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Ironically and I
He later noted, " Ironically, the studio brass were horrified when I said I was cutting the wave.
Ironically the last three of these battles were amongst Germany's most celebrated victories in World War I.
Ironically, according to Carroll Quigley, the Cliveden Set had been strongly anti-German before and during World War I.
Ironically, an earthquake shook the area that very morning and the ceremony was nearly cancelled, which caused Patty to joke, " Some people said that earthquake this morning was LaVerne because she couldn't be here, but really it was just Maxene and I on the telephone.
Ironically, Diamond himself had performed in radio ads for H. I. S.
Ironically, Khachaturian wrote the work as a tribute to communism: " I wanted to write the kind of composition in which the public would feel my unwritten program without an announcement.
" Stacy Keach recalls the situation differently: " Ironically, I was the lucky benefactor of a Nicol tantrum in the late ' 70s.
A long series of Shakespeare adaptations were the first done of the Bard's works in the U. S. The 1915 feature The Battle Cry of Peace ( written and directed by Blackton ) was one of the great propaganda films of World War I. Ironically, after America declared war, the film was modified for re-release because it was seen as not being sufficiently pro-war, thus it also earns a place in the history of censorship.
Ironically, it was in the concentration camp that he was encouraged to continue his earlier research: " While I was imprisoned inside I had, after a few days, told the in the work production scheduling department of my ideas.
Ironically, Tanya Huff later shared: " Back when Christina Cox was doing F / X: The Series, I used to point at the screen and announce, ' When she's a little older, she'd be brilliant as Vicki!
Ironically, while at the helm of Aston Martin, he actually used a rival product, a Jaguar XJ Series I, as personal transport.
Ironically with Drew being so intimately associated with being " a Dubliner " he would somewhat tongue-in-cheek say that ; " I was born and grew up in Dun Laoghaire, and no true Dubliner would accept that at all !".
Ironically, a month ago I saw more kangaroos ( a mob of 14 ) on Red Hill in the centre of Canberra than I saw subsequently during the entirety of a 16-day tour of the Red Centre.
" Ironically enough, Sallard would eventually throw in a few back-up vocals for Peniston on a song with a significant title, " You Win, I Win, We Lose ", while Peniston, who in return played an agent to get a record deal also for Malaika ( whose album Sugar Time scored in 1993 two Top 5 hits on the US Dance chart, including the No. 1 single " Gotta Know ( Your Name )") would mention the Pooch's name on her own debut album in addition, leaving Davis a note saying " thanks for letting me be a part of Female Preacher.
The ballet was regularly performed for seven years, achieving forty-six performances until the outbreak of World War I. Ironically, Mahler proved to be more accurate in his judgment as to the cost of the production, as the Viennese performances were expensive, and was neglected until 1975 when the ballet was resurrected.
Ironically that also means that the blood of two mortal enemies — King Edward I of England, and King Robert the Bruce of Scotland — were mixed.
Ironically, his defeat is told ( by Pound ) in Poem I in short minimalist lines, of the kind that Mauberley himself would write.
Ironically, one week before the gift shop at 26 Second Avenue changed into Srila Prabhupada ’ s temple, I was standing in that very doorway with a Bhagavad-gita in my back pocket, waiting to meet a friend.

Ironically and who
Ironically, it soon became apparent that it had been Lascoe, an old pro ... who had made her feel like an amateur.
Ironically, it was Hoyle who coined the phrase that came to be applied to Lemaître's theory, referring to it as " this big bang idea " during a BBC Radio broadcast in March 1949.
Ironically, one of the stronger arguments against this position came from an individual highly respected by their theological quarter, Bliss Knapp, who claimed that Eddy understood through her lawyer that these consent clauses would not hinder normal operation after her decease.
Ironically one of the bands on the album, The Headstones, featured singer Hugh Dillon, who also starred in the movie as a singer of the fictional band.
Ironically, though, Guy is the only character who goes unharmed in the adventure.
" Ironically ," wrote theatre critic Lucy Komisar, " possibly his only true book ... about a successful author who is shown to be a fraud.
Ironically, Bradman was bowled shortly thereafter at a memorial match by Grimmett, who produced a perfectly pitched stock ball that turned just enough to remove Bradman's off bail.
Ironically, it had been Bryce, following orders from Grossberg, who fought a hacking battle of sorts ( a la the opening scene to Hackers ) with Theora Jones that led to Edison hitting his head on a traffic barrier and falling unconscious.
Ironically, most leaders who proclaim themselves President for Life do not in fact successfully serve a life term.
Ironically, many who held similar opinions to the character enjoyed the show, perhaps missing the point that Alf's opinions were considered offensive and that they were being ridiculed.
Ironically, after Jennings left the session, the idea was dropped at the prompting of Stevie Wonder, who pointed out that Ethiopians did not speak Swahili.
Ironically, it was the king who had originally chosen Gaveston in 1298 to be a suitable friend for his son due to his wit, courtesy and abilities.
Ironically, it was the Tories who finally agreed to purchase it, in 1858, for the then recently founded National Portrait Gallery, London | National Portrait Gallery.
The winners of that truce were Hill and Morgan, who immediately formed the Northern Securities Company with the aim of tying together their three major rail lines ( Ironically, the Burlington Route, Northern Pacific, and Great Northern would later merge in 1970 to form the Burlington Northern Railroad ).
Ironically, Mission Santa Cruz ( though ultimately ignored by the marauders ) was ignominiously sacked and vandalized by local residents who were entrusted with securing the church's valuables.
( Ironically, the election of Davis was the brainchild of Tilden's nephew who assumed it would secure his commission vote for the Democratic side.
Ironically, it had been Mulroney who had played the lead role in recruiting Wagner to the PC party a few years earlier, and the two wound up as rivals for Quebec delegates, most of whom were snared by Wagner, who even blocked Mulroney from becoming a voting delegate.
Ironically, historian Derek Brown notes that if the battle is seen as part of the War of the Grand Alliance, Pope Alexander VIII was an ally of William and an enemy to James ; the Papal States were part of the Grand Alliance with a shared hostility to Louis XIV of France, who at the time was attempting to establish dominance in Europe and to whom James was an ally.
Ironically the team that came sixteenth in Accrington's last season were Newton Heath, playing their first season in the league, who were later to become Manchester United.
Ironically, this codification of laws seems to have begun under the direction of the caesar Bardas who was murdered by Basil.
Ironically, John Tyler, son of the man who had once defeated him for office, would serve as his son's Vice President.
( Ironically, Blondell, who plays Mansfield's frumpy middle-aged, all-business secretary, was herself a major movie sex symbol some thirty years before — and whose sexuality was one of the first victims of the Hays Code ).
Ironically, vom Rath himself was a professional diplomat with the Foreign Office who expressed known anti-Nazi sympathies, largely based on the Nazi's treatment of the Jews, and was himself under Gestapo investigation for being politically unreliable.
Ironically, Brand, a genuine decorated veteran, portrays a phony war hero, a coward who obtained his prize trophy ( a Japanese soldier's sword ) by murdering a Japanese officer after he had surrendered.

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