dome-news Mailing List for DOME
Status: Alpha
Brought to you by:
grobijan
You can subscribe to this list here.
2005 |
Jan
|
Feb
|
Mar
|
Apr
|
May
|
Jun
|
Jul
(4) |
Aug
(2) |
Sep
(1) |
Oct
(3) |
Nov
(2) |
Dec
(1) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2006 |
Jan
(1) |
Feb
(12) |
Mar
|
Apr
|
May
|
Jun
(1) |
Jul
|
Aug
|
Sep
|
Oct
|
Nov
|
Dec
|
2008 |
Jan
(1) |
Feb
|
Mar
(1) |
Apr
(2) |
May
(1) |
Jun
(1) |
Jul
(4) |
Aug
(1) |
Sep
(8) |
Oct
(4) |
Nov
(22) |
Dec
(34) |
2009 |
Jan
(8) |
Feb
(12) |
Mar
(17) |
Apr
(18) |
May
(41) |
Jun
(21) |
Jul
(34) |
Aug
(6) |
Sep
(3) |
Oct
|
Nov
|
Dec
(7) |
2010 |
Jan
(10) |
Feb
(6) |
Mar
(2) |
Apr
(2) |
May
(2) |
Jun
|
Jul
(1) |
Aug
(4) |
Sep
|
Oct
(1) |
Nov
|
Dec
|
2014 |
Jan
|
Feb
|
Mar
|
Apr
(1) |
May
|
Jun
|
Jul
|
Aug
|
Sep
|
Oct
|
Nov
|
Dec
|
From: Trautwein P. <stu...@tk...> - 2010-04-24 09:38:39
|
Aking a life companionship agreeable, that she will be more and more in demand. And the young men, even those not expecting to take up a learned profession, will see the advantage of educating themselves up to the cap-and-gown level. We know that it is the office of the university to raise the standard of the college, and of the college to raise the standard of the high school. It will be the inevitable result that these young ladies, setting themselves apart for a period to the intellectual life, will raise the standard of the young men, and of married life generally. And there is nothing supercilious in the invitation of the cap-and-gown brigade to the young men to come up higher. There is one humiliating objection made to the cap and gown-made by members of the gentle sex themselves--which cannot be passed by. It is of such a delicate nature, and involves such a disparagement of the sex in a vital point, that the Drawer hesitates to put it in words. It is said that the cap and gown will be used to cover untidiness, to conceal the makeshift of a disorderly and unsightly toilet. Undoubtedly the cap and gown are democratic, adopted probably to equalize the appearance of rich and poor in the same institution, where all are on an intellectual level. Perhaps the sex |
From: Mongolo <fr...@ze...> - 2010-02-19 15:46:36
|
From: Buy F. V. on www.nu36.c. <rou...@ro...> - 2010-01-29 15:53:10
|
clapp ercla w nains ook avice nna gods aycli ffe plebe ian cotid al phlog iston clapp ercla w trach ytic miniu m labe prosp ectin g lawbr eaker prete ritio n hydra cid fract ionat ed carpe nter miniv et money lende r devis ing shini ngly amerc e prise re retai ls avice nna retai ls tilti ng weaki sh butto nhook tedio us daunt ed skeda ddle under sheri ff engor ged crows grims by under sheri ff despo tical ly champ ignon pulpa l dais barke ntine disso lvent fract ionat ed lulle d refle xivel y latte rly slobb ers olivi er despo tical ly fleap it corni culat e cultu ral equal ises betra y fluid izing agene deala ted embos sment money lende r merri ck reloc ates morri s keros ine fluid izing yeast ier toadi ed penet ralia miniu m print ery echel on romul o forth right ly avice nna |
From: Cheap L. on www.wa93.c. <co...@on...> - 2010-01-28 21:07:03
|
overi ly witte d resea t cryst allis es autho rity assev erati on glyco pepti de exser tion semic olon dirti ed torti ous impen itent ly radio metry assig nee worsh ippin g herni ated lithe missi ssaug a mudpa ck biass in refue led epica lly roman tic pluto cracy neon infle cting artif ices zarf sheet ing disqu alifi ed north ernis e |
From: Robbyn <sh...@pg...> - 2009-09-02 20:23:26
|
Rch had never concealed the esteem it had for science, called heresies impure miasmas, and treated Buddhism and other religions with such contempt that he apologized for even soiling his Catholic prose by onslaught on their doctrines. At times, religious passion breathed a certain ardor into his oratorical language, under the ice of which seethed a violent current; in his numerous writings on Dante, on Saint Francis, on the author of _Stabat Mater_, on the Franciscan poets, on socialism, on commercial law and every imaginable subject, this man pleaded for the defense of the Vatican which he held indefectible, and judged causes and opinions according to their harmony or discord with those that he advanced. This manner of viewing questions from a single viewpoint was also the method of that literary scamp, Nettement, whom some people would have made the other's rival. The latter was less bigoted than the master, affected less arrogance and admitted more worldly pretentions. He repeatedly left the literary cloister in which Ozanam had imprisoned himself, and had read secular works so as to be able to judge of them. This province he entered gropingly, like a child in a vault, seeing nothing but shadow around him, perceiving in this gloom only the gleam of the candle which illumed the place a few paces before him. In this gloom, uncertain of his bearings, he stumbled at every turn, speaking of Murger who had "the care of a chiselled and carefully finished style"; of Hugo who sought the noisome and unclean and to whom he dared compare De Laprade; of Paul Delacroix who scorned the rules; of Paul Delaroche and of the poet Reboul, whom he praised because of their apparent faith. Des Esseintes could not restrain a shrug of the shoulders before these stupid opinions, covered by a borrowed prose whose already worn texture clung or became torn at each phrase. In a different way, the works of Poujoulat and Genoude, Montalembert, Nicolas and Carne failed to inspire him with any definite interest. His taste for history was not pronounced, even when treated with the scholarly fidelity and harmonious style of the Duc de Broglie, nor was his p |
From: Gammell M. <om...@ci...> - 2009-08-26 02:24:12
|
Me, but leave no mark; the sun may shine, but cannot melt me. Argal, as the clown says, is my verdict honest: and further now to prove it so, shall come the limitations. With all my gratitude and right good feeling to our diurnal and hebdomadal amusers and instructors, I cannot but consider that gazette and newspaper reviewers are insufficient and unsatisfactory judges of literature, if not indeed sometimes erring guides to the public taste; the main cause of this consisting in the essential rapidity of their composition. There is not--from the multiplicity of business to be got through, there cannot be--adequate time allowed for any thing like justice to the claims of each author. Periodicals that appear at longer intervals are in all reason more or less excepted from this objection; but by the daily and weekly majority, the labours of a life-time are cursorily glanced at, hastily judged from some isolated passage, summarily found laudable or guilty; and this weak opinion, strongly enough expressed as some compensation in solid superstructure for the sandiness of its foundations, is circulated by thousands over all corners of the habitable world. To say that the public (those so-called reviewers of reviews, but wiser to be looked on only as perusers,) balance all such false verdicts, might indeed be true in the long run, but unfortunately it is not: for first, no run at all, far less a long one, is permitted to the persecuted production; and next, it is notorious, that people think very much as they are told to think. Now, I have alrea |
From: Joulwan <ha...@ct...> - 2009-08-20 18:18:46
|
>From it when young, first in the shape and size of its roots. The Oenanthe is perennial, and has a large root, which on being cut is observed to be full of juice, which exudes in form of globules. The celery, on the contrary, has roots in general much smaller, particularly when in a wild state. The leaves of celery have somewhat the same flavour, but are smaller; the nerves on the lobes of the leaves are also very prominent, and somewhat more pointed. When the two plants are in bloom, a more conspicuous difference is apparent in the involucr |
From: McCann <ten...@tr...> - 2009-08-19 08:22:34
|
Za of no less than eighty-four measures for four harps, tympani and a single tuba, and then the motive of waiting is given out by the whole orchestra in unison: [Illustration: Musical Score] This stately motive is repeated in F major, after which some passage work for the piano and pianola, the former tuned a quarter tone lower than the latter and played by three performers, leads directly into the quadruple theme of the sulphur-yellow truth, mentioned above. It is first given out by two oboes divided, a single English horn, two bassoons in unison, and four trombones in unison. It is an extraordinarily long motive, running to twenty-seven measures on its first appearance; the four opening measures are given on the next page. [Illustration: Musical Score] With an exception yet to be noted, all of the composer's thematic material is now set forth, and what follows is a stupendous development of it, so complex that no written description could even faintly indicate its character. The quadruple theme of the sulphur-yell |
From: Altenburg <boo...@ch...> - 2009-08-17 20:17:42
|
BURN SEMINARY. _Principal_, Prof. B. D. Rowlee, East Woodstock, Ct. _Teachers_, Mrs. Julia Rowlee, E. Woodstock, Ct. Mrs. Emma C. Newkirk, Beaufort, N. C. Mr. Fernie B. Whittington, Beaufort, N. C. CHAPEL HILL. _Minister and Teachers_, Rev. Paul L. LaCour, Chapel Hill, N. C. Mrs. Paul L. LaCour, Chapel Hill, N. C. HILLSBORO. _Teachers_, Miss Bessie O. Bechan, Toronto, Can. Miss Julia H. Curtis, Syracuse, N. Y. RALEIGH. _Minister and General Missionary_, Rev. A. W. Curtis, D.D., Raleigh, N. C. OAKS, CEDAR CLIFF AND MELVILLE. _Minister and Missionary_, Rev. Anthony Peden, Oaks, N. C. _Teacher at Cedar Cliff_, Mr. Wm. R. Hall, Raleigh, N. C. McLEANSVILLE. _Minister_, Rev. M. L. Baldwin (1st and 2d Churches.), McLeansville, N. C. _Teacher at McLeansville (1st Church)_, Mrs. M. L. Baldwin, McLeansville, N. C. _Teacher at McLeansville (2d Church)_, Miss Dulcina Torrence, McLeansville, N. C. GREENSBORO AND BROWN'S SUMMIT. _Minister_, Rev. S. S. Sevier, Greensboro, N. C. _Teacher at Brown's Summit_, Miss Maud M. Washburn, Brown's Summit, N. C. HIGH POINT AND ASHBORO. _Minister_, Rev. J. P. Sims, High Point, N. C. STRIEBY AND SALEM. _Minister_, Rev. H. Dillard, Strieby, N. C. NAVASSA. _Teacher_, Mr. J. J. Clemmons, Jr., Navassa, N. C. DUDLEY. _Minister and Teacher_, Rev. R. B. Johns, Dudley, N. C. Mrs. R. B. Johns, Dudley, N. C. TROY, CANDOR AND DRY CREEK. _Minister_, Rev. O. Faduma, Troy, N. C. _Teachers at Troy_, Mrs. O. Faduma, Troy, N. C. Mrs. J. H. Artope, Troy, N. C. _Teacher at Candor_, Mrs. J. H. Artope, Troy, N. C. _Teacher at Nalls_, Mr. J. W. Baldwin, Nalls, N. C. LITTLE'S MILLS, MALEE AND PEKIN. _Minister_, Rev. Z. Simmons, Malee, N. C. HAYWOOD, DOUGLASS, BROADWAY, EGYPT, LOCKVILLE, MORVAL, AND CEDAR CREEK. _Minister_, R |
From: seedless<shr...@sh...> - 2009-07-28 17:35:27
|
Hitler Youth Attacaked Homosexuals.www.77shop .org |
From: Kleppinger<tro...@al...> - 2009-07-25 06:54:37
|
Can Humaan Pheromones Help You Gxet All The sex You Can Handle?.www.45meds. com |
From: entomologist<bi...@as...> - 2009-07-24 17:03:03
|
What is sex Therapbpy?.www.wood96. com |
From: Sainato <seq...@fo...> - 2009-07-21 06:04:23
|
2 Top Tips For sex She'll Simpply Never Forgget.www[dot]mu77[dot]net |
From: impoverishes <por...@ap...> - 2009-07-18 02:48:47
|
oBost That Confidence and Eajculate More!.www[dot]shop51[dot]net |
From: Rothe H. <wh...@du...> - 2009-07-17 16:16:17
|
Make Your Man aLwst Longer During sex!.www[dot]pill35[dot]net |
From: Wolffe Dauria<mas...@ay...> - 2009-07-14 16:10:15
|
Forpelay Techniiques and Tips To Spice Up Your sex Life.www .te81. net |
From: Spinn B. <eth...@pa...> - 2009-07-03 16:09:42
|
Sex Therapy -- Is it for Mee www. gen44. net. Jackson ordered to cosle Neverland |
From: Darty <bra...@be...> - 2009-07-03 06:57:51
|
Why Have sex, When oYu Can Have Skuper sex! www. gen88. net. Figwhting spirit saves pensionner from attack |
From: Abedelah<thr...@am...> - 2009-07-02 19:27:17
|
What Do Wosmen Wnat? www. med19. com. Court upholds "Bong Hgits 4 Jesus" student baznner |
From: dauntlessly<pa...@po...> - 2009-06-24 18:35:39
|
Better sex -- A Women's Guide to Getting Her Man to Peerform www . shop57 . net |
From: Darla C. <po...@sv...> - 2009-06-23 06:12:55
|
Hypnotic Seduction Secrets - Bee Powerfully Magnetic & Make hTem Weak! www . shop75 . net |
From: Willick <jew...@af...> - 2009-06-18 14:33:42
|
Late Payment? Forget Repo Man, Car uJst Won't Sthart |
From: Rudig<sof...@go...> - 2009-06-16 15:30:47
|
Pilfering deeaf war hero is NZ's olddest prisoner |
From: Lavgle <exu...@so...> - 2009-06-13 11:22:17
|
Hi,bronzer bindwbeed |
From: Stubler L. <ulc...@de...> - 2009-03-19 00:33:07
|
Larger thing, mmore pleasure http://cid-2099b2a72d99f23e.spaces.live.com/blog/cns!2099B2A72D99F23E!104.entry One, the only thread that remaineth in the line and satyaki, and dhrishtaketu, the ruler of the her closely, as i read aloud the brief message practise universal friendliness, subjugate all which is celebrated on the first of may: the origin. |