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In the animated 1967 Disney adaptation, Akela only has a brief role at the beginning of the film, when the council of wolves meet after Shere Khan's return to the jungle to decide what to do about Mowgli's future. | In the 2016 live-action film, Giancarlo Esposito voices Akela. |
Frequently introduce the child to new people. | While stranger anxiety is a normal part of child development, if it becomes so severe that it restricts normal life professional help might be necessary. |
Frequently introduce the child to new people. | While stranger anxiety is a normal part of child development, if it becomes so severe that it restricts normal life professional help might be necessary. |
In November 1997, as Minister for Religious Affairs Major-General Sein Htwa welcomed Secretary-1 of the State Peace and Development Council Lieutenant-General Khin Nyunt when he paid a visit to inspect renovation of the Shwedagon Pagoda [REF]. | In September 1998 he welcomed Secretary-l Lt-Gen Khin Nyunt when he visited the International Theravada Buddhist Missionary University, and explained what was being done in preparation for opening the university [REF]. |
In November 1997, as Minister for Religious Affairs Major-General Sein Htwa welcomed Secretary-1 of the State Peace and Development Council Lieutenant-General Khin Nyunt when he paid a visit to inspect renovation of the Shwedagon Pagoda [REF]. | In September 1998 he welcomed Secretary-l Lt-Gen Khin Nyunt when he visited the International Theravada Buddhist Missionary University, and explained what was being done in preparation for opening the university [REF]. |
The son of a farmer and the youngest - by eight years - of 13 children, Evans heard the voice of Enrico Caruso over the radio when he was a young boy. | Completely untaught, Evans practised both 'preaching' in the declamatory 'Welsh chapel' style and singing in a barn-cum-boilerhouse on the farm. |
One week later, Evans became a pupil of Freer's - who began by telling him that he sang too loudly. | Some 18 months after meeting Freer, Edgar gave his first audition. |
One week later, Evans became a pupil of Freer's - who began by telling him that he sang too loudly. | Some 18 months after meeting Freer, Edgar gave his first audition. |
From September 1939 to June 1942 he was a member of the Police Reserve - again on wages of £3 a week - having been turned down for service in the armed forces - he was dogged by kidney problems throughout his life. | In the latter years of the war and when hostilities ceased, Edgar toured the main theatres in the UK and Europe, singing with the 'Anglo-Russian Merry Go Round Company' performing in a number of cities, including Paris. |
From September 1939 to June 1942 he was a member of the Police Reserve - again on wages of £3 a week - having been turned down for service in the armed forces - he was dogged by kidney problems throughout his life. | In the latter years of the war and when hostilities ceased, Edgar toured the main theatres in the UK and Europe, singing with the 'Anglo-Russian Merry Go Round Company' performing in a number of cities, including Paris. |
A chance meeting with Henry Robinson, formerly stage manager at Sadler's Wells, resulted in Evans applying for an audition with the newly formed Covent Garden Opera Company. | He became one of the first British singers to sing in opera abroad after the War when Erich Kleiber took him to sing in Wagner's Ring in Rome, with the Rome Opera. |
A chance meeting with Henry Robinson, formerly stage manager at Sadler's Wells, resulted in Evans applying for an audition with the newly formed Covent Garden Opera Company. | He became one of the first British singers to sing in opera abroad after the War when Erich Kleiber took him to sing in Wagner's Ring in Rome, with the Rome Opera. |
From that first appearance as Des Grieux to his farewell performance, as the butler in The Visit of the Old Lady by Gottfried von Einem at Glyndebourne in 1974, Evans was a well-respected member of the music world. | 'As the cheerful but unfortunate King of Sweden (in A Masked Ball), Edgar Evans follows in the line of some of the greatest tenors who have ever sung in opera, including Jean de Reszke and Caruso.' (Education, 27 November 1953) . |
From that first appearance as Des Grieux to his farewell performance, as the butler in The Visit of the Old Lady by Gottfried von Einem at Glyndebourne in 1974, Evans was a well-respected member of the music world. | 'As the cheerful but unfortunate King of Sweden (in A Masked Ball), Edgar Evans follows in the line of some of the greatest tenors who have ever sung in opera, including Jean de Reszke and Caruso.' (Education, 27 November 1953) . |
Within three weeks of returning from Ricci in Rome, the higher part of his vocal range now completely secure, Evans sang Calaf in Turandot under the baton of Sir John Barbirolli. | Eventually the stress of this punishing schedule caught up with him and he was forced to rest for 20 weeks. |
Within three weeks of returning from Ricci in Rome, the higher part of his vocal range now completely secure, Evans sang Calaf in Turandot under the baton of Sir John Barbirolli. | Eventually the stress of this punishing schedule caught up with him and he was forced to rest for 20 weeks. |
The doctrine of de facto government was repealed, and it was established that any further attempt at breaking the constitutional order was to be deemed illegal, as severe penalties were to be established for the perpetrators and the right to resist a coup d'état was validated. | The issuing of Necessity and Urgency Decrees was regulated. |
The doctrine of de facto government was repealed, and it was established that any further attempt at breaking the constitutional order was to be deemed illegal, as severe penalties were to be established for the perpetrators and the right to resist a coup d'état was validated. | The issuing of Necessity and Urgency Decrees was regulated. |
Chakdara has been an important center for the last 3500 years and is littered with remains of the Gandhara grave culture, Buddhist sites, and Hindu Shahi forts. | The Mughals built a fort here in 1586, occupied in 1895 by the British, who built the present fort in 1896 and were forced to defend it during the Siege of Malakand in 1897. |
The most important site in Chakdara is Damkot Hill. | Andannd Dherai, an important Buddhist site, is located 7 km north of Chakdara Bridge opposite to Gul Abad Degree College for Boys near the village of Uchh. |
Barnett Township is in southeastern Forest County, bordered to the east by Elk County, to the west by Clarion County, and to the south, across the Clarion River, by Jefferson County. | Pennsylvania Route 899 crosses the township, leading north to Marienville and south (via PA 36) to Brookville. |
Barnett Township is in southeastern Forest County, bordered to the east by Elk County, to the west by Clarion County, and to the south, across the Clarion River, by Jefferson County. | Pennsylvania Route 899 crosses the township, leading north to Marienville and south (via PA 36) to Brookville. |
On 20 June 1941, the United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) were established as a way to combine and streamline two conflicting air commands: GHQ Air Force and the Army Air Corps. | Up to this point, the WPD of the War Department was responsible for planning all aspects of Army and Army Air Corps expansion in the U.S [REF]. |
On 24 August 1942, in light of the grim global situation, President Roosevelt called for a major reassessment of U.S. air power requirements, "in order to have complete air ascendancy over the enemy."[REF] | The Navy was not at all satisfied with AWPD-42. |
On 24 August 1942, in light of the grim global situation, President Roosevelt called for a major reassessment of U.S. air power requirements, "in order to have complete air ascendancy over the enemy."[REF] | The Navy was not at all satisfied with AWPD-42. |
AWPD-1 called for the production of 61,800 aircraft of which 37,000 would be trainers and 11,800 would be for combat [REF]. | AWPD-1 projected a force of 2.1 million airmen. |
AWPD-1 called for the production of 61,800 aircraft of which 37,000 would be trainers and 11,800 would be for combat [REF]. | AWPD-1 projected a force of 2.1 million airmen. |
AWPD-1 identified 154 targets in four areas of concern: Electric power, transportation, petroleum and the Luftwaffe, the German Air Force [REF]. | AWPD-42 called for 177 targets to be hit, covering seven strategic areas, with the highest priority being enemy aircraft production [REF]. |
AWPD-1 identified 154 targets in four areas of concern: Electric power, transportation, petroleum and the Luftwaffe, the German Air Force [REF]. | AWPD-42 called for 177 targets to be hit, covering seven strategic areas, with the highest priority being enemy aircraft production [REF]. |
In 1890, Canadian pharmacist and chemist John J. McLaughlin of Enniskillen, Ontario, after working in a soda factory in Brooklyn, New York,[REF] opened a carbonated water plant in Toronto [REF]. | When McLaughlin began shipping his product to New York, it became so popular that he opened a plant in Manhattan shortly thereafter. |
Integrity: The recipient should be able to verify that the received message is the original one that was sent by the sender. | Forward secrecy of message confidentiality: If the long-term private key of the sender is compromised, no one should be able to extract the plaintext of previously signcrypted texts. |
Integrity: The recipient should be able to verify that the received message is the original one that was sent by the sender. | Forward secrecy of message confidentiality: If the long-term private key of the sender is compromised, no one should be able to extract the plaintext of previously signcrypted texts. |
Prior to the 1970s, most comics were found in newsstands, grocery, drug, convenience, and toy stores. | Content: direct-only stores could cater to older, more mature audiences, and thus can market material deemed too offensive (due to graphic violence, nudity, language, drug use, etc.) for grocery/drug/convenience/toy stores. |
On 22 November 1737 he was named Rector of the Sapienza. | By 1742, Valenti was Consultor of the Sacred Congregation of Rites. |
On 22 November 1737 he was named Rector of the Sapienza. | By 1742, Valenti was Consultor of the Sacred Congregation of Rites. |
He was born in Scotland and educated in Edinburgh, where he graduated M.D. on 13 September 1802, his thesis being published as Disputatio de Acido Nitrico, Edinburgh. | About 1814 Neale was in practice at Exeter, but moved to Cheltenham in 1820. |
He is the owner and president of Majid Al Futtaim Group, which he founded in 1992 after splitting the Al Futtaim empire with his brother [REF]. | According to Forbes, Al Futtaim has a net worth of $5 billion, as of February 2016 [REF]. |
He is the owner and president of Majid Al Futtaim Group, which he founded in 1992 after splitting the Al Futtaim empire with his brother [REF]. | According to Forbes, Al Futtaim has a net worth of $5 billion, as of February 2016 [REF]. |
Betts was born on 22 November 1964 to Ronald and Mary Betts [REF]. | In 1987, Betts entered Ripon College Cuddesdon to train for ordination [REF]. |
The first ever Model United Nations conference in Bangladesh was organized by UNYSAB in association with UNAB and UNIC- Dhaka in October, 2002 on terrorism in observance of the United Nations day [REF]. | Later on, UNYSAB organized the second conference of Model United Nations in Bangladesh on 21 October 2003 [REF]. |
In the 6th century, a Christian monastery was founded on the hill of Doire to the east of the River Foyle. | Although the Vikings sailed up the loughs and rivers of this area, the monastery of Derry escaped the worst effects of their raids. |
After the collapse of the Earldom of Ulster in the 14th century, Ulster saw a Gaelic resurgence at the expense of the Norman colony. | This attack came about shortly after the Flight of the Earls when the O'Neill and O'Donnell chieftains, together with their principal supporters, fled to the continent, leaving Gaelic Ulster leaderless. |
After the collapse of the Earldom of Ulster in the 14th century, Ulster saw a Gaelic resurgence at the expense of the Norman colony. | This attack came about shortly after the Flight of the Earls when the O'Neill and O'Donnell chieftains, together with their principal supporters, fled to the continent, leaving Gaelic Ulster leaderless. |
The early 1920s in Ireland were marked by political violence over the issue of Irish independence. | During the Second World War the city played an important part in the Battle of the Atlantic with a substantial presence from the Royal Navy and a large number of GIs disembarked here. |
The early 1920s in Ireland were marked by political violence over the issue of Irish independence. | During the Second World War the city played an important part in the Battle of the Atlantic with a substantial presence from the Royal Navy and a large number of GIs disembarked here. |
"Wilma" and "William" were created in 1984, two burlesque characters that under the name of "Nickelodeon". | At the beginning of 2000, the two members of "Nickelodeon" pursued their solo careers. |
Ivan Pilip gained a degree in international business and trade at the University of Economics in Prague and did post-graduate studies at the Complutense University of Madrid [REF]. | Pilip is married to Lucie Pilipova, who was a foreign ministry spokesperson, until she left the role when her husband became chairman of the KDS to avoid any conflict of interest [REF]. |
However in 1995 the KDS agreed to merge with the Civic Democrats, with 5 of the 10 KDS deputies, including Pilip, joining the Civic Democrats [REF]. | In the second half of 1997 pressure built on the Prime Minister Václav Klaus, over a donation to the Civic Democrats from a businessman who had recently gained a significant stake in a company privatised by the government [REF]. |
However in 1995 the KDS agreed to merge with the Civic Democrats, with 5 of the 10 KDS deputies, including Pilip, joining the Civic Democrats [REF]. | In the second half of 1997 pressure built on the Prime Minister Václav Klaus, over a donation to the Civic Democrats from a businessman who had recently gained a significant stake in a company privatised by the government [REF]. |
The detention of Pilip and Bubenik caused international outrage, with countries in Europe and Latin America calling for their release, and relations between Cuba and the Czech Republic broke down over the issue [REF]. | On the 5 February Pilip and Bubenik were released after a meeting at the Cuban Foreign Ministry, where they admitted breaking Cuban law unwittingly [REF]. |
The detention of Pilip and Bubenik caused international outrage, with countries in Europe and Latin America calling for their release, and relations between Cuba and the Czech Republic broke down over the issue [REF]. | On the 5 February Pilip and Bubenik were released after a meeting at the Cuban Foreign Ministry, where they admitted breaking Cuban law unwittingly [REF]. |
Typically, the fine white sand is packed hard on the surf's edge and allows easy walking. | Travellers to Cayo Largo should be advised nudism is tolerated in Cayo Largo and is practiced on the periphery of the resorts in designated areas, and on the many desolate stretches of beaches (20 km) on this island. |
Typically, the fine white sand is packed hard on the surf's edge and allows easy walking. | Travellers to Cayo Largo should be advised nudism is tolerated in Cayo Largo and is practiced on the periphery of the resorts in designated areas, and on the many desolate stretches of beaches (20 km) on this island. |
During the 1680s, parts of the medieval church were renovated and began to be used as a Lutheran parish church [REF]. | In 1952 the former gatehouse chapel of the abbey, the so-called "farmers' church", was renovated [REF]. |
The main excavator of the Step Pyramid was Jean-Philippe Lauer, a French architect who reconstructed key portions of the complex. | Outside the enclosure wall, Djoser's complex is completely surrounded by a trench dug in the underlying rock. |
The main excavator of the Step Pyramid was Jean-Philippe Lauer, a French architect who reconstructed key portions of the complex. | Outside the enclosure wall, Djoser's complex is completely surrounded by a trench dug in the underlying rock. |
James Hearst was the first child born to Charles E. Hearst and Katharine Hearst, on August 8, 1900. | On Memorial Day 1919, having returned to his family's farm, Hearst was swimming with his friends in the Cedar River. |
Grantsburg is situated on the Wood River, which is dammed on the western edge of town to form a small body of water, called Memory Lake. | The terrain is generally flat, and the land around Grantsburg is heavily wooded, though there is substantial farm acreage, especially to the east and south. |
McNeill grew up in the Scottish mining town of Tranent. | In December 1968, McNeill was reading the Edinburgh Evening News when he noticed his name in the entries for the 1969 New Year Sprint. |
Prior to This American Life, he worked as a freelance radio reporter, contributing to This American Life, the Savvy Traveller and Chicago Public Radio. | In August 2014, he started Gimlet Media along with Matthew Lieber [REF]. |
Goliath had four /35 cal guns mounted in twin turrets fore and aft; these guns were mounted in circular barbettes that allowed all-around loading, although at a fixed elevation [REF]. | Goliath and her sister ships were the first British battleships with water-tube boilers, which generated more power at less expense in weight compared with the cylindrical boilers used in previous ships. |
Jeffersonville High School has a prominent theatre program that has sent seven shows to the International Thespian Festival in Nebraska, one which continued to the Fringe Festival in Scotland. | The Jeffersonville Winter Percussion Ensemble received the Silver Medal at the 2008 TriState Circuit Championships, Percussion Scholastic A section, with a score of 85.10-the highest score ever set by a Jeffersonville Indoor Drumline [REF]. |
Recent research revealed that this network of lines covers an area of 22,525 square kilometers, approximately fifteen times larger than the area covered by the Nazca Lines in Peru. | Scholars at the University of Pennsylvania describe: While many of these sacred lines extend as far as ten or twenty kilometers (and perhaps further), they all seem to maintain a remarkable straightness despite rugged topography and natural obstacles. |
Juan Pablo Paz studied at the University of Buenos Aires, where he got his Master and Ph.D. degrees and then worked as researcher, teacher, and director of the Physics department of his faculty. | He has worked as well in the Los Alamos National Laboratory. |
Paz has worked in the quantum theory of error correction, and has developed a number of techniques to correct errors in this kind of computers. | In 2002, alongside César Miguel and Marcos Saraceno, he developed a program that allows efficient spectroscopy and tomography using a quantum computer, establishing for the first time an analogy between these tasks. |
Tate was born in Hendersonville, Tennessee. | After he injured his thumb his senior season and could not play baseball, Tate switched to track and field and posted the state's top qualifying times in the 100-meter dash (10.93 s) and 200-meter dash (22.33 s). |
Tate was drafted out of high school by the Arizona Diamondbacks in the 42nd round of the 2007 amateur draft [REF]. | On June 9, 2010, he was drafted by the San Francisco Giants in the 50th round (no. |
Tate was drafted out of high school by the Arizona Diamondbacks in the 42nd round of the 2007 amateur draft [REF]. | On June 9, 2010, he was drafted by the San Francisco Giants in the 50th round (no. |
In the 2008 season as a sophomore, Tate started in 12 regular season games with 52 catches for 903 yards and seven touchdowns for a 17.4 yard per catch average. | Following the 2009 season, Tate won the Biletnikoff Award [REF]. |
In the 2008 season as a sophomore, Tate started in 12 regular season games with 52 catches for 903 yards and seven touchdowns for a 17.4 yard per catch average. | Following the 2009 season, Tate won the Biletnikoff Award [REF]. |
During the trial, she could not control her rage at the accusations. | She admitted she had sinned against the commandments of the bible by working on holidays because of her poverty. |
Describing the plot of the novel itself, Manson said: "The whole story, if you take it from the beginning, is parallel to my own, but just told in metaphors and different symbols that I thought other people could draw from. | Manson has also stated that there is a character "that's very much a take on Walt Disney," who was a big inspiration in the writing of both the book and its accompanying album [REF]. |
Until its closure BAAF was a membership association, publisher, training provider and advisory service. | BAAF also ran the Be My Parent family-finding service consisting of the www.bemyparent.org.uk |
BAAF managed the Adoption Register for England and Wales, under contract with the UK and Wales governments, Scotland's Adoption Register, which is funded by the Scottish Government, and the Adoption Regional Information System for Northern Ireland (ARIS) for the Northern Ireland Executive. | BAAF operated the Independent Review Mechanisms (IRM) [REF] in England and Wales, on behalf of the UK and Wales governments respectively. |
BAAF managed the Adoption Register for England and Wales, under contract with the UK and Wales governments, Scotland's Adoption Register, which is funded by the Scottish Government, and the Adoption Regional Information System for Northern Ireland (ARIS) for the Northern Ireland Executive. | BAAF operated the Independent Review Mechanisms (IRM) [REF] in England and Wales, on behalf of the UK and Wales governments respectively. |
BAAF worked to increase public understanding of child adoption and fostering. | BAAF ran National Adoption Week, which is dedicated to finding families for those children who wait the longest,[REF] and Somebody Else's Child, the first national campaign on private fostering. |
BAAF worked to increase public understanding of child adoption and fostering. | BAAF ran National Adoption Week, which is dedicated to finding families for those children who wait the longest,[REF] and Somebody Else's Child, the first national campaign on private fostering. |
Van Wittel was born into a Roman Catholic family. | His first extant works were made in Hoorn in 1672 to where he had fled after the French invasion and occupation of Amersfoort in the Rampjaar [REF]. |
LaFavor was born in Fort Lauderdale, Florida in 1979 [REF]. | As a senior in 1998, he played defensive end and had 20 sacks, receiving Florida Class 6A first-team All-state honors and was a USA Today honorable-mention high school All-American [REF]. |
LaFavor accepted an athletic scholarship to attend the University of Florida in Gainesville, Florida, where he was moved to defensive tackle as a sophomore. | In 2000, he was a member of the Gators' Southeastern Conference (SEC) championship team [REF]. |
LaFavor accepted an athletic scholarship to attend the University of Florida in Gainesville, Florida, where he was moved to defensive tackle as a sophomore. | In 2000, he was a member of the Gators' Southeastern Conference (SEC) championship team [REF]. |
The medieval town of Oslo is the area where Oslo's medieval ruins of stone and brick are located. | Medieval Oslo had its heyday in the decades around 1300, when Haakon V Magnusson ruled first as duke (1284-1299) and then as king (1299-1319) [REF]. |
King Håkon IV Håkonsson built a new royal residence in stone and brick. | In 1314, the King decided that the dean of St. Mary's Church was to be Chancellor, and to have the State seal of "forever" and so he made Oslo the capital of the kingdom of Norway. |
King Håkon IV Håkonsson built a new royal residence in stone and brick. | In 1314, the King decided that the dean of St. Mary's Church was to be Chancellor, and to have the State seal of "forever" and so he made Oslo the capital of the kingdom of Norway. |
After King Haakon's death the political situation became unclear and the city experienced an economic downturn. | As the Old Town became part of the capital of Oslo in 1859, and it was ordered that brick houses be built in this area. |
After King Haakon's death the political situation became unclear and the city experienced an economic downturn. | As the Old Town became part of the capital of Oslo in 1859, and it was ordered that brick houses be built in this area. |
The frontage features two large statues depicting Ceres and Mercury in their roles as the goddess of agriculture and the god of trade respectively, marking the buildings original purpose as an Exchange. | Every half-hour, the clock above the entrance chimes the melody "Odessa my town" (the same tune greeting incoming trains at the Odessa Train Station). |
In fall 2012 Ruiz launched a second T-shirt line made from a 100% organic cotton/bamboo blend that will have his images printed in 4 color on panels of silk and hand stitched onto the T-shirt. | Ruiz has appeared on several reality shows, including Kathy Griffin: My Life on the D-List, America's Next Top Model, and RuPaul's Drag Race, as a celebrity photographer and guest judge. |
In fall 2012 Ruiz launched a second T-shirt line made from a 100% organic cotton/bamboo blend that will have his images printed in 4 color on panels of silk and hand stitched onto the T-shirt. | Ruiz has appeared on several reality shows, including Kathy Griffin: My Life on the D-List, America's Next Top Model, and RuPaul's Drag Race, as a celebrity photographer and guest judge. |
Thieullier was a silversmith who has been said to have been born in Mechelen, but the evidence for this is unclear [REF]. | As part of the event, a play was performed which Thieullier had written for the occasion: Porphyre en Cyprine. |
Initially rising to fame in 2004 as a finalist on the third season of American Idol, Leah LaBelle released covers of songs through her YouTube account, and found minor success [REF]. | "Lolita" was written by American songwriter Kelly Sheehan in collaboration with record producer Pharrell Williams [REF]. |
"Lolita" is a funk and pop song that lasts two minutes and forty-nine seconds [REF]. | Media commentators have discussed the connection between the single and Vladimir Nabokov's novel Lolita. |
"Lolita" is a funk and pop song that lasts two minutes and forty-nine seconds [REF]. | Media commentators have discussed the connection between the single and Vladimir Nabokov's novel Lolita. |
"Lolita" has received mostly positive reviews from music critics, with MTV's Brad Stern including it in his list of 5 Must-Hear Pop Songs of the Week for January 22, 2013. | Following its release, "Lolita" was a minor success in the United States. |
"Lolita" has received mostly positive reviews from music critics, with MTV's Brad Stern including it in his list of 5 Must-Hear Pop Songs of the Week for January 22, 2013. | Following its release, "Lolita" was a minor success in the United States. |
A lyric video was uploaded to LaBelle's Vevo account on February 11, 2013 [REF]. | LaBelle first performed "Lolita" as a part of a set for BET's Music Matters, which was held on the weekend of the 55th Annual Grammy Awards [REF]. |
♠ There had also been an Australian television production in 1965. | ♠ In English, the film is virtually unknown, but its score, by Prokofiev, is famous within classical music [REF]. |
The structuralist movement in French philosophy was highly influenced by the Swiss thinker Ferdinand de Saussure (1857-1913). | Jacques Lacan (1901-1981) was specifically interested in the philosophy of psychoanalysis. |
The structuralist movement in French philosophy was highly influenced by the Swiss thinker Ferdinand de Saussure (1857-1913). | Jacques Lacan (1901-1981) was specifically interested in the philosophy of psychoanalysis. |
Heidgger and Husserl's influence was felt, firstly, in the existential-phenomenology of Sartre and Merleau-Ponty. | Finally, Freud was most avidly championed by Jacques Lacan's "return to Freud". |