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"scally" Definitions
  1. a boy or young man who behaves badly or causes trouble

153 Sentences With "scally"

How to use scally in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "scally" and check conjugation/comparative form for "scally". Mastering all the usages of "scally" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Horan was dating one Holly Scally in 2010 when he first entered The X Factor Guys, if anyone out there still hates Melissa, just remember Holly Scally😐😒😨😝 pic.twitter.
"It's so intense to play the same show every single night," Scally says.
Brewer Anheuser-Busch and hat manufacturer Boston Scally Co. are also reportedly rethinking their involvement.
Corianne Payton Scally, principal research associate at the Urban Institute, studies renter households and communities.
While renters are worse off, Scally said, it's clear that many homeowners are also struggling with their bills.
For Victoria Legrande and Alex Scally, who make up Beach House, that is exactly what their seventh album, 7, represents.
Leary had clearly discovered his comedic persona already: He sports sunglasses and a scally cap, with a cigarette dangling from his lips.
"When you go to a show, you are there to watch somebody perform for you," says Scally of the installation's execution and intent.
Last year, Ms. Legrand and her band mate, Alex Scally, released two excellent albums, "Depression Cherry" and "Thank Your Lucky Stars," within two months.
As for a reduction in costs, Scally says an increase in supply could have Warren's desired effect, but geography would be a major variable.
"We've got this picture where these events are happening all over the place," said Aylwyn Scally, an evolutionary geneticist at the University of Cambridge.
"Still, renters seem to be worse off," said Corianne Scally, a senior research associate at the Urban Institute and a co-author of the study.
Tracksuits are, of course, not foreign to Americans, but pumping the scally luxe look at a bunch of unsuspecting American teenagers is quite a feat.
"What we should be doing is taking these more complicated models that we have now, this messy picture … and applying that to other species," Scally said.
She'd put her hair in a bun, cover it all with a scally cap, sport a pair of aviators, and paint a mustache above her upper lip.
Nancy Netzer, director of the McMullen Museum, said that one of her favorite discoveries during her research for the show was the biography of Ethel Josephine Scally, a forgotten textile artist and antiquarian.
Pleb Says: This seems to be some sort of comment on scally blokes with shaved heads, but who are gay, which is a big thing, like those guys in those chav porn films.
"There's been a change in state leadership and a groundswell of tenants' advocacy," said Corianne Scally, a senior research associate focused on housing at the Urban Institute, a Washington, DC-based, nonpartisan think tank.
Since making their debut in 28, the Baltimore duo — comprising the singer Victoria Legrand and the guitarist Alex Scally, both of whom also play keyboards — have stayed true to their surreal, soft-edged, romantic sound.
"Growing delinquencies among subprime borrowers are responsible for this deteriorating performance, and younger borrowers are struggling most acutely to afford their auto loans," said Joelle Scally, administrator of the New York Fed's center for microeconomic data.
The band, which consists of Mr. Scally and Ms. Legrand and also features the touring musicians Skyler Skjelset and James Barone, played 16 songs each night at Webster Hall, but 25 total over the mini-residency.
"It's unfortunate that disasters, whether man-made or natural, sometimes bring out the worst in people," said Kevin Scally, the chief relationship officer at Charity Navigator, a nonprofit group that evaluates the quality and performance of charitable organizations.
People are much smaller than cars and SUVs and, since they're not made of hard metal, they're less visible to radar systems, said John Scally, chief engineer for active safety systems at Honda's US research and development center.
"When I hear about bands that play the same set ever single night, it's horrifying to me," the guitarist Alex Scally said the day after the group's third sold-out show at Webster Hall in New York this week.
It's a strange place: an opulent yet chintzy interview location, where a taxidermy bear covered in paisley print looms over the dining room we're in—something Alex Scally, who completes the group, laughs about as we wait for our drinks.
"It would have been very easy for this map to end up at the bottom of a skip but thankfully it can now take its place among the magnificent maps held within our collection," stated National Librarian John Scally in last month's release.
Scally pointed out that not only could landlords stop renting out units, they can also still hike up the rent significantly under the Oregon legislation, which was tempered by private real-estate lobbyists, and, again, isn't truly "universal"—it doesn't affect every rental unit.
When Victoria Legrand and Alex Scally take to their instruments (keyboards and guitar, respectively), they're washed in shades of fuchsia and violet; the outlines of their bodies and the flourish of their movements are the only things that keep them from melting into the saturated field of color behind them.
Interviewing a second-generation stable owner and manager of horse carriages popular in Central Park, a man "in a scally cap … pink-cheeked with heather gray eyes," Moss and his subject grieve the impending extinction of the trade on West 37th Street at the hands of developers, neither of the two registering that the man, owner of a building bought in 1979, now highly coveted, has been put in the position of potentially making many millions of dollars.
Also, the words antwacky, scally and divi are not new, with antwacky being Liverpudlian for antique and scally being short for scallywag.
Neil Scally (born 14 August 1978, in Paisley) is a Scottish former footballer. Scally played for Ayr United, Dumbarton, Falkirk and Queen of the South. He is currently Assistant manager at Partick Thistle.
Joseph "Joe" Scally (born December 31, 2002) is an American professional soccer player who plays as a right back for New York City. Scally will join Bundesliga side Borussia Mönchengladbach on January 1, 2021.
During his time at Children's ITV, there was also a short-lived Scally cartoon strip in the children's TV magazine, Look-In as well. A "Scally" cartoon-strip from "Look-In" magazine, August 1989. Scally first appeared on Children's ITV in January 1989, alongside his first human co-presenter, Mark Granger. When the independent production company, Stonewall Productions took over producing Children's ITV in April '89, Scally was kept on and appeared alongside the new presenter, former TV-am co-host Nick Owen, in the afternoons for the rest of '89.
However, Gillingham chairman Paul Scally stated that he believed the player's agent had already agreed a transfer with another club. Scally also claimed that Jarvis had the potential to play for England by the time he was 24.
Scally started his playing career with Ayr United and then Dumbarton. Scally then played for Falkirk, for who he scored the equalising goal in the 2004 Scottish Challenge Cup Final win against Ross County. That same season Scally and Falkirk earned promotion to the Scottish Premier League as First Division champions. He left on a free transfer from Falkirk in the summer of 2006.
RUC Constable John Scally was killed in the attack; Scally was the first fatality of the new IRA campaign. Ó Brádaigh and others were arrested by the Garda Síochána across the border the day after the attack, in County Cavan.
However, on 8 February 2007, Scally unexpectedly rescinded the ban after approximately six years.
A Children's ITV promotional photo from early 1989, of Scally The Dog & his first co-presenter, Mark Granger. Scally the Dog was a puppet mongrel dog character, who co-presented the Children's ITV afternoon service from January 1989 - March 1991 in the United Kingdom.
"Axis to sell Canon solutions in EMEA." September 1, 2016. Retrieved December 21, 2016.Tim Scally, SDM Magazine.
Green 1999, p. 1031. ; scally : A hooligan youth (Scouse), short for scallywag.Green 1999, p. 1032. ; scarper : Run away.
He spilled the ball and Glennon and Keith Scally pounced, forcing Corley to overcarry once he had retrieved the ball.
All lyrics written by Victoria Legrand; all music composed and arranged by Alex Scally and Legrand with assistance from Daniel Franz.
Chairman Paul Scally has cited the lack of parking as one of the main reasons why a new stadium is essential.
She was born Caroline Stein in Dún Laoghaire in 1886 to Robert Francis and Mary Josephine Stein. She studied art under William Orpen at the Metropolitan School of Art in Dublin with Sean Keating and James Sinton Sleator. In 1911 Scally won the Taylor Art award and went to Paris and then Rome. She married Gerald Scally in 1914.
They were: Larry Scally (flyweight), T. Byrne (bantamweight), Jack Kennedy (welterweight), and Jimmy Magill (middleweight). Magill, who won bronze, was in the RUC; as was William "Billy" Duncan, who won bronze at welterweight. Magill and Duncan's medals are credited to Northern Ireland. One (possibly incomplete) list of results of the boxing events does not list Scally, Byrne, or Kennedy.
He said of the Goo Goo Dolls that the soundtrack "helped to re-establish them ... [it] brought them back into our minds". Robert Scally wrote of "Uninvited", "Placing exclusives on soundtracks ... has been a successful tactic for creating a buzz around the album while highlighting the musical artist".Scally, Robert. "The charts are alive with the Sound of Movies".
Clarence "Scally" Smith was a baseball player in the Negro Leagues. He would play infielder and outfielder and played from 1921 to 1933.
Children's ITV's bosses had noticed how successful puppet characters (such as Gordon the Gopher and Edd the Duck) had been on its rival, Children's BBC, so they decided to create their own version, which was Scally the Dog. He was operated and voiced alternately by three different puppeteers, who were Richard Coombs, John Eccleston and Michael J. Bassett. Coombs was the original operator of Scally and also built the puppet of him too. However, due to him working on other TV projects at the time, he had to share the duties of doing Scally with both Eccleston & Bassett too.
From 1845 onwards, Ireland was gripped by the Great Famine. Well over a million Irish people fled Ireland or were deported, and between one and two million starved to death. Records indicate that the members of the Scally family were among the first to emigrate to America. Between 1800 and 1870, many members of the Scally family arrived in Philadelphia.
Scally then joined Dumfries club Queen of the South. His career was hampered by serious injury, not playing first team football at all in 2008. After playing on 22 December 2007 he did not play first team football for Queens again until 3 January 2009. Scally thus missed the Palmerston Park club's run to the 2008 Scottish Cup Final against Rangers.
Gabriel Scally (born 25 October 1947) is an Argentine field hockey player. He competed at the 1968 Summer Olympics and the 1972 Summer Olympics.
GAA Final TeamsGAA ArchivesIRISH FANS VENT IRE ON NEW YORK TEAM - New York TimesLongford GAA historyThe GAA: An Oral History, chapter 4, John Scally.
Scally (also spelled Scales, Scully, Skelly, Scelly, O'Scully, Scullin, ScullaneName Variations) and "Scalaí" in IrishScally Surname in Irish is a surname of Irish origin.
Paul Damien Phillip Scally (born 1955/1956) is a London-born businessman who has been the chairman of association football club Gillingham since 1995.
Downs and Scally both appeared on the programme, alongside other past and present Children's ITV presenters, such as Roland Rat, Matthew Kelly and Michael Underwood.
Luis Scally (26 June 1915 - 8 July 1994) was an Argentine field hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1948 Summer Olympics.
Tommy Scally (28 June 1927 - 26 March 1977) was an Argentine field hockey player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1948 Summer Olympics.
In 2004, Legrand met Baltimore-native Alex Scally, and they quickly formed a two-piece band. Legrand often mentions how organically they work together, and how, in Scally, she found her "musical soulmate." The two have recorded seven studio albums as Beach House: Beach House (2006), Devotion (2008), Teen Dream (2010), Bloom (2012), Depression Cherry and Thank Your Lucky Stars (2015), and 7 (2018).
Alex Scally (born July 26, 1982)"United States Public Records, 1970-2009," database, FamilySearch (May 16, 2014), Alex Scally, Residence, Baltimore, Maryland, United States; a third party aggregator of publicly available information. is an American multi-instrumentalist and songwriter. He is best known as the co-writer, guitarist and backing vocalist of the dream pop duo Beach House, with whom he has recorded eight studio albums.
Scally v Southern Health and Social Services Board [1992] 1 AC 294 is an English contract law case, relevant for pensions and UK labour law, concerning implied terms.
Scally signed his first professional contract with New York City on March 21, 2018, and in doing so became the second youngest professional soccer player in the United States, after Freddy Adu. Scally made his professional debut for New York City in a 4-0 U.S. Open Cup loss to New York Red Bulls on June 6, 2018, coming on as a late substitute. On November 13, 2019, it was announced that Scally would join German Bundesliga side Borussia Mönchengladbach at the end of the 2020 MLS season. The transfer fee was reported to be a seven-figure sum that could rise to become one of the highest transfer fees received for a MLS player.
He died in a hill-walking accident in Glencoe.--The Times; Sept. 2002Relay: the journal of the University, College and Research Group, cilip Sheila Cannell, and Dr John Scally.
Second Edition. Syracuse University Press. p.92 Author Don Mullan described the brigade as one of the most ruthless battalions operating in the 1970s.Mullan, Don; Scally, John; Irwin, Margaret (2000).
The Maughan-Scally Cup is the junior grade inter-varsity rugby tournament. It was inaugurated in 2010 and is named after two stalwarts of UCD RFC and university rugby in Ireland. The Maughan-Scally is considered to be the most social, enjoyable and "old school" of the inter-varsity competitions. The current holders are University of Ulster Coleraine who led by team captain Dave Gilkinson retained the trophy by beating Queens University in the 2017-2018 final.
Many have contributed to the return of hurling as an activity in the club. As an example we can name Alejandro Yoyo Wade, Johnny Wade, Barbie, Cecilia and Irene Scally, David Ganly, Dickie Mac Allister, Eduardo Cabrera Punter, Hernan Magrini Scally. Several Irish have participated in many opportunities to work with the skills and education: Jonathan Lynch, Kevin O'Connors and Michael Connery, who currently works with the team's training to participate in the Aer Lingus International Hurling Festival.
At this point, Bassett realized that she wanted to make films. Since moving into film-making would entail substantial risk, Bassett worked for a year animating and voicing the puppet Scally the Dog on Children's ITV while she thought things over. After putting Scally the Dog to rest, Bassett produced several short films, as well as a 16 mm piece for broadcast television. All the while, Bassett worked on feature scripts which she used to try to catch producers' attention.
On 30 April 2010 Scally was announced as the new assistant manager and Under 19's coach at Queens, whilst remaining on the playing staff."'Scal' now assistant coach" on www.qosfc.com He was released from his contract at Queens when the new management team arrived in June 2011. Scally was then given training facilities with Ayr United and attempted to prove his fitness in order to gain a contract and since then has been appointed the first team coach at Somerset Park.
Scally is the sole owner of Priestfield Developments Ltd., a company formed in 2007 with the sole purpose of purchasing Gillingham's Priestfield Stadium for £9.8m as part of the restructuring of the club's debts.
Cathal Scally (born 1994 in Clonkill, County Westmeath, Ireland) is an Irish sportsperson. He plays hurling with his local club Clonkill and has been a member of the Westmeath senior inter-county team since 2011.
Klaus-Peter Schmid (March 4, 2004), Der allerletzte Keynesianer Die Zeit. He has in the past oftentimes disagreed with the Council’s conclusions.Derek Scally (March 9, 2015), Keynesian odd one out of Germany’s five ‘wise men’ Irish Times.
Other stars who appeared in 1989 were the late TV presenter and practical joker Jeremy Beadle and the Australian cartoonist Rolf Harris, who drew portraits of both Jerry and Scally throughout the links on the day he appeared.
BMC Evolutionary Biology. 2007 Jan 25;7(1):8. nuclear DNA,Amrine-Madsen H, Scally M, Westerman M, Stanhope MJ, Krajewski C, Springer MS. Nuclear gene sequences provide evidence for the monophyly of australidelphian marsupials. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution.
Recording this album was considerably more expensive; Scally says, "Every bit of money we got, we spent. The recording was insanely expensive. Every single step of the way, we've just tried to go more, go further".Interviews: Beach House.
The Channel 4 comedy Father Ted parodied the festival in the episode "Rock-a-Hula Ted" where the eponymous character is asked to host the local "Lovely Girls" competition. Will Scally produced and directed a Channel Four documentary called Rose of Tralee.
The term 'scally' is also used in the United Kingdom to refer to elements of the working class and petty criminality, in a similar vein to the more contemporary chav. In Philippines, scalawags were used to denote rogue police or military officers.
A unique record of the memorabilia and paraphernalia of the Millennium Experience is held by a private collector in the United States. Many of the fixtures and fittings were also purchased by Paul Scally, chairman of Gillingham F.C., for the club's stadium.
We want to make people leave themselves. Any good artistic experience is like that,” adds Scally. In March 2018, the band announced an extensive tour itinerary that started at the end of April in the States and took them through the fall to Europe.
Scally is a youth international for the United States, representing the United States U15s and the United States U17s despite being 3 years younger than his teammates. In October 2019, he was named to the squad for the 2019 FIFA U-17 World Cup in Brazil.
According to a post by Downs on the TV Forum website in 1998, the puppet of Scally now resides at the Museum of the Moving Image in Birmingham, and is owned by someone who used to work on the BBC Saturday morning kids' show, Live & Kicking.
The B-side is a four-track demo version of "Apple Orchard", a song which featured on the band's self- titled debut, recorded three years to the month before "Used to Be". It is one of the first things Scally and Legrand recorded together as Beach House.
In this final book, Mollie and Peter are home for the half-term holiday and Winks and the Wishing-Chair are ready to fly away with them to magical lands. They visit the Land of Wishes, the Land of Scally-Wags and help Santa Claus deliver presents on Christmas Eve.
The surname Scally is an anglicized version of the Gaelic "O Scolaidhe", which means "descendant of the scholar". It was first found in County Westmeath. The variations of the name were formed when church officials spelled the names as they were pronounced, which caused many different spellings of the surname.
When they learned that the Black and Tans were combing the wood, under a Captain McKay of the Leicestershire Regiment. The four men attempted to escape. Two were wounded Joe Satchwell and Thomas (Toby) Scally. Following a drumhead court-martial the others, John Bergin and Stephen McDermott were shot on the spot.
Also, the puppet character Scally the Dog often appeared in the mornings with them too. Additionally during this time, they both took separate turns as stand-ins for fellow Children's ITV presenter Jerry Foulkes in the afternoons, when he was away on holiday. On 2 January 1990 (following Foulkes' departure on 22 December 1989) Downs took over co-presenting the Children's ITV afternoons service, along with Scally. Warren returned to Children's ITV in summer 1990, to present the mornings service on his own, but he and Downs did occasionally swap roles, with him doing the afternoons and she doing the mornings instead sometimes. In September 1990, Children's ITV's afternoon service became slightly longer, now running from 3:55 to 5:10pm each weekday.
He also had a short spell in Hong Kong with Happy Valley. Pulis took his first steps into management at Bournemouth, where he was a player/coach and then Harry Redknapp's assistant. He then took control when Redknapp left the club. He then went on to Gillingham before leaving in 1999 after a dispute with chairman Paul Scally.
In January 2003, he returned as Scally on the CITV's 20th Birthday Bash programme, alongside fellow presenter, Jeanne Downs. He is a Punch and Judy performer and has worked on several Jim Henson muppet projects. He was one of the puppeteers on the ITV satirical show, Spitting Image, and worked on the 2005 film version of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.
St. Josaphat Roman Catholic Church in Philadelphia is located in the Manayunk section of Northwest Philadelphia at 124 Cotton Street.St Josaphat Parish Philadelphia, PA 19127 This parish was merged with those of St. John the Baptist and St. Mary of the Assumption in 2012.Scally, Bernard J. "The End of an Era for Manayunk." Lansdale, Pennsylvania: The Review (montgomerynews.com), April 17, 2012.
Together with Bobbie Jacobson from the Johns Hopkins University and Gabriel Scally, they described the UK's response to the COVID-19 pandemic as "too little, too late, too flawed", with no adequate plan for community-based case-finding, testing, and contact tracing. Their findings were published in the New Statesman, and discussed in Medscape, the British Journal of Social Psychology and the Practice Nurse.
15 This, in time, severely limited the IRA's capacity to build up units within Northern Ireland. On the evening of December 30, the Teeling Column under Noel Kavanagh attacked the Derrylin RUC barracks again, killing RUC constable John Scally, the first fatality of the campaign. Others involved in that attack included two prominent IRA men, Charlie Murphy and Ruairí Ó Brádaigh.Robert White, Ruairi O Bradaigh, p. 61.
As of 2009, Scally is non-resident in the UK for tax purposes, and resides in Dubai. He has been married three times and has had seven children. One of his sons died after a fall at the age of one, and another of a heart defect in 2003 at the age of 16 weeks. His surviving children comprise two daughters and three sons.
Gillingham chairman Paul Scally has made it clear that he intends to relocate the club away from its current stadium, announcing in September 2003 that "there is no future for the club at the Priestfield". In 2004, the club outlined plans for a new stadium at Cuxton but abandoned them soon afterwards due to the cost of improving transport links to the site. At the time Scally stated that he anticipated the club moving within four years, but by 2007 the proposed date had been pushed back to 2010. In March 2017, he again identified Mill Hill, on the east of the A289 Yokosuka Way, as his preferred site for a new stadium, re-iterated that this was necessary for the club to have ambitions of future Premier League football, and that he would be launching a bond scheme to fund the early stages of the development.
Alice Leahy), Untold Stories (ed Colin Murphy) Moving Forward Together ( ed Ginnie Kennerly) A Just Society (ed John Scally), Credo (ed John Quinn), He has contributed the following articles to Search Magazine: A New Millennium (2000), Civil Partnerships (2011), Abortion Issues (2013, Immigration (2015). He also writes a regular column for the Irish Times newspaper. He married Helen Henry in 1965 and they have three children. Helen died in 2015.
The Ensemble included Jacob Bradford, Adam Crossley, Emily Dunn, Laura-Jane Fenney, Lucy Fitzgerald, Matt Powell, Nathan Saxon and Charlotte Scally. Notable cast members in the original Independence cast are Cory Lloyd (Danny), Katrina Diehm (Sandy), Max Gukhman (Kenickie), Stephanie Miller (Rizzo), Kristian Morse (Roger), Louise Willoughby (Jan), Bradley Judge (Sonny), Sarah Agar (Marty), Zach Sorrow (Doody), Lizzie Rees (Frenchy), Betty Marie Muessig (Patty), Dominic Fortuna (Vince Fontaine).
After more than a century of service to Roman Catholics of Polish descent in the Manayunk, Roxborough, and Wissahickon areas of the greater Philadelphia area, St. Josaphat's Parish was merged with St. John the Baptist and St. Mary of the Assumption in 2012.Scally, "The End of an Era for Manayunk," The Review."Salvation for a Neighborhood Icon in Manayunk," in "Eyes on the Street." Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: PlanPhilly, August 20, 2015.
On 1 January 2013, Legge joined Gillingham on a month long loan with a view to a permanent move. Manager Martin Allen said that Legge's signing was "pushing the boat out" and credited chairman Paul Scally for the capture. Legge said that Myles Weston helped to convince him to sign at Priestfield. Legge made his debut for the "Gills" in a 1–0 win over Southend United on New Year's Day.
Singer Victoria Legrand's vocals have often been compared to those of Nico. Some music outlets have also compared Legrand's vocals to 1980s psychedelic rock vocalist Kendra Smith of the band Opal. Guitarist Alex Scally plays a Fender Stratocaster guitar in an E♭ Tuning. The group's influences include This Mortal Coil, Cocteau Twins, The Zombies, Brian Wilson, Françoise Hardy, Neil Young, Big Star, Tony, Caro and John and Chris Bell.
Beach House is an American dream pop duo formed in Baltimore, Maryland in 2004. The band consists of vocalist and keyboardist Victoria Legrand and guitarist, keyboardist, and backup vocalist Alex Scally. Their self-titled debut album was released in 2006 to critical acclaim and has been followed by Devotion (2008), Teen Dream (2010), Bloom (2012), Depression Cherry (2015), Thank Your Lucky Stars (2015), B-sides and Rarities (2017), and 7 (2018).
He was appointed Archdeacon of Dublin in 1988 and later served as Honorary Secretary to the Church of Ireland General Synod. He took part in the New Ireland Forum and was a member of a Government Review Body on Primary Education. He served as a member of the Commissioners for Charitable Donations and Bequests. His publications include Sing and Pray, Thinking Anew, An Easter People (Ed John Scally), With Trust in Place (Ed.
Downs and Scally continued to present Children's ITV's afternoons service until 29 March 1991, when Central Television regained the contract to produce Children's ITV back from Stonewall. They were replaced by a solo Tommy Boyd, who had already presented Children's ITV once before in the 1980s, now returning for a second time on 1 April 1991. However, on 3 January 2003 CITV celebrated its 20th birthday, with a special one-off programme called CITV's 20th Birthday Bash.
In 1995, Gillingham F.C. owner Paul Scally co-opted a local women's football team called Borstal '88. In June 2014, the team was brought back under the banner of the men's football club, Gillingham F.C., after a period as an independent outfit. Following this takeover, the club became known as Gillingham Ladies and played home games at Priestfield Stadium. Simon Ratcliffe was appointed as manager, but the club was relegated after the 2014–15 season and Ratcliffe subsequently departed.
Burns took care of his siblings and attended Saint Louis School, while his mother worked. She joined the Postal Service, and with the help of her brother, became postmaster for Fort Shafter and a clerk at the Honolulu Post office. In 1925 Anne sent John to live with her brother in Kansas, where Jack Scally served as a father figure. In Kansas he attended Immaculata High School in Leavenworth, then transferred to St. Benedict High School (now Maur Hill – Mount Academy) in Atchison.
The United Through Sport DVD was ‘a major awareness campaign and education support promoting the powerful potential for positive integration through sport.’ The DVD features contributions from Sonia O'Sullivan, Shay Given, Mickey Harte, Mícheál Ó Muircheartaigh, Jan Dinsdale, Harpal Singh Purewal, Karen Cromie, Martin Rogan, Karen Bingh, Gugu Banda, Glenn Ferguson, Trevor Ringland, Trent Johnston, Jessica Kurten, Ken Doherty, Jimmy Magee, Chloe Magee, Bernard Dunne, Sean Og O hAilpin, Tracy Piggott, Fiona Scally, Jason Sherlock, Jerry Flannery, Brian Kerr, John Joe Joyce.
A quartet of Irish enthusiasts Hugh McAlinden, Joe Shaw, Jim Clarke and Paddy O'Donoghue introduced track racing to Ireland at Celtic Park in Belfast when the first Irish track was built and opened on 18 April. This was followed by Shelbourne Park in Dublin one month later on the 14 May. Shelbourne employed four track trainers in their kennels, Mick Horan, Paddy Quigley, Billy Donoghue and Ben Scally. Scotland opened Powderhall Stadium (North Edinburgh) located in Beaverhall Road on 3 August.
Scally & Co., most likely dating from the 1960s. The current version, painted over the original in the early 2000s, reflects the major changes in African political geography in the recent times. The "Eagle" mural is located in Wilson St., Newtown, on the rear wall of the Newtown Mission. The graphic style and content are very similar to the "Martin Luther King" mural and it is presumed to have been created by Andrew Aiken sometime in the early to mid-1990s.
The plans to open a greyhound track in Dublin were drawn up by Paddy O’Donoghue, Jerry Collins, Patsy McAlinden and Jim Clarke. Shelbourne Park opened on 14 May 1927 hot on the heels of Celtic Park (Belfast). The stadium located in the docklands in Ringsend was Dublin's answer to the Belfast track and the pair became the two most greyhound prestigious tracks in Irish racing. When opening in 1927 the track employed four resident trainers in Mick Horan, Paddy Quigley, Billy Donoghue and Ben Scally.
He scored his first goal for Gillingham in an EFL Trophy tie against Tottenham Hotspur U21s on 12 November 2019. Having broken into the first team under the management of Steve Evans, Tucker was the subject of a written transfer bid in December 2019 from an unnamed Championship club, which was rejected by Gillingham chairman Paul Scally. The same day Tucker signed a new contract with Gillingham. He was named as the Kent side's young Player of the Season at the conclusion of the 2019–20 season.
On 20 June 2007, chairman Paul Scally confirmed that Facey had signed for Gillingham.Official Gillingham website On 27 March 2008, Facey signed on loan for Wycombe Wanderers until the end of the season. He scored against former club Bradford in the last game of the season to help them qualify for the play-offs, where his goal against Stockport County in the semi final was not enough to put them through to the final. He was transfer listed by Gillingham on 5 June 2008.
In 2013, John Koetsier of Venturebeat said Amazon's Kindle Fire Android-based tablet was "a de-Google-ized version of Android." In 2014 John Simpson of US News wrote about the “right to be forgotten” by Google and other search engines. In 2015, Derek Scally of Irish Times wrote an article on how to "De-Google your life." In 2016 Kris Carlon of Android Authority suggested that users of CyanogenMod 14 could “de-Google” their phones, because CyanogenMod works fine without Google apps too.
Byfield told the press that his teammates should take the blame for Neale Cooper's departure in November 2005, and should be "ashamed" of their performances. Byfield scored 14 goals during the 2005–06 campaign, becoming the club's top-scorer, despite spending two months on the sidelines nursing a knee injury. He joined Millwall in June 2006, despite manager Ronnie Jepson's best efforts to keep him at Priestfield. Byfield later claimed he was not offered a new contract by the "Gills", something which chairman Paul Scally denied.
The clock was removed during later stadium redevelopment work. New owner Paul Scally took over at the club in 1995 and soon instigated a programme of redevelopment which completely transformed the formerly run- down ground. The closed stand was replaced with a new Gordon Road Stand in 1997 at a cost of more than £2 million. Two years later the Rainham End terracing was replaced with a new all-seater stand, with the sports centre behind it demolished and replaced with a car park.
Scally has a reputation for often taking controversial positions. For example, he has made no secret of his desire to relocate the club from the town of Gillingham, possibly to a location away from the Medway Towns though still somewhere within the county of Kent, claiming "The future of this football club is not at this stadium and everyone, if they are not stupid, accepts that is a fundamental point." He summarily dismissed manager Tony Pulis immediately after he had led the team to a Wembley play-off final in 1999, which brought about a protracted legal dispute over Pulis' contract. He has also become involved in a number of public disputes, most notably with several other Football League clubs over player transfers, the Kent Messenger Group of local newspapers (whose reporters he banned from the ground for several years for supposedly criticising poor team performances), and Alan Liptrott, then chairman of the Gills Independent Supporters Club, with whom he had several public disagreements, the largest over the ownership of an internet domain name, which led to Scally imposing a lifetime ban from Priestfield on Liptrott.
The 2004 Scottish Challenge Cup Final, also known as the Bell's Cup Final for sponsorship reasons, was an association football match between Falkirk and Ross County on 7 November 2004 at McDiarmid Park in Perth. It was the 14th final of the Scottish Challenge Cup since it was first organised in 1990 to celebrate the centenary of the Scottish Football League. Falkirk emerged winners after defeating Ross County 2–1 with goals from Neil Scally and Darryl DuffyFalkirk 2-1 Ross County, BBC Sport. 2004-11-07. Retrieved 2009-12-31.
In response to the controversy, the Irish Department of Health announced on 8 May 2018 that a scoping inquiry was being established, to be carried out by Gabriel Scally. On 12 September 2018 the Department of Health published Dr Scally's final report. The report gathered testimony from women and families affected by the scandal, and conducted an investigation and audit of the CervicalCheck programme. It also contained 50 recommendations covering access to medical records, governance of CervicalCheck, procurement of laboratory services and revision of the HSE's open disclosure policy.
This continued until 29 March 1991, when Stonewall lost the contract to produce Children's ITV back to Central Television (who had also done it previously from 1983 - 1989). They were both replaced by a solo Tommy Boyd on 1 April 1991. However, both Downs and Scally (operated & voiced by Coombs) made a return to CITV 12 years later on 3 January 2003, when they appeared on a special one-off programme called CITV's 20th Birthday Bash, shown as part of the ITV programming block's landmark 20th birthday celebrations.
Guitarist Alex Scally concurred, saying, "There was a transparent feeling, [the songs] didn't feel as nuanced." Though some of Depression Cherrys musical ideas originated from 2012, Beach House wrote the majority of the record between autumn 2013 and 2014; "10:37" was one of the first songs to be written during this period. The album was recorded at Studio in the Country in Bogalusa, Louisiana over two months, from November 2014 to January 2015. It was co-produced by Chris Coady, who worked on the band's previous two records, Teen Dream (2010) and Bloom.
His first experience of radio broadcasting came at Radio Moorfields, the hospital station at Moorfields Eye Hospital in London, which broadcast from 1974 until 2006. From there he joined the first in-store radio station, Radio Topshop, at Topshop's store on Oxford Circus in London. In the 1980s, Warren had a number of years presenting shows on Metro Radio, covering the north-east of England. Following this, he presented Children's ITV's summer mornings service in 1989 and 1990 and occasionally in the afternoons too, alongside fellow presenters Jeanne Downs, Nick Owen and Scally the Dog.
Clothing often associated with the "Guido" stereotype includes gold chains (often herringbone chains, figaro chains, cornicellos, or saints' medallions), pinky rings, oversized gold or silver crucifixes, rosaries worn as necklaces, working class clothing such as plain white T-shirts, muscle shirts or "guinea Ts", leather jackets, sweat or tracksuits, scally caps, unbuttoned dress shirts, Italian knit shirts, designer brand T-shirts such as Armani, and often typical Italian "tamarro" or "truzzo" club dress. Slicked-back hair and pompadours, blowouts, tapers, quiffs, fades and heavily pomaded or gelled hair are also common stereotypes.
If this album feels like an alternate-reality Beach House, it's because Legrand and Scally have altered their reality." Tiny Mix Tapes Matthew Neale gave 7 a perfect score and called it the duo's greatest album. Clash lauded the record, writing: "The Baltimore duo have somehow gifted us their masterpiece, and though the rain outside has now stopped, new heavens have opened." Joe Goggins of Drowned in Sound said that 7 is "a record that gets closer to the band's self-imposed boundaries than they ever have before without really threatening to break them down.
The Orchids are a Scottish band that achieved success with Sarah Records. Formed in Penilee in Glasgow in 1985, the Orchids released a series of underground singles on Sarah Records. The group's line-up comprised James Hackett (vocals), Pauline Hynds Bari (vocals), John Scally (guitar), Chris Quinn (drums), Matthew Drummond (guitar) and James Moody (bass). Their producer, Ian Carmichael, often played keyboards on their records. They changed their line up in 1993 when bassist James Moody left and Ronnie Borland, a long time collaborator and supporter of the band, took over on bass.
Foulkes left CITV on 22 December 1989, and on 2 January 1990, fellow CITV presenter Jeanne Downs (who had presented CITV's summer mornings service in 1989) took over co-presenting the afternoons with Scally, until 29 March 1991, when Stonewall lost the contract to produce CITV back to Central Television (who had also done it previously from 1983 to 1989). On the first day that Downs took over from Foulkes (on 2 January 1990), they had a mop and a bucket in the studio, with a name tag of Foulkes on it, and during the links both she and Scally made some amusing comments about it. Also, due to frequent CITV opt-outs by TSW, in order to fit in their local birthdays programme, Gus Honeybun, ITV viewers in the South West missed out on many of Foulkes' links during 1989, most notably his final day on 22 December 1989, as they opted out of several links, including the final one, which meant that TSW viewers never got to hear him say "Goodbye" for the last time. Foulkes was one of several former CITV presenters who didn't appear on CITV's 20th Birthday Bash on 3 January 2003, although he was briefly mentioned and several clips of him were shown during the show.
Rahugh or Ráith Aeda Meic Bric is an early Christian site founded by Áed mac Bricc (also referred to as Saint Hugh of Rahugh) in the 6th century, inside a ráth or ringfort. The site, located about 8 km north of Tullamore along the L1024. Rahugh Rahugh consists of one pub (The Hazel Bar and Lounge) a Catholic church, local community centre, a primary school and several small -medium sized enterprises such as Dunnes Workshop and Scally Precast. Rahugh also contains the remains of an ancient Christian monastery site and graveyard, a holy well and a so-called headache stone.
Some fans believed the "BMH" could generally be relied upon to take the most pessimistic and cynical view possible, although this became increasingly difficult during the early years of the tenure of Paul Scally as chairman, as the club recovered from receivership and near losing of its League place to ascend to previously undreamed of heights: by season 2005–06, after relegation and financial difficulties in the club, the chairman has ceased to be considered beyond criticism. The fanzine gained a reputation as "one of the best and most popular fanzines ever made",www.FootballFanzines.com with the name attracting comment for its quirky nature.
"Used to Be" is a song by American dream pop band Beach House from their third studio album, Teen Dream. It was written by lead vocalist and keyboardist Victoria Legrand and guitarist Alex Scally and produced by them along with Chris Coady. The song was released on October 21, 2008 as the album's lead single and features a B-side of a different version of "Apple Orchard", a song which featured on their self-titled debut album. The single version released in 2008 is included on the band's B-Sides and Rarities compilation album, released on June 30, 2017.
Scally had previously accused Southend United manager Steve Tilson of making an illegal approach for Byfield. Having scored a hat-trick at the start of the month, he was nominated for the League One player of the month award for January, but lost out to Bristol City's Enoch Showunmi. Despite missing the end of the campaign due to an ankle injury, he scored 16 goals in 31 League One games in 2006–07 to become the club's top-scorer. However, he seemed keen to move away from The Den, and did not appear in pre-season friendlies or photo opportunities.
We tend to make pretty still music, and this record felt like we were really excited by the kind of bubbling, chaotic, discordant energy field. … The vibe and the show are getting more energetic and messy, but in what I think is a cool way. Maybe a little bit more “rock and roll,” to use the old term,’’ adds Scally. On October 23, 2018, the band released a limited edition 7-inch vinyl of "Lose Your Smile" from 7 as the A-side and a new track from the recording sessions of 7 titled "Alien" as the B-side.
Two years later, they finished second in Division Two but were denied automatic promotion because of a restructuring of the league. They lost to Huddersfield Town in the playoff semi-finals and remained in Division Two, while Ratcliffe dropped down a division to sign for Gillingham. When Ratcliffe signed for Gillingham, new owner Paul Scally had rescued the club from the brink of bankruptcy and appointed Tony Pulis as manager. Ratcliffe was a regular player in the side that won promotion from Division Three that season, and helped them stay in Division Two before playing his last professional game for them in 1998 at the age of 31.
This was no empty song writing exercise as some members of the band had been arrested for selling pills and speed after a gig at The Moles Club, Bath. It was a time when the more gentile southern youth considered any scally with a northern accent as having access to top drugs unavailable to them, an invitation the Taxis found hard to pass by. Prison was only avoided in Bath when the remaining bag of disco biscuits (MDMA) was found to contain vitamin pills. Later Mick narrowly avoided a prison sentence again after being convicted of stealing carpets from the Hilton hotel in Leeds.
Initially, Keane was turned down from the Ireland schoolboys squad after a trial in Dublin; one explanation from former Ireland coach and scout Ronan Scally was that the 14-year-old Keane was "just too small" to make it at the required level. Undeterred, he began applying for trials with English clubs, but he was turned down by each one. As his childhood years passed, he took up temporary jobs involving manual work while waiting for a breakthrough in his football prospects. In 1989, he eventually signed for the semi-professional Irish club Cobh Ramblers after persuasion from Ramblers' youth team manager Eddie O'Rourke.
Barry started out as a young 'scally' who, together with an often reluctant best friend Terry, was always looking for easy ways to make money. Such scams consisted of torching his Jaguar in order to claim off the insurance, stealing copper from building sites, and buying and selling stolen items. Barry was always the apple of his mother Sheila's eye but had a less sturdy relationship with his father Bobby who was eventually revealed to be his stepfather. Although Barry was usually on the wrong side of the law, he was shown to be the more respectable of the Grant brothers in early episodes.
" Leah Greenblatt of Entertainment Weekly said "7s artful wooziness is hardly new, but for Beach House, it feels like home." Frank Guan of Vulture called 7 the duo's best album yet, writing "the darkness and directness of its sound, combined with Legrand's customary sibylline vocals, add up to something welcome and unprecedented in the Beach House catalogue — their best album in an already impressive set." Kelsey J. Waite of The A.V. Club wrote, "With 7, Legrand and Scally have gotten freer themselves. This is the sound of a band that knows itself extremely well and yet, in seeking outside perspectives and embracing imperfection, has discovered a whole new level to explore.
Dr Gabriel Scally and three other doctors were employees of either the Southern or Eastern Health and Social Services Boards in Northern Ireland. In consequence of the long duration of undergraduate medical training, six years, they would not have been in paid employment for the requisite 40 years before retirement to get full superannuation (or pension) benefits by the time they reached 60 years of age. But by lawHealth Services (Superannuation) (Amendment) (No. 3) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 1974 they could "top up" their superannuation by a lump sum purchase of added years of superannuation entitlement within twelve months of beginning their first period of employment in the Health and Social Services.
Conway joined the Labour Party as a trainee accountant in the 1970s, and was later elected as a member of Kildare County Council. He was Labour's director of elections in the Kildare constituency at the 1981 general election, after which he was nominated by the Taoiseach, Garret FitzGerald, as a member of the 15th Seanad Éireann. The appointment was explained by the Labour Party's secretary, Seamus Scally, as an organisational one: Conway would be responsible for organising and improving the finances of the party in the Leinster area. The following year he was elected to the 16th Seanad, topping the poll on the Industrial and Commercial Panel.
Moreover, the club also announced Homegrown Player Joe Scally would depart to join Bundesliga club Borussia Mönchengladbach, effective January 1, 2021. The official transfer fee was undisclosed, although, multiple reports suggested the fee is to be a seven-figure sum that could rise to become one of the highest transfer fees received for a player in MLS history. Soon thereafter, Parks' loan was made permanent, while the club completed the acquisition of Gedion Zelalem on a free transfer. On January 28, 2020, New York City signed Icelandic midfielder Guðmundur Þórarinsson from Swedish club Norrköping, and the club announced the appointment of Ronny Deila as the new head coach; Deila signed a three-year contract.
Richard Coombs is a puppeteer from England, who has worked extensively on many British television shows, feature films, commercials, and music videos. From 1987 to 1988, he worked on the ITV Saturday morning children's show, Get Fresh, where he operated the puppet Gilbert the Alien, alongside fellow puppeteer John Eccleston, with the character's voice performed by Phil Cornwell. Coombs was one of the three puppeteers (again alongside Eccleston as well as Michael J. Bassett), who each alternately controlled and voiced the puppet character, Scally the Dog, who co-presented Children's ITV, from 1989–1991. From 1990-1992 he performed the character of Ringo the Rabbit on A Kind of Magic, an ITV programme starring British magician Wayne Dobson.
Dyke moved Owen to become a main presenter of Good Morning Britain from 4 April 1983 and he was soon teamed up with Anne Diamond until 1986 when he left. Having left TV-am, he then became a presenter for ITV Sport remaining with them until 1993, presenting Midweek Sport Special and also presenting ITV's coverage of the 1988 Olympic Games, Euro 88 and the 1990 World Cup as well as the game show Sporting Triangles. In addition to his ITV Sport job, Owen hosted a TV game show called Hitman and presented Children's ITV alongside puppet dog Scally. From 1992 to 1996 he co-presented Good Morning with Anne and Nick on BBC One.
Many special guests appeared in the studio during Foulkes' time on CITV. Various pop stars such as Kylie Minogue, Jason Donovan, Sonia, Big Fun, Lisa Stansfield, The Primitives and many more all appeared in 1989. Donovan's appearance on CITV was quite memorable, as due to him being stuck in traffic, he arrived at the CITV studios in Birmingham just before the start of the final programme of the day, which was a repeat of Scooby-Doo. However, the show was started a bit earlier than originally planned and the final CITV link of the day was quite longer than usual, which gave Foulkes and Scally a bit more of air-time to chat to Donovan.
The 1966–67 National Football League was the 36th staging of the National Football League (NFL), an annual Gaelic football tournament for the Gaelic Athletic Association county teams of Ireland. Three-in-a-row All-Ireland champions Galway were shocked in the final by a double defeat to a taller and stronger New York side.GAA Final Teams"NEW YORK SCORES OVER GALWAY, 14-9; 12,000 See Gaelic Football Here--Furlong Is Star" - New York TimesNew York All-Stars Beat Galway in Gaelic Football for 2nd Straight Time; CUMMINS IS STAR IN 15-10 TRIUMPH His 2 Straight Goals Late in Game Give New York Irish National TitleThe GAA: An Oral History, chapter 4, John Scally.
He captained the Kent side for a lengthy spell and was also named the club's player of the year on an unprecedented four occasions, although his final reign ended in a bizarre dispute with chairman Paul Scally in which Smith reportedly refused to hand back the trophy until he was paid money he claimed the club owed him. He left Priestfield in 2005, after the team were relegated to Football League One and he was offered reduced terms. In July 2005 he joined Walsall, returning to Gillingham in October 2005 to play three times in a loan spell. He moved to Swindon Town in January 2006, but was released in June 2006 after Swindon sacked manager Iffy Onuora.
Despite the proposed move, the club promoted its facilities, in conjunction with Medway Council, as a possible training base for athletes competing in the 2012 Summer Olympics, saying: In December 2007, Gillingham shareholders passed a resolution to sell the ground to Priestfield Developments Ltd, a company wholly owned by Paul Scally, for £9.8m as part of a restructuring of the club's debts. The deal was to allow three years use of the stadium at £1 p.a., with the club meeting running costs, with tenure secured for a further seven years at a rent as yet unspecified. In 2011, however, the club purchased the stadium back for around 10% of the fee paid by Priestfield Developments.
From 3 April 1989, the independent production company Stonewall Productions won the contract to produce Children's ITV presentation. Stonewall Productions was headed up by Michael Jackson, a Central staffer who used his expertise to prepare a suitable application. Whereas Central had restricted links to the station's former in-vision presentation studio, Stonewall chose not to use a fixed set, but instead presented links from various areas of Central's headquarters at Broad Street in Birmingham, utilising a rotating team of presenters which included Clive Warren (now a DJ), Jeanne Downs (a singer), Jerry Foulkes (a producer who left Children's ITV on 22 December 1989) and a large puppet dog called Scally (who started out with Mark during his last few months).
The club entered administration on 9 March, ending what had been a genuine push for promotion; talks between the administrator and Adams did not seem constructive, as Adams told the press that he was "taking legal advice". However, he stayed put, and steered the "Valiants" to a 12th-place finish; they would have been only 3 points off the play-offs had the club not entered administration. In May, he was linked with the vacant management position at Gillingham, with his friendship with "Gills" chairman Paul Scally cited in his favour in media reports. With the club still unable to sign new players due to administration in May 2012, Adams offered contracts to 16 of his players for the 2012–13 campaign.
During the 2003–04 season, however, the Gills' fortunes declined, and the team only avoided relegation on goal difference after holding Stoke City to a draw in the last match of the season. As the team continued to struggle at the start of the following season, club owner Paul Scally reiterated his confidence in Hessenthaler but brought in former Swindon Town and Wycombe Wanderers manager John Gorman to assist him. The following month, with no significant improvement in the team's fortunes, Hessenthaler tendered his resignation. He remained at the club as a player but was rarely selected for the team, and in January 2005, he went on loan to Hull City, where he was reunited once again with Peter Taylor.
When Hattersley's left-wing CLP secretary Kevin Scally and Birmingham city councillor Amir Khan set up Sparkbrook Black Section, Hattersley had them expelled from Labour. But a vigorous national Black Sections campaign, fronted by Clare Short and supported by their Transport and General Workers Union, then Britain's largest trade union, got them reinstated by party conference, against the wishes of Kinnock and Hattersley. Despite powerful opposition from the Labour and trade union leaderships and a hostile news media, within a few years Black Sections had 35 branches, several of them in London, most sending "unofficial" delegates to their CLP party management and executive committees. On the back of the success of Black Sections, more than 200 African Caribbean and Asian Labour candidates were elected across the country in the 1986 council elections - a three-fold increase on their previous numbers.
When former member of parliament Sebastian Edathy in December 2014 appeared before a Bundestag inquiry into his purchase of child pornography, he was asked about whether a tip-off from party colleagues gave him time to destroy evidence ahead of a police raid on his home and office. Edathy claimed senior SPD members, particularly Oppermann, breached legal privilege by discussing the case with colleagues and staff.Derek Scally (December 18, 2014), Ex-SDP politician testifies on his use of child pornography Irish Times. During a closed-door hearing of the Committee on Internal Affairs earlier that year, Oppermann had denied that he or any of his fellow high-ranking SPD officials “indirectly or directly informed or even warned Sebastian Edathy of the investigation or our knowledge of it.“Oppermann defends actions in Bundestag hearing over Edathy affair Deutsche Welle, February 19, 2014.
He made an appearance at the start of the 2004–05 season, and then joined First Division club Ross County on loan for the rest of that campaign. While in Dingwall, Adam made fifteen appearances, scoring twice, against Raith Rovers and St Mirren. He also played in the 2004 Scottish Challenge Cup Final against Falkirk. County were ahead courtesy of David Winters 56th-minute goal. Adam was substituted in the 60th minute as was teammate Sean Higgins six minutes later. Neil Scally and Darryl Duffy then scored in 70 and 75 minutes respectively for Falkirk to come back to lift the trophy. Adam then joined First Division side St Mirren on loan for the 2005–06 season. During his spell in Paisley, he again appeared in the 2005 Scottish Challenge Cup Final, however this time he was on the winning side as St Mirren defeated Hamilton Academical 2–1.
In employment contracts, multiple standardised implied terms arise also, even before statute comes into play, for instance to give employees adequate information to make a judgment about how to take advantage of their pension entitlements.See Scally v Southern Health and Social Services Board [1992] 1 AC 294, cf Crossley v Faithful & Gould Holdings Ltd [2004] EWCA Civ 293 The primary standardised employment term is that both employer and worker owe one another an obligation of "mutual trust and confidence". Mutual trust and confidence can be undermined in multiple ways, primarily where an employer's repulsive conduct means a worker can treat herself as being constructively dismissed.e.g. Wilson v Racher [1974] ICR 428 In Mahmud and Malik v Bank of Credit and Commerce International SA[1998] AC 20 the House of Lords held the duty was breached by the employer running the business as a cover for numerous illegal activities.
He created the terrace fanzine Get into Them which was closed down by authorities. Nicholls received a new Football Banning Order (FBO) on 6 October 2003 banning him from every football ground in England and Wales for two years, apart from games where he was there as manager of Welsh Alliance League club, Holywell Town F.C. when he admitted to being involved in football hooliganism in his book, Scally: Confessions of a Category C Football Hooligan and for his involvement in a pub fight between Everton and Aston Villa fans, in which he claimed he was only helping injured victims to escape. He had been summoned to Liverpool Magistrates Court under the Football Disorder Act over the publication of the book, and banned for two years, with £500 costs. In April 2004, Nicholls was convicted by Flintshire magistrates for breaching the banning order, after he attended a match in Russia between Wales and Russia.
"Burnsie" began his professional career with his local senior club Ayr United in July 1995 and made an early impact when he made his first team debut at the age of 17 against Berwick Rangers at Shielfield Park. He didn't have to wait long for his first start either, which came at Somerset Park against Raith Rovers when he was just 18. In 1997, along with fellow starlets Keith Hogg, Neil Scally, Gareth "Bo" Armstrong and Joe Carruth, he enjoyed a spell on loan at Glenafton Athletic under Alan Rough which prepared him for the rough and tumble of Scottish football. Next season, in February 1998, he was thrown in at the deep end by manager Gordon Dalziel as a versatile youngster in an Ayrshire derby match against Kilmarnock at Somerset Park, with the home side recording a famous 2-0 victory courtesy of an 83rd minute headed goal from Jim Dick & a beautiful lob from Ian Ferguson over the head of Killie keeper Gordon Marshall.
Pulis then joined Gillingham in the summer of 1995, whom he managed for a further four seasons, turning a team that had struggled at the very bottom of the Football League into a promotion winning one in his first season, and laying the foundations for the club's eventual elevation to the First Division for the first time in their history. In the 1999 Second Division play-off final, the Gills were 2–0 up with less than two minutes left, following goals by the prolific partnership of Robert Taylor and Carl Asaba, only to see Manchester City score twice, the equaliser in injury time, and after that win a penalty shoot-out 3–1. Following the defeat, Pulis was controversially sacked by the club amidst claims of gross misconduct. He later brought a £400,000 court case against Gillingham chairman Paul Scally for unpaid bonuses, which was settled out of court in 2001 for £75,000.
In mid-2019 it was revealed that Prince Georg Friedrich, Prince of Prussia, Head of the House of Hohenzollern had filed claims for permanent right of residency for his family in Cecilienhof, or one of two other Hohenzollern palaces in Potsdam, as well as return of the family library, 266 paintings, an imperial crown and sceptre, and the letters of Empress Augusta Victoria.Derek Scally, The fall of the House of Hohenzollern, Irish Times, 25 July 2019 Central to the argument was that Monbijou Palace, which had been permanently given to the family following the fall of the Kaiser, was demolished by the East German government in 1959. Lawyers for the German state argued that the involvement of members of the family in National Socialism had voided any such rights. In June 2019, a claim made by Prince Georg Friedrich that Rheinfels Castle be returned to the Hohenzollern family was dismissed by a court.
Scally had become wealthy through the sale of his Metronote photocopier business in South London prior to buying sole control of Gillingham F.C. for the sum of £1 in 1995, taking the club out of administration shortly before they would have been placed into liquidation. His tenure has witnessed probably the most successful period in the club's history, with three promotions, three Wembley play-off finals and four FA Cup victories over top division opponents, and their highest league finish of 11th in the Championship. He has also overseen the radical redevelopment of the club's Priestfield Stadium, with three new permanent stands and one temporary one transforming it into an all-seater arena, together with other non- footballing facilities such as a banqueting suite. However the club's fortunes both on and off the pitch took a downhill turn from about 2004, arising mainly from his overspending on the new stands and facilities, and also the loss of anticipated income following the collapse of ITV Digital.
Nat Muir, Power of 10 by British Athletics His career has seen some ups and downs and he has been described as "One of Scotland's best ever distance runners: possibly also one of the country's unluckiest in that he never had the success at the very topmost level that his ability and dedication deserved".Nat Muir, Scottish Distance Running: 1945–2000 Muir ran in many competitions throughout his career from his humble beginnings in 1970 spanning over twenty years, with some notable successes such as his fifth win at the 1984 Irvine Beach Park. His last race was in the 1992-93 season on the Glasgow-Edinburgh run where his team came in 7th with Muir's recurring Achilles tendon injury. Muir himself knew that with the injury his time had come to retire, a decision not brought on by team performance but by his knowledge of his personal limitations to his own fitness and a previous race, the Allan Scally Relay, as a gauge for the upcoming Glasgow-Edinburgh run.
Modelling contracts and deals with fashion labels like Top Man, Hugo Boss and Armani culminated in their collective nickname, the "Spice Boys". The situation was further aggravated by stories of McManaman and best friend Robbie Fowler's lifestyles off the pitch following an interview with the magazine Loaded, which depicted the duo as hedonists and 'scally' characters, as well as stories about McManaman and Fowler's lack of decorum and disruptive influence in the dressing room. McManaman responded by joining The Times to write a weekly column, becoming the first footballer of his generation to do so. McManaman's columns were known for articulating opinions on matters from a player's perspective, and in one particular column, discussed the issue of how the Bosman ruling impacted the future of the English game with "cut price imports" that threatened local development, while also proposing the increasing of odds for smaller teams to beat big clubs by having the League Cup reduced to a single leg affair, thus enabling players to be better rested as well.

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