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One and wider
The Tyne Brewery site was bought by a consortium of Newcastle University, Newcastle City Council and the regional development agency One NorthEast, as part of the wider Newcastle Science City project.
One such policy was a substantially more limited advocacy of Arab nationalism and a re-examination of the conflict with Israel that prioritized the liberation of Egyptian territory conquered by Israel in the Six Day War of 1967 ( namely the Sinai Peninsula ), rather than the wider, and far more challenging goal, of Palestinian liberation.
One notable example is Georgia, shown below on the right, which has very similar stroke shapes to Times New Roman but wider serifs.
One of Shakespeare's most famous speeches, drawn almost verbatim from North's translation of Plutarch's Lives, Enobarbus's description of Cleopatra on her barge, is full of opposites resolved into a single meaning, corresponding with these wider oppositions that characterise the rest of the play:
One feature found in shells of the modern Nautilus is the variation in the shape and size of the shell according to the sex of the animal, the shell of the male being slightly smaller and wider than that of the female.
One would have expected that a scientific work at the time would have been in Latin-in which case it would have been accessible to a wider circle of readers ( for a similar case, see: Caspar Wessel ).
There are other university buildings located throughout the city and the wider region, including One Central Park in Moston.
One popular form of castle was the motte and bailey, in which earth would be piled up into a mound ( called a motte ) to support a wooden tower, and a wider enclosed area built alongside it ( called a bailey ); Stafford Castle is a typical example of a post-invasion motte castle.
* One widened space, typically one-and-a-third to slightly less than two times wider than a word space.
One of these was Michael Roberts, whose New Country anthology both introduced the group to a wider audience and gave them their name.
Throughout his life, Bernstein demonstrated an enthusiasm for an even wider spectrum of the arts than his childhood interests would imply and, in 1959, when he was scoring The Story on Page One, he considered becoming a novelist and asked the film's screenwriter, Clifford Odets, to give him lessons in writing fiction.
One arm ( excellent all the way ) becomes the A2070 and runs parallel to the railway to link the Marsh to Hamstreet, Ashford and the wider world.
Events such as Henry VIII's schism with the Roman Catholic Church or the excommunication of Elizabeth I or the wider Reformation in mainland Europe all contributed to the development of the Church of England as it is now established, but are regarded as a continuation of the arrival of the One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church to the British Isles.
One should note not to confuse a Gidayu ( Highest Koma made, fashioned out of black buffalo horn ) or Kiyomoto koma ( looks exactly like Nagauta koma but is much wider at the base ) with Tsugaru.
One website that is dedicated to exposing advance fee scammers and similar schemes, ebolamonkeyman. com, exposed one use of the Abacha family name -- resulting in a wider exposure and awareness of these type of scams in general.
One issue with duck typing is that it forces the programmer to have a much wider understanding of the code he or she is working with at any given time.
One of the last cable holdouts, Time Warner Cable, added the music channels portion of the Digital Suite to their system in the summer of 2012 as part of a wider agreement to give Time Warner tablet application access to Viacom's networks.
Typically, each batch of wine yields 23 Liters ( 6 US gallons ). One of the primary differences of a micro-winery as compared to a typical winery is that a micro-winery is typically able to offer a wider range of wines ; as it is not tied to the grapes it grows.
One of the Copenhagen Consensus panel experts later distanced himself from the way in which the Consensus results have been interpreted in the wider debate.
One year later, the speedway continued the improvement project by replacing the front stretch pit wall to insall a longer SAFER barrier wall that would make a wider and safer pit road, as well as an additional pit stall.
One factor is that the railways of the former Soviet Union ( USSR ) used a wider rail gauge than most of the rest of Europe as well as China.
Some power-ups give special weapons: One of them is an extremely fast machinegun and other one is an automatic shotgun with a slightly lower firing rate, but has a larger crosshair, allowing it to strike a wider area with each shot.
One of the most significant and obvious changes was the redesigned body, which had a wider footprint, a rounder profile with fewer hard edges and a reduced drag coefficient of. 31 compared to the Z31's. 30.
* Jackson and Tamihere have also recently fronted a political show pertaining to wider New Zealand views on Māori issues called " The World According to Willie and JT " which is currently screening Monday nights on TV One.

One and passages
The popularity of the instrument is documented in Leopold Mozart's second edition of his Violinschule, where he writes " One can bring forth difficult passages easier with the five-string violone, and I heard unusually beautiful performances of concertos, trios, solos, etc.
One of the passages in the letter revolves around a serial necrophiliac and murderer named Raymond Andrew Joubert making his way through Maine ; it turns out he was the Space Cowboy, confirmed when Jessie confronted him in a court hearing and Joubert mimicked Jessie's arm positions while she was in the handcuffs.
One of the best-performing rigs per square foot of sail area and is fast for up-wind passages.
One approach to cybering is a simulation of " real " sex, when participants try to make the experience as close to real life as possible, with participants taking turns writing descriptive, sexually explicit passages.
One pipe in the aulos pairs ( double flutes ) likely served as a drone or " keynote ," while the other played melodic passages.
Despite this lack of promotion, many critics did praise the book, and a large number of them seemed most affected by the character of Hurstwood, such as the New Haven Journal Courier, which proclaimed, “ One of the most affecting passages is where Hurstwood falls, ruined, disgraced ”.
One thing of note is that the name of the son is not given in the Qur ' an, but most accept that it was Ishmael because the following passages discuss the birth of Isaac.
One of the first games with a 3D engine to feature hidden features was Wolfenstein 3D, where certain walls could be " pushed " to reveal hidden passages.
One of the most famous passages of the play is Lavinia's metaphor of capturing a mouse to converting from Christianity to believing in the Roman gods, where Lavinia shows that the most important part of religion is earnestness and a lack of hypocrisy.
One of the works of Philolaus was called On Nature, which seems to be the same work which Stobaeus calls On the World, and from which he has preserved a series of passages.
One critic went so far as to number each of the passages to which he objected.
One other source of difficulty arises from the fact that works of music usually involve passages that are repeated ( either identically or similarly ) in more than one location ; this occurs, for instance, in the recapitulation section of a work in sonata form or in the main theme of a rondo.
One of the best-known and best-loved passages of this part is known as the " Tablet of the True Seeker.
One of the relevant Bible passages is John 1: 1-18 where, in the Trinitarian view, Christ is identified with a pre-existent divine hypostasis called the Logos or Word.
One of the first and most famous expositions of universal mechanism is found in the opening passages of the Leviathan by Thomas Hobbes ( 1651 ).
The vibrant, power-packed tone of his voice, while exceedingly thrilling, could never be described as " honeyed " or " seductive " and this reduced the effectiveness of his contribution to the more intimate passages of love duets, such as the one for the protagonist and Desdemona that crowns Act One of Otello.
One of the book's most memorable passages describes Abbey's character Seldom Seen Smith, as he kneels atop the dam praying for a " pre-cision earthquake " to remove the " temporary plug " of the Colorado River.
One distinguishing characteristic of Douglas Moore's music is the modesty, grace and tender lyricism that mark the slower passages of his many works, especially his Symphony in A major and the clarinet quintet.
* Nik Van-Eckmann − spoken passages ( on "... of Silence ", " The End of This Chapter ", " Last Drop Falls " and " The Power of One " from Silence and " Don't Say a Word ", " White Pearl, Black Oceans ..." and " Wildfire " from Reckoning Night )
One of these passages, a combination of a rim shot on the snare followed directly by a bass drum accent, earned Clarke his nickname, " Klook ", which was short for " Klook-mop ", in imitation of the sound this combination produced.
One of the most important passages in Tristan, one which owes nothing to Thomas, is the so-called literary excursus, in which Gottfried names and discusses the merits of a number of contemporary lyric and narrative poets.
One advantage of this approach is that it allows one to see all that the Bible says regarding some subject ( e. g. the attributes of God ), and one danger is a tendency to assign technical definitions to terms based on a few passages and then read that meaning everywhere the term is used in the Bible ( e. g. " justification " as Paul uses it in his letter to the Romans ) is allegedly different from how James uses it in his letter (, and ).
When Socrates and Phaedrus proceed to recount the various tools of speechmaking as written down by the great orators of the past, starting with the " Preamble " and the " Statement Facts " and concluding with the " Recapitulation ", Socrates states that the fabric seems a little threadbare. He goes on to compare one with only knowledge of these tools to a doctor who knows how to raise and lower a body's temperature but does not know when it is good or bad to do so, stating that one who has simply read a book or came across some potions knows nothing of the art. One who knows how to compose the longest passages on trivial topics or the briefest passages on topics of great importance is similar, when he claims that to teach this is to impart the knowledge of composing tragedies ; if one were to claim to have mastered harmony after learning the lowest and highest notes on the lyre, a musician would say that this knowledge is what one must learn before one masters harmony, but it is not the knowledge of harmony itself. This, then, is what must be said to those who attempt to teach the art of rhetoric through " Preambles " and " Recapitulations "; they are ignorant of dialectic, and teach only what is necessary to learn as preliminaries.

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