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  1. 16 de oct. de 2018 · As the Conservative M.P. E. F. L. Wood (the future viceroy of India and Earl of Halifax) said in a 1922 report on political development in the Caribbean, which would have been gloomy reading for those seeking independence, the British territories in the region possessed ‘not a few individuals of somewhat exceptional capacity and ...

  2. E. F. L. Wood, Lord Halifax. Las conversaciones se celebraron en la Sede episcopal primada belga de Malinas entre 1921 y 1927, en gran medida gracias a la iniciativa del cardenal Désiré-Joseph Mercier, pero con el apoyo tácito del Vaticano y del arzobispo de Canterbury y del arzobispo de York. 1 . El número de participantes varió en cada ...

  3. Formed in 1888 by its twelve founder members, the EFL (English Football League) is the world's original league football competition and is the template for leagues the world over. The EFL is the largest single body of professional Clubs in European football and is responsible for administering and regulating the EFL, the Carabao Cup and the EFL ...

  4. Edward Wood, 1:e earl av Halifax. Uppslagsordet ”Lord Halifax” leder hit. Se även: Earl av Halifax. Edward Frederick Lindley Wood, 1:e earl av Halifax, känd som lord Irwin 1925–1934 och som viscount Halifax 1934–1944, född 16 april 1881 på Powderham Castle i Devon, död 23 december 1959 på Garrowby Hall i Yorkshire, var en brittisk ...

  5. Halifax, Edward Frederick Lindley Wood, 1st earl of, 1881–1959, British statesman. He entered the House of Commons (1910) as a Conservative and was president of the Board of Education (1922–24) and of the Board of Agriculture (1924–25).

  6. The plainer the dress, the greater luster does beauty appear. E. F. L. Wood, 1st Earl of Halifax. Beauty, Lust, Dresses. 8 Copy quote. A fool hath no dialogue within himself, the first thought carrieth him without the reply of a second. E. F. L. Wood, 1st Earl of Halifax. Fool, Firsts, Dialogue. 5 Copy quote.

  7. As the Conservative M.P. E. F. L. Wood (the future viceroy of India and Earl of Halifax) said in a 1922 report on political development in the Caribbean, which would have been gloomy reading for those seeking independence, the British territories in the region possessed‘not a few individuals of somewhat exceptional capacity and intelligence ...