1. In Hoc

    Again with the small chapters. You don’t need that many paddles because there aren’t that many fucking pledges.

    14 years ago at 1:42 pm
    1. Self Broclaimed

      ^Yeah you’re right there’s a lot of names on those paddles…too bad they’re all from the 1990’s.

      14 years ago at 5:28 pm
  2. monumentavenue

    he country of Narnia is where most of the action of the series is set. According to the mythology of the series, Narnia was created by the great lion, Aslan, and is filled with talking animals and mythical creatures. C. S. Lewis may have taken the name from the Italian town of Narni, whose Latin name was in fact Narnia. Narnia features rolling hills rising into low mountains to the south, and is predominantly forested except for marshlands in the north. The region is bordered on the east by the Eastern Ocean, on the west by a great mountain range, on the north by the River Shribble, and on the south by Archenland.
    The Great River of Narnia enters the country from the northwest and flows to the Eastern Ocean. At its mouth lies Cair Paravel, the seat of High King Peter and his siblings. Other communities along the river include, from east to west, Beruna, Beaversdam, and Chippingford.

    14 years ago at 2:25 pm
  3. BrotherOmicron

    Donnelley began making maps with computers in the mid-1980s to generate maps for customers. Much of that code was adapted for use on the Internet to create the MapQuest web service in 1996. In 1999 the company was renamed to MapQuest to leverage the popularity of its online brand.
    MapQuest was acquired in 2000 by America Online, Inc.
    For a while, MapQuest included satellite images through a licensing deal with GlobeXplorer, but later removed them due to the unorthodox business mechanics of the arrangement brokered by AOL. In September 2006, the website once again began serving satellite imagery in a new beta program.
    In 2004, MapQuest, uLocate, Research in Motion and Nextel launched MapQuest Find Me, a buddy-finder service that works on GPS-enabled mobile phones. MapQuest Find Me lets users automatically find their location, access maps and directions and locate nearby points of interest including airports, hotels, restaurants, banks and ATMs. Users also have the ability to set up alerts to be notified when network members arrive or depart from a designated area. In 2005 the service became available on Sprint and in 2006, Boost Mobile.
    In July 2006, MapQuest created a beta version of a new feature in which users could now “Build Your Route” by adding additional stops, reorder one’s route (and the stops along the way), to avoid any turns or roads en route.
    In April 2007, MapQuest announced a partnership with General Motors’ OnStar that will allow OnStar subscribers to plan their driving routes on MapQuest.com and send their destination right to OnStar’s turn-by-turn navigation service. The OnStar Web Destination Entry pilot program began in the summer of 2007 with a select group of OnStar subscribers.

    The former MapQuest logo was phased out after a website redesign was introduced on July 14, 2010.
    In July 2010, MapQuest announced[2][3] plans to become the first major mapping site to embrace open-source mapping, launching a new site[4] entirely using data from the OpenStreetMap project.

    14 years ago at 3:43 pm
  4. FratDadddy

    We mentally haze our pledges. Less bruises, less questions, just as effective.

    14 years ago at 6:53 pm
    1. Wealthyweight

      No one cares about DKE’s because they are all poor virgins, look it up on wikipedia. Facts bro, facts.

      14 years ago at 9:10 pm
  5. XxRushPIKE69xX

    Justus was the fourth Archbishop of Canterbury. He was sent from Italy to England by Pope Gregory the Great, on a mission to Christianize the Anglo-Saxons from their native Anglo-Saxon paganism, probably arriving with the second group of missionaries despatched in 601. Justus became the first Bishop of Rochester in 604, and attended a church council in Paris in 614. Following the death of King Ethelberht of Kent in 616, Justus was forced to flee to Gaul, but was reinstated in his diocese the following year. In 624 Justus became Archbishop of Canterbury, overseeing the despatch of missionaries to Northumbria. After his death he was revered as a saint, and had a shrine in St Augustine’s Abbey, Canterbury. Augustine consecrated Justus as a bishop in 604, over a province including the Kentish town of Rochester. The historian Nicholas Brooks argues that the choice of Rochester was probably not because it had been a Roman-era bishopric, but rather because of its importance in the politics of the time. Although the town was small, with just one street, it was at the junction of Watling Street and the estuary of the Medway, and was thus a fortified town. Because Justus was probably not a monk (he was not called that by Bede), his cathedral clergy was very likely non-monastic too.

    14 years ago at 11:22 am