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Ojo de dios made from chopsticks and yarn. In the traditional Huichol ranchos, the nieli'ka or nierika is an important ritual artifact. Negrín states that one of the principal meanings of "nierika" is that of "a metaphysical vision, an aspect of a god or a collective ancestor," [4] and is the same term the Tepehuán people use to refer to deities.
"Lo que une dios" Pedro Pablo Ibarra: Guillermo Ríos: 19 September 2010 () 15: 2 "Cordero de Dios" Pedro Pablo Ibarra: Laura Sosa: 26 September 2010 () 16: 3 "Aparta de mí éste cáliz" Pedro Pablo Ibarra: Carmen Madrid: 3 October 2010 () 17: 4 "El ojo de Dios" Javier Patrón: Joaquín Guerrero Casasola: 10 October 2010 () 18: 5
The Mote in God's Eye (originally titled Motelight) [2] is set in Pournelle's CoDominium universe, where a union of the United States and the Soviet Union produced a world government and a number of colonies in other star systems, followed by nuclear war on Earth and the rise of the First Empire based on the planet Sparta several centuries before the events of the novel.
The Athletics have left Oakland, but it will be some time before MLB officially moves to Las Vegas, where the team's long-term future lies.. After 57 seasons in the East Bay, the Athletics played ...
The Ojo de Dios on the altar at Mission San Miguel Arcángel, painted by Munrás in the 1820s. Esteban Carlos Munràs (1798–1850) was a Spanish-born Californio artist, best known for his vibrantly colored frescoes that adorn the church at Mission San Miguel Arcángel in San Miguel, California.
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The NHTSA's Office of Defects Investigation said it had received one complaint alleging a crash when the feature was being used and had reviewed at least three media reports of similar crashes ...
Amulet from the tomb of Tutankhamun, fourteenth century BC, incorporating the Eye of Horus beneath a disk and crescent symbol representing the moon [2]. The ancient Egyptian god Horus was a sky deity, and many Egyptian texts say that Horus's right eye was the sun and his left eye the moon. [3]