While he is gone, Mrs. Weston reveals to Emma that Frank Churchill and Jane Fairfax had been secretly attached and are now engaged! |
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And it is easy to find lengthy disquisitions from Macaulay, Churchill, Smuts, and the like to this effect. |
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At some point, the album left the ownership of the Churchill family and was found in a skip. |
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After suing anyone who dared to cross him, Douglas was finally imprisoned himself for libeling Winston Churchill. |
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An intense golden yellow in colour, the Churchill is slightly creamer than the non-vintage, with a more mature nose of dried fruit and apricots. |
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This will enable advertisers such as Churchill to trial a variety of ads with different types of customer. |
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He has won riding titles at Churchill Downs, Turfway Park, and River Downs. |
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Even Winston Churchill, then the minister responsible, was shocked by the action of some trigger-happy pilots and vengeful ground troops. |
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A few days later Churchill was himself taken prisoner when the armoured train that he was travelling on was ambushed at Chieveley. |
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She was scratched out of Friday's Pocahontas Stakes at Churchill in favor of Saturday's race. |
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When Churchill first learned about the V-1 he was so alarmed that he advocated using poison gas against Germany. |
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While most prospects for the Breeders' Cup races had no timed workouts on Saturday, a trio of candidates tuned up at Churchill Downs. |
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Lloyd George after 1922 and Winston Churchill before 1939 spent long periods in the political wilderness. |
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When Irving turns to Churchill as Prime Minister in 1940 he levels his most scurrilous attacks. |
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It was hardly a socialist Utopia, but enough to earn the undying hatred of reactionaries like Winston Churchill. |
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By August John had started to suffer high blood pressure and he was readmitted to Oxford's Churchill Hospital for further scans. |
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When it became known that both ships had berthed in Brest, Bomber Command made them a primary target following an order from Winston Churchill. |
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Residents in Churchill Close, Calne, are eagerly awaiting the result of an Ombudsman's report on subsiding land beneath their gardens. |
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Only then did Churchill and Brooke turn to Lt Gen. Montgomery, who was training his corps in Scotland. |
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One of their most popular rooms is called the Churchill Suite, where it is believed Churchill stayed during his visits. |
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On 28 July 1914, with the black wrack of imminent war rolling in from the east, Churchill requisitioned them both for the Royal Navy. |
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Small well-developed brown anatase crystals replacing larger titanite crystals have been collected from Corral Canyon, Churchill County, Nevada. |
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Moore says that the organization has passed its Chamberlain period, and is now in need of a Churchill. |
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He has not convinced me that events would have transpired any differently if Roosevelt and Churchill had been on less intimate terms. |
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Steve possesses deep, intimate knowledge of both Churchill and Reagan, having written books on each, though he deploys his learning lightly. |
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The result is an unawed, sometimes wry and witty, always elegantly written study that provides new insights on Churchill. |
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At their head was Winston Churchill, a lifelong Francophile with a deep admiration for French military prowess. |
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Lake Austin has never been worse than second in five trips to the post and is exiting a Churchill Downs allowance score. |
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Throughout May Churchill continued to get a stony reception from the Conservative benches. |
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Bewildered, the composer answered in monosyllables, until a frustrated Churchill gave up and turned to the guest on his left. |
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When two weeks later Churchill urged Eisenhower to speed his advance into Czechoslovakia in order to occupy Prague, Marshall vetoed the proposal. |
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If Churchill is so violently attacked by both extremes of the political spectrum, we can assume that he cannot have been that bad. |
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All serious bodysurfers have used surf-quality swim fins since their invention by Owen Churchill. |
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When Winston Churchill opposed the conventional wisdom that Hitler was tolerable, he was isolated from public life, his sanity questioned. |
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To precis the plot is even more distorting than usual since Churchill works in non-linear fashion. |
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As an Englishman opposed to Indian independence, Churchill was naturally unsympathetic to the leader of the national movement. |
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After the speech, Churchill Club members boogied away the night in single-minded pursuit of the groove. |
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The crowds included familiar faces from the era, including a character actor playing Winston Churchill. |
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Frank Churchill is charming and attractive, and for a brief period Emma thinks herself in love. |
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That, more or less, is how Winston Churchill summed up the special transatlantic relationship. |
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When the field turned into Churchill Downs' long homestretch, the horses stopped running and began staggering. |
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The people of Churchill Flats appealed for an access bus to be provided to take them to Morrisons for a weekly shop. |
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Winston Churchill was always impatient for action and unable to understand the time the Generals took to prepare for action. |
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When Lloyd George made a somewhat defeatist speech in Parliament in May 1941, Churchill felt no need to conciliate him. |
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I would suspect that the program divided most of those who watched it, into two groups, one identifying with Orwell and one with Churchill. |
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The lead up to Churchill coming to power was the result of the failure of the Munich agreement. |
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It's an uncomfortable parallel, anyway, since British voters ungratefully booted Churchill out of office once the Second World War was over. |
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Indeed, within a few weeks Churchill crossed the floor of the House from the Conservative benches to join the Liberals. |
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In addition to the price increases, Churchill Downs has changed seating plans on Oaks day. |
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None other than those infamous troublemakers and malcontents, Winston Churchill and Thomas Jefferson, respectively. |
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There is a fine line between being Churchill and being a chump, and we'll let history decide who you are. |
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She heads a cast of 23 former champion skaters in what will be the Churchill Theatre's first ever ice show. |
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The shop was in Churchill Road, a cul-de-sac right at the top of the High Street on the left hand side. |
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As Dr White points out, even Margaret Thatcher and Winston Churchill took power naps. |
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He is the presiding genius of the national spirit, a kind of Churchill in a neck ruff. |
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Having crossed the floor to become a Liberal in 1904, Churchill became president of the Board of Trade four years later. |
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Ponting's animus toward Churchill never reaches Irving's level of contempt but he has his moments. |
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A few days later, a pompous brigadier turned up and criticised Churchill for leaving a gap in his defences. |
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In one delightful sequence, Bertie urges Churchill to form a new government, but asks that he leave newspaper baron Lord Beaverbrook out of it. |
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From Dr. Johnson to Winston Churchill, it is the idiosyncratic individual who stirs their imagination, not some unpalatably abstract truth. |
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Even a man of Karsh's considerable charm couldn't have turned Churchill from lion to lamb in an instant. |
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Precisely what is the legal basis of their alleged exclusionary rule, if we hypothesize that the investigation of Churchill violates the First Amendment? |
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When Winston Churchill visited Bletchley during the war to make a speech to the codebreakers, he thought they were ill-dressed, ill-mannered and eccentric. |
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It was for this reason that Churchill and Roosevelt, while they were together at the Placentia Bay conference, cabled Stalin to suggest the Three-Power conference. |
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In fact, according to a recent biography of Jackson, Churchill actually fagged for two England captains, having earlier served Archie MacLaren as well. |
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By contrast, Churchill was keen to distance himself from various amphibious fiascos, especially the defeat at Dieppe in August 1942, which nobody can remember ordering. |
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Over the years, field marshals, generals, prime ministers and archbishops have been made honorary freemen of the city, although Winston Churchill did not take up the offer. |
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Then I called up Winston Churchill, who, at the age of 114, had been assigned to an insignificant position at the British consulate in Los Angeles. |
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For all his egotism and irascibility, Churchill was a good man as well as a great one. |
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However, if one mark of the true artist is the willingness to take risks and to venture into uncharted territory, then Churchill is the genuine article. |
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At Churchill an exposed thermometer registered 5.5 degrees F on Thursday morning, equal to 26.5 degrees of frost, and this was in a fairly sheltered position. |
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Winston Churchill was given a guided tour of the D-Day beaches in a duck. |
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Much of the fun of The Churchill Factor comes from the delightful and evervescent way Johnson tells the tale. |
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In other words, Churchill recognized that power rests upon dependence. |
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Newspaper editors happily confirm that Churchill stories make great copy, especially since in the UK one cannot sue for libel on behalf of the dead. |
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Jockey Shane Sellers, who suffered a cracked tailbone when he was unseated in a paddock accident last week at Churchill Downs, plans to return to riding within two weeks. |
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Bush had to be converted into Churchill for the sake of the national psyche, or newsstand sales, or something or other. |
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Grey-skinned office refugees fill Edmonton's Churchill Square, the bright midday sun forcing them to squint as they nibble on their pallid tuna sandwiches. |
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Manchester knew that you were a World War II buff, and that you were deeply interested in Churchill long before you met him. |
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Nagrani started out selling socks with designs ranging from a shirt on magnum, P.I. to Winston Churchill. |
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Well, Artsfans, no longer will you have to schlepp down to Churchill Square or crook your dialing finger to lay dibs on tickets to that exquisite cultural event. |
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Soldiers have been practising drills all week, including a reverse arms salute not performed in Britain since the 1965 state funeral of Sir Winston Churchill. |
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Did Churchill and Roosevelt agree about the when, where, and how of D-day and the invasion of France? |
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Three mares listed in foal to Danjur, who set a track record for five furlongs in winning the 1996 Churchill Downs Turf Sprint Stakes, are in the catalog. |
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Woolley hitched the horse to the back of his four-wheel-drive and traveled 1,500 miles to Churchill Downs. |
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One Sunday morning I was hailed by a trader known as The Banana King who used more pure oratory selling a bunch of bananas than any politician had used since Churchill. |
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Whereas quotations with an apothegmatic feel are normally ascribed to Shaw, those with a more grandiose or belligerent tone are almost automatically credited to Churchill. |
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The revival of the brilliant Caryl Churchill play Top Girls at the Aldwych is by and large not only a major event but also an evening to make alarm bells ring. |
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A former jailbird playing Churchill? You couldn't make it up, could you? |
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They highlighted the fact that many famous people with a stammer, including Winston Churchill and Marilyn Monroe, managed to overcome their speech defect. |
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In Churchill, disposal of waste and refuse has been a problem because of poorly planned landfills and inclement temperatures, which slow down the rate of biodegradation. |
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Credit Suisse sold off several noncore operations, such as British insurer Churchill, and let go more than 7,500 employees over the past two years. |
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Dawn is upbeat yet unspecific, avoiding the potential irony Churchill warned of when an overconfidently named mission goes poorly. |
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He watched as the man looked up at the painting of Winston Churchill in the old war room beneath Whitehall, the only politician that Hammer had any respect for. |
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Prematurely retired in early 1940, Hobart was brought back at the personal insistence of Churchill. |
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Simpson found that OMG easily dates back to the 1980s, and even has an outlying instance in a 1917 letter to Winston Churchill. |
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Artists and Churchill, in the right circumstances, got on like a house on fire. |
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Even after Chamberlain became too sick to attend Cabinet Meetings, Churchill had the main telegrams sent to his home where Chamberlain continued to read them until he died. |
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Just across the atrium, the Churchill Lounge beckons to those with an affinity for cigars and fine spirits in a cozy, windowed space that recalls an English gentleman's club. |
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Earlier this year, she joined Winston Churchill and Nelson Mandela in being made an Honorary Freeman of the City of Leeds in recognition of her outstanding service to music. |
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The protesters, who are taking it in turns to sit under an umbrella beside the statue of Winston Churchill, had been attracting no more than a passing glance. |
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In this sense, the experience of debut author, Winston Churchill, is instructive. |
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The Few, as Churchill dubbed the Fighter Command aircrew, were not the free-spirited, knights of the air, officer types immortalised by the media. |
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While in London, Harriman also launched an affair with Pamela Churchill, daughter-in-law of the prime minister. |
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Winston Churchill, who personally vetted many of the British military code words, ordered that they should be neither overly boastful, nor frivolous. |
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It approved the writing-off of the debts of seventeen officers including one of thirteen rupees owed by Winston Churchill, then a young cavalry subaltern. |
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Mike Battaglia, oddsmaker at Churchill Downs since 1975 and one of horse racing's most respected handicappers, will be an analyst for NBC at the Belmont Stakes. |
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In March 1916, Churchill returned to England after he had become restless in France and wished to speak again in the House of Commons. |
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In July 1917, Churchill was appointed Minister of Munitions, and in January 1919, Secretary of State for War and Secretary of State for Air. |
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In 1920, after the last British forces had been withdrawn, Churchill was instrumental in having arms sent to the Poles when they invaded Ukraine. |
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After the election the seven Constitutionalist candidates, including Churchill, who were elected did not act or vote as a group. |
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When Ramsay MacDonald formed the National Government in 1931, Churchill was not invited to join the Cabinet. |
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Later reports indicate that Churchill favoured letting Gandhi die if he went on a hunger strike. |
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In June 1936, Churchill organised a deputation of senior Conservatives to see Baldwin, Inskip and Halifax. |
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The meeting ended with Baldwin agreeing with Churchill that rearmament was vital to deter Germany. |
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In June 1936, Walter Monckton told Churchill that the rumours that King Edward VIII intended to marry Mrs Wallis Simpson were true. |
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Later that night Churchill saw the draft of the King's proposed wireless broadcast and spoke with Beaverbrook and the King's solicitor about it. |
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Even during the time Churchill was campaigning against Indian independence, he received official and otherwise secret information. |
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From 1932, Churchill's neighbour, Major Desmond Morton, with Ramsay MacDonald's approval, gave Churchill information on German air power. |
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Wind Sock Race 1 Fair Grounds Comes off a decent debut at Churchill, and trainer has 20 per cent strike-rate with such horses. |
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The war energised Churchill, who was 65 years old when he became Prime Minister. |
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According to Lord Moran, during the war years Churchill sought solace in his tumbler of whisky and soda and his cigar. |
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The most significant of these meetings was held on 9 October 1944 in the Kremlin between Churchill and Stalin. |
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We can't assume he is well-read on the Second World War, or even Churchill himself. |
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Two contrasting assessments of Burke also were offered long after his death by Karl Marx and Winston Churchill. |
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It would be another decade before Churchill finally did hand over the reins. |
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During his 1946 trip to the United States, Churchill famously lost a lot of money in a poker game with Harry Truman and his advisors. |
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However, Churchill did not want Britain to actually join any federal grouping. |
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In 1956, after retiring as Prime Minister, Churchill went to Aachen to receive the Charlemagne Prize for his contribution to European Unity. |
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Being a strong proponent of Britain as an international power, Churchill would often meet such moments with direct action. |
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After a vote in the Commons, in which the government's majority fell from more than 200 to 81, Chamberlain made way for Winston Churchill. |
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Much of the war occurred on Belgian soil, with the allies there being led upon the field by John Churchill, the Duke of Marlborough. |
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In the end the Soviets proposed a five power conference, which did not meet until after Churchill had retired. |
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From around this time, at Anne's request she and Sarah Churchill, Lady Marlborough, began to call each other the pet names Mrs. |
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Her close friendship with Sarah Churchill, Duchess of Marlborough, turned sour as the result of political differences. |
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After leaving the premiership, Churchill spent less time in parliament until he stood down at the 1964 general election. |
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By the time of the 1959 general election Churchill seldom attended the House of Commons. |
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Later in 1965 a memorial to Churchill, cut by the engraver Reynolds Stone, was placed in Westminster Abbey. |
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The villa was rebuilt within the museum in 1985 with a gallery of Churchill paintings and memorabilia. |
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Outside the British ambassador's residence stands a statue of Sir Winston Churchill. |
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It was given in 1916 to Bonar Law, and when he declined, to David Lloyd George and in 1940 to Winston Churchill. |
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Macmillan was one of the few ministers brave enough to tell Churchill to his face that it was time for him to retire. |
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With a narrow win in the 1951 general election, despite losing the popular vote, Churchill was back. |
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This proposal impressed Churchill and General Alexander, but did not meet with American approval. |
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His commander in chief, the Earl of Feversham, advised retreat on 23 November, and the next day John Churchill deserted to William. |
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His papers are held at the Churchill Archives Centre in Cambridge, and are accessible to the public. |
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In 1955 he had been the obvious successor to Churchill, but this time there was no clear heir apparent. |
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He was also an Honorary Fellow of Churchill College, Cambridge and of University College, London. |
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In 1960, Crick accepted an honorary fellowship at Churchill College, Cambridge, one factor being that the new college did not have a chapel. |
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In a 2002 public television poll conducted by the BBC to select the 100 Greatest Britons, Brunel was placed second, behind Winston Churchill. |
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Many MPs openly criticised Churchill over Yalta and voiced strong loyalty to the UK's Polish allies. |
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When Eden succeeded Churchill as Prime Minister in 1955 he promoted Home to the cabinet as Secretary of State for Commonwealth Relations. |
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This was used to construct a new bridge which was dedicated to the memory of Arabella Churchill. |
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He telephoned Duff Cooper, the Minister of Information under Winston Churchill, hoping to get a position in Cooper's department. |
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Following this, Sellers provided the growling voice of Winston Churchill to the BAFTA award winning film The Man Who Never Was. |
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The play depicted an October 1938 meeting between Soviet spy Guy Burgess, then a young man working for the BBC, and Winston Churchill. |
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Stuart, previously an influential chief whip, was a confidant of Churchill, and possibly the most powerful Scottish Secretary in any government. |
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Winston Churchill was Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1940 to 1945 and he referred to the flag of the United Kingdom as the Union Jack. |
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Winston Churchill wrote about the use of the Union Jack as a symbol connected to British nationalism and imperialism. |
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Labour left the wartime coalition in May 1945 and Churchill formed a caretaker Conservative government, pending a general election in July. |
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Several 20th century Prime Ministers, such as David Lloyd George and Winston Churchill, were famous for their oratorical skills. |
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News of this was kept from the public and from Parliament, who were told that Churchill was suffering from exhaustion. |
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As he refused to accept public subordination, Lloyd George, despite lobbying from the King and Churchill, refused to invite him. |
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At the 1945 general election, to the surprise of many observers, Winston Churchill was defeated by the Labour Party headed by Clement Attlee. |
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Stalin eventually was convinced by Churchill and Roosevelt not to dismember Germany. |
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Instead, Churchill used his skilful rhetoric to harden public opinion against capitulation and to prepare the British for a long war. |
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The Uriah Butler Highway, Churchill Roosevelt Highway and the Sir Solomon Hochoy Highway links the nation together. |
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Some British naval officials, particularly the First Lord of the Admiralty, Winston Churchill, sought a more 'offensive' strategy. |
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France was later added as the fifth member of the council in 1945 due to the insistence of Churchill. |
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Clement Attlee formed the Attlee ministry in the United Kingdom in 1945, succeeding Winston Churchill as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. |
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Party leader Clement Attlee became Prime Minister replacing Winston Churchill in late July. |
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The dump in Churchill, Manitoba was closed in 2006 to protect bears, and waste is now recycled or transported to Thompson, Manitoba. |
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However, in the October 1951 general elections the Conservatives returned to power under Winston Churchill. |
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While Leader of the Opposition, Churchill criticised the government in February 1951 for not having completed an atomic weapon. |
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The Chiefs of Staff Committee and the Churchill ministry, however, believed that. |
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Winston Churchill was probably one of the most prominent people of Huguenot descent, deriving from his American grandfather Leonard Jerome. |
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This resulted in a change of government, with the Conservative Party returning to power and Churchill replacing Attlee as Prime Minister. |
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Haig Avenue doubles as London's Walthamstow Stadium where Churchill, played by Keith Flood, is heckled by thousands. |
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Since World War II, the bulldog has been umbilically linked to Winston Churchill who did, actually, look like one. |
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Similarly, four Orkney islands are joined to the Orkney Mainland by a series of causeways known as the Churchill Barriers. |
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South Ronaldsay, Burray, Glims Holm, and Lamb Holm are connected by road to the Mainland by the Churchill Barriers. |
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Examples are William Ewart Gladstone, David Lloyd George, Neville Chamberlain, Winston Churchill, Margaret Thatcher, and Tony Blair. |
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Formerly, the peerage bestowed was usually an earldom, with Churchill offered a dukedom. |
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The first example was the close relationship between Winston Churchill and Franklin Roosevelt who were in fact distantly related. |
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On his appointment as Prime Minister in May 1940, Winston Churchill created for himself the new post of Minister of Defence. |
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The differences between Roosevelt and Churchill led to several separate deals with the Soviets. |
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Prime Minister Churchill asked President Eisenhower for help in overthrowing Mossadeq. |
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The Germans were also unimpressed by the specifications of Churchill tanks left behind after the withdrawal. |
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Winston Churchill came to power, promising to fight the Germans to the very end. |
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In this speech, Churchill describes the division of the West and East to be so solid that it could be called an iron curtain. |
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Rosebery turned to writing, including biographies of Lord Chatham, Pitt the Younger, Napoleon, and Lord Randolph Churchill. |
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Sir John French suggested landing at Antwerp, which was vetoed by Winston Churchill as the Royal Navy could not guarantee safe passage. |
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Haig accepted the advice of Winston Churchill, Secretary of State for War, that exercising his right to shoot the ringleaders was not sensible. |
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Haig sent Churchill extracts from his diaries and commented on drafts, to which Churchill was willing to make amendments. |
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It contains the Churchill River, the largest river in Labrador and one of the largest in Canada. |
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The hydroelectric dam at Churchill Falls is the secondlargest underground power station in the world. |
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The Lower Churchill Project will develop the remaining potential of the river and supply it to provincial consumers. |
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The highlands above the Churchill Falls were once an ancient hunting ground for the Innu First Nations and settled trappers of Labrador. |
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After the construction of the hydroelectric dam at Churchill Falls in 1970, the Smallwood Reservoir has flooded much of the old hunting land. |
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Winston Churchill suggested that British sovereigns would use either the English or the Scottish number, whichever was higher. |
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To raise morale following the blitz, the King and Queen as well as the prime minister, Winston Churchill, visited Swansea. |
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Winston Churchill, the British Prime Minister, ordered any ship or boat available, large or small, to collect the stranded soldiers. |
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The British Prime Minister, Neville Chamberlain, resigned during the battle and was replaced by Winston Churchill. |
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As the Gallipoli campaign failed, relations with Churchill became increasingly acrimonious. |
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Once the First World War broke out in August 1914, Fisher was a 'constant' visitor to Churchill at the Admiralty. |
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Keyes impressed First Lord of the Admiralty Winston Churchill by the daring of his plan, which was adopted but not without changes. |
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Shortly after Fisher's resignation, Churchill became First Lord of the Admiralty. |
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In September 1619, he found the entrance to Hudson Bay and spent the winter near the mouth of the Churchill River. |
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To prevent further attacks, Winston Churchill ordered the construction of permanent barriers. |
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To the south, causeways called Churchill Barriers connect the island to Burray and South Ronaldsay via Lamb Holm and Glims Holm. |
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She is also a Council member for the Winston Churchill Memorial Trust and an International Inspiration Ambassador. |
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Winston Churchill allowed him to paint his portrait at Eisenhower's request. |
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On Armistice Day 1922, a memorial to the employees of the GWR who died during the war was unveiled by Viscount Churchill. |
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The eisteddfod itself took place on the old Vicarage Field at Fronhyfryd and was visited by David Lloyd George, accompanied by Winston Churchill. |
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Although publicly supportive, Churchill was privately scathing about Eden's Suez Invasion. |
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As First Lord of the Admiralty before the First World War, Winston Churchill twice suggested naming a British battleship HMS Oliver Cromwell. |
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Oldman will star in Darkest Hour as Winston Churchill, which will be directed by Joe Wright. |
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Cardiff Masonic Hall occupies a major site on the corner of Guildford Street, adjacent to Churchill Way. |
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At the Admiralty, Wilson, Oliver and Churchill arranged a plan to confront the Germans with a superior opponent. |
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In the face of bad news Churchill normally became even more pugnacious, always wanting to respond to defeat by going on the attack. |
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But for 'que it's probably better known as the Pimlico or Churchill Downs of competition barbecue. |
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I ventured to hint that he was not quite a fair judge, as Churchill had attacked him violently. |
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His sister, Arabella Churchill, was the Duke of York's mistress, and he was to be Anne's most important general. |
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In Parliament in 1944 Tory MP Simon Wing fiel-Digby snootily tackled Winston Churchill about the secret missions. |
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Hearne once saw a flock of more than 400 Willow Ptarmigan near the Churchill River. |
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Others sat in wheelchairs, such as 90-year-old Burt Swinehart of the Churchill Chuckers. |
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A dozen premiers, from Churchill via Wilson and Thatcher through Blair, Brown and Cameron, valued their weekly chinwags with her. |
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Barbaro stretched his unbeaten record to six with a brilliant performance in the 132nd Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs. |
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It's a sparkling fe stive event with a magic al Santa's grotto on Churchill Way. |
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British-brewed Churchill Beers are making their debut in the United States through international import company, Rouseabout International Inc. |
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He had a fever and didn't ship to Churchill Downs from Lexington with fellow Dubai-based 3-year-olds China Visit and Curule. |
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As it was, he finished sixth at Churchill Downs, failing to stay, a place in front of stablemate Curule. |
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But things went way too far when Winston Churchill school in Woking, Surrey, announced a change in its catchment area to chase the chasers. |
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Griff Gleed Owen, who shares his birthday with the late Sir Winston Churchill, November 30, 1915, was brought up in Pwllheli. |
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In June, Chris Byrne, former president of the Churchill Club, became a charter member. |
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We might have guessed that from his public speechifications, apart from the one successful attempt to sound like Churchill. |
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A copy of his report of the first Chindit operation went to a friend of Churchill, who brought it to the great man's attention. |
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They include Michael Skinner, a young Reading tailor who dressed the Peers of the Realm, including Winston Churchill, for the service. |
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After Churchill left Harrow School in 1893, he applied to attend the Royal Military College, Sandhurst. |
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A thoroughbred horse stampeding across the Churchill Downs turn. |
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Tied after three quarters, Churchill made 9-of-11 free throws in the fourth quarter when it outscored the Highlanders 15-4 to get the win. |
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Winston Churchill also found Nelson to be a source of inspiration during the Second World War. |
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He greatly influenced Churchill, both in his approach to oratory and politics, and encouraging a love of America. |
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On arrival Churchill badly wrenched his shoulder while leaping from the boat, an injury which would plague him throughout his life. |
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It says Hess was on a mission to broker a top secret peace deal with the consent of Hitler and Winston Churchill. |
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Sadistic Keith Foody, of Churchill Road, Handsworth, said he thought the cat was suffering because it had lost its sight. |
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When Churchill was PM in the 1950s he was on the toilet one day when an official told him that the Lord Privy Seal had come to see him. |
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Aged only twenty, she caught the gooseberry eye of Lord Randolph Churchill. He proposed to her almost at once. |
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At the end of the Phoney War, Winston Churchill became the wartime Prime Minister. |
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The next day, Lord Churchill, one of James' chief commanders, deserted to William. |
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Following his deselection in the seat of Oldham, Churchill was invited to stand for Manchester North West. |
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In 1951, the Conservative Party returned to power in Britain, under the leadership of Winston Churchill. |
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During this conference, the United Kingdom held its general election, and Clement Attlee replaced Churchill as Prime Minister. |
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Following the resignation of Neville Chamberlain on 10 May 1940, Churchill became Prime Minister. |
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Asquith in 1908, Churchill was promoted to the Cabinet as President of the Board of Trade. |
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Independent and rebellious by nature, Churchill generally had a poor academic record in school. |
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Within weeks of his arrival at Harrow, Churchill had joined the Harrow Rifle Corps. |
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When young Winston started attending Harrow School, he was listed under the S's as Spencer Churchill. |
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In 1919, Churchill sanctioned the use of tear gas on Kurdish tribesmen in Iraq. |
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Any plans that Churchill may have had to create a Constitutionalist Party were shelved with the calling of another general election. |
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Winston Churchill was a Freemason and a member of the Loyal Waterloo Lodge of the National Independent Order of Odd Fellows. |
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The Churchill Centre and Museum says the majority of records show his impediment was a lateral lisp, while Churchill's stutter is a myth. |
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In 1909, Churchill made several speeches with strong Georgist rhetoric, stating that land ownership is at the source of all monopoly. |
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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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The house caught fire and Churchill prevented the fire brigade from dousing the flames so that the men inside were burned to death. |
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In October 1911, Churchill was appointed First Lord of the Admiralty and continued in the post into the First World War. |
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On 5 October 1914, Churchill went to Antwerp, which the Belgian government proposed to evacuate. |
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For several months Churchill served in the sinecure of Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster. |
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As part of this hobby Churchill joined the Amalgamated Union of Building Trade Workers, but was expelled due to his revived membership in the Conservative Party. |
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The budget was passed after the first election, and after the second election the Parliament Act 1911, for which Churchill also campaigned, was passed. |
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Cameron has tried to morally blackmail MPs into backing him by claiming they're faced with a stark choice of being the bulldog Churchill or the appeaser Chamberlain. |
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They attacked German ships in Bordeaux harbour using limpet mines in Operation Frankton, which Winston Churchill claimed shortened the war by six months. |
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More shipping was being lost than could be replaced, and Churchill ordered the intact recovery of one of these new mines to be of the highest priority. |
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The state's football powerhouses include Salgaocar Sports Club, Dempo Sports Club, Churchill Brothers, Vasco Sports Club and Sporting Clube de Goa. |
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Jess, 20, developed panhypopituitarism, a rare disease affecting hormones, after completing her AS-levels at Churchill Community College in Wallsend, North Tyneside. |
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That is what Churchill called a terminological inexactitude. |
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He further served for a year as a senior official of the colonial office working with Winston Churchill and others to help establish the new states of Iraq and Transjordan. |
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Winston Churchill and Benedict Cumberbatch are old Harrovians and in the this series we meet some of Shells, as the new boys are called, arriving as boarders. |
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He harrumphs around Westminster as if he owns the place, which is not surprising since he is not just a Tory MP but a grandson of Winston Churchill to boot. |
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When William arrived on 5 November 1688, many Protestant officers, including Churchill, defected and joined William, as did James's own daughter, Princess Anne. |
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After winning the 1951 election, Churchill again became Prime Minister. |
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His father died on 24 January 1895, aged 45, leaving Churchill with the conviction that he too would die young and so should be quick about making his mark on the world. |
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Clementine gave birth to her fourth child, Marigold Frances Churchill, on 15 November 1918, four days after the official end of the First World War. |
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In spite of this, the rumour persists that Churchill had ordered troops to attack, and his reputation in Wales and in Labour circles never recovered. |
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Beginning in 1931, when he opposed those who advocated giving Germany the right to military parity with France, Churchill spoke often of the dangers of Germany's rearmament. |
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At this time, Churchill publicly gave his support to the King. |
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Lord Swinton, as Secretary of State for Air, and with Baldwin's approval, in 1934 gave Churchill access to official and otherwise secret information. |
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Swinton did so, knowing Churchill would remain a critic of the government, but believing that an informed critic was better than one relying on rumour and hearsay. |
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Ultimately, responsibility for the British part of the attack lay with Churchill, which is why he has been criticised for allowing the bombings to occur. |
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As Europe celebrated peace at the end of six years of war, Churchill was concerned with the possibility that the celebrations would soon be brutally interrupted. |
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On the morning of 27 July, Churchill held a farewell Cabinet. |
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During these years Churchill continued to influence world affairs. |
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Churchill was still keen for a trip to Moscow, and threatened to resign, provoking a crisis in the Cabinet when Lord Salisbury threatened to resign if Churchill had his way. |
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By the autumn Churchill was again postponing his resignation. |
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Aware that he was slowing down both physically and mentally, Churchill at last retired as prime minister in 1955 and was succeeded by Anthony Eden. |
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The archway of the door leading into the Commons Chamber has been left unrepaired as a reminder of the evils of war, and is now known as the Rubble Arch or Churchill Arch. |
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On 12 September the First Lord of the Admiralty, Winston Churchill, gave a speech in which he proposed 10 or 12 regional parliaments for the United Kingdom. |
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Finally, breaking all the rules, on 28 October they wrote directly to Winston Churchill spelling out their difficulties, with Turing as the first named. |
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The zones, which will cover Greyfriars Road and Churchill Way, were imposed at last night's full meeting of Cardiff council following concerns raised by South Wales Police. |
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The traditional high point of US horse racing is the Kentucky Derby, held on the first Saturday of May at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Kentucky. |
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