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Totten's and .
Even so, the first two officers who tried to surrender were killed by Indians, and after Scott had personally waved a white flag ( actually Totten's white cravat ), excited Indians continued to fire from the heights into the crowd of Americans on the river bank below for several minutes.
The following season proved to be Totten's last at the helm, an eighth-placed finish bringing to an end his five-year reign as manager.
When the film was finished Siegel did not want his name to replace Totten's.
The Union artillery ( Captain Totten's battery, Company F, 2nd U. S. Lt Artillery ) quickly displaced sharpshooters stationed in the William Adams house, while Union infantry closed with the line of guardsmen and fired several volleys into them, causing them to retreat.
When Fort Totten's Castle was restored in the 1990s, the Corp of Engineers was contacted in the hope that they would participate, particularly since the Fort Totten Castle was occupied at one time by the Corp of Engineers, but the military failed to show any interest.
At the Battle of Queenston Heights, he fought alongside Winfield Scott, who used Totten's cravat as a white flag to signal the American surrender.
One of Totten's most significant achievements was the design and construction of the Minot's Ledge Light near Cohasset, Massachusetts.
In fact, Captain Babcock was severely criticized for altering Totten's plans without orders.

apprentices and included
The demonstrators included London apprentices and Roundhead was a term of derision for them because the regulations to which they had agreed included a provision for closely cropped hair.
Other apprentices included Laurie Cribb, Donald Potter and Walter Ritchie.
Popular folk songs included emigration songs from the 19th century, work songs and songs of apprentices, as well as democracy-oriented folk songs collected in the 1950s by Wolfgang Steinitz.
These objects included tablets used by stone-cutters ' apprentices while learning their trade.
In early modern Japan, a woodblock print artist's first gō was usually given to them by the head of the school ( a group of artists and apprentices, with a senior as master of the school ) in which they initially studied ; this gō usually included one of the syllables of the master's gō.
As one of Borglum's apprentices, Noguchi received little training as a sculptor ; his tasks included arranging the horses and modeling for the monument as General Sherman.
His American apprentices included: Warren MacKenzie, Byron Temple, Clary Illian and Jeff Oestrich.
Later it included a centre for training apprentices but its major contribution to the industry was its gas appliance testing facilities, which were made available to the whole industry, including gas appliance manufacturers.
Wright and his apprentices designed and included many of these in Broadacre City models that toured the country.
Over the years, Westport Country Playhouse apprentices have included composer / lyricist Stephen Sondheim, screenwriter Frank Perry, television host Sally Jesse Raphael, composer Mary Rodgers, actor Cary Elwes, and actress Tammy Grimes.
The organization formerly included one of America's most prominent architectural conservation centers ( the SPNEA Conservation Center ), which pioneered a number of conservation techniques under research leader Morgan W. Phillips and his apprentices.

apprentices and John
He took on a number of apprentices, including David Kindersley, who in turn became a successful sculptor and engraver, and John Skelton ( 1923 – 99 ), his nephew, and also noted as an important letterer and sculptor.
Wythe later had numerous students assist in his law office as legal apprentices, including Jefferson, his law clerk for five years ; Henry Clay, and John Breckinridge.
At times the demand for apprentices would be so high, the steward of the hospital, John Hargreaves, would have to write to the London board, asking for more to be sent.
* John Giles Eccardt one of his apprentices, who became a noted portrait painter in Britain.

apprentices and G
In Sigma 6, both Jinx and Kamakura serve as Snake Eyes ' apprentices and G. I.

apprentices and .
-- Arranging for ministerial graduates to spend from 6-12 months as apprentices in well-established churches.
It was fantastic to turn from the seven men in shackles to the wardroom, where a class of apprentices awaited him.
Some of these apprentices were, in physical strength, already men and doubtless a percentage of them were Spencer's followers.
He was one of the last silversmiths in America to train apprentices to carry out designs in hand-wrought silver.
By a further act of 1541 — which was not repealed until 1845 — artificers, labourers, apprentices, servants and the like were forbidden to play bowls at any time except Christmas, and then only in their master's house and presence.
At the same time the new craft of printing was introduced to Basel by apprentices of Johann Gutenberg.
The first evidence of decorated trees associated with Christmas Day are trees in guild halls decorated with sweets to be enjoyed by the apprentices and children.
The town was conceived in order to provide everything necessary for filmmaking: theaters, technical services, and even a cinematography school for younger apprentices.
Boys served as apprentices in the Pimpfen (" cubs ") beginning at the age of six, and at age 10, entered the Deutsches Jungvolk (" Young German Boys ") and served there until entering the Hitler Youth proper at age 14.
Journeymen were able to work for other masters, unlike apprentices, and generally paid by the day and were thus day labourers.
They located and matched masters and likely apprentices through monitored learning.
A doctor cannot work as a physician's assistant unless ( s ) he separately trains, tests and apprentices as one.
The art of gunpowder-making and metal-smelting and casting for shot and cannon was closely held by skilled military tradesmen, who formed guilds which collected dues, tested apprentices, and gave pensions.
No longer able to support themselves financially, the family instead sought to place their sons as apprentices in various occupations.
His experiences at Hyde's, where he worked a thirteen-hour day and slept in a dormitory with other apprentices, later inspired his novels The Wheels of Chance and Kipps, which portray the life of a draper's apprentice as well as providing a critique of society's distribution of wealth.
Workhouses would sell orphans and abandoned children as " pauper apprentices ", working without wages for board and lodging.
* 1899 – 13 crew members and 5 apprentices are rescued from the stricken schooner Forest Hall by the Lynmouth Lifeboat when it floundered off the coast of Devon, England, United Kingdom.
The Kansas City Ballet, founded in 1957 by Tatiana Dokoudovska, is a ballet troupe comprising 25 professional dancers and apprentices.
Trade union organisations may be composed of individual workers, professionals, past workers, students, apprentices and / or the unemployed.
Knowing more than we can say explains how apprentices acquire non-explicit knowledge i. e. pupils improve their skills by observing a master.
The maidens may either be family members in training, apprentices, or local volunteers.
The seer-priests were usually attached to a local shrine or temple, such as Shiloh, and initiated others as priests in that priesthood: it was a mystical craft-guild with apprentices and recruitment.
" While in San Francisco, Nurmi received news that one of his apprentices, 1936 Olympic champion Gunnar Höckert, had been killed in action.

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