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Kelso and Central
The Scottish Omnibuses operations from Berwick, Dunbar, Galashiels, Hawick, Jedburgh, Kelso, North Berwick and Peebles depots passed to a new company, Lowland Scottish Omnibuses Ltd., whilst Airdrie ( Clarkston ) depot was passed to Central Scottish Omnibuses Ltd., Linlithgow depot passed to Midland Scottish Omnibuses Ltd., and Baillieston depot was closed ( its vehicles and operations being transferred briefly to the Stepps depot of Midland Scottish, pending further reorganisation to create Kelvin Scottish Omnibuses Ltd .).

Kelso and Michigan
Examples of singing sand dunes include California's Kelso Dunes and Eureka Dunes ; sugar sand beaches and Warren Dunes in southwestern Michigan ; Sand Mountain in Nevada ; the Booming Dunes in the Namib Desert, Africa ; Porth Oer ( also known as Whistling Sands ) near Aberdaron in Wales ; Indiana Dunes in Indiana ; Barking Sands in Hawaiʻi ; Mingsha Shan in Dunhuang, China ; Singing Beach in Manchester-by-the-Sea, Massachusetts ; near the Al Udeid Air Base west of Doha, in Qatar ; and Gebel Naqous, near el-Tor, South Sinai, Egypt.
Ben Kelso ( born April 11, 1949, in Flint, Michigan ) is an American former NBA player for the Detroit Pistons.
In 1976, Kelso was hired by Scott as one of his assistant coaches at Eastern Michigan University.
Currently, Kelso is the head coach at Mumford High School and also periodically conducts his own basketball training program for youth, collegiate and professionals players in Michigan.

Kelso and University
Guest spots include trombonist George Bohanon, who was in one of Chico ’ s classic sixties ensembles ; vocalist Jose James, who studied under Chico at New School University Jazz and Contemporary Music program ; and multi-reedist Jack Kelso, Chico ’ s lifelong friend.
These ideas were further elaborated and refined in Two-Factor Theory: The Economics of Reality ( Random House, 1967 ) and Democracy and Economic Power: Extending the ESOP Revolution Through Binary Economics ( 1986, Ballinger Publishing Company, Cambridge, Massachusetts ; reprinted 1991, University Press of America, Lanham, Maryland ), both co-authored by Patricia Hetter Kelso, his collaborator since 1963.
* Democracy and Economic Power: Extending the ESOP Revolution Through Binary Economics, by Louis O. Kelso and Patricia Hetter Kelso, Ballinger Publishing Co., Cambridge, Massachusetts: 1986 ; reprinted by University Press of America, Lanham, Maryland: 1991.
* Employee Stock Ownership Plans: ESOP Planning, Financing, Implementation, Law and Taxation by Robert W. Smiley Jr., Ronald J. Gilbert, David M. Binns, Ronald L. Ludwig, and Corey M. Rosen, ( Afterword by Louis O. Kelso and Patricia Hetter Kelso ) The Beyer Institute at the Rady School of Management University of California, San Diego, Vol.
Born at Blaiklaw ( now named Blakelaw ), four miles south of Kelso in Roxburghshire he attended Kelso Grammar School and went on to study at Edinburgh University, where he developed a talent for writing.
Injured in an accident in infancy, he did not follow his father into farming, but after attending Kelso grammar school and later Edinburgh University worked as a clerk and continued writing, soon succeeding to editorships of journals and newspapers.
Kelso, a native of Fayetteville, Tennessee, attended public school and the University of the South in Sewanee, Tennessee, prior to entering the U. S. Naval Academy in 1952.
* Greenfield, Sidney M. Making Another World Possible: the Torah, Louis Kelso and the Problem of Poverty ( paper given at conference, Columbia University, May, 2006 ).
* Anthony Agbali, Jason Booza, Jennifer Creighton, Amanda Dudley, Richard Fancy, Lance Greene, Amy Howell, Kevin Johnson, Ken Kelso, Rachel Klamo, Mary Mans, Alexandria Meriano, Elizabeth Pare, Girthia Porchia, Michelle Proctor, Oliver Rue, Tim Scrimger, Joseph White, Shihong Yao, " University City-Woodbridge Historic Area Together: A Community Study of the Woodbridge Historic District ", April 23, 2001, paper presented on COMM-ORG: The On-Line Conference on Community Organizing and Development.

Kelso and was
Arbroath Abbey, in the Scottish town of Arbroath, was founded in 1178 by King William the Lion for a group of Tironensian Benedictine monks from Kelso Abbey.
Cook was the second of eight children of James Cook, a Scottish farm labourer from Ednam near Kelso, and his locally born wife, Grace Pace, from Thornaby-on-Tees.
She was born into an upper-middle-class family: her father, Robert Simpson Cassat ( later Cassatt ), was a successful stockbroker and land speculator, and her mother, Katherine Kelso Johnston, came from a banking family.
After finishing school he was sent to stay for six months with his aunt Jenny in Kelso, attending the local grammar school where he met James and John Ballantyne who later became his business partners and printed his books.
News of the murder was carried to Fort Dearborn by a soldier of the garrison named John Kelso and a small boy who had managed to escape from the farm.
The first modern development in Arbroath was the Abbey, founded by King William the Lion in 1178 for monks of the Tironensian order from Kelso Abbey.
* Blanche Kelso Bruce, the first African American Senator, was born as a slave in Prince Edward County.
From 1850 to 1874, another notable land owner, Amos Matthews, had a farm of that — with the exception of the largely natural parcel where the Kelso Home for Girls ( currently Towson YMCA ), was later erected — was wholly developed into the neighborhoods of West Towson, Southland Hills and other subdivisions beginning in the middle 1920s.
The first post office was established in 1840 ; however, the name of the settlement was changed from Spring Hills to Kelso when the post office was reopened in 1858.
Kelso was founded by Peter W. Crawford, a Scottish surveyor, who, in 1847, took up the first donation land claim on the Lower Cowlitz River.
In the late 19th century and into the first part of the 20th century, Kelso was the center for commercial smelt fishing on the Cowlitz River.
It was apparent that Kelso, with a population of barely 2, 000 would not be able to support the approximately 14, 000 men that would be required to run the mill.
He succeeded his father James II on 3 August 1460 and was crowned at Kelso Abbey, Roxburghshire, a week later.
On 15 November 1960 an Ontario panel of experts, appointed by Attorney General Kelso Roberts, found that novel was not obscene according to the Canadian Criminal Code.
Nicoll was born at the Manse in Kelso, Scotland, the son of William Robertson Nicoll, a minister of the Free Church of Scotland.
In order to be able to write the final part of his trilogy, Kelso wants to track down and have sex again with all the girls he " shagged " when he was in his teens — in reverse order.
Soon after the battle there were legends that James IV had survived ; a Scottish merchant at Tournai in October claimed to have spoken with him, Lindsay of Pitscottie records two myths ; " thair cam four great men upon hors, and every ane of thame had ane wisp upoun thair spear headis, quhairby they might know one another and brought the king furth of the feild, upoun ane dun hackney ," and also that the king escaped from the field but was killed between Duns and Kelso.
Similarly, John Lesley adds that the body taken to England was " my lord Bonhard " and James was seen in Kelso after the battle and then went secretly on pilgrimage in far nations.
After some success in modeling, Kutcher moved to Los Angeles and, after his first audition, was cast as Michael Kelso in the television series That ' 70s Show, which debuted in 1998 and ended in 2006.
A short time later, this successor company was acquired by Hallmark Entertainment in 1994, but Halmi, Robert Halmi Jr. and affiliates of Kelso & Company reacquired the company in 2006.

Kelso and by
On May 18, 1980, being only away, Kelso residents experienced the shock wave caused by the eruption of Mt.
Called the largest volcanic eruption in historic times in the contiguous United States, Kelso received large amounts of volcanic ash through the air and from the massive mudflow caused by the eruption transported by the Toutle and Cowlitz Rivers.
The largest employer is the Kelso School District, followed by Foster Farms and Safeway.
Kelso is served by Southwest Washington Regional Airport, formerly known as Kelso-Longview Regional Airport.
By 1921, the decision had been made by Wesley Vandercook to build a mill near the small town of Kelso, Washington.
The depot is currently served by Amtrak as the midpoint between Kelso, Washington and Olympia, Washington.
He invented a legend in which the lady of Smailholm Tower, near Kelso, keeps vigil by the midnight fires three nights in a row ( see above ) and is visited by her lover ; but when her husband returns from battle, she learns he slew that lover on the first night, and she has been entertained by a very physical ghost.
Cunt ( 1999 ) is a novel by Stewart Home written in the form of a journal kept by a novelist from Aldeburgh called David Kelso ( who also has a false passport in the name of Kevin Callan ).
A maniac called Gary McMara, who likes to wear women's underwear and who accuses Kelso of conspiring with some radical political group ( the " secret state "), follows Kelso to Finland, where McMara dies after he is thrown into an ice-cold lake by Kelso and subsequently warmed too quickly in a sauna.
This is also the view taken by one of the girls Kelso has sex with:
# the coordination of human movement, e. g. seminal studies of bimanual coordination by Kelso
The term " military space opera " is occasionally used to denote this subgenre, as used for example by critic Sylvia Kelso when describing Lois McMaster Bujold's Vorkosigan Saga.
* " The Shield of Rome ", published 2011 by William Kelso.

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