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obscure and Chandler
" However, David Chandler surmises that, " the whole episode is so obscure and inconclusive that it is still not possible to make a definite ruling.

obscure and 1972
Norman's 1969 apocalyptic song, I Wish We'd All Been Ready ”, was also featured in the 1972 Christian end times film A Thief in the Night, which was watched by an estimated 50, 000, 000 people, but sung by an obscure group known as The Fishmarket Combo.
The revival of garage rock can be traced to the release of the two disk Nuggets compilation in 1972 by future Patti Smith guitarist Lenny Kaye, which drew together both commercially successful and relatively obscure tracks from the mid-1960s and whose sleeve notes helped coin the phrase " punk rock " to describe the phenomenon.
In 1972, Scepter released From Within which included all thirteen tracks from the Soulful sessions as well as thirteen obscure R & B influenced tracks by Warwick.
Under the alias of Speed Savage, the name of an obscure comic book hero, he wrote the 1972 live-action cult film, Voulez-vous coucher avec God ?.
Pierre Laberge ( 1972 ) observes that Kant's famous critique of physicotheology in the Critique of Pure Reason ( 1781 ; second edition 1787 ) has tended to obscure the fact that in his early work, General History of Nature and Theory of the Heavens ( 1755 ), Kant defended a physicotheology that at the time was startlingly original, but that succeeded only to the extent that it concealed what Laberge terms a theophysics (" ce que nous appellerons une théophysique ").

obscure and is
One might argue that the ultimate purpose of literary scholarship is to correct this spontaneous provincialism that is likely to obscure the horizons of the general public, of the newspaper critic, and of the creative artist himself.
The effect, needless to say, is almost terrifying, and though at times a bit obscure, the film is certainly a much-needed catharsis for the `` repressed '' movie-goer.
First is the long and still somewhat obscure process of preparation, planning and discussion.
The etymology is obscure.
The aardvark is not closely related to the pig ; rather, it is the sole recent representative of the obscure mammalian order Tubulidentata, in which it is usually considered to form one variable species of the genus Orycteropus, the sole surviving genus in the family Orycteropodidae.
In certain obscure magical writings of Egyptian origin ἀβραξάς or ἀβρασάξ is found associated with other names which frequently accompany it on gems ; it is also found on the Greek metal tesseræ among other mystic words.
Another criticism is that universities tend more to pseudo-intellectualism than intellectualism per se ; for example, to protect their positions and prestige, academicians may over-complicate problems and express them in obscure language ( e. g., the Sokal affair, a hoax by physicist Alan Sokal attempting to show that American humanities professors invoke complicated, pseudoscientific jargon to support their political positions.
It is possible that Antonio's father and Giovanni were friends or business associates, but this is obscure.
Andreas Schlüter was born in Hamburg His early life is obscure as at least three different persons of that name are documented.
Botswana is affected by periodic droughts, and seasonal August winds blow from the west, carrying sand and dust, which can obscure visibility.
The meaning of this is obscure.
The obscure and extravagant imagery has led to a wide variety of interpretations: historicist interpretations see in Revelation a broad view of history ; preterist interpretations treat Revelation as mostly referring to the events of the apostolic era ( 1st century ), or -- at the latest -- the fall of the Roman Empire ; futurists believe that Revelation describes future events ; and idealist or symbolic interpretations consider that Revelation does not refer to actual people or events, but is an allegory of the spiritual path and the ongoing struggle between good and evil.
" Although the work is commonly attributed to Cranmer, its detailed origins are obscure.
This is an obscure prophecy, but in combination with other passages, it has been interpreted to mean that the " prince who is to come " will make a seven-year covenant with Israel that will allow the rebuilding of the temple and the reinstitution of sacrifices, butin the middle of the week ,” he will break the agreement and set up an idol of himself in the temple and force people to worship it — the “ abomination of desolation .” Paul writes:
The early history of the synagogue is obscure, but it seems to be an institution developed for public Jewish worship during the Babylonian captivity when the Jews ( and Jewish Proselytes ) did not have access to a Temple ( the First Temple having been destroyed c. 586 BC ) for ritual sacrifice.
Typically, census data is processed to obscure such individual information.
Compare this with < tt >/ dev / null </ tt > which is also a file, but its size may be obscure.
He maintains that his intention is not to mock anyone, but to explore insular, perhaps obscure communities through his method of filmmaking.

obscure and set
Brel also recorded two obscure singles in Dutch, " De apen " (" Les singes ") and " Men vergeet niets " (" On n ' oublie rien "), which were included in the 16-CD box set Boîte à Bonbons by Barclay.
Its extraordinarily high value is a result of a combination of the desire by many top collectors to acquire a complete set of autographs by all 56 signers of the U. S. Declaration of Independence, and the extreme rarity of the Gwinnett signature ; there are 51 known examples, since Gwinnett was fairly obscure prior to signing the Declaration and died shortly afterward.
He has also set to music poems by both well-known and relatively obscure poets, including Louis Aragon ( Il n ' y a pas d ' amour heureux ), Victor Hugo ( La Légende de la Nonne, Gastibelza ), Jean Richepin, François Villon ( La Ballade des Dames du Temps Jadis ), and Guillaume Apollinaire, Antoine Pol ( Les Passantes ).
After the fall of the Old Kingdom came a roughly 200-year stretch of time known as the First Intermediate Period, which is generally thought to include a relatively obscure set of pharaohs running from the end of the Sixth to the Tenth, and most of the Eleventh Dynasty.
For instance, a choice from a very large list of insurance claim codes might be filtered to a much smaller list, if the user has already selected Home / Car / Pet insurance, or if they have already entered their own identification and so the system can determine the set of risks for which they're actually covered, omitting the obscure policies that are now known to be irrelevant for this transaction.
The story was set in England in an obscure and barbarous age.
Typically, the set of possible locations for each label is highly constrained, not only by the map itself ( each label must be near the feature it labels, and must not obscure other features ), but by each other: two labels will be illegible if they overlap each other.
The largest exit poll was organized by the U. S. firm Penn, Schoen & Berland, financed by a hitherto obscure outfit in Dallas called Democracy Watch ( later it emerged that Democracy Watch was essentially set up by Fox campaign insiders to help prevent an expected election fraud ).
In an attempt to appease the players, Wizards released the first set with the different backs – Spirit Wars – bundled with opaque sleeves that would obscure the designs on the backs of the cards, allowing players to use any mix of cards in their decks.
After his father's death, Propertius ' mother set him on course for a public career -- indicating his family still had some wealth — while the abundance of obscure mythology present in his poetry indicates he received a good education.
In fact, John Lennon set off a minor frenzy when, in a 1971 Rolling Stone interview, he incorrectly identified an obscure Italian compilation album, The Beatles in Italy, as a live recording (" There's one in Italy apparently, that somebody recorded there ").
He set sail on a Dutch West India Company ship to Ghana via Guinea, arriving in about 1747 where his father and a sister were still living, and his life from then on becomes more obscure.
It does not appear on newer editions of the soundtrack recordings, and is available only in an obscure box set.
The text also expressed a hope that members of the Romanian diaspora who had left the country under the Communist regime were to return to their homeland and contribute to the society, and set itself against the portion of the public " who, instigated by obscure forces, abused the returned exiles ".
No longer playing rather obscure progressive rock, nor the classic and hard rock of its Baltimore competitor WIYY, HFS was now formatted more towards a younger set of fans who were more apt to listen to Green Day and Fuel than less mainstream artists such as Fugazi or Lou Reed.
Drover has a great deal of curiosity and often asks Hank obscure questions such as " Why does the moon rise in the evening and set in the morning.
The story is about a group of women and girls who go on government-sponsored humanitarian missions as the Angel Troupe ( Angel-tai ) to search for Lost Technology, generally a plot device to set up amusing and absurd humor typical of the show, rife with obscure Japanese puns.
A set of questions, from the obvious to the obscure, are posed.
With the exception of " Hurdy Gurdy Man ", the songs on this set largely avoid Donovan's chart hits of the 1960s in favor of more obscure and even unreleased songs.
However, the name originates from, and can describe a more elaborate set of spacefaring hardware in the 1970s, although this meaning is obscure.
There was a fear in Congress that many projects in the country would be affected by litigation as biologists might set out to discover obscure species, including insects or even micro-biotic life forms.
Its origin is obscure, but appears to be associated with R. V. Jones and may appear in the Crabtree Orations, a set of academic commentaries attributed to the fictitious poet, Joseph Crabtree, after whom the Crabtree Foundation is named.

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