Victoria Alternatively you might - Mount Victoria

Mount Victoria can refer to one of a number of peaks named after Queen Victoria:

  • Mount Victoria, Auckland, New Zealand
  • Mount Victoria, Wellington, New Zealand
  • Mount Victoria, Burma, also known as Nat Ma Taung, in western Burma
  • Mount Victoria (Alberta) in Alberta, Canada
  • Mount Victoria, Papua New Guinea in the Owen Stanley Ranges, Papua New Guinea
  • Mount Victoria was the name of what is now known as Mount Tomanivi in Fiji

Mount Victoria can also refer to the township of:

  • Mount Victoria, New South Wales, Australia

Academy of Young Scientists - Shishu Academy

Shishu Academy (Bangla: শিশু একাডেমী ) is the national academy for Children in Bangladesh. It was established in 1976 for promoting cultural development of children, and nurturing their talents.


See also


External links

  • Article on Shishu Academy], Banglapedia

By Saint Thomas Aquinas - Elijah Ben Joseph Chabillo

Elijah Ben Joseph Chabillo was a Spanish philosopher who lived in Monzon, Aragon, in the second half of the fifteenth century.

He was an admirer of the Christian scholastics, and studied Latin in order to translate into Hebrew some of their works, especially those dealing with psychology. The works which he partly translated and partly adapted (some bearing his name; others, though anonymous, known to be his) were the following

  • By Thomas Aquinas

    • Quæstiones Disputatæ, Quæstio de Anima
    • De Animæ Facultatibus (Hebrew title Ma’amar be-Kochot ha-Nefesh), published by Adolf Jellinek in Philosophie und Kabbala, Leipzig, 1854
    • De Universalibus
    • She’elot Ma’amar be-Nimtza ube-Mahut questions on Thomas Aquinas’ treatise on being and quality
  • By Occam
    • Three treatises of Summa Totius Logices to which he added an appendix
    • Quæstiones Philosophicæ
  • By Aristotle
    • De Causa thirty-two premises, with their explanations.

According to Jellinek and Moritz Steinschneider, Chabillo also translated, anonymously, Vincent of Beauvais’ De Universalibus under the title Ma’amar Nikbad bi-Kelal.


References

Southern - Southern League

Southern League may mean:

  • Southern League (baseball) for minor league baseball in the United States
  • Southern Football League for the semi-professional football league in England currently known as the British Gas Business Football League
  • Southern League (ice hockey), a former top-flight ice hockey league in southern England
  • Southern Leagues, the various tournaments for association football, cricket, field hockey, on the South Island of New Zealand
  • League of the South, the U.S. Southern nationalist organization, formerly known as the Southern League
  • Southern League Ausonia, an Italian political party based in Campania

Slipway. - North Wirral Coastal Park

The North Wirral Coastal Park, on the Wirral Peninsula, England is a coastal park including public open space, common land, natural foreshore and sand-dunes. The park lies between Dove Point in Meols, and the Kings Parade in New Brighton, and was created in 1986.

The park is managed by the Metropolitan Borough of Wirral ranger service from their offices in the Leasowe Lighthouse, and occupies some 400 acres (988 hectares) of land in a four mile stretch along the coastline making it Wirral’s largest park.

Although the park in its current form is relatively new, the history of the site goes back at least 5000 years to when the area, including the foreshore, was heavily forested. The remains of this coastal forestland are known as the ’submerged forest’ and can be seen at Dove Point, Meols, between the slipway and the groyneWirral Borough Council. “North Wirral Coastal Park”, Wirral Borough Council Website, n.d., Accessed June 13 2007.


Leisure pursuits


Wildlife

The park, which has been granted triple-SI (Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI)) status, is one of the country’s premier sites for wading bird populations. Among the species which can be found in the area are: Oystercatcher, Redshank, Dunlin, Sanderling, Turnstone, Lapwing, Bar-tailed Godwit and Curlew. The large population of fish, worms and crustaceans in the foreshore region sustains the bird wildlife. Among these are to be found: Shore crabs, Shrimps, Prawns, Lugworm, Ragworm, Cockles, Telling, Peppery furrow shell, gobies, blennies, sole, plaice, flounder, dab and pipefish.


Sports

The park is a popular site for sailing, angling, swimming, cycling, picnicking, walking, jogging, ball games, bird watching and horse riding.


References


External links

  • Wirral Metropolitan Borough Council: North Wirral Coastal Park
  • Wirral Metropolitan Borough Council: Leasowe Lighthouse

Of Young - Davidson Young Scholars program

The Davidson Young Scholars program assists profoundly intelligent Young Scholars in locating a challenging learning environment. The Young Scholars are children who need a learning environment fit to them. The YS program fits those needs and also provides a community of peers to them. The Young Scholars program also aids the families of the profoundly gifted and talented with consultations and financial support to help Young Scholars develop their talents in hopes that these gifts will make a positive difference in the global community. In addition, the Davidson Institute holds annual gatherings and seminars across the country for the Young Scholars to support relationships between families and also between the parents and children themselves.

It is a part of the Davidson Institute for Talent Development.

And data - AGML

Annotated Gel Markup Language, or AGML, is a language that has been proposed to markup data obtained by 2-D gel electrophoresis based on the XML language. The eXtensible Markup Language (XML) is particularly well suited to represent biological data and methods and is the choice to do this in most areas. As such XML syntax notation was used to describe data acquired from 2-D gel electrophoresis and mass spectrometry. The goal of AGML is to enable proteomics research to move into the browsing mode of searching through existing databases.

The AGML Central project is part of a wider XML data model to represent 2-D gel electrophoresis data. In this regard the aim is to faithfully represent both the data/results and experimental protocols/methods used in producing the data. The major advantage in this comes from the fact that when analysing 2-D gel electrophoresis data stored in AGML (an XML data structure), all the pertinent information can be found in one data file. AGML 2.0 data structure can store data, both gel and mass spectrometry, and experimental methods through the use of MI2DG.


External links

  • http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2105/5/9
  • http://www.agml.org
  • http://bioinformatics.musc.edu/agml2

Are two places - List of Registered Historic Places in Schuyler County, New York

List of Registered Historic Places in Schuyler County, New York:

See also: List of Registered Historic Places in New York
This list is complete as of the Recent Listings dated June 29, 2007


Schuyler County

  • Catherine

  • Hector
    • First Presbyterian Church of Hector
  • Logan
    • Logan Methodist Church
  • Montour
    • Lee School
  • Montour Falls
    • Brick Tavern Stand
    • Montour Falls Historic District
  • Tyrone
    • Lamoka
  • Watkins Glen
    • A. F. Chapman House
    • First Baptist Church of Watkins Glen
    • Schuyler County Courthouse Complex
    • US Post Office-Watkins Glen
    • Watkins Glen Grand Prix Course, 1948-1952
  • Weston
    • Weston Schoolhouse

The school: King - Charles King

Charles King may refer to:

  • Charles King (composer) - An English composer and musician of the 17th and 18th century.
  • Charles Bird King (1785-1862) - a United States portrait painter
  • Charles King (1844-1933) - A United States general and author
  • Charles D. B. King (1875-1961) - President of Liberia
  • Charles King (1895-1957) - An American film actor
  • Charles King (vaudevillian) (1889-1941) - An American vaudevillian actor
  • Charles King (1947-) (author/editor of non-fiction articles and books on shipwrecks and treasure, pen name of Dr. E. Lee Spence)
  • Charles King (1967-) - Georgetown University professor and author
  • Charles King (athlete) - an American athlete who won an Olympic silver medal
  • Charlie King (politician) - Attorney and New York politician
  • Charles King (social entrepreneur) - Founder of Housing works and Social Enterprise Alliance
  • Charles King (TV executive) - The founder of King World Productions.
  • Charles King (academic) - past president of Columbia University

A goalie prevents - Javier Bruses

Javier Bruses Manresa (born May 11, 1979 in Barcelona, Catalonia) is a field hockey goalkeeper from Spain, who was a member of the Men’s National Team that finished fourth at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece. The goalie of Real Club de Polo won the title at the Champions Trophy tournament in Lahore (2004), and at the 2005 Men’s Hockey European Nations Cup in Leipzig.


External link

  • Profile on Athens 2004-website

Save Säve Flygplats - Save Manapouri Campaign

The Save Manapouri Campaign was a successful environmental campaign fought in the 1960s and early 1970s to save Lake Manapouri from flooding for to the construction of a hydroelectric dam.

The original plans for Manapouri Power Station development in the 1960s involved raising Lake Manapouri by up to 30 metres, and merging Lakes Manapouri and Te Anau. The Save Manapouri Campaign became an early New Zealand manifestation of the international awareness of the environment that came with the prosperity of the 1960s.

“At its simplest, the issue was about whether Lake Manapouri should be raised by as much as 30 metres. But there was much more at stake than that. There were strong economic and engineering arguments opposing lake raising, and there were also legal and democratic issues underlying the whole debate. What captured the public’s imagination across the country was the prospect that a lake as beautiful as Manapouri could be interfered with, despoiled and debased”, wrote Neville Peat.

In 1970, 264,907 New Zealanders, almost 10% of the population, signed the Save Manapouri petition. In the 1972 general election Manapouri was a significant issue, and the Labour Government of Norman Kirk was elected on a platform that included a strong endorsement of the Save Manapouri ideals.

In 1973 Kirk honoured his party’s election pledge. He created an independent body, the Guardians of Lake Manapouri, Monowai, and Te Anau to oversee management of the lake levels, which they do to this day. The original six Guardians were all prominent leaders of the Save Manapouri Campaign. That same year, John Hanlon recorded and released a single, “Damn the Dam”, in support of the campaign.

In 1991 the Save Manapouri Campaign was revived with many of the same leaders, and renamed Power For Our Future. The campaign opposed selling off the power station, to ensure that Comalco did not revive its plans to raise Lake Manapouri’s waters. The campaign was successful: the government announced that Manapouri would not be sold to Comalco.


The original six Guardians

  • Ronald McLean, Wilson Campbell, Alan Mark, Les Hutchins, John Moore, and Jim McFarlane


Further reading

Birmingham - Halcyon Gallery

There are four Halcyon Galleries in the United Kingdom, the original gallery is in Birmingham whilst the other three supplementary galleries are in London.

The Halcyon Gallery was established to cater for art lovers in the Midlands by Paul Green and his parents Lionel and Raena Green in 1982. It was originally situated in Birmingham New Street railway station where it sold contemporary artworks by upcoming sculptors and painters. In 1997 the Halcyon Gallery moved to the prestigious ICC in Birmingham’s Convention Quarter. Other galleries also opened in London at the departments stores Selfridges and Harrods and in Bruton Street, Mayfair.

The Halcyon Gallery has a reputation for supporting new talents. The gallery has partnerships with Christie’s and other world famous art auctioneers.


External links

  • Halcyon Gallery Website

Säve Flygplats - Tabloid Magazine

Tabloid Magazine” is the third single lifted from The Living End’s gold and Top 5 album, Modern Artillery.It features a live version of the classic “All Torn Down”, plus acoustic versions of “Who’s Gonna Save Us” and “What Would You Do” and a previously unreleased track.

On the title track frontman Chris Cheney writes, “I have a weak spot for these mags. I am fascinated at the social preoccupation with reading about other people’s lives. They lure you in and become difficult to put down. I think it has a new wave kinda edge”.


Track listing

  1. “Tabloid Magazine”
  2. “No Reaction” (Demo)
  3. “All Torn Down” (Live)
  4. “What Would You Do?” (Acoustic)
  5. “Who’s Gonna Save Us?” (Acoustic)

France Save - Fils de France

Fils de France (French for “Son of France”) was the title given to the sons of the kings and dauphins of France. Daughters used the title Fille de France (”Daughter of France”). Both males and females enjoyed the style of Royal Highness. Although the children of French monarchs are often referred to as prince or princess in English, those titles were never officially used in France during the monarchy.


See also

  • Petit-Fils de France
  • Monsieur
  • Madame Royale
  • Prince of the blood
  • First Prince of the Blood

Säve Flygplats former - Soviet propaganda during World War II

Soviet propaganda during the Second World War was launched mainly after the German invasion of the USSR. Important organs of the press were the newspapers “The Red Star” (”Krasnaya Zvezda“) and “The Truth” (”Pravda“). It forms a specific chapter in the history of Soviet propaganda (agitprop).


Posters


See

also

  • Agitprop
  • Soviet propaganda during World War II
  • American propaganda during World War II
  • Nazi propaganda

Dylan - Abandoned Love

Abandoned Love” is a song written by Bob Dylan, recorded in 1975 but not released until 1985, on his compilation album Biograph. It was originally recorded for inclusion on his 1976 album Desire, but was dropped in favor of Joey. Abandoned Love was written during Dylan’s breakup with his then-wife Sara Lownds. Only one live performance of this song is known of, at the “Other End” on Bleecker Street in Greenwich Village on July 3 1975, during a show with Ramblin’ Jack Elliott. Paul Cable, in his book Bob Dylan: His Unreleased Recordings (New York: Schirmer Books, 1980), described this live version of the song as “Beautiful, eerie, easily as good as Blonde on Blonde lyrics and a tune that is unusual and perfect.”


Covers

  • Everly Brothers: Born Yesterday (1985); Wings of a Nightingale (1998)
  • Sean Keane: All Heart No Roses (1993)
  • George Harrison: Artifacts I - The Definitive Collection of Beatles Rarities 1969-1994 (1995)
  • Chuck Prophet: Outlaw Blues, Volume 2 (1995)
  • Michel Montecrossa: Born in Time (2000)
  • Barb Jungr: Every Grain of Sand: Barb Jungr Sings Bob Dylan (2002)
  • David Michael Moore: (2006)


External links

  • Lyrics

For slipway. - Bugøynes

(in Finnish Pykeija) is a fishing community in the very most northeastern tip of Norway, in the province of Finnmark, situated by the Varanger Fjord (Bøkfjorden in Norwegian) which is a vast bay off the Barents Sea (a part of the Arctic Ocean), near the border with Russia. The village is situated some 500 km (300 miles) north of the Arctic Circle, with nearly 230 inhabitants.


History

Before the road was built to Bugøynes in 1962, the main link between Bugøynes and the rest of the world was by sea. The most-visited town in those days was Vadsø, on the opposite side of the Varanger Fjord. Although Kirkenes, on the south side of the fjord, was the local administrative centre for Bugøynes, it did not become the centre for shopping until people could reach it by car.

Now most trade in this part of Finnmark takes place in Kirkenes. Workplaces in Bugøynes include fishing, salmon and other fish processing, the processing of reindeer meat and game, as well as slipway and machine workshops.

At Gandvika, 23 km from the village, is a salmon farm. The village has two grocery shops, a post-office and a doctor’s surgery (every other Thursday). There are also a children’s nursery, a school, a library, a dentist and a priest.


Sights

• The Pleym Pier. Restored piers dating back to the 19th century with a museum exhibition showing old coastal culture. Open on request.

• The Lassi House, culture house dating back to the 1850s.

Ranvika Bird Sanctuary. The largest bird sanctuary in Sør-Varanger is situated ca 90 minutes’ walk from Bugøynes. The footpath to the sanctuary is well marked.

• The King Crab. At Bugøynes, attempts are being made at fishing and farming the Russian king crab, which can weigh up to 12 kg. Bugøynes is one of the few places in Norway, where fishermen have been granted licences to fish this protected species of crustacean.

See: Quinquae - Roman numerals

Roman numerals is a numeral system originating in ancient Rome, adapted from Etruscan numerals. The system used in classical antiquity was slightly modified in the Middle Ages to produce the system we use today. It is based on certain letters which are given values as numerals.

Roman numerals are commonly used today in numbered lists (in outline format), clockfaces, pages preceding the main body of a book, chord triads in music analysis, the numbering of movie publication dates, successive political leaders or children with identical names, and the numbering of some sport events, such as the Olympic Games or the Super Bowl.

For arithmetics involving Roman numerals, see Roman arithmetic and Roman abacus.


Symbols

There are seven basic Roman numerals.

Symbol Value
I 1 (one) ()
V 5 (five) ()
X 10 (ten) ()
L 50 (fifty) ()
C 100 (one hundred) ()
D 500 (five hundred) ()
M 1000 (one thousand) ()

Multiple symbols may be combined to produce numbers in between these values, subject to certain rules on repetition. In cases where it may be shorter, it is sometimes allowable to place a smaller, subtractive, symbol before a larger value, so that, for example, one may write IV or iv for four, rather than iiii. Again, for the numbers not assigned a specific symbol, the above given symbols are combined:

  • II or ii for two
  • III or iii for three. The final character is sometimes “j” instead of “i”, often in medical prescriptions.
  • IV, iv, IIII, or iiii for four
  • VI or vi for six
  • VII or vii for seven
  • VIII or viii for eight
  • IX or ix for nine
  • XXXII or xxxii for thirty two
  • XLV or xlv for forty five

For large numbers (4000 and above), a bar is placed above a base numeral to indicate multiplication by 1000:

  • for five thousand
  • for ten thousand
  • for fifty thousand
  • for one hundred thousand
  • for five hundred thousand
  • for one million

For very large numbers, there is no standard format, although sometimes a double bar or underline is used to indicate multiplication by 1,000,000. That means an underlined X (X) is ten million.


Origins

Although the Roman numerals are now written with letters of the Roman alphabet, they were originally separate symbols. The Etruscans, for example, used I Λ X 8 ⊕ for I V X L C M.

They appear to derive from notches on tally sticks, such as those used by Italian and Dalmatian shepherds into the 19th century. Thus, the I descends from a notch scored across the stick. Every fifth notch was double cut (i.e. , , , , etc.), and every tenth was cross cut (X), much like European tally marks today. This produced a positional system: Eight on a counting stick was eight tallies, IIIIΛIII, but this could be abbreviated ΛIII (or VIII), as the existence of a Λ implies four prior notches. Likewise, number four on the stick was the I-notch that could be felt just before the cut of the V, so it could be written as either IIII or IV. Thus the system was neither additive nor subtractive in its conception, but ordinal. When the tallies were later transferred to writing, the marks were easily identified with the existing Roman letters I, V, X.

(A folk etymology has it that the V represented a hand, and that the X was made by placing two Vs on top of each other, one inverted.)

The tenth V or X along the stick received an extra stroke. Thus 50 was written variously as N, И, K, Ψ, , etc., but perhaps most often as a chicken-track shape like a superimposed V and I - . This had flattened to (an inverted T) by the time of Augustus, and soon thereafter became identified with the graphically similar letter L. Likewise, 100 was variously Ж, , , H, or as any of the symbols for 50 above plus an extra stroke. The form Ж (that is, a superimposed X and I) came to predominate, was written variously as >I< or , was then shortened to or C, with C finally winning out because, as a letter, it stood for (Latin for “hundred”).

The hundredth V or X was marked with a box or circle. Thus 500 was like a superposed on a or (that is, like a Þ with a cross bar), becoming a struck-through D or a Ð by the time of Augustus, under the graphic influence of the letter D. It was later identified the letter D, perhaps as an abbreviation of “half-thousand”. Meanwhile, 1000 was a circled X: , , ⊕, and by Augustinian times was partially identified with the Greek letter Φ. It then evolved along several independent routes. Some variants, such as Ψ and CD (more accurately a reversed D adjacent to a regular D), were historical dead ends (although one folk etymology later identified D for 500 as half of Φ for 1000 because of this CD variant), while two variants of survive to this day. One, , led to the convention of using parentheses to indicate multiplication by 1000 (later extended to double parentheses as in , , etc.); in the other, became and , eventually changing to M under the influence of the word (”thousand”).


Zero

In general, the number zero did not have its own Roman numeral, but a primitive form (nulla) was known by medieval computists (responsible for calculating the date of Easter). They included zero (via the Latin word meaning “none”) as one of nineteen epacts, or the age of the moon on March 22. The first three epacts were nullae, xi, and xxii (written in minuscule or lower case). The first known computist to use zero was Dionysius Exiguus in 525. Only one instance of a Roman numeral for zero is known. About 725, Bede or one of his colleagues used the letter N, the initial of nullae, in a table of epacts, all written in Roman numerals.

A notation for the value zero is quite distinct from the role of the digit zero in a positional notation system. The lack of a zero digit may have prevented Roman numerals from being developed into a positional notation, and led to their gradual replacement by Hindu-Arabic numerals in the early second millennium. On the other hand, it may have been the lack of positional notation that prevented the Romans from developing a zero.


Fractions

Even though the Romans used a decimal system for whole numbers, reflecting Latin, they used a duodecimal system for fractions, because the divisibility of twelve (12 = 3×4) makes it easier to handle the common fractions of 1/3 and 1/4 than in a system based on ten (10 = 2×5). On coins, many of which had values that were duodecimal fractions of the unit , they used a notational system similar to that of whole numbers, but based on twelfths and one halves rather than units and fives. A dot • indicated an (one twelfth, the source of the English words inch and ounce), and dots were added together up to five twelfths. Then one half (six twelfths) was notated using the letter S for (”half”). Dots were added to S for the fractions from seven to eleven twelfths, just as tallies were added to V for whole numbers from six to nine. Each of these fractions had its own name, which was also the name used for the corresponding coin:

Fraction Roman Numeral Name
1/12
2/12 = 1/6 ••
3/12 = 1/4 •••
4/12 = 1/3 ••••
5/12 •••••
6/12 = 1/2 S
7/12 S•
8/12 = 2/3 S••
9/12 = 3/4 S••• or
10/12 = 5/6 S•••• or
11/12 S•••••
12/12 = 1 I

The names mean “ounce”, “sixth”, “quarter”, “third”, “five-ounce” (quinquae unciae > quincunx), “half”, “seven-ounce” (septem unciae > septunx), “twice” (twice a third), “less a quarter” (de-quadrans > dodrans) or “ninth ounce” (nona uncia > nonuncium), “less a sixth” (de-sextans > dextans) or “ten ounces” (decem unciae > decunx), “less an ounce” (de-uncia > deunx), and “unit”. The arrangement of the dots was variable and not necessarily linear. Five dots arranged like :·: (as on dice faces ) are known as a quincunx from the name of the Roman fraction/coin. The Latin words sextans and quadrans are the source of the English words sextant and quadrant.

Other Roman fractions include:

  • 1/8 (from sesqui- + uncia, i.e. 1 uncias), represented by a sequence of the symbols for the semuncia and the uncia.
  • 1/24 (from semi- + uncia, i.e. of an uncia), represented by several variant glyphs deriving from the shape of Greek letter sigma , one variant resembling the pound sign without the horizontal line(s) and another resembling Cyrillic letter .
  • 1/36 (”two sextulas”) or , represented by a sequence of two reversed S.
  • 1/48 , represented by a reversed C.
  • 1/72 (1/6 of an uncia), represented by a reversed S.
  • 1/144 (”half a sextula”), represented by a reversed S crossed by a horizontal line.
  • 1/288 , represented by a symbol resembling Cyrillic letter .
  • 1/1728 , represented by a symbol resembling closing guillemets ».


IIII vs. IV

The notation of Roman numerals has varied through the centuries. Originally, it was common to use IIII to represent four, because IV represented the Roman god Jupiter, whose Latin name, IVPITER, begins with IV. The subtractive notation (which uses IV instead of IIII) has become universally used only in modern times. For example, Forme of Cury, a manuscript from 1390, uses IX for nine, but IIII for four. Another document in the same manuscript, from 1381, uses IV and IX. A third document in the same manuscript uses IIII, IV, and IX. Constructions such as IIIII for five, IIX for eight or VV for 10 have also been discovered. Subtractive notation arose from regular Latin usage: the number 18 was or “two from twenty”; the number 19 was or “one from twenty”. The use of subtractive notation increased the complexity of performing Roman arithmetic, without conveying the benefits of a full positional notation system.

Likewise, on some buildings it is possible to see MDCCCCX, for example, representing 1910 instead of MCMX – notably Admiralty Arch in London. The Leader Building in Cleveland, Ohio, at the corner of Superior Avenue and E.6th Street, is marked MDCCCCXII, representing 1912. Another notable example is on Harvard Medical School’s Gordon Hall, which reads MDCCCCIIII for 1904.

Another likely tale is that the low literacy rate made it difficult for some to do subtraction, where the IIII notation could simply be counted.


Calendars and clocks

Clock faces that are labeled using Roman numerals conventionally show IIII for four o’clock and IX for nine o’clock, using the subtractive principle in one case and not the other. There are many suggested explanations for this, several of which may be true:

  • The four-character form IIII creates a visual symmetry with the VIII on the other side, which IV would not.
  • With IIII, the number of symbols on the clock totals twenty I’s, four V’s, and four X’s, so clock makers need only a single mold with a V, five I’s, and an X in order to make the correct number of numerals for their clocks: VIIIIIX. This is cast four times for each clock and the twelve required numerals are separated:
    • V IIII IX
    • VI II IIX
    • VII III X
    • VIII I IX
The IIX and one of the IX’s are rotated 180° to form XI and XII. The alternative with IV uses seventeen I’s, five V’s, and four X’s, possibly requiring the clock maker to have several different molds.
  • IIII was the preferred way for the ancient Romans to write four, since they to a large extent avoided subtraction.
  • As noted above, it has been suggested that since IV is the first two letters of IVPITER (Jupiter), the main god of the Romans, it was not appropriate to use.
  • Only the I symbol would be seen in the first four hours of the clock, the V symbol would only appear in the next four hours, and the X symbol only in the last four hours. This would add to the clock’s radial symmetry.
  • IV is difficult to read upside down and on an angle, particularly at that location on the clock.
  • Louis XIV, king of France, preferred IIII over IV, ordered his clockmakers to produce clocks with IIII and not IV, and thus it has remained.W.I. Milham, Time & Timekeepers (New York: Macmillan, 1947) p. 196


Chemistry

As it relates to the nomenclature of inorganic compounds, only IV should be used. For example MnO2 should be named manganese (IV) oxide; manganese (IIII) oxide is unacceptable.


Modern usage

The Roman number system is generally regarded as obsolete in modern usage, but is still seen in certain institutions to this day.
Below are a few examples of its current use.

  • The year and/or credits given at the end of a television show or film.
  • Some faces of clocks and timepieces show hours in Roman numerals.
  • Names of monarchies are still displayed in Roman numerals, e.g. George VI.
  • Postmarks often display Roman numerals.
  • Books (particularly older ones) are dated in Roman numerals, and display preliminary pages in Roman numbers. Volume numbers on spines can also be in Roman numerals.

There are many other places as well.


XCIX vs. IC?

Rules regarding Roman numerals often state that a symbol representing 10x may not precede any symbol larger than 10x+1. For example, C cannot be preceded by I or V, only by X (or, of course, by a symbol representing a value equal to or larger than C). Thus, one should represent the number ninety-nine as XCIX, not as the “shortcut” IC. However, these rules are not universally followed.

This problem manifested in such questions as why 1990 was not written as MXM instead of the universal usage MCMXC, or why 1999 was not written simply IMM or MIM as opposed to the universal MCMXCIX.


Year in Roman numerals

In seventeenth century Europe, using Roman numerals for the year of publication for books was standard; there were many other places it was used as well. Publishers attempted to make the number easier to read by those more accustomed to Arabic positional numerals. On British title pages, there were often spaces between the groups of digits: M DCC LX I (relating to 1000 700 60 1 or 1761) is one example. This may have come from the French, who separated the groups of digits with periods, as: M.DCC.LXI. or M. DCC. LXI. Notice the period at the end of the sequence; many countries did this for Roman numerals in general, but not necessarily Britain. (Periods were also common on each side of numerals in running text, as in “commonet .iij. viros illos”.)

These practices faded from general use before the start of the twentieth century, though the cornerstones of major buildings still occasionally use them. Roman numerals are today still used on building faces for dates: 2007 can be represented as MMVII. They are also sometimes used in the credits of movies and television programs to denote the year of production, particularly programs made by the BBC and CBS.


Other modern usage

Roman numerals remained in common use until about the 14th century, when they were replaced by Arabic numerals (thought to have been introduced to Europe from al-Andalus, by way of Arab traders and arithmetic treatises, around the 11th century). The use of Roman numerals today is mostly restricted to ordinal numbers, such as volumes or chapters in a book or the numbers identifying monarchs or popes (eg. Elizabeth II, Benedict XVI, etc.).

Sometimes the numerals are written using lower-case letters (thus: i, ii, iii, iv, etc.), particularly if numbering paragraphs or sections within chapters, or for the pagination of the front matter of a book.

Undergraduate degrees at British universities are generally graded using I, IIi, IIii, III for first, upper second (often pronounced “two one”), lower second (often pronounced “two two”) and third class respectively.

Modern English usage also employs Roman numerals in many books (especially anthologies), movies (eg. Star Trek and Star Wars), sporting events (eg. the Olympic Games, the Super Bowl, and WWE’s WrestleMania), historic events (eg. World War I, World War II), and computer or videogames (eg. Final Fantasy, King’s Quest, Tales Of Symphonia). The common unifying theme seems to be stories or events that are episodic or annual in nature, with the use of classical numbering suggesting importance or timelessness.

Sports teams can be referred to as the number of players in the squad with roman numerals. In rugby union, the 1st XV of a particular club would be the 1st and best team the club has, likewise for the XIII in rugby league, and XI for football (soccer), field hockey and cricket.

In chemistry, Roman numerals were used to denote the group in the periodic table of the elements. But there was not international agreement as to whether the group of metals which dissolve in water should be called Group IA or IB, for example, so although references may use them, the international norm has recently switched to Arabic numerals.

In astronomy, the natural satellites or “moons” of the planets are traditionally designated by capital Roman numerals, at first by order from the center of the planet, as the four Galilean satellites of Jupiter are numbered, and later by order of discovery; e.g., Callisto was “Jupiter IV” or “J IV”. With recent discoveries—Jupiter currently has 63 known satellites—as well as computerization, this is somewhat disparaged for the minor worlds, at least in computerized listings.
Science fiction, and not astronomy per se, has adopted the use for numbering the planets around a star; e.g., Planet Earth is called “Sol III”.

In earthquake seismology, Roman numerals are used to designate degrees of the Mercalli intensity scale.

In music theory, while scale degrees are typically represented with Arabic numerals, often modified with a caret or circumflex, the triads that have these degrees as their roots are often identified by Roman numerals (as in chord symbols). See also diatonic functions. Upper-case Roman numerals indicate major triads while lower-case Roman numerals indicate minor triads, as the following chart illustrates. In the major mode the triad on the seventh scale degree, the leading tone triad, is diminished.

Roman numeral I ii iii IV V vi vii°
Scale degree
(major mode)
tonic supertonic mediant subdominant dominant submediant leading tone/subtonic

Roman numerals often appear in crossword puzzles. For example, the answer to the clue “half of MCIV” would be “DLII”, or the answer to the clue “Ovid’s 552″ would also be “DLII”.


Modern non-English-speaking usage

The above uses are customary for English-speaking countries. Although many of them are also maintained in other countries, those countries have additional uses for Roman numerals which are unknown in English-speaking regions.

The Catalan, the French, the Portuguese, the Polish, the Romanian, the Russian and the Spanish languages use capital Roman numerals to denote centuries. For example, XVIII refers to the eighteenth century, so as to avoid confusion between the 18th century and the 1800s. (The Italians usually take the opposite approach, basing names of centuries on the digits of the years; for example is the common Italian name for , the fifteenth century.) Some scholars in English-speaking countries have adopted the former method, among them Lyon Sprague de Camp.

In Poland, Russia, and in Spanish, Portuguese and Romanian languages, mixed Roman and Arabic numerals are used to record dates (usually on tombstones, but also elsewhere, such as in formal letters and official documents). Just as an old clock recorded the hour by Roman numerals while the minutes were measured in Arabic numerals, the month is written in Roman numerals while the day is in Arabic numerals: 14-VI-1789 is 14 June 1789. This is how dates are inscribed on the walls of the Kremlin, for example. This method has the advantage that days and months are not confused in rapid note-taking, and that any range of days or months can be expressed without confusion. For instance, V-VIII is May to August, while 1-V-31-VIII is May 1 to August 31.
Note, though, that Spanish journalists use another format with the month’s initial for certain dates even if it may be ambiguous: 11-M marks the bombing of trains in Madrid on 11 de marzo de 2004, not 11 de mayo.

In Eastern Europe, especially the Baltic nations, Roman numerals are used to represent the days of the week in hours-of-operation signs displayed in windows or on doors of businesses. Monday is represented by I, which is the initial day of the week. Sunday is represented by VII, which is the final day of the week. The hours of operation signs are tables composed of two columns where the left column is the day of the week in Roman numerals and the right column is a range of hours of operation from starting time to closing time. The following example hours-of-operation table would be for a business whose hours of operation are 9:30AM to 5:30PM on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays; 9:30AM to 7:00PM on Tuesdays and Fridays; and 9:30AM to 1:00PM on Saturdays; and which is closed on Sundays.

I 9:30–17:30
II 9:30–19:00
III 9:30–17:30
IV 9:30–17:30
V 9:30–19:00
VI 9:30–13:00
VII

Since the French use capital Roman numerals to refer to the quarters of the year (III is the third quarter), and this has become the norm in some European standards organisation, the mixed Roman–Arabic method of recording the date has switched to lowercase Roman numerals in many circles, as 4-viii-1961. (ISO has since specified that dates should be given in all Arabic numerals, in ISO 8601 formats.)

In geometry, Roman numerals are often used to show lines of equal length.

In Romania, Roman numerals are used for floor numbering. Likewise apartments in central Amsterdam are indicated as 138-III, with both an Arabic numeral (number of the block or house) and a Roman numeral (floor number). The apartment on the ground floor is indicated as .

In Poland, Roman numerals are used for ordinals in names of some institutions. In particular high schools (”" - 5th High School in Kraków), tax offices (”" - 2nd tax office in Gdańsk) and courts (”" - District Court, 1st Civil Division) - use Roman numerals. Institutions that use “” notation always use Arabic numerals. These include elementary (”") and middle schools (”").

Roman numerals are rarely used in Asia. The motion picture rating system in Hong Kong uses categories I, IIA, IIB, and III based on Roman numerals.


Alternate forms

In the Middle Ages, Latin writers used a horizontal line above a particular numeral to represent one thousand times that numeral, and additional vertical lines on both sides of the numeral to denote one hundred times the number, as in these examples:

  • for one thousand
  • for five thousand
  • || for one hundred thousand
  • || for five hundred thousand

The same overline was also used with a different meaning, to clarify that the characters were numerals. Sometimes both underline and overline were used, e. g. , and in certain font-faces, particularly Times New Roman, the capital letters when used without spaces simulates the appearance of the under/over bar, eg. MCMLXVII, which is often exaggerated when written by hand.

Sometimes 500, usually D, was written as followed by an apostrophus, resembling a backwards C (), while 1,000, usually M, was written as . This is believed to be a system of encasing numbers to denote thousands (imagine the Cs as parentheses). This system has its origins from Etruscan numeral usage. The D and M symbols to represent 500 and 1,000 were most likely derived from and , respectively.

An extra denoted 500, and multiple extra s are used to denote 5,000, 50,000, etc. For example:

Base number   CIƆ = 1,000 CCIƆƆ = 10,000 CCCIƆƆƆ = 100,000
1 extra Ɔ IƆ = 500 CIƆƆ = 1,500 CCIƆƆƆ = 10,500 CCCIƆƆƆƆ = 100,500
2 extra Ɔs IƆƆ = 5,000   CCIƆƆƆƆ = 15,000 CCCIƆƆƆƆƆ = 105,000
3 extra Ɔs IƆƆƆ = 50,000     CCCIƆƆƆƆƆƆ = 150,000

Sometimes was reduced to an lemniscate symbol () for denoting 1,000. John Wallis is often credited for introducing this symbol to represent infinity (), and one conjecture is that he based it on this usage, since 1,000 was hyperbolically used to represent very large numbers. Similarly, 5,000 () was reduced to ; and 10,000 () was reduced to

In medieval times, before the letter j emerged as a distinct letter, a series of letters i in Roman numerals was commonly ended with a flourish; hence they actually looked like ij, iij, iiij, etc. This proved useful in preventing fraud, as it was impossible, for example, to add another i to vij to get viij. This practice is now merely an antiquarian’s note; it is never used. (It did, however, lead to the Dutch diphthong IJ.)


Table of Roman numerals

The “modern” Roman numerals, post-Victorian era, are shown below:

Standard Alternate Arabic Notes
none 0 N was used at least once (by Bede about 725).
I 1
II 2
III 3
IV 4 IIII is still used on clock and card faces.
V 5 IIIII was used rarely in the Middle Ages.
VI 6
VII 7
VIII 8 IIX was used rarely in the Middle Ages.
IX 9
X 10 VV was used rarely in the Middle Ages.
XI 11
XII 12
XIII 13
XIV 14
XV 15
XVI 16
XVII 17
XVIII 18
XIX 19
XX 20
XXV 25
XXX 30
XL 40
L 50
LX 60
LXIX 69
LXX 70 The abbreviation for the Septuagint
LXXX 80
XC 90
XCIX 99 As opposed to the “shortcut” way IC seen above.
C 100 This is the origin of using the slang term “C-bill” or “C-note” for “$100 bill”.
CC 200
CCC 300
CD 400
D 500
DC 600
DCLXVI 666 Using every basic symbol but M once gives the beast number.
DCC 700
DCCC 800
CM 900
M 1000 MIX=1009
MCDXLIV 1444 Smallest pandigital number (each symbol is used)
MDCLXVI 1666 Largest efficient pandigital number (each symbol occurs exactly once)
MCMXLV 1945
MCMXCVII 1997
MCMXCIX 1999 Shortcuts like IMM and MIM disagree with the rule stated above
MM 2000
MMVII 2007
MMD 2500
MMM 3000
MMMM 4000 Not M
5000 I followed by two reversed C, an adapted Chalcidic sign
MDCLXVI 6666 This number uses every symbol up to once.
10000

An accurate way to write large numbers in Roman numerals is to handle first the thousands, then hundreds, then tens, then units.

Example: the number 1988.

One thousand is M, nine hundred is CM, eighty is LXXX, eight is VIII.

Put it together: MCMLXXXVIII.


Unicode

Unicode has a number of characters specifically designated as Roman numerals, as part of the Number Forms range from U+2160 to U+2183. For example, MCMLXXXVIII could alternatively be written as
. This range includes both upper- and lowercase numerals, as well as pre-combined glyphs for numbers up to 12 ( or XII), mainly intended for the clock faces for compatibility with large East-Asian character sets such as JIS X 0213 that provide these characters. The pre-combined glyphs should only be used to represent the individual numbers where the use of individual glyphs is not wanted, and not to replace compounded numbers. Additionally, glyphs exist for alternate forms of 1000, 5000, and 10000.

Table of Roman numerals in Unicode
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F
U+2160
U+2170
U+2180

The characters in the range U+2160–217F are present only for compatibility with other character set standards which provide these characters. For ordinary uses, the regular Latin letters are preferred. Displaying these characters requires a program that can handle Unicode and a font that contains appropriate glyphs for them.


Games

After the Renaissance, the Roman system could also be used to write chronograms. It was common to put in the first page of a book some phrase, so that when adding the I, V, X, L, C, D, M present in the phrase, the reader would obtain a number, usually the year of publication. The phrase was often (but not always) in Latin, as chronograms can be rendered in any language that utilises the Roman alphabet.


Mnemonic devices

There are several mnemonics that can be useful in remembering the Roman numeral system.

The following mnemonics recall the order of Roman numeral values above ten, with L being 50, C being 100, D being 500, and M being 1000.

  • Lucky Cows Drink Milk
  • Lucy Can’t Drink Milk
  • Lazy Cows Don’t Moo
  • Little Cats Drink Milk
  • Little Children Do Math
  • LCD Monitor

A longer mnemonic helps to recall the order of Roman numerals from large to small.

  • My Dear Cat Loves Xtra Vitamins Intensely


References


See also

  • Arabic numerals


External links

  • Online Converter for Decimal/Roman Numerals (JavaScript, GPL)
  • Web Based Converter - Decimal to Roman Numerals
  • Roman Numeral Conversion Exercises (Java)
  • Why do clocks with Roman numerals use “IIII” instead of “IV”?: FAQ #1
  • “Romance in Numbers” by Paul Niquette
  • Conversion algorithm and demonstration program (with source code)

A ship were scrapped - WAYS

WAYS may stand for:

  • World Academy of Young Scientists,
  • WAYS (AM), an AM radio station in Macon, Georgia.
  • WAYS-FM, an FM radio station in Macon, Georgia.

The term ways is also an alternative name for slipway. A ship undergoing construction in a shipyard is said to be on the ways. If a ship were scrapped there, she is said to be broken up in the ways.

Also an alternative name - Cellular checkpoint

  1. Redirect Cell cycle checkpoint 

This is a redirect from a title that is an alternative name, a pseudonym, a nick name or a synonym.

It leads to the title in accordance with the naming conventions for common names and can help writing.

For more information, follow the category link.

Slipway. A - British Shipbuilders

British Shipbuilders Corporation was a public corporation that owned and managed the UK shipbuilding industry from 1977 and through the 1980s.

The corporation was founded as a result of the Aircraft and Shipbuilding Industries Act 1977 which nationalised all major British shipbuilding companies. The same act nationalised the three large British aviation companies and grouped them in an analogous corporation, British Aerospace.

Harland & Wolff, the only shipbuilder based in Northern Ireland was a special political case and remained out with the control of the British Shipbuilders management, despite being in its ownership. British Shipbuilders was privatised in 1983 under the terms of the British Shipbuilders Act 1983. The various divisions that had survived under nationalised ownership were divested throughout the 1980s as the company wound up operations.

The British Shipbuilders Corporation continues to exist in statute DTI | Managing Government Assets and Liabilities in order to be accountable for any liabilities incurred during its operational history.


Assets subsumed by British Shipbuilders

  • Ailsa Shipbuilding Company, Troon (acquired in 1978, merged with Ferguson Shipbuilders to form Ferguson-Ailsa in 1981, assets transferred to Scott Lithgow)
  • Austin & Pickersgill, Sunderland
  • John Brown & Company, Clydebank
  • Cammell Laird and Company, Birkenhead
  • William Doxford and Sons, Pallion
  • Ferguson Shipbuilders, Port Glasgow (merged with Ailsa in 1981 to form Ferguson-Ailsa)
  • Falmouth Docks Company, Falmouth
  • Govan Shipbuilders, Govan
  • R & H Green & Silley Weir and London Graving Dock Company, London (as River Thames Ship Repairers, later renamed Blackwall Engineering)
  • Hall Russell & Company, Aberdeen
  • Harland and Wolff, Belfast (nationalised but outwith the management of British Shipbuilders)
  • Hawthorn Leslie and Company, Hebburn
  • Northwestern Ship Repairers and Shipbuilding Limited (NSL), Merseyside
  • John Readhead and Sons, South Shields
  • Scott Lithgow, Greenock
  • Robb Caledon Shipbuilders, Leith and Dundee
  • Smiths Dock Company, Middlesbrough
  • Swan Hunter Shipbuilders Limited , Wallsend (later renamed Swan Hunter)
  • Vickers Limited Shipbuilding Group, Barrow in Furness (later renamed Vickers Shipbuilding and Engineering Limited - VSEL)
  • Vosper Thornycroft, Woolston and Portsmouth
  • Wallsend Slipway and Engineering Company, Wallsend
  • Yarrow Shipbuilders (YSL), Scotstoun


Denationalisation

  • Cammell Laird - 1986 - as a subsidiary of VSEL, finished shipbuilding 1993, now part of NSL
  • Ferguson Ailsa - 1986 - split and sold, Ailsa to Perth Corporation as Ailsa Perth Shipbuilders and Ferguson to Appledore Shipbuilders as Appledore Ferguson
  • Govan Shipbuilders - 1988 - sold to Kværner as Kværner (Govan), to GEC-Marconi 1999 as part of Marconi Marine then to BAE Systems as part of BAE Systems Marine, now BAE Systems Naval Ships
  • Scott Lithgow - 1981 - individual operating companies dissolved, sold to Trafalgar House in 1984, closed 2003
  • Swan Hunter - ? - to receivership 1994, bought by Jaap Kroese
  • YSL - 1985 - sold to GEC-Marconi as Marconi Marine (YSL) then to BAE Systems as part of BAE Systems Marine, now BAE Systems Naval Ships
  • Vosper Thornycroft - 1985 - management buyout, now known as VT Group
  • VSEL - 1986 - with Cammell Laird as a subsidiary. Acquired by GEC-Marconi in 1995 as part of Marconi Marine, then to BAE Systems as part of BAE Systems Marine, now BAE Systems Submarines
  • Harland and Wolff - 1989


The evolution of British Shipbuilders


References

In southern - Santa Fe Pacific Corporation

The Santa Fe Pacific Corporation was formed as the Santa Fe Southern Pacific Corporation in 1984 by the merger of Santa Fe Industries, which owned the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway, with the Southern Pacific Company, which owned the Southern Pacific Railroad. After the Interstate Commerce Commission denied their plan to merge their railroads as the Southern Pacific Santa Fe Railroad the holding company name was shortened and the Southern Pacific Railroad sold.

The holding company retained all the non-rail interests of both predecessors (mainly real estate and natural resources, but Southern Pacific had also formed the telephone company known as Sprint, which was sold shortly before the merger). It was initially headquartered in Chicago and later in Schaumburg, Illinois, former Southern Pacific executive Robert Krebs succeeding Santa Fe head John J. Schmidt as CEO.

In September 1995 the company merged into Burlington Northern and the Santa Fe railroad became part of the Burlington Northern Santa Fe, with Krebs becoming head of the merged company until his retirement.

The Santa Fe Pacific Corporation was not related to the Santa Fe Pacific Railroad, which operated from 1897 to 1902.

Term ways is - Strategic essentialism

Strategic essentialism is a major concept in postcolonial theory. The term was coined by the Indian literary critic and theorist Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak. It refers to a strategy that nationalities, ethnic groups or minority groups can use to present themselves. While strong differences may exist between members of these groups, and amongst themselves they engage in continuous debates, it is sometimes advantageous for them to temporarily ‘essentialize’ themselves and bring forward their group identity in a simplified way to achieve certain goals.

Spivak has said since first introducing the term that she is unhappy with the ways it has been taken up and used. In interviews, she has disavowed the term, although she has not completely deserted the concept itself.

The idea also comes up regularly in queer theory and in feminist theory, specifically in the work of Luce Irigaray.


External links

  • Glossary of Key Terms in the Work of Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak by Michael Kinburn
  • Postcolonial Perspective on Intercultural Relations: A Japan-U.S. Example by William Kelly (see section 6.)

Game Salvation in - Gaming

Gaming may refer to participating in a:

  • Computer and video game; see also Video game culture, Gamer

    • Console game
    • Personal computer (PC) game
  • Gambling, wagering
  • Game of chance
  • Peace gaming
  • Role-playing game
    • Live action role-playing game
  • Tabletop game
    • Board game
    • Card game
      • Collectible card game
    • Dice game
  • Wargaming
    • Miniature wargaming
  • Gaming, Austria, a town in the district of Scheibbs in Lower Austria


See also

  • Game (disambiguation)

Undergoing construction in - Lopper Tunnel

The Lopper Tunnel is a motorroad tunnel in Switzerland, and forms part of the A8 motorroad.

The tunnel is 1,562 metres long and has two lanes (one in each direction). There is no central reservation.

It lies in central Switzerland.

At times, the link to the A2 motorway may be undergoing roadworks.


References

The World’s Longest Tunnels Page — Switzerland

Winning - Gemilang

Gemilang is an album released in 2004 by Jaclyn Victor, winner of Malaysian Idol. This album has eleven tracks, including Tunggu Sekejap, When I Fall in Love and Gemilang, the three songs performed by Jaclyn Victor which eventually led to her winning the inaugural competition.


Track listing

  1. “Gemilang”
  2. “Cuma Setia”
  3. “Padamu Permataku”
  4. “Di Bawah Pohon Asmara”
  5. “Tiada Lagi Indah”
  6. “Love”
  7. “Bring out the Best in Me”
  8. “Impian”
  9. “When I Fall in Love”
  10. “Tunggu Sekejap”
  11. “Gemilang” (live; bonus track)


History

“Gemilang”, the first track, was composed by Aubrey Suwito, a local composer who is responsible for many award-winning songs in Asia. After hitting the stores across Malaysia, Gemilang sold thousands of CDs, achieving gold status within days. This CD topped the charts of ERA.fm, HITZ.fm, and other local charts, surpassing those of many other famous local artists.

Television drama - Merseybeat (TV series)

For the other uses see Mersey sound

Merseybeat is the name of a BBC television drama filmed in Widnes about police officers on Merseyside, starring Leslie Ash, Joanna Taylor, John McArdle, Haydn Gwynne, Josie D’Arby and Michelle Holmes.


External links

  • Merseybeat fansite

Of God’s existence - Philosophical sin

The existence of philosophical sin was a debate waged in the Roman Catholic Church in the late seventeenth century. The idea of a “philosophic sin,” as opposed to “theological sin” was advocated by those who would construct a moral system independent of God. Philosophical sin is a morally bad act which violates the natural order of reason, not the divine law. Theological sin is a transgression of the eternal law. Those who are of atheistic tendencies and contend for this distinction, either deny the existence of God or maintain that He exercises no providence in regard to human acts. This position is destructive of sin in the theological sense, as God and His law, reward and punishment, are done away with. Those who admit the existence of God, His law, human liberty and responsibility, and still contend for a distinction between philosophical and theological sin, maintain that in the present order of God’s providence there are morally bad acts, which, while violating the order of reason, are not offensive to God, and they base their contention on this that the sinner can be ignorant of the existence of God, or not actually think of Him and His law when he acts. The contention is that without the knowledge of God or consideration of Him, it is impossible to offend Him.

This doctrine of philosophical sin was censured as scandalous, temerarious, and erroneous by Pope Alexander VIII in 1690 in his condemnation of the following proposition: “Philosophical or moral sin is a human act not in agreement with rational nature and right reason, theological and mortal sin is a free transgression of the Divine law. However grievous it may be, philosophical sin in one who is either ignorant of God or does not actually think of God, is indeed a grievous sin, but not an offense to God, nor a mortal sin dissolving friendship with God, nor worthy of eternal punishment.” The Church maintains the contrary view that sin can be offensive to God even if the sinner either does not know God or does not consider Him while sinning.

River Africa - Liesbeek River

The Liesbeek River (also spelt Liesbeeck) is a river in Cape Town in South Africa. It is named after a small river in Holland. The first “free burghers” of the Dutch East India Company were granted land to farm along the river in 1657, shortly after the first Dutch settlers arrived in the Cape. The river was originally called the Amstel or Versse Rivier.

The river starts in mountain gorges above Kirstenbosch and runs through parts of the southern suburbs. It is canalised in parts, with a path known as the Liesbeek River Trail running alongside.

It joins the Black River to empty into Table Bay at Paarden Island (Island of horses).

The Liesbeeck is home to the Platanna, or African clawed frog, an amphibian that has been important in certain areas of medical research.


External links

  • Friends of the Liesbeek

Georgia. WAYS-FM an FM - Roswell Road

Roswell Road is the name of at least two roads leading to Roswell, Georgia:

  • in Fulton County, Atlanta’s Roswell Road through Buckhead and then Sandy Springs is Georgia 9 and U.S. 19 [1]
  • in Cobb County, Marietta’s Roswell Road (called Roswell Street west of U.S. 41 to town square) is Georgia 120

Station in - Midland station

Midland station can refer to:


United Kingdom

  • Bedford Midland railway station
  • Derby Midland railway station
  • Leyton Midland Road railway station
  • Nottingham Midland railway station
  • Oxford Midland railway station
  • An alternative name for St Pancras Thameslink railway station
  • Sheffield Midland railway station


USA

  • Midland Station, Texas


Australia

King - Eversley, Ontario

Eversley is a hamlet located in King Township, Ontario, Canada. Although it has its own historical development, it has slowly been subsumed as a suburb of King City. It lies on King City’s north-eastern edge, just south of Snowball.

The community is part of Ward 1 in King Township.

The ways. If - All the Myriad Ways

All the Myriad Ways is a collection of short stories and essays by science fiction author Larry Niven, originally published in 1971. It contains:

  • “All the Myriad Ways”
  • “Passerby”
  • “For a Foggy Night”
  • “Wait it Out”
  • “The Jigsaw Man”
  • “Not Long Before the End”
  • “Unfinished Story #1″
  • “Unfinished Story #2″
  • “Man of Steel, Woman of Kleenex”
  • “Exercise in Speculation: The Theory and Practice of Teleportation
  • “The Theory and Practice of Time Travel”
  • “Inconstant Moon” (Made into an Outer Limits episode)
  • “What Can You Say About Chocolate Covered Manhole Covers?”
  • “Becalmed in Hell”

In the eponymous story contained within, Niven attempted to craft a response to stories featuring the many-worlds interpretation as a key plot point, taking the social implications of infinite realities to a depressing conclusion.

All the Myriad Ways features the essay Man of Steel, Woman of Kleenex, a humorous discussion of the difficulties Superman might encounter in trying to conceive a child with Lois Lane.

To: Saved album - The Ultimate Collection

The Ultimate Collection is a name given to a number of compilation music albums:

  • The Ultimate Collection (Katy Garbi album)
  • The Ultimate Collection (Madonna)
  • The Ultimate Collection (Barry White album)
  • Michael Jackson: The Ultimate Collection
  • The Ultimate Collection (The Who album)
  • The Ultimate Collection, by Bonnie Tyler
  • The Ultimate Collection (Hooker), by John Lee Hooker
  • The Ultimate Collection, by Ladysmith Black Mambazo
  • The Ultimate Collection (Patsy Cline album)
  • The Ultimate Collection (Chihiro Onitsuka album)
  • The Ultimate Collection, by Emerson, Lake & Palmer
  • The Ultimate Collection (The Kinks album)
  • The Ultimate Collection, by B. B. King
  • The Ultimate Collection (The Carpenters album)
  • The Ultimate Collection (Santana album)
  • The Ultimate Collection (Grace Jones album)

Team - Team Sonic

Team Sonic (not to be confused with the Sonic Team, completely unrelated), can refer to either of the following:

  • Team name in Sega’s video game Sonic Heroes.
  • Second-party video game developer at Sega which was also know as Sonic Co. and Sonic Software Planning, responsible for creating and developing the Shining Force series. Merged with Camelot Software Planning after finishing Shining Force III.

Team Sonic consists of Sonic,Knuckles and Tails.
Of Course the three usually are on the same side but they are selectable as a whole team in Sonic Heroes.

2004 film Saved - Jacob Pitts

Jacob Pitts is an American actor. His most notable performance was in the film EuroTrip as Cooper Harris. He appeared in the play Where Do We Live at the Vineyard Theatre in May 2004. He currently resides in Brooklyn, New York.
Jacob Pitts has also appeared in popular TV shows such as Law and Order in 2000 where he played John Telford, and Sex & The City also in 2000 where he played Sam Jones.

His look and demeanor often invites comparisons to actor David Spade.


Filmography

  • The Novice (2004)
  • A Separate Peace (2004)
  • EuroTrip (2004)
  • K-19: The Widowmaker (2002)
  • We Were the Mulvaneys (2002)
  • Pipe Dream (2002)
  • Tart (2001)
  • Eight (2001)
  • Zen and the Art of Landscaping (2001)


External links

Places called Five Ways. - List of Registered Historic Places in Nantucket County, Massachusetts

List of Registered Historic Places in Nantucket County, Massachusetts:

Contents: Counties in Massachusetts
Barnstable - Berkshire - Bristol - Dukes - Essex - Franklin - Hampden - Hampshire - Middlesex - Nantucket - Norfolk - Plymouth - Suffolk - Worcester
This list is complete as of the Recent Listings dated June 29, 2007


Nantucket

  • Brant Point Light Station — Brant Point (added October 28, 1987)
  • Jethro Coffin House — Sunset Hill (added December 24, 1968)
  • Nantucket Historic District (added December 13, 1966)
  • Nantucket Light (added 1982) - Structure - #82005272) Also known as Great Point Light; Located at Sandy Point, Nantucket Island, Nantucket
  • Sankaty Head Light — Sankaty Head (added November 15, 1987)

An alternative - Cell checkpoint

  1. Redirect Cell cycle checkpoint 

This is a redirect from a title that is an alternative name, a pseudonym, a nick name or a synonym.

It leads to the title in accordance with the naming conventions for common names and can help writing.

For more information, follow the category link.

A video game - Rygar

Rygar may be:

  • Rygar (video game), a video game produced by Tecmo
  • Rygar (NES game), the Nintendo Entertainment System adaptation of this game
  • Rygar: The Legendary Adventure, a PlayStation 2 game patterned after the earlier Rygar games
  • , working title for the upcoming game in the Rygar series for Wii.
  • “Rygar”, a monster in Monster Rancher, a Tecmo video game

Refer to: Saved - Reclaim

The word Reclaim or Reclaiming can refer to :

  • Reclaiming words by promoting them with positive connotations
  • Land reclamation
  • Water reclamation
  • REgional CLean Air Incentives Market (RECLAIM), an emissions trading program in California
  • To reclaim, rather than recycle, is use discarded material for its original intended purpose, eg reclaimed bricks are those saved from demolition, cleaned up and set aside or sold for reuse. Recycled bricks are those crushed and used as a secondary aggregate.

Aquinas see: - Cathedral of Saint Joseph the Workman

The Cathedral of St. Joseph the Workman is the mother church of the Diocese of La Crosse. Built of limestone, it has a tall clock tower which rises above the surrounding buildings in downtown La Crosse, Wisconsin.

The following Bishops of the Diocese of La Crosse are buried in the Blessed Sacrament Chapel:

  • Kilian Caspar Flasch
  • James Schwebach
  • Alexander Joseph McGavick, founder of Aquinas High School-La Crosse, Wisconsin
  • John Patrick Treacy, the builder of the new cathedral
  • Frederick William Freking
  • John Joseph Paul

Note:Bishop Michael Heiss is buried in Milwaukee and Auxiliary Bishop William Richard Griffin is buried in Chicago.


External links

  • The Cathedral of St. Joseph the Workman

Radio station - Talk Radio

Talk Radio can refer to:

  • Talk Radio UK, a former national UK talk station which is to be relaunched the new digital radio licence by the 4 Digital Group.
  • Talk radio, a call-in discussion format for radio broadcasts.
  • Talk Radio (play), a 1987 play written by Eric Bogosian.
  • Talk Radio (