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Harold and put
Harold, with brothers Frank, Joe and William, took over at the death of their father, Harry M. Stevens, who put a few dollars into a baseball program, introduced the `` hot dog '' and paved the way for creation of a catering empire.
Conspiracies within secret intelligence services have occurred more recently, and led Harold Wilson in the 1960s to put in place rules to prevent phone tapping of members of parliament for example.
Powell had also expressed his opposition to the race relations legislation being put into place by Labour prime minister Harold Wilson at this time.
This was seen as a move against Harold Harefoot, Cnut's son by Ælfgifu of Northampton, who put himself forward as Harold I with the support of many of the English nobility.
" The chief of the European theater asked Officer Harold Lindsay Lin to put together another band to take its place, and that's when the 314 was formed.
Music critic Harold C. Schonberg in The Great Conductors ( 1967 ), says that while Strauss was a very fine conductor, he often put scant effort into his recordings.
At the time of the Norman Conquest Harold Godwinson put the abbot of St Benet's, Aelfwold, in charge of defending the coast against invasion.
After the death of Harold at the Battle of Hastings, Stigand worked with Earl Edwin and Earl Morcar, as well as Archbishop Ealdred of York, to put Edgar the Ætheling on the throne.
Harold C. Schonberg said that " playing him was like trying to put handcuffs on an eel.
It's unknown if Labelle themselves recorded it but due to conflicting recording and touring schedules, the song was never put on Labelle's follow-up Warner album, Moon Shadow and Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes recorded the song making it a hit.
In December 1935, Cleveland mayor Harold Burton hired him as the city's Safety Director, which put him in charge of both the police and fire departments.
* Harold Alfond Stadium new in 2008, contains an illuminated 400-meter, 8-lane track, with area for the long and triple jump, new discus and hammer cage and separate areas for shot put and javelin competition.
The recommendations were put into practice under Harold Macmillan during a successful experiment from 18 July 1961 to the end of the session ( 4 August ), and the sessions were made permanent in the following session, with the first of these on 24 October 1961.
The Crime and Investigation channel's ' Fred Dinenage Murder Casebook ', put forward the case that the killer could have been Harold Jones, a convicted murderer from Wales.
However, the acting commander of II Corps, Maj-Gen Bernard Montgomery, advised Gort that Barker was in an unfit state to be left in final command, and recommended that Maj-Gen Harold Alexander of 1st Division should be put in charge.
Neville Chamberlain wrote of Simon: " I am always trying to like him, and believing I shall succeed when something crops up to put me off ", while Harold Nicolson described him more pithily as " a toad and a worm ".
In a memorandum sent to President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Prime Minister Harold Macmillan on September 17, 1958, he argued for the creation of a tripartite directorate that would put France on an equal footing with the United States and the United Kingdom, and also for the expansion of NATO's coverage to include geographical areas of interest to France, most notably French Algeria, where France was waging a counter-insurgency and sought NATO assistance.
He noted that National Labour could attract to collectivist Socialism some who were put off by the resolutely working class character of the Labour Party, and cited Harold Nicolson as a case in point.
Chester is prescribed a cat psychiatrist, it is discovered that it is too soon to give Harold his shots and Bunnicula is put on an all-liquid diet, due to his weakened state.
As Labour Member of Parliament from 1957 for East Ham North, later Newham North East, he was a minister of state in Harold Wilson's first government at Education and Science ( 1964 – 1966 ), then as Minister of Public Buildings and Works ( 1966 – 1967 ), and finally was put in charge of the still-new Ministry of Overseas Development ( 1967 – 1969 ).
Spycatcher, Wright's subsequent account of the period when he and colleagues had, as he put it, " bugged and burgled our way across London ", revealed what had in effect been a planned coup against the then Labour government of Harold Wilson.
Winning paintings were put on permanent display on the concourse of the Old Trafford family stand, and the winners will be presented with awards by artist Harold Riley on 22 February.
Jobe's powers and abilities continue to grow, although the treatments also affect his mental stability, and he takes revenge on those who abused him when he was " dumb ": Father McKeen is engulfed in flames, a bully named Jake is put into a catatonic state by a mental " lawnmower man " continually mowing his brain, and a lawnmower invention of Jobe's runs down Harold, Peter's abusive father.

Harold and coffee
Ian Smith ( born 19 June 1938 ) is an Australian soap opera character actor and television screenwriter, best known today for his long-running role as the caring, kindly coffee shop owner Harold Bishop in the soap opera Neighbours.
Books on Thomson's art include The Silence and the Storm by Harold Town and David Silcox, and several coffee table books by the art expert Joan Murray.
Raised on his parents ' coffee estate, Kaima Betta Estate, at Pollibetta, in Coorg, he attended Bishop Cotton Boys ' School, Bangalore, and the Dragon School, Oxford, before following his elder brother Harold to St.

Harold and cup
Mr. Harrison, the proprietor of the Victoria Hotel in Fort William, donated a cup called the Harrison Trophy which became the property of three time winner, Harold Johnston, the son of pioneer farmers.

Harold and filled
Arriving in London, she was promptly taken under the wing of socialite Sybil Colefax, whose drawing room had become a salon, filled with " the bright young things " of the day such as John Gielgud, Harold Nicolson, Noël Coward and notables such as Arnold Bennett, Max Beerbohm and Bernard Shaw.
The plan, of a garden in " rooms ", was largely Harold Nicolson's ; Vita Sackville-West filled it to overflowing with choice plants.
By the time he returned, his starting role was filled by Harold Green.

Harold and with
When Harold Arlen returned to California in the winter of 1944, it was to take up again a collaboration with Johnny Mercer, begun some years before.
The countrywide success of `` Lazybones '' and `` And The Angels Sing '' could only lead to Hollywood, where, besides Harold Arlen, Mercer collaborated with Harry Warren, Jimmy Van Heusen, Richard Whiting, Walter Donaldson, Jerome Kern, and Arthur Schwartz.
`` I couldn't write with them in the same room with me, but I could with Harold.
There have been cases of humans being contaminated with americium, the worst case being that of Harold McCluskey, who at the age of 64 was exposed to 500 times the occupational standard for americium-241 as a result of an explosion in his lab.
Bill Woodfull evades a ball from Harold Larwood with Bodyline field settings.
Jardine instructed his fast bowlers, most notably Harold Larwood and Bill Voce, to bowl at the bodies of the Australian batsmen, with the goal of forcing them to defend their bodies with their bats, thus providing easy catches to a stacked leg-side field.
Probably he brought it back from Germany, possibly in concert with Harold.
The king again employed Ealdred as a diplomat in 1056, when he assisted earls Harold and Leofgar in negotiations with the Welsh.
In line with Harold Innis ' " Staples Thesis ", the economy has changed substantially as different export commodities have risen or fallen in importance.
In 1924 in the UK the chemist Harold Plenderleith began to work at the British Museum with Dr. Alexander Scott in the newly created Department of Scientific and Industrial Research, thus giving birth to the conservation profession in the UK.
It was adapted for film in 1977, with Harold Prince directing and Elizabeth Taylor, Len Cariou, Lesley-Anne Down and Diana Rigg starring.
It was directed by Harold Prince with choreography by Patricia Birch and design by Boris Aronson.
Most biographers blame Lerner's professional decline on the lack of a strong director with whom Lerner could collaborate, as Neil Simon did with Mike Nichols or Stephen Sondheim with Harold Prince ( Moss Hart, who had directed My Fair Lady, died shortly after Camelot opened ).
In 1930, England captain Douglas Jardine, together with Nottinghamshire's captain Arthur Carr and his bowlers Harold Larwood and Bill Voce, developed a variant of leg theory in which the bowlers bowled fast, short-pitched balls that would rise into the batsman's body, together with a heavily stacked ring of close fielders on the leg side.
Holly was having trouble getting his royalties from Petty, so he hired the noted lawyer Harold Orenstein at the recommendation of his friends the Everly Brothers, who had engaged Orenstein following disputes with their own manager, Wesley Rose.
Instead a minority Labour government was formed under Harold Wilson but with no formal support from Thorpe.
In 1952, Lancaster co-produced with producer Harold Hecht ( who had previously produced three Lancaster films under his own production company Norma Productions ; Kiss the Blood Off My Hands ( 1948 ), The Flame and the Arrow ( 1950 ), and Ten Tall Men ( 1951 )).

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