Phelsuma - Anzeiger (Leipzig) 3: 280-? Boettger, O. (1881 a). Diagnoses reptilium et batrachiorum novorum ab ill. Dr. Christ Rutenberg in insula Madagascar collectorum. Zool. Anz. Leipzig 4: 46-48. Boettger, O. (1881 b). Reliquiae Rutenbergiana II: Reptilien und Amphibien. Abl. bremer naturwiss. Ver. Bremen 7: 177-190. Boettger, O. (1881 c) Die Reptilien und Amphibien von Madagaskar. Dritten Nachtrag Abh. senck. naturfors. Gesellschaft 12: 435-558. Boettger, O. (1893). Katalog der Reptilien Sammlung im Museum der Senckenbergischen naturforschenden gesellschaft in Frankfurt am Main. I. Teil Frankfurt a/M.Gesellschaft 12: 435-558. Boettger, O. (1894). Diagnose eines Geckos und Chameleons aus Südmadagascar. Zool. Anzeiger (Leipzig) 17: 137-140. Boettger, O. (1913). Reptilien und Amphibien von Madagaskar, den Inseln und dem Festland Ostafrikas (Sammlung Voeltzkow 1889-1895 und 1903-1905) in: Voeltzkow, A. 1908-1917, Reise in Ostafrika. Stuttgart 3: 269-375. Böhme, W..
USS Wasp (CV-18) - to obtain some knowledge of Spruance's ships, but American scout planes were unable to find Ozawa's force. Early the following morning, 19 June, aircraft from Mitscher's carriers headed for Guam to neutralize that island for the coming battle and in a series of dogfights, destroyed many Japanese land-based planes. During the morning, carriers from Ozawa's fleet launched four massive raids against their American counterparts, but all were thwarted almost completely. Nearly all of the Japanese warplanes were shot down while failing to sink a single American ship. They did manage to score a single bomb hit on South Dakota (BB-57), but that solitary success did not even put the battleship out of action. That day, Mitscher's planes did not find the Japanese ships, but American submarines succeeded in sending two enemy.
Distinguishing accents in English - at variations in the speech of native English speakers. Table of contents showTocToggle("show","hide") 1 Countries and Regions (in alphabetical order) 2 Australia 3 Canada 3.1 British Columbia 3.2 Cape Breton Island 3.3 Maritimes 3.4 Newfoundland 3.5 Ontario and Quebec 3.6 Prairies 4 England 4.7 Southern English 4.7.1 Home Counties 4.7.2 Cockney 4.7.3 Estuary English 4.7.4 Southeastern English 4.7.5 London 4.7.6 West Country (southwestern) English 4.7.7 East Anglian English 4.8 Northern and Midlands English 4.8.8 Midlands English 4.8.9 Northern English/Liverpool 4.8.10 Northern English/Yorkshire 4.8.11 Northern English/Lancashire 4.8.12 Northern English/Newcastle-upon-Tyne and the northeast 5 Ireland 6 Scotland 7 South Africa 8 United States of America 8.9 African American 8.10 Appalachia 8.11 Boston, Massachusetts 8.12 Brooklyn, New York 8.13 Maine and Downeast 8.14 Midwest 8.15 New England and East Coast 8.16 Old Northwest 8.17.
Dennison Berwick - Walk Along the Ganges") and travelled extensively in the Amazon and (journeys published as "Amazon" and "Savages: The Life and Killing of the Yanomami"). He is also editor of the "Canadian Retreat Guide", a guide to more than 140 monasteries, retreat centres etc. in Canada. He is currently working on a novel - three stories bound into one tale. He lives on a sailboat in South-East Asia. More information External Link http://www.2db.ca Selected bibliography: 2000 onwards work in progess, “The Rotting Man” 1998 "Canadian Retreat Guide", 2nd edition, published. 1996 "Directory of Retreats in Canada", 1st edition, published. 1992 "Savages, the Life & Killing of the Yanomami" published. 1990 "Amazon" published. 1989 to 1993 Lived in Lisbon, Portugal. 1986 to 1991 Travelled in the Amazon. 1986 "A Walk Along the Ganges".
List of WOSM members - sex (United States) or race (Israel). World Organization of the Scout Movement Members Country Membership (from 2000 or most recent available info) Name of Member Organization Year Current Scouting Organization joined WOSM Year Member Organization was founded Albania 1,730 Besa Skaut Albania 1999 1922 Algeria 11,120 Scouts Musulmans Algériens 1963 1939 Angola 13,777 Associação de Escuteros de Angola 1998 1998 Argentina 44,981 Scouts de Argentina 1922 1912 Armenia 2,256 Hayastani Azgayin Scautakan Sharjum Kazmakerputiun 1997 1912 Australia 98,084 Scouts Australia 1953 1908 Austria 13,785 Pfadfinder und Pfadfinderinnen Österreichs 1922 1912 Azerbaijan 1,414 Azerbaican Skaut Assosiasiyasi 2000 1997 the Bahamas 729 The Scout Association of the Bahamas 1974 1913 Bahrain 1,820 Boy Scouts of Bahrain 1970 1953 Bangladesh 908,435 Bangladesh Scouts 1974 19 Barbados 3,032 Barbados Boy Scouts Association 1969 1972 Belarus.
USS Pennsylvania (BB-38) - Island Sound. While at Yorktown, 11 August 1917, Pennsylvania manned the rail and rendered honors as Mayflower, with President of the United States Woodrow Wilson aboard, stood in and anchored. At 1215 President Wilson returned the call of Commander, Battle Force, aboard Pennsylvania and was given full honors. On 2 December 1918, Pennsylvania steamed to anchorage off Tompkinsville, New York. On 4 December, she got underway for Brest, France. At 1100, transport George Washington, flying the flag of the President of the United States, stood out with an escort of ten destroyers. Pennsylvania manned the rail and fired a salute of 21 guns. she took position ahead of George Washington as guide for the President's escort. Arriving in Brest 13 December, the crew manned the rail and cheered as George Washington.
USS Wyoming (BB-32) - 2 October and then ran a full-power trial as she headed south to Norfolk, Virginia, to resume exercises off the Virginia capes before sailing for Europe on 26 October. Reaching Valletta, Malta, on 8 November, the dreadnought battleship visited Naples, Italy, and Villefranche, France, during the course of her Mediterranean cruise. The battleship then left French waters astern on the last day of November and reached New York on 15 December. Wyoming then underwent voyage repairs at the New York Navy Yard remaining there through the end of 1913. Getting underway on 6 January 1914, the battleship reached Hampton Roads on the morrow and spent the next three days coaling to prepare for the annual fleet exercises in the warmer Caribbean climes. Wyoming exercised with the fleet out of Guantanamo Bay.
List of poets - (born 1964), (Red Dwarf, Captain Butler) Geoffrey Chaucer, (ca.1343-1400), Chanticleer the Fox (extract from Canterbury Tales) Henri Chopin, (born 1922), poet John Ciardi, Italian-American poet Franc Cimperman, (1852-1873), poet Josip Cimperman, (1847-1893), poet Amy Clampitt, poet John Clare, (1793-1864), poet George Elliott Clarke, poet, U of T professor Paul Claudel, (1868-1955), poet Matthias Claudius, poet Michelle Cliff, poet Lucille Clifton, poet Arthur Hugh Clough, (1819-1861), poet Jean Cocteau, (1889-1963), French writer Leonard Cohen, (born 1934), poet/singer Stan Cohen, poet Wanda Coleman, poet Hartley Coleridge, (1796-1849), poet Mary Elizabeth Coleridge, (1861-1907), poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge, (1772-1834), English poet Billy Collins (U.S. Poet Laureate) William Collins, (1721-1759), poet William Collins (poet), (1721-1759) William Congreve, (1670-1729), English poet Evan S. Jr. Connell, poet Leo Connellan (Clear Blue Lobster-Water Country trilogy) Henry Constable, (1562-1613), poet.
List of ships of the United States Navy - name is used for ships of different types at different times. Add rest of destroyers and subs, but will need to break up list by letters.) A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Alphabetical list of ships A USS Abraham Lincoln (SSBN-602, CVN-72) USS Adirondack (1860s, 1917, AGC-15) USS Agamenticus (1863) USS Admiralty Islands (CVE-99) USS Akron (ZRS-4) USS Alabama (1818, BB-8, BB-60, SSBN-731) USS Alaska (1860s, 1910s, CB-1, SSBN-732) USS Albany (1846, 1869, CL-23, CA-123, SSN-753) USS Albemarle (1863) USS Albuquerque (SSN-706) USS Alexander Hamilton (1871, WPG-34, SSBN-617) USS Alliance (1778, 1877) USS Altamaha (CVE-18) USS Amberjack (SS-219, SS-522) USS America (1782, 1905?, CV-66) USS Amphitrite (?, 1883) USS Amsterdam (CL-101).
Cape Cod - Cape Cod Cape Cod is an arm-shaped peninsula forming the easternmost portion of the state of Massachusetts, in the northeastern United States. It is coextensive with Barnstable County. Although Cape Cod was originally connected to the mainland, the first Cape Cod Canal, completed in 1914, effectively transformed Cape Cod into a large island. Table of contents showTocToggle("show","hide") 1 Geography 2 History 3 Tourism Geography Cape Cod consists of three portions: The "Upper Cape" is the section of Cape Cod closest to the mainland. This portion of the Cape includes the towns of Bourne, Falmouth, Mashpee, and Sandwich. While part of the city of Barnstable can be considered to be located on the Upper Cape, it is more commonly thought to be in the Mid-Cape area. Falmouth.
Cape Cod National Seashore - Cape Cod National Seashore The Cape Cod National Seashore (CCNS), created on August 7th, 1961 by President John F. Kennedy, encompasses 43,500 acres of ponds, woods and beachfront on Cape Cod, Massachusetts. The CCNS includes nearly 40 miles of seashore along the Atlantic-facing eastern edge of Cape Cod, in the towns of Provincetown, Truro, Wellfleet, Eastham, Orleans and Chatham. The CCNS is run by the National Park Service, with the dual goal of protecting precious, ecologically fragile land, while allowing the public to enjoy a unique resource. Notable sites encompassed by the CCNS include Marconi Station, site of the first two-way transatlantic radio transmission..
Cape Canaveral - Cape Canaveral Cape Canaveral is a strip of land near the center of the Atlantic coast of Florida. It is in a region known as the Space Coast, and is the site of the Kennedy Space Center, and the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. Most United States spacecraft are launched from either one of these sites. President John F. Kennedy was an enthusiastic backer of the space program, and after his assassination in 1963, Cape Canaveral was renamed Cape Kennedy. Although the name change was approved by the U.S. Board of Geographical Names of the Interior Department in 1964, it was not popular in Florida and in 1973 the state passed a law restoring the former 400-year-old name and the Board went along. The people of.
Cape Canaveral, Florida - Cape Canaveral, Florida Cape Canaveral is a city located in Brevard County, Florida. As of the 2000 census, the city had a total population of 8,829. The city of Cape Canaveral is located on the narrow strip of land on the Atlantic coast of Florida known as Cape Canaveral (known as Cape Kennedy from 1963 to 1973). Geography \nCape Canaveral is located at 28°23'18" North, 80°36'13" West (28.388382, -80.603498)1. According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 6.1 km² (2.3 mi²). 6.0 km² (2.3 mi²) of it is land and 0.1 km² (0.04 mi²) of it is water. The total area is 0.85% water. Demographics \nAs of the census of 2000, there are 8,829 people, 5,066 households, and 2,097 families.
Cape Canaveral Air Force Station - Cape Canaveral Air Force Station The Cape Canaveral Air Force Station is the East Coast launch facility of the Department of Defense of the United States. Located on Cape Canaveral, it depends on Patrick Air Force Base, home of the 45th Space Wing. It is next to the Kennedy Space Center. Currently, it lauches only non-manned vehicles, including Delta, Atlas and Titan rockets..
Cape Gelidonya - Cape Gelidonya Cape Gelidonya wreck, near Finike, Turkey. Phoenician merchant ship from about 1200 BC, on ca 27 m depth on irregular rocky bottom. Located in 1954. Excavated from 1960 by Peter Throckmorton, George F Bass, and Frédéric Dumas. Among the finds were Mycenaean ceramics and copper and tin ingots. / P.Å..
USS America (CV-66) - same period, other activities were happening aboard ship, and in Paris, France. Two squadrons of CVW-6 participated in the 27th Paris Air Show held at the French capital's Le Bourget Airport from 25 May to 5 June. A Fighter Squadron (VF) 33 F-4B "Phantom" and an Early Warning Squadron (VAW) 122 Grumman E-2A Hawkeye were on display at the airfield throughout the show. America next hosted, commencing on 14 June, 49 midshipmen from the United States Naval Academy and Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps (NROTC) units across the country. For six weeks the "middies," under the watchful eyes of the ship's officers, f illed junior officer billets in all of the departments in the ship. In late July, the second group of 41 "middies" arrived for their six-week cruise. America transited.
Academy Award for Best Actor - Charles Boyer - Gaslight Barry Fitzgerald - Going My Way Cary Grant - None but the Lonely Heart Alexander Knox - Wilson 1945 Ray Milland - The Lost Weekend Bing Crosby - The Bells of St. Mary's Gene Kelly - Anchors Aweigh Gregory Peck - The Keys of the Kingdom Cornel Wilde - A Song to Remember 1946 Fredric March - The Best Years of Our Lives Laurence Olivier - Henry V Larry Parks - The Jolson Story Gregory Peck - The Yearling James Stewart - It's a Wonderful Life 1947 Ronald Colman - A Double Life John Garfield - Body and Soul Gregory Peck - Gentleman's Agreement Michael Redgrave - Mourning Becomes Electra William Powell - Life with Father 1948 Laurence Olivier - Hamlet Lew Ayres - Johnny Belinda Montgomery.
Casualties of the September 11, 2001 Terrorist Attacks: Plane passengers - Falkenberg, 45, University Park, Md., director of research at ECOlogic Corp. Zoe Falkenberg, 8, University Park, Md. Dana Falkenberg, 3, University Park, Md. James Joseph Ferguson, 39, Washington, D.C., educational outreach director, National Geographic Society (National Geographic Society educational trip) Darlene "Dee" Flagg, Millwood, Va. Wilson "Bud" Flagg, Millwood, Va., retired Navy admiral and pilot for American Airlines Richard P. Gabriel Sr, 54, Great Falls, Va., managing partner, Stratin Consulting Ian Gray, 55, Washington, president of healthcare consulting firm Stanley Hall, 68, Rancho Palos Verdes, Calif., Raytheon Co. Hani Hanjour, suspected hijacker Bryan W. Jack, 48, Alexandria, Va., senior executive at Defense Department Steven D. "Jake" Jacoby, 43, Alexandria, Va., chief operating officer, Metrocall Inc. Ann Judge, 49, Great Falls, Virginia, National Geographic Society travel office manager (National Geographic Society educational.
Carmen Sandiego - more driven than her brother Zack is, and gets frustrated easily. Ivy's last name is unknown. Ivy was featured in Where on Earth is Carmen Sandiego? and in Carmen Sandiego: Junior Detective Edition Zack - Zack (age 14) has a photographic memory and can speak twenty languages. He is a kid genius who knows millions of facts. He manages to be a cool, floppy haired, baggy clothed, skate boarding teen, and takes cases less seriously than his sister Ivy. Zack's last name is unknown. Zack was featured in Where on Earth is Carmen Sandiego? and in Carmen Sandiego: Junior Detective Edition Stretch the Crime Dog - As a pup, Stretch nabbed so many V.I.L.E. villains, that ACME awarded him it's highest K-9 honor: "The Golden Snout Award." Stretch should be kept.
Chicago, Illinois - in the era of so-called machine politics. In his time in office, the 1968 Democratic National Convention visited Chicago, four major expressways were built, the Sears Tower became the tallest building in the world and O'Hare Airport was constructed which later became the busiest airport in the world. In 1983, Harold Washington became the first African American mayor of Chicago. Richard M. Daley, son of Richard J. Daley, became mayor in 1989. Important Historical Events French-Canadian explorers Jacques Marquette and Louis Jolliet pass through the area that will become Chicago. 1673 French explorer René Robert Cavelier, Sieur de la Salle, passes through Chicago en route to the mouth of the Mississippi River. 1682 French Jesuits establish Fort de Chicago, the area's first true European settlement. 1683 Jesuit missionary Francois Pinet founds.