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Wilfred and James
* James Wilfred Estey ( October 6, 1944 – January 22, 1956 )
The band included Dayton Knapp, Wilfred Knapp, James Knapp, Carl Schlappi, and Robert Lashier.
*" Your Land and My Land " by Paul Whiteman, vocal Charles Harrison, Lewis James, Elliot Shaw and Wilfred Glenn
The Assistant Architects were: George Esselmont Gordon Leith, Wilfred Clement von Berg, Charles Henry Holden ( who in 1920 became a Principal Architect ), William Harrison Cowlishaw, William Bryce Binnie, George Hartley Goldsmith, Frank Higginson, Arthur James Scott Hutton, Noel Ackroyd Rew, and John Reginald Truelove.
* James Wilfred Hewitt, 5th Viscount Lifford ( 1837 – 1913 )
Wilfred (" Wilf ") James Mannion ( 16 May 1918-14 April 2000 ) was an English professional footballer who played as an inside forward, making over 350 senior appearances for Middlesbrough.
Rear-Admiral James Wilfred Jefford, chief of naval staff, had to drawn an " Short-term Emergency Plan ( STEP )" to work up the frigates and naval defences.
During this time, command and field appointments in certain key assignments in Naval Combatant Headquarters ( NHQ ) were given to native officers to replace the admirals of Royal Navy. First, Commander Khalid Jamil was appointed as navy's first native Deputy Chief of Naval Staff ( DCNS ) while Rear-Admiral James Wilfred Jefford served as first chief of naval staff until 1953. The chief of naval staff was assisted in the matters of navy by Deputy Chief of Staff Commander M. A. Alavi whilst other administrative positions were also re-designed and created by the Pakistan Government. Meanwhile, the Ministry of Finance awarded contracts to Corps of Engineers of Pakistan Army to led the construction of NHQ in Karachi and the Karachi Naval Dockyard in mid 1950s.
# Rear Admiral James Wilfred Jefford ( August 15, 1947 – January 30, 1953 )
" By 1931, there were several big time numbers operators, James Warner, Stephanie St. Clair, Casper Holstein, Ellsworth " Bumpy " Johnson, Wilfred Brandon, Jose Miro, Joseph Ison, Masjoe Ison and Simeon Francis.
He was the son of James Wilfred Estey, a puisne justice of the Supreme Court of Canada, and Muriel Baldwin.
She is the niece of radio presenter Wilfred Pickles and the sister of judge James Pickles.
Anthony Wilfred James " Tony " Whitford ( born June 11, 1941 ) is a retired politician and former Commissioner of the Northwest Territories.

Wilfred and Bill
Wilfred Bailey Everett “ Bill ” Bixby III ( January 22, 1934 − November 21, 1993 ) was an American film and television actor, director, and frequent game show panelist.
ELO's debut concert took place on 15 April 1972 at The Fox & Hounds Pub in Croydon, U. K. with a line-up of Wood, Lynne, Bevan, Bill Hunt ( horns, keyboards ), Wilfred Gibson ( violin ), Hugh McDowell ( cello ), Mike Edwards, Andy Craig ( cello ) and Richard Tandy on bass.
As animator Bill Tytla disliked the results, he used colleague Wilfred Jackson to pose shirtless which gave him the images he needed.
* Wisden Five Cricketers of the Year – Wilfred Rhodes, Bill Storer, Charlie Townsend, Albert Trott, William Lockwood
The rules for what eventually became fantasy football were developed starting in 1962 at New York City's Milford Plaza Hotel by a limited partner in the Oakland Raiders named Wilfred " Bill " Winkenbach together with Bill Tunnell, former Raiders public relations manager, and Scotty Stirling, a former reporter.
Wilfred Gordon " Bill " Bigelow, ( June 18, 1913 – March 27, 2005 ) was a Canadian heart surgeon known for his role in developing the artificial pacemaker and the use of hypothermia in open heart surgery.
William Wilfred Cobey, Jr., known as Bill Cobey ( born May 13, 1939 ), is a former one-term Republican member of the United States House of Representatives from North Carolina.
She was appointed to Bill Davis's cabinet as Minister of Labour on October 7, 1975, and won a convincing re-election victory over Liberal candidate Wilfred Caplan in the 1977 election.
" Other actors who have played the station master include Wilfred Brambell ( 1976 ) and Bill Oddie ( 1992 ).
Wilfred Von Der Ahe's three sons, Bill, Chuck, and Tom all graduated from Loyola University.
Similar to Bill Wilson's Alcoholics Anonymous five decades earlier, Beattie's early work took the previously complex object relations theory and interpersonal theories of psychoanalysts like Heinz Kohut, Wilfred Bion and Otto Kernberg and put them in language the average reader could easily grasp.

Wilfred and Australian
* 1911 – Wilfred Burchett, Australian journalist ( d. 1983 )
Wilfred Graham Burchett ( 16 September 191127 September 1983 ) was an Australian journalist known for his reporting of conflicts in Asia and his Communist sympathies.
FX also purchased a pilot starring Elijah Wood based on the Australian comedy series Wilfred.
* Wilfred ( Australian TV series ), an Australian comedy series
* Wilfred ( U. S. TV series ), an American remake of the Australian series
* Wilfred " Chicken " Smallhorn ( 1911 – 1988 ), Australian rules footballer
* Wilfred Arthur ( 1919-2000 ), Australian World War II fighter ace
Rodney Wilfred Heath ( 15 June 1884 – 6 October 1936 ) was an Australian male tennis player.

Wilfred and government
He was re-elected in 1882 and became secretary-treasurer and then minister without portfolio in the government of William Wilfred Sullivan.
Trench Town is known in popular culture due to numerous ska, rocksteady, and reggae musicians, including The Abbysinians, Wailing Souls, The Paragons, The Techniques, Toots & the Maytals, Dean Fraser, Ernest Ranglin, Alton Ellis, Hortense Ellis, Winston " Flames " Jarrett, Delroy Wilson, Joe Higgs, Adina Edwards, Junior Braithwaite, Lord Tanamo, Stranger Cole, Cynthia Schloss, Lascelles Perkins, Dobby Dobson, Noel ' Scully ' Simms, the Folkes Brothers, Wilfred ' Jackie ' Edwards, Leroy Sibbles, Bongo Herman, Roy Shirley, Massive Dread, Anthony Johnson, Peter Tosh and Bunny Wailer, but most notably Bob Marley, who spent much of his youth in a " government yard " on First Street.
At the Kenyan general election, 2007, Democratic Party is part of the Party of National Unity led by President Mwai Kibaki in the chaotic 2007 general election and one of its members, Wilfred Machage, was named a cabinet minister in the half cabinet which Kibaki named prior to the formation of the Grand Coalition government.

Wilfred and official
Until its repeal in 1986, the school was funded partly through a tax on cinema ticket sales known as the Eady Levy, named after then UK Treasury official Sir Wilfred Eady.
Hillcrest School and Sixth Form Centre was opened as Bartley Green Grammar School for Girls on 7 September 1954, though the official opening by Sir Wilfred Martineau did not take place until 13 July 1955.

Wilfred and ;
* 1929 – Wilfred Rhodes takes his 4000th first-class wicket during a performance of 9 for 39 at Leyton ; he is the only player in history to have reached that plateau.
for this are as follows: Wilfred P. Deac, " Road to the Killing Fields: The Cambodian War of 1970-1975 " ( Texas A & M University Press, 1997 ) pp. 61 – 2 ; Robert Dallek, " Nixon and Kissinger: Partners in Power ," ( Harper Collins, 2007 ), p. 191 ; Steve Heder " Cambodian Communism and the Vietnamse Model, Volume I: Imitation and Independence, 1930-1975 ," ( White Lotus Press, 2004 ), p. 156.: It seems likely that Lon Nol initially intended to strengthen his position against the North Vietnamese with the ultimate aim of preventing their troops ( and those of the Viet Cong ) from operating within Cambodian borders, and wished to apply pressure on Sihanouk to achieve this.
Sara Northrup ( aka " Sarah Elizabeth " or " Betty " Northrup ), began living with Parsons and Parsons ' wife, Sara's half-sister Helen Northrup ; later, Parsons and Sara became involved in an affair, which caused strife with Helen and eventually led to Helen leaving with Wilfred Smith.
Wilfred was chosen to present the Roman position to the council ; he also acted as Agilbert's interpreter, as the latter did not speak the local language.
Wilfred Trotter, a famous surgeon of University College Hospital, London, wrote similarly in his famous book Instincts of the Herd in Peace and War, just before the beginning of World War I ; he has been referred to as ' Le Bon's popularizer in English.
' Trotter also introduced Wilfred Bion, who worked for him at the hospital, to Sigmund Freud's work Massenpsychologie und Ich-Analyse ( 1921 ; English translation Group Psychology and the Analysis of the Ego, 1922 ), which was based quite explicitly on a critique of Le Bon's work.
* Exile in the Fatherland: Martin Niemöller ’ s Letters from Moabit Prison, translated by Ernst Kaemke, Kathy Elias, and Jacklyn Wilfred ; edited by Hubert G. Locke ( Grand Rapids, Mich .: W. B.
A scan of a final draft of Anthem for Doomed Youth by Wilfred Owen, penned by the author. Literature in World War I is generally thought to include poems, novels and drama ; diaries, letters, and memoirs are often included in this category as well.
Although the canon continues to be challenged, the texts most frequently taught in schools and universities are lyrics by Siegfried Sassoon and Wilfred Owen ; poems by Ivor Gurney, Edward Thomas, Charles Sorley, David Jones and Isaac Rosenberg are also widely anthologised.
Wilfred Owen was killed in battle ; but poems created at the front did achieve popular attention after the war's end ,. e. g., Dulce Et Decorum Est, Insensibility, Anthem for Doomed Youth, Futility and Strange Meeting.
The outbreak of World War I represented a setback for the budding modernist movement for a number of reasons: firstly, writers like Aldington found themselves in active service ; secondly, paper shortages and related factors meant that publication of new work became increasingly difficult ; and, thirdly, public sentiment in time of war meant that war poets such as Wilfred Owen, who wrote more conventional verse, became increasingly popular.
Nonetheless, at mid – twentieth century, despite such refinement of the open rhinoplasty approach, the endonasal rhinoplasty was the usual approach to nose surgery — until the 1970s, when Padovan presented his technical refinements, advocating the open rhinoplasty approach ; he was seconded by Wilfred S. Goodman in the later 1970s, and by Jack P. Gunter in the 1990s.
An opening batsman, Hobbs established several effective opening partnerships ; with Tom Hayward and Andy Sandham for Surrey and with Wilfred Rhodes and Herbert Sutcliffe for England.
Hobbs was chosen for the first Test against South Africa ; the MCC captain, Leveson-Gower, selected Wilfred Rhodes to open the batting with him.
Further recognition came when he, along with Wilfred Rhodes, joined the England selection committee for the Ashes series to be played that summer ; for professional cricketers to serve as England selectors was unprecedented.
In 879, Wilfred the Hairy began the repopulation of the county with free minores, who cultivated the lands given them as aprisiones ; they turned Osona into a central and important part of Catalonia.
In 1980 Baker wrote Fatal Spring, a play for television dealing with lives of poets Wilfred Owen, Siegfried Sassoon and Robert Graves ; this appeared on BBC 2 on 7 November 1980.
2 ( Seattle: Tartu Publications, 1984 ), 32-35 ; Joseph H. Wherry, The Totem Pole Indians, ( New York: Wilfred Funk, Inc., 1964 ), 64, 89 ; William C. Speidel, Sons of the Profits ( Seattle: Nettle Creek Publishing Co., 1967 ), 329-331 ; Viola Garfield, Seattle's Totem Poles ( Bellevue, WA: Thistle Press, 1996 ), 9 ; Seattle Department of Parks and Recreation, Data on the History of Seattle Park System Vol.
* Wilfred M. McClay – Professor of History ( former ; presently at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga )
They included: future Air Marshal Arthur Coningham DSO, MC, DFC ; Walter Tyrrell, MC ; Arthur Claydon, DFC ; John Donaldson, DSC, DFC, CdG ; Wilfred Green, DFC, MM, CdG ; Frank Hale, DFC ; Hubert Jones, MC, AFC ; William Curphey, MC ; Maxmillian Mare-Montembault, MC ; and George Lawson, DFC.

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