Archive for December, 2007
Irthlingborough Diamonds were a football club from Irthlingborough, Northamptonshire, England, founded in 1946. In 1992, they merged with Rushden Town to create Rushden and Diamonds.
The Diamonds played their home games at the old Nene Park, which sits on the site of the current stadium.
References
Diamonds by DiamondSafe.com Diamonds by the experts at DiamondSafe.com. Our massive […]
A sightholder is a company on the Diamond Trading Company’s (DTC) list of authorized bulk purchasers of rough diamonds. DTC is controlled by the De Beers Group, the single largest producer and purveyor of rough diamonds in the world. In May 2006, DTC released a list of the 93 sightholders on its website. […]
Diamond Education College based in Johannesburg, South Africa, provides various training courses enabling students to evaluate and grade rough diamonds, mark rough diamonds for polishing, and evaluate and grade polished diamonds.
External links
THE OFFICIAL ROUGH DIAMOND EDUCATION AUTHORITY / CORLIA ROBERTS
External links
Educationisforever.org
References
Conflict Diamonds A diamond merchant shows his wares June 15, 2001 in Kenema, Sierra Leone. […]
19 Naughty III is the third album from Naughty by Nature, released on February 23, 1993 on Tommy Boy.
Track listing
19 Naughty III - 4:42
Hip Hop Hooray - 4:26
Contains samples from “Funky President” by James Brown, “Don’t Change Your Love” by Five Stairsteps, “Make Me Say it Again, Girl” by Isley Brothers, “You Can’t Turn Me […]
The Sword & Sorcery imprint is used by White Wolf to publish its d20 & OGL material. It publishes the Scarred Lands and Ravenloft D&D campaign settings, as well as the Everquest Role-Playing Game and Warcraft the Roleplaying Game pencil and paper game lines. This imprint is also used on the print versions of books […]
“Four Little Diamonds” is a song by the rock music group Electric Light Orchestra from their 1983 album Secret Messages. It also featured on their compilation albums Afterglow and Flashback.
The song refers to the search made by the singer for his cheating lover who emotionally conned him out of a ring which had ‘Four Little […]
Courtney Taylor may refer to:
Courtney Taylor (American football player), a professional football player
Courtney Taylor-Taylor, a musician
References
Loose Diamonds from Diamonds-USA.com Loose diamonds from Diamonds-USA.com at low prices. Wide variety of diamond jewelry including round, pear, oval, marquise, emerald, princess, heart,
Loose Diamonds | AGS and GIA Certified Loose Diamonds at J.R.Dunn Loose Diamond Search; Huge […]
Carved Up is a 7″ vinyl single released in 1996 by Hypocrisy immediately after the Abducted album.
Track listing
A-side: “Carved Up”
B-side: “Beginning of the End”
Credits
Mikael Hedlund − Bass
Lars Szöke − Drums
Peter Tägtgren − Vocals, Guitars, Keyboards
References
Diamonds | American Museum of Natural History Overview of the Diamond Exhibition presented at […]
This is a list of Royal Air Force groups. The group is a formation just below command level.
No. 1 Group RAF
No. 2 Group RAF
No. 3 Group RAF
No. 4 Group RAF
No. 5 Group RAF
No. 6 Group RAF
No. 7 Group RAF
No. 8 Group RAF
No. 9 Group RAF
No. […]
Dennis Morgan (December 20, 1908 – September 7, 1994) was an American actor-singer.
In 1945 he played the part of Jefferson Jones in the holiday classic Christmas in Connecticut opposite Barbara Stanwyck. He also starred in such films as God Is My Co-Pilot and the 1943 film version of The Desert Song. He was Ginger Rogers’s […]
Castor Cracking Group (CCG) was a demo group from Sweden, and were active on the ZX Spectrum during 1986-88. They were one of the first groups for the ZX Spectrum with their release of Castor Intro early in 1986.<ref name=”CastorIntro10″>CCG, Castor Intro 10, 1988</ref>
Originially they named themselves after Castor in the constellation Gemini, but […]
The Moussaieff Red Diamond is a diamond measuring 5.11 carats (1.022 g) with a triangular brilliant cut (sometimes called a trillion or a trilliant cut), rated in color as Fancy Red by the Gemological Institute of America. While this may seem relatively small when compared to other famous diamonds, the Moussaieff Red is, in […]
In contract bridge, a two suiter is a hand containing cards mostly from two of the four suits. Traditionally a hand is considered a two suiter if it contains at least ten cards in two suits, with the two suits not differing in length by more than one card. Depending on suit quality and partnership […]
Diamonds & Rust in the Bullring was a Joan Baez album, recorded live in the bullring of Bilbao, Spain. The album featured twelve songs, six of which were performed in English, five in Spanish, and one - “Txoria Txori” - in Basque. Most of the songs had been performed and recorded by Baez […]
A Roman Scandal was a synth pop band from Austin, Texas active from 1999 through 2001. Members included Tyler Jacobsen (from Denim and Diamonds and OMD 20/20), Sean O’Neal (from the Arm and This Microwave World), Chris Bultman (from the Daniel Johnston Band, Jad Fair, This Microwave World, and Denim and Diamonds), Alex Killough […]
Phone jack can refer to:
A jack used for audio connectors, (originally derived from telephone switchboard connectors). See Jack plug
A jack for a household telephone cord to be plugged into. See Telephone jack.
This should not be confused with a phono jack, named after its use on phonographs. See RCA connector
References
Living […]
for the plant named Donkey’s tail see Sedum morganianum
Donkey’s Tail () was a Russian artistic group created from the most radical members of the Jack of Diamonds group. The group included such painters as: Mikhail Larionov (inventor of the name), Natalia Gontcharova, Kazimir Malevich, Marc Chagall, and Alexander Shevchenko. The group was influenced by the […]
Anagenetic evolution refers to the evolution of an ancestral species to a descendant species without a split of lineage.
There are two views of how evolution works. The first is called anagenetics. This is where one type gradually evolves into another type along a single line. The second is cladogenetics. This is where a population splits […]
Jah Won’t Pay the Bills is an independent demo album by Sublime released in 1991.
Track listing
“D.J.s”
“Badfish”
“Let’s Go Get Stoned”
“New Song”
“Had a DAT”
“Don’t Push”
“Ball and Chain”
“Slow Ride”
“Date Rape”
“Live at E’s”
Since these tracks were originally released in a now rare cassette the tracks 1-5 are in side […]
The Gemesis Corporation is a privately-held company founded by Carter Clarke in Sarasota, Florida, United States. The corporation creates cultured diamonds using proprietary Soviet technology.
During the Cold War, Soviet scientists developed the diamond synthesis technology because diamond is the best substrate for strategic semi-conductor electronics that are less susceptible to the electromagnetic pulse of nuclear […]
is the first rider to appear in the Kamen Rider Blade series. was the second wearer chosen by the B.O.A.R.D. organization to use the Rider System which transforms him into Kamen Rider Garren. The first was his sempai, Kiryu. Sakuya is played by .
Contents
1 Transforming
2 Forms
3 Card combinations
3.1 Gear
4 Card list
5 Card combinations
5.1 Rider […]
Blue Earth may refer to:
Blue Earth, Minnesota
Blue Earth City Township, Minnesota
Blue Earth County, Minnesota
Blue Earth River
Blue Earth, an album by the Jayhawks
References
Stella as Earth Center The Stella As Earth Center Program began in 1991, when a group of women religious were assembled at the 134 acre property of Stella Niagara, New York,
SPACE.com — Earth-Sized […]
LRS is one of three acts that was featured on D Mob’s A Little Bit of This, a Little Bit of That album, along with Gary Haisman and Cathy Dennis. “It’s Time to Get Funky” was their only appearance on the set and their only number-one U.S. Hot Dance Club Play chart-topper with D Mob […]
A nanga is a harp, used from early times in Africa. Particularly, this was the most primitive form of harps in ancient Egypt and consisted of 3 or 4 strings. It has a vaulted body of wood, and the back is divided by a sound bar, on which the strings are wound. […]
Brayley is a lunar impact crater located in the southwest part of the Mare Imbrium. It has a circular rim and a low rise in the center. There are no notable craters overlapping the rim or interior. Just to the north of the crater is the sinuous rille named Rima Bradley, which has a length […]
Dirty Diamonds is the 24th studio album by Alice Cooper. It was released on July 4, 2005 internationally and on August 2 for North America.
The album peaked on Billboard’s “Top Independent Albums” chart at position #17, and on the Billboard 200 album chart at #169 - Cooper’s highest charting album since The Last Temptation, 11 […]
King Diamond & Black Rose 20 Years Ago (A Night of Rehearsal) is an album released as a King Diamond album. In fact it is a rehearsal tape of a pre-Mercyful Fate band featuring King Diamond on vocals, named Black Rose.
Track listing
“Locked up in the Snow” – 3:33
“Holy Mountain Lights” – 5:45
“Crazy […]
Thompson & Morgan is a United Kingdom-based plant and seed grower and retailer, founded in 1855 by William Thompson and John Morgan to grow rare and unusual plants. In 1939, T&M became a limited company and in 1973 their distribution centre in Poplar Lane, Ipswich, from which the company currently operates, was expanded. In May […]
In mathematics, a bad group is a connected simple group of finite Morley rank in which every connected soluble subgroup is nilpotent.
References
GROUP 3 File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - View as HTMLParticipants in this group represented the following committees and have . GP 3-31. The Master Plan commitments do not seem to have any enforcement […]
In geology, a massif is a section of a planet’s crust that is demarcated by faults or flexures. In the movement of the crust, a massif tends to retain its internal structure while being displaced as a whole. The term is also used to refer to a group of mountains formed by such a structure. […]
There are two people named Jack Gardner:
Jack Gardner, a college basketball coach.
Jack Gardner, a general in the United States Army.
References
Jack of Diamonds — Britannica Online Encyclopedia Britannica online encyclopedia article on Jack of Diamonds: group of artists founded in Moscow in 1909, whose members were for the next few years the
Bluegrass Messengers The “Jack […]
The Graveyard is a concept album by King Diamond released in 1996. This was also the first album by King Diamond to be featured on the Massacre Records label.
Plot
In this story, King’s character is an employee for a crooked, perverted and immoral mayor, Mayor McKenzie. One night, King’s character happens to walk in on his […]
Comitatus (Latin: company, armed group) may refer to:
Comes, a Latin word with similar meaning
Comitatenses, the Roman late Imperial mobile army
Comitatus (classical meaning), a political term used in various meanings, in Europe’s classical period and in the Middle Ages
Comitatus (re-enactment), a historical reenactment & living history society, portraying a comitatensis of the […]
Universal Soldier may refer to:
Film
Universal Soldier (1971 film)
Universal Soldier (1992 film)
Universal Soldier: The Return, the sequel to Universal Soldier
Universal Soldier (cyborg), the cyborg type in the 1992 Universal Soldier film series
Music
“Universal Soldier” (song), a song by Buffy Sainte-Marie
Universal Soldier (Pastor Troy album)
Universal Soldier (1967 Donovan album)
Universal Soldier […]
Ice blasting is the use of explosives to break up ice in rivers, greatly aiding navigation systems.
This is done during the spring when snow is melting and river ice is breaking up. There is always a chance that the ice flows could collide creating an ice jam creating a dam and blocking the river. […]
Bad Company is the name of 14 films:
Bad Company (2002 film), a film from 2002 directed by Joel Schumacher
Mabudachi (En. Bad Company), a Japanese film from 2001 written and directed by Tomoyuki Furumaya
Mauvaises fréquentations (En. Bad Company), a French film from 1999 directed by Jean-Pierre Améris
The Nature of the Beast (Eur. Bad Company), a film […]
1-2-3 may refer to:
“1-2-3″ (song), a song by Len Barry
“1, 2, 3″ (song), a song by Gloria Estefan and Miami Sound Machine
1-2-3 (band) or Clouds, a 1960s rock band
One, Two, Three, a film by Billy Wilder
Lotus 1-2-3, an computer spreadsheet program
JELL-O 1-2-3, a JELL-O dessert
See also
123 (number)
References
FUNKY DIAMONDS lyrics // Funky Diamonds song lyrics […]
Los Lonely Boys (Los Lonely Boys Sofaking album)
0 Comments Published December 29th, 2007 in UncategorizedLos Lonely Boys was released in 1997. The first track, “Diamonds”, has been updated and is the first single released from LLB’s 2006 album “Sacred”.
Track listing
“Diamonds” – 3:15
“All Tied Up” – 2:00
“My Little Angel” – 3:56
“I Don’t Know (How To Say I. L. Y.)” – 2:32
“Crazy Baby” – 2:45
[…]
Slušaj Mater was Edo Maajka’s debut album and it was very big hit especially in Bosnia. It was the first rap album to be nominated for best album of the year in that region.
Contents
1 The Album
2 Production
3 Tracklist
4 Singles
The Album
In Edo’s debut album, he talks about all kinds of things from bloody revenge in the […]
Bruce Herbert Glover (born May 2, 1932) is an American actor perhaps best known for his role of assassin Mr. Wint in the 1971 James Bond film Diamonds Are Forever. He is also the father of actor Crispin Glover.
Information
Talented character actor who has notched up over 45 years in Hollywood, and is generally most entertaining […]
A crack intro, also known as a cracktro, loader, or just intro, is a small introduction sequence added to cracked software, designed to inform the user which “cracking crew” or individual cracker was responsible for removing the software’s copy prevention and distributing the crack.
These first appeared on Apple II and later Commodore 64 games that […]
Jack of Diamonds may refer to:
The playing card.
Jack of Diamonds, a group of artists founded in 1909 in Moscow.
Jack of Diamonds, a 1967 film directed by Don Taylor.
Jack of Diamonds, a 2001 film directed by Jon Kirby and Mitchell Morgan.
Jack of Diamonds (song)
References
Diamonds (1999) Cast/credits plus additional information about the […]
Jack of Diamonds may refer to:
The playing card.
Jack of Diamonds, a group of artists founded in 1909 in Moscow.
Jack of Diamonds, a 1967 film directed by Don Taylor.
Jack of Diamonds, a 2001 film directed by Jon Kirby and Mitchell Morgan.
Jack of Diamonds (song)
References
Diamonds, Diamond Engagement Rings and Diamond Jewelry From […]
Jack Richardson may refer to several people:
Jack Richardson (actor) - A silent film actor
Jack Richardson (chemical engineer) - British textbook author
Jack Richardson (record producer) - a Canadian record producer
References
93.1 Jack FM - From the Dumpy Little Building in Culver City 93.1 JACK FM at the Dumpy Little Building in Culver City.
Jack Gartside's Home Page: fly […]
The Ekavyahāraka school of Buddhism split from the [[Mahasamghaka|]] during the reign of Aśoka. The Ekavyahārikas emphasized the transcendence of the Buddha, asserting that he was eternally enlightened and essentially non-physical.
The Lokottaravāda may be an offshoot of the Ekavyahārikas.
See also
Early Buddhist schools
Nikaya Buddhism
Schools of Buddhism
References
ScienceDaily: Early Human News Read about early humans […]
The Crown of Queen Adelaide was the consort crown of Adelaide of Saxe-Meiningen, wife and Queen consort of King William IV of the United Kingdom. It was used at the coronation of William and Adelaide in 1831. It was emptied of its jewels soon afterwards, was not worn again by Queen Adelaide, and has never […]
King Diamond & Black Rose 20 Years Ago (A Night of Rehearsal) is an album released as a King Diamond album. In fact it is a rehearsal tape of a pre-Mercyful Fate band featuring King Diamond on vocals, named Black Rose.
Track listing
“Locked up in the Snow” – 3:33
“Holy Mountain Lights” – 5:45
“Crazy […]
Ape Escape is a series of video games made by Sony Computer Entertainment, starting with Ape Escape for PlayStation in 1999.The series are widely known for their use of ape-related humor, its unique gameplay, its wide variety of pop culture references, and for being the first to use the Sony Dualshock Controller. They are […]
University Hills may refer to:
University Hills, Irvine, California
University Hills, Los Angeles, California
References
MiningNews.net - Midwest posts initial Jack Hills resource TAKEOVER target Midwest Corporation has reported its initial JORC-complaint mineral resource at its Jack Hills direct shipping ore project in Western
Murchison ups Jack Hills mineral resources by 58% AX> announced a 58% increase to its […]
The Black Hills are a small range of hills in Thurston and Grays Harbor counties of Washington. They are a subset of the Willapa Hills. 2,507 foot (764 meter) Capitol Peak is the highest point.
The Capitol State Forest has roughly the same boundaries as the Black Hills.
The high school Black Hills League is […]
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