"I can't even afford to buy a notebook for every subject I'm taking, " said Bocardo, who is taking night classes to earn a degree in accounting.
12.
The Oxford Martyrs were imprisoned in the Bocardo Prison by the church before they were burnt at the stake in what is now Broad Street nearby, then immediately outside the city walls, in 1555 and 1556.
13.
The series features four women : Detective Deborah Moyer, Detective Lindsey Smith, Deputy Kelly Bocardo and Deputy Amie Duong; and follows the women at their jobs as law enforcement officials and at home with their families.
14.
The forced retirements of two executives and reassignment of a third last weekend have angered managers at Petroleos de Venezuela SA, said Jose Manuel Bocardo, PDVSA's director of industrial operations in the western state of Zulia.
15.
There is a folk-etymology for the name : because Bocardo was found to be one of the harder forms of valid syllogism for students to learn, it was said to be the name of a prison that was hard to escape from.
16.
Alejandro Bocardo, president of the Mexican-based Federacion Internacional de Futbol Rapido ( FIFRA )-- International Fast Soccer Federation, says he is " 98 percent " certain Maradona will play with an Argentine select team in the Dec . 14-17 event.
17.
In 1629 or 1630 he became surety for the debts of his brother, and being unable to pay was committed to prison, first in the Bocardo Prison at Oxford, and subsequently in the King's Bench, where he pursued his studies, spending what money he could upon books.
18.
In " Star Energy Weald Basin Limited and another v Bocardo SA " the UK Supreme Court ( having heard argument that the principle was no longer relevant to land ownership ) held that the principle " . . . still has value in English law as encapsulating, in simple language, a proposition of law which has commanded general acceptance.
19.
It was located near the church of St Michael at the North Gate; the prison consisted in fact of rooms in a watchtower by Oxford's North Gate, the tower being attributed to Robert D'Oyly, a Norman of the eleventh century, though also said to be originally a Saxon construction of 1040; the gate itself was called also Bocardo Gate.
20.
Layton wrote to Cromwell,'We have sett Dunce [ Duns Scotus ] in Bocardo and have utterly banished hym Oxforde for ever, with all his blinde glosses, and is nowe made a comon servant to evere man, faste nailede up upon postes in all comon howses of easement : id quod oculis meis vidi'('I saw it with my own eyes . ')