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Colman and returned
His monastery continued to be used for many years afterwards-St. Colman is recorded as having paid homage to its founder when he returned from abroad to visit Ireland a century after St Mobhi's death in 544.
Eventually, Northumbria was persuaded to move to the Roman practice and the Celtic Bishop Colman of Lindisfarne returned to Iona.
Bede, in the Historia Ecclesiastica Gentis Anglorum, states that " On the fourteenth of July in the above mentioned year, when an eclipse was quickly followed by plague and during which Bishop Colman was refuted by the unanimous decision of the Catholics and returned to his own country, Deusdedit the sixth Archbishop of Canterbury died.
In 1954, Colman returned to his hometown of London, Ontario, signing on as player-manager with the London Majors, then owned by team general manager Clare Van Horne.
In February she returned to the West End in Noël Coward's Hay Fever with Kevin McNally, Jeremy Northam and Olivia Colman, once again under the direction of Howard Davies.

Colman and London
Melvin Bragg, moderator, with Ian Stewart, Emeritus, University of Warwick, Andrew Colman, University of Leicester, and Richard Bradley, London School of Economics.
Rains served in the First World War in the London Scottish Regiment, with fellow actors Basil Rathbone, Ronald Colman and Herbert Marshall.
In 1916, he enlisted for the remaining duration of World War I, joining the London Scottish Regiment as a private, serving alongside his future successful acting contemporaries Claude Rains, Herbert Marshall and Ronald Colman.
* Dan Colman, I Never Saw My Father Nude ( London: Arthur Barker, 1981 ), ISBN 0-213-16791-3
Smith was born in Pimlico, Middlesex ( now London ), England the only child of an American merchant from Brooklyn, Charles Edward Smith and his wife Corinne Colman.
( 31 January 1754 – 30 September 1756 ), was a London weekly eighteenth century newspaper founded and chiefly run by George Colman the Elder and the parodist Bonnell Thornton as a ' plebeian ' counterpart to Edward Moore's The World, a periodical of about the same time, which dealt more with the interests of aristocrats.
* 2000: Lyric Theatre, London ; with Jessica Lange ( Mary ), Charles Dance ( James ), Paul Rudd ( Jamie ), Paul Nicholls ( Edmund ), and Olivia Colman ( Cathleen ).
* Colman, George, New Brooms !, London, 1776.
Anthony John Colman ( born 23 July 1943 ) was the Labour member of Parliament for Putney, London from 1997 to 2005.
Other London notables to graduate to the Major Leagues from Labatt Park during the 1940s are Tom ( Tim ) Burgess ( 1927 – 2008 ) and Frank Colman ( 1918 – 1983 ).
In 1936, Frank Colman started out at Labatt Park with the London Majors of the Senior Intercounty Baseball League, winning the Most Valuable Player award, batting title and Intercounty Baseball League championship.
Colman is also a co-founder of the Eager Beaver Baseball Association ( EBBA ) in London which has provided competitive league play for thousands of youngsters since its founding in 1955.
Colman was inducted into the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame & Museum in 1999 and the London Sports Hall of Fame in 2005.
Comprising the Most Rare, Curious, and * Recherche Works Extant, in Theology, History, Antiquities, Classical, and Black Letter Literature, Selected by Himself: Just Received from Europe, and on Sale by William A. Colman ( London: n. p., 1829 ).
London Elektricity is the stage name of DJ and electronic musician Tony Colman, who is best known as a recording artist of five albums, international DJ and formerly a member of the drum and bass act London Elektricity Live.
The first incarnation of London Elektricity was the duo Tony Colman and Chris Goss.
Colman and Goss are also founders of the Hospital Records record label, to which London Elektricity are currently signed.
Tony Colman now DJs drum and bass solo under the name of London Elektricity.
Other film stars considered to be " members " of this select group were David Niven ( whom Smith treated like a son ), Ronald Colman, Rex Harrison, Robert Coote, Nigel Bruce ( whose daughter's wedding he had attended as best man ), Leslie Howard ( whom Smith had known since working with him on early films in London ) and Patric Knowles.
Introduced by Younger, her Liverpool manager, to Colman, she made her first appearance in London at the Haymarket, 9 June 1777, as Miss Hardcastle.
In 1996, London Elektricity was the recording name of Goss and Colman.
Goss joined Colman to form the electronica-duo London Elektricity, but parted again in 2002 to focus on managing the label.
Although Chris Goss had parted London Elektricity, in 2003 the band released a second album with Tony Colman drawing in a range of musicians and vocalists and turned the project into a live band.

Colman and 1954
Over the course of seven years, the trio collaborated on seven films, including A Double Life ( 1947 ) starring Ronald Colman, Adam's Rib ( 1949 ), Born Yesterday ( 1950 ), The Marrying Kind ( 1952 ), and It Should Happen to You ( 1954 ), all starring another Cukor favorite, Judy Holliday, who won the Academy Award for Best Actress for Born Yesterday.
Buchanan appeared in more than 100 movies, including Penny Serenade ( 1941 ) with Cary Grant, Tombstone, the Town Too Tough to Die ( 1942 ), The Talk of the Town ( 1942 ) with Ronald Colman and Jean Arthur, The Man from Colorado ( 1948 ), Cheaper by the Dozen ( 1950 ), She Couldn't Say No ( 1954 ), Ride the High Country ( 1962 ) with Randolph Scott and Joel McCrea, McLintock!

Colman and after
Originally, Frank Capra intended to make Lost Horizon after Broadway Bill ( 1934 ), but lead actor Ronald Colman couldn't get out of his other filming commitments.
There is also a network of small roads in Newton Heath named after the players who lost their lives in Munich, including Roger Byrne Close, David Pegg Walk, Geoff Bent Walk, Eddie Colman Close, Billy Whelan Walk, Tommy Taylor Close and Mark Jones Walk.
The residences are named after Horatio Nelson, John Constable, Benjamin Britten, Jeremiah Colman, Horatio Nelson's ship HMS Victory, Robert Kett, Sir Thomas Browne and the Paston family who wrote the Paston Letters.
On February 21, 10 days after the declaration of independence, in the midst of the Carnival indigenous revolution broke out that lasted until 27 February, which was led by Nele Gantule and the chief Colman.
There is a legend that Queen Margaret of Anjou took refuge after the battle in what is known as The Queen's Cave where she was accosted by a robber ; the legend formed the basis for an 18th century play by George Colman the Younger ; but it has been established that Queen Margaret had fled to France by the time the battle took place.
Other moviemakers arrived from Europe after World War I: directors like Ernst Lubitsch, Alfred Hitchcock, Fritz Lang, and Jean Renoir ; and actors like Rudolph Valentino, Marlene Dietrich, Ronald Colman, and Charles Boyer.
A housing complex called Duncan Edwards Court exists in Manchester, among a network of streets, named after his fellow Munich victims, including Eddie Colman, Roger Byrne and Tommy Taylor.
Soon after Wulfstan's death, a hagiography, or saint's life, was written about him in English by his former chancellor Colman.
In 1984, a year after Colman's death, the EBBA's all-star day in mid-July was renamed " Frank Colman Day.
Believing her Captain to be after stowaways, Clarissa and Oakes are hastily married by Martin, the ship's assistant surgeon and a clergyman, and Jack orders Bonden to hide Padeen Colman.
Other roads and paths on the estate include Tommy Taylor Close, Eddie Colman Close, Mark Jones Walk, Billy Whelan Walk and David Pegg Walk, as well as a housing complex called Duncan Edwards Court, all of which are named after other players who died at Munich.
An accommodation building at the University of Salford is named after him – the Eddie Colman Court is a block of flats located near the main campus.
A statue of Colman was erected at his graveside in Weaste Cemetery, Salford, after his death, but it was badly damaged by vandals and after being repaired was placed in the home of his father Dick, who died in October 1986 at the age of 76 and is buried alongside Eddie as well as Eddie's mother Elizabeth, who died in November 1971 at the age of 62.
Reckitt and Colman approached Stanley Wagner to buy the business and after a very long negotiation a deal was concluded.
It has been said that after Titus Oates had left his deposition with Godfrey that Godfrey warned one of the intended scapegoats, Edward Colman who was later hanged, drawn and quartered, and who was a personal friend.
In addition, the Colman House residence at the University of East Anglia is named after the company and Jeremiah Colman.
She was favourably received, and, after enacting Maria in Murphy ’ s Citizen, Rosetta, and Miss Tittup in Garrick's Bon Ton, she was trusted by Colman, 30 Aug. 1777, with Rosina in the Spanish Barber, or the Useless Precaution, his adaptation from Beaumarchais ' The Barber of Seville.
The publication of Colman ’ s newspaper was interrupted by the American Civil War, but three years after the war he founded the Colman ’ s Rural World.
Colman resigned the Bishopric of Lindisfarne after the Synod of Whitby called by King Oswiu of Northumbria decided to calculate Easter using the method of the First Ecumenical Council instead of his preferred Celtic method.

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