In particular, his works of this period have always a narrative or literary element ( Visor’d, Garden of Stones, The Sound and the Fury, Cold Forest) and inspired by poetry of Walt Whitman or prose of William Faulkner.
White House | Chicago White Sox | White | Snow White | The White Stripes | White American | Tim Burton | Tim Pawlenty | white | black-and-white | Tim Rice | Tim Allen | Tim Hortons | Tim Kaine | White Star Line | White Nile | Tim Berners-Lee | Jack White | Jack White (musician) | Betty White | Tim Tebow | Tim McGraw | White Collar (TV series) | White Collar | Byron White | White movement | Tim O'Brien | Tim Finn | Tim Curry | Tim Buckley |
In an accompanying news article published with the initial descriptions in 2010, detractors of the idea that A. sediba might be ancestral to the genus Homo (e.g. Tim White and Ron Clarke) suggest that the fossils could be a late southern African branch of Australopithecus, co-existing with already existing members of the Homo genus.
Jakub Sobieski (May 5, 1590 – June 23, 1646) was a Polish-Lithuanian noble, parliamentarian, diarist, political activist, military leader and father of King Jan III Sobieski.
On May 19, 1983, the Spirit traded Sobieski to the Cleveland Force in exchange for Luis Alberto.
The estate first belonged to szlachta nobility and, at the end of 16th century, was bought by the famous Sobieski family.
In an effort to secure employment at the upscale Century City Mall in Los Angeles, Jennifer (Sobieski), a 17-year-old "goth-punk" girl, makes a nuisance of herself at a clothing store run by 49-year-old Randall Harris (Brooks), who eventually hires her on a trial basis as a stockroom clerk.
The Royal Route begins at Warsaw's Castle Square and runs south down Krakowskie Przedmieście (Kraków Suburb Street), ulica Nowy Świat (New World Street), Aleje Ujazdowskie (Ujazdów Avenue), ulica Belwederska (Belweder Street) and ulica Sobieskiego (Sobieski Street), finally to arrive at Wilanów (King Jan III Sobieski's personal residence).
The House of Sobieski was a noble family with a prominent role in Polish history, and the choice of name reflects the large Polish American element in the town's population.
Zolochiv Castle was a residence of the Sobieski noble family on a hill at the confluence of two small rivers in the south-eastern part of Zolochiv, Galicia (now part of Ukraine's Lviv Oblast).