Polish Investment and Trade Agency (PAIH)Role Aside from the promotion of Poland for economic investment, PAIH also assists investors to overcome the administrative and legal hurdles that one must jump over when investing in Poland.
+He earned his first national cap on 23 June 1984 against New Zealand at Auckland.
+Troma Entertainment hails Story of a Junkie as one of the company's best films; it's one of the most well known outside of the films directed by Troma founders Lloyd Kaufman and Michael Herz.
+People Iiris Vesik, Estonian singerSee also Iris (disambiguation)ReferencesCategory:Finnish feminine given namesCategory:Estonian feminine given names
+"Starting off with something as quote unquote "poppy" as "Androgyny" was maybe where we wanted to go with this..." explained Erikson, "it sounds a lot different to what we've done before."
+CultivationPlants may be grown in shade, but a position in full sun is desirable to maximise flowering.
+The magazine attributed the pieces success to Royère's ability to make "the minimalist pieces look almost structure-less, entirely covering the skeletons—created using traditional wood-bending techniques—in layers of synthetic foam".
+Notable people with the name include: Annalena Baerbock (born 1980), German politician Annalena McAfee (born c. 1952), British children's author and journalist Annalena Tonelli (1943–2003), Italian lawyer and social activistSee also Anna-Lena, given name Analena, Croatian-Slovenian post-hardcore bandCategory:Feminine given names
+Michel Renard (born September 24, 1924, Marigot, Martinique; died December 17, 2015, Fort-de-France) was a politician from Martinique who served in the French National Assembly from 1986-1988.
+He was an APS of Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina.
+During the 2000–2002 school year, four new science rooms, a wellness center, and air conditioning were added.
+The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1991.
+Ahmed El Maanouni (born in 1944) is a Moroccan screenwriter, film director, cinematographer, actor and producer.
+The long-time musical director for the program was Ivan Hutchinson.
+Peter Augustus Jay may refer to: Peter Augustus Jay (lawyer) (1776–1843), eldest son of Founding Father and first United States Chief Justice, John Jay Peter Augustus Jay (born 1821) (1821–1855), son of Peter Augustus Jay (1776–1843) and grandson of John Jay Peter Augustus Jay (diplomat) (1877–1933), American diplomat and great great grandson of Peter Augustus Jay (1776–1843)See also 1838 Peter Augustus Jay House, named for Peter Augustus Jay, a New York lawyer Peter Jay (disambiguation)
+Mael Fabhaill had a brother, Eidhean mac Cléireach, who gave his name to the Ó hEidhin family of south County Galway.
+DescriptionThe low spreading shrub with many branches typically grows to a height of .
+Current squadAchievementsReferencesCategory:Football clubs in AfghanistanCategory:Sport in Kabul
+His research areas include pesticide health effects, injuries and illness in agriculture, and clinical occupational injury management.
+ReferencesCategory:Roller Trio albumsCategory:Live jazz albumsCategory:2014 live albums
+The suburb is named after George Postans who was one of the first settlers in the area.
+Given a function , the inverse function, denoted and defined as , is a function such thatNow, if we apply the inverse function to both sides of , where is a constant value in , we obtainand we have found the solution to the equation.
+The school is now part of the Tor Bridge Partnership which includes Plym Bridge Nursery, Tor Bridge Primary School and Cann Bridge School.
+On February 15, 2011, Robinson died from cancer.
+The population density was 78.3 people per square mile (30.2/km²).
+This caused him to be sued by the company, then withdrawn following a consensual agreement with which Bello FiGo renounced the use of the name Gucci.
+The Crockett Springs Cottage and Piedmont Camp Meeting Grounds Historic District are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
+Within four years, Boombox Saints have released two EPs, The Boombox EP and Bringin' the Boom Back: Based on a True Story as well as a full-length debut album titled For the Moment.
+The authors compared the START and JumpSTART systems with two other pediatric triage tools: the Pediatric Triage Tape and Care Flight.
+The West Feliciana Parish Library is located in St. Francisville.
+There are only a few similar objects in the entire world.
+The college offers post-secondary, distance education and classroom diploma programmes to believers and clergy who wish to complete their ministerial training to enter ministry.
+External links18 km Olympic cross country results: 1948-52Category:Olympic cross-country skiers of GermanyCategory:Cross-country skiers at the 1952 Winter OlympicsCategory:German male cross-country skiersCategory:Possibly living peopleCategory:1929 births
+Academic departments Academic departments of Food nurtrutionSee also List of junior colleges in JapanExternal links Category:Japanese junior colleges
+ReferencesCategory:Populated places in Tizi Ouzou ProvinceCategory:Communes of Algeria
+The elder Wilson returned to Stirling where his son, John was born in 1789.
+Albrechtson died in Västra Frölunda aged 49.
+Outside of the promotion phase, "Mall" was featured at number 37 in 2018 and 53 in the 2019 edition of the Eurovision Top 250 charts.
+BibliographyTopology and Order (Krieger Pub.
+Brigg, trying to find Skye, ends up in the VIP room and is ambushed by Madison, who throws herself at him and kisses him.
+Surrounding area Tendo MokkoSee alsoList of railway stations in JapanReferencesExternal links JR East Station information Category:Stations of East Japan Railway CompanyCategory:Railway stations in Yamagata PrefectureCategory:Ōu Main LineCategory:Railway stations opened in 1954Category:1954 establishments in JapanCategory:Tendō, Yamagata
+ReferencesExternal links MESOZOIC MAMMALS; Stem zatherians, zatherians & Peramuridae, an internet directory Palaeos Vertebrates 430_500 Mammalia Spalacotheroidea & CladotheriaCategory:Mesozoic mammalsCategory:Extant Middle Jurassic first appearances
+In total, 56 goals were scored by 29 different players, with none credited as own goals.
+FormatThe top eight finishers of the conference's sixteen members were eligible for the tournament.
+Napoleon (1769–1821) also known as Napoleon Bonaparte or Napoleon I, was a French military leader and emperor.
+Mait Patrail (born 11 April 1988) is an Estonian handball player for TSV Hannover-Burgdorf and the Estonian national team.
+Destructions and restorations After World War I, a first intervention was removing the word "Hungarians" from the inscription behind the monument.
+Land trust In 2017 community members, and public representatives came together to began the creation of a land trust that would work towards establishing affordable housing in the area.
+Opinion of the CourtFacebook sued Power Ventures Inc. in the Northern District of California.
+Virgílio's last game came at age 33, in the Euro 1960 1–5 quarter-final loss to Yugoslavia, on 22 May 1960.
+This even included the then demilitarized M-19 candidate Antonio Navarro Wolff.
+The following day, they revealed the title of another song called "Dark Side".
+FilmographyReferencesExternal links Category:1959 birthsCategory:American film actressesCategory:Living peopleCategory:20th-century American actressesCategory:American television actressesCategory:Actresses from ArizonaCategory:People from Tempe, Arizona
+It is found in the Indomalayan realm (Peninsular Malaya).
+ReferencesSee also Radio stations in interwar PolandCategory:Radio stations established in 1938Category:Polskie RadioCategory:1938 establishments in PolandCategory:Mass media in BaranavichyCategory:Radio stations disestablished in 1939
+The Lawrence O. Poncin is a United States Army Reserve facility located in Attleboro, Massachusetts.
+The plants are green to red in color and usually without hairs, but new growth can be woolly.
+Donovan was a featured interview in the HBO documentary Cops: Behind the Badge.
+ReferencesExternal links MitchellMitchell
+Meeks, Geoff, and GM Peter Swann.
+Unlike Suslin lines, the existence of Aronszajn lines is provable using the standard axioms of set theory.
+Agr ABCD.
+However, probably because the ancient Chinese scholars believe in a saying that "excessive attention to trivia saps the will", there is very limited literature on the development of tea pets in Chinese history.
+It often has a bronze or a green-gold tinge.
+1 September2 September5 September6 September7 September9 September10 September11 September12 September13 September15 September16 September17 September18 September19 September20 September21 September22 September23 September24 September25 September26 September27 September28 September29 September30 SeptemberUnknown dateReferences1820-09
+During his tenureship of BBC Three, the channel increased its share of 16-34-year-old viewers by 58% and won Digital Channel of the Year at the Edinburgh International TV Festival in two out of three years – 2008 and 2010.
+In 1993 a bishop was consecrated for Guilin, Bishop Benedict Cai (Chinese name: Cai Xiufeng 蔡秀峰).
+Franklin Pierce Buyer (1878–1963), who went by Franklin P. Buyer, was a traveling salesman who was on the Los Angeles City Council between 1933 and 1939.
+LeadershipThe BOSCO-USA Board of Directors is made-up entirely of volunteers.
+It serves Bilara city.
+He was promoted to the rank of captain on 30 June 1918 and assumed command of the light cruiser in April 1919.
+Roger Ebert gave the film three stars out of four, claiming: "Movies like this do not grab you by the throat.
+Notable people Heinrich Graetz (1817 – 1891) an historian, wrote a history of the Jewish people from a Jewish perspective.
+Platydemus manokwari is presumed to act as a transmission vector of the parasite to humans and affects the epidemiology of angiostrongyliasis.
+Professional playing careerSt. Louis Cardinals2007 and 2008 seasonsFollowing the draft, Descalso began his professional career with the Batavia Muckdogs, the Short-Season A affiliate of the Cardinals in the New York–Penn League.
+Mount Davis () is a mountain located 1.6 km north of Mount Bentley and 2.4 km southeast of Mount Hale in the Sentinel Range, Antarctica.
+It is located just east of Howard Glacier in the Kukri Hills, flowing north into Taylor Valley in Victoria Land.
+Ajintha may refer to: Ajintha (film), a 2012 Marathi film Ajintha caves, also known as Ajanta Caves near Aurangabad
+As was the custom since 1930, the 1948 Tour de France was contested by national and regional teams.
+BiographyShe's been living with music since born, at age 4 she started play on piano and won various competitions prizeShe graduated from Osaka College of MusicIn 2007 she appeared as pianist in Memorial Concerts of ZardIn 2008 she released her first album Kokoro wo Hiraite ~Zard Piano ClassicsHer last update on personal blog was in December 2012.
+His music has been in a number of international music charts, and is considered a prominent contributor to Kizomba music.
+It was the first public gay rights organization.
+ReferencesCliff Breitkreuz's Web PageExternal links Category:1940 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Members of the House of Commons of Canada from AlbertaCategory:Reform Party of Canada MPsCategory:People from Lac Ste.
+Thus, Chow thinks feminists should critique the visuality of women.
+Lopresti became the singer and guitar player of a surf-punk band called Garlands Room in 1994.
+This was a step up from the championships held in Beijing 2007, where he won bronze.
+GapWest Broadcasting, also known as Gap II, was based in Greenwood Village, Colorado and acquired stations in 13 markets in Idaho, Minnesota, Montana, Washington, and Wyoming.
+This article is not about Asim ibn Umar ibn Qatada ibn al-Nu`man al-Ansari's (d. 120 or 129).
+He brought two nephews, William Johnson, eventually Sir William Johnson, and Michael Tyrrell to clear and manage the land.
+The remainder of Royal Prussia, except for Marienburg (Malbork) was overrun by Sweden and Frederick William I's forces pursued to Königsberg (now Kaliningrad), where he was forced to accept Swedish overlordship in the Treaty of Königsberg in January 1656.
+Jolanda di Savoia borders the following municipalities: Berra, Codigoro, Copparo, Fiscaglia, Formignana, Tresigallo.
+The Singapore Tourism Board began actively marketing Singaporean education to South Koreans in 2005; they form one of the larger sources of international students, along with other Asian countries such as China, India, Indonesia, Malaysia and Vietnam.
+The editors-in-chief are Deborah Kerfoot (Keele University), Ida Sabelis (Vrije Universiteit) and Alison Pullen (Macquarie University).
+561–564 Santos M.B., Pierce G.J., Boyle P.R., Reid R.J., Ross H.M., Patterson I.A.P., Kinze C.C., Tougaard S., Lick R., Piatkowski U. and V, Hernández-García 1999.
+The forewings are pale ochreous-white and the markings are brown.
+(e.g.
+Frank Sinatra had recently become a father when he recorded "Soliloquy" for the first time on May 28, 1946.
+The area is known as Cox's Field West and Cox's Field East following a donation from Richard Cox, an Old Abingdonian.
+John Ashley (born 1972) was found guilty of taking part in two of the murders and received life imprisonment with a recommended minimum of 25 years, while Dean Carr (born 1976) was found guilty of taking part in the murder of Ellen Frith and received life imprisonment with a recommended minimum of 14 years.
+Protein components The uhp system is composed of UhpA, UhpB, UhpC, and UhpT.
+As featured performerMiscellaneousSoundtracksAppearancesMusic videosReferencesCategory:Rhythm and blues discographiesCategory:Discographies of American artistsCategory:Soul music discographies
+Also, Usagi Yojimbo creator Stan Sakai has praised Hirata's artwork.
+Tony McNamara may refer to: Tony McNamara (footballer) (1929–2015), English footballer Tony McNamara (writer) (born 1967), Australian writer for film and television
+The county consists of two districts (bakhsh): Central District and Seh Qaleh District.
+The women's 9-ball doubles event at the 2017 Summer Universiade was held on 28 and 29 August at the Expo Dome, Taipei Expo Park.
+Living speciesEight species were recognised in Mammal Species of the World in 2005: Red and white giant flying squirrel, Petaurista alborufus Milne-Edwards, 1870 Spotted giant flying squirrel, Petaurista elegans Müller, 1840 Japanese giant flying squirrel, Petaurista leucogenys Temminck, 1827 Hodgson's giant flying squirrel, Petaurista magnificus Hodgson, 1836 Bhutan giant flying squirrel, Petaurista nobilis Gray, 1842 Red giant flying squirrel, Petaurista petaurista Pallas, 1766 Indian giant flying squirrel, Petaurista philippensis Elliot, 1839 Chinese giant flying squirrel, Petaurista xanthotis Milne-Edwards, 1872Seven additional species now often recognised, but traditionally considered subspecies: White-bellied giant flying squirrel, Petaurista albiventer Gray, 1834 Grey-headed giant flying squirrel, Petaurista caniceps Gray, 1842 Formosan giant flying squirrel, Petaurista grandis Swinhoe, 1863 Hainan giant flying squirrel, Petaurista hainana G. Allen, 1925 Taiwan giant flying squirrel, Petaurista lena Thomas, 1907 Petaurista marica Thomas, 1912 Chindwin giant flying squirrel, Petaurista sybilla Thomas and Wroughton, 1916Three new species that were described in 2007–2013: Mechuka giant flying squirrel, Petaurista mechukaensis Choudhury, 2007 Mishmi giant flying squirrel, Petaurista mishmiensis Choudhury, 2009 Mebo giant flying squirrel, Petaurista siangensis Choudhury, 2013Extinct speciesIn addition to the living species, there are a few extinct species that only are known from fossil remains from the Mid and Late Pleistocene in China, the Russian Far East and Germany: †Petaurista brachyodus Young, 1934 †Petaurista helleri Dehm, 1962 †Petaurista tetyukhensis Tiunov & Gimranov, 2019References Category:Rodent generaCategory:Taxa named by Johann Heinrich Friedrich LinkCategory:Taxonomy articles created by Polbot
+References Category:Rural localities in Amur OblastCategory:Rural localities in Seryshevsky District
+With help from a friend, a pretty young prostitute is hired for the task.
+ReferencesExternal links 2001Category:2001 television awardsCategory:2001 in Australian television
+InteractionsIts use is advised against in people on strong CYP3A4 inhibitors such as clarithromycin, chloramphenicol, ketoconazole, ritonavir and nefazodone due to its reliance on CYP3A4 for metabolism.
+Seyyed Abbas or Seyyedabbas () may refer to: Seyyed Abbas, Kermanshah Seyyed Abbas, Khuzestan Seyyed Abbas, Lorestan Seyyed Abbas, West Azerbaijan Seyyed Abbas Rural District, in Khuzestan Province
+The cells were active for less than two years in the mid-1980s; primarily engaged in bombings within Belgium's borders.
+Tyhawk was inducted later into the British Columbia Horse Racing Hall of Fame, and has been considered "possibly the top BC sprinter of all time."
+ReferencesExternal linksPIER Systems Official siteRegroup Mass NotificationCategory:Companies established in 2000Category:Companies based in Bellingham, WashingtonCategory:Software companies based in Washington (state)Category:Software companies of the United States
+Martens, 1830) Columella edentula (Draparnaud, 1805) Truncatellina callicratis (Scacchi, 1833) Truncatellina claustralis (Gredler, 1856) Truncatellina costulata (Nilsson, 1823) Truncatellina cylindrica (A. Férussac, 1807) Truncatellina monodon (Held, 1837) Vertigo alpestris Alder, 1838 Vertigo angustior Jeffreys, 1830 Vertigo antivertigo (Draparnaud, 1801) Vertigo genesii (Gredler, 1856)* - extinct Vertigo geyeri Lindholm, 1925 Vertigo heldi (Clessin, 1870) Vertigo lilljeborgi (Westerlund, 1871) Vertigo modesta (Say, 1824) Vertigo moulinsiana (Dupuy, 1849) Vertigo pusilla O.F.
+PlotIn this episode, Peter is sure his son Chris will never beat him at anything, from skating, to stacking dinnerware on top of their heads, and playing basketball.
+Alwayno Visagie (born ) is a South African rugby union player for the in the Currie Cup and the Rugby Challenge.
+Category:Villages in Jõgeva County
+According to the anonymous 14th-century Chronicle of a Hundred Years, Esukan was a daughter of the Mongol general Chormaqan Noyan and sister of Shiramun Noyan.
+It was reported that around 300 artists and technicians took part in the film's production.
+East Valla (Östra Valla) is a district in western Linköping.
+National Award Winners Montee Ball, Wisconsin – Doak Walker AwardAttendanceHead coaches Tim Beckman, Illinois Kevin R. Wilson, Indiana Kirk Ferentz, Iowa Brady Hoke, Michigan Mark Dantonio, Michigan State Jerry Kill, Minnesota Bo Pelini, Nebraska Pat Fitzgerald, Northwestern Urban Meyer, Ohio State Bill O'Brien, Penn State Danny Hope, Purdue Bret Bielema, WisconsinReferences*
+Kalateh-ye Now (, also Romanized as Kalāteh-ye Now) is a village in Kenarshahr Rural District, in the Central District of Bardaskan County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran.
+122 (or about 7.59% of the population) belonged to no church, are agnostic or atheist, and 40 individuals (or about 2.49% of the population) did not answer the question.
+European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Committee (EIOPC) is a regulatory and legislative policy body within the European Union.
+Many of his sewing machine patents were used by the leading manufacturers of the day.
+Parsian Shahr-e Qods Futsal Club () is an Iranian futsal club based in Shahr-e Qods.
+At last he took Savithri Kutty along with him.
+It is also found in the Mediterranean Sea.
+Career Zuckerman served as the executive director of the Gowanus Canal Community Development Corporation (GCCDC) and the Gowanus Canal Conservancy, and took leave to run full-time for City Council.
+He also returned 3 punts for a total of 9 yards, and 1 kickoff return for 27 yards.
+The building is now vacant.
+The courthouse is included in the Marietta Historic District which was added to the National Register on 1974-12-19.
+In July 2008, Im was named as a member of the 2008 South Korea Olympic national baseball team together with the fellow 2006 World Junior Baseball champion Kim Kwang-hyun.
+It was described by Martins in 1976.
+See also Sombrero GalaxyReferencesExternal links HST: Burst of Star Formation Drives Bubble in Galaxy's Core Superwind Sculpts Filamentary Features - Chandra Space Telescope Category:Barred spiral galaxiesCategory:Ursa Major (constellation)30790538729050
+Tamarindo River is a river in the Guanacaste Province of Costa Rica.
+It is threatened by habitat loss.
+ReferencesNatural History Museum Lepidoptera genus databaseCategory:Cuculliinae
+Between undergraduate and graduate school he worked for the Peace Corps in Africa.
+ReferencesExternal links Allan Browne at CricketArchiveCategory:1888 birthsCategory:1941 deathsCategory:Barbadian cricketersCategory:Barbados cricketersCategory:Pre-1928 West Indies cricketersCategory:People from Saint Michael, Barbados
+The event was established in 1919.
+History The Egba group, originally under the Oyo Empire, became independent following the spectacular collapse of Oyo in the first half of the 19th century.
+He was also a regular at the keyboard at The Wheeltapper's and Shunter's Social Club where he was the MD overseeing 'the turns.'
+Gastrotheca phalarosa is a species of frog in the family Hemiphractidae.
+A bonus CD containing an additional three tracks was included with preorders placed on Ian's web site.
+Figure skatingWomenPairsReferencesVIII Olympic Winter Games Squaw Valley, California 1960 Final Report Olympic Winter Games 1960, full results by sports-reference.comCategory:Nations at the 1960 Winter Olympics1960Category:1960 in South African sport
+PopulationSee alsoCommunes of the Eure departmentReferencesINSEEExternal linksOfficial siteCategory:Communes of Eure
+Ahead of the 2009 season he joined Flekkerøy IL.
+Standing at , he plays at the center position.
+However, the election results saw the UNC and the People's National Movement both win 18 seats.
+See alsoList of rivers of MissouriReferencesCategory:Rivers of Ralls County, MissouriCategory:Rivers of Missouri
+The play is about the final days of pre-Socratic Greek philosopher Empedocles, who, according to legend, threw himself into Mount Etna.
+Yakov Sergeyevich Dashevsky (; 18 April 1902, Kherson - 8 February 1972, Moscow) was a Soviet Red Army military intelligence officer and lieutenant-general.
+It is elected by proportional representation.
+Despite similarities in name, the Colombana nera is not grown in the San Colombano al Lambro DOC of Lombardy nor is it permitted in the DOC wine.
+Selected worksDet ideale teater (1928)Tragedien om Mengin (play, 1928)ReferencesCategory:1896 birthsCategory:1961 deathsCategory:People from BergenCategory:Norwegian theatre directorsCategory:20th-century Norwegian dramatists and playwrightsCategory:Norwegian male dramatists and playwrights
+Kitazawa and her team represented Japan at the 2019 Pacific-Asia Curling Championships in Shenzhen, China the following season.
+"For interrogators in Kandahar, it was a standard operating procedure".
+In 2018, Pitchfork listed it at number 23 on its list of the 30 best dream pop albums.
+HistoryAs one of the Kunjen peoples, the Uw Oykangand suffered deeply from the sudden incursion of whites when the discovery of gold in their region caused the Palmer River Gold Rush in 1873.
+Lawyered, Choice/less, The Breach, and What Else Happened.
+It entered service with 35 Sqn on 23 November 1940 at RAF Linton-on-Ouse, carrying out its first night-raid on 11 March 1942 over Le Havre.
+The workplace culture is the work and behavior norms as perceived by the workers point of view.
+The Ashton Court estate provided occupations such as gamekeepers and foresters, and there have been several mills in the parish including a snuff-mill on the Land Yeo at Gatcombe in 1769, however the current building dates from the early 19th century.
+ReferencesCategory:Bayreuth (district)
+People’s Literature (Renmin Wenxue 人民文学) magazine recently chose her – in a list reminiscent of The New Yorker's ‘20 under 40’ – as one of China’s twenty future literary masters.
+The lake has a storage capacity of , a normal surface area of and a shoreline of .
+InfoBase is the company's brokered warehouse of consumer data.
+On the underside the markings on the wings will, on careful examination, be found very similar but paler brown and all very much reduced in width so that a greater extent of the white ground colour is visible.
+Tempe's old dams were computer controlled to maintain air pressure of .
+Neodactria oktibbeha is a moth in the family Crambidae.
+This mycoheterotrophic orchid has no chlorophyll, so it makes no energy for itself.
+A learning rule may accept existing conditions (weights and biases) of the network and will compare the expected result and actual result of the network to give new and improved values for weights and bias.
+He was present at the Battle of Worcester in 1651.
+Conservation status Bernier's teal is on the verge of extinction.
+The protein ligands to the iron are the sidechains of the three cysteine (Cys) residues and two mainchain amide nitrogens.
+playersCategory:Aldershot Town F.C.
+Career statisticsInternational careerMora was selected for the Chile national under-20 football team which participated in the 2013 South American Youth Championship.
+ReferencesExternal linksCategory:American Civil War sitesCategory:Federal architecture in West VirginiaCategory:Historic American Buildings Survey in West VirginiaCategory:Houses completed in 1797Category:Houses in Jefferson County, West VirginiaCategory:Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in West VirginiaCategory:Jefferson County, West Virginia in the American Civil WarCategory:National Register of Historic Places in Jefferson County, West VirginiaCategory:Robert Lucas familyCategory:Shepherdstown, West Virginia
+MIX5 was a Latin American band formed on the second season of La Banda.
+In 2019, Gallagher became a Fulbright distinguished professor.
+It flows into the Weser close to Bad Oeynhausen.
+Goals and work Unlike many Jewish men's Associations, the JFB was formed less out of resistance to societal antisemitism or for the purpose of encouraging assimilation, but rather as a community of interest focused on Jewish culture.
+The Western Australian Institute of Sport (WAIS) is an elite sports institute set up in 1983 by the Government of Western Australia to support athletes in Western Australia.
+Track listingSide ASide BBonus tracks 1997 CD re-issuePersonnel and production Dusty Springfield – lead vocals The Breakaways – background vocals Johnny Franz – record producer Ivor Raymonde – orchestra director Keith Grant – engineer Roger Wake – digital remastering/remix (1997 re-issue) Mike Gill – digital remastering/remix (1997 re-issue)ChartsReferencesBibliography Howes, Paul (2007).
+Everton Anthony Williams (born 2 February 1957) is a Jamaican former professional footballer who played as a forward.
+ReferencesExternal links Official Profile by GOV.UKCategory:1958 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:People educated at Sherborne SchoolCategory:Alumni of Trinity College, CambridgeCategory:Ambassadors of the United Kingdom to North KoreaCategory:Consuls-General of the United Kingdom in GuangzhouCategory:People from CamberleyCategory:Companions of the Order of St Michael and St George
+Reviews and further discussions Council on Foreign Relations senior fellow Max Boot published a critique of the book in The Weekly Standard on February 2005.
+The airline was affiliated with (but independent of) Ansett Australia airlines which ceased operations on 14 September 2001.
+Both the grass runways are wide and at night serve as a single runway.
+After switching to the BBC, their show was cancelled in 1991.
+Today Midus is produced by several companies and is to be found in the majority of liquor shops in the US and supermarkets in Lithuania.
+InternationalSolehov made his senior team debut on 13 December 2018 against Oman, scoring his first goal for Tajikistan in the same game.
+They can be distinguished from similar genera based on the nearly square-shaped areolet and the large and dense punctures on the post-petiole.
+ReferencesExternal linksprofileCategory:1911 birthsCategory:1985 deathsCategory:Ice hockey players at the 1936 Winter OlympicsCategory:Olympic silver medalists for CanadaCategory:Olympic ice hockey players of CanadaCategory:Olympic medalists in ice hockeyCategory:Medalists at the 1936 Winter Olympics
+The nickname of the club, Owena Mermaid was evidently gotten from a prominent river within the state.
+First Rodeo is honeyhoney's debut album, released on November 4, 2008, under the now-defunct Ironworks record label, run by actor Kiefer Sutherland and friend Jude Cole.
+It contains 15 buildings that are recorded in the National Heritage List for England as designated listed buildings.
+Sources andamanicaCategory:Flora of the Andaman IslandsCategory:Endangered flora of AsiaCategory:Taxonomy articles created by Polbot
+Because of these findings, he is considered by many to be the "founder of embryology".
+Burong isda (literally "pickled fish") is a Filipino dish consisting of cooked rice and raw filleted fish fermented with salt and angkak (red yeast rice) for around a week.
+Il sorpasso (, occasionally titled The Easy Life) is a 1962 Italian cult comedy film co-written and directed by Dino Risi and starring Vittorio Gassman, Jean-Louis Trintignant and Catherine Spaak.
+Legendary narrativeYūryaku was a 5th-century monarch.
+The inaugural champion was Jimmy Snuka, who defeated Salvatore Bellomo in a tournament final on April 25, 1992 to become the first ECW Heavyweight Champion.
+The first Kyrgyzstan Super Cup was held on 9 April 2011 at the Central Stadium in Kant, and was competed between Neftchi Kochkor-Ata and Dordoi Bishkek.
+Artyom Vadimovich Roshchin (; born 12 January 1993) is a Russian football forward.
+Local Canberra rally driver Greg Carr dominated the event with six successive victories from 1975 to 1980.
+FilmingProduction and filming took place in Melbourne, Australia and Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam Oct - Dec 2012.
+In March 1984 the Popular Vanguard Party split in two factions.
+Hoping to travel and gain a wider world perspective, Foster joined the Navy, and soon her musical talents had her singing in the naval band Pride, that played pop and funk hits at recruitment drives in the southeastern United States.
+Currently, formerly 'white suburbs' (Sandringham, Kingsway, Windsor, Bergsig, Blue rise, Balmoral, Madeira Park and a new fast-growing suburb of Komani Park) surround the hexagon to the north, east and west, however, one of the city's great townships (and squatter camps) lies to the south.
+CareerBroten was born in Roseau, Minnesota.
+Dual-voltage could refer to: Multi-system (rail), in which the trains are able to operate on more than one railway electrification systems Dual-voltage CPU, in which a CPU can supply a different output voltage than the input 42-volt electrical system, automotive wiring, where some implementations run combined 14 V/42 V electrics Mains electricity, for North American household 110 V/240 V grid power systems
+Quillayute Valley School District 402 (QVSD) is a school district headquartered in Forks, Washington.
+The first single of this album is "Comandante".
+Visavadar Junction railway station is a small railway station in Junagadh district, Gujarat.
+In the finale, McGee's longtime friend Meyer is terrified into submission by the main villain and judges himself a failure because his inaction almost led to disaster.
+Moses organized an important school at Cordova, which was independent of the gaonate and was attended by many pupils; and through him Cordova became the seat of Jewish scholarship.
+Museum contentMuch of the museum's content is displayed on a series of panels covering a diverse set of personalities including Estevanico, Omar ibn Said, Hajj Ali, Yarrow Mamout, and Mohammed Alexander Russell Webb.
+Born in Savannah, Georgia, Bryant served in the United States Army and served in South Vietnam.
+Notable people with the surname include:Chris Swailes (born 1970), English football playerDanny Swailes (born 1979), English football playerDonovan Swailes (1892–1984), Canadian politicianRobert Swailes (1896–1968), Canadian politician
+The New Hope Baptist Church, located in Natchez, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
+Unseen by her, the child hurries home and resolves to be the "bestest" boy in all the world thereafter.
+Basil William Iwanyk (born January 4, 1970) is an American film producer.
+In 2012, its tools were being used by 20,000 mobile developers and that number was growing at 40% monthly.
+Pierre grew up in Windermere, Florida and attended school at the First Academy, a school run by the First Baptist Church of Orlando.
+J. S. Sirén, architect (M.Sc.)
+Winniki may refer to the following places:Winniki, Masovian Voivodeship (east-central Poland)Winniki, Opole Voivodeship (south-west Poland)Winniki, West Pomeranian Voivodeship (north-west Poland)Polish name for Vynnyky, a city in Ukraine
+The Witton Weavers Way long distance path passes close to the north.
+Jørn Lier Horst (born 1970), Norwegian authorPoliticians Deena Horst, American (Kansas) politician Hans Jacob Horst (1848–1931), Norwegian politician Henry Horst (1836–1905), American politicianScientists Sarah Hörst, planetary scientist Heather Horst, American anthropologist Jürgen Horst, German human geneticistSport Alexander Horst (born 1982), Austrian beach volleyball player César Horst (born 1989), Argentine footballer David Horst (born 1985), American soccer player Egon Horst (born 1938), German footballer Jeremy Horst (born 1985), American baseball pitcherOther Emil Clemens Horst (1867–1940), German-American hop farmer and inventorPlaces Adlerhorst, one of Hitler's command centers Horst, Gelsenkirchen, a part of the city of Gelsenkirchen, Germany Horst aan de Maas, a municipality in the southeast of The Netherlands Horst, Gelderland, a village in the municipality of Ermelo, The Netherlands Horst, Limburg, a village in the southeast of The Netherlands Horst, North Brabant, a village in the province of North Brabant, The Netherlands Horst, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, a village in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany Horst, Steinburg, a municipality in the Steinburg district, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany Horst, Lauenburg, a municipality in the Lauenburg district, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany Horst, Seevetal, part of the Seevetal municipality in Niedersachsen, Germany Kasteel van Horst (Castle of Horst), a medieval castle in the municipality of Holsbeek, Belgium Kasteel van Horst (Castle of Horst), a medieval castle in the municipality of Achterberg, The NetherlandsSport STV Horst-Emscher, a defunct German association football clubFictional characters Horst (Inheritance), a character in the novel Eragon Horst Staley, a MacArthur midshipman in the Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle science fiction novel The Mote in God's Eye Dr. Horst, a character in the 2002 film Wilbur Wants to Kill Himself played by Mads Mikkelsen Horst, a character in the 2007 film Ratatouille (film) played by Will Arnett Horst Cabal, the main character's elder brother from Jonathan L. Howard's Johannes Cabal series Horst Loeffler, the main character's almost ex-husband from the 2013 postmodern detective novel Bleeding Edge by Thomas Pynchon
+Mansourah ( - „victorious“) is a town and commune in Tlemcen Province in Northwestern Algeria.
+External linksCategory:American screenwritersCategory:American male songwritersCategory:Possibly living peopleCategory:Year of birth missing
+He was successful in the short term, but his death in 1539 left the priory without an effective protector.
+The All Points West Music & Arts Festival was an annual music and arts festival held at Liberty State Park in Jersey City, New Jersey.
+Without this system, it would not have been possible for the RVNAF to deploy its forces effectively where needed.
+She will be one of four openly LGBT officeholders currently serving in the North Carolina state legislature, alongside caucus colleagues Marcia Morey, Allison Dahle and Cecil Brockman.
+JPP was a member of the World Federation of Democratic Youth.
+Kev's Back (The Return of the Yobbo) is the second album by the bawdy Australian singer/comedian Kevin Bloody Wilson.
+He was appointed bishop of Lodi on July 10, 1952.
+the member's signatures Fabio Colonna (1567-1640), Italian naturalist and botanist
+She competed in the women's high jump at the 1968 Summer Olympics.
+It resembles Purva Kalyan, the main difference being the use of Pa which is strong in Bairari and weak in Purva-Kalyan.
+He misses his job interview due to the delay and has to walk all the way across the city in a bed sheet to get his spare key from Jerry.
+WorkIZA runs the world's largest research network in economic science, comprising over 1,300 international Research Fellows and Affiliates, as well as Policy Fellows from business, politics, society and the media.
+and the Spooky Swamp
+Presidents1949: Jakob Knöss1957: Georg Leber1966: Rudolf Sperner1982: Konrad Carl1991: Bruno Köbele1995: Klaus WiesehügelReferencesCategory:Building and construction trade unionsCategory:German Trade Union ConfederationCategory:Trade unions established in 1949Category:Trade unions disestablished in 1996
+Starsiege
+Y Y chromosome deletions Yaws Yeast infection Yellow fever Yellow nail syndrome Yemenite deaf-blind hypopigmentation syndrome Yersinia pestis infection Yersiniosis Yersinia entercolitica infection Yersinia pseudotuberculosis infection Yim–Ebbin syndrome Yolk sac tumor Yorifuji–Okuno syndrome Yoshimura–Takeshita syndrome Young–Hugues syndrome Young–Madders syndrome Young Mc keever Squier syndrome Young Simpson syndrome Young syndrome Yunis–Varon syndrome Yusho diseaseY
+Individual tests can be added to or removed from the battery to target specific cognitive domains.
+Merb's default application stack incorporated Datamapper for models, ERB for views, and Rack and Mongrel as the web server layer.
+The Nooney Ricket 4 (also known as The Nooney Rickett IV) is an American rock and roll group.
+Air-to-air missilesAir-to-surface missilesSurface-to-surface missilesSurface-to-airAntisubmarine warfareICBMSubmarine-launchedSee alsoLists of weaponsList of missilesList of missiles by country Category:Weapons of the United StatesMissiles, United StatesMissilesUnited States
+Music videoA music video for the track was filmed in April 2002.
+ReferencesCategory:Villages in Lipsko County
+It was directed by Brad Bird, who took over from Jan Pinkava in 2005.
+Track listingTrack 10 presents only the first half of the "Stereotype/Stereotype Pt.
+Stroitel Stadium may refer to Stroitel Stadium (Dimitrovgrad), Russia Stroitel Stadium (Murmansk), Russia Stroitel Stadium (Soligorsk), BelarusSee also
+PlotAlexander Snobman and Philip Helt compete for the favor of the dancer Eva Sommers.
+Antonio Stradivari is well known not only for his high productivity, but also for his use of templates and a highly finished product, eliminating all tool marks that could be used to deduct the identity of the workman.
+Galore, by Michael Crummey, is a novel first published by Doubleday Canada in 2009, about the discovery of an 18th-century Jonah in a remote coastal town of Paradise Deep, Newfoundland.
+"My Swagger" is a Japanese single by South Korean boy group Got7.
+Sir James Lindsay was his elder brother.
+He also participated on the Dano-Swedish tug of war team which won the gold medal against opponents France.
+The following is the list of mayors of Metro Manila.
+The oldest works of Momotaro known to have existed had been dated to the Genroku era (1688–1704) or perhaps earlier.
+There is a difference in monthly mean temperature of 10 °C between the cities of Los Angeles and San Diego.
+ReferencesExternal links Allmusic.com - Belfast Confetti creditsCategory:2009 albumsCategory:Ricky Warwick albums
+None of them survived their parents.
+Li-ion battery of 10 Ah for fast recharge and long range.
+This species is a parasitoid of Salticidae spiders (Heliophanus species).
+The High Country is a 1981 Canadian adventure film directed by Harvey Hart and starring Timothy Bottoms and Linda Purl.
+E-bikes with pedal-assist only: either pedelecs (legally classed as bicycles) or S-Pedelecs (often legally classed as mopeds) Pedelecs: have pedal-assist only, motor assists only up to a decent but not excessive speed (usually 25 km/h), motor power up to 250 watts, often legally classed as bicycles S-Pedelecs: have pedal-assist only, motor power can be greater than 250 watts, can attain a higher speed (e.g., 45 km/h) before motor stops assisting, legally classed as a moped or motorcycle (not a bicycle) E-bikes with power-on-demand and pedal-assist E-bikes with power-on-demand only: often have more powerful motors than pedelecs but not always, the more powerful of these are legally classed as mopeds or motorcyclesSee alsoElectric car use by countryList of electric cars currently availableGovernment incentives for plug-in electric vehiclesList of hybrid vehicles List of modern production plug-in electric vehicles available in the United StatesList of production battery electric vehiclesReferencesExternal links Akaki Mamaladze on production of first electric cars in Caucasus (Georgia): "Our childhood dreams come true" — Interview of A.Mamaladze, director of AIProduction, for Caucasian JournalMeet the Fleet by Plugincars.comPlug-in Vehicle Tracker: What's Coming, When by Plug In AmericaCategory:Lists of carsCategory:Electric vehiclesCategory:Plug-in hybrid vehiclesCategory:Electric vehicle conversion
+Radom: Polskie Wydawnictwo Encyklopedyczne, 2001, .
+Uniforms of the NSDAP.
+Unagi (voiced by Brian Dobson) is a mutated electric eel and slimy savage with an eye for detail.
+After his studies in Mexico he was appointed as fellow physician at the Cardiology services of the “Sanatorio Antituberculoso”.
+When the cause is not obvious, clinicians use other tests, such as: ESR, ferritin, serum iron, transferrin, RBC folate level, serum vitamin B12, hemoglobin electrophoresis, renal function tests (e.g.
+A drag act cover band inspired by Priscilla, Queen of the desert, after a few months performing the band split due to musical differences.
+The journal was established in 1963 and the editor-in-chief is Prof. Zhongqing Su (The Hong Kong Polytechnic University).
+The history of Western fashion is the story of the changing fashions in clothing for men and women in Europe and other countries under influence of the Western world, from the 12th century to the present.
+In some cases, characters created for an expanded universe are later featured in the primary works associated with that franchise, as in the cases of Aayla Secura and Grand Admiral Thrawn in the Star Wars franchise.
+The song debuted at #112 on the UK Singles Chart on the week ending March 12, 2011, and peaked at #6.
+Notable people with the surname include:Fernand Dehousse (1906–1976), Belgian politicianJean-Maurice Dehousse (born 1936), former Member of the European Parliament and he was the first Minister-President of the Walloon Region
+Orlando Brown may refer to:Orlando Brown (Kentucky) (1801–1867), American newspaper editor, historian and politicianOrlando Brown (Wisconsin) (1828–1910), American farmer and legislatorOrlando Brown (American football) (1970–2011), American football playerOrlando Brown (actor) (born 1987), American actor and rapperOrlando Brown Jr. (born 1996), American football player
+ReferencesCategory:1974 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Nigerian male sport wrestlersCategory:Olympic wrestlers of NigeriaCategory:Wrestlers at the 1992 Summer OlympicsCategory:Wrestlers at the 1996 Summer OlympicsCategory:Wrestlers at the 2000 Summer OlympicsCategory:Place of birth missing (living people)Category:Commonwealth Games silver medallists for NigeriaCategory:Commonwealth Games medallists in wrestling
+After an extensive career with the California State Legislature she began working for PicoBrew, a product development company in Seattle, WA that specializes in automated brewing equipment.
+Tommaso De Benedetti (born in 1969) is an Italian journalist and author known for writing fake news as well as a schoolteacher in Rome.
+She competed in the 2013 UCI women's road race in Florence.
+Matinha is a municipality in the state of Maranhão in the Northeast region of Brazil.
+Alexotypa japonica is a moth in the Carposinidae family.
+San Jose Airport (Filipino: Paliparan ng San Jose) , formerly known as McGuire Field, is an airport serving the general area of San Jose, Occidental Mindoro in the Philippines.
+There are 24 streets.
+Eosentomon iranicum is a species of proturan in the family Eosentomidae.
+MWC may refer to: Mark Williams Company, a software company Married... with Children, a U.S. television situation comedy Ma Wan Channel, a channel between Ma Wan and Tsing Yi islands in Hong Kong Mennonite World Conference, a global community of Christian churches Midwest Conference, a U.S. college athletic conference The Minnesota Wrecking Crew, a Canadian sketch comedy troupe Mobile World Congress, annual conference and trade show for the mobile phone industry in Barcelona Monod-Wyman-Changeux model, biochemical model of protein transitions Mountain West Conference, another U.S. collegiate athletic conference (more often abbreviated as MW) Multiply-with-carry pseudorandom number generator, an algorithm Music World Corporation, a U.S. music publishing company , a measure of an earthquake's magnitude
+Filmography His filmography includes over 300 films: Kurama Tengu (鞍馬天狗, Kurama Tengu) (1928) Kurama Tengu: Kyōfu Jidai (鞍馬天狗 恐怖時代, The Frightful Era of Kurama Tengu) (1928) Kurama Tengu ōedo ihen (鞍馬天狗 大江戸異変 ) (1950)Meiji tennō to Nichiro daisensō (明治天皇と日露大戦争) (1957)Kyōen Kobanzame (侠艶小判鮫, Kyōen Kobanzame) (1958)Hana no Shōgai (1963, tv series)Akō Rōshi (1964, tv series)Abashiri Prison (網走番外地, Abashiri Bangaichi) (1965) The Profound Desire of the Gods (神々の深き欲望, Kamigami no Fukaki Yokubo) (1968) Higashi Shinakai (1968) Nichiren (1979)ReferencesBibliographyExternal links Kinema Junpō DatabaseCategory:Japanese male film actorsCategory:1903 birthsCategory:1980 deathsCategory:Male actors from KyotoCategory:20th-century Japanese male actors
+There are long-standing plans are to convert the building into a 4-star hotel.
+Records.
+Due to this field being generated in a loop, it is expected that the field would look similar to that of an electric dipole.
+It is found in Brazil, French Guiana, Guyana, and Suriname.
+Oued Taga is a town in north-eastern Algeria.
+External links Review about Sanoja Hernández at Correodelcaroni.com Category:1930 birthsCategory:2007 deathsCategory:Venezuelan journalistsCategory:Venezuelan literary criticsCategory:Venezuelan male writersCategory:Venezuelan historiansCategory:Central University of Venezuela alumniCategory:Central University of Venezuela facultyCategory:20th-century historiansCategory:20th-century male writers
+The album debuted at No.
+These included Gibson's godson Henry Gibson Rivington (1872–1954), Arthur Clifford Fountaine (1875–1931) and Hermon Joseph Bond Cockshutt (1907–1970).
+They are somewhat more primitive than the true boxfishes, but have a similar protective covering of thickened scale plates.
+Villeroy is a commune in the Yonne department in Bourgogne-Franche-Comté in north-central France.
+As a key component in the Phillies’ unexpected, last-to-first 1993 National League Championship team, Thompson platooned in left field with Pete Incaviglia, in the World Series, against the Toronto Blue Jays.
+proved the Ahlfors conjecture for topologically tame groups, by showing that a topologically tame Kleinian group is geometrically tame, so the Ahlfors conjecture follows from Marden's tameness conjecture that hyperbolic 3-manifolds with finitely generated fundamental groups are topologically tame (homeomorphic to the interior of compact 3-manifolds).
+He married Elisabeth Troost, the daughter of Cornelis Troost.
+Toni C. Antonucci is an American psychologist, currently the Elizabeth R. Douvan Collegiate Professor at University of Michigan and formerly President of Gerontological Society of AmericaReferencesCategory:Year of birth missing (living people)Category:Living peopleCategory:University of Michigan facultyCategory:American women psychologistsCategory:Wayne State University alumni
+Roseland is an unincorporated community in Henry County, in the U.S. state of Missouri.
+Their lives and loves provided high drama for many years.
+Codd, and their unborn child.
+October 17 – CTV News Channel begins broadcasting.
+In 1978, he was inducted into the Hall of Great Westerners of the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum.
+Category:North Carolina Commissioners of AgricultureCategory:People from Wayne County, North CarolinaCategory:19th-century birthsCategory:Year of death missing
+Moses Brown (1738–1836) was an American abolitionist and industrialist.
+In Linnaean taxonomy, genus is the rank between family and species.
+Shaikh Muhammad bin Hamad bin Abdullah bin Jassim bin Muhammed Al Thani was born in 1929.
+Herrera is a surname of Spanish origin, from the Latin FERRĀRIA, meaning "iron mine" or "iron works" and also the feminine of Latin FERRĀRIUS (and ultimately from the PIE root "bhar" "to carry"), "of or pertaining to iron"; or, alternatively, the feminine of Spanish herrero ("ironsmith", from FERRĀRIUS), which also gives the surname Herrero.
+It is most popular for its snow safety.
+It was assigned GLONASS-M №14L number by the manufacturer and 714 by the Ground Control.
+He played for the Philadelphia Athletics during the season.
+The brain size however normalized by mid-childhood.
+It is the administrative center of the municipality.
+2018 -World Para-Power lifting Championships, Fazza, Dubia.
+Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (see Territorial changes of Poland after World War II).
+St. Ann's Church is a Roman Catholic parish church in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York, located at 312 East 110th Street, in the East Harlem section of the Borough of Manhattan in New York City.
+Personal lifeSnow married Ruby Dent Davies in Ballarat in 1913, with whom he had three children.
+So Serious is the second album by indie rock band The Like Young.
+Category:Populated places in Álava
+Kötüklü is a municipality and village in the Qabala Rayon of Azerbaijan.
+Haedus is a genus of lace bugs in the family Tingidae.
+ReferencesCategory:1967 birthsCategory:2015 deathsCategory:Rugby union players from Buenos AiresCategory:Argentine rugby union playersCategory:Argentina international rugby union playersCategory:Rugby union centresCategory:Cycling road incident deathsCategory:Road incident deaths in Argentina
+According to the 1991 census, the village is located in the municipality of Rogatica.
+The program was originally named the Autonomous Naval Support Round (ANSR) and was developed by Alliant Techsystems.
+He later achieved the rank of major general and was appointed Colonel of his old regiment on 3 June 1914.
+In December 2019, the Washington Post detailed how an editorial in the Billings Gazette against Medicare-for-all by Gross was drafted with the help of a lobbying group, Partnership for America’s Health Care Future.
+Chart performance The song debuted at number 5 on the National-Report Top 100 chart for the week of June 10, 2013.
+On January 28, 2014, the film was also released on Region 0 DVD-R by Alpha Video.
+Its fibers blend with those of the plantar calcaneonavicular ligament.
+Ifigenia may refer to:Books and filmIfigenia (novel), 1924 novel by Teresa de la ParraIfigenia, 1950 novel Gonzalo Torrente Ballester, directed by Iván FeoMusicIfigenia (Pizzetti), 1950 opera by Ildebrando PizzettiIfigenia in Aulide (disambiguation)Ifigenia in Tauride (disambiguation)See alsoIphigenia (disambiguation)
+Born in the town of Trimbelle, Pierce County, Wisconsin, Tombleson graduated from River Falls Teachers College in 1906.
+It is also the seat of Iffou Region in Lacs District.
+GeographyAccording to the United States Census Bureau, Cane Hill Township covers an area of of land and of water for in total area.
+Atop Sex Peak stands the Sex Peak Lookout Station, a decommissioned fire lookout tower which is now available for rental for overnight recreational visits from the United States Forest Service.
+ReferencesExternal linksCategory:1990 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Bosnia and Herzegovina footballersCategory:Bosnia and Herzegovina under-21 international footballersCategory:FK Jablonec playersCategory:FK Sarajevo playersCategory:1.
+Churapchinsky District.
+Track listingPersonnelPrimary musical performersJoe Bonamassa – guitar, vocals, liner notesCarmine Rojas – bassAnton Fig – drumsBogie Bowles – drumsRick Melick – keyboards, tambourine, backing vocalsAdditional musiciansSean Freeman – saxophoneLee Thornburg – trumpet, brass arrangementsMike Feltham – tromboneEric Clapton – guitar, vocals (guest appearance)Paul Jones – harmonica (guest appearance)Production personnelKevin Shirley – production, mixingJosh Shirley – mixing assistanceBritannia Row Studios – recording, engineeringBarry MacLeod – engineering assistanceRyan Smith – masteringSam Dunn – directionScot McFadyen – directionDave Pattenden – productionLisa Grootenboer – editingDennis Friel – graphic designMarcus Sweeney-Bird – photographyChristine Goodwin – photographyChart performanceCertificationsReferencesCategory:2009 live albumsCategory:Joe Bonamassa albumsCategory:Albums produced by Kevin ShirleyCategory:Live albums recorded at the Royal Albert Hallpt:Live From The Royal Albert Hall
+The Soviet policy of compelling the socialist governments of its satellite states to subordinate their national interests to those of the Eastern Bloc (through military force if needed) became known as the Brezhnev Doctrine.
+The municipality covers an area of and as of 2011 had a population of 95 people.
+Prior to the Synod of Ráth Breasail the Catholic Church in Ireland did not have a diocesan system of governance.
+Track listingPersonnelTurboWojciech Hoffmann – guitar Marcin Białożyk – guitar, vocalsRadosław Kaczmarek – bass guitar, vocalsSławomir Bryłka – drumsTomasz Goehs – drumsProductionRadek Kaczmarek – cover conceptWłodzimierz Kowaliński – photographyWojciech Kurkowski – assistantJacek Frączek – assistantPiotr "MaDcs" Madziar – engineeringWojciech Hoffmann – producerMariusz Łechtański – cover artRelease historyReferencesCategory:1992 albumsCategory:Turbo (Polish band) albums
+EditionSouth East Asian Peninsular GamesSoutheast Asian GamesMedal tableMedalistsMenSinglesDoublesTeamWomenSinglesDoublesTeamMixed DoublesReferencesPage 24Page 27Page 56Page 23Page 13Page 98Page 31 Southeast Asian GamesTennisSoutheast Asian Games
+Venice Medical is a 1983 American television film.
+The 36th edition of the Liberty Bowl, the game featured the Illinois Fighting Illini of the Big Ten Conference and the East Carolina Pirates, a football independent.
+LifeBorn in Boston, Massachusetts, Boles was ordained a priesthood for the Boston Archdiocese on February 2, 1955.
+Floretta McCutcheon (22 July 1888 - 2 February 1967) was a professional bowler and activist.
+HistoryIn 1918, the western segment of US 2 was old WIS 10 with the exception of the short segment between US 51 and the Michigan state line, which was not a part of the state highway system until Michigan signed their trunkline system a year later.
+Sir.
+A supporter of World War I, he stood as an independent at the 1917 Aberdeen South by-election, taking second place with 29.4% of the vote, then again in Aberdeen South at the 1918 general election, where his vote dropped back to only 16.8%.
+Category:Populated places in El SalvadorCategory:Municipalities of the Sonsonate Department
+Centre-forward Bill Rawlings finished as the season's top scorer with 20 goals in the Second Division and one in the FA Cup.
+It is one of the 100 Famous Japanese Mountains.
+!
+This was his second, more successful, shot at the competition after not qualifying in 2005.
+Iblin (Arabic: أبلين), also spelled Ibleen, is a village in the Arihah District in the Idlib Governorate in Syria.
+References Category:Acrididae generaCategory:Orthoptera of Indo-ChinaCategory:Monotypic insect generaCategory:Insects described in 1940
+One former resident says that people kept the holidays for the social attachment, and another spouts, “Judaism—there wasn't any!” In fact, when they were building their meeting hall it was almost unanimously decided to not build a synagogue—until they learned it could be a tax write off.
+Whittle submitted his audition tape just as he returned to the U.K. for Christmas.
+It took place at the Hungaroring, Hungary, on July 1, 2001.
+See also List of Major League Baseball no-hittersReferencesExternal linksCategory:1906 birthsCategory:1977 deathsCategory:St. Louis Cardinals playersCategory:Chicago Cubs playersCategory:Brooklyn Dodgers playersCategory:Major League Baseball pitchersCategory:Texarkana Twins playersCategory:Austin Senators playersCategory:Houston Buffaloes playersCategory:Rochester Red Wings playersCategory:Montreal Royals playersCategory:TCU Horned Frogs baseball playersCategory:Baseball players from TexasCategory:People from Comanche, Texas
+It is a Gram-positive, facultatively anaerobic, non-motile, non-spore-forming bacillus.
+The club also competed in Serie A and the Coppa Italia.
+Environmental impactAlthough larvae can kill young trees by girdling them, infested mature trees are usually not seriously injured.
+ReferencesCategory:1987 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:South African female field hockey playersCategory:Female field hockey goalkeepersCategory:Olympic field hockey players of South AfricaCategory:Field hockey players at the 2008 Summer OlympicsCategory:Field hockey players at the 2010 Commonwealth GamesCategory:Commonwealth Games competitors for South Africa
+The Italian and German editions of Metal Hammer commented on the "sophisticated songwriting" in this release.
+Carving chisels used for intricate designs and sculpting; cutting edges are many; such as gouge, skew, parting, straight, paring, and V-groove.
+Spot 1019 played their last show June 2012.
+She is best known for her portraits and still life.
+Tremessen is an old name for Tlemcen, city in Algeria Trzemeszno, town in Poland
+Serendipitously, the two founding members of the group had previously met at kindergarten.
+Certified Workshops in the field of robotics are conducted every year before the fest to help students understand the different technology trends in the market.
+Haplogroup U1 has also been found among specimens at the mainland cemetery in Kulubnarti, Sudan, which date from the Early Christian period (AD 550-800).
+Despite never being released as a single, it remains a favourite amongst Queen's fans.
+Television and filmThe Rockin' Berries' version of the song appears in the 2015 British film Legend, which is heavily based on the story of the Kray twins, notorious London gangsters during the mid-1960s (when the song was a U.K. hit).
+BFI may also refer to:Companies Browning-Ferris Industries, American waste collection company BFI Canada, non-hazardous solid waste management company in North AmericaGovernmental entities Bureau of Fraud Investigation, Irish national police division responsible for investigating fraudulent activity Boeing Field, Seattle, Washington, United States (by IATA airport code)Non-commercial enterprises Big Five Inventory, survey for measuring Big Five personality traits Baby Friendly Initiative (UK), pro-breastfeeding campaign run by UNICEF UK as part of global Baby Friendly Hospital Initiative Becker Friedman Institute for Research in Economics, cross-disciplinary center for research in economics at University of Chicago Buckminster Fuller Institute, U.S. charitable institution dedicated to propagating ideas of Buckminster Fuller
+This is possible thanks to the cooperation of a team of Israeli and Palestinian doctors who work together.
+He highlighted the antagonistic agency Sentinel Services, feeling that giving it the initials "SS" was a reference to the Schutzstaffel, a paramilitary division of Nazi Germany.
+The same study shows that insertions in the canonical framework of ankyrin repeats are enriched in conflictive interactions, that are related to function.
+The case has been posited by Danish linguist Søren Wichmann for the Azoyú variety of the Tlapanec language, which seems to be the only natural language to use such a case.
+This is one of five volumes in the series that collects songs by Texas bands; the others are Highs in the Mid-Sixties, Volume 11, Highs in the Mid-Sixties, Volume 12, Highs in the Mid-Sixties, Volume 17, and Highs in the Mid-Sixties, Volume 23.
+Mahmudabad (, also Romanized as Maḩmūdābād) is a village in Yanqaq Rural District in the Central District of Galikash County, Golestan Province, Iran.
+In the latter situation, an Erie guess would be the only option available for the federal court attempting to apply state law.
+Libertarian caucusesThe Libertarian Party of Iowa conducted their own caucuses on February 8, offering in-person caucus locations and an online virtual caucus.
+Hunting and fishing is practiced by permission in the dry season.
+Career Kaufmann was a Research Supervisor at the Department of Chemistry at Rutgers University in New Jersey, United States of America from May 1998 to June 2001; after being a Teaching Assistant at the Department of Bioengineering at the University of Pennsylvania, United States of America.
+Kelden Amadiro, seemingly enraged by the attack on Fastolfe, quickly blames Earth.
+Claude Gatignol (born November 20, 1938 in Saint-Julien-près-Bort) is a member of the National Assembly of France.
+Ufo abei is a species of gall wasp in the genus Ufo.
+"Tr3́s Jr." aired Spanish dubs of Blue's Clues and Wonder Pets!.
+Awards and honors Recipient of the Panchanan Chakravarty Memorial Award (1999) awarded by the Bengal Economic Association for promoting teaching and research in West Bengal, India Mahalanobis Memorial Medal, Indian Econometric Society, 2002 Recipient of the best paper award US$10000 from the Global Development Network (World Bank) on the theme “Globalization and Inequality” (2003) V.K.R.V.
+ReferencesCategory:PolyommatiniCategory:Butterflies of AfricaCategory:Taxa named by George Talbot (entomologist)Category:Butterflies described in 1935
+Mangueigne is a sub-prefecture of Salamat Region in Chad.
+The Act made provisions for the government of the United Kingdom to administer Anguilla, and pass laws for the territory or on its behalf.
+Final league tableResultsSheffield United's score comes firstLegendFootball League First DivisionFA CupLeague CupPlayersFirst-team squadSquad at end of seasonReferencesNotesCategory:Sheffield United F.C.
+The gold medal was originally won by Jerome Young of the United States in 44.50, but he was later disqualified for doping, together with his teammate Calvin Harrison who finished sixth.
+He is known for his roles as Assistant Secretary of State Bob Slatterly in The West Wing and for various roles in the Star Trek franchise.
+Category:Mountains of LombardyCategory:Ortler AlpsCategory:Mountains of the Alps
+The Fireclown may refer to:The Fireclown, a 1965 science fiction novel by Michael MoorcockFireclown, a minor New Wave of British Heavy Metal (NWOBHM) band formed in 1979"Fireclown", a song by NWOBHM group Tygers of Pan Tang
+He was selected on the bench for the side to face during a tour match during a 2014 incoming tour.
+The city's economy depended on shipping, brewing, fishing and agriculture.
+Jacob Baegert was buried in Neustadt and his simple tombstone is kept there, outside of St. Mary's Catholic Church.
+Nowadays, most of their games are freeware, along with the older titles, and the upcoming ones.
+Italian tenor Andrea Bocelli also played in piano bars to pay for singing lessons.
+The book describes the dramatic changes that was felt in the Central Asia in early twentieth century.
+At the very western end of Gad Cliff is Worbarrow Tout, which forms the southern bastion enclosing Worbarrow Bay, which is cut into the comparatively soft clays and sands of the Wealden Beds.
+The autopsy results indicated that Allende had died after shooting himself with an AK-47 received as a gift from Fidel Castro.
+Cheech & Chong: Roasted is a 2008 roast of comedians Cheech & Chong broadcast on TBS.
+It is known from Israel, the Ukraine, Iraq, Turkey, Armenia, and Syria.
+There were two intermediate stations: and Abbey (latterly known as Abbey and West Dereham).
+Kayleen Green (born 3 June 1998) is a Namibian cricketer.
+In 1676 the wealthy and prestigious Grocers’ Institute (; formed in 1375 to offer guild-like protection to merchants), purchased the grounds and erected 20 apartments for the widows of deceased members, to encourage them to vacate their shops in favour of new members.
+External links Atlantide Il Sussidiario Il Sussidiario (English)Category:Think tanks established in 2002Category:Think tanks based in ItalyCategory:Catholic social teachingCategory:Organisations based in MilanCategory:2002 establishments in Italy
+Its broadcasting center is in Koto, Tokyo.
+Their fame could be brief, what matters is that they were well known during the peak of their popularity.
+(Harry Akst, Grant Clarke)"No Moon at All" (David Mann, Redd Evans)"Romance In the Dark" (Lil Green)"It Must Be True" (Harry Barris, Gus Arnheim, Gordon Clifford)"Everything But You" (Duke Ellington, Harry James, Don George)Tracks 1-5, 7, 9 & 10 recorded in New York City on 20 November 1956; tracks 6, 8, 11 & 12 recorded New York City on 21 November 1957.
+The MOT includes historic motoring photographs, decorative walls, vintage neon signs, antique cars, bicycles and motorcycles.
+There is also a streak of blackish irroration along the fold, marked with two or three white dots.
+Kopcheliite is a village in Gabrovo Municipality, in Gabrovo Province, in northern central Bulgaria.
+Columna Lactaria "Milk Column" was a landmark in ancient Rome in the Forum Holitorium
+In September 2019 the company merged with another Dutch pharmacy company DA, with the DIO stores being re-branded as DA stores.
+The trunk is often crooked.
+On 18 August 1919 he was transferred to the post of chief of staff of Banat troops, and on 20 September of the same year he was stationed at the headquarters of the First Army District.
+Founding member and first president, Mr. Yevhen Liakhovych, an engineer by training and a proponent of Ukrainian nation's right to self-determination and independence from the Soviet Union, established the ODFFU to support the struggle for a free and independent Ukraine.
+The name Chacabuco may also refer to:Chile Chacabuco Valley, the origin of the name Chacabuco Cuesta, a Mountain pass through the Chilean Coast Range (Cordillera de la Costa) Chacabuco, an abandoned nitrate or "saltpeter" town in the Atacama Desert of northern Chile Chacabuco Province, a Province in central Chile Puerto Chacabuco, a town in Chile Chacabuco River, a river in Chile Chilean ship Chacabuco, a number of warships of ChileArgentina Chacabuco, Buenos Aires, a city in Buenos Aires Province, ArgentinaChacabuco Partido, a political division in Buenos Aires Province, ArgentinaChacabuco Department, San Luis, a political division in San Luis Province, ArgentinaChacabuco Department, Chaco, a political division in Chaco Province, ArgentinaParque Chacabuco, a neighborhood in the city of Buenos Aires, ArgentinaChacabuco Park, a city park in Buenos Aires, Argentina
+ReferencesFurther reading Yahoo plug-in gives brains to browser search Inquisitor for iPhoneCategory:MacOS-only softwareCategory:Yahoo!
+Match resultsGame following a State of Origin matchLadderScorersHonoursNilLeaguePlayer of the year: Kevin WaltersRookie of the year: Paul Hauff / Willie CarneBest back: Kevin WaltersBest forward: Gene MilesClubman of the year: Ray HerringClubReferencesCategory:Brisbane Broncos seasonsBrisbane Broncos seasonBrisbane Broncos season
+Caccia Dominioni graduated from the Politecnico di Milano in 1936, and opened a studio with two fellow-students, Livio and Pier Giacomo Castiglioni.
+TYR Sport, Inc. is an American manufacturer of competitive swim and triathlon apparel and gear.
+At the 2006 census, its existence was noted, but its population was not reported.
+Bibliography J'apprends le yoga, Paris, published by Flammarion, 1968 Je perfectionne mon yoga, Paris, published by Flammarion, 1970 Pranayama, la dynamique du souffle, published by Flammarion, 1971 Ma séance de yoga, Paris, published by Flammarion 2 x 7 jours pour rajeunir, Paris, published by Flammarion Tantra, le culte de la Féminité, Évolution du corps et de l'Esprit par l'érotisme et l'amour, Paris, published by Flammarion, 1988 Le yoga mental, published by Almora, 2013ReferencesExternal links (French)Category:1919 birthsCategory:2004 deathsCategory:Yoga teachers
+He was born in Miryang in Gyeongsang province, to a yangban family of the Seonsan Gim lineage.
+Delegan or Dalgan () may refer to: Delegan-e Madrasah Delegan-e Mazan Far Delegan-e Molla Faqir Delegan-e Sheykh Cheragh Dalgan County
+Staff film review, February 7, 1945.
+Oberarzt (short: OArzt or OA), literally meaning "senior physician," in English known as first lieutenant (Dr.), was a military commissioned officer rank in the Austro-Hungarian Common Army until 1918, and in the German Reichswehr and Wehrmacht until 1945.
+It is situated in the town of Totnes on the River Dart in Devon.
+|}See also List of protected heritage sites in Luxembourg (Belgium)Étalle, BelgiumReferences Belgian heritage register: Direction générale opérationnelle - Aménagement du territoire, Logement, Patrimoine et Energie (DG4) www.dglive.beEtalle, BelgiumCategory:Étalle, Belgium
+Category V is one of the more flexible classifications of protected areas.
+Over much of her childhood Michelena’s parents toured with the Emma Abbott Grand Opera Company.
+Bilderberg may refer to: Bilderberg Hotel, a hotel in Oosterbeek in the Netherlands, namesake of the Bilderberg Group Bilderberg conference, an annual private conference
+It had a capacity of 10,000 patrons.
+Transition year is packed with a variety of activities such as : bag packing for charity organisations, fundraising events, work experience, public speaking, manual handing, kickboxing, first aid, business enterprise, ECDL and many more.
+See also List of Italian soups List of soupsReferencesExternal links Category:Italian soups
+The Beatles version was released on their Anthology 1 album in 1995 and again in 2013 on their On Air – Live at the BBC Volume 2 collection.
+BiographyEarly lifeChildhoodMirra Alfassa was born in 1878 in Paris to Moïse Maurice Alfassa a Turkish Jewish father, and Mathilde Ismalun an Egyptian Jewish mother.
+He was a Member of the Economic Council of the Polish Government in 1989-91.
+Stonyhurst Association Charitable TrustThe Stonyhurst Association Charitable Trust raises money to advance the further education of current and former pupils of the College.
+Accreditation requires site visits at least once every three years by the EBAA to evaluate adherence to established standards and quality control.
+Stockhausen groups Carré with Kontakte (1958–60) and Momente (1962–64/69) as representatives of moment form, in which he tried to compose states and processes in which each moment is a personal, centred one, that can exist on its own and, as something individual, can also always be related to its surroundings and to the whole; something in which everything that happens does not pursue a determined course from a defined beginning to an inevitable end.
+ArtistsSee Heavenly Recordings#Artists for a list of artists.
+A house of a legislature can also use a resolution to exercise its specific powers, as the British House of Commons does to elect its Speaker or as the United States House of Representatives does to impeach an officer of the government.
+The Peacekeeper Revolver is the light gun released for the Philips CD-i multimedia system.
+Natural Yip made her international debut at the 2012 Women's Twenty20 Asia Cup.
+Dinosaur fossils are known from the formation, including those of Plateosaurus and Notatesseraeraptor.
+East Timor competed at the 2017 World Aquatics Championships in Budapest, Hungary from 14 to 30 July.
+She also had a featured role in the musical film Calypso Heat Wave.
+It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1992.
+CouncillorsElection Results2017 By-election2017 Election2017 South Lanarkshire Council election2012 Election2012 South Lanarkshire Council election2007 Election2007 South Lanarkshire Council electionReferencesCategory:Wards of South LanarkshireCategory:Rutherglen
+Peter Ebdon was the defending champion but he lost 8–9 to Ian McCulloch in the Last 32.
+ReferencesCategory:Unincorporated communities in OklahomaCategory:Unincorporated communities in Carter County, Oklahoma
+The steady-state flow of groundwater is described by a form of the Laplace equation, which is a form of potential flow and has analogs in numerous fields.
+Țepeș Vodă may refer to several villages in Romania: Țepeș Vodă, a village in Movila Miresii Commune, Brăila County Țepeș Vodă, a village in Siliștea Commune, Constanța County
+The leader of the group Barrister Benjamin Onwuka gave Nigerians living in Biafran territory an ultimatum to vacate their land before March 31, 2014, or face the bloodbath that will come afterward.
+Vulpeşti may refer to several villages in Romania: Vulpeşti, a village in Buzoești Commune, Argeș County Vulpeşti, a village in Dobroteasa Commune, Olt Countyand to a village in Moldova: Vulpeşti, a village in Mănoileşti Commune, Ungheni districtSee also Vulpe, Vulpea, Vulpescu - Romanian family names
+Among them are The Last Supper, Christ Bearing His Cross, The Dead Saviour in the Arms of the Eternal Father, and The Archangel Michael Driving Souls into Purgatory and Hell.
+Also, the system's surface model will be improved to counter high-speed boats and fast attack craft.
+497–9, pedigree of Incledon of BucklandReferencesCategory:1676 birthsCategory:1758 deathsCategory:People from BarnstapleCategory:Mayors of BarnstapleCategory:Incledon family
+These multi-page ads from the major studios supported the magazine for decades.
+An amendment in 2000 further specified the jurisdiction of the law, that included East Jerusalem.
+The Partnership for Prosperity and Security in the Caribbean (PPS) is a regional-level dialogue with the stated purpose of providing greater cooperation on security and economic issues.
+Aregnaudeau and Duc de Dantzig were last heard of on 13 December 1811, when the privateer Gazelle reached Morlaix and reported on her activities.
+References Category:Roman Catholic biblical scholarsCategory:French Roman CatholicsCategory:French biblical scholarsCategory:1946 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Female biblical scholars
+Hew Dalrymple may refer to: Hew Dalrymple, Lord North Berwick (1652–1737), Scottish judge and politician Sir Hew Dalrymple, 2nd Baronet (1712–1790), Scottish politician, grandson of the above Hew Dalrymple (advocate) (c. 1740–1774), Scottish advocate, poet and Attorney-General of Grenada Sir Hew Dalrymple, 3rd Baronet (1746–1800), Scottish politician, son of the 2nd Baronet Hew Whitefoord Dalrymple (1750–1830), British Army general Hew Hamilton Dalrymple (1857–1945), Scottish politician
+magazine numerous times.
+Despite having a point deducted in the first round for an illegal knee, Gadelha defeated Hamasaki via third-round TKO and earned a shot at Esparza's strawweight title.
+Wabanaki, Wabenaki, Wobanaki, etc.
+Through the use of PSIP, digital television receivers display the station's virtual channel as its former UHF analog channel 38.
+At the 2006 census, its existence was noted, but its population was not reported.
+A Son of the Sun may refer to: A Son of the Sun (album), an album by Uyama Hiroto A Son of the Sun (novel), a 1912 novel by Jack London
+Altitude (feet) 967Altitude (meters) 294 Time zone (est) UTC+2(+3DT)Nearby Cities and Towns West North East South Akpınar (4.9 nm)Karaibrahimler (4.9 nm)Dedeler (4.0 nm) Kadılar (1.0 nm) Üvezdere (0.8 nm) Hacıkasım (4.7 nm)Şerbetli (2.4 nm)Dumanköy (1.3 nm)Category:Cities in Turkey
+Juventude de Viana|0||2||0||0||2||4||10||-6|}Group C|- style="background: #ccffcc;"|style="text-align:left;"|1.
+A tributary of the Kaikou River, it flows northwest before turning southwest to enter the Kaikou south of Moerewa.
+The women and children stay, along with an American priest.
+CompetitionsThe convention presents two awards, chosen by a jury of game industry professionals based on a list of nominations also selected by the jury from public entries.
+José Antonio Llamas Martínez (born 28 February 1985) is a Spanish footballer who plays for UE Sant Andreu as a right back.
+ReferencesCategory:Villages in Przasnysz County
+Integrated Transport Authority (ITA)It has been suggested that the four unitary authorities of Bristol, South Gloucestershire, North Somerset and Bath and North East Somerset should form a regional Integrated Transport Authority (ITA).
+Skaay appears three times in church records: first, in 1884 when he was baptized "Robert McKay"; second, on 13 March 1892, again a baptism, where his name is entered simply as "Sky"; third, in January 1894 when he registers a marriage to "Esther" and was baptized once more, this time as "John Sky".
+DiscographyMassive AppendageThe Severed Erection (1989) - OriginalFester FanaticsWhat Choice Do We Have?
+Today, high blocks cover the once richly-gardened district.
+ReferencesCategory:Government agencies of Balochistan, PakistanCategory:Provincial public service commissions of Pakistan
+The establishment of a negotiating process aimed at overcoming all the differences between Spain and the United Kingdom over Gibraltar.
+He is the youngest of the three Marquette brothers (himself, Chris, and Eric), all of whom are active in entertainment.
+The brand was originally popular in northern Mexico and Texas, with the Coca-Cola Company later helping it spread nationwide.
+They were forced into the highlands by continuous invasions of the Mongoloid people of China.
+Maryland Route 41 (MD 41) is a state highway in the U.S. state of Maryland.
+The original owners of WAGM were a father and son—Alexander G. Miller (a former mayor of Royal Oak), and his oldest son Robert.
+The meeting was informal and technical in nature.
+Idaho gained a second seat for the 1912 election and both seats were at-large through the 1916 election.
+Present circumstancesTheir habitat is hilly undulating terrain, and extremely forested.
+The wingspan is about 18 mm.
+Working Papers Some Neglected Axioms in Fair Division.
+In fall of 2015, the Brandon Valley School District added an intermediate school.
+This name derives from the Old English aened-mere, meaning 'duck mere or lake'.
+In 1920, Paul Whiteman and his band recorded "Whispering" in New York City, in a subgenre known as symphonic jazz.
+---Mher FilianFilian is currently running his own music production company, splitting his time between New York and LA.
+It was described by Walter Thornbury as "a ridiculous octagonal structure crowned by an absurd statue".
+The following lists events that happened during 1961 in the Republic of Chile.
+Summary of raiding historyReferencesNotesCitationsBibliographyCategory:World War I submarines of GermanyCategory:1916 shipsCategory:U-boats commissioned in 1916Category:Ships built in Bremen (state)Category:Type U 57 submarines
+Here are the policies: EuroCOP strongly encourages further discussion of sector specific legislative initiatives on the health and safety rights of police officers at the EU level.
+Current companyCarly Motors continues to fine-tune engines, with a focus on software remapping for raceteams with cars competing on the highest level of motorsport as well as regular street and muscle cars.
+ReferencesCategory:Populated places in Ekerö MunicipalityCategory:Uppland
+However, as there are many factors which will determine the rate of retreat as it continues, such as the narrowness of the channel along which it is occurring and the movement of warm water from the deep ocean, it is difficult to be certain about the fate of the glacier without the collection of more data.
+Yorke was initially sympathetic to the origin myth of the Welsh people, including the traditions which traced its descent from Trojan forebears, but later rejected such theories.
+Camerae are short.
+Thomas Aldwell (14 June 1868 – 1954) was a Canadian entrepreneur and businessman who developed and gained financing for a project to build the Elwha Dam on the Elwha River in Washington State, approximately 4.9 miles upstream from the mouth of the river at the Strait of Juan de Fuca.
+Nettle Creek may refer to:StreamsNettle Creek (Grass River), New York, United StatesNettle Creek (Mad River), Ohio, United StatesNettle Creek, Innot Hot Springs, Queensland, AustraliaPopulated placesNettle Creek, Illinois, United States, an unincorporated communityNettle Creek Township, Grundy County, Illinois
+References Category:Populated places in Izeh County
+He started his career in artillery, but turned in 1912 into the Aeronautical Military Service.
+Malcolm Island has daily BC Ferry service for both vehicles and passengers.
+Samuel Michel (born February 11, 1971) is a former French professional football player and now manager.
+And on the Madill Subdivision between Denison, TX and Irving, TX with an ABS signal overlay on the northern ten or so miles between Denison and Sherman, TX.
+On April 26, Qatar reached the 10,000 mark of coronavirus cases with 929 new confirmed cases reported by MOPH.
+As a sophomore in 2006–07, he averaged 11 points and six rebounds per game as Hopkins made it to the section championship.
+Track listingAll compositions by Joey DeFrancesco except where noted "I'll Always Love You" (Jimmy George) – 8:30 "Red Top" (Lionel Hampton, Ben Kynard) – 7:32 "Teach Me Tonight" (Gene De Paul, Sammy Cahn) – 4:38 "Song for My Mother" – 6:25 "Where Were You" – 6:54 "Georgia on My Mind" (Hoagy Carmichael, Stuart Gorrell) – 4:59 "Lights Camera Action" – 3:08 "But Not for Me" (George Gershwin, Ira Gershwin) – 7:33 "I Thought About You" (Jimmy Van Heusen with lyrics by Johnny Mercer) – 5:22 "Love Attack" (Horace Ott) – 4:34PersonnelJoey DeFrancesco – Hammond C3, Steinway piano, Ensoniq EPS, Ensoniq EPS-M, Ensoniq SQ-80, Ensoniq VFXArt Baron (track 9), Virgil Jones (tracks 3, 6, 7 & 10), Wallace Roney (tracks 3, 6, 7 & 10) – trumpet Spanky Davis, Victor Paz – trumpet, flugelhorn (tracks 3, 6, 7, 9 & 10)Warren Cavington, Dick Griffin, Grover Mitchell – trombone (tracks 3, 6, 7, 9 & 10)Garfield Fobbs – bass trombone (tracks 3, 6, 7, 9 & 10)Harvey Estrin - flute, piccolo (tracks 4, 6 & 9)Billy Kerr – flute, alto flute, piccolo (tracks 4, 6 & 9)Phil Bodner – oboe, flute (tracks 4, 6 & 9)Kirk Whalum – soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone (tracks 2, 4 & 5)Chuck Wilson, Jerome Richardson – alto saxophone (tracks 3, 6, 7, 9 & 10)Bill Easley (tracks 3, 6, 7, 9 & 10), Patience Higgins (tracks 3, 6 & 7), Illinois Jacquet (tracks 2 & 8) – tenor saxophoneBabe Clark – baritone saxophone (tracks 3, 6, 7, 9 & 10)John Campo – bassoon, flute (tracks 4, 6 & 9)John Scofield – guitar (track 1)Lou Volpe – rhythm guitar, guitar Milt Hinton – bass (tracks 3, 6 & 9)Wilbur Bascomb – bass, Fender bass (tracks 7 & 10)Billy Hart (tracks 3, 6 & 9), Eugene Jackson (tracks 1, 2, 4, 5 & 8), Dennis Mackrel (tracks 7 & 10) – drums Sammy Figueroa (tracks 1-4 & 6-10), Steve Thornton (track 5) – percussionReferencesCategory:Joey DeFrancesco albumsCategory:1990 albumsCategory:Columbia Records albumsCategory:Albums recorded at Van Gelder Studio
+Events from the year 1428 in FranceIncumbents Monarch – Charles VIIEvents 12 October - English forces begin the Siege of Orléans during the Hundred Years WarBirths 2 November - Yolande, Duchess of Lorraine, ruler of Lorraine (died 1483) August - Radegonde of Valois, French Princess (died 1445)Deaths 6 November - Guillaume Fillastre, Cardinal (born 1348)Category:1428 in EuropeCategory:1420s in FranceCategory:Years of the 15th century in FranceFrance
+In 2005, a punk/hardcore record store opened in Towson, MD naming itself after the song.
+He worked at the Sandvik Church until 1948 when he was appointed the Bishop of the Diocese of Stavanger.
+The season was contested between August 2011 and April 2012, with Melrose RFC winning their eighth Championship and Gala RFC winning the Cup.
+At Challenge Day, students from all walks of life gather together in one room.
+It was located in Ascarate Park in El Paso, Texas from 1960 until 2006, but after conflicts with El Paso County, owner Pat Thompson decided to move it to Sunland Park where the owner of Sunland Park Casino donated land right across from his casino.
+ReferencesExternal linksGameFAQsCategory:1996 video gamesCategory:Turn-based strategy video gamesCategory:Video games developed in the United StatesCategory:Windows games
+Currently the Chairman of the Union is Aram Satian who succeeded Robert Amirkhanyan in 2013.
+He renounced his American citizenship, and formed the Yeongdo Ha clan after gaining his Korean citizenship.
+The Witts Springs Formation is a sandstone geologic formation in Arkansas with thin layers of limestone, shale, and siltstone.
+The government later signed a tripartite MoU with the AAI and DRDO in March 2017, to develop the airport for non-military use of Airbus A-320 category aircraft.
+Chongqing Zoo is a zoo in the city of Chongqing, China, about 8 km (5 miles) southwest from the city centre.
+There were no special sessions of the 13th Minnesota Legislature.
+At the 2009 Annual Conference of the Society for Imaging Informatics in Medicine (SIIM) in Charlotte, North Carolina, WHITIA announced its partnership with SIIM, which will allow both organizations to collaborate on specific initiatives.
+Polygala quitensis is a species of plant in the family Polygalaceae.
+The main branch of the Black River rises in Charlton Township in east-central Otsego County near the boundary with Montmorency County.
+Timber Queen may refer to:The Timber Queen, an American 1922 film serial directed by Fred JackmanTimber Queen (1944 film), an American 1944 film directed by Frank McDonald
+"In Memory of Elizabeth Reed", "Mountain Jam" and "Whipping Post" from the live album At Fillmore East capture Oakley at his best.
+C (6)s to year.
+This enzyme participates in histidine metabolism as it is involved in the 6th step of histidine biosynthesis as part of a nine step cyclical pathway.
+Priest released the album through Geffen/MCA Records, which already had a relationship with Wu-Tang Clan.
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