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footnote and Historian
According to the footnote of the " The lunar calender of Qin and Chu " (《 秦楚之际月表 》) from the Index of the Records of the Grand Historian (《 史记索隐 》), the first month Zhengyue, " due to the taboo of the First Emperor's given name Zheng, was reformed as Duanyue ( 端月 ).
In a footnote the Historian also described the transfer of the artillery of the 23rd and 24th divisions and thirteen medium ( 60-pdr ) and 25 heavy ( fifteen 6-inch gun, five 8-inch and five 9. 2-inch howitzer ) batteries from the Second Army.
Historian Francis Whiting Halsey, who spelled the name of the village Oghwaga, included this footnote in his 1901 work The Old New York Frontier:

footnote and described
It is described in a short footnote as " Excerpt from Walt Mervin's ' Certain Essays in History '".
Trevanian described the movie as " vapid " in a footnote in his later novel Shibumi.
Georges Cuvier first described a specimen of the winghead shark in 1817, as a footnote to his account of Squalus zygaena (= Sphyrna zygaena, the smooth hammerhead ).
The Independent newspaper has described it as a " delightful and worthwhile publications, more footnote than story, that delivers a comprehensive picture of a clandestine world which the Establishment would prefer remained secret ".
Scottish historical novelist Sir Walter Scott scornfully described the last method in a footnote to his influential poem Lady of the Lake.
Webb briefly described Cobb ’ s aborted career with Union Fish Company ( see Dunn, 2005: 4, footnote 19 ).

footnote and intelligence
It is also claimed by Mr Holloway that " When the information was acquired by MI6, a footnote was written on the page of an intelligence report sent to No 10 stating that the claim was ' verifiably inaccurate '.

footnote and July
The Ralph L Clark memo of the 29th July contains a footnote reference to a meeting, “ OSI: FCD: RLC mtw ( 28July52 )” which appears to indicate a 28 July 1952 meeting between F C Durant and Clark on this subject.
Bradshaw's July 1922 Railway Guide, in a timetable footnote refers to Market Street, giving the distance to Exchange Station.
Thomas Chatterton, The Rowley Poems, Hastings ii. 90 and footnote 15 to Eclogue the Second, at Project Gutenberg, accessed on 12 July 2006.
Another interesting footnote about Hearn is that he hit two inside-the-park home runs, including one in a game on July 9, 1955 in which he also hit a traditional fence-clearing homer.

footnote and which
Topp and Martin Hamilton of Kew Gardens compiled the most recent checklist of vegetation in 2009, which can be found at this footnote.
In a footnote, which was published as a correction in the next issue of the journal, he justified his suggestion to call organs of unicellular organisms " organella " since they are only differently formed parts of one cell, in contrast to multicellular organs of multicellular organisms.
The Holy See's Annuario Pontificio, in its list of popes and antipopes, attaches a footnote to its mention of Stephen II ( III ): " On the death of Zachary the Roman priest Stephen was elected ; but, since four days later he died, before his consecratio, which according to the canon law of the time was the true commencement of his pontificate, his name is not registered in the Liber Pontificalis nor in other lists of the Popes.
The Annuario Pontificio attaches to its mention of Stephen II ( III ) the footnote: " On the death of Zachary the Roman priest Stephen was elected ; but, since four days later he died, before his consecratio, which according to the canon law of the time was the true commencement of his pontificate, his name is not registered in the Liber Pontificalis nor in other lists of the Popes.
In their 2002 paper ( which has been cited more than 280 times ), a footnote on the " Cardassian term " states:
In the 1961 decision, Justice Hugo Black commented in a footnote, " Among religions in this country which do not teach what would generally be considered a belief in the existence of God are Buddhism, Taoism, Ethical Culture, Secular Humanism, and others.
The footnote in Torcaso v. Watkins referenced Fellowship of Humanity v. County of Alameda, a 1957 case in which an organization of humanists sought a tax exemption on the ground that they used their property " solely and exclusively for religious worship.
In 1772, Johann Elert Bode, aged only twenty-five, completed the second edition of his astronomical compendium Anleitung zur Kenntniss des gestirnten Himmels, into which he added the following footnote, initially unsourced, but credited to Titius in later versions:
Because of its " graphic " nature, this tale has at times been translated incompletely, as in John Payne's translation, where Alibech's sexual awakening is left untranslated and is accompanied with this footnote: " The translators regret that the disuse into which magic has fallen, makes it impossible to render the technicalities of that mysterious art into tolerable English ; they have therefore found it necessary to insert several passages in the original Italian.
William Whiston, a 17 / 18th century translator of the Antiquities, stated in a footnote that he believed Josephus mistook Seth for Sesostris, king of Egypt, the erector of the referenced pillar in Siriad ( being a contemporary name for the territories in which Sirius was venerated ( i. e., Egypt ).
Donald J. Keefe in his paper " Tracking the footnote " traced a quote by Leo XII which strongly condemned vaccination to " an unverified citation " by Dr. Pierre Simon in Le Contredes Naissances.
A somewhat odd footnote is that even though only half as many Higgins boats were produced, far more survive ( seven hulls, 3 of which have been restored to their World War II configuration ), than of the more numerous Elco boats, thus seemingly demonstrating the superior construction of the Higgins boat.
* In colloquial usage, an asterisk is used to indicate that a record is somehow tainted by circumstances, which are putatively explained in a footnote referenced by the asterisk.
" ( Trevor Hastie, Robert Tibshirani, and Jerome Friedman, co-authors of The Elements of Statistical Learning in their Preface to the Second Edition have a footnote which reads: " On the Web, this quote has been widely attributed to both Deming and Robert W. Hayden ; however Professor Hayden told us that he can claim no credit for this quote, and ironically we could find no ' data ' confirming Deming actually said this.
Sir John Herschel, in a footnote of the 1845 edition of the Encyclopedia Metropolitana, posed two ideas for the visual correction: the first " a spherical capsule of glass filled with animal jelly ", and " a mould of the cornea " which could be impressed on " some sort of transparent medium ".
In de la Peña's narrative, he adds a footnote which may align both versions.
Additionally, in one of his many drafts, in a footnote on Big Daddy's action in the third act, Williams deems Cat on a Hot Tin Roof a " play which says only one affirmative thing about ' Man's Fate ': that he has it still in his power not to squeal like a pig but to keep a tight mouth about it.
To which Fitzgerald adds the following footnote ( 1st edition, 1859 ): " Bahram Gur-Bahram of the Wild Ass from his fame in hunting it-a Sassanian sovereign, had also his seven palaces, each of a different colour ; each with a Royal mistress within ; each of whom recounts to Bahram a romance.
Lamb also contributed a footnote to Shakespearean studies at this time with his essay " On the Tragedies of Shakespeare ," in which he argues that Shakespeare should be read rather than performed in order to gain the proper effect of his dramatic genius.
( Burton's footnote comments: " This tale is evidently taken from the escape of Aristomenes the Messenian from the pit into which he had been thrown, a fox being his guide.
One evening in March 1973, while on a concert tour of Japan to promote Close to the Edge, Anderson found himself " caught up in a lengthy footnote on page 83 " of Autobiography of a Yogi by Paramahansa Yogananda which describes four Shastric scriptures that cover religion, art, social life, medicine, music and architecture.
* Pierre Bayle's Historical and Critical Dictionary follows each brief entry with a footnote ( often five or six times the length of the main text ) in which saints, historical figures, and other topics are used as examples for philosophical digression.
( The 2005: 284 reprint of Chamberlain adds a footnote after " possessed ": " Himeko in the Chinese historical notices of Japan was skilled in magic, with which she deluded the people.
However the name is traditional and well established ; it can be found both in ( Macdonald, 1979 ), which says ( footnote on p. 12 )
This sentiment was echoed by the columnists of Next Generation Magazine, who noted the game as one that would most likely become a footnote in the history of the hardware on which it is played: " While it provides some interesting challenges, it's less a game than a drop-dead gorgeous example of the kind of rock-solid, smoothly flowing worlds the Nintendo 64 can produce.

footnote and German
Barbero comments that the incident would be little more than a footnote in scholarship were it not for controversy in German circles due to Nationalistic sentiment during World War II in Germany.
The speech is also found in a footnote to notes about a speech Hitler held in Obersalzberg on 22 August 1939 that were published in the German Foreign Policy documents

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