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New Mexico State Road 333 New Mexico State Highway 333 is a highway in central New Mexico. Its eastern terminus is at Interstate 40 on the east side of Moriarty, New Mexico; its western terminus is at Interstate 40 about three miles east of Albuquerque.
New Mexico State Road 37 New Mexico State Highway 37 is a state highway that runs north-south through the Sacramento Mountains, which are part of the Lincoln National Forest in Lincoln County, New Mexico in the United States. It's southern terminus is at NM 48 several miles north of the town of Ruidoso, New Mexico.
New Mexico State Road 48 New Mexico State Highway 48 is a state highway that runs north-south through the Sacramento Mountains, which are part of the Lincoln National Forest in Lincoln County, New Mexico in the United States. It's southern terminus is at U.
New Mexico State Road 80 New Mexico State Highway 80 (or NM-80) is a short (21 miles) north-south state highway in southwestern New Mexico between Interstate 10 and the Arizona state line, where it feeds into Arizona State Route 80 just southwest of Rodeo, New Mexico. The highway angles westward toward the south (or eastward to the north), leading to (with AZ-80) Douglas, Arizona from Interstate 10.
New Mexico State University New Mexico State University, or NMSU, is a land-grant university that has its main campus in Las Cruces, New Mexico. The school was founded in 1888 as an agricultural college and preparatory school called New Mexico A&M College.
New Mexico's 1st congressional district New Mexico District 1 of the United States House of Representatives is a Congressional district that serves the central area of New Mexico, in and around Albuquerque. The current Representative from District 1 is Republican Heather Wilson.
New Mexico's 2nd congressional district New Mexico District 2 of the United States House of Representatives is a Congressional district that serves the southern half of the state of New Mexico, including Las Cruces and Roswell. It is the eighth largest district in the nation.
New Mexico's 3rd congressional district New Mexico District 3 of the United States House of Representatives is a Congressional district that serves the northern half of the state of New Mexico, including the state's Capital city of Santa Fe. The current Representative from District 3 is Democrat Tom Udall.
New Milford High School (New Jersey) New Milford High School is a four-year comprehensive public high school that serves students in ninth through twelfth grade from New Milford, in Bergen County, New Jersey, United States, as part of the New Milford School District.
New Milford Plant of the Hackensack Water Company The New Milford Plant of the Hackensack Water Company was a water filtration and pumping plant located on Van Buskirk Island, an artificially created island in the Hackensack River, in Oradell, New Jersey. The site was purchased in 1881 by the Hackensack Water Company (now United Water).
New Millennium Concepts New Millennium Concepts is a a reseller of a series of water purification systems products called British Berkefeld (manufactured by Doulton in the UK), with each product named Berkey, a separate brand from British Berkefeld.
New Millennium Homes "New Millennium Homes" is a song by Rage Against the Machine, from their third album The Battle of Los Angeles. The song is about "Spirit of Jackson"; George Jackson was a young black man on death row.
New Mission Systems International New Mission Systems International (NMSI) is an evangelical Christian ministry headquartered in Fort Myers, Florida. They have missionaries deployed to six continents, with different foci such as evangelism and AIDS education.
New Mobile Report Gundam Wing: Endless Duel New Mobile Report Gundam Wing: Endless Duel (In the United States known as Gundam Wing: Endless Duel) was a fighting game released in Japan in 1996. It was the first New Mobile Report Gundam Wing video game, and was not released in the United States
New Mobility Agenda The New Mobility Agenda is an international institution which while virtual and an open collaborative was originally set up by an international working group meeting at the Abbey de Royaumont near [Paris] with the support of the OECD in Paris in 1974 to challenge old ideas and practices in the field of urban transport through a collaborative long term program of information exchange, education and peer support. The Agenda today draws together the experience, expertise and support of more than four thousand individuals and groups world wide in an open collaborative peer network.
New Model Army The New Model Army became the best known of the various Parliamentarian armies in the English Civil War. It comprised professional soldiers led by trained generals, unlike other military forces of the era, which tended to have aristocratic leaders with no guarantee of military training.
New Model Army 3 x CD New Model Army 3 x CD is a box set collection of the New Model Army studio albums The Ghost Of Cain (1986) and Thunder & Consolation (1989) and the live-album Raw Melody Men (1991). It was released in September 2000 on EMI.
New Model Union New Model Trade Unions (NMTU) were a variety of Trade Unions prominent in the 1850s and 1860s in the UK. The term was coined by Sidney and Beatrice Webb in their History of Trade Unionism (1894), although later historians have questioned how far New Model Trade Unions represented a 'new wave' of unionism, as portrayed by the Webbs.
New Monarchs New Monarchs were the rulers of European nations during the 15th century who unified their nations, creating a stable and centralized government. It was the centralized governments created under the New Monarchs in the 15th century that allowed for an era of colonization and conquest in the 16th century, and paved the way for rapid economic growth in Europe.
New Mongrels The New Mongrels are a musical ensemble that includes Amy Ray and Emily Saliers of the Indigo Girls, Gherkin, Michelle Malone, DeDe Vogt, members of Cowboy Envy, members of the Big Fish Ensemble, Gerard McHugh, Caroline Aiken, and members of the Dudley Manlove Quartet, under the leadership of Haynes Brooke. The ensemble is an attempt on Brooke's part to bring back to life the Smythe County Mongrels' Society, a group founded by his great-grandfather in 1866.
New Monkees New Monkees was the name of both a US pop rock music group and the short-lived, syndication-only television show featuring the band. The 20th anniversary of The Monkees in 1986 generated enough publicity that this band was created later that year.
New Monsoon New Monsoon is at its core a rock jam band that is based in the San Francisco, CA area that was founded in 1998 by Penn State classmates Bo Carper and Jeff Miller. They mainly are a west coast band, but have made trips to the east coast, most recently as part of the Big Summer Classic Tour.
New Montreal FilmFest The New Montreal FilmFest resulted from a yearlong dispute between the funding agencies SODEC and Telefilm Canada and the organizers of the Montreal World Film Festival (WFF) — Festival des Films du Monde - Montréal (FFM) — in 2004."Montreal Film Fest Sues Telefilm to Stop Proposed New Festival,", CBC News, Arts & Entertainment, December 1, 2004.
New Moon Shine New Moon Shine is singer-songwriter James Taylor's fourteenth album. After a series of lacklustre releases in the 1980s, the deep and well crafted New Moon Shine, released in 1991, ranks with the best of his production of the 1970s.
New Museum of Contemporary Art The New Museum of Contemporary Art, founded in 1977 by Marcia Tucker, is the only museum in New York City exclusively devoted to presenting contemporary art from around the world. Over the past five years, the New Museum has exhibited artists from Argentina, Brazil, Bulgaria, Cameroon, China, Chile, Colombia, Cuba, Germany, Poland, Spain, South Africa, Turkey, and the United Kingdom among many other countries.
New Museums Site The New Museums Site is a major site of the University of Cambridge, located in the centre of the city, on Pembroke Street and Free School Lane, sandwiched between Corpus Christi College, Pembroke College and the Lion Yard. The smaller and older of two university city-centre science sites (the other is the Downing Site), the New Museums Site houses many of the university's science departments, lecture halls and examination rooms, as well as two museums.
New Music Weekly New Music Weekly is a nationally distributed trade magazine for the radio and music industries. New Music Weekly prides itself in providing the industry with the most accurate and current chart data each and every week.
New Mutants The New Mutants is the name of two defunct Marvel Comics superhero teams, as well as the title of two series featuring those teams. Both were offshoots of the popular X-Men franchise and both featured a team of teenaged, mutant superheroes.
New Mysterianism New Mysterianism is a philosophy proposing that certain problems will never be explained or at the least cannot be explained by the human mind at its current evolutionary stage. The problem most often referred to is the hard problem of consciousness; i.
New National Agenda The New National Agenda (NNA) is a set of policies and objectives devised by the ruling party of Malaysia, UMNO, as a fresh means to continue the Malaysian New Economic Policy under prime minister Abdullah Badawi. A major proponent of the NNA has been Khairy Jamaluddin, the Deputy Head of UMNO Youth and Abdullah's son-in-law.
New National Party (South Africa) The New National Party (NNP) was a South African conservative political party formed when the National Party pulled out of the Government of National Unity with the African National Congress and decided to change its name in the process. The name change was an attempt to distance itself from its apartheid past, and reinvent itself as a moderate, non-racial federal party.
New Nationalist Party This article is about the New Nationalist Party founded in the United Kingdom in the latter part of 2006. For the New National Party of South Africa, see here; for the Fijian party of the same name, see New Nationalist Party (Fiji).
New Nationalist Party (Fiji) The New Nationalist Party is a Fijian political party with a strongly nationalist platform, arguing for the paramountcy of indigenous Fijian interests and of the Christian faith, professed by the great majority of indigenous Fijians but relatively few Indo-Fijians, who comprise some 38 percent of the country's population. The party, a splinter from the Nationalist Vanua Tako Lavo Party, was registered on 1 June 2001 and claims to be the heir to the legacy of the late Sakeasi Butadroka and the Fiji Nationalist Party.
New Naturalist The New Naturalist books are a series published by Collins in the United Kingdom, on a variety of natural history topics relevant to the British Isles. The aim of the series at the start was: "To interest the general reader in the wild life of Britain by recapturing the inquiring spirit of the old naturalists.
New Negro The phrase "New Negro" was in use long before the Harlem Renaissance. It has been used in African American discourses at least since 1895 and the concept(s) associated with the term evolved over the years to become critical to the African American scene during the first three decades of the twentieth century, receiving the most attention during the peak years of the Harlem Renaissance, 1917-1928.
New Netherland New Netherland (Dutch: Nieuw-Nederland, Latin: Novum Belgium or Nova Belgica; see below), 1614–1674, was the territory on the eastern coast of North America in the 17th century which stretched from latitude 38 to 45 degrees North as originally discovered by the Dutch East India Company with the yacht Half Moon under the command of Henry Hudson in 1609 and explored by Adriaen Block and Hendrick Christiaensz from 1611 through 1614. Their map of 1614, presented to the States General, claimed the territory as New Netherland for the Republic of the Seven United Provinces.
New Netherland Project The New Netherland Project was created to translate and publish 17th century Dutch documents from the period of the Dutch colonization of New Netherland. The Project was established in 1974 by the New York State Library and the Holland Society of New York; it has so far published over sixteen volumes of translated documents.
New Norcia, Western Australia New Norcia is a town in Western Australia, 132 km (82 miles) north of Perth, along the Great Northern Highway. Situated in the Shire of Victoria Plains, New Norcia was founded on 1 March, 1847 by the two Spanish Benedictines, Rosendo Salvado and Joseph Serra, and is the only monastic town in Australia.
New Norfolk Eagles The New Norfolk District Football Club is an Australian rules football club currently playing in the Australian Football League Southern Football League (Tasmania), also known as the Southern Football League, in Tasmania, Australia.
New Northwest Broadcasters New Northwest Broadcasters, headquartered in Bellevue, Washington, operates 38 radio stations in seven cities in the Pacific Northwest and Alaska. Its stations are located in Alaska (Anchorage and Fairbanks), Montana (Billings), Oregon (Astoria and Klamath Falls), and Washington (Tri-Cities and Yakima).
New old stock New old stock (abbreviated NOS) refers to merchandise being offered for sale which was manufactured long ago but that has never been used. Such merchandise may not be produced anymore, and the new old stock may represent the only market source of a particular item at the present time.
New Objectivity The New Objectivity, or Neue Sachlichkeit (new dispassion), was an art movement which arose in Germany in the early 1920s as an outgrowth of, and in opposition to, expressionism. The movement essentially ended in 1933 with the fall of the Weimar Republic and the rise of the Nazis to power.
New OHL Open Forum The New OHL Open Forum (known as "The NOOF" by its members) is an online discussion board covering the Ontario Hockey League, a major junior hockey league with teams based in Ontario, Michigan, and Pennsylvania.
New Order (Code Lyoko episode) "New Order" is the twenty-seventh episode of the French animated television series Code Lyoko and the first episode of Season 2. It premiered in France on August 31, 2005 and in the United States on September 19, 2005.
New Order (Indonesia) The New Order (Indonesian: Orde Baru) is the term coined by former Indonesian President Suharto to characterize his regime as he came to power in 1966. Suharto used this term to contrast his rule with that of his predecessor, Sukarno (dubbed dismissively as the "Old Order," or Orde Lama).
New Order (National Socialist) New Order (National Socialist) is the neo-Nazi organization led by Matt Koehl, who took over the the organization until recently known as the American Nazi Party, newly renamed the "National Socialist White People's Party," upon the assassination of George Lincoln Rockwell in 1967. The name "New Order" was adopted in 1983, and reflects Koehl's esoteric Hitlerism: a belief in Adolf Hitler as a god-like being sent to rescue humanity - and specifically the European peoples - from the Jews.
New Order (political system) New Order is the name used to denote the political, economic, and social system which the Nazis hoped to establish in Europe in the 1930s and 1940s. The system would have involved German hegemony of Europe and the annexation of large eastern territories for German settlement.
New Order Amish The New Order Amish are an Amish group that split from the Old Order Amish Church in 1966 in favor of a more liberal church. The beliefs that the group disagreed with were: shunning (ex-communication of members who behave badly or in disaccordance with the Ordnung); only being able to hope for salvation; and not using electricity.
New Oriental New Oriental Education & Technology Group Inc. (Simplified Chinese 新东方教育科技集团, ), more commonly New Oriental (Simplified Chinese 新东方) is a provider of private educational services in China.
New Orlando Magic Arena The New Orlando Magic Arena is a description for a proposed sports venue in Orlando, Florida, United States. It is part of Downtown Master Plan 3, a plan that also involves improvements to the Citrus Bowl and a new performing arts centre.
New Orleans and Gulf Coast Railway The New Orleans and Gulf Coast Railway (NOGC) is a small railroad that operates around New Orleans. It operates about 32 miles of track on the "Westbank" of New Orleans, running from Westwego, LA to Algiers (New Orleans' Westbank suburb), and then down river from Algiers to just below Belle Chasse, LA.
New Orleans Architecture and the rebuilding process The city of New Orleans was devastated by the consequences of Hurricane Katrina. The breaking of the levees due to the storm surge caused an estimated 80% of the city to flood with some neighborhoods getting as much as twenty feet of water.
New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary The New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary is a private, non-profit institution of higher learning associated with the Southern Baptist Convention, located in the city of New Orleans, Louisiana. The Seminary offers Doctoral, Master, Bachelor and Associate degrees.
New Orleans Bowl The New Orleans Bowl is a post-season college football bowl game certified by the NCAA that has been played annually at the Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans, Louisiana since 2001. The game was sponsored by Wyndham Hotels & Resorts from 2002 to 2004 and was officially called the Wyndham New Orleans Bowl.
New Orleans Buccaneers The New Orleans Buccaneers were a charter franchise in the American Basketball Association, originally based in New Orleans, Louisiana. In the league's first year, they qualified for the finals, losing to the Pittsburgh Pipers.
New Orleans class cruiser (1896) The New Orleans-class of protected cruisers of the United States Navy comprised only two ships which both served in the Spanish-American War and World War I. They were launched as gunboats and only later were classified as cruisers.
New Orleans class cruiser (1931) The New Orleans class cruisers were a class of 7 heavy cruisers built for the United States Navy under the Washington Naval Treaty before World War II. They were an improvement on the Northampton class heavy cruisers.
New Orleans Central Business District The Central Business District is an area of New Orleans, Louisiana. It is the equivalent of what many cities call their "downtown," although in New Orleans "downtown" or "down town" is often used to mean portions of the city in the direction of flow of the Mississippi River.
New Orleans Cotton Exchange The Cotton Exchange was established in New Orleans, Louisiana in 1871 on the corner of Carondelet and Gravier Streets. It was conceived and financed by a group of cotton merchants with support from bankers at a time when fully one-third of the entire production of cotton the United States was sent to New Orleans.
New Orleans hip hop New Orleans, Louisiana, usually renowned as a center for musical creativity and influence, has been said to have an underdeveloped hip-hop scene compared to larger cities like New York and Los Angeles. New Orleans Rap, however, distinct from mainstream hip-hop or even other styles of hardcore rap, is yet another creation of the Crescent City that has arguably been more influential nationally than it is often given credit for.
New Orleans Hurricane of 1915 The New Orleans Hurricane of 1915 was an intense Category 4 hurricane that made landfall near Grand Isle, Louisiana during the 1915 Atlantic hurricane season. The hurricane killed 275 people and caused $13 million (1915 US dollars) in damage.
New Orleans in the Civil War New Orleans, Louisiana, was the largest city in the Southern United States during the American Civil War. It provided thousands of troops for the Confederate States Army, as well as several leading officers and generals.
New Orleans Jazz National Historical Park New Orleans Jazz National Historical Park celebrates the origins and evolution of America’s most widely recognized indigenous musical art form, jazz. The National Park Service leases four acres within Louis Armstrong Park, which is located in the Treme neighborhood of New Orleans, Louisiana.
New Orleans Jazz Vipers The New Orleans Jazz Vipers are a seven-piece swing band playing regularly to enthusiastic audiences in New Orleans and all over the world. The band's repertoire comes from the likes of Billie Holiday, Duke Ellington, Louis Armstrong, Dicky Wells, Benny Carter, and Count Basie, including well-known favorites and more obscure treasures.
New Orleans mayoral election, 1958 The New Orleans mayoral election of 1958, held in February, resulted in the re-election of deLesseps Morrison to his fourth consecutive term as mayor of New Orleans. Morrison was able to defeat the Regular Democratic Organization candidate - former State Representative Claude W.
New Orleans mayoral election, 1969-70 The New Orleans mayoral election of 1969-1970 resulted in the election of Moon Landrieu as mayor of New Orleans. This election also saw an unexpectedly strong showing for a Republican candidate; the party had previously had negligible support in the city.
New Orleans mayoral election, 2002 The New Orleans mayoral election of 2002 was an election for Mayor of New Orleans; the primary round of voting was held on February 2, 2002, followed by a runoff on March 2. It resulted in the election of Ray Nagin as mayor.
New Orleans mayoral election, 2006 The first round of the New Orleans mayoral election of 2006 took place on April 22, 2006; a runoff between incumbent Mayor Ray Nagin and Louisiana Lieutenant Governor Mitch Landrieu took place on May 20, resulting in reelection for Mayor Nagin. The Mayor of New Orleans is the top official in New Orleans' mayor-council system of government.
New Orleans mayoral elections The following is a list of elections in Mayor of New Orleans since the end of the Civil War, and a summary of their results. For elections since 1930, only candidates who made it to the runoff are included; for complete results, see the linked articles on specific elections.
New Orleans Museum of Art The New Orleans Museum of Art (often referred to as NOMA) in New Orleans, Louisiana, was established nearly a hundred years ago and is the city's oldest fine arts institution. The museum also includes the Sydney and Walda Besthoff Sculpture Garden, a landscaped 5-acre outdoor site with 50 sculptures set beneath live oaks, pines and magnolias amidst footpaths and lagoons.
New Orleans Musica da Camera The New Orleans Musica da Camera was founded in 1966, by Milton G Scheuermann, Jr, and is the oldest surviving Early Music organisation in the United States. They perform music of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, using historically-informed performance techniques and reproductions of period instruments, and have appeared in concert throughout the Gulf South.
New Orleans Opera Opera has long been part of the musical culture of New Orleans, Louisiana. Operas have regularly been performed in the city since the 1790s, and for the majority of the city's history since the early 19th century, New Orleans has had a resident company regularly performing opera in addition to theaters hosting traveling performers and companies.
New Orleans Protocol The New Orleans Protocol (NOP) was signed in New Orleans, Louisiana, on May 29, 2004. David Duke, then recently released from prison, organized a weekend gathering of the "European Nationalists", in the vein of White nationalism.
New Orleans Public Belt Railroad The New Orleans Public Belt Railroad is a non-profit terminal switching railroad, a commission operated by the State of Louisiana. It connects with six Class I railroads serving the city, and provides switching and haulage service.
New Orleans rhythm and blues The phrase New Orleans rhythm and blues refers to a type of R&B music from New Orleans, Louisiana, that is characterized by extensive use of piano and horn sections, complex rhythms and celebratory lyrics. The lazy, plodding rhythms distinguish this Louisiana musical genre.
New Orleans Records New Orleans Records was a United States-based record label from the 1950s - 1970s that specialized in New Orleans jazz. It was owned and operated by New Orleans, Louisiana record store owner/music writer Orin Blackstone.
New Orleans Rhythm Kings The New Orleans Rhythm Kings (nicknamed NORK) were one of the most influential jazz bands of the early-to-mid 1920s. The band was a combination of New Orleans and Chicago musicians most famous for their residency in Chicago, where they helped shape Chicago Style Jazz and influenced many younger musicians.
New Orleans Saints The New Orleans Saints are a professional American football team based in New Orleans, Louisiana. They are currently champions of the Southern Division of the National Football Conference (NFC) in the National Football League (NFL).
New Orleans Shell Shockers New Orleans Shellshockers are an American soccer team, founded in 2003. The team is a member of the United Soccer Leagues Premier Development League (PDL), the fourth tier of the American Soccer Pyramid, and plays in the Mid-South Division of the Southern Conference against teams from Austin, Baton Rouge, Dallas, El Paso, Jackson and Laredo.
New Orleans Square New Orleans Square is a themed land exclusively at Disneyland, and is not at any other Disney park; however, a similarly themed area can be found within Tokyo Disneyland's Adventureland. It is based on 19th century New Orleans.
New Orleans Storm The New Orleans Storm was a soccer club that competed in the United Soccer Leagues from 1993 to 1999. Based in New Orleans, Louisiana, the club started as the New Orleans Riverboat Gamblers in the D-3 Pro League before moving to the A-League in 1997; they were renamed a year later.
New Orleans Union Passenger Terminal New Orleans Union Passenger Terminal (NOUPT) is the main train station in New Orleans, Louisiana. It is served by Amtrak passenger trains, and played a role in the recovery efforts from Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
New Orleans Voodoo New Orleans Voodoo is a system of folk magic used in New Orleans and surrounding areas of Louisiana, in which objects like roots, gris-gris bags, powders, graveyard dirt, and "poppets" or "voodoo dolls" are employed for magical effect for the purpose of material gain or against an enemy. It is not to be confused with the religion of Vodou.
New Orleans Voodoo Spiritual Temple The New Orleans Voodoo Spiritual Temple was established in New Orleans, Louisiana in May of 1990 by Priest Oswan Chamani and Priestess Miriam Chamani. Over the years the Temple has grown in its knowledge of Voodoo in relation with World Religions, and serves many people throughout America and the World.
New Orleans Wanderers The New Orleans Wanderers was the name under which Lil Hardin recorded with members of Louis Armstrong's Hot Six on a 1926 session for Columbia Records. Armstrong himself was unable to appear since he was under contract to Okeh, although he collaborated with Hardin on three of the four songs.
New Orleans Worst Film Festival The New Orleans Worst Film Festival is a film festival in New Orleans, starting in 1990, encouraging teenagers to purchase tickets and refreshments to benefit charity. This festival shows some of the worst movies ever made.
New Orleans Yacht Club The New Orleans Yacht Club (NOYC) was founded in 1949 and is dedicated to further the sport of yacht racing, marine safety and seamanship. The club is located at West End's Municipal Harbor on the shore of Lake Pontchartrain and is a member of the Gulf Yachting Association.
New Orleans Zephyrs The New Orleans Zephyrs are a minor league baseball team based in New Orleans, Louisiana. The Zephyrs play in the Triple-A Pacific Coast League and were most recently affiliated with the Washington Nationals, from 2005-2006; the other parent clubs since the franchise arrived in New Orleans were the Astros and the Brewers.
New Orleans, Louisiana New Orleans (pronounced New OR-linz in American English; French La Nouvelle-Orléans, pronounced in standard accent ; Spanish Nueva Orleáns) is a major United States port city and historically the largest city in the U.S.
New Otani The New Otani is a chain of hotels, with headquarters in Tokyo, Japan. The main hotel in Tokyo opened in 1964, to coincide with the Tokyo Olympics of that year, and is known for the revolving restaurant atop the hotel, along with the New Otani Art Museum located on its sixth floor.
New Otani Art Museum The New Otani Art Museum (ニューオータニ美術館) is an art museum founded in 1991 and housed on the sixth floor of the Hotel New Otani's Garden Court office building. The Hotel, located in Tokyo's Chiyoda Ward, opened in 1964 to coincide with the Tokyo Olympic Games.
New Oxford American Dictionary The New Oxford American Dictionary (NOAD) is a single-volume dictionary of North American English by the American editors at the Oxford University Press. The latest second edition contains some 250,000 entries and definitions.
New Oxford Book of Carols The New Oxford Book of Carols is a comprehensive anthology of Christmas carols, edited by Hugh Keyte and Andrew Parrott, and intended to supplement if not supersede the original Oxford Book of Carols of 1928. This thoroughly documented text contains notes on sources, histories and variants of carols from a wide variety of sources; it is usable not only as a book for carol singing, but as a reference book as well.
New Oxford Book of English Verse 1250-1950 The New Oxford Book of English Verse 1250–1950 is a poetry anthology edited by Helen Gardner, and published in New York and London in 1972 by the Oxford University Press with ISBN 0-19-812136-9, as a replacement for the Quiller-Couch Oxford Book of English Verse. It was limited to British and Irish poets, mostly (Ezra Pound being allowed a special status).
New paltz middle school New Paltz Middle School is located in the town of New Paltz, NY, Known for academic success. After-school activities range from a variety of sports (football, baseball, basketball, soccer, track, cross country, etc.
New people (Kampuchea) New People were civilian Cambodians who were controlled and exploited by the Khmer Rouge regime in Cambodia from 1975-1979. Generally, anyone who was from an urban area was made a New Person and people from rural areas were made Old People.
New product development In business and engineering, new product development (NPD) is the term used to describe the complete process of bringing a new product or service to market. There are two parallel paths involved in the NPD process : one involves the idea generation, product design, and detail engineering ; the other involves market research and marketing analysis.
New Palace (Potsdam) The New Palace (German: Neues Palais) is a palace situated on the western side of the Sanssouci royal park in Potsdam. The building was begun in 1763, after the end of the Seven Years' War, under Frederick the Great and was completed in 1769.
New Palgrave: A Dictionary of Economics The New Palgrave: A Dictionary of Economics (1987) is a 4-volume reference edited by John Eatwell, Murray Milgate, and Peter Newman. It has 4,100 pages of entries, including 1,300 subject entries and over 655 biographies listed alphabetically.
New Paltz Middle School New Paltz Middle School is located in the town of New Paltz, NY, and known for academic success. After-school activities range from a variety of sports (football, baseball, basketball, soccer, track, cross country, etc.
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