Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "COUM Transmissions" ¶ 3
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

commune and members
The legislative body of the municipality ( commune ) is the City Council ( Consiglio Comunale ), which is composed by 48 members elected every five years.
The legislative body of the municipality ( commune ) is the City Council ( Consiglio Comunale ), which is composed by 35 members elected every five years.
The MOVE members lived in a commune in a house owned by Donald Glassey in the Powelton Village section of West Philadelphia.
Originally Stables, Louisiana, the town was renamed when 200 members of the Socialist commune Llano Del Rio Cooperative Colony in California relocated to this site in 1917, giving the town its present name.
There was some friction in the early days, but townspeople and commune members gradually became more cooperative.
This seat was used by Rapp to watch over the commune and its members in their daily lives.
Filmed in a hippie commune in Phoenix, Maryland, the cast members spent much of the time smoking cigarettes and marijuana and taking amphetamines, although all of the scenes had been heavily rehearsed beforehand.
Religious scholar Mary McCormick Maaga argues that Jones ' authority decreased after he moved to the isolated commune, because he was not needed for recruitment and he could not hide his drug addiction from rank and file members.
We believe that none but regularly Baptized members have the right to commune at the Lord's Table, and no one has the right to administer the ordinance of the Gospel, except he be legally called and qualified.
These elections to select chiefs and members of 1, 621 commune ( municipality ) councils also were marred by political violence and fell short of being free and fair by international standards.
The Shalam Colony, or Land of Shalam, was formed in Las Cruces, New Mexico, in 1884, as a commune in which members would live peaceful, vegetarian lifestyles, and where orphaned urban children were to be raised.
However, similarities between Glendenning's claims and those of Mormonism's founder Joseph Smith, Jr .— as well as the Utah location of the commune he established in the 1950s, and the LDS roots of most of its founding members — has caused the Aaronic Order to be associated with Mormonism in scholarly and popular view.
The commune is famous for its lăutari or gypsy musicians, especially the group Taraful Haiducilor ( a. k. a. Taraf de Haïdouks ) and members of the group Mahala Raï Banda.
* Kerista – Website by and for former members of Kerista commune
1958 People's commune free for all kitchen, where members were supposed to be able to eat all they can eat.
Thinking that the pranks were but youthful mischief, the commune members simply repaired their dwellings and made no complaint.
The land of the members who leave the commune shall revert to the land fund ; preferential right to such land shall be given to the near relatives of the members who have left, or to persons designated by the latter.
Resettlement shall be effected in the following order: landless peasants desiring to resettle, then members of the commune who are of vicious habits, deserters, and so on, and, finally, by lot or by agreement.
The episode explores the home lives and relationships of the three main characters, and the widespread disapproval they face from their boyfriends and in Dee's case, her fellow commune members.
The members of Narodnaya Volya were not in complete agreement about the relationship between the social and political revolutions ; some believed in the possibility of achieving both simultaneously, relying on the socialist instincts of the Russian peasantry, as demonstrated in the traditional peasant commune.
When a commune was formed, all participating members gathered and swore an oath in a public ceremony, promising to defend each other in times of trouble, and to maintain the peace within the city proper.

commune and regime
Under the French regime, Etterbeek was made into a commune, within the canton of Sint-Stevens-Woluwe.

commune and with
I believe that what I do has some effect on his actions and I have learned, in a way, to commune with drunks, but certainly my actions seem to resemble more nearly the performance of a rain dance than the carrying out of an experiment in physics.
In 1971, Love relocated with her family to a commune in Marcola, Oregon, where they lived in what she described as " a teepee ".
According to him, these are the tools that God uses to commune with a contemplative.
With the exception of the Orthodox Church of Greece ( Holy Synod in Resistance ), they will commune the faithful from all the canonical jurisdictions and are recognized by and in communion with the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia.
Within the electoral divisions of Chile, the commune is represented in the Chamber of Deputies by Joaquín Godoy ( RN ) and Aldo Cornejo ( PDC ) as part of the 13th electoral district, ( together with Valparaíso and Isla de Pascua ).
Visitors to Kangaroo Island, South Australia, have the nightly opportunity to commune with penguins at the Kangaroo Island Marine Centre in Kingscote and at the Penneshaw Penguin Centre.
At the 1999 French census, there were 293, 159 inhabitants in the metropolitan area ( aire urbaine ) of Le Mans, with 146, 105 of these living in the city proper ( commune ).
During the late Middle Ages it was an independent commune with considerable importance owing to its location on the old Via Francigena, the main road between France and Rome, but increasingly Montalcino came under the sway of the larger and more aggressive city of Siena.
The northern half of Poya, with the main settlement and most of the population, is part of the North Province, while the southern half of the commune, with only 127 inhabitants in 2009, is part of the South Province.
The first of these was Emanuel Swedenborg ( 1688 – 1772 ), a Swedish scientist who after a religious experience devoted himself to Christian mysticism, believing that he could travel to Heaven and Hell and commune with angels, demons and spirits, and who published widely on the subject of his experiences.
Inspired by Crass, its Dial House commune, and its independent Crass Records label, a scene developed around British bands such as Subhumans, Flux of Pink Indians, Conflict, Poison Girls, and The Apostles that was concerned as much with anarchist and DIY principles as it was with music.
In 1835 he left Newfoundland for Compton, Lower Canada where he farmed unsuccessfully for three years, originally in an attempt to establish a commune with two of his religious friends.
The inhabitants worship a godlike being known as " OMM 0910 ", with whom they commune in telephone booth-like areas known as Unichapels.
He also claimed to commune with the spirit of the late President Roosevelt.
In 1978, when Ryder was seven years old, she and her family relocated to Rainbow, a commune near Elk, Mendocino County, California, where they lived with seven other families on a plot of land.
The position could be fraught with personal dangers in the violent political life of the medieval commune: in 1252 Milanese heretics assassinated the Church's Inquisitor, later known as Saint Peter Martyr, at a ford in the nearby contado ; the killers bribed their way to freedom, and in the ensuing riot the podestà was very nearly lynched.
* In the series Fate / Zero, the ultimate goal of the magi is to commune with " The Akashic Record ".
There, Pope Adrian IV was struggling with the forces of the republican city commune led by Arnold of Brescia, a student of Abelard.
* Confronted with internal strife, the commune of Bologna is the first Italian republic to turn to the rule of a podestà, Guido di Ranieri da Sasso ( ends in 1155 ).
In 1929, the commune of Gorée Island, now with only a few hundred inhabitants, was merged into Dakar.
The commune of Gorée, created in 1872, was itself one of the oldest Western-style municipalities in Africa ( along with the municipalities of Algeria and South Africa ).
As the commune, however, had begun to erode the lands of the bishop and other local faudataries, the latter sued for help to Frederick Barbarossa, who presented under the city walls with a huge army in the February 1155.
After the death of Matilda of Tuscany, the city began to constitute itself an independent commune, with a charter in 1160.

1.960 seconds.