Princess Alice, the then viceregal consort of Governor General Alexander Cambridge, Earl of Athlone, served as Honorary Air Commandant of the Women's Division.
Royal Navy | United States Air Force | Royal Air Force | Canadian Broadcasting Corporation | Royal Dutch Shell | Canadian Pacific Railway | Royal Society | Royal Albert Hall | Royal Shakespeare Company | Royal Opera House | Royal Victorian Order | Royal Engineers | Royal Australian Navy | United States Army Air Forces | 101st Airborne Division | Royal National Theatre | Royal Canadian Navy | Royal Canadian Air Force | Indian Air Force | Canadian Football League | Royal Court Theatre | Royal Marines | United States Air Force Academy | Special Air Service | Canadian Forces | Royal Commission | Football League First Division | X-Force | Fleet Air Arm | Canadian National Railway |
-- plural in Queen's English convention used in India--> an alternative rock band from Kolkata, West Bengal, India.
In 2009, Putnam/Philomel published Artist To Artist: 23 Major Illustrators Talk to Children about Their Art, with contributors including Mitsumasa Anno, Quentin Blake, Carle, Tomie dePaola, Leo Lionni, Barry Moser, Robert Sabuda, Maurice Sendak and Rosemary Wells.
The King's Division was formed in 1968 with the union of the Lancastrian Brigade, Yorkshire Brigade and North Irish Brigade.
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King's Own Fusiliers - The television drama series Soldier Soldier depicts the lives of members of the 1st Battalion, King's Own Fusiliers.
The tournament has its origins in an annual match started in 1994 between Alice Springs and Tennant Creek by Shane and Mervyn Franey from Alice Springs and Ross Williams from Tennant Creek.
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The team takes part in the Imparja Cup Cricket Australia has declared the tournament into a national competition.
Despite the initial plan of a unified Korea in the 1943 Cairo Declaration, escalating Cold War antagonism between the Soviet Union and the United States eventually led to the establishment of separate governments, each with its own ideology, leading to Korea's division into two political entities in 1948: North Korea and South Korea.