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Indiana District (LCMS) The Indiana District is one of the 35 districts of the Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod (LCMS), and encompasses the state of Indiana as well as most of western Kentucky; the remainder of Kentucky is divided between the Mid-South District and the Ohio District. In addition, eight Indiana congregations are in the non-geographic English District, and two congregations in Lake County are in the SELC District.
Indiana E-Learning Academy Formerly the Indiana Web Academy, the Indiana E-Learning Academy is a program of the Indiana Department of Education. The stated mission of the Indiana E-Learning Academy is to empower the students and educators in the state of Indiana to integrate technology and the Internet with education.
Indiana Evans Indiana Evans (born July 27, 1990) is an Australian actress, who plays 16-year-old Matilda Hunter on the popular Australian soap opera Home and Away. She plays the daughter of Beth Hunter (Clarissa House), twin sister of Henry Hunter (Tobi Atkins) and her other siblings are Scott (Kip Gamblin), Kit (Amy Mizzi) and Robbie (Jason Smith).
Indiana Finance Authority In order to provide economic efficiencies and management synergies and enable the State of Indiana ("State") to communicate as one voice with the various participants in the financial markets, the Indiana Development Finance Authority, the State Office Building Commission, the Indiana Transportation Finance Authority, the Recreational Development Commission, the State Revolving Fund Programs and the Indiana Brownfields Program were consolidated into a new and separate entity called the Indiana Finance Authority ("IFA") on May 15, 2005. Visit the IFA website the successor entity to these formerly separate debt-issuing entities, the IFA is authorized to issue revenue bonds payable from lease rentals under lease agreements with various state agencies and to finance or refinance the cost of acquiring, building and equipping structures for state use including state office buildings, garages, highways, bridges, airport facilities, correctional facilities, state hospitals and recreational facilities related to State
Indiana General Assembly The Indiana General Assembly is the state legislature, or legislative branch, of the state government of Indiana. It is a bicameral legislature that consists of a lower house, the Indiana House of Representatives, and an upper house, the Indiana Senate.
Indiana Harbor Belt Railroad The Indiana Harbor Belt Railroad is a Class II railroad in the United States. The line is comprised of 320 miles of track—30 miles of single mainline track, 24 miles of double main track and 266 miles of additional yard and side track—starting northwest of Chicago in Franklin Park, Illinois, traveling southeast around the city to its headquarters in Hammond, Indiana.
Indiana High School Forensics Association The Indiana High School Forensic Association, or IHSFA, is a speech and debate organization which works to improve, coordinate, and expand speech programs in the High Schools of Indiana. Any private or public High School or formally organized Home School Consortium may join the association and compete in the tournaments it sponsors.
Indiana Hoosiers Indiana University's athletic teams are called the Hoosiers, and their colors are crimson and cream, though red and white has been used at times in the past. From its humble beginnings with baseball in 1867, the Hoosier athletic program has grown to include over 600 male and female student-athletes on 24 varsity teams boasting one of the nation's best overall records.
Indiana Christian University Indiana Christian University (ICU) is an unaccredited conservative Christian university located in the Indianapolis suburb of Noblesville, Indiana. According to the school's catalog, it evolved from predecessor institutions Indiana Bible Institute (1923) and Indiana Bible college (1934), adopting the present name in 1940.
Indiana Ice The Indiana Ice is a Tier I ice hockey team formed in 2004 when it was purchased from the former Danville, Illinois, USA team. It plays its home games at the Pepsi Coliseum, located in the Indiana State Fairgrounds in Indianapolis, Indiana (some of its home games are also played in the Conseco Fieldhouse, located in downtown Indianapolis -- better known as the home of the Indiana Pacers and Indiana Fever basketball teams).
Indiana Invaders Indiana Invaders are an American soccer team, founded in 1998. The team is a member of the United Soccer Leagues Premier Development League (PDL), the fourth tier of the American Soccer Pyramid, and play in the Great Lakes Division of the Central Conference against teams from Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit, Fort Wayne, Grand Rapids and Toronto.
Indiana Invaders Soccer Complex The Indiana Invaders Soccer Complex is located in South Bend, Indiana. The complex includes many soccer fields, but is most commonly known for the soccer-specific stadium that the Indiana Invaders use, including the Invaders in the W-League, USL Premier Development League, and the Super Y-League.
Indiana Jones 4 Indiana Jones 4 is the working title of the long-awaited fourth (and final) film in the Indiana Jones series. The film has been in development hell since shortly after the release of Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, with various false production starts and screenwriters.
Indiana Jones and His Desktop Adventures Indiana Jones and his Desktop Adventures is a 1996 computer game. Desktop adventures is made to run in a windowed form on the desktop to use the least amount of memory possible and still allows the player to perform other on screen tasks.
Indiana Jones and the Emperor's Tomb Indiana Jones and the Emperor's Tomb is an action video game developed by The Collective and published by LucasArts in 2003 featuring cover art by Drew Struzan. The game is a new adventure of fictional archeologist Indiana Jones.
Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis (sometimes also referred to as Indiana Jones 4) is a graphical adventure game, originally released in 1992 and published by LucasArts. It was the seventh game to use the SCUMM adventure game engine.
Indiana Jones and the Iron Phoenix Following the success of Fate of Atlantis, LucasArts began developing a sequel named Indiana Jones and the Iron Phoenix in 1993. The game was eventually cancelled and the script was adapted to be used in a four-issue Indiana Jones comic book published by Dark Horse Comics.
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade is a 1989 film directed by Steven Spielberg and starring Harrison Ford, Sean Connery, Denholm Elliott, Julian Glover, Alison Doody, River Phoenix and John Rhys-Davies. This film is the third released, though the twenty-fifth chronologically, in a series of film and TV productions about the adventures of the heroic fictional archaeologist Indiana Jones.
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (video game Sega) In 1989, Lucasfilm Games released both a graphical adventure game and an action game of the same name, based on the film. There are also two completely different games for the NES called "Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade", with no subtitle to differentiate the two versions
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (video game) Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade is the title of three different types of software games released for various video and computer home systems. The format of each particular video or computer game is different, but they all loosely follow the film's storyline.
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade: The Graphic Adventure Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade: The Graphic Adventure is a graphical adventure game, originally released in 1989, published by Lucasfilm Games (now LucasArts). It was the third game to use the SCUMM engine.
Indiana Jones and the Tomb of the Templars Indiana Jones and the Tomb of the Templars contains three adventures for use with West End Games Masterbook system: Indiana Jones and the Tomb of the Templars, Indiana Jones and the Druids' Curse and Indiana Jones and the Sword in the Stone. The adventures taking place between 1936 and 1938 and all in the United Kingdom.
Indiana Jones' Greatest Adventures Indiana Jones' Greatest Adventures was a game based on the Indiana Jones trilogy released for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System in 1994, developed by Factor 5 and published by JVC Musical Industries, Inc. The story was told through cutscenes and text and was mostly faithful to the movies.
Indiana Jones: The Pinball Adventure Indiana Jones: The Pinball Adventure is a 1993 widebody pinball game designed by Mark Ritchie (the younger brother of acclaimed pinball designer Steve Ritchie) and released by Williams. It was based on the Indiana Jones movies.
Indiana Limestone Indiana Limestone or Bedford Limestone is a common term for Salem limestone, a geological formation primarily quarried in south central Indiana between Bloomington and Bedford. Bloomington Indiana has been noted to have the highest quality quarried Limestone in the United States.
Indiana Marching Band State Finals The Indiana State School Music Association (ISSMA) is the governing body of the Indiana State Marching Band competition. For a band to make it to state finals in its class, they must first get a gold rating at a District competition and move on to a Regional competition.
Indiana pouch An Indiana pouch is a surgically-created urinary diversion used to create a way for the body to store and eliminate urine for patients who have had their urinary bladders removed as a result of bladder cancer or pelvic exenteration.
Indiana Pacers The Indiana Pacers are a professional basketball team that plays in the National Basketball Association (NBA). The team is based in the state's largest city and capital, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA, located in the center of the state.
Indiana Pi Bill The Indiana Pi Bill is the popular name for bill #246 of the 1897 sitting of the Indiana General Assembly, which is one of the most famous historical attempts to establish scientific truth by legislative fiat. Despite its popular name, the main result claimed by the bill is a method to square the circle, rather than the establishment of the value of π.
Indiana Rail Road The Indiana Rail Road is a United States Class III railroad, operating over trackage from Lis, Illinois to Indianapolis, Indiana, a distance of 155 miles (249 km). The main line is most of the former Illinois Central Railroad line from Indianapolis to Effingham, Illinois; Illinois Central successor Canadian National Railway retains the portion from Lis to Effingham.
Indiana Railroad The Indiana Railroad (IR) was the last of the typical Midwestern United States interurban lines. It was formed in 1930 by combining the operations of the five major interurban systems in central Indiana into one entity.
Indiana Repertory Theatre Indiana Repertory Theatre is a theatre in Indianapolis, Indiana that began as a genuine repertory theatre, with its casts performing in multiple shows at once. It has subsequently become a regional theatre and a member of the League of Resident Theatres.
Indiana Southwestern Railway Indiana Southwestern Railway is a subsidiary of Pioneer Railcorp, operator of several short-line railroad companies. The ISW is a Class III railroad, and operates on 23 miles of track from Evansville, Indiana, northward to Cynthiana, Indiana.
Indiana State Road 327 Indiana State Road 327 is a north-south, largely rural surface highway in north-eastern Indiana. It is an undivided surface road throughout its entire course between the Indiana/Michigan state line just north of Orland, Indiana to a point just south of Garrett, Indiana, where it terminates at an intersection with Indiana State Road 205.
Indiana State Road 45 State Road 45 is a state route from Bean Blossom, Indiana to Rockport, Indiana. From Bean Blossom and through Brown County, State Road 45 is a narrow, shoulderless two-lane road that passes between the Morgan-Monroe State Forest and the Yellowwood State Forest.
Indiana State Road 662 Formerly a four-mile route that passed through Newburgh, Indiana 662 connected Indiana 66 east of Newburgh with Interstate 164. In recent years, however, the highway was decommissioned through Newburgh proper, and now has a routing of slightly more than a mile from I-164 to Ellerbusch Road on the west side of the town.
Indiana State Road 727 State Road 727 is a very short east-west Indiana state highway lying entirely within Steuben County, Indiana, connecting Pokagon State Park to State Road 127 and hence Interstate 69. Termini are at the gate of Pokagon State Park and Indiana 127 at a rural intersection.
Indiana State Road 827 State Road 827 is a short northeast-to-southwest highway connecting Fremont (northern terminus on State Road 120) and Angola (southern terminus on State Road 127). Roughly 8 miles in length, it lies entirely within Steuben County.
Indiana State School Music Association The Indiana State School Music Association (ISSMA) is the governing body for a variety of interscholastic and individual school music compositions throughout the US state of Indiana. Its main event is the Indiana Marching Band State Finals, held every year at the RCA Dome in Indianapolis.
Indiana Territory Indiana Territory was an organized territory of the United States from 1800 to 1816, created by Act of Congress and signed into law by President John Adams on May 7, 1800, effective on July 4. It was the first new territory created from lands of the Northwest Territory, which had been organized in 1787 by the Northwest Ordinance.
Indiana Toll Road The Indiana Toll Road, officially the Indiana East-West Toll Road, is a tolled freeway running east-west across the northernmost part of Indiana. It is a part of the New York-Chicago Toll Road system, and has been advertised as the "Main Street of the Midwest.
Indiana Toll Road Concession Company The Indiana Toll Road Concession Company (ITRCC), is the subsidiary of the Cintra Concesiones de Infraestructuras de Transporte and Macquarie Infrastructure Group joint-venture that operates and maintains the Indiana East-West Toll Road. It assumed this responsibility from the Indiana Department of Transportation on June 30, 2006 in accordance with a 75-year lease agreement, included as part of the 2005 Major Moves legislation proposed by Governor Mitch Daniels and enacted by the Indiana General Assembly in November 2005.
Indiana Transportation Museum The Indiana Transportation Museum is located in Forest Park, Noblesville, Indiana. The museum is a volunteer run, non-profit organization whose mission is to preserve Indiana's railroad history, educate the public in the history of the railroad, and provide the experience of railroad travel as it used to be.
Indiana University Bloomington academic structure The academic structure of Indiana University Bloomington exhibits the diversity, comprehensiveness, and depth befitting a university in its 19th decade. Indiana University Bloomington is academically organized into one large college, which itself contains one school, and twelve more-specialized schools, which together confer more than 900 different degrees, majors, and programs:
Indiana University Hospital Indiana University Hospital is a teaching hospital in Indianapolis, Indiana affiliated with the Indiana University School of Medicine and Clarian Health Partners. As part of Clarian, the hospital works closely with nearby Methodist Hospital and James Whitcomb Riley Hospital for Children.
Indiana University Marching Hundred The Marching Hundred (or "Hundred" for short) is Indiana University's marching band. Indiana University's famed Marching Hundred is the product of tradition dating back to the organization of the first band at Indiana in 1896.
Indiana University Press Indiana University Press, also known as IU Press, is a publishing house associated with Indiana University that engages in academic publishing, specializing in the humanities and social sciences. It was founded in 1950.
Indiana University School of Education The School of Education of Indiana University is an academic unit within the university, with a presence on the two core campuses of IU, Indiana University Bloomington and IUPUI. It offers a range of degrees in professional education: a B.
Indiana University School of Law - Bloomington The Indiana University School of Law — Bloomington is a law school located in Bloomington, Indiana. It is one of two law schools of its parent institution, Indiana University and is a part of the Indiana University System.
Indiana University School of Medicine The Indiana University School of Medicine is the medical school of Indiana University, based at the IUPUI campus of IU in Indianapolis, Indiana (the main campus of IU being in Bloomington). It is currently the second largest medical school in the United States.
Indiana University-Purdue University Columbus Indiana University—Purdue University Columbus (IUPUC) is a small but academically diverse university located in Columbus, Indiana. The Purdue University College of Technology at Columbus is also located in the same building.
Indiana Uplands The Indiana Uplands are a geographical region in south-central Indiana. On a topographical map the Indiana Uplands (also known as the Hoosier Uplands) begin slightly north of the city of Bloomington, Indiana and continue south to the Ohio River.
Indiana's 10th congressional district The now-defunct Indiana 10th Congressional District encompassed roughly the "Old City Limits" of Indianapolis from 1983-2003. The district was re-drawn after the 1980 census and eliminated when Indiana's representation in the House of Representatives fell from 10 to nine after the 2000 Census.
Indiana's 7th congressional district The 7th Congressional district is in the heart of Central Indiana and encompasses most of Marion County/Indianapolis, Indiana. However, prior to the 2002 redistricting the 7th district referred to a completely different area of Indiana, covering Fountain, Parke, Tippecanoe, Montgomery, Clinton, Boone, Hendricks, Vigo, Clay, Putnam, and Owen counties and parts of Morgan and Hamilton county.
Indiana's 8th congressional district United States House of Representatives, Indiana District 8 is a district of the United States Congress in southwestern Indiana. Based in Evansville, it was widened when Indiana lost a seat after the 2000 Census to include much of the former 5th and 7th Districts.
Indiana's 9th congressional district United States House of Representatives, Indiana District 9 is a district of the United States Congress in south-central and south-eastern Indiana. The district is represented in the 110th United States Congress by Baron Hill (D).
Indiana, Ontario Indiana is an old village site -- a ghost town -- now within the precincts of the Ruthven Park National Historic Site, 1 km north of Cayuga, in Haldimand County, Ontario, Canada. The site was also referred to as "Deans" as late as 1940-1951, when it was marked on a map published by C.
Indianapolis (balance), Indiana Indianapolis (balance) is a statistical entity defined by the United States Census Bureau to represent a portion of the consolidated Indianapolis-Marion County metropolitan government.(1) As of the 2000 census, the balance had a total population of 781,870.
Indianapolis 500 The Indianapolis 500-Mile Race, often shortened to Indianapolis 500 or Indy 500, is an American automobile race, held annually over the Memorial Day weekend at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Speedway, Indiana. "The Greatest Spectacle in Racing" is one of the oldest and richest motorsport events in existence, having the largest attendance and one of the largest radio and television audiences of any single-day sporting events worldwide.
Indianapolis ABCs The Indianapolis ABCs were a Negro League baseball team that played both as an independent club and as a charter member of the first Negro National League (NNL). They claimed the western championship of black baseball in 1915 and 1916, and finished second in the 1922 NNL.
Indianapolis Blues The Indianapolis Blues were a baseball team in the National League only during the 1878 season and finished fifth in the six-team league with a 24-36 record. They were managed by outfielder/first baseman/catcher John Clapp, and played their home games at South Street Park.
Indianapolis Clowns The Indianapolis Clowns were a professional baseball team in the Negro American League. Playing variously as the Indianapolis Clowns and Cincinnati Clowns, the club was the only clowning team to earn entrance into black baseball's "major league.
Indianapolis Colts seasons This is a list of seasons completed by the Indianapolis Colts American Football Franchise. This list documents the season-by-season records of the Colts’ franchise from the dawn of the Baltimore Colts franchise, to present day.
Indianapolis Foundry Indianapolis Foundry was a DaimlerChrysler automobile foundry in Indianapolis, Indiana. The factory opened in 1890 as the "American Foundry Company" and was purchased later in 1925 by Chrysler and operated as a subsidiary.
Indianapolis Children's Choir The Indianapolis Children’s Choir, founded in 1986 by Artistic Director Henry Leck, provides an opportunity for young people ages infant through high school to learn, grow, and excel through quality instruction and experiences that emphasize the development of musical skills and understanding as well as fostering a sense of self-esteem, respect, accomplishment, and pride. Each week, the ICC has the pleasure of working with over 1,700 youth from 21 counties in over 20 ensembles and programs, including an early childhood program, an outreach program, and choirs that meet at the ICC headquarters at Butler University and at locations in Brownsburg, Carmel, Greenfield, Greenwood, and Zionsville.
Indianapolis Ice The Indianapolis Ice is the name of a former hockey team in Indianapolis, Indiana that played in the International Hockey League from 1988–99 and in the Central Hockey League from 1999–2004. Their original home arena was Pepsi Coliseum at the State Fairgrounds on the city's near-northeast side.
Indianapolis Indians The Indianapolis Indians are a minor league baseball team based in Indianapolis, Indiana. The team, which plays in the International League, is the Triple-A affiliate of the Pittsburgh Pirates major-league club.
Indianapolis Motor Speedway Radio Network The Indianapolis Motor Speedway Radio Network (known typically as the IMS Radio Network, and formerly the Indy Racing Radio Network) is a broadcast radio network (actually, more properly a radio syndication arrangement) by which the annual Indianapolis 500 automobile race is broadcast on radio stations covering most of North America. This arrangement allows the Hulman-George family, controlling figures in the Indianapolis 500, the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, and the related Indy Racing League, more control than had they merely granted the broadcast rights to another entity.
Indianapolis News The Indianapolis News was an evening newspaper published for 130 years, beginning December 7, 1869, and ending publication on October 1, 1999. At one time it had the largest circulation in the state of Indiana, and was the oldest Indianapolis newspaper in existence.
Indianapolis Prize The Indianapolis Prize is the world's leading award for animal conservation. The Indianapolis Prize includes a US$100,000 cash award and the Lilly Medal, which are presented every two years to a conservationist who has made substantial contributions toward the sustainability of an animal species or group of species.
Indianapolis Public Schools [Public Schools, abbreviated locally as IPS, is the largest school district] in [[Indianapolis as well as in the state of Indiana with nearly 40,000 students. The origins of the Indianapolis Public Schools date back to 1853.
Indianapolis Times The Indianapolis Times was an evening newspaper that served the city of Indianapolis, Indiana from the late 1800s to 1965 when the paper ceased publishing. The Times received a Pulitzer Prize in 1928 for Public Service when they ran an article that exposed political corruption in the state and the KKK.
Indianapolis-Carmel, IN Metropolitan Statistical Area The Indianapolis, IN Metropolitan Statistical Area is the 35th largest Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) in the United States.Population in Combined Statistical Areas (CSAs) in Alphabetical Order and Numerical and Percent Change for the United States and Puerto Rico: 1990 and 2000 It was originally formed by the United States Census Bureau in 1950 and consisted of the Indiana county of Marion.
Indianapolis, Indiana Indianapolis (IPA: ) is the capital city of the State of Indiana, and the county seat of Marion County, Indiana. According to the 2000 Census, its population is listed as 791,926, making it Indiana's most populous city, the 12th largest city in the U.
Indianista Indianista is movement in South American literature that explored the beliefs and lifestyles of the Indigenous peoples durning the 19th century. Prominent indianista writers include Jose Maria Arguedas and JoĂŁo GuimarĂŁes Rosa and Juan Mera.
Indianized kingdom The concept of the Indianized kingdom, first described by George Coedès, is based upon the Hindu and Buddhist cultural and economic influences in Southeast Asia. States such as Srivijaya and the Khmer empire developed territories and economies that rivalled those in India itself.
Indianola Junior High School Indianola Junior High School was the first junior high school in the United States. Its school building still exists and is used by the Columbus Public Schools' Indianola Informal School, an alternative school.
Indianola, Washington Indianola is an unincorporated town in Kitsap County, Washington, located on the north shore of Port Madison on the Port Madison Indian Reservation, home of the Suquamish Indian Tribe. It was originally established as a summer community and was a stop for Mosquito Fleet ferries until the 1950s.
Indians in Fiji Indians, defined by the constitution of Fiji as anybody who can trace, through either the male or the female line, their ancestry back to anywhere on the Indian subcontinent, constitute about 38 percent of Fiji's population. They are mostly descended from indentured labourers brought to the islands by Fiji's British colonial rulers between 1879 and 1916 to work on Fiji's sugar plantations.
Indians of All Tribes Founder Bernie Whitebear and other Native Americans invaded the land which was originally Indian land to start. It was made to improve the spiritual, social, economic, educational and cultural conditions of Native Americans.
Indians of Canada Pavilion The Indians of Canada Pavilion was a pavilion at the 1967 International and Universal Exposition in Montreal, Canada. It presented a somewhat different message than what the Canadian government had hoped, emphasizing the First Nations' point of view.
Indiantown Gap National Cemetery Indiantown Gap National Cemetery is a United States National Cemetery located in the town of Annville, in Lebanon County, Pennsylvania. It occupies approximately 677 acres, and is site to 26,323 interments, as of the end of 2005.
Indiantown, South Carolina Indiantown is an unincorporated community in rural Williamsburg County, South Carolina that is a historical site in the area. Prior to the arrival of Europeans to North America, it was the site of a Chickasaw village and the area was a favored hunting and fishing ground.
Indic scripts The family tree (of the scripts of the South and South-East Asian sub-continent. Brahmi] may be concluded as the mother of all the indic scripts by a conservative evaluation and was first deciphered by [[James Prinsep, an architect and orientalist.
Indica (Arrian) Indica is the name of an ancient book about India written by Arrian, one of the main ancient historians of Alexander the Great. The book mainly tells the story of Alexander's officer Nearchus’ voyage from India to the Persian Gulf after Alexander the Great’s conquest of the Indus Valley.
Indica Gallery Indica Gallery was a counterculture art gallery in Mason's Yard (off Duke Street), Mayfair, London, England during the late 1960s, in the basement of the Indica Bookshop co-owned by John Dunbar, Peter Asher and Barry Miles. It was supported by Paul McCartney and hosted a show of Yoko Ono's work in November 1966 at which Ono first met John Lennon.
Indicated airspeed Indicated airspeed (IAS) is the speed read directly from the airspeed indicator on an aircraft, driven by the pitot-static system. IAS is directly related to calibrated airspeed (CAS), but includes instrument errors and position error.
Indication (medicine) In medicine, an indication is a term describing a valid reason to use a certain test, medication, procedure, or surgery. In the United States, indications for medications are strictly regulated by the Food and Drug Administration, which includes them in the package insert under the phrase "Indications and Usage".
Indicative conditional The indicative conditional is the logical operation given by statements of the form "If A then B" in ordinary English (or similar natural languages). The indicative conditional, unlike the material conditional, does not have a stipulated definition.
Indicator (metadata) In metadata an indicator is a Boolean value that may contain only the values true or false. The definition of an Indicator must include the meaning of a true value and should also include the meaning if the value is false.
Indicator bacteria Each gram of human feces contains approximately 10 billion (109) bacteria, among them may include pathogenic bacteria, such as Salmonella. In addition, feces may contain pathogenic viruses, protozoa and parasites.
Indicator net Constructed using light steel nets, indicator nets were often anchored at various depths to the sea bed around Allied naval bases during World War II. They were intended to entangle U-boat traffic of the enemy, even though the submarines often managed to disentangle themselves and escape before being blown up by depth charges.
Indicator species Indicator species are indicators of the natural environment or the ecology of a species. The two basic usages of an indicator species is to define the range or ecology of where a species lives, the second usage being as an indicator of environmental conditions, along the lines of a biomarker, a bioindicator, or environmental science, (especially to include pollution or environmental effects).
Indicazione Geografica Tipica Indicazione Geografica Tipica is the second of four classifications of wine recognized by the government of Italy. Created to recognize the unusually high quality of the class of wines known as Super Tuscans, IGT wines are labeled with the locality of their creation, but do not meet the requirements of the theoretically higher DOC or DOCG designations, which are generally intended to protect traditional wine formulations such as Chianti or Barolo.
Indice forêt météo The indice forêt météo (IFM) is an estimation of the risk of wildfire computed by Météo France, the French national meteorology institute; it means Forest weather index. It was created in 1992 and is based on a Canadian empirical model developed in 1976.
Indices of Economic Freedom The annual surveys Economic Freedom in the World and Index of Economic Freedom are two indices which attempt to measure the degree of economic freedom, using a definition for this similar to laissez-faire capitalism, in the world's nations. These indices have in turn been used in many peer-reviewed studies which have found many beneficial effects of more economic freedom.
Indict An indict (plural indiction, from Latin indiction, "announcement", Byzantine Greek: Ινδικτιών, indikti'ōn) is a unit of time which has been in use since the time of Roman Emperor Diocletian. An indict is equal to 15 years.
Indictment In the common law legal system, an indictment () is a formal charge of having committed a most serious criminal offense. In those jurisdictions which retain the concept of a felony, the serious criminal offense would be a felony; those jurisdictions which have abolished the concept of a felony often substitute instead the concept of an indictable offense, i.
Indidginus Indidginus (Michael Martin) is an electronic musician based in Cape Town, South Africa, He has been producing electronic music since 2001 and playing didgeridoo for around 8 years. Past musical projects include Koru, Impact, Squeeker, Unconscious Collective & Whitestar.
Indie The term indie is short for "independent" and refers to artistic creations outside the commercial mainstream, without the support of a major record label, major movie studio, or other source of a large budget. For example,
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