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Famously and club
Famously hearing one alumnus describe St. Mark's as the best club he had ever joined, Brewster subsequently fought to make admissions merit-based, and expanded financial assistance.

Famously and Club
Famously, Hill adopted the colours and cap design of London Rowing Club for his racing helmet-dark blue with white oar-shaped tabs.

Famously and is
Famously, Anthony is said to have faced a series of supernatural temptations during his pilgrimage to the desert.
Famously, Aristotelian logic runs into trouble when one or more of the terms involved is empty ( has no members ).
Famously, he stated that the point is to know one way or the other what the solution is, and he believed that we always can know this, that in mathematics there is not any " ignorabimus " ( statement that the truth can never be known ).
Famously, a British Foreign Secretary is said to have rejected the Playfair cipher because, even if school boys could cope successfully as Wheatstone and Playfair had shown, ' our attachés could never learn it!
Famously, Samuel Johnson claimed that A Tale of a Tub was a work of true genius ( in contrast to Gulliver's Travels where once one imagines " big people and little people " the rest is easy ) and too good to be Jonathan Swift's.
Famously John Lennon is quoted: " I might have been born in Liverpool-but I grew up in Hamburg ".
An application: Famously and controversially, in the philosophy of the Greek Anaxagoras ( at least as it is discussed by the Roman Atomist Lucretius ), it was assumed that the atoms constituting a substance must themselves have the salient observed properties of that substance: so atoms of water would be wet, atoms of iron would be hard, atoms of wool would be soft, etc.
Getting Along Famously is a Canadian sitcom which aired on CBC Television in 2006.
Famously fired from the role of Marty McFly in Back to the Future, he is widely known for playing the role of Rocky Dennis in the biographical drama film Mask, which earned him the nomination for a Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor in a Motion Picture, and has appeared in a wide variety of films from mainstream fare like Some Kind of Wonderful to independent films like Pulp Fiction, Killing Zoe, and Kicking and Screaming.
Famously, she narrated a story starring a young Jessica Ferguson, who is now Head of Drama at the prestigious Southam College in Warwickshire, who played The Baked Bean Queen.
Famously within the tradition, one of Chaitanya Mahaprabhu's close associates, Haridasa Thakur, is reported to have chanted 300, 000 holy names of God each day.
Famously used by the " Mirror Universe " version of Star Trek character Spock, in the episode " Mirror, Mirror ", it was an easy way for audiences to tell " good " Spock from " evil " Spock ( though in truth the character, while more ruthlessly logical than his counterpart, is far from evil ).
Famously, when Larijani-in 2008-was asked about the mass execution of political prisoners in Iran in a press conference, he answered " I have a good number of birth records, it is about 4 %, we have two million new people each year.
Famously, Dias is credited for breaking the ice with the wary Tupiniquim on the beach by jumping into an impromptu joyful dance to the accompaniment of Tupi pipes.
Famously referred to as " Professor Shloven " by Congressman Bill Thomas, Shoven is known to his friends as " The Sherpa.

Famously and also
Famously, two spells also deal with the judgement of the deceased in the Weighing of the Heart ritual.
Famously, in his commentary to Leviticus 18: 4-5 ( see also Rashi ad loc.
The story continues in its sequel How to Fight a Girl, which has also been released under the title How to Get Famously Rich.

Famously and within
Famously, he came within two minutes of picking up a winners ' medal in 1999, only to have his hopes dashed by Manchester United, who scored two last-minute goals in the final, after he was substituted in the 86th minute of play while the team was still leading 1 – 0.
Famously, although Randle and Pottle's guilt was not in doubt, the jury —" perversely ", according to the authorities, but entirely within their rights — acquitted them.

Famously and .
Famously, radar was developed in the UK, Germany, and the United States during the same period.
Famously, the Société Linguistique de Paris in 1866 refused to admit any further papers on the subject.
Famously, the first version of Superman ( a bald-headed villain ) appeared in the third issue of Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster's 1933 fanzine Science Fiction.
Famously, Machiavelli argued that virtue and prudence can help a man control more of his future, in the place of allowing fortune to do so.
* Leo Strauss: Famously rejected modernity, mostly on the grounds of what he perceived to be modern political philosophy's excessive self-sufficiency of reason and flawed philosophical grounds for moral and political normativity.
Famously, Pat Boone recorded sanitized versions of Little Richard songs.
Famously Plato argued against sophist thinkers such as Gorgias of Leontini, who held the physical world cannot be experienced except through language, this meant that for Gorgias the question of truth was dependent on aesthetic preferences or functional consequences.
Famously vituperative attacks came from journalist H. L. Mencken, whose syndicated columns from Dayton for The Baltimore Sun drew vivid caricatures of the " backward " local populace, referring to the people of Rhea County as " Babbits ," " morons ," " peasants ," " hill-billies ," " yaps ," and " yokels.
Famously, he saw no practical use for his discovery.
Famously, the failure to predict the orbit of Uranus in the 19th century led, not to the rejection of Newton's Law, but rather to the rejection of the hypothesis that there are only seven planets in our solar system.
Famously, the Romans used their shields to create a tortoise-like formation called a testudo in which entire groups of soldiers would be enclosed in an armoured box to provide protection against missiles.
Famously, in the midst of being so giddy with delight after Life Is Beautiful was announced as the Best Foreign Film, Benigni climbed over and then stood on the backs of the seats in front of him and applauded the audience before proceeding to the stage.
Famously, the much smaller Greek army held the pass of Thermopylae against the Persians for three days before being outflanked by a mountain path.
Famously, this was mis-dated in Roman numerals as " 1468 ", thus apparently pre-dating Caxton.
Famously, he strung along the opposition and was expected to make his declaration of election in a broadcast on 7 September 1978.
Other well-known celebrities who live on or have regularly visited the island: Famously renowned Harlem Renaissance artist Lois Mailou Jones, U. S. President Barack Obama ; former president Bill Clinton and his wife, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton ; comedian and talk show host David Letterman ; Bill Murray ; Tony Shalhoub ; Quincy Jones ; Ted Danson and wife Mary Steenburgen ; Larry David ; the Farrelly brothers ; Meg Ryan ; Chelsea Handler.
Famously, they are an essential component of a full English or Irish breakfast.
Famously, the ' Stoke Newington 8 ' were arrested on 20 August 1971 at 359 Amhurst Road for suspected involvement in The Angry Brigade bombings.
Famously, he branded him with the nickname " cothurnus ", the name of a boot worn on the stage that could fit either foot ; Theramenes, he proclaimed, was ready to serve either the democratic or oligarchic cause, seeking only to further his own personal interest.

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