A sketch by any other name…: Book Meme (stolen from Anusha)

Array The vocab words are numbered because my teacher insisted that we do that and I didn’t feel like going back and changing them all.The Boston Red Sox appear to be on the advent (1) of a stellar (2) season. After their unemphatic (13) Opening Day performance, the Red Sox regained their composure (14) and turned April into a month for the archives (15), never again appearing vulnerable (16). When the vain, egotistical Roger Clemens signed with the Yankees several weeks later, some Red Sox fans felt jaundiced (23) and made caustic (24) comments, but the truth is that Roger is washed-up and self-centered, with a propensity (25) for infantile (26) histrionics (27) due to the cavalier (28) belief that the entire baseball world glorifies (29) and exalts (30) him as its pinnacle (31). The venerable (41) knuckleballer Tim Wakefield, entering his twelfth season in a Red Sox uniform, returns to his fourth spot in the rotation, while interim (42) starter Julian Tavarez rounds out the rotation until Jon Lester returns from a perilous (43) bout of cancer (luckily, the cancer was found in its nascent (44) stages). The repercussions (49) of facing any one Red Sox reliever include strikeouts and bellicose (50) glares at the mound.The Red Sox also have a lineup capable of turning pitches into projectiles (51), and their hitters are currently hot enough to be the genesis (52) of a conflagration (53). At 5’7”, Pedroia appears lilliputian (96), yet his tiny body is able to produce grandiloquent (97) home runs, and he is believed to be in the incipient (98) stages of an impressive career.The Red Sox call the felicitous (99) environs (100) of Fenway Park home, and they are lucky to have one of baseball’s most historic venues (101) as a ballpark.
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Baxter critiqued Owen’s work in an appendix of his Aphorisms of Justification by tackling a seemingly less central claim in The Death of Death that “the payment made by Christ for us (by the payment of the debt of sin understand, by analogy, the undergoing of the punishment due unto it) was solutio ejusdem, or of the same thing directly which was in the obligation.”[4] As we proceed we will discuss the contours of this debate, considering the relevant biblical material, the systematic arguments made by both parties, and the exact positions of both Baxter, Grotius and Owen regarding this issue.[5] This discussion will lead us to discover the ways (if any) in which the punishment borne by Christ on the cross was identical with the punishment deserved by sinners and the ways (if any) in which it differed.WHY BAXTER TACKLED THIS ARGUMENTWhat we need to remember here is that Owen’s chief argument in The Death of Death is for effectual atonement, while Baxter’s Amyraldianism means he holds to a universal view of the atonement. 17.”[30]Fifthly, Owen proposes that when our sins were laid on Jesus[31] and when he was made sin for us,[32] in that act “lay the very punishment of our sin.”[33] Such an argument from these verses alone seems hard to come by, but the context of Isaiah 53 links, like Owen does, the imputation of our sin onto Christ, Christ suffering the punishment due to that sin.[34] Owen’s arguments are convincing.Finally Owen refers us to the copious references in the New Testament which express Christ’s agonies in his passion, and Owen asks us to “see if they do not plainly hold out the utmost that ever was threatened to sin.”[35] Here Baxter would have no problems in responding, of course Christ’s death had to be as horrific a torture as the Bible describes, for Christ was establishing the new covenant and Baxter had learnt that “a testament [covenant] is established by blood.”[36]THE SYSTEMATIC MATERIALLike any good work from the Puritans this debate was highly systematic and both sides repeatedly drew from “simple truths of logic.”[37] We will firstly critique the arguments from Baxter and Grotius which are claimed to be formulated by reading “simple truths of logic”[38] from clear scriptural propositions, [39] by considering Owen’s responses.1. so I shall not farther trouble any therewith.”[53] However at other points in The Death of Christ[54] Owen does take up one of the charges made by Baxter, namely that Christ did not suffer the “eternity of torment”[55] (which the Bible teaches is deserved by sinners[56]), so did not suffer an identical punishment as the one deserved by sinners.Firstly, Owen agrees that Christ did not suffer punishment forever, because eternal death’s “attendancies, as duration and the like … even the whole obligation, was taken out of the way and nailed to the cross.”[62] Owen later adds that if Christ did not deliver us by his death absolutely “we shall have no benefit by his death but upon the performance of a condition, which himself by that death of his did not absolutely procure.”[63] A position Owen asserts is not biblical for “faith, which is this condition, is itself procured by the death of Christ for them for whom he died.”[64]Baxter later replies that Owen is here falling into the Hyper-Calvinist error which claims pre-faith justification for the elect. In other words, he defines the difference solely by reference to the person punished, not to the measure of punishment itself.”[80]This puts Grotius squarely on the side with Owen who, as we saw in the very last point, made this exact distinction.One final way in which Baxter tries to blur the boundaries between his position and Owen’s comes in response to Owen’s description of the cross as a: “compensation.”[81] Baxter comments “[Owen] saith, it was a full valuable compensation, (therefore not the same.)”[82] As Baxter starts playing with Owen’s words like this we begin to understand why Owen would go on to make comments in his reply like: much of Baxter’s arguments “do lie rather against words than things, expressions than opinions, ways of delivering things than doctrines themselves.”[83]CONCLUSIONSo Owen successfully maintains that the punishment borne by Christ on the cross was identical with the punishment deserved by sinners, in what he calls “weight and pressure”[84] although not “in all accidents of duration and the like.”[85] From this position Owen can describe the cross as Christ “undergoing that same punishment which, by reason of the obligation that was upon [sinners], they themselves were bound to undergo.”[86] Whereas Baxter unsuccessfully maintains Christ bore a different punishment on the cross with that deserved by sinners in that it did not procure its end “ipso facto, delivering the debtor.”[87] Baxter cites Grotius in support of him but we have seen how this is not acceptable, Grotius “merely … Here it is not only the curse threatened but also the coming of the curse on the one “who does not confirm the words of this law by doing them.”[15] Baxter is here paraphrasing Grotius in Aphorisms, 303, my italics.[16] Owen, Death of Christ, 448-449.[17] Owen, Death of Christ, 448.[18] Douglas J. Nevertheless his reading does support Owen’s in that Moo would agree that it expressly reveals “the translation of punishment in respect of the subjects suffering it.”[19] Isaiah 53:5.[20] Owen, Death of Christ, 448.[21] Galatians 3:10.[22] Romans 3:20.[23] Joachim Jeremias in John Stott, The Cross of Christ, (Leicester: IVP, 1986 repr.,2003), 345.[24] Galatians 3:10.[25] Owen, Death of Christ, 448, italics mine.[26] “There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.” on page 1.[41] Owen, Death of Christ, 443.[42] Owen, Death of Christ, 443.[43] Owen, Death of Death, 270.[44] Owen, Death of Christ, 443.[45] 2 Corinthians 12:9; 1 Peter 5:10.[46] Baxter, Aphorisms, 303.[47] Baxter cited in Owen, Death of Christ, 437, 441 etc.[48] Baxter, Aphorisms, 302.[49] Owen, Death of Death, 270, my italics. Owen, Death of Death, 268.[50] Owen, Death of Christ, 441, author’s italics.[51] Owen, Death of Christ, 441.[52] Baxter, Aphorisms, 303.[53] Owen, Death of Christ, 443. Owen, The Death of Death, 270.[58] John Owen, Death of Death, 268.[59] Owen, The Death of Christ, 448, author’s italics. This last reference concerning Christ sweating being especially potent as sweat was a mark of the curse which God placed in man at the fall (Genesis 3:19) and which Owen has already argued Christ suffered the full force of from Galatians 3:13.[60] Owen, Death of Christ, 448.[61] Owen, Death of Christ, 448, my italics.[62] Owen, Death of Death, 268, author’s italics.[63] Owen, Death of Christ, 450.[64] Owen, Death of Christ, 450, my italics. Williams, Effectual Atonement: A Lecture (Given at Oak Hill College, 2007 as part of CD4/5.3 Doctrine of Salvation), 63.[65] Owen, Death of Death, 268, italics mine.[66] Owen, Death of Christ, 452.[67] I have included this section later rather than earlier because we can only realise the importance of the following issues once we have consider the biblical and systematic arguments from both sides.[68] Baxter, Aphorisms, 302, my italics.[69] Baxter, Aphorisms, 302, author’s italics.[70] Baxter, Aphorisms, 302.[71] Romans 5:9-10; Owen, The Death of Christ, 447.[74] Baxter, Aphorisms, 306, author’s italics.[75] Baxter, Aphorisms, 305.[76] Owen, Death of Christ, 447.[77] Owen, Death of Christ, 443.[78] Baxter, Aphorisms, 301, my italics.[79] Owen, Death of Christ, 443.[80] Garry J. Owen, Death of Christ, 448.[81] Owen, Death of Death, 270.[82] Baxter, Aphorisms, 305.[83] Owen, Death of Christ, 435. (443)[84] Owen, Death of Death, 269.[85] Owen, Death of Death, 269.[86] Owen, Death of Death, 269.[87] Baxter, Aphorisms, 302.[88] Williams, “Grotius,”
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-ne Last week the Transportation Security Administration had lost a computer hard drive containing data and payroll information for about 100,000 employee records. They were planning on it!- May 4, 2007 TSA notifies 100,000 of a lost hard drive- May 9, 2007 The American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE), along with four security screeners, charged that the TSA had recklessly violated the Privacy Act and also violated the Aviation and Transportation Security Act. If you were handed information and told your financial future depended on keeping it safe, you can be sure there would be people keeping better track of that data better than their wallet.Lack of accountability breeds lack of responsibility.
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-ne Pigs heads on sale in Moore St. The Ulyssies heading into Dublin port. Says he.I stopped the car and told him to turn around that I work in the port and this is not the way.Back on course he headed for the port then straight for the port tunnel.Where the hell are you going now?This is the way. He was very annoyed, it was an expensive lesson for the cabby.Fair enough if a guy knows where he is going you take him where he is going you don’t go on a wild goose chase.New York and Sydney are full of drivers who do not speak English and who have no clue where they are going you could spend a lifetime in transit.All the scamming that is happening here in Dublin at night beggars belief.It has become so bad that I would not be surprised to hear of a murder soon, very unsavory characters around in the night time, both as passengers and drivers.Thought I would give you some 10s of the best for DublinBest restaurants.1 L’Gueleton. 8732266 Very busy good reports not cheap www.chapteronerestaurant.com3 Cafe Bar Deli 78/79 Grafton St. Bewleys6727720 4 Bang Cafe 11 Merrion Row 6760898 www.bangrestaurant.com beside Unicorn which is reckoned to be good as well..5 L’Ecrivan 109 Lr Baggott St.www.leecrivian.com,6611919 All I can tell you of this place is a blazing row with an Italian opera singer from the Westbury hotel.. Aya Clarendon St www.aya.ie 6771544 Japanese food.Sushi,(If you knew sushi like I knew suchi)try the brasdcrumb chicken with lime.
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an impressive selection of darts accessories for sale, in glass display cases . More lottery action, horse racing video, an Instant Lotto vending machine—the Brooklyn version of a gambling bar . the sun through the open door reflects off the video poker machine . Coney Island Avenue @ Cortelyou to Avenue I—a crazy ethnic mélange: Russian, Polish, Pakistani, Muslim, Christian, Hasidic . my love of Brooklyn sometimes makes me tear (5:09 pm) .
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SBS = Sky Blue Sky84 ~ Less Than You Think (AGIB)83 ~ 23 Seconds of Silence (Summer)82 ~ Red-Eyed And Blue (BT)81 ~ Too Far Apart (AM)80 ~ Poor Places (YHF)79 ~ Hell Is Chrome (AGIB)78 ~ Monday (BT)77 ~ Dash 7 (AM)76 ~ Candyfloss (Summer)75 ~ What’s The World Got In Store (BT)74 ~ It’s Just That Simple (AM)73 ~ ELT (Summer)72 ~ Either Way (SBS)71 ~ Someone Else’s Song (BT)70 ~ I Thought I Held You (AM)69 ~ Someday Soon (BT)68 ~ I Got You (At The End Of The Century) (BT)67 ~ Shake It Off (SBS)66 ~ We’re Just Friends (Summer)65 ~ Heavy Metal Drummer (YHF)64 ~ Shouldn’t Be Ashamed (AM)63 ~ Handshake Drugs (AGIB)62 ~ Say You Miss Me (BT)61 ~ Wishful Thinking (AGIB)60 ~ Misunderstood (BT)59 ~ Blue Eyed Soul (AM)58 ~ A Shot In The Arm (Remix)(Summer)57 ~ You Are My Face (SBS)56 ~ Pick Up The Change (AM)55 ~ Spiders (Kidsmoke) (AGIB)54 ~ Pot Kettle Black (YHF)53 ~ Hotel Arizona (BT)52 ~ My Darling (Summer)51 ~ I’m the Man Who Loves You (YHF)50 ~ (Was I) In Your Dreams (BT)49 ~ Summer Teeth (Summer)48 ~ Sky Blue Sky (SBS)47 ~ That’s Not The Issue (AM)46 ~ Theologians (AGIB)45 ~ Radio Cure (YHF)44 ~ Side With The Seeds (SBS)43 ~ The Lonely 1 (BT)42 ~ Passenger Side (AM)41 ~ I’m Always In Love (Summer)40 ~ Please Be Patient With Me (SBS)39 ~ Why Would You Wanna Live (BT)38 ~ When You Wake Up Feeling Old (Summer)37 ~ What Light (SBS)36 ~ In A Future Age (Summer)35 ~ Company In My Back (AGIB)34 ~ Leave Me (Like You Found Me) (SBS)33 ~ I Must Be High (AM)32 ~ Forget The Flowers (BT)31 ~ Should’ve Been In Love (AM)30 ~ Pieholden Suite (Summer)29 ~ Kingpin (BT)28 ~ Kamera (YHT)27 ~ How To Fight Loneliness (Summer)26 ~ I’m A Wheel (AGIB)25 ~ Far, Far Away (BT)24 ~ Impossible Germany (SBS)23 ~ Hate It Here (SBS)22 ~ Outtasite (Outta Mind) (BT)21 ~ Outta Mind (Outta Sight) (BT)20 ~ On And On And On (SBS)19 ~ Can’t Stand it (Summer)18 ~ Reservations (YHF)17 ~ Casino Queen (AM)16 ~ Via Chicago (Summer)15 ~ Sunken Treasure (BT)14 ~ Muzzle Of Bees (AGIB)13 ~ Box Full Of Letters (AM)12 ~ Hummingbird (AGIB)11 ~ War on War (YHF)10 ~ Nothing’severgonnastandinmyway (Again) (Summer)9 ~ Walken (SBS)8 ~ Ashes of American Flags (YHF)7 ~ Dreamer In My Dreams (BT)6 ~ A Shot In The Arm (Summer)5 ~ At Least That’s What You Said (AGIB)4 ~ I am Trying to Break Your Heart (YHF)3 ~ She’s A Jar (Summer)2 ~ Jesus, etc.
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-ne Look at the list of books below:* Bold the ones you’ve read** Italicize the ones you want to read*Leave blank the ones that you aren’t interested in.*If you are reading this, tag, you’re it!**If there are any books on this list that I didn’t italicize and you think I should read, let me know in comments! Also, what other books do you think belong on this list and why?1. The Lord of the Rings: Fellowship of the Ring (Tolkien)7. Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (Rowling)12. Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix (Rowling)14. Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone (Rowling)17. Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban (Rowling)20. Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (Rowling)58. The World According To Garp (John Irving)79. The Celestine Prophecy (James Redfield)100. Ulysses (James Joyce)Those that were left behind:1. The James Bond series (Ian Fleming)4. Sherlocke Holmes series (Sir Arthur Conan Doyle)**Note if a book is both Bold and Italics it means I have read and want to read again :)
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Array The vocab words are numbered because my teacher insisted that we do that and I didn’t feel like going back and changing them all.The Boston Red Sox appear to be on the advent (1) of a stellar (2) season. After their unemphatic (13) Opening Day performance, the Red Sox regained their composure (14) and turned April into a month for the archives (15), never again appearing vulnerable (16). When the vain, egotistical Roger Clemens signed with the Yankees several weeks later, some Red Sox fans felt jaundiced (23) and made caustic (24) comments, but the truth is that Roger is washed-up and self-centered, with a propensity (25) for infantile (26) histrionics (27) due to the cavalier (28) belief that the entire baseball world glorifies (29) and exalts (30) him as its pinnacle (31). The venerable (41) knuckleballer Tim Wakefield, entering his twelfth season in a Red Sox uniform, returns to his fourth spot in the rotation, while interim (42) starter Julian Tavarez rounds out the rotation until Jon Lester returns from a perilous (43) bout of cancer (luckily, the cancer was found in its nascent (44) stages). The repercussions (49) of facing any one Red Sox reliever include strikeouts and bellicose (50) glares at the mound.The Red Sox also have a lineup capable of turning pitches into projectiles (51), and their hitters are currently hot enough to be the genesis (52) of a conflagration (53). At 5’7”, Pedroia appears lilliputian (96), yet his tiny body is able to produce grandiloquent (97) home runs, and he is believed to be in the incipient (98) stages of an impressive career.The Red Sox call the felicitous (99) environs (100) of Fenway Park home, and they are lucky to have one of baseball’s most historic venues (101) as a ballpark.
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Baxter critiqued Owen’s work in an appendix of his Aphorisms of Justification by tackling a seemingly less central claim in The Death of Death that “the payment made by Christ for us (by the payment of the debt of sin understand, by analogy, the undergoing of the punishment due unto it) was solutio ejusdem, or of the same thing directly which was in the obligation.”[4] As we proceed we will discuss the contours of this debate, considering the relevant biblical material, the systematic arguments made by both parties, and the exact positions of both Baxter, Grotius and Owen regarding this issue.[5] This discussion will lead us to discover the ways (if any) in which the punishment borne by Christ on the cross was identical with the punishment deserved by sinners and the ways (if any) in which it differed.WHY BAXTER TACKLED THIS ARGUMENTWhat we need to remember here is that Owen’s chief argument in The Death of Death is for effectual atonement, while Baxter’s Amyraldianism means he holds to a universal view of the atonement. 17.”[30]Fifthly, Owen proposes that when our sins were laid on Jesus[31] and when he was made sin for us,[32] in that act “lay the very punishment of our sin.”[33] Such an argument from these verses alone seems hard to come by, but the context of Isaiah 53 links, like Owen does, the imputation of our sin onto Christ, Christ suffering the punishment due to that sin.[34] Owen’s arguments are convincing.Finally Owen refers us to the copious references in the New Testament which express Christ’s agonies in his passion, and Owen asks us to “see if they do not plainly hold out the utmost that ever was threatened to sin.”[35] Here Baxter would have no problems in responding, of course Christ’s death had to be as horrific a torture as the Bible describes, for Christ was establishing the new covenant and Baxter had learnt that “a testament [covenant] is established by blood.”[36]THE SYSTEMATIC MATERIALLike any good work from the Puritans this debate was highly systematic and both sides repeatedly drew from “simple truths of logic.”[37] We will firstly critique the arguments from Baxter and Grotius which are claimed to be formulated by reading “simple truths of logic”[38] from clear scriptural propositions, [39] by considering Owen’s responses.1. so I shall not farther trouble any therewith.”[53] However at other points in The Death of Christ[54] Owen does take up one of the charges made by Baxter, namely that Christ did not suffer the “eternity of torment”[55] (which the Bible teaches is deserved by sinners[56]), so did not suffer an identical punishment as the one deserved by sinners.Firstly, Owen agrees that Christ did not suffer punishment forever, because eternal death’s “attendancies, as duration and the like … even the whole obligation, was taken out of the way and nailed to the cross.”[62] Owen later adds that if Christ did not deliver us by his death absolutely “we shall have no benefit by his death but upon the performance of a condition, which himself by that death of his did not absolutely procure.”[63] A position Owen asserts is not biblical for “faith, which is this condition, is itself procured by the death of Christ for them for whom he died.”[64]Baxter later replies that Owen is here falling into the Hyper-Calvinist error which claims pre-faith justification for the elect. In other words, he defines the difference solely by reference to the person punished, not to the measure of punishment itself.”[80]This puts Grotius squarely on the side with Owen who, as we saw in the very last point, made this exact distinction.One final way in which Baxter tries to blur the boundaries between his position and Owen’s comes in response to Owen’s description of the cross as a: “compensation.”[81] Baxter comments “[Owen] saith, it was a full valuable compensation, (therefore not the same.)”[82] As Baxter starts playing with Owen’s words like this we begin to understand why Owen would go on to make comments in his reply like: much of Baxter’s arguments “do lie rather against words than things, expressions than opinions, ways of delivering things than doctrines themselves.”[83]CONCLUSIONSo Owen successfully maintains that the punishment borne by Christ on the cross was identical with the punishment deserved by sinners, in what he calls “weight and pressure”[84] although not “in all accidents of duration and the like.”[85] From this position Owen can describe the cross as Christ “undergoing that same punishment which, by reason of the obligation that was upon [sinners], they themselves were bound to undergo.”[86] Whereas Baxter unsuccessfully maintains Christ bore a different punishment on the cross with that deserved by sinners in that it did not procure its end “ipso facto, delivering the debtor.”[87] Baxter cites Grotius in support of him but we have seen how this is not acceptable, Grotius “merely … Here it is not only the curse threatened but also the coming of the curse on the one “who does not confirm the words of this law by doing them.”[15] Baxter is here paraphrasing Grotius in Aphorisms, 303, my italics.[16] Owen, Death of Christ, 448-449.[17] Owen, Death of Christ, 448.[18] Douglas J. Nevertheless his reading does support Owen’s in that Moo would agree that it expressly reveals “the translation of punishment in respect of the subjects suffering it.”[19] Isaiah 53:5.[20] Owen, Death of Christ, 448.[21] Galatians 3:10.[22] Romans 3:20.[23] Joachim Jeremias in John Stott, The Cross of Christ, (Leicester: IVP, 1986 repr.,2003), 345.[24] Galatians 3:10.[25] Owen, Death of Christ, 448, italics mine.[26] “There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.” on page 1.[41] Owen, Death of Christ, 443.[42] Owen, Death of Christ, 443.[43] Owen, Death of Death, 270.[44] Owen, Death of Christ, 443.[45] 2 Corinthians 12:9; 1 Peter 5:10.[46] Baxter, Aphorisms, 303.[47] Baxter cited in Owen, Death of Christ, 437, 441 etc.[48] Baxter, Aphorisms, 302.[49] Owen, Death of Death, 270, my italics. Owen, Death of Death, 268.[50] Owen, Death of Christ, 441, author’s italics.[51] Owen, Death of Christ, 441.[52] Baxter, Aphorisms, 303.[53] Owen, Death of Christ, 443. Owen, The Death of Death, 270.[58] John Owen, Death of Death, 268.[59] Owen, The Death of Christ, 448, author’s italics. This last reference concerning Christ sweating being especially potent as sweat was a mark of the curse which God placed in man at the fall (Genesis 3:19) and which Owen has already argued Christ suffered the full force of from Galatians 3:13.[60] Owen, Death of Christ, 448.[61] Owen, Death of Christ, 448, my italics.[62] Owen, Death of Death, 268, author’s italics.[63] Owen, Death of Christ, 450.[64] Owen, Death of Christ, 450, my italics. Williams, Effectual Atonement: A Lecture (Given at Oak Hill College, 2007 as part of CD4/5.3 Doctrine of Salvation), 63.[65] Owen, Death of Death, 268, italics mine.[66] Owen, Death of Christ, 452.[67] I have included this section later rather than earlier because we can only realise the importance of the following issues once we have consider the biblical and systematic arguments from both sides.[68] Baxter, Aphorisms, 302, my italics.[69] Baxter, Aphorisms, 302, author’s italics.[70] Baxter, Aphorisms, 302.[71] Romans 5:9-10; Owen, The Death of Christ, 447.[74] Baxter, Aphorisms, 306, author’s italics.[75] Baxter, Aphorisms, 305.[76] Owen, Death of Christ, 447.[77] Owen, Death of Christ, 443.[78] Baxter, Aphorisms, 301, my italics.[79] Owen, Death of Christ, 443.[80] Garry J. Owen, Death of Christ, 448.[81] Owen, Death of Death, 270.[82] Baxter, Aphorisms, 305.[83] Owen, Death of Christ, 435. (443)[84] Owen, Death of Death, 269.[85] Owen, Death of Death, 269.[86] Owen, Death of Death, 269.[87] Baxter, Aphorisms, 302.[88] Williams, “Grotius,”
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-ne Last week the Transportation Security Administration had lost a computer hard drive containing data and payroll information for about 100,000 employee records. They were planning on it!- May 4, 2007 TSA notifies 100,000 of a lost hard drive- May 9, 2007 The American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE), along with four security screeners, charged that the TSA had recklessly violated the Privacy Act and also violated the Aviation and Transportation Security Act. If you were handed information and told your financial future depended on keeping it safe, you can be sure there would be people keeping better track of that data better than their wallet.Lack of accountability breeds lack of responsibility.
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-ne Pigs heads on sale in Moore St. The Ulyssies heading into Dublin port. Says he.I stopped the car and told him to turn around that I work in the port and this is not the way.Back on course he headed for the port then straight for the port tunnel.Where the hell are you going now?This is the way. He was very annoyed, it was an expensive lesson for the cabby.Fair enough if a guy knows where he is going you take him where he is going you don’t go on a wild goose chase.New York and Sydney are full of drivers who do not speak English and who have no clue where they are going you could spend a lifetime in transit.All the scamming that is happening here in Dublin at night beggars belief.It has become so bad that I would not be surprised to hear of a murder soon, very unsavory characters around in the night time, both as passengers and drivers.Thought I would give you some 10s of the best for DublinBest restaurants.1 L’Gueleton. 8732266 Very busy good reports not cheap www.chapteronerestaurant.com3 Cafe Bar Deli 78/79 Grafton St. Bewleys6727720 4 Bang Cafe 11 Merrion Row 6760898 www.bangrestaurant.com beside Unicorn which is reckoned to be good as well..5 L’Ecrivan 109 Lr Baggott St.www.leecrivian.com,6611919 All I can tell you of this place is a blazing row with an Italian opera singer from the Westbury hotel.. Aya Clarendon St www.aya.ie 6771544 Japanese food.Sushi,(If you knew sushi like I knew suchi)try the brasdcrumb chicken with lime.
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an impressive selection of darts accessories for sale, in glass display cases . More lottery action, horse racing video, an Instant Lotto vending machine—the Brooklyn version of a gambling bar . the sun through the open door reflects off the video poker machine . Coney Island Avenue @ Cortelyou to Avenue I—a crazy ethnic mélange: Russian, Polish, Pakistani, Muslim, Christian, Hasidic . my love of Brooklyn sometimes makes me tear (5:09 pm) .
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SBS = Sky Blue Sky84 ~ Less Than You Think (AGIB)83 ~ 23 Seconds of Silence (Summer)82 ~ Red-Eyed And Blue (BT)81 ~ Too Far Apart (AM)80 ~ Poor Places (YHF)79 ~ Hell Is Chrome (AGIB)78 ~ Monday (BT)77 ~ Dash 7 (AM)76 ~ Candyfloss (Summer)75 ~ What’s The World Got In Store (BT)74 ~ It’s Just That Simple (AM)73 ~ ELT (Summer)72 ~ Either Way (SBS)71 ~ Someone Else’s Song (BT)70 ~ I Thought I Held You (AM)69 ~ Someday Soon (BT)68 ~ I Got You (At The End Of The Century) (BT)67 ~ Shake It Off (SBS)66 ~ We’re Just Friends (Summer)65 ~ Heavy Metal Drummer (YHF)64 ~ Shouldn’t Be Ashamed (AM)63 ~ Handshake Drugs (AGIB)62 ~ Say You Miss Me (BT)61 ~ Wishful Thinking (AGIB)60 ~ Misunderstood (BT)59 ~ Blue Eyed Soul (AM)58 ~ A Shot In The Arm (Remix)(Summer)57 ~ You Are My Face (SBS)56 ~ Pick Up The Change (AM)55 ~ Spiders (Kidsmoke) (AGIB)54 ~ Pot Kettle Black (YHF)53 ~ Hotel Arizona (BT)52 ~ My Darling (Summer)51 ~ I’m the Man Who Loves You (YHF)50 ~ (Was I) In Your Dreams (BT)49 ~ Summer Teeth (Summer)48 ~ Sky Blue Sky (SBS)47 ~ That’s Not The Issue (AM)46 ~ Theologians (AGIB)45 ~ Radio Cure (YHF)44 ~ Side With The Seeds (SBS)43 ~ The Lonely 1 (BT)42 ~ Passenger Side (AM)41 ~ I’m Always In Love (Summer)40 ~ Please Be Patient With Me (SBS)39 ~ Why Would You Wanna Live (BT)38 ~ When You Wake Up Feeling Old (Summer)37 ~ What Light (SBS)36 ~ In A Future Age (Summer)35 ~ Company In My Back (AGIB)34 ~ Leave Me (Like You Found Me) (SBS)33 ~ I Must Be High (AM)32 ~ Forget The Flowers (BT)31 ~ Should’ve Been In Love (AM)30 ~ Pieholden Suite (Summer)29 ~ Kingpin (BT)28 ~ Kamera (YHT)27 ~ How To Fight Loneliness (Summer)26 ~ I’m A Wheel (AGIB)25 ~ Far, Far Away (BT)24 ~ Impossible Germany (SBS)23 ~ Hate It Here (SBS)22 ~ Outtasite (Outta Mind) (BT)21 ~ Outta Mind (Outta Sight) (BT)20 ~ On And On And On (SBS)19 ~ Can’t Stand it (Summer)18 ~ Reservations (YHF)17 ~ Casino Queen (AM)16 ~ Via Chicago (Summer)15 ~ Sunken Treasure (BT)14 ~ Muzzle Of Bees (AGIB)13 ~ Box Full Of Letters (AM)12 ~ Hummingbird (AGIB)11 ~ War on War (YHF)10 ~ Nothing’severgonnastandinmyway (Again) (Summer)9 ~ Walken (SBS)8 ~ Ashes of American Flags (YHF)7 ~ Dreamer In My Dreams (BT)6 ~ A Shot In The Arm (Summer)5 ~ At Least That’s What You Said (AGIB)4 ~ I am Trying to Break Your Heart (YHF)3 ~ She’s A Jar (Summer)2 ~ Jesus, etc.
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-ne Look at the list of books below:* Bold the ones you’ve read** Italicize the ones you want to read*Leave blank the ones that you aren’t interested in.*If you are reading this, tag, you’re it!**If there are any books on this list that I didn’t italicize and you think I should read, let me know in comments! Also, what other books do you think belong on this list and why?1. The Lord of the Rings: Fellowship of the Ring (Tolkien)7. Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (Rowling)12. Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix (Rowling)14. Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone (Rowling)17. Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban (Rowling)20. Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (Rowling)58. The World According To Garp (John Irving)79. The Celestine Prophecy (James Redfield)100. Ulysses (James Joyce)Those that were left behind:1. The James Bond series (Ian Fleming)4. Sherlocke Holmes series (Sir Arthur Conan Doyle)**Note if a book is both Bold and Italics it means I have read and want to read again :)
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