User talk:Hallucegenia/sandbox

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Awarded to the BLP Rescue Squad on the occasion of clearing the backlog of "Unreferenced BLPs from April 2008"


 * Started 1 July 2010 - with 458 unreferenced BLP's
 * Declared complete on 19 July 2010

The following template serves as a reminder of this event and a placeholder to keep the month visible in the statistics here

Come and join us. There are plenty more months to be done.

See User:Milowent/Unreferenced_BLP_Rescue/Trophy Cabinet

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== References ==

Category:All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championships navigational boxes

Early warning of deletion I have been unable to find sources to establish notability (See WP:N) for this person. Unless someone can find some reliable sources (See WP:RS) soon, then I shall propose this article for deletion. ~

WP:template WP:CTT

Self-created BLP unsourced for two years for which I cannot find any sources to establish notability

drafts
Mann Eddy

The Mann Eddy is a very small ocean current feature in the Atlantic. It is a persistent clockwise circulation in the middle of the North Atlantic ocean. Dr Rory Bingham from Newcastle University, UK describes it as "a persistent pocket of water in the Atlantic that just goes around and around."

Vicky Pryce is a British economist, and former Joint Head of the UK Government Economic Service.

Vicky was born in Greece in 1953. She studied at the LSE, and had a "glittering career" as chief economist for KPMG, Exxon Europe and the Royal Bank of Scotland, before joining the Department for Trade and Industry.

In June 2010, she left BIS and is now senior managing director of the finance consultancy firm FTI.

She is married to but separated from Chris Huhne, the Liberal Democrat MP for Eastleigh and secretary of state for Energy and Climate Change.

She is a Visiting Professor at CASS Business School; a visiting Fellow at Nuffield College, Oxford; a Fellow of the Society of Business Economists, and sits on the Council of the University of Kent and of the Royal Society for the encouragement of Arts (RSA).

... that a message of farewell to the spa town of Buxton on a window pane of the Old Hall Hotel was reputedly inscribed by Mary Queen of Scots?

The Old Hall Hotel is a hotel in Buxton, Derbyshire, and is one of the oldest buildings in the town.

It is located on the site of the warm spring for which Buxton water is known.

The current building dates from the Restoration period, built around and incorporating an ealier fortified tower. This four-storey tower was built in 1573 by Bess of Hardwick and her third husband, George Talbot, 6th Earl of Shrewsbury, on the site of an earlier Auld Hall.

The tower was used at times between 1576 and 1578 to house Mary Queen of Scots, whilst she was in the custody of the Earl on the orders of Queen Elizabeth I.

The Hall was rebuilt by the Duke of Devonshire into its present form in 1670.

Daniel Defoe whilst staying in the Old Hall in 1727 wrote that "This is indeed, a very special place with its own special feeling". (Quoted in )

By the time that the nearby Georgian Crescent was built (1780-86), Buxton had become an established spa town; and the Old Hall had become a fashionable hotel for the Georgian aristocracy taking the waters.

It has served as a hotel ever since.

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Koch's postulates —Preceding unsigned comment added by Hallucegenia (talk • contribs) 18:13, 7 March 2010 (UTC)

Alternatively, the cold store can be liquid air or Nitrogen.

Cryogenic energy storage
Cryogenic energy storage uses the liquification of air or Nitrogen as an energy store.

A pilot cryogenic energy system that uses the liquid air as the energy store and low-grade waste heat to drive the thermal re-expansion of the air has been operating at a power station in Slough, UK since 2010.

Liquid air energy storage