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Page "Extended Industry Standard Architecture" ¶ 12
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Ironically and one
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, although the ID tags include religion as a way of ensuring that religious needs will be met, some personnel have them reissued without religious affiliation listed — or keep two sets, one with the designation and one without — out of fear that identification as a member of a particular religion could increase the danger to their welfare or their lives if they fell into enemy hands.
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, the loss of his priesthood had allowed him to pursue a military career, as the high priest of Jupiter was not permitted to touch a horse, sleep three nights outside his own bed or one night outside Rome, or look upon an army.
Ironically, one aspect of American society that the Americo-Liberians recreated was a cultural and racial caste system — however, in this case with themselves at the top instead of the bottom.
" Ironically ( because, it appears, no one had noticed his allusion ) Sonata No. 7 received a Stalin Prize ( Second Class ), and No. 8 a Stalin Prize First Class, even though the works have been subsequently interpreted as representing Prokofiev " venting his anger and frustration with the Soviet regime.
Ironically, the ABC affiliate in St. Louis, KDNL-TV, has been regarded as one of the network's weakest affiliates since joining the network in 1995.
Ironically, for an artist considered one of the Italian cinema's greatest and most influential directors, De Sica's sole Academy Award nomination was for acting, when he received a Best Supporting Actor Oscar nod for playing Major Rinaldi in American director Charles Vidor's 1957 adaptation of Ernest Hemingway's A Farewell to Arms, a movie that was panned by critics and proved a box office flop.
Ironically, Kobe, the home city of the largest yakuza syndicate Yamaguchi-gumi, is one of the safest cities in Japan, because " cheap " criminals such as street gangs and thugs are afraid to attract the yakuza's attention so they avoid being active in the city.
Ironically, one finds within this move almost every iconic paradigm inherent to the gangster image in the U. S. We have a plethora of drugs and guns.
Ironically, one of the formulae, which does not represent benzene correctly and was not advocated by Dewar, is sometimes still called Dewar benzene.
Ironically one of the most important issues, the replacement of the light firearms, failed during his mandate due to the soldiers clinging onto their cheap and highly reliable Heckler & Koch G3's, made by INDEP ( the Portuguese Military factory ) in Portugal.
Ironically, the main beneficiaries were perhaps the owners of biens nationaux, numbering around one million, as their property had been guaranteed as one of the conditions for the act's passing, which subsequently led to a rise in the value of their land.
Ironically, given the role he played in Lumumba's ousting, Mobutu strove to present himself as a successor to Lumumba's legacy, and one of the key tenets early in his rule was " authentic Congolese nationalism.
Ironically, it was the one in use during the seal's centennial in 1882.
Ironically, Thrawn was also personally responsible for one of the greatest setbacks to the Imperial cause.
Ironically, this phobia is one of the factors that leads to his defeat.
( 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, the isolationist Albania under Enver Hoxha, virtually a hermit kingdom, became one of the most prolific international broadcasters during the latter decades of the Cold War, with Radio Tirana one of the top five broadcasters in terms of hours of programming produced.
Ironically, Paul America, one of the actors in the underground film, was jailed the following year in upstate Michigan, facing twenty years to life on an obscure marijuana charge.
Ironically the town experienced its largest growth spurt a year after the storm as more people moved to the area, going from a population of roughly 23, 000 in 1990 to one of roughly 47, 000 in 2000.

Ironically and benefits
Ironically, the senior British naval officer of the force which sinks Ziethen and benefits from Brown's action, is none other than now Captain Saville-Samarez, Brown's father, although they do not know of each other.
Ironically the earthquake that brought so many benefits to the company also sowed the seeds of its demise, as the independent Geary Street, Park & Ocean Railway was acquired by the city and became in 1912 the beginning of the San Francisco Municipal Railway ( Muni ).

Ironically and come
Ironically, their ancestors hadn't come looking for a life on the sea, but on the land.
Ironically, the Dodgers had just come off a 3-game sweep of the New York Mets and had produced 31 hits and 18 runs.
Only after weeks of debate did he come to see that a new document was necessary .< ref name =" Jared Ingersoll, Military History "></ span ></ font ></ ref > Ironically, his major contribution to the cause of constitutional government came not during the Convention, but later during a lengthy and distinguished legal career when he helped define many of the principles enunciated at Philadelphia.
Ironically, although Dixie has come to intimidate Holmes, Holmes cleverly secures Dixie's future cooperation by threatening to tell what he knows about the suspicious Perkins death involving Dixie.
Ironically, Kennedy would eventually prove to be Smythe's favourite player and he would come to call Kennedy " the greatest competitor in hockey ".
Ironically, since WW2, only the Israeli Defence Force seem to have come close to matching the Wehrmacht of WW2 in the exercise of command in this style: partly due to a conscious decision on the part of Moshe Dayan, who fought under British command in WW2, and who attended a British Army Staff training course which-according to his memoirs-disappointed him, to put it mildly.

Ironically and out
Ironically, the property that they prevent the soil from drying out can also be problematic for commercial agriculture.
Ironically the perpetrator turns out to be a strong, assertive women, capable of taking bold initiatives and setting the agenda for everybody else-and making use of all this to aggressively promote a violently anti-feminist agenda.
Ironically, the 49ers, the previous Super Bowl champion, also suffered a blow out loss at home the prior season ( 40-8 to the Philadelphia Eagles ).
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, Nora's leaving is as much motivated by " the letter " and disclosure of a " past secret " as it is by her own determination to strike out on her own.
Ironically, the first time the wheel was spun, it landed on Dawson, inspiring four of the panelists ( including Dawson ) to stand up from their places and leave the set momentarily out of disbelief.
Ironically, the lyrics speak to their own condition of running out of food.
( Ironically, this report turned out to have been false, having been made up by Alastair Campbell during his late days on the Daily Mirror.
Ironically, as Jackson points out, the communist organization suppressed the very freedoms which made its conspiracy possible.
Ironically enough, it is not really the end of the world in any sense, but when one stands there and looks out across the vast area of ocean one can forget about the geography and really feel like there is nothing else out there.
Ironically, Emile Berliner died in 1929, the same year RCA bought out Victor, and Edgar Berliner resigned the following year.
Ironically Snow White was an enormous success, but Walt had previously read a book on psychology, so instead of giving out bonuses to everyone he gave out " salary adjustments " to certain animators who he felt did exceptional work.
Ironically, as it turned out, the proposal was made by Dutch Sternaman, co-owner of the Bears.
Ironically, Maidstone also went out of business and had to leave the Football League just five months after Aldershot's demise.
Ironically, Pete Rozelle is erroneously given credit for the merger, even though he consistently refused to have a game between NFL and AFL champions, and the fact that Rozelle was " out of the loop " when the AFL and NFL owners negotiated the merger.
Ironically, Lancaster and Frankenheimer became close friends during the filming, while Douglas and the director had a falling out.
Ironically, politicians from across the aisle — Malcolm Fraser and a number of his ministers — spoke out in defence of Cairns on this subject, agreeing that they too signed letters of which they had little or no memory.
Ironically, Charles James, who had modestly stayed out of the argument as to priority, worked on a much larger scale than the others, and undoubtedly possessed the largest supply of lutetium at the time.
Ironically: the same people who were, for decades, stigmatised as ultra-Croatian " linguistic nationalists " ( Stjepan Babić, Dalibor Brozović, Radoslav Katičić, Miro Kačić ) have been accused as pro-Serbian " political linguists " simply because they opposed these " language purges " that wanted to kick out numerous words of Church Slavonic origin ( which are common not only to Croatian and Serbian, but are also present in Polish, Russian, Czech and other Slavic languages ).
Ironically, politicians from across the isle-Malcolm Fraser and a number of his ministers-spoke out in defence of Cairns on this subject, agreeing that they too signed letters of which they had little or no memory.
Ironically, while Maimonides refrained from citing sources out of concern for brevity ( or perhaps because he designed his work to be used without studying the Talmud or other sources first ), the result has often been the opposite of what he intended.

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