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pupils and 1909
The Brook Street premises were closed in 1909 and pupils transferred to a new school building, on a 5½ acre site on Queen Anne's Road, Clifton.
They were divorced in 1909, and Monteux married one of her former pupils, Germaine Benedictus, the following year.
In Vienna, Arnold Schoenberg and his pupils Alban Berg and Anton Webern moved along an increasingly avant-garde path, pioneering atonal music in 1909 and twelve-tone music in 1923.
Dagnall School, opened in 1909, In 1989 the number of registered pupils at Dagnall County First School, as it was then called, had fallen to just 13 and the school was at risk of closure.
The town has two schools, Paddock Wood Primary School which was built in 1909, and which has approximately 600 pupils and Mascalls School, ( a comprehensive secondary school ), opened in 1956 and has around 1400 pupils, and it takes its pupils from Brenchley, Matfield, Capel, Five Oak Green, East Peckham, Horsmonden, Lamberhurst and Yalding, as well as Paddock Wood itself.
In 1909 the house system was changed to reflect the increasing number of boys in the school, and the difficulty of allocating pupils on the basis of where they lived.
* In 1909, there were 121, 000 Catholics in 93 parishes, 36 missions and 53 parish schools with 18, 000 pupils.
He also had as pupils Francisque Guillebeau ( 1821 – 1897 ) and Valéry Mayet ( 1839 – 1909 ).

pupils and included
Composers he influenced musically included pupils of J. S.
They included established masters from other parts of Italy, probably working with their own teams as sub-contractors, as well as pupils and journeymen.
Although his pupils included Peter Philips and Thomas Tomkins, both of whom were active as keyboard composers, the native virginal school to which he had contributed so much went into sharp decline with a number of deaths in the 1620s and never recovered.
Former pupils of Monmouth School have included politicians Colin Moynihan and Derek Ezra ; international rugby players Eddie Butler and John Gwilliam ; and show jumper David Broome.
Other pupils of this generation included Heinrich Jalowetz, Erwin Stein and Egon Wellesz, and somewhat later Eduard Steuermann, Hanns Eisler, Rudolf Kolisch, Paul A. Pisk, Karl Rankl, Josef Rufer and Viktor Ullmann.
By extension, however, certain pupils of Schoenberg's pupils ( such as Berg's pupil Hans Erich Apostel and Webern's pupils René Leibowitz, Leopold Spinner and Ludwig Zenk ) are usually included in the roll-call.
Later in his life he was appointed professor of composition at the Conservatoire de Paris and the École Normale de Musique ; his pupils included Maurice Duruflé, Olivier Messiaen, Joaquín Rodrigo and Manuel Ponce.
His other pupils included Metrocles, Monimus, Menippus, Cleomenes, Theombrotus, and Crates ' brother Pasicles.
His followers and pupils included his son Karl ( who sometimes painted so well that his works are occasionally mistaken for those of his father ), Oudinot, Delpy, Albert Charpin and Pierre Emmanuel Damoye.
After the war, together with Hilary Pepler and Desmond Chute, Gill founded The Guild of St Joseph and St Dominic at Ditchling, where his pupils included the young David Jones, who soon began a relationship with Gill's daughter, Petra.
His pupils included the orators Theramenes and Isocrates, and in the year of the death of Socrates ( 399 BC ), Prodicus was still living.
She had 11 pupils, which included her five younger brothers.
Its famous pupils included the poet Alun Lewis and the actor Sir Anthony Hopkins.
His many distinguished pupils included Pierre Boulez and Yvonne Loriod, who became his second wife.
Other pupils included Karlheinz Stockhausen in 1952, Alexander Goehr in 1956 – 57, György Kurtág in 1957, Tristan Murail in 1967 – 72 and George Benjamin during the late 1970s.
She grew up in north-west London, attending the Yehudi Menuhin School on a scholarship as a weekly boarder between the ages of 8 and 18, where her fellow pupils included Nigel Kennedy.
Already a successful opera composer, in 1715 Porpora was appointed at the Conservatory of S. Onofrio, where his pupils included such well-known castrati as Giuseppe Appiani, Felice Salimbeni, and Gaetano Majorano ( known as Caffarelli ), as well as distinguished female singers such as Regina Mingotti and Vittoria Tesi ; Farinelli may well have studied with him privately.
His pupils included canal engineer William Jessop and architect and engineer Benjamin Latrobe.
His pupils included Anton Colander, Christoph Bernhard, Matthias Weckmann, Heinrich Albert, Johann Theile, Friedrich Werner, Philipp Stolle Johann Nauwach, Caspar Kittel, Christoph Kittel, Clemens Thieme, Johann Klemm, Johann Vierdanck, David Pohle, Constantin Christian Dedekind, Johann Jakob Loewe ( or Löwe ), Johann Kaspar Horn, Friedrich von Westhoff, Adam Krieger, Johann Wilhelm Furchheim, Carlo Farina.
His pupils included Basilios Bessarion and George Scholarius ( later to become Patriarch of Constantinople and Plethon's enemy ).
Xenakis's compositions from 1949 – 52 were mostly inspired by Greek folk melodies, as well as Bartók, Ravel, and others ; after studying with Messiaen, he discovered serialism and gained a deep understanding of contemporary music ( Messiaen's other pupils at the time included, for example, Karlheinz Stockhausen and Jean Barraqué ).
Other Monteux students included John Canarina, whose 2003 biography was the first full-length study of the conductor in English, and Charles Bruck, one of Monteux's first pupils in Paris, who became music director of the school in Hancock after Monteux's death.
Lily's pupils included William Paget, John Leland, Antony Denny, Thomas Wriothesley and Edward North, 1st Baron North.

pupils and Marie
Breitner had only two pupils, Kees Maks ( 1876 – 1967 ) and Marie Henrie Mackenzie ( 1878 – 1961 ).
Jessie Bond, Camille Everardi, Erminia Frezzolini, Jenny Lind, Mathilde Marchesi, Christina Nilsson, Julia Ettie Crane, Julius Stockhausen, Marie Tempest, and Henry Wood were among his pupils.
The phenomenal success of some of his pupils, such as Jan Kubelík, Jaroslav Kocián, Efrem Zimbalist, Juan Manén, Marie Hall, Victor Kolar and Erika Morini brought to him students from all parts of the world.
His best piano pupils were Marie Pleyel and Camille-Marie Stamaty.
Some of his pupils continued on to successful concert or other significant music careers, including Webster Aitken, Stefan Askenase, Robert Goldsand, Ignace Hilsberg, Edward Goll, Maryla Jonas, Lubka Kolessa, Elly Ney, Ozan Marsh, Dario Raucea, Elfi von Dassanowsky, Isolde Ahlgrimm, Else Herold and Marie Aimée Varro.
Among his pupils at the Imperial Ballet School were Michel Fokine, Vaslav Nijinsky, Tamara Karsavina, George Balanchine, and Anna Pavlova, to whom he taught the soaring leap of Marie Taglioni and Carlotta Grisi.

pupils and who
However, the teacher who understands the influence of emotions on behavior may be highly influential in helping pupils gain confidence, security, and satisfaction.
It is the classroom teacher, however, who has daily contacts with pupils, and who is in a unique position to put sound psychological principles into practice.
This last point is important because if high school pupils are aware that few, if any, graduates who have chosen a certain vocational program have obtained a job as a consequence of the training, the whole idea of relevance disappears.
In order to prepare the role of an important old actress, a theatre student interviews three actresses who were her pupils: an international diva ( Glòria Marc, played by Núria Espert ), a television star ( Assumpta Roca, played by Rosa Maria Sardà ) and a dubbing director ( Maria Caminal, played by Anna Lizaran ).
He taught French for a year at Eton, where Eric Blair ( later to become George Orwell ) and Stephen Runciman were among his pupils, but was remembered as an incompetent and hopeless teacher who couldn ’ t keep discipline.
Dosing of all opioids may be limited by opioid toxicity ( confusion, respiratory depression, myoclonic jerks and pinpoint pupils ), seizures ( tramadol ), but there is no dose ceiling in patients who accumulate tolerance.
All the princes of Europe sent him pupils, who found in this skillful professor not only an indefatigable teacher, but an affectionate guardian.
The school was fashioned as " a Free Academy for the purpose of extending the benefits of education gratuitously to persons who have been pupils in the common schools of the city and county of New York.
As a comparative grammarian he was much more than as a Sanskrit scholar ,” and yet “ it is surely much that he made the grammar, formerly a maze of Indian subtilty, as simple and attractive as that of Greek or Latin, introduced the study of the easier works of Sanskrit literature and trained ( personally or by his books ) pupils who could advance far higher, invade even the most intricate parts of the literature and make the Vedas intelligible.
skill in the shadowy and obscure, by often remarking to his pupils, that ' there was only one man in the world who could fully understand his writings ;
Bach in Leipzig, such as Wilhelm Friedmann Bach, Carl Philipp Emmanuel Bach and Johann Friedrich Agricola, as well as those composers who performed under his direction in Leipzig ( Christoph Graupner, Johann David Heinichen and Johann Georg Pisendel ), composers of the Berlin lieder school, and finally, his numerous pupils, none of whom, however, became major composers.
Sekien is known to have had a number of other pupils, who failed to achieve distinction.
Leonardo's formal training in the anatomy of the human body began with his apprenticeship to Andrea del Verrocchio, who insisted that all his pupils learn anatomy.
His co-professors were Louis Cappel and Josué de la Place, who also were Cameron's pupils and lifelong friends, who collaborated in the Theses Salmurienses, a collection of theses propounded by candidates in theology prefaced by the inaugural addresses of the three professors.
His biographer Paolo Giovio says, " His nature was so rough and uncouth that his domestic habits were incredibly squalid, and deprived posterity of any pupils who might have followed him.
The pupils who attend high school are around the age of 12.
His instrumental music greatly attracted the attention of Johann Sebastian Bach, who wrote at least two fugues on Albinoni's themes ( Fugue on a Theme by Albinoni in A, BWV 950, Fugue on a Theme by Albinoni in B minor, BWV951 ) and frequently used his basses for harmony exercises for his pupils.
Among Zeno's other pupils there were Aristo of Chios, Sphaerus, and Cleanthes who succeeded Zeno as the head ( scholarch ) of the Stoic school in Athens.
The earlier Megarian dialecticians – Diodorus Cronus and Philo – had done work in this field, and the pupils of Aristotle – Theophrastus and Eudemus – had investigated hypothetical syllogisms, but it was Chrysippus who developed these principles into a coherent system of propositional logic.
Several months later he was still in charge of the pupils, the sons of Douglas and Cockburn, who wearied of moving from place to place while being pursued.
To hold him who has taught me this art as equal to my parents and to live my life in partnership with him, and if he is in need of money to give him a share of mine, and to regard his offspring as equal to my brothers in male lineage and to teach them this art-if they desire to learn it-without fee and covenant ; to give a share of precepts and oral instruction and all the other learning to my sons and to the sons of him who has instructed me and to pupils who have signed the covenant and have taken an oath according to the medical law, but to no one else.

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