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Troublesome and who
Troublesome political dissidents, factionalists and class enemies, who are considered irredeemable are incarcerated together with any close family members or children born in the camp in " Total Control Zones " for life at hard labor.
Contemporary skaldic poetry which refers to the battle includes a work by Hallfreðr the Troublesome Poet, who was in Olaf Tryggvason's service.
Troublesome Westwood Senior School ( later Westwood College ) became The Harris Academy Falconwood in 2008 under the funding of Lord Harris of Peckham, who owns several other academies in South London.

Troublesome and have
Plays that have been assigned to ( or blamed on ) Peele include Locrine, The Troublesome Reign of King John, and Parts 1 and 2 of Shakespeare's Henry VI trilogy, in addition to Titus Andronicus.
The extent and nature of the non-Shakespearean repertory in the first is not known ; plays such as Locrine, The Troublesome Reign of King John, and Christopher Marlowe's Edward II have somewhat cautiously been advanced as likely candidates.

Troublesome and their
" For the Hooley Dooleys ( the character sing their into song ), the kids dance and Jamie's friend Zooey wave, the Boy Jumped " And So Hundred of Family All around Australia " Repart of Thomas and Friends of Troublesome Trucks, Blinky Bill ( Including Their name ) and The Ferals ( Feral Laughs and Feral Angry ) and Mister Whiskers sing " I'm Mister Whiskers Children Sing " ( Children Dance ) " Join the ABC For Kids Club!

Troublesome and them
Among the other etchings which deserve very special reference are those in Young Master Troublesome or Master Jacky's Holidays, and the frontispiece to Hints on Life, or How to Rise in Society ( 1845 )— a series of minute subjects linked gracefully together by coils of smoke, illustrating the various ranks and conditions of men, one of themthe doctor by his patient's bedside — almost equalling in vivacity and precision the best of Cruikshank's similar scenes.

Troublesome and .
( Troublesome < CODE > FORMAT </ CODE > statements would also be eliminated.
* Gutzman, Kevin, " A Troublesome Legacy: James Madison and the ' Principles of ' 98 ,'" Journal of the Early Republic 15 ( 1995 ), 569 – 89.
Katharine M. Rogers in The Troublesome Helpmate alleges Christianity to be misogynistic, listing what she says are specific examples from the New Testament letters of the Christian apostle Paul of Tarsus.
* Rogers, Katharine M. The Troublesome Helpmate: A History of Misogyny in Literature.
* Nat Turner: A Troublesome Property, a film by Charles Burnett, was released in 2003.
King John is closely related to an anonymous history play, The Troublesome Reign of King John ( c. 1589 ), the " masterly construction " but infelicitious expression of which led Peter Alexander to argue that Shakespeare's was the earlier play.
The majority view, however, first advanced in a rebuttal of Honigmann's views by Kenneth Muir, holds that the Troublesome Reign antedates King John by a period of several years ; and that the skilful plotting of the Troublesome Reign is neither unparalleled in the period, nor proof of Shakespeare's involvement.
Honigmann discerned in the play the influence of John Foxe's Acts and Monuments, Matthew Paris ' Historia Maior, and the Wakefield Chronicle, but Muir demonstrated that this apparent influence could be explained by the priority of the Troublesome Reign, which contains similar or identical matter.
They embarked and drifted fairly uninterrupted towards Micco until they reached a point not far from Troublesome Creek, where they were both surprised to see the river divided.
The early roots of Reidsville, incorporated in 1873 by the State Legislature, date back to the early 19th century when William Wright of the Little Troublesome Creek area owned a tavern and store on the road connecting Danville and Salem.
Richardson ’ s home, built in 1842 on a knoll overlooking Little Troublesome Creek, still remains on Richardson Drive and has the distinction of being the oldest standing house in the city.
Reuben Reid of the Hogan ’ s Creek area moved his family, including wife, Elizabeth Williams Settle, and son, David Settle Reid, to a farm on the ridge between Wolf Island and Little Troublesome creeks in May 1814.
* Troublesome adverse effects on morphine, hydromorphone or oxycodone.
A Troublesome Indian race.
See also: A Troublesome Indian race.
* Nigger: The Strange Career of a Troublesome Word-online book preview at Google Books.
Fleay saw grounds for assigning to Lodge Mucedorus and Amadine, played by the Queen's Men about 1588, a share with Robert Greene in George a Greene, the Pinner of Wakefield, and in Shakespeare's 2nd part of Henry VI ; he also regards him as at least part-author of The True Chronicle of King Leir and his three Daughters ( 1594 ); and The Troublesome Raigne of John, King of England ( c. 1588 ); in the case of two other plays he allowed the assignation to Lodge to be purely conjectural.

rivals and who
He resolved to suppress many abuses, but above all things, to check feudalism and limit the power of the nobles, who were rivals for his throne.
While the NA continues to this day, he saw it as a tool to end threats from smaller rivals who might some day want to expand in other territories and threaten his league's dominance.
The colours had been chosen by the group of boys who had founded Charlton Athletic in 1905 after having to play their first matches in the borrowed kits of their local rivals Woolwich Arsenal, who also played in red and white.
The Great Army defeated an attack on York by the two rivals for the Northumbrian throne, Osberht and Ælla, who had put aside their differences in the face of a common enemy.
In World War II rivals who had combat service in the first great war ( led by Gen. Bernard Montgomery ) sought to denigrate Eisenhower for his previous lack of combat duty, despite his stateside experience establishing a camp, completely equipped, for thousands of troops, and developing a full combat training schedule.
The immediate necessity for the Labours of Heracles is as penance for Heracles ' murder of his own family, in a fit of madness, which had been sent by Hera ; however, further human rather than mythic motivation is supplied by mythographers who note that their respective families had been rivals for the throne of Mycenae.
In the film Victor McLaglen and Robert Armstrong play two merchant seamen who are arch rivals when it comes to conquest women, with McLaglen constantly finding Armstrong's tattoo on the women that he is attempting to seduce.
He would reform taxes and attempt to break the feudal system, in order to undercut rivals, the most important of which was also named Bashir: Bashir Jumblatt, whose wealth and feudal backers equaled or exceeded Bashir II – and who had increasing support in the Druze community.
Force may be used to eliminate political rivals, to coerce resistant populations, and to purge the community other men strong enough of character to rule, who will inevitably attempt to replace the ruler.
In week 17, the Saints defeated division rivals Carolina ; however, the Saints needed other results to break their way and when the St. Louis Rams beat the New York Jets the Saints were eliminated despite having beaten the Rams, who finished with the same record.
Later, he loses it all when one of his rivals ( who's also married to Yoshiko, who never forgave Kubo for abandoning her ) takes control of his enterprise with Tanaka's unwitting aid.
Historian Beau Riffenburgh states that the promise to Scott " should never ethically have been demanded ", and compares Scott's intransigence on this matter unfavourably with the generous attitudes of the Norwegian explorer Fridtjof Nansen, who gave freely of his advice and expertise to all, whether they were potential rivals or not.
The teams were managed by managing legends John McGraw and Connie Mack, who were friendly rivals and considered to be the premier managers during that era.
They also note that Lenin put a ban on factions within the Russian Communist Party and introduced the one-party state in 1921-a move that enabled Stalin to get rid of his rivals easily after Lenin's death, and cite Felix Dzerzhinsky, who, during the Bolshevik struggle against opponents in the Russian Civil War, exclaimed " We stand for organised terror – this should be frankly stated ".
When the tribe grows to a size that rivals Ralph's, they begin to harass those who remain at the shelters and make pronouncements encouraging them to abandon Ralph and the societal order he has imposed.
Willkie consistently spoke of the need to aid Britain against Germany ; this contrasted with his main rivals Taft, Dewey, and Vandenberg, who were isolationists.
Employees were laid off without pay, and the company's game brands and other intellectual properties were sold to rivals like Microsoft, Namco, Crave and Ubisoft, and also to founder Trip Hawkins, who paid $ 405, 000 for rights to some old brands and the company's " Internet patent portfolio ".
However, many of the audience were supporters of one of Rossini's rivals, Giovanni Paisiello, who played on " mob mentality " to provoke the rest of the audience to dislike the opera.
The unexpected demise of Frederick left the Crusader army under the command of the rivals Philip II of France and Richard I of England, who had traveled to Palestine separately by sea, and ultimately led to its dissolution.
Attempts by the Persians to reign in the Bahraini ulema were often counterproductive, and ended up strengthening the clerics against their local land-owning Bahraini rivals who challenged the clerics ' control over the lucrative pearl trade.
In the early 1960s, Ellington embraced recording with artists who had been rivals of the past, or who had been young artists from a later generation.
Sometimes he has rivals who disagree with him ; sometimes they are right, and he is the first to admit that sometimes he might be wrong.

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