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Page "Sydney Riot of 1879" ¶ 16
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Barton and said
Barton said harshly, `` Why did you do that ''??
Commenting on her departure, Barton said, " My character has been through so, so much and there's really nothing more left for her to do.
Lieutenant Gray ( Peter Ford ), Barton's aide and second-in-command, admits to Barton that he was the soldier who said that he saw marker flags.
" Senator Barton says, " We have reached a troubling point in the state of business when companies that conduct business online are so eager to make a buck, they resort to targeting our children ," said Senator Barton.
At both houses during this long career she played all the leading tragedy and comedy parts, and Barton Booth ( who discovered her ) said she was the best successor of Mrs Oldfield.
When Jock Gallagher became head of the Midland Region of BBC Radio in the early 1970s, he said that he had always hated The Archers because it killed off his boyhood hero, Dick Barton.
Independent witnesses said the decision was " close but fair ", and was supported by the other umpire Edmund Barton, later to become Australia's first Prime Minister.
However, Barton's assistant Kit Marshall said in 1993 that Barton was previously unaware of the anti-Semitic and racist views of these groups.
This drew criticism from Rob Boston of Americans United for Separation of Church and State, who accused Barton of " shoddy workmanship ", and said that despite these and other corrections, Barton's work " remains rife with distortions of history and court rulings ".< ref name = shoddy >

Barton and decision
" In Barton v. Armstrong AC 104, a decision of the Privy Council, Armstrong threatened to kill Barton if he did not sign a contract, which was set aside due to duress to the person.
He defended Barton's decision to commit support to the conflict, emphasized his own role in the making of the decision alongside Barton and professed a belief that it was Australia's duty to stand behind the imperial government in the war.
The other umpire, Edmund Barton, defended Coulthard and Lord Harris, saying that the decision against Murdoch was correct and that the English had conducted themselves appropriately.
* Peter Galison and Barton Bernstein, " In any light: Scientists and the decision to build the Superbomb, 1942 – 1954 " Historical Studies in the Physical and Biological Sciences Vol.

Barton and was
Barton was relieved to see that Carl Dill and Emmett Foster had brought extra mounts.
It was to him that Barton had sent Carl Dill on Dill's release from the prison.
Dill was silent as if he hated to answer, and Barton had a cold, sick feeling of apprehension.
It was over an hour before their escape was discovered, but still the news that Barton was free flashed across the central portion of the state.
For everyone involved knew that the whole valley was a powder keg, and Mitchell Barton the fuse which could send it into explosive violence.
She was born Frances Barton, the daughter of a private soldier, and began her career as a flower girl and a street singer.
His first act was to appoint the inaugural Prime Minister, Edmund Barton, since the first federal elections were not held until March.
In 1858 ( when she was 39 ) Amos Barton, the first of the Scenes of Clerical Life, was published in Blackwood's Magazine and, along with the other Scenes, was well received.
This defense was first used by U. S. Congressman Daniel Sickles of New York in 1859 after he had killed his wife's lover, Philip Barton Key, but was most used during the 1940s and 1950s.
A later proposal by William Barton Rogers led to a charter for the incorporation of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, which was signed by the governor of Massachusetts on April 10, 1861.
Lyne was unable to do so and returned his commission in favour of Edmund Barton, who became the first prime minister and led the inaugural government into and beyond the election.
He was the second of only two Australian prime ministers to be knighted during their term of office ( the first prime minister Edmund Barton was knighted during his term in 1902 ).
* In 1973 Menzies was awarded Japan's Order of the Rising Sun, Grand Cordon, First Class ( other Australian Prime Ministers to be awarded this honour were Edmund Barton, John McEwen, Malcolm Fraser and Gough Whitlam ).
One of the designers of the B5000, Robert S. Barton, later wrote that he developed RPN independently of Hamblin sometime in 1958 while reading a textbook by Kopi on symbolic logic and before he was aware of Hamblin's work.
The Big Lebowski was written around the same time as Barton Fink.
According to Ethan, " the movie was conceived as pivoting around that relationship between the Dude and Walter ", which sprang from the scenes between Barton Fink and Charlie Meadows in Barton Fink.
The director was Scott Elliott, the choreographer Aszure Barton, and, while not adored by the critics, the production was nominated for the " Best Musical Revival " Tony award.

Barton and Englishmen
Barton defended the Englishmen and Coulthard, saying that none had done anything wrong.

Barton and were
There were three other men within this prison whom Barton would have liked to liberate, but they were in other cell blocks.
His great-grandparents were Philip Key and Susanna Barton Gardiner, both of whom were born in London and immigrated to Maryland in 1726.
The Coens met filmmaker John Milius when they were in Los Angeles making Barton Fink and incorporated his love of guns and the military into the character of Walter.
Prostitutes were often presented as victims in sentimental literature such as Thomas Hood's poem The Bridge of Sighs, Elizabeth Gaskell's novel Mary Barton, and Dickens ' novel Oliver Twist.
According to Michael Barton, a prominent ichthyologist and professor at Centre College, " the earliest ichthyologists were hunters and gatherers who had learned how to obtain the most useful fish, where to obtain them in abundance, and at what times they might be the most available ".
Sir Andrew Barton, Lord High Admiral of Scotland, followed the example of his father, who had been issued with letters of marque by James III of Scotland to prey upon English and Portuguese shipping in 1485 ; the letters in due course were reissued to the son.
The original scriptwriters were Geoffrey Webb and Edward J. Mason, who were also working on the series Dick Barton whose popularity partly inspired The Archers and whose slot in the schedules it eventually took.
Many of the new suburbs were named after Australian politicians, such as Barton, Deakin, Reid, Braddon, Curtin, Chifley and Parkes.
Of the four men whose ideas were adopted, neither Charles Thomson, Pierre Du Simitière nor William Barton were Masons and, while Francis Hopkinson has been alleged to have had Masonic connections, there is no firm evidence to support the claim.
In 1974, Ian Richardson and Richard Pasco alternated the roles of Richard and Bolingbroke in a production from John Barton at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre: thirty years later this was still a standard by which performances were being judged.
In the autumn of 1533, various arrests were made in connection with the so-called revelations of the Holy Maid of Kent, Elizabeth Barton, but as Fisher was taken seriously ill in December, proceedings against him were postponed for a time.
They were accompanied by a younger brother, Richard, who came to establish a home for their widowed mother, Sarah Barton Murphy.
Differences among people were generally referred to Sarah Barton Murphy and her decisions were accepted as final.
Writers Edward FitzGerald and Anne Knight were born in Woodbridge, and fellow writer Bernard Barton lived in the town in later life.
Their coal tipples were located right in Barton and the mines were located on the mountain on the west side of Barton.

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