Archive for March, 2008



This is a list of lists of artists by nationality.

By nationality

List of American artists

List of Australian artists

List of Austrian artists and architects

List of Bangladeshi artists

List of British artists

List of Bulgarian artists

List of Canadian artists

List of Chadian artists

List of Chilean artists

List of Chinese painters

List of […]

Name
Party
Constituency

A

Gordon Adam
Lab
Northumbria

B

Richard Balfe
Lab
London South Inner

Roger Barton
Lab
Sheffield

Angela Billingham
Lab
Northamptonshire & Blaby

David Bowe
Lab
Cleveland & Richmond

C

Bryan Cassidy
Con
Dorset & East Devon

Giles Chichester
Con
Devon & East Plymouth

Ken Coates
Lab
Nottinghamshire North & Chesterfield

Kenneth Collins
Lab
Strathclyde East

John Corrie
Con
Worcestershire & South Warwickshire

Peter Crampton
Lab
Humberside

Christine Crawley
Lab
Birmingham East

Tony Cunningham
Lab
Cumbria & Lancashire North

D

Wayne David
Lab
South Wales Central

Alan Donnelly
Lab
Tyne and Wear

Brendan Donnelly
Con (Ind) (PEC)
Sussex South & Crawley

E

James Elles
Con
Buckinghamshire & Oxfordshire East

Michael Elliott
Lab
London West

Robert […]

Heather Mitchell

Heather Mitchell (born ?), is an Australian actress.

She appeared in the starring role of “Ashka” in both of the “Spellbinder” series — Spellbinder, and Spellbinder 2: Land of the Dragon Lord.

Other television series include: Five Mile Creek, the miniseries Bodyline, Embassy, A Country Practice and the miniseries drama The Day of the Roses.

Films in which she […]

Low-angle shot

In cinematography, a low-angle shot, is a shot from a camera positioned low on the vertical axis, often at knee height, looking up. This technique is sometimes used in scenes of confrontation to illustrate which character holds the higher position of power, and is a common element in the aesthetic texture of certain genres […]

Tom Mankiewicz

Tom Mankiewicz (born June 1, 1942) is an American screenwriter and director. A graduate of Yale University, he is the son of Joseph L. Mankiewicz and the nephew of Herman J. Mankiewicz.

Tom Mankiewicz wrote or co-wrote the screenplays for Mother, Jugs & Speed, The Cassandra Crossing and The Eagle Has Landed. He also wrote the […]

Du rire aux larmes

Du rire aux larmes (French for ‘from laughter to tears’) was the 2001 debut album by the French hip hop group Sniper. It was published on the Desh Musique record label. The album contained the track La France, which was later fiercely attacked by the French interior minister Nicolas Sarkozy.

Track listing

“Intro” – (1:32)

“Sniper […]

Return to Del

Return to Del is the eighth and final book of the original series of Deltora Quest.

Plot summary
The main characters of the book are Barda, Lief and Jasmine who have retrieved all seven of the magic gems from their perilous guardians and lairs. They now have the Topaz, Ruby, Emerald, Lapis-Lazuli, Diamond, Opal […]

Charlie Paton

Charlie Paton, former Royal Marine and personal trainer, is the first Scotsman to walk unsupported to the Geographic North Pole from Canada. After a grueling 70 days on the ice, Charlie led by Alan Chambers MBE, raised the Union Jack on top of the world at 23:16 hours on 16th May 2000.

Only one in one […]

Janet Lowe

Janet Celesta Lowe is a writer from Santa Fe, New Mexico United States. Lowe formerly was business editor of the San Diego Tribune (now Union-Tribune) and editor of the San Diego Daily Transcript. Her freelance work includes, Newsweek, Los Angeles Times, Dallas Morning News, San Jose Mercury News, Modern Maturity and other national magazines. She […]

Bad Boys

Bad Boys may refer to:

In film:

Bad Boys (1961 film), a 1961 film by Susumu Hani

Bad Boys (1983 film), a 1983 film starring Sean Penn

Bad Boys (1995 film), a 1995 film starring Will Smith and Martin Lawrence

Bad Boys II, the 2003 sequel to Bad Boys (1995)

In music:

“Bad Boys” (Inner Circle song), a song by Inner Circle, […]

Fred Mitchell

Fred Mitchell may refer to

Fred Mitchell, a creator of the Mitchell-Green gravity set.

Fred Mitchell, the foreign minister of the Bahamas.

Fred Mitchell, a baseball manager of the 1910s.

Fred Mitchell, American football player.

Fred Mitchell, a noted Canadian businessman and chairman of Intercontinental Packers

Fred Mitchell, (b. 1923-) noted American abstract expressionist, New […]

Low-angle shot

In cinematography, a low-angle shot, is a shot from a camera positioned low on the vertical axis, often at knee height, looking up. This technique is sometimes used in scenes of confrontation to illustrate which character holds the higher position of power, and is a common element in the aesthetic texture of certain genres […]

Pumpkin Diamond

The Pumpkin Diamond is a diamond measuring 5.54 carats (1.108 g) rated in color as Fancy Vivid Orange by the Gemological Institute of America. While this may seem relatively small when compared to other famous diamonds, the Pumpkin Diamond is, in fact, one of the largest Fancy Vivid Oranges the GIA reports having rated […]

Bort

Bort or boart is a term used in the diamond industry to refer to shards of gem-grade/quality diamonds. In the manufacturing and heavy industries, “bort” is used to describe dark, imperfectly formed/crystallized diamonds of varying levels of opacity. The lowest grade, “crushing bort”, is crushed by steel mortars and used to make industrial-grade abrasive […]

Cherrytree Records

Cherrytree Records is an imprint of Interscope Records founded in 2005 by Martin Kierszenbaum. It functions like an independent label within a major, focusing on new artists with growth potential, although ultimately owned by major label Universal Music Group.

Notable artists

The Lovemakers

Feist

Flipsyde

The Grates

The Feeling

the Fratellis

The Pipettes

Rooney

See also

List […]

Joel Billings

Joel Billings is an American computer game designer. He is the founder of the seminal game company SSI in 1979. The company was an industry leader for years in war games and role-playing games.

In 1987 Billings acquired the rights to the Dungeons and Dragons role-playing games from TSR, which led to the creation […]

Serguei Garbouzov

Serguei Garbouzov (born January 13, 1974 in Moscow) is a Russian water polo player who played on the silver medal squad at the 2000 Summer Olympics and the bronze medal squad at the 2004 Summer Olympics.

References

Howstuffworks "Carbon and Kimberlite" The surface area of diamond-bearing kimberlite pipes ranges from 2 to 146 These are diamonds […]

Taylor-Burton Diamond

The Taylor-Burton was a diamond purchased by actor Richard Burton for his wife Elizabeth Taylor to celebrate her fortieth birthday in 1972.

Links

The Taylor-Burton Diamond, from “Famous, Historic and Notable Diamonds”

References

Loose Diamonds: Shop, Find, Compare, and Price - AOL Shopping Looking for Loose Diamonds? AOL Shopping has the lowest prices from thousands of […]

The Letter

The Letter may refer to:

in theatre:

The Letter (play), a 1927 drama by W. Somerset Maugham

in literature:

The Letter, a 1904 short story by Edith Wharton

in film:

The Letter (1929 film), a 1929 film directed by Jean de Limur starring Jeanne Eagels

The Letter (1940 film), a 1940 film directed by William Wyler starring Bette Davis

[…]

Rómenna

In J. R. R. Tolkien’s fictional world of Middle-earth, the haven of Rómenna was the main seaport of Númenor situated on its east coast, through which much of the traffic with the old lands of Middle-earth passed. Its name meant ‘Eastwards’ in Quenya. Many of the Faithful of Númenor were relocated to Rómenna late in […]

Grigory Landsberg

Grigory Samuilovich Landsberg (Григорий Самуилович Ландсберг) (January 22, 1890, Vologda - February 2, 1957, Moscow) was a Russian physicist.

Grigory Landsberg graduated from Moscow University in 1913. His primary scientific contribution was in the fields of optics and spectroscopy. He was a co-discoverer of inelastic scattering of light used in Raman spectroscopy.
References

Poet Biographies: Anna Akhmatova | […]

These are the results for the field hockey competition at the 1956 Summer Olympics. Only a men’s competition occurred that year.

References

Conflict Diamonds A diamond merchant shows his wares June 15, 2001 in Kenema, Sierra Leone. Muslim militant Osama bin Laden's al Qaeda network has collected millions of
Droste's - Certified Diamonds - Lowest Prices Droste's […]

Rapport congruency

Rapport congruency is the Human tendency to form rapport with someone who seems to be portraying a common role, such as a friend. When someone acts like a friend or an enemy, the Human mind is more likely to associate them with filling that role, even on meeting the person for the first time.

Déjà […]

Mix

Mix, mixture or mixing may refer to:

Contents

1 Science and mathematics
2 Music and radio
3 Other
4 See also

Science and mathematics

Mixing (mathematics), a concept in ergodic theory

Mixing (physics), a descriptive condition of a dynamical system

Mixture (probability), a set of probability distributions often used for statistical classification

Mixing (process engineering), a unit operation for manipulating physical […]

Jack Marshall managed Blackburn Rovers for seven years.

His nickname by some of the players at that time was “Jolly” Jack.

References

Jack Gartside's Home Page: fly fishing articles, books, flies, and Official site of Jack Gartside, reknowned flyfishing author and fly tyer. Tactics and flies for striped bass, tarpon, bonefish, and trout.
Amazon.com: On And On: Music: […]

Heaven (film)

There are three films titled Heaven:

Heaven (1987), a documentary directed by Diane Keaton

Heaven (1998), directed by Scott Reynolds

Heaven (2002), directed by Tom Tykwer and starring Cate Blanchett

References

Diamonds.net - Home Page Welcome to Diamonds.net - home of RapNet

Jack Graney

John Gladstone Graney (June 10 1886 – April 20 1978) was a Canadian left fielder in Major League Baseball who played his entire career with the Cleveland Indians (1908, 1910-1922). He was born in St. Thomas, Ontario.

On June 26, 1916, the Cleveland Indians used numbers on their uniforms on an experimental basis in a home […]

Bely Gorod

Bely Gorod (; “White Town”) is a part of Moscow, Russia. The name comes from the fact that Bely Gorod was surrounded by white stone fortification wall which was built in the end of 15th century and demolished in the end of 17th century. It was replaced by several boulevards, comprising Boulevard Ring.

References

Cordelia Lutheran […]

MRR 2

MRR 2 may refer to:

Kuala Lumpur Middle Ring Road 2

My Restaurant Rules (season 2)

References

KAZ BANK HOLIDAY RULES. 1 It will rain 2 The couple next door will have a flaming 11 You will come home and get very drunk. KAZ. posted by KAZ at 3:54 PM
Posts tagged with Covenant - Justia Blawg […]