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Search Results for "blunder"
There are 172 Retriever pages mentioning "blunder":
  1. Napoleon Bonaparte -- History
    The Napoleonic Guide is the best reference source for everything you need to know about the life and times of Napoleon Bonaparte. It has more than 2000 pages of information covering all aspects of the greatest era in world history.
  2. Zoroastrianism -- Evil
    The cosmology of Zoroastrianism is one of dividing time into three periods. In the first of these, the original one, everything was perfect. In the second, the present one, evil is active. In the third and last, perfect goodness will be restored.
  3. Nick Lachey -- Lachey and Simpson
    Both Lachey and Simpson had a series of failures in the music industry: Lachey faded off the map after 98 Degrees, and Simpson had low sales in both albums Irresistible and In This Skin. They needed some heavy promotion to push their careers further and Simpson's father, Joe Simpson, had the idea for a reality show that followed their newly married life together.
  4. Juan Pablo Montoya -- Victories
    In 2001 Button moved to Benetton-Renault due to Montoya's arrival at the team. The FW23 won four races, three by Ralf Schumacher at Imola; Montreal and his home Grand Prix in Germany. His teammate, Montoya, was victorious at Monza, and would have won a few more races if not for the FW23's unreliability and pit crew blunders. The car proved to be quicker than the Ferrari and McLaren counterparts in several races, but Williams' 2001 campaign can only manage third place in the constructor’s championship.
  5. Raith -- Sports Tonight
    A 1980 graduate of the University of Missouri with a degree in journalism, Raith joined CNN in 1980 as a sports producer and was later promoted to coordinating producer for CNN Sports. From September 1983 to August 1984, he served as producer of "The Games of '84," CNN's daily coverage leading up to and including the 1984 Olympic Winter and Summer Games.
  6. Gujarati -- Words
    The word order of Gujarati is SOV. However there is considerable flexibility, such that SVO can be used for stylistic or complex constructions, and OVS for conversation or short replies. Personal pronouns can ... be omitted in conversational speech and instead inferred from context as well as through unique verbal conjugations that render the pronouns redundant.
  7. Don Rickles -- Don Rickles Tv
    [One] TV appearance of note came in 1984 when Don Rickles received one of the highest honors an entertainer can be afforded. He was invited by President Reagan to perform at the televised Inaugural Gala, where he "zinged" the President, the Vice President and other of the nation's dignitaries gathered for the occasion.
  8. Caesar Ii -- Caesar Iv
    Caesar IV is certainly not an improved Caesar III - it is yet another big leap forward for the city-building genre, pioneered by Impressions Games more than a decade ago. Continuing in this spirit, Caesar IV breaks new ground technologically, visually, and in its organic, AI driven gameplay. Many of the lofty ideals of this unique genre will be fully realized for the first time in Caesar IV. Yet, the game remains firmly rooted in the legacy of its predecessors. Put simply: It's still all about building efficient, attractive, functional cities, but the tools you have to do this (including feedback) are more powerful and informative than ever before.
  9. Maginot Line -- Defenses
    The Maginot Line was a powerful line of defense which stretched from Switzerland to the Ardennes in the North, and from the Alps to the Mediterranean in the South. It was a vast, dynamic, state-of-the-art, ultra-modern defensive system. Most of its components were underground, where interconnecting tunnels stretched for kilometers, and where, beneath the earth, thousands of men slept, trained, watched, and waited for a war that never came.
  10. Homer Simpson -- Character
    Bumbling cartoon character Homer Simpson is more likely to influence people’s thinking on the nuclear industry than the government, a new study has revealed. Rather than turn to official sources, Scots are more likely to rely for information on the exploits of the beer-guzzling cartoon dad - best known for his catastrophic blunders while working as a safety inspector at a nuclear power plant.
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