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Page "Chair" ¶ 47
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** and Wood
** Marbled Wood Quail, Odontophorus gujanensis
** Spot-winged Wood Quail, Odontophorus capueira
** Black-eared Wood Quail, Odontophorus melanotis
** Rufous-fronted Wood Quail, Odontophorus erythrops
** Black-fronted Wood Quail, Odontophorus atrifrons
** Chestnut Wood Quail, Odontophorus hyperythrus
** Dark-backed Wood Quail, Odontophorus melanonotus
** Rufous-breasted Wood Quail, Odontophorus speciosus
** Tacarcuna Wood Quail, Odontophorus dialeucos
** Gorgeted Wood Quail, Odontophorus strophium
** Venezuelan Wood Quail, Odontophorus columbianus
** Black-breasted Wood Quail, Odontophorus leucolaemus
** Stripe-faced Wood Quail, Odontophorus balliviani
** Starred Wood Quail, Odontophorus stellatus
** Spotted Wood Quail, Odontophorus guttatus
** In London at the Wood Green Empire, Chung Ling Soo ( William E Robinson, U. S .- born magician ) dies during his trick where he is supposed to " catch " two separate bullets – but one of them perforates his lung.
** Sidney Wood, American tennis player ( d. 2009 )
** Danny Wood, American singer ( New Kids on the Block )
** Lana Wood, American actress and producer
** A Unabomber bomb injures United Airlines president Percy Wood in Lake Forest, Illinois.
** Beatrice Wood, American artist and ceramicist ( b. 1893 )
** Craig Wood, American golfer ( b. 1901 )
** Evelyn Wood, British field marshal and Victoria Cross recipient ( b. 1838 )
** Keith Wood, Irish rugby player
** Beatrice Wood, American artist and ceramicist ( d. 1998 )

** and slats
** Hollow-core-Often consists of a lattice or honeycomb made of corrugated cardboard, or thin wooden slats.
** Stave-core-Consists of wooden slats stacked upon one another in a manner similar to a plank & batten door ( though the slats are usually thinner ) or the wooden-block hollow-core ( except that the space is entirely filled ).
** Hollow-core-Often consists of a lattice or honeycomb made of corrugated cardboard, or thin wooden slats.
** Stave-core-Consists of wooden slats stacked upon one another in a manner similar to a plank & batten door ( though the slats are usually thinner ) or the wooden-block hollow-core ( except that the space is entirely filled ).

** and often
** howitzers: capable of high angle fire, they are most often employed for indirect-fire.
** New Curonian ( nearly extinct ; often considered a separate language, but mutually intelligible to Latvian )
** Hardware bug, a defect in hardware, often with close affinity to software
** Occasional frost, often with summer rainfall maximum
** contemporaneous ancient copies minted as counterfeits ( often gold-or silver-plated ) to fool merchants and consumers
** modern copies sold as replicas ( often, but not always, marked as such )
** The program and data memories are often integrated on the same chip.
** Buttermilk, the liquid left over after producing butter from cream, often dried as livestock feed
** Design brief or Parti pris – an early ( often the beginning ) statement of design goals
** English studies, the study of English language and literature, often as a school subject
** A ground bus or earth bus is a conductor used as a zero voltage reference in a system, often connected to ground or earth.
** Industrial fermentation, the breakdown and re-assembly of biochemicals for industry, often in aerobic growth conditions
** Alcohol induced hypoglycemia often linked with ketoacidosis ( depletion of NAD + leads to a block of gluconeogenesis )
** Monkey lemurs, most terrestrial of lemurs, often compared to baboons or macaques.
** The Art of Computer Programming, often referred to by the author's name
** The first transfinite ordinal number, often identified with the set of natural numbers including 0 ( sometimes written )
** in a closed consensus process: Restricted membership and often having formal procedures for due-process among voting members
** Comedy of errors – a work that is light and often humorous or satirical in tone, in which the action usually features a series of comic instances of mistaken identity, and which typically culminates in a happy resolution of the thematic conflict.
** Comedy of manners – satirizes the manners and affectations of a social class, often represented by stock characters.
** Farce – aims at entertaining the audience by means of unlikely, extravagant, and improbable situations, disguise and mistaken identity, verbal humour of varying degrees of sophistication, which may include word play, and a fast-paced plot whose speed usually increases, culminating in an ending which often involves an elaborate chase scene.
** St. James's church ( often mistakenly called St Jacob's ), a basilica from the 14th century, with monumental wall paintings and Gothic stalls
** Black tie (" dinner jacket " in the UK ; often referred to as a " tuxedo " in the US ; traditionally appropriate only for use after 6: 00 p. m., but also seen in daytime, especially in the United States )
** In more egalitarian weddings, the bride responds verbally, often giving the groom a ring in return.
** Sino-Japanese War: Battle of Lugou Bridge ( aka Marco Polo Bridge Incident ): Japanese forces invade China ( often seen as the beginning of World War II in Asia ).
In the US, magazines and newspapers often do not use it, instead printing " family-friendly " censored versions, usually " n * gg * r ", " n ** ger ", " n ——", and " the N-word "; however, historians and social activists, such as Dick Gregory, criticize the euphemisms and their usage as intellectually dishonest, because using the euphemism " the N-word " instead of nigger robs younger generations of Americans of the full history of Black people in America.

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