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Oxford and Reading
" On the other hand, Richard Caplan of Reading and Oxford University reviewed the work in International Affairs, where he described the work as " a revisionist and highly contentious account of western policy and the dissolution of Yugoslavia ".
Hayes and Harlington railway station offers frequent local services to London Paddington in about 15 20 minutes, and services to Slough, Reading and Oxford ; every 30 minutes there is a service to London Heathrow Airport.
Paddington station is the terminus for commuter services to the west of England ( e. g., Slough, Maidenhead, Reading, Swindon ) and mainline services to Oxford, Bristol, Bath, Taunton, Exeter, Plymouth, Cornwall and South Wales ( including Cardiff, Bridgend and Swansea ).
Southall is served by Southall railway station on the Great Western Main Line, providing links to Heathrow Airport, Reading and Oxford as well as London Paddington.
The nearest railway station is Hayes & Harlington, which offers frequent local services to London Paddington in about 15 20 minutes, and services to Slough, Reading and Oxford ; every 30 minutes there is a service to London Heathrow Airport.
Hayes and Harlington railway station offers frequent local services to London Paddington in about 15 20 minutes, and services to Slough, Reading and Oxford ; every 30 minutes there is a service to London Heathrow Airport.
Additionally, he made some important early photographs of Oxford, Paris, Reading, and York.
There are frequent buses to Reading and Oxford by Thames Travel services X39 and The X40 which passes through Woodcote en route to Reading.
As the King's forces moved southwards, taking Oxford, Reading and Windsor, the garrison commander at Farnham ( and noted poet ), Captain George Wither, decided to evacuate the castle ; the new High Sheriff of Surrey ( John Denham, a Royalist sympathiser and another noted poet ) then occupied the vacant castle with 100 armed supporters.
Out of 132 universities and colleges, the OU was ranked 43rd in the Times Higher Education Table of Excellence in 2008, between the University of Reading and University of the Arts London ; it was rated highly in specific subjects such as art history, sociology ( below Oxford and Cambridge ) and development studies.
* River Thames, a river that flows through Oxford, Reading, and London
The other founding members were the University of Kent, University of Oxford, University College London, University of Southampton, University of Bristol, University of Bath, University of Reading, University of Portsmouth and University of Cambridge.
However, the rivalry between Oxford and Swindon is stronger than between either of the two and Reading, partly due to them both spending their recent history in lower divisions than Reading.
Thames Trains ran passenger services from along the Great Western Main Line from London Paddington to Greenford, Windsor & Eton Central, Marlow, Henley, Reading, Bedwyn, Oxford, Bicester Town, Worcester, Hereford and Stratford-upon-Avon.
After capturing Banbury on 27 October, Charles advanced via Oxford, Aylesbury and Reading.
The main station, now called simply Banbury, is now served by trains running between London Paddington and Birmingham via Reading, Oxford and Leamington Spa, and from London Marylebone via High Wycombe and Bicester, the fastest non-stop train taking 68 minutes to London Marylebone ( and 62 minutes for the return journey ).
* Hourly services to Bournemouth call at Stockport, Macclesfield, Stoke-on-Trent, Stafford, Wolverhampton, Birmingham New Street, Birmingham International, Coventry, Leamington Spa, Banbury, Oxford, Reading, Basingstoke, Winchester, Southampton Airport Parkway, Southampton Central, and Brockenhurst.
* “ Reductionism and the First Person ”, in Jonathan Dancy, ed., Reading Parfit ( Blackwell, Oxford, 1997 ), pp. 230 50
Subsequent work on Massinger includes Philip Edwards and Colin Gibson, eds., The Plays and Poems of Philip Massinger ( 5 vols., Oxford, 1976 ), Martin Garrett, ed., Massinger: the Critical Heritage ( London, 1991 ), chapters in Annabel Patterson, Censorship and Interpretation: the Conditions of Writing and Reading in Early Modern England ( Madison, 1984 ) and Martin Butler, Theatre and Crisis 1632 1642 ( Cambridge, 1984 ), and Martin Garrett, " Philip Massinger " in the revised Dictionary of National Biography ( Oxford, 2005 ).
* Bishop of Reading, Anglican suffragan bishop in Diocese of Oxford since 1889
Wantage is at the crossing of the B4507 valley road, the A417 road between Reading and Cirencester and the A338 road between Hungerford ( and junction 14 of the M4 motorway ) and Oxford.
Ambisonics was invented by Michael Gerzon of the Mathematical Institute, Oxford, who with Professor Peter Fellgett of the University of Reading, David Brown, John Wright and John Hayes of the now defunct IMF Electronics, and building on the work of other researchers developed the theoretical and practical aspects of the system in the early 1970s.

Oxford and Tree
* " Joe Pullen's Tree ", a wych elm ( Ulmus glabra ) in Oxford, was planted in about 1700 by the Rev.
Armantrout's poems have appeared in many anthologies, including In The American Tree ( National Poetry Foundation ), Language Poetries ( New Directions ), Postmodern American Poetry: A Norton Anthology, From the Other Side of the Century ( Sun & Moon ), Out of Everywhere ( Reality Street ), American Women Poets in the 21st Century: Where Language Meets the Lyric Tradition, ( Wesleyan, 2002 ), The Oxford Book of American Poetry ( Oxford, UP, 2006 ) and The Best American Poetry of 1988, 2001, 2002, 2004 and 2007.
While still at Oxford, she won the Sunday Times National Student Drama Award for her one-act play Under the Bamboo Tree.
In 1986 Korky Paul met the editor, Ron Heapy, at Oxford University Press, who looked at his work and commissioned him to do a several pictures for a short book about a witch written by Valerie Thomas for OUP ’ s Reading Tree programme.
*( Editor ) Over the Tree Tops: Nursery Rhymes from Many Lands, Blackwell ( Oxford, England ), 1949.
The visit of Princess Elizabeth was immortalised in Jim Corbett's ( who was a resident " hunter " at Treetops ) final book Tree Tops, which was published by the Oxford University Press just days before Corbett's death in April 1955.
In the east window there is a Tree of Jesse commemorating Pusey, who was one of the leaders of the nineteenth century Oxford Movement in the Church of England.
The remaining 101 are intended for school use and include her " Songbirds " phonic reading scheme which is part of the Oxford Reading Tree.
After completion of the Oxford Ring Road, the southern terminus was changed to the Pear Tree Roundabout between Kidlington and Oxford.
His reviews, articles, poems and short stories have also appeared in Small Axe, Asili, The Caribbean Writer, Gulf Stream, Florida in Poetry: A History of the Imagination, Wheel and Come Again: An Anthology of Reggae Poetry, Whispers from the Cotton Tree Root, The Oxford Book of Caribbean Short Stories, and The Oxford Book of Caribbean Verse.

Oxford and 1
Editors for Volumes 1, and 2, were M. W. Porter and the late R. C. Spiller, both of Oxford University.
* Halbert, N, and Derr, J ( 1995 ) A Comprehensive Evaluation of Cattle Introgression into US Federal Bison Herds, Journal of Heredity, Oxford Journals, Vol 98, Issue 1.
Affectionately known as her " Boar " or her " Turk ," discord arose between them, and on 1 July, Oxford bolted to the continent without permission, travelling to Calais with Lord Edward Seymour, and then to Flanders, ' carrying a great sum of money with him '.
His father-in-law made him several large loans, and Elizabeth granted Oxford a £ 1, 000 annuity, to be continued at her pleasure or until he could be provided for otherwise.
Widowed, weary of the unsettled life of a courtier, and anxious to provide for his children and himself, Oxford wrote to Burghley outlining a plan to purchase the manoral lands of Denbigh, in Wales, if the Queen would consent, offering to pay for them by commuting his £ 1, 000 annuity and agreeing to abandon his suit to regain the Forest of Essex.
Derby had promised Oxford his new bride would have £ 1, 000 a year, but the financial provision for her was slow in materializing.
On 25 July Oxford was among those who officiated at the King's coronation, a month later James confirmed Oxford's annuity of £ 1, 000.
The French Revolution and the Creation of Modern Political Culture ( Oxford, 1987 94 ) vol 1: The Political Culture of the Old Regime, ed.
A Reconnaissance of the Romano-British Ceramic Evidence ’, Oxford Journal of Archaeology 11 ( 1 ): 93-117.
* Oxford English Dictionary ( Second Edition ) on CD-ROM version 3. 1.
" In The Oxford Handbook of Business Ethics, by George G. Brenkert and Tom L. Beauchamp, 1: 408-439.
The inscription supposedly commemorated the execution of Aristocrates of Arcadia, who had betrayed the Messenian hero Aristomenes at the battle of the Great Trench .< ref > Paul Anthony Cartledge " Aristomenes ( 1 )" The Oxford Classical Dictionary.
* Kline, Morris, Mathematical Thought from Ancient to Modern Times, Oxford University Press, USA ; Paperback edition ( March 1, 1990 ).
1 </ u >, Oxford University Press, 1992 ; ISBN 0-19-506267-1 </ ref >
Dr. John Ward's 1662 diary entry stating that Shakespeare wrote two plays a year " and for that had an allowance so large that he spent at the rate of £ 1, 000 a year " as a critical piece of evidence, since Queen Elizabeth I gave Oxford an annuity of exactly £ 1, 000 beginning in 1586 that was continued until his death.
Most notable among these, they say, are certain similar incidents found in Oxford's biography and Hamlet, and Henry IV, Part 1, which includes a well-known robbery scene with uncanny parallels to a real-life incident involving Oxford.
( The Antiquaries Journal 1, Oxford University Press, 19 41 ).
Yellow glass with 1 % uranium oxide was found in a Roman villa on Cape Posillipo in the Bay of Naples, Italy by R. T. Gunther of the University of Oxford in 1912.
| w || 1911 || 1 Cor Eph || Henry Julian White || Oxford
4 vols., 1940 97, Manchester: Manchester University Press 1 3 ; Oxford: Oxford University Press 4.
* Mary Moorman, William Wordsworth, A Biography: The Early Years, 1770-1803 v. 1, Oxford University Press, 1957 ISBN 978-0198115656
* February 1 The first edition of the Oxford English Dictionary is published.
In an article in Harvard Design Magazine in 2005, Oxford University professor Bent Flyvbjerg argues that Utzon fell victim to a politically lowballed construction budget, which eventually resulted in a cost overrun of 1, 400 per cent.

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