|
| |
| | Amazon.com: Lust: Music: Lords of Acid |
 | | If you buy one Lords of Acid CD (and that is likely), let it be this one because the subsequent offerings have all been subpar. |  | | Anyone conscious during the early '90s is probably already familiar with anti-anthems like "Rough Sex," "Let's Get High," and "I Must Increase My Bust," Lords of Acid singles that combined the rough sounds of '80s Belgian new beat with England's emerging rave scene and added enough nasty thoughts to make Larry Flynt blush scarlet. |  | | The lyrics and music extol the virtues of decadence and excess to the apocalyptic soundtrack of pop rave music. |
|
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/B000000UM2?v=glance
(984 words)
|
|
| |
| | eBay - house of ..., DVD, Comics items on eBay.com |
 | | House Of Lords - House Of Lords 1988 German Import |  | | House of Freaks Tantilla SoundTrack LP Bryan Harvey |  | | House of Flying Daggers DVD R3 DTSES 1 disc uncut! |
|
http://search-desc.ebay.com/search/search.dll?query=house+of+...&newu=1&krd=1
(589 words)
|
|
| |
| | Lords of Acid - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Lords of Acid is a Belgian acid house band from the 1990s that started as a spinoff of Praga Khan with the controversial New beat single I Sit On Acid in 1988. |  | | Lords of Acid also performed as Digital Orgasm, with a less-sex and more-rave sound. |  | | In 2000 they released a more rock 'n' roll album called Farstucker and in 2003, after being in the business for 15 years the band has released a Greatest Hits album. |
|
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lords_of_Acid
(206 words)
|
|
| |
| | VH1.com : Lords of Acid : Artist Main |
 | | Lords of Acid's exaggeratedly sexual acid house dance music gained a cult following with their 1991 album, Lust. |  | | Tour De Force: Lords of Acid, Bentley Rhythm Ace |  | | This station celebrates the beat of the latest electronic music from around the world. |
|
http://www.vh1.com/artists/az/lords_of_acid/artist.jhtml
(197 words)
|
|
| |
| | Armchair DJ: Music Review: Lords of Acid: Expand Your Head and Praga Khan: TwentyFirstCenturySkin |
 | | Meanwhile, the Lords Of Acid's "Expand Your Head" consists mostly of old and new remixes of the band's back catalog, plus three new tracks. |  | | A surprisingly wide variety of electronic musicians contribute, including KMFDM, Front 242's Luc Van Acker, hip-hop turntablist Rob Swift, San Francisco house-head Robbie Hardkiss and techno thump masters Joey Beltram and Frankie Bones. |  | | Much of the rest of the disc degenerates into a rather sorry mixture of cheesy acid techno, circa 1994, with lyrics and vocals that sometimes border on hilarity ("Supersonic Lovetoy"?). |
|
http://www.armchair-dj.com/reviews/e/expand_your_head.asp
(292 words)
|
|
| |
| | Lords Of Acid |
 | | Lords of Acid are a Belgian acid house band from the 1990s... |  | | This is the biggest fan site on the internet for the music groups Lords of Acid and Praga Khan... |  | | Typisch voor Lords of Acid is dat zij... |
|
http://www.musicbyartist.com/Lords-of-Acid-.html
(417 words)
|
|
| |
| | Techno Guide: Lords of Acid |
 | | Lords of Acid's style can be described as Acid House and their music is known widely for it's sexual content. |  | | Lords of Acid was formed by Lady Galore, Lord T. Byron, Shai de la Luna, and McGuinnes in Belgium in the late 80's. |  | | Their released their first album, "Lust" in 1991 and have since became a sort of cult band in Europe and in the U.S. and the songs "I Must Increase My Bust" and "Rough Sex" became club hits. |
|
http://www.intuitivemusic.com/tguidelordsofacid.html
(80 words)
|
|
| |
| | E3Expo 2005 Exhibitor Profiles |
 | | Unprecedented graphical style and gameplay in a world filled with bizarre characters and dark humor." Venture into the city of Metronome, a sprawling mass of haphazardly built houses and makeshift machinery where the outlandish inhabitants are carrying out their chores day and night. |  | | Company description: Schanz International Consultants has been linking developers and publishers and partners on long term with several high profile studios to handle their business relations and licensing. |  | | We are currently developing the Metronome prototype in-house at Gameport AB, an incubator for innovative game concepts. |
|
http://www.tmcnet.com/usubmit/2005/May/1145663.htm
(80 words)
|
|
| |
| | Department for Constitutional Affairs - Consultation Paper - Next Steps for the House of Lords |
 | | House of Lords Act 1999- removed most hereditary peers from the House of Lords, stopped inheritance of a title being an automatic entry ticket to Parliament, and ended the century long dominance of the House by one political party. |  | | House of Lords reform is but one element of a radical programme of constitutional renewal that this Government has put in place since 1997. |  | | House of Commons and House of Lords debate composition of Lords and consider options ranging from a fully appointed to a fully elected House in January and February 2003. |
|
http://www.dca.gov.uk/consult/holref
(80 words)
|
|
| |
| | House Of Lords Act 1999 |
 | | The House of Lords Act does not remove the right to disclaim, but it repeals the references in section 1(2) to writs of summons, as a hereditary peer will no longer by virtue of being a hereditary peer be entitled to receive a writ of summons unless he is an excepted peer. |  | | It also removes the existing disqualifications of a hereditary peer, unless he is excepted under section 2 of the Act from the general exclusion from the House of Lords, to vote in elections to the House of Commons and to stand as a candidate for, or be a member of, the House of Commons. |  | | Any hereditary peer excepted from the general exclusion from the House of Lords remains a member of the House of Lords for life, or until such time as a further Act of Parliament is enacted to the contrary to implement further, long-term reform of the House of Lords. |
|
http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/en1999/1999en34.htm
(3010 words)
|
|
| |
| | House Of Lords Act 1999 |
 | | The House of Lords Act does not remove the right to disclaim, but it repeals the references in section 1(2) to writs of summons, as a hereditary peer will no longer by virtue of being a hereditary peer be entitled to receive a writ of summons unless he is an excepted peer. |  | | Any hereditary peer excepted from the general exclusion from the House of Lords remains a member of the House of Lords for life, or until such time as a further Act of Parliament is enacted to the contrary to implement further, long-term reform of the House of Lords. |  | | It also removes the existing disqualifications of a hereditary peer, unless he is excepted under section 2 of the Act from the general exclusion from the House of Lords, to vote in elections to the House of Commons and to stand as a candidate for, or be a member of, the House of Commons. |
|
http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/en1999/1999en34.htm
(3010 words)
|
|
| |
| | Parliament Of The United Kingdom Encyclopedia Article, Definition, History, Biography |
 | | Charles was executed in 1649 and under Oliver Cromwell's Commonwealth of England the House of Lords was abolished, and the House of Commons remained subordinate to Cromwell. |  | | The House of Lords includes two different types of members—the Lords Spiritual (the senior clergy of the Church of England) and the Lords Temporal (members of the Peerage); it is a wholly unelected body. |  | | The House of Lords and the House of Commons meet in separate chambers in the Palace of Westminster (commonly known as the "Houses of Parliament"), in the British capital, London (more precisely, in the borough (and city) known as the City of Westminster). |
|
http://www.variedtastes.com/encyclopedia/Parliament_of_the_United_Kingdom
(7210 words)
|
|
| |
| | House of Lords White Paper. |
 | | Modernising the Lords: longer-term reform the compostion of a reformed House of Lords. |  | | The House of Lords reserves the right to propose amendments to the detail of the Bill although it is generally accepted that the convention applies to wrecking amendments which are intended to be destructive of the purpose of a Bill for which there is manifesto authority. |  | | Since clergymen of the Churches of England, Scotland and Ireland, and Roman Catholic priests, are not able to be members of the House of Commons, the presence of Bishops in the House of Lords was before the introduction of life peers the only significant non-lay representation of the principal religious denominations in Parliament. |
|
http://www.centreforcitizenship.org/wp3.html
(3139 words)
|
|
| |
| | House of Lords: 3D View of the Web |
 | | House of Lords Judgments - House of Lords Judgments Judgments of the House of Lords delivered since 14 November 1996 published by the court itself. |  | | See live article House of Lords Act 1999 The House of Lords Act 1999, an Act of Parliament passed by the British Parliament, was a major constitutional enactment as it completely reformed one of the chambers of Parliament, the House of Lords. |  | | Design of the new building Image:Hoflentrance-thumbnail.jpg The Irish House of Lords entrance to the Parliament House (east view) The House of Lords entrance, which was part of an extension to the original building, was designed by renowned architect James Gandon larger... |
|
http://www.resolve3d.com/Arts/Music/Styles/Rock/HeavyMetal/HairMetal/BandsandArtists/HouseofLords
(3139 words)
|
|
| |
| | House of Lords Papers - University of Wisconsin-Madison - Memorial Library |
 | | The House of Lords papers and House of Commons papers are also known collectively as the "Sessional papers." Usually, however, when someone refers to the "Sessional papers," they're referring to the House of Commons papers. |  | | Also, the House of Lords has appointed its own investigative committees, and the reports of and evidence presented to the committees can only be found in the House of Lords papers. |  | | The House of Commons papers are usually the more useful papers, but House of Lords papers can be useful in tracking the progress of a bill. |
|
http://www.library.wisc.edu/guides/govdocs/british/lordspap.htm
(742 words)
|
|
| |
| | commons.txt |
 | | The House of Lords consists of the lords spiritual, comprising the archbishops and senior bishops of the Church of England, and the lords temporal. |  | | Among his duties is the summoning of the members of the Commons to the House of Lords for the state opening of Parliament. |  | | Members of the House of Lords expressly appointed to hear appeals to that House, which is the final court of appeal for civil cases in Britain and for criminal cases in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland. |
|
http://www.empowermentzone.com/commons.txt
(12298 words)
|
|
| |
| | House of Lords White Paper. |
 | | Modernising the Lords: longer-term reform the compostion of a reformed House of Lords. |  | | The House of Lords provides a valuable function of scrutiny without which the burden on the House of Commons would be greater and the quality of government legislation diminished. |  | | The House of Lords has always attached importance to its ability to provide general advice and to initiate a general debate on important issues of the day, in an atmosphere less pressurised than the House of Commons by party political issues. |
|
http://www.centreforcitizenship.org/wp7.html
(2700 words)
|
|
| |
| | lords Houses of Parliament |
 | | The House of Lords is also the final court of appeal for civil cases in the United Kingdom and for criminal cases in England, Wales and Northern Ireland. |  | | All other members of the House of Lords are unpaid, but they are entitled to reimbursement of their expenses, within maximum limits for each day on which they attend the House. |  | | The House of Lords is the second chamber of the U.K. Houses of Parliament. |
|
http://www.parliament.uk/works/lords.cfm
(2700 words)
|
|
| |
| | Department for Constitutional Affairs Website |
 | | Because of the failure of attempts at comprehensive reform, the House of Lords arrived at the verge of the twenty-first century still dominated, numerically and in its ethos, by the hereditary peerage. |  | | The Government legislated in the House of Lords Act 1999 to remove the right to be a member of the House of Lords by virtue of a hereditary peerage. |  | | The Royal Commission recommended that anyone leaving the House of Lords, whether at the end of a term or through resignation, should not be eligible to be a member of the House of Commons for 10 years after their original term expired. |
|
http://www.dca.gov.uk/constitution/holref/holsdocs.htm
(20288 words)
|
|
| |
| | Department for Constitutional Affairs - Consultation Paper - Next Steps for the House of Lords |
 | | For the House of Lords, on the other hand, although a peer is effectively unable to sit and vote while imprisoned, her or she is free to resume his or her seat immediately on release. |  | | House of Commons and House of Lords debate composition of Lords and consider options ranging from a fully appointed to a fully elected House in January and February 2003. |  | | It has become accepted as a limitation on the powers of the House of Lords in its relations with the House of Commons, whatever Government is in power, even though it was born out of the peculiarities of the composition of the House of Lords at the time it was articulated. |
|
http://www.dca.gov.uk/consult/holref
(11165 words)
|
|
| |
| | lords Houses of Parliament |
 | | The House of Lords is also the final court of appeal for civil cases in the United Kingdom and for criminal cases in England, Wales and Northern Ireland. |  | | All other members of the House of Lords are unpaid, but they are entitled to reimbursement of their expenses, within maximum limits for each day on which they attend the House. |  | | Members of the House of Lords are not elected and, with the exception of bishops who leave the House on retirement, they retain their seats for life. |
|
http://www.parliament.uk/works/lords.cfm
(1076 words)
|
|
| |
| | House Of Lords Act 1999 |
 | | The Act does not affect the rights of holders of a hereditary peerage excluded from the House of Lords to keep all the other titles, rights, offices, privileges and precedents attaching to the peerage which are unconnected with membership of the House of Lords. |  | | It also removes the existing disqualifications of a hereditary peer, unless he is excepted under section 2 of the Act from the general exclusion from the House of Lords, to vote in elections to the House of Commons and to stand as a candidate for, or be a member of, the House of Commons. |  | | The Act does not affect the position of The Queen, who is not a member of the House of Lords by virtue of a hereditary peerage. |
|
http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/en1999/1999en34.htm
(1076 words)
|
|
| |
| | House Of Lords Act 1999 |
 | | The Act does not affect the rights of holders of a hereditary peerage excluded from the House of Lords to keep all the other titles, rights, offices, privileges and precedents attaching to the peerage which are unconnected with membership of the House of Lords. |  | | It also removes the existing disqualifications of a hereditary peer, unless he is excepted under section 2 of the Act from the general exclusion from the House of Lords, to vote in elections to the House of Commons and to stand as a candidate for, or be a member of, the House of Commons. |  | | The Act does not affect the position of The Queen, who is not a member of the House of Lords by virtue of a hereditary peerage. |
|
http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/en1999/1999en34.htm
(3010 words)
|
|
| |
| | Encyclopedia article on House of Lords Act 1999 [EncycloZine] |
 | | The House of Lords Act 1999, an Act of Parliament passed by the British Parliament, was a major constitutional enactment as it completely reformed one of the chambers of Parliament, the House of Lords. |  | | The Act also provided that a hereditary peer would be entitled to vote in elections for, and sit in, the House of Commons, unless he or she was also a member of the House of Lords. |  | | Prior to the House of Lords Act 1999 the power of the Lords was diminished by the Parliament Acts of 1911 and 1949 which stripped the Lords of their ability to block adoption of most bills; at most they could delay them for one session. |
|
http://encyclozine.com/House_of_Lords_Act
(3010 words)
|
|
| |
| | House of Lords - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The House of Lords is the upper house of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. |  | | The House of Lords is an unelected body, consisting of two archbishops and 26 bishops of the established Church of England ("Lords Spiritual") and 706 members of the Peerage ("Lords Temporal"). |  | | The jurisdiction of the House of Lords extends, in civil and in criminal cases, to appeals from the courts of England and Wales, and of Northern Ireland. |
|
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_of_Lords
(7108 words)
|
|
| |
| | Ireland Information Guide , Irish, Counties, Facts, Statistics, Tourism, Culture, How |
 | | The upper House of the Parliament of the United Kingdom, the House of Lords, has historically comprised the Peers of the Realm, who have at the same been excluded from the House of Commons. |  | | Under the Act of Union 1801, however, Irish peers were allowed to sit in the House of Commons provided they renounced the privileges associated with the privilege, such as a right to a trial in the House of Lords rather than by a jury of commoners. |  | | After the House of Lords was reinstated in 1660, however, peers returned to the former position of being barred from the House of Lords. |
|
http://www.irelandinformationguide.com/Peers_and_Parliament
(7108 words)
|
|
| |
| | text-Lords-mja |
 | | Although the functions of the House of Lords are limited, it is useful: it acts as a safeguard against the increasing powers of the government and of the prime minister. |  | | The House of Lords also has a judicial function: it is the final court of appeal for civil cases in Britain and for criminal cases in England, Wales and Northern Ireland; in that case, only five law lords attend the debates. |  | | Logically, since the removal of most hereditary peers, the House of Lords has proved just as ready to fight the government and the House of Commons as it was before the reform; for example, on 20 January 2000, it forced the government to withdraw its bill to end the right to jury trials. |
|
http://www.univ-nancy2.fr/CEAA/CRESAB/text-Lords-mja.html
(3276 words)
|
|
| |
| | Parliament Home Page Houses of Parliament |
 | | Members of the House of Commons and Members of the House of Lords. |  | | The House of Commons and the House of Lords have returned from Summer recess. |  | | Click on the following links for information about the forthcoming business in the House of Commons or the Order Paper and Future Business of House of Lords. |
|
http://www.parliament.uk
(3276 words)
|
|
|