We talked about Sidney Nolan, who had illustrated his most recent book, and about Australia. |
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Among some of these and later pastoralists were Thomas Elder, John Warren, John Baker and Sidney Kidman. |
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Sidney Austin, the harness-maker, still uses strips of whitleather to repair..the collars of farm-horses. |
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Washington was just a child when he saw Sidney Poitier become the first black actor to win an Oscar for a leading role. |
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The resurrection that characters such as Zelmane experience will for Sidney occur only through the commemorations enacted by his continuers. |
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To say that Ford was in the same class as Sidney Smith as a letter writer would be an exaggeration but not by much. |
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The Sidney Lanier Bridge is the second cable-stayed bridge to be constructed in Georgia. |
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This discovery was greatly facilitated by the deep personal experience of these principles by theosopher Sidney Banks. |
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Traversing the Brunswick River, the new 2500-foot-long Sidney Lanier Bridge is the longest and tallest cable-stayed bridge in Georgia. |
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At a study site near Sidney, he's distributed tiny meteorological sensors across a field. |
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To me, when it comes to black actors, Morgan Freeman ranks second, beneath Sidney Poitier. |
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He is sure to maintain his heavy role within the offense under new coach Sidney Lowe. |
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Samsonov was hyped like Sidney Crosby, back when Sid the Kid was in bobskates. |
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Sidney Lumet's film is a thriller in the classic sense and slowly builds tension to boiling point. |
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Best known is Sylvia Sidney playing Rose in what is an exceedingly natural and unmannered fashion. |
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Reeves became a close friend of Sidney and Beatrice Webb and George Bernard Shaw and other Fabians. |
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Laughing and playing peekaboo on the settee with his mother, Sidney pretends to be shy but then turns on a radiant smile for the camera. |
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A second approach, championed by Sidney Pollard, is to think of economic change in regional terms. |
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Sidney Flinton came into the world on the hard shoulder of the M62 motorway. |
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His chief patrons were the Sidney family, the earl of Pembroke, the countess of Bedford, and the duke and duchess of Newcastle. |
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Deal's congressional district includes Lake Sidney Lanier, created in the 1950s by damming the upper Chattahoochee River, about 50 miles northeast of Atlanta. |
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Earlier British attempts to adopt the meter, such as that of Sir Philip Sidney, failed only because they clung to the quantitative system of classical prosody. |
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When Sidney steps out of the room to take one of many cell phone calls, Harold works up the nerve to go over to the actress and introduce himself. |
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Sidney Lumet's unforgettable film starring Henry Fonda and Lee J. Cobb is a celluloid classic, a whodunit in which we never see the crime, the victim or the accused. |
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Each adventure in which they are involved requires, in the ongoing revision that Sidney undertakes in the New Arcadia, further stories of unrequited love and unavenged death. |
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English pastoral was inaugurated by Spenser's verse eclogues in The Shepheardes Calendar and further developed in The Arcadia, a prose romance by Sidney. |
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She says he introduced her to Sidney Poitier and promised to help her career. |
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Samantha Sidney Altman's girlfriend, Marie Dana, had a right to be upset when she saw Altman's will. |
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His idols and inspirations, he says, were Sidney Poitier and Harry Belafonte. |
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Cagney and Sylvia Sidney also worked well together, reflecting Cagney's respect for Sidney as an actor and also his enjoyment of her adeptness at witty repartee. |
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His aunt and uncle, the contralto Louise Homer and the composer Sidney Homer, who was Barber's mentor for more than 25 years, encouraged his studies. |
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Not only is it genuinely frightening, thanks in no small part to Sidney Sager's unsettling pseudo-Neolithic vocal score, but the script is unpatronisingly complex. |
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What sets Sidney and most of the characters in Scream apart from previous slasher film characters is that, in a world of integrated communication, they are very media-savvy. |
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Here he met Sidney Webb, a junior civil servant who, like Shaw, was busy educating himself. |
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Burchfield, Neil Welliver, Alex Katz, Milton Avery, Peter Doig, Andrew Wyeth, David Hockney and Sidney Nolan. |
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On 28 July 1927 a maid at Hotel Sidney, discovered Welsh laid face downward in his pyjamas and bathrobe. |
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As a result of the work of sculptor William Leslie, and later Sidney Field, granite memorials became a major status symbol in Victorian Britain. |
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Sidney Gilchrist Thomas developed a more sophisticated process to eliminate the phosphorus from iron. |
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At Christ Church, he became acquainted with Philip Sidney, who encouraged Camden's antiquarian interests. |
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Sidney Castle was the firm's manager and he was known as the greatest shipbreaker of his day. |
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Sitwell introduced Stevenson to an art critic at the time named Sidney Colvin. |
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Pauly took his mixmaster expertise and partnered with liquor industry veterans, Tom Bruno, formally of Sidney Frank Importing Company Inc. |
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The Seven consisted of Lord Shrewsbury, Lord Devonshire, Lord Danby, Lord Lumley, Henry Compton, Edward Russell, and Henry Sidney. |
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Algernon Sidney, Sir Thomas Armstrong and William Russell, Lord Russell were executed for treason. |
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His term was controversial after his responses to the Cambrian Colliery dispute, the Siege of Sidney Street and the suffragettes. |
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In early January 1911, Churchill made a controversial visit to the Siege of Sidney Street in London. |
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Working with Ramsay MacDonald and Sidney Webb, Henderson in 1918 established a national network of constituency organizations. |
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Secondly, Henderson secured the adoption of a comprehensive statement of party policies, as drafted by Sidney Webb. |
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The five trustees were Sidney Webb, Edward Pease, Constance Hutchinson, William de Mattos and William Clark. |
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Among the various vernacular rhyming slang names for steak and kidney pie are Kate and Sidney pie, snake and kiddy pie, and snake and pygmy pie. |
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Around two centuries later, Sir Philip Sidney greatly praised Troilus and Criseyde in his own Defence of Poesie. |
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Born at Penshurst Place, Kent, he was the eldest son of Sir Henry Sidney and Lady Mary Dudley. |
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In the aftermath of this episode, Sidney challenged de Vere to a duel, which Elizabeth forbade. |
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Characteristically, Elizabeth bristled at his presumption, and Sidney prudently retired from court. |
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During a 1577 diplomatic visit to Prague, Sidney secretly visited the exiled Jesuit priest Edmund Campion. |
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Sidney had returned to court by the middle of 1581 and in 1584 was MP for Kent. |
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In the same year, he made a visit to Oxford University with Giordano Bruno, who subsequently dedicated two books to Sidney. |
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As Sidney was a brother of the Worshipful Company of Grocers, the procession included 120 of his company brethren. |
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An early biography of Sidney was written by his friend and schoolfellow, Fulke Greville. |
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The city of Sidney, Ohio, in the United States and a street in Zutphen, Netherlands, have been named after Sir Philip. |
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Six of these were written by fellow churchmen, others by such courtly writers as Thomas Carew, Sidney Godolphin and Endymion Porter. |
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This connection with the Sidney family provided the impetus for one of Jonson's most famous lyrics, the country house poem To Penshurst. |
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The most important poets of this era include Edmund Spenser and Sir Philip Sidney. |
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The central figures of the Elizabethan canon are Edmund Spenser, Sir Philip Sidney, Christopher Marlowe, William Shakespeare, and Ben Jonson. |
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Landmark Keats biographers since include Sidney Colvin, Robert Gittings, Walter Jackson Bate and Andrew Motion. |
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He joined the Fabian Society's executive under the sponsorship of Sidney Webb. |
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He was a member of the Coefficients dining club of social reformers set up in 1902 by the Fabian campaigners Sidney and Beatrice Webb. |
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Wilkinson and Sidney Gilpin, who performed a similar service for Cumberland. |
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Also in this year he began his association with Sidney Godolphin, and through him ultimate entry into the circle around Princess Anne. |
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It was produced by Sidney Bernstein of the British Ministry of Information, and was assembled in London. |
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However, his repeated assaults on Acre were driven back by Ottoman and British forces under the command of Jezzar Pasha and Sir Sidney Smith. |
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Other contemporaries were Douglas Young, John Buchan, Sidney Goodsir Smith, Robert Garioch, Edith Anne Robertson and Robert McLellan. |
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At Cambridge, it was particularly strong at Emmanuel, St Catharine's Hall, Sidney Sussex and Christ's College. |
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In 1962 the Sidney Janis Gallery mounted The New Realists, the first major pop art group exhibition in an uptown art gallery in New York City. |
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Wojtowicz was famously played by Al Pacino in Sidney Lumet's Dog Day Afternoon, based on Wojtowicz's 1972 bank heist. |
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Sidney Stringer Academy in Hillfields is looking to host an interschool poetry slam on November 19 to coincide with Anti-Bullying Week. |
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For all of that time, Daniel has taken a prochoice position and Sidney a prolife position. |
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These are objects loosed from fixed property relations, signs that will not serve as the indexicals Sidney imagined that characters bear onstage. |
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He went on to study at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, then a recently founded college with a strong Puritan ethos. |
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It quickly became a centre where arts and crafts flourished among a gifted student body, among them Arthur and Georgie Gaskin and Sidney Meteyard. |
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Jonson's poem ends with the highest compliments for Lady Barbara Sidney, born Gamage, whose Penshurst huswifery was apparently of a truly impeccable standard. |
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Built from approximately half a million pieces of Welsh slate, it was sculpted by Stephen Kettle, having been commissioned by the American billionaire Sidney Frank. |
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Within it lies a magnificently inscribed and illuminated First World War Roll of Honour designed by Sidney Meteyard of the Birmingham Central School of Art. |
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Within it lies a magnicently inscribed and illuminated First World War Roll of Honour designed by Sidney Meteyard of the Birmingham Central School of Art. |
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Differences in negotiating strategy between Premier Vittorio Orlando and Foreign Minister Sidney Sonnino further undermined Italy's position at the conference. |
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Napoleon attacked north along the Mediterranean coast, but Turkish defenders supported by Captain Sir Sidney Smith defeated his army at the Siege of Acre. |
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While the school remained influential into the new century, modernists such as Margaret Preston, and, later, Sidney Nolan and Arthur Boyd, explored new artistic trends. |
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This incredible average speed has also meant that Sidney has beaten the existing fully crewed record time set by Steve Fosset onboard Paystation, by 1 hour and 7 seconds. |
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In the late 1560s, William Salesbury found the manuscript in the possession of Sir Henry Sidney at Ludlow, when Siancyn Gwyn of Llanidloes held it on loan from him. |
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The more radical ideas of Sidney and Locke, argues Ward, became marginalized in Britain, but emerged as a dominant strand in American republicanism. |
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She was cast in the play The Mask of Virtue, directed by Sidney Carroll in 1935 and received excellent reviews, followed by interviews and newspaper articles. |
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But in the summer of 1707 it became evident to Sidney Godolphin that some secret influence behind the throne was shaking the confidence of the Queen in her ministers. |
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The political ideas of Milton, Locke, Sidney, and James Harrington strongly influenced the Radical Whigs, whose ideology in turn was central to the American Revolution. |
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Clarinetist and soprano saxophonist Sidney Bechet was one of the titanic figures of early jazz, equalled only by Louis Armstrong in the power and imagination of his playing. |
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It also inspired evolutionary biologist John Maynard Smith to formulate a problem in signalling theory which is known as the Sir Philip Sidney game. |
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As he lay dying, Sidney composed a song to be sung by his deathbed. |
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Matthew Cottle is wonderful to watch as he perfectly captures the world of repressed, time-obsessed Sidney and he is well-matched by Sara Crowe as house-proud housefrau Jane. |
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Sidney Stringer School was one of the first specialist schools in the country in 1995 when it became a flagship for the government's city technology college scheme. |
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