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Belgrade declaration Since 1948 there was a sincere rift in the relationships between the USSR and the SFR Yugoslavia as Yugoslav leader Josip Broz Tito established a socialist regime disregarding Stalin. After Stalin's death in 1953, Tito had to choose between a more western approach to reforms or an agreement with new soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev.
Belgrade Light Metro Belgrade's light railway (Serbian: БеоградŃки лаки метро/Beogradski laki metro - BELAM for short) is a planned rapid transit system due to begin construction in 2008. It is intended to relieve Belgrade's growing traffic congestion issues, with the first stretch of line opening in 2012.
Belgrade Theatre The Belgrade Theatre is a live performance venue seating 866 and situated in Coventry, England. It was the first civic theatre to be built after the second world war in Britain and as such was more than a place of entertainment.
Belgrave Square Belgrave Square is one of the grandest 19th century squares in London, England. It is a centrepiece of Belgravia, and was laid out by the property contractor Thomas Cubitt for the 2nd Earl Grosvenor in the 1820s.
Belgravia Belgravia is a district of central London in the City of Westminster, situated to the south-west of Buckingham Palace. Belgravia is approximately bounded by Knightsbridge to the north (the street of that name, not the district), Grosvenor Place and Buckingham Palace Road to the east, Pimlico Road to the south, and Sloane Street to the west.
Belgravia vineyard Belgravia Vineyard is comprised of three properties covering 1838 Ha (4,540 acres) in the Bell River sub catchment area near Orange, New South Wales, Australia. It operates under an integrated, whole farm planning approach, incorporating production of premium wine grapes, an ultra fine merino wool stud and fat lamb production, EU certified beef breeding, bed and breakfast accommodation and restoration of the endangered ecological community, the grassy white box woodlands.
Belgreen, Alabama Belgreen is a community in the state of Alabama, located west of Russellville and around east of Red Bay on Alabama Highway 24. It could be considered a subdivision of Russellville, although it does have its own Kindergarten - Grade 12 school.
Belhaven College Belhaven College is a college in Jackson, Mississippi that was founded by the Presbyterian Church (USA) but that is independently run by a Board of Trustees. It is a private college whose tuition currently runs about $7000 per semester plus about $3500 for room and board.
Belhaven Hill School Belhaven Hill School is co-educational and conisders itself to be a first rate institution for children aged eight to thirteen based in Dunbar, Scotland and its fair to say its 'remarkably tally-ho'. The current headmaster is Michael Osborne, who for the last three years has been called 'inspirational' in the Tatler Good School Guide.
Belhifet Belhifet is a fictional demon from the Black Isle computer role-playing game Icewind Dale. In the Dungeons & Dragons game system, Belhifet is classified as a balor, one of the most powerful classes of demons.
Belchalwell Belchalwell is a village in Okeford Fitzpaine Parish in the Blackmore Vale, North Dorset, and lies two and a half miles south-west of Shillingstone, eight miles north-east of Blandford and four miles south of Sturminster Newton.
Belchamp Rural District Belchamp was a rural district in Essex in England. It was formed under the Local Government Act 1894 from that part of the Sudbury rural sanitary district which was in Essex (the rest going to form the Melford Rural District in West Suffolk).
Belcher Mountains Exposed in the Hudson Bay region these plunging folded sedimentary and volcanic strata outline the former position of the Belcher Mountains, a range which stood here in the late Precambrian. The folds trend northward.
Belchertown High School It has been suggested that this school-related article be merged to the appropriate school district or locality article. It may not meet Wikipedia's standards of verifiability or notability, it may not feature multiple independent reliable sources, or it may be a short entry that provides only directory-style information about the school.
Belchertown State School The Belchertown State School for the Feeble-Minded was established in 1922 in Belchertown, Massachusetts. Located at 30 State Street, the 876-acre campus comprised of ten major buildings built in a Colonial Revival style by Kendall, Taylor, and Co.
Beli I of Alt Clut Beli I of Alt Clut was the ruler of Alt Clut (modern Dumbarton Rock in the West of Scotland), probably sometime in the early-to-mid seventh century. According to the Harleian genealogies, he was the son of Neithon, his predecessor as king.
Beli II of Alt Clut Beli II of Alt Clut was the ruler of Alt Clut (the area around modern Dumbarton Rock) for some period in the early eighth century. According to the Harleian genealogies, he was the son of Elfin, one of his predecessors as king.
Beli Manastir Beli Manastir is a town and municipality in eastern Croatia, the principal town of the Croatian part of Baranja, in the Osijek-Baranja county. The town has a population of 8,671 (2001), while total municipality population is 10,986.
Belial (Dungeons & Dragons) In many campaign settings for the Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game, Belial is an Arch-Devil of Hell (Baator in later editions of the game), and is the lord of pain and sufferings, and the father of Fierna. He has an alliance with Telchur, Oerth's god of winter, as well as a secret alliance lasting centuries with Baalzebul, lord of the Seventh Hell.
Belial's Brood One of the antagonists in Vampire: The Requiem, Belial's Brood is a loose confederation of Satanists, demon-worshippers and overt miscreants. The Covenant claims that the Damned originate from Hell itself, and exalt in the spread of misery and pain.
Belidae Belidae is the family called primitive weevils, though all the families of Curculionoidea aside from Curculionidae can be considered primitive weevils (to distinguish them from the "true weevils"); basically, any weevil whose antennae are not elbowed is "primitive". The three subfamilies have each, at various times, been considered as separate families, but they are grouped together in most recent classifications.
Belief Belief is the conviction of the truth of a proposition. Like the related concepts truth, knowledge, and wisdom, there is no single definition of belief on which scholars agree, but rather numerous theories and continued debate about the nature of belief.
Belief propagation Belief propagation, also known as the sum-product algorithm, is an iterative algorithm for computing marginals of functions on a graphical model most commonly used in artificial intelligence and information theory. Judea Pearl in 1986 and Lauritzen and Spiegelhalter also in 1986 independently formulated this algorithm.
Belief revision Belief revision is the process of changing beliefs to take into account a new piece of information. The logical formalization of belief revision is researched in philosophy, in databases, and in artificial intelligence for the design of rational agents.
Beliefs of the Children of God This article describes the beliefs and the faith of the new religious movement the Family formerly called the Children of God, that was founded by the American David Berg in 1968, and is as of 2005 led by Karen Zerby. The Children of God were part of the Jesus Movement of late the 1960s.
Belier Belier is the designation of a single-step French elevator research rocket, which in three versions between 1961 and 1970 by Hammaguir, Salto di Quirra, Ile you Levant and Kourou was started. The Belier was used also as upper stage of other French elevator research rockets.
Believe (Yellowcard song) "Believe" is the eleventh track on Yellowcard's debut album Ocean Avenue. The song pays tribute to the firefighters who lost their lives trying to rescue people trapped in the World Trade Center towers after the terrorist attacks in New York City on September 11, 2001.
Believe Nothing Believe Nothing (2002) is a British sitcom starring Rik Mayall as Quadruple Professor Adonis Cnut, the cleverest man in England and Oxford's leading moral philosopher. Starring alongside Mayall is Michael Maloney as Brian Albumen, Cnut's faithful servant, and Emily Bruni as Dr.
Believer (band) Believer is a Christian Heavy metal band from the late 1980s and early 1990s, that played a hybrid mixture of Death, Thrash, and Progressive metal. The two primary members of the band were vocalist/guitarist Kurt Bachman and drummer Joey Daub, who were joined by several others after their 1989 debut album, Extraction from Mortality.
Believer's baptism Believer's baptism (also called credobaptism, from the Latin word credo meaning "I believe") is the Christian ritual of baptism given to adults and children who have made a declaration of their personal faith in Jesus Christ as their Savior. It contrasts with infant baptism, or paedobaptism, from the Greek paido meaning "child", in which young children who cannot decide are baptised.
Believer's Voice of Victory Believer's Voice of Victory is an evangelical television series hosted by televangelist Kenneth Copeland. The program usually consists of a sermon by Copeland, or by his wife Gloria, or Kenneth discussing the gospel with other televangelists.
Believers Church Believers Church, or Believers Assembly, are the modern day followers of the religious leader William Marrion Branham. William Branham (1909-1965) was associated with the Latter Rain Movement, a Pentecostal movement that began after World War II.
Believers of the Source Now a disbanded Faction of the Planescape universe, Believers of the Source (also known as Godsmen) proclaim that every mortal can reach godhood. They are for the most part allied with the Lost (Athar), though they focus on a positive note (the possible attainment of godhood by mortals) while Athar focus on a more negative note (the lack of qualitative difference between mortals and so-called Gods).
Believing in Better Believing in Better is the second studio album by Lennie Gallant, released in 1991 (see 1991 in music). The album helped earn Gallant Male Artist of the Year from the East Coast Music Awards and also garnered two Juno nominations.
Belišće Belišće is a town in Croatia, located in the region of Slavonia, 6 km north of Valpovo and at the altitude of 93 m. The population of the town is 7,197 (2001), 11,786 in the municipality, the majority who are Croats.
Belinda Bauer Belinda Bauer (born January 1, 1951) is an Australian actress whose promising career never led to super-stardom. Bauer became popular in several American cult films of the late 1970's and 1980's including Winter Kills, The American Success Company and Flashdance.
Belinda Clark Belinda Jane Clark (born 10 September, 1970 in Newcastle, New South Wales) is a female Australian cricketer, who has played international cricket since 1991. Together with Karen Rolton, the two have ensured that the Australian women's cricket team has been just as dominant as the men's in the 1990s and 2000s.
Belinda Colling Belinda Louise Colling (born 12 September 1975 in Cromwell, New Zealand) is a New Zealand international netball and basketball representative. As a netballer, Colling has represented New Zealand 54 times since 1996, and captained the national team 1997-1999.
Belinda Martinez Belinda Martinez is a Latin American voice actress who was the Spanish voice of Fujiko Mine in the Mexican/Latin American dub of Lupin III. She also was the Mexican/Latin American voice of Queen Beryl in Sailor Moon.
Belinda Montgomery Belinda Montgomery (born July 23, 1950 in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada) is a Canadian born actress who is perhaps best known as Mrs. Katherine Howser, the matriarch in the ABC medical comedy-drama Doogie Howser, M.
Belinda Panelo Filipino-American actress and former commercial model Belinda Panelo became an MTV VJ after winning the MTV VJ Hunt in 1999 along with KC Montero. She made her mark in MTV as one of the funniest and wackiest MTV VJs ever, especially in her regular shows Classic MTV and MTV Mush.
Belinda Snell Belinda Snell (born October 1, 1981 in Mirboo North, Victoria, Australia) is an Australian women's basketball player who plays for Australia and the Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA) in the United States.
Belinda Stronach Belinda Caroline Stronach, PC, MP (born May 2, 1966 in Newmarket, Ontario) is a Canadian businesswoman, politician, and a Liberal Member of Parliament (MP) in the Canadian House of Commons. From May 17, 2005 to February 6, 2006, she was the Minister of Human Resources and Skills Development and Minister responsible for Democratic Renewal.
Belisario DomĂnguez Medal of Honor The Order of the Belisario DomĂnguez Medal of Honor is the highest award bestowed by the Mexican government. The award has been given every year since 1954 by the Senate of Mexico to eminent Mexicans with a distinguished lifetime career who contributed most "toward the welfare of the Nation and mankind".
Beliskner class cruiser The Beliskner class cruiser is a fictional spacecraft in the science fiction television show, Stargate SG-1. Named after the first ship of its type seen in the series, the Beliskner class is the most commonly-used type of Asgard starship.
Belize Botanic Gardens Belize Botanic Gardens, BBG, is 45 acres of native and exotic plants growing in the Cayo district of western Belize. The garden is in a valley on the banks of the Macal River, surrounded by the Maya Mountain foothills.
Belize City Municipal Airport Belize City Municipal Airport is an airport that serves Belize City, Belize. It is is only one mile from the city center, and is therefore more centrally located to the city than is Belize City International Airport.
Belize District Belize District is a district of the nation of Belize, with its district capital in the nation's largest city, Belize City. Also in Belize District are the towns of Hattieville, Ladyville, San Pedro Town and Caye Caulker; the villages of Burrel Boom, Crooked Tree, and Gales Point; and Rockstone Pond.
Belize River Belize River is a 180-mile (290 km) river in Belize that drains more than one-quarter of the country as it winds along the northern edge of the Maya Mountains across the center of the country to the sea near Belize City. However the Belize River/Mopan River Catchment contains over 45 percent of the population of Belize.
Belize Teachers' College Belize Teachers' College was established in the 1950's to train Belize's teachers and education professionals in the art of education. It was disbanded in 2000 and subsumed into the University of Belize as the Faculty of Education and Arts.
Belize Technical College Belize Technical College was established as a high school and later junior college for Belizeans that did not excel in academic pursuits. It was founded in September 1952 as a four year high school but before long adopted junior college level status.
Belize Zoo The Belize Zoo and Tropical Education Center was started in 1983 as a last ditch effort to provide a home for a collection of wild animals which had been used in making documentary films about tropical forests.
Belizean cricket team The Belizean cricket team is the team that represents the country of Belize in international cricket matches. They became an affiliate member of the ICC in 1997 They didn't make their international cricket debut until 2004] however, when they played in the qualifying tournament for the [[ICC Americas Championship.
Belizean Kriol people The Belizean Creole or Kriol are Creole descendants of African slaves who were brought primarily from Jamaica and Nicaragua's Mosquito Coast to cut down mahogany trees.(Shoman) Because of a lack of European women, their Irish and Scottish slave owners would either marry or engage in sexual relations with female slaves, creating a new ethnic group.
Belizean municipal election, 2003 Belize municipal elections, 2003 were a series of municipal elections held on March 5, 2003 to elect City and Town Councils in the Cities of Belize and Belmopan and the towns of Corozal, Orange Walk, San Pedro, San Ignacio/Santa Elena, Dangriga and Punta Gorda.
Belizean municipal election, 2006 Belize municipal elections, 2006 were a series of local elections held on March 1, 2006 to fill vacancies for town councils in Corozal, Orange Walk, San Pedro, San Ignacio, Benque Viejo, Dangriga, Punta Gorda, Belize City and Belmopan. All the councils except Belize City elected one mayor and six councillors; Belize City elected one mayor and ten councillors.
Belkacem Radjef Belkacem Radjef (1909-1989) was born in Fort-National (today Larbaa NaĂŻt Iraten), Algeria and spent 32 years of his life in the fight to liberate Algeria from French colonialism. He joined the first movement for independence, L'Etoile Nord Africaine, in 1930.
Belkar Bitterleaf Belkar Bitterleaf is a major character in the webcomic The Order of the Stick, written by Rich Burlew. A halfling ranger at the start of the Order's adventures, he has since taken at least one level of barbarian.
Belkin Belkin Corporation is a global manufacturer of computer hardware which specializes in connectivity devices. Belkin sells primarily in the consumer and home user market, but they also make switches, hubs (USB and computer network), cables, UPSs, and other peripherals.
Belkis Ramirez Belkis Ramirez is Dominican artist who challenges the expected role of women in the arts and society as a whole. Only a handful of women in the Dominican Republic have attained positions of stature in the arts, and those have tended to be painters.
Belknap class cruiser The Belknap class cruiser was a class of single-ended guided missile cruisers (their missile armament was installed only forward, unlike "double-ended" missile cruisers with missile armament installed both forward and aft) built for the United States Navy during the 1960s. They were originally designated as DLG frigates (destroyer leaders; the USN use of the term frigate from 1950 to 1975 was intended to evoke the power of the sailing frigates of old), but in the 1975 fleet realignment, they were reclassified as guided missile cruisers (CG).
Belknap Hill Belknap Hill (also called Lookout Hill), is a prominent river bluff directly northeast of downtown Grand Rapids, Michigan. The hill is a distinct topographical feature when viewed from the Western approach to the downtown area.
Bell (crater) Bell is a lunar impact crater that is located on the far side of the Moon, just past the western limb. It lies in an area of terrain that is marked by many small craters, a number of which are satellite craters of Bell listed in the table below.
Bell (Monotype) Bell is a Didone classification serif typeface designed in 1788 by Richard Austin (1768–1830) while working in John Bell's British Type Foundry. Bell, impressed by the clarity and contrast found in contemporary French typefaces cut by Firmin Didot, wanted his foundry to offer a British version.
Bell (school) A bell is a signal in a school, either a real bell, a distributed ringer or heard over the intercom that tells the students when it is time to go to class in the morning and when it is time to change classes during the day. Typically the first bell tells the students that it is time to report to class and the bell that occurs shortly after that means that the students are late.
Bell 212 The Bell Helicopter 212 or UH-1N (also known as the Twin Two-Twelve and Twin Huey) is a medium military/civilian helicopter that first flew in 1968. The 212 has a fifteen seat configuration, with one pilot and fourteen passengers.
Bell 407 The Bell Model 407 is a civil utility helicopter, a derivative of the Bell Model 206L-4 "LongRanger". The 407 uses a 4-bladed rotor system with a rigid, composite rotor hub instead of the 2-bladed conventional rotor of the Model 206.
Bell Aircraft The Bell Aircraft Corporation was an aircraft manufacturer of the United States, a builder of several types of fighter aircraft for World War II but most famous for the Bell X-1, the first supersonic aircraft, and for the development and production of many important civilian and military helicopters. Bell also developed the Reaction Control System for the Project Mercury Spacecraft and the Bell Rocket Belt.
Bell Biv DeVoe Bell Biv DeVoe was a successful splinter group of New Edition that consisted of three previous members, Ricky Bell (also known as Slick), Michael Bivins (also known as Biv), and Ronnie DeVoe (also known as R.D.
Bell Bottom Trousers Bell Bottom Trousers is an old sea shanty about a simple English girl and a sailor, possibly originated from the British Royal Navy. This shanty is best classified as a "dirty" shanty and its subject matter may not be appropriate to everyone, especially to those not familiar with regular vulgarity of sea shantys.
Bell crank A bell crank is a type of crank that changes motion around a 90 degree angle. The name comes from its first use, changing the vertical pull on a rope to a horizontal pull on the striker of a bell, used for calling servants in upper class British households.
Bell curve grading In education, grading on a bell curve is a method of assigning grades designed to yield a desired distribution of grades among the students in a class. Strictly speaking, grading "on a bell curve" refers to the assigning of grades according to the frequency distribution known as the Normal distribution (also called the Gaussian distribution), whose graphical representation is referred to as the Normal curve or the bell curve.
Bell cymbal A bell cymbal or bell splash cymbal is a small, very thick cymbal with little if any taper, used as an effects cymbal in a drum kit. The sound produced when striking the bell cymbal with a drumstick is a distinctive high-pitched ping sound with a long sustain.
Bell Canada Administrative Buildings, Scarborough Bell Canada's Administrative Building in Scarborough, Ontario was built in the early 1980s. The distinctive 5 storey silver clad building was built next to the Scarborough Civic Centre and south of the Scarborough Town Centre.
Bell Canada Cup The Bell Canada Cup or Bell Capital Cup is an International ice hockey tournament staged in Ottawa, Ontario. It brings together childern aged 9-13, form all over the world to play in the largest hockey tournament in the world.
Bell Centennial Bell Centennial is a sans-serif typeface designed by Matthew Carter in the period 1975–1978. The typeface was commissioned by AT&T as a proprietary type to replace their then current directory typeface Bell Gothic on the occasion of AT&T's one hundredth anniversary.
Bell County Expo Center The Bell County Expo Center is a 6,559-seat multi-purpose arena in Belton, Texas. It is home to the CenTex Barracudas (Intense Football League) and the former home of the now defunct Texas Bullets (Professional Indoor Football League) and the Central Texas Stampede (Western Professional Hockey League).
Bell effect The Bell Effect, also known colloquially as "bells", is a technique used in musical arrangement where single notes of a chord are played in sequence by different instruments which sustain their individual notes to allow the chord to be heard. It is, in effect, an arpeggio played by several instruments sequentially.
Bell ExpressVu Bell ExpressVu is the division of Bell Canada that provides satellite television service across Canada. It launched on September 10, 1997 and as of 2004 has been providing IPTV service via VDSL to select multidwelling units (condominiums and apartments) in Toronto, Ottawa, and Montreal.
Bell Gully Bell Gully is one of New Zealand's largest law firms. Founded in 1840, it practises all areas of commercial law, including banking and finance, corporate law, mergers and acquisitions, property law, taxation law, commercial litigation and employment litigation.
Bell hooks bell hooks (born Gloria Jean Watkins on September 25, 1952) is an American intellectual, feminist, and social activist. hooks focuses on the interconnectivity of race, class, and gender and their ability to produce and perpetuate systems of oppression and domination.
Bell housing The bell housing is part of the transmission system on a gasoline(also known as petrol) or diesel powered vehicle. It is bolted to the engine block and contains the flywheel, the torque converter or clutch of the transmission.
Bell Helicopter Textron Bell Helicopter Textron is an American helicopter and tiltrotor manufacturer headquartered in Fort Worth, Texas. A division of Textron, Bell manufactures military helicopter and tiltrotor products in the United States (primarily in and around Fort Worth as well as in Amarillo, Texas) and commercial rotorcraft products in Mirabel, Quebec, Canada.
Bell Labs Bell Laboratories (also known as Bell Labs and formerly known as AT&T Bell Laboratories and Bell Telephone Laboratories) is part of the research and development organization of Alcatel-Lucent and previously the United States Bell System.
Bell Mall, Utsunomiya Bell Mall is a modern shopping mall in Utsunomiya, Tochigi Prefecture, Japan. Bell Mall is located near the central area of Utsunomiya City, a large regional city in the Northern Kanto region, and it is one of the largest shopping centers in the North Kanto area.
Bell Mountain Wilderness The United States Congress designated the Bell Mountain Wilderness in 1980 and it now has a total of 9027 acres. Bell Mountain is located within the Potosi-Fredericktown Ranger District of the Mark Twain National Forest, south of Potosi, Missouri in the United States.
Bell number In combinatorial mathematics, the nth Bell number, named in honor of Eric Temple Bell, is the number of partitions of a set with n members, or equivalently, the number of equivalence relations on it. Starting with B0 = B1 = 1, the first few Bell numbers are :
Bell of Batoche The bell of Batoche is a 20-pound silver church bell seized in 1885 as spoils of war from the Métis community of Batoche (now in Saskatchewan) by soldiers from Ontario, following their victory in the Battle of Batoche over the North-West Rebellion.
Bell pull A bell pull is a woven textile, cord, handle, knob, or other object that connects with a bell or bell wire, and which rings a bell when pulled. Bell pulls are used to summon workers in homes of people who have butlers, maids or other servants, and often have a tassel at the bottom.
Bell Park, Victoria Bell Park (; post code: 3215) is a residential suburb of Geelong, Victoria, Australia. It is located 3km north-west of the Geelong city centre and is bordered to the north by the Ballarat rail line, to the east by Thompson Road, to the south by Ballarat Road and to the west by Anakie Road.
Bell Performance Bell Performance, Inc. (formerly known as Bell Additives) is a Longwood, Florida manufacturer and blender of fuel and oil additive products (for gasoline and diesel engines) and additive products for use in power generation facilities.
Bell Post Hill, Victoria Bell Post Hill (; post code: 3215) is a residential suburb of Geelong, Victoria, Australia. The suburb will be bypassed by traffic from Melbourne coming from the Princes Freeway by the creation of the Geelong Bypass, due for completion in 2009.
Bell Ranch, New Mexico The Bell Ranch originated with two Spanish land grants to Don Pablo Montoya in 1824. Lying along LaCinta Creek near the Canadian River, the historic Bell Ranch is bordered by present day Conchas Lake about 60 miles from Tucumcari in San Miguel County.
Bell Records (1920s) The United States based Bell Records record label started issuing records in about 1920. The label's parent company was the Standard Music Roll Company of Orange, New Jersey, which was also the parent of Arto Records.
Bell Records (1950) The third record label to be called Bell Records was founded in 1954 in New York. This Bell Records went on to issue several hit singles, including "I'm Your Puppet" by James and Bobby Purify in 1966 and "The Letter" by The Box Tops in 1967.
Bell Road Bell Road is the busiest arterial road in the city of Phoenix, Arizona. Bell Road runs east-west through northern Phoenix connecting the suburbs of Glendale and Scottsdale (where Bell is known as Frank Lloyd Wright Boulevard).
Bell Rock Lighthouse Bell Rock Lighthouse is the world's oldest surviving sea-washed lighthouse and was built on Bell Rock (also known as Inchcape Rock) in the North Sea, 12 miles (18 km) off the coast of Angus, Scotland, east of the Firth of Tay (). The rock was the scene of many shipwrecks as it lies just below the surface of the sea for all but a few hours at low tide.
Bell test experiments In quantum mechanics, Bell's Theorem states that a Bell inequality must be obeyed under any local hidden variable theory but can in certain circumstances be violated under quantum mechanics (QM). The term "Bell inequality" can mean any one of a number of inequalities — in practice, in real experiments, the CHSH or CH74 inequality, not the original one derived by John Bell.
Bell tower A tower containing one or more bells, typically part of a church, is a bell tower; attached to a city hall or other civil building, it is usually named belfry; the occasional free standing one may be referred to by its Italian name, campanile. Such towers are now rarely constructed but are kept primarily for their historic value.
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