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Clive and Burr
* 1957 – Clive Burr, British musician ( Iron Maiden )
* Clive Burr ( born 1957 ), drummer
* 29 November 2005 – UK, London – Appearance at the Clive Burr Testimonial
After Gillan disbanded, Gers undertook a Humanities degree before joining Gogmagog, which included former Iron Maiden vocalist Paul Di ' Anno and drummer Clive Burr.
Its star-studded cast includes Raymond Burr, Richard Chamberlain, Robert Conrad, Barbara Carrera, Richard Crenna, Timothy Dalton, Sharon Gless, Andy Griffith, Mark Harmon, Gregory Harrison, David Janssen, Alex Karras, Brian Keith, Sally Kellerman, Stephen McHattie, Lois Nettleton, Donald Pleasence, Adrienne La Russa, Lynn Redgrave, Clive Revill, Robert Vaughn, Dennis Weaver, Anthony Zerbe, Stephanie Zimbalist, and numerous other well-known actors.
* Clive Burr – drums
King brought in Di ' Anno, drummer Clive Burr, guitarists Janick Gers and Pete Willis along with Neil Murray on bass.
According to Di ' Anno, he wanted Clive Burr ( ex-Iron Maiden ) on drums, but he couldn't get to rehearsals in time.
In 1982, the band asked McBrain to replace their previous drummer, Clive Burr, and, as news of Burr's departure had not yet been announced, made his first appearance with Iron Maiden on German TV disguised as Eddie.
His biggest drumming inspirations are Phil Rudd, Clive Burr, Nicko McBrain, Cozy Powell, Jeff Porcaro, Dave Lombardo and Tommy Lee.
Clive Burr ( born 8 March 1957, East Ham, east London ) is a British drummer, best known as a member of Iron Maiden from 1979 to 1982.
Iron Maiden lead singer Bruce Dickinson still considers Clive Burr to be '... the best drummer the band ever had.
Iron Maiden staged a series of charity concerts and were involved in the founding of the Clive Burr MS Trust Fund.
Burr is now patron of the charity Clive Aid, a charity formed in 2004.
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Clive and appears
Other characters include Clive – a friend of Gary's who never appears on screen.
A cover of the Schwartz-Dietz song " Dancing in the Dark " appears in Clive Barker's film Lord Of Illusions during the closing credits.
Whiteley appears as a character in the book Falling Towards England by Clive James under the name Dibbs Buckley.
* Dixon of Dock Green – ( transmitted in 1963 ) – Marriott appears in an episode entitled The River People playing a character called ' Clive Dawson '; the episode was written by Ted Willis.
Dragon ( 1990 ) is the first novel in which a character identified as Clive Cussler appears.
Tiro ( spelled Tyro ) appears in the television programme Rome, played by Clive Riche in the episodes " Son of Hades ", " These Being the Words of Marcus Tullius Cicero ", " Heroes of the Republic ", and " Philippi ".
In spectroscopy this distribution, with frequency as the dependent variable, is known as a van der Waals profile .< ref group =" note ">" van der Waals profile " appears with lowercase " van " in almost all sources, such as: Statistical mechanics of the liquid surface by Clive Anthony Croxton, 1980, A Wiley-Interscience publication, ISBN 0-471-27663-4, ISBN 978-0-471-27663-0, ; and in Journal of technical physics, Volume 36, by Instytut Podstawowych Problemów Techniki ( Polska Akademia Nauk ), publisher: Państwowe Wydawn.
Pinhead first appears in Clive Barker's novella The Hellbound Heart ( 1986 ), in which he only appears in the story's beginning, and is portrayed as a sexually ambiguous follower of the " Engineer ":
It is said to have originated in Australia between 1976 and 1980, and appears first in the literature in 1981 in the Savant Institute publication Information Engineering by James Martin and Clive Finkelstein.
Albert Cassius Giordino is a fictional character in a series of adventure novels by Clive Cussler ; he first appears in The Mediterranean Caper ( published in 1973 ).
However, if Clive Sinclair would like to contact me in writing at the PW offices in Broadstone, Dorset, in the UK, ( PW Publishing Ltd. Arrowsmith Court, Station Approach, Broadstone, Dorset BH18 8PW ) providing the dates where his name appears on the magazine's ' masthead ' ( listing the official staff involved with each issue ) I will remove this statement.
Clive Barker's horror novella The Hellbound Heart ( later adapted into a movie Hellraiser, followed by numerous original sequels ) centered around Lemarchand's box which appears to be such a puzzle box but in fact opens the gates to another dimension when manipulated.
The Hellraiser story " For My Son ", by Lovece and artist Bill Koeb, originally published in Clive Barker's Hellraiser Summer Special # 1 ( Summer 1992 ), appears in Checker Publishing's Clive Barker's Hellraiser: Collected Best, Volume 1 ( ISBN 0-9710249-2-8 ), though with the last page inexplicably missing ; the complete story appears in an authorized online version from web publisher Wowio.

Clive and on
Hunley is raised to the surface after 136 years on the ocean floor and 30 years after its discovery by undersea explorer E. Lee Spence and 5 years after being filmed by a dive team funded by novelist Clive Cussler.
It is perhaps the need to balance the social and scientific aspects of archaeoastronomy which led Clive Ruggles to describe it as: "... field with academic work of high quality at one end but uncontrolled speculation bordering on lunacy at the other.
At that time, survivor Clive Doyle was living at the Mount Carmel Center with supporter Ron Goins, operating a small visitor museum as well as holding weekly Bible studies on the Sabbath.
Anderson hosted his own chat-show, Clive Anderson Talks Back, on Channel 4, which ran for 10 series.
Anderson moved to the BBC in 1996 and the show's name changed to Clive Anderson All Talk and was aired on BBC One.
In recent years, Clive Anderson has combined his continuing interest in the law with his role as a radio presenter in the regular series Unreliable Evidence on Radio 4.
He also hosted six series of Clive Anderson's Chat Room on BBC Radio 2 from 2004 – 2009.
Clive Anderson has appeared on BBC Radio 4's The Unbelievable Truth hosted by David Mitchell.
In 1756, on the recommendation of Samuel Foote, she became a member of the Drury Lane company, where she was overshadowed by Mrs Pritchard and Kitty Clive.
However, armed forces under Robert Clive later recaptured Calcutta and then pressed on to capture the French settlement of Chandannagar in 1757.
This led to the Battle of Plassey on June 23, 1757, in which the Bengal Army of the East India Company, led by Robert Clive, defeated the French-supported Nawab's forces.
Theories that Cronje was murdered on the orders of a cricket betting syndicate flourished after his death and were most recently re-floated by former Nottinghamshire coach Clive Rice in the wake of the death of Pakistan coach Bob Woolmer in March 2007.
Gulacy was a film buff, and modeled many characters after film stars: Juliette on Marlene Dietrich, James Larner on Marlon Brando, Clive Reston ( often broadly hinted at as being the son of James Bond as well as the grand nephew of Sherlock Holmes ) occasionally looking like Basil Rathbone and Sean Connery, and a minor character Ward Sarsfield ( after the real-life name of Sax Rohmer ) who looked like David Niven.
Tarantino then went on to be credited as " Special Guest Director " in Robert Rodriguez's 2005 neo-noir film Sin City for his work directing the car sequence featuring Clive Owen and Benicio del Toro.
He had personally less to do with the successes in India than with the other great enterprises that shed an undying lustre on his administration ; but his generous praise in parliament stimulated the genius of Clive, and the forces that acted at the close of the struggle were animated by his indomitable spirit.
Pitt's particular genius was to finance an army on the continent to drain French men and resources so that Britain might concentrate on what he held to be the vital spheres: Canada and the West Indies ; whilst Clive successfully defeated Siraj Ud Daulah, ( the last independent Nawab of Bengal ) at Plassey ( 1757 ), securing India.
These " Bloomsbury assumptions " are also reflected in members ' criticisms of materialistic realism in painting and fiction, influenced above all by Clive Bell's " concept of ' Significant Form ', which separated and elevated the concept of form above content in works of art ": it has been suggested that, with their " focus on form ... Bell's ideas have come to stand in for, perhaps too much so, the aesthetic principles of the Bloomsbury Group ".
Clive Bell polemicized post-impressionism in his widely read book Art ( 1914 ), basing his aesthetics partly on Roger Fry ’ s art criticism and G. E. Moore ’ s moral philosophy ; and as the war came he argued provocatively that " in these days of storm and darkness, it seemed right that at the shrine of civilization-in Bloomsbury, I mean-the lamp should be tended assiduously ".
Roger Fry wrote and lectured widely on art ; while Clive Bell applied Bloomsbury values to his book Civilization ( 1928 ), which Leonard Woolf saw as limited and elitist, describing Clive as a " wonderful organiser of intellectual greyhound racing tracks ".
Shortly following the last of these, Derek and Clive – Ad Nauseam, Moore made a break with Cook, whose alcoholism was affecting his work, to concentrate on his film career.
In a July 21, 2007, commentary on a rebuttal to Clive Barker, he revealed that he had lost the ability to speak, but not to write.
The Sinclair Research C5 is a battery electric vehicle invented by Sir Clive Sinclair and launched by Sinclair Vehicles Ltd in the United Kingdom on 10 January 1985.

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