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Willam and between
Television followed the films especially in the UK with The Adventures of Robin Hood, Sword of Freedom, The Buccaneers, and Willam Tell between 1955 and 1960.
The beginning of the nineteenth century can be considered the most significant period in the history of Serampore, with the arrival of four English missionaries-Joshua Marshman, Hannah Marshman, William Carey, and Willam Ward-who between them were the architects of the Serampore renaissance.

Willam and for
One of the earliest proposals for IEC was by Willam C Elmore, et al.
Willam Arens, an anthropologist known for his criticism of reports of learned cannibalism, claims that Gajdusek never actually witnessed cannibalism himself.
By 1336 the resources of Edward III of England ordered Willam Sinclair, 8th Baron of Roslin to sail eight ships to the partially ruined Dunnottar for the purpose of rebuilding and fortifying to use as a forward resupply base for the northern campaign.
* Wimsatt, Willam ( 2007 ) Re-engineering Philosophy for Limited Beings: Peicewise Approximations to Reality, Harvard University Press.
is a gentleman by the name of Willam George Plunkett who worked for the Collins company for nearly 40 years.
*** The Nutcracker ( Willam Christensen ), a 1944 version for the San Francisco Ballet by Willam Christensen
While the band was temporarily stationed for one year in Waterford, Willam was born on 11 March 1812.
The family returned to Ballina some months later and Willam spent his formative years in Ballina, taking an active part in his father's band and already composing pieces by the age of nine for the band recitals.
Battle Group Willam had the primary responsibility for relieving then taking command of 500th SS Parachute Battalion in Drvar on 25 May, and was then to attack in the direction of Bosanski Petrovac.

Willam and with
Compare with the following excerpt from an 1750 ode by Willam Collins:
John Bunyan's tomb ( foreground ) with a memorial to Daniel Defoe ( obelisk, left ) and Willam Blake's grave ( right ) in background.
The West Highland Line railway from Glasgow splits approximately five miles to the south at Crianlarich, with one branch heading to Fort Willam and the other to Oban.
About 7am on 26 May, 500th SS Parachute Battalion established radio contact with reconnaissance elements of Battle Group Willam, but it was not until 12. 45pm that the 92nd Motorised Grenadier Regiment reached Drvar and relieved the paratroopers.
In this year, Lew Christensen — the premier danseur at the time — partnered with Willam Christensen as co-directors.

Willam and .
The master-mason appointed to rebuild the choir was a Frenchman, Willam of Sens.
* Smith, Willam.
He was later joined by James Bailey, Samuel Caruthers, William Flemming, M. Johnson, Willam Kendrick, Robert Thrasher, A. Patterson, and Kinchen Mayo who extended the settlement along the creek toward the Junction.
They also deal marijuana to various pedestrians ( including Willam Black ), much to the chagrin of Quick Stop clerk Dante Hicks.
Willam Moreno Jr. High-Home of the Aztecs
* Ivan L. R. Lemelle, Federal Judge, U. S. District Court, Eastern District of Louisiana, nominated by President Willam J. Clinton, and former U. S. Majistrate Judge, Eastern District of Louisiana.
:< sup > 2 </ sup > Willam Tunnicliff, Dan ' l Hawks, John Hatch, Ebenezor Eaton, and Jos.
There are also portraits of Joshua Marshman, Hannah Marshman, William Carey, and Willam Ward who were all missionaries to India and Andrew Fuller who was a missionary and first secretary of the Baptist Missionary Society.
In 1992, the town of Awendaw was first incorporated and elected Willam H. Alston as the first Mayor.
The city's initial, which were deeded to the county commissioners by Willam Rankin, were chosen due to their central location within the new county.
It was founded in 1921 as the Communist Party of South Africa by the joining together of the International Socialist League and others under the leadership of Willam H. Andrews.
In 2010, Baldwin portrayed Dr. Willam van der Woodsen, father of Serena and Eric van der Woodsen, on the third and fourth seasons of Gossip Girl.

Bateson and between
In the early 1900s, after the rediscovery of Mendel's work, the gaps in understanding between genetics and evolutionary Darwinism led to vigorous debate among biometricians, such as Walter Weldon and Karl Pearson, and Mendelians, such as Charles Davenport, William Bateson and Wilhelm Johannsen.
In her memoir about her parents, With a Daughter's Eye, Mary Catherine Bateson implies that the relationship between Benedict and Mead was partly sexual.
Gregory Bateson played a key role in establishing the connection between anthropology and systems theory ; he recognized that the interactive parts of cultures function much like ecosystems.
Bateson revisited the topic in his 1979 book Mind and Nature: A Necessary Unity, and other scholars have continued to explore the connection between natural selection and systems theory.
Gregory Bateson was the first to draw such analogies in his project of an Ecology of Mind ( Bateson 1973 ), which was based on general principles of complex dynamic life processes, e. g. the concept of feedback loops, which he saw as operating both between the mind and the world and within the mind itself.
Bateson thinks of the mind neither as an autonomous metaphysical force nor as a mere neurological function of the brain, but as a " dehierarchized concept of a mutual dependency between the ( human ) organism and its ( natural ) environment, subject and object, culture and nature ", and thus as " a synonym for a cybernetic system of information circuits that are relevant for the survival of the species.
In his work on the Ecology of Mind, Gregory Bateson adopts and extends Jung's distinction between Pleroma ( the non-living world that is undifferentiated by subjectivity ) and Creatura ( the living world, subject to perceptual difference, distinction, and information ).
Bateson revisited the topic in his 1979 book Mind and Nature: A Necessary Unity, and other scholars have continued to explore the connection between natural selection and systems theory.
The concept of schismogenesis was developed by the anthropologist Gregory Bateson in the 1930s, to account for certain forms of social behavior between groups.
Analogous to Émile Durkheim's concepts of mechanical and organic solidarity ( see functionalism ), Bateson posited a symmetrical form of schismogenic behavior that consisted of a competitive relationship between categorical equals ( e. g., rivalry ) and complementary schismogenesis between categorical unequals ( e. g., dominance and submission ).
In 1900 the work of Gregor Mendel was rediscovered and this precipitated a conflict between Weldon and Pearson on the one side and William Bateson on the other.
There was then a feud between Bateson and Pearson over the hereditary mechanism.

Bateson and novel
* A TV version of the novel appeared on BBC2 in 1979, with Terrence Hardiman ( Pooter ) and Timothy Bateson ( Cummings ).

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