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Alan and Davidson
Australia won 4 – 0 in 1958 – 59, having found a high-quality spinner of their own in new skipper Richie Benaud, who took 31 wickets in the five-Test series, and paceman Alan Davidson, who took 24 wickets at 19. 00.
* 2003 – Alan Davidson, British author ( b. 1924 )
* Davidson, Alan.
* Alan Davidson – Former Australian cricketer
Food writer Alan Davidson suggests that the people of Ancient Romans were the first known to have made products of the haggis type.
After mentioning that this fish was sacred to Hecate, Alan Davidson writes, " Cicero, Horace, Juvenal, Martial, Pliny, Seneca and Suetonius have left abundant and interesting testimony to the red mullet fever which began to affect wealthy Romans during the last years of the Republic and really gripped them in the early Empire.
In 1980, playing against India, he became the first player to score a century and take ten wickets in a Test match ( Alan Davidson was the first to score 100 runs and take 10 wickets in a Test but that did not include a century ).
Along with fellow bowling all-rounder Alan Davidson, he helped restore Australia to the top of world cricket in the late 1950s and early 1960s after a slump in the early 1950s.
He also put on 167 in a partnership with Alan Davidson, the first collaboration between the pair, who would later go on to lead Australia's bowling in the last five years of their career.
The First Test in Brisbane ended in the first tie in Test history, which came about after Benaud and Alan Davidson, rather than settle for a draw, decided to risk defeat and play an attacking partnership, which took Australia to the brink of victory.
* March 30 – Alan Davidson, British author ( d. 2003 )
* Davidson, Alan.
* Davidson, Alan.
Alan Davidson, editor of the Oxford Companion to Food, found no printed recipe for the present-day croissant in any French recipe book before the early 20th century ; the earliest French reference to a croissant he found was among the " fantasy or luxury breads " in Payen's Des substances alimentaires, 1853.
* Alan Davidson, The Oxford Companion to Food
According to Alan Davidson, the French word omelette came into use during the mid-16th century, but the versions alumelle and alumete are employed by the Ménagier de Paris ( II, 5 ) in 1393.
* Davidson, Alan ( 1975 ).
Alan Davidson and Jennifer Davidson, eds.
Two of his former players and two of Kingston ’ s greatest hockey stars died in World War I ; Alan ( Scotty ) Davidson was lost in battle in 1915 just one year after he helped the Toronto Blueshirts win the Stanley Cup and another Kingston hockey great, Capt.
He wrote suggesting the trophy in memory of the boys who were killed in the war and no doubt a big part of the idea was instigated by his devotion to his beloved ( Alan ) Scotty Davidson *, who fell ( June 6, 1915 ) with many other hockey players in the world conflict ( including Capt.
Jim Carrey, David Alan Grier, Tommy Davidson, T ' Keyah Crystal Keymáh, and " Fly Girl " Deidre Lang are the only cast members who remained on the show throughout all five seasons, although Carrey's presence during the fifth season was limited due to his rising movie career, while Davidson missed most of the fourth season for unknown reasons.
During the first half of 1984, this period of transition and the storyline developments with the new cast were complemented by return appearances from departed characters such as Wally Wallace ( Alan Hopgood ), Helen Smart, Erica Davidson, Doreen Burns, Margo Gaffney, Tracy Morris ( albeit played by a new actress ) and Marie Winter ( though this also marked the final appearance of all these characters ).

Alan and Oxford
In June 1139, Stephen held his court in Oxford, where a fight between Alan of Brittany and Roger's men broke out, an incident probably deliberately created by Stephen.
Hinsley and Alan Stripp, eds., Codebreakers: The Inside Story of Bletchley Park, Oxford University Press, 1993.
While studying music and composition there, he also performed with Alan Bennett in the Oxford Revue.
John Bassett, Wadham College, Oxford graduate and assistant to Ponsonby, recommended jazz band mate and rising cabaret talent Dudley Moore, who in turn recommended Alan Bennett, who had been a hit at Edinburgh a few years before.
* Alan Rook, editor of the 1936 issue of New Oxford Poetry, one of the Cairo poets
Faye Mishna, Alan McLuckie, and Michael Saini, co-authors of the Oxford Journal article Real-World Dangers in an Online Reality: A Qualitative Study Examining Online Relationships and Cyber Abuse, reported the results of their research and observation of over 35, 000 individuals between the ages of 6 and 24 who have been or currently are a part of an internet relationship.
At the end of the year he was defeated for the Presidency of the Oxford Union by another Balliol candidate, Alan Wood, on the issue of whether the Chamberlain government should give way to a left-wing Popular Front.
* Richard Stoker, ‘ Bush, Alan Dudley ( 1900 – 1995 )’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 17 February 2008
* Brown, Bruce Alan, Gluck and the French Theatre in Vienna Oxford: Clarendon Press 1991
In June 1139, Stephen held his court in Oxford, where a fight between Alan of Brittany and Roger's men broke out, an incident probably deliberately created by Stephen.
St Catherine's College was founded by the distinguished historian Alan Bullock, who went on to become the first Master of the College, and later Vice-Chancellor of Oxford University.
Factory's headquarters ( FAC 251 ) on Charles Street, near the Oxford Road BBC building, were opened in September 1990 ( prior to which the company was still registered at Alan Erasmus ' flat in Didsbury ).
* Bailey, Alan, Sextus Empiricus and Pyrrhonean scepticism ( Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002 ).
* Lane, Alan & Campbell, Ewan, Dunadd: An early Dalriadic capital, Oxbow Books, Oxford, 2000.
Alan R. Thrasher ; Sheng article, Grove Music Online, Oxford Music Online.
* Alan Charles Kors, " The Atheism of D ' Holbach and Naigeon ", Atheism from the Reformation to the Enlightenment ( Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1992 ).
* Alan Bell, ‘ Stephen, Sir Leslie ( 1832 – 1904 )’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, Sept 2004 ; online edn, May 2006
In Oxford Bruner collected a large group of graduate students and post-doctoral fellows who participated in the effort to understand how young children manage to crack the linguistic code, among them Alison Gopnik, Magda Kalmar: hu: Kalmár Magda ( pszichológus ), Alan Leslie, Andrew Meltzoff, Anat Ninio, Roy Pea, Susan Sugarman, Michael Scaife, Marian Sigman, Kathy Sylva
Alan Atkinson wrote in The Europeans in Australia ( Oxford University Press, 1997 ): " Townshend was an anomaly in the British Cabinet, and his ideas were in some ways old-fashioned ...

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