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Walley and Barnes
Match of the Days first match was presented by Kenneth Wolstenholme, who also commentated alongside Walley Barnes.
In 1950-51 Scott played 17 matches for Arsenal, but with his injury often recurring, he was no longer automatic first-team choice, sharing the right-back position with Walley Barnes.
He played in Arsenal's 1952 FA Cup Final defeat to Newcastle United, although in that match he was forced to deputise for full back Walley Barnes after Barnes was stretchered off with an injury.
Walley Barnes ( 16 January 1920 – 4 September 1975 ) was a Welsh footballer and broadcaster.
Walley Barnes wrote his autobiography, titled Captain of Wales.
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Smith primarily played as a full back, but his initial chances were few and far between ; Arsenal already had experienced full backs in Laurie Scott and Walley Barnes.

Walley and led
The landing force, 1, 200 men led by Major John Walley, were unable to cross the well-defended Saint-Charles River, and the naval bombardment failed because the New Englanders ' guns were unable to reach the high battlements of the city, and they furthermore soon ran out of ammunition.

Walley and out
After nearly 30 years out of feature films, he returned to perform character roles, including the sympathetic Walley World theme park founder Roy Walley in National Lampoon's Vacation, and Duncan's Toy Chest toy store owner Mr. Duncan in Home Alone 2: Lost in New York.
The following years were less successful, as Hollins and his assistant Ernie Walley fell out with several key players, particularly David Speedie and Nigel Spackman, team morale slumped and the side began to struggle.

Walley and team
Eventually the SWAT team arrives along with park owner Roy Walley ( Eddie Bracken ).

Walley and O
Roy Walley himself is a pastiche of both Walt Disney and Roy O. Disney, right down to the thin mustache.

Walley and ;
No publication followed, however, until 1609 ; the stationers Richard Bonian and Henry Walley re-registered the play on 28 Jan. 1609, and later that year issued the first quarto, but in two " states ".
Precursors to the genre were Columbia Pictures 1959 release Gidget, starring Sandra Dee as teenage surfer girl Gidget and James Darren as her beau Moondoggie ; 1961's Gidget Goes Hawaiian starring Deborah Walley as Gidget ; and Gidget Goes to Rome ( 1963 ) starring Cindy Carol as Gidget.
Actress Kay Cole ( who later went on to work on Broadway in A Chorus Line ) had played Suzie Hubbard in the original unaired pilot ; but when the series began, Cole was replaced by actress Deborah Walley.
Eve Arden ( Eve Hubbard ) died in 1990 ; Herbert Rudley ( Herb Hubbard ) died in 2006 ; Deborah Walley ( Suzie Hubbard Buell ) died in 2001 ; Roger C. Carmel ( Roger Buell # 1 ) died in 1986 ; and Richard Deacon ( Roger Buell # 2 ) died in 1984.

Walley and ).
The band were John French ( drums ), John Thomas ( keyboards ) and Jeff Moris Tepper and Denny Walley ( guitars ).
Walley is a Port Vale supporter ( Port Vale is the major club within her constituency ).
Immediately after Kirk's departure from Disney he kept busy appearing in several of the 1960s beach party films and teen movie films, notably in American International Pictures ' Pajama Party ( taking Frankie Avalon's usual lead role opposite Annette Funicello while Avalon only appears in cameo role ), The Ghost in the Invisible Bikini ( with Deborah Walley ), and later in the independent It's a Bikini World ( paired again with Walley ).
The first is Les, the female drummer of his band ( played by Deborah Walley ).
During this time his first wife died, and he married a widow, Elizabeth Walley ( née More ).

Barnes and led
Spalding won 47 games and Barnes led the league in hitting at. 429 as Chicago won the first ever National League pennant, which at the time was the game's top prize.
Their secondary, led by safeties Cliff Harris and Charlie Waters, along with cornerbacks Benny Barnes and Aaron Kyle, combined for 16 interceptions.
The mayor of Sudbury gave a casting vote to Barnes despite having already voted, and the decision led to serious riots in the town.
The Tragedy and the Triumph of Phenix City, Alabama by Margaret Ann Barnes chronicles these events, which led to the small town to be known as " Sin City, USA ".
On the advice of the Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition government led by Prime Minister David Cameron Lord Patten of Barnes was appointed by the Queen-in-Council as Chairman of the BBC Trust, and he took office on 1 May 2011, in the place of Sir Michael Lyons.
A new leadership led by Jack Barnes ( who became national secretary in 1972 ) made identification with Cuba an ever greater part of the politics of the SWP throughout the 1970s.
Beginning in 1945, the Bell Record Company of Honolulu responded to the demand with a series of releases by the western swing band Fiddling Sam and his Hawaiian Buckaroos ( led by fiddler Homer H. Spivey, and including Lloyd C. Moore, Tiny Barton, Al Hittle, Calvert Duke, Tolbert E. Stinnett and Raymond " Blackie " Barnes ).
In 1988, the company, which still comprised the original Guiseley fish and chips premises, was bought by Merryweathers, led by Chairmen John Barnes and Richard Richardson.
Barnes & Richardson led the transition of the business from a single restaurant in Yorkshire to a world famous brand.
In February 1945, General Gladeon Barnes, chief of the Research and Development section of Army Ordnance, personally led a special team to the European Theater, called the Zebra Mission.
" It may have been reading Joyce that led Barnes to turn away from the late 19th century Decadent and Aesthetic influences of The Book of Repulsive Women toward the modernist experimentation of her later work.
Her critiques of successive drafts led Barnes to make major structural changes, and when publisher after publisher rejected the manuscript, it was Coleman who pressed T. S. Eliot, then an editor at Faber and Faber, to read it.
During his time in London Barnes became an active member of the Amalgamated Society of Engineers ( serving as its General Secretary ), a committed member of the co-operative movement, and a keen if moderate socialist, which led him to join the Independent Labour Party on its foundation in 1893.
Delhomme also then played for the NFL Europe's Frankfurt Galaxy in 1999, and along with Pat Barnes, he was part of the " double-headed quarterback monster " that led the Galaxy to a World Bowl victory over the Barcelona Dragons.
Barnes led the league with 66 runs scored and 91 total bases, finishing second in batting average at. 401.
Barnes again led the Association in 1873, hitting. 425, as well as leading in on-base percentage (. 456 ), slugging percentage (. 584 ), base hits ( 137 ), runs scored ( 125 ), total bases ( 188 ), doubles ( 29 ), bases on balls ( 28 ), and stolen bases ( 13 ).
One possible reason for this is that Barnes disapproved of Grindal's refusal to suppress the prophesyings-which refusal had led to Grindal being suspended from office.
After discovering some financial irregularities that led to the indictment of the state health commissioner, Barnes became interested in politics.
The first game ( Phase I ) focused on three campaigns: German ( led by Hans Von Gröbel ), Soviet ( led by Aleksander Efremovich Vladimirov ), and Western Allied ( led by Jeffrey S. " The Gent " Wilson and James " The Buck " Barnes ).
She then became a member of the Patten Commission headed by Lord Patten of Barnes which reformed policing in Northern Ireland and led to the formation of the Police Service of Northern Ireland.
The first board, which hired Barnes and Phillips, was chaired by Josie Miner while a second board led by Arnold Minors was elected by opponents of the first board.

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