[ noun ] (European mythology) a supernatural smith and king of the elves; identified with Norse Volund <noun.person>
There are good vernacular 'fishing village' designs by architects like Richard Mac Cormac, Wayland Tunley, Peter Aldington and Ralph Erskine.
Gainesville Police Chief Wayland Clifton said he remains confident the case will be solved but cautions citizens not to let down their guard.
At greatest risk are infants born to women who eat fish once a week caught by non-commercial anglers, said Wayland Swain, former director of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Great Lakes research laboratory in Grosse Ile, Mich.
Wayland Hicks, a Xerox executive vice president, said Xerox should continue recapturing market share from the Japanese with the new machines, although the recovery will come more slowly than did the rapid decline of the 1970s and early 1980s.
Although Textron's Mr. Wayland isn't a director, he does serve on the ruling management committee.
Police Chief Wayland Clifton claimed the two-clerk requirement was a major reason why convenience store robberies in the city dropped from 61 in 1986 to 23 last year and eight so far this year.
I didn't sleep." Finally, at 6:30 a.m. Wednesday, Charlie Mann, interim superintendent of buildings and grounds at Wayland Academy in this southeast Wisconsin city, asked Forrester if she was in the elevator.