1、Ghent gobbled Imperial encrypt codes as a hobby.

2、At Ghent, Baekeland would have had a secure career and support for his chemistry experiments.

3、Two days after his arrival on Coruscant, Ghent had Ackbar cleared.

4、Researchers from Ghent University in Belgium said there could be "serious clinical consequences" for patients.

5、Recruited from Chibias, Ghent handled all of Karrde's computers and droids, keeping them running smoothly.

6、The peace treaty was signed the day before Christmas at Ghent, Belgium.

7、Before coming here, I visited a Volvo plant in Ghent together with King Philippe and Queen Mathilde.

8、Now the city has an effective transportation plan which includes Ghent City bicycles for staff and outlying parking.

9、That is why the city was rewarded the UNESCO title of 'Ghent - UNESCO Creative of city of Music' - a prestigious title Ghent shares with only 3 other cities in the world.

10、This three-star Novotel is perfect for a weekend stay in Ghent with your partner or family.

11、The impetus for the building of a new plush Ghent playhouse was given by local rich industrialists in the first half of the 19th century.

12、Gaeton Borgonie of Ghent University and his team found the organisms after sampling deep fracture water from the Beatrix and Driefontein gold mines of South Africa.

13、"There has been a massive increase in demand for vegetarian dishes at my restaurant over the past few years," Wim Vandamme, a Ghent restauranteur told me.

14、One person died and 17 others were injured when a cargo train carrying toxic chemicals derailed near the northwestern Belgian city of Ghent on Saturday.

15、We don't know who is behind this, nor why, " the spokeswoman for the Ghent prosecutor's office, An Schoonjans, told AFP, adding that the store had not received any prior warning."

16、A short time later, when Leia needed to get to the planet Wayland, Ghent rigged a fake Imperial transponder code on the Wild Karrde that allowed it to carry her there.

17、"It was used especially by 15th-century Flemish painters (e.g., Jan van Eyck's Ghent Altarpiece, 1432) and in the late 18th century to imitate Classical sculpture in wall and ceiling decoration. It is sometimes used to produce monotone underpainting for translucent oil colours."