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Carew and for
Sir John Carew Eccles, AC FRS FRACP FRSNZ FAAS ( 27 January 1903 – 2 May 1997 ) was an Australian neurophysiologist who won the 1963 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his work on the synapse.
John Carew Eccles performed some of the important early experiments on synaptic integration, for which he received the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1963.
The four contenders for the batting title that year were Brett and Royals teammate Hal McRae, and Minnesota Twins teammates Rod Carew and Lyman Bostock.
A more recent English translation is by John Carew Rolfe ( 1927 ) for the Loeb Classical Library.
In 1887, the Metropolitan Railway was extended from Harrow-on-the-Hill to Rickmansworth, and Carnegie sold his land to Frank Murray Maxwell Hallowell Carew for development for £ 59, 422.
Carew stipulated the prices for the new housing he had built, with the cottages along the west side of the High Street priced at £ 120.
It is not considered exclusive, though, with Carew ( for example ) falling into both sides, in some opinions (' metaphysical ' was in any case a retrospective term ).
vii., and his correspondence with Lord Carew in 1615 and 1617 by Sir F. Maclean for the same society in 1860.
This interlude was printed in William Carew Hazlitt's edition of Dodsley's Old English Plays, by James Orchard Halliwell-Phillipps for the Percy Soc.
He was therefore sent to Italy as a member of Sir Dudley's household and, when the ambassador returned from Venice, he seems to have kept Thomas Carew with him, for he was working as secretary to Carleton, at the Hague, early in 1616.
* Index entry for Thomas Carew at Poets ' Corner
Some of the English landowners settled in Ireland after the Plantations of Ireland also patronised Irish poets, for instance George Carew and Roger Boyle.
Kirk bought a section at 12 Carew Street for just NZ £ 40 ( compared to today's land valuation of NZ $ 126, 000 ).
In appreciation for this, Mrs. Carew named the boy Rodney Cline Carew.
Although Carew attended George Washington High School, which MLB star Manny Ramirez also attended, he never played baseball for the high school team.
Instead, Carew played semi-pro baseball for the Bronx Cavaliers, which is where he was discovered by Minnesota Twins ' scout, Monroe Katz ( whose son, Steve, played with Carew on the Cavaliers ).
Carew stole home seven times in the 1969 season to lead the majors, just missing Ty Cobb's Major League record of eight and the most in the major leagues since Pete Reiser stole seven for the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1946.
In, Carew led the American League in batting, hitting. 318, and remarkably, without hitting a single home run for the only time in his career.
In 1975, Carew joined Ty Cobb as the only players to lead both the American and National Leagues in batting average for three consecutive seasons.
Seeing time predominantly at second base early in his career, Carew moved to first base in September and stayed there for the rest of his career.

Carew and by
* Carew: A Story of Civil War in the West Country by Dennis Russell, ( Aidan Ellis Publishing, 2001 ).
Sluggers Harmon Killebrew and Bob Allison, who had already been stars in Washington, were joined by Tony Oliva and Zoilo Versalles, and later second baseman Rod Carew and pitchers Jim Kaat and Jim Perry, winning the American League pennant in 1965.
In 1969, the new manager of the Twins, Billy Martin, pushed aggressive base running all-around, and Rod Carew set the all-time Major League record by stealing home seven times.
New characters Jim ' Kimo ' Carew ( played by William Smith ), Lori Wilson ( played by Sharon Farrell ), and Truck ( played by Moe Keale ) were introduced in season 12 alongside returning regular character Duke Lukela.
However, " only Mr. Robert sometimes desires it and is a little entered in it ", but despite the " many reasons " given by Carew to turn their attentions to it, " they practice the French and Latin but they affect not the Irish ".
In October 1602, Boyle was again sent over by Sir George Carew, the president of Munster, on Irish affairs.
He was knighted at St Mary's Abbey, near Dublin, by Carew on 25 July 1603.
Cork had also been left the manor of Saltcombe ( Salcombe ) in Devon by his friend Thomas Stafford the iligitamate son of George Carew, 1st Earl of Totnes.
The Domesday Book mentions two Beddington estates and these were united by Nicholas Carew to form Carew Manor in 1381.
The Grade I listed banqueting hall, which boasts a fine hammerbeam roof, survives from the original house along with part of the orangery built by Sir Francis Carew and claimed to be the first in England.
Archaeologists have recently discovered a Tudor garden including a grotto at Carew Manor, believed to have been created by Sir Francis Carew in the 16th century.
The Grade I listed banqueting hall, which boasts a fine hammerbeam roof, survives from the original house along with part of the orangery built by Sir Francis Carew and claimed to be the first in England.
The characters of Muriel Carew and Ivy Pearson do not appear in Stevenson's original story but do appear in the 1887 stage version by playwright Thomas Russell Sullivan.
After finishing second in the league in batting in 1977 to Twins teammate Rod Carew, Bostock became one of baseball's earliest big-money free agents, and signed with the California Angels, owned by Gene Autry.
* about. com-Spacemen 3 profile including biography by Andrew Carew
File: Nelson's Column-North Face Of Plinth Trafalgar Square-London-240404. jpg | North side of the plinth, depicting the Death of Nelson, by John Edward Carew
Dodsley is, however, best known as the editor of two collections: Select Collection of Old Plays ( 12 vols., 1744 ; 2nd edition with notes by Isaac Reed, 12 vols., 1780 ; 4th edition, by William Carew Hazlitt, 1874 – 1876, 15 vols.

Carew and British
Among prominent Fifth Monarchists were Thomas Harrison, Christopher Feake, Vavasor Powell, John Carew, John Rogers and Robert Blackborne, Secretary of the Admiralty and later of the British East India Company.
* Baron Carew, a title in the British peerage
* Sir Alexander Carew, 2nd Baronet ( 1609 – 1644 ), British Member of Parliament involved in the English Civil War
* Benjamin Hallowell Carew ( 1761-1834 ) British admiral during the Napoleonic Wars, one of Horatio Nelson's " Band of Brothers "
* Charles Robert Sydenham Carew ( 1853 – 1939 ), British Conservative politician
* David Plant, John Carew, Regicide, 1622 – 60, the British Civil Wars and Commonwealth website
* Faith and Folklore of the British Isles, by William Carew Hazlitt, Kessinger Publishing.
It is set in Nepal (" to the north of Kathmandu "), during the British Raj and tells the tale of a wild young officer known as " Mad Carew ", who steals the " green eye " of a " yellow god " ( presumably an emerald in a gold statue ) in order to impress his beloved.

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