The park is home to over 200 bird species, including such rare birds as the chestnut-necklaced partridge, red-collared woodpecker, WWF ) recorded 259 butterfly species of 11 families.
12.
It's no coincidence that Bacon happily recalls " the beauty of it " when he once saw an upturned vehicle on the road, necklaced with bodies, blood and shattered glass.
13.
The demonstrations, which officials said took place in the presence of police officers, have been coupled with pictures on television of unidentified foreigners being accosted and in at least one case " necklaced " with a burning tire.
14.
Monday I listened as radio sports philosopher Rush Limbaugh debated the pros and cons of a recent deal that Sega Genesis allegedly offered Deion Sanders, the gold-necklaced-and-earringed 49ers defensive back, Reds outfielder and wack rapper.
15.
He later went on to say " The question that still haunts me is'would those people have been necklaced, if there was no media coverage ? " Pulitzer Prize winner Carter was always troubled by his professional responsibilities vs . moral considerations.
16.
It won't change the fact that they killed Stanza Bobape, they bombed Khotso House, they tortured their own people in their camps in Tanzania, in Angola, they necklaced people, " referring to a form of execution involving rubber tires set ablaze.
17.
As for his feud with the newspaper, it may not have helped that he once disagreed with a position taken by The Journal-Constitution's editorial page editor, Cynthia Tucker, by telling her that in South Africa blacks like her are " necklaced " with burning tires.
18.
In the poem, a nameless narrator wanders through the Financial District and Harlem, looking in vain for Walt Whitman's ghost and angrily imagining " an eastern wind " uprooting skyscrapers, " a cloud necklaced with fire " and " people melting like tears ."
19.
When Brendan Fitzgerald, a tourist from Massachusetts, arrived in Peggy's Cove earlier this week, it was still known mainly as the most visited, most admired old fishing village on Nova Scotia's craggy east coast _ necklaced by great white rocks, serenaded by crashing surf and crowned by a red-tipped lighthouse worth driving hours to see.