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Thames & Hudson Thames & Hudson (also Thames and Hudson and sometimes T&H for brevity) are a publisher, especially of art and illustrated books, founded in 1949 by Walter and Eva Neurath. The name was chosen after the River Thames (London) and the Hudson River (New York), spanning both sides of the Atlantic.
Thames and Medway Canal The Thames and Medway Canal is a disused canal in Kent, south east England, also known as the Gravesend and Rochester Canal. It was originally some 11 km (seven miles) long and cut across the neck of the Hoo peninsula, linking the River Thames at Gravesend with the River Medway at Strood.
Thames A Class Rater (scow) The Thames A Class Rater is both a historic and modern specialist sailing craft designed for the particular conditions at Thames Sailing Club, in Surbiton in the United Kingdom. The rulesRules of the The Thames "A" Rater Association refer to the craft as a yacht.
Thames A.F.C. Thames Association Football Club were a football club from East London, England, who briefly played in the Football League between 1930 and 1932. Initially known as Thames Association when founded, they dropped the "Association" upon joining the Football League to become plain Thames.
Thames Barrier Park The Thames Barrier Park is a 22 acre park in London's docklands, named after its location on the north side of the River Thames next to the Thames Barrier. It is intended to aid the regeneration of the area by creating an attractive public space alongside residential and commercial developments.
Thames Centre, Ontario The municipality of Thames Centre, Ontario, Canada was formed on January 1, 2001 when the townships of West Nissouri and North Dorchester were amalgamated; despite its official name, it technically remains a township.
Thames Clipper Thames Clipper is a water-bus service operating in London on the River Thames. The company offers commuter services between eastern and central London, as well as tourist services under licence from London River Services.
Thames Conservancy The Thames Conservancy was a historical body responsible for the management of the River Thames in England. It was founded in 1857 and, although the length of the river it was responsible for varied over time, at the maximum extent it controlled the river from Cricklade in Wiltshire to the sea at Yantlet Creek on the Isle of Grain.
Thames Embankment The Thames Embankment is a major feat of 19th century civil engineering in central London. Designed by Sir Joseph Bazalgette, it incorporates the main low level interceptory sewer from west London, over which a wide road and riverside walkway were also constructed, as well as a retaining wall along the north side of the River Thames.
Thames Gateway The Thames Gateway is an area of land stretching 40 miles (60 km) eastwards from East London on both sides of the River Thames and the Thames Estuary. The area, which includes much brownfield land, has been designated a national priority for urban regeneration.
Thames Hare and Hounds Thames Hare and Hounds is the oldest cross-country running club in the world, based on the Roehampton end of Wimbledon Common, adjacent to Richmond Park, and draws runners from across south-west London. Both the mens' and womens' teams compete in the Surrey Cross Country League, division one; the club also fields teams in road races and relays.
Thames House Thames House is an office development in Millbank, London on the bank of the River Thames adjacent to Lambeth Bridge. It has served as the headquarters of the British Security Service , commonly known as MI5, since December 1994.
Thames Navigation Commission The Thames Navigation Commission used to manage the River Thames in southern England. In particular, they were responsible for installing or renovating many of the locks on the river in the 18th and early 19th centuries.
Thames Rowing Club Thames Rowing Club is based on the River Thames in Putney, London, United Kingdom and was founded in 1860. The club's colours are red, white and black in stripes, the white stripe lying between the red and black and being of half their width.
Thames skiff A Thames skiff is a traditional River Thames wooden rowing boat with an easily erectable canvas cover.The cover can be used for shelter from the sun and rain during the day and at night converts the entire craft into a cosy floating tent.
Thames Trader The Thames Trader was a range of trucks manufactured by the British arm of the Ford Motor Company built between 1957 and 1965. The distinctive cab design, which sets it apart from all other British commercial vehicles, was a forward-control (or semi-forward control) design and the Thames Trader model covered a much wider weight range than the existing normal control ET Thames model or the earlier forward control 7V model.
Thames Trains Thames Trains was a British railway company franchised (from September 1996, following the privatisation of British Rail, until 31 March 2004) to run regional and suburban trains from London Paddington station to destinations in the home counties west of London, to Worcester, Hereford and Stratford-upon-Avon, and the Reading to Gatwick Airport service.
Thames Transit Thames Transit was a bus and coach company which operated in the Oxford area. As well as running a number of local services, they also ran a regular service to London (via the M40 motorway) called the Oxford Tube.
Thames Tunnel The Thames Tunnel was the world's first underwater tunnel, built beneath the River Thames in London. 35 feet wide (11m), 20 feet (6m) high and 1,300 feet (396m) long, it runs between Rotherhithe and Wapping at a depth of 75 feet (23m) below the river's surface at high tide.
Thames Valley Cricket League The Thames Valley Cricket League is a recreational cricket league overing the counties of Hampshire, Surrey, Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Hertfordshire and Oxfordshire in the Thames Valley area of Southern England. It plays a key part in theECB Premier League pyramid with promotion/relegation with Division 2(West) of the Home Counties Premier Cricket League.
Thames Valley District School Board The Thames Valley District School Board (TVDSB) is a public school board in southwestern Ontario. It was created on January 1, 1998 by the amalgamation of the Elgin County Board of Education, The Board of Education for the City of London, Middlesex County Board of Education, and Oxford County Board of Education.
Thames Valley Harriers Thames Valley Harriers is a well-known athletics club based in West London, England. It was founded in 1887 and is based at the Linford Christie Stadium, which is named after one of its most famous athletes, Olympic 100 metres gold medallist Linford Christie.
Thames Valley Police Museum The Thames Valley Police Museum is located at the White House, Sulhamstead in Berkshire, England. The site was formerly the headquarters of the Berkshire Constabulary, and is now the training centre for the Thames Valley Police.
Thames Valley Tigers Thames Valley Tigers was a British basketball team competing in the British Basketball League from 1987 to 2005, when funding was ceased and the franchise folded. Based in Bracknell, Berkshire, the team's fans setup a new team to replace the Tigers and just a month later the Guildford Heat was born.
Thames Valley University Students' Union The Thames Valley University Students' Union' (also known as TVUSU) is the recognised student organisation of the Thames Valley University, in England. The Students' Union represents the 47,000 students at all its sites, from Ealing and Slough to the newest campuses in Reading.
Thames Valley, New Zealand The Thames Valley is a district in the North Island of New Zealand. It is located along the banks of the Waihou River, formerly known as the Thames River, to the south of the Firth of Thames, southeast of Auckland.
Thames Water Thames Water, known originally as the Thames Water Authority and after privatisation as Thames Water Utilities Limited, is the utility responsible for water supply and waste water treatment in parts of Greater London, Surrey and the Thames Valley. Originally it was also responsible for managing the rivers and water catchments of the area, and was the navigation authority of the non-tidal River Thames, but these responsibilities ceased with privatisation.
Thames Water Ring Main The Thames Water Ring Main (TWRM) — formerly known as the London Water Ring Main (LWRM) — is an approximately 80km system of mostly 2.54m (100") concrete pipelines used to transfer potable water from water treatment works (WTWs) in the Thames and River Lee catchments to distribution within London.
Thames-Coromandel District The Thames-Coromandel District Council in the North Island of New Zealand is seated in the town of Thames. It is located in the region around the Firth of Thames and Coromandel Peninsula, to the southeast of Auckland.
Thameslink Thameslink is a fifty-station line in the British railway system running 225 km (140 miles) north to south across London from Bedford to Brighton through Snow Hill tunnel. It is a significant commuter route and serves the airports at London Gatwick and London Luton.
Thameslink (train operating company) Thameslink was a train operating company in the United Kingdom, run by Govia (a joint venture between Go-Ahead Group and Keolis — previously Via-GTI, renamed following its acquisition by SNCF). It operated the London commuter railway line known by the same name.
Thameslink Programme The Thameslink Programme, formerly known as Thameslink 2000, is a £3.5 billion major project to expand the Thameslink network from 51 to 172 stations, spreading northwards to Bedford, Peterborough, Cambridge and King's Lynn and southwards to Guildford, Eastbourne, Horsham, Hove to Littlehampton, East Grinstead, Ashford, Dartford.
Thamesville, Ontario Thamesville is a small town located at the old junction of Highways 2 and 21, now local roads and a road between Chatham and London in Ontario, Canada. Its name comes from the Thames River that flows nearby and the suffix -ville.
Thamil Isai Kalaamanram Thamil Isai Kalaamanram (TIKM) is a non-profit organization dedicated to promoting classical Carnatic music and Bharathanatyam dance in Ontario, Canada, headquartered in Toronto. Founded in 1992, this Toronto-based organization has grown to become the widely-accepted conservatory of South Indian music and dance, servicing over 160 teachers in Canada.
Thamir Ghadhban Thamir Ghadhban is an Iraqi bureaucrat and politician, specialising in the oil industry. After the war in 2003 he became Chief Executive Officer of the Ministry of Oil, and in mid of the following year he served as Interim Oil Minister.
Thamirabarani River The Thamirabarani River (also spelled Tamaraparani) originate from a peak in hills of the Western Ghats above Papanasam in the Ambasamudram taluk and flows through the Tirunelveli district of the Tamil Nadu state of southern India.
Thammarak Isaragura na Ayuthaya Thammarak Isarangkura na Ayuthaya (Thai:ธรรมรักษ์ อิศรางกูร ณ อยุธยา) is a former Thai military officer, Member of Parliament, co-founder of the Thai Rak Thai party, and former Defence Minister. He was deposed in the 2006 Thailand coup and is reportedly under arrest by the Council for Democratic Reform.
Thammasat University Thammasat University (), formerly known as the University of Moral and Political Science (), is the second oldest university in Thailand and is one of the most prestigious universities in the country. The University was established on June 27, 1934, and initially offered four major fields of study: law, commerce and accountancy, politics, and economics.
Thammasat University College of Innovative Education College of Innovative Education (Thai: วิทยาลัยนวัตกรรมอุดมศึกษา) is a graduate school in Thammasat University, Thailand. The college was established in January 30, 1995.
Thammayut Nikaya Thammayut Nikaya (Pali), literally "Those adhering strictly to the monastic discipline" is an order of Theravada Buddhist monks in Thailand. It was founded in the 19th century by King Mongkut, the son of King Rama II.
Thammuz In demonology Thammuz is a demon of low category, considered inventor of the Inquisition, fire guns, artillery, and the one that stimulates men to torture other people. Some treatises on demonology say that he is the ambassador of Hell to Spain.
Thamnophis gigas Giant Garter Snake, Thamnophis gigas (Fitch, 1940) The largest of garter snakes, it is endemic to the Central Valley wetlands of California. Destruction of wetland habitat has been so widespread that this species is listed as threatened by the state and federal governments.
Thamnophis proximus rubrilineatus The Redstripe Ribbon Snake (Thamnophis proximus rubrilineatus) is a species of garter snake found in the United States, in central Texas. It is semi-aquatic, spending most of its time on the edge of permanent bodies of water: Swamps, ponds, lakes, or slow moving streams.
Thamnophis sauritus septentrionalis The Northern Ribbon Snake (Thamnophis sauritus septentrionalis) is a species of garter snake. It is one of four subspecies of the eastern ribbon snake (Thamnophis sauritus) and occurs in the United States and Canada in southern Maine, southern Ontario, Michigan, New York, Nova Scotia, and northern Ohio and Indiana.
Thamos, König in Ägypten Thamos, König in Ägypten (Thamos, King of Egypt, or King Thamos, in English) is a play by Tobias Philipp, baron von Gebler, for which, between 1773 and 1780, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart wrote incidental music, K. 345/336a, of an operatic character.
Thampan Thampan is the name of Kshatriya clan from the state of Kerala in India. Unlike the common belief, Thampans are not members of the Nair community but included as members of the small caste group known as the Samanta Kshatriyas.
Thampi The Thampis are the sons of the Maharajahs (Kings) born of Nair women. Since the Varma kings or Maharajahs of South Kerala (Travancore) also belong to the Warrior race of the Nairs, they followed the matrilineal system of inheritance.
Thamsanga Mnyele Thamsanga (Thami) Mnyele (sometimes spelled Thamsanqa) (1948 - June 14 1985) was a South African artist associated with the anti-apartheid politics of the African National Congress and the Black Consciousness Movement. His artistic career took off in the 1970s when he produced works dealing with the emotional and human consequences of oppression.
Thamsanqa Dube Thamsanqa Dube is, as of 2006, the heavyweight boxing champion of Zimbabwe. In November 2003 in Bulawayo, Dube beat Arigoma Chiponda with a technical knockout taking the heavyweight national championship belt.
Thamud The Thamud (Arabic: ثمود) were an early Arabian people. Their name is mentioned in Assyrian annals (Tamudi), in a Greek temple inscription from the northwest Hijaz of 169 AD, in a 5th-century Byzantine source, and in Old North Arabian graffiti around Tayma, as well as (arguably) an Eblaite tablet; from these sources, it seems that the Thamud were a tribe living somewhere between Mecca and Tayma.
Thamuz Thamuz is a fictional character and the master of tortures in Hell who has taken it upon himself to discover the secrets that Al Simmons has hidden within his soul. After his defeat by The Disciple, Simmons found himself a prisoner of Thamuz in Hell.
ThaMuseMeant ThaMuseMeant is a four-piece band comprised as of 2007 of Aimee Curl (upright bass, vocals), Nathan Moore (guitar, harmonica, vocals, chief songwriter), Enion Pelta-Tiller (violin), and David Tiller (mandolin, banjo, octave mandolin, bouzouki, Eight string guitar). Prior to 2001 the band contained Jeff Sussman on percussion instead of Enion Pelta-Tiller on violin.
Than Shwe Senior General Than Shwe (Burmese: သန္‌​းေရ္ဝ္ဟ; ; born February 2, 1933) is the ruler of Myanmar (Burma), serving as Commander-in-Chief of the Tatmadaw and chairman of the State Peace and Development Council since April 23 1992. SPDC is the new name of State Law and Order Restoration Council (SLORC), established in 1988.
Thanasis Lightbridge Thanasis Lightbridge is a Greek keyboard player/composer best known as the founder of electronica art metal band Dol Ammad and independent record label Electronicartmetal Records. He currently resides in Thessaloniki, Greece where he maintains a recording studio nicknamed "Theeta".
Thanatology Thanatology is the academic, and often scientific, study of death among human beings. It investigates the circumstances surrounding a person's death, the grief experienced by the deceased's loved ones, and larger social attitudes towards death such as ritual and memorialization.
Thanatopian Psychology Thanatopian psychology is a name that has been coined to describe a movement in depth psychology that is heavily based on the works of Dr. Ernest Becker particularly from his Pulitzer Prize winning book called The Denial of Death.
Thanatopsis Thanatopsis, written by William Cullen Bryant at the age of 17, is considered to be a masterpiece of American poetry. The title is from the Greek thanatos ("death") and the suffix -opsis (literally, "sight"); it has often been translated as "Meditation upon Death.
Thanatos In Greek mythology, Thanatos (θάνατος, "death") was the personification of death (Roman equivalent: Mors), and a minor figure in Greek mythology. Thanatos was a son of Nyx (Night) and Erebus and twin of Hypnos (Sleep).
Thanatos (Dutch band) With a history dating back to 1984, Thanatos is the Netherlands' oldest death metal band. After encountering a constant plague of problems with touring, distribution and promotion, Thanatos folded after only two albums in 1993.
Thandi Tshabalala Thandi Tshabalala (born 19 November 1984, Welkom, Free State, South Africa) is a South African cricketer who plays first class cricket for the Eagles as a specialist off spinner. He was first called up to the South African team in February 2006, as he made the squad for their Twenty20 International against Australia, but did not play.
Thane Thane (Marathi: ठाणे) (formerly Thana) is a city in Maharashtra, India, part of the Mumbai Conurbation, northeast of Mumbai at the head of the Thane Creek. It is the administrative headquarters of Thane District.
Thane Baker Walter Thane Baker (born October 4, 1931 in Elkhart, Kansas) is a former American athlete and winner of the gold medal in the 4x100 m relay at the 1956 Summer Olympics in Melbourne, Australia, with a new world record of 39.5 seconds.
Thane Maynard Thane Maynard is a wildlife expert. In addition to being the Vice President of the Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Garden, he is an author and the host of The 90-Second Naturalist, a 1½-minute radio program played on WGUC.
Thanesar Thanesar (Hindi: थानेसर) is an old and historic town on the banks of the Ghaggar river in Haryana state of northern India. It is located in Kurukshetra District, approximately 160 km northwest of Delhi.
Thanet Bombardiers The Thanet Bombardiers Australian Rules Football Club is Kent's first and only Australian Rules Football Club. The club will be playing in the 2006 BARFL Regional League for the first time, run by Club Captain Joe Rixon.
Thang global Thang Global is a massively multiplayer online RPG (role playing game). with servers based in malaysia and the untied states this game has thousands of players the game is based on a realistically animated fantasy setting with 3 classes of character play and a wide range of weapons, armor, and skills.
Thang Online Thang Online is a client-based MMORPG created by the Korean company Ubiport and currently free to play. Still under development, it already boasts a wide range of abilities, armour and three different characters to choose from.
Thangadh Thangadh is an industrial town and a municipality located southwest of Surendranagar in Surendranagar district in the Indian state of Gujarat.A large number of small-scale Ceramic manufacturing units are located around Thangadh.
Thangal Kunju Musaliar College of Engineering Thangal Kunju Musaliar College of Engineering, founded in 1958, is the first government aided engineering institution in the private sector in the state of Kerala, India. The college is located at Kilikolloor, six kilometers away from town of Kollam in southern Kerala.
Thangata Thangata is the Congolese term for work without compensation. It was used during the Belgian colonization of the Congo when the Belgian colonists would frequently order native Congolese to do menial labor for no material gain.
Thangkhangin Ngaihte As of June 1, 2005, Thangkhangin Ngaihte is the president of the Lok Janshakti Party (LJP) Manipur State Committee. He was nominated (May 11, 2005) by LJP president Ram Vilas Paswan to replace Albert Gengoukhup Mate, the former State Committee president, who was killed in the prior month.
Thanhouser Company The Thanhouser Company (later the Thanhouser Film Corporation) was a motion picture studio founded in New Rochelle, New York in 1909 by Edwin Thanhouser (November 11, 1865 to March 21, 1956), Gertrude Thanhouser (April 23, 1882 to May 29, 1951) and Lloyd Lonergan (March 3, 1870, to April 6, 1937). In the spring of 1912 The Thanhousers and Lonergan sold their interest in the company to the Mutual Film Corporation and remained involved in films released through early 1913.
Thanissaro Bhikkhu Thanissaro Bhikkhu (Geoffrey DeGraff) (1949 - ) is an American Buddhist monk of the Thai forest kammatthana tradition. After graduating from Oberlin College in 1971 with a degree in European Intellectual History, he travelled to Thailand, where he studied meditation under Ajaan Fuang Jotiko, himself a student of the late Ajaan Lee.
Thanjavur Thanjavur (தஞ்சாவூர் in Tamil), also known by its anglicised name Tanjore, is a city and a municipality in Thanjavur district in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu. Thanjavur is also the capital of the Thanjavur District.
Thanjavur Marathi Thanjavur Marathi, also commonly spelled Tanjore Marathi, is a community language of the Indo-Aryan Maharashtrians who migrated south, along with Shivaji's half brother Venkoji, to the great land of Thanjavur in India back in the 1600s. The language spoken by this community, also known as "Thanjavur Marathi", is a scholarly dialect far removed from the present day Marathi.
Thanjavur Quartet Thanjavur Quartet were four brothers who lived during the early 19th century and contrubited to the development of the Indian classical dance Bharatanatyam and Carnatic music. While they excelled in the art of Bharatanatyam, they have also authored a number of Tana varnams and Kritis.
Thank God It's Friday Thank God It's Friday is a 1978 film directed by Robert Klane and produced by Motown Productions and Casablanca Filmworks for Columbia Pictures. Produced at the height of the disco craze, the film features The Commodores performing Too Hot to Trot, and Donna Summer performing Last Dance which won the Academy Award for Best Song.
Thank God It's Friday (song) Thank God It's Friday is a 1978 disco song by the studio disco group Love and Kisses, popularized as the theme song of the film by the same name. The song's catchphrase tantalized listeners with the prospect of love at the discotheque: "Hey / Put a smile on your face / Things are coming your way / Out there somewhere tonight".
Thank God It's Friday, Again "Thank God It's Friday, Again" is an episode of the television program Farscape from the first season, written by David Wilks and directed by Rowan Woods. It was the sixth episode produced, but was the fifth to air in the show's premiere season.
Thank God You're Here Thank God You're Here is an Australian partially improvised comedy television program created by Working Dog Productions, which premiered on Network Ten on the 5 April 2006 and concluded its first series on 7 June 2006. Each episode involves celebrities walking through a door into an unknown situation, greeted by the line "Thank God you're here".
Thank you letter A thank you letter or letter of thanks is a letter that is used when one party wishes to express appreciation to another party. There are two main types of thank you letters: business thank you letters and personal thank you letters.
Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin) "Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin)", released in December 1969, is a 1970 hit single recorded by Sly & the Family Stone. The song, double a-sided with "Everybody is a Star", reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100 in February of 1970 and is considered by some music scholars as the first single to feature the matured form of funk music, after a half-decade of proto-funk records from the Family Stone, James Brown, Jr.
Thank You (Jamelia album) Thank You is the second album from British R&B star Jamelia. The album, a mix of R&B, hip hop, and pop was released in three main versions between 2003 and 2004 and contains 5 UK top 40 singles, "Bout", "Superstar", "Thank You", "See It In a Boy's Eyes" and "DJ".
Thank You (Jamelia song) "Thank You" was the third single from British R&B star Jamelia's second album Thank You. The song, released in the UK on February 24 2004, became Jamelia's highest charting single in the UK to date, peaking at #2, and spending 14 weeks within the whole UK Singles Chart, and kept off the top spot a re-release of Peter Andre's "Mysterious Girl".
Thank You (Led Zeppelin song) "Thank You" is a song written by Robert Plant and Jimmy Page which was released by English rock band Led Zeppelin on their 1969 album Led Zeppelin II. It is a slow ballad and signaled a deeper involvement in song writing by Plant, being the first Led Zeppelin song that he wrote all the lyrics for, though, the first lines resemble heavily the song "If 6 was 9" of Jimi Hendrix "if the sun refuse to shine, I don't mind/if the mountains fell in the sea, let it be, it ain't me".
Thank You for Being a Friend "Thank You for Being a Friend" is a popular song written by Andrew Gold. He recorded it for his third album, All This And Heaven Too, and the single version reached #25 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1978.
Thank You Girl "Thank You Girl" is a song by The Beatles. Originally intended to be their third single, it was relegated to the B-side of "From Me To You", which was recorded on the same day (March 5, 1963).
Thanks (TV series) Thanks was a short-running television sitcom that took was filmed in Los Angeles, California, on the same soundstage as the daytime version of the The Price Is Right, Studio 33 in Hollywood, and the main characters of the series were an outstanding puritan family called the "Winthrops" in colonial New England. It debuted on the CBS network in August 1999.
Thanks for the Book Award The Thanks for the Book Award, (Kiitos kirjasta -mitali in Finnish and Tack för boken-medaljen in Swedish), is a Finnish literary prize that has been presented since 1966 by the Organization of the Booksellers’ Association of Finland (Kirjakauppaliitto r.y.
Thanks-Giving Square Thanks-Giving Square is an open area in the City Center District of downtown Dallas, Texas (USA) that is dedicated to promoting the concept of giving thanks as a universal, human value. The area was designed by architect Philip Johnson and was completed in 1976.
Thanks, I'll Eat it Here "Thanks, I'll Eat it Here" is the title of the only solo album by rock and roll singer-songwriter Lowell George. While George is best known for his work with Little Feat, by 1977 Lowell felt that they were moving increasingly into jazz-rock, a form in which he felt little interest.
Thanks/you Thanks/you is a music album composed by Japanese dojin music artist, dai, for use in the "answer" arcs to the visual novel video game Higurashi no Naku Koro ni. Unofficially, fans refer to this as original soundtrack, even though it does not have all the scores that were used in the game.
Thanksgiving Thanksgiving, or Thanksgiving Day, is an annual one-day holiday to give thanks, traditionally to God, for the things one has at the end of the harvest season. In the United States, Thanksgiving is celebrated on the fourth Thursday of November.
Thanksgiving Classic The National Football League's Thanksgiving Classic is a series of games played during the Thanksgiving holiday in the United States. The games are usually hosted each year at the home stadiums of the Detroit Lions and the Dallas Cowboys, although as part of the NFL Network TV package in 2006, the Kansas City Chiefs also hosted a Thanksgiving game.
Thanksgiving Hymns The Thanksgiving Scroll or Hodayot was one of the first seven Dead Sea Scrolls discovered in 1947 by the Bedouin. The scroll gets its name from the recurring use of the phrase “I thank you” in many of the poems, thus ‘Thanksgiving Scroll’ or Hodayot (the Hebrew word referring to ‘thanks’ or ‘thanksgiving’).
Thanmathra Thanmathra (Malayalam:Molecule) (2005) is a Malayalam film directed by Blessy which deals with the effects of Alzheimer's disease on the life of a person. The film bagged five Kerala state film awards for the Best Film, Best Actor, Best Director, Best Screenplay and a special mention for debutant actor Arjun Lal.
Thannhauser Galleries The Thannhauser Galleries originated in Munich, in autumn 1909, when Heinrich Thannhauser (1859-1934) decided to quit his former partner Franz Josef Brakl and installed his Modern Gallery (Moderne Galerie) at the Arco-Palais, Theatinerstrasse 7.
Thanong Bidaya Thanong Bidaya (born Thanong Lamyai) is a Thai politician and deposed Finance Minister. After the military overthrew the government of Thaksin Shinawatra, he remained in Singapore where he was attending the annual meeting of the World Bank/IMF.
Thanopoulos Thanopoulos (Greek: Θανόπουλος) is a Greek supermarket chain situated in Athens. The company's history traces back to 1877 when Panayiotis Thanopoulos established the grocery store "Thanopoulos" in downtown Athens.
Thanos Leivaditis Thanos Leivaditis, also Thanos Livaditis (Greek: Θάνος Λειβαδίτης, 1934 in Lamia – 1 September, 2005 in Athens) was a Greek actor and screenwriter. He studied drawing at the School of Great Works (Σχολή Καλών Τεχνών = Scholi Kalon Technon) of the Athens Polytechnic School (at the workshop of the writer Giannis Moralis).
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