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One Pace Plaza One Pace Plaza, completed in 1969, is the flagship building complex of Pace University in New York City, specifically designed for Pace. It is located directly across from City Hall and adjacent to the Brooklyn Bridge, and houses most of the classrooms, administrative offices, a 2,000-square-foot student union, the 750-seat community theater of the Michael Schimmel Center for the Arts, and an 18-floor high-rise residence hall (known as "Maria's Tower").
One Party Country One Party Country refers to the Republican Party's vision for long term electoral supremacy in the United States through a generation-long effort to develop its political infrastructure, its knowledge of voter motivations, and by appealing to voter demographics that have traditionally leaned to the Democrats (e.g.
One People's Project One Peoples Project is an anti-racist organization founded in 2000 to monitor allegedly racist and far right groups and individuals. Its most prominent members are its founder Daryle Lamont Jenkins and Joshua Hoyt, who joined the group in 2002.
One Per Desk The One Per Desk, or OPD, was an innovative hybrid personal computer/telecommunications terminal based on the hardware of the Sinclair QL. The One Per Desk was built by International Computers Ltd (ICL) and launched in the UK in 1984.
One Piece at a Time "One Piece at a Time" is a humorous country song by Johnny Cash, released in 1976. It tells a story from the point of view of an auto worker who saw Cadillacs roll by day after day on the assembly line, knowing that he would never be able to afford one on his salary.
One Piece media and release information This is a list of all current volumes of the Japanese manga series One Piece, as well as the titles of the chapters contained therein. Chapters are arranged by volume, with their appropriate volume titles and chapters listed underneath.
One Piece side comics One Piece side comics is an umbrella term which applies to a variety of short (less than 5 pages each) manga drawn by Eiichiro Oda and featuring the characters of One Piece, but unrelated to the plot of the series. This is in contrast to the chapter title page mini-arcs, which are part of the main story, and "Romance Dawn", which was a prototype for One Piece.
One Post Office Square One Post Office Square is a 40 floor Modern skyscraper in the Financial District section of Boston, Massachusetts. This 160 meter tall (525 ft) building has approximately 766,000 square feet of Class A office space.
One Power In The Wheel of Time fantasy series by Robert Jordan, the One Power is the force that maintains the continuous motion of the Wheel of Time. It comes from the True Source, and it is separated into two halves: saidin (pronounced 'sah-ih-DIHN'), the male half, and saidar (pronounced 'sah-ih-DAHR'), the female half.
One Prudential Plaza One Prudential Plaza (formerly known as the Prudential Building) is a 44 story structure in Chicago completed in 1955 as the headquarters for Prudential's Mid-America company. At the time, the skyscraper was significant as the first new downtown skyscraper built in Chicago in 21 years (the last such building was the Field Building, now headquarters of LaSalle Bank, completed in 1934).
One Punk Under God One Punk Under God is an original observational documentary that airs on the Sundance Channel. It focuses on the life of Jay Bakker, only son of Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker, fallen evangelical ministers and hosts of The PTL Club.
One quarter One quarter, or One fourth is the irreducible fraction resulting from dividing one by four (ÂĽ) or dividing one half by 4; multiplication by one fourth is equivalent to division by four. The english word "Quarter" derives from the French meaning "4" (quatre) or "ÂĽ" (quatrier).
One rep maximum One rep maximum (one repetition maximum, or 1RM) in weight training, is the maximum amount of weight one can lift in a single repetition for a given exercise. One rep maximum can be used for determining an individual's maximum strength, and is the method for determining the winner in events such as powerlifting and weightlifting competitions.
One room mansion A one room mansion(ワ) is a Japanese apartment style in which there is only one small room (10 m² (109 ft² or 10 ft by 11 ft) in many cases) and usually a compact bathroom. These styles of units are most often rented by single individuals due to their extremely small size which make it hard for more than one person to reside in them.
One Rincon Hill One Rincon Hill or 425 First Street is a residential complex that is currently under construction on the apex of Rincon Hill in San Francisco. The complex, designed by the Chicago architectural firm Solomon, Cordwell, Buenz and Associates, includes townhouses and two highrise condo towers, with the north tower being 49 stories and 541 ft.
One Ring Zero One Ring Zero is a modern music group that melds many genres and sounds to create a unique type of music and is based in the New York City borough of Brooklyn. Centered around Joshua Camp and Michael Hearst the band uses a unique blend of intriguing instruments.
One sheet In music publicity and distribution, a one-sheet or one sheet is exactly what the name implies: One sheet of paper, on which information is provided about the music artist &/or a specific release which is being distributed. One-sheets often accompany a record or CD when it is being shipped to radio stations and music publications (i.
One sheet (film) The term "one sheet" refers to a specific size of advertising created to promote a film in the United States, currently 27 x 40 inches, displayed in a portrait format primarily at cinemas. It is what is commonly referred to as a "movie poster" or "film poster".
One strike you're out One strike, you're out is the colloquial term for a policy adhered to by public housing officials in the United States, which requires tenants living in housing projects or otherwise receiving housing assistance from the federal government to be evicted if they, or any guest or visitor under their more or less direct control, engage in certain types of criminal activity on — or in some cases even off — the premises of said housing. This term is used because no warning or second chance is given to the offending tenant, and is apparently a back-formation of the "three strikes, you're out" concept embodied in the mandatory sentencing laws for repeat criminal offenders that began to be enacted in various American states in the 1990s.
One Settler, One Bullet One Settler, One Bullet was a rallying cry and slogan originated by the Azanian People's Liberation Army (APLA) - the armed wing of the Pan Africanist Congress (PAC) - during the era of apartheid. Although APLA became famous for this wildly popular slogan, the organisation was never able to launch a particularly effective guerilla campaign.
One Song to the Tune of Another "One Song to the Tune of Another" was the first game played on the BBC Radio 4 comedy panel game I'm Sorry I Haven't A Clue and is still almost always played every other episode. It consists of panellists singing the lyrics of one song to the tune of another song, accompanied on the piano.
One Station Unit Training One Station Unit Training, sometimes referred to as One Site Unit Training, is a term used by the United States Army to refer to a training program in which recruits remain with the same unit for both Basic Combat Training (BCT) and Advanced Individual Training (AIT). Immediately following Basic Training graduation, the unit seamlessly transforms from a BCT unit into an AIT unit.
One Step Ahead (Debbie Gibson song) "One Step Ahead" is the fourth single from the 1990 album Anything Is Possible by American singer Debbie Gibson. The version found on the A-side is a different mix to that found on the album and is entitled the "Hot Radio Mix.
One Step Beyond (song) One Step Beyond is a song originally written by a Jamaican ska singer Prince Buster as a b-side for his single "Al Capone". It was made famous by British band Madness that covered it for their debut 1979 album One Step Beyond...
One Step Closer (American Juniors song) "One Step Closer" was the American Juniors' first single, a remake of the 2002 S Club 8 song "One Step Closer". The song was recorded by the ten finalists on the American Juniors television program, not just the five who won.
One Step from Earth One Step from Earth is a collection of science fiction stories written by Harry Harrison and published in 1970. The stories in the collection are tied together by the central theme of teleportation, or matter transportation as the author phrases it.
One Survivor Remembers One Survivor Remembers is a documentary by Kary Antholis in which Holocaust survivor Gerda Weissmann Klein recounts her six-year ordeal as a victim of Nazi cruelty. Rendered in a deceptively simple manner, the film explores the tragedy of Weissmann’s experience in with great intimacy.
One timer A one timer (or one-time) is an ice hockey shot that occurs when a player meets a teammate's pass with an immediate slapshot, without any attempt to control the puck on his stick. An effective one timer requires precise timing on the part of both players involved, especially the shooter.
One Tambon One Product One Tambon One Product (OTOP) was a local entrepreneurialism stimulus program designed by Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra during the 2001-2006 Thai Rak Thai government. The program aimed to support the unique locally made and marketed products of each Thai tambon (village).
One Thing Leads to Another One Thing Leads to Another is a song by new wave rock group The Fixx, from their album Reach the Beach. "One Thing Leads to Another" is the group's best known song, and their most successful single, reaching as high as No.
One Thousand Guineas The One Thousand Guineas Stakes is a Group 1 flat horse race in the United Kingdom for three-year-old thoroughbred fillies run over a distance of 1 mile (1,609 metres) on the Rowley Mile course at Newmarket Racecourse, Newmarket, Suffolk, England in late April / early May. It is one of five United Kingdom Classic Races.
One Thousand Roads to Mecca One Thousand Roads to Mecca: Ten Centuries of Travelers Writing About the Muslim Pilgrimage is a collection of travel journals edited by Michael Wolfe and published in 1999. Covering over 20 accounts made over 10 centuries, this work shows many sides of the Hajj, the Pilgrimage to Mecca required of every able Muslim.
One Times Square One Times Square is the name of the building in Times Square upon which the famous New Year's Times Square Ball drop is performed annually. It was originally built by the New York Times in 1904 as a headquarters for their operations.
One Too Many One Too Many, also known as Killer With a Label, Mixed-Up Women, and The Important Story of Alcoholism, was an exploitation film produced by Kroger Babb in 1950. It told the story of Helen Mason (Ruth Warrick), who is slowly revealed during the course of the film to be an alcoholic, destroying her career as a concert pianist and her family in the process.
One Tree Hill Volume 2 “Music From the WB Television Series One Tree Hill - Volume II: Friends With Benefit” was released on Tuesday, February 7th and a portion of the proceeds has been donated to The National Breast Cancer Foundation.
One True One True is the fictional hegemonic software program that takes control of individual human minds and entire human societies in John Barnes' two Meme Wars novels Candle and The Sky So Big and Black; the novel Kaleidescope Century details the years leading up to its existence. The threat posed by an unknown highly contagious meme of either human or non-human invention has not been much explored in science fiction in large part because imagining such a meme is difficult.
One TV One TV (previously called channel 33 or dubai 33) is Dubai Media Incorporated's 24-hour free-to-air English language entertainment channel available in the Middle East and North Africa, that was launched on December 24, 2004. The channel is based in the city of Dubai, United Arab Emirates, and provides a Western entertainment in an Arabic theme.
One Two Three and Away One, Two, Three and Away (ISBN 0003142183) was a series of books for children written by Sheila McCullagh, illustrated by Ferelith Eccles Williams and published by Collins in the 1980s. Characters include: Roger Red Hat, Billy Blue Hat, twins Jonny and Jennifer Yellow Hat and Percy Green Hat.
One Unit To diminish the differences between the two regions, the government of Pakistan decided to reorganise the country as two distinct provinces under the One Unit policy announced by Prime Minister Chaudhry Muhammad Ali on 22nd November, 1954.
One voice policy One voice policy means the attempt of an institution to communicate with one voice in different channels. In theory, all communication messages and instruments are to be designed as if they came from a single communicator.
One vote one value In Australia, one vote one value is a legislative principle of democracy whereby each electorate has the same population within a specified percentage of tolerance. In the case of the Commonwealth, the maximum tolerance for the House of Representatives is 10% The electoral legislation of The Commonwealth for the House of Representatives] and all states follows the principle of one vote one value with some exceptions.
One Vision "One Vision" is a song written and recorded by the band Queen, first released as a single in 1985 and then included on their 1986 album A Kind of Magic. Even though it was on this album, it was not featured in the movie Highlander, but instead it was featured in the movie Iron Eagle.
One way ride A one way ride, also known by the phrase "take for a ride", is a slang term used by the underworld as an execution method. The usual plan is for the victim, who is lured or forced into a car, to be driven to a remote location where they are killed (either on route or after their arrival) where their bodies are dumped.
One Wall Centre The Sheraton Wall Centre is the tallest building in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada as of 2005. The building is located at a high point on the downtown peninsula of Vancouver and is addressed as 1088 Burrard Street.
One Way Street Regional Festivals One Way Street Regional Festivals are puppetry festivals sponsored by the Denver-based puppet supplier, One Way Street, Inc. (OWS) These weekend conferences take place annually in many cities across the United States and feature workshops, performances, competitions, demonstrations, and resources for puppeteers, puppet teams, team leaders, Sunday school teachers, and others involved in Christian puppetry.
One Week At A Time Hosted by Mark Franklin, Luke Mather & Lynden McGregor, One Week At A Time Runs from 12pm - 6am Sunday mornings on SEN 1116. The show features segments such as "The Percentage Game", "Word Association" and "Fire Up Franka" as well as a world football wrap from producer Dave Ciampa.
One Who Walks With the Stars One Who Walks With the Stars was an Oglala Sioux woman who was the wife of Crow Dog, a Brule Sioux warrior. She killed two soldiers by slashing and clubbing them in the water of the river bank during the Battle of Little Big Horn.
One Wild Night Live 1985-2001 Bon Jovi's only live album, One Wild Night Live 1985-2001 was released in May of 2001. The album includes live covers of Neil Young's "Rockin' in the Free World" and The Boomtown Rats' "I Don't Like Mondays".
One Wild Oat One Wild Oat is a 1951 British film with a notable appearance by a pre-stardom Audrey Hepburn as an extra. Reportedly her role in this film -- she plays a hotel desk clerk -- was originally much larger but was mostly edited out.
One Wish (Roxette song) "One Wish," written by Per Gessle, is the first single released from Swedish pop duo Roxette's 2006 album "Roxette Hits", the first release from Roxette since 2003. Per Gessle describes the song as an uptempo duet.
One World (album) One World is the 2005 debut album by UK based dance group Uniting Nations. Their first single off the album, "Out of Touch" - a Hall & Oates cover - became a hit in the UK peaking at #7 on the charts.
One World By Night OWBN or One World By Night is an international network of linked Live Action Role Playing chapters. Using the original 'World of Darkness' setting published by White Wolf Game Studio, the network boasts over 70 networked games across 5 countries.
One World Film Festival One World is a human rights' documentary film festival held annually in Prague (Czech Republic). It is organized by the Czech humanitarian organization People in Need, and over seven days it features about 130 documentary films from almost 40 countries.
One World Week One World Week is the World’s Largest Student-run International Event hosted annually at The University of Warwick. The week consists of a variety of interactive celebrations in the four elements of Forum, Festival, Arts and Sports.
One Worldwide Plaza Built in 1989, One Worldwide Plaza is part of a three-building, mixed-use commercial and residential complex located in the New York City borough of Manhattan, known collectively as Worldwide Plaza. One Worldwide Plaza is a commercial office tower, while Two Worldwide Plaza and Three Worldwide Plaza are condominum residential buildings to the west of the office tower.
One Year Later "One Year Later" is a 2006 event running through the DC Universe. As the title suggests, it involves a narrative jump exactly one year into the future of the DC Comics Universe following the events of the Infinite Crisis event, to explore major changes within the continuities of the many different comic books within the DC Comics range.
One Zero (Acoustic) One Zero (Acoustic) (2007) is an album from Derek Webb containing remixed acoustic tracks of ten previously released songs. It was released the same day as One Zero (Remix), containing the same ten tracks remixed differently.
One Zero (Remix) One Zero (Remix) (2007) is an album from Derek Webb containing tracks of ten previously released Derek Webb songs remixed by engineer Will Hunt. It was released the same day as One Zero (Acoustic), containing the same ten tracks remixed differently.
One's Company One's Company (full title: One's Company: A Journey to China) is a book by Peter Fleming describing his travels through Japanese-occupied Manchuria and his journey south through China skirting the communist controlled regions of the Jiangxi Soviet.
One-armed router A Stub router or One-armed router is a router that routes traffic between virtual local area networks. It has only a single Ethernet NIC that is part of two or more Virtual LANs [VLAN], enabling them to be joined.
One-bar facemask The one-bar facemask is a model of facemask for use with football helmets which was one of the earliest facemasks available. It has been illegal in the NFL since 2004, but a grandfather clause allows players who wore the mask prior to 2004 to continue to do so for the remainder of their careers.
One-day International cricket hat-tricks This is a list of all hat-tricks in One-day International cricket; that is, the occasions when a bowler has taken three wickets in consecutive deliveries in an One-day International (ODI) cricket match, dismissing three different batsmen with three consecutive balls bowled. A hat-trick is a relatively rare event: only 23 hat-tricks have been taken in over 2,400 ODIs in the 25 years since the first ODI, between Australia and England on 5 January 1971.
One-design One-design There are two primary methods of competition in sailboat racing, one-design (also known as Spec series) and handicap. One design refers to a racing class that consists of just one model or design of boat or vehicle.
One-drop theory The one-drop theory (or one-drop rule) is a historical colloquial term for the standard, found throughout the United States of America, that holds that a person with even a tiny portion ("one drop of blood") of non-white ancestry should be classified as non-white, especially for the purposes of racial profiling and laws forbidding interracial marriage.
One-Day Internationals in England in 2005 There are thirteen One-day Internationals scheduled to be played in England in 2005 - ten in the NatWest Series between England, Bangladesh and Australia, and three between England and Australia in the NatWest Challenge immediately following the Series.
One-electron reduction A one-electron reduction in organic chemistry involves the transfer of an electron from a metal to an organic substrate. It serves to differentiate between true organic reductions and other reductions such as hydride transfer reactions that actually involve two-electron species.
One-eyed royals The phrase one-eyed royals is poker jargon referring to the Jack of Spades, Jack of Hearts and King of Diamonds. The terminology results from the depiction of the royal on the card being in profile, resulting in only one eye being visible.
One-Eye, Two-Eyes, and Three-Eyes One-Eye, Two-Eyes, and Three-Eyes is a German fairy tale collected by the Brothers Grimm, tale number 130. Andrew Lang included it, as "Little One-eye, Little Two-eyes, and Little Three-eyes", in The Green Fairy Book.
One-form A one-form, also called a covector, is a linear function which maps each vector in a vector space to a real number, such that the mapping is invariant with respect to coordinate transformations of the vector space.
One-game playoff A one-game playoff or pennant playoff is a tiebreaker in certain American professional sports, to determine which of two teams, tied in the final standings, will qualify for a post-season tournament. Such a playoff is either a single game or a short series of games (such as best-2-of-3).
One-hit wonders in Canada A one-hit wonder is a Top 40 phenomenon: the combination of artist and song that scores big in the music industry with one hit, but is unable to repeat the achievement with another hit. The term can refer to the artist, the song, or both together.
One-hit wonders in the UK A One-hit wonder is a Top 40 phenomenon, the combination of artist and song that scores big in the music industry with one hit, but is unable to repeat the achievement with another Top 40 hit. The term can refer to the artist, the song, or both together.
One-hit wonders in the United States A one-hit wonder is a Top-40 phenomenon: the combination of artist and song that scores big in the music industry with one smash hit, but is unable to repeat the achievement with another hit. The term can refer to the artist, the song, or both together.
One-horse shay The one-horse shay is a light, covered two-wheeled carriage for two persons, drawn by a single horse. It is the American adaptation, originating in Union, Maine of the French chaise, and is also known as a whisky as its owners tended to whisk about doing errands.
One-hot In digital circuits, one-hot refers to a group of bits among which the legal combinations of values are only those with a single high (1) bit and all the others low (0). For example, the output of a decoder is usually a one-hot code, and sometimes the state of a state machine is represented by a one-hot code.
One-hour Thanksgiving dinner A "one-hour Thanksgiving dinner" is the practice of preparing a complete Thanksgiving dinner in one hour, assuming the turkey breast is thawed. In contrast, a traditional Thanksgiving dinner for a small family or group of 4-8 people takes many hours to prepare and may involve some preparation the day before.
One-China policy The One-China policy (Traditional Chinese: 一個中國; Simplified Chinese: 一个中国; pinyin: yī gè Zhōngguó) is the principle that there is one China and that mainland China, Tibet, Hong Kong, Macau, Xinjiang and Taiwan are all part of that China. This acknowledgement is required for all countries seeking diplomatic relations with the People's Republic of China (PRC).
One-in-three 3SAT One-in-three 3SAT is a variant of 3SAT where the input instance is the same, but the question is to determine whether there exists a satisfying assignment so that exactly one literal in each clause is set to 1 (instead of at least one literal, as in ordinary 3-SAT).
One-light A one-light workprint is a cinematographic term used to describe a timed workprint made using a single setting of the three lights (red, green and blue) used to make a colour film print. Since a fully timed print requires the presence of a skilled person called a colour timer (US) or film grader (UK), a one-light print is more economical for printing dailies (positive) from rushes (negative).
One-line fix In computer programming jargon, the term one-line fix is used—often sarcastically—to describe a change to a computer program that is thought to be trivial or insignificant. Such a change often results in a bigger problem, like a system crash.
One-loop Feynman diagram In physics, a one-loop Feynman diagram is a connected Feynman diagram with only one cycle (unicyclic). Such a diagram can be obtained from a tree diagram by adding an edge connecting two internal vertices (of course, this is only possible in general if we ignore the vertex matching rules).
One-man band A one-man band is a musician who plays a number of musical instruments simultaneously. Stereotypically, these include a number of wind instruments strapped around the neck, a large bass drum mounted on the musician's back, cymbals between the knees, a banjo, ukulele or guitar held in the hands, and a harmonica mounted on wire framing (known as a 'harmonica rack') just below the mouth.
One-Man Army Corps One-Man Army Corps (OMAC) was a superhero comic book created by Jack Kirby and published by DC Comics. Set in the near future ("the world that's coming"), OMAC was a corporate nobody named Buddy Blank who was changed by an A.
One-Mile Telescope The 'One-Mile Telescope' at the Mullard Radio Astronomy Observatory (MRAO) was completed by the Radio Astronomy Group of Cambridge University in 1964. It is an array of radio telescopes (2 fixed and 1 moveable, fully steerable 60-ft-diameter paraboloids operating simultaneously at 1420 and 408 MHz) designed to perform aperture synthesis interferometry.
One-night stand A one-night stand is a single sexual encounter between individuals, where at least one of the parties has no immediate intention or expectation of establishing a longer-term sexual or romantic relationship. The individuals participating in a one-night stand typically have not known each other long and have had minimal time to get to know each other before engaging in sexual activity.
One-off housing One-off housing is a term used in The Republic of Ireland to refer to the building of individual rural houses, outside of towns and villages. The term is used to contrast with housing developments where multiple units are constructed as part of a housing estate or city street.
One-pass algorithm In computing, a one-pass algorithm is one which reads its input exactly once, in order, without unbounded buffering. A one-pass algorithm generally requires O(n) (see 'big O' notation) time and less than O(n) storage (typically O(1)), where n is the size of the input.
One-pot masala The one-pot masala (aka, "modular curry") method is a method used in many Indian restaurants and take-aways for fast and efficient preparation of curry. The ease of its usage is generally responsible for the proliferation of relatively cheap restaurants of this type.
One-pot synthesis In chemistry a one-pot synthesis is a strategy to improve the efficiency of a chemical reaction whereby a reactant is subjected to successive chemical reactions in just one reactor. This is much desired by chemists because avoiding a lengthy separation process and purification of the intermediate chemical compounds would save time and resources while increasing chemical yield.
One-Person (or Solo) Librarianship The founder of the One-Person Library movement, Guy St. Clair, librarian at the University Club of New York City, defined the One-Person Library as “one is which all the work is done by the [single] librarian” (1976).
One-room school One-room schools were commonplace throughout rural portions of various countries including the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, United Kingdom and Ireland in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. In most rural (country) and small town schools, all of the students met in a single room.
One-shot (comics) In the comic industry, the term one-shot is used to describe a pilot comic or stand-alone story only designed to last one issue. These single issues are usually emblazoned with a "#1", despite there being no following issues.
One-spot puller The one-spot puller (in New Zealand) or brown puller (in Australia), Chromis hypsilepis, is a damselfish of the genus Chromis, found off south east Australia and between North Cape and East Cape of the North Island of New Zealand to depths of about 60 m, off rocky coasts. Its length is between 15 and 20 cm.
One-time pad In cryptography, the one-time pad (OTP) is an encryption algorithm where the plaintext is combined with a random key or "pad" that is as long as the plaintext and used only once. A modular addition (for example XOR) is used to combine the plaintext with the pad.
One-time password The purpose of a one-time password (OTP) is to make it more difficult to gain unauthorized access to restricted resources, like a computer account. Traditionally static passwords can more easily be accessed by an unauthorized intruder given enough attempts and time.
One-to-one (communication) One-to-one in communication is the act of an individual communicating with an other. In Internet terms this can be done by e-mail but the most typical one-to-one application in the Internet is instant messaging as it does not consider many-to-many communication such as a chat room as an essential part of its scope.
One-to-One Institute One-to-One Institute is a national, non-profit organization that grew out of the Michigan Freedom to Learn (FTL) program. One-to-One Institute helps states and school districts improve student achievement and engagement through one-to-one learning programs.
One-Tonne Challenge The One-Tonne Challenge was a challenge presented by the Government of Canada in March 2004 for Canadians to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions by one tonne each year. The figure represents 20% of total greenhouse gas output by Canadians and aims to help the country reach its Kyoto Protocol emission reduction targets.
One-Trick Pony One Trick Pony is a 1980 movie starring Paul Simon, it also has a partial soundtrack album of the same name. Simon plays Jonah, a once-popular rock star who has not had a hit in 10 years, and who now opens for punk rock bands.
One-way deck A one-way deck is a deck of playing cards where the back of the cards has a pattern which can be oriented to have a "top" and "bottom". Magicians and card sharps can use the orientations of cards in one-way decks to encode information that allows them to perform card tricks.
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