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1994 and Scotland
In England the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994 allowed such inferences to be made for the first time in England and Wales ( it was already possible in Scotland under the rule of criminative circumstances ).
* Guest star in the 3rd episode of the award-winning BBC Scotland drama series Takin ' Over the Asylum ( 1994 )
( 1994 ) Collins Encyclopaedia of Scotland.
( 1994 ) The Celtic Place-Names of Scotland.
The council area was recreated in 1996, under the Local Government etc ( Scotland ) Act 1994, with the boundaries of the former Clackmannan district of the Central region.
( Scotland ) Act 1994 created a single tier of local government throughout Scotland.
Gullit refused to play for the national team following this but later changed his mind and agreed to return, facing Scotland in May 1994.
In terms of local government, the city of Stirling is a part of the wider Stirling Council area, which governs on matters of local administration as set out by the Local Government etc ( Scotland ) Act 1994.
( Scotland ) Act 1994 in 1996, and the same four cities were designated.
( 1994 ) The Celtic Place-Names of Scotland.
) Regulations 1994 implement the terms of the Directive in Scotland, England and Wales.
The monks employed Tony Harmsworth to devise a rescue package which saw the site converted into the largest private heritage centre in Scotland which operated between 1994 and 1998, however the heritage centre failed to generate sufficient profit to maintain the buildings.
( Scotland ) Act 1994, with the boundaries of the East Lothian district of the Lothian region.
( Scotland ) Act 1994, with the boundaries of the Midlothian district of the Lothian region.
( Scotland ) Act 1994, which replaced the regions and districts with unitary council areas.
( Scotland ) Act 1994, resulting in the abolition of Lothian Regional Council, and its replacement by a unitary system of local government.
( Scotland ) Act 1994, from part of the former Bearsden and Milngavie and Strathkelvin districts of the wider Strathclyde region.
( Scotland ) Act 1994, with the boundaries of the West Lothian district of the Lothian region.
( Scotland ) Act 1994.
( 1994 ) Collins Encyclopaedia of Scotland, London, HarperCollins ISBN 0-00-255082-2
( 1994 ) Collins Encyclopaedia of Scotland.
( 1994 ) The Celtic Place-Names of Scotland.
* The Turnberry Resort, Ailsa Course: A course on the southwest coast of Scotland which hosted The Open in 1977, 1986, 1994, and 2009.
In Scotland, on the other hand, the population increased by some 16 percent between 1994 and 2006, according to surveys done by the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds and Scottish Natural Heritage.

1994 and RAF
A crash at RAF Boscombe Down on 26 September 1994 appeared closely linked to " black " missions, according to a report in AirForces Monthly.
These were the very same aircraft that the RAF had derided in order to get the TSR-2 go-ahead, but the Buccaneer proved capable and was still in service until 1994.
In 1994, Prince Michael was made Honorary Commodore ( now Honorary Rear Admiral ) of the Royal Naval Reserve, and in 2002 he was made Honorary Air Commodore of RAF Benson.
Most of the 6th-century portion of the film was shot in Budapest, Hungary, while the majority of the 20th-century portion was filmed in late September 1994, at the softball field of London Central High School ( LCHS ), an American institution at RAF Daws Hill, High Wycombe, England.
In April 1994, 208 Squadron was disbanded and was replaced by 617 Squadron, which transferred with their Tornados from RAF Marham in Norfolk.
23 Sqn was disbanded on 1 March 1994, and was reformed at RAF Waddington in 1996 flying the Sentry E3D, This left two Tornado squadrons, which were half of the air defence fighter squadrons of the RAF.
In 1993 the squadron began the changeover to anti-shipping and by 1994 was operating from RAF Lossiemouth assigned to SACLANT with the Tornado GR4B with the Sea Eagle missile.
The squadron then moved to RAF Coltishall, being declared operational in the tactical nuclear role with twelve aircraft and eight WE. 177 nuclear bombs until 1994, when the squadron's nuclear role was terminated and the weapons withdrawn.
It was activated at RAF Mildenhall on 1 July 1994, having been previously assigned to RAF Alconbury.
In 1994 No 1 Air Control Centre ( No 1 ACC ) reformed at RAF Boulmer, providing the Royal Air Force with a highly-capable, rapidly-deployable fielded air command and control capability.
In 1994, RAF West Raynham was shut down by the Ministry of Defence.
Just after the war ended the RAF Base Accounts Office moved from York to Gloucester and grew into the Central Pay Office and became part of the RAF Personnel and Training Command, which formed in 1994, based at Innsworth.
In 1994, the TWU left Chivenor, merging with No. 4 Flying Training School at RAF Valley, and the airfield was handed over to the Royal Marines.
Other surviving features during the entire period of the airfield's use as RAF Gatow ( 1945 – 1994 ) included light bulbs in the main hangars, many of which dated from the 1930s.
The history of RAF Gatow and of western forces in Berlin from 1945 to 1994 is told in the Alliiertenmuseum, or the Allied Museum ( see weblink at base of page ).
* John Thomson ( RAF officer ) ( 1941 – 1994 ), one of the senior officers of the Royal Air Force, later Commander-in-Chief Strike Command
RAF Carlisle was just one in a chain of several Maintenance Units forming RAF Support Command, later to become RAF Logistics Command in 1994.

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