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Loftus and married
While resident at Wisbech, he married Grace Loftus.
# Sir Dudley Loftus, married Anne Bagenal ( grandparents of Dudley Loftus, a pioneer scholar of Middle Eastern languages );
# Sir Edward Loftus, married Anne Duke ;
# Sir Thomas Loftus, married Ellen Hartpole ;
# Isabella Loftus, married William Usher ;
# Anne Loftus, married ( i ) Sir Henry Colley of Castle Carbury ; ( ii ) George Blount ; and ( iii ) Edward Blayney ;
# Jane Loftus, who married Sir Francis Berkeley and then Henry Berkeley ;
# Martha Loftus, who married Sir Thomas Colclough of Tintern Abbey, County Wexford, six times great-grandparents of Rogers Cotter ;
# Dorothy Loftus, married Sir John Moore of Croghan, also six times great-grandparents of Rogers Cotter ;
# Alice Loftus, married Sir Henry Warren of Warrenstown ; and
# Margaret Loftus, married Sir George Colley of Edenderry
Sullivan is married to Miriam Gay Sullivan ( née Loftus ) of Quincy, Massachusetts ; they currently reside in Alexandria, Virginia.
His son, Raymond S. Benton married Mary Kay Loftus in 1968 in Iowa.
In 1803 he married Frances Hastings with whom he had five children: John Hastings Otway, Caesar George Otway, Loftus Otway, Jane Otway and Frances Otway.

Loftus and Richard
* 15 July 2008: Produced by the Hillyer Theatre Company at the Everyman Theatre in Cheltenham, directed by Jack Fayter, with Richard Loftus as Jamie, Joel Stubbs as Ste, Evelyne Beech as Sandra, Megan Travers as Leah and Steve Roberts as Tony.
Richard Bagwell in the DNB article states " On the other hand, it may be thought suspicious that Sir Robert Loftus refused to join in his wife's suit against his father ".
Some of the influential figures in the genesis of the theory are forensic psychologist Ralph Underwager, psychologist Elizabeth Loftus and sociologist Richard Ofshe.
The magazine is also supported by an Editorial Advisory Board consisting of the following individuals: James Alcock, Julian Baggini, Susan Blackmore, Derren Brown, Scott Campbell, David Clarke, David Colquhoun, Brian Cox, Richard Dawkins, Sergio Della Sala, Philip Escoffey, Edzard Ernst, Richard J. Evans, Stephen Fry, David Allen Green, Wendy M. Grossman, Simon Hoggart, Bruce Hood, Ray Hyman, Robin Ince, Paul Kurtz, Stephen Law, Andy Lewis, Scott Lilienfeld, Elizabeth Loftus, Richard McNally, Tim Minchin, PZ Myers, Mark Newbrook, Charles Paxton, Phil Plait, Massimo Polidoro, Benjamin Radford, James Randi, Ian Rowland, Karl Sabbagh, Simon Singh, Karen Stollznow and Richard Wiseman.
One was named Richard Grandy, and the other Loftus Frizzel.

Loftus and bishop
# REDIRECT Adam Loftus ( bishop )
* Adam Loftus ( bishop ) ( c. 1533 – 1605 ), Church of Ireland Archbishop of Armagh

Loftus and by
The concept of the Semantic Network Model was coined in the early sixties by the cognitive scientist Allan M. Collins, linguist M. Ross Quillian and psychologist Elizabeth F. Loftus in various publications, as a form to represent semantically structured knowledge.
The Adnams family was joined in 1902 by Pierse Loftus and his brother Jack, and Adnams still has members of each family on the board, with Jonathan Adnams as chairman and Simon Loftus as a non-executive director.
In 1851, some modest excavation was done by William Loftus, who identified it as Susa.
QPR became a professional team in 1889 and played their home games in nearly 20 different stadia ( a league record ), before permanently settling at Loftus Road in 1917 ( although the team would briefly attempt to attract larger crowds by playing at the White City Stadium for two short spells: 1931 to 1933 and the 1962 – 63 season ).
The site of Uruk was discovered in 1849 by William Kennett Loftus who led the first excavations from 1850 to 1854.
Audley can be accessed by road, from Loftus, Waterfall or Otford, and there are several railway stations ( Loftus, Heathcote, Waterfall, Otford ) on the outskirts of the park.
The most recent revival ran from December 3, 2011 to March 10, 2012 at the Old Vic Theatre, directed by Lindsay Posner and starring Jonathan Coy, Janie Dee, Robert Glenister, Jamie Glover, Celia Imrie, Karl Johnson, Aisling Loftus, Amy Nuttall and Paul Ready.
Loftus was returned, along with Sir Francis Rushe, as member for the King's County in the parliament of 1613, more apparently by the act of the sheriff than by the choice of the freeholders, and he was one of the Protestant majority who made Sir John Davies speaker.
As the chancellor could scarcely be judge in her own case, the matter was referred to the lord deputy and council, who decided, upon the evidence of a single witness, who testified to words spoken nearly twenty years before, that Loftus must settle upon Sir Robert Loftus and the children by Eleanor Rushe his house at Monasterevan, co. Kildare, furnished, and £ 1, 200 a year in land.
Loftus was constantly occupied in attempts to improve his financial position by obtaining additional preferment ( he had been obliged to resign the Deanery of St Patrick's in 1567 ).
The political-religious overlap was personified by Adam Loftus, who served as Archbishop and as Lord Chancellor of Ireland.
Loftus ' zeal and efficiency were commended by James I upon the king's accession.
Toni Ferguson recorded string quartet adaptations of both tracks on the album The String Quartet Tribute to Slayer: The Evil You Dread, with the former cover being described as having " menacing chord shifts " by Allmusics Johnny Loftus.
Trained by Louis Feustel and ridden by Johnny Loftus, Man o ' War made his debut at Belmont Park on June 6, 1919, winning by six lengths.
Jockey Johnny Loftus put Man o ' War in a bad position, getting boxed in by other horses.
In 1920, Johnny Loftus was denied a renewal of his jockey's license by The Jockey Club and was replaced as Man o ' War's rider by Clarence Kummer.

Loftus and whom
In 1629 the king granted Loftus the unusual favour of a general license to visit England when he pleased, leaving the great seal in the hands of the commissioners last appointed, of whom his cousin, Sir Adam Loftus of Rathfarnham, co. Dublin, was one.
Adam and Jane Loftus were the parents of twenty children, eight of whom died in infancy.
Briefly, in February to April 1851, Loftus was released from the work of the Commission to excavate at Susa on behalf of the British Museum, but was in June replaced by Hormuzd Rassam, together with whom Loftus subsequently explored the sites and collaborated on a report on the work at Susa.

Loftus and had
Therefore, The Cottagers have had 12 grounds overall ( including a temporary stay at Loftus Road ), meaning that only their former ' landlords ' and rivals QPR have had more home grounds ( 14 ) in British football.
In one of his first games in the top flight, against Queen's Park Rangers at Loftus Road on 22 September 1984, Waddle scored a first half hat-trick for Newcastle, who had a 4-0 lead at half time.
Loftus afterwards complained that its ill-paid duties had obliged him to abandon a lucrative practice in the ecclesiastical courts.
The dispute lasted long, Loftus complaining bitterly that his thirty years ' service was despised, that his dues were not paid, and that he had but £ 300 a year to support the dignity of his great place.
Young Lady Loftus had died in the previous summer, " one of the noblest persons ", Wentworth wrote, " I ever had the happiness to be acquainted with.
Much has been written about Loftus during this time but between 1584 and 1591 ; he had a series of clashes with Sir John Perrot on the location of an Irish University.
Loftus died in Dublin in 1605 and was interred in the building he had helped to preserve for future generations, while many of his portraits hang today within the walls of the University which he helped found.
They were one of the oldest Hiberno-Norman families, and had for a long time been known as the Redmonds of ' The Hall ', which is now known as Loftus Hall.
He was born Charles Tottenham, the son of John Tottenham, who had been created a baronet, of Tottenham Green in the County of Wexford, in the Baronetage of Ireland in 1780, by the Honourable Elizabeth, daughter of Nicholas Loftus, 1st Viscount Loftus, and sister and heiress of Henry Loftus, 1st Earl of Ely ( see Earl of Ely for earlier history of the Loftus family ).
He was the great-grandson of Lieutenant-Colonel Charles John Tottenham, DL, JP, eldest son of the Right Reverend Lord Robert Tottenham ( who had not assumed the surname Loftus ), second son of the first Marquess.
Falkland believed that his difficulties with the nobility had been largely due to the intrigues of the Lord Chancellor of Ireland, Adam, Lord Loftus, After the dissolution of the assembly of the nobility in 1627, he brought a charge against Loftus of malversation, and of giving encouragement to the nobility to refuse supplies.
After the case had been heard in London, Lord Loftus was allowed to return to his duties pending further inquiry.
By 1901, however, he had worn out his welcome and his contract was sold to the Cubs, then managed by Tom Loftus, who had had success with Waddell in Columbus / Grand Rapids ; but Loftus did not have the latitude to cope with Rube he had had Columbus owner / manager.

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