Remove Sign Word Later
Make the most out of your eSignature workflows with airSlate SignNow
Extensive suite of eSignature tools
Robust integration and API capabilities
Advanced security and compliance
Various collaboration tools
Enjoyable and stress-free signing experience
Extensive support
Remove Sign Word Later
Keep your eSignature workflows on track
Our user reviews speak for themselves
Remove Sign Word Later. Discover by far the most consumer-pleasant exposure to airSlate SignNow. Handle your entire record handling and discussing method electronically. Move from handheld, paper-dependent and erroneous workflows to automatic, computerized and flawless. You can easily make, produce and sign any papers on any gadget just about anywhere. Ensure your important business circumstances don't slide over the top.
See how to Remove Sign Word Later. Adhere to the easy manual to get going:
- Create your airSlate SignNow accounts in mouse clicks or sign in along with your Facebook or Google profile.
- Enjoy the 30-time free trial or go with a rates strategy that's excellent for you.
- Get any authorized template, create on the web fillable types and share them tightly.
- Use sophisticated capabilities to Remove Sign Word Later.
- Signal, customize putting your signature on order and collect in-particular person signatures ten times quicker.
- Established automatic reminders and obtain notices at each and every step.
Transferring your duties into airSlate SignNow is straightforward. What practices is a simple process to Remove Sign Word Later, along with recommendations to maintain your colleagues and companions for greater partnership. Inspire your employees using the finest tools to be along with company procedures. Increase productivity and level your organization more quickly.
How it works
Rate your experience
-
Best ROI. Our customers achieve an average 7x ROI within the first six months.
-
Scales with your use cases. From SMBs to mid-market, airSlate SignNow delivers results for businesses of all sizes.
-
Intuitive UI and API. Sign and send documents from your apps in minutes.
A smarter way to work: —how to industry sign banking integrate
FAQs
-
Is it legal in the state of Florida, U.S.A. to refuse to roll down your window at a traffic stop?
Your sign will make it clear that you do not want to talk and that you refuse to any searches, and that is fine. But otherwise refusing to cooperate isn’t going to work. Refusing to speak and refusing to allow a search of your car is about as much as you have control over during a lawful traffic stop. And you are not really in the position to dispute whether a traffic stop is lawful during the stop. If something comes of it later, that is when you dispute the stop. In other words, in court.If you refuse to get out of your car, the officer can remove you from it. The same is true for any passengers. And when you refuse to get out of your car and the officer has to remove you, now you are going to be charged with at least one crime and maybe more. You can object to getting out of your car, but you still have to do it.Generally speaking, as long as the stop is lawful, ordering you out of your car, ordering you to roll down your window, ordering you to hand over your keys (or at least take them out of the ignition) are all perfectly acceptable orders. They all involve the safety of the police officer. State law will vary on what is and is not allowed during a traffic stop, so you will need to look in your state specifically.Why people feel they do not need to cooperate with lawful orders during a traffic stop I do not know. Getting pulled over: Do you know your rights?
-
Have you ever asked someone (who later passed away) to give you proof of an afterlife? For example, a word/gesture that only you
In my late teens and early twenties, my boyfriend would always tell me he was going to die young or live forever. I would tell him to stop saying that because he couldn’t possibly live forever. He would laugh, so unaffected by the thought of dying young. So one night after he’d said it again while we were lying in bed I jabbed him in the ribs. He laughed yelled “ow!” and said what was that for? I told him every time he said it from now on I was going to poke him right between the ribs and make him wish he was dead. He laughed and turned on me, poking me in the ribs where I was most ticklish. He said “alright then, then after I’m good and young and dead I’m going to haunt your ass and jab you every time you annoy me!” This turned into a ridiculous sort of assaulting tickle fight. A night I remember fondly.A few months later, I was 21 and he was 24. We’d spent the day watching movies with my best friend. It was June 22, 2007. A beautiful summer Friday evening. We decided to go be outside somewhere. Enjoy the weather. So we gathered some friends and dogs and skateboards and took off. The first part of the evening was full of laughter and summer sweat. But less than two hours after we left my house, the night was full of screams and too much blood. We had been jumped on an elementary school playground in Baltimore County and in trying to protect me my boyfriend was brutally assaulted in front of me, beaten by three men with baseball bats.The moments between the actual attack and getting to shock trauma are flashes. There’s the flash of me holding his broken body, begging him not to leave me. Flashes of his grip on my hand weakening. His eyes rolling back into his head if I stopped talking to him long enough to scream at the two women who had stopped to call 911, demanding why it was taking so long. There’s the flash of the EMTs arriving, telling me not to let him go yet as they secured his neck. Me begging them to tell me he was going to be okay and their refusal to speak or look at me. Flashes of the wind of the helicopter landing and of him being loaded into it, me falling to the ground so hard my knees bled for days, praying to a god I didn’t even believe in. Flashes of flying down the highway to get to Hopkins. Apparently the entire way I rocked and sobbed “please don’t take him away from me,” though I don’t remember.I was numb and in shock and already experiencing PTSD from what I saw. I was questioned by police, shuffled from waiting room to interview room and back. Numb. Sticky. Staring at the blood on my hands I’d refused to let the firefighters wash off, so afraid they’d be washing him away for good. I sat in a small chair in the waiting area, covered in his vomit and so much blood that had poured from his broken body, namely the large opening in his skull, that it looked like motor oil. Looking back this time is a blur, I have only two clear memories of the wait to go see him. I remember a fly buzzing around the vomit on my knee. Then I remember running people. Crying people. I remember glancing up to see a very famous skateboarder sitting in the chair next me. Tears streaming down his face. I watched the tears for a moment before went back to staring at the fly on my knee.A day later while my boyfriend was in a drug induced coma I learned that at the exact moment my boyfriend was being jumped, Stephen Murray was taking his turn on the Baltimore stop of the BMX Dew Tour. He was flying through the air, attempting a double back flip, turning the wrong way and landing even worse on his neck. He was flown into shock trauma just seconds after my boyfriend. They didn’t know if either man would make it. I spent the next week numbly spending time with Stephen’s at the time wife, who was also named Melissa. We swapped pills we’d been prescribed to try to get through what was happening around us, chain smoked outside and she invited me over for spaghetti to the empty home the Dew Tour had set her up in down the street. I came to know his family and friends. In fact the moment I learned my boyfriend was having part of his skull removed to try to accommodate the swelling in his brain, I stepped off the elevator and there stood Stephen’s mother Cynthia and his brother. She took one look at my face and wrapped me in her arms. Holding me as I sobbed before asking in her unbelievably soothing English accent, “do you have a mum here?” I’ll never forget that woman, that hug or that voice. Warmth I latched onto in that cold sterile hallway.Stephen survived his accident a Quadriplegic and my boyfriend died July 10. Eighteen days after the attack and on my baby brother’s seventeenth birthday. The days after I barely remember. I recall I picked out the clothes he would be buried in but couldn’t go to the funeral. I couldn’t see him in a casket, the hospital had been bad enough. After the funeral many of my friends came to my door to check on me. One of them was one of the kindest most unbelievably genuine people I’d ever know, named Mark. Mark would continue to check on me every day after we the others all faded away, unsure how to talk to or be around me. But not Mark. He texted, called or just showed up for months to make sure I was at bare minimal surviving.Two weeks ago yesterday I stood at the podium at Mark’s viewing, looking down on him in his own casket, sharing that very story. While standing there I mentioned my boyfriend. I mentioned how he and Mark and I spent one summer together. I mentioned how Mark had been there for after the murder and I mentioned that they were together now.After I sat down and began listening to another person share a story about Mark, I thought back to Mark sitting next to me on my front step a month after the murder. He’d shown up at my door and dragged me out into the sun. I began crying that day. Mark jokingly told me to stop being a cry baby that my boyfriend would hate it. At that exact moment I felt Mark jab me between the ribs. I jumped and went to swat his hand away but his hands were in front of him. Mark looked at me funny and asked what was wrong. I told him what my boyfriend had said about poking me in the ribs. Mark laughed his huge laugh from his beautiful shit eating grin and said he totally believed my boyfriend was jabbing me in the ribs for being a cry baby. He’d have done the same thing he said before playfully shoving my shoulder and wrapping an arm around me.Two weeks ago yesterday I sat on a small love seat across from Mark in his casket with my current fiancé, in a room swollen full of young people and I thought back to that moment and I began to sob again. Next to me my fiancé shifted in his seat, my eyes were locked on Mark in his casket, and I felt a jab between my ribs. I flinched and looked to my fiancé, my eyes wide, but he was leaning away from me signNowing for a tissue. I looked back to Mark, remember his big shit eating grin saying of course it was my boyfriend jabbing me in the ribs for being a cry baby, he would do the same thing!And all I could do was smile.
-
What are some rare photos of world history?
Following are the rarest photographs of historical figures at random events.1.Indian Police motorcycle with a mounted sidecar machine gun. New York City, May 16 1918.2. Spanish Civil War, Republican militia near Aragon front, September 1936. (Colourised)3. Troops of the Eight-Nation Alliance in 1900. Left to right: Britain, United States, Australia,India, Germany, France, Russia, Italy, Japan.4. India-Soviet Friendship Poster (Soviet Union, date unknown)5. The original Ronald McDonald, 1963.6. Statue of Liberty towering over Paris just before it was disassembled and shipped to New York. (1884).7. Japanese Boy Scouts being trained with rifles, 1916.8. One year old Emperor of Japan Hirohito in 1902, He ruled Japan from 25 December 1926 to 7 January 1989.9. Imperial Japanese Navy aircraft carrier 'Akagi' April, 1942 during the Indian Ocean Raid as seen from an aircraft that has just taken off from her deck.10. Indian soldiers with Italian civilians, World War II, 1945.11. Seven foot tall German soldier, Jacob Naken, speaking with the Canadian soldier who captured him at Calais, France, September 29, 1944. (Colorized)12. Warriors of the Dayak headhunter tribe. Borneo 1940s .13. Child labor at the Loray Mills Gastonia North Carolina in 1912.14. Jewish women before their execution in Skede, Latvia, December 15-17, 1941.15. The interior of 1936 Imperial Airlines airplane.16. Leader of the American Nazi Party clashes with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.17. Princess Diana sitting on the fender of Charles's vintage Aston Martin, 1987.18. Portrait of a Union soldier in Missouri, 1863.19. 15 year old German soldier Hans Georg Henke cries after being captured by the US 9th Army in Rechtenbach, Hesse, Germany, Tuesday, 3 April 194520. Two Armenian counter militias fighting the Armenian genocide perpetrated by the Turkish Ottomans 1915.21. The Tōya Maru (洞爺丸) was a Japanese train ferry which sank in a Typhoon on 26 September 1954 and 1154 people died.22. Ruine of a Temple in India which was destroyed by Mughal emperor ,(Photo taken 1869)23. Mushroom cloud from the atomic explosion over Nagasaki at 11:02 a.m., August 9, 1945.24. Indian Army's officers of 4 Sikh Regiment had captured a Police Station in Lahore, Pakistan(2nd largest city of Pakistan) in 1965 during indo Pak war.25. The first flight of an airplane, the Wright Flyer on December 17, 1903.26. A British couple sleeps inside a "Morrison shelter” used as protection from collapsing homes during the WWII 'Blitz' bombing raids... March 194127. Abraham Lincoln and George McClellan after the Battle of Antietam in 1862.28. It's the first big oil well in Iran and it sets off a wave of exploration, extraction and exploitation that will change the region's and the world's history, 1908.29. Albert Einstein posing for a portrait painting.30. Adolf Hitler with Helga Goebbels, 1936. She was 12 years old when her parents killed her with a cyanide capsule.31. Australian former POWs (Prisoners of War) after their release from captivity in Singapore, 1945. Photograph by Z. Oliver via AWM.32. Mulberry Street, New York City, 1900.33. Smart Phone. Circa 1880, this early switchboard operator hardware weighed 6 pounds.34. Jeremy Corbyn arrested after protesting against Apartheid regime (Racial segregation of white minorities). out side the South African Embassy in 1984.35. A German soldier treats a wounded Russian civilian. ca. 1941.36. Soviet And Nazi Soldiers Talking After The Successful Invasion Of Poland, September 1939.37. “Smokey” Buchanan from the West Palm Beach police force, measuring the bathing suit of Betty Fringle on Palm Beach, to ensure that it conforms with regulations introduced by the beach censors in 1925.38. Che Guevara, at the battle of Santa Clara, 1958.39. Mahatma Gandhi (right) with his eldest brother Laxmidas in 1886.40. “A Gurkha, a Brahmin and a Sood in traditional garb, Simla”, ca.1868.Adding few more!41. The Great White Hurricane - New York. 1888, one of the worst blizzards in American history strikes the Northeast, killing more than 400 people and dumping as much as 55 inches of snow in some areas.42. Argentine soldiers buy postcards at a souvenir shop in Port Stanley, on Falkland Islands, on April 13, 1982, shortly before the British respond to their invasion.43. The first mobile phone: Bell Labs two way radio telephone, 1924.44. First ever ride on the subway... London, 1863.45. African girl in a human zoo, Belgium 1958.46. “Group of Sioux Indians”, 1875.47. Women protesting forced Hijab days after the revolution, Iran, 1979.48. Women firefighters direct a hose after the Japanese attack on the US naval base at Pearl Harbor (1941).49. The Golden Gate Bridge on its opening day in San Francisco, May 27th, 1937.50. A Japanese American unfurled this banner the day after the Pearl Harbor attack. (Dec 1941)Thanks for the scrolls!Source: Random Telegram Channels
-
What is the dirtiest fine print you've seen in a contract?
1. A friend had an idea she thought she should patent, and it seemed a good idea to a lot of people. But instead of getting her own patent, she contacted one of those companies that advertises for “inventors”. She soon brought me a 27 page contract of small print that she thought promised her legal assistance for the patent and all kinds of testing, design refinement, product development, manufacturing, advertising and promotion, and distribution of the product based on her d [ http://design.It ]esign. This assistance only cost $12,000, but that was 20 years ago and they guaranteed success. What it didn’t do was define success or any other term in the document, and on page 26, when you were brain dead from reading an infinity of detailed nonsense, it said the services and guarantees would be provided by third parties - unnamed third parties who weren’t signing the contract anyway; so no one was guaranteeing anything. The contract also actually stated that she would have to do everything herself and that the company was responsible for nothing. She was so excited, she had been ready to sign and send her $12k 2. I was in a writer’s group and a member who had left the priesthood and was writing a book about it asked me to review his contract, this one 26 pages. The contract was similar to the one above. For $12,000 the company would provide an agent, an editor, printing, publication and distribution. Minimum sales of $50,000 were guaranteed if he, the author, complied with all requirements. , Near the end was a paragraph stating again that sales of a minimum of $50,000 were guaranteed if he himself sold $50,000 worth of books. They recommended that he go around the country from small independent bookseller to bookseller and set up a web site to sell it. 3. Another friend asked me to read a lease before she signed. She was opening a restaurant, and the lease said she would be liable for the HVAC. I pointed out that tenants are responsible for utilities, but it is rare that they are responsible for any systems of the facility. That’s the landlord’s responsibility. Even most states’ laws say so. I told her I suspected the HVAC system was undependable and she was being set up. And it was not reasonable in a 2 -year-lease for her to have to repair a major component/system of the building, anyway. She wanted this place so badly that she signed without even questioning it. Less than 6 months later, she had to replace the entire system, including replacing ductwork, damage in ceilings, and much more. Over $12,000, I don’t remember exactly how much. A hard blow to a new business. And the repairman who pronounced the HVAC unit dead and impossible to resurrect told my friend it was “ancient” and said the owners had to know it was on its last legs for a long time. 4. In a real estate closing, the mortgage document said, again near the end of an infinity of boring detail, that the buyer could not pay off the mortgage early. Not early like in less than 30 years. What?? Even the other party’s lawyer also had a fit about that. What’s wrong is wrong. But the poor buyer had just come from 1,000 miles away with kids and the moving van idling in the parking lot. He wanted to sign it, even though he intended to move again in 2 or 3 years. It took both lawyers to convince him how dumb that would be. 5. In business I have noticed no one reads contracts, leases, or other legal documents and it often appears their lawyers don’t either. It’s so dangerous. We should read every mind-numbing line carefully. Or get our lawyers to. It would be a lot cheaper than a major misstep.
-
Have you ever created a computer virus?
Yes!But I was always interested mostly in the payload part.Virus are made by two parts, the spreading and the payload. Essentially you want the virus to spread and make the computer do what you want with it.Being disabling or maiming other computers not ethical, my interest was more toward finding means or exploits which will make the user itself to be annoyed so much to grant the virus then the privilege it needed to spread. [evil laugh].My first was Cip Ciop, a deadly virus that can't be stopped by the resource manager.Made with AutoHotkey, a macro interpreter, it was very simple.Here the pseudocode:Cip.exeOpen a pop up “Hello, I'm Cip”Resize pop up to full screenStart Ciop.exeSleep 100millisecondsExitCiop.exeOpen a pop up “Hello, I'm Ciop”Resize pop up to full screenStart cip.exeSleep 100msExitDone correctly, you can kiss goodbye to your desktop manager. The only way to recover is to delete either Cip or Ciop without using a window.Since I did know how to use the terminal I was immune, but it was pretty funny to see my friends to scramble trying to select and press CANC in less than 100ms.Fork bombIt is maybe the most powerful way to destroy the virtual environment of a computer.Pseudo code:Fork_bomb.exeWhile (true){Launch Fork_bomb.exe}This will launch routinely itself until 99.999…9% of processes active on the machine are Fork_bomb.exeThe same fork bomb can also be packaged as a single inline command like:(){ :|: & };:If you somewhat happen to get a terminal on an evil alien mother ship computer running Linux, you can make it lag very badly, possibly averting an Apocalypse.It is possible to minimize damage from a fork bomb by limiting max thread number, to a reasonable low number, like 10,000.A machine running 10 thousands threads, but running at 1–2GHz will still be able to any previous created process at 100Hz, which is still enough to slowly save your work before rebooting, or executing a regex kill command which will wipe any process spawned by the bomb.CryptLockerAfter hearing of the ransomware CryptoLocker I wondered how hard it is to make one, so I tried making one.It is dreadfully easy in Java.Essentially the exploit it is this:Get downloaded and executed by the admin of the PCGet the location of desktop folderEncrypt the folder with really long and random password, possibly with a 2kb password as SHA private key. For uninitiated to cryptography, this is a really strong encryption and expected to be uncrackable for a millennia even with world best supercomputer.Ask for money when user click on the folder desktop, with a pop up. The money is actually not required but in line of theory, when the user pays the a server gives a password token that can be used to unencrypt.Unencrypt the folder when user enters the token that is generated by the server within an hour.Of course I did faked the money aspect. The token was printed in the window.The password token will have hashed inside time and ID of the server, if the server is taken down or it is an old password there is no valid password.This is a really dangerous software, the easiest way to deal with it is uninstall it and then load a backup.Make backup regularly and you shouldn't fear at all this.I didn't share it with no one, except a friend who believed that backups where a waste of time.Key loggerA program which logs all key strokes.Even if it is child easy to log all keys until it matches the regular expression of a credit card number, I used it to prevent my cousin to log in to Facebook when I was not at home.When he would have written his password to login to Facebook, a pop up would open saying “critical computer error! Shutdown within 10 seconds” and full shutdown.It worked! My cousin said my PC had a critical error and shut down. He was just checking on Wikipedia and puff. I said it was happening only when logging to Facebook and he had a really embarrassed look.BadUSBThis is sneaky, because there is really no way to prevent it, unless serious change about how USB is used. And at the same time there is little to worry about it.See, the mouse and keyboard are the ultimate root user. You enter the password trough the keyboard.You enable admin access by clicking with mouse on Windows.W+D //goes to desktopCTRL+N //makes a new file“virus content here”CTRL+S //saves contentCTRL+R “virus.exe” or “virus.sh”//renames it as executableCTRL+ALT+T //opens terminal in current directory“./virus.exe” or “bash ./virus.sh” //executes the virus.“history -cw” //clear terminal historyALT+F4 //closes the terminalOr you can also just open the terminal and do what you want, no traces that the virus ever executed, save for optional file.The way to completely be safe from this attack is to disable autorun from usb keys, and not stick suspicious usb sticks into your computer.It is also true that once one has physical access to your computer, he may as well hack it with an axe…A simple fix to bypass this kind of attacks is to type a random sequence shown in a popup by the operating system, which has to be typed on the keyboard before it is trusted.
-
What did your doctor say or do for you that you will never forget?
I was tortured and kept against my will in a man’s apartment. The incident left me with debilitating PTSD for years, and I vehemently avoided doctors as potential triggers. Alas, diabetes and wisdom teeth don’t care about mental states, and thus in my worst years I had to go to the doctors five times. Two of those times will never leave me.Incident OneMy wisdom teeth were starting to be impossible to ignore, and so I agreed to see a dentist to get a referral. The guy had great reviews, a small office, and could see me on my winter break from college. Great.When I arrive, everyone is personable and kind. There’s a lot of light, its quiet, and there are no tall French men with shaggy hair and an interest in torture. In fact, there are very few men at all here. I begin to relax, and I fill out the forms in which I note that I’m taking fluoxetine and have PTSD and depression, thinking it shouldn’t be relevant at all.Apparently the dentist thought otherwise.As soon as I sit down, he’s decided to offer me a free counseling session, except with him asking triggering questions and me gurgling out replies as he stabs me with his tools.“Why do you have PTSD?”“I was kidnapped and tortured.”“How?”“Its a long story.”“How’d you escape?”“Its an even longer story.”I guess he was pretty distracted by his inquisition, because I was pouring blood down my smock. Note that I was the obnoxious kid who asked all the questions ever at the dentists office. I floss (no, really! I do!), brush, the whole shebang. But it looked like Jackson Pollock teamed up with Quentin Tarantino to perform a sacrifice on my bib. I started crying, but I actually think the dentist liked that. He gave off real sadist vibes (and I should know at this point!)So how did this all conclude? I’d like to say I stormed off, told him how inappropriate some of the things he was saying were, etc., but instead I bawled my eyes out and flashed straight back to my captivity. The pain, can’t move, get out, need to get out, don’t cry, he likes the tears, get out get out getoutgetoutgetout….His concluding question was this:“Have you seen the movie Taken?”Incident TwoThe second incident occurred when my old endocrinologist finally stopped refilling my insulin prescription without seeing me. I was living in the middle of nowhere for college, and there was only one “endocrinologist” in town. I very, very loosely use that term. I think she only worked with an endocrinologist at the clinic she had before he retired, never actually having received any training, but whatever, the other closest one was an hour and a half away, and I needed insulin or I would, you know, die. Not that that seemed like such a bad option at the time (hurrah! Depression!), but my mom would be super mad. And wouldn’t that just fulfill my attacker’s wishes? Ugh, fine, I’ll brave the doctor’s again.So I get to this hole in the wall. The whole place smells slightly of old people, and two geriatrics are arguing bitterly over their insurance. You know those stuffy 70’s living rooms where the dad watches the TV and never the kids and the carpets too deep and the walls are carpet too and everything smells faintly of moth balls and depression? It was that place but a doctor’s office. Too late to escape now though. I already skipped class and managed to drive a whole 30 minutes (a very big deal). I considered not putting my PTSD and other related awful stuff on my forms, but I faintly remembered a story about a girl who got cancer and her insurance denied her because she didn’t report a case of acne. Or something. So I put it down.The nurse calls me back, we have a brief discussion about something else terrible that had more recently happened to me, but I was still *throws glitter* not triggered! Maybe things were better after all?And then the doctor comes back. If you’ve ever seen Burn After Reading, she was the fitness instructor. But more country, and somehow more plastic? She had one of those eternal smiles that makes you think, “Wow, humans really do have a lot of sharp, scary teeth. Better stay away from those!”Focus, Eden! Get your insulin and get out!But twas not to be.The initial talk was…fine. She adjusted the basal, bolus, etc. without reading any of my numbers or looking at any of the previous figures (for non-diabetics, that’s like a teenager walking into a random hospital room, going, “That’s not right!”, and pulling out all the machines. In other words, you = dead af.)Then she finally reads my forms. Uh oh. Instantly, her attention snaps to PTSD. If her face ever moved, I’m sure her eyes would have lit up with curiosity.“Why do you have PTSD?”“I had a traumatic incident.”“What sort of traumatic incident?”“I was kidnapped and tortured.”Without missing a beat, she says:“Have you,”Please no.“Ever seen,”Stop.“The movie,”Kill me now.“Taken?”Maybe I don’t need insulin as much as I thought I did.ConclusionI’ve learned a lot of fun ways not to be a horse’s anus over the past few years, mostly from ways people were amazingly reminiscent of one towards me. From a guy getting in a bar fight over not being able to pet my service dog to people equating my experience to being catcalled. But the biggest way I’ve learned not to shove my own head through my intestines is by, when dealing with someone going through something extremely difficult, giving myself a half-second to think about what I want to say next. And can you guess what has never, ever, ever been the right thing to let out of my mouth? That’s right!Have you seen the movie taken?
-
Why can’t Trump pronounce anonymously?
Some signs of dementia:Inability to pronounce simple words such as “anonymous” correctly,Suddenly blurting our words that are not actually words at all but just nonsense such as “covfefe,”Halted speech while trying to come up with a word but failing to do so,Contradicting himself because he can’t remember what he said yesterday — short term memory loss,Slurred speech — difficult to understand what the patient is saying,Unreasonable sudden flareups of anger over trivial things,A shift toward extreme racism in later years,Use of profanity in very inappropriate circumstances, .e.g. “shithole countries,” andParanoia — feeling everyone is out to get him, e.g., “Witch Hunt,” removing security clearances of those who disagree with him, firing those who refuse to commit crimes on his behalf.For Pete’s sake, how much evidence does it take before the recently whistleblowing op-ed cabinet member and his or her allies in Trump’s cabinet that he mentions in the NY Times artlicle, get together and invoke the 25th Amendment and rid the country of Dangerous Donny Demento?
-
How many Treaties of Paris are there?
Are you ready for a ride?If you do not like long answers, this one is definitely not for you. It is the longest I wrote on Quora so far.In total, I have managed to find 67 Treaties of Paris as well as two Peace Accords, eleven Conventions, five Protocols, one Charter, one Declaration and two Agreements - in total, 89 international agreements concluded in Paris (it seems that over the last decades the word “treaty” is out of fashion). My list is much fuller than anything you would find in an English or a French Wikipedia. I still might have missed a treaty or a convention. Any suggestions are therefore welcome.Treaty of Paris (1214) was signed on 24 October 1214 by Philip II August, the King of France, and Jeanne de Constantinople, Duchess of Flanders. It was the aftermath of the great battle of Bouvines, in which the French King managed to crush a united army of English, Germans and Flemish. Jeanne’s husband Ferrand was taken prisoner. The young woman (she was somewhere between 15 and 20 at the time) came to Paris to find King and signed a treaty. She agreed to demolish all fortresses in Flanders, give back all the property confiscated from the King’s supporters and appoint King-approved baillis (governors). In exchange, she would get her husband back. Flemish Estates (parliament) never ratified the Treaty. Jeanne’s husband spent 13 years in captivity.Treaty of Paris (1229) was signed on 12 April between Blanche of Castile, mother of the King Louis IX, and Raymond VII, Count of Toulouse. It marked the end of 20 years of crusades against the heretics in Southern France. Seeing his domains systematically looted, his people slaughtered, their houses burned, Raymond agreed to all the conditions. He agreed to join the fighting against the heretics, to destroy the walls of his capital, Toulouse, to marry his daughter to the King’s brother and to agree that after his death, all his land would be annexed to the Crown of France.Treaty of Paris (1259) was signed on 4 December between Louis IX of France (Saint Louis) and Henry III of England. After fifty years of military failures, the English Kings were still reluctant to recognise that they have lost almost all their domains in France. However, Henry, plagued by rebels at home, who received French assistance, agreed to back down. He renounced to everything save Gascony, part of Aquitaine, Ponthieu and Channel Islands and agreed to recognise the French King as his suzerain in his French domains.Treaty of Paris (1295) was signed on 23 October between Philip IV the Fair of France and the representatives of John Balliol, King of Scotland. It was a defensive alliance against England. The treaty started the Auld Alliance of Scotland and France that would continue until 1560. However, even after that date French residing in Scotland and Scots residing in France could automatically get dual citizenship (and many exiled Jacobites used the possibility in the 18th century). This disposition would only be revoked in 1906.We can see that in all four treaties signed in Paris in 13th century, France was the dominant party. So it was just natural that people came to Paris to bow to the French King.Raymond VII’s ratification of the Treaty of Paris (left). A WW1 propaganda poster (right).5. Treaty of Paris (1303). Signed between Philip IV the Fair of France and Edward I of England on 20 May, ended a nine-year war between two countries in a compromise way. The reason of this compromise was the great defeat inflicted on French knights by Flemish in the Battle of Golden Spurs in 1302. Gascony, seized by French, was returned to Edward, he recognised Philip as his suzerain, and two Kings decided to marry their kids. This measure of reconciliation would lead a very big war when the son of Edward’s son and Philip’s daughter will decide to claim the throne of France.6. Treaty of Paris (1310) between Henry VII of the Holy Roman Empire and Philip IV the Fair of France mediated by Pope was supposed to make them friends. It did not work.7. Treaty of Paris (1320) finally concluded the French-Flemish war.8. Treaty of Paris (1323), signed on 6 March, ended the war between the Count of Flanders and the Count of Holland. Louis of Flanders recognised the sovereignty of his rival over Zeeland.9. Treaty of Paris (1327), signed on 31 March, ended one more war between England and France. Badly beaten by the French, the English lost several provinces and had to pay a large war indemnity. 14-year-old Edward III, son of the French princess, did not appreciate this humiliation. Ten years later, he would start the Hundred Years’ War.10. Treaty of Paris (1355), signed on 5 January, ended the conflict between France and the County of Savoy. It involved a complicated exchange of lands between two countries. Besides, John the Good, King of France, renounced any claims to Geneva. He wanted his hands free for a big fight against the English invaders. The treaty allowed him to assemble a large force, that would be decisively defeated by the English next year.In 14th century, as we can see, it became a tradition that all treaties involving France should be signed in Paris. However, the 1323 treaty was an innovation because France was not a party to the treaty - and Paris still was chosen to sign it. However, because of the Hundred Years’ War, the tradition would be abandoned for almost a century and a half.When you are Edward I of England, conqueror of Scotland, Wales and Ireland, it is awfully humiliating to kneel to Philip of France for your French domains. But you have to do it. Edward III did not want to do it anymore.11. Treaty of Paris (1498). As Louis XII was preparing to invade Italy, Philip the Fair, Count of Flanders and son of the Emperor Maximilian, concluded a treaty with him (on 2 August), which meant he would not interfere with King Louis’s plans.12. Treaty of Paris (1515). On 24 March, Charles, the 15-year-old Count of Flanders, concluded alliance with Francis I, King of France. They agreed that he would later marry Francis’s daughter, the 4-year-old princess Renée. The marriage would never be concluded. Within four years, the young Count would become both the King of Spain and the Emperor of the Holy Empire, the strongest power in Europe. Charles and Francis would forever be enemies.13. Treaty of Paris (1600). Signed on 27 February 1600 between Charles-Emmanuel I of Savoy and Henry IV of France. The Duke of Savoy wanted to keep Saluzzo, a French possession he seized. Henry pressed him to sign the treaty. Back to Savoy, the Duke started a new war.14. Treaty of Paris (1623). France, Venice and Savoy signed an alliance against Spain. However, France did not fight Spain. Spain was struggling against a great Protestant alliance and Cardinal Richelieu feared to alienate French Catholics if he started fighting against His Catholic Majesty.15. Treaty of Paris (1626) was signed on 5 February between King Louis XIII and the Huguenots (Protestants) of the city of La Rochelle. They could preserve religious freedom but had to destroy two key forts and could not keep a war fleet. After this treaty, a new war erupted, leading to the capture of La Rochelle in 1628 and liquidation of the last Protestant enclave in France.16. Treaty of Paris (1634) was signed on 1 November between France, Sweden and Heilbronn League of Protestant princes in Germany. France promised them money and military assistance to fight Spain and the Holy Roman Empire. The treaty was never ratified because Swedish chancellor wanted better terms. A Franco-Swedish alliance would finally be signed at Compiègne a year later.17. Treaty of Paris (1635), signed on 25 February, established a Franco-Dutch alliance against Spain, both offensive and defensive. France entered the Thirty Years’ War.18. Treaty of Paris (1657) concluded by the Cardinal Mazarini and Oliver Cromwell meant an Anglo-French alliance against Spain. As a result, England conquered Dunkirk, later ceded to France.19. Treaty of Paris (1662) established a defensive Franco-Dutch alliance. During the Anglo-Dutch war of 1664–1667, France would also fight England.Siege of La Rochelle (left). Cardinal Richelieu and his cats (right).20. Treaty of Paris (1718), signed on 21 January between Philip of Orleans, Regent of France, and his brother-in-law Leopold, Duke of Lorraine and Bar, was just a landswap allowing for more contiguous borders of France and Lorraine (later in the century, Lorraine will become part of France).21. Treaty of Paris (1749), signed on 15 August, specified borders between France and Geneva.22. Treaty of Paris (1761) aka Third Family Compact, signed on 15 August, was an alliance between France and Spain, both ruled by Bourbon Kings. Spain honoured this treaty in 1761 and in 1779, entering wars with England to help France. It became obsolete during the French Revolution.23. Treaty of Paris (1763), signed on 10 February, ended the Seven Years’ War aka French and Indian War. France lost Canada, Dominica, Grenada, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Tobago and Senegal to Britain. It also lost Western Louisiana to Spain and Eastern Louisiana (lands between Mississippi and Thirteen Colonies) to Britain. Spain lost Florida to Britain.24–26. Treaty of Paris (1783), which ended the American Revolutionary War. In fact, there were three separate treaties, signed on 3 September 1783 in Paris. The Thirteen Colonies became independent and received all the former territories of East Louisiana. France gained Saint Lucia, Tobago and Senegal. Spain gained Menorca and Florida.27. Treaty of Paris (1783), signed on 8 October, was the American-Dutch treaty of amity and commerce.28. Treaty of Paris (1784), signed on 20 March, ended the fourth Anglo-Dutch War. The Dutch surrendered the Indian city of Negapatnam to Britain and allowed British to sail in their seas (it would lead to the establishment of British colonies in Singapore and Australia).29. Treaty of Paris (1786), signed on 21 May, settled territorial disputes between France and Wurtemberg.Family Compact. Allegory (left). The General Peace. English cartoon, 1783 (right).30. Treaty of Paris (1796), signed on 15 May between France and Piedmont, resulted from the first campaign of the young Napoleon Bonaparte. France obtained Savoy and Nice - and the right of passage through the territory of Piedmont.31–32. Treaties of Paris (1796) were signed on 7 and 22 May respectively with Wurttemberg and Baden, German states that chose to make separate peace with France seeing Napoleon’s prowess.33. Treaty of Paris (1796) was signed on 5 November with the Duchy of Parma that agreed to let French armies in its territory and pay a huge war indemnity.34. Treaty of Paris (1801), signed on 24 August, was a Franco-Bavarian treaty of peace and alliance. Bavaria has lost some lands because of having fought against Napoleon; thanks to this treaty, it would get other lands.35. Treaty of Paris (1801), mediated by France and signed on 4 October, ended the Russian-Spanish war. It was a weird war: no shot was fired during two years. Finally, Spanish and Russian ambassador agreed to restore the traditional amity of two countries.36. Treaty of Paris (1802), signed on 20 May, regulated new borders of Wurttemberg.37. Treaty of Paris (1802), signed on 25 June by Talleyrand and Mehmed Said Galip Pasha, ended the French-Ottoman war after the failure of Napoleon’s Egyptian campaign. Interestingly, this treaty used three systems of dating: the French Revolutionary calendar, the Islamic calendar and the Gregorian calendar.38. Treaty of Paris (1802), signed on 26 December between France and Austria, also dealt with territorial changes. Duke of Tuscany, brother of the Austrian Emperor, gave his territory to Napoleon and received a newly created Duchy of Salzburg in exchange. France then transferred Tuscany to the Duke of Parma, close relative of the Spanish King, because France wanted to keep Parma. In exchange for Tuscany, Spain surrendered not only Parma but Louisiana as well, that Napoleon would sell to Thomas Jefferson.39. Treaty of Paris (1806), signed on 24 May by Talleyrand and the representatives of the Batavian Republic, sanctioned the transformation of the latter into the Kingdom of Holland under Napoleon’s brother Louis Bonaparte.40. Treaty of Paris (1806), signed on 12 July by Talleyrand and the representatives of sixteen German princes, established the Confederation of the Rhine that replaced the Holy Roman Empire. Curiously, one of these sixteen princely states still survives today. It is Liechtenstein.41. Treaty of Paris (1810), signed on 6 January and mediated by Russians, ended Franco-Swedish war of 1808–1809. Sweden accepted to become part of the Continental Blockade against Britain. Swedes would elect renowned Napoleonic marshal Bernadotte to be their next King, in hopes he would guarantee French support for a new war against Russia. Bernadotte would ally with Russia and turn against Napoleon.42. Treaty of Paris (1810), signed on 28 February between France and Bavaria, dealt with exchanges of territory. As a result, Bavaria would lose lots of land in one place and get lots of land in another place.43–45. Treaties of Paris (1810) signed between Bavaria and Wurttemberg, Baden and Hessen and Wurttemberg and Baden, regulated their borders.46. Treaty of Paris (1812), signed on 5 March, established Franco-Prussian alliance against Russia. Prussia was obliged to assist Napoleon in his invasion of Russia, giving him half of its army, provisions, munitions and horses and wagons to transport them. A quarter of Prussian officer corps (300 officers) resigned their commissions when hearing of this treaty: most of them would go to Russia to help defend it against Napoleon, including a young officer Carl von Clausewitz who would become a famous military writer.47. First Treaty of Paris (1814), signed on 30 May, ended the war between Napoleonic France and the Sixth Coalition. Napoleon was removed from throne and replaced with Louis XVIII Bourbon. In general, due to Czar Alexander’s patronage and to Talleyrand’s skill, the conditions were very lenient. France kept some of its conquests and did not pay any indemnity.48. Second Treaty of Paris (1815), signed on 20 November, definitely ended the war between France and the Sixth Coalition. It was necessary because of Napoleon’s brief return to France (the Hundred Days). New terms were much harsher. France lost more land, had to pay 700 million francs in indemnities and was subjected to Allied occupation. It was also - why do I think of Donald Trump? - obliged to finance defensive fortification of its neighbours against itself. An additional article and an act signed on the same day had important consequences. The former was a declaration to stop the slave trade and the latter recognised neutrality of Switzerland.49. Treaty of Paris (1816) restored the Bonaire island to the Dutch after nine years of British administration.50. Treaty of Paris (1817), signed on 20 June by the representatives of European Big Five and Spain, gave the Empress Marie-Louise, Napoleon’s wife, three duchies in Italy - Parma, Piacenza and Guastalla to live peacefully with her lover.During Napoleon’s time, Paris was the capital of Europe. After 1815, France lost its leading role in European politics. That is why the next Treaty of Paris will be signed only four decades later.If you chop a piece too big, you may sometimes choke with it.51. Treaty of Paris (1856), signed on 30 March, ended the Crimean War between Russia and the alliance of Britain, France, Ottoman Empire and Sardinia. Russia lost South Bessarabia and its status of protector of Ottoman Christians (it was given to France). Both Russia and the Ottoman Empire were prohibited from keeping fortresses or war fleet in the Black Sea.52. Treaty of Paris (1857), signed on 4 March, ended the Anglo-Persian War. Iran had to abandon its plans to annex the city of Herat.53. Treaty of Paris (1857) between Prussia and Switzerland was mediated by France and signed on 26 May. The King of Prussia renounced to all claims to the Swiss city of Neuchâtel that belonged to Kings of Prussia since 1708.54–55. Treaties of Paris (1879) were signed on 14 and 21 August between Spain and respectively Peru and Bolivia, ending the war between these countries.56. Treaty of Paris (1898), signed on 10 December, ended the Spanish-American War. Cuba became independent. The Philippines, Guam and Puerto Rico were annexed by the USA. Spain received a $20 million compensation.57. Treaty of Paris (1900), signed on 27 June between France and Spain, settled the borders of Río Muni, the future Equatorial Guinea, and Río de Oro (future Western Sahara).58. Treaty of Paris (1918), signed on 17 July, defined relations between France and Monaco, barring the possibility of German princes becoming Monégasque souverains.59. Treaty of Paris (1920), signed on 28 October between France, UK, Italy, Japan and Romania, recognised Romanian annexation of Bessarabia. USA refused to sign the treaty. Finally, the treaty never came into effect because Japan did not ratify it.60. General Treaty for Renunciation of War as an Instrument of National Policy aka Briand-Kellogg Pact (1928). It was signed by most countries of the world. It should however be remarked that, as the war became illegal, signatories to the treaty started to invade other countries without declaring war.61–65. Paris Peace Treaties (1947) between Allies, on the one side, and Italy, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria and Finland, on the other side, formally established peace between these countries. The five allies of Nazi Germany had to pay reparations and, in some cases, surrender parts of their territory.66. Treaty of Paris (1951), signed on 18 April by France, West Germany, Italy and Benelux countries, established the European Coal and Steel Community.67. Treaty of Paris (1952), signed on 27 May, established European Defence Community. It never came into effect because France failed to ratify it (other five signatories did).Since Napoleon III, Paris has become a place for all kinds of treaties and conventions. I think people started coming to Paris to sign something simply because they liked to come to Paris.Hawaii, Cuba and Philippines happy about US domination. An American cartoon, 1899 (left). An anti-Communist poster for European unity, 1951 (right).Ok. So these were the Treaties of Paris. Now comes an Appendix. As if 67 was not enough.Peace Accords:1 (68). Paris Peace Accords (1973) aka Agreement on Ending the War and Restoring Peace in Vietnam, signed on 27 January by USA, North Vietnam, South Vietnam and Viet Cong, marked the end of active American involvement in Vietnam War.2 (69). Paris Peace Accords (1991), signed on 23 October, marked the end of the Vietnamese-Cambodian War.Lê Ðức Thọ and Kissinger in Paris. They were the main negotiators of the Paris Peace Accords of 1973. They were awarded Nobel Peace Prize but Lê Ðức Thọ declined it.Conventions:1 (70). Paris Convention (1858) united the Danube principalities of Wallachia and Moldavia into the United Provinces of Wallachia and Moldavia (later to become the Kingdom of Romania). The new country was to be an Ottoman vassal but to enjoy the guarantees of the Great Powers.2 (71). Paris Monetary Convention (1865) established the Latin Monetary Union, bringing currencies of France, Belgium, Italy and Switzerland to the same bimetallic (golden and silver) standard. Later, Greece also joined the Union. Other countries (Spain, Romania, Austria-Hungary, Peru, Colombia, Venezuela, Finland, Serbia, Bulgaria, Papal States) did not join but tried to conform their currencies to the LMU standard.3 (72). Metre Convention (1875) signed in Paris by representatives of 17 nations. The treaty set up an institute for the purpose of coordinating international metrology and for coordinating the development of the metric system. Ironically, United States were among the first 17 signatories.4 (73). Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property (1883) is still in force. It was one of the first international conventions on intellectual property, covering patent applications and trademarks.5 (74). Paris Convention for the Protection of Birds Useful to Agriculture (1902) was the first international treaty on protection of birds.6 (75). Paris Convention (1904) concluded by France and Spain specified the border between the French and the Spanish zones in South Morocco.7 (76). Paris Convention of 1919 aka Convention Relating to the Regulation of Aerial Navigation decided that every country owns its airspace and demanded that all aircraft be registered in one country or another.8 (77). Paris Convention (1920) providing for the relations between Poland and the Free City of Gdansk, signed on 9 November.9 (78). Paris Convention on the Organisation of International Expositions (1928) established the Bureau International des Expositions.10 (79). Paris Convention on the Protection of Birds (1950) had a purpose to protect the birds in the wild state as well.11 (80). Paris Convention on Third Party Liability in the Field of Nuclear Energy (1960) regulated liabilities and compensations in the case of nuclear energy accidents.12 (81). Convention for the Protection of the Marine Environment of the North-East Atlantic (OSPAR), signed in Paris on 22 September 1992.13 (82). International Convention Against Doping in Sport which was adopted at the General Conference of UNESCO in Paris on 19 October 2005 and empowered the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA).Early aerial navigationProtocols:1–4 (83–86): Protocols of Paris (1941), signed on 27 and 28 May between Vichy France and Nazi Germany, granted Germany facilities in Syria, access to a railway in Tunisia and to ports in Tunisia and Senegal.5 (87): Protocol on the Termination of the Occupation Regime in the Federal Republic of Germany, signed on 21 October 1954 by West Germany, USA, UK and France, put the end to the occupation of West Germany.Charter:1 (88). Charter of Paris for a New Europe (1990), signed by a number of European countries, USA, Canada and Soviet Union, served as a basis for the establishment of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe.Occupation zones of Germany (left). Soviet stamp dedicated to the Charter of Paris (right).Declaration:1 (89): Paris Declaration on Aid Effectiveness, signed in February 2005, contains a number of commitments from different countries on making international aid more effective.Agreements:1 (90): Gruber - De Gasperi Agreement, signed on 5 September 1946 by Italy and Austria, granted the German-speaking population of the Province of Alto Adige/Südtirol the right to autonomy and preservation of their language, cultural identity and customs.2 (91): Paris Climate Agreement, signed on 12 December 2015, addresses the issues of global warming, with every country taking obligations to limit the temperature increase.This map indicates per capita responsibility for current anthropogenic CO2 in the atmosphereEDIT: Yes, in case there are question, I did not include any Treaty of Versailles (or Trianon, St Germain, Sevres, Neuilly, Meaux) to the list. Environs of Paris deserve a separate answer.EDIT 2: Thank you, Jesus Rueda Rodriguez and Bob Gluck for adding two more conventions to my list.
-
What are the best examples of subtlety in movies?
I love the GodFather trilogy.Will skip the “Keep your friends close and your enemies closer”, and other well-known lines and scenes from this classic .It has all these subtle , downplayed moments that are so ordinary and yet crucial to the central plot and twists. Not too much background score . Not too much hyterics. Few lines. All beautifully shot and played on screen by Al Pacino.Here are my favorites:While in Havana negotiating with Roth, Michael realizes that Fredo is the family traitor he had been looking for. Despite twice telling Michael that he had never met Ola, Fredo drunkenly lets slip that they had met in Havana earlier that year.Movies & TV Stack ExchangeI love how Michael Corleone handles his anger and frustration very well. He could have had a fit and slapped his dimwit of a brother for all I care. Or shot him point blank for more cinematic flare.But he didn’t .He calmly confronts him , gave him the kiss of death and said, "I know it was you, Fredo. You broke my heart. You broke my heart!"Of course we all know where Fredo ended up after- sleeping with the fishes.******************************************Before Don Vito Corleone passed away, he told Michael that whoever will approach him to set up a meeting with the other families is the traitor. Clever of the Don himself to predict that one of his own close friends, Salvatore Tessio, would betray him.How could he have predicted that? And why on his funeral?And yet it turned out to be true. There sits Michael Corleone, watching all the people paying their respects to his late father.Tessio then approached him for a meeting with Barzini :Look at that. Not a flinch. No surprise whatsoever. Not a hint of disbelief from an utter betrayal being committed by a man who was like a father to him.Again, we all know what happened to the other heads of the other families by the end of the movie as he was attending the baptism as a godfather to his sister Connie’s son.******************************************and lastly this: the final scene of the 3rd movieMichael Corleone , after trying for years to legitimize the business , ends up losing everything in the end- with his daughter taking the bullet for him. Perhaps a retribution for past transgressions. Or plain karma.He then hands the reins to his nephew, Vincent, and retires to his villa is Sicily.The once powerful Don now old, with no friends and family , died under the midday sun, with no one to witness his last breath but the stray dogs.***The End***I first watched all GodFather movies when I was 16. I have watched it so many times after that. Yet my appreciation for the genius of Francis Ford Coppola never wanes. Some people find it overrated. I couldn’t care any less. It still is my favorite movie and trilogy of all time.
Trusted esignature solution— what our customers are saying
Get legally-binding signatures now!
Related searches to Remove Sign Word Later
Frequently asked questions
How do i add an electronic signature to a word document?
How to sign digital documents on gogole drive?
How to setup electronic signature on dotloop?
Get more for Remove Sign Word Later
- Help Me With Electronic signature Arizona Orthodontists Presentation
- How Do I Electronic signature Arizona Orthodontists PPT
- How Can I Electronic signature Arizona Orthodontists Presentation
- Can I Electronic signature Arizona Orthodontists Presentation
- Help Me With Electronic signature Arizona Orthodontists PPT
- How To Electronic signature Arizona Orthodontists Presentation
- How To Electronic signature Arizona Orthodontists Presentation
- How Do I Electronic signature Arizona Orthodontists Presentation
Find out other Remove Sign Word Later
- Slr 508 texas state library and archives commission form
- Fcs screening form
- Atrium window wizard form
- Band registration form 43815849
- Ssw 310 form
- Account reactivation form united bank for africa
- Trek sensor bike computer manual form
- Country citizenship on resume form
- Iroquois county highway department form
- Ics form 205a 341632
- Service provider portal access request form
- Byu application 47860205 form
- Phi request form
- Guide dog assessment form
- Literacy teaching methods open university of tanzania out ac form
- Viking forge form
- Sexual harassment and child abuse video viewing aacps form
- Bof 4544a report of operations of law or intra familial firearm transaction bof 4544a report of operations of law or intra form
- Resume brainstorming worksheet form
- How to log on to ladder logic on automax rockwell form