style of no style". Books he wrote First book he wrote was Chinese Gung-Fu: Philosophical Art of Self Defense. Later he wrote more two books Acting career His first film was Marlowe He played his first leading role in THE BIG BOSS His last film was Enter the Dragon Dead After his last movie he died mysteriously He died in 20 July 1973 Lee was only 32 years old Later his son were buried next to him Sculpture Nowdays there is a sculpture of Bruce Lee in Avenue of Stars in Hong Kong The End
The Damned Thing „The Damned Thing“ by Ambrose Bierce speaks about a man who died very mysteriously. The book starts with a meeting where nine old men are present, but unfortunately one of them is dead. A young man named William Harker, who is the witness of the crime, enters the room. Coroner asks him to speaks about what had happened to Hugh Morgan. William starts to tell the jury about what he had seen. He visited Hugh to shoot and fish. After greeting each other they began to hunt for deers and reached a field of wild oats where they hid behind a rock because Hugh saw something moving in
5. The filmed it in diffrent country's, where the most is filmed in UK and some is filmed in USA aswell. But the the film is located in London. 6. Detective Sherlock Holmes and his stalwart partner Watson engage in a battle of wits and brawn with a nemesis whose plot is a threat to all of England. 7. After finally catching serial killer and occult "sorcerer" Lord Blackwood, legendary sleuth Sherlock Holmes and his assistant Dr. Watson can close yet another successful case. But when Blackwood mysteriously returns from the grave and resumes his killing spree, Holmes must take up the hunt once again. Contending with his partner's new fiancée and the dimwitted head of Scotland Yard, the dauntless detective must unravel the clues that will lead him into a twisted web of murder, deceit, and black magic - and the deadly embrace of temptress Irene Adler. 8. Sherlock Holmes is the legendary great detective who solves even the most baffling cases
so why not overlive this one as well? /.../ Kaoru said the weather will be better tomorrow, but sooner or later we'll face the same problem again we have no food. / .../ The only thing to do now is to pray and hope that tomorrow will start. The nights are really dark in the north so the sun is as a new flow of life every day. 23 May, Wednesday Nothing's changed we're dying. /.../ The food is at its end and water, too, is `mysteriously' disappearing. The fact is that team A is stealing it Joshua found some footprints that didn't belong to any of our team members. /.../ Kaoru is quiet about the weather now the snow is getting heavier. No surprise if our camps were smashed one night. 24 May /.../ Our situation is hopeless, I don't see a way for us to ever leave this canyon... / .../ 25 May No food. The water is ending. Why? What have we done wrong to deserve such a cruel end
these newcomers Spaniards, Africans, Greeks, Italians and Cubans blended with the indigenous people to create a mélange of traditions that are unique to Veracruz. Long before Cortes these tropical lowlands wwewe the domain of the Olmec,Mesoamerica's oldest civikization, which rose to prominence 3,000 years ago, developing religious ideas, mathematical concepts and a calendar system that would be adopted later by the Maya and Aztec. Master carvers, the Olmec disappeared mysteriously around 400 b.c.,leaving behind gigantic asalt heads believed to represent their rulers.Most are n display in Mxico's museums, including the Museum o Anthropology in Xalap (right), the capital of Veracruz state. Many of the Olmec sities were locates atop vast salt domes, witch, to modern feologists, means the presence of oil.Today that oil fuels a billon-dollar industry, second only to manufacturing.Mexico is the leading oil producer in Latin Ametica, with the world's eighth largest reserves
Miss Blanche Ingram Mr. Rochester disguised looking in a book. as a Gypsy woman. Jane saves Mr. Bertha Mason rips Rochester from a fire. Jane's wedding veil. Mr. Rochester seems quite taken with Jane, and she enjoys his company. However, odd things begin to happen: a strange laugh is heard in the halls, a near-fatal fire mysteriously breaks out, and a guest named Mason is attacked. Jane receives word that Mrs. Reed has suffered a stroke and is asking for her. Returning to Gateshead, she remains for over a month while her aunt lies dying. Mrs. Reed rejects Jane's efforts at reconciliation, but does give her a letter previously withheld out of spite. The letter is from John Eyre, Jane's uncle, notifying her of his intent to bequeath his fortune to her.
latter. But the power of fashion in itself should never be underestimated, and as has been rightly said, Public sector reform is in fashion and no self-respecting government can afford to ignore it. How a fashion is established is one of the most intriguing questions of public policy. Part of the answer lies in policy diffusion brought about by the activities of international officials (whose zeal for administrative reform mysteriously stops short at the door of their own organizations), by meetings of public administrators, academics, and the so-called policy entrepreneurs. (Wright 1997: 8) Indeed, the international vocabulary of management reforms carries a definite normative `charge'. Within the relevant community of discourse ... the assumption has grown that particular things performance management, TQM ... and so on are progress. To be progressive one has to be seen to
emperor Hadrian to guard the northern part of Britain against barbarian invaders Most imposing frontier of Roman Empire, controlling peoples mobements Building took several years, builders kept changing minds about the size 119 km lenght, 5m high, 3m deep The Picts, Caledonia The painted ones, northern tribes, part of the Scots Inhabited an area known as eastern and th western Scotland, until 10 c Mysteriously disappeared Constantly fought with Romans Teir country- Caledonia- Pictland The Scots, Hibernia Raiders, Celts living in Ireland/Hibernia Migrated to Scotland Raided Roman Britain After Kenneth McAlpin united Scotland all inhabitants became Scots The Venerable Bede A monk in the Northumbrian monastery of Jarrow In 731 ,,The Great Ecclesiastical History of the English People"- overshaows all other sources of 7th, early 8th C
unhealthy v. hair n. harm Excessive radiation is harmful to the body. Bleach harms certain fabrics. insignificant adj. not important; of little value adv. insignificantly Syn. Meaningless n. insignificance The amount of rainfall this summer has been insignificantly. The insignificance of his comment became apparent with the passing of time. mysterious adj. not easily understood or figured out adv. mysteriously Syn. baffling n. mystery n. mysteriousness He had a mysterious effect on everyone who heard him speak. The man's disappearance was a mystery. perilous adj. threatening or risky; harmful adv. perilously Syn. Dangerous n. peril It is perilous to exceed the speed limit. There are ample perils in the sport of mountain climbing. postpone v. reschedule at a later time; put off n
objection 3 by "rigidifying" the descriptions in terms of which they explicate names: Understand "Richard Nixon," not as "the winner of the 1968 elec- tion," but as "the actual winner of the 1968 election." See the next chapter. Objection 4 Kripke (1972/1980: 837) offers an (utterly fictional!) example regard- ing Gödel's Incompleteness Theorem, a famous metamathematical result. In Kripke's fiction, the theorem was proved in the 1920s by a man named Schmidt, who died mysteriously without publishing it. Kurt Gödel came along, appropriated the manuscript, and scurrilously published it under his own name.6 Now, most people know Gödel, if at all, as the man who proved the Incompleteness Theorem. Yet it seems clear that, when even those who know nothing else about Gödel utter the name "Gödel," they do refer to Gödel rather than to the entirely unknown Schmidt. For example, when they say "Gödel proved the Incompleteness Theorem," they are speaking falsely,