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Afloat tours in the Naval Reserve have included deck watch officer in Emory S. Land, weapons officer in Harold J. Ellison, and selected reserve coordinator in Oliver Hazard Perry. Shore billets have included executive officer of Shore Intermediate Maintenance Activity (SIMA) Philadelphia, Surface Group Four Squadron liaison officer, and plans ...
The Commander format launched in 2011, which was derived from a fan-created format known as "Elder Dragon Highlander (EDH)"; [4] the format uses 100 card singleton decks (no duplicates except basic lands and cards that state otherwise), a starting life total of 40, and features a "Commander" or "General".
Viceroy John Lawrence's executive council in Simla, 1864. The Viceroy's Executive Council, formerly known as Council of Four and officially known as the Council of the Governor-General of India (since 1858), was an advisory body and cabinet of the Governor-General of India, also known as Viceroy. It existed from 1773 to 1947 in some form or the ...
The new plane of Kaldheim, and the set based around it, is "Viking and Norse mythology-inspired" [1] and has a top-down design where the theme "dictates the set's cards and powers". [3] The plane "is home to elves, dwarves, valkyrie angels, changelings, giants, and Viking-like human berserkers.
Council of Four may refer to: The Big Four (World War I), the top Allied leaders who met at the Paris Peace Conference in January 1919; Council of Four (India), a political body of 18th century India; Council of Four Lands, the central body of Jewish authority in Poland from 1580 to 1764
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The Council of Four from left to right: David Lloyd George, Vittorio Emanuele Orlando, Georges Clemenceau and Woodrow Wilson in Versailles. The Big Four or the Four Nations refer to the four top Allied powers of World War I [1] and their leaders who met at the Paris Peace Conference in January 1919. The Big Four is also known as the Council of ...
The Governor General was given a casting vote but no veto. [4] It was appointed by the Court of Directors (board) of the East India Company. At times it also included the British military Commander-in-Chief of India (although this post was usually held concurrently by the Governor General). Hence the council was also known as Governor-General ...