[ noun ] a department of Greece in the central Peloponnese <noun.location>
Arcadia \Ar*ca"di*a\, n. [L. Arcadia, Gr. ?.] 1. A mountainous and picturesque district of Greece, in the heart of the Peloponnesus, whose people were distinguished for contentment and rural happiness.
2. Fig.: Any region or scene of simple pleasure and untroubled quiet.
Where the cow is, there is Arcadia. --J. Burroughs.
John Taylor and Andy Taylor splintered off to join The Power Station with Robert Palmer, while Le Bon, Rhodes and Roger Taylor formed Arcadia.
Ms. Reece, now 67, was a neighbor of Richardson's in Arcadia.
Mr Nicholas Driver and Mr Robert Rayne, directors of LMS, will join Arcadia's board. LMS reported a 20 per cent drop in pre-tax profits to Pounds 22.3m last year.
"I think this Weaver thing is going to put the icing on the cake," John Spencer Robinson of Arcadia, who defended Richardson at trial and initially appealed the case, said Monday.
And last week, Arcadia's former chief of police, Richard Barnard, swore he believes Richardson was "framed" by then-DeSoto County Sheriff Frank Cline.
Once he's passed the exam - with the public and the critics - he forgets all about it and moves on to the next subject.' In Arcadia, his subject is higher mathematics, not forgetting his work on physics in Hapgood.
But this year, Solomon received a phone call from Coon asking her to keep the card, and not return it to Arcadia.
"People must have read the paper and heard it on the radio because Arcadia filled up," he said. "The car was hauled into town with the bodies still inside.
A Nobel prize-winner said on the radio on Monday that he could keep up with all the talk about science and Romanticism in Tom Stoppard's Arcadia.
The settlement marks the end of the Rays' complaint that school officials violated their sons' civil rights by refusing to allow them to attend Memorial Elementary School in Arcadia in 1986 and 1987 for fear of spreading the deadly disease.
The family lived in a Arcadia, about 35 miles east of Sarasota.
He writes music (see 'Arcadia').
The first anencephalic child considered by Loma Linda hospital for the pioneering procedure was the child of Brenda and Michael Winner of Arcadia, Calif. But the baby was stillborn on Dec. 22.
Tom Stoppard, who has toyed with mathematics and the sciences in Arcadia, ought to look to his laurels.