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Baum and is
A good example of the results obtainable with ultrasonic radiation is contained in papers presented by Dr. G. Baum who has explored the human eye.
Baum would later recount the actual story in an article, but the short story is told from the point of view of the actor playing the Ghost.
Frank Joslyn Baum, in his biography, To Please a Child, claimed that this was following an incident described as a heart attack, though there is no contemporary evidence of this ( and much evidence that material in Frank J.
It is unclear how much control or influence Baum had on the script ; it appears that many of the changes were written by Baum against his wishes due to contractual requirements with Hamlin.
Trouble is, not only is there no evidence that he purchased such an island, no one has ever been able to find any island whose name even resembles Pedloe in that area .< nowiki ></ nowiki > Nevertheless, Baum stated to the press that he had discovered a Pedloe Island off the coast of California and that he had purchased it to be " the Marvelous Land of Oz ," intending it to be " a fairy paradise for children.
As a Republican and avid supporter of Women's Suffrage, it is thought that Baum personally did not support the political ideals of either the Populist movement of 1890-92 or the Bryanite-silver crusade of 1896-1900.
) This aspect is retained in the name for cotton in many European languages, such as German Baumwolle, which translates as " tree wool " ( Baum means " tree "; Wolle means " wool ").
The Patchwork Girl of Oz by L. Frank Baum, is a children's novel, the seventh set in the Land of Oz.
Glinda, using her book that records everything that happens, is able to know that someone is using a telegraph to contact Oz, so she erects a telegraph tower and has the Shaggy Man, who knows how to make a telegraph reply, tell the story contained in this book to Baum.
This story is the first one since the original The Wonderful Wizard of Oz to send its hero on a quest through the land of Oz, a technique that allowed Baum to showcase the marvels of the land.
The road of yellow brick is an element in the novel The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by L. Frank Baum, with additional such roads appearing in The Marvelous Land of Oz and The Patchwork Girl of Oz.
L. Frank Baum concluded The Marvelous Land of Oz with the revelation that Princess Ozma, sought by the protagonists, had been turned into a boy as a baby, and that Tip ( who had been searching for her ) is that boy.
Recent research in the molecular systematics of this group, and related species, by Oyama and Baum ( 2004 ), has confirmed that the genus as described by Thompson is monophyletic, provided that one species ( A. cyathiferum ) is removed to a separate genus, and two others ( previously listed as Mohavea confertiflora and M. breviflora ) are included.
Matt Baum was in The ' 89 Cubs, but currently drums for Race for Titles and the Coffin Killers ; Ian McElroy is Rig 1 ; Denver Dalley is in Statistics and Intramural ; Landon Hedges is currently in Little Brazil ; and Casey Scott is Goldensection.
This is the first time in the Oz series that Baum made use of double plots for one of the books.
How far such analyses and comparisons should be pursued is of course open to debate ; as Baum writes of the social structure of Oz in Chapter Three, p. 31, " I do not suppose such an arrangement would be practical with us ...."
Even Ulysses ' resolute final utterance —" To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield "— is undercut by irony, when Baum and later critics compare this line to Satan's " courage never to submit or yield " in John Milton's Paradise Lost ( 1667 ).
The Tin Woodman of Oz: A Faithful Story of the Astonishing Adventure Undertaken by the Tin Woodman, Assisted by Woot the Wanderer, the Scarecrow of Oz, and Polychrome, the Rainbow's Daughter is the twelfth Land of Oz book written by L. Frank Baum and was originally published on May 13, 1918.

Baum and German
Slavoljub Eduard Penkala invented a solid-ink fountain pen in 1907, a German inventor named Baum took out a ballpoint patent in 1910, and yet another ballpoint pen device was patented by Van Vechten Riesburg in 1916.
He had German, Scots-Irish, and English ancestry, and was the seventh of nine children born to Cynthia Ann ( née Stanton ) and Benjamin Ward Baum, only five of whom survived into adulthood.
She was the founder of Syracuse Oratory School, and Baum advertised his services in her catalog to teach theatre, including stage business, playwriting, directing, and translating ( French, German, and Italian ), revision, and operettas, though he was not employed to do so.
In response to a proposal first made on July 22 by the commander of his German troops, Baron Riedesel, Burgoyne sent a detachment of about 800 troops under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Friedrich Baum from Fort Miller on a foraging mission to acquire horses for the German dragoons, draft animals to assist in moving the army, and to harass the enemy.
The common English name of " hornbeam " derives from the hardness of the woods ( likened to horn ) and the Old English " beam ", a tree ( cognate with German " Baum ".
Walter Lippmann was born on September 23, 1889, in New York City, to Jacob and Daisy Baum Lippmann ; his upper-middle class German Jewish family took annual holidays in Europe.
On August 16, 1777, Gen. John Stark ’ s 1, 500 New Hampshire Militia defeated 800 troops of German mercenaries, local Loyalists, Canadians and Indians under German Lt. Col. Friedrich Baum.
* Frank Baum ( footballer ) ( born 1956, Leverkusen ), a German footballer
During their exile from Nazi Germany in the 1930s and 40s, Pacific Palisades became a venue for German and Austrian writers and actors, like Thomas Mann, Lion Feuchtwanger, Vicki Baum, Oskar Homolka and Emil Ludwig.
Baum never explained where the term came from, but Baum researcher Brian Attebery has hypothesized that there might be a connection to the emblem of the Bavarian city of Munich ( spelled München in German ).
Baum's family had German origins: Baum could have seen one such reproduction in his childhood.
Vicki Baum accredits Walter Spies with providing her the factual historical information and details on Balinese culture for her historical fiction novel " Love and Death in Bali "-dealing with the Dutch intervention in Bali ( 1906 ), and first published in German in 1937.
He plans to set up his own factory with the help of his friends Max Baum ( Andrzej Seweryn ), a German and heir to an old handloom factory, and Moritz Welt ( Wojciech Pszoniak ), an independent Jewish businessman.
* Frank Baum ( footballer ) ( born 1956 ), German footballer
* Walter Baum ( born 1921 ), German type designer
CPT Baum directed the remnants of his force northeastward, but by now the area was swarming with German infantry and armor.

Baum and surname
* Baum ( surname )

Baum and meaning
Even the citizens of Oz who do not possess magical powers are referred to as " fairy people " by Baum in The Emerald City of Oz, meaning that they are not mortals like Dorothy and the Wizard who were born in the outside world.

Baum and tree
Baum ( tree ) becomes Bäumle
Steht auf der Grenze ein Baum, so gebühren die Früchte und, wenn der Baum gefällt wird, auch der Baum den Nachbarn zu gleichen Teilen (" If a tree stands on the property line between two plots of land, the neighbours have equal rights to the fruit thereof and, if it is cut down, also to the tree.
* Jack Pumpkinhead, a character made of tree limbs and a jack o ' lantern for a head, from the Oz book series by L. Frank Baum

Baum and people
The original 5-person Mattel game development team had grown to 110 people under now-Vice President Baum, while Daglow led Intellivision development and top engineer Minkoff directed all work on all other platforms.
Baum went on to write thirteen more novels based on the places and people of the Land of Oz.
The vegetable people grow what Baum elsewhere calls " meat people ," apparently for food ; Neill's pictures show plants with the heads of human children being watered by their growers.
* 1901: L. Frank Baum, an author, first mentions the idea of an electronic display / spectacles that overlays data onto real life ( in this case ' people '), it's named a ' character marker '.
Among the people observing the march was L. Frank Baum, before he gained fame.
( A story the Voe people tell seems to indicate that by now Baum had decided that people in a fairy land do not die ; even cut into pieces, an individual is still active and aware.
There were only 32 people in the first meeting, among them Lee Felsenstein, Bob Marsh, Bob Albrecht, Steve Dompier, Allen Baum and Stephen Wozniak.
They state that Baum and Denslow did not simply invent the Lion, Tin Woodman, Scarecrow, Yellow Brick Road, Silver Slippers, cyclone, monkeys, Emerald City, little people, Uncle Henry, passenger balloons, witches and the wizard.
Baum refers to humans in or out of Oz as " meat people ," in contrast to nonhumans such as the Scarecrow or the Tin Woodman.
Although Baum did not often use the word " mortal ," Thompson seemed far more fond of it as a way of describing the people who had come to Oz from the great outside world.
For example, in The Road to Oz Baum attempted to explain this inconsistency by saying that only bad people could die.
However, in Tik-Tok of Oz Baum suggested that Oz people could go on living after being eaten and digested, and also that Nomes would continue to live after being cut into tiny pieces, which disproves the destruction theory.
* Winkie Country, a place in the Wizard of Oz novels by L. Frank Baum and the people that inhabit it
Baum had been assigned a loyalist from the nearby region to guide his forces and attest to the character of any indigenous people encountered along the way.
L. Frank Baum presented her as an extremely kind and gentle character who stood against the oppression and subjugation of people.

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