Campbell Sentence Examples

campbell
  • In 1840 Campbell conducted the prosecution against John Frost, one of the three Chartist leaders who attacked the town of Newport, all of whom were found guilty of high treason.

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  • The legal point in the dispute (which Campbell afterwards made the subject of a separate pamphlet) was whether the churchwardens of the parish, in the absence of the vestry, had any means of enforcing a rate except the antiquated interdict or ecclesiastical censure.

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  • It was not on legal technicalities, however, but on the broad principle of religious equality, that Campbell supported the abolition of church rates, in which he included the Edinburgh annuity-tax.

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  • Pepys (Lord Cottenham) and Bickersteth (Lord Langdale) were both promoted to the bench in preference to Campbell.

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  • Next year, as the Melbourne administration was near its close, Plunkett, the venerable chancellor of Ireland, was forced by discreditable pressure to resign, and the Whig attorney-general, who had never practised in equity, became chancellor of Ireland, and was raised to the peerage with the title of Baron Campbell of St Andrews, in the county of Fife.

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  • His wife, Mary Elizabeth Campbell, the eldest daughter of the first Baron Abinger by one of the Campbells of Kilmorey, Argyllshire, whom he had married in 1821, had in 1836 been created Baroness Stratheden in recognition of the withdrawal of his claim to the mastership of the rolls.

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  • The post of chancellor Campbell held for only sixteen days, and then resigned it to his successor Sir Edward Sugden (Lord St Leonards).

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  • The circumstances of his appointment and the erroneous belief that he was receiving a pension of f 4 000 per annum for his few days' court work brought Campbell much unmerited obloquy.'

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  • It was during the period 1841-1849, when he had no legal duty, except the self-imposed one of occasionally hearing Scottish appeals in the House of Lords, that the unlucky dream of literary fame troubled Lord Campbell's leisure.'

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  • The 3rd volume of the Protests of the Lords, edited by Thorold Rogers (1875), contains no less than ten protests by Campbell, entered in the years 1842-1845.

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  • On the resignation of Lord Denman in 1850, Campbell was appointed chief justice of the queen's bench.

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  • See Misrepresentations in Campbell's "Lives of Lyndhurst and Brougham" corrected by St Leonards (London, 1869).

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  • Campbell died on the 23rd of June 1861.

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  • Campbell, representing President Davis, on the other, he instructed his representatives to insist on the recognition of the Confederacy as a condition to any arrangement for the termination of the war.

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  • To the great alarm of the inhabitants a body of about 1400 men disembarked, but it quickly capitulated, practically without striking a blow, to a combined force of the local militias under Sir Richard Philipps, Lord Milford and John Campbell, Lord Cawdor; the French frigates meanwhile sailing away towards Ireland.

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  • It was founded in 1814 by the London publisher, Colburn, and was edited in turn by Campbell, Theodore Hook, Bulwer-Lytton and Ainsworth.

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  • The Metropolitan Magazine was started in opposition to Fraser, and was first edited by Campbell, who had left its rival.

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  • In 1720 came The Life and Adventures of Mr Duncan Campbell.

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  • His mother was Madeline Caroline Frances Eden, daughter of Sir Guy Campbell, 1st baronet; and through her he was great grandson of Lord Edward Fitzgerald, the Irish rebel.

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  • Campbell, a Belfast merchant, who left 200,000 for the building and endowment of a public school.

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  • Campbell Fraser; he joined the staff of the Encyclopaedia Britannica (9th ed.) (1874) and studied widely in the Advocates' Library.

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  • In 1908-09 there was an unsuccessful attempt to pass in the legislature a constitutional amendment providing for state-wide prohibition; the amendment was favoured by the Democratic state platform, but the hostility of the legislature to Governor Campbell, who favoured the amendment, secured its defeat.

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  • The old castle, now in ruins, was dismantled in 1645 by the marquis of Argyll in retaliation for the destruction of Castle Campbell in Dollar Glen on the south side of the Ochils.

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  • The fragment beginning TfOva F t 'ac -yap xaaov has been translated by Thomas Campbell, the poet.

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  • Campbell, the superintendent of Darjeeling, and Sir Joseph Hooker, resulted in the stoppage of the allowance granted to the raja for the cession of the hill station of Darjeeling, and in the annexation of the Sikkim tarai at the foot of the hills and of a portion of the hills beyond.

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  • In the park is the fine Colombo Museum, founded by Sir William Gregory l; and near the neighbouring Campbell Park are the handsome buildings of a number of institutions, such as Wesley College, and the General, Victoria Memorial Eye and other hospitals.

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  • In May 1888 she attended a performance of Sir Arthur Sullivan's Golden Legend at the Albert Hall, and in August she visited Glasgow to open the magnificent new municipal buildings, remaining for a couple of nights at Blythswood, the seat of Sir Archibald Campbell.

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  • Thus McLeod Campbell (q.v.) held that Christ atoned by offering up to God a perfect confession of the sins of mankind and an adequate repentance for them, with which divine justice is satisfied, and a full expiation is made for human guilt.

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  • But the essential narrowness and timidity of his general outlook prevented him from detecting and estimating latent forces, either in politics or in matters strictly intellectual and moral; and this lack of understanding and sympathy accounts for his distrust and dislike of the passion and fancy of Shelley and Keats, and for his praise of the half-hearted and elegant romanticism of Rogers and Campbell.

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  • Some of the coal mined in eastern Kentucky is an excellent steam producer, especially the Jellico coal of Whitley county, Kentucky, and of Campbell county, Tennessee.

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  • The Rev. John Campbell, one of the founders of the Bible Society, also travelled in southern Bechuanaland and the adjoining districts in 1812-1814 and 1819-1821, adding considerably to the knowledge of the river systems. About 1817 Mosilikatze, the founder of the Matabele nation, fleeing from the wrath of Chaka, the Zulu king, began his career of conquest, during which he ravaged a great part of Bechuanaland and enrolled large numbers of Bechuana in his armies.

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  • On the 29th of December of this year Colonel Archibald Campbell (1739-1791) with an expeditionary corps of 35 00 men from Clinton's army in New York, captured Savannah, Georgia, defeating the American force under General Robert Howe.

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  • C., near the North Carolina line, by bands of riflemen under Colonels Isaac Shelby, James Williams, William Campbell and others, and after a desperate fight on the wooded and rocky slopes, surrendered.

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  • It has a publishing house (1834) and Bonebrake Theological Seminary (1871) at Dayton, Ohio; and supports Otterbein University (1847) at Westerville, O.; Westfield College (1865) at Westfield, Illinois; Leander Clark College (1857) at Toledo, Iowa; York College (1890) at York, Nebraska; Philomath College (1867) at Philomath, Oregon; Lebanon Valley College (1867) at Annville, Pa.; Campbell College (1864) at Holton, Kansas, and Central University (1907) at Indianapolis, Indiana.

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  • Antrim, Ireland, on the 12th of September 1788, and was the son of Thomas Campbell (1763-1854), a schoolmaster and clergyman of the Presbyterian "Seceders."

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  • Alexander in 1809, after a year at Glasgow University, joined his father in Washington, Pennsylvania, where the elder Campbell had just formed the Christian Association of Washington, "for the sole purpose of promoting simple evangelical Christianity."

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  • Campbell, who in 1829 had been elected to the Constitutional Convention of Virginia by his anti-slavery neighbours, now established The Millennial Harbinger (1830-1865), in which, on Biblical grounds, he opposed emancipation, but which he used principally to preach the imminent Second Coming, which he actually set for 1866, in which year he died, on the 4th of March, at Bethany, West Virginia, having been for twenty-five years president of Bethany College.

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  • Campbell'S Poetry, In Spite Of A Certain Lack Of Compression, Is Full Of Dramatic Vigour; Roberts Has Put Some Of His Best Work Into Sonnets And Short Lyrics, While Carman Has Been Very Tsuccessful With The Ballad, The Untrammelled Swing And Sweep Of Which He Has Finely Caught; The Simplicity And Severity Of Cameron'S Style Won The Commendation Of Even So Exacting A Critic As Matthew Arnold.

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  • Archibald Campbell (1739-1791) in January 1779, but was evacuated a month later; it was the seat of government of Georgia for almost the entire period from the capture of Savannah in December 1778 until May 1780, and was then abandoned by the Patriots and was occupied chiefly by Loyalists under Lieut.-Col.

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  • In that year the Orissa famine awakened the public conscience, and the commission presided over by Sir George Campbell laid down the lines upon which subsequent famine-relief was organized.

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  • His professional income amounted to £400 a year, equal to £4000 in present money, and, " considering the relative profits of the law and the value of money, probably indicated as high a station as £ io,000 at the present day " (Campbell).

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  • Campbell, who also discusses the subject in Popular Tales of the Western Highlands, iv.

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  • The tilting working chamber is connected with the stationary ports L and L' by means of the loose water-cooled joint W in Campbell's system, which is here shown.

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  • Woolrych, The Life of Sir Edward Coke (1826); Foss, Lives of the Judges; Campbell, Lives of the Chief Justices; also English Law.

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  • In 1812 the Human Nature and the Liberty and Necessity (with supplementary extracts from the Questions of 1656) were reprinted in a small edition of 250 copies, with a meritorious memoir (based on Campbell) and dedication to Horne Tooke, by Philip Mallet.

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  • The name of Vitruvius has been given to several works on modern architecture, such as Campbell, Vitruvius Britannicus (London, 1715-71), a series of illustrations of the chief buildings of the 18th century in England, including many works of the brothers Adam; one of these brothers, William Adam, produced a similar work illustrating the buildings which he had designed for Scotland, under the title of Vitruvius Scoticus (Edinburgh, 1790).

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  • On a conical hill above the pier stand the remains of Dunoon Castle, the hereditary keepership of which was conferred by Robert Bruce on the family of Sir Colin Campbell of Loch Awe, an ancestor of the duke of Argyll.

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  • Facing the pier a statue was erected in 1898 of Mary Campbell, Burns's "Highland Mary," who was a native of Dunoon.

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  • Kilmun, on the northern shore of Holy Loch, a portion of the parish of Dunoon and Kilmun, contains the ruins of a Collegiate chapel founded in 1442 by Sir Duncan Campbell of Loch Awe and used as the burial-ground of the Argyll family.

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  • In 1803 he was appointed commander-in-chief in Scotland, and in 1804 he married Flora Mure Campbell, countess of Loudoun in her own right.

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  • Sir Nial Campbell of Lochow, founder of the house of Argyll, secured shipping for him, and he reached a castle of Macdonald of Islay (Angus Og), his ally, at Dunaverty in Kintyre.

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  • These two men, with Campbell of Loch Awe, and Randolph's son, the earl of Moray, held up the national standard and were joined by the English claimant of the earldom of Atholl.

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  • The British forces, under General Oswald, took Zante, Cephalonia and Cerigo in 1809, and Santa Maura in 1810; Colonel (afterwards Sir Richard) Church (q.v.), reduced Paxo in 1814; and after the abdication of Napoleon, Corfu, which had been well defended by General Donzelot, was, by order of Louis XVIII., surrendered to Sir James Campbell.

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  • Campbell and including Surg.

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  • The ship left on March 8 to make a final attempt to relieve Campbell's northern party and did not return, so the base party did not know what had happened either to the northern or southern parties.

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  • Campbell the average velocity in space of a star is 21.2 m.

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  • Campbell from the radial motions of 280 stars found the velocity to be 20 kilometres per second with a probable error of 12 km.

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  • He professed to have obtained from the monastery of Icolmkill, through the good offices of the earl of Argyll, and his brother, John Campbell of Lundy, the treasurer, certain original historians of Scotland, and among the rest Veremundus, of whose writings not a single vestige is now to be found.

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  • Campbell, was appointed in April 1869, and the organization of the Territory was completed in May of the same year.

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  • The edition of 1723 was presented as a nuisance by the Grand Jury of Middlesex, was denounced in the London Journal by "Theophilus PhiloBritannus," and attacked by many writers, notably by Archibald Campbell (1691-1756) in his Aretelogia (published as his own by Alexander Innes in 1728; afterwards by Campbell, under his own name, in 1733, as Enquiry into the Original of Moral Virtue).

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  • Campbell and others entered, thus discovering the cavern now described.

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  • Her clergy included many distinguished Scotsmen, among them Thomas Reid, George Campbell, Adam Ferguson, John Home, Hugh Blair, William Robertson and John Erskine.

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  • John M`Leod Campbell (q.v.), minister of Row, was deposed by the assembly of 1830 for teaching that assurance is of the essence of faith and that Christ died for all men.

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  • When they again referred him to Haywood, he applied to Thomas Campbell, then chairman of a company formed for buying up the copyright of meritorious but rejected works.

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  • Owing to the steps taken by the British envoy, Sir John Campbell, assisted by Colonel Bethune, at the head of a considerable force, supplied with artiller the opposition of the first was neutralized, and Mahommed Sha entering Teheran on the 2nd of January, was proclaimed king on the 31st of the same month.

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  • Sir John Campbell, in less than a year after the sovereigns installation, went home, and was succeeded as British envoy by Henry Ellis.

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  • A full account of the principal trials, and of the various legislative measures for repressing the expressions of popular opinion for which he was more or less responsible, will be found in Twiss's Public and Private Life of the Lord Chancellor Eldon, and in the Lives of the Lord Chancellors, by Lord Campbell.

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  • His cousin, William Campbell Preston Breckinridge (1837-1904), was a Democratic representative in Congress from 1885 to 1893.

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  • A second town, laid out in 1764, by Colonel John Campbell (with the permission of the commandant at Fort Pitt), is bounded in the present city by Water Street, Market Street, Second Avenue and Ferry Street, and comprises four blocks.

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  • In January 1784 the sale of the land included in the " Manor of Pittsburgh " was begun by the grandsons of William Penn,, John Penn (1729-1795), the second son of Richard Penn and lieutenant-governor of Pennsylvania in1763-1771and in 1 7731776; and John Penn (1760-1834), the fourth son of Thomas Penn; and in the following June a new series of town lots was laid out in which was incorporated Colonel Campbell's survey, Thereafter, settlers, chiefly Scotch and Irish, came rapidly.

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  • Sir Colin Campbell, a veteran soldier whose laurels had been won in many battles from the Peninsula to the Crimea, was despatched from England to take command =of the army in India.

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  • Sir Colin Campbell had been sent out from England to suppress the Mutiny, and had assumed command of the Indian army on the 17th of August, but could not immediately proceed to the front.

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  • Campbell had with him 4500 men with whom to raise a siege maintained by 60,000 trained soldiers occupying strong positions.

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  • On the 16th the Sikandra Bagh was stormed; on the following day Campbell joined hands with Outram and Havelock, and the relief of Lucknow was finally accomplished.

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  • Sir Colin Campbell now decided to withdraw the garrison and women and children from the residency, and to hold Lucknow by a strong division operating outside the city.

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  • On his return to Cawnpore Campbell found that General Windham was being attacked at that place by the Gwalior contingent.

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  • The enemy were thoroughly routed, but Campbell lost the opportunity of pushing the victory home by forbidding Outram to cross the bridge in pursuit if he thought he would lose a "single man," and by sending the cavalry away from the environs of the city at the critical moment.

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  • It was afterwards acknowledged that the Oudh proclamation, interpreted as Canning meant it should be, was a wise piece of statesmanship. After the fall of Lucknow Canning insisted that Sir Colin Campbell should take immediate action against the rebels in Oudh and Rohilkhand, and a number of petty and harassing operations were carried out by detached columns; but Campbell moved too slowly to bring his guerrilla opponents to book, and the rebellion was really brought to a conclusion by Sir Hugh Rose's brilliant campaign in Central India.

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  • The rising in this quarter received little attention until January 1858, when Sir Hugh Rose was given the command of two brigades, to act in concert with Sir Colin Campbell, and he immediately began a campaign which for celerity and effectiveness has rarely been equalled in India.

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  • He was hampered by none of that exaggerated respect for the rebels which earned Sir Colin Campbell the nickname of Old Khabardhar (Old Take-Care); but carried to an extreme the policy of audacity.

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  • BianchiGiovini's biography (1836) is greatly marred by digressions, and is inferior in some respects to that by Arabella Georgina Campbell (1869), which is enriched by numerous references to MSS.

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  • The pre-Cape rocks of the northern region occur in the Campbell Rand, Asbestos mountains, Matsap and Langebergen, and in the Schuftebergen.

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  • The chief rocks of the Campbell Rand series are limestones and dolomites, with some interbedded quartzites.

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  • In 1907, the year of the Imperial Conference, he pleaded strongly for Colonial Preference, a policy against which, in spite of the support which it obtained from Dominion Ministers, Sir Henry Campbell * Bannerman's Government set its face.

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  • Like Stone, Alexander Campbell had adopted (in 1812) immersion, and, like him, his two great desires were for Christian unity and the restoration of the ancient order of things.

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  • Campbell objected to the name "Christians" as sectarianized by Stone, but "Disciples" never drove out of use the name "Christians."

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  • During the Civil War the denomination escaped an actual scission by following the neutral views of Campbell, who opposed slavery, war and abolition.

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  • Lucknow, where a small British garrison was besieged in the residency, was twice relieved, once temporarily by Sir James Outram and General Havelock, and afterwards permanently, by Sir Cohn Campbell, who had been sent out from England to take the chief command.

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  • The refusal of the council to accept the recommendation of the senate, that they should appoint an eminent Unitarian minister to the professorship of logic and mental philosophy, revived all De Morgan's sensitiveness on the subject of sectarian freedom; and, though his feelings were doubtless excessive, there is no doubt that gloom was thrown over his life, intensified in 1867 by the loss of his son George Campbell De Morgan, a young man of the highest scientific promise, whose name, as De Morgan expressly wished, will long be connected with the London Mathematical Society, of which he was one of the founders.

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  • John M`Leod Campbell - with a strong desire for unity in thought, " the simplicity that is in Christ " - caught most attention by the suggestion of a vicarious repentance in Jesus Christ.

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  • With the aid of the Gwalior contingent he pressed General Windham hard at Cawnpore on the 27th and 28th of November 1857, but was defeated by Sir Colin Campbell on the 6th of December.

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  • Lord Chancellor Campbell (1799-1861) was a native of Cupar.

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  • Campbell (1768-1848), whose brief and disastrous term had been marked by wholesale bank suspensions, and an enormous depreciation of state and national bank notes.

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  • Writers the most unlike each other - Swift and Hugh Boulter, George Berkeley and George Stone, Arthur Young and Dr Thomas Campbell - all tell the same tale.

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  • In Windsor are the Campbell School (for girls) and a.

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  • On an isolated hill above the junction of the parent streams, named Sorrow and Care, stands the ruin of Castle Campbell, known also as Gloom Castle, an old stronghold of the Argyll family.

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  • Harviestoun Castle, about midway between Dollar and Tillicoultry, once belonged to the Tait family, and here Archibald Campbell Tait, archbishop of Canterbury, spent some of his boyhood.

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  • Alfalfa is not easily started, however, on the uplands of the extreme western part of the state; and dry-farming (the Campbell dust-mulch system) has the expensiveness in labour of intensive cultivation.

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  • In 1756 or 1757, Fort Loudon, named in honour of John Campbell, earl of Loudon, was built on the Little Tennessee river, about 30 m.

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  • The only person wearing a bright red blazer, Chairman Andy Campbell.

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  • He then ate the food and climbed the hill before burying himself in the warm bosom of Ffyona Campbell or some such blond.

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  • Citizen florida home insurance owner friend Camille campbell profit without having lack of data.

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  • Johnny Campbell lead the first cheerleaders at a Minnesota University American football game on November 2, 1898.

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  • John Terry. i presume your saying sol campbell and Ashley cole arent english or worthy?

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  • Campbell's Betty Boo's bodily contortions when entering and exiting the stage is side splittingly funny.

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  • Vortex Dynamics Dr. A.M. Campbell The project is investigating the role of surface currents in the critical current of BSCCO crystals.

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  • Donald Campbell Donald started by buying the K4 Bluebird (in its jet conversion form) from his father's executors.

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  • Meeting up with David Campbell and Susan, The timelord must once intervene in a war between the ruling factions vying to unite England.

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  • Control over the flow of information from the government to the media became Campbell ' s personal fiefdom.

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  • The former Australian Olympic champion at the 200m freestyle, Duncan Campbell, considered what his response to Thorpe would have been.

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  • Campbell falsely charges that PH " have also urged patients to take a poisonous drug called ' organic germanium ' .

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  • Perhaps they all realized what a smug git Campbell is.

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  • Ken Campbell has always sought the holy Grail of comedy, the state of mind in which everything is funny.

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  • According to the official coast path guidebook they were built in the 1930s by architect John Campbell.

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  • Ken Campbell has always sought the Holy Grail of comedy, the state of mind in which everything is funny.

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  • However, Anne Campbell Mcinnes soon found that the idea of so early a map appearing after centuries of obscurity provoked complete incredulity.

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  • James Campbell is principal investigator for the vaccine trials at the University of Maryland School of Medicine.

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  • Joel Campbell it is not.

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  • Campbell Jung lexicon Of terms A useful lexicon of terms, particularly related to the psychology of Carl Jung.

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  • The Great Cellists by Margaret Campbell Normal Price £ 16.95 This book recreates the magic of the greatest cellists in history.

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  • Meanwhile, the front page of today's Guardian includes a piece on John Humphrys of Radio 4 ' savaging ' Alastair Campbell...

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  • Behavior The Campbell is a very practical, hardy duck which is a prolific egg layer.

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  • Donald Campbell, a child, adolescent and adult psychoanalyst, works in the National Health Service and in private practice.

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  • He repeatedly rebuffed attempts by Alistair Campbell, the Gus Hedges of the government, to polish the document his way.

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  • Pre 87 young gun Ryan Campbell (Reynard 83FF) took fourth ahead of series returnee Hugh Graham.

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  • Kurt Campbell 5 - Failed to impress and did not look sharp coming back from his injury.

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  • Naomi Campbell was born May 22, 1970 and is a British supermodel and actress.

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  • This sequel to Campbell's 1998 hit The mask of Zorro made the fatal mistake of undermining the masked swordsman by challenging his very relevance.

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  • The Cameroon striker pulls away from Campbell, turns and strikes a left-footed thunderbolt.

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  • A fellow Australian journalist, Eric Campbell, suffered minor shrapnel wounds in the blast.

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  • Thomas Campbell's poem, Gertrude of Wyoming (1809), is based on this episode, various liberties being taken with the facts.

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  • A second theory is contended for by Principal Campbell in his treatise on the eldership, and by others also, that there is no warrant in Scripture for the eldership as it exists in the Presbyterian Church; that the ruling elder is not, and is not designed to be, a counterpart of the New Testament elder; in other words, that he is not a presbyter, but only a layman chosen to represent the laity in the church courts and permitted to assist in the government of the church.

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  • He also wrote a campaign biography of William Henry Harrison (1839); Theory of Morals (1844); and Theory of Politics (1853), as well as Lives of Atrocious Judges (1856), compiled from Lord Campbell's two works.

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  • The second was called for by the preference which the common law gave to a distant collateral over the brother of the half-blood of the first purchaser; the fourth conferred an indefeasible title on adverse possession for twenty years (a term shortened by Lord Cairns in 1875 to twelve years); the fifth reduced the number of witnesses required by law to attest wills, and removed the vexatious distinction which existed in this respect between freeholds and copyholds; the last freed an innocent debtor from imprisonment only before final judgment (or on what was termed mesne process), but the principle stated by Campbell that only fraudulent debtors should be imprisoned was ultimately given effect to for England and Wales in 1869.1 In one of his most cherished objects, however, that of Land Registration, which formed the theme of his maiden speech in parliament, Campbell was doomed to disappointment.

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  • Both his father and his uncle William Campbell, who had together founded an important drapery business in Glasgow, left him considerable fortunes; and he assumed the name of Bannerman in 1872, in compliance with the provisions of the will of his maternal uncle, Henry Bannerman, from whom he inherited a large property in Kent.

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  • The history of that ill-fated queen occupied much of his attention, and his last work, A Detection of the LoveLetters lately attributed in Hugh Campbell's work to Mary Queen of Scots, is an exposure of an attempt to represent as genuine some fictitious letters said to have passed between Mary and Bothwell, which had fallen into deserved oblivion.

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  • In the case of ex parte John Merryman (1861, Campbell's Reports, 646), he protested against the assumption of power by the President to suspend the privileges of the writ of habeas corpus or to confer that power upon a military officer without the authorization of Congress.

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  • Skye Campbell, a client service specialist there, said most of the animals turned in are cats or purebred animals.

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  • A token of this will be the recasting of the role of Alastair Campbell.

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  • Senior Instructors Ollie demonstrating frontal reverse kick in Savate kickboxing with apprentice instructor Tim Campbell.

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  • By Alastair Campbell I bumped into David Cameron recently and immediately experienced the charm that currently has our media slurping out of his hands.

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  • This sequel to Campbell's 1998 hit The Mask of Zorro made the fatal mistake of undermining the masked swordsman by challenging his very relevance.

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  • Lashing out at them is a tongue-in-cheek reference to Campbell 's widely documented temper tantrums.

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  • The false charges trumped up out of Ali Campbell 's backside?

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  • In the best traditions of the trade union movement, solidarity was given to Oliver Campbell who is fighting against his unjust imprisonment.

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  • Naomi Campbell fragrance came onto the scene in 2000 as a blend of florals meant for nights out or evenings spent indoors with your lover or just for casual wear.

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  • One of the things you may not have heard of in the realm of Naomi Campbell's scent exploration is Naomagic.

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  • The fragrance is different from the scent called Naomi Campbell.

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  • Naomi Campbell not only created the Naomi Campbell and Naomagic fragrances, but there's also a line called Exult.

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  • Naomi Campbell's perfumes and lotions may not be the most talked about.

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  • He has designed the faces of some of the most famous models, including Naomi Campbell and Heidi Klum, to name only a few.

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  • Known as the pop artist who made prints of Marilyn Monroe and Campbell's soup cans, Warhol had an unmistakable style.

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  • Seems it's hard to be pretty and nice for supermodel Naomi Campbell.

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  • Once again, Campbell's attitude has gotten her into trouble - this time leading to her arrest.

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  • Naomi Campbell isn't exactly synonymous with "friendly" or "sweet."

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  • In the case of Galanis, Campbell paid an undisclosed amount and was not convicted.

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  • On Wednesday, October 25, Campbell was arrested on "suspicion of assault" in London and held for questioning.

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  • While the Metropolitan Police would not release the name of the woman they had arrested because she had not yet been charged with a crime, it was clear that it was Naomi Campbell when her representatives released a statement.

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  • Police would still not confirm that it was Naomi Campbell but did say the woman was released on bail until sometime in December.

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  • The arrest was made when a woman, reportedly Campbell's drug counselor, told the police that she had been attacked.

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  • Often the subject of controversy, Campbell has repeatedly blamed her bad attitude on resentment she has for her father abandoning her at a young age.

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  • Naomi Campbell's sentence, set to begin March 19, 2007, is court-ordered community service.

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  • Campbell was originally charged with second-degree assault.

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  • Campbell, 36, who has a reputation for having a temper and being difficult to work with, was also ordered to attend a two-day anger management course and pay more than $350 to cover Scolavino's medical costs from the incident.

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  • People magazine reports that Campbell is "happy" to do the cleaning, and once it's over, she'll get on with her life.

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  • This was not Naomi Campbell's first time facing the law.

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  • In March 2005, her also then-assistant claimed Campbell slapped her and hit her in the head with a BlackBerry personal organizer.

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  • Campbell also has publicly feuded with several celebrities, including fellow model Tyra Banks and former Spice Girl Victoria Beckham.

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  • Campbell's sentence is similar to the one 1980s pop singer Boy George (George O'Dowd) received the previous year.

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  • Supermodel Naomi Campbell was born on this day in 1970 in Streatham, South London, England.

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  • Campbell is also known for her short temper, and has been accused several times of assault.

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  • Naomi Campbell is one of the most successful supermodels in the world, and she uses her fame to advocate for other African-American models.

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  • First Naomi Campbell was sentenced to cleaning floors as punishment for breaking the law, and now it's Paris Hilton's turn.

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  • In March 2007, model Naomi Campbell served a five-day sentence of cleaning the floors in the New York City Sanitation Department for assaulting her housekeeper with a cell phone.

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  • Naomi Campbell - It's to be expected that a supermodel has legs up to there, but Naomi's have shape, which is exactly what gets her a ticket on our list.

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  • The family now lives in California and Dakota goes to Campbell Hall school in North Hollywood.

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  • The woman claimed to have seen Heath Ledger doing drugs before his tragic death and also made claims that she was once the personal assistant to tantrum prone model Naomi Campbell.

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  • White once claimed that Campbell made her smuggle drugs.

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  • Vincent Kartheiser plays Pete Campbell on Mad Men, a married account executive who has a child with Peggy Olson.

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  • Well-known Brits around the world include J.K. Rowling, Naomi Campbell, Rod Stewart, Catherine Zeta-Jones, David Tennant, Daniel Radcliffe, Jason Stathem and Academy Award winner Colin Firth to name a few.

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  • Despite a reputation for diva like behavior, Campbell's international presence includes a personal friendship with former South African President Nelson Mandela and an on-again off-again relationship with Robert DeNiro in the early 1990s.

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  • In 1898, a young man named Johnny Campbell directed the crowd's cheers and became the first official college cheerleader.

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  • Lanegan has also worked with notable artists like Greg Dulli of the Afghan Wigs and Isobel Campbell from Belle and Sebastian.

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  • Some of the celebrities who wear David Yurman jewelry include Ashley Judd, Megan Fox, Kate Moss, Naomi Campbell, Tyra Banks, Julia Roberts, Goldie Hawn, Gwyneth Paltrow, Charlize Theron, and probably most of Hollywood.

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  • Boasting lens colors in lava stone, soft coral and white sand, these shades are a hit with the jet set crowd, particularly with globetrotter and supermodel Naomi Campbell.

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  • Another lead character in the series is Sam Axe played by Bruce Campbell.

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  • Campbell reviewed in the Journal of Criminal Justice.

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  • Ken and Kim Campbell are both of supporters of a relaxed homeschooling method.

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  • When reading or listening to the Campbell's Homeschool Habitat materials, you will be given a chance to observe the implementation of relaxed homeschooling methods in a family's life.

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  • From nebulous schedules to a myriad of hands-on activities, Kim and Ken Campbell have given potential homeschoolers an opportunity to estimate the advantages and disadvantages of this particular homeschool approach.

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  • One of the stars of the show was Naomi Campbell who, in conjunction with the creators of line, helped design a collection of bikinis and cocktail dresses for the supermodel's charitable foundation, the Fashion For Relief Association.

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  • There's a reason "rhinestone" and "cowboy" were combined in Glen Campbell's song, "Rhinestone Cowboy".

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  • The company's initial product was a replica of Andy Warhol's Campbell's Soup Can imprinted on a pair of shoes - and this bold risk paid off.

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  • Once more, Anna Faris returns in the role of Cindy Campbell, the bimbette who always seems to attract supernatural occurrences.

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  • Anna Farris and Regina Hall are back as Cindy Campbell and Brenda Meeks, respectively.

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  • Anna Faris is back for another movie as Cindy Campbell.

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  • A printable coupon for $1.00 off two Campbell's cooking soups nets you two free cans of soup when they are on sale for 50 cents each.

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  • Axion footwear was founded by pro skateboarder Kareem Campbell and was a popular name until the company went bankrupt.

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  • Today, Mont Blanc jewelry is worn by celebrities such as Andie MacDowell, Naomi Campbell, Jennifer Lopez, Lucy Liu, Eva Green and Naomi Watts.

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  • Naomi Campbell is a diva of many talents.

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  • Discovered at the age of fifteen on the streets of London, Naomi Campbell has been in the limelight for over fifteen years.

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  • Both television and movies have had the honor of featuring Naomi Campbell.

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  • For a great deal of Campbell's television time, she's just been herself.

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  • Campbell is also involved in other charitable organizations, helping in fundraisers to help underprivileged children.

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  • Interested in buying one of Naomi Campbell's books and contributing to a good cause?

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  • Naomi Campbell is just as well known for being feisty as she is for her phenomenal body and poise.

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  • Several former employees have claimed to have been viciously mistreated by Campbell.

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  • Naomi Campbell may be beautiful and poised, but it's probably best to just admire her from afar.

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  • Naomi Campbell is a beautiful mix of ethnicities.

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  • Fans of Belle and Sebastian, Isobell Campbell, Camera Obscura, and The Hermit Crabs will hear something they like here.

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  • Although it is often said that the musical is based on the music of ABBA, in reality the story actually was adapted by British writer Catherine Johnson from a 1968 Gina Lollabrigida movie called Buona Sera, Mrs. Campbell.

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  • Prior to the release of her debut album, Pink stayed busy singing back up vocals for Diana Ross, 98 Degrees, Kenny Lattimore and Tevin Campbell.

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  • The one that threatened the parodists the most was the 1990s case Campbell vs. Acuff-Rose Music.

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  • It is Campbell who is credited with fostering the writers who are now considered writers of the Golden Age of Sci-Fi.

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  • She becomes close to and eventually adopts the oldest and yet youngest of the returnees, Maia Rutledge (Conchita Campbell), an eight-year-old girl who disappeared in 1946.

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  • The ray gun was introduced in 1930 in the book The Black Star Passes by Campbell.

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  • In this work, Campbell points out that various myths from various cultures through time continue to affect people because they all follow a similar hero-myth structure.

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  • Star Wars creator George Lucas stated his films consciously follow Campbell's structure.

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  • Mary's parents Samuel and Deanna Campbell were Hunters, a fact she kept a secret from John.

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  • It took place in Cleveland where seven year old Eric Campbell was abducted from his Karate class.

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  • He's Eric Campbell's grandfather on his mother's side.

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  • Fred wandered into the kitchen as Dean was reading the label of a Campbell's soup can in hopes of creating an exotic sauce for his broiling fish.

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  • The edition of the Republic, undertaken in 1856, remained unfinished, but was continued with the help of Professor Lewis Campbell.

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  • See Holliday's Life (1797); Campbell's Chief Justices; Foss's Judges; Greville's Memoirs, passim; Horace Walpole's Letters; and other memoirs and works on the period.

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  • Following on this first experiment, the East India Company, in 1841, proposed to maintain a permanent flotilla on the Tigris and Euphrates, and set two vessels, the " Nitocris " and the " Nimrod," under the command of Captain Campbell of the Indian navy, to attempt the ascent of the latter river.

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  • The foundation of the Aberdeen Philosophical Society (the "Wise Club"), which numbered among its members Campbell, Beattie, Gerard and Dr John Gregory, was mainly owing to the exertions of Reid, who was secretary for the first year (1758).

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  • Conway married in 1747 Caroline, daughter of General Campbell (afterwards duke of Argyll), and widow of the earl of Aylesbury.

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  • At Elba, as Sir Neil Campbell noted, he became inactive and proportionately corpulent.

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  • In 1818 he joined the Rev. John Campbell in his second journey to South Africa to inspect the stations of the London Missionary Society, and reported that the conduct of the Cape Colonists towards the natives was deserving of strong reprobation.

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  • In 1914 James Campbell left an estate, valued at $10,000,000, in trust to St.

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  • Whether the national hieroglyphic system of the Hittites expressed the same Indo-European language as, according to Hrozny, their cuneiform does, we do not know, as further attempts to elucidate it made by Campbell Thompson 11 and Cowley," while in themselves very interesting experiments, do not seem to take us further than previous attempts by Sayce and others.

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  • In 1883, however, an observatory, equipped at a cost of f4000 (raised by public subscription), was opened by Mrs Cameron Campbell of Monzie, who provided the site.

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  • Mission stations north of the 'Orange were established a few years later, and in 1813 the Rev. John Campbell, after visiting Griqualand West for the London Missionary Society, traced the Harts river, and from its junction with the Vaal followed the latter stream to its confluence with the Orange, journeying thence by the banks of the Orange as far as Pella, in Little Namaqualand, discovering the great falls.

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  • For a few years Campbell studied at the United College, St Andrews.

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  • Campbell also devoted himself a good deal to criminal business, but in spite of his unceasing industry he failed to attract much attention behind the bar; he had changed his circuit from the home to the Oxford, but briefs came in slowly, and it was not till 1827 that he obtained a silk gown and found himself in that "front rank" who are permitted to have political aspirations.

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  • In a temperate and learned speech, based on Fox's declaration against constitution-mongering, he supported both the enfranchising and the disfranchising clauses, and easily disposed of the cries of "corporation robbery," "nabob representation," "opening for young men of talent," &c. The following year (1832) found Campbell solicitor-general, a knight and member for Dudley, which he represented till 1834.

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