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A tavern is a place where people drink alcoholic beverages and eat food, often with lodging. Learn about the origins, variations, and cultural roles of taverns in different countries and regions, from ancient times to modern days.
Agoura Hills is a city in the Santa Monica Mountains region of Los Angeles County, California, with a population of 20,299 in 2020. It was incorporated in 1982 and has a history of ranching, filmmaking, and public discontent with county development.
On January 17, 2014, a suicide bomber detonated explosives at the gate of the Taverna du Liban, a heavily fortified restaurant in Kabul popular with foreign nationals, including diplomats, humanitarian aid workers and journalists; two gunmen then entered the building and began "shooting indiscriminately." [1] 21 people were slain. [2]
Samuel Edward Konkin III (1947-2004) was a Canadian-American left-libertarian philosopher and Austrian school economist. He coined the term agorism, a political philosophy that advocates for a society based on voluntary exchanges and counter-economics.
Learn about the history and legacy of the Agora, a music venue in Cleveland, Ohio, that hosted thousands of local, national, and international acts since 1966. Find out how the Agora pioneered live broadcasts, recording, and syndication of rock-and-roll shows.
Taverna workflows can invoke general SOAP/WSDL or REST Web services, and more specific SADI, BioMart, BioMoby and SoapLab Web services. It can also invoke R statistical services, local Java code, external tools on local and remote machines (via ssh), do XPath and other text manipulation, import a spreadsheet and include sub-workflows.
Zenon Taverna was a restaurant serving Greek and Cypriot cuisine on 31st Avenue in Astoria, Queens, in the U.S. state of New York. [1] History.
The remains of the Odeon in the Agora of Athens. The Odeon of Agrippa was a large odeon located in the centre of the ancient Agora of Athens. It was built about 15 BC, occupying what had previously been open space in the centre of the Agora. It was a gift to the people of Athens by Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa, a Roman statesman and general. [1]