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Boilermaker A boilermaker is a trained craftsman who produces steel fabrications from plates and sections. The name originated from craftsmen who would fabricate boilers, but they may work on projects as diverse as bridges to blast furnaces.
Boilermaker (beer cocktail) A Boilermaker is a beer cocktail consisting of a shot of whiskey, tequila, or vodka, and a glass of beer (therefore sometimes also called simply a shot and a beer). The whiskey and beer are both typically, though not necessarily, of American production, with an inexpensive bourbon or a Tennessee whiskey favored for the shot, and a mass-market American lager for the beer.
Boilerplate (robot) Boilerplate is a modern hoax, purporting that a Victorian era robot, created by a Professor Archibald Campion during the 1880s, was unveiled at the 1893 "World's Columbian Exposition". Archibalds's "creation" is featured on the BigRedHair.
Boilie Boilie Cheese is a soft fresh cheese that is formed into small balls and packed in glass jars along with sunflower oil, herbs, pink peppers and garlic. Boilie is available in two varieties, Boilie (Cow's milk cheese) and Goat's Boilie (goat's milk cheese).
Boilies First formulated in the 1970's, Boilies are now one of the most established carp baits, available in such a huge range of colours and flavours. Carp anglers are willing to spend lots on boilies in hope that it will put a carp on the bank which is of a substantial size.
Boilin' Blazes "Boilin' Blazes" is the opening song of Mike Watt's third solo album The Secondman's Middle Stand. It is the first part of the "Inferno" section of the album, referencing and describing how Watt fell ill with an infection in his perineum not long after performing a benefit gig with Banyan in Utah.
Boiling Boiling, a type of phase transition, is the rapid vaporization of a liquid, which typically occurs when a liquid is heated to its boiling point, the temperature at which the vapor pressure of the liquid is equal to the pressure exerted on the liquid by the surrounding atmospheric pressure. Thus, a liquid may also boil when the pressure of the surrounding atmosphere is sufficiently reduced, such as the use of a vacuum pump or at high altitudes.
Boiling frog The boiling frog story states that a frog can be boiled alive if the water is heated slowly enough—it is said that if a frog is placed in boiling water, it will jump out, but if it is placed in cold water that is slowly heated, it will never jump out.
Boiling chip Boiling chips, also known as boiling stones or anti-bumping granules, are small, irregularly shaped stones added to liquids to make them boil more smoothly. They provide nucleation sites so the liquid boils easily without becoming superheated.
Boiling point The boiling point of a substance is the temperature at which it can change its state from a liquid to a gas throughout the bulk of the liquid at a given pressure. A liquid may change to a gas at temperatures below the boiling point through the process of evaporation.
Boiling Point (film) Boiling Point is the official international title for 3-4X1ďĽćś (3-4X jugatsu, literally: "the third and fourth of October"), a 1990 film by Japanese filmmaker Takeshi Kitano. It was his second film as director and first film as a screenwriter.
Boiling Point: Road to Hell Boiling Point: Road to Hell (previously known as Xenus) is a video game developed by the Ukrainian based game studio Deep Shadows and published in 2005 by Atari. Boiling Point's gameplay is a combination of both FPS and RPG mechanics.
Boiling Points Boiling Points is a prank reality television show broadcast on MTV in the United States. In each half-hour episode, annoying situations are set up and deliberately inflicted on one or more young adults who are unaware that they are being tested.
Boiling water reactor A boiling water reactor (BWR) is a type of light-water nuclear reactor developed by the General Electric Company in the mid 1950s. It is characterized by two-phase fluid flow (water and steam) in the upper part of the reactor core.
Boiling-point elevation Boiling-point elevation is a colligative property that states that a solution will have a higher boiling point than that of a pure solvent after the addition of a dissolved solute. The change in boiling point can be determined by the equation ΔTB.
BoiĹŁa BoiĹŁa (Hungarian: Bojca) is a commune in Sibiu County, Transylvania, Romania, at the foothills of the Cindrel Mountains, 22 km south of the county capital Sibiu, in the MÄrginimea Sibiului ethnographical area, on the main road between Sibiu and the southern part of Romania, the National road 7/European route 81, at the entrance of the Olt River defile.
Boios The obscure Boios was a Greek grammarian and mythographer, remembered chiefly as the author of a lost work on the transformations of mythic figures into birds, his Ornithogonia, which was translated into Latin by Aemilius Macer, a friend of Ovid, who was the author of the most familiar such collections of metamorphoses. In the second century CE, Antoninus Liberalis gave extremely brief summaries of the contents of some of the myths collected in Ornithogonia.
Boiron Boiron is a homeopathic pharmaceutical manufacturer, headquartered in France and with an operating presence in 59 countries worldwide. It is the largest manufacturer of homeopathic products in the world, and in 2005, was the second largest manufacturer of over the counter medicine in France.
Bois Blanc Island (Ontario) Bois Blanc Island, commonly called Boblo Island, is an island located directly west of Amherstburg, Ontario in the Detroit River (on the Canadian side of the border). The island is about 3 miles (5 km) long, 0.
Bois Brule River The Bois Brule River (Sometimes referred to as simply the Brule River) is a river situated in Douglas County, Wisconsin. The river, which is 44 miles (72 km) long, rises in central Douglas County near Upper St.
Bois de Sioux River The Bois de Sioux River drains Lake Traverse, the southernmost body of water in the Hudson Bay watershed of North America. It is a tributary of the Red River of the North and defines part of the western border of the U.
Bois Forte Indian Reservation Bois Forte Indian Reservation is an Indian reservation formed for the Bois Forte Band of Chippewa (or Zagaakwaandagowininiwag (Men of the Thick Woods) in the Ojibwe language). It is comprised of three sections in northern Minnesota, USA.
Bois-Brûlés Bois-Brûlés ("burnt wood"), or Brullis (a French translation of their Indian name sichangu), a sub-tribe of North American Dakota Indians (Teton river division). The name is most frequently associated with those in Manitoba, who in 1869 came into temporary prominence in connection with Rids Rebellion; at that time they had lost all tribal purity, and were alternatively called Métis (half-castes), the majority being descendants of French-Canadians.
Bois-Franc (AMT) Bois-Franc is a commuter rail station on the AMT Deux-Montagnes Line in the Greater Montreal, Quebec, Canada area. The Bois-Franc station was intended to be an intermodal station with the Orange Line which was to have extended into Laval at this end.
Bois-Guillaume Bois-Guillaume is a town and commune of the Seine-Maritime département, in Normandy, France. It is a weathly, primarily residential hilltop suburb of Rouen and is considered part of Greater Rouen ("l'Agglomeration de Rouen").
Boise Bible College Boise Bible College (BBC) is an accredited institution of higher learning which specializes in training students to serve in variety of ministry careers. Located in Boise, Idaho, BBC serves churches primarily in the western United States.
Boise Cascade Boise Cascade Holdings, LLC, which uses the trade name Boise, is an American pulp and paper company, ranked as the thirteenth biggest pulp and paper company in the world. It is composed of the assets sold off when Boise Cascade Corporation renamed itself OfficeMax Inc.
Boise greenbelt The Boise greenbelt refers to a long walking or jogging trail through Boise, Idaho, USA that follows the Boise River and connects most of the major city parks. The greenbelt runs from Lucky Peak Reservoir in the east and runs well beyond the city's border to the city of Eagle, Idaho.
Boise Idaho Temple The Boise Idaho Temple is the 29th constructed and 27th operating temple of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Located in the city of Boise, Idaho it was built with a sloping roof & six-spire design.
Boise metropolitan area The Boise City-Nampa, ID Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) (commonly known as the Boise Metropolitan Area or the Treasure Valley) is a region in southwestern Idaho which officially includes Ada, Boise, Canyon, Gem and Owyhee Counties. It includes three of Idaho's five largest cities, Boise, Nampa and Meridian.
Boise National Forest The Boise National Forest is a US national forest located north and east of the city of Boise, Idaho. It is about 2,612,000 acres (10,570 km²) in size, ranging in elevation from 2,600 to 9,800 feet (800 to 3000 m).
Boise River The Boise River is a tributary of the Snake River, approximately 75 mi (120 km) long, in southwestern Idaho in the United States. It drains a rugged portion of the Sawtooth Range northeast of Boise, as well as part of the western Snake River Plain.
Boise, Idaho Boise (pronounced Boy-see not Boy-zee); locally ), is the capital and the most populous city of the State of Idaho. Boise was given its name after French-Canadian trappers first explored the area after crossing the arid desert plains.
Boisi Center for Religion and American Public Life The goal of Boisi Center for Religion and American Public Life is to create opportunities for discussion of the intersection of religion and American public life. The goal of these conversations is to help clarify the moral consequences of public policies to maintain the common good while respecting religious diversity.
Boisrond-Tonnerre Louis Félix Mathurin Boisrond-Tonnerre (1776 - 1806), better known as simply Boisrond-Tonnerre, was a Haitian writer and historian. He is best known as the author of the 1804 Independence Act of Haiti, which formally declared Haiti's independence from the colonial rule of France.
Boizenburg Boizenburg is a town in the district of Ludwigslust, in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, Germany. It is situated on the right bank of the Elbe, 53 km west of Ludwigslust, 25 km northeast of LĂĽneburg and 50 km east of Hamburg.
Bojan Neziri Bojan Neziri (Serbian Cyrillic: БоŃан Незири; born February 26, 1982 in Ĺ abac, Serbia, SFR Yugoslavia) is a Serbian football player who plays for FC Metalurh Donetsk but in August 2005 the left-back went on loan to German team VfL Wolfsburg for one year. He started his career playing for FK Sabac but was forced to leave for neighbors FK Radnicki Zorka after his first club went bankrupt.
Bojana River The Buna, indefinite Albanian form BunĂ«, Bojana in Serbian - Cyrillic: БоŃана, is a 41 km long river in Albania and Montenegro which flows into the Adriatic sea. An outflow of the Lake Skadar, measured from the source of the Lake Skadar's longest tributary, the MoraÄŤa, the MoraÄŤa-Lake Skadar/Shkodra-Buna/Bojana system is 183 km long.
Bojangles (film) Bojangles is a biographical drama that chronicles the life of legendary entertainer Bill "Bojangles" Robinson (1878-1949). This film boasts some incredible tap dance routines and a complicated, if not unique, interpretation of the main character by Gregory Hines, who also served as an Executive Producer.
Bojangles' Bojangles' is a regional chain of fast food restaurants whose initial board of business initiation used a name from a song written by Jerry Jeff Walker, to propel business success and create an imagination and visual illustration. The franchise base operations, are located in the United States, specializing in fried chicken and biscuits.
Bojayá massacre The Bojayá massacre occurred on May 2, 2002 in the Colombian town of Bojayá (with its urban centre also referred to as Bellavista), in Chocó department. FARC guerrillas seized the town in an attempt to take control of the Atrato river region from AUC paramilitaries, in the process killing approximately 119 civilians in an apparently indiscriminate attack with an improvised homemade mortar assembled with gas cylinders parts (known in Spanish as pipeta or Cilindro bomba).
Boji Boji is one of the 180 woredas in the Oromia Region of Ethiopia. Part of the Mirab Welega Zone, Boji is bordered on the southwest by Ayra Guliso, on the west by Jarso, on the northwest by Nejo, on the northeast by the Benishangul-Gumaz Region, and on the southeast by Lalo Asabi.
Boji stone Boji stones, also known as "Kansas pop rocks", are ordinary concretions composed of either iron sulfide, i.e pyrite and marcasite, or in some cases jarosite, which are found in outcrops of the Smoky Hill Chalk Member of the Niobrara Formation within Grove County, Kansas.
Bojnik Bojnik (Serbian Cyrillic: БоŃник) is a village and a municipality located in the Jablanica District of Serbia some 20km west from Leskovac. In 2002, the population of the village was 3,159, while population of the municipality was 13,118.
Bok Fu Bok Fu is a style of Kung Fu developed by the Shaolin monk and swordsman Fong Sai Yuk (also known as Fong Do Duk). "Bok fu" translates, literally, into the way ("fu") of the white tiger ("bok"), and as such Fong Sai Yuk's style was "White Tiger Kung Fu.
Bok globule A Bok globule is a dark cloud of dense dust and gas in which star formation is sometimes taking place. Bok globules are found within H II regions, and typically have a mass of about 10–50 solar masses contained within a region about a light year or so across[1].
Bok House The Bok House was an old mansion on Jalan Ampang in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The compound where the building stood is a block away from the Petronas Twin Towers, owned by a private trustee managed by the Bok family.
Bokanovskification Bokanovskification is a biological process used by scientists in Aldous Huxley's Brave New World to induce "budding" in fertilized human eggs. The result is ninety-six genetically identical human fetuses.
Bokaro District Bokaro is one of the twenty-two districts of Jharkhand state, India. It was created in the year 1991 by carving out one subdivision consisting of two blocks from Dhanbad District and six blocks from Giridih District.
Bokator Bokator, or more formally, Lbokkatao (ល្បុក្កតោ), is an ancient Khmer martial art and is the predessesor of Pradal Serey, and Muay Thai. Depicted in bas reliefs at Angkor Wat, Bokator was the close quarter combat system used by the ancient Angkor army.
Boke (woreda) Boke is one of the 180 woredas in the Oromia Region of Ethiopia. Part of the Mirab Hararghe Zone, Boke is bordered on the south by the Shabelle River which separates it from the Bale Zone, on the southwest by Darolebu, on the northwest by Habro, on the northeast by Kuni, and on the east by the Galetti River which separates it from the Misraq Hararghe Zone.
Bokeh Bokeh (from the Japanese boke (ăĽă‘), "blur"Mike Johnston, former editor of Photo Techniques magazine, claims to have coined the "bokeh" spelling to suggest the correct pronunciation to English speakers; see his Bokeh in Pictures article referenced below.) is a photographic term referring to out-of-focus areas in an image produced by a camera lens.
Bokelji The Bokelj or Bokez (Бокељ, Бокез) people (pl. Бокељи, Bokelji, or Бокези, Bokezi) are the inhabitants of the Boka Kotorska (hence the name) and adjacent regions (near the towns of Kotor, Tivat, Herceg Novi, Risan, Perast).
Bokerley Dyke Bokerley Dyke ia a Romano-British defensive ditch in north east Dorset, England, near the village Pentridge. The ditch ran for several miles, cutting across the Roman Road between Old Sarum and Badbury Rings on the Cranborne Chase ridgeway.
Bokermannohyla Bokermannohyla is a genus of frogs in the Hylidae family. This genus was erected in 2005 following a major revision of the Hylidae family 23 species that were previously placed in the Hyla] genus was moved to this genus.
Boki Milošević Božidar "Boki" Milošević is a Serbian clarinetist. Although completed undergraduate and graduate studies of classical music from the Academy of Music in Belgrade, where studied with Bruno Brun, he plays mostly folk music.
Bokkura Bokkura (Dhivehi: ބޮއްކުŢާ) is the smallest sailing vessel used in Maldives. It has slight similarities to Dhoni — multi-purpose sail boat with or without lateen sails — but is smaller in size and without lateen sails.
BokmĂĄl BokmĂĄl (lit. "book language") is the most commonly used of the two official written Neither is a spoken standard officially, but an urban East Norwegian pronunciation of BokmĂĄl can be regarded as a de facto standard for that form of the language - standards of Norwegian, the other being Nynorsk.
Boknafjord The Boknafjord is a Norwegian fjord located in the county of Rogaland, between the cities Stavanger and Haugesund. The fjord is shared between the municipalities of Kvitsøy, Rennesøy, Finnøy, Tysvær, Bokn and Karmøy.
Bokor A bokor is a dark Voodoo priest, a practitioner of black magic, often in Haitian societies. They are featured in many Haitian tales and are often associated with the creation of zombies by the use of a deadening brew or potion usually containing non-fatal poisons.
Boktai 2: Solar Boy Django Boktai 2: Solar Boy Django, known in Japan as Another Our Sun: Solar Boy Django (ç¶šăśă‚Żă‚‰ă®ĺ¤Şé™˝ 太陽少年ジăŁăłă‚´ Zoku Bokura no TaiyĹŤ: TaiyĹŤ ShĹŤnen Django), is a video game that was developed and published by Konami for the Game Boy Advance. Released in North America and Japan in 2004 and in Europe in 2005, it is the sequel to Boktai: The Sun Is in Your Hand (Bokura no Taiyou in Japan).
Boktai: Sabata's Counterattack Boktai: Sabata's Counterattack (ć–°ă»ăśă‚Żă‚‰ă®ĺ¤Şé™˝ 逆襲ă®ă‚µăタ Shin Bokura no TaiyĹŤ: GyakushĹ« no Sabata) is a video game that was developed and published by Konami for the Game Boy Advance. It is the third game in the Boktai series, and (unlike the previous two installments) was released only in Japan, on July 28, 2005.
Boktai: The Sun is in Your Hand Boktai: The Sun is in Your Hand, known in Japan as Our Sun (ăśă‚Żă‚‰ă®ĺ¤Şé™˝ Bokura no TaiyĹŤ), is a video game released on the Game Boy Advance in 2003 by Konami. Produced by Hideo Kojima, Boktai's game cartridge includes a photometric light sensor that measures the amount of sunlight/uv rays exposed to it.
Boku wa Kuma is Utada Hikaru's 17th Japanese single (22nd overall). The single was released on November 22nd of 2006, just a matter of months after Hikaru's last studio effort, ULTRA BLUE, and only two months after the end of her tour, UTADA UNITED.
Boku wo Tsutsumu Tsuki no Hikari Boku wo Tsutsumu Tsuki no Hikari (ăśă‚Żă‚’包むćśă®ĺ…‰)(or The Moonlight which Embraces Me) is an ongoing manga series published in Hana to Yume's monthly Betsuhana anthology and drawn and written by Saki Hiwatari. It is a sequel of her previous work, Please Save My Earth, and features the two focus characters of that series, Alice Sakaguchi (now Kobayashi) and Rin Kobayashi.
Bokura ga Ikiru MY ASIA a special single celebrating J-pop idol group Morning Musume's 10th anniversary. Five past and present members, Kaori Iida, Natsumi Abe, Maki Goto, Risa Niigaki and Koharu Kusumi, under the unit name , were chosen by Tsunku to participate in this single.
Bola de Ouro The Bola de Ouro (Golden Ball) is an award given each year, since 1973, by the authoritative Brazilian magazine «Placar» to the best player in the Brazilian National Championship. It is practically the equivalent to a Footballer of the Year award.
Bola Sete Bola Sete (born Djalma de Andrade) was a Brasilian guitarist born on July 16, 1923 in Rio de Janeiro and who died on February 14, 1987 in Greenbrae , California. "Bola Sete" is a nickname, meaning "seventh ball" in Portuguese, which is the only black ball in billiards.
Bolaang Mongondow language The Bolaang Mongondow language (also called simply Mongondow) is spoken in the district (Kabupaten) of Bolaang Mongondow in North Sulawesi (Celebes), Indonesia. An interesting characteristic of the language cannot pronounce the letter l, so it is spoken a somewhat like r instead.
Bolaji Badejo Bolaji Badejo (born in Nigeria) is a former design student and one-time actor known for his portrayal as "The Alien" in the acclaimed science fiction movie Alien. He is Nigerian and a member of the Yoruba tribe.
Bolam Test In the English law of tort, the Bolam test is one of the rules used to determine the issue of professional negligence where the defendant has represented him or herself as having more than average skills and abilities. In essence this test expects standards which must be in accordance with a responsible body of opinion, even if others differ in opinion.
Bolama Bolama is the closest of the BijagĂłs Islands to the mainland of Guinea-Bissau, and is also the name of the island's main town, the capital of the Bolama Region. It is almost surrounded by mangrove swamps and is known for its cashew nuts.
Boland Amendment The Boland Amendment was an amendment to the House Appropriations Bill of 1982, which was attached as a rider to the Defense Appropriations Act of 1983. The House of Representatives passed the Boland Amendment 411-0 on December 8, 1982,http://ciadrugs.
Boland Cavaliers The Boland Cavaliers, are a South African rugby union team that participates in the annual Currie Cup tournament. They draw players from the Cape Winelands and West Coast districts of Western Cape Province, and play out of Wellington at Boland Stadium.
Bolas [(from Spanish] [[bola, "ball", also known as boleadoras) are a throwing weapon similar to the surujin made of weights on the ends of interconnected cords, designed to capture animals by entangling their legs. They are most famously used by the South American gauchos, but have been found in excavations of pre-Hispanic settlements, especially in Patagonia, where indigenous peoples used them to catch guanaco and ñandu.
Bolayır Bolayır is a village in the European part of Turkey. In the First Balkan War the Bulgarian army managed to stop a Turkish counterattack near this village and this decisive victory gave a strong position to the Bulgarian forces.
BolĂvar is me BolĂvar Soy Yo is a 2002 film detailing the story of an actor who is known for his interpretation of "El Libertador," SimĂłn BolĂvar. The excitement of the role and the admiration of the public are so strong that reality and fiction begin to mix.
BolĂvar Square The BolĂvar Square (Spanish: Plaza de BolĂvar) is located in the heart of the historical area of Bogotá. It has a statue of SimĂłn BolĂvar sculpted in 1846 by the Italian Pietro Tenerani, which was the first ever public monument in the city.
BolĂvar State Anthem The anthem of the BolĂvar State, Venezuela, has lyrics written by JosĂ© Manuel Agosto MĂ©ndez; the music for it was composed by Manuel Lara Colmenares. It was established as the anthem of the State by National Decree on 22nd January 1910.
BolĂvar's War BolĂvar's War refers to a series of independence wars in South America from 1811 to 1825 led by the famous South American nationalist and general SimĂłn BolĂvar. These wars eventually led to the independence of several South American states from the colonial rule of Spain.
Boléro in popular culture Boléro, a one-movement orchestral piece composed by Maurice Ravel, has found many uses in popular music and in film and television for its recurring theme which has reached its popular appeal. The music is also featured in various sport occasions, mostly in ice skating.
Bold (band) Bold is a late 80's hardcore punk band from upstate New York, which along with bands like Youth Of Today and Side By Side were a part of the Youth Crew, and a major influence in the late 80's straight edge hardcore scene.
Bold Park (Western Australia) Bold Park is a 437 hectare urban bushland area in the suburb of City Beach, in Perth, Western Australia. It is located 8 km directly west of the central business district, its western border less than one kilometre from the Indian ocean.
Boldenone Boldenone (1,4-androstadiene-3-one-17β-ol, available as the undecylenate ester), also known under the trade names Equipoise, Ganabol, Equigan and Ultragan, is an anabolic steroid developed for veterinary use, mostly for treatment of horses. It is not indicated for use in humans in the US and is only available through veterinary clinics.
Bolder Boulder The city of Boulder, Colorado has hosted a 10-km road run, the Bolder Boulder, on Memorial Day, every year since 1979. The race involves up to 50,000 runners, joggers, walkers, and wheelchair racers, making it one of the largest road races in the world.
Bolder Bridge Barnsley Bolder Bridge is an area of land adjacent to a large bird sanctuary run by the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds. The area is synonymous with a number of large scrap yards that specialise, for the most part in recycling cars and commercial vehicles, mainly buses.
Bolder Media Bolder Media, Inc. is a joint-venture between Frederator Studios and the Mixed Media Group, founded in 2002 by television producers Susan Miller and Fred Seibert for the development of books, television series, and movies for children.
Boldklubben 1903 Boldklubben 1903 or B 1903 is a football club founded in 1903, located in Copenhagen, Denmark. Seven times winner of the Danish championship (introduced 1913) in 1920, 1924, 1926, 1938, 1969, 1970 and 1976 and twice winner of the Danish Cup (introduced 1955) in 1979 and 1986.
Boldo Boldo (Peumus boldus Molina) is a plant native to the coastal region of Chile. Its leaves, which have a strong, woody and slightly bitter flavor and camphor-like aroma, are used for culinary purposes, primarily in Latin America.
Boldre Boldre is a lovely little village and civil parish in the New Forest district of Hampshire. It is situated outside the New Forest National Park borders, near the Lymington River, and is about two miles north of Lymington.
Boldrewood Boldrewood is the Biomedical Sciences campus of the University of Southampton in Southampton, UK. It is home to the School of Biological Sciences which encompasses the degree titles Biology, Zoology, Biochemistry, Biomedical sciences, Pharmacology, Physiology and Nutritional sciences among others.
Boldron Boldron is a village in the Pennines of England, situated close to Barnard Castle. It is traditionally located in the North Riding of Yorkshire, but along with the rest of the former Startforth Rural District it was transferred to County Durham for administrative and ceremonial purposes on 1 April 1974, under the provisions of the Local Government Act 1972.
Boldt Decision United States v. Washington, better known as the Boldt Decision, was a controversial 1974 court case which, in effect, granted the right to half of the annual salmon harvest in Washington to Native American tribes which had signed treaties with the U.
Bolek and Lolek Bolek and Lolek are two Polish cartoon characters from the TV animated series by the same title. They are based on Władysław Nehrebecki's sons and were partially created by native German Alfred Ledwig before being developed by Władysław Nehrebecki and Leszek Mech.
Bolel Bolel is a style of Ethiopian music that evolved out of the Azmari musical tradition in Addis Ababa and elements of modern urban culture. The word bolel is a corrupted form of the word meaning dust, in reference to the bad roads of the rural countryside.
Boler Mountain Boler Mountain, is the home of the London Ski Club in London, Ontario. The mountain is located in the western suburbs of London and is used for skiing, snowboarding and snow tubing in the winter and for mountain biking in the summer.
Bolero (1984 film) Bolero was a 1984 film starring Bo Derek, and written and directed by her husband John Derek. The film centers on Bo Derek's sexual awakening and her journey around the world to pursue an ideal first lover who will take her virginity.
Bolero Lava Bolero Lava was a mid-1980s pop punk all-women band from Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. They recorded their first single on the indie label Mo-Da-Mu and their second on Lava Rock Records — presumably their own label.
Bolero Records Bolero Records is an independent record label established in March of 2002 by world renowned Nuevo Flamenco guitarist, Armik, based in Tarzana, California. In addition to Armik, their artist roster includes guitarists Young & Rollins, Romero, and Jason McGuire.
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