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assembly and hall
** Moot hall, a meeting or assembly building, traditionally to decide local issues
Two Polish slave janitors of Peenemünde's Camp Trassenheide in early 1943 provided maps, sketches and reports to Polish Home Army Intelligence, and in June 1943 British intelligence had received two such reports which identified the " rocket assembly hall ', ' experimental pit ', and ' launching tower '.
Construction of the first Zeppelin began in 1899 in a floating assembly hall on Lake Constance in the Bay of Manzell, Friedrichshafen.
Pride participants instead tried to peacefully assemble and deliver a petition to city hall regarding the right of assembly and freedom of expression.
After preparing the meeting hall, members of the dissolved assembly of the three main Protestant estates gathered at 9: 00am, led by Count Thurn, who had been deprived of his post as Castellan of Karlstadt by the Emperor.
In the north-east corner was an aisled assembly hall.
The National Assembly, which used to meet in the Tashechhoe Dzong until 1993, is now held in this building in an elaborately decorated assembly hall at the end of two long decorated corridors.
Other large buildings include a " Pillared Hall ", thought to be an assembly hall of some kind, and the so-called " College Hall ", a complex of buildings comprising 78 rooms, thought to have been a priestly residence.
The Battle of Hemmingstedt in a history painting of 1910 by Max Friedrich Koch, assembly hall of the former District Building in Meldorf.
Mayasura was a great architect who soon constructed the Maya assembly hall – a gigantic palance for the Pandavas in Indraprastha.
The new school had three more classrooms, an assembly hall, a teacher's room, and a room for health services.
It comprised a market hall ( now Brasserie Chez Gerard ), large assembly hall and rooms for the Mechanics ’ Institute.
First, in the mid-1950s, came a new assembly hall for the Vickers Viscount known as ' B. 1 ' ( presumably as it consisted of a number of standard war-time B. 1 type hangars re-used ( together with some T. 2 hangars too ) and rebuilt as one long double bay structure parallel to the runway.
The assembly hall, ballroom, exhibition hall and theatre built in 1910 – 11 at the time of the federation to the design of T. Wallis and J. A.
Construction of the first Zeppelin airship began in 1899 in a floating assembly hall on Lake Constance in the Bay of Manzell, Friedrichshafen.
The Bourne Building also features at its focus a large assembly hall, inherited from the building that stood there previously.
) The assembly hall rolls with the struggle between Girondists and Montagnards.
Magen Broshi, analyzing the size of L77 ( which he calls an assembly hall ), estimated that about 120 to 150 people could sit there, to which he added a few dozen candidates to the population, yielding over 170 people.
Disaffected church and convent buildings now used as an assembly hall and festival venue ( Salle des Catherinettes ).
One of the early buildings still stands on the campus, the pagoda was built in 1902 and served as the original assembly hall for the school.
* A cultural centre, known as the BAPS Shri Swaminarayan Haveli, designed in traditional Gujarati haveli architecture, housing an assembly hall, gymnasium, bookshop, and offices.
The Norman Thomas High School ( formerly known as Central Commercial High School ) in Manhattan and the Norman Thomas ' 05 Library at Princeton University's Forbes College are named after him, as is the assembly hall at the Three Arrows Cooperative Society, where he was a frequent visitor.
Intended as a recreational retreat, the main features of the planned complex for the park were three buildings: a recreation hall used for official entertaining, a community assembly hall for conferences with local government officials, and a rest house directly opposite the Palace across the Pasig River which would serve as the venue for informal activities and social functions of the President and First Family.

assembly and was
It is presumed that this negative head was associated with some geometric factor of the assembly, since different readings were obtained with the same fluid and the only apparent difference was the assembly and disassembly of the apparatus.
A red filter, Zeiss barrier filter with the code ( Schott ) designation BG 23, was also used in the ocular lens assembly as it improved the contrast between specific and nonspecific fluorescence.
Even his old literary home, Punch, where the When We Were Very Young verses had first appeared, was ultimately to reject him, as Christopher Milne details in his autobiography The Enchanted Places, although Methuen continued to publish whatever Milne wrote, including the long poem ' The Norman Church ' and an assembly of articles entitled Year In, Year Out ( which Milne likened to a benefit night for the author ).
Henry Ford was the first to master the moving assembly line and was able to improve other aspects of industry by doing so ( such as reducing labor hours required to produce a single vehicle, and increased production numbers and parts ).
Ford was the first company to build large factories around the assembly line concept.
The assembly line concept was independently redeveloped throughout history and not " invented " at one time by one person.
The programming language to be employed by users was akin to modern day assembly languages.
In 2010, the health of the Dry Island Albertosaurus assembly was reported upon.
", which was taken up by the whole assembly.
* Pittacus-the dominant political figure of his time, he was voted supreme power by the political assembly of Mytilene and appears to have governed well ( 590-580 BC ), even allowing Alcaeus and his faction to return home in peace.
He was elected as an alderman and as Mayor of Greeneville, Tennessee before being elected to the state assembly.
This was in accordance with the agreement that Æthelred and Alfred had made earlier that year in an assembly at Swinbeorg.
Anaxagoras (, " lord of the assembly "; c. 500 – 428 BC ) was a Pre-Socratic Greek philosopher.
Citizenship could be granted by the assembly and was sometimes given to large groups ( Plateans in 427 BC, Samians in 405 BC ) but, by the 4th century, only to individuals and by a special vote with a quorum of 6000.
Attendance at the assembly was not always voluntary.
After the restoration of the democracy in 403 BC, pay for assembly attendance was introduced.
The epistates ( ἐπιστάτης ), an official selected by lot for a single day from among the currently presiding prytany, chaired that day's meeting of the boule and, if there was one, that day's meeting of the assembly ; he also held the keys to the treasury and the seal to the city, and welcomed foreign ambassadors.
Altogether, the boule was responsible for a great portion of the administration of the state, but was granted relatively little latitude for initiative ; the boule's control over policy was executed in its probouleutic, rather than its executive function ; in the former, it prepared measures for deliberation by the assembly, in the latter, it merely executed the wishes of the assembly.

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