Indian Wedding Invitation
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Wedding Invitation A wedding invitation is a letter sent to a person, asking the recipient to attend a wedding. They are typically mailed out 6 weeks before the wedding date. Wedding invitations can sometimes have fancy writing on them known as calligraphy. Other types of printing include Engraving, Thermography, Letterpress printing and sometimes Blind Embossing. Most of time, they are mailed in double envelopes. The inner envelope can be lined in a matching color, is not gummed and fits into the outer envelope. The outer envelope is gummed for sealing and addressing.
Along with the wedding invitation, the ensemble may also include a respond card or folder and envelope. The respond card or folder is traditionally used for gathering totals for the caterer and getting a general number of guests attending. The recipient is asked to mail back the respond card or folder roughly two weeks before the wedding or by the date indicated. The envelope is pre-addressed and pre-stamped by the wedding party for ease.
Other pieces often included in the ensemble are the reception card or folder, map or direction card, and accommodation information.
The reception card simply lists the addresses and times of any post-wedding events, such as a cocktail hour, dinner or dance. Map or direction cards provide details about the location of the wedding and reception. The accommodation information gives helpful tips about airfare, transportation or hotel arrangements for out-of-town guests. Local attractions may be featured as well. Often times the accommodation information is sent in advance with the save the dates.
A save the date is similar to an invitation and is mailed up to one year before the wedding date. Save the dates simply announce that the wedding date has been set and encourages recipients to plan for the event. It is not used as a a substitute for the wedding invitation and typically mentions that an invitation will follow.
Category:Wedding
The Invitation ''The Invitation'' is the debut album from Thirteen Senses. Released 27th September 2004, it features the singles "Do No Wrong", "Into The Fire", "Thru The Glass" and "Salt Wound Routine".
Track listing
#"Into The Fire" (3:38)
#"Thru The Glass" (4:37)
#"Gone" (3:22)
#"Do No Wrong" (4:52)
#"The Salt Wound Routine" (4:38)
#"Saving" (6:09)
#"Lead Us" (4:46)
#"Last Forever" (3:54)
#"History" (3:51)
#"Undivided" (2:44)
#"Angels and Spies" (5:13)
#"Automatic" (5:03)
Category:2004 albums
Category:Debut albums
An Invitation To Lubberland "''An Invitation to Lubberland''" was a broadside ballad first printed in 1685. Many believe that it inspired the hobo ballad which formed the basis of the song ''Big Rock Candy Mountain'' recorded in 1928 by Harry McClintock.
An Invitation to Lubberland
with An Account of the great Plenty of that Fruitful Country
To the tune of: Billy and Molly now lost or, The Journey-man Shoemaker by Daniel Cooper.
There is all sorts of Fowl and Fish,
With Wine and store of Brandy;
Ye have there what your hearts can wish:
The Hills are Sugar-Candy
There is a ship, we understand,
Now riding in the river;
'Tis newly come from Lubberland,
The like I think was never;
You that a lazy life do love.
I'd have you now go over,
They say the land is not above
Two thousand leagues from Dover.
The captain and the master too,
Do's give us this relation,
And so do's all the whole ship's crew,
Concerning this strange nation:
"The streets are pav'd eith pudding-pies,
nay, powder'd-beef and bacon,
They say they scorn to tell you lies:'
Who thinks it is mistaken.
The king of Knaves, and Queen of Sluts
Reign there in peace and quiet;
You need not fear to starve your guts,
There is such store of dyet:
There may you live free from all care,
Like hogs set up a fat'ning;
The garments which the people wear
Is silver, silk and satin.
The lofty buildings of this place
For many years have lasted;
With nutmegs, pepper, cloves, and mace,
The walls are there rough-casted,
In curious hasty-pudding boil'd,
And most ingenious carving;
Likewise they are with pancakes ty'd,
Sure, here's no fear of starving.
The captain says, "In every town,
Hot roasted pigs will meet ye,
They in the streets run up and down,
Still crying out, Come eat me"
Likewise, he says, "At every feast,
The very fowls and fishes,
Nay from the biggest to the least,
Comes tumbling to the dishes.
"The rivers run with claret fine,
The brooks with rich canary,
The ponds with
Buick Invitational The Buick Invitational is a PGA TOUR golf tournament played at Torrey Pines Golf Course in San Diego, California each February. It was formerly knowns as the San Diego Open, and then the Andy Williams San Diego Open, among a variety of names it has had since it began in 1927.
Winners
Buick Invitational
2005 Tiger Woods
2004 John Daly
2003 Tiger Woods
2002 José María Olazábal
2001 Phil Mickelson
2000 Phil Mickelson
1999 Tiger Woods
1998 Scott Simpson
1997 Mark O'Meara
1996 Davis Love
Buick Invitational of California
1995 Peter Jacobsen
1994 Craig Stadler
1993 Phil Mickelson
1992 Steve Pate
Shearson Lehman Brothers Open
1991 Jay Don Blake
Shearson Lehman Hutton Open
1990 Dan Forsman
1989 Greg Twiggs
Shearson Lehman Hutton Andy Williams Open
1988 Steve Pate
Shearson Lehman Brothers Andy Williams Open
1987 George Burns
1986 Bob Tway
Isuzu / Andy Williams San Diego Open
1985 Woody Blackburn
1984 Gary Koch
1983 Gary Hallberg
Wickes / Andy Williams San Diego Open
1982 Johnny Miller
1981 Bruce Lietzke
Andy Williams - San Diego Open
1980 Tom Watson
1979 Fuzzy Zoeller
1978 Jay Haas
1977 Tom Watson
1976 J.C. Snead
1975 J.C. Snead
1974 Bobby Nichols
1973 Bob Dickson
1972 Paul Harney
1971 George Archer
1970 Pete Brown
1969 Jack Nicklaus
1968 Tom Weiskopf
San Diego Open Invitational
1967 Bob Goalby
1966 Billy Casper
1965 Wes Ellis
1964 Art Wall
1963 Gary Player
1962 Tommy Jacobs
1961 Arnold Palmer
1960 Mike Souchak
1959 Marty Furgol
1958 No Tournament
1957 Arnold Palmer
Convair - San Diego Open
1956 Bob Rosburg
1955 Tommy Bolt
San Diego Open
1954 Gene Littler
1953 Tommy Bolt
1952 Ted Kroll
1930-51 No tournament
1929 Leo Diegel
1928 No tournament
1927
Invitation To Treat
In contract law, an invitation to treat is an action by one party which may appear to be a contractual offer but which is actually inviting others to make an offer of their own. The distinction is important because if a legitimate contractual offer is accepted by another, a binding contract is immediately formed and the terms of the original offer cannot be further negotiated without both parties consent. An invitation to treat may be seen as a request for expressions of interest.
The clearest example of an invitation to treat is a tender process. The party tendering out services is not obliged to sign a contract with the first party who submits a tender proposal. An auction may be more ambiguous. Generally an auction may be seen be an invitation to treat, with the property owner asking for offers of a certain amount and then selecting which to accept. However, if it is stated by the owner that there is no reserve price or that there is a reserve price beyond which offers will be accepted then the auction is most likely a contractual offer which is accepted by the highest bidder (''Spencer v Harding'' (1870) LR 5 CP 561) .
A shop owner displaying their goods for sale is generally making an invitation to treat. They are not obliged to sell the good to anyone who is willing to pay for them, even if additional signage such as "special offer" accompanies the display of the good. This distinction was legally relevant in ''Fisher v Bell'' 1961 1 QB 394 where it was held that displaying a flicknife for sale in a shop did not contravene legislation which prohibited offering for sale such a weapon. The distinction also means that if a shop mistakenly displays a good for sale at a very low price it is not obliged to sell it for that amount http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/the_economy/441740.stm.
Contract
Offer and acceptance
Category: Contract law
Ladies Invited
''Ladies Invited'' is the fifth album by American rock band J. Geils Band, released in 1973 (see 1973 in music).
Track listing
all songs written by Seth Justman and Peter Wolf
#"Did You No Wrong" - 4:08
#"I Can't Go On" - 5:04
#"Lay Your Good Thing Down" - 4:32
#"That's Why I'm Thinking of You" - 3:13
#"No Doubt About It" - 3:40
#"The Lady Makes Demands" - 4:21
#"My Baby Don't Love Me" - 3:42
#"Diddyboppin'" - 3:31
#"Take a Chance (On Romance)" - 3:55
#"Chimes" - 5:04
Personnel
Stephen Bladd - percussion, drums, vocals
J. Geils - guitar
Seth Justman - keyboard, vocals
Danny Klein - bass
Magic Dick - harmonica, trumpet
Peter Wolf - vocals
Production
Producer: Bill Szymczyk
Engineers: Allan Blazek, Bill Szymczyk
Mastering: Zal Schreiber
Special assistance: Juke Joint Jimmy
Arrangers: J. Geils Band
Personal managers: Stephen Bladd, Danny Klein
Design: Ira Friedlander, Douglas T. Slade
Cover design: Antonio, Douglas T. Slade
Photography: Robert Agriopoulos
Illustrations: Antonio
Charts
Album - Billboard (North America)
Category:J. Geils Band albums
Category:1973 albums
Category:Rock albums
The Style Invitational
The Style Invitational, or S.I., is a long-running weekly humor contest in the Sunday Washington Post Style section. Started in 1993, it had run nearly 600 times as of January 2005. It was initiated by a mysterious individual known as "The Czar", who abdicated in late 2003. The contest is currently run by the The Empress. The humor ranges from a less mature style to a more intellectual vein, and frequently touches on sophisticated political, scientific, or historical allusions. While the contest theme changes every week, some popular ones are periodically repeated. It has a loyal following of self-proclaimed "Losers", who refer to having an entry published in the contest as "getting ink". Columnist and former Style section editor Gene Weingarten has been rumored to have some connection with the contest.
History
The Style Invitational kicked off in March 1993, first asking readers to come up with a less offensive name for the Washington Redskins. The winner, published two weeks later, was Douglas R. Miller, with the entry "The Baltimore Redskins. No, don't move the team, just let Baltimore deal with it." He won a Timex watch, and apparently never entered again, as he wanted to retire undefeated.
Another early contest asked entrants to help choose a better nickname for Washington, D.C., to replace "A Capital City". Exemplifying the S.I.'s irreverence, the winning entry was "A Work-Free Drug Place".
The contest had a several-month hiatus beginning in August 1999, starting again in January of 2000 using annoying roman numerals to number the contest weeks. It usually receives entries from hundreds of persons each week and, since multiple entries are allowed for each individual, has received upwards of 20,000 entries in a single week.
A group of devotees (see links) of the S.I. meets periodically in the Washington, D.C. area, and hosts an annual "Flushies" awards dinner that has attracted gameplayers from as far away as Ireland and California.
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Indian Wedding Invitation
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Indian Wedding Invitation
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