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Attack helicopter An attack helicopter is a military helicopter armed for attacking targets on the ground such as enemy infantry, armored vehicles and structures, using autocannon and machine-gun fire, rockets, and precision guided missiles such as the Hellfire. Many attack helicopters are also capable of carrying air to air missiles, though mostly for purposes of self-defense.
Attack of the 50 Foot Woman Attack of the 50 Foot Woman is a 1958 science fiction film produced by Bernard Woolner for Allied Artists Pictures. It was directed by Nathan Juran (credited as Nathan Hertz) from a screenplay by Mark Hanna, and starred Allison Hayes, William Hudson and Yvette Vickers.
Attack of the Crab Monsters Attack Of The Crab Monsters is a 1957, American, black-and-white, science fiction film, written by Charles B. Griffith and produced and directed by Roger Corman via Los Altos Productions, on contract for distribution by Allied Artists Pictures Corporation.
Attack of the Cybermen Attack of the Cybermen is a serial in the British science fiction television series Doctor Who, which was first broadcast in two weekly parts from January 5 - January 12, 1985. It opened Season 22 of the series.
Attack of the Graske Attack of the Graske is a "mini-episode" of the British science fiction television series Doctor Who. A special interactive episode for the BBC's digital television service, it was available until midnight following the transmission of the Christmas special, The Christmas Invasion, on 25 December, 2005.
Attack of the Killer Garage Sale "Attack of the Killer Garage Sale" is the fourth episode in the television series Danny Phantom. Danny's garage sale to raise money for an outfit goes bust when he has to confront Technus, the ghost master of technology.
Attack of the Killer Hog Attack of the Killer Hog is a 2000 Argentine horror film directed and written by AgustĂ­n Cavalieri and Marcos Meroni. The film premiered in December 2000 in Buenos Aires and was released also in Germany with an 18 certificate by Epix Media.
Attack of the Killer Cheese Attack of the Killer Cheese is a 4-song cassette demo by the Los Angeles, California ska band The Hippos, released in 1995. It bears the label "Potamus Records" but this is a fictitious record label and in reality the demo was self-recorded and self-released.
Attack of the Mutant Zombie Flesh Eating Chickens From Mars Attack of the Mutant Zombie Flesh Eating Chickens From Mars (AOTMZFECFM) was a computer game advertized by Software Projects in 1987, but never released. The version for the ZX Spectrum was much anticipated due to being programmed by Matthew Smith.
Attack of the Puppet People Attack of the Puppet People (also known as I Was a Teenage Doll (working title), Six Inches Tall (UK) and The Fantastic Puppet People) is a 1958 Black-and-white science fiction Horror film directed, produced and written by Bert I. Gordon.
Attack of the Twonkies (game) Attack of the Twonkies is a video game released in 2004 based on the animated TV series The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius. In the game, the player controls Jimmy Neutron in a quest to save earth from the alien twonkies using a variety of gadgets and inventions.
Attack of the Weirdos Attack of the Weirdos is an EP recorded by Detroit rapper Bizarre in late 1997. The tracks were produced by local Detroit producers and DJs including DJ Head, who was D12's DJ at the time, Mad Chemist, Hush (of Da Ruckus), DJ Lenn Swann and the now acclaimed producer Jay Dee of Slum Village.
Attack of the Zolgear Attack Of The Zolgear was a video game implemented as a conversion kit for Namco's Galaxian 3 Theater. A somewhat sequel to the popular Galaga, this six player game (gameplay for 6 at the same time in this huge 17' x 17' theater) never hit big like its earlier version.
Attack of The Planet Smashers Attack of The Planet Smashers is the second full-length release from The Planet Smashers. This is the first of three collaborations between the Planet Smashers and producer Chris Murray (the other two are Life of the Party and Unstoppable).
Attack on Russian diplomats in Iraq On June 3, 2006, a car belonging to the Russian Embassy in Iraq came under fire. Embassy official Vitaly Titov was killed, and Fyodor Zaitsev, Rinat Agliuglin, Anatoly Smirnov and Oleg Fedoseyev were kidnapped.
Attack on Sydney Harbour In late May and early June, 1942, a group of five Imperial Japanese Navy submarines made a series of attacks on Sydney, Australia and the nearby port of Newcastle. These attacks are one of the best known examples of Axis naval activity in Australian waters during World War II.
Attack on the Sui-ho Dam The attack on the Sui-ho Dam was the collective name for a series of air attacks by United Nations Command air forces on 13 hydroelectric generating facilities in North Korea that took place June 23–24, 1952, during the Korean War. The attack was intended to apply political pressure at the stalled truce negotiations at Panmunjeom.
Attack poodle Attack poodle is a political epithet or pejorative that typically denotes a vociferous but utterly servile defender of a given political leader, party, or faction. It gained popular currency in 2002 when a member of the British Parliament who ran afoul of the Labour party Chief Whip charged that Prime Minister Tony Blair was setting out "one of his attack poodles" to bring him or her into line.
Attack Poodles and Other Media Mutants Attack Poodles and Other Media Mutants: The Looting of the News in a Time of Terror (2004) is a book by American media critic James Wolcott. Wolcott takes as his subject matter popular right-wing pundits whom he dubs "attack poodles".
Attack Retrieve Capture Attack Retrieve Capture (ARC) is a free multiplayer, 2D computer game originally created by John Vechey (jv) and Brian Fiete (bf) as a college project was later published by Hoopy Entertainment in 1997. The game is primarily capture the flag (CTF), but other game modes exist.
Attack surface The attack surface of a software environment is the scope of functionality that is available to unauthenticated users. In other words, how much can a piece of software do in its default configuration by unauthorized users.
Attack Squadron 174 (U.S. Navy) Attack Squadron 174 (VA-174) also known as the "Hellrazors" was a United States Navy attack squadron based at Naval Air Station Cecil Field, Floridia, and were attached to Light Attack Wing One. The unit has evolved several times throughout its history that dates back to 1944.
Attack Squadron 176 (U.S. Navy) Attack Squadron One Seven Six (VA-176), known as the "Thunderbolts", was a United States Navy A-6 Intruder squadron that saw combat service in the Vietnam War and later in 1983 in both Grenada and Lebanon. Two members of the squadron attained fame while operating the AD-1 Skyraider by successfully engaging a North Vietnamese MiG 17, an unusual instance of propeller-driven aircraft defeating a jet-powered adversary.
Attack time In telecommunication, attack time is the time between (a) the instant that a signal at the input of a device or circuit exceeds the activation threshold of the device or circuit and (b) the instant that the device or circuit reacts in a specified manner, or to a specified degree, to the input. Attack time occurs in devices such as clippers, peak limiters, compressors, and voxes.
Attack tolerance The term attack tolerance in complex network theory adverts to the responsive behavior a network may have, under intentional damage caused to it from external factors. An attack against a network may take various forms.
Attacks on humanitarian workers Humanitarian aid workers belonging to UN organisations, PVOs / NGOs or the Red Cross / Red Crescent have traditionally enjoyed both international legal protection, and de facto immunity from attack by belligerent parties. However, attacks on humanitarian workers have occasionally occurred, and became more frequent in the 1990s and 2000s.
Attacks on North America during World War II Attacks on North America during World War II by the Axis Powers were rare, mainly due to the continent's geographical separation from the central theaters of conflict in Europe and Asia. This article includes attacks on continental territory (extending 200 miles [370 km] into the ocean) which is today under the sovereignty of the United States and Canada but excludes military action involving the Danish territory of Greenland and the Caribbean.
Attacotti The name Attacotti (also Atecotti, A(t)ticotti, Ategutti) appears in several late Roman texts. The historian Ammianus Marcellinus includes this ‘warlike race of men’ (bellicosa hominum natio) in a list of peoples disturbing Roman Britain c.
Attacus atlas The Atlas moth (Attacus atlas) is a large saturniid moth found in the tropical and subtropical forests of Southeast Asia, southern China, common across the Malay archipelago to Indonesia. In India, Atlas moths are cultivated for their silk in a non-commercial capacity; unlike that produced by the related Silkworm moth (Bombyx mori), Atlas moth silk is secreted as broken strands.
Attached (TNG episode) "Attached" is the eighth episode of the seventh season of Star Trek: The Next Generation, first broadcast on November 8, 1993. It is episode #160, production #260, written by Nick Sagan and directed by Jonathan Frakes.
Attachmate Attachmate is a major privately owned software company created by the acquisition of NetIQ by AttachmateWRQ in 2006. Attachmate focuses on host connectivity, systems and security management, and PC lifecycle management software.
Attachment parenting Attachment parenting, a phrase coined by pediatrician William Sears, is a parenting philosophy based on the principles of the attachment theory in developmental psychology. According to attachment theory, a strong emotional bond with parents during childhood, also known as a secure attachment, is a precursor of secure, empathic relationships in adulthood.
Attachment theory Attachment theory is a psychological theory about the evolved adaptive tendency to maintain proximity to an attachment figure. The origin of attachment theory can be traced to the publication of two 1958 papers, one being John Bowlby's "the Nature of the Child's Tie to his Mother", in which the precursory concepts of "attachment" were introduced, and Harry Harlow's "the Nature of Love", as based on the results of experiments which showed, approximately, that infant rhesus monkeys preferred emotional attachment over food.
Attachment Therapy "Attachment Therapy", also called "holding therapy" or rebirthing, is an ambiguous term which is sometimes used to describe a form of "treatment" for behavioral difficulties in children suffering from attachment disorder. However, because the term has no common meaning, or generally accepted meaning, in the professional community, its actual definition is unclear.
Attachment Unit Interface An Attachment Unit Interface (AUI) is a 15 pin connection that provides a path between a node's Ethernet interface and the Medium Attachment Unit (MAU), sometimes known as a transceiver. It is the part of the IEEE Ethernet standard located between the MAC, and the MAU.
Attachments (TV Series) Attachments is a BBC TV Series that ran for two seasons from 2000 to 2002, a total of 26 episodes. It focuses on a group of young professionals in London that work for an Internet startup company called "seethru" during the dot com boom.
Attainment area An attainment area is a zone within which the the level of a pollutant is considered to meet National Ambient Air Quality Standards. These standards are per pollutant, so it is possible for a zone to meet these standards for a certain substance and not for another.
Attalid dynasty The Attalid dynasty was a Hellenistic dynasty that ruled the city of Pergamon after the death of Lysimachus, a general of Alexander the Great. One of Lysimachus' officers, Philetaerus, took control of the city in 282 BC.
Attalus of Macedonia Attalus (in Greek Aτταλoς; lived 4th century BC), son of Andromenes the Stymphaean, and one of Alexander's officers, was accused with his brothers, Amyntas and Simmias, of having been engaged in the conspiracy of Philotas, 330 BC, but was acquitted, together with his brothers. In 328 BC, Attalus was left with Polyperchon and other officers in Bactria with part of the troops, while the king himself marched against the Sogdians.
Attap dwelling An Attap dwelling is traditional housing found in the kampongs of Singapore. Named after the attap palm, which provides the wattle for the walls, and the leaves with which their roofs are thatched, these dwellings can range from huts to substantial houses.
Attar Singh Attar Singh is a Fijian trade unionist of Indian descent. As of January 2007, he is the General Secretary of the Fiji Islands Council of Trade Unions (FICTU), one of two major umbrella bodies for trade unions in Fiji.
Attati Mpakati Attati Mpakati (died 24 March 1983 in Harare, Zimbabwe) was a Malawian dissident and leader of the Socialist League of Malawi (LESOMA) from 1975 until his death. He was killed by a letter bomb while in exile in Zimbabwe.
Attawapiskat, Ontario Attawapiskat First Nation is an isolated community located in Northern Ontario, Canada, at the mouth of the Attawapiskat River which drains into James Bay. According to Indian and Northern Affairs Canada statistics, there were 2,800 registered members of the Attawapiskat First Nation.
Attempt The essence of the crime of attempt is that the defendant has failed to commit the actus reus (the Latin term for the "guilty act") of the full offence, but has the direct and specific intent to commit that full offence. The normal rule for establishing criminal liability is to prove an actus reus accompanied by a mens rea ("guilty mind") at the relevant time (see concurrence and strict liability offences as the exception to the rule).
Attempted murder In the criminal law, attempted murder is committed when the defendant does an act that is more than merely preparatory to the commission of the crime of murder and, at the time of these acts, the person has a specific intention to kill.
Attempts at Reconciliation in Somalia (1991-2004) The downfall of Siad Barre's government did not bring peace to the nation. The years of the 1990s through the turn of the millennium were rife with conflict between clans, militias, warlords, separatist and rebellion movements, and the forces of intercessionist nations, including a series of UN missions for intervention in Somalia.
Attempts to ban football games Numerous attempts have been made throughout history to ban various kinds of football games, particularly the most rowdy and disruptive forms. These attempts were most common in Mediæval and early modern Europe, especially in England, where a multitude of forms of folk or mob football were popular, among and between villages and urban districts.
Attendant console An attendant console is a telephone station that is generally part of a private branch exchange (PBX) or Centrex or other private telephone system. An attendant console generally is a regular PBX telephone station with one or more additional modules each bearing numerous buttons that can be programmed to be associated with particular lines in the private telephone system, or with particular specialized functions.
Attending physician An attending physician is a physician that has completed residency and practices medicine in a clinic or hospital, often focusing on the specialty learned during residency. An attending physician can also supervise residents and medical students.
Attentato ai tre grandi Attentato ai tre grandi (English: Attack on the three large ones) is a 1967 war film set during World War II in Morocco about a German commando group with a mission to assassinate Churchill, Roosevelt and de Gaulle at a conference in Casablanca. The film is a character based drama that focuses on the German soldiers' various drives and conflicts during encounters with Tuareg nomads, and French and American soldiers.
Attention Attention is the cognitive process of selectively concentrating on one thing while ignoring other things. Examples include listening carefully to what someone is saying while ignoring other conversations in the room (e.
Attention management The human attention span is limited (see hrair). Attention management is the practise of using automation and user interface techniques to provide greater context and control over how and when the information is displayed.
Attention span Attention span is the amount of time a person can concentrate on a single activity. The ability to focus one's mental or other efforts on an object is generally considered to be of prime importance to the achievement of goals.
Attention To Detail Attention To Detail (short: ATD; official: Attention To Detail Ltd) was a Warwickshire-based British software house that endured nearly 15 years, from its foundation by five University of Birmingham graduates in September 1988 to their liquidation in mid-2003. It was best-known for creating games.
Attention versus memory in prefrontal cortex A widely accepted theory regarding the function of the brain's prefrontal cortex is that it serves as a store of short-term memory. This idea was first formulated by Jacobsen, who reported in 1935 that damage to the primate prefrontal cortex caused short-term memory deficits.
Attention-focusing method An attention-focusing method is an axiomatic system that contains at least one attention-focusing axiom. Deterministic sensitivity analysis, risk sensitivity, and time-preference sensitivity are attention-focusing methods in decision analysis.
Attentional bias Attentional bias is a form of cognitive bias in which a person does not examine all possible outcomes when making a judgment about a correlation or association. They may focus on one or two possibilities, while ignoring the rest.
Attentional blink Attentional blink (AB) is a phenomenon observed in Rapid Serial Visual Presentation (RSVP). Attentional blink is when a subject detects one target stimulus in a stream of distractors but then fails to detect a second, different target presented within about 500ms of the first.
Attenuation (electromagnetic radiation) Attenuation is the decrease in intensity of electromagnetic radiation due to absorption or scattering of photons. Attenuation does not include the decrease in intensity due to inverse-square law geometric spreading.
Attenuation length In physics, the attenuation length is the distance tau into a material when the probability has dropped to 1/e that a particle has not been absorbed. Alternatively, if there is a beam of particles incident on the material, the attentuation length is the distance where the intensity of the beam has dropped to 1/e, or about 63% of the particles have been stopped.
Attenuation to crosstalk ratio In telecommunications, the attenuation to crosstalk ratio is the ratio of the attenuated signal to near-end crosstalk (NEXT). It's a factor in determining how far a signal can be transmitted in any given medium.
Attenuator (genetics) The attenuator plays an important regulatory role in prokaryotic cells because of the absence of the nucleus in prokaryotic organisms. The attenuator refers to a specific regulatory sequence that, when transcribed into RNA, forms hairpin structures to stop translation when certain conditions are not met.
Attera Totus Sanctus Attera Totus Sanctus is Dark Funeral's 4th full length studio album. It was released on October 24th, 2005 in Europe through Regain Records, and on November 29th, 2005 in the United States through Candlelight Records USA.
Atterby Atterby is a small hamlet within the parish of Bishop Norton, distinguished by a grade two listed building, Atterby Mill. Now nothing more than a cluster of buildings at a crossroads, in the 19th century it was rather larger with 134 inhabitants, a butcher, shop and a carrier.
Attercliffe Attercliffe () is an industrial suburb of northeast Sheffield. Lying on the south bank of the River Don, it originally grew as a small hamlet centred on Attercliffe Chapel, and was part of the parish of Sheffield.
Attercliffe Chapel Attercliffe Chapel, also known as the Hill Top Chapel, is a Gothic chapel in Attercliffe, now a suburb of Sheffield, England. The chapel was constructed in 1629, when Attercliffe was a township separate from Sheffield, although in the same parish.
Attercliffe Road Station Attercliffe Road Station was a railway station in Sheffield, South Yorkshire. The station served the communities of Attercliffe, Burngreave and workers in the Don Valley and was situated on the Midland Main Line near Attercliffe Road in Attercliffe, lying between Sheffield Midland station and Brightside Station.
Atteridgeville Atteridgeville, part of the City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality, is a township located on the west of Pretoria, South Africa. It is bordered to the west by Saulsville, to the east by Proclamation Hill; to the south by Laudium and to the north by Lotus Gardens.
Attestation In the Trusted Computing Group community, a trusted-platform device is said to attest to its state - that is, it reports its integrity state, for example the values inside the registers inside the TPM (Trusted Platform Module) chip.
Attestation clause In the statutory law of wills and trusts in the United States, an attestation clause is a clause that is typically appended to a will, often just below the place of the testator's signature. Its purpose is to allow the will to be admitted to probate without affidavits from the attesting witnesses to be submitted to the probate court along with the will itself.
Attestation Standards Accounting attestation standards define the basic standards for representing attestation engagements. Attestation is defined as an engagement in which a practitioner is hired to issue written communication that expresses a conclusion about the reliability of written assertions prepared by a separate party.
Attested languages In linguistics, attested languages are languages for which evidence has survived to the present day, either in the form of inscriptions or literature, or because the language is still spoken. They are the opposite of the hypothetical, unattested proto-languages proposed as a result of linguistic reconstruction.
Atthakavagga and Parayanavagga The Aṭṭhakavagga (Pali, "Octet Chapter") and the Pārāyanavagga (Pali, "Way to the Far Shore Chapter") are two small collections of suttas within the Pāli Canon of Theravada Buddhism.In the Pali canon, these chapters are the fourth and fifth chapters of the Khuddaka Nikaya's Sutta Nipata, respectively.
Attic calendar The Attic calendar is the calendar that was in use in ancient Attica, the ancestral territory of the Athenian polis. This article focuses on the 5th and 4th centuries BC, the classical period that produced some of the most significant works of ancient Greek literature.
Attic Entertainment Software The Attic Entertainment Software GmbH was a German computer game developer and publisher that was founded September 1990 by Hans-Jürgen Brändle, Jochen Hamma and Guido Henkel in Albstadt, Baden-Württemberg. Attic shut down in 2001.
Attic Greek Attic Greek is the prestige dialect of Ancient Greek that was spoken in Attica, which includes Athens. Of the ancient dialects, it is the most similar to later Greek and is the standard form of the language studied in courses in "Ancient Greek".
Attic orators The ten Attic orators were considered the greatest orators and logographers of the classical era (5th century BC–4th century BC). They are included in the Alexandrian Canon compiled by Aristophanes of Byzantium and Aristarchus of Samothrace.
Attic style In classical architecture, the term attic refers to a storey or low wall above the cornice of a classical façade. This usage originated in the 17th century from the use of Attica style pilasters as adornments on the top storey's façade.
Attica Attica (in Greek: Αττική, Attike; see also List of traditional Greek place names) is a periphery (subdivision) in Greece, containing Athens, the capital of Greece. Attica is subdivided into the prefectures of Athens, Piraeus, East Attica and West Attica.
Attica Correctional Facility The Attica Correctional Facility is one of the best known prisons in the United States. It is located in Attica, New York, a small town located midway between Buffalo and Rochester, at 42°50'59"N 78°16'18"W.
Attica Prison riots The Attica Prison riots were general prison uprisings that began at the Attica Correctional Facility in Attica, New York, United States, on September 9, 1971. In the end, at least thirty-nine people had been killed.
Atticus (band) Atticus (formed in 1995 in Knoxville, Tennessee) is a rock band noted for progressive compositions, complex harmonies, innovative cover art, and a small but loyally devoted fan base. The band is named after the Atticus Finch character of To Kill a Mockingbird, a novel by Harper Lee which won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1961.
Atticus (c. 175) Atticus, all of what is known of this philosopher are fragments of his book preserved in Eusebius' Preparatio Evangelica, Atticus was vehemently anti-[Peripatetic]]. Atticus' work was a polemic, possibly originating from the first holder of the chair in Platonic philosophy at Athens under Marcus Aurelius.
Attigny, Ardennes Attigny is a commune on the river Aisne and eponymous seat of a canton in the arrondissement of Vouziers (formerly arrondissement of Compiègne) in the département of Ardennes in the in the Champagne-Ardenne région of northern France.
Attila (1954 film) Attila (Italian: Attila, il flagello di Dio, French: Attila fléau de Dieu) is a 1954 Franco-Italian film co-production, directed by Pietro Francisci and produced by Dino de Laurentiis. It stars Anthony Quinn and Sophia Loren with Henri Vidal, Irene Papas, Ettore Manni and Christian Marquand.
Attila (opera) Attila is an opera in three acts by Giuseppe Verdi to an Italian libretto by Temistocle Solera, based on the play Attila, König der Hunnen by Zacharias Werner. First performance: Teatro La Fenice, Venice, March 17, 1846.
Attila (TV miniseries) Attila (also known as Attila the Hun in the UK), takes place during the waning days of Roman Empire, the barbarian Huns are making their way toward Europe. A warrior named Attila violently assumes Hun leadership and unites the warring clans under his banner.
Attila Ambrus Attila Ambrus (born October 6 1967) is notorious for committing a string of robberies in Hungary. He was born in a Szekely Hungarian family in FitĂłd (Fitud), a small village in Eastern Transylvania, Romania, right outside CsĂ­kszereda (Miercurea Ciuc).
Attila Bernath Attila Bernath (born 1977 in Budapest, Hungary) is a contemporary painter. He received an invitation from from several galleries and he was also a participator in some reconstuctions of historic monuments such as Matthias Church in the Buda castle.
Attila Czene Attila Czene (born June 20, 1974 in Budapest) is a former medley swimmer from Hungary, who won the gold medal in the 200 m Individual Medley at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia. He competed in three consecutive Summer Olympics for his native country, starting in 1992.
Attila Filkor Attila Filkor (born July 12 1988, Budapest Hungary) is an attacking midfielder who can also play as a striker plays for Inter Milan in Italy's Serie A. He joined them in summer 2006 from Maltese club PietĂ  Hotspurs FC and has been called-up for the Hungary national football team.
Attila Joachim Attila Joachim (1923-1947) died at approximately 24 years of age due to accumulated internal bodily injuries suffered from repeated beatings by the Hungarian (Magyar) collaborators of the German nazis during the Budapest holocaust circa 1943 and 1944 in Budapest, Hungary. He was a student at, and a 1946 graduate of, the "Képzőművészeti Főiskola" ("The Hungarian Academy of Fine Arts" in Hungarian, "The Hungarian Academy of Fine Arts" in English, a university level professional college) in Budapest, Hungary.
Attila Savolt Attila Savolt (born February 5, 1976 in Budapest) is a tennis player from Hungary, who represented his native country at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney. There he was defeated in the first round by Thailand's Paradorn Srichaphan.
Attila Zoller Attila Cornelius Zoller (born June 13 1927 in Visegrád, Ungarn; died January 25 1998 in Townshent, Vermont) was the first guitarist to discover the free jazz and is considered as one of the innovators of modern jazz guitar.
Attila ZsivĂłczky Attila ZsivĂłczky (born 29 April, 1977 in Budapest) is a Hungarian track and field athlete, competing in decathlon. He has previously specialized in high jump, where he took a fourth place at the 1994 World Junior Championships in Athletics
Attila Zubor Attila Zubor (born March 12, 1975 in Budapest) is a former freestyle swimmer from Hungary, who competed in three consequentive Summer Olympics for his native country, starting in 1996. He was trained by the famous Tamás Széchy, who also guided the great Tamás Darnyi for instance.
Attilio Demaría Attilio Demaría (born March 19, 1909 in Buenos Aires – died November 11, 1990 in Haedo) was a football (soccer) player, who played for Argentina in the 1930 World Cup, but for Italy in the 1934 World Cup. He played 295 games for Internazionale of Italy between 1931 and 1943.
Attis Attis, a life-death-rebirth deity, was both the son and the lover of Cybele, her eunuch attendant and driver of her lion-driven chariot; he was driven mad by her and castrated himself. Attis was originally a local semi-deity of Phrygia, associated with the great Phrygian trading city of Pessinos, which lay under the lee of Mount Agdistis. The mountain was personified as a daemon, whom foreigners associated with the Great Mother Cybele.
Attitude (song) Attitude is the last single by Suede, released on October 6, 2003 on Columbia Records. The single was a fitting end for the band, as it was a great comeback following the disappointing singles from A New Morning.
Attitude 2: The New Subversive Alternative Cartoonists Attitude 2: The New Subversive Alternative Cartoonists is an anthology of alternative comics, photos and artists' interviews edited by Universal Press Syndicate editorial cartoonist Ted Rall. Following Attitude: The New Subversive Political Cartoonists by two years, Rall turned to alternative weekly-oriented cartoonists whose work leaned more toward general humor than the original volume.
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