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Page "Salford Museum and Art Gallery" ¶ 3
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Langworthy and wing
This bequest was used to build the west wing, named Langworthy Wing.
Two years was required for the new wing, which was designed in the same fashion as the Langworthy Wing to be completed and opened in 1938.

Langworthy and was
On New Year's Eve 2011, Erin Langworthy, an Australian woman was plunged into the Zambezi River at Victoria Falls, where she nearly drowned with her feet still tied together after her bungee rope snapped during a jump.
Note that Emmons, like Langworthy, was published in New York City.
In the late 19th century the Locustville mill property was taken over by the Nichols and Langworthy Company, which had operated the Hope Valley mills since 1835.
Then in 1937 he went to the Victoria University of Manchester where he was elected to the Langworthy Professorship and created a major international research laboratory.
Edward Langworthy ( 1738 – 1802 ) was an American teacher who was a delegate to the Continental Congress from Georgia.
Langworthy began working with Georgia's Committee of Safety, and was their secretary when they became a revolutionary Council of Safety on December 11, 1775.
In 1795 Langworthy was made the clerk of customs for Baltimore, a post he held until his death.
When Langworthy retired in 1892, Eugene's brother Herbert bought his share and the company was re-organized as The Adams Company, foundry and machine shop.
The pilot of the aircraft Squadron Leader Richard " Dick " Langworthy AFC RAF was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross ( DFC ) for his part in the air operations.
After 17 broadcasts of The Children's Club Hour, the time slot was given to Estelle Levy and Patricia Ryan who created another children's program, The Adventures of Helen and Mary, scripted by Yolanda Langworthy.
This world-premiere production, with books and lyrics by Linda Alper, Douglas Langworthy and Penny Metropulos and music and additional lyrics by Sterling Tinsley, was directed by Penny Metropolus.
The winner was William Fitzgerald Langworthy of the Conservative Party.
Much of this later fame was associated with Ernest Rutherford who succeeded Schuster as Langworthy Professor in 1907.

Langworthy and over
Despite carrying the name of a suburb of Salford, Langworthy ARLFC has been based in Pendlebury ( at Rabbit Hills playing fields, Bolton Road ) for over 20 years, whilst local rivals Folly Lane ARLFC operate on the Blue Ribbon field off Pendlebury Road.

Langworthy and three
Born into a working class family in the Langworthy area of Pendleton, Salford, Lancashire, Eccleston is the youngest of three sons of Elsie and Ronnie Eccleston.

Langworthy and
The decision to echo the Langworthy Wing in the 1930s is remarkable in the architectural climate of the time and it is tempting to argue that Walker ’ s addition is the first Victorian revival building in the country.

Langworthy and with
It then carries on as the dual carriageway Broad Street through Pendleton and past the junction with Langworthy Road ( A5186 ).
The Eccles line of the Manchester Metrolink runs through the City of Salford, with stations at Exchange Quay, Salford Quays, Anchorage, Harbour City, Broadway, Langworthy, Weaste, Ladywell and Eccles.

Langworthy and .
Emmons and Langworthy, contemporary sources, give 1781, and Pratt and Sobel accept this date ; this has the effect of making him born in Kentucky, which would be a reason to invent it.
* Asahel Langworthy A Biographical Sketch of Col. Richard M. Johnson, of Kentucky.
In Weaste, there is the Langworthy station near the A5186 left turn where the Metrolink leaves the road to the south.
* Kidd, J. G, and Langworthy, O. R. Jake paralysis.
The Roberts & Langworthy Iron Works, located at 57 South Main Street in Dubuque, were manufacturers of " fine light castings " like grave crosses and park benches.
A change of the company name to Langworthy and Adams Iron Works followed in 1885.
The story begins by Edward Langworthy, former Mayor of Salford and early supporter of the museum, who died in 1874 leaving a £ 10, 000 bequest to the museum.

wing and was
His face was dark as the sky above it as he stood on the wing and waited for his pilot.
Out of this background of hunting and fishing, it was only natural that Roy first painted subjects he knew best: hunters in the field, fishermen in the stream, ducks and geese on the wing -- almost always against a vast backdrop of weather landscape.
Their flight was delayed, Dunn said, when a boarding ramp inflicted some minor damage to the wing of the plane.
Umkhonto we Sizwe ( or MK ), translated " Spear of the Nation ", was the military wing of the ANC.
The problem was remedied by adding a " dive flap " beneath the wing which altered the center of pressure distribution so that the wing would not lose its lift.
Although he was a major figure in the protectionist wing of the Conservative Party after 1844, Disraeli's relations with the other leading figures in the party, particularly Lord Derby, the overall leader, were often strained.
This act was unpopular with the right wing of the Conservative Party, most notably Lord Cranborne ( later the Marquess of Salisbury ), who resigned from the government and spoke against the bill, accusing Disraeli of " a political betrayal which has no parallel in our Parliamentary annals.
The Allied commanders agreed that Marlborough would command 36, 000 troops and attack Tallard's force of 33, 000 on the left ( including capturing the village of Blenheim ), whilst Eugene, commanding 16, 000 men would attack the Elector and Marsin's combined forces of 23, 000 troops on the right wing ; if this attack was pressed hard the Elector and Marsin would have no troops to send to aid Tallard on their right.
Although the SDP was seen as being largely a breakaway from the right wing of the Labour Party, an internal party survey found that 60 % of its members had not belonged to a political party before, with 25 % being drawn from Labour, 10 % from the Conservatives and 5 % from the Liberals.
Their analysis revealed that sufficient lift was generated by " the unconventional combination of short, choppy wing strokes, a rapid rotation of the wing as it flops over and reverses direction, and a very fast wing-beat frequency ".
The first stage was the construction of the northern wing beginning 1906.
The wing was funded entirely by Oliver Postgate using royalties received from the BBC.
* The right wing, composed of knights of Champagne and Burgundy, was commanded by the Duke of Burgundy Eudes and his lieutenants: III Gaucher de Châtillon Count of Saint-Pol, Count Wilhelm I of Sancerre, Count of Beaumont and Mathieu de Montmorency and Adam II Viscount of Melun.
The right wing was composed of men of arms and militia parish of Burgundy, Champagne and Picardy covered by the mounted sergeants from Soissons.
* The left wing, composed of knights and foot soldiers was led by Robert de Dreux, Count William of Ponthieu.
Octavian's fleet was waiting beyond the straits, led by the experienced admiral Agrippa, commanding from the left wing of the fleet, Lucius Arruntius commanding the centre and Marcus Lurius commanding from the right.
Gaius Sosius launched the initial attack from the left wing of the fleet, while Antony's chief lieutenant Publius Canidius Crassus was in command of the triumvir's land forces.
Paddy Ward claimed he was the leader of the Fianna Éireann, the youth wing of the IRA in January 1972.
These changes within the military wing of the Republican Movement were accompanied by changes in the political wing and at the 1986 Sinn Féin Ard Fheis ( party conference ), which followed the IRA Convention, the party's policy of abstentionism, which forbade Sinn Féin elected representatives from taking seats in the Oireachtas, the parliament of Ireland, was dropped.
RAI International's latest politically appointed President ( an avowed right wing nationalist and former spokesperson for Giorgio Almirante, the leader of the post-fascist party of Italy ) had unilaterally terminated a 20-year-old agreement and stripped all of its 1, 500 to 2, 000 annual hours of programming from TLN Telelatino, a Canadian-run channel which had devoted 95 % of its prime time schedule to RAI programs for 20 years since TLN was founded.
The failure to follow procedures resulted in the delamination in flight of a section of one Cessna 400's wing skin from the spar while the aircraft was being flown by an FAA test pilot.
It was discontinued as a rank in these services during the postwar period, but as an appointment, the title " commodore " was then used to identify senior U. S. Navy captains who commanded squadrons of more than one vessel or functional air wings or air groups that were not part of a carrier air wing or air group.

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