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Some Related Sentences

London and County
In 1899, as part of a reform of local government in the County of London, the various parishes in London were reorganised as new entities, the ' metropolitan boroughs '.
These were reorganised further when Greater London was formed out of Middlesex and the County of London in 1965.
Despite Connecticut's relatively small size, it features wide regional variations in its landscape ; for example, in the northwestern Litchfield Hills, it features rolling mountains and horse farms, whereas in the southeastern New London County, it features beaches and maritime activities.
In 1904 London County Council became concerned with the level of safety at the ground, and tried to get it closed.
Anderson was educated at Stanburn Primary School and Harrow County School for Boys in London, where his group of friends included Geoffrey Perkins and Michael Portillo.
He was succeeded by his eldest son, the second Marquess, who was a member of the London County Council and served as Lord-Lieutenant of Aberdeenshire.
The term Greater London was in use before 1965 to refer to a variously defined area, larger than the County of London and often similar to the Metropolitan Police District.
The term Greater London was used well before 1965, particularly to refer to the area covered by the Metropolitan Police District ( such as in the 1901 census ), the area of the Metropolitan Water Board ( favoured by the London County Council for statistics ), the London Passenger Transport Area and the area defined by the Registrar General as the Greater London Conurbation.
Although the London County Council had been created as a London-wide authority covering the County of London in 1889, the county did not cover all the built-up area of London, particularly West Ham and East Ham ; and many of the LCC housing projects, including the vast Becontree Estate, were outside its boundaries.
London County Council proposed a vast new area for Greater London, with a proposed boundary somewhere between the Metropolitan Police District and the home counties.
Reform of the local government arrangements in the County of London and its environs was again considered by the Royal Commission on Local Government in Greater London.
Greater London was formally created by the London Government Act 1963, which took force on 1 April 1965, replacing the former administrative counties of Middlesex and London, adding the City of London, which was not under the London County Council, and absorbing parts of Kent, Surrey, Essex and Hertfordshire.

London and Council's
In January 1951, Franklin started working as a research associate at King's College London in the Medical Research Council's ( MRC ) Biophysics Unit, directed by John Randall.
In recent years, Haringey Council has become the subject of nationwide criticism over its handling of the welfare of young children in connection with the murder of Victoria Climbie and the death of Baby P. In March 2009, Haringey Council's performance was placed by the Audit Commission in the bottom four of the country and the worst in London.
When the two streets were scheduled for demolition as part of the London County Council's plans for the construction of Kingsway and Aldwych, the GN & SR moved the location to the junction of the two new roads.
Price was nominated for the British Fashion Council's ' Red Carpet Designer Award ' at the 2006 British Fashion Awards, and a small range of his clothes sell in London boutique ' A La Mode '.
Such a scheme has a precedent in Hasselt, Belgium, where the city centre was revived by the provision of free public transport, and was a key plank of the Greater London Council's policy platform in the early 1980s.
He qualified in 1938 at University College Hospital, London, at University College London and joined the Medical Research Council's Pneumoconiosis Unit at Llandough Hospital, a part of Welsh National School of Medicine, now Cardiff University School of Medicine in 1948.
In April 2003, the gallery moved to County Hall, the Greater London Council's former headquarters on the South Bank, occupying of the ground floor.
Brockwell Lido was designed by HA Rowbotham and TL Smithson of the London County Council's Parks Department to replace Brockwell Park bathing pond and is almost identical in design to the Victoria Park Lido.
He became the Chair of Finance, responsible for the Greater London Council's budget, and was Ken Livingstone's deputy leader.
One of his first cases saw him give Bromley London Borough Council permission to challenge the Greater London Council's " Fare's Fair " policy of lowering public transport fares.
* Chelsea Bridge in Pimlico, London, designed by G. Topham Forrest, former head of London County Council's Architect's Department, is completed.
Nunhead forms part of Southwark London Borough Council's Peckham Programme regeneration scheme.
Southfields is one of the 20 wards that make up the London Borough of Wandsworth, and it supplies three of the Borough Council's 60 councillors.
He is or has been a member of Lewisham London Borough Council's Council Urgency Committee, Elections Committee, Licensing ( Supplementary ) Committee, Licensing Committee, Overview and Scrutiny Committee and Marsha Phoenix Memorial Trust.
After Sappho, Jackie became a member of the a member of Greater London Council's Women's Committee.
* June 25 – Greater London Council's Policy and Resources committee endorses enlargement of the London Underground network by construction of a new " Fleet Line " and extension of the Piccadilly Line to Heathrow Airport.
They evolved from the London County Council's Londoners ' Meals Service which originated in September 1940 as a temporary emergency system for feeding those who had been bombed out.
She was an alderman of the Greater London Council from 1964 and became chairman of Lewisham Council's children's committee, where she was also an alderman, when the GLC was abolished.
He had not done so by January 1960 when the Evening Standard reported that Marples Ridgeway had won the tender to build the Hammersmith Flyover and that the Ministry of Transport's engineers had endorsed the London County Council's rejection of a lower tender.
The Refugee Council's head office is in London.

London and resident
The Commissioner is assisted by an Administrator and small staff, and is based in London and resident in the Foreign and Commonwealth Office.
The British Parliament first guaranteed diplomatic immunity to foreign ambassadors in 1709, after Count Andrey Matveyev, a Russian resident in London, had been subjected to verbal and physical abuse by British bailiffs.
Philby also dealt with Anatol Gorsky ( code-name Kap ) the OGPU resident in London and his predecessor, a German known as Reif ( code-name Mar ).
The new London resident, Ivan Chichayev ( code-name Vadim ), re-established contact and asked for a list of names of British agents being trained to enter the USSR.
A notable example of this was the occasional surveillance by Prussian police of Karl Marx during the years he remained resident in London.
The body was subsequently recovered by a fishermen, and resident Danes reportly had it reburied at their local cemetery in London.
', but characters do occasionally venture further: several attended the Countryside Alliance march in London, there have been references to the gay scene in Manchester's Canal Street, and a number of scenes have taken place abroad or in other places around the country, with some characters resident overseas in South Africa and Hungary, and other characters have visited Norfolk.
Lean was a long-term resident of Limehouse, east London.
It is, however, based on the fact that there were widespread demonstrations in the area, sparked off by the arrival of the Potemkin in Odessa Harbour, and both The Times of London and the resident British Consul reported that troops fired on the crowds with accompanying loss of life ( the actual number of casualties is unrecorded ).
Plans for the station were first made in December 1848 under the direction of George Turnbull, resident engineer for construction of the first 20 miles of the Great Northern Railway out of London.
Today, Holloway is a vibrant residential, shopping and business area and has one of the highest densities of resident per square foot in London.
* Writer Charles Dickens, a one-time resident of Camden Town, placed various characters and places in his stories there as well: Bob Cratchit's family in A Christmas Carol ( 1843 ); the Micawbers in David Copperfield ( 1850 ); and in Dombey and Son ( 1846 – 1848 ), a description of the building of the London and Birmingham Railway, includes a trip through Camden Town.
Examples are the Royal National Theatre in London, that frequently organizes short directing courses, or the Orange Tree Theatre and the Donmar Warehouse on London's West End, which both employ resident assistant directors on a one-year basis for training purposes.
Bexley, Ohio, was named at the suggestion of an early resident, Col. Lincoln Kilbourne, in honor of his family's roots in the London Borough of Bexley.
In London, William Dorrit, imprisoned as a debtor, has been a resident of Marshalsea debtor's prison for so long that his three children — snobbish Fanny, idle Edward ( known as Tip ), and Amy ( known as Little Dorrit ) — have all grown up there, though they are free to pass in and out of the prison as they please.
He made his concert debut as a pianist at the age of 11 ; then, at the age of 18 he moved to London to study under Dame Myra Hess on a scholarship and has been a London resident ever since, currently living in Hampstead.
The Maldives maintain resident diplomatic missions in Colombo, New Delhi, Islamabad, Dhaka, Singapore, Kuala Lumpur, New York, Tokyo, Beijing, Riyadh, London, Geneva, and the European Union, and non-resident accreditation in a number of countries including Nepal and Bhutan.
A long term resident of Norbury, South London, he retired to Ashgrove, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia in 1983, where he lived until his death.
Negotiations with the Corporation of the City of London with a view to establishing the LSO as the resident orchestra of the planned Barbican Centre began in the same year.
The London County Council withdrew its understanding that the LPO would be the resident orchestra at the new Royal Festival Hall, and eventually the orchestra voted to dismiss Russell.
He was not eligible to enter a workhouse in London for more than one night and would be accepted only by Leicester Union, where he was a permanent resident.
Though resident in London at this time, he was associated with " the brethren of the Separation " there and their secret meetings.
This original research was repeated in 1976 in a community-based environment with institutionalised deaf cognitively impaired adults resident at St George's Hospital, London, to enable them to communicate using sign language.
* The Nordstrom Sisters are the resident act at the Ritz Hotel in London.

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