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  2. Andrew Heywood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Heywood

    Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; ... Andrew Heywood is a British author of textbooks on politics and political science. [1] ...

  3. Heywood baronets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heywood_baronets

    Sir Arthur Percival Heywood, 3rd Baronet (1849–1916) Sir (Graham) Percival Heywood, CB, DSO, 4th Baronet (1878–1946) Sir Oliver Kerr Heywood, 5th Baronet (1920–1992) Sir Peter Heywood, 6th Baronet (born 1947) The heir presumptive to the baronetcy is Michael Heywood (born 1947), 2nd son of the 5th Baronet and younger twin brother of the ...

  4. John B. Heywood (engineer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_B._Heywood_(engineer)

    Heywood grew up in the United Kingdom in an academic family, [1] the child of a mechanical engineer father, Harold Heywood, and a metallurgist mother, Frances Heywood.After graduating from Cambridge University with a BA, he moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1960 to study at MIT for a master's degree in 1962, and completed a PhD in mechanical engineering in 1965.

  5. James Modyford Heywood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Modyford_Heywood

    Portrait of his mother, Mrs. James Heywood, by Michael Dahl, c. 1730. Heywood was the only son of James Heywood (c1684–1738), of Maristow (near Roborough in Devon) and Jamaica, and the former Mary Elton (1706–1755), [1] daughter of Sir Abraham Elton, 2nd Baronet of Clevedon Court, MP for Bristol and Taunton. [2]

  6. The Play of the Weather - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Play_of_the_Weather

    The Play of the Weather is an English interlude or morality play from the early Tudor period.The play was written by John Heywood, a courtier, musician and playwright during the reigns of Henry VIII, Edward VI and Mary I and published by his brother-in-law, William Rastell, in 1533 as The Play of the Wether, a new and mery interlude of all maner of Wethers.

  7. Arthur Heywood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur_Heywood

    The Heywood radiating axle locomotives could pass very tight curves by a special axle arrangement. This was first drawn by Arthur Heywood in 1877 and described in a book published in 1881, much earlier than the patent filings of the Klien-Lindner axle and Luttermöller axle. On steam locomotives with three axles the frame of the middle axis ...

  8. It's the end of the road for these cars: Models that won't ...

    www.aol.com/end-road-cars-models-wont-131806139.html

    A number of car models won't ring in the new year.. The Ford Edge, Toyota Venza and Mini Clubman are just some of the vehicles that won't make it past model year 2024 in U.S. markets.

  9. The English Traveller - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_English_Traveller

    The play was first performed by Queen Henrietta's Men, an important company of players in Caroline England, and for which Heywood wrote other plays.According to the Stationers' Register, The English Traveller was entered to the printer Nicholas Okes on 15 July 1633, the entry reading "a Comedy called the Traveller by Mr Heywood". [2]