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offshoot and Boston
In 1772 he cofounded the Boston Grenadier Corps as an offshoot of The Train, and served as its second in command.
the First Church of Christ, Scientist in Boston, Massachusetts, that of the Christian Scientists "; and " The church ( i. e. organized body of Christians ) of which another church or denomination is an offshoot ; ( also ) the oldest or original church from which all others have sprung ".
( Not to be confused with Boston metalcore ( also known as metallic hardcore ; itself an offshoot of Boston hardcore.

offshoot and Symphony
In the 1970s he taught at the University of Sussex, where he obtained a doctorate for his work on Mahler, an offshoot of his long collaboration with Deryck Cooke on the performing version of Mahler's Tenth Symphony.

offshoot and Orchestra
* ELO Part II, an offshoot band of Electric Light Orchestra
The University of Cambridge Philharmonic Orchestra, popularly known as UCPO, was originally founded as an offshoot of the Fitzwilliam College Music Society.
As an offshoot of that foundation, Lewis plans to form a Youth Choir and Youth Orchestra.
After the band's popularity reached new heights in late 1980s, spurred on by the televised version of Top Lista Nadrealista, the Bosnian War which followed saw the breakup of the band, with one offshoot continuing work in Belgrade initially as Zabranjeno Pušenje, later under the name No Smoking Orchestra, and the other in Zagreb, using the original name.
The first album, Music From The Penguin Cafe, was released in 1976 on Brian Eno's experimental Obscure Records label, an offshoot of the EG label ; a collection of pieces recorded in the years 1974-1976, it was followed in 1981 by Penguin Cafe Orchestra, after which the band settled into a more regular release schedule.

offshoot and is
Much of the free-love tradition is an offshoot of anarchism, and reflects a civil libertarian philosophy that seeks freedom from state regulation and church interference in personal relationships.
The overlap between physics and materials science has led to the offshoot field of materials physics, which is concerned with the physical properties of materials.
Naked News TV is its offshoot pay-per-view or subscription service.
While Spock makes it clear that the events during the period of Surak are well documented (" The Savage Curtain "), he is completely uncertain in regard to the origin of the Romulans: " If the Romulans are an offshoot of my Vulcan blood -- and I think this likely -- then attack becomes even more imperative.
* July 17 – King George V of the United Kingdom issues a proclamation, stating that thenceforth the male line descendants of the British Royal Family will bear the surname Windsor, vice the Germanic bloodline of House of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, which is an offshoot of the historic ( 800 + years ) House of Wettin.
* Relational algebra, an offshoot of first-order logic ( and of algebra of sets ), deals with a set of finitary relations which is closed under certain operators
A slightly later-starting Neolithic culture found in central Wallonia is the so-called " Groupe de Blicquy ", which may represent an offshoot of the LBK settlers. One notable archaeological site in this region is the Neolithic flint mines of Spiennes.
He grew up near the new offshoot from Lindisfarne at Melrose Abbey, which is today in Scotland but was then in Northumbria.
The rozhok (‘ little horn ’) of the Vladimir and Tver ( Kalinin ) districts, however, may be a rural offshoot of the straight cornett ; it has a separate mouthpiece ( which some players place to the side of the lips ) and is made in two or more sizes for playing music in parts.
* The Union for Traditional Judaism ( UTJ ), an offshoot of the left-wing of Orthodoxy and the right-wing of Conservative Judaism, has a non-denominational seminary in New Jersey ; the seminary is accepted by all non-Orthodox rabbis as a valid, traditional rabbinical seminary.
One popular offshoot of the circle packing method is box-pleating, where squares are used instead of circles.
Arapaho is an Algonquian language closely related to Gros Ventre, whose people are seen as an early offshoot of the Arapaho.
" It is believed to be a sophisticated offshoot of divination.
As a prominent and respected literary theorist, Fish is best known for his analysis of interpretive communities — an offshoot of reader-response criticism.
An offshoot of the Western genre is the " post-apocalyptic " Western, in which a future society, struggling to rebuild after a major catastrophe, is portrayed in a manner very similar to the 19th century frontier.
The Mysore painting style is an offshoot of the Vijayanagar school of painting, and King Raja Wodeyar ( 1578 – 1617 CE ) is credited with having been its patron.
Because of its similarities to the tenets of Discordianism, The Church of the SubGenius is often described as a syncretic offshoot of that belief.
The band's debut 1983 full-length album " Dehumanization " on Corpus Christi Records, an offshoot of Crass Records, is often considered to be their definitive work and a cornerstone of political punk.
The band's debut full-length " Dehumanization " on Corpus Christi Records ( an offshoot of Crass Records ) showcased their extremely fast and overdriven sound and is widely considered to be their definitive work and a cornerstone of political punk.
This is a close offshoot of the long geographic ridge called Sand Mountain, a southmost extension of the Appalachian Mountains.
The latter is an offshoot of The Daily Home.
The city is also the headquarters of a polygamist offshoot of the mainstream LDS Church, the True and Living Church of Jesus Christ of Saints of the Last Days.

offshoot and founded
The Josty company had been founded in 1793 by two Swiss brothers, Johann and Daniel Josty, who had emigrated to Berlin from Sils in Switzerland and set up a bakery from which the café was a 1796 offshoot.
It was an offshoot of the Communist Party of Peru — Bandera Roja ( red flag ), which in turn split from the original Peruvian Communist Party, a derivation of the Peruvian Socialist Party founded by José Carlos Mariátegui in 1928.
The term think tank itself, however, originally referred to organizations that offered military advice — most notably the RAND Corporation, founded originally in 1946 as an offshoot of Douglas Aircraft, and which became an independent corporation in 1948.
Crawfurd, in alliance with Hunt, took over the presidency of the Ethnological Society of London, which was an offshoot of the Aborigines ' Protection Society, founded with the mission to defend indigenous peoples against slavery and colonial exploitation.
In 1826, the Scottish Academy was founded by a group of artists as an offshoot of the Royal Institution, and in 1838 it became the Royal Scottish Academy ( RSA ).
In 1995, Shooter founded Broadway Comics, which was an offshoot of Broadway Video, the production company that produces Saturday Night Live, but this line folded after its parent sold the properties to Golden Books.
The UM System was created in 1963 when the University of Missouri ( founded in 1839 in Columbia ) and its offshoot, the Missouri School of Mines ( now the Missouri University of Science & Technology ), founded in 1870 in Rolla, were combined with the formerly private University of Kansas City ( now University of Missouri-Kansas City, founded in 1933 ), and a newly created campus in suburban St. Louis ( University of Missouri-St. Louis ) in 1963.
Based largely upon the principles of Islamic fundamentalism that were gaining momentum throughout the Arab world in the 1980s, Hamas was founded as an offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhood in 1987, during the First Intifada.
Cumae was a direct offshoot of an earlier colony on the nearby island of Ischia, Pithecusae, founded by colonists from the Euboean cities of Eretria and of Chalcis ( Χαλκίς ), which was accounted its mother-city by agreement among the first settlers.
Disenchanted former samurai had established patriotic societies and intelligence-gathering organizations, such as the Gen ' yōsha ( 玄洋社 Black Ocean Society, founded in 1881 ) and its later offshoot, the Kokuryūkai ( 黒竜会 Black Dragon Society or Amur River Society, founded in 1901 ).
The Order of the Silent Brotherhood was an offshoot of the Aryan Nations, an organization founded in the early 1970s by Richard G. Butler ; the latter had since the 1950s been associated with another antisemitic group, called the Church of Jesus Christ Christian.
In 1899 he founded the Action Française ( AF ) review, an offshoot of the newspaper created by Maurice Pujo and Henri Vaugeois the preceding year.
Originally called the " Philosophical Society ", the Society was founded in 1743 by Benjamin Franklin and John Bartram as an offshoot of an earlier club, the Junto.
The Ethnological Society of London ( ESL ) was a learned society founded in 1843 as an offshoot of the Aborigines ' Protection Society ( APS ).
Flxible Owners International ( see external link ) was founded in the mid-1980s as an offshoot of the Family Motor Coach Association, and is dedicated to the preservation of buses and coaches produced by Flxible.
Bloch founded an offshoot of the punk rock movement called The New Irreverence which also included Kim Kristensen, Daniel M. Lewis, and Michael Heaton, and a group of painters that later came to be known as M ' bwebwe in New York City.
In November 2006, Eduardo dos Santos adopted an initiative created by veteran Diamantaire, Dr. André Action Diakité Jackson, to launch the African Diamond Producers Association ( ADPA ), an intergovernmental offshoot of the African Diamond Council ( ADC ), consisting of approximately 20 African nations founded to promote market cooperation and foreign investment in the African diamond industry.
Pohl, previously the order ’ s Chancellor, founded a schismatic offshoot: the Germanenorden Walvater of the Holy Grail.
The British League of Rights is an offshoot of the Australian League of Rights founded in 1971.
It also founded an offshoot, Western Goals ( UK ), ( later the Western Goals Institute ), which was briefly influential in British Conservative politics.

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