Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Millicent Fenwick" ¶ 16
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Millicent and Hammond
Millicent Hammond Fenwick ( February 25, 1910 – September 16, 1992 ) was an American fashion editor, politician and diplomat.
Born Millicent Vernon Hammond, she was the middle of three children born to renowned politician and later Ambassador to Spain, Ogden Haggerty Hammond ( October 13, 1869 – October 29, 1956 ) of Louisville, Kentucky and his first wife, Mary Picton Stevens ( May 16, 1885 – May 7, 1915 ) of Hoboken, New Jersey.
In 1931 Millicent Hammond got to know Hugh McLeod Fenwick ( February 17, 1905 – July 24, 1991 ), who was already married to the former Dorothy Ledyard, daughter of New York attorney Lewis Cass Ledyard.

Millicent and Fenwick
* Millicent Fenwick ( 1910 – 92 ), U. S. Congresswoman, United States representative to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization.
The Center holds the archive of Albert's Congressional papers along with those of Robert S. Kerr, Helen Gahagan Douglas, Millicent Fenwick, Ernest Istook, Fred R. Harris, Percy Gassaway, and many others.
Lautenberg won the election, defeating popular Republican congresswoman Millicent Fenwick by 52 % to 48 %.
Andrews, for example, referenced Lautenberg's own 1982 defeat of Millicent Fenwick, in which Lautenberg was alleged to have referred to Fenwick's age ( Fenwick was 72 at the time ; Lautenberg was 84 in 2008 ).
** Millicent Fenwick ( R ), 48 %
Millicent Fenwick, in the 1948 Vogue's Book of Etiquette states that "' Xmas ' should never be used " in greeting cards.
Hugh Fenwick remarried while Millicent Fenwick did not.
** Millicent Fenwick ( R ), 48 %
Millicent Fenwick: Her Way ( 2003 ).
de: Millicent Fenwick
* Millicent Fenwick ( 1910 – 1992 ), American politician and diplomat
* Fenwick, Millicent
With Martha he had six children: John Stevens ( b. July 1856 ), grandfather of Millicent Fenwick ; Edwin Augustus Stevens Jr. ( b. March 14, 1858 ); Caroline Bayard Stevens ( b. November 21, 1859 ), who married Archibald Alexander and then H. Otto Wittpenn ; Robert Livingston Stevens ( b. August 26, 1864 ); Charles Albert Stevens ( b. December 14, 1865 ); and Richard Stevens ( b. May 1868 ).
) Thereafter, he served as the second United States Ambassador to the United Nations Agencies for Food and Agriculture from 1987 to 1988, succeeding Millicent Fenwick.

Millicent and at
In 1922, Steiner brought these ideas to Oxford at the invitation of Professor Millicent Mackenzie and the Oxford Conference led to the founding of Waldorf schools in Britain.
Doorway of Millicent Fawcett's home at No. 2, Gower Street ( London ) | Gower Street, London, with blue commemorative plaque
In 1868 Millicent joined the London Suffrage Committee, and in 1869 she spoke at the first public pro-suffrage meeting to be held in London.
The archives of Millicent Garrett Fawcett are held at The Women's Library at London Metropolitan University, ref 7MGF.
The archives of Millicent Fawcett are held at The Women's Library at London Metropolitan University, ref 7MGF
Angry at this decision, some of the group's leaders, including Lydia Becker and Millicent Fawcett, stormed out of the meeting and created an alternative organisation committed to the " old rules ," called the Great College Street Society after the location of its headquarters.
** Henry Huttleston Rogers homepage at Millicent Library website
Rather than remain at the studio for further tuition Le Mesurier decided to leave and take a position in repertory theatre with the Edinburgh-based Millicent Ward Repertory Players, earning £ 3. 10s a week.
Born at Markethill, County Armagh, Gosford was the son of Arthur Acheson, 1st Earl of Gosford, and his wife Millicent ( née Pole ).
The then Marquess of Tavistock married on 20 June 1961 at St Clement Danes in London Henrietta Joan Tiarks ( born London, 5 March 1940 ), daughter of Henry Frederick Tiarks III ( born Woodheath, Chislehurst, 8 September 1900-died Marbella, 2 July 1995 ), a merchant banker with Schroders, who had married firstly on 27 April 1930 ( divorced in 1936 ) Lady Millicent Olivia Mary Taylour ( died 24 December 1975 ), daughter of Geoffrey Taylour, 4th Marquess of Headfort ; Henry Frederick Tiarks married secondly ( 3 October 1936 ) Ina Florence Marshman Bell ( born London, 5 November 1903-died Marbella, 10 April 1989 ), an actress known as Joan Barry, who had married firstly Henry Hampson.
It grew out of The Millicent Protocol for Inexpensive Electronic Commerce, which was presented at the 1995 World Wide Web Conference in Boston, but became associated with Compaq after that company purchased Digital Equipment Corporation.
Edward Palmer was the son of James Bardin Palmer, an Irish barrister who had come to the Island at the beginning of the nineteenth century, and Millicent Jones.
In 1933, Burke was cast as Mrs. Millicent Jordan, a scatterbrained high-society woman hosting a dinner party in the comedy Dinner at Eight, directed by George Cukor, co-starring with Lionel Barrymore, Marie Dressler, John Barrymore, Jean Harlow and Wallace Beery.
Though that vision was never achieved two factors led to a more innovative and experimental nature at Kirkland: first, the introduction of progressive views of undergraduate education on the part of Millicent C. McIntosh, former President of Barnard College, and second, the mandate to " make a fresh attack on introducing major fields of learning " without being constrained by the more traditional patterns at Hamilton-a mandate embraced by Kirkland's president, Samuel F. Babbitt.
Wells started in cabaret at Oxford and began his television career as a writer on That Was The Week That Was, the 1960s weekly satire show that launched the careers of David Frost and Millicent Martin, among others, and also appeared in the television programme Not So Much a Programme, More a Way of Life, as well as in The Secret Policeman's Other Ball.
Millicent gave birth to a son, John, in 1598. Until his return to Hopton in 1620, Gell lived with his mother and stepfather at Kedleston.
A performance of the play was arranged by the New Stage Club at the Bijou Theatre in Archer Street, London, on 10 and 13 May 1905, starring Millicent Murby as Salome and directed by Florence Farr.
Montagu was born at Melchbourne, Bedfordshire the second son of George Montagu, 6th Duke of Manchester by his first wife Millicent, daughter of Robert Bernard Sparrow.
Actors that have performed at Regent's Park Open Air Theatre include: Benedict Cumberbatch, Anna Neagle, Robert Helpmann, Vivian Leigh, Eileen Atkins, Leslie French, Bill Kenwright, Felicity Kendal, Anthony Andrews, Wayne Sleep, Ricky Tomlinson, Jeremy Irons, Zoë Wanamaker, Judi Dench, Celia Imrie, Lesley Garrett, Douglas Hodge, Richard E Grant, Natasha Richardson, Ralph Fiennes, Christopher Biggins, Jenny Galloway, Joanna Riding, Samantha Spiro, Jenna Russell, Liz Robertson, Toyah Willcox, Bernard Bresslaw ( who died in his dressing room at Regent's Park Open Air Theatre, while performing the part of Grumio in the 1993 production of The Taming of the Shrew ), Nigel Planer, Nigel Harman, Su Pollard, Milton Jones, John Malkovich, Scarlett Strallen, Sheridan Smith, Summer Strallen, Topol, Millicent Martin, Janie Dee, Clive Rowe, Martha Wainwright, Hannah Waddingham and Helen Dallimore.

Millicent and United
Newson and Louise had six daughters and four sons, including Millicent and Elizabeth, later famous as the first woman in the United Kingdom to qualify as a doctor.

Hammond and Fenwick
They had two children, Mary Stevens Fenwick ( born February 25, 1934, died 1987 ) and Hugh Hammond Fenwick ( born January 28, 1937 ; died 2002 ), but separated a few years later and were divorced in 1945.

Hammond and at
England had a very strong batting side, with Wally Hammond contributing 905 runs at an average of 113. 12, and Hobbs, Sutcliffe and Patsy Hendren all scoring heavily ; the bowling was more than adequate, without being outstanding.
At Francis C. Hammond High School in Alexandria, Virginia, he did poorly academically, having little interest in school work, but was popular with other students, and after leaving decided that he wanted to study painting at college, thereby beginning his studies at School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston in 1964, where he was a roommate of Peter Wolf.
Originally located at 4200 West Diversey Avenue in Chicago, Illinois, Hammond is now owned by Suzuki Musical Inst.
Having finished his apprenticeship with Hammond, Keats registered as a medical student at Guy's Hospital ( now part of King's College London ) and began studying there in October 1815.
Keats's long and expensive medical training with Hammond and at Guy's Hospital led his family to assume that medicine would be his lifelong career, assuring financial security, and it seems that at this point Keats had a genuine desire to become a doctor.
Hammond was Grotius ’ only notable Protestant convert, and despite his reputation and influence, Grotius ’ interpretation of Revelation was overwhelmingly rejected by Protestants and gained no ground for at least 100 years.
During his discussions with George Hammond, first British Minister to the U. S. from 1791, Jefferson tried to achieve three important goals: secure British admission of violating the Treaty of Paris ( 1783 ) ; vacate their posts in the Northwest ( the territory between the Appalachian Mountains and the Mississippi River north of the Ohio ); and compensate the United States to pay American slave owners for the slaves whom the British had freed and evacuated at the end of the war.
She was given a pass by General William Hammond to ride in army ambulances to provide comfort to the soldiers and nurse them back to health and lobbied the U. S. Army bureaucracy, at first without success, to bring her own medical supplies to the battlefields.
Describes the photophone work of Hammond V Hayes at the Bell Labs ( patented 1897 ) and the German engineer H T Simon in the same year.
The rhythm section of a jazz band consists of the percussion, double bass or bass guitar, and usually at least one instrument capable of playing chords, such as a piano, guitar, Hammond organ or vibes ; most will usually have more than one of these.
While all went well for the recording used to produce the album, the debut tour performance at the same venue ground to a halt as the power failed, just as Emerson arrived at the Hammond organ to open the next part of the piece.
* " Blues Variation " from Pictures at an Exhibition also contains an uncredited quote of the ' head ' of Bill Evans ' minor blues piece " Interplay ", during Keith Emerson's Hammond Organ solo.
In 2008, Müller's Anatomie Titus was translated into English by Julian Hammond and performed at the Cremorne Theatre in Brisbane, the Canberra Theatre, the Playhouse in the Sydney Opera House and the Malthouse Theatre, Melbourne by the Bell Shakespeare Company and the Queensland Theatre Company.
Speedway racing was staged at a stadium in New Hammond Beck Road in the 1970s and 1980s.
The 2008 1st & 2nd half Western Division champions take the field in game 2 of the playoffs at Hammond Stadium
By doing this study, Hammond found that the mean gestational age ( how many weeks when birthed ) at birth was 33. 4 weeks for triplets and 31 weeks for quadruplets.
In 2005, student Chris Heady wrote, directed, and produced a live stage version of The Secret of Monkey Island at Hammond High School in Columbia, Maryland.
On August 1, 2002, John Gaeta was changing a tire at a parking lot in Hammond, Louisiana and was shot in the neck by Malvo.
Following the historic Hammond Lumber Company railroad grade, the trail begins at the Hammond Bridge – which crosses the Mad River near the Mad River County Park – and extends north to Clam Beach County Park just south of Little River State Beach.
In 1905, the Hammond School was built at Johnson Ferry Road and Mt.
In 1959, after a fire at Hammond Elementary School, Atlanta Mayor William Hartsfield urged residents to support annexation so that the area would have better firefighting protection.

0.629 seconds.