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") and Then
Then from 27 September 1939 forward, it was administered by the Reichssicherheitshauptamt ( RSHA ) (" Reich Main Security Office ") and was considered a sister organization of the Sicherheitsdienst ( SD ) (" Security Service ").
This melding of scientific and social speculation is clearly present in the novel Voyage from Yesteryear ( strongly influenced by Eric Frank Russell's famous story " And Then There Were None ") about a high-tech anarchist society in the Alpha Centauri system, a starship sent from Earth by a dictatorial government, and the events following their first contact.
Finally, everything comes to what is a plain flat plain at the lowest elevation possible ( called " baseline ") This plain was called by Davis ' " peneplain " meaning " almost plain " Then the rejuvenation occurs and there is another mountain lift and the cycle continues.
Then, following the death of his mother in 1578, Pieter, along with his brother Jan Brueghel the Elder (" Velvet Brueghel ") and sister Marie, went to live with their grandmother Mayken Verhulst ( widow of Pieter Coecke van Aelst ).
Then he meets a young failed actress ( Veronica Lake, credited only as " The Girl ") who is contemplating quitting the business.
The town, a " mother town " of the county, was later reduced in size by the formation of other towns, the first being the Town of Owego ( Then the " Town of Tioga ") in 1800, followed by Lisle ( 1801 ), Greene ( 1808, now in Chenango County ), Vestal ( 1823 ).
Then, the leather is air dried (" crusted ") for several weeks, which allows it to stabilize.
Then, Belvedere's novel ( described as " A Screaming Satire on suburban manners and morals ") is published and becomes a national bestseller.
Then the name was changed to that of the well-known character from David Copperfield, Uriah Heep ( for, according to biographer Kirk Blows, " Dickens ' name being everywhere around Christmas ' 69 due to it being the hundredth anniversary of his death ") and the decision came of widening the sound.
" Then he extended the final word Echad (" One ") until his life expired with that word.
Then A is an algebra over K if the following identities hold for any three elements x, y, and z of A, and all elements (" scalars ") a and b of K:
Then, she became a full fledged member of the Telemundo family where she hosted the afternoon lifestyles program La Buena Vida (" The Good Life "), The show was merged with another newsmagazine titled Ocurrió así (" It Happened This Way ") and Esta noche con Cecilia Bolocco (" Tonight With Cecilia Bolocco ") followed for which she won two Emmy awards.
Then, he bought the few Japanese geography books named Miyakoji (" City roads ") or Edo hōgaku (" Tokyo maps ") for children, and he tried reading aloud them, then he wrote the Sekai Kunizukushi of six volumes as the same style of the Japanese geography books.
If Not Doc. SupportsService (" com. sun. star. text. TextDocument ") Then
If TextEl. SupportsService (" com. sun. star. text. Paragraph ") Then
The poem also contains a reference to Canto XXVI in its line " Poi s ' ascose nel foco che gli affina " (" Then hid him in the fire that purifies them ") which appears in Eliot's closing section of The Waste Land as it does to end Dante's canto.
* " Weg nach unten " (" The way down ") describes a depressed person digging himself into the earth ; what appears to be metaphorical at first is in the end revealed to be meant literally: " Dann kommt Licht und ein Känguruh, und ich weiß ich bin zu weit " (" Then there's light and a kangaroo, and I know I've gone too far ")
Then the judge can sustain ( rule in favor of ) a demurrer on the basis that the complaint's date-related allegations indicate it was filed too late (" the statute of limitations has run "), unless the plaintiff can show a typographical error ( a so-called " scrivener's error ") occurred in the drafting of the complaint.
Then in 1865 the Cranleigh Line linking Guildford with Horsham opened, and " Bramley & Wonersh " station ( initially known as " Bramley ") was the last stop on the line before Guildford.
In 1998, Johnson and Gane recorded a single new bonus track (" Resurrection ") for the 1998 Martha and the Muffins / M + M compilation album Then Again: A Retrospective.
Then attention is directed away from the object ( hence, " misdirection ") through a combination of comedy, sleight of hand or an unimportant object of focus, thus providing just enough time for the magician to do whatever he or she wishes to do with the original object.
While at Rugby School in 1938, Stott heard the Reverend Eric Nash ( nicknamed " Bash ") deliver a sermon entitled " What Then Shall I Do with Jesus, Who Is Called the Christ?

") and captain
") inside, and that he will have the captain knock three times when he arrives.
In Ancien Régime France, a nom de guerre ( a French phrase meaning " war name ") would be adopted by each new recruit ( or assigned to him by the captain of his company ) as he enlisted in the French army.
Mark Anthony Taylor, ( born 27 October 1964 in Leeton, New South Wales ; nicknamed " Tubby " or " Tubs ") is a former Australian cricket player and Test opening batsman from 1988 – 1999, as well as captain from 1994 – 1999, succeeding Allan Border.
In Norse mythology, Hrym ( Old Norse " decrepit ") is a jötunn and the captain of the ship Naglfar according to the Gylfaginning ( chapter 51 ).
The current system by which most of the team is determined by performances with a small number of players selected by the captain ( known as " wild cards " or " captain's picks ") gradually evolved and has been used by both sides since 1989.
* Caporegime (" Capo "), high-ranking member (" captain ") in charge of a Mafia crew
" Răzvan spune " ( Răzvan says ) in Romanian, " Yakup der ki " in Turkish, " 船長さんの命令 " (' Senchosan no meirei ' " Ship Captain's orders ") in Japanese, " Kongen befaler " (" the king commands ") in Norwegian, " Kapteeni käskee " (" the captain commands ") in Finnish, " 老師話 " (" the teacher says ") in Cantonese, " O rei manda " (" the king orders ") in Portuguese, and " O mestre mandou " (" The master ordered ") in Brazilian Portuguese.
Two of the brothers, Robert Percy ( known as " Bobus ") and Cecil, were sent to Eton, but he was sent with the youngest to Winchester College, where he rose to be captain of the school.
Besides the camel-pullers the caravan would also include a xiansheng ( 先生, literally, " Sir ", " Mister ") ( typically, an older man with a long experience as a camel-puller, now playing the role of a general manager ), one or two cooks, and the caravan master, whose authority over the caravan and its people was as absolute as that of a captain on a ship.
As a development, the bare name of a ship in the Royal Navy meant its captain ( e. g., " Cressy didn't learn from Aboukir ") while the name with an article referred to the ship ( e. g., " The Cressy is foundering ").
To facilitate the further training of a number of newly-qualified co-pilots, SFOs were instructed to occupy only the third flight deck seat of the Trident and to act in the capacity known as " P3 ", involving operating the aircraft ’ s systems and assisting the captain ( known as " P1 " on the BEA Trident fleet ) and the co-pilot ( known as " P2 ") who between them handled the aircraft.
This term " captain general " ( actually " general captain ") started to appear in the 14th century, with the meaning of commander in chief of an army ( or fleet ) in the field, probably the first usage of the term general in military settings.
El Capitán (" the captain ", " the chief ") was taken to be a loose Spanish translation of the local Native American name for the cliff, variously transcribed as " To-to-kon oo-lah " or " To-tock-ah-noo-lah ".
In the thirteenth century in Florence, in Orvieto ( 1251 ) and some other cities a capitano del popolo ( literally, " captain of the people ") was chosen to look after the interests of the lower classes.
Peter and John were imprisoned by a " Jewish leadership " (" the priests, the captain of the temple, and the Sadducees ") who were " much annoyed because they were teaching the people and proclaiming that in Jesus there is the resurrection of the dead ".
For forward-facing jumpseats, the position is exactly the same but with the feet behind the knees, with some airlines requiring flight attendants to tuck their chin in to their chest (" bow to the captain ") to reduce the likelihood of whiplash injuries.
For example, a lieutenant (" Leutnant ") would address his captain as " Herr Hauptmann " (" Mr. Captain ").
A grave of a Hungarian Honvédség | honvéd captain and 6 of his men who fell fighting on the Polish side during the Uprising ( the epitath says: " Here lies Honved Sergeant Jözef Vonyik and 6 unidentified Hungarian soldiers who fell fighting for the Polish cause during the Warsaw Uprising, August 1944 ")
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