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fine and brass
There are two fine monuments to members of the Prideaux family ( Sir Nicholas, 1627 and Edmund, 1693 ): there is also a monumental brass of 1421.
They became more utilitarian and were built of steel and plastic instead of fine woods and brass.
One method is to start with a sheet of brass shim or metal reclaimed from an aluminium drinks can or tin foil / aluminum foil, use fine sand paper to reduce the thickness of the centre of the material to the minimum, before carefully creating a pinhole with a suitably sized needle.
The veneers used are primarily woods, but may include bone, ivory, turtle-shell ( conventionally called " tortoiseshell "), mother-of-pearl, pewter, brass or fine metals.
Elgar's conducting was highly praised ; as to the orchestra, Ernest Newman wrote in The Manchester Guardian, " Its brass and its wood-wind were seen to be of exceptional quality, but the strings, fine as they are, have not the substance nor the colour of the Hallé strings.
Nicks and scratches add up quickly, so fine brushes ( never brass brushes ) are used for cleaning the anilox roll.
The Communion Table is fine mahogany ; the very latches of the pew doors are polished brass.
Composers such as Gasparo Alberti produced music with polyphony using two organs, brass and viols, a style usually associated with Venice, but which flourished in the fine acoustic environment of Santa Maria Maggiore.
The antique form is usually made of fine woods and brass fittings.
Marbella still produces a variety of handmade goods, including woven carpets, articles of copper, leather, brass, wood and leather, embroidery, bronze, fine silverwork, artistically crafted locks, plaster-casts, traditional and artistic hand-forged ironwork, jewelry, macramé and carved marble.
The art guild, concert and marching bands, jazz and brass ensembles, and others allow students to explore the fine and performing arts.
In some lines of fine work ( such as jewellery or musical instrument repair ), some specialized pliers feature a layer of comparatively soft metal ( such as brass ) over the two plates of the head of the pliers to reduce pressure placed on some fine tools or materials.
The brush types include stiff nylon ( general purpose ), soft nylon ( finishing / polishing ), horsehair ( soft and hard ), brass ( fine and extra fine ), copper, fine steel, coarse steel and combination brushes.
Inside are monuments to the great and the good of the many manors in the parish, including an excellent brass to John Estbury ( 1508 ), who founded the almshouses outside, and fine effigies of Sir Thomas Essex and his wife ( 1558 ).
The parish church contains the fine brass of Nicholas Assheton and his wife, 1466.
A 15th century Rector, John Cate, has another fine brass portrait.
* Tubular ( sealed element ): a fine coil of Nichrome wire in a ceramic insulating binder ( MgO, alumina powder ), sealed inside a tube made of stainless steel or brass.
Additionally there are clubs for the school newspaper, photography, chorus, brass band, theater, biology, flower arranging, astronomy, fine art, physics, Japanese literature and Go
There are some fine monuments of Georgian period and a brass of 1423.
Although Cheney was trained as a maker of fine clocks in brass and other materials, Eli Terry, a clockmaker who had trained as a clockmaker with either Timothy or Benjamin Cheney, had just invented a method of producing the parts for wooden shelf, or pillar-and-scroll clocks that enabled them to be mass-produced using interchangeable parts.
Besides, he got all the old and existing temples repaired and set up in all of them holy statues made of gold, stone, silver, brass and of a mixture of fine metals and performed their Anjankala ceremony: i. e., declared them fit for worship.

fine and eagle
The new 1837 standard for the eagle was 258 troy grains ( 16. 718 g ) of. 900 fine gold ( with the alloy remainder for all U. S. coins after 1837, to. 100 copper and no silver ), with other coins proportionately sized.
In 2000 a unique eagle the 2000 Library of Congress bimetallic ten dollar coin was issued commemorating the Library of Congress consisting of equal weights of an approximately 1 / 4 oz. 9995 fine platinum core and a. 900 fine gold outer ring.
Sidney Waugh ( 1904 – 63 ), who designed the eagle sculpture, was selected because he had " a fine architectural sense.

fine and given
At the same time another child -- this one of Shelley's brain -- was given to the world: Alastor, a poem of pervading beauty in which the reader may gaze into the still depths of a fine mind's musings.
Previously known as Jefferson Arms, Kodiak has given this 11-shot hammerless job an exceptionally fine stock design, and the 260 is the first autoloader to handle
He would tell the Poles, he said, that they had been `` given a fine place to live in, more than three hundred miles each way ''.
This is illustrated in the figure above, where the first pattern is the diffraction pattern of a single slit, given by the function in this equation, and the second figure shows the combined intensity of the light diffracted from the two slits, where the function represent the fine structure, and the coarser structure represents diffraction by the individual slits as described by the function.
Greenpeace was fined US $ 7, 000 for damaging the reef and agreed to pay the fine saying they felt responsible for the damage, although Greenpeace stated that the Philippines government had given it outdated charts.
The energy levels of hydrogen, including fine structure, are given by
For example Erzulie Freda will be given a mirror and a comb, fine cloth or jewelry ; Legba will be given his cane, straw hat and pipe ; Baron Samedi will be given his top hat, sunglasses and a cigar.
Miltiades was given a massive fine for the crime of ' deceiving the Athenian people ', but died weeks later as a result of his wound.
Weathering has also given rise to circular " rock basins '" formed by the accumulation of water and the repeated freezing and thawing – a fine example is to be found at Kes Tor on Dartmoor.
This reel gained popularity initially for very fine lines which has given rise to one of its designations-" threadline winder ".
'" President Nixon approved the plan, and after he is given more information about the involvement of his campaign in the break-in, he tells Haldeman: " All right, fine, I understand it all.
He arrived in Dublin on 23 June 1588 with just over £ 27 (£ as of ), as well as a gold bracelet worth £ 10 (£ as of ),, and a diamond ring ( given to him by his mother at her death and which he wore all his life ), besides some fine clothing, and his " rapier and dagger ".
In 1425, parliament directed that all bishops must instruct their clergy to say specific prayers for the monarch and his family and in March 1426, parliament toughened up this decree insisting that the prayers be given at every mass under pain of a fine and a warning.
Despite being ridiculed for the letter by the media, Cleveland fans embraced the owner, even offering to pay the $ 100, 000 fine given by the NBA.
He carried his enquiries so far into the occult sciences of abstruse and hidden nature, that, after having given most ample proofs, by his writings concerning physiognomy, geomancy, and chiromancy, he moved on to the study of philosophy, physics, and astrology ; which studies proved so advantageous to him, that, not to speak of the two first, which introduced him to all the popes of his time, and acquired him a reputation among learned men, it is certain that he was a great master in the latter, which appears not only by the astronomical figures he had painted in the great hall of the palace at Padua, and the translations he made of the books of the most learned rabbi Abraham Aben Ezra, added to those he himself composed on critical days, and the improvement of astronomy, but by the testimony of the renowned mathematician Regiomontanus, who made a fine panegyric on him, in quality of an astrologer, in the oration he delivered publicly at Padua when he explained there the book of Alfraganus.
In 1965, Nolte was arrested for selling counterfeit documents and was given a 45-year jail sentence and a $ 75, 000 fine, however the sentence was suspended.
Brackley Kennett, the Lord Mayor, was convicted of criminal negligence for not reading out the Riot Act and given a £ 1, 000 fine.
After Irving denied the Holocaust in two 1989 speeches given in Austria, the Austrian government issued an arrest warrant against him and barred him from entering the country .< ref > In early 1992 a German court found him guilty of Holocaust denial under the Auschwitzlüge section of the law against Volksverhetzung ( a failed appeal by Irving would see the fine rise from 10, 000 DM to 30, 000 DM ), and he was subsequently barred from entering Germany.
Virgin Atlantic was given immunity for tipping off the authorities and received no fine — a controversial decision the Office of Fair Trading defended as being in the public interest.
The monks had, apparently willingly, already signed the Oath of Supremacy, and were given generous pensions-Elisha Ferrers, the last Abbot, became Vicar of Wymondham ( the fine sixteenth century sedilia on the south side of the chancel is said to be his memorial ).
Whitman was given a $ 100 fine for the offense.
Another reason given for the development of the community is the fact that a fine school, the Denham Springs Collegiate Institute, was founded by a group or residents in 1895.
On May 9, 1867, the post office and community were renamed Eureka, the name given by Edward Stark " as a place where he had found and others would find a fine place for doing business.

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