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Page "Ridley Scott" ¶ 42
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Scott and cityscapes
Other genres include marine paintings, represented by Samuel Scott and Charles Brooking ; London cityscapes ; travel art from India, scenes of Shakespearean plays, and portraits of actors.

Scott and emphasis
Former emphasis on presumed race, in which John A. Scott could write an article on Achaean blondness, compared to the dark locks of " Mediterranean " Poseidon, on the basis of hints in Homer, has been laid aside.
Most of those involved were Whigs ; but, although the general bias of the Review was towards social and political reforms, it was at first so little of a party organ that it numbered Sir Walter Scott among its contributors ; and no distinct emphasis was given to its political leanings until the publication in 1808 of an article by Jeffrey himself on the work of Don Pedro Cevallos on the French Usurpation of Spain.
It later transformed itself into a more refined periodical with an emphasis on men's fashion and contributions by Ernest Hemingway and F. Scott Fitzgerald.
On November 22, 2010, the station changed its branding to " 106. 7 WYAY, Atlanta's Greatest Hits ", dropped Scott Shannon and The True Oldies Channel feed, and shifted from oldies to classic hits with an emphasis on 1970s and 1980s music.
Shot mostly on location, the film is largely faithful to the real events of the ill-fated polar trek, with emphasis on the heroic character of Scott and the significance of their expedition.
Producer Irving Thalberg was concerned that the original story and the first draft of a script by F. Scott Fitzgerald were too serious, and offered the job of rewriting it to Anita Loos, instructing her to provide something that was more fun and playful and with a greater emphasis on comedy.
Produced by Cooper and his bassist at the time, Erik Scott, Zipper Catches Skin is musically known for its dry and energetic pop-rock style with punk rock and post-punk influences and less emphasis on hard riffs, carrying on a similar musical direction of the preceding Special Forces with sonically slicker and clearer results.

Scott and storytelling
Editor Scott Haring said it " is the roleplaying game that comes closest of them all to pure storytelling.
In entertainment, spoken word performances generally consist of storytelling or poetry, exemplified by people like Hedwig Gorski, Gil Scott Heron and the lengthy monologues by Spalding Gray.
Scott of the New York Times observed, " The storytelling is deliberately disjointed, jumping back and forth in time without warning, so that the meaning of events and the connections among them emerge retrospectively.

Scott and e
The nucleus of the estate was a small farm of, called Cartleyhole, nicknamed Clarty ( i. e., muddy ) Hole, and was bought by Scott on the lapse of his lease ( 1811 ) of the neighbouring house of Ashestiel.
The support of Sharpton and other Black religious / political leaders ( e. g. Harvard's Peter Gomes, Jesse Jackson, Coretta Scott King ) is especially helpful for Black gays and lesbians who are negotiating the challenges of being gay in black communities.
* Romolo e Remo: a 1961 film starring Steve Reeves and Gordon Scott as the two brothers.
It is not unusual to find among the ranks of voice actors people who also act in live-action film or television, or on the stage ( see e. g., J. Scott Smart, an " old time radio " actor ).
M. Scott Peck developed stages for larger-scale groups ( i. e., communities ) which are similar to Tuckman's stages of group development.
sv: James Scott, 1: e hertig av Monmouth
Spurred by the success of N. Scott Momaday's Pulitzer Prize winning House Made of Dawn, Native American literature showed explosive growth during this period, known as the Native American Renaissance, through such novelists as Leslie Marmon Silko ( e. g., Ceremony ), Gerald Vizenor ( e. g., Bearheart: The Heirship Chronicles and numerous essays on Native American literature ), Louise Erdrich ( Love Medicine and several other novels that use a recurring set of characters and locations in the manner of William Faulkner ), James Welch ( e. g., Winter in the Blood ), Sherman Alexie ( e. g., The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven ), and poets Simon Ortiz and Joy Harjo.
Noting that the clumsy " created " nature of the young Hemingway in A Moveable Feast is well-established as fraudulent ( e. g., Hemingway had access to large sums of money during the time he was in Paris, yet portrayed himself as " starving "), Kennedy points out that Hemingway writes as if he were the only person in his literary circle in Paris who was sexually stable and healthy, in contrast to F. Scott Fitzgerald and Gertrude Stein.
These late experimental narratives show Brown exploring the interface of fiction and history at the end of the revolutionary era, at a moment that both follows the great Enlightenment historians ( e. g., David Hume, William Robertson, Edward Gibbon ) and prefigures the emergence of the 19th-century historical romance form in writers like Walter Scott or James Fenimore Cooper.
The Scott catalogue generally only describes United States envelope color and value of the indicia which is perfect for dealing with cut squares, but falls short of information needed to collect entires, i. e. the whole envelope.
People who choose to be known primarily by their middle name may abbreviate their first name to an initial ( e. g. F. Scott Fitzgerald and W. Somerset Maugham ).
sv: John Scott, 1: e earl av Eldon
In the non-traditional arena, many Welsh musicians have been present in popular rock and pop, either as individuals, ( e. g. Tom Jones, Shirley Bassey, Dave Edmunds, Shakin ' Stevens ), individuals in groups ( e. g. John Cale of The Velvet Underground, Green Gartside of Scritti Politti, Julian Cope of Teardrop Explodes and Andy Scott of Sweet, Roger Glover of Deep Purple and Rainbow ), or as bands formed in Wales ( e. g. Amen Corner, The Alarm, Man, Budgie, Badfinger, Tigertailz, Young Marble Giants ), but not until the 1990s did Welsh bands begin to be seen as a particular grouping.
Wade also stands in for Chandler in discussions about literature, e. g., praising F. Scott Fitzgerald.
Only rarely is a film released that makes a more positive impression on the general discourse and achieves a higher exchange value, e. g. Patton ( 1970 ) starring George C. Scott as the eponymous American general, was released at a time of considerable anti-war sentiment.
Critics argue that judges are making determinations of policy and morality that properly belong with legislators ( i. e. " legislating from the bench "), or argue that judges are reading views into the Constitution that are not really implied by the document, or argue that judges are claiming power to expand the liberty of some people at the expense of other people's liberty ( e. g., as in the Dred Scott case ), or argue that judges are addressing substance instead of process.
More recent work has begun to emphasize multiple, competing logics ( Friedland & Alford, 1991 ; Lounsbury, 2007 ), focusing on the more heterogeneous sources of diversity within fields ( Lounsbury, 2001 ) and the institutional embeddedness of technical considerations ( e. g., Scott et al., 2000 ; Thornton, 2004 ).
Critics argue that judges are making determinations of policy and morality that properly belong with legislators ( i. e. " legislating from the bench "), or argue that judges are reading views into the Constitution that are not really implied by the document, or argue that judges are claiming power to expand the liberty of some people at the expense of other people's liberty ( e. g. as in the Dred Scott case ), or argue that judges are addressing substance instead of process.

Scott and .
`` I really do have something important to tell you, Mr. Scott.
Mr. Justice Taney's Dred Scott decision in 1857 was unpopular in the North, and soon became a dead letter.
These narratives of coarse action and crude language appeared first in local newspapers, as a rule, and later found their way between book covers, though rarely into the planters' libraries beside the morocco-bound volumes of Horace, Mr. Addison, Mr. Pope, and Sir Walter Scott.
I do not suppose you ever heard of F. Scott Fitzgerald, living or dead, and moreover I do not suppose that, even if you had, his legend would have seemed to you to warrant more than a cluck of disapproval.
Wood took the proposal to Chief of Staff Hugh L. Scott, who passed it on to Baker a month before the actual declaration of war against Germany.
After Kahn's death in 1924 Scott wrote: `` May he rest in peace with the eternal gratitude of his adopted country ''.
The fourteenth name was ( Richard ) Buckenham, written Buckman, admitted to Christ's College under Scott 2 July 1625.
Of majestic build, rubicund and slash-mouthed, he resembled the late General Winfield Scott, who was said to be the most imposing general of his century, if not of all centuries.
In his minor way Charles Arthur Shires was perhaps more typical of his era than Ruth was, for he was but one of many young men who laid waste their talents in these Scott Fitzgerald days for the sake of earning space in the newspapers.
Ruth himself, still owning his farm in Massachusetts and an interest in the Massachusetts cigar business that printed his round boyish face on the wrappers, had led the parade down from Fenway Park, followed by pitchers Carl Mays, Leslie `` Joe '' Bush, Waite Hoyt, Herb Pennock, and Sam Jones, catcher Wally Schang, third baseman Joe Dugan ( who completed the `` playboy trio '' of Ruth, Dugan, and Hoyt ), and shortstop Everett Scott.
An internal police operation managed by Scott McLeod, a former F.B.I. man installed as security officer upon congressional insistence, was part of the vengeance.
His contention was denied by several bankers, including Scott Hudson of Sherman, Gaynor B. Jones of Houston, J. B. Brady of Harlingen and Howard Cox of Austin.
The monthly cost of ADC to more than 100,000 recipients in the county is 4.4 million dollars, said C. Virgil Martin, president of Carson Pirie Scott & Co., committee chairman.
While in the service he attended radio school at Scott Field in Belleville, Ill..
All the performances of the evening were smooth and assured, and the sizable company, with Mr. Nagrin and Marion Scott as its leading dancers, seemed to be fine shape.
Portrait of Dred Scott.
Lincoln denounced the Supreme Court decision in Dred Scott v. Sandford as a conspiracy to extend slavery.
In March 1857, the Supreme Court issued its decision in Dred Scott v. Sandford ; Chief Justice Roger B. Taney opined that blacks were not citizens, and derived no rights from the Constitution.
Douglas said that Lincoln was defying the authority of the U. S. Supreme Court and the Dred Scott decision.
Most Republicans agreed with Lincoln that the North was the aggrieved party, as the Slave Power tightened its grasp on the national government with the Dred Scott decision and the presidency of James Buchanan.

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