On that day, near Pompey, France, he single-handedly destroyed five enemy machine gun positions.
Edgar Allan Poe | Andrew Lloyd Webber | Frank Lloyd Wright | David Lloyd George | Edgar Rice Burroughs | Lloyd Kaufman | Lloyd's of London | Edgar Degas | Julian Lloyd Webber | Christopher Lloyd | Edgar Award | J. Edgar Hoover | Edgar Winter | Harold Lloyd | William Lloyd Garrison | Lloyd Alexander | Edgar | Marie Lloyd | Lloyd | Lloyd Richards | John Lloyd Cruz | Edgar Wallace | Edgar Lee Masters | Lloyd's Register | Curtis Gates Lloyd | Lloyd Cole | Lloyd's | Edgar Sulite | Edgar Buchanan | Lloyd Stearman |
In 1938 the BBC hired him to write a radio documentary about seafaring life, and from then on he worked as a journalist and singer.
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It was led by Arnold Wesker, with MacColl and Lloyd providing the musical content and Charles Parker on production.
It was through the initiative of Edgar H. Sturtevant that Goetze was invited to Yale University in 1934, a move that was to prove momentous for the advancement of Assyrology and Hittology at Yale.
Also included as a hidden track is "Texas in 1880", which Foster originally released in 1988 as one-half of Foster & Lloyd.
Lloyd commanded Munro in the search and rescue of the crab fishing vessel Ocean Challenger, in the midst of the Bering Sea; which was documented by the Deadliest Catch reality TV show on the Discovery Channel.
Besides research on Native American languages and field work on the Modern American English dialects, he is the father of the Indo-Hittite hypothesis, first formulated in 1926, based on his seminal work establishing the Indo-European character of Hittite (and the related Anatolian languages), with Hittite exhibiting more archaic traits than the normally reconstructed forms for Proto-Indo-European.
Cross-cultural management textbook: Lessons from the world leading experts, Introduction by Edgar H. Schein with Charles Hampden-Turner, Meredith Belbin et al.
Sherman P. Lloyd, Utah State Senator and Member of the United States House of Representatives from Utah
On the 75th anniversary of the Star, the newspaper began to be printed off the Five-Unit Webb-offset at the Western Telegraph, Haverfordwest.
Born in Helena, Montana, Lloyd attended public schools in Washington State, California, and Oregon.
Lloyd, alongside that year nominee, Vice President Richard Nixon and Governor of West Virginia Cecil H. Underwood (who also ran only in his home state), were the only candidates to win primaries in 1960.
The Lloyd Loom process was invented in 1917 by the American Marshall B. Lloyd, who twisted kraft paper round a metal wire, placed the paper threads on a loom and wove them into what was to become the traditional Lloyd Loom fabric.
Some scholars, including Jerald T. Milanich and Edgar H. Sturtevant, consider the dialect known as Agua Salada, spoken in an unspecified stretch of the Florida coast south of the Mocama Province, to be identical.
His manager Wayne Barrow and fellow rapper James "Lil' Cease" Lloyd made public announcements denying Biggie's role in the crime and claimed further that they were both with him in the recording studio during the night of the event.
Many prominent names in the folk scene collaborated on the project Dolly Collins (a composer, the sister of Shirley Collins), Martin Carthy, Mike Waterson, Norma Waterson, June Tabor, Nic Jones, A.L. Lloyd, Cyril Tawney and Dave Swarbrick.
Russell G. Lloyd, Jr. (born 1950), American politician, mayor of Evansville, 2000–2004, son of Russell G. Lloyd, Sr.
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Russell G. Lloyd, Sr. (1932–1980), American politician, mayor of Evansville, 1972–1980
Lloyd was elected as a Republican to the Eighty-eighth Congress, November 6, 1962 defeating fellow State Senator Bruce Jenkins.
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Lloyd was elected to the Ninetieth and to the two succeeding Congresses (January 3, 1967-January 3, 1973).
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He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1972 to the Ninety-third Congress.
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He was not a candidate for reelection in 1964 to the Eighty-ninth Congress, but was an unsuccessful candidate for nomination for the United States Senate.
Among the contributors listed are Richard E. Boyatzis, James A. Champy, Allan R. Cohen, Jay A. Conger, Samuel A. Culbert, Christopher DeRose, Dexter Dunphy, David Finegold, Elizabeth Florent-Treacy, Rob Goffee, Robert L. Heneman, Harvey A. Hornstein, Andrew, Kakabadse, Manfred F. R. Kets de Vries, Edgar H. Schein, and Noel M. Tichy.
Other notable contributors to The Telegram include former editor and author Michael Harrington, artist Rae Perlin, former Newfoundland Prime Minister William F. Lloyd and former provincial NDP leader Peter Fenwick.
Thomas F. Lloyd (1841–1911), founder of Carrboro, North Carolina and mill owner
Due to a political crisis over conscription the government of Sir Edward Patrick Morris formed a National Government and invited Lloyd to join as Attorney-General.