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193 result(s) for "Kelly, Laurence"
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Kelly appointed as Ards coach
A Hamilton Park spokesman said: \"[Laurence Kelly] is an IRFU Level 2 accredited coach with previous coaching experience at Bangor and Sullivan Upper School.
Kelly appointed as Ards coach
A Hamilton Park spokesman said: \"[Laurence Kelly] is an IRFU Level 2 accredited coach with previous coaching experience at Bangor and Sullivan Upper School.
Rats beat elements again
The heavens opened on 400 Rats of Tobruk who gathered in Brisbane's Anzac Square yesterday for the 60th anniversary of the Easter Battle that started on April 13, 1941. In that battle, 24,000 allied forces -- more than 14,000 of whom were Australians -- outwitted the German attack by lying in the trenches, letting the tanks through and then attacking the German infantry coming up the rear.
Rats beat elements again
The heavens opened on 400 Rats of Tobruk who gathered in Brisbane's Anzac Square yesterday for the 60th anniversary of the Easter Battle that started on April 13, 1941. In that battle, 24,000 allied forces -- more than 14,000 of whom were Australians -- outwitted the German attack by lying in the trenches, letting the tanks through and then attacking the German infantry coming up the rear.
Supervisor at meat factory to sue State for damages
The action is being taken by Laurence Kelly (54), a line supervisor in the boning hall of the Anglo Irish Beef Processors plant, at Ballywilliam, Rathkeale. He claims that as a result of wrongful acts of the servants or agents of the Minister for Agriculture, namely the forging of his signature on certain documentation, he was subjected to arrest, detention and prosecution. The signature appearing on the forms was not Mr Kelly's as he did not sign any of the forms. His signature was placed on the documents by an officer, servant or agent of the Minister and was done without the knowledge or consent of Mr Kelly.
Rats of Tobruk out in the open for reunion
Laurence Kelly shelters from the rain at the 60th world reunion of the Rats of Tobruk.
Albany, N.Y., Hospital Sees Affiliation Collapse Due to Merger Issues
Although the hospitals reached an agreement to drop the affiliation, officials at St. Mary's drove the decision. Nathan Littauer officials said they still believed an affiliation was in the best long-term interests of both institutions. [Peter Capobianco] said the restructuring at Carondelet would have complicated the affiliation process with Nathan Littauer because Ascension would have to become part of the legal arrangement. \"It would be going back to square one again,\" he said. Capobianco's counterpart at [Nathan Littauer], Laurence Kelly, agreed that both hospitals do not need each other to solve immediate financial problems, but he said the affiliation could have helped in the future.
Portland, Maine, Business Center Helps Fledgling Start-Ups Get Off the Ground
[Dean Barron] and [Laurence A. Kelly] are the owners of NewVision, a Web site- generating software company. When NewVision outgrew its old office space on High Street, Barron and Kelly decided to start the Portland Business Center to give their old company a new home and to provide space to other small businesses. David Glaser's Executive Office Centers Inc. has been operating at 477 Congress St. for 28 years; he's been the owner for 18 years. They've got some longer-term clients, said Glaser, with some renting space there for 10 years. The space they rent are offices, said Glaser, with four walls and a door, with a range of prices from $450 to $1,150 a month. Glaser said the shared receptionist services go above and beyond, tracking down clients in case of emergencies, or if their children are sick at school. The offices give clients a \"full-service appearance,\" said Glaser.
He played the Great Game and lost George Walden praises this Life of a little-known Russian diplomatist and playwright
In many ways [Alexander Griboyedov] (\"mushroom-eater\" in Russian) was a lesser Pushkin. Like the great poet he was a Byronic figure, suspected of complicity in the Decembrist revolt of 1825. Like Pushkin he was a highly sophisticated Russian who never came to the West, but travelled extensively in the Caucasus, where Tiflis, the Georgian capital, was feted as the Paris of the East. And like Pushkin his passionate nature involved him in duels, although Griboyedov survived. Griboyedov's craving for romantic action found its outlet in the murderous conflicts provoked by Russia's policy of expansion at the expense of her southern Muslim neighbours. As [Laurence Kelly] points out, the Great Game really began in the Persia of the 1820s - which the British saw as the first line of defence of India - rather than in Central Asia in the 1850s. The wars and intrigues finally led to the signing of the treaty of Turkmanchai, negotiated by Griboyedov, which set the frontier between Russia and Persia to Though on the fringes of the Decembrist plot, and briefly arrested, Griboyedov was too uncommitted for direct action. Nor is it easy to classify him retrospectively as Westerniser or Slavophile. A modern man for his times who thought of becoming an entrepreneur, above all he was a patriot who made his peace with \"the Czar with the terrifying pewter eyes\", and believed his country was civilising the barbaric trans-Caucasians.