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once-popular and from
Maurice Keen provides a brief summary and useful critique of the once-popular view that Robin Hood had mythological origins, while ( unlike some ) refraining from utterly and finally dismissing it.
In a turnabout from this serious drama, they followed with three musical comedies, all based on once-popular stage plays.
" Though few of Harty's compositions continued to be regularly programmed in the concert hall, and even the once-popular Handel arrangements have fallen from favour in the era of authentic period performance, several of his works have been recorded for compact disc, notably by the Ulster Orchestra.
The title is derived from a once-popular pizza delivery slogan.
In fact, a survey of a once-popular area of the Mayan lowlands shows the rapid decline of beekeepers, down to around 70 in 2004 from thousands in the late 1980s.
Lanny Wolfe influenced gospel music in two ways: 1 ) through recordings of original music, and 2 ) through his once-popular National Music Ministry Conference, an annual conference hosted by the aforementioned bible school and the First Pentecostal Church of Jackson, Mississippi, where Wolfe worked from 1974 until 1993.

once-popular and their
Max Weiss, one of Fantasy's co-owners initially changed the group's name to The Visions, but when their songs were released as a single, in November 1964, Weiss renamed them The Golliwogs, an apparent reference to a once-popular minstrel doll called a Golliwogg.
Max Weiss, one of Fantasy's co-owners, initially changed the group's name to The Visions, but when their songs were released as a single, in November 1964, Weiss renamed them The Golliwogs, an apparent reference to a once-popular minstrel doll called a Golliwogg.
The once-popular " Sambo's " restaurant chain used the Helen Bannerman images to promote and decorate their restaurants although it was named after the chain's co-owners, Samuel Battistone and Newell Bohnett.

once-popular and most
In the United States, the most well-known facilities meeting the general criteria for being colloquially labelled " reform schools " include the Lincoln Hills School near Merrill, Wisconsin ( mentioned in episodes of the once-popular TV series Picket Fences ) and the Preston School of Industry in Ione, California.

once-popular and which
A Beanie Baby is a once-popular stuffed animal, made by Ty Warner Inc., which was later renamed as Ty Inc. in late 1993.
Released in 1996, the film documents a once-popular punk band, Hard Core Logo, which is composed of lead singer Joe Dick ( Hugh Dillon ), fame-tempted guitarist Billy Tallent ( Callum Keith Rennie ), schizophrenic bass player John Oxenberger ( John Pyper-Ferguson ), and drummer Pipefitter ( Bernie Coulson ).
This once-popular spot in Mesquite housed department stores, retail shops, an early form of arcade, and even a movie theater ( which has since been demolished ).

once-popular and is
Galaxy Quest is a once-popular television space-drama series starring Jason Nesmith as the commander of a spaceship called the NSEA Protector, Alexander Dane as the ship's alien science officer, Fred Kwan as the chief engineer, Gwen DeMarco as the computer officer, and Tommy Webber as a precocious child pilot.
Efke is one of the last manufacturers still making the once-popular 127 film, and indeed was the only manufacturer in the world making 127 format film between 1995, when Kodak discontinued the format, and 2006, when a Canadian company also began making 127.
In some Central Italian regions, a once-popular and recently rediscovered fancy food is the bagiana, a soup of fresh or dried fava beans seasoned with onions and beet leaves stir-fried, before being added to the soup, in olive oil and lard ( or bacon or cured ham fat ).
The film is based on a once-popular French comic novel Mon oncle Benjamin by Claude Tillier ( 1842 ).

once-popular and .
For them, in the grim words of a once-popular song, love and marriage go together like a horse and carriage.
In the decades following Mariner and Apollo, the once-popular subgenre of realistic stories about a first expedition to Mars fell out of fashion, possibly due to the failure of the Apollo Program to continue on to Mars.
The 1999 film Galaxy Quest portrays the lives of a once-popular television space-drama crew who are kidnapped by real aliens who have mistaken the fictional series as reality.
A once-popular form of this instrument used a vacuum tube in the amplifier circuit and so was called the vacuum tube voltmeter, or VTVM.
There are many topical references, including once-popular brand names.
The once-popular split-single design falls into this class, being effectively a folded uniflow.
In 1970, NIR started using new rolling stock to re-launch the once-popular Enterprise between Dublin and Belfast with three new NIR Class 101 diesel locomotives built by Hunslet in England and Mark 2B carriages built by BREL.
This led to an increased awareness of the once-popular beverage.
Beyond the clock tower, Tower Esplanade leads to the beach, with a statue of the Jolly Fisherman in the Compass Gardens to one side and the entrance to the once-popular boating lake on the other.
After the war, however, many armies rejected the once-popular headwear ( as the British Army did in 1905 ), although it came back into fashion briefly during World War II during the Burma campaign and amongst troops serving in India and Southeast Asia at this time.
Several of the Travestys writers and editors have gone on to publish That Other Paper, a once-popular but now-defunct alt-weekly in Austin, Texas.
A once-popular goddess also associated with the morning, Zaria was known to her worshippers as " the heavenly bride.

term and derives
David Roberts, in his book " In Search of the Old Ones: Exploring the Anasazi World of the Southwest ", explained his reason for using the term " Anasazi " over a term using " Puebloan ", noting that the latter term " derives from the language of an oppressor who treated the indigenes of the Southwest far more brutally than the Navajo ever did.
The term " antibacterial " derives from Greek ἀντί ( anti ), " against " + βακτήριον ( baktērion ), diminutive of βακτηρία ( baktēria ), " staff, cane ", because the first ones to be discovered were rod-shaped, and the term " antibiotic " derives from anti + βιωτικός ( biōtikos ), " fil for life, lively ", which comes from βίωσις ( biōsis ), " way of life ", and that from βίος ( bios ), " life ".
It is also possible that the term derives from the Welsh Brit Gweldig, the term for a ruler of Britain.
The term " Bronze Age " ultimately derives from the Ages of Man, the stages of human existence on the Earth according to Greek mythology.
The name " Bohemia " derives from the Latin term for the Celtic tribe inhabiting that area, the Boii, who were called Boiohaemum in the early Middle Ages.
The term " common law " originally derives from the 1150s and 1160s, when Henry II of England established the secular English tribunals.
This learned term derives from the Latin cognatus ( blood relative ).
The term derives from the same Latin root as the word " city ", civis, meaning citizen.
The term cabal derives from Kabbalah ( a word that has numerous spelling variations ), the mystical interpretation ( of Babylonian origin ) of the Hebrew scripture, and originally meant either an occult doctrine or a secret.
Here, again, a new term appears in the record, the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle for the first time using the word scottas, from which Scots derives, to describe the inhabitants of Constantine's kingdom in its report of these events.
The term " clipper " most likely derives from the verb " clip ", which in former times meant, among other things, to run or fly swiftly.
This version of " critical " theory derives from Kant's ( 18th-century ) and Marx's ( 19th Century ) use of the term " critique ", as in Kant's Critique of Pure Reason and Marx's concept that his work Das Kapital ( Capital ) forms a " critique of political economy.
The term derives its etymology from the Daedalus Labyrinth or " complicated maze ".
The term derives from the Greek διακριτικός ( diakritikós, " distinguishing ").
The term Houge derives from the Old Norse word haugr, meaning a mound or barrow.
The term derives from the verb διασπείρω ( diaspeirō ), " I scatter ", " I spread about " and that form διά ( dia ), " between, through, across " + the verb σπείρω ( speirō ), " I sow, I scatter ".
The term ethology derives from the Greek word èthos ( ήθος ), meaning character.
The term derives from the Greek ( esôterikos ), a compound of ( esô ): " within ", thus " pertaining to the more inward ", mystic.
The term empire derives from the Latin imperium ( power, authority ).

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