(1) Two other men – Ryan Hadfield, 29, from Ashton-under-Lyne, and Matthew James, 33, from Clayton – were found not guilty of the same murder.
(2) Many of the highest concentrations of pension recipients are in National party seats, such as Page, Hinkler, Lyne, Cowper and Gippsland.
(3) We do not aim to abolish faith schools, but no school run by a religious organisation should be state-funded Holly Lyne, West Yorkshire We endeavour to support all children in their educational journey, and that extends to supporting parents who home educate.
(4) UC is due to start on 29 April with pilot projects in Ashton-under-Lyne, Oldham, Warrington and Wigan.
(5) In 2010, soon after the company launched, Lyne became worried the brand would be lost in a sea of cupcakes – and saw the free-from category as a way to differentiate it from the competition.
(6) Universal credit went live on 29 April with just one jobcentre – Ashton under Lyne – accepting clams for universal credit and three other jobcentres, Wigan, Warrington and Oldham, testing the system before taking claims for universal credit in July.
(7) Photograph: David Sillitoe for the Guardian Tracey Richardson-Lyne, 36, (pictured above) found herself the victim of the postcode lottery of IVF funding after marrying husband Chris.
(8) Psychiatric nurse Vicky Atkinson, 37, from Ashton-under-Lyne, says: "The amount of homeless people, the inequality, shows that there is an issue.
(9) But where Lyne was apparently dazzled by the sexual imagery of music videos (Flashdance, 9½ Weeks, Fatal Attraction), Scott was more interested in their pacing and glitz.
(10) Apart from Gilbert, there was Sir Lawrence Freedman , a military historian; Sir Roderic Lyne , a former ambassador to Russia, who a few years earlier used to go running with Campbell; and Baroness Usha Prashar , an experienced social reformer with an expertise in the problems of Britain rather than Iraq.
(11) Carneal wasn't the first: Jeffrey Lyne Cox held a class of students hostage at gunpoint in 1988, inspired by the novel ; Dustin L Pierce did the same in 1989, down to the detail of imprisoning his algebra class ; in 1996, Barry Loukaitis killed his algebra teacher and two others , before holding the rest of the class to ransom.
(12) At the time of Simon's birth in Ashton-under-Lyne, Lancashire, his father was awaiting demobilisation, and the shape of his early years was dictated by Richard's academic employment, first in Hull, which took Simon to Hymer's College, then at Leicester, where he went to Wyggeston grammar school and developed a lasting affection for Leicester City FC.
(13) Of the 11 different camera products Lyne tested personally, three contained the much-publicised Heartbleed vulnerability , while four didn’t use any encryption at all, meaning a hacker could easily intercept data being sent to and from the cameras, including usernames and passwords.
(14) Richardson-Lyne has been trying to have a child for 10 years but has suffered three ectopic pregnancies.
(15) David Jolley Willow Wood Hospice, Ashton under Lyne • Two of your contributors talk about difficulties in accessing painkillers at the end of life.
(16) London jazz festival The singer, composer and bassist Esperanza Spalding has broken out of the jazz loop with more pop-oriented music, but she comes to the 2013 LJF as a virtuoso double bassist, part of a trio with the pianist Geri Allen and drummer Terri Lyne Carrington.
(17) In 1970 they reached No 12 with the rollicking single Down the Dustpipe, but the ensuing albums Ma Kelly’s Greasy Spoon (1970) and Dog of Two Head (1971), their first without Lynes, were unsuccessful.
(18) * Not her real name Stepchildren cost my my own baby Tracey Richardson-Lyne in Leicester.
(19) The new lineup – Parfitt and Rossi plus the drummer John Coghlan, bassist Alan Lancaster and keyboard player Roy Lynes – immediately felt their luck changing as their single Pictures of Matchstick Men (1968), written by Rossi, reached No 7 in the UK and the Top 40 in the US.
(20) "It's completely unfair and I feel very angry about it," says Richardson-Lyne, an accounts clerk in the city.
Lynx
Definition:
(n.) Any one of several species of feline animals of the genus Felis, and subgenus Lynx. They have a short tail, and usually a pencil of hair on the tip of the ears.
(n.) One of the northern constellations.
Example Sentences:
(1) The complete primary structure of the major hemoglobin component from the adult European lynx (Lynx lynx) is presented.
(2) A total of €33m (£28.5m) – most of it provided by the regional government of Andalucía – has been spent so far on saving the lynx.
(3) Lynx on the loose after breaking out of Dartmoor zoo Read more Actually, Mee and his team know roughly where Flaviu is.
(4) The WWF has warned that the Iberian lynx, found only in Spain and Portugal, could become the first big cat to go extinct since the sabre-tooth tiger died out 10,000 years ago.
(5) The second phase of the programme involved trying to expand the narrow gene pool of the lynxes in the Doñana region.
(6) A further €50m has been committed for work to reintroduce the lynx to other areas of Spain and Portugal, with the bulk of this coming from the EU.
(7) The Iberian lynx is the only feline classified in the highest category of risk of extinction,” said Catherine Numa of the Spanish branch of the Geneva-based body.
(8) Spain's endangered Iberian lynx was brought back from brink of extinction thanks to an imaginative conservation programme that has brought hunters, farmers and the tourist industry under its wing.
(9) Visual evoked potentials were recorded from the occipital scalp of two anaesthetized Lynx (Lynx europea) in response to alternating gratings of various spatial frequencies and contrasts.
(10) Rabies virus was pantropic in naturally infected gray foxes and a bobcat (Lynx rufus).
(11) A Kuterevo bear takes a dip Bears aside– though bears alone are a pretty convincing reason to visit anywhere – the national park of the northern Velebit is home to over 2,700 plant species, as well as wolves, lynx, birds of prey and rarities such as the long-fingered bat and capercaillie .
(12) Read the second batch of Prince Charles's letters in full Read more Beef farming, dairy quotas, the power of supermarkets, Lynx helicopters, badger culling, listed buildings, summer schools, old-fashioned teaching methods and herbal medicines – Prince Charles filled ministers’ pigeon-holes with idiosyncratic lobbying letters covering an astonishing array of issues.
(13) Adult lynxes, which are about a metre long and weigh around 10kg – twice the size of a wildcat – have been reintroduced to the surrounding hills.
(14) Vegaolmosponce's idea was that you could mix two Lynx fragrances to get a third and that in turn would help men attract a gorgeous "mixable" woman.
(15) Rewilding plans by conservationists, similar to efforts to reintroduce wolves, lynx and other species to the UK , could also be harmed by the loss of wilderness, because the world risked losing a true picture of what certain ecosystems looked like.
(16) Slightly larger than a red fox and distinguished by its black ear tufts, the lynx has seen its population ravaged by farming, poaching and a decline in wild rabbits, its main prey, due to disease.
(17) The rise in lynx road deaths comes as efforts to boost lynx numbers through breeding programmes are starting to pay off.
(18) Of the 18 mammals surveyed, only the Iberian lynx ( Lynx pardinus ) is still declining, with a decrease of 84% since 1965 and only 279 individuals thought to remain in the wild.
(19) Finland approves wolf hunt in trial cull Read more Thanks to people finally shrugging off the fairytale baddies that teach us to fear this carnivore, and thanks to protection from an EU directive on habitats, wolf numbers – along with those of lynx and brown bears – have been slowly recovering in Europe .
(20) Having persuaded local hunters and landowners to stop shooting and laying down snares in lynx territory, conservationists have since been capturing animals and relocating young adult lynxes in protected territory.