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Named and by
Named by Mayor Wagner three years ago to head a committee that included James A. Farley, Bernard Gimbel and Clint Blume, Shea worked relentlessly.
Named " Baraka ", its earliest colonizers are later driven out by rivals from Al-Andalus and flee to the Loire Valley, where they found the city of Nsara.
** Named Italian Player of the 20th century by FIGC
Named after the Renaissance astronomer Galileo Galilei, it was launched on October 18, 1989, by the Space Shuttle Atlantis on the STS-34 mission.
Named " Madelyne Pryor ", the unaware clone meets Cyclops in a situation engineered by Sinister and the two fall in love, marry, and have a child, Nathan Christopher Summers.
Named by humans for the creatures in H. G.
A 24-year-old Brando as Stanley Kowalski on the set of the stage version of A Streetcar Named Desire ( play ) | A Streetcar Named Desire, photographed by Carl Van Vechten in 1948
Brando achieved stardom, however, as Stanley Kowalski in Tennessee Williams's 1947 play A Streetcar Named Desire, directed by Elia Kazan.
Karl Malden, Brando's fellow actor in A Streetcar Named Desire, On The Waterfront, and One-Eyed Jacks ( the only film directed by Brando ), talks in a documentary accompanying the DVD of A Streetcar Named Desire about a phone call he received from Brando shortly before Brando's death.
Named for the god Nergal, it may have been used for some ceremonial purpose, as it is the only known gate flanked by stone sculptures of winged bull-men ( lamassu ).
Named Team OS / 2, it was a grassroots organization conceived by an IBM employee and initially joined by other IBMers which quickly spread outside IBM.
Named after the Roots brothers who designed and invented it, this lobe pump works by displacing the liquid trapped between two long helical twisted rotors, each fitting into the other when perpendicular at 90 °, rotating inside a triangular shaped sealing line configuration, both at the point of suction and at the point of discharge.
Named by the 18th-century naturalist and founding taxonomist Carolus Linnaeus, it has not undergone much taxonomic change since.
* Tribunus laticlavius, Broad Band Tribune: Named for the broad striped tunic worn by men of senatorial rank, this tribune was appointed by the emperor or the Senate.
* " The Sea Named ' Solaris '", a piece by Isao Tomita
Named for their close-cropped or shaven heads, the first skinheads were greatly influenced by West Indian ( specifically Jamaican ) rude boys and British mods, in terms of fashion, music and lifestyle.
Named after the Inklings is The Inklings Society based in Aachen, and their yearbook, Inklings Jahrbuch für Literatur und Ästhetik, published from 1983 by Brendow, Moers.
Named for King James I, it was founded in May 1607 by Christopher Newport.
Her performance in the West End production of A Streetcar Named Desire, described by the theatre writer Phyllis Hartnoll as " proof of greater powers as an actress than she had hitherto shown ", led to a lengthy period during which she was considered one of the finest actresses in British theatre.
Named Uncle Ollie, or OLI ( Omnipresent Laser Interceptor ), it was a space-based defensive laser run by an intelligent program.
Named after Henry L. Stimson, United States Secretary of State in the Hoover Administration ( 1929 – 1933 ), the policy followed Japan's unilateral seizure of Manchuria in northeastern China following action by Japanese soldiers at Mukden ( now Shenyang ), on September 18, 1931.

Named and US-ACAN
Named by Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names ( US-ACAN ) for Martin C. Predoehl, United States Antarctic Research Program ( USARP ) meteorologist at McMurdo Station, 1961 – 62 and 1962-63.
Named by Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names ( US-ACAN ) for James S. Sherwin, ionospheric scientist at Little America V, 1958.
Named by Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names ( US-ACAN ) for John C. Albright, United States Antarctic Research Program ( USARP ) geologist on the South Pole-Queen Maud Land Traverse, 1964-65.
Named by US-ACAN for Bela Csejtey, U. S. Antarctic Research Program ( USARP ) geologist at McMurdo Station, 1962-63.
Named by US-ACAN after John Isbell, Department of Geosciences, University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee ; investigator of Permian and Lower Triassic strata of the Darwin and Churchill Mountains in several field seasons, 1992-2001, including work near this mountain.
Named by US-ACAN for Charles H. Summerson, U. S. Antarctic Research Program ( USARP ) geologist to the Mount Weaver area, 1962-63.
Named by US-ACAN for Peter R. Vogt, United States Antarctic Research Program ( USARP ) geologist at McMurdo Station, 1962-63.
Named by US-ACAN for Arthur J. Boucot, U. S. Antarctic Research Program ( USARP ) geologist at Byrd Station and to the Horlick Mountains, 1964-65.
Named by Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names ( US-ACAN ) ( 2004 ) after James R. Balsley, U. S. Geological Survey, who conducted airborne magnetometer near this peak during U. S. Navy Operation Highjump, 1946-47 ; later Chief, Branch of Geophysics, United States Geological Survey ( USGS ).
Named by US-ACAN for Donald L. Sneddon, U. S. Navy, electronics technician with the Byrd Station winter party in 1967.
Named by US-ACAN for Lieutenant John R. Swadener, U. S. Navy, navigator of the ski-equipped R4D in which Rear Admiral George J. Dufek made the first aircraft landing at the geographic South Pole, on October 31, 1956.
Named by US-ACAN for the University of Wisconsin – Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, which has sent numerous researchers to Antarctica.
Named by US-ACAN in association with the Wisconsin Range.
Named by Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names ( US-ACAN ) for Henry M. Eldridge, Antarctic cartographer, Branch of Special Maps, U. S. Geological Survey.
Named by US-ACAN for Frede Iversen, ionospheric physicist at Byrd Station in 1960.
Named by US-ACAN for James M. Schopf, geologist, Coal and Geology Laboratory, U. S. Geological Survey ( USGS ), Columbus, Ohio, who greatly assisted the field geologist by analyzing coal and related rock specimens from this mountain.
Named by US-ACAN for Richard L. Urbanak, meteorologist at Byrd Station in 1960.
Named by US-ACAN for the U. S. Naval Air Station, Pensacola, Florida, in commemoration of the historic role of that establishment in training aviators of the U. S. Navy.
Named by the US-ACAN after the USS Forrestal, first supercarrier of the U. S. Navy.
Named by US-ACAN for Hartford E. Blount, aviation machinists mate with U. S. Navy Squadron VX during Operation Deep Freeze, 1956.
Named by US-ACAN in 1979 after James E. Cooke, USGS geophysicist who worked in Forrestal Range and Dufek Massif, 1978-79.
Named by US-ACAN for Major Ralph C. Lechner, USA, airlift coordinator on the staff of the Commander, U. S. Naval Support Force, Antarctica, 1964-66.
Named in 1979 by US-ACAN after Raymond D. Watts, USGS geophysicist who worked in the Forrestal Range and Dufek Massif, 1978-79.
Named by US-ACAN for Commander Charles F. Zirzow, U. S. Navy, Assistant Chief of Staff to the Commander, U. S. Naval Support Force, Antarctica, 1966-67.
Named by US-ACAN for the USS Lexington of 1926, one of the first large aircraft carriers of the U. S. Navy.

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