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Clough and was
The title meant that Dalglish was only the third football manager in history to lead two different clubs to top-flight league championships, after Herbert Chapman and Brian Clough.
At the request of Portmeirion's designer Clough Williams-Ellis, the main location for the series was not disclosed until the opening credits of the last episode.
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.
His burnt and mutilated body was found three days later in a waterlogged ditch used for the disposal of animal carcasses near Clough.
It was designed and built by Sir Clough Williams-Ellis between 1925 and 1975 in the style of an Italian village and is now owned by a charitable trust.
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.
But the most famous business was the Rockwell Clough Company, established by William Rockwell Clough, inventor of the corkscrew.
In the 1960s the Hall Cliffe house was demolished and replaced with the Ian Clough Hall.
Mountaineer Ian Clough was born in Baildon.
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.
In the same month the British film The Damned United was released, chronicling the 44-day period in which Brian Clough was manager of Leeds United.
It was at his suggestion and with his help that Anne Clough opened a house of residence for students, which developed into Newnham College, Cambridge.
A Ronald Reagan Professor of Public Policy at Pepperdine University and a senior fellow at the Clough Center for the Study of Constitutional Democracy at Boston College, he was a co-author of the 1982 article introducing the broken windows theory.
In 1852 he was appointed professor of English literature at University College, London, in succession to A H Clough, and from 1858 to 1865 he edited the newly established Macmillan's Magazine.
Arthur Hugh Clough ( 1 January 1819 – 13 November 1861 ) was an English poet, an educationalist, and the devoted assistant to ground-breaking nurse Florence Nightingale.
He was the brother of suffragist Anne Clough, who ended up as principal of Newnham College, Cambridge.
Arthur Clough was born in Liverpool to James Butler Clough, a cotton merchant of Welsh descent, and Anne Perfect, from Pontefract in Yorkshire.
His youngest child was Blanche Athena Clough ( 1861 – 1960 ), who devoted her life to Newnham College, Cambridge, where her aunt ( his sister Anne ) was principal.

Clough and for
Clough is a northern dialect word for a steep sided, wooded valley ; a large part of Boggart Hole Clough is made up of these valleys and is said to be inhabited by boggarts.
Jowett switched to manufacturing aircraft parts for the Blackburn & General Aircraft Company in a former woollen mill at Howden Clough, Birstall, near Batley.
The county is named for Richard Clough Anderson, Jr., a Kentucky Legislator, U. S. Congressman and minister to Colombia.
There are two primary schools and a secondary in the village: Linthwaite Ardron Memorial Junior School and the Linthwaite Clough Junior Infant and Early Years School for local children ; and Colne Valley High School, whose catchment area is described in the name.
From the period of about 1820 to 1850, the Greek Revival style dominated the United States ( for example, the Benjamin F. Clough House in Waltham, Massachusetts ), and could be found as far west as Springfield, Illinois.
Since 1846 Clough had been financially responsible for his mother and sister ( following the death of his father and younger brother and the marriage of his elder brother ).
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.
* Selections from the poems were made by Mrs Clough for the Golden Treasury series in 1894, and by E. Rhys in 1896.
Wright did not make it into the squad for Euro 1992 at the expense of Clough, Gary Lineker of Tottenham Hotspur, Alan Shearer of Southampton and Arsenal team mates Alan Smith and Paul Merson.
Occasionally, though rarely, other tunings have been used, for example Tom Clough recommended G, c, g, suitable for tunes in C major, or D, A, d, a, for some tunes in D major.
Other variation sets were composed by Clough, such as those for Nae Guid Luck Aboot the Hoose which uses the extended range of a keyed chanter.
Brenda W. Clough has been nominated to an Hugo Award and a Nebula Award in 2002 for her Novella " May Be Some Time ".
National Front deputy leader Martin Webster claimed two decades later that the activities of the Anti-Nazi League played a key part in the NF's collapse at the end of the 1970s, but this claim seems counter-intuitive, for the Anti-Nazi League collapsed early in 1979 amid claims of financial impropriety, with former celebrity supporters such as Brian Clough disowning the organisation.
Famous ex-players include Nigel Clough, who went on to play for Nottingham Forest
The large paved space includes the new statue of Brian Clough, the legendary, straight-talking former manager of Derby County and Nottingham Forest, who forged ties between the two cities famous for local rivalry.
During the late 1970s and early 1980s, the programme's main presenter was Gordon Clough, who would typically prepare for the programme by completing the Times, Guardian and FT crosswords.

Clough and time
Clough states " But looking back, sure, I wish I had taken more time.
Hartlepool is known for its association with Brian Clough who began his managerial career at the club in 1965 and is widely considered to be one of the greatest English football managers of all time.
This time the male undergraduates celebrating victory over the women used a handcart as a battering ram to destroy the lower half of the bronze gates at Newnham, a memorial to Anne Jemima Clough.
" In his autobiography Clough noted that " Rarely could there have been a more unlikely looking professional athlete ... was a scruffy, unfit, uninterested waste of time ... but something told me he was worth persevering with.
Working behind the desk at the police precinct, Vicki Taylor ( April Clough ) was a female officer who usually spent time dodging pick-up comments from Vince Romano.
There is a public house in the village called the Mytton & Mermaid ( owned at one time by Clough Williams-Ellis as a staging post on the way to his iconic Italianate village of Portmeirion ), but the school, Post Office and petrol station have all closed.
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.
Thompson subsequently ensured that the most successful club manager of the time, Brian Clough, never became England manager.
Clough is most notable for his time at Nottingham Forest, where he played over 400 times in two separate spells, mostly under the managership of his father Brian and scored 131 goals, making him the second highest scorer in the club's history.
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.
She also worked alongside Vera Duckworth, Ivy Tilsley and Ida Clough at Baldwin's Casuals clothing factory, where she spent some time working as supervisor.
He received much assistance from Bertram Clough Williams-Ellis ( of Portmeirion fame ) and Stafford Cripps, a prominent politician of the time.

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