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March and Clerihew
* March 30 – Edmund Clerihew Bentley, English inventor ( b. 1875 )

March and Bentley
E. C. Bentley ( 10 July 187530 March 1956 ) was a popular English novelist and humorist of the early twentieth century, and the inventor of the clerihew, an irregular form of humorous verse on biographical topics.
Bentley was one of the five congressmen injured on the floor of the U. S. House of Representatives on March 1, 1954, when Puerto Rican nationalist terrorists opened fire from the gallery.
* January to March 2006: Sound Theatre in London starring Andrew Garfield, Gavin Brocker, Leo Bill, Sophie Stanton and Naomi Bentley.
At the end of March 1981 the band rehearsed and recorded new songs for their debut album including the follow-up single " Let Him Have It ", inspired by the Derek Bentley / Christopher Craig case.
* March 2011: Bentley acquires the SACS business from Engineering Dynamics, Inc.
* March 2012: Bentley acquires elcoSystems business of of Hannappel Software, based in Wiesbaden, Germany.
In a June 2008 interview with Bad Religion bassist Jay Bentley, he mentioned that Graffin would be teaching there from January to March 2009.
In March 1948 Bentley and another boy were arrested for theft.
In March 1951, Bentley was employed by a furniture removal firm but was forced to leave the job after injuring his back in March 1952.
In a case with similarities to the Bentley case, a House of Lords judgment of 17 July 1997, cleared Philip English of murdering Sergeant Bill Forth in March 1993, the reasons being given by Lord Hutton.
Released in March 1998, the album was recorded in fits and starts over a period of two years and featured his former band mates Duff McKagan and Rick Richards, as well as former Reverend Horton Heat drummer Taz Bentley, whose work Stradlin admired.
With their Headquarters at RAF Bentley Priory the ROC remained administered by Fighter Command until 31 March 1968 when responsibility was handed over to the newly formed RAF Strike Command.
In March 2012, Bentley had a supporting role in the blockbuster movie The Hunger Games, playing gamemaker Seneca Crane.
It seems that Bentley provoked the former tyre supplier by attempting a new record with a different brand because, on March 6, 2011, Nokian Tyres test driver, piloting an Audi RS6 with Nokian Hakkapeliitta 7 studded tyres, took the ice speed record in Finland, clocking a top speed of in freezing conditions.
* George Strait & The Ace in the Hole — February 13, 2003, with Tammy Cochran, March 4, 2005, with Dierks Bentley and March 2, 2007, with Taylor Swift and Ronnie Milsap
Robert Bentley ( 25 March 1821 – 24 December 1893 ) was an English botanist.
Bartolucci and Attorney General Chris Bentley appealed to the federal government to introduce stricter gun control legislation in March 2008, including a ban on handguns.
John Francis Bentley ( 30 January 1839 – 2 March 1902 ) was an English ecclesiastical architect whose most famous work is the Westminster Cathedral in London, England, built in a style heavily influenced by Byzantine architecture.
Bentley Rhythm Ace ( BRA ) are a duo formed in Birmingham, England in 1997, consisting of Mike Stokes and Richard March.
Headquarters ROC at RAF Bentley Priory finally closed on 31 March 1996 after all administrative winding-up tasks were completed.
White-Jacket ; or, The World in a Man-of-War, usually referred to as White-Jacket, is an 1850 novel by Herman Melville first published in England on January 23 by Richard Bentley and in the U. S. on March 21 by Harper & Brothers.

March and novelist
But his rancor did not cease, and presently, on March 13, when he preached a sermon on the text, `` And Ben-hadad Was Drunk '', he told his congregation how disappointed he was in Mr. Lewis, how he regretted having had him in his house, and how he should have been warned by the fact that the novelist was drunk all the time that he was working on the book.
Charlotte Brontë (; 21 April 1816 – 31 March 1855 ) was an English novelist and poet, the eldest of the three Brontë sisters who survived into adulthood, whose novels are English literature standards.
Laurence Sterne ( 24 November 1713 – 18 March 1768 ) was an Anglo-Irish novelist and an Anglican clergyman.
Louisa May Alcott ( November 29, 1832 – March 6, 1888 ) was an American novelist best known as author of the novel Little Women and its sequels Little Men and Jo's Boys.
Peter Nilson ( 17 October 1937 – 8 March 1998 ) was a Swedish astronomer and novelist.
In March 2009, British family care activist and a best-selling novelist Erin Pizzey reportedly declined to comment on the temporary withdrawal by its publishers of the book Andrew Marr's History of Modern Britain following her complaint it had falsely linked her to The Angry Brigade.
William Ford Gibson ( born March 17, 1948 ) is an American-Canadian speculative fiction novelist who has been called the " noir prophet " of the cyberpunk subgenre.
* March 23 – T. P. Cameron Wilson, English poet and novelist ( b. 1888 )
* March 27 – Arnold Bennett, English novelist ( b. 1867 )
* March 9 – Charles Brackett, American novelist and screenwriter ( b. 1892 )
* March 6 – Ross Lockridge, Jr., American novelist ( suicide ) ( b. 1914 )
* March 15 – Alicia Freilich, Venezuelan writer and novelist
* March 4 – Joseph Henry Shorthouse, English novelist ( b. 1834 )
* March 2 – Sholom Aleichem, Ukrainian Yiddish novelist ( d. 1916 )
* March 19 – Thomas Bailey Aldrich, American poet and novelist ( b. 1836 )
* March 23 – Edwin O ' Connor, American novelist and Pulitzer Prize for Fiction winner ( b. 1918 )
* March 26 – Raymond Chandler, American-born novelist ( b. 1888 )
* March 16 – Jenny Eclair, British comedian, actress and novelist
* March 7 – Kōbō Abe, Japanese novelist ( d. 1993 )
* March 19 – Irving Wallace, American novelist ( d. 1990 )
* March 16 – Flora Eldershaw, Australian novelist, critic, and historian ( d. 1956 )
* March 27 – Harriet Adams, American novelist ( b. 1892 )
* March 17 – Paul Green, novelist and Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright ( d. 1981 )
* March 13 – Sir Hugh Walpole, English novelist ( d. 1941 )
* March 2 – Tom Wolfe, American author and novelist

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