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Bonham Road Bonham Road (Officially 般咸道, also 般含道) is a road in Sai Ying Pun, Hong Kong Island in Hong Kong. The road is a main road connecting Pokfulam Road in the west, near the University of Hong Kong, and Caine Road in the east, at the junction with Hospital Road and Seymour Road.
Bonham Volunteer Fire Department The Bonham Volunteer Fire Department was officially incorporated as a non-profit organization on September 19 2005. The Bonham Volunteer Fire Department was created in 1893 and until the 1960's was all volunteers.
Bonheur du jour A bonheur du jour is a type of lady's writing-desk, so called because, when it was introduced in France about 1760, it speedily became intensely fashionable. The bonheur du jour is always very light and graceful; its special characteristic is a raised back, which may form a little cabinet or a nest of drawers, or may simply be fitted with a mirror.
Boniface Alexandre Boniface Alexandre (born 31 July 1936) was the acting president of HaĂŻti from 2004 to 2006. Following the departure of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide on February 29, 2004, Alexandre, as the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court and therefore next in the presidential line of succession, assumed the office of president.
Boniface I of Tuscany Boniface I (or II, died circa 838) was the count and duke of Lucca (from 5 October 823) and first margrave of Tuscany from about 828. He succeeded his father Boniface I in Lucca — in what was an early example of hereditary succession — and extended his power over the region.
Boniface I, Count of Lucca Boniface I (died 823) was appointed governor of Italy by Charlemagne after the death of King Pepin. He was the count and duke of Lucca and sometimes is considered the first margrave of Tuscany because of the various counties he amassed: Pisa, Pistoia, Volterra, and Luni.
Boniface Kiprop Boniface Kiprop (born October 12, 1985 in Kapchorwa) is a track and field athlete from Uganda, who competed at the 2004 Summer Olympics for his native African country. There he finished fourth in the final of the 10,000 metres.
Boniface Merande Boniface Merande (born 13 February 1962) is a retired Kenyan long-distance runner, who represented his native country at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, South Korea. Four years later he finished in 14th position in the 1992 Olympic Marathon.
Bonifazio Bevilacqua Aldobrandini In 1601, Pope Clement VIII associated Conte Luigi Bevilacqua and his two brothers, Conte Bonifazio IV (1571-1627) and Conte Alfonso II (1565-1610), with his own family granting them use of his family’s Aldobrandini Coat of Arms and the right to appoint courts and judges in their territories. They were also made Counts of the Palace and Knights of the Lateran and of the Golden Spur.
Bonin Grosbeak The Bonin Grosbeak or Bonin Islands Grosbeak (Chaunoproctus ferreorostris) is an extinct finch, the only species of the genus Chaunoproctus. It is one of the diverse bird taxa that are vernacularly called "grosbeaks", but it is not closely related to the grosbeaks sensu stricto.
Bonin Petrel The Bonin Petrel, Pterodroma hypoleuca, is a seabird in the family Procellariidae. It is a small gadfly petrel that lives in the waters of the north west Pacific and nests on islands south of Japan and in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands.
Bonin White-eye The Bonin White-eye Apalopteron familiare is a small yellow and grey bird endemic to the Ogasawara Islands (formerly Bonin Islands) of Japan. Until recently it was considered part of the Meliphagidae family of honeyeaters and was called the Bonin Honeyeater.
Bonin Woodpigeon The Bonin Wood-pigeon (Columba versicolor) was a pigeon endemic to Nakodo-jima ("Nakondo" is a frequent spelling error) and Chichi-jima in the Ogasawara Islands off the coast of Japan. It averaged a total length of 45 cm and was known from four recorded specimens, the first from 1827.
Boninite Boninite is a high magnesium mafic extrusive rock formed in back-arc environments, typically in seafloor spreading centres but also in terrestrial back-arc spreading centres. The rock is named for its occurrence in the Izu-Bonin arc south of Japan.
Bonino da Campione Bonino da Campione was an Italian Gothic-era sculptor, active between 1350 and 1390. His works include the monument to Bernabò Visconti at Castello Sforzesco, Milan and the monument to Cansignorio della Scala (1374) at Santa Maria Antica, Verona.
Bonita Lake Bonito Lake is a very scenic lake located high in the mountains south east of Ruidoso, New Mexico, near Sierra Blanca. Although it is near to the Lincoln National Forest, it is not itself a state or national park.
Bonita Magazine Bonita Magazine is an international men's magazine aimed at the Hispanic/Latin market based in the USA and printed in English. The magazine was first published for a consumer audience in 2005, however, the concept and format had existed as long as 3 years earlier, in 2002.
Bonita Vista High School Bonita Vista High School (BVH) in Chula Vista, California, was a four-year middle school founded in 1966 then it was converted to a three-year high school in 1968 when Bonita Vista Jr opened. It is part of the Sweetwater Union High School District, and currently has about 2,800 students.
Bonito Bonito is a name given to various species of medium-sized, predatory fish of the genus Sarda, in the mackerel family, including the common or Atlantic bonito (Sarda sarda) and the Pacific bonito (Sarda chiliensis).
Bonivert Claude Bonivert Claude is a former governor of the Banque de la Republique d'HaĂŻti (the Central Bank of HaĂŻti) and current presidential candidate. Claude also registered to run for president in the 2000 elections, where Jean-Bertrand Aristide won in a controversial race.
Bonjela Bonjela is an oral gel, aimed to cure mouth ulcers and denture sores and relieve the pain associated with these ailments. The Bonjela gel is produced using ethanol, glycerol, menthol, choline salicylate, cetalkonium chloride, hyperomellose 4500, anise oil and sodium saccharin intended to kill bacteria in the mouth ulcer or denture sore.
Bonjour Browser Bonjour Browser is a Creative Commons licensed Mac OS X application that displays all services declared using Bonjour. The program was originally called "Rendezvous Browser", but changed it's name in version 1.
Bonjour paresse Bonjour paresse (Hello Laziness) (Editions Michalon, Paris, 2004) is the title of an international bestseller by Corinne Maier, a French writer, psychoanalyst, and economist. The book is a highly cynical and humorous critique of contemporary French corporate culture (epitomized for Maier by the middle manager) that advocates various ways of undermining the system.
Bonjour Tristesse (film) Bonjour Tristesse is a 1958 film made by Otto Preminger productions and released by Columbia Pictures. It was directed and produced by Otto Preminger with John Palmer as associate producer from a screenplay by Arthur Laurents based on the novel of the same title by Françoise Sagan.
Bonk (condition) Bonk has long been a colloquial term, slightly jocular in its connotation, meaning sexual intercourse, but has recently become more commonly used as a jargon term by endurance athletes, primarily cyclists and long-distance runners, to describe a condition when the athlete suddenly loses energy and fatigue sets in, usually caused when glycogen stores in the liver and muscles are depleted, resulting in a major performance drop.
Bonk (video game) Bonk is a video game character from NEC's TurboGrafx-16 console. Known in Japan as "PC-Genjin" (PC原人, PC-Caveman, a pun on "PC Engine") and as "BC Kid" in PAL territories, Bonk was a mascot for NEC's console, though some Bonk games eventually saw releases on other consoles as well.
Bonk on the Head Bonk on the Head is a novel written by John-James Ford. Published in 2005 by Nightwood Editions, it is about coming of age in a journey that takes the protagonist through the final years of high school, a reserve regiment and the Royal Military College of Canada.
Bonk's Revenge Bonk's Revenge is a 2D platformer originally for the TurboGrafx 16 console, created in 1991 by Hudson and Turbo Technologies, and licensed by NEC. The game features Bonk -- a large-headed caveman -- on a quest to recover half of the moon, which was stolen by the evil King Drool.
Bonke Bonke is one of the 77 woredas in the Southern Nations, Nationalities and Peoples' Region of Ethiopia. Part of the Semien Omo Zone, Bonke is bordered on the south by the Dirashe special woreda, on the west by the Weito River which separates it from Kemba, on the north by Dita Dermalo, and on the east by Arba Minch Zuria.
Bonkers (board game) Bonkers (also known as This Game is Bonkers) was a race-style board game produced by Parker Brothers and later by Milton Bradley. The object was to be the first player to score 12 points by adding instruction cards to the empty spaces in an attempt to move to several scoring stations.
Bonkers (pricing game) Bonkers is a pricing game on the American television game show The Price Is Right. Debuting on September 24, 2001's episode (aired out of order on October 1), it is played for a four-digit prize, usually valued between $2,000 and $10,000.
Bonky Onno Borgen (1962-09-05 - 2003-01-04), more widely known as Bonky was born in Calgary, Canada. An active artist in the trance scene, particularly from 1994 until his death in 2003, he lived and wrote most of his music in Amsterdam.
Bonn Agreement (Afghanistan) Officially the Agreement on Provisional Arrangements in Afghanistan Pending the Re-Establishment of Permanent Government Institutions, the Bonn Agreement was the initial series of agreements intended to re-create the State of Afghanistan following the U.S.
Bonn Agreement (religion) The Bonn Agreement of 1931 is a document that established full communion between the Anglican churches and the Old Catholic Churches of the Union of Utrecht, including the Old Catholic Church of the Netherlands.
Bonn Convention The Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals (also known as CMS or the Bonn Convention ) aims to conserve terrestrial, marine and avian migratory species throughout their range. It is an intergovernmental treaty, concluded under the aegis of the United Nations Environment Programme, concerned with the conservation of wildlife and habitats on a global scale.
Bonn Minster The Bonn Minster (German: Das Bonner MĂĽnster) is one of Germany's oldest churches having been built between the 11th and 13th centuries. At one point the church served as the cathedral for the Archbishopric of Cologne, however, the MĂĽnster is now Papal Basilica.
Bonn Square Bonn Square in Oxford, England, is named after the German city of Bonn with which Oxford is twinned. It is close to the original west gate of the city of Oxford, where the Westgate Shopping Centre is now located.
Bonn-Bamberg basketball brawl The Bonn-Bamberg basketball brawl describes a violent altercation between players of the German Bundesliga clubs Telekom Baskets Bonn and GHP Bamberg which took place in the 2006 BBL playoff series on May 4, 2006. Fourteen players were ejected, and one fouled out, making that game the probably only playoff game in professional basketball history that ended as a 3-on-4 match.
Bonnaroo Music Festival The Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival (Bonnaroo, BonRoo or the 'Roo for short) is a four day annual music festival by Superfly Productions and AC Entertainment, first held in 2002. The festival is held on a 700 acre (2.
Bonne Nuit Ma Chérie Bonne Nuit Ma Chérie (English translation: "Good Night My Darling") was the German entry in the Eurovision Song Contest 1960, performed in German (with the exception of the French of the title) by Wyn Hoop.
Bonne projection A Bonne projection is a pseudoconical equal-area map projection, sometimes called a dépôt de la guerre or a Sylvanus projection. It is named after Rigobert Bonne (1727-1795), who used this projection considerably.
Bonnefanten Museum The Bonnefanten Museum can be found in Maastricht, The Netherlands and is the foremost museum for old masters and contemporary fine art in the province of Limburg. The museum is housed in a building designed by the Italian architect Aldo Rossi.
Bonnechere River Waterway Provincial Park Bonnechere River Waterway Provincial Park is located along the Bonnechere River in Ontario, Canada. A 23 km long section of the Bonnechere River, starting at the Algonquin Park boundary, has been protected as a waterway provincial park.
Bonner Fellers Bonner Frank Fellers (1896 - 1973), during World War II, was a Colonel who served as the USA military attaché to Cairo, Egypt. He was later promoted to Brigadier General and assigned to the Pacific where he served as the Chief of Psychological Operations under General Douglas MacArthur.
Bonner L. Stiller Bonner Lee Stiller is a Republican member of the North Carolina General Assembly representing the state's seventeenth House district, including constituents in Brunswick and New Hanover counties. In a controversial turn of events, Stiller unseated wildly popular long serving Representative David Redwine.
Bonner spheres Bonner spheres are used to determine the energy spectra of a neutron beam. The methodology, which was first described in 1960 by Rice University's Bramblett, Ewing and Bonner, employs thermal neutron detectors embedded in moderating spheres of different sizes.
Bonner Springs, Kansas Bonner Springs is a river city located mostly in Wyandotte and Johnson counties (although the vast majority of the population lives in Wynadotte County) in Kansas and is part of the "Unified Government" which contains Kansas City, Kansas, Bonner Springs, Kansas and Edwardsville, Kansas. The population was 6,768 at the 2000 census.
Bonnet Bay, New South Wales Bonnet Bay is a suburb in southern Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. Bonnet Bay is located 29km south of the Sydney central business district in the local government area of the Sutherland Shire.
Bonnet Plume River The Bonnet Plume River is one of the Yukon's better-known rivers. It flows from a mountain lake source in the Bonnet Plume Range in the Mackenzie Mountains through several mountain ranges to its confluence with the Peel.
Bonnett's Run Bonnett's Run is a stream in Crab Orchard, West Virginia, and a tributary of Crab Orchard Creek. The creek rises from a number of natural springs in a deep hollow and flows less the half a mile before joining Crab Orchard Creek.
Bonneville 400 The Bonneville400 is a project by BAR Honda to set an official world speed record in a Formula One car, at the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah, USA. The car is on a BAR-007 chassis in full FIA spec, but with altered wings to reduce drag.
Bonneville cisco The Bonneville cisco (Prosopium gemmifer) is a species of cisco endemic to Bear Lake along the Utah-Idaho border, USA. It is one of three species of whitefish endemic to Bear Lake, the others being the Bear Lake whitefish and the Bonneville whitefish.
Bonneville cutthroat trout The Bonneville cutthroat trout (Oncorhynchus clarki utah) is a subspecies of Cutthroat trout that once inhabited the Late Pleistocene-aged Lake Bonneville of Utah, eastern Nevada, and Southern Idaho (USA). Since the drainage of that lake, the fish has been evolutionarily isolated in small populations in the headwaters of cool mountain streams and lakes of the Bonneville Drainage basin.
Bonneville International Bonneville International Corporation, managed by Deseret Management Corporation, is a broadcasting company wholly owned by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (the LDS Church). Headquartered in the Triad Center Broadcast House in Salt Lake City, Utah, Bonneville's name alludes to the prehistoric Lake Bonneville which once covered much of modern-day Utah.
Bonneville whitefish The Bonneville whitefish Prosopium spilonotus is a salmonid fish endemic to Bear Lake on the Utah-Idaho border. It is one of three species of Prosopium endemic to Bear Lake, the other two being the Bear Lake whitefish and the Bonneville cisco.
Bonnevoie Bonnevoie (Luxembourgish: Bouneweg, German: Bonneweg) is an area of south-eastern Luxembourg City, in southern Luxembourg. It is divided between the quarters of North Bonnevoie-Verlorenkost and South Bonnevoie.
Bonnie and Clyde (film) Bonnie and Clyde (1967) is a film about Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow, bank robbers who roamed the central United States during the Great Depression. The film was directed by Arthur Penn, and starred Warren Beatty as Clyde Barrow and Faye Dunaway as Bonnie Parker.
Bonnie and Terry Turner Bonnie and Terry Turner are a husband-and-wife writing team, best known for creating the sitcoms Third Rock From the Sun (1996 - 2001) and the That '70s Show (1998 - 2006) for NBC and FOX, respectively. They also created the ill-fated spin-off That '80s Show for FOX in 2002.
Bonnie Blair Bonnie Kathleen Blair (born March 18, 1964 at Cornwall, New York) was one of the top female speedskaters of her time, and one of the most decorated female athletes in Olympic history. Blair competed for the United States in four Olympics, and in her Olympic career won five gold medals and one bronze medal.
Bonnie Blue Flag [Bonnie Blue Flag, a single white star on a blue field, was the flag of the short-lived Republic of West Florida]. In September [[1810, settlers in the Spanish territory of West Florida revolted against the Spanish government and proclaimed an independent republic.
Bonnie Bonnell Marion Wright ("Bonnie" or "Bonny") Bonnell (August 1, 1905 - March 14, 1964) was an actress who played "straight woman" in seven early short comedies, most of which featured the Three Stooges when they worked with Ted Healy between 1933 and 1934. She was also Healy's offscreen girlfriend during that time.
Bonnie Bracey Bonnie Laverne Bracey is an American teacher and technology consultant based in Washington DC. One of the first teachers to promote the role of the Internet in the classroom , Bracey was the only teacher selected by the Clinton Administration for serving on the National Information Infrastructure Advisory Council, whose work in the mid 1990s led to the creation of the E-rate program.
Bonnie Bramlett Bonnie Bramlett (born Bonnie Lynn O'Farrell on November 8, 1944 in Alton, Illinois), is an American singer known for her distinctive vocals in rock and popular music, beginning in the mid-sixties as a backup singer, forming the husband-and-wife team of Delaney & Bonnie, and continuing to the present day as a solo artist.
Bonnie Brewer Bonnie Brewer is a former official mascot for the Milwaukee Brewers baseball team, appearing at Milwaukee County Stadium from 1973 to 1979. Bonnie was portrayed as a young blonde woman in a gold blouse and short blue lederhosen, wearing a baseball cap and frequently carrying a blue-and-gold broom which she would use to sweep the bases.
Bonnie Clutter Bonnie Mae Clutter, born Bonnie Mae Fox (January 7 1914 – November 15 1959) was one of four members of the Clutter family murdered during an invasion of their Holcomb, Kansas farmhouse by Perry Smith and Richard Hickock, two ex-convicts who mistakenly believed that a large amount of money was kept in a safe in the house. Bonnie Clutter suffered from depression after the birth of her children and was known to spend much time isolated in her room.
Bonnie Dobson Bonnie Dobson (born November 13, 1940 in Toronto) is a Canadian folk music songwriter, singer, and guitarist, most known in the 1960s for composing the songs "I'm Your Woman" and "Morning Dew". The latter, augmented (with a controversial co-writing credit) by Tim Rose, became a melancholy folk rock standard, covered by the Grateful Dead and the Jeff Beck Group among many others.
Bonnie Fuller Bonnie Fuller was the editor of Flare magazine, YM magazine, the first American edition of Marie Claire magazine, Cosmopolitan magazine, Glamour magazine (beginning in 1998), and Us Weekly. Her tenure at these publications was marked by a change in content towards a more sensationalistic sensibility, resulting in the desired increase in circulation.
Bonnie Gadusek Bonnie Gadusek (born September 11, 1963 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania) is a former professional tennis player from the United States, who retired in April 1987. She won five singles titles during her career on the WTA Tour.
Bonnie Garland murder case In the early morning hours of July 7, 1977, Yale graduate Richard Herrin blugeoned his former girlfriend, Yale student Bonnie Garland, to death with a hammer as she lay sleeping in her parent's Scarsdale, New York, home. Herrin was eventually convicted of manslaughter, rather than first degree murder.
Bonnie George Campbell Bonnie James Campbell or Bonnie George Campbell is Child ballad 210. Different variants may be lamenting different deaths: that of Archibald or James Campbell, in the battle of Glenlivet, or Sir John Campbell of Calder, who was murdered.
Bonnie Hammer Bonnie Hammer has been President of the Sci Fi Channel since 2001 (despite being not being a fan of science fiction at all - as evidenced in this New York Times article in 2005 - and of the USA Network] since [[2004 (both networks are owned by NBC Universal). She joined USA as a programming executive in 1989 and has held a number of positions at both companies since then.
Bonnie K. Worley Bonnie Worley is an art teacher in Haworth, Oklahoma. She is also the co-author of Cup of Tears, the story of Marie Zimina Johnson, a Siberian who as a teenager escaped the Russian Revolution and trekked her way across Siberia, married an American fur trader, and eventually made her way to Northwestern Montana where she became a successful and triumphant citizen.
Bonnie Koloc Bonnie Koloc (born in Waterloo, Iowa) is an American folk singer/songwriter, actress, and artist who was considered one of the three main Illinois-based folk singers in the 1970s, along with Steve Goodman and John Prine. Koloc was the least successful of the three, but her material did sell modestly.
Bonnie Maxon Bonnie Maxon(born September 10, 1981 in Sacramento, California), better known by her ring name Rain, is an American professional wrestler, working with numerous promotions throughout her career such as IWA-Mid South, CZW, NWA Midwest, Ring of Honor, and SHIMMER. She frequently teams up with her tag-team partner Lacey to form The Minnesota Home-Wrecking Crew
Bonnie McKee Bonnie Leigh McKee (born January 20, 1984)Birth date confirmed at the State of California, California Birth Index, 1905-1995. Center for Health Statistics, California Department of Health Services, Sacramento, California.
Bonnie Mealing Phillomena "Bonnie" Mealing (July 28, 1912, Woolloomooloo - January 1, 2002 in Sydney) was an Australian freestyle and backstroke swimmer of the 1920s and 1930s, who won a silver medal in the 100m backstroke at the 1932 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, the first Australian to win a medal in backstroke.
Bonnie Mitchelson Bonnie Mitchelson (born November 28, 1947 in Winnipeg) is a politician in Manitoba, Canada. She has been a Progressive Conservative member of the Manitoba legislature since 1986, and served as a cabinet minister in the government of Gary Filmon from 1988 to 1999.
Bonnie Nardi Bonnie Nardi is best known as the lead author of Information Ecologies: Using Technology with Heart, Nardi & O'Day, (MIT Press, 1998). She is widely known among librarians - especially research, reference and digital librarians - for Chapter 7 of Information Ecologies, which focused on librarians as keystone species in information ecologies.
Bonnie Piesse Bonnie Piesse is best known for her role as Donna on the television series High Flyers and as Beru Lars in Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones and Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith. She was also a guest on Blue Heelers and Horace and Tina, and played the lead role in Composite Creatures.
Bonnie Pointer Patricia "Bonnie" Pointer (born on July 11, 1951 in Oakland, California) is an American R&B and disco singer most notable for being the next-to-youngest member of the popular 1970s and 1980s family music group, The Pointer Sisters. She scored several solo hits after leaving the Pointers in 1977 including a disco cover of the Elgins' "Heaven Must Have Sent You" in 1978.
Bonnie Prudden Bonnie Prudden (Born January 29, 1914) was a leading American rock climber in the 1940s and 1950s, with 30 documented first ascents to her credit in New Yorks Shawangunks mountains. Along with Hans Kraus, she was a pioneering advocate of physical fitness and later developed a form of trigger point therapy called Myotherapy.
Bonnie Somerville Bonnie Somerville (born February 24, 1974 in Brooklyn, New York, United States) is an actress who has had roles in a number of movies and television series, most notably NYPD Blue, Grosse Pointe, and The O.C..
Bonnie Steinbock Bonnie Steinbock is a professor of philosophy at the University at Albany and a specialist in bioethics who has on topics such as abortion and (in one article) animal rights. Questions from her examinations have appeared in the "Education Life" section of the New York Times.
Bonnie Watson Coleman Bonnie Watson Coleman is an American Democratic Party politician, who has served in the New Jersey General Assembly since 1998, where she represents the 15th legislative district. Watson Coleman has served as the Majority Leader of the Assembly since 2006.
Bonnie's Bookstore Bonnie's Bookstore is a word-forming computer puzzle game developed by New Crayon Games and published by PopCap Games. On each level, tiles containing one (or in some cases, two) letters are arranged in a specific structure.
Bonnier Bonnier is a large Swedish media group owned by the Bonnier family. The company was started in 1804 by Gerhard Bonnier in Copenhagen, Denmark when Bonnier published his first book, Underfulde og sandfærdige kriminalhistorier.
Bonnier Amigo Music Group Bonnier Amigo Music Group (BAM) is an independent record label based in Stockholm, Sweden. The label was formed in 2001 when record company and distributor Amigo Musik merged with record company Bonnier Music.
Bonnier de La Chapelle Fernand Bonnier de La Chapelle, born in 1922 in Algiers and executed in that city on December 26, 1942, was a member of the French resistance who shot Admiral of the Fleet François Darlan, the former chief of government of Vichy France and the self-named high commissioner of French North Africa and West Africa, on December 24 1942. For this act, Bonnier de La Chapelle is considered a hero of the French resistance to Nazi tyranny in World War II.
Bonnington Bonnington is a small village and civil parish on the northern edge of the Romney Marsh in Ashford District of Kent, England. The village is located eight miles (13 kms) to the south of the town of Ashford on the B2067 (Hamstreet to Hythe road).
Bonnot gang The Bonnot Gang (la bande Ă  Bonnot) was a French criminal anarchist group that operated in France and Belgium from 1911 to 1912. Comprised of individuals who identified with the emerging illegalist mileu, the gang utilized cutting-edge technology (including automobiles and repeating rifles) not yet available to the French police.
Bonny (song) Bonny is a song performed by Australian hard rock band AC/DC, based on the traditional Scottish ballad The Bonnie Banks O' Loch Lomond and played as a tribute to the band's original lead singer, Bon Scott. This song was featured on AC/DC's live album, Live: 2 CD Collector's Edition.
Bonny Eagle High School Bonny Eagle High School is a public high school located in Standish, Maine, United States. The school is a part of Maine School Administrative District 6, which serves the towns of Buxton, Hollis, Limington, and Standish.
Bonny Hicks Bonny Hicks (January 5, 1968 – December 19, 1997) was a Singaporean catwalk model who gained her greatest notoriety for her contributions to Singaporean post-colonial literature and the philosophy conveyed in her works. Her first book, Excuse Me, are you a Model?
Bonny Jain Bonny Jain (born 1993) is an academic competitor. His achievements include placing fourth in the 2005 National Geographic Bee, winning the 2006 National Geographic Bee, and coming in thirteenth in the Scripps National Spelling Bee.
Bonny Portmore Bonny Portmore is a traditional Celtic folk song, which details the centuries of Ireland's old oak forests, specifically The Great Oak of Portmore, being leveled for military and shipbuilding purposes. Loreena McKennitt performed this song on her 1991 album, The Visit.
Bonnyrigg Rose Athletic F.C. Bonnyrigg Rose Athletic Football Club are a football (soccer) club from the town of Bonnyrigg, Lothian, Scotland. Formed in 1890 and nicknamed "the Rose", they play in the East region of Scottish Junior football.
Bono Manso Bono Manso (sometimes known as Bono Mansu) was an ancient trading town in what is now the Nkoranza district of the Brong-Ahafo region of Ghana. Located just south of the Black Volta river at the transitional zone between savanna and forest, the town was frequented by caravans from Djenné as part of the Trans-Saharan trade.
Bonotsu, Kagoshima Bonotsu (坊津町; Bōnotsu-chō) was a town located in Kawanabe District, Kagoshima, Japan. On November 7, 2005 the town merged with three other towns and the city of Kaseda forming the city of Minamisatsuma and no longer exists as an independent municipality.
Bonsai aesthetics Bonsai Aesthetics vary according to the style of bonsai which is sought and according to individual tastes. The discussion of bonsai characteristics may be discussed in two parts: general aesthetics and aesthetic schools.
Bonsai CVS code management system The Bonsai CVS code management system is a computer program designed to help large programming projects productively manage CVS code archives. It was initially developed to fill the Mozilla project's need for good tools to allow multiple developers to edit its extremely large codebase.
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