[ noun ] a port and state capital of Tasmania <noun.location>
James L. Hobart, the 54-year-old chairman, was named to the additional post of chief executive officer, succeeding Henry E. Gauthier, who was appointed to the newly created position of chief operating officer.
"We don't want anyone standing on the curb watching this parade _ we want everyone in it," said Hobart Cawood, superintendent of Independence National Historical Park.
Hobart Cawood, superintendent at Philadelphia's Independence National Historical Park, denounced plans to charge a $2 entrance fee there, especially during this year's Constitution bicentennial.
Even if the Soviet fishing agreement were operated from the relative isolation of Hobart, Aeroflot would nonetheless have the ability to touch down at other points in Australia.
'It was a hell where men deprived of the means of suicide had been known to commit murder solely for the privilege of being taken in chains to Hobart and hanged - and thus escape.' If Australia itself was remote, Sarah Island was another planet.
Bush spoke at the dedication of the methanol pump at an ARCO station at Wilshire and Hobart boulevards.
The Vincent Glare is now a legend on the boat; we summon it up like voodoo.' The sub-plot running along the Rio waterfront this week has been the 7,000 miles of sailing between here and Hobart.
A spokesman for the Bureau of Meteorology in Tasmania, an island state off Australia's southern coast, said temperatures in the capital, Hobart, had dipped almost 9 degrees below average to a minimum of 36 degrees.
They left Hobart exactly two weeks ago and are heading for Cape Town.
"It's not right that Tupperware (executives) get penalized because Hobart fell down or Kraft had a soft year," he says.
Since 1936, when the last known Tasmanian tiger died in a Hobart zoo, expeditions have spent hundreds of thousands of dollars seeking the wolflike creature.