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         Square A:     more books (99)
  1. Ben Franklin and the Magic Squares (Step-Into-Reading, Step 4) by Frank Murphy, 2001-02-27
  2. Times Square Red, Times Square Blue by Samuel R. Delany, 2001-11
  3. One Magic Square: The Easy, Organic Way to Grow Your Own Food on a 3-Foot Square by Lolo Houbein, 2010-02-16
  4. The Cats in Krasinski Square by Karen Hesse, 2004-09-01
  5. Postcards from Tomorrow Square: Reports from China (Vintage) by James Fallows, 2008-12-30
  6. Sea Squares by Joy Hulme, 1999-05-19
  7. Knit Kimono Too: Simple Designs to Mix, Match, and Layer by Vicki Square, 2010-12-14
  8. Great Public Squares: An Architect's Selection by Robert F. Gatje, 2010-04-05
  9. 200 Crochet Blocks for Blankets, Throws, and Afghans: Crochet Squares to Mix and Match by Jan Eaton, 2004-09-01
  10. One Square Mile of Hell: The Battle for Tarawa by John Wukovits, 2007-08-07
  11. Little Scribbles: Halloween Fun with Spookley the Square Pumpkin by Joe Troiano, 2006-09-28
  12. Walking the Perfect Square (Moe Prager Series) by Reed Farrel Coleman, 2008-04-07
  13. Murder on Washington Square (Gaslight Mystery) by Victoria Thompson, 2002-04-02
  14. The Pajama Girls of Lambert Square by Rosina Lippi, 2008-02-14

21. Jackson Square: A Lingering Way Of Life In New Orleans
Jackson Square is a popular area with the throngs of strangers who visit New Orleans each year. But the square is also home to a number of fulltime
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2001/05/0517_jacksonsquare.html
Site Index Subscribe Shop Search Top 15 Most Popular Stories NEWS SPECIAL SERIES RESOURCES Front Page Travel Jackson Square: A Lingering Way of Life in New Orleans by Susan Roesgen
National Geographic Today
May 17, 2001 As if suddenly remembering the punch line to a familiar joke, a street musician playing his horn in the middle of New Orleans' Jackson Square stops abruptly to address his audience. "And we must tell you about Mr. Fill-Up-the-Box," he says. "The more you pay, the better we play." This, and an earful of music, is what out-of-towners expect to see down in the heart of the famous French Quarter of Louisiana's old port city. While the musty, Southern thoroughfare distracts tourists with its street charlatans and bards, Jackson Square is simply home to people such as Pat and Lee Mason. "Bring a list," Pat Mason says to her husband as they head out to the grocery store. The Masons have lived in the French Quarter along Jackson Square for seven years, surrounded by throngs of strangers who stroll the 18th-century streets beneath the steeple of St. Louis Cathedral Basilica, the country's oldest cathedral. Unnoticed by the tourists and fortune-tellers, the Masons never have to go more than a few blocks to find everything they need. And even during New Orleans's legendary Mardi Gras parades and annual Jazz and Heritage Festival, which bring thousands of visitors to their front door every year, the Masons dont seem to mind the guests. "When I'm in St Louis, I visit them!" said Lee.

22. Square And Non-Square Pixels
Pixels in the graphics world are square. A 100 pixel vertical line is the Usually this means that you start with a greater number of square pixels than
http://www.lurkertech.com/lg/pixelaspect.html
Square and Non-Square Pixels
By Chris Pirazzi. Thanks to Bob Williams for much of the information. Thanks to Charles Poynton for pointer to RP 187 and other info.
What Are They?
Pixels in the graphics world are square. A 100 pixel vertical line is the same length as a 100 pixel horizontal line on a graphics monitor. Pixels in an ITU-R BT.601-4 digital video signal (also known as Rec. 601 and formerly CCIR 601) are non-square. A 100 pixel vertical line may be longer or shorter than a 100 pixel horizontal line on a video monitor, depending on the video standard. See below for details. The term which describes this is pixel aspect ratio. In SGI libraries it is specified as a fraction of vertical (y) pixel size divided by (x) horizontal pixel size. The pixel aspect ratio for square pixels is 1/1. This term is different than frame aspect ratio, which is a fraction of total vertical (y) frame size over total horizontal (x) frame size, for a given definition of "frame."
Why Do I Care?
Many image processing operations assume a certain pixel aspect ratio. For example, a blur operation with a radially symmetric kernel may look bad on non-square pixels. Any rendering of geometry-based graphics to an image must take the pixel aspect ratio into account.

23. Public Square: A PASSION FOR TRUTH: THE WAY OF FAITH AND REASON
Richard John Neuhaus brings his usual broad commentary on (very) contemporary Americal culture with a special look at our natural passion for seeking truth.
http://www.firstthings.com/ftissues/ft9812/public.html
The Public Square
(December 1998)
Richard John Nuehaus
A Passion for Truth: The Way of Faith and Reason
Nearly 130 years ago the First Vatican Council, in a document called Dei Filius , affirmed the complete compatibility of faith and reason, and a few years later, in 1879, Leo XIII issued the encyclical Aeterni Patris , "On the Restoration of Christian Philosophy," which affirmed the normative status of the thought of St. Thomas Aquinas. Both texts come in for frequent mention in the new encyclical by John Paul II, Fides et Ratio (Faith and Reason), but this reflection of almost thirty thousand words also reaches back to biblical and classical sources, lifts up the pioneering intellectual work of the patristic era, pays high tribute to its development in the medieval period (with particular attention to St. Anselm of Canterbury as well as St. Thomas), and brings all this into critical conversation with the modern era and the Church’s response to it in the Second Vatican Council. Fides et Ratio is as breathtaking in its historical and intellectual reach as it is provocative in its argument.

24. The Public Square: A Continuing Survey Of Religion And Public Life
Richard John Neuhaus The Public Square from First Things Journal.
http://www.firstthings.com/ftissues/ft9504/public.html
The Public Square
Richard James Neuhaus
First Things 52 (April 1995):56-68.
Clearing the Mind of Cant
With the enormous attention paid The Bell Curve , the book by Richard Herrnstein and Charles Murray that is inevitably described as "controversial" (or worse), another book appearing about the same time, and addressing some of the same questions, went almost unnoticed. It is a shame, because Thomas Sowell's Race and Culture: A World View (Basic Books) is an invaluable resource in a time such as ours when very basic questions are being asked about the limits of human behavior and the ethics of social policy. Sowell, a senior fellow at the Hoover Institute at Stanford University, is a prolific author and columnist. Race and Culture is not merely another of his always suggestive publications, but a summing up of what he has learned from many years of examining human behavior in cultural contexts as various as Los Angeles, Sri Lanka, and remote islands of the South Pacific. It warrants the subtitle "a worldview" by virtue of both global scope and the range of questions addressed. Why is it that some groups "succeed" and others don't? Sowell is impatient with intellectual complexifiers of what is meant by success. To succeed, in his view, is to make your way economically, to build a solid material base on which life is stable and pleasant enough to afford the luxury of indulging other interesting concerns, including, if one is so inclined, the question of what it means to succeed. Sowell's argument is that some cultures do and some cultures do not support the values, dispositions, and character traits that, everywhere and always, have produced material success. Backing up the argument with a stunning array of historical illustrations, he shows that hard work, an ability to organize others, a gift for rational thinking, and an eagerness to learn from "superior" cultures are among the characteristics essential to material success.

25. Semimagic Square -- From MathWorld
A semimagic square is a square that fails to be a magic square only because For example, Jelliss terms a semimagic Square A magic square and a magic
http://mathworld.wolfram.com/SemimagicSquare.html
INDEX Algebra Applied Mathematics Calculus and Analysis Discrete Mathematics ... Alphabetical Index
DESTINATIONS About MathWorld About the Author Headline News ... Random Entry
CONTACT Contribute an Entry Send a Message to the Team
MATHWORLD - IN PRINT Order book from Amazon Recreational Mathematics Magic Figures Magic Squares Semimagic Square A semimagic square is a square that fails to be a magic square only because one or both of the main diagonal sums do not equal the magic constant (Kraitchik 1942, p. 143). Note some care with terminology is necessary. For example, Jelliss terms a semimagic square a "magic square" and a magic square a "diagonally magic square." The number of distinct semimagic squares (treating squares differing by rotations and reflections as identical) of orders 1, 2, ... are 1, 0, 9, .... The nine semimagic squares of order 3 are illustrated above. SEE ALSO: Magic Square [Pages Linking Here] REFERENCES: Jelliss, G. "Knight's Tour Notes." http://home.freeuk.net/ktn/ Jelliss, G. "General Theory of Magic Knight's Tours." http://home.freeuk.net/ktn/mg.htm

26. Theater Square A-Fare
The Theater Square AFare package can be ordered with the following Cultural District events. Dr. Dolittle, Benedum Center (Pittsburgh CLO); Kem,
http://www.pgharts.org/theatersquareafare/
About the Trust Venues Real Estate Support the Trust ... Contact Us Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa Home Event Search Contact Us Join Our Mailing List ... Webcam The Pittsburgh Cultural Trust is a non-profit organization dedicated to the promotion and development of Pittsburgh's downtown Cultural District. 803 Liberty Avenue
Pittsburgh, PA 15222
Phone: (412) 471-6070 Box Office:
A Theater Square A-fare Package:
available exclusively to Cultural District Ticket Buyers
on Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Sunday evenings
Includes dinner for two*
Available for pre- or post-performance dining
Plus
located within the Cabaret at Theater Square
Plus guaranteed, pre-paid parking at the Theater Square garage
Visit or call the Box Office at Theater Square
To order online, click here
Make the most of your evening out! The Theater Square A-Fare package can be ordered with the following Cultural District events.

27. Goldstein Museum ~ Exhibitions : Hip Art That's Square
Hip Art That s Square A Survey of Album Covers from the Collection of Richard Shelton. hip art logo (see exhibit poster)
http://goldstein.che.umn.edu/hip-art.html
Hip Art That's Square Hip Art That's Square: A Survey of Album Covers from the Collection of Richard Shelton see exhibit poster This exhibition examines the relationships between popular music and the graphic art of its packaging. The show features almost 300 albums from the collector's total library of 18,000+ albums, which spans half of the twentieth century and most musical genres. Dates: January 30 - April 3, 2005. Curated by Richard Shelton and Steven McCarthy. The gallery also featured an interactive computer kiosk with 60 album images; viewers could learn more about each record and hear a song played. Designed and produced by graduate student Rebecca Noran. A small publication with essays by Goldstein director Mason Riddle and Weisman director of education Colleen Sheehy, and a checklist of the albums in the exhibit, is available from the gallery at no charge. Themes in exhibit (linked to text panels) Overview of Record Albums Vogues: The Picture Record Case Study: Jim Flora Case Study: David Stone Martin ... Album Rhetoric: Censored!

28. Math Forum: Magic Squares: 'Multiplication' In A New Context
For example, with the 3x3 Square A and the 4x4 square B, the two 12x12 squares A*B and Thus, the 12x12 magic Square A*B is composite. On the other hand,
http://mathforum.org/alejandre/magic.square/adler/product.html
A Math Forum Web Unit
Allan Adler's
Exploring the Math:
Magic Squares: 'Multiplication' in a new context.
How can we call the result a 'product'?
Suzanne's Magic Squares Multiplying Magic Squares: Contents
Statement:
    The first magic square, which will be called A , is 3x3, and the second one, which will be called B , is 4x4. The 'product' of A and B , denoted by A*B , will be a 12x12 magic square.
Question 1:
    How can this be called a product
Explanation 1:
    The words product and multiplication are intended to convey the notion that two magic squares are being combined to get another magic square. Since we are not dealing with numbers, however, we cannot claim that the word 'multiplication' already means something here; the use of the word in this new context is an invention.
    Having used the word, it is reasonable to ask whether it has anything else in common with the usual notion of multiplication for numbers besides the fact that things get combined.
Question 2:
    What must be true to have the operation qualify as multiplication
Explanation 2:
  • The operation * , which we defined for magic squares, satisfies the
  • 29. Math Forum - Ask Dr. Math
    So, what s the official word? Is a Square A rhombus or not? Date 8/30/96 at 134328 From Doctor Jodi Subject Re Is a Square A rhombus? Hi Carol!
    http://mathforum.org/library/drmath/view/59003.html

    Associated Topics
    Dr. Math Home Search Dr. Math
    Is a Square a Rhombus?
    Date: 8/30/96 at 13:17:5 From: Carol Boyer Subject: Is a Square a Rhombus? My son is in fourth grade, and his homework had a list of geometric shapes and he was to say whether each was a rhombus or not. Next to "square", he had written "yes." I told him that a square was not a rhombus, but he insists that his teacher said that it was. Well, I have checked three different dictionaries and am coming up with some conflicting information. They all agree that a rhombus is an equilateral parallelogram, but one says the angles are oblique, one says the angles are USUALLY oblique (implying that they don't have to be), and one specifically says the angles are NOT right angles. So, what's the official word? Is a square a rhombus or not? Date: 8/30/96 at 13:43:28 From: Doctor Jodi Subject: Re: Is a square a rhombus? Hi Carol! Eric's online treasure trove of math defines a rhombus as: A quadrilateral with both pairs of opposite sides parallel (and therefore of the same length), i.e. an equilateral parallelogram. According to this definition, a square is a rhombus. Thanks for your question - it's a good one! -Doctor Jodi, The Math Forum Check out our web site! http://mathforum.org/dr.math/

    30. Tiananmen Square: A Revolt That Still Haunts China’s Rulers
    The Tiananmen Square revolt is often seen as a student protest. But although students started the movement it quickly drew in millions of workers.
    http://www.swp.ie/resources/Tiananmen Square.htm
    Tiananmen Square: A revolt that still haunts China’s rulers When NATO bombed the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets in cities across China in the biggest protests since the Tiananmen Square revolt ten years ago. China’s rulers tolerated the protests at first but soon curbed them, as they feared a repeat of the Tiananmen Square. China’s economy, the seventh largest in the world, has been hit hard by the Asian economic crisis that swept through the region last year. Unemployment has risen to its highest level since 1949 and some figures estimate that 100 million are out of work. Haunted by the memories of Tiananmen Square, China’s rulers fear they are sitting on a volcano. Anger at the economic crisis and the demands for political change could lead to an explosion. Reform The revolt in Tiananmen Square began in May 1989 when 150,000 people demonstrated at the funeral of the sacked pro-reform politician Hu Yaobang. Beijing workers and students defied the threats of their rulers in protests that grew ever more militant, culminating in the ‘nights of the barricades’ when millions took over the city and faced down the troops sent in to crush them. The massive growth in China’s economy in the 1980s had produced chaotic effects. Society was transformed but it had also resulted in insecurity and poverty for millions.

    31. Shaker Square Area Development Corp. -- Mission And Objectives
    A nonprofit corporation that provides the people and businesses of the Shaker Square Area with the leadership and action needed to foster wellmaintained, economically strong neighborhoods.
    http://www.shakersquareareadevelopment.org/
    Shaker Square Area Development Corp. Shaker Square Area Development Corp.'s (SHAD's) mission is to provide the people and businesses of the Shaker Square area with the leadership and action needed to foster well-maintained, economically strong neighborhoods. A diverse membership of 1000 individuals, families and businesses support SHAD in its pursuit of the following objectives To maintain and promote the 4000 units of apartment/condominium housing located in the Shaker Square area. To promote home ownership and housing maintenance in the Fairwood, Ludlow, CHALK and Chadbourne- Drexmore neighborhoods. To revitalize and promote Shaker Square, Larchmere and Shaker Boulevard West as regional shopping, entertainment and business districts. To preserve, protect and enhance the area's landmark architecture, public spaces and green spaces. To address security and quality of life issues within our physical environment. To foster neighborhood pride and collaboration.

    32. A Cricket In Times Square: A Cricket In Times Square: Pitchfork Review
    High Two; 2004 Rating 7.6 Review by Chris Dahlen.
    http://www.pitchforkmedia.com/record-reviews/c/cricket-in-times-square/cricket-i
    Reviews News Features
    January February March April May June July August September October November December 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
    A Cricket in Times Square
    A Cricket in Times Square
    [High Two; 2004]
    Rating: 7.6
    The best way to act like a caveman is to live deep inside a cave, which is where A Cricket in Times Square have landed: their garage-rock guitars are run through shoegazer pedals and effects and magnified until they sound not like a noise, but a space a shadowy, cavernous rock chamber that threatens to drain all color from the music until they're left with nothing but echoes. Volume alone doesn't make for great rock music, and A Cricket in Times Square take a risk on their debut album by ditching precision and almost rendering themselves faceless. They hit the usual reference points from the guitar jams of a "Sister Ray" to the massive shoegaze of Bailter Space so the trick is to set themselves apart from their forebearers. Frontman Michael Tyler often drowns his vocals by shouting into the winds, rendering himself almost anonymous. You can hear his space-weary voice more clearly on the slow numbers. He gets an extended showcase on "Outliving Your Shadow", a drowsy slow dance on which he sounds like he's drooling on his pillow; the last half of the song jerks awake with an extended guitar solo that wails and doubles up on itself. But even as the guitars try to crush the album, the band's songwriting triumphs. Each track is a distinct composition, from the climbing riffs of "Careless" or the ominous two-note figure that repeats through "5 1/2-Minute Hallway", chased by eerie leather-winged-bird noises that recall early Pink Floyd. In the quiet-to-loud Galaxie 500 dreaminess of "Mourning Son", the chorus hangs on like a battleship in high seas while the band struggles to bash it off course, and the frenetic melody of "Everything Known About Medicines" hits the highest energy mark, setting off eruptions at every chorus.

    33. A Word From The Shaker Square Webkeeper
    Walking my boxer around Shaker Square A few days ago (we live just east of the In the southwest corner of the Square A large sign proclaimed Dave s
    http://www.shakersquare.net/news/message-current.htm
    Directory Events News A word from the webkeeper What a way to start a month! September 1, 2005 Dear friend of the Square,
    Just enjoyed a walk to the Square and shopping at Dave's Market , which just opened. Steve Saltzman says it's a "soft opening" — just open the doors and start serving the public — and that there will be a more formal opening in October. Busy store, wide selection, helpful staff and (something we didn't have in this spot a couple of years ago) reasonable prices. All friends of the Square must be pleased by the long-awaited announcement that Sergio’s Samba Kitchen will be opening in November in the northwest quadrant - occupying the largest vacant space at the Square. Sounds like an exciting restaurant concept. To read Sergio's message, click here So as September begins we look forward with hope:
    • That the Square's new owner will keep following through on his promises to fill it and promote it

    34. The Public Square: A Continuing Survey Of Religion And Public Life
    Richard John Neuhaus The Public Square from First Things Journal.
    http://www.leaderu.com/ftissues/ft9308/public.html
    Academics
    Humanities

    Social Sciences

    Sciences

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    ...
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    ... What's New Special Interest Past Features Other Sites Help LU About LU ... Feedback Navigation Site Map Site Index Advanced Search Browsing Help ... LU Home LU Updates Receive LU-Announce
    First Things
    The Public Square
    Richard John Neuhaus
    First Things 35 (August/September 1993): 63-75.
    Immigration and the Aliens Among Us
    Like many American Jews, Martin Peretz, editor in chief of The New Republic , had until now a deep inhibition about ever, ever visiting Germany. But he took the plunge and returns with some instructive observations about that country, and ours. Germans, he suggests, have almost gone overboard to "mortify themselves over anti-Semitism despite Germany having done more to purge this poison than any other country in Europe." He writes admiringly of Germany as Europe's "most responsible collective citizen" in responding to the masses of refugees trekking Westward as a consequence of the turmoils following the collapse of Communism. Although shortly after his visit Berlin put new restrictions on such mass immigration, one doubts that this would change Peretz's respect for the German model as the world tries to cope with changing notions of citizenship and nationhood. "The advanced countries," Peretz writes, "are now having to choose between being civic nations and ethnic nations, a choice they could elude so long as huge masses of 'others' did not pass through their portals. It was easy to be a civic nation of individuals until new ethnics with new demands for ethnic rights put into question what 'we' meant. This is tinder-box material, especially when ethnic and racial minorities demand cultural and political outcomes that they want to deny to the defining or founding majorities. This has not quite occurred in Germany, at least not yet, but it is happening in the United States."

    35. The Public Square: A Continuing Survey Of Religion And Public Life
    Richard John Neuhaus The Public Square from First Things Journal.
    http://www.leaderu.com/ftissues/ft9508/public.html
    Academics
    Humanities

    Social Sciences

    Sciences

    Theology
    ...
    Faculty Offices

    Departments
    Current Issues

    Publications

    Conferences/Events

    Apologetics
    ... What's New Special Interest Past Features Other Sites Help LU About LU ... Feedback Navigation Site Map Site Index Advanced Search Browsing Help ... LU Home LU Updates Receive LU-Announce
    First Things
    The Public Square
    Richard John Neuhaus
    First Things 55 (August/September 1995): 67-84.
    This Month
    A Sense of Change Both Ominous and Promising
    The Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), with about a million members, arises out of the Restoration Movement launched by Alexander Campbell (1788-1866). The body was formed by a merger between Barton W. Stone's "Christians" and Campbell's "Disciples" in 1832, and it was at one time the fastest-growing Protestant denomination in the country. We mention this because the March issue of its magazine, Touchstone , has extensive coverage of agitations occasioned by the 1994 declaration "Evangelicals and Catholics Together" (ECT)- agitations that have their parallel in other parts of the myriad worlds of evangelical Protestantism. Frederick W. Norris of the Emmanuel School of Religion in Tennessee suggests that the last time Disciples took such a serious look at Roman Catholicism was when Campbell debated Bishop John Purcell of Cincinnati in 1837.

    36. 4 New Square
    A set of commercial and civil barristers in Lincoln's Inn, with a focus on professional liability. The set edits Jackson and Powell on Professional Negligence . Press coverage, how clients are services and fees managed, as well as details of seminars and training the set organizes.
    http://www.4newsquare.com/
    Advanced Search Home page Four New Square is a leading commercial and civil set of barristers comprising 57 members, of whom eleven are Queen's Counsel. We act as specialist advocates and advisers in a wide range of civil disputes and as expert advisers in non-contentious matters. We have a particularly high reputation in the field of professional liability. The leading practitioners' work on the subject, was written by Rupert Jackson QC (now Mr Justice Jackson) and John L. Powell QC, and continues to be written and edited by members of chambers. In all our work we aim to:
    • provide an efficient, friendly service to all our clients
    • give sound practical advice and explain legal issues in clear terms
    • be approachable and work as a team with our clients and their other professional advisers
    We have a modern IT network, spacious conference facilities and a video-conferencing suite. We are all members of the Commercial Bar Association (COMBAR), the Professional Negligence Bar Association (PNBA) and the London Commercial Law Bar Association (LCLCBA). A number of us are members of the Chancery Bar Association, the Technology and Construction Bar Association (TECBAR) and various other specialist organisations. Languages spoken in chambers include French, German, Hindi, Italian, Serbo-Croat, Spanish and Welsh. 4 New Square
    Lincoln's Inn
    London, WC2A 3RJ

    37. Kochoff Hall - Conference Square A - University Center - The University Of Michi
    Kochoff Hall (Formaly MultiPurpose Room) - Conference Square Setup (Section A). Kochoff Hall A - Conference Square. Kochoff Hall A - Conference Square.
    http://www.umd.umich.edu/universitycenter/squareA.html
    Kochoff Hall (Formaly Multi-Purpose Room) - Conference Square Setup (Section A)

    38. Find A Brick At Pioneer Courthouse Square
    On the west side of the Square A waterfall cascades down a series of large granite blocks into a reflecting pool below.
    http://www.pioneercourthousesquare.org/default.aspx

    Home
    Calendar Amenities Hold An Event ... Contact Us On the west side of the square a waterfall cascades down a series of large granite blocks into a reflecting pool below. Become A Member FIND YOUR BRICK BrickFinder Program on the Web
    By Scott Hanselman First Name: Last Name: Address: City: State/Province: OR AL AK AB AZ AR BC CA CO CT DE DC FL GA HI ID IL IN IA KS KY LA ME MB MD MA MI MN MS MO MT NE NV NB NF NH NJ NM NY NC ND NS OH OK ON PA PE PQ RI SK SC SD TN TX UT VT VA WA WV WI WY Select state from drop down for US and Canada. For all other countries please use text box. Country: United States Andorra, Principality of United Arab Emirates Afghanistan Antigua and Barbuda Anguilla Albania Armenia Netherlands Antilles Angola Antarctica Argentina American Samoa Austria Australia Aruba Azerbaidjan Bosnia-Herzegovina Barbados Bangladesh Belgium Burkina Faso Bulgaria Bahrain Burundi Benin Bermuda Brunei Darussalam Bolivia Brazil Bahamas Bhutan Bouvet Island Botswana Belarus Belize Canada Cocos (Keeling) Islands Central African Republic Congo, The Democratic Republic of the Congo Switzerland Ivory Coast (Cote D'Ivoire) Cook Islands Chile Cameroon China Colombia Costa Rica Former Czechoslovakia Cuba Cape Verde Christmas Island Cyprus Czech Republic Germany Djibouti Denmark Dominica Dominican Republic Algeria Ecuador Estonia Egypt Western Sahara Eritrea Spain Ethiopia Finland Fiji Falkland Islands Micronesia Faroe Islands France France (European Territory) Gabon Great Britain Grenada Georgia French Guyana Ghana Gibraltar Greenland Gambia Guinea Guadeloupe (French) Equatorial Guinea

    39. Princes Square - Contact
    Princes Square A specialist shopping centre in Glasgow city centre.
    http://www.princessquare.co.uk/spring05/info/

    40. Public Square: A Column On Politics & Current Affairs
    Public Square A Column on Politics Current Affairs.
    http://www.hollywoodinvestigator.com/pork/pork1.htm
    Public Square Archives
    "Liberal" Justices Turn Back Clock ... To the Year 1215
    , by Thomas M. Sipos [June 25, 2005] Defanging Regulatory Bullies , by Thomas M. Sipos [January 25, 2005] Neoconservatism: It's Neofascism in Red, White and Blue Bunting , by George Phillies [October 27, 2004] Illegal Aliens: American Slaves , by Alfredo Ramos [November 14, 2003] Objectivist Darrow Clements Runs for California Governor , by Hank Willow [August 8, 2003] Maybe Left Has Good Reason to Fear Right , by Chuck Baldwin [May 9, 2003] New York Under Siege by Subway Soldiers , by Patrick Patterson [May 2, 2003] Men, Women and Work , by Glenn Sacks [January 18, 2003] Iraqi Chemical Warheads: What Was Found? Staff Report [January 18, 2003] The Banality of the Ballot , by R. Tim Barber [August 28, 2002] Free Heart Transplant for Felon , by Robert E. Downey [January 31, 2002]
    Are YOU mad as Hell about something? The Hollywood Investigator wants YOU editor@HollywoodInvestigator.com
    RETURN to The Hollywood Investigator! "Hollywood Investigator" and "HollywoodInvestigator.com" trademarks are currently unregistered, but pending registration upon need for protection against improper use. The idea of marketing these terms as a commodity is a protected idea under the Lanham Act. 15 U.S.C. s 1114(1) (1994) (defining a trademark infringement claim when the plaintiff has a registered mark); 15 U.S.C. s 1125(a) (1994) (defining an action for unfair competition in the context of trademark infringement when the plaintiff holds an unregistered mark).

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