Central African Republic chief of mission: Ambassador Emmanuel TOUABOY chancery: 1618 22nd Street NW, Washington, DC 20008 telephone:
— from The 2008 CIA World Factbook by United States. Central Intelligence Agency
[1] (202) 965-6820 FAX: [1] (202) 965-1207 consulate(s) general: Boston Cayman Islands: none (overseas territory of the UK) Central African Republic: chief of mission: Ambassador Emmanuel TOUABOY chancery: 1618 22nd
— from The 2001 CIA World Factbook by United States. Central Intelligence Agency
Central African Republic chief of mission: Ambassador (vacant); Charge d'Affaires James PANOS embassy: Avenue David Dacko, Bangui mailing address: B. P. 924, Bangui telephone:
— from The 2007 CIA World Factbook by United States. Central Intelligence Agency
Fond of domestic life, retiring by disposition and character, caring more for husband and family than for all the glitter and glory of the world's greatest functions or positions, [Pg 80] she yet lived in the blaze of a continuous publicity without possible or actual criticism and with a ceaseless and ready charm of manner, a never-failing courtesy to high and low, an ever-increasing popularity.
— from The Life of King Edward VII with a sketch of the career of King George V by J. Castell (John Castell) Hopkins
As the rotation of these blades would merely tend to create a rotary current of molasses and water, and not to mix them, some means should be used for impeding and breaking up this current.
— from A Practical Handbook on the Distillation of Alcohol from Farm Products by F. B. (Frederic B.) Wright
Central African Republic chief of mission: Ambassador Frederick B. COOK embassy: Avenue David Dacko, Bangui mailing address: B. P. 924, Bangui telephone:
— from The 2009 CIA World Factbook by United States. Central Intelligence Agency
And, if we consider a reasonable creature or moral agent, without regard to the particular relations and circumstances in which he is placed, we cannot conceive anything else to come in towards determining whether he is to be ranked in a higher or lower class of virtuous beings, but the higher or lower degree in which that principle, and what is manifestly connected with it, prevail in him.
— from Human Nature, and Other Sermons by Joseph Butler
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