It was formerly considered a subspecies of the White-browed Shrike-babbler.
Blyth | Blyth, Northumberland | Shrike | White-headed Babbler | River Blyth | White-browed Shrike-babbler (disambiguation) | White-browed Shrike-babbler | Ann Blyth | River Blyth, Northumberland | Old World babbler | Grey-crowned Babbler | Alan Blyth | AGM-45 Shrike | Taiwan Wren-babbler | Shrike (racing car) | Shrike (Philip Reeve) | Reginald Horace Blyth | Mark Blyth | John Blyth Barrymore | James Blyth, 1st Baron Blyth | Chestnut-fronted Shrike-babbler (disambiguation) | Chestnut-fronted Shrike-babbler | Blyth, South Australia | Benjamin Blyth | SHRIKE | River Blyth, Suffolk | River Blyth (disambiguation) | Northern White-crowned Shrike | Nepal Wren-babbler | Long-tailed Shrike |
In the December 1952 edition of Motion Picture and Television Magazine Ann Blyth stated in an interview that she endorsed Dwight D. Eisenhower for president the month before in the 1952 presidential election.
Starting in the 1970s, Amotz Zahavi observed the babbler at length, giving rise to his theory of signal and its correlative, the handicap principle.
Old World babbler, a large family of mostly Old World passerine birds
Blyth was a first cousin of Arthur Blyth, who was three times premier of South Australia in the 19th century.
After the death of both parents – Benjamin Blyth in 1866 and Mary Dudgeon Wright in 1868 – Blyth and his siblings were brought up by their mother's sister, Elizabeth Scotland Wright.
In 1989, Blyth A won a place in the Guinness Book of Records by setting the world record for total running hours in a plant of its size, when all four generating units achieved 200,000 running hours.
Subsidiaries include Candle Corporation Of America, which owns the Sterno product brand and the PartyLite direct sales business.
It was staffed at first by monks from the Mother House, Holy Trinity Priory at Rouen France.
A 2011 study has many taxonomists splitting this species from the Fork-tailed Swift complex.
Seven species of birds are strictly endemic: the Bamenda Apalis (Apalis bamendae), Bangwa Forest Warbler (Bradypterus bangwaensis), White-throated Mountain-babbler (Kupeornis gilberti), Banded Wattle-eye (Platysteira laticincta), Bannerman's Weaver (Ploceus bannermani), Mount Kupe Bush-shrike (Telophorus kupeensis) and Bannerman's Turaco (Tauraco bannermani), which is a cultural icon for the Kom people who live in the area.
Charged GBH, commonly known as GBH, are an English street punk band, formed in 1978 by vocalist Colin Abrahall, guitarist Colin "Jock" Blyth, bassist Sean McCarthy and Drummer Andy "Wilf" Williams.
In 1997, Blyth was created a Knight Bachelor by Queen Elizabeth II for his services to sailing.
Clare Valley Film Festival is a biennial event held over a weekend in late January in Blyth, Clare Valley, South Australia.
In a 1959 paper, Loren Eiseley claimed that "the leading tenets of Darwin's work – the struggle for existence, variation, natural selection and sexual selection – are all fully expressed in Blyth's paper of 1835".
Eddie Milne (1915–1983), British Labour Party Member of Parliament for Blyth, afterwards re-elected as an independent
Blackadder studied early Byzantine art while at university, where she was influenced by William Gillies, Penelope Beaton and Robert Henderson Blyth, as well as by her lecturers.
Greg McClinchey (born in Clinton, Ontario) was a municipal councillor for the Township of North Huron, Ontario (Blyth Ward) and was the nominated candidate in Huron-Bruce for the Liberal Party of Canada in the 2008 federal election.
The species was described by Edward Blyth based on a drawing by Francis Buchanan-Hamilton after whom the species is named.
Headway Arts, incorporated in 1995 as Headstrong Productions, is an independent arts organisation and registered charity based in Blyth, Northumberland.
The game reached its zenith in the final minutes when Blyth saved Jim Ryan's penalty kick to help the Sky Blues to a 5–4 victory.
Lumsden claimed a foul occurred but this was disallowed and the Blyth man acknowledged that he had been beaten by a better man.
It is derived from the personal name Lyalya, "aunt", the nickname lyalya or lala, itself from Proto-Slavic *l'al'a, "babbler, fool" or from the personal name Lyala, an affectionate form of Vlado (Vladimir, Vladislav).
In 1941 he moved to the Nilgiris to take up a position as headmaster at St. George's School in Ketti; the school, which had been first recognized by the Education Department of Madras as a free primary school, was raised to the status of a high school in 1944 during his tenure.
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In 1946 he moved to Saurashtra as a private tutor and from 1948 to 1963 till his death, he was the Principal of the Rajkumar College, Rajkot, a school founded and run by the Princely Order of Kathiawar.
Saints paid £60,000 for Mel Blyth in September 1974 – he was one of Lawrie McMenemy’s first over-30 signings.
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The contrasting styles of Blyth and McCormick made for a good mix, and the two of them stayed together until McCormick's retirement, near the end of Bert Head's time in charge.
After further success in North America he decided to test his mettle against Europe and travelled to England in 1879 where, on 16 June 1879 he defeated the English champion, W. Elliott of Blyth, rowing the course from the Mansion House in Newcastle upon Tyne to the Scotswood Bridge on the River Tyne in the record time of 21 minutes 2 seconds.
Further north in Brunswick East, at the corner of Blyth Street, Melbourne alternative radio station 3RRR makes its home.
It is located to the south east of the village of Cambois and to the north of the town of Blyth on the north eastern side of the River Blyth harbour.
1979: Paul Wright and Geoff Smith founded Blyth Computers Ltd (later renamed Blyth Software Ltd, then Omnis Software) in Wenhaston, Suffolk, in the UK, which became the first Apple dealership in East Anglia.
Other regular freelance writers include Jon 'Log' Blyth, Ed Zitron, Steve Hill, Martin Korda, Rhianna Pratchett, Richie Shoemaker, Daniel Emery and Paul Presley.
The best known long distance record is 333 mi (535.8 km) from Blyth in the United Kingdom to Almere, Netherlands.
The Taiwan Wren-babbler is endemic to Taiwan, and similarly the Nepal Wren-babbler has a resricted distribution, mostly occurring in Nepal (and also slightly into India).
The video also includes fellow YouTube user and ex-television presenter Larry Bundy Jr reviewing the Amstrad CPC version and video game journalist Jon Blyth reviewing the Commodore 64 version of the game, both criticising the game as well.
River Blyth is the name of several rivers in England.
:For articles about other rivers named River Blyth, see River Blyth (disambiguation).
They became the Honour of Blyth (later renamed the Honour of Tickhill), and within it, de Busli erected numerous castles, at Tickhill, Kimberworth, Laughton-en-le-Morthen and Mexborough.
The Taiwan Wren-babbler was once treated as a subspecies of this species.
As with other babbler species, they frequently occur in groups of up to a dozen, and the rain forest species like Indian Scimitar Babbler often occur in the mixed feeding flocks typical of tropical Asian jungle.
The first house on the site was built 1740 by James Paine for John Monckton, 1st Viscount Galway, who had bought the 500 acre Serleby estate from the Saunderson family of Blyth.
Sewell Barn Theatre is located in the grounds of Sewell Park College (formerly the Blyth school, later the Blyth-Jex school) on Constitution Hill in Norwich, England.
Tommy Hedley (died 8 August 2007) was a businessman and the chairman of the semi-professional football club Blyth Spartans F.C. in Blyth, Northumberland.
It previously was considered the nominate subspecies of the Chestnut-fronted Shrike-babbler.
Among the artworks Blyth-Hill worked on are those by Leonardo da Vinci, Rembrandt van Rijn, Auguste Renoir, Mary Cassatt, Henri Matisse, Marcel Duchamp, Larry Bell, Ed Ruscha, David Hockney, Marc Chagall, Robert Motherwell, Pablo Picasso, Alexander Calder, Isami Noguchi, Frank Stella, Craig Kauffman, and Wallace Berman.
The Wellesley Nautical School was a naval training school first located on the Tyne, and later removed to Blyth
The remainder, in Nottinghamshire, became the Blyth and Cuckney Rural District, taking its name from two of the parishes, Blyth and Cuckney.