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Briton and Hadden
* February 27Briton Hadden, co-founder of Time Magazine.
At Hotchkiss, he first met Briton Hadden, who would become a lifelong partner.
* founders of Time, Henry Luce and Briton Hadden ;
Called the YDN ( or sometimes the News or the Daily News ), the paper is produced in the Briton Hadden Memorial Building at 202 York Street in New Haven and printed off-site at the Republican-American in Waterbury, Connecticut.
In summer 2010, the 78-year-old Briton Hadden Memorial Building was renovated, increasing the amount of usable space in the basement and adding a multimedia studio in the heart of the newsroom.
* Henry Luce and Briton Hadden, co-founders of Time
Briton Hadden in 1928.
Briton Hadden ( February 18, 1898 – February 27, 1929 ) was the co-founder of Time magazine with his Yale classmate Henry Luce.
Thus the two greatest magazine editors of the 1920s Briton Hadden and Harold Ross worked in the same building.
The office is today called the Briton Hadden Memorial Building.
de: Briton Hadden
es: Briton Hadden
fr: Briton Hadden
" The Hall " sits fronted by York Street and surrounded by the Yale Daily News Briton Hadden Memorial building, the Yale Drama School and theatre ( both gifts from E. Harkness ), and the former homes of the Fence Club ( or Psi Upsilon, 224 York Street ), DKE ( 232 York Street ) and Zeta Psi ( 212 York Street ).
Time journalists Briton Hadden and Henry Robinson Luce said that Spears " may be the queen of pop tartiness, but her new video, ' From the Bottom of My Broken Heart ', is an entirely wholesome affair ," while Chris Ryan of MTV considered it " a suitably soft-focus affair ".
Born in New York City, Busch began his writing career in the early twenties, when he went to work for Time Magazine ( co-founded by Busch's cousin, Briton Hadden ).

Briton and about
These are derived from the ancient Briton custom of Mystery Plays, in which stories and fables were enacted to teach lessons or educate about life in general.
Grenville prosecuted John Wilkes and the printers and authors for treason and sedition for publishing a bitter editorial about King George III's recent speech in " The North Briton " a weekly periodical.
In the UK, the inquiry about the murder of the black Briton Stephen Lawrence concluded that the investigating police force was institutionally racist.
They also knew about Eddie Chapman, alias ' Zig-Zag ', a Briton who was recruited by the Germans in Jersey, where he was imprisoned for safe-cracking before the German invasion, and later parachuted into Norfolk by the Luftwaffe at night, thanks to Enigma intercepts.
Swansea Bay ( and all of the upper reaches of the Bristol Channel ) experiences one of the largest tidal ranges in the world with a maximum range of about 10 m. The shipping ports in Swansea Bay are Swansea Docks, Port Talbot Docks and Briton Ferry wharfs.
" Giants Grave " is a folk song written by Huw Pudner and Chris Hastings about the shipbreaking industry at the Briton Ferry Docks.
Two years before the founding of the town, the meddling of the British government in the affairs of the Free State led to the military clash between Boer and Briton at the Battle of Boomplaats, about 30 km from the current Fauresmith.
Between 1815 and 1842, additional docks and wharfs were built at Giants Grave, extending the length slightly, and the canal was extended to Briton Ferry by the construction of the Jersey Canal in 1832, which was about long, and was built without an Act of Parliament by the Earl of Jersey.

Briton and
Britomart figures in Edmund Spenser's knightly epic The Faerie Queene, where she is an allegorical figure of the virgin Knight of Chastity, representing English virtue in particular, English military power through a folk etymology that associated Brit -, as in Briton, with Martis, here thought of as " of Mars ", the Roman war god.
From that time on he always sent me a Christmas card which was signed ' To Robin Hood from the Ancient Briton '" Lord Crawshaw, House of Lords Hansard, Tuesday 8 July 1997
' It was to be George III a scion of the German House of Hanover who recaptured something of the old spirit of King James of 1603 when he declared his pride ' in the name of Briton.
The Briton replies, " My tailor is rich " (" Mon tailleur est riche ") an allusion to basic lessons in English, available in European states ; " My tailor is rich " was the very first spoken phrase said in the first Assimil " English without Pain " ( Anglais sans Peine ) vinyl record volume released in 1929.
* Jamie Murray ( Moulton House, 1998 – 99 ): Tennis player, won the Wimbledon Doubles in 2007 the first Briton to win at Wimbledon for twenty years ; elder brother of tennis player Andy Murray.
The museum has so far received pledges from four men an Icelander, a German, an American and a Briton to donate their penises.

Briton and which
Most of Bede's informants for information after Augustine's mission came from the eastern part of Britain, leaving significant gaps in the knowledge of the western areas, which were those areas likely to have a native Briton presence.
The latter etymology was first suggested by John Mitchell Kemble who alluded that " of six manuscripts in which this passage occurs, one only reads Bretwalda: of the remaining five, four have Bryten-walda or-wealda, and one Breten-anweald, which is precisely synonymous with Brytenwealda "; that Æthelstan was called brytenwealda ealles ðyses ealondes, which Kemble translates as " ruler of all these islands "; and that bryten-is a common prefix to words meaning ' wide or general dispersion ' and that the similarity to the word bretwealh (' Briton ') is " merely accidental ".
Briton Simon Mann, a former officer in the Special Air Service, led the plot, which also included former members of the South African Army 32 Battalion.
Bede says that Ninian was a Briton who had been instructed in Rome ; that he made his church of stone, which was unusual among the Britons ; that his episcopal see was named after Saint Martin of Tours ; that he preached to and converted the southern Picts ; that his base was at " hwit ærn ", which was in the province of the Bernicians ; and that he was buried there, along with many other saints.
Céloron continued south until his expedition reached the confluence of the Ohio and the Miami rivers, which lay just south of the village of Pickawillany, the home of the Miami chief known as " Old Briton ".
The Prophecy is not without its critics, and the entry which is assumed to identify Eochaid, calling him the Briton of the Clyde, refers to his mother as " the woman of Dún Guaire ( Bamburgh )", which raises unanswered questions.
A satirical engraving of Wilkes by William Hogarth, who shows him with a demonic-looking wig, crossed eyes, and two editions of his The North Briton: Numbers 17 ( in which he attacked, amongst others, Hogarth ) and the famous 45.
Other popular music forms that arose during the 1970s include: Briton ( Linton Kwesi Johnson's dub poetry ); Sly & Robbie's rockers reggae, which drew on Augustus Pablo's melodica, becoming popular with artists such as The Mighty Diamonds and The Gladiators ; Joe Gibbs ' mellower rockers reggae, including music by Culture and Dennis Brown ; Burning Spear's distinctive style, as represented by the albums Marcus Garvey and Man in the Hills ; and harmonic, spiritually-oriented Rasta music like that of The Abyssinians, Black Uhuru and Third World.
Thomas Hicks ( a Briton running for the United States ) was the first to cross the finish-line legally, after having received several doses of strychnine sulfate ( a common rat poison, which stimulates the nervous system in small doses ) mixed with brandy from his trainers.
In the United Kingdom, Divine would sing his hit " You Think You're A Man " – a song which he had dedicated to his parents – on BBC television show Top of the Pops, and also gained a devout follower in the form of Briton Mitch Whitehead, a man who would declare himself to be Divine's " number 1 fan ", tattooing himself with images of his idol and eventually aiding Bernard Jay in setting up for Divine's show onstage.
The former leads to and from a spur leading to the roundabout in Briton Ferry, formerly known as junction 41A, and the original bridge over the River Neath, which would allow access onto the stretch of the M4 from junction 43 westward.
Later generations of his deerhounds were painted by Sydney Dobell's brother-in-law, Briton Rivière, notably in The empty chair, which was first exhibited at the Dudley Gallery, London, in 1869.
In 1763, he signed the general warrant for the " authors, printers and publishers " of The North Briton number 45, under which John Wilkes and 48 others were arrested, and for which, six years later, the courts of law made Halifax pay damages.
Eubank would defend the title successfully against Dan Sherry ( in a fight cut short by a headbutt, for which Eubank was penalised 2 points but still won on points over the 9 completed rounds ), fellow Briton Gary Stretch and finally in an excellent match with another fellow Briton, Michael Watson, fighting him to a narrow 12-round majority decision in Eubank's favour.
In 1758 he became the first Briton to win the triennial architecture competition at the Accademia di San Luca, which made his name known in London, and won him the rivalry of fellow Scot Robert Adam.
His conquest of Northumbria, which he held for a year or two after Edwin died, made him the last Briton to hold substantial territory in eastern Britain until the rise of the Tudor dynasty.

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