Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Sunderland Albion F.C." ¶ 43
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Hartley and Glass
Sunderland Albion were now backed by some wealthy individuals, most noticeably James Hartley, who along with his brother John owned the Wear Glass Works at Monkwearmouth, founded in 1837.

Hartley and Works
* Ferg, Stephen, Two Early Works of David Hartley, Journal of the History of Philosophy, vol.
In 1905, Richard Sutcliffe ( 1849 – 1930 ), who had worked as part-time manager at Hartley Bank Colliery, opened his Universal Works on the site of the old dye house mill on the Horbury-Wakefield boundary in 1905 and started to manufacture conveyor belts and mining machinery.
* Much of this article is based on an essay in The Works of Lord Byron, Volume 6, by Ernest Hartley Coleridge.
** Don Juan in The Works of Lord Byron, Volume 6, edited by Ernest Hartley Coleridge

Hartley and was
However, the game system was reviewed in 1990 in Dragon # 155 by Hartley, Patricia, and Kirk Lesser in " The Role of Computers " column.
In 1961, an EDSAC 2 version of Autocode, an ALGOL-like high-level programming language for scientists and engineers, was developed by David Hartley.
It was once believed that real-input DFTs could be more efficiently computed by means of the discrete Hartley transform ( DHT ), but it was subsequently argued that a specialized real-input DFT algorithm ( FFT ) can typically be found that requires fewer operations than the corresponding DHT algorithm ( FHT ) for the same number of inputs.
He was prosecuted by Sir Hartley Shawcross and was convicted on 1 March 1950.
The soundtrack from The Rocky Horror Picture Show was released in 1975 by Ode Records, produced by Richard Hartley.
Leigh was born Vivian Mary Hartley in the campus of St. Paul's School, Darjeeling, Bengal, India ( British India ), to Ernest Hartley, an English officer in the Indian Cavalry, and Gertrude Mary Robinson Yackjee ( 1888-1972 ), a devout Roman Catholic of Irish and Armenian descent, the daughter of Mary I. Robinson and John G. Yackjee, who wed in 1872.
In 1917, Ernest Hartley was transferred to Bangalore, while Gertrude and Vivian stayed in Ootacamund.
An only child, Vivian Hartley was sent to the Convent of the Sacred Heart in Roehampton ( now Woldingham School ) in 1920, from Loreto Convent, Darjeeling by her devoutly Catholic mother.
The fundamental theoretical work in data transmission and information theory by Harry Nyquist, Ralph Hartley, Claude Shannon and others during the early 20th century, was done with these applications in mind.
It was also reviewed in 1988 in Dragon # 132 by Hartley, Patricia, and Kirk Lesser in " The Role of Computers " column.
The act, still effective, was sponsored by Senator Robert Taft and Representative Fred A. Hartley, Jr. and became law by overcoming U. S. President Harry S. Truman's veto on June 23, 1947 ; labor leaders called it the " slave-labor bill " while President Truman argued that it was a " dangerous intrusion on free speech ," and that it would " conflict with important principles of our democratic society ," Nevertheless, Truman would subsequently use it twelve times during his presidency.
The principal author of the Taft – Hartley Act was J. Mack Swigert of the Cincinnati law firm Taft, Stettinius & Hollister.
Taft – Hartley was one of more than 250 union-related bills pending in both houses of Congress in 1947.
The Taft – Hartley Act was seen as a means of demobilizing the labor movement by imposing limits on labor's ability to strike and by prohibiting radicals from their leadership.
Hartley said, " I realised that the group was heading towards suicidal, sombre music — the sort of thing that didn't interest me at all.
A hairless and immunodeficient breed was the result of a spontaneous genetic mutation in inbred laboratory strains from the Hartley stock at the Eastman Kodak Company in 1979.
The game was reviewed in 1989 in Dragon # 150 by Hartley, Patricia, and Kirk Lesser in " The Role of Computers " column.
Populous: The Promised Lands was reviewed in 1990 in Dragon # 156 by Hartley, Patricia, and Kirk Lesser in " The Role of Computers " column.
The film was directed by Mark Hartley and interviews filmmakers including Quentin Tarantino, Dennis Hopper, George Miller and Barry Humphries.
Bob Hartley was hired to the head coach position in June 1998.
Hartley then combined the above quantification with Nyquist's observation that the number of independent pulses that could be put through a channel of bandwidth B hertz was 2B pulses per second, to arrive at his quantitative measure for achievable line rate.

Hartley and major
On 15 October 1862, the Hartley Institute was opened by the Prime Minister Lord Palmerston in a major civic occasion which exceeded in splendor anything that anyone in the town could remember.
In 1883 the assets were bought by Hartley & Graham of New York, a major firearms wholesaler.
In 1888, Remington was purchased by Marcus Hartley and Partners, a major sporting goods chain who also owned the Union Metallic Cartridge Company in Bridgeport, Connecticut.
Robins, the grandson of Albert Hartley Robins, founder of the A. H. Robins pharmaceutical company, was a major University of Richmond benefactor, with he and his family donating in excess of $ 175 million to the university.
Even though Skip came from a " major football institution " ( Notre Dame ), University of Connecticut President Dr. Harry J. Hartley said that the hire " should not be seen as a signal that Connecticut intends to upgrade its program.
In 1912, she married British-born playwright J. Hartley Manners, who wrote Peg o ' My Heart, a major and enduring personal triumph for Taylor, who toured in it extensively throughout the country.
The Roads and Traffic Authority is at present researching a major upgrade to the Great Western Highway with the view to bypass the township and the steep Victoria Pass down to Little Hartley to the west.

Hartley and £
The college began to move to its present site in 1913, when it purchased the lease of a house called ' The Mount ' from the Rev Robert Hartley for £ 2, 500.
An obelisk was built on the heath, adjacent to Tibbet's corner 1776 marking the Lord Mayor of London's decision to give Hartley £ 2, 500 for work on his fire plates.
Much of this was raised by a public appeal and the private donors included Henry Tate, who gave £ 20, 000 towards the building and a further £ 5, 500 for books in the library, and William Hartley, who paid £ 4, 300 for the clock and bells in the tower.
St. Johnstone manager Sandy Clark, who had previously managed Hartley at Hamilton, signed Hartley for a £ 200, 000 fee in 2000.
In January 2005, Celtic attempted to buy Hartley, but their £ 300, 000 offer was considered significantly below Hearts valuation and was rejected.
Hartley signed for Celtic for £ 1. 1 million on a two-and-a-half-year contract, with the option for a further year, in January 2007.

Hartley and backing
Meanwhile, a spin-off band comprising Smith, Tolhurst, Dempsey, Gallup, Hartley and Thompson, with backing vocals from assorted family and friends, and lead vocals provided by their local postman Frankie Bell released a 7-inch single in December under the assumed name of Cult Hero.
The backing arose from James Allan ’ s friendship with Hartley ; they were neighbours, Allan living nearby in Whitehall Terrace.
However, this game was played out in front of a sell-out crowd who showed their vocal backing for Pressley, Gordon and Hartley.

1.123 seconds.