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Reynolds and often
Renowned for his placidity, Reynolds often claimed that he " hated nobody ".
These mass transfer coefficients are typically published in terms of dimensionless numbers, often including Péclet numbers, Reynolds numbers, Sherwood numbers and Schmidt numbers, among others
Early industrial music often featured tape editing, stark percussion and loops distorted to the point where they had degraded to harsh noise, such as the work of early industrial group Cabaret Voltaire, which Journalist Simon Reynolds described as characterized by " hissing high hats and squelchy snares of rhythm-generator.
The Hot Springs Railroad, often referred to as the Diamond Jo line, was established as a narrow-gauge railroad by Chicago businessman Joseph Reynolds in 1874.
" He concluded, " The Unsinkable Molly Brown, in the person of Miss Reynolds, and the other principals, often mistakes vigor for art.
This attitude partly explains the often coarse modelling and clashing colour combinations he employed, in contrast to the more refined style of Thomas Gainsborough and Reynolds.
The science fiction writer Mack Reynolds, who wrote one of the first Star Trek novels, was an active member of the SLP and his fiction often deals with socialist reform and revolution as well as socialist Utopian thought.
), a heat transfer correlation ( often more readily available from literature and experimental work, and easier to determine ) for the Nusselt number ( Nu ) in terms of the Reynolds number ( Re ) and the Prandtl number ( Pr ) can be used as a mass transfer correlation by replacing the Prandtl number with the analogous dimensionless number for mass transfer, the Schmidt number, and replacing the Nusselt number with the analogous dimensionless number for mass transfer, the Sherwood number.
They were often mentioned in the Discourses of Sir Joshua Reynolds, the dominant English critical work on art of the century.
Big Tobacco is a pejorative term often applied to the tobacco industry in general, or more particularly to the " big three " tobacco corporations in the United States: Philip Morris ( Altria ), Reynolds American ( RJR ) and Lorillard.
They had four girls ( Emily, Naomi, Lois, Amelia ) and five boys, Joseph Fielding ( most often called Joseph Fielding Smith, Jr .), Lewis Warren, George Reynolds, Douglas Allan and Milton Edmund.
Still in the Bay Area, Guard and Reynolds had organized themselves somewhat more formally into an entity named " The Kingston Quartet " with friends bassist Joe Gannon and vocalist Barbara Bogue, though as before they were often joined in their performances by other friends.
In the 1970s and ' 80s he often co-starred with Burt Reynolds.
However, as David Reynolds observes: ‘ For most of the period since 1919, Anglo-American relations had been cool and often suspicious.
His father was also the inspiration for the word " sumbitch " used in the film, an apparent mispronunciation of the words " son-of-a-bitch " he reportedly uttered quite often, according to Reynolds.
Before Reynolds, urban counties were often drastically underrepresented.
Quite often, Binghamton is ready to send McHale and his gang to the brig, only to see them pull off a military success against the enemy that impresses Admiral Reynolds ( Herbert Lytton ) or Admiral Rodgers ( Roy Roberts ), many times thanks to McHale's knowledge of the area, gained from his service in the South Pacific as a Merchant Marine officer.
After the Academy was established Reynolds ' portraits became more overly classicizing, and often more distant, until in the late 1770s he returned to a more intimate style, perhaps influenced by the success of Thomas Gainsborough, who only settled in London in 1773, after working in Ipswich and then Bath.
Describing the latter as " conventional reasoning patterns ," Professor Mark Tushnet suggests Warren often disregarded these in groundbreaking cases such as Brown v. Board of Education, Reynolds v. Sims and Miranda v. Arizona, where such traditional sources of precedent were stacked against him.
Another – often used – definition, for constant density, of the Reynolds stress components is:
In fact, while much effort has been expended in developing good models for the Reynolds stress in a fluid, as a practical matter, when solving the fluid equations using computational fluid dynamics, often the simplest turbulence models prove the most effective.
Reynolds is often regarded as the originator of " shock talk radio ", whose sometimes outlandish on and off-air stunts garnered widespread publicity.
His father was also the inspiration for the word " sumbitch " used in the movie, a phrase he reportedly uttered quite often, according to Reynolds.

Reynolds and adapted
Another operatic version came in 1828, when Frederic Reynolds adapted Garrick's Catherine and Petruchio, adding an overture by Rossini and songs from Shakespeare's plays and sonnets set to music by tenor John Braham and T. Cooke.
The central block is adapted from an 1823 design in Peter Nicholson's ' The New Practical Builder ' ( Apperly, Irving & Reynolds, 1989 ).
As early as 3 March 1914, Nazarene mission policy developed for the work in Japan by Reynolds encouraged the creation of " self-supporting and self-governing churches ": When a Mission Church reaches a place where it can become entirely self supporting it shall be organized by the District Missionary Superintendent ( SIC ) Into a self supporting body according to the manual of the Pentecostal Church of the Nazarene adapted to the needs peculiar to the country, and shall be governed by the same.
The first novel in the series was originally adapted to the screen in 1959 as The Mating Game, starring Debbie Reynolds and Tony Randall as Mariette and Charley.
The central block is adapted from an 1823 design in Peter Nicholson's ' The New Practical Builder ' ( Apperly, Irving & Reynolds, 1989 ).
The series and some episode scripts were adapted from a 1951 collection of short stories of the same name, written by Max Shulman, that also inspired the 1953 film The Affairs of Dobie Gillis with Debbie Reynolds, Bob Fosse, and Bobby Van as Dobie Gillis.
In 1954 he co-wrote ( with Robert Paul Smith ) the Broadway play The Tender Trap starring Robert Preston, which was later adapted into a movie starring Frank Sinatra and Debbie Reynolds.
In 1996, it was adapted to the screen, under the title Striptease, written and directed by Andrew Bergman, and starring Demi Moore as Erin, Burt Reynolds as Dilbeck, Ving Rhames as Shad, Armand Assante as Al Garcia, Robert Patrick as Darrell, Rumer Willis as Angela and Paul Guilfoyle as Moldowsky.
Follow That Girl is a musical adapted by Julian Slade and Dorothy Reynolds from their original Bristol Old Vic production Christmas in King Street.

Reynolds and subjects
The difference between them is said to have been widened by Burke ’ s growing intimacy with Sir Joshua Reynolds, and by Barry ’ s jealousy of the fame and fortune of his rival “ in a humbler walk of the art .” About the same time he painted a pair of classical subjects, Mercury inventing the lyre, and Narcissus, the last suggested to him by Burke.
" “ In England, what West and Copley did together was to create a new kind of history painting, one with modern, topical subjects, chiefly death scenes of heroes, in a historic manner, but with scrupulous attention to contemporary detail ” ( Johnson 441 ) The American was duly introduced to Sir Joshua Reynolds and was taken to " the Royal where the Students had a naked model from which they were Drawing.
She returned to the southern United States in 1981, where she accepted the lifetime Reynolds Professorship of American Studies at Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, and she taught a variety of subjects that reflected her interests, including philosophy, ethics, theology, science, theater, and writing.
She can be said to have made three reputations in the course of her long life: as a poet and playwright in the circle of Johnson, Reynolds and Garrick, as a writer on moral and religious subjects, and as a practical philanthropist.
When, on 11 May 1749, Commodore Keppel sailed from Plymouth to the Mediterranean, as Commodore commanding the Mediterranean Fleet, ( with his pennant in his old ship HMS Centurion intending to persuade the Dey of Algiers to restrain the piratical operations of his subjects ) Reynolds travelled with him as far as Minorca and there painted the first of his 6 portraits of Keppel, left, along with others of officers of the British garrison there.
His cover subjects have included, President Ronald Reagan and Vice President George Bush, Alabama football coach Bear Bryant, National Rifle Association President Joe Foss, Statue of Liberty's 100th birthday celebration, actors Burt Reynolds and Clint Eastwood, Pope John Paul II's visit to America, Heavyweight Champion Mike Tyson, New York City Mayor Ed Koch, The Space Shuttle Columbia, President Jimmy Carter, The Animals of Africa, Olympian Carl Lewis, and actor Paul Newman.
Other subjects included: Thomas Arnold, Sir Joshua Reynolds, Benjamin West and George Cruikshank.
The Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood ( PRB ) achieved considerable influence after its foundation in 1848 with paintings that concentrated on religious, literary, and genre subjects executed in a colourful and minutely detailed style, rejecting the loose painterly brushwork of the tradition represented by " Sir Sploshua " Reynolds.
Among his historical and figure subjects are Agrippina, after West ; Love in Bondage, after Guido Reni ; the Royal Academy, the Embassy of Hyderbeck to meet Lord Cornwallis Colonel Mordant's Cock Fight and a Tiger Hunt, the last four after Zoffany ; and Lord Heathfield, after Sir Joshua Reynolds.

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