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latter and plays
Searle asserts that there is no essential difference between the role the computer plays in the first case and the role he plays in the latter.
The latter was intended to be fairly short-lived, but Mobutu's power plays dragged it in length, to ultimately 1997, when the forces-led by Laurent Kabila eventually toppled the regime, after a 9-month-long successful military campaign.
P contains all the extant plays of Euripides, L is missing The Trojan Women and latter part of The Bacchae.
Thus for example two extant plays, The Phoenicean Women and Iphigenia at Aulis, are significantly corrupted by interpolations ( the latter possibly being completed post mortem by the poet's son ) and the very authorship of Rhesus is a matter of dispute.
It is unclear what the attitude of the new Doctor Who television series is toward the information in the novels and audio plays, the latter produced by Big Finish Productions.
Nicknamed " The Wizard " for his defensive brilliance, Smith set major league records for career assists ( 8, 375 ) and double plays ( 1, 590 ) by a shortstop ( the latter since broken by Omar Vizquel ), as well as the National League ( NL ) record with 2, 511 career games at the position ; Smith won the NL Gold Glove Award for play at shortstop for 13 consecutive seasons ( 1980 – 1992 ).
During the latter part of his career, celebrated actor John Barrymore starred in a radio program, Streamlined Shakespeare, which featured him in a series of one-hour adaptations of Shakespeare plays, many of which Barrymore never appeared in either on stage or in films, such as Twelfth Night ( in which he played both Malvolio and Sir Toby Belch ), and Macbeth.
The shotgun was used by the New York Jets as they employed the formation during the latter part of the Joe Namath era, as documented in the 1971 Sporting News article " Joe and the Booyah Tribe ", to give the bad-kneed, and often immobile quarterback more time to set up plays by placing him deeper in the backfield.
After Merchant married the playwright Harold Pinter in 1956, she appeared in many of his plays, including the 1960 revival of his first play, The Room at the Hampstead Theatre, A Slight Ache, A Night Out, The Collection and The Lover ; the latter also a celebrated television production partnering Alan Badel at Associated Rediffusion, for which she was given an Evening Standard Theatre Award for Best Newcomer and the BAFTA Award for Best Actress, both in 1963.
As he aged, Gielgud sought out distinctive new voices in the theatre, appearing in plays by Edward Albee ( Tiny Alice ), Alan Bennett ( Forty Years On ), Charles Wood ( Veterans ), Edward Bond ( Bingo, in which Gielgud played William Shakespeare ), David Storey ( Home ), and Harold Pinter ( No Man's Land ), the latter two in partnership with his old friend Ralph Richardson, but he drew the line at being offered the role of Hamm in Beckett's Endgame, saying that the play offered " nothing but loneliness and despair ".
In the 1970 film Cromwell starring Richard Harris and Alec Guinness, Michael Jayston plays Ireton as a subtle but well-meaning manipulator who hates Charles I and pushes Cromwell into taking actions which the latter at first considers neither desirable nor possible but then pursues all the way.
On August 17, 2006, Soulfly played the 10th Annual D-Low Memorial show with several guest artists including Dave Ellefson and Roy Mayorga, the latter of whom who currently plays with Stone Sour.
A painting which might be a real Wilkie or only a copy ( the question is only resolved in the latter half of the book ) plays a role in the novel Winter Solstice by Rosamunde Pilcher.
The film also features the famous Habanera from the opera Carmen and the opening from Richard Strauss's Also sprach Zarathustra, the latter of which plays over the deathbed of Earl Partridge and introduces his son Frank Mackey on stage.
He was featured in Thomas Dekker's News from Hell and referred to in the anonymous Parnassus plays, of which the latter provides this epitaph:
An unusual concentration of plays with the latter sort of staging requirement can be associated with the Rose, indicating that the Rose had an enhanced capacity for this particularity of stagecraft.
These latter plays, however, are often included in modern studies of Shakespeare's treatment of history.
Major appearances include " Anywhere " " Anyhoo " and " Team Laser Explosion " ( in the latter, he plays the main villains ).
The latter sentence can mean either " during the time that Sally plays, Sue works " or " although Sally plays, Sue works " and is thus ambiguous.
The latter no longer exists, as it was destroyed in the 1918 earthquake that hit the city and was never rebuilt, since the Teatro Yagüez had become the city's preferred gathering place for Opera, plays, concerts, and silent movies.
In the former, he plays a sadistic Vietnam veteran hellbent on rape and murder ; while the latter has him as a husband turned vigilante to seek revenge over the rape and murder of his wife.
Black also sometimes fianchettoes his king's bishop with ... g6 and ... Bg7 ( the Leningrad Dutch ), but may instead develop his bishop to Be7, d6 ( after ... d5 ), or b4 ( the latter is most often seen if White plays c4 before castling ).

latter and prominent
The story of Jonah is set against the background of Ancient Israel in the 8th-7th centuries BC but deals with the religious and social issues of the late 6th-4th centuries BC, coinciding with the views of latter chapters of the book of Isaiah ( Third Isaiah ), where Israel is given a prominent place in the expansion of God's kingdom to the Gentiles.
Elvis Presley was a prominent player of the latter genre and was known early in his career as the " Hillbilly Cat ".
The latter, the most prominent English-language egoist journal, was published from 1898 to 1900 with the subtitle ' A Journal of Egoistic Philosophy and Sociology.
Prominent MPs from this wing of the party include Andrew Rosindell, Nadine Dorries and Edward Leigh — the latter a prominent Roman Catholic, notable in a faction marked out by its support for the established Church of England.
Most prominent among the latter in Maryland at the time were members of the Religious Society of Friends, often called Quakers.
Although there have been hundreds of orchestrators in film over the years, the most prominent film orchestrators for the latter half of the 20th century have been Herbert W. Spencer, Edward Powell, ( who worked almost exclusively with Alfred Newman ), and Alexander Courage.
A prominent feature of the latter are numerous royal walkabouts, the tradition of which was initiated in 1939 by Queen Elizabeth when she was in Ottawa and broke from the royal party to speak directly to gathered veterans.
Out of Canada's three most prominent political parties, neither the Liberal Party nor the Conservative Party is officially in favour of abolishing the monarchy ( though the latter makes support for constitutional monarchy a founding principle in its policy declaration ) and the New Democratic Party ( NDP ) has no official position on the role of the Crown.
This division was based on the most prominent common feature shared by the fur seals and absent in the sea lions, namely the dense underfur characteristic of the latter.
Moreover, by the latter half of Thutmose III's reign, the more prominent high officials who had served Hatshepsut would have died, thereby eliminating the powerful religious and bureaucratic resistance to a change in direction in a highly stratified culture.
The most prominent of them are Further south are Nikolayevskaya Sopka ( notable for its ski jumping tracks ), Karaulnaya Gora and Chornaya Sopka, the latter being an extinct volcano.
* He is a prominent character in the latter stages of the novel The Kingdom of the Wicked by Anthony Burgess.
In 1935 McDaniel had prominent roles with her performance as a slovenly maid in RKO Pictures ' Alice Adams, a comic part as Jean Harlow's maid / traveling companion in MGM's China Seas, the latter her first film with Clark Gable, and as Isabella the maid in Murder by Television, with Béla Lugosi.
* a mixture of funk and rock guitar styles, the latter being more prominent on Funkadelic's recordings
The latter was a prominent lawyer, a resident of Kaskaskia and afterward a member of Congress, and gave his name to Cook County.
In the latter part of the nineteenth century, North College Hill was the home of Dr. Isaac Mayer Wise, who has been called “ the most prominent Jew of his time in the United States ” for his influence as one of the early leaders of Reform Judaism in America.
Dalmatian was influenced particularly heavily by Venetian and Croatian ( despite the latter, the Latin roots of Dalmatian remained prominent ).
During the latter half of the 18th century and the early 19th century, Admiral Sir William Luard was the town's most prominent citizen, a resident of Chipping Hill and a founder and patron of St. Nicolas ' Church.
Eden dismissed the latter as the " weak sisters "; the most prominent was Butler, whose perceived hesitancy over Suez on top of his support for appeasement of Hitler damaged his standing within the Conservative party.
Highway engineering became prominent towards the latter half of the 20th Century after World War 2.
Such was the prestige of the latter square that among its many prominent residents was the Church of Ireland Archbishop of Dublin.
The latter field of musicians included prominent activists and thinkers, including Hugh Masekela, Abdullah Ibrahim ( formerly known as ' Dollar Brand '), Kippie Moeketsi, Sathima Bea Benjamin, Chris McGregor, Johnny Dyani and Jonas Gwangwa.
The latter fact was perhaps most prominent when in 1979 – 80, first-year phenom Wayne Gretzky was not eligible to win the Calder Trophy despite scoring 137 points ( the previous rookie record at the time being 95 ), because he had played a full season the previous year in the World Hockey Association.
While Bertel Thorvaldsen was undoubtedly the country's most prominent contributor, many other players have produced fine work, especially in the areas of Neoclassicism, Realism, and in Historicism, the latter resulting from growing consciousness of a national identity.

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