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Page "Arthur Hugh Clough" ¶ 10
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Clough and himself
Following Jewell's resignation as Derby manager, Savage found himself brought back into first team contention by new manager Nigel Clough, who made him first choice in central midfield.
Clough also gave himself some game time during the course of the season, coming on as a late substitute for the reserve side in their 2 – 1 victory over West Bromwich Albion reserves in their Central League Central Section clash.
However, he still proved himself to be a competent goalscorer, particularly with 15 league goals in the 1983 – 84 season and 14 in the 1986 – 87 season, the last of which he was joint top goalscorer alongside midfield star Neil Webb and up and coming striker Nigel Clough.
The stand was renamed The Brian Clough Stand after Clough's retirement, and was re-opened after refurbishment by the man himself in the mid-1990s.
Many famous people are buried in the graveyard: Elizabeth Barrett Browning ( in a tomb designed by Frederic, Lord Leighton ), Walter Savage Landor, Arthur Hugh Clough, Fanny Trollope and her daughter-in-law Theodosia Garrow Trollope and three other family members, Isa Blagden, Southwood Smith, Hiram Powers, Joel Tanner Hart, Theodore Parker, Fanny, the wife of William Holman Hunt in a tomb he himself sculpted, Mary, the daughter of John Roddam Spencer Stanhope in a tomb he himself sculpted, Louise, sister to Henry Adams, whose dying he describes in his ' Chaos ' chapter in The Education of Henry Adams, two children of the Greek painter George Mignaty, whom Robert had paint Casa Guidi as it was when Elizabeth Barrett Browning died there, and Nadezhda De Santis, a black Nubian slave brought to Florence at fourteen from Jean-François Champollion's 1827 expedition to Egypt and Nubia, while the French Royalist exile Félicie de Fauveau sculpted two tombs here.

Clough and no
The eye-witness Richard Clough, a Welsh Protestant merchant then in Antwerp, saw: " all the churches, chapels and houses of religion utterly defaced, and no kind of thing left whole within them, but broken and utterly destroyed, being done after such order and by so few folks that it is to be marvelled at.
no: Brian Clough
But Scumspawn isn't sure his leadership skills are up to the task, and a management seminar with Genghis Khan, Winston Churchill, Gandhi, Queen Elizabeth I and football manager Brian Clough proves no help.
Despite this incident, Keane bore no hard feelings against his manager, later claiming that he sympathised with Clough due to the pressures of management and that he was too grateful to him for giving him his chance in English Football.
Many young women in mid-19th century England had no access to the kind of formal secondary schooling which would have enabled them to go straight into the same university courses as the young men-Anne Jemima Clough herself was never a pupil in a school.
The Clough family had no comeback.
Stein had been manager of Leeds for just 44 days, like Clough, although his tenure and departure had no bitterness or rancour.
Hadley and Clough ( 1996 ) claim the reforms ' have created care in chaos ' ( Hadley and Clough 1996 ) They claim the reforms have been inefficient, unresponsive, offering no choice or equity.
Despite these reports however, there was no evidence that Clough was on Forest's radar nor that he and his staff were looking to go elsewhere and Clough entered into new contract discussions with Derby, stating " It has never been a question of if we wanted to stay or not.
Troubridge married Pamela Clough in 1939, but had no issue.

Clough and on
Author Bill Cherry proposed George Roy Clough as the first to invite listeners to argue politics on a call-in radio show at KLUF, his station in Galveston, Texas, as a way to bring his own political views into listeners ' homes.
In 2008, he became the third British manager to win the European Cup on more than one occasion, after Brian Clough and Bob Paisley.
However a monument designed by the architect Sir Clough Williams-Ellis was subsequently erected around the grave, bearing an englyn ( strict-metre stanza ) engraved on slate in his memory composed by his nephew Dr William George.
Sir Clough Williams-Ellis, Portmeirion's designer, denied repeated claims that the design was based on the town of Portofino, Italy.
Sir Thomas Gresham, the English financier who arranged Elizabeth I's borrowings, and whose agent in Antwerp was Clough, left London for Antwerp on August 23, only hearing about the Antwerp attacks en route ; he needed to roll-over 32, 000 Flemish pounds and borrow another 20, 000 to finance her expenses in Ireland.
Jeremiah Clough located on a hill near Canterbury Center, where the Pennacook Indians came to trade.
* Clough Corners – A hamlet near the north town line on County Road 144.
The Clough House Inn, on Clough Lane, is easily seen from the nearby M62.
After he was killed on an expedition to the Himalayan mountain Annapurna in 1970, Ian Clough Hall, a meeting-place and arts venue, was established in Baildon in his memory.
Such critics include: Herald-News reporter Cal Deal ; Larry Elder ; Thomas Clough ; Barbara Burns, the daughter of victim Hazel Tanis ; George Kimball of The Irish Times ; Milan Simonich of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette ; Lona Manning ; The New York Times reporter Robert Lipsyte ; Paul Mulshine of The Newark Star-Ledger ; and Jack Newfield of the New York Post, who stated, " I knew Rubin Carter, attended his fights, covered his retrial and I didn't see much reality on the screen.
Pastoral nevertheless survived as a mood rather than a genre, as can be seen from such works as Matthew Arnold's Thyrsis ( 1867 ), a lament on the death of his fellow poet Arthur Hugh Clough.
In 1829 Clough began attending Rugby School, then under Thomas Arnold, whose strenuous views on life and education he accepted.
Clough is perhaps best known now for his short poems Say Not the Struggle Naught Availeth, a rousing call to tired soldiers to keep up the good fight, Through a Glass Darkly, an exploration of religious doubt, and The Latest Decalogue, a satirical take on the Ten Commandments.
Among his other works were The Passionate Pilgrim ( 1858 ), a volume of selections from Robert Herrick entitled Chrysomela ( 1877 ), a memoir of Arthur Hugh Clough ( 1862 ) and a critical essay on Sir Walter Scott ( 1866 ) prefixed to an edition of his poems.
Maria, the first of the Brontë children, was born in Clough House, High Town on 23 April 1814, and died at the age of eleven in Haworth on 6 May 1825.
Among the prominent British personalities he portrayed were Eddie Waring, the famously impossible to understand rugby league commentator ; Brian Clough, the controversial football manager ; Robin Day, the then top political interviewer on the BBC ; Magnus Pyke, the eccentric TV science presenter ; Alf Garnett, the star from Till Death Us Do Part ; the fictional American detective Columbo ; Frank Spencer, the comic creation of sitcom actor Michael Crawford ; and Wilson's Conservative Party rival Ted Heath.
* 1956: J. Turner, R. W. Clough, H. C. Martin, and L. J. Topp's paper on the " Stiffness and Deflection of Complex Structures " introduces the name " finite-element method " and is widely recognized as the first comprehensive treatment of the method as it is known today
In the summer of 1992, the town came to national attention following rioting on the Stoops and Hargher Clough council estates in the south west of the town.
But ' choyting ' ( the complex open-fingered gracing after the manner of Highland piping ) is generally frowned on, and Tom Clough made a point of avoiding open-fingered ornament altogether, considering open-fingering ' a grievous error '.
descending over from its source among the sedge grass on Burbage moor behind a small farm on Hangram just inside the Peak District National Park in the west of the city at Clough Hollow, near the village of Ringinglow.
It passes the Doctor's Gate and follows the Lady Clough valley downhill to a point where Lady Clough meets the River Ashop, passing the Snake Pass Inn on the left.

Clough and might
An example of this might be a panel game or discussion featuring his versions of Robin Day, Harold Wilson, Brian Clough.
Smithsonian Secretary G. Wayne Clough later in interview states that although he stands by his decision, it " might have been made too quickly " and he describes that making the decision was " painful.
" Clough mentions that because of heated controversy surrounding the footage and the possibility that it might " spiral out of control ", the Smithsonian might be in the end forced to shut-down the entire " Hide / Seek " exhibition, and its " something he didn ’ t want to happen.
Giving this up some ten years later, she lived for a time with the widow of her brother Arthur Hugh Clough — who had died in 1861 — in order that she might educate his children.

Clough and refer
In the college arms the chevron links them with the coats of Balfour and Kennedy, while its colour and the mascles refer to Clough.

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