Example sentences of "later to [be] " in BNC.

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1 In the same way I was unable to do much else but grin and bear it when my then assistant chief constable ( crime ) , Ken Oxford ( later to be the chief constable of Merseyside ) implicitly restated police concepts of correct bodily order , when he jokingly told a group of visiting journalists who had come to do a story on this wayward group of detectives , ‘ we pay him a plain clothes allowance you know ’ .
2 Masha had , in fact , learned the terrible lesson as the despicable pogroms developed into a policy of national hatred and persecution , later to be transformed into actual genocide and thence into the horrors of the Holocaust .
3 In all this he found time to address meetings for these and many other bodies , hold weekly classes for teaching the youth of his synagogue post-biblical history and related subjects , write articles for the Jewish press ( he founded an Anglo Jewish Journal called The Jewish Times later to be absorbed into the Canadian Jewish Chronicle ) .
4 It included such as Wanda Staniszewska , Jackie Gallagher , Buddy Rozynski ( cousin of Louis Dudek ) and Aileen Collins ( later to be Mrs L. Dudek ) , Robert A. Currie , Yaffa Lerner , Anna Azzulo , Betty Sutherland ( later Mrs Sutherland Layton ) , and Dudek himself .
5 In BR 's blue-and-grey standard coach livery , later to be repainted in classic Pullman umber and cream , the Pullmans made their SLOA debut behind ‘ Back Five ’ No 5407 on the Carlisle-Hellifield Cumbrian Mountain Pullman on 2 May 1981 .
6 But these social and technological changes hardly brought a more leisurely or carefree life to the farming families ( who were later to be emigrants to Britain , see Table I ) .
7 His mentor , Enrico Fermi , later to be called ‘ the father of the bomb ’ , and Emilio Segre ( who died in California earlier this year ) .
8 The home of the Arts Lab which was later to be re-named ‘ Growth ’
9 Stage costume idea , later to be discarded , circa 1971
10 Paisley 's standing among the urban working-class ‘ secular ’ Protestants was considerably enhanced , and that support was later to be translated into support in elections .
11 ‘ All I can say though is that whatever happens it will be my decision , ’ she said , revealing the determination and single-mindedness that was later to be turned against her .
12 Although Futurism succumbed to the ravages of the First World War and its surviving adherents were later to be put to flight by Mussolini , many of its observations and its leading artists , such as Severini , Picabia , Boccioni and Balla continue to inspire the main stream of modern art .
13 Rush , later to be carried off with what Mr Bonds termed a ‘ bad groin injury ’ , also had a shot turned aside by Flowers , who later flung himself to keep out a stinging shot by Allen .
14 For the District it was a period of the funded-tutor enterprise which was later to be challenged through the gradual development of a new regional policy by the Cambridge University Extra-Mural Board .
15 Louis ( later to be known as ‘ the Pious ’ ) would rule the Spanish March , Aquitaine and Provence .
16 In the ensuing massacre , eleven men , Narcissa Whitman and two children were savagely killed and forty-seven people captured , later to be ransomed .
17 Dutch manure and fertiliser rates are due to be reduced until a 50 mg/litre soil water concentration is achieved at 2m depth , later to be cut to 25 mg/litre .
18 It was he who , with others in the legendary Room 40 at the Admiralty under the direction of Sir Alfred Ewing ( later to be Principal and Vice-Chancellor of Edinburgh University ) , had decoded the famous Zimmermann telegram which played its part in bringing the United States into the First World War .
19 It was Christmas 1781 when news filtered through that they were celebrating at the Red Lion at Bishopsgate ( an inn later to be made famous by Dickens 's Old Curiosity Shop ) .
20 Had all four defendants committed the brutal crimes , or had just two of the brother perpetrated these heinous events , later to be joined by William who had done his best to abet them after the event ?
21 The young Disraeli , later to be the chief manager of the Victorian imperial pageant , deplored the colonies as ‘ millstones round our neck ’ .
22 All were later to be intensely involved in the civil rights movement .
23 At Pittsburgh , Daniel Burnham , later to be more famous for his Beaux-Arts work , designed an office-block station which was erected between 1898 and 1901 .
24 This was to prove a bargain offer as the contents alone were later to be sold for £6 million .
25 It was Molly Piggott , later to be Molly Curdle , who took out Ruth Bassett 's little nephew Paul Young each afternoon .
26 Her mother at one time took in a lodger — and she was later to be raped by the man .
27 As Programme Director for the new radio station , I enlisted the services of our original staff ( Sid Boyling , Louis Bourgeois and Bob McLean ) as announcers , and we shortly made use of Louis H. Lewry , later to be known as ‘ Scoop ’ Lewry , and ‘ Hendy ’ Henderson .
28 The Reverend George R Wedgewood , later to be Vice-President of the Conference , lectured on the eighteenth century and the place of the Wesleys in it and the Reverend Mark Guy Pearse , colleague of Hugh Price Hughes of West London Mission , spoke on Cornwall .
29 The institutes which began to open in London in the late 1850s appear to have recruited from among the lower-middle class , though Waldo McGillicuddy Eagar , a young Edwardian club worker ( later to be a leading figure in the National Association of Boys ' Clubs ) claimed that ‘ as anxiety about the working classes was intensified , some Youths ’ Institutes reached down from the middle classes to the poor , and increasingly diluted their formal educational programmes with recreational activities .
30 This attitude was most apparent in a speech given in the Isle of Dogs in 1978 by Sir Geoffrey Howe , later to be Mrs Thatcher 's first Chancellor ( Howe , 1978 ) .
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