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Page "Stanley Holloway" ¶ 20
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its and obituary
After the death of Mary Hastings Bradley in 1976, " Tiptree " mentioned in a letter that his mother, also a writer, had died in Chicago — details that led inquiring fans to find the obituary, with its reference to Alice Sheldon ; soon all was revealed.
William of Poitiers wrote glowingly of William's reign and its benefits, but the obituary notice for William in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle condemns William in harsh terms.
As Whitrow explained in Dingle's obituary, this is not correct .< ref > The Lorentz transformation is x '=( x − vt ) β, t '=( t − vx / c < sup > 2 </ sup >) β, and its algebraic inverse is x =( x '+ vt ') β, t =( t '+ vx '/ c < sup > 2 </ sup >) β, where β = 1 /√( 1 − v < sup > 2 </ sup >/ c < sup > 2 </ sup >).
* In its 26 August 2009 obituary for Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, the New York Times described the late Senator as a " Rabelaisian figure in the Senate and in life ".
" The campaign was the beginning of an association with Dukakis and his wife, Kitty, that would bring Mr. Zakim to the policy-making level of the national Democratic Party, a standing he retained after Dukakis's political career faded ," the Boston Globe wrote in its obituary on Zakim.
He also " used his political connections and friendships with black ministers, Roman Catholic leaders and sports celebrities to establish community organizations and public-service events, including the 12, 000-member Team Harmony antiracism rally for teenagers ," the New York Times said in its obituary.
In its obituary of the scholar, The Independent stated that " Isaiah Berlin was often described, especially in his old age, by means of superlatives: the world's greatest talker, the century's most inspired reader, one of the finest minds of our time ... there is no doubt that he showed in more than one direction the unexpectedly large possibilities open to us at the top end of the range of human potential ".
For Life ’ s final issue in its original format, 80-year-old Edward Sandford Martin was recalled from editorial retirement to compose its obituary.
Peter Travers of Rolling Stone claimed that Town & Country was " less deserving of a review than it is an obituary .... The corpse took with it the reputations of its starry cast, including Warren Beatty and Diane Keaton.
A 2005 obituary by The Guardian of its pocket cartoonist David Austin said " Newspaper readers instinctively look to the pocket cartoon to reassure them that the disasters and afflictions besetting them each morning are not final.
Soon afterwards, The Sporting Times prints its legendary obituary notice:
* On 26 June 1975, a the day after emergency was imposed in India, the Bombay edition of The Times of India in its obituary column carried an entry that read " D. E. M O ' Cracy beloved husband of T. Ruth, father of L. I. Bertie, brother of Faith, Hope and Justica expired on 26 June ".
In its obituary, The New York Times credited Griffin as " the only reason that animal thinking was given consideration at all ".
In its obituary for Noguchi, the New York Times called him " a versatile and prolific sculptor whose earthy stones and meditative gardens bridging East and West have become landmarks of 20th-century art.
After the Associated Press mistakenly placed Bob Hope's obituary on its web site in June 1998, Stump announced on the floor of the House that the entertainer had died.
The Times praised Backhaus in its 1969 obituary for having upheld the classical German music tradition of the Leipzig Conservatory.
The 1980 film Where the Buffalo Roam loosely depicts Acosta's life and his relationship with Hunter S. Thompson, and takes its name from Thompson's obituary to Acosta " The Banshee Screams for Buffalo Meat ", which in turn is a reference to Acosta's book Autobiography of a Brown Buffalo.
According to Leopold Kohr's obituary for Schumacher, when his paper " was published in the spring of 1943 in Economica, it caused some embarrassment to Keynes who, instead of arranging for its separate publication, had incorporated the text almost verbatim in his famous " Plan for an International Clearing Union ," which the British government issued as a White Paper a few weeks later.
The Wisden Cricketers ' Almanack, in its obituary for him, called him Australia's greatest batsman: " Of all the great Australian batsmen Victor Trumper was by general consent the best and most brilliant.
Sometimes the prewritten obituary's subject outlives its author ; an example is The New York Times obituary of Taylor, written by the newspaper's theater critic Mel Gussow, who died in 2005.
Reacting to his own company's obituary of Severin in 2012, Fantagraphics co-publisher Kim Thompson wrote, " I don ’ t think I ’ m in thinking of CRACKED for most of its run as “ a bunch of crap, and John Severin .”
The Daily Telegraph wrote in its obituary: " There was only one Dan.
In its obituary, the New York Times attributed his death to " paralysis of the brain ", and stated that his death had been expected.

its and Holloway
Clare Market and part of Aldwych where the London School of Economics and Political Science is based, as well as the West Wing of Somerset House, the location for the Courtauld Institute of Art and King's College London, St Bart's Hospital, the University of London Boat Club in Chiswick and the Egham campus of Royal Holloway with its historic Founder's Building are also examples of properties which form part of the University's estate.
During the Second World War, parts of Holloway experienced intense bombing due to its proximity to Kings Cross railway station.
Over time, many movie stars began voice acting in movies, with one of the earliest examples being The Jungle Book, which counted among its cast contemporary stars such as Phil Harris, Sebastian Cabot, Louis Prima, George Sanders and Sterling Holloway.
In order to achieve this, Smith and his assistant editor Nick Logan raided the underground press for its best writers, such as Charles Shaar Murray and Nick Kent, recruited other writers such as Tony Tyler, Ian MacDonald and Californian Danny Holloway.
Holloway Hall served as the original home of Maryland State Normal School at Salisbury upon its opening in 1925.
Following its provincial success, The Disorderly Room was given a West End production at the Victoria Palace Theatre in late 1919, in which Holloway starred alongside Henson and Tom Walls.
In October 2006, the University opened a new Science Centre, part of a £ 30m investment in its science department at the North campus close to Holloway Road, with a " Super Lab " claimed to be one of Europe's most advanced science teaching facilities, and 280 workstations equipped with digital audio visual interactive equipment.
) They have unique red tips to some of the wing feathers where the shafts extend beyond the barbs ; in the Bohemian and Cedar Waxwings, these tips look like sealing wax, and give the group its common name ( Holloway 2003 ).
The celebrated stage and film actor Stanley Holloway joined the Royal Irish Constabulary in 1920, but left a year later shortly before its disbandment in 1922 in the midst of the Anglo-Irish War.
He duly forms a governing body ; one of its members is the shrewd shopkeeper Arthur Pemberton ( Stanley Holloway ).
Bar billiards in its current form started in the UK in the 1930s when an Englishman David Gill saw Billard Russe being played in Belgium and persuaded the Jelkes company of Holloway Road in London to make a similar table.
In September 2001, an inspection report from Her Majesty's Chief Inspector of Prisons claimed that Holloway Prison was " failing " many of its inmates, mainly due to financial pressures.
St George's intends to keep working with Royal Holloway in the field of health and social care along with its well-established Joint Faculty with Kingston University.
It also won a raft of awards for its journalism, design and photography, in the UK and internationally, and secured the former archbishop Richard Holloway and On the Waterfront scriptwriter Budd Schulberg as regular contributors.
The station is in Islington, just off the Holloway Road near its southern end, close to the Liverpool Road junction.
Compton sits nestled below the ridge that stretches south west from Aldersley, with some of its housing climbing the steep hill near ' The Holloway ' on the climb towards Tettenhall Wood.
Much of the area was built in the latter half of the 20th century, though Compton does retain some of its older buildings such as several houses on The Holloway.
By 1978 Admiral James L. Holloway III concluded that the United States Navy had a very slim margin over its Soviet counterpart.
That bridge was at the north end of the Causeway, at its junction with Heybridge Street and Holloway Road, but the bridge there now is hardly distinguishable as such.
On 1 September 1990 Kiss relaunched as a legal station, its studio and offices located on the Holloway Road, and was supported financially by EMAP.
Sterling Holloway and June Cochrane introduced the song " Manhattan ", as its " easygoing strolling melody and ingeniously rhymed lyric related all of the everyday pleasures to be found in New York ".
Since then, the Institute has been part of a successful collaboration between the University of London and two of its colleges: Queen Mary, University of London and Royal Holloway, University of London.
However, Ian Holloway, Dean of Law at the University of Western Ontario, criticised McWhinney's proposal for its ignorance of provincial input, and opined that its implementation " would be contrary to the plain purpose of those who framed our system of government.

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