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trove and material
There is a vast trove of unpublished material in the British Library, and a scattering of unpublished correspondence in several Continental archives.
After an Atlas Comics retrenchment in 1957 — during which the company mixed a trove of inventory stories by Wildey and many others with new material for two to three years — Wildey freelanced on a small number of standalone anthology stories for two other publishers: Harvey Comics, in the science fiction / fantasy titles Alarming Tales # 3-5 ( Jan .- Sept. 1958 ), and Black Cat Mystic # 62 ( March 1958 ), Hi-School Romance # 73 ( March 1958 ) and Warfront # 34 ( Sept. 1958 ); and DC Comics, in Tales of the Unexpected # 33 & 35 ( Nov. 1958, March 1959 ), House of Secrets # 17 ( Feb. 1959 ), My Greatest Adventure # 28 & 32 ( Nov. 1958 & June 1959 ), and House of Mystery # 89 ( Aug. 1959 ).
* Vampyres: A Tribute to the Ultimate in Erotic Horror Cinema ( 1996 ) by Tim Greaves is devoted entirely to the making of the film, filled with interview material, reviews and a treasure trove of photos.

trove and for
In 1868 a highly valuable trove of about 70 Roman silver vessels for eating and drinking, the so-called Hildesheim Treasure, was unearthed by Prussian soldiers.
After 1942, when Congress cut off the Library of Congress's funding for folk song collecting, Lomax continued to collect independently in Britain, Ireland, the Caribbean, Italy, and Spain, as well as the United States, using the latest recording technology, assembling a treasure trove of American and international culture.
It preserved most of the relics intact, and it is a treasure trove for archaeologists, leading some to call Kernavė the " Troy of Lithuania ".
* To refuse the " Queen's Consent ", where direct monarchical assent is required for a bill affecting, directly or by implication, the prerogative, hereditary revenues — including ultimus haeres, treasure trove, and bona vacantia — or the personal property or interests of the Crown to be heard in Parliament.
Upon his death, this trove of materials was passed to Esther Hoffe, who maintained most of them until her own death in 2007 ( one original maunuscript of The Trial was auctioned in 1988 for $ 2 million ).
Arunachal Pradesh is considered to be the " nature's treasure trove " and home to orchids, known for their exquisitely beautiful blooms, from one of the dominant taxa with more than six hundred species, occurring in varying elevations and climatic conditions throughout the state.
He gave the following reasons for his pledge: " Rapid advances in biological science foretell of a treasure trove of discoveries this century, including dramatically improved health and longevity for all.
* Old outhouse pits are seen as excellent places for archeological and anthropological excavations, offering up a trove of common objects from the past — a veritable inadvertent time capsule — which yields historical insight into the lives of the bygone occupants.
Ben believes there ’ s another way out to the surface and kept searching then found a strange keyhole and uses the pipe from the Charlotte to open yet another secret door to reveal the vast treasure trove, for which he has been searching his entire life, as well as a route to the surface.
The Hammer today manages a complex group of art holdings, including the collections amassed by Armand Hammer, and UCLA's Franklin D. Murphy Sculpture Garden and the Grunwald Center for the Graphic Arts, a 45, 000-piece graphic arts trove.
After his death, this vast trove of artifacts was donated to the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts.
The Petroglyph National Monument is a major asset for the City of Albuquerque and New Mexico but its rich trove of cultural and natural resources is threatened by the inability of the City and the National Park Service ( NPS ) to cooperatively manage the two-thirds of the monument that is City-owned land, according to documents posted on June 6, 2012 by Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility ( PEER ).
Mark Richardson of Pitchfork wrote, " Those hoping for a trove of overlooked gems will be disappointed ... Simply put, there's enough good stuff here for a solid single disc.
Upon their arrival, Chief Medical Officer Dr. McCoy finds the planet is a medical treasure trove of materials needed for various serums and drugs.
It is reported from ‘ Uqbah Ibn ‘ Amir Al-Juhani that he said that Muhammed said: “ Recite the last two verses from Surat Al-Baqarah, for I was given them from a treasure trove beneath the Throne ” ( Ahmad )
The story cannot be verified as no legal application for treasure trove was ever made, but it is known that members of the family ceased being fisherman and left Tortola at about the time to open some shops in Charlotte Amalie in St. Thomas.
Rumours persist of more pirate gold to be found on Norman Island, although to date no applications have ever been made for treasure trove.
The behaviour of the Webbs, and nearly seven years of litigation, culminating in the Supreme Court action where they unsuccessfully sought over £ 5, 000, 000 for the find, led to the replacement of Irish laws of treasure trove by the law in the National Monuments ( Amendment ) Act, 1994, with a new Section 2 being included in the legislation.
The Southern Poverty Law Center has described Radio Islam as " a Stockholm-based neo-Nazi propaganda outfit " which " contains a treasure trove of antisemitica " and Ahmed Rami as a " key IHR ( Institute for Historical Review ) ally " and " a key promoter of anti-Semitism worldwide ".
A treasure trove may broadly be defined as an amount of money or coin, gold, silver, plate, or bullion found hidden underground or in places such as cellars or attics, where the treasure seems old enough for it to be presumed that the true owner is dead and the heirs undiscoverable.
The Crown in Scotland has a prerogative right to treasure trove for it is one of the regalia minora (" minor things of the King "), that is, property rights which the Crown may exercise as it pleases and which it may alienate ( transfer to another party ).
The sum total comprises a treasure trove for the photographer, historian or anyone interested in Ireland ’ s roots.

trove and album
Released in October 2011, Condition was described by Mixmag magazine as “ a shape-shifting trove of wonders that leaps ambitiously from the serene to the brutal ”, awarded Drum ′ N ′ Bass album of the month and rated 5 / 5.

trove and with
" In a similar vein, there is the incident where Alvy scatters a trove of cocaine with an accidental sneeze: although not in the script, the joke emerged from a rehearsal happenstance and stayed in the movie.
After a few despairing days sealed in the dark chamber, they find an escape route, bringing with them a few pocketfuls of diamonds from the immense trove, enough to make them rich.
A negret (, ) in Catalan myths and legends, especially those of Majorca, is a small, dark-skinned sprite who, if touched with a candle by a mortal, instantly turns into a trove of coins.
Both of these rights, together with treasure trove, are administered by the Queen's and Lord Treasurer's Remembrancer, an office held by the Crown Agent, the senior official in the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service ( COPFS )..
Tigbauan, is one of Iloilo's treasure trove, packed with " gems " from more than a millennium of historical significance.
The dark, overtone-rich sound of these rather lightweight cymbals, combined with the rich, warm sound of his wood-shell drums ( he almost exclusively played Gretsch drums, although in later years was playing Slingerland drums ) equipped with natural calfskin top heads ( again, Lewis was a purist ), using regular mylar heads on the bottom, exuded a veritable treasure trove of sound.
In 15th-century English the Anglo-French term was translated as " treasure found ", but from the 16th century it began appearing in its modern form with the French word trové anglicized as trovey, trouve or trove.
In the case of treasure trove, the typical plural form is almost always treasure troves, with treasures trove found mostly in historical or literary works.
Treasure trove had to be hidden with animus revocandi, that is, an intention to recover it later.

trove and was
Some chroniclers claimed that this was because a local peasant had uncovered a treasure trove of Roman gold, which Richard claimed from Aimar in his position as feudal overlord.
A magnificent hoard of late Roman silver was discovered at nearby Thistley Green in 1942, and the 34 pieces, which included bowls, spoons, dishes and goblets, were declared to be Treasure trove and are now in the British Museum.
In April 1986, Rivera hosted the syndicated special The Mystery of Al Capone's Vault, an ill-conceived adventure where Rivera excavated what he had been told was the site of Al Capone's buried treasure trove.
In 1958 one denarius, coined in c. 82 AD, was revealed in the Şamaxı trove.
* trove, as in treasure trove, was originally an adjective, not a noun, and means found.
The large celtic treasure trove at Erstfeld, now generally interpreted as a votive offering to a mountain deity, indicates that there was a large, prosperous population in central alps during the 4th century BC.
The Vatera area hit the Greek news in 1997 when a palaeontologist, Michael Dermitzakis, confirmed what farmers unearthing bones had long suspected when he announced that the area was a treasure trove of two-million-year old fossils, belonging to the Late Pliocene.
Wacken was first mentioned in 1148, but there were probably some settlements before, which is proven by the trove of Germanic artefacts.
In March 1854, about two miles from the centre of the village an immense amount of gold was found in what appeared to be a hastily hidden trove concealed in a stone chamber under a cam of slight elevation, near the lake of Mooghaun, or Lougha-traska.
" An immediate zakat of 20 percent is due when one finds a treasure trove that was buried in pre-Islamic times ( N: or by non-Muslims, ancient or modern ) if it amounts to the zakat minimum ( def: h4. 2 ) and the land is not owned.
The English term treasure trove was derived from tresor trové, the Anglo-French equivalent of the Latin legal term thesaurus inventus.
In Roman law treasure trove was called thesaurus (" treasure " in Latin ), and defined by the Roman jurist Paulus as " vetus quædam depositio pecuniæ, cujus non extat memoria, ut jam dominum non habeat " ( an ancient deposit of money, of which no memory exists, so that it has no present owner ).
According to Dutch jurist Hugo Grotius ( 1583 1645 ), as the feudal system spread over Europe and the prince was looked on as the ultimate owner of all lands, his right to the treasure trove became jus commune et quasi gentium ( a common and quasi-international right ) in England, Germany, France, Spain and Denmark.
Under the common law, treasure trove was defined as gold or silver in any form, whether coin, plate ( gold or silver vessels or utensils ) or bullion ( a lump of gold or silver ),< ref >.</ ref > which had been hidden and rediscovered, and which no person could prove he or she owned.

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