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Page "Urban legend" ¶ 10
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One and classic
One part of her audience was totally engaged, the connoisseur witnessing a peculiarly fine performance of some ancient classic, the other part, the guest of the connoisseur, attentive as one who must take an intelligent interest in that which he does not fully understand.
One of the President's special assistants, the Harvard dean McGeorge Bundy, was co-author with Henry L. Stimson of the latter's classic memoir, On Active Service.
The city has two commercial radio stations: Forth One, a station aimed at young listeners with a mainstream chart music output, and Forth 2 on medium wave which plays classic hits.
One quip from Marx concerned his response to Sam Wood, the director of the classic film A Night at the Opera.
* Calakmul – One of two " superpowers " in the classic Maya period.
* Tikal — One of two " superpowers " in the classic Maya period.
* Peter Kropotkin: One of the classic anarchist thinkers and the most influential theorist of anarcho-communism
One of the classic questions is when are attitudes a predictor of behavior.
One of them was the HP Series 300 of Motorola 68000-based workstations, another Series 200 line of technical workstations based on a custom silicon on sapphire ( SOS ) chip design, the SOS based 16-bit HP 3000 classic series and finally the HP 9000 Series 500 minicomputers, based on their own ( 16 and 32-bit ) FOCUS microprocessor.
One by one he discovered the authors that would influence his later work: Jack London and his stories of reincarnation and past lives, most notably The Star Rover ( 1915 ); Rudyard Kipling's tales of subcontinent adventure and his chanting, shamanic verse ; the classic mythological tales collected by Thomas Bulfinch.
One of the classic calderas is at Glen Coe in the Grampian Mountains of Scotland.
Todd McCarthy in Variety magazine wrote, " One of the film's indisputable triumphs is its soundtrack, which mixes Carter Burwell's original score with classic pop tunes and some fabulous covers.
The song has become a festive classic in the UK and Ireland over the years, and was voted the best Christmas song of all time three years running in 2004, 2005, and 2006 in polls by music channel VH1 UK, despite not achieving Christmas Number One when it was released.
One classic example of such a utopia was Edward Bellamy's Looking Backward.
One of the classic instances was in the First Edition of K & R.
One of her trademarks is twirling across the stage with shawls flying during the interlude of her classic songs, notably " Stand Back " and " Gypsy ".
* Smashing The Stack For Fun And Profit by Aleph One, published in issue 49, is the " classic paper " on stack buffer overflows, partly responsible for popularizing the vulnerability.
One of his first picture stories, Max and Moritz ( published in 1865 ), was an immediate success and has achieved the status of a popular classic and perennial bestseller.
One classic example of handshaking is that of modems, which typically negotiate communication parameters for a brief period when a connection is first established, and thereafter use those parameters to provide optimal information transfer over the channel as a function of its quality and capacity.
One classic example of deductive reasoning is that found in syllogisms like the following:
One of France's most renowned actresses, she has also appeared in seven English-language films, most notably the 1983 cult classic The Hunger.
One of the most classic macroeconomic inquiries is the effect of public capital investment on economic growth.
One classic example of this mode of thought is that of the rooster and the sunrise.
One classic example of PIE * t → PGmc * d is the word for ' father '.

One and hallmarks
One of the hallmarks of Palestrina's music is that dissonances are typically relegated to the " weak " beats in a measure.
One of the hallmarks of leet is its unique approach to orthography, using substitutions of other characters, letters or otherwise, to represent a letter or letters in a word.
" ( Tyler, A History of Amherst College ) One of the hallmarks of the new college was its Charity Fund, an early form of financial aid that paid the tuition of poorer students.
One of the hallmarks of McDowell's later work is his denial that there is any philosophical use for an idea that our experience contains representations that are not conceptually structured, so-called " non-conceptual content ".
One of the hallmarks of the faculty is their faith.
Two years later they " set aside the hallmarks " for a " three-week, no-nonsense tour against college teams " from men's Division One.
" One of the hallmarks of the period's anti-war movement was its stated support for the troops in the field and the affiliation of many returning veterans with it.
One of the hallmarks of his sound is the use of alternate tunings on the guitar.
One of the greatest hallmarks of Gottfried's style is his skillful use of irony, to both humorous and tragic effects.
One of the programme's hallmarks was its willingness to embrace popular culture, at a time when its competitors preferred a more highbrow approach.
One of the hallmarks of a Hartwick education is faculty-student collaboration on research.
( One of her most notable hallmarks was her writing of the number one: When she voted for number one, it was written with a Roman numeral I.
One of the distinctive hallmarks of Geylang architecture is the preservation of its shophouses used by the clan ( kinship ) associations, set up as a ( first ) point of contact for newcomers in the migrant wave between 1840 and 1940 for the purpose of integrating the newcomers into the ways and customs of locals.
One of the hallmarks of arterial claudication is that it occurs intermittently.
In The Times, John Higgins wrote, " One of the hallmarks of the Davis regime was the flood of international conductors who suddenly arrived at Covent Garden.
One of the hallmarks of The Hill School academic program is the star-studded Classics Department, which currently employs three PhD holders to teach interested students the languages of Latin and Ancient Greek.
One of Daffney's hallmarks was a high piercing scream when she was lurking at ringside.
One of the hallmarks of evolutionary epistemology is the notion that empirical testing does not justify the truth of scientific theories, but rather that social and methodological processes select those theories with the closest " fit " to a given problem.
" One of his hallmarks was integrity and self-reliance.
One of the hallmarks of Knowledge building is a sense of we superseding the sense of I, a feeling that the group is operating collectively, and not just as an assemblage of individuals.
One of the hallmarks of Spence's music is its intangible familiarity.
One of the hallmarks of the positive youth development movement is that it is built on a foundation of scientific research.

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