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Late and 1957
His literary debut, Garner began work on the novel after he moved in to the Late Medieval house at Toad Hall in Blackden, Cheshire in 1957.
In 1957, Garner purchased Toad Hall, a Late Mediaeval building in Blackden, seven miles away from Alderley Edge.
* Gail Gloston, Karl Shapiro, Delmore Schwartz, and Randall Jarrell: The Image of the Poet in the Late 1940s ( Thesis: Reed College, 1957 ).
Late in his career he appeared in various episodes of a number of television shows, including The Real McCoys ( 1957 ), Breaking Point ( Episode # 22 A Child of the Center Ring, 1964 ), Daniel Boone ( 1966 ), and Bonanza ( 1966 ).
For the First time in Walajapet, in the year 1957, the Murthy ’ s Commercial Institute was established by Late C. M.
* Too Late Now, for television, ca 1957
* 1957 –: Ricky Nelson's " Poor Little Fool ", " Lonesome Town ", " It's Late " and other hit recordings
Earlier suggestions from Denizot in 1957 and Ruggieri in 1967 proposed that this layer was Late Miocene in Age, and the same Ruggieri coined the term Messinian Salinity Crisis.
DeFore's film appearances include: The Male Animal ( 1942 ), The Human Comedy ( uncredited, 1943 ), A Guy Named Joe ( 1943 ), Thirty Seconds over Tokyo ( 1944 ), The Affairs of Susan ( 1945 ), You Came Along ( 1945 ), It Happened on 5th Avenue ( 1947 ), Ramrod ( 1947 ), Romance on the High Seas ( 1948 ), My Friend Irma ( 1949 ), Too Late for Tears ( 1949 ), Dark City ( 1950 ), Southside 1-1000 ( 1950 ), The Guy Who Came Back ( 1951 ), A Girl in Every Port ( 1952 ), Jumping Jacks ( 1952 ), Battle Hymn ( 1957 ), A Time to Love and a Time to Die ( 1958 ), and The Facts of Life ( 1960 ).

Late and General
Tecumseh Sherman, Late General, U. S. A. ( 1891 ) Useful 19th century biography.
Late in the Civil War, General William Tecumseh Sherman and his army began to push their way toward Robeson County as they headed north.
Late in the day, Jackson clashed with Union forces under Brigadier General Isaac Stevens and Major General Philip Kearny near Ox Hill, west of Fairfax.
* Jonathan Swift-A Satirical Elegy on the Death of a Late Famous General ( satire on Marlborough, written before his death )
Late in 1982, LeBlanc became Minister of Public Works for two years before being nominated by Trudeau to then Governor General Jeanne Sauvé for appointment to the Senate on June 29, 1984.
The popular songstress Salawa Abeni had become nationally renowned after the release of Late General Murtala Ramat Mohammed in 1976, which was the first Nigerian recording by a woman to sell more than a million copies.
Funeral of the Late General Canby -- the Body Lying in State
Several issues (# 14, # 13, #) give accounts of Pekar's becoming a recurring guest on the NBC television show Late Night with David Letterman, including a 1987 interview segment in which Pekar criticized Letterman for ducking criticism of General Electric, the parent company of NBC.
In recent years, keynote graduation speakers have included future Attorney General Eric Holder ( 2001 ), former President Bill Clinton ( 2002 ), GE CEO Jack Welch ( 2003 ), United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan ( 2004 ), CUNY Chancellor Matthew Goldstein ( 2005 ), Late Night comedian Conan O ' Brien ( 2006 ),> American Symphony Orchestra conductor / Bard College president Leon Botstein ( 2007 ), New York Times reporter David Herszenhorn ( 2008 ), actress / alumna Lucy Liu ( 2009 ), David Axelrod, Senior Advisor to President Barack Obama ( 2010 ), and writer / alum Gary Shteyngart ( 2011 ).
* The Life of the Late General William Eaton: Principally Collected from his Correspondence and Other Manuscripts.
Col. Lodwick ( Late General Sir ) stationed at Satara, in April 1824 with a contingent of soldiers and Indian guides climbed up the mountain face reaching what is now known as the Lodwick Point.
Late in the war, during the Allied advance through western Europe following the Normandy landings, Butlin was approached by General Bernard Montgomery, who asked him to help set up leave centres for the 21st Army Group.
) or comedic sketches ( e. g., General Mathpital, a parody of General Hospital ; Nobody's Inn, a parody of Fawlty Towers ; Late Afternoon with David Numberman, a parody of Late Night with David Letterman ; etc.
One of the stories also parodied the autobiographical stories of Harvey Pekar, portraying a version of Pekar's famous appearance on Late Night with David Letterman, in which Pekar's vehement critique of General Electric had earned him a longtime ban from the program.
Late in the morning of 30 April, with the Soviets less than 500 metres from the bunker, Hitler had a meeting with General Helmuth Weidling, commander of the Berlin Defence Area, who informed Hitler that the Berlin garrison would probably run out of ammunition that night.
Late 1955, he was promoted to Général de brigade ( Major General ).
Late in the afternoon of 18 June, as Napoleon was heavily engaged against Wellington at Waterloo, Grouchy, commanding the corps of General Gérard and General Vandamme, prepared to attack the Prussian forces confronting him over the River Dyle between the towns of Wavre and Limal.
Late in the 1994 – 95 season, Boe and head coach / General Manager Jim Roberts negotiated a deal with the St. Louis Blues.

Late and Raoul
Late in 1968 the band released a concept album called The Turtles Present the Battle of the Bands, in which the group pretended to be 11 different bands ( with names including ' The Bigg Brothers ', ' Nature's Children ', ' the US Teens featuring Raoul ', and ' the Fabulous Dawgs '), each with a song in a different genre.

Late and commanding
An officer of engineers, or praefectus fabrum, is referenced in armies of the Late Republic, but this post is not verifiable in all accounts and may have simply been a military advisor on the personal staff of a commanding officer.

Late and French
The town's name is attested as Aisincurt in 1175, derived from a Germanic masculine name Aizo, Aizino and the early Northern French word curt ' farm with a courtyard ' ( Late Latin cortem ).
Late 18th century French revolutionary " decimal " clockface.
The word battle is a loanword in English from the Old French bataille, first attested in 1297, from Late Latin battualia, meaning " exercise of soldiers and gladiators in fighting and fencing ", from Late Latin ( taken from Germanic ) battuere " beat ", from which the English word battery is also derived via Middle English batri, and comes from the staged battles in the Colosseum in Rome that may have numbered 10, 000 individuals.
First attested in English 1664, the word " celery " derives from the French céleri, in turn from Italian seleri, the plural of selero, which comes from Late Latin selinon, the latinisation of the Greek σέλινον ( selinon ), " parsley ".
In autumn 2006, Smith starred opposite Belinda Lang in a tour of a new comedy An Hour and a Half Late by French playwright Gérald Sibleyras, which was adapted by Smith.
The etymology of the word into English is from Old French Philistin, from Classical Latin Philistinus found in the writings of Josephus, from Late Greek Philistinoi ( Phylistiim in the Septuagint ) found in the writings by Philo, from Hebrew Plištim, ( e. g. 1 Samuel 17: 36 ; 2 Samuel 1: 20 ; Judges 14: 3 ; Amos 1: 8 ), " people of Plešt " (" Philistia "); cf.
The English term patriot is first attested in the Elizabethan era, via Middle French from Late Latin ( 6th century ) patriota " countryman ", ultimately from Greek πατριώτης ( patriōtēs ) " countryman ", from πατρίς, " fatherland ".
It was borrowed in 1792 from French numismatiques, itself a derivation from Late Latin numismatis, genitive of numisma, a variant of nomisma meaning " coin ".
The word ' torture ' comes from the French torture, originating in the Late Latin tortura and ultimately deriving the past participle of torquere meaning ' to twist '.
* clīvium " mountain " ( a Late Latin word, from Classical clīvus " slope, hill ") > montānia, from Classical montānus " mountainous " ( French montagne, Spanish montaña, Portuguese montanha, Italian montagna )
)" > berbicēs, from Late Latin berbex ,-ecis " wether ( ram )", from Classical vervex ( French brebis " ewe ", Italian berbice, Old Occitan berbitz, Romansh barbeisch " ram ", Romanian berbec " ram "; but Portuguese ovelha, Spanish oveja, Catalan ovella, Occitan dial.
The word " rob " came via French from Late Latin words ( e. g. deraubare ) of Germanic origin, from Common Germanic raub — " theft ".
Late in the 17th century, the Dakota entered into an alliance with French merchants.
The word is from the Old French ( ca 1300 ) disner, meaning " breakfast ", from the stem of Gallo-Romance desjunare (" to break one's fast "), from Latin dis-(" undo ") + Late Latin ieiunare (" to fast "), from Latin ieiunus (" fasting, hungry ").
According to the Concise Oxford Dictionary, proud comes from late Old English prut, probably from Old French prud " brave, valiant " ( 11th century ) ( which became preux in French ), from Late Latin term prodis " useful ", which is compared with the Latin prodesse " be of use ".
First attested in English in late 14th century, the word scar derives from Old French escharre, from Late Latin eschara, which is the latinisation of the Greek ἐσχάρα ( eskhara ), meaning " hearth, fireplace ", but in medicine " scab, eschar on a wound caused by burning or otherwise ".
The word viscount, known to be used in English since 1387, comes from Old French visconte ( modern French: vicomte ), itself from Medieval Latin vicecomitem, accusative of vicecomes, from Late Latin vice-" deputy " + Latin comes ( originally " companion ; later Roman imperial courtier or trusted appointee, ultimately count ).
The word baron comes from the Old French baron, from a Late Latin baro " man ; servant, soldier, mercenary " ( so used in Salic Law ; Alemannic Law has barus in the same sense ).
The English word " prophecy " ( noun ) in the sense of " function of a prophet " appeared in Europe from about 1225, from Old French profecie ( 12th century ), and from Late Latin prophetia, Greek prophetia " gift of interpreting the will of the gods ", from Greek prophetes ( see prophet ).
The word " blasphemy " came via Middle English blasfemen and Old French blasfemer and Late Latin blasphemare from Greek βλασφημέω, from βλάπτω
Owing to the fairly constant state of war between England and France in the Late Middle Ages successive English governments had objected to money going overseas to France from these Alien Priories (' trading with the enemy ') whence the French king might get hold of it, and to foreign prelates having jurisdiction over English monasteries.

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