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Aruna Chaudhary
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അരുണ ചൗധരി
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Over the years, the university's students have represented all 50 states and close to 150 foreign countries.
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Au fil des ans, les étudiants de l'Université ont représenté les cinquante États et près de 150 pays étrangers.
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how to reset kmc smart plug?
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Press and hold for 10 seconds to reset (LED flashes green and the Smart Plug resets upon release). Use the app to reconfigure network settings. Reset the smart plug to factory defaults, then follow the initial setup instructions again. Unplug the Smart Plug, then press and hold the power button.
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As the story progresses, she proves the nobility of her character through the various trials and tribulations of youth, evolving from a willful and rather selfish little girl into a kind, generous, loving young woman.
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À medida que a história avança, ela prova a nobreza de sua personagem através dos vários ensaios e atribulações da juventude, evoluindo de uma menina voluntariosa e bastante egoísta à uma jovem generosa e amorosa.
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what does standard enthalpy measure?
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The standard enthalpy of formation is measured in units of energy per amount of substance, usually stated in kilojoule per mole (kJ mol−1), but also in kilocalorie per mole, joule per mole or kilocalorie per gram (any combination of these units conforming to the energy per mass or amount guideline).
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existence of the idea, which existence the will does not want but which, nevertheless, is sensibly present.' Brentano suggests that Hartmann's definition of consciousness perhaps refers to "something purely imaginary", and certainly does not agree with Brentano's definition. Background and publication history Brentano was at work on Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint in 1873, while travelling in Europe after leaving the Roman Catholic Church and resigning from his position at the University of Würzburg. He completed the first two books of the work in March 1874. Brentano originally intended to produce a large work consisting of six books, the first five of which would cover psychology as a science, mental phenomena in general, and their three basic classes, while the sixth would deal with the mind-body problem, the soul, and immortality. However, Brentano was ill with smallpox after publishing the first two books. The work remained incomplete. In 1911, Brentano published book two of Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint under the new title Von der Klassifikation der psychischen Phänomene, with the addition of remarks explaining his later views, where they differed from those he held in 1874. Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint was first published as Psychologie vom empirischen Standpunkte, but subsequent editions were published as Psychologie vom empirischen Standpunkt, which is the more commonly cited name. The first edition was designated Volume 1, but this was also abandoned in later editions. In 1924, after Brentano's death, the book was published in a new edition, which included explanatory notes by the philosopher Oskar Kraus. Reception Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint is Brentano's best-known book, and much has been written about its "intentionality passage". Brentano reintroduced the concept of intentionality into the philosophy of mind. However, the philosopher Roger Scruton describes the intentionality passage of Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint as both obscure and hesitant. Scruton believes that the obscurity of the passage is "compounded by Brentano's description of intentionality as the mark which distinguishes mental phenomena from physical phenomena, the latter being described, not as objective features of the natural world, but as appearances." According to Scruton, while in later editions of Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint Brentano described intentionality as a property of mental activity, and characterized it as a kind of "mental reference", Brentano never makes clear precisely what kind of property he believes it to be anywhere in his writings. Scruton has commented that none of the volumes of Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint "fulfil the promise made in the book's title", adding that Brentano eventually came to doubt that an empirical science of the mental is likely to be invented. Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint has been compared to Sigmund Freud's early metapsychology, especially as expressed in his Project for a Scientific Psychology. The psychologist Paul Vitz, who
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was designated Volume 1, but this was also abandoned in later editions. In 1924, after Brentano's death, the book was published in a new edition, which included explanatory notes by the philosopher Oskar Kraus. Reception Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint is Brentano's best-known book, and much has been written about its "intentionality passage". Brentano reintroduced the concept of intentionality into the philosophy of mind. However, the philosopher Roger Scruton describes the intentionality passage of Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint as both obscure and hesitant. Scruton believes that the obscurity of the passage is "compounded by Brentano's description of intentionality as the mark which distinguishes mental phenomena from physical phenomena, the latter being described, not as objective features of the natural world, but as appearances." According to Scruton, while in later editions of Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint Brentano described intentionality as a property of mental activity, and characterized it as a kind of "mental reference", Brentano never makes clear precisely what kind of property he believes it to be anywhere in his writings. Scruton has commented that none of the volumes of Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint "fulfil the promise made in the book's title", adding that Brentano eventually came to doubt that an empirical science of the mental is likely to be invented. Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint has been compared to Sigmund Freud's early metapsychology, especially as expressed in his Project for a Scientific Psychology. The psychologist Paul Vitz, who calls Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint Brentano's greatest work, notes that while Brentano rejected the unconscious, "his answer followed largely from his definitions of consciousness and unconsciousness, and the evidence subsequently available to Freud did not, of course, figure in Brentano's thought." The philosopher Clark Glymour writes that Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint "gave Freud one vision of what psychology should seek to know, and of what methods it should use." According to Glymour, Brentano believed that "psychology should have exact laws, and that the goal of psychology should be to find such laws...Brentano held that there are exact laws that refer only to the mental, and do not need to appeal to physical circumstances." In Glymour's view, while Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint "contains lively criticism", Brentano nevertheless
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A person kayaking on a sunny day.
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A person is out on the water.
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a guy wearing a gray t-shirt is shaving is face.
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A male is grooming himself.
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St. Augustine Beach is a city of Florida in the United States .
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St. Augustine Beach was the location of an infamous globster , known as the St. Augustine Monster , that washed up on the beach in 1896 .
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Araceli González
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أراسيلي غونزاليس
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is we built this city the worst song?
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Rolling Stone Top Ten Worst Songs of the 1980s In 2011, a Rolling Stone magazine online readers poll named "We Built This City" as the worst song of the 1980s. The song's winning margin was so large that the magazine reported it "could be the biggest blow-out victory in the history of the Rolling Stone Readers Poll".
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Imperial court in Beijing. Tenryū-ji abbot In 1403, Keimitsu was the chief abbot of Tenryū-ji monastery. During the 1430s, the temple entered into a tributary relationship with the Imperial Court of Ming Dynasty China. Chinese imperial policy at the time forbade formal trade outside of the Sinocentric world order, and both the Japanese imperial court and Ashikaga shogunate refused to submit to Chinese suzerainty. This arrangement with the Tenryū-ji allowed for formal trade to be undertaken between the two countries, in exchange for China's control over the succession of chief abbot of the temple. This arrangement gave the Zen sect, and Tenryū-ji more specifically, a near monopoly on Japan's legitimate trade with China. In conjunction with the temple of the same name in Okinawa, as well as other Zen
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and both the Japanese imperial court and Ashikaga shogunate refused to submit to Chinese suzerainty. This arrangement with the Tenryū-ji allowed for formal trade to be undertaken between the two countries, in exchange for China's control over the succession of chief abbot of the temple. This arrangement gave the Zen sect, and Tenryū-ji more specifically, a near monopoly on Japan's legitimate trade with China. In conjunction with the temple of the same name in Okinawa, as well as other Zen temples there, Tenryū-ji priests and monks played major roles in coordinating the China-Okinawa-Japan trade through to the 19th century. Missions to China The economic benefit of the Sinocentric tribute system was profitable trade. The tally trade (kangō bōeki or kanhe maoyi in Chinese) involved exchanges of Japanese products for Chinese goods. The Chinese "tally" was a certificate issued by the Ming. The first 100 such tallies were conveyed to Japan by Kenchū Keimitsu in 1404. Only those
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(1982– ), American racing driver Cole Whitt (1991– ), American racing driver Don Whitt (1930– ), an American professional golfer Ernie Whitt (1952– ), former Major League Baseball catcher and coach Jack Whitt (born April 12, 1990) is
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vaulter Joe Whitt Jr., American football coach Rusty Whitt, American head strength and conditioning coach Ward Whitt (born 1942), an American professor of operations research and management sciences W. B. Whitt, former mayor of Ashland, Kentucky
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Man, 51, screamed at officers and waved 11-inch knife erratically .
Shot twice in the stomach by officers and died in hospital .
He refused repeated orders to drop weapon in one of New York's busiest tourist spots .
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By . Emily Anne Epstein and Associated Press . PUBLISHED: . 15:37 EST, 11 August 2012 . | . UPDATED: . 01:58 EST, 13 August 2012 . Police shot and killed a man who lunged at them with a machete in Times Square as he screamed 'Shoot me, shoot me'. The terrifying stand-off happened on Saturday afternoon at 3pm in Times Square and was witnessed by dozens of bystanders. Officers had approached the 51-year-old man who appeared to be smoking marijuana near West 44th Street and Seventh Avenue, in the heart of Times Square, one of New York's busiest tourist destinations. Scroll down for video . Terror on the streets: NYPD officers, with their weapons drawn, stalk a machete wielding man in the middle of Times Square . The unidentified 30-year-old male was corralled down seventh avenue by officers of the NYPD as they instructed him to drop his weapon . The man became agitated, pulled out an 11-inch knife and began to put a bandanna on his head, police said. He refused repeated orders to drop the . weapon and began backing down the avenue, continuing for a number of . blocks and drawing many officers into a slow-speed pursuit that took . them south of Times Square. According to the police account, . officers pepper sprayed the man six times but he held onto the knife . throughout the seven-block pursuit. At West 37th Street, he lunged at . police and two officers shot him in the torso, police said. He was . pronounced dead at Bellevue Hospital. 'They screamed, ''Put it down, put it down,''' said newsstand worker Sunny Choi, 26, of police orders to the man. Another witness said that tourists . were screaming and running down the packed thoroughfare as the man was . corralled down Seventh Avenue by police. The incident was filmed by witnesses in Times Square as the man screamed obscenities at the police . On the move: Police chased down the 51-year-old waving a knife in the mid-town area of New York . 'The tourists were running everywhere, screaming, panic,' said Henry Irby, a t-shirt vendor. Witnesses recalled a chaotic scene in . which some bystanders took cover, while others began following the . procession down the avenue in an attempt to capture cellphone video of . it. On video, a number of officers, guns drawn, can be seen pursuing the man . as he appears to skip down Seventh Avenue. 'He was swinging at people as he ran,' Jobby Nogver, a 17-year-old visiting from Boston, told The New York Times. Nogver watched as police surrounded the man and fired. 'I can't tell you how many shots,' he said. Video taken at the scene from witnesses' cell phone suggested that approximately ten rounds were fired. Bewildered: Onlookers shouted at the man to do what the police were telling him but he did not seem to listen . Chaos: Times Square is one of New York's busiest tourist destinations . Busy streets: Witnesses following the unfolding scene down from New York's Times Square . The dreadlocked man has not been identified yet because he was carrying no identification on him, said police. Priscilla Rocha, a tourist from Brazil, was visiting Times Square with her husband when they saw the confrontation. 'I almost had a heart attack," she told the Times. 'Everyone started running.' NYPD Commissioner Paul Browne told MailOnline: 'A man armed with a knife was pepper . sprayed by officers to no effect, advanced on officers, refused to drop . his weapon and was shot by police on 7th Avenue between 37th and 38th . streets'. He was taken to Bellevue Hospital while suffering from cardiac arrest. He was in serious condition for just over an hour before he died from his injuries, police said. Horror: 'Omg! Time to go home!! Man in times square with a machete ...like 20 cops came out of nowhere with guns drawn! I'm traumatized!!' said another . Scared: 'Just saw a guy with a knife, 30 cops and more than 5 police cars running by me at Times Square. What's up???' tweeted one woman . Mr Browne added that some officers were being treated for tinnitus, or ringing of the ears, at an area hospital. A video of the event shows multiple police vehicles surrounding a man on Seventh Avenue before dozens of cops descend on him. The sound of gunshots can be heard shortly thereafter. Witnesses were in disbelief; reeling from the dramatic scene that unfolded in front of them. 'Just saw a dude with a butcher size knife get chased through times square by cops. Apparently, they chased him down and shot him,' one witness tweeted. 'Omg! Time to go home!! Man in times square with a machete ...like 20 cops came out of nowhere with guns drawn! I'm traumatized!!' said another. '20 police officers against 1 person.... Killed him right in the middle of the street,' said another. View more videos at: http://nbcnewyork.com.
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Philippe Hurault de Cheverny (bishop of Chartres)
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Philippe Hurault de Cheverny (évêque)
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and completed his education in New Zealand. In an acting career dominated by New Zealand productions, he is best known internationally for his roles in Xena: Warrior Princess and Farscape. In New Zealand he is remembered as the boss in popular Roger Hall sitcom Gliding On. Blackburn's other screen roles include breakthrough kidult series Hunter's Gold, and 'baddy' roles on New Zealand's longest-running soap operas: Close to Home and Shortland Street. He also had a starring role in 1978 feature Skin Deep, playing a local identity who encourages the gym in his town to employ a city masseuse in a bid to improve the town's
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Colster Blackburn (born 1935) is a New Zealand actor and writer. He has worked in film, television, radio and theatre in New Zealand, Australia, and the United Kingdom since 1972. Biography Blackburn was born in Bristol, England, and completed his education in New Zealand. In an acting career dominated by New Zealand productions, he is best known internationally for his roles in Xena: Warrior Princess and Farscape. In New Zealand he is remembered as the boss in popular Roger Hall sitcom Gliding On. Blackburn's other screen roles include breakthrough kidult series Hunter's Gold, and 'baddy' roles on New Zealand's longest-running soap operas: Close to Home and Shortland Street. He also had a starring role in 1978 feature
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as the head technician for the show. Feller toured the world as a master sergeant. After World War II, Feller worked at Imperial Scenic Studio as a head carpenter for nine years before starting his own business. Feller Scenic Studios Peter Feller was the owner of Feller Scenery Studios in the Bronx. He acquired the shop, which was previously a metalworking shop, around 1960. Feller created unique and huge Christo-Vac thermo-forming machines to make the walls for the Vatican Pavilion at the 1964 World's Fair in New York City. Feller Scenery Studios became a one-stop-shop for theatrical designers when it merged with Costume Associates, which was owned by Feller's wife, Katy. By the mid-1970s, the studio was building sets for almost half the shows being produced on Broadway, and employed anywhere from 35 to 130 workers depending on the work-load. Feller innovated the use of electronically operated winches for moving scenery around the stage and was among the first theatrical set builders to spot the stage potential of plastics. Feller used the vacuum forming machines to create a plastic set of armor for Man of La Mancha. In 1975, the company changed its name from Feller Scenery Studio, Inc., to Theater Techniques, Inc., when it moved from the Bronx to an abandoned hangar in Stewart Airport in Newburgh, NY. The Rolling Stones were rehearsing in the space and brought Feller up to build their
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him a job with Vail Scenic where he worked on Jimmy Durante's show "Jumbo" at the Hippodrome. Feller joined the Army during World War II. He applied for the Irving Berlin musical, This Is the Army. Berlin had worked with Feller's father on Yip Yip Yaphank during World War I and hired Feller as the head technician for the show. Feller toured the world as a master sergeant. After World War II, Feller worked at Imperial Scenic Studio as a head carpenter for nine years before starting his own business. Feller Scenic Studios Peter Feller was the owner of Feller Scenery Studios in the Bronx. He acquired the shop, which was previously a metalworking shop, around 1960. Feller created unique and huge Christo-Vac thermo-forming machines to make the walls for the Vatican Pavilion at the 1964 World's Fair in New York City. Feller Scenery Studios became a one-stop-shop for theatrical designers when it merged with Costume Associates, which was owned by Feller's wife, Katy. By the mid-1970s, the studio was building sets for almost half the shows being produced on Broadway, and employed anywhere from 35 to 130 workers depending on the work-load. Feller innovated the use of electronically operated winches for moving scenery around the stage and was
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"The Case of the Ruinous Road." She played opposite Jack Lemmon in the episode "Disappearance" of Alcoa Theatre in 1958 and also made single appearances on Bonanza, I Spy, and Gunsmoke. During the 1965–1966 season, Blackman was part of the regular cast of the primetime television serial Peyton Place. On that show, she played Marion Fowler, the wife to the district attorney. Personal life In May 1959, Blackman married Joby Baker, a fellow actor she met in drama school. The couple divorced two years later, in November 1961. She then married actor Rockne Tarkington in July 1968. They had two
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of the Mohicans. Among her television appearances was her role as Hilary Gray in the 1964 Perry Mason episode "The Case of the Ruinous Road." She played opposite Jack Lemmon in the episode "Disappearance" of Alcoa Theatre in 1958 and also made single appearances on Bonanza, I Spy, and Gunsmoke. During the 1965–1966 season, Blackman was part of the regular cast of the primetime television serial Peyton Place. On that show, she played Marion Fowler, the wife to the district attorney. Personal life In May 1959, Blackman married Joby Baker, a fellow actor she met in drama school. The couple divorced two years later, in November 1961. She then married actor Rockne Tarkington in July 1968. They had two children before divorcing in October 1970.
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to pursue an education. References External links BC Lions bio Miami RedHawks bio Tennessee Titans bio 1983 births Living people Sportspeople from Grand Rapids, Michigan Players of American football from Grand Rapids, Michigan American football linebackers American players of Canadian football Canadian football linebackers Miami RedHawks football players Players of American football from Michigan Tennessee Titans players Indianapolis Colts players
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in NFL history to bench press over 40 reps at the NFL Combine. He played college football at Miami University. Nande was also a member of the Indianapolis Colts and San Diego Chargers of the NFL and the BC Lions of the
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is every real number complex?
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So, a Complex Number has a real part and an imaginary part. But either part can be 0, so all Real Numbers and Imaginary Numbers are also Complex Numbers.
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and New Wave drummer Paul Simon (album), a 1972 self-titled album by the American musician Paul Simon "Paul Simon", a 2005 song by The Russian Futurists See
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refer to: Paul Ludwig Simon (1771–1815), German architect and professor Paul Simon (politician) (1928–2003), United States Representative and Senator from Illinois Paul Simon (drummer) (born 1950), British punk rock and New Wave drummer Paul Simon (album), a 1972 self-titled album by the American
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Bloggers take issue with the President's Press Secretary's claim about the weight of Putin's catch.
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Блогеры не согласны с заявлением пресс-секретаря президента о весе улова Путина.
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where he began building low-density dwellings, known as villas, including Devonshire Villa, the home of the poet Thomas Hood. He was also involved in the construction of archways and sewers for the London Underground's first railway as part of the Metropolitan Board of Works. Political career Upon the recommendation and support of Benjamin Disraeli—the then-Chancellor of the Exchequer and future Prime Minister—Treeby stood for election as a Conservative for the corrupt borough Lyme Regis, where he had been buying properties for development, at the 1859 general election. During campaigning, Treeby bribed electors—who otherwise "taunted" him from having "risen for the people"—leading to a tie with his rival William Pinney, only settled when the
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and was successfully elected. In Parliament, he loyally supported the Conservative Party, although he also rebelled on votes relating to parliamentary and local government franchises, siding with the Liberal and philosopher John Stuart Mill, both speaking for and voting for Mill's amendments. He also amended the Conservative Reform Act 1867 bill, requiring overseers of elections to publish lists of ratepayers in arrears and in danger of losing their rote to vote. Yet, he also attempted to make public secret land deals between "resident country gentleman" and railway companies saw him rebuked by fellow Conservatives. Treeby later ended up at loggerheads with his former ally, Disraeli, when the 1868 Scottish Reform Bill saw an additional seat granted to Scotland at the expense of Lyme Regis, whose parliamentary representation was transferred to Dorset. Treeby was unseated and did not seek re-election elsewhere,
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Television broadcasts consist of translator stations in Yonaguni and Uchimichi and radio broadcasts are established from the Yonaguni television translator station.
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Hệ thống truyền hình gồm có các trạm truyền dẫn tại Yonaguni và Uchimichi và hệ thống phát thanh được hình thành nên từ trạm truyền dẫn truyền hình Yonaguni.
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Jewish money-lenders: how did they collect?
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King Edward I exiled all the Jews of England in 1290. This move was roundly supported by his barons, because it basically wiped the debts clean. Jews didn't return to England for hundreds of years. There was basically no Jewish influence in England through the rest of the midieval period. So, their attempts to collect debts went terribly wrong in that circumstance.
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Brasidas liberated the city during that conflict and after a pro-Lacedaemonian coup d'état the Edonians became his allies.
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Brasida liberò la città durante il conflitto e, dopo un colpo di stato pro-Sparta, gli Edoni ne divennero alleati.
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While Bahá'u'lláh did not himself directly claim to be either the Hindu or Buddhist messiah, he did so in principle through his writings.
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Embora Bahá'u'lláh não tenha dito que ele era o messias hindu ou budista, porém ele afirmou em princípio através de seus escritos.
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to: , later USS SP-913, a patrol vessel in commission from 1917 to 1918 , a patrol vessel in commission from 1917
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patrol vessel in commission from 1917 to 1918 , a patrol vessel in commission from 1917 to 1918 , a
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Since that date the IACHR has received thousands of petitions and has processed in excess of 12,000 individual cases.
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Seit damals hat das IAKMR tausende Petitionen erhalten und über 12.000 individuelle Fälle bearbeitet.
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northern France. Douai may also refer to: In or around the French commune Arrondissement of Douai, an administrative division Canton of Douai, an
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commune Arrondissement of Douai, an administrative division Canton of Douai, an administrative division Douai station in the town University of Douai Other Douai Mountain in the Canadian Rockies Adolph
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what do i need to do to become a canadian citizen?
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['be a permanent resident.', 'have lived in Canada for 3 out of the last 5 years.', 'have filed your taxes, if you need to.', 'pass a test on your rights, responsibilities and knowledge of Canada.', 'prove your language skills.']
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them to Milwaukee and the Beer Barrel Man made a comeback as the first logo of the new Milwaukee Brewers. The Beer Barrel Man was used by the American League club through the 1977 season. Legacy Since then, he has made appearances on stadium giveaways, such as the 1999 Turn Ahead the Clock promotion, and has found new life on Cooperstown Collection merchandise. The Beer Barrel Man was also featured in the winning design for the Brewers' "Design A Youniform" contest in 2013. The contest received nearly 700 entries and the winning design, created by Ben Peters of Richfield, Minnesota, used the Beer Barrelman as the cap logo and sleeve patch. This design was used in exhibitions games on March 22 in Arizona against the Chicago Cubs and once again March 30 in a game at Miller Park in Milwaukee against the Chicago White Sox. In 2013, fans selected Bernie's Barrelman Ale as the name of a new craft beer, made by Leinenkugel's, in a poll on the team's website. Return in 2015 On January 25, 2015, at their "On Deck" offseason event, the Brewers announced they would be bringing back the character, now named simply
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pitching, batting, fielding balls and running the bases. The December 1944 issue of Brewer News, the club's newsletter, depicted Owgust in a Santa Claus suit and long white beard. The Beer Barrel Man was used until spring training of 1953, when the Boston Braves displaced the Brewers in Milwaukee. Major Leagues After the Braves moved to Atlanta after the 1965 season, former Braves minority owner Bud Selig announced the formation of a group to bring major league baseball club back to Milwaukee, adopting the batting Beer Barrel Man as his organization's logo. When Selig's group was awarded the bankrupt American League Seattle Pilots franchise, he moved them to Milwaukee and the Beer Barrel Man made a comeback as the first logo of the new Milwaukee Brewers. The Beer Barrel Man was used by the American League club through the 1977 season.
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The arena was opened on January 30, 1990, as the Knickerbocker Arena, with a performance by Frank Sinatra.
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Fue inaugurado el 30 de enero de 1990 con la denominación de Knickerbocker Arena con un concierto de Frank Sinatra.
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4 Her father is fairly strict, screening her from reading racy material such as shojo manga or playing video games.
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Su padre es bastante estricto, evitando que lea material picante como shojo manga o jugando videojuegos.
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For example, all 12 populations showed a similar pattern of rapid improvement in fitness that decelerated over time, faster growth rates, and increased cell size.
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Por ejemplo, las 12 poblaciones muestran un patrón similar de rápido mejoramiento de aptitud que desaceleró a lo largo del tiempo, mayor velocidad de crecimiento y un tamaño celular más grande.
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Zico Bailey
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Ziko Bayli
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Do the Nine Kings of Men still wear the rings after turning into Nazgûl?
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How did Sauron remain in control of the Nazgûl?
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as Insomniac Records, SAINT VIXEN, YNW Melly and 6ix9ine. The company also acquired Flighthouse, a digital media brand. In 2018, Create Music Group announced the launch of its music publishing division with the signing of 6ix9ine. Following the launch of their publishing division, Create Music Group distributed 6ix9ine's Dummy Boy album after the release was leaked. They also released "Gooba", 6ix9ine's first single after being released from prison. The label scored its first Billboard Hot 100 number one with 6ix9ine and Nicki Minaj's "Trollz". References External links Create Music Group website 2015 establishments
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was founded in 2015 by CEO Jonathan Strauss and COO Alexandre Williams. Strauss invested $1 million into the company and later raised a seed round of $2.25 million in exchange for a minority share. The company began by collecting unclaimed revenue for EDM artists on YouTube. , Create Music Group monetizes approximately 9 billion streams a month. In 2016, Create Music Group acquired distribution company Label
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track' "Braindead". Access to the song is gained by holding the rewind button of a CD player at the start of the first track until there is silence when the song can then be heard. Track listing "God of Traffic" "Attack! Attack! Attack!" "Smoke & Mirrors" "Promote the Happy Hours" "Hard to
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is gained by holding the rewind button of a CD player at the start of the first track until there is silence when the song can then be heard. Track listing "God of Traffic" "Attack! Attack! Attack!" "Smoke & Mirrors" "Promote the Happy Hours" "Hard to Love Easy to Lay" "800 Million Heart Beats" "Broken Back" "Both Your Houses" "The Face"
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How Videogame publishers keep users from viewing raw game code
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When you write a computer program the compiler compiles the code into a machine readable executable code which is not human readable. For example a python program named _URL_0_ creates _URL_0_c similarly foo.java creates ~~foo.jar~~ foo.class .... (See correction below as pointed by /u/Schnutzel). Now you can take this compiled code and run it to get the program. Games and often other software work the same way. They sell you this compiled code (as opposed to the source code). So you can see how the program executes but not its source.
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In 1995 Queen Elizabeth II unveiled a statue of Gibson near the Ocean Terminal in Durban harbour.
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Năm 1995 Nữ hoàng Elizabeth II cho xây dựng một bức tượng Gibson gần Ocean Terminal ở cảng Durban. ^ Laurie Roberts.
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what happens to blood pressure during heart failure?
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So your body doesn't get enough blood and oxygen. When this occurs, the body believes that there isn't enough fluid inside its vessels. The body's hormone and nervous systems try to make up for this by increasing blood pressure, holding on to salt (sodium) and water in the body, and increasing heart rate.
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Maroni replied he was outraged over the accusation of racism, insisting his plan is simply to carry out a "comprehensive national census" of the Roma people with no kind of discrimination whatsoever.
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Maroni respondió que estaba indignado por la acusación de racismo, e insistió en que su plan es simplemente llevar a cabo un “exhaustivo censo nacional” del pueblo romaní sin ningún tipo de discriminación en absoluto.
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where can i watch the new series picard?
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On Twitter today, Stewart announced that Trek fans in the United States can now watch "Star Trek: Picard" for free on CBS All Access using the code "GIFT." The code is valid through April 23, so you'll have to act soon to binge the series. CBS All Access is a subscription service that starts at $5.99 a month.
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A head will fall - of that journalist hyena who published it
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Rodará una cabeza - del periodista hiena que lo publicó.
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CEOs of the Tobacco factory Rovinj and the Iranian Tobacco Company signed in 2010 a contract for building a joint tobacco factory in Iran.
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המנכ"לים של מפעל הטבק הקרואטי רוביני וחברת הטבק האיראנית חתמו בשנת 2010 על חוזה להקמת מפעל טבק משותף באיראן.
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the 11th season in 13 years of the American Football league that started out as the World League of American Football. Three NFL Europe teams had
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Europe teams had new homes for 2003, Berlin Thunder at Berlin's Olympic Stadium, the F.C. Barcelona Dragons at Mini Estadi, and the Rhein Fire, at Arena AufSchalke in Gelsenkirchen. World Bowl XI World Bowl XI
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Comic Relief (disambiguation)
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Comic Relief
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November 1966) is an Egyptian weightlifter. He competed in the men's super heavyweight event at
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Egyptian weightlifter. He competed in the men's super heavyweight event at the 1988 Summer Olympics. References 1966 births Living people
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In autumn 1968 the group added Ian McDonald on saxophone, flute and clarinet, and former Fairport Convention vocalist Judy Dyble.
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Na jeseň 1968 sa k skupine pridal Ian McDonald (saxofón, flauta a klarinet) a bývalá speváčka skupiny Fairport Convention Judy Dyble.
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We cannot keep giving lentils to people."
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Kita tidak bisa terus menerus memberikan kacang."
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Dealing with Social Anxiety?
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realize that most people in this world are so self absorbed that they wont pay attention to you unless you approach them
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visit, provide physically inactive patients with brief counseling, and 'write' a basic exercise prescription. Before leaving the clinic setting, inactive patients should also receive a referral to available physical activity resources in the community to assist with becoming more physically active. EIM was started by American College of Sports Medicine President Robert E. Sallis, MD, FACSM in 2007, who has continued to serve as the chair of the EIM initiative since its inception. Under the guidance of Dr. Sallis and the EIM advisory board, Adrian Hutber, PhD, served as the first vice president and has overseen the global development of the initiative over its first decade of existence. From 2007-2017, EIM grew into a "global health" initiative with a presence in more than 40 countries worldwide. The initial five years of the initiative focused on increasing global awareness that "exercise is good medicine". More recently, efforts have shifted toward the strategic implementation of the EIM Solution in healthcare systems. Implementation The Exercise is Medicine Solution is the practical implementation of EIM in a health system. The EIM Solution is designed as a simple, brief four-step process that can be carried in the clinic setting in under five minutes by the entire healthcare team. 1. The first step, and initiator, of the EIM Solution is the systematic assessment of every patient's physical activity levels. The Physical Activity Vital Sign is an evidence- and practice-based tool consisting of two questions to determine whether the patient is meeting the established physical activity guidelines. This tool for assessing patient physical activity levels has been successfully integrated into several health care systems including the Kaiser Permanente health systems of Northern and Southern California, as well as in Intermountain Health. 2. The second step is to provide brief advice or counseling regarding the importance of regular physical activity, specifically relevant to that patient's medical history and situation. Several physical activity counseling models have been shown to be effective in increasing patient physical activity levels including the "5As" (Ask, Advise, Agree, Assist, Arrange), motivational interviewing, and the use of the transtheoretical model. 3. The third step of the EIM Solution is to provide eligible patients (i.e., patients who are not completing 150 minutes of moderate to vigorous aerobic activity in a week) with a basic physical activity prescription, depending on the health, fitness level and preferences of the patient. Prescriptions can
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over its first decade of existence. From 2007-2017, EIM grew into a "global health" initiative with a presence in more than 40 countries worldwide. The initial five years of the initiative focused on increasing global awareness that "exercise is good medicine". More recently, efforts have shifted toward the strategic implementation of the EIM Solution in healthcare systems. Implementation The Exercise is Medicine Solution is the practical implementation of EIM in a health system. The EIM Solution is designed as a simple, brief four-step process that can be carried in the clinic setting in under five minutes by the entire healthcare team. 1. The first step, and initiator, of the EIM Solution is the systematic assessment of every patient's physical activity levels. The Physical Activity Vital Sign is an evidence- and practice-based tool consisting of two questions to determine whether the patient is meeting the established physical activity guidelines. This tool for assessing patient physical activity levels has been successfully integrated into several health care systems including the Kaiser Permanente health systems of Northern and Southern California, as well as in Intermountain Health. 2. The second step is to provide brief advice or counseling regarding the importance of regular physical activity, specifically relevant to that patient's medical history and situation. Several physical activity counseling models have been shown to be effective in increasing patient physical activity levels including the "5As" (Ask, Advise, Agree, Assist, Arrange), motivational interviewing, and the use of the transtheoretical model. 3. The third step of the EIM Solution is to provide eligible patients (i.e., patients who are not completing 150 minutes of moderate to vigorous aerobic activity in a week) with a basic physical activity prescription, depending on the health, fitness level and preferences of the patient. Prescriptions can be given out in a number of different formats including exercise prescriptions entered into the electronic health record and provided to the patient in the after visit summary paperwork or a pad (a format patients are familiar with in receiving prescriptions for medications). The first major exercise prescription program was the Green Prescription started by the Sport and Recreation New Zealand in 1998. 4. The final, and perhaps most crucial, component of the EIM Solution is ensuring that all eligible patients receive a physical activity referral to supportive resources to assist them in engaging in greater physical activity levels. Patients may be referred to existing physical activity resources within a health system (i.e., wellness programs, cardiac rehabilitation programs, physical
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Her family relocated to Dion-le-Val, near to Brussels in francophone Wallonia in 1977.
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Su familia se trasladó a Dion-le-Val, cerca de Bruselas, en la parte francófona, en el año 1977.
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played in three first-class matches for South Australia between 1946 and 1949. Ben Goode attended Scotch College, Adelaide, from 1931 to 1941. In 1941 he was School Captain, dux of the school and captain of cricket, football and tennis. He studied Medicine at the University of Adelaide and graduated MBBS in 1949, going to join his father and older brother in practice in Adelaide. He worked as a general practitioner until he retired in 1991. He married Jean
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He played in three first-class matches for South Australia between 1946 and 1949. Ben Goode attended Scotch College, Adelaide, from 1931 to 1941. In 1941 he was School Captain, dux of the school and captain of cricket, football and tennis. He studied Medicine at the University of Adelaide and graduated MBBS in 1949, going to join his father and older brother in practice in Adelaide. He worked as a general practitioner until he retired in 1991. He married Jean
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what are some good books about military leaders and their tactics?
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Is there a specific time period you wish to go over? Oddly enough I became obsessed with Napoleonic Tactics before Napoleonic France itself.
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: Jotka – Skoganvarre, 58 km Stage 3 : Skoganvarre – Levajok, 88 km Stage 4 : Levajok – Skippagurra, 100 km Stage 5 : Skippagurra – Neiden, 94 km Stage 6 : Neiden – Kirkenes, 75 km Stage 7 : Kirkenes – Ellentjern, 115 km Stage 8 : Ellentjern - Neiden, 77 km Stage 9 : Neiden – Varangerbotn, 88 km Stage 10 : Varangerbotn – Sirbma, 74 km Stage 11: Sirbma – Levajok, 70 km Stage 12: Levajok – Karasjok, 85 km Stage 13: Karasjok – Jotka, 82 km Stage 14: Jotka – Alta, 50 km Winners Limited Class Daily stages, totalling 478 km Stage 1: Alta – Jotka, 50 km Stage 2: Jotka – Jergul, 78 km Stage 3: Jergul – Karasjok, 67 km Stage 4: Karasjok - Levajok, 85 km Stage 5: Levajok – Skoganvarre, 90 km
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sled dog race. It is also Europe's longest sled dog race. The race starts on Saturday of the 10th week of the year and goes across Finnmark in Norway. The race was first run in 1981. Open Class Daily stages, totaling 1100 km Stage 1 : Alta – Jotka, 50 km Stage 2 : Jotka – Skoganvarre, 58 km Stage 3 : Skoganvarre – Levajok, 88 km Stage 4 : Levajok – Skippagurra, 100 km Stage 5 : Skippagurra – Neiden, 94 km Stage 6 : Neiden – Kirkenes, 75 km Stage
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Why isn't Canada's John A MacDonald viewed in the same way as Washington and the founding fathers?
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I'm not quite sure what you're getting at OP. In Canadian circles that I know of MacDonald is considered to be on the same level as Washington and Franklin. Just some more background information would be nice because there are some reasons that I know of, but most of them are not historical reasons per se. They involve the projection of American culture and the lack of projection in regards to Canadian culture.
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of Alabama Honorary Lieutenant Colonel Aide-de-camp, commissioned by Alabama Governor George Wallace; 1972 State of Kentucky Kentucky Colonel, commissioned by Kentucky Governor Wendell H. Ford; 1972 Mississippi College Service of Humanity Award; 1976 Blue Mountain College Honorary Degree of Doctor of Law; 1977 Paul Harris Fellow-Rotary Club 1978; National Mental Health Association Humanitarian Award; 1979 Mississippi State University Mississippi Woman of the Year Award; 1980 State of Mississippi Mississippian of the Year in Government; 1981 Exchange Club "Golden Deeds" Award; 1982 Mississippi College School of Law Award for Excellence in Law; 1984 Mississippi Women's Political Caucus Susan B. Anthony Award for Outstanding Service to the State of Mississippi; 1984 University of Southern Mississippi Alumni Hall of Fame;1985 Mississippi University for Women Medal of Excellence;1991 The Mississippi Bar Lifetime Achievement Award; 1994 Women's Political Network First Annual Award for Distinguished Service; 1994 Mississippi Democratic Party James O. Eastland Award; 1995 American Bar Association Margaret Brant Women Lawyers of Achievement Award; 1997 Mississippi Association of Women Lawyers Lifetime Achievement Award; 1998 Hattiesburg Women's Forum Leadership Award; 1998 Lindy Boggs Women in Public Service Award; 1998 The Mississippi Bar Chief Justice Award; 1998 The Mississippi Bar Susie Blue Buchanan Award; 2003 See also List of female lieutenant governors in the United States References External links (University of Southern Mississippi's "Edythe Evelyn Gandy Papers") Congressional Quarterly's Guide to U.S. Election ("Gubernatorial Primaries") 1920 births 2007 deaths Lieutenant Governors of Mississippi State
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a lawyer from Canton, who left the party and from 2001 to 2008 served as the Mississippi Republican Party chairman. Gandy lost the 1983 Democratic primary as well to Attorney General William "Bill" Allain, 405,348 (52.4 percent) to 367,953 (47.5 percent)). On her death, Winter called his former intraparty rival Gandy "one of Mississippi's most conscientious and able public leaders." While Gandy renounced her segregationist views in her gubernatorial campaigns, it is believed that those positions and her close relationship with Bilbo eroded her support among African Americans, a key segment of voters in the Mississippi Democratic Party. From 1983 until her death, she was engaged in private law practice in Hattiesburg. Gandy remained active in Mississippi Democratic politics until her death. She publicly endorsed Al Gore for U.S. President in 2000 and also attended Democratic National Chairman Howard Dean's visit to Mississippi in 2005. Death Gandy died at age 87 after a lengthy bout with progressive supranuclear palsy, a debilitating illness similar to Parkinson's disease. She never married or had children. Her body lay in state on December 27, 2007, in the rotunda of the Mississippi State Capitol building in downtown Jackson. U.S. and Mississippi flags on all state buildings and grounds were flown at half-staff from sunrise on December 27, 2007 until sunset on December 28, 2007. Legacy In 2006, the Evelyn Gandy Parkway was opened, near Petal in her native Forrest County. Awards and honors State of Alabama Honorary Lieutenant Colonel Aide-de-camp, commissioned by Alabama Governor George Wallace; 1972 State of Kentucky Kentucky Colonel, commissioned by Kentucky Governor Wendell H. Ford; 1972 Mississippi College Service of Humanity Award; 1976 Blue Mountain College Honorary Degree of Doctor of Law; 1977 Paul Harris Fellow-Rotary Club 1978; National Mental Health Association Humanitarian Award; 1979 Mississippi State University Mississippi Woman of the Year Award; 1980 State of Mississippi Mississippian of the Year in Government; 1981 Exchange Club "Golden Deeds" Award; 1982 Mississippi College School of Law Award for Excellence in Law; 1984 Mississippi Women's Political Caucus Susan B. Anthony Award for Outstanding Service to the State of Mississippi; 1984 University of Southern Mississippi Alumni Hall of Fame;1985 Mississippi University for Women Medal of Excellence;1991 The Mississippi Bar Lifetime Achievement Award; 1994 Women's Political Network First Annual Award for Distinguished Service; 1994 Mississippi Democratic Party James O. Eastland Award; 1995 American Bar Association Margaret Brant Women Lawyers of Achievement Award; 1997 Mississippi Association of Women Lawyers Lifetime Achievement Award; 1998 Hattiesburg Women's Forum Leadership Award; 1998 Lindy Boggs Women in Public Service Award; 1998 The Mississippi Bar Chief Justice Award; 1998 The Mississippi Bar Susie Blue Buchanan Award; 2003 See also List of female lieutenant governors in the
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Galeno mine
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Proyecto Galeno
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On October 12, 2014, it was announced that the series will not be aired, because the house was demolished.
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Dana 12. listopada 2014., objavljeno je da je emisija neće biti emitirana, jer je kuća srušena.
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You were the one who suggested I visit Tom.
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Você foi que me aconselhou a visitar Tom.
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After World War II, Hajduk continued to play in the Yugoslav championship and its cup.
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Poslije Drugog svjetskog rata Hajduk je nastavio igrati u Jugoslavenskom prvenstvu i kupu.
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The blusey rock song is about lead vocalist, Maria Brink's struggle in her upbringing and her relationship of what she perceives as God.
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La canzone parla della voce solista, della lotta di Maria Brink nella sua educazione e del suo rapporto con ciò che lei percepisce come Dio.
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National Agency for Fiscal Administration
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Agenția Națională de Administrare Fiscală
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Charlie Chan's Secret
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L'ora che uccide (film 1936)
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can you add someone on snapchat after removing them?
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You will see the “+ Add” button to the right of their names. Tap it to connect with them on the app. Once you add someone that you've previously deleted, Snapchat allows you to see all the snaps they've sent you while you weren't friends – assuming they accept your invite the second time around.
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Box Hill they registered a 30-point win. In the lead-up to the 2008 International Cup, Japan once again competed against its sister club Box Hill, this time easily accounting for its Australian rivals, winning by 56 points. This increased expectations for the Japanese side. During the cup, they had a breakthrough win against Samoa, following it with a thrashing of India which helped them to climb to 8th in the overall tournament ranking. Notable players Michito Sakaki, current captain of the Samurai, has trained with the Essendon Football Club and played semi-professionally in Australia has been All-International in both 2005 and 2008. Teammate Tsuyoshi Kase also trained with Essendon and has played amateur football in Australia. International competition International Cup 2002: 10th 2005: 9th 2008: 8th 2011: 12th 2014: 13th Arafura Games 1995: 4th (as ''Japan/ Singapore) 1997: 6th 1999: Qualifying rounds 2001: 4th References External links Official Samurais Website ABC radio interview Review of Japan's 2006 tour of Australia Samurai downed by Vietnamese at Windy Hill – finish Aus tour 1–3 Samurais back touring Australia Michito goes semi-pro in Australia Samurai's first ever win outside Japan National Australian rules football teams Australian rules football Australian
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the Silver medal in the Arafura Games. Later that year, the team again competed in the International Cup, lifting its international ranking to 9th and included its first International Cup win, by 71 points against Spain. Richard Laidler, who had been Troy Beard's assistant for four years previously took on the senior coaching position in 2006 and the Samurai again toured Australia with a young squad playing 4 games finishing with a 2-point win against Box Hill North Football Club, but losses to the Howlong Football Club, Box Hill North Superules and Melbourne Vietnam Australian Football Club. In 2007, the Samurai toured Australia, finishing 6–9 (45) in its game against the newly formed Melbourne based Vietnamese side, the Elgar Park Dragons 13–7 (85). Against Box Hill they registered a 30-point win. In the lead-up to the 2008 International Cup, Japan once again competed against its sister club Box Hill, this time easily accounting for its Australian rivals, winning by 56 points. This increased expectations for the Japanese side. During the cup, they had a breakthrough win against Samoa, following it with a thrashing of India which helped them to climb to 8th in the overall tournament ranking. Notable players Michito Sakaki, current captain of the Samurai, has trained with the Essendon Football Club and played semi-professionally in Australia has been All-International in both 2005 and 2008. Teammate Tsuyoshi Kase also trained with Essendon and has played amateur football in Australia. International competition International Cup 2002: 10th 2005: 9th 2008: 8th 2011: 12th 2014: 13th Arafura Games 1995: 4th (as ''Japan/ Singapore) 1997: 6th 1999: Qualifying rounds
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Alexander Dobrunov
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Добрунов, Александр Львович
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who is emirates partnered with
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Japan Airlines is also an Emirates partner. Their program is a bit funky, but once again you can transfer SPG points to top up, and you can redeem for Emirates flights much cheaper than you could using Emirates miles.
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The first two 1804 dollars (as well as the other coins for the sets) were struck in November 1834.
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Los dos primeros dólares de 1804 (así como el resto de las monedas ) fueron acuñadas en noviembre de 1834.
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Ly-Fontaine is a commune . It is found in the region Picardie in the Aisne department in the north of France .
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Ly-Fontaine is a commune in the Aisne department in Picardy in northern France .
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NEW: Obama says modest changes can save Social Security .
NEW: Housing market needs more time to recover, Obama says .
The president meets with Columbus, Ohio, residents .
The president is taking his economics plan across the country .
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Columbus, Ohio (CNN) -- President Barack Obama pledged Wednesday that the Social Security system won't be privatized while he is in the White House. In a town-hall style meeting with a few dozen residents of Columbus, Ohio, Obama said "modest" changes can keep the government pension system solvent for decades. Republicans have called for transforming the government program to a private savings account as a way to help keep it going as America's aging population stresses its financial health. "It will not be privatized as long as I'm president," Obama said to applause, noting that the economic recession and Wall Street collapse would have devastated the savings of retirees under a privatized Social Security system. He said Social Security needed adjustments, rather than a total overhaul. "There are some fairly modest changes that can be made without any newfangled schemes that can keep it running for 75 years so everybody gets what they deserve," Obama said. While citing steps his administration has taken to spur recovery from the recession, Obama also warned that more work needed to be done. He said the housing market remains a "big drag" on the economy and will take more time to recover. Overbuilding in the boom years that preceded the economic recession has resulted in too many houses available for the level of demand, the president said. "It is going to take time to absorb this inventory that is just too high," Obama said. "There's no quick way to do it." Before the meeting, Obama huddled around the kitchen table with the Columbus family of Rhonda and Joe Weithman to talk about how his administration's economic stimulus spending has helped it. The Recovery Act funded local infrastructure projects like a new police station that provided work for the small architectural firm co-owned by Joe Weithman, helping it stay in business, Obama said. In addition, the administration subsidized COBRA health insurance benefits, which allowed Rhonda Weithman to maintain the family's insurance coverage after she lost her job, he said. The trip was Obama's ninth to Ohio since taking office. Ohio will likely be a key state in upcoming elections. Later Wednesday, Obama was to attend a fundraiser for Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland, before heading to Miami Beach, Florida, for events with Senate candidate Kendrick Meek and gubernatorial candidate Alex Sink. On Tuesday, Obama held a round-table discussion with three Seattle, Washington, business owners -- an innkeeper, a baker and a pizza maker. The president cited how each has been helped by his administration's policies intended to spur recovery from the recession. He also renewed his call for the U.S. Senate to pass a jobs bill aimed at helping small businesses. Senate Republicans have filibustered the measure, which would provide tax breaks for small businesses and expand available capital to them through local banks. Obama insisted the Senate would take up the bill again immediately after returning from its August recess. The measure would provide immediate help to small-business owners, who are the backbone of the U.S. economy, Obama said. "They are who this bill is for," he said of the Seattle-area small-business owners who flanked him. "They will see the benefits right away." The Small Business Jobs and Credit Act, stalled in the Senate, would authorize the creation of a $30 billion lending fund. The Treasury Department would run the program, which would deliver ultra-cheap capital to community banks, defined as those with less than $10 billion in total assets. Other key components of the bill would provide $12 billion worth of tax relief for small businesses between 2010 and 2020, according to a preliminary estimate from the Joint Committee on Taxation. The bill also would increase Small Business Administration loan limits and extend loan sweeteners through the end of the year. It would offer a slew of tax cuts for small businesses to encourage both investment and entrepreneurship. And the legislation would provide $1.5 billion in grants to state lending programs that can't turn to empty state coffers for more cash.
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Watty Corbett
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Walter Corbett
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In 1619 he was appointed Savilian professor of geometry at Oxford, and resigned his professorship of Gresham College in July 1620.
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En 1619 il fut nommé Savilian professor de géométrie à l'université d'Oxford, et démissionna de sa chaire de médecine du Gresham College en juillet 1620.
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There were about 80 towers, some 50 of which are still preserved.
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C'erano circa 80 torrette, di cui circa 50 sono ancora conservate.
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"modern era" to have begun in 1944. Records from before this year are often incomplete and inconsistent, and they are generally not included in these lists. These lists are dominated by more recent players for several reasons: Since 1944, seasons have increased from 10 games to 11 and then 12 games in length. The NCAA didn't allow freshmen to play varsity football until 1972 (with the exception of the World War II years), allowing players to have four-year careers. Bowl games only began counting toward single-season and career statistics in 2002. The Black Knights have played in four bowl games since then: the Armed Forces Bowl in 2010, 2017, and 2018, plus the game now known as the
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players. This means that for a player to play for four years, he must be good enough to see the field as a true freshman. Relatively few players are prepared to do this, which depresses career records. In the modern era, the Black Knights have traditionally run an option offense that emphasizes running, including by the quarterbacks. However, Army ran a pro-style offense in the 1970s and the early 2000s, and passing and receiving records tend to belong to players from those eras. These lists are updated through Army's game against Rice on August 30, 2019. Passing Passing yards Passing touchdowns Rushing Rushing yards Rushing touchdowns Receiving Receptions Receiving yards Receiving touchdowns Total offense Total offense is the sum of passing and rushing statistics. It does not include receiving or returns. Total offense yards Touchdowns responsible for "Touchdowns responsible for" is the NCAA's official term for combined passing and rushing touchdowns. Defense Interceptions Tackles Sacks Kicking Field goals made Field goal percentage References Lists of college
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imminent-Raeder suggests action by us at the next new moon-to which Hitler agrees." When confronted with the minutes of the 26 March 1940 meeting by Maxwell Fyfe, Raeder had no response. Weinberg wrote that "especially eloquent lies" about the invasion of Norway were told by Raeder and his supporters. When Maxwell Fyfe charged that Raeder was guilty of violating both the Treaty of Versailles and the Anglo-German Naval Agreement and commented: "For 20 years, from 1918 to 1938, you and the German navy had been involved in a course of complete, cold and deliberate deception of your treaty obligations ... Do you deny this was so?". Raeder's response was that this was true, but "It was not a cold blooded affair". Raeder claimed that he was not involved in a conspiracy to commit aggression because Hitler's statements in the Hossbach Memorandum of 1937 and again to senior officers including Raeder for plans for a war with Poland in May and August 1939 together with Raeder's own statements to Hitler about seizing Norway in October–November 1939 were all just mere talk that was not to be taken seriously. The American historian Norman Goda wrote that Maxwell Fyfe and the American prosecutor Telford Taylor tore Raeder to pieces on the stand for his statements. Raeder testified that he was an apolitical professional who was just doing his duty, and to the extent he thought about politics, he disliked the Nazi regime. Raeder testified that he was deeply horrified by the nature of the Nazi regime when he saw how badly Gessler had been tortured in March 1945, stated he had stopped wearing his Golden Party Badge to protest the Nazi regime after he had seen what had been done to Gessler, and he had frequently made "serious protests" against the Nazi regime during private meetings with Hitler, so it was unfair to blame him for the crimes of the Third Reich. This in turn led him to be questioned by Maxwell Fyfe about his speech on Heroes' Day on 12 March 1939 praising Hitler "... for the clear and unmerciful declaration of war against Bolshevism and International Jewry, whose drive for destruction of peoples we have felt quite enough in our racial body". Raeder testified in response to Maxwell Fyfe's question about his Heroes' Day speech to his belief that starting in 1917 "International Jewry had destroyed the resistance of the German people ... and had gained an excessively large and oppressive influence in German affairs" and all of the anti-Semitic measures of the Nazi regime which presumably included genocide were merely just acts of German self-defence. Goda wrote that Raeder by his own testimony disproved his own claims to have been an apolitical professional who was against the Nazi regime, and instead established that he was an anti-Semite who willingly served the Nazi regime because of his hatred for Jews. Taylor commented about Raeder's claim to have been just an apolitical professional doing his job was meaningless because: "It is an innocent and respectable business to be a locksmith, but it is nonetheless a crime if the locksmith turns his talents into picking the locks of his neighbours and looting their homes." Raeder's claims to have been an apolitical officer who objected to the Nazis involved him in many testy exchanges with Maxwell Fyfe. Maxwell Fyfe charged that Raeder had been part of the effort to cover up that it was an U-boat that sank the Athenia and to falsely accuse the British of sinking the Athenia. Raeder claimed that he had been "very indignant" about his government's claim that Britain had sunk the Athenia, which led Maxwell Fyfe to remark that he had done nothing to express that "indignation", just as he claimed to have been angry about the false charges of homosexuality against Werner von Fritsch, where he had also done nothing after Fritsch had been cleared. One of the more serious charges facing Raeder was that he ordered unrestricted submarine warfare in 1939. Maxwell Fyfe brought up Raeder's order of 15 October 1939, which read: "Measures which are considered necessary from a military point of view will have to be carried out, even if they are not covered by existing international law ... Every protest from neutral powers will have to be turned down ... The more ruthlessly economic warfare is waged ... the sooner the war will come to an end". When questioned about his order on 15 October 1939 for unrestricted submarine warfare including orders to fire on neutral ships, which Raeder had admitted even as he issued his order violated international law, Raeder stated in his defence: "Neutrals are acting for their own egotistical reasons and they must pay the bills if they die". Under cross-examination, Raeder admitted to passing on the Commando Order on 18 October 1942 to the Kriegsmarine and for enforcing the Commando Order by ordering the summary execution of captured British Royal Marines at Bordeaux in December 1942. Raeder testified in his defence that he believed that the Commando Order was a "justified" order, and that the execution of the Royal Marines was no war crime in his own opinion. Raeder charged that British Commandos had committed atrocities against German forces during the Dieppe raid, and the Commando Order was only a reasonable German response to what he called the British "deviation" from the laws of war. When asked by his entry in the war diary that seemed to criticise the shootings at Bordeaux, Raeder stated that he was not protesting against the executions per se, but was instead protesting that the shootings had been done by the Kriegsmarine, arguing that the local naval commanders should have handed over the British POWs to the SD to be shot. When questioned by Maxwell Fyfe about the Libau massacres, Raeder claimed that he no idea about what had happened, and maintained that he would have stopped the massacres had he known. The Nuremberg trial was also a further escalation of Raeder's ongoing feud with Dönitz when an affidavit of Raeder's was introduced as evidence against Dönitz. Raeder described his relations with Dönitz as very poor, saying that Dönitz's "somewhat conceited and not always tactful nature did not appeal to me". Raeder claimed that Dönitz had made all sorts of blunders and mistakes "resulting from his personal viewpoint, which were known to the officer corps, soon became apparent, to the detriment of the Navy". Raeder accused Dönitz and Speer of failing the navy by mismanaging U-boat production, and said that Dönitz's National Socialism had blinded him to reality, writing: "His [Dönitz's] speech to the Hitler Youth, which was ridiculed in all circles, earned him the title of "Hitler-boy" Dönitz". Finally, Raeder claimed that Dönitz was unqualified to become Commander-in-Chief of the Navy in 1943, and that Dönitz was only appointed to that position because Hitler preferred an unqualified "Hitler-boy" like Dönitz to qualified officers like himself. On the night after the affidavit was introduced, the American psychologist Gustave Gilbert who interviewed Dönitz described him as being in state of rage against Raeder, accusing Raeder of being a bitter old man driven by jealousy that Dönitz was the superior officer. Spandau years On 1 October 1946, Raeder was found guilty of conspiracy against the peace, conspiracy to commit aggression, and war crimes. Raeder expected a death sentence, and was deeply shocked when he received life imprisonment, which he regarded as a worse punishment than execution, complaining that as an old man spending the rest of his life in prison would be unbearable. Raeder formally asked the International Military Tribunal to be executed by firing squad instead, only to be informed that the Tribunal did not have the powers to change its sentence. At Spandau Prison, Raeder spent his days working in the prison library. When not working in the library, Raeder spent his time debating with the prison chaplain, the French Pastor Georges Casalis who believed that Raeder's soul might be saved if he confessed his guilt, and tried hard to save Raeder. Raeder for his part did not believe he was guilty of anything, and he rejected Casalis's attempts to save his soul. When not debating questions of guilt with Casalis, Raeder spent his free time continuing his war-time feud with Karl Dönitz. Dönitz was savage in his relentless attacks against Raeder for his "policy of bloated surface vessels" and for not spending enough money on building U-boats in the 1930s, a policy that Dönitz claimed had cost him victory in the Battle of the Atlantic. Dönitz told the former Foreign Minister Konstantin von Neurath that "It had been Raeder's fault that until the middle of 1940 only two U-boats slid down the ways" per month, and that if only he had been Navy Commander-in-Chief in 1940 then he would have won the war. In 1951, Dönitz learned that a British historian had written if only Germany had a larger U-boat fleet in 1939, then Dönitz might have won the Atlantic campaign, leading Dönitz to announce that once he was free, he would repeat that judgement "in the full light of publicity" to ruin Raeder's reputation once and for all. When not blaming each other for losing the Battle of the Atlantic, the two admirals fought over status. The authoritarian Raeder still continued to behave as if he was Commander-in-Chief of the Navy, and expected Dönitz to behave like a subordinate who only existed to take orders, a position that Dönitz utterly rejected. Dönitz was also a Grand Admiral, making him Raeder's equal, and he fiercely resented Raeder's patronising, condescending attitude. Because Hitler had appointed Dönitz his successor in his last will and testament, well into the 1950s the Nationalist Socialist fanatic Dönitz continued to insist that he was still President of Germany, and that the NSDAP should still be the only legal party in Germany. Since in his own mind, he was still Germany's leader, Dönitz saw himself as Raeder's superior, and expected Raeder to be his subordinate. From the moment Raeder was convicted, a campaign to have him released was started by his wife, Erika who routinely made very exaggerated claims to the press about how harsh life was in Spandau prison for her husband. In a 1950 interview, Erika Raeder claimed that her septuagenarian husband was forced to do brutal "hard labour" in Spandau when Raeder's job in Spandau was to work in the prison library. In another interview in 1951, Erika Raeder claimed that:"The treatment we Germans had to endure is worse than anything that happened to the Jews". Erika Raeder was on the whole portrayed favourably in the West German press, where she was depicted as a victim of Allied injustice while as a reporter put it "where does Raeder's guilt lie?" Erika Raeder's campaign to free her husband was joined by German veterans, who bombarded the American, British and French governments with demands that Raeder, who they claimed was an innocent man wrongly convicted at Nuremberg, be freed. Admiral Gottfried Hanson, head of the Verband deutscher Soldaten veterans' group in a letter in support of Raeder sent to the three western high commissioners' for Germany declared: "As a friend of many years' standing, and certain that all ex-members of the Navy will agree with me, I venture to say that no military leader could have educated and influenced his subordinates from a higher moral and Christian level than did Raeder ... both as a man and a Christian ... How can genuine peace and real understanding among the nations of the occident be brought about ... if true right and justice is not applied to the Germans that are still be kept prisoners?" In an interview in November 1950, Admiral Hanson claimed that American and other United Nations commanders fighting in the Korean War would have been convicted of aggression if the same standards that were applied to Raeder applied to them. The French High Commissioner in Germany André François-Poncet replied that the admiral seemed ill-informed about history and the law, stating that North Korea had attacked South Korea, and that UN forces in Korea were fighting in response to South Korean appeals for help and under the authority of the UN Security Council, which did not correspond at all to the situation with Norway in 1940. In Britain, the campaign to free Raeder was headed by the historian Captain Basil Liddell Hart and Lord Hankey, both of whom repeatedly charged that the attack on Norway was a "preventive war" forced on Germany, and as such, not only was Raeder innocent, but that Winston Churchill should have been convicted of conspiracy to commit aggression against Norway in place of Raeder. Hankey used his seat in the House of Lords to express his support for Raeder while Liddell Hart in a series of widely publicised interviews claimed that Raeder was an innocent man. A good part of Hankey's 1950 book Politics, Trials, and Errors, in which Hankey argued for the innocence of all the German and Japanese war criminals convicted by Allied courts and strenuously attacked the legitimacy of war crimes trials was taken up with a defence of Raeder. Hankey claimed that even in 1940 it was clear that invasion of Norway had been a defensive move forced on Raeder by Britain. More recently, the American journalist Patrick Buchanan in his 2008 book Churchill, Hitler and the Unnecessary War defended Raeder, arguing that the real aggressor against Norway was Churchill, and Raeder should never been convicted at Nuremberg. The American historian Norman Goda wrote that Raeder's champions usually spoke if aggression against Norway was the only thing that Raeder had been convicted of, and that campaign to free Raeder rested upon "... a quasi-legal argument mixed with moral equivalency and wilful ignorance". Goda charged that Erika Raeder and her friends had grossly quoted out of context certain passages from Churchill's 1948 book The Gathering Storm to support their claim that the invasion of Norway was a "preventive war" forced on the Third Reich while ignoring the evidence that had convicted Raeder at Nuremberg. Starting in 1950, the government of Konrad Adenauer started a quiet diplomatic offensive aimed at freeing Raeder and the rest of the men in Spandau. An American diplomat Richard Lynch reported back to Washington in 1954 that public opinion in West Germany was all for freeing Raeder and the rest of the men convicted in Nuremberg, and until the admirals in Spandau were freed, "the feelings does exist and ... until some way can be found to overcome it, a future German Navy will not have the support of its former officers". The retired Admiral Gerhard Wagner had told Lynch that many Kriegsmarine officers would liked to join the new Bundesmarine in order to fight the Soviets should World War Three break out, but refused to do so as long as Raeder and Dönitz were still prisoners. It was the position of the United States government in the 1950s that Raeder should be freed, ostensibly for reasons of health, but in fact because of the demands of the Cold War and the need to integrate West Germany into NATO. Last years The sentence was later reduced and, due to ill health, he was released at 11:35 on 26 September 1955. After his release he settled down at the Uhlandstrasse in Lippstadt, Westphalia. He later wrote an autobiography, Mein Leben (My Life), in 1957. Mein Leben was ghost-written by a committee of former Kriegsmarine officers headed by Admiral Erich Förste with Raeder's role limited to reviewing the chapters and either giving his approval or sending it back to the committee. Mein Leben was intended to be a sort of "official history" that would rebut the "Nuremberg version" of history, and hence the book devoted a disproportionate amount of space to attacking point by point the verdict of Nuremberg. One of the major changes that the committee imposed on Raeder was to suppress his feud with Dönitz, and instead presented relations between the two admirals as one of friendship, respect and mutual harmony. This was done largely to avoid repeating the situation of the 1920s where dueling memoirs by various Great War admirals blaming each other for the defeat had done considerable damage to the image of the navy; instead there was to be a "united front" on the history of the navy. In addition, there was a tendency in the 1950s to present Wehrmacht leaders as noble and high-minded and thus morally superior to the Allied commanders who had defeated them with the implication that the wrong side had won. Allowing Raeder to pursue his feud with Dönitz in print as he wanted to would have made him look petty, jealous and vindictive, and thus damaged the image of the Wehrmacht leaders as noble and tragic figures. Leaders of veterans' groups made it clear to both Raeder and Dönitz that they wanted a "united front" on history, and neither of them would be welcome at veterans' gatherings if they made their feud public. In Mein Leben, it was argued that "the deadly effect of the terms of the Treaty of Versailles" justified rearmament in the 1930s, and used the "sacrifice" of the Anglo-German Naval Agreement of 1935 to prove Germany was not pursuing aggressive policies. In Mein Leben, it was stated the Treaty of Versailles was "completely unrealistic" had it had "shackled" the German people by enforced "... subjugation, including confiscation of national territory, occupation and military control, disregard for a people's sovereignty and corresponding humiliation ...", and as such it was the Versailles treaty and the Versailles treaty alone that was responsible for the Third Reich. It was claimed that Raeder as "apolitical" officer who had just been doing his duty to the Fatherland borne no legal or moral guilt for anything that had happened under the Third Reich, and that the real responsibility for Nazi crimes rested with the governments of the United Kingdom, France and the United States who had imposed the Treaty of Versailles on Germany. It was claimed that the Allies had "good reason" to forbid using resistance against Versailles as a defense at Nuremberg because Nazi Germany was a "direct consequence of the situation created by the victorious enemy powers in 1918". Along the same lines, it was charged that the Nuremberg trial of 1945–46 was meant by the Allies to cover up the "decisive part" played by the Versailles treaty in causing Nazi Germany and the war crimes committed by the Allies "... by damning the whole German nation as
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he too would stay in Berlin to inspire Germans to resist to the bitter end. Hitler never acknowledged the message, but Raeder remained in Berlin and survived the ensuing Battle of Berlin. In May 1945, Raeder was arrested by the Soviet forces and taken to Moscow. Raeder was treated more as a guest than as a prisoner during his time in Moscow, receiving good food, lodgings and medical treatment. Raeder offered his services to the Soviet government as a naval adviser, believing that his "lessons learned" from World War II would be invaluable to the Soviet Union in the post-war world, and wrote several historical tracts for the Soviet benefit about the naval aspects of World War II. Raeder was later to be deeply embarrassed when his writings in Moscow praising German-Soviet friendship and his offer to teach the Red Navy how to fight the British and Americans were made public by the Soviet government, which led several former Kriegsmarine officers led by his arch-rival Dönitz to accuse him of "collaboration" with the Russians. Raeder was very unpleasantly surprised in October 1945 when he learned that he had been indicted as a war criminal, instead of staying in Moscow as more or less a guest of the Soviet regime. The Soviet delegation at the International Military Tribunal voted against indicting Raeder, but at the insistence of the American and French delegations, Raeder was indicted. After the war Nuremberg trial After the war, Raeder was sentenced to life imprisonment at the Nuremberg Trials, for waging a war of aggression, a charge arising from his planning of the German invasion of Norway and Denmark, for conspiracy against the peace for his role in preparing Germany for war before 1939, and for war crimes by enforcing the Commando Order. Raeder's lawyer called three witnesses. The first was Carl Severing, the former SDP Prussian Interior Minister who testified that every government in the Weimar Republic had violated the disarmament clauses of the Treaty of Versailles, and the politicians of Weimar were well aware that officers like Raeder were violating Versailles. The second was the diplomat Baron Ernst von Weizsäcker, who testified that Raeder had not been involved in the propaganda effort to blame the sinking of the Athenia on the British. The third was Raeder's aide Vice Admiral Erich Schulte-Mönting who supported Raeder's claim to have been an apolitical officer just doing his job, and that Raeder had not been a Nazi. The German defence in the Nuremberg trials in 1946 argued that Germany was "compelled to attack Norway by the need to forestall an Allied invasion and that her action was therefore preemptive", like the Anglo-Soviet invasion of Iran. The German defence was referring to Plan R 4 and its predecessors. The International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg determined that no Allied invasion had been imminent, and therefore rejected the German argument that Germany was entitled to attack Norway. In response to Raeder's defence of pre-emptive war against Norway, the British prosecutor David Maxwell Fyfe read out the minutes of a meeting between Raeder and Hitler on 26 March 1940, which read: "British landing in Norway is not considered imminent-Raeder suggests action by us at the next new moon-to which Hitler agrees." When confronted with the minutes of the 26 March 1940 meeting by Maxwell Fyfe, Raeder had no response. Weinberg wrote that "especially eloquent lies" about the invasion of Norway were told by Raeder and his supporters. When Maxwell Fyfe charged that Raeder was guilty of violating both the Treaty of Versailles and the Anglo-German Naval Agreement and commented: "For 20 years, from 1918 to 1938, you and the German navy had been involved in a course of complete, cold and deliberate deception of your treaty obligations ... Do you deny this was so?". Raeder's response was that this was true, but "It was not a cold blooded affair". Raeder claimed that he was not involved in a conspiracy to commit aggression because Hitler's statements in the Hossbach Memorandum of 1937 and again to senior officers including Raeder for plans for a war with Poland in May and August 1939 together with Raeder's own statements to Hitler about seizing Norway in October–November 1939 were all just mere talk that was not to be taken seriously. The American historian Norman Goda wrote that Maxwell Fyfe and the American prosecutor Telford Taylor tore Raeder to pieces on the stand for his statements. Raeder testified that he was an apolitical professional who was just doing his duty, and to the extent he thought about politics, he disliked the Nazi regime. Raeder testified that he was deeply horrified by the nature of the Nazi regime when he saw how badly Gessler had been tortured in March 1945, stated he had stopped wearing his Golden Party Badge to protest the Nazi regime after he had seen what had been done to Gessler, and he had frequently made "serious protests" against the Nazi regime during private meetings with Hitler, so it was unfair to blame him for the crimes of the Third Reich. This in turn led him to be questioned by Maxwell Fyfe about his speech on Heroes' Day on 12 March 1939 praising Hitler "... for the clear and unmerciful declaration of war against Bolshevism and International Jewry, whose drive for destruction of peoples we have felt quite enough in our racial body". Raeder testified in response to Maxwell Fyfe's question about his Heroes' Day speech to his belief that starting in 1917 "International Jewry had destroyed the resistance of the German people ... and had gained an excessively large and oppressive influence in German affairs" and all of the anti-Semitic measures of the Nazi regime which presumably included genocide were merely just acts of German self-defence. Goda wrote that Raeder by his own testimony disproved his own claims to have been an apolitical professional who was against the Nazi regime, and instead established that he was an anti-Semite who willingly served the Nazi regime because of his hatred for Jews. Taylor commented about Raeder's claim to have been just an apolitical professional doing his job was meaningless because: "It is an innocent and respectable business to be a locksmith, but it is nonetheless a crime if the locksmith turns his talents into picking the locks of his neighbours and looting their homes." Raeder's claims to have been an apolitical officer who objected to the Nazis involved him in many testy exchanges with Maxwell Fyfe. Maxwell Fyfe charged that Raeder had been part of the effort to cover up that it was an U-boat that sank the Athenia and to falsely accuse the British of sinking the Athenia. Raeder claimed that he had been "very indignant" about his government's claim that Britain had sunk the Athenia, which led Maxwell Fyfe to remark that he had done nothing to express that "indignation", just as he claimed to have been angry about the false charges of homosexuality against Werner von Fritsch, where he had also done nothing after Fritsch had been cleared. One of the more serious charges facing Raeder was that he ordered unrestricted submarine warfare in 1939. Maxwell Fyfe brought up Raeder's order of 15 October 1939, which read: "Measures which are considered necessary from a military point of view will have to be carried out, even if they are not covered by existing international law ... Every protest from neutral powers will have to be turned down ... The more ruthlessly economic warfare is waged ... the sooner the war will come to an end". When questioned about his order on 15 October 1939 for unrestricted submarine warfare including orders to fire on neutral ships, which Raeder had admitted even as he issued his order violated international law, Raeder stated in his defence: "Neutrals are acting for their own egotistical reasons and they must pay the bills if they die". Under cross-examination, Raeder admitted to passing on the Commando Order on 18 October 1942 to the Kriegsmarine and for enforcing the Commando Order by ordering the summary execution of captured British Royal Marines at Bordeaux in December 1942. Raeder testified in his defence that he believed that the Commando Order was a "justified" order, and that the execution of the Royal Marines was no war crime in his own opinion. Raeder charged that British Commandos had committed atrocities against German forces during the Dieppe raid, and the Commando Order was only a reasonable German response to what he called the British "deviation" from the laws of war. When asked by his entry in the war diary that seemed to criticise the shootings at Bordeaux, Raeder stated that he was not protesting against the executions per se, but was instead protesting that the shootings had been done by the Kriegsmarine, arguing that the local naval commanders should have handed over the British POWs to the SD to be shot. When questioned by Maxwell Fyfe about the Libau massacres, Raeder claimed that he no idea about what had happened, and maintained that he would have stopped the massacres had he known. The Nuremberg trial was also a further escalation of Raeder's ongoing feud with Dönitz when an affidavit of Raeder's was introduced as evidence against Dönitz. Raeder described his relations with Dönitz as very poor, saying that Dönitz's "somewhat conceited and not always tactful nature did not appeal to me". Raeder claimed that Dönitz had made all sorts of blunders and mistakes "resulting from his personal viewpoint, which were known to the officer corps, soon became apparent, to the detriment of the Navy". Raeder accused Dönitz and Speer of failing the navy by mismanaging U-boat production, and said that Dönitz's National Socialism had blinded him to reality, writing: "His [Dönitz's] speech to the Hitler Youth, which was ridiculed in all circles, earned him the title of "Hitler-boy" Dönitz". Finally, Raeder claimed that Dönitz was unqualified to become Commander-in-Chief of the Navy in 1943, and that Dönitz was only appointed to that position because Hitler preferred an unqualified "Hitler-boy" like Dönitz to qualified officers like himself. On the night after the affidavit was introduced, the American psychologist Gustave Gilbert who interviewed Dönitz described him as being in state of rage against Raeder, accusing Raeder of being a bitter old man driven by jealousy that Dönitz was the superior officer. Spandau years On 1 October 1946, Raeder was found guilty of conspiracy against the peace, conspiracy to commit aggression, and war crimes. Raeder expected a death sentence, and was deeply shocked when he received life imprisonment, which he regarded as a worse punishment than execution, complaining that as an old man spending the rest of his life in prison would be unbearable. Raeder formally asked the International Military Tribunal to be executed by firing squad instead, only to be informed that the Tribunal did not have the powers to change its sentence. At Spandau Prison, Raeder spent his days working in the prison library. When not working in the library, Raeder spent his time debating with the prison chaplain, the French Pastor Georges Casalis who believed that Raeder's soul might be saved if he confessed his guilt, and tried hard to save Raeder. Raeder for his part did not believe he was guilty of anything, and he rejected Casalis's attempts to save his soul. When not debating questions of guilt with Casalis, Raeder spent his free time continuing his war-time feud with Karl Dönitz. Dönitz was savage in his relentless attacks against Raeder for his "policy of bloated surface vessels" and for not spending enough money on building U-boats in the 1930s, a policy that Dönitz claimed had cost him victory in the Battle of the Atlantic. Dönitz told the former Foreign Minister Konstantin von Neurath that "It had been Raeder's fault that until the middle of 1940 only two U-boats slid down the ways" per month, and that if only he had been Navy Commander-in-Chief in 1940 then he would have won the war. In 1951, Dönitz learned that a British historian had written if only Germany had a larger U-boat fleet in 1939, then Dönitz might have won the Atlantic campaign, leading Dönitz to announce that once he was free, he would repeat that judgement "in the full light of publicity" to ruin Raeder's reputation once and for all. When not blaming each other for losing the Battle of the Atlantic, the two admirals fought over status. The authoritarian Raeder still continued to behave as if he was Commander-in-Chief of the Navy, and expected Dönitz to behave like a subordinate who only existed to take orders, a position that Dönitz utterly rejected. Dönitz was also a Grand Admiral, making him Raeder's equal, and he fiercely resented Raeder's patronising, condescending attitude. Because Hitler had appointed Dönitz his successor in his last will and testament, well into the 1950s the Nationalist Socialist fanatic Dönitz continued to insist that he was still President of Germany, and that the NSDAP should still be the only legal party in Germany. Since in his own mind, he was still Germany's leader, Dönitz saw himself as Raeder's superior, and expected Raeder to be his subordinate. From the moment Raeder was convicted, a campaign to have him released was started by his wife, Erika who routinely made very exaggerated claims to the press about how harsh life was in Spandau prison for her husband. In a 1950 interview, Erika Raeder claimed that her septuagenarian husband was forced to do brutal "hard labour" in Spandau when Raeder's job in Spandau was to work in the prison library. In another interview in 1951, Erika Raeder claimed that:"The treatment we Germans had to endure is worse than anything that happened to the Jews". Erika Raeder was on the whole portrayed favourably in the West German press, where she was depicted as a victim of Allied injustice while as a reporter put it "where does Raeder's guilt lie?" Erika Raeder's campaign to free her husband was joined by German veterans, who bombarded the American, British and French governments with demands that Raeder, who they claimed was an innocent man wrongly convicted at Nuremberg, be freed. Admiral Gottfried Hanson, head of the Verband deutscher Soldaten veterans' group in a letter in support of Raeder sent to the three western high commissioners' for Germany declared: "As a friend of many years' standing, and certain that all ex-members of the Navy will agree with me, I venture to say that no military leader could have educated and influenced his subordinates from a higher moral and Christian level than did Raeder ... both as a man and a Christian ... How can genuine peace and real understanding among the nations of the occident be brought about ... if true right and justice is not applied to the Germans that are still be kept prisoners?" In an interview in November 1950, Admiral Hanson claimed that American and other United Nations commanders fighting in the Korean War would have been convicted of aggression if the same standards that were applied to Raeder applied to them. The French High Commissioner in Germany André François-Poncet replied that the admiral seemed ill-informed about history and the law, stating that North Korea had attacked South Korea, and that UN forces in Korea were fighting in response to South Korean appeals for help and under the authority of the UN Security Council, which did not correspond at all to the situation with Norway in 1940. In Britain, the campaign to free Raeder was headed by the historian Captain Basil Liddell Hart and Lord Hankey, both of whom repeatedly charged that the attack on Norway was a "preventive war" forced on Germany, and as such, not only was Raeder innocent, but that Winston Churchill should have been convicted of conspiracy to commit aggression against Norway in place of Raeder. Hankey used his seat in the House of Lords to express his support for Raeder while Liddell Hart in a series of widely publicised interviews claimed that Raeder was an innocent man. A good part of Hankey's 1950 book Politics, Trials, and Errors, in which Hankey argued for the innocence of all the German and Japanese war criminals convicted by Allied courts and strenuously attacked the legitimacy of war crimes trials was taken up with a defence of Raeder. Hankey claimed that even in 1940 it was clear that invasion of Norway had been a defensive move forced on Raeder by Britain. More recently, the American journalist Patrick Buchanan in his 2008 book Churchill, Hitler and the Unnecessary War defended Raeder, arguing that the real aggressor against Norway was Churchill, and Raeder should never been convicted at Nuremberg. The American historian Norman Goda wrote that Raeder's champions usually spoke if aggression against Norway was the only thing that Raeder had been convicted of, and that campaign to free Raeder rested upon "... a quasi-legal argument mixed with moral equivalency and wilful ignorance". Goda charged that Erika Raeder and her friends had grossly quoted out of context certain passages from Churchill's 1948 book The Gathering Storm to support their claim that the invasion of Norway was a "preventive war" forced on the Third Reich while ignoring the evidence that had convicted Raeder at Nuremberg. Starting in 1950, the government of Konrad Adenauer started a quiet diplomatic offensive aimed at freeing Raeder and the rest of the men in Spandau. An American diplomat Richard Lynch reported back to Washington in 1954 that public opinion in West Germany was all for freeing Raeder and the rest of the men convicted in Nuremberg, and until the admirals in Spandau were freed, "the feelings does exist and ... until some way can be found to overcome it, a future German Navy will not have the support of its former officers". The retired Admiral Gerhard Wagner had told Lynch that many Kriegsmarine officers would liked to join the new Bundesmarine in order to fight the Soviets should World War Three break out, but refused to do so as long as Raeder and Dönitz were still prisoners. It was the position of the United States government in the 1950s that Raeder should be freed, ostensibly for reasons of health, but in fact because of the demands of the Cold War and the need to integrate West Germany into NATO. Last years The sentence was later reduced and, due to ill health, he was released at 11:35 on 26 September 1955. After his release he settled down at the Uhlandstrasse in Lippstadt, Westphalia. He later wrote an autobiography, Mein Leben (My Life),
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Arroz con pollo
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아로스 콘 포요
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Kavalai Vendam
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கவலை வேண்டாம்
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how many times should you urinate in one day?
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Most people urinate between six and eight times a day. But if you're drinking plenty, it's not abnormal to go as many as 10 times a day. You may also pee more often if you're taking certain medications, like diuretics for high blood pressure.
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He did not hesitate to dismiss those who showed the slightest sign of weakness, questioned his methods or did not adhere to the 'spirit of the mail' (l'esprit du courrier).
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Il n'hésite pas à renvoyer ceux qui montrent un seul signe de faiblesse, contestent ses méthodes ou n'adhèrent pas à « l'esprit du courrier ».
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morel mushroom or sponge morel, a mushroom species Synonyms Moronobea esculenta, a synonym for Platonia insignis, a tree species found in South
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to: Manihot esculenta, the cassava, yuca or manioc, a shrub species found in South America Morchella esculenta, the morel, yellow morel, common morel, true morel, morel mushroom
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Jazz review by Jerome Wilson awarded the album 3 ½ stars and noted it as "a fine representation of the scope and joy of (Magris's) piano abilities." Track listing Never Can Say Goodbye (Clifton Davis) - 6:20 Pilgrim (Lackner/Nievergelt/Perkins) - 7:50 Blue Bamboo (Yunnan folk song) - 9:12 Another More Blues (Roberto Magris) - 5:13 Song for
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(Clifton Davis) - 6:20 Pilgrim (Lackner/Nievergelt/Perkins) - 7:50 Blue Bamboo (Yunnan folk song) - 9:12 Another More Blues (Roberto Magris) - 5:13 Song for an African Child (Roberto Magris) - 7:56 Blues at Lunch! (Roberto Magris) - 7:49 Vse Najlepse Rozice / All the Most Beautiful Flowers (Slovenia folk song) - 4:02 High Priest (Andrew Cyrille) - 6:23 I’m Glad There is You (Jimmy Dorsey/Paul Madeira) - 9:19 Stella by Starlight (Victor Young) - 9:32 Audio Notebook - 2:59 Personnel Musicians Roberto Magris - piano Dominique
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For example, domestic abuse was an ongoing problem mainly because abuse and rape were considered to be “private crimes.”
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Por ejemplo, el abuso doméstico era un problema continuo, principalmente porque el abuso y la violación se consideraban "delitos privados".
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Bigo further argues that this (in)securitization process is embedded in the use of technology in every day practices.
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Bigo menambahkan bahwa proses pengamanan ini ada dalam penggunaan teknologi sehari-hari.
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Juan Antonio Anquela
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Хуан Антонио Анкела
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Abbasid Caliphate. Khurshid, was, however, defeated, and fled to Daylam, where he made a counterattack against the Abbasids, but was once again defeated. After learning that his family was captured by the Abbasids, Khurshid poisoned himself. This marked the end of the Dabuyid dynasty; however, other dynasties such as the Bavandids, Karenids and Zarmihrids, who were all formerly subject
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defeated. After learning that his family was captured by the Abbasids, Khurshid poisoned himself. This marked the end of the Dabuyid dynasty; however, other dynasties such as the Bavandids, Karenids and Zarmihrids, who were all formerly subject to the Dabuyids, continued to control parts of Tabaristan as tributary vassals of the Abbasid government. Surkhab II died in 772, and was succeeded by his son Sharwin I, who would later along with the rulers of Tabaristan revolt
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to: God Is in the House (Art Tatum album), 1940–41 [1973] God Is
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in the House (Hillsong Church album), 1996 God Is in
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"H. L. Hunley".
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«H. L. Hunley».
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Solidarités international
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Solidarités International
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Why would we want to go to Boston?
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Neden Boston'a gitmek isteriz?
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Marcílio
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Marcílio da Silva Miguel
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Turnbull also drew heavily on the ideas of Lord Shaftesbury.
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Turnbull s'inspire aussi fortement idées de Lord Shaftesbury.
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can i ovulate without having a period while breastfeeding
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Most women will not start ovulating in the first six weeks after giving birth.1 Breastfeeding typically delays the onset of ovulation.2 Depending on the intensity of breastfeeding, it can be several months or over a year before you regain your fertility.
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teams by aggregated results of both stages were relegated to the Regional Leagues and replaced by the top two performers of the Regional League promotion series. However, if one or two teams would be admitted to J3 or withdrawn at the end of the season, the number of relegated clubs would be reduced accordingly. As a result of SP Kyoto FC's withdrawal, no club was relegated. According to updated J.League Terms, the clubs must comply the following requirements to be promoted to J3 League: Play in JFL for at least one season before promotion Hold a J. League 100 Year Plan club status Finish in top 4 of the combined JFL table, and finish either 1st or 2nd among associate members. Have an average home attendance of at least 2,000; with significant effort recognized toward reaching 3,000 spectators Have an annual operating revenue of 150 million yen Pass the J3 licensing examination conducted by J.League First stage Second stage Championship play-offs The championship play-offs will be held after the season between two winners of each stage. Vanraure Hachinohe, the winners of the first stage, hosted the first leg on 29 November, and Sony Sendai who won the second stage hosted the second leg on 5 December. |} Overall table This table was used to determine J3 promotion candidates.
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1st or 2nd among associate members. Have an average home attendance of at least 2,000; with significant effort recognized toward reaching 3,000 spectators Have an annual operating revenue of 150 million yen Pass the J3 licensing examination conducted by J.League First stage Second stage Championship play-offs The championship play-offs will be held after the season between two winners of each stage. Vanraure Hachinohe, the winners of the first stage, hosted the first leg on 29 November, and Sony Sendai who won the second stage hosted the second leg on 5 December. |} Overall table This table was used to determine J3 promotion candidates. To qualify for promotion, a club must hold a 100 Year Plan status, obtain J3 license (marked in bold in the table), and finish both in the top 4 of the JFL, and either 1st or 2nd among the promotion-eligible clubs. On 25 September J.League has awarded J3 licenses for 2016 season. Among JFL clubs, only Kagoshima United, Azul Claro Numazu, and Nara Club received the licenses. On 17 November J.League officially promoted Kagoshima United to next year's J3 League. Top
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$ \forall x ( P(x) \lor Q(x)) \iff \forall x (P(x)) \lor \forall x (Q(x) ) $
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Proof, is $\forall x : (P(x) \lor Q(x)) \Leftrightarrow \forall x : P(x) \lor \forall x : Q(x)$?
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also History of Yeshiva University References Defunct schools in New York City Jewish day schools in New York (state) Educational institutions established in 1886 1886 establishments in New York
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East Side of Manhattan, New York. It was founded as a cheder-style elementary school and, over time, became the basis of Yeshiva College and Yeshiva University. See also History of
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wheel rather than a skid. It was available with a tow release in both the nose and near the centre of gravity; in-flight adjustable rudder pedals and seat back. A lever bar to aid in assembly was also employed. A larger than common retractable main wheel with drum brake is also a nice feature, however the brake lever located in the seat pan behind the joy stick is slightly inconvenient. The maiden flight of the Mosquito took place in 1976. It is by all accounts a nice-handling, comfortable and pleasing aircraft, but a little less performing than the contemporaneous Rolladen-Schneider LS3 and ASW 20. Therefore, the Mosquito (and the Schempp-Hirth Mini-Nimbus that shares the same wing) did not do well in top-level competition, neither did it find the large commercial success of the Libelle. The Mosquito was superseded in 1980 by the Glasflügel 304. Aircraft on display US Southwest Soaring Museum Specifications See also References Citations Bibliography Thomas F, Fundamentals of
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of gravity; in-flight adjustable rudder pedals and seat back. A lever bar to aid in assembly was also employed. A larger than common retractable main wheel with drum brake is also a nice feature, however the brake lever located in the seat pan behind the joy stick is slightly inconvenient. The maiden flight of the Mosquito took place in 1976. It is by all accounts a nice-handling, comfortable and pleasing aircraft, but a little less performing than the contemporaneous Rolladen-Schneider LS3 and ASW 20. Therefore, the Mosquito (and the Schempp-Hirth Mini-Nimbus that shares the same wing) did not do well in top-level competition, neither did it find the large commercial success of the Libelle. The Mosquito was superseded in 1980 by the Glasflügel 304. Aircraft on display US Southwest Soaring Museum Specifications
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how long does it take for lung ct scan?
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The actual CT scan takes only about 5 minutes in total (with set up and scanning time). The scan itself only takes seconds.
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