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Occasional and programmes
Occasional non-film ( but film-related ) programmes are also shown.

Occasional and continued
Occasional use ( mainly transport of beet from Midleton to the Mallow Sugar Factory ) continued for many years after 1963, but even the sporadic usage of the line came to an end in 1988, with the final train to use the track being a passenger excursion for Midleton GAA supporters to Dublin for the final of the All Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship ( in which Midleton played ).
Occasional Concorde charter flights, all of which used British Airways aircraft, continued until June 2000, just one month before the Concorde disaster in Paris.
Occasional acts of Tlingit aggression continued until 1858, with one significant uprising ( though quickly quelled ) occurring in 1855.

Occasional and following
Occasional individual reconnaissance flights were made in the following month by the two craft.
Occasional errors and revisions accounts for some past criticism while the allocation of Private Finance Initiative expenditure ( albeit following OECD and international statistical guidelines according to who carries the risk ) has attracted political attention.
According to Code of Federal Regulations ( CFR ) Title 21 Section 201. 305, use of isoprenaline has been regulated by mandating the inclusion of the following warning label: " Occasional patients have been reported to develop severe paradoxical airway resistance with repeated, excessive use of isoprenaline inhalation preparations.

Occasional and year
Occasional sucking up to the fifth year may not affect a youngster's teeth ; ;
Occasional uses by charter trains and visiting rolling stock are anticipated to not exceed 12 times a year.

Occasional and until
Occasional eruptions from its three cones with both pyroclastic flow deposits and lavas occurred from then until 1550, the last eruption creating a narrow isthmus connecting it to Vulcano.
Occasional visits by Royal Navy ships were made from the late 18th century until the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi in 1840.
Occasional hardback editions combined with the magazine Daylight appeared sporadically, but it was as Penguin New Writing that the magazine survived until 1950.
Occasional quarry trains ran until 1988 to Blodwel, after which the track was left in place but abadoned by Network Rail.
Occasional sight records of people claiming to have seen the bird ( e. g. Sopp, 1957 ) persisted until 1970 ( Bell & Singleton, 1974 ; Olsen 1993 ), but the North Island Piopio is considered extinct nowadays.

Occasional and regular
Occasional freight services and excursions travel the full length of the line, however regular passenger services currently only operate between and Redmire, a distance of.

Occasional and series
On the first occasion which offered itself, that of Pulteney's rupture with Walpole in 1726, he endeavoured to organize an opposition in conjunction with the former and Wyndham ; and in 1727, began his celebrated series of letters to the Craftsman, attacking the Walpoles, signed " an Occasional Writer ".
Occasional pop culture references familiar to Americans, such as Pokémon and Britney Spears, who has been known to be a fan of the series herself, were added to increase the appeal to American audiences.
* CSP Occasional Papers-This series of papers is intended to function as timely and incisive original research.
Occasional publications in anthropology: Linguistic series, ( no.
The SHS now publishes a twice-yearly journal " Socialist History " and a series of monographs called " Occasional Papers ".
The Centre organises conferences and produces both books and a series of Occasional Papers on religious experience and spirituality.
In 1986, a series of Occasional Publications was initiated.

Occasional and by
Occasional letters are sent by individuals to one another and many are written by companies to one another, but these are mostly typewritten.
* The Miscellaneous Essays and Occasional Writings of Francis Hopkinson, Esq Printed by T. Dobson, 1792.
Once obtained, licences were jealously protected by the licensees ( who were expected to be generally present, not an absentee owner or company ), and even " Occasional Licences " to serve drinks at temporary premises such as fêtes would usually be granted only to existing licensees.
Occasional ancient battles took place along the Persian Gulf coastlines, between the Sassanid Persian empire and the Lakhmid Kingdom, the most prominent of which was the invasion led by Shapur II against the Lakhmids, leading to Lakhmids ' defeat, and advancement into Arabia, along the southern shore lines.
Anne supported the Occasional Conformity Bill of 1702, which was promoted by the Tories and opposed by the Whigs.
* 1665 – Occasional Reflections upon Several Subjects, which was ridiculed by Swift in A Meditation Upon a Broom-Stick, and by Butler in An Occasional Reflection on Dr Charlton's Feeling a Dog's Pulse at Gresham College
Occasional and inconsistent vowel-length markings occur in 19th-century manuscripts and newspapers written by Māori, including macron-like diacritics and the doubling of letters.
* Papago Park: A History of Hole-in-the-Rock from 1848 to 1995, Pueblo Grande Museum Occasional Papers No. 1, by Jason H. Gart, 1997
His Slavery Discussed in Occasional Essays from 1833 to 1846 ( 1846 ) exercised considerable influence upon Abraham Lincoln, and in this book appears the sentence, which, as rephrased by Lincoln, was widely quoted: " If that form of government, that system of social order is not wrong — if those laws of the Southern States, by virtue of which slavery exists there, and is what it is, are not wrong — nothing is wrong.
* Drinking Death in Groundwater: Arsenic Contamination as a Threat to Water Security for Bangladesh, by Mustafa Moinuddin, ACDIS Occasional Paper, Program in Arms Control, Disarmament, and International Security, University of Illinois, May 2004.
* Beyond Precision: Issues of Morality and Decision Making in Minimizing Collateral Casualties, ACDIS Occasional Paper by Lt. Col. Dwight A. Roblyer
* Occasional Meditations ( 1630 ), edited by his son Robert Hall
Known by many as " The Occasional Philosopher ," a term coined by David Hume.
Occasional contributions included special reports by Walters, who was credited as anchor of the special coverage desk from New York City and worldwide, and commentary by Smith, who was easing into eventual retirement.
His poems were first edited by Rufus Wilmot Griswold ( New York, 1844 ); another American edition, by W. A. Whitmore, appeared in 1859 ; an authorized edition with a memoir by Derwent Coleridge appeared in 1864: The Political and Occasional Poems of W. M. Praed ( 1888 ), edited with notes by his nephew, Sir George Young, included many pieces collected from various newspapers and periodicals.

Occasional and began
There he went into business making seals and engraving plates, and later began to publish a two small newspapers, The Cincinnati Occasional and The Daily Press.

Occasional and was
The business of making the changes was then entrusted to a small committee of bishops and the Privy Council and, apart from tidying up details, this committee introduced into Morning and Evening Prayer a prayer for the Royal Family ; added several thanksgivings to the Occasional Prayers at the end of the Litany ; altered the rubrics of Private Baptism limiting it to the minister of the parish, or some other lawful minister, but still allowing it in private houses ( the Puritans had wanted it only in the church ); and added to the Catechism the section on the sacraments.
The Occasional Conformity Bill was revived in the wake of the storm, but Anne withheld support, fearing its reintroduction was a ruse to cause a political quarrel.
Occasional, much-younger co-star Bette Davis recalled that Chatterton was " very kind " to her at Warners when Davis was starting out on her career.
High churchmen and Tories, empowered late in Queen Anne's reign, sought to close this loophole with the passing of the Occasional Conformity Bill in 1711, however the Act was repealed after the Hanoverian Succession with the return to power of the Whigs, who were generally allied with non-conforming Protestants.
In a pamphlet of " Remarks " ( 1742 ), he replied to John Tillard, and Remarks on Several Occasional Reflections ( 1744 – 1745 ) was an answer to Akenside, Conyers Middleton ( who had been his friend ), Richard Pococke, Nicholas Mann, Richard Grey, Henry Stebbing and other of his critics.
Accordingly he attacked the author of the Pleasures of the Imagination — which was published anonymously — in a scathing preface to his Remarks on Several Occasional Reflections, in answer to Dr Middleton ... ( 1744 ).
A collection of his journalistic articles was published in 1897 as Occasional Papers.
In 1731, at Houghton Hall, Sir Robert Walpole's country house in Norfolk, the Duke, with the Duke of Lorraine ( later the Holy Roman Emperor ), was made a Master Mason by the Grand Master, Lord Lovell, at an Occasional Lodge.
He was, however, active in 1702 in opposing the Occasional Conformity Bill, and in 1706 was one of the managers of the union with Scotland.
Occasional special idents were also produced including a modified logo to mark the station's 30th anniversary in 1987, while the main ident was largely replaced by 1988 in favour of a new set of seasonal and themed idents.
However, the full phrase " the dismal science " first occurs in Carlyle's 1849 tract entitled Occasional Discourse on the Negro Question, in which he was arguing for the reintroduction of slavery as a means to regulate the labor market in the West Indies:
Occasional confusion arises about the article " the ", since it was spoken by narrators in voice-overs.
; Occasional Large Group Meetings: " I did not shrink from declaring to you anything that was profitable, and teaching you publicly and from house to house " ( Acts 20: 20 NASB )
The Occasional Conformity Act ( also known as the Toleration Act 1711 ) was an Act of the Parliament of Great Britain ( statute number 10 Anne c. 6 ), the long title of which is " An Act for preserving the Protestant Religion " which passed on 20 December 1711.

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