Despite the distractions with Pinocchio, Walt Disney was looking for an opportunity to collide with new ideas.
But you don't have to collide with the creator of "Star Wars" to ensure a visit to Cannes Film Festival is memorable.
Richard Dallimore of Llangennith Surf said they could cause someone a serious injury if they were to collide with one of them on what is Gower's most popular beach for surfing.
Previous research found artificial light caused newly-hatched turtles to head away from the sea, rather than towards it, and caused seabirds such as petrels to collide with lighthouses and other lit structures.
BBC: Grangemouth and Longannet lights help birds feed at night
Court papers showed he denied a charge of careless driving at Lochgreen Road that day, losing control of his car, causing it to collide with and damage an electrical box and a fence.
Here, near the settlement of Sesriem, westerly winds from the Naukluft Mountains to the east collide with the Atlantic winds, stopping the dunes' advance.
Entitlement spending is the driver of deficits, but entitlement reforms, such as raising the retirement age or converting Medicare to grants, collide with the core of liberal statist thinking.
FORBES: Barack Obama Wants YOU --- to Pay $10,000 More To Maintain His Entitlement State
Mr Prodi may well find that his ambitions for a strong commission lead him to collide more often with national governments, in such matters as the single market, competition and foreign affairs.
ECONOMIST: The European Commission: New broom sweeps half-clean | The
The gravity of the three large planets is throwing the smaller bodies off course, causing them to migrate around and collide with each other.
That may collide with attempts to change the Barnett formula, which controls the distribution of public money between the nations of the UK, and which many MPs and the eponymous former Labour Treasury Minister, Lord Barnett, argue gives too much money to Scotland.
The Large Hadron Collider (LHC), the world's biggest particle accelerator, uses a staggering 1, 200 tonnes of superconducting wire, similar to the sort used in MRI, in order to speed protons up to within a whisker of the speed of light and to collide them inside vast detectors, themselves stuffed with several hundred tonnes of superconducting materials.
Alongside other clusters highlighted at the meeting, astronomers hope to better understand how they form, grow and collide with one another.
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