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Festo is known for making moving robots that move like animals, such as the seagull-like SmartBird, jellyfish, butterflies and the BionicKangaroo. [2] In 2018 they also added a flying fox and a rolling spider to the list. [3] Festo calls their Bionic Flying Fox an “ultra-lightweight flying object with intelligent kinematics.” [citation needed]
Hymnus ad laudes in festo Sanctae Trinitatis: alto or baritone and organ: 83: 46: 1878: Slovanské tance 1. řada: Slavonic Dances, Series I: orchestra: orchestration of B. 78 84a – 1878: Tři novořecké básně: 3 Modern Greek Songs: voice and orchestra: lost; see B. 84b Op. 50 84b: 50: 1878: Tři novořecké básně: 3 Modern Greek Songs ...
Cantantibus organis (Antiphona in festo Santa Caeciliae) alt ch orch G major–G minor 1879 Choral, sacred 7bis I10 Cantantibus organis (Antiphona in festo Santa Caeciliae) alt ch hp harm/org pf G major–G minor 1879 Choral, sacred 8/1 J 5a Missa quattuor vocum ad aequales mch org 1846–47 Choral, sacred 1st version of S.8/2 8/2 J 5b
Officium de festo Corporis Christi, ad mandatum Urbani Papae IV 1264 On the Reasons of the Faith against the Saracens, Greeks and Armenians, to the Cantor of Antioch ( De rationibus fidei contra Saracenos, Graecos et Armenos, ad Cantorem Antiochiae )
Festo Kivengere, sometimes referred to as "the Billy Graham of Africa", a Ugandan Anglican Bishop of Kigezi, evangelist, and fierce critic of Idi Amin's excesses. Charles William Kerr, first permanent Protestant Christian minister of Tulsa, Oklahoma. Isaac C. Ketler, founder of Grove City College
Offertorium, "In Festo Sta. Theresia" for Tenor, soli viola d'amore, cello, with strings and chorus Modern works. Louis van Waefelghem (1840–1908) Romance in D major for violin or viola d'amore and piano (1891) Soir d'automne (Autumn Evening), Melody for viola d'amore or viola and piano or harp (1903) Charles Martin Loeffler (1861–1935)
Trump v. New York, 592 U.S. 125 (2020), was a United States Supreme Court case dealing with the 2020 United States census.It centered on the validity of a July 2020 executive memorandum from President Donald Trump to the Department of Commerce, which conducts and reports the census.
Southern Pacific Company v. Arizona, 325 U.S. 761 (1945), was a United States Supreme Court case in which the Court held that the Arizona Train Limit Law of 1912, which prohibited passenger trains with more than fourteen cars and prohibited freight trains with more than seventy cars, placed an unconstitutional burden on interstate commerce. [1]