Gertrude Walker was the daughter of the Thomas Walker, rector of St. Peter's Church in the Worcestershire village of Abbots Morton - she played the organ there and trained the choir, and had already known Elgar for many years.
Guiding Light | Electric Light Orchestra | light rail | Edmonton Light Rail Transit | For Your Eyes Only | Bright Eyes | light curve | For Your Eyes Only (film) | Bright Eyes (band) | Light-emitting diode | light novel | Charge of the Light Brigade | Eyes Wide Shut | William Light | light | incandescent light bulb | Light | Florida Power & Light | Wolf Eyes | Baltimore Light Rail | traffic light | Light Up the Sky | Figures of Light | Durham Light Infantry | Docklands Light Railway | Divine Light Mission | Can't Take My Eyes Off You | Black Light Burns | Australian Light Horse | Angels of Light |
District Line platforms 8 and 9 are partially covered by a short canopy, and retain a number of examples of early solid-disc Underground signs, used before Edward Johnston designed the familiar roundel in 1919.
The commercial version features the United States roundel instead.
In addition, the Republic of Korea Air Force aircraft roundel incorporates the Taiji in conjunction with the trigrams representing Heaven.
The earliest roundel to be described was the one at Krpy (Kropáčova Vrutice), Bohemia, by Woldřich 1886, but it was only with systematic aerial survey in the 1980s and the 1990s that their ubiquity in the region became apparent.
Examples are the flags of the city of São Paulo and the Portuguese Autonomous Region of Madeira, the coat of arms of several Portuguese and Brazilian cities and municipalities, the badges of the Portuguese and Brazil national football teams and the roundels of the Portuguese Air Force aircraft.
Roundels of medieval glass, originally from Glastonbury Abbey and depicting the heads of three doctors of the church, have been preserved.
All ammunition currently produced at Radway Green is NATO certified i.e. bears the NATO roundel as part of the headstamp on the cartridge case surrounding the primer.
In a note he wrote to the Inspector-General of the Canadian Air Force, Air Vice-Marshal Sir Willoughby Gwatkin, Tylee proposed that the RAF Ensign be adopted with a maple leaf at the centre of the roundel.
On the obverse is a roundel at the centre of the star, bearing a gold maple leaf on a red enamel background and surrounded by a silver laurel wreath.
His arms (Courtenay with each point of the label charged with three plates for difference) are impaled by the arms of the See of Winchester.