Party members oversaw the work of a commune to ensure that decisions followed the correct party line. |
|
The film once more revisits the gruesome case of Manson, the madman who led a commune of young people into a series of horrific murders. |
|
First, property rights were transferred from advanced cooperatives to the commune, further centralizing ownership. |
|
It is divided into departments that are subdivided into arrondissements, communes, commune sectionals, and habitations. |
|
Sometimes, too, the commune would rent or purchase additional land from the landowner or from the state. |
|
Each year, TCI members and instructors from around the country meet here to commune with the big trees and with one another. |
|
Among these rising areas is the Graves region and the tenderloin of that commune. |
|
Jennifer is a seachanger who moved to the Northern Rivers to live on a commune and pursue her passion for filmmaking. |
|
In Uganda, the reserves where foreign visitors come to commune with the mountain gorilla have proved a money-spinner. |
|
The administration of the governmental system is organized through the levels of nation, region, department, arrondissement, canton, and commune. |
|
The accumulation of viscous polysaccharides in the mycelia of S. commune often interferes with genomic DNA isolations. |
|
When he resolves to find medical supplies for the village, his boldness threatens to shatter the safety of the commune and change things forever. |
|
This mute of hounds, dashing all over the pace, split the morning air with enough hideous din to frighten any fox out of the commune. |
|
It was some sort of commune though not necessarily the communist nor hippie type. |
|
It tells us that capitalism will not allow enclaves of socialism to exist, be it a hippy commune or an island of socialism. |
|
We formed a commune, to share our wallets, share our tools, share our ideas, share our love, play music. |
|
Equally as important, peasants were declared the legal owners of their plots of land within the framework of their commune. |
|
He and some friends formed a type of hippy commune, living off the land organically and working with nature. |
|
I thought it would be neat to live in a peaceful commune and promote world togetherness. |
|
She wanted to go back to the commune in the morning and spend time with the artists. |
|
|
One of the residents of the Together household invites his sister and her two young children to come and join the commune. |
|
The commune thus benefited from the collective effect of this renewal effort. |
|
In 1975 Stockholm, a woman flees her abusive drunk husband with her two kids, and goes to the small socialist commune run by her younger brother. |
|
Peasants at home identified themselves in terms of their membership in the village commune and as Orthodox believers. |
|
They saw in the Russian commune the possibility of a direct transition from a precapitalist mode of production to socialism. |
|
They pointed to the peasant commune as the cell of the new communist society. |
|
Many peasants were forced to work for the state as a part of a collective commune. |
|
One such was the Swiss commune, which, under Lenin's instigation, was organized by Fritz Platten, a friend of mine. |
|
Wines made from grapes grown within the commune of Pupillin have the right to the appellation Arbois Pupillin. |
|
There are municipal and national police as well as gendarmeries in each commune. |
|
The administrative district or commune embodies a sense of community and self-identification for its residents. |
|
Located on the southern border of the La Morra commune, part of the vineyard is located in the neighboring commune of Barolo. |
|
In 1975 she was pushed out of the city to Kandal province, then to a commune in Pursat province. |
|
The important units of community government are the commune and subcommunes. |
|
But they were not salaried by the state and minimally, if at all, by the commune or parish. |
|
This Italian commune in the province of Bologna had a population in 1944 of 4,200 of whom 650 lived in the main town. |
|
It was organized as a commune in 1052 but was still part of the Kingdom of Italy. |
|
He knew that it was forbidden of him to commune with the persons of his past. |
|
He loves us deeply and wants to commune with us and enjoy our presence through Jesus. |
|
As shareholders in God's eternal story, we commune with a creating God and are drawn into fellowship with a global community. |
|
|
In evangelical symbolism, that meant that a man of prayer was going to commune with God, somewhat like Moses on Mount Sinai. |
|
Alison took the time to sit down in the reading area and quietly commune with the spirits even if she wasn't conversing with a particular spirit. |
|
And it's gone through the process of how you go out to God, you commune with God, and eventually become one with God. |
|
He loves his Lord, and loves to come to him, to commune with him in the fellowship of prayer. |
|
But there are many who commune with gods, talk to angels, worship deities and meet up to worship. |
|
The Spirit gives and stirs faith, and by faith we are lifted up to heaven, where Christ is, and we commune with Him. |
|
He was to carry the idea back to the capital, where it was energetically taken up by his colleagues at the commune. |
|
She decides to surrender, to give up the stage and move to California where she will toil with her comrades on a commune in Anaheim. |
|
It combines faith, commune, all the key elements of magick, in a simple system that it available to anyone who wants in on it. |
|
Today's commune members strive to reconcile communal responsibility with individual ambitions and aspirations. |
|
I deeply respect you and your goals, both of bringing a spiritual dimension back into people's lives, and to create this commune in which people share ideas and resources. |
|
He certainly didn't feel ready to commune with the God just yet. |
|
The commune refused to be disbanded and, after hints from Robespierre at the Jacobins, tried to have a number of hostile deputies and ministers arrested. |
|
I took time to commune with God and I already feel more complete. |
|
It was as if we built the fire to commune with an autumn god. |
|
You may take a brief vacation away from the madding crowd and commune with close family and friends or walk into a festive crowd to enjoy some party fun and frolic. |
|
What typifies the modern commune is the fact that it has learnt from earlier mistakes. |
|
From the outside, with the sounds of laughing children and chooks and the overgrown fence line, you could be forgiven for mistaking Cubbies for some sort of hippy commune. |
|
How was your commune formed, and what kinds of people joined it? |
|
After living on a commune, he and his wife moved to Burlington, joining so many other back-to-the-landers looking to flee their harried urban existences. |
|
|
If they are found not to be virgins, the commune will give them nothing. |
|
In this, the commune system sought to do what had been tried within the original collectives through the attempt to equalize the assets of the constituent brigades. |
|
It calls the disciple to live, at least part of the time, as if he or she were already in the next world, a world where all share freely and constantly commune with God. |
|
Each commune in France generally holds a town festival during the year. |
|
They met in their cities on the Sabbath to commune with him. |
|
Nora invited Amanda to the sitting room for tea, and filled her in on how the commune worked, and that no profits were made, but everything was paid for. |
|
It is a close knit community, like a big commune but everyone is family. |
|
I now have none with whom I can unreservedly commune as I did with him. |
|
Brunton organises his historical riff around a thematics of the commune. |
|
Even if there were cows, they belonged to the commune and no one was allowed to slaughter them or consume them. |
|
The Agnus Dei is chanted while the clergy and assistants first commune, followed by lay communicants. |
|
Tributaries of the Nive are the Ruisseau de Hillans and the Ruisseau d'Urdaintz which both rise in the commune. |
|
The following table details the origins of Labord, Bayonne, and other names in the commune. |
|
Genoa began to gain autonomy from the Holy Roman Empire around 1096, becoming a medieval commune and participating in the First Crusades. |
|
As such, it is a variety of the European continental civil law or ius commune. |
|
This analysis was based on what Marx and Engels saw as the exceptional characteristics of the Russian village commune or obshchina. |
|
It was during this chaotic era that Italian towns saw the rise of a peculiar institution, the medieval commune. |
|
Believers consult divination specialists or 'keepers of the secrets', known as babalawo in order to commune with the spirit world. |
|
Therefore, Ta Ngai Cho is still a poor commune and a beneficiary of the Government s 30a wellfare policy. |
|
People who commune along persons with Neurofibromatosis do not have to worry that they will acquire the disease as well. |
|
|
Dried snot on the marijuana pipe tossed into the cowpool built with government subsidy on a Vermont commune. |
|
The infected birds were traced back to a poultry farm in Tin An Dong commune, Quang Ngai city. |
|
The Sardinian town of Sassari, which was under Pisan control, became a commune which was controlled by Genoa. |
|
The lack of watercourses within the commune prevents flooding from overflows. |
|
A study by Aphekom comparing ten large French cities showed that Le Havre is the least polluted urban commune of France. |
|
Over 60 buildings within the commune are protected in France as monuments historiques. |
|
Tourism is the main and even almost unique source of income of the commune. |
|
Falaise is a commune in the Calvados department in the Normandy region in northwestern France. |
|
If the bol'shak mismanaged the family farm, or was too often drunk and violent, the commune could replace him under customary law with another household member. |
|
The peripheral suburbs of the commune grew in the postwar period. |
|
In the 14th century, Pisa changed from a commune to a signoria. |
|
For 65 years the autonomous commune was part of the department of Landes. |
|
Under Pope Innocent III, whose reign marked the apogee of the papacy, the commune liquidated the senate, and replaced it with a Senatore, who was subject to the pope. |
|
Now every Dave Spart up the commune knows that basically, to his mind, the only, like, real theatre, man, is made by the people, you know, in the street, man, in the street. |
|
The book's chapters examine the development of schooling supported by the commune, lay confraternities, religious orders, the episcopate, and parents. |
|
However, his rich historical narrative underemphasizes the agency of political actors such as firm managers and commune leaders, which I address below. |
|
While the two try to sort out their relationship, Bonny's best friend Liz comes to dinner with a control freak named Kell, who lures her to a commune in Scotland. |
|
While historically the ius commune became a secure point of reference in continental European legal systems, in England it was not a point of reference at all. |
|
On 1 January 2017, it was merged into the new commune Gouffern en Auge. |
|
The various historic sources of Scots law, including custom, feudal law, canon law, civilian ius commune and English law have created a hybrid or mixed legal system. |
|
|
This administration, as often in the Italian cities, evolved into the commune, a new form of social organisation, expression of the new wealthy classes. |
|
Because of the Orthodox understanding of mankind's fallen nature in general those who wish to commune prepare themselves in a way that reflects mankind in paradise. |
|
The commune of Calais is bordered by the English channel to the north, Sangatte and Coquelles to the west, Coulogne to the south and Marck to the east. |
|
Florence originated as a Roman city, and later, after a long period as a flourishing trading and banking medieval commune, it was the birthplace of the Italian Renaissance. |
|
He also set up an Owenite commune called New Harmony in Indiana. |
|
The new millennium began with the creation of a new commune. |
|
The inhabitants of the commune are known as Bayonnais or Bayonnaises. |
|
When a banker and a developer arrive to find that the commune has not been evacuated, the spirit of resistance is awakened in the old kibbutzniks. |
|
Today, the jus commune of Quebec is codified in the Civil Code of Quebec. |
|
An annual summer festival has been held in the commune since 1932 for five days organized around parades, bulls races, fireworks, and music in the Basque and Gascon tradition. |
|
Le Havre is the most populous commune of Upper Normandy, although the total population of the greater Le Havre conurbation is smaller than that of Rouen. |
|
Government school construction initiatives have ensured at least one primary school per fokontany and one lower secondary school within each commune. |
|
Formation of an extracellular lacease by Schizophyllum commune dikaryon. |
|
The government provides at least one basic health center per commune. |
|