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[...] and
Under Ambrose's major influence, emperors Gratian, Valentinian II and Theodosius I carried on a persecution of Paganism .< ref name = " MacMullen1984p100 "> MacMullen ( 1984 ) p. 100: ‘ The law of June 391, issued by Theodosius [...] was issued from Milan and represented the will of its bishop, Ambrose ; for Theodosius recently excommunicated by Ambrose, penitent, and very much under his influence < sup > 43 </ sup > was no natural zealot.
Rolling Stone called the album " accessible, fiery and intimate often at the same time [...] a basic guitar record that's anything but basic.
:" I call your own kind self to witness [...] the last pages of Heart of Darkness where the interview of the man and the girl locks in as it were the whole 30000 words of narrative description into one suggestive view of a whole phase of life and makes of that story something quite on another plane than an anecdote of a man who went mad in the Centre of Africa.
Prior to this before the Second World War he was content with the role of an apolitical liberal intellectual: " Now teaching at a lycée in Laon [...] Sartre made his headquarters the Dome café at the crossing of Montparnasse and Raspail boulevards.
The Renaissance begins not with the ascent of Mont Ventoux but with the subsequent descent the " return [...] to the valley of soul ", as Hillman puts it.
Lavater later described Mendelssohn in his book on physiognomy, " Physiognomische Fragmente zur Beförderung der Menschenkenntnis und Menschenliebe " ( 1775 – 1778 ), as " a companionable, brilliant soul, with piercing eyes, the body of an Aesop a man of keen insight, exquisite taste and wide erudition [...] frank and open-hearted "— ending his public praise with the wish of Mendelssohn recognizing, " together with Plato and Moses ... the crucified glory of Christ ".
[...] As time goes on, the psychological accent shifts from the motives for the magical act on to the measures by which it is carried out that is, on to the act itself.
[...] Now anthropologists and many historians as well were slack-jawed and nearly speechless.
The Cambridge cryptographer Ross Anderson has great concerns that " TC can support remote censorship [...] In general, digital objects created using TC systems remain under the control of their creators, rather than under the control of the person who owns the machine on which they happen to be stored ( as at present ) [...] So someone who writes a paper that a court decides is defamatory can be compelled to censor it and the software company that wrote the word processor could be ordered to do the deletion if she refuses.
[...] They added strings, and I didn't like them, but I could live with them.
[...] Many right-thinkers laughed themselves silly in 1933 but a large number didn't.
Matte supervisor Chris Evans attempted to create paintings that felt less contrived and more real while the natural instinct of filmmaking is to place important elements in an orderly fashion, Evans said that photographers would " shoot things that [...] are odd in some way " and end up with results that look natural instead.
The New York Times Richard Eder said the film " could be masterpiece [...] a shattering successful effort to use an uncommon form cartoons and live action combined to convey the hallucinatory violence and frustration of American city life, specifically black city life [...] lyrically violent, yet in no way it exploit violence ".
[...] The dialog it has obviously generated if not the box office obstacles seems joltingly healthy.
Nevertheless, Rubinstein's Fourth Piano Concerto greatly influenced Tchaikovsky's piano concertos, especially the first ( 1874 5 ), and the superb finale, with its introduction and scintillating principal subject, is the basis of very similar material at the beginning of the finale of Balakirev's Piano Concerto in E-flat major [...] The first movement of Balakirev's concerto had been written, partially under the influence of Rubinstein's Second Concerto, in the 1860s.
[...] It would be absurd to expect Jews to resign themselves in order to become a minority with certain rights and very many duties after they have tasted the honey of power and conquered as many command positions as they have.
:" In addition, the present century has seen the conscious creation of a ‘ mainstream variety of Scots a standard literary variety, [...] referred to as ‘ synthetic Scots ’, now generally goes under the name Lallans (=‘ Lowlands ’).
[...] Schwimmer remains bland, competent, and boyish though not fatally boyish in the manner that appears to have turned these women on.

[...] and extent
[...] In English and American, " homophilia " was used to some extent ; but by the end of the 1960s, it was replaced those languages by " homosexual ", " gay ", and " lesbian ".
Michael C. Vanier says, " It is thought that the really huge games ( dai-dai and up ) were never really played to any significant extent [...] and were devised merely so that the creators could have the fun of inventing enormous games, amazing their friends and confounding their enemies.
Parson states that " this point [...] is independent of the sense in which individual is concretely autonomous or creative rather than ' passive ' or ' conforming ', for individuality and creativity, are to a considerable extent, phenomena of the institutionalization of expectations "; they are culturally constructed.
[...] The government is frightened to the extent to which it does not understand black Cubans today.
" " Under the Median rule [...] Median must to some extent have been the official Iranian language in western Iran.
[...] The evidence does not provide systematic quantitative proof regarding the extent to which bias and vote-rigging altered the election outcome.

[...] and Section
The preamble of Section 91 of the Constitution Act, 1867 states: " It shall be lawful for the Queen, [...] to make laws for the Peace, Order, and good Government of Canada, in relation to all Matters not coming within the Classes of Subjects by this Act assigned exclusively to the Legislatures of the Provinces ;" In addition to assigning powers that are not otherwise stated elsewhere ( which has been very narrowly interpreted ), this has led to the creation of the national emergency and national concern doctrines, which are governed by the principles stated by Le Dain J. in R. v. Crown Zellerbach Canada Ltd .:

[...] and right
Al Sharpton, former Pentecostal minister, now a Baptist minister and Civil rights leader, during his campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2004 said that asking whether gays or lesbians should be able to get married was insulting: " That's like saying you give blacks, or whites, or Latinos the right to shack up – but not get married [...] It's like asking ' do I support black marriage or white marriage '...
[...] f there are practices and policies which have potential to undermine the national security and territorial integrity of Fiji, the RFMF has every right under the Constitution to intervene.
The director's male characters have been described by critic Jennie Yabroff as " three time losers, petty thiefs and inept con men, all [...] eminently likeable, if not down right charming ", and by novelist Paul Auster as " laconic, withdrawn, sorrowful mumblers ".
[...] There's one shot in particular, where Cruz enters a room in a greenish glow, which is right out of Hitchcock's picture.
[...] It seemed to sit just right with us, accurately describing our collective ' secondary ' social esteem ".
[...] for democracy, for the right of those who submit to authority to have a voice in their own government, for the rights and liberties of small nations, for a universal dominion of right by such a concert of free peoples as shall bring peace and safety to all nations and make the world itself at last free.
The majority want to get married [...] they just want to do it right the first time, the same thing with their careers.
[...] And thus, those have the right idea who think that the soul does not exist without the body.
[...] The question in every case is whether the words used are used in such circumstances and are of such a nature as to create a clear and present danger that they will bring about the substantive evils that Congress has a right to prevent.
[...] And thus, those have the right idea who think that the soul does not exist without the body.
In 2006, Entertainment Weeklys website EW. com gave the overall series ( the review was made early after the fifth season premiere ) a grade of " A -", with the author saying " Scrubs is the trickiest comedy on TV [...] A likable, daffy, buoyant series that would be a big annoying mess if it weren't done just right, Scrubs is the very definition of nimble ".
[...] I must know whether America is right or wrong.
The second metaphor, also foregrounded in the title, is the representation of place: “ In the summer here in the Okanagan [...] there is a shade of cobalt blue that can be so intense it s overwhelming, and you get this gold and silver of the sun shredding it, shattering it, burnishing it, as it goes down .” The interconnection of the horses moving out to meet the in-coming sun creates a crease, a physical epiphany that assures humanity is in the right place.
Cherniack announced his retirement from political life in October 1980, saying " I am selfish enough to want a little more private life and have for some time [...] There comes a time in a person's life when he has a right to say I want to be relieved of the burden ".
The right, under a different formulation (' No one shall be subjected to [...] inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.
[...] There reemerges, in its cruelest form, the old theory that small states have no right to independence, that they fall within living spaces [...].
Of her audition, Carter said, " she came in and read the part with a seriousness and intensity that I knew the Scully character had to have and I knew [...] she was the right person for the part ".
[...] Their upkeep costs nothing and we must not tolerate that these animals, whose children are possibly killing our children right now, get to eat German bread.
Behind him another man landed to his right [...] Then a third [...] landed nearby.
" [...] Many writers find it scandalous that I should support the right of free expression for Faurisson without carefully analyzing his work, a strange doctrine which, if adopted, would effectively block defense of civil rights for unpopular views.
[...] very person will be given the right to vote for only one candidate, irrespective of race or religion.
:' His bravura pieces, fantasies on melodies from Rossini's Mosè and La donna del lago, on motifs from Bellini's Norma and on Russian folk-songs, became extraordinarily popular through his own, brilliant execution ; however, they treat their subjects always in one and the same way, [...] to let the tones of a melody be played in the medium octave of the keyboard now by the thumb of the right, now of the left hand, while the rest of the fingers are executing arpeggios filling the whole range of the keyboard '.
:" Out of the trees came Forrester of the Buffs, clad in shorts, a long yellow army jersey reaching down almost to the bottom of the shorts, brass polished and gleaming, web belt in place and waving his revolver in his right hand [...] It was a most inspiring sight.

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