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Sir and Reginald
Hussein learned of the agreement when it was leaked by the new Russian government in December 1917, but was satisfied by two disingenuous telegrams from Sir Reginald Wingate, High Commissioner of Egypt, assuring him that the British government's commitments to the Arabs were still valid and that the Sykes-Picot Agreement was not a formal treaty.
All of the twenty four members of the Sierra Leonean delegation were prominent and well-respected politicians including Sir Milton's younger brother lawyer Sir Albert Margai, the outspoken trade unionist Siaka Stevens, SLPP strongman Lamina Sankoh, outspoken Creole activist Isaac Wallace-Johnson, Paramount chief Ella Koblo Gulama, educationist Mohamed Sanusi Mustapha, Dr John Karefa-Smart, professor Kande Bureh, lawyer Sir Banja Tejan-Sie, former Freetown's Mayor Eustace Henry Taylor Cummings educationist Amadu Wurie, and Creole diplomat Hector Reginald Sylvanus Boltman.
A week after his appointment Haig met Vice-Admiral Sir Reginald Bacon, who emphasised the importance of obtaining control of the Belgian coast, to end the threat from there by German naval forces.
* Sir Reginald Hibbert, GCMG Chargé d ' Affaires in Ulan Bator, Mongolia, 1964 66 ; Minister at Bonn 1972 75 ; Assistant Under-Secretary of State, Foreign and Commonwealth Office 1975 76 ; Deputy Under-Secretary of State 1976 79 ; Ambassador to France 1979 82.
When he was knighted, he became Sir Elton John rather than Sir Reginald Dwight.
During the attack on Becket in 1170 by the four knights, Sir Reginald FitzUrse, Sir Hugh de Morville, Brito and Sir William de Tracy, Brito is said to have broken his sword when chopping at Becket's head.
Sir Geoffrey Pole was arrested in August 1538 ; he had been corresponding with Reginald, and the investigation of Henry Courtenay, Marquess of Exeter ( Henry VIII's first cousin and the Countess ' second cousin ) had turned up his name ; he had appealed to Thomas Cromwell, who had him arrested and interrogated.
Under interrogation, Sir Geoffrey said that his eldest brother, Lord Montagu, and the Marquess had been parties to his correspondence with Reginald.
Sir Reginald Blomfield's Talbot Hall, Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford.
The architect of the main college buildings was Sir Reginald Blomfield who used the French Renaissance style of the 17th century and chose red brick with white stone facings.
Since then it has been endowed with papers from other political figures including former Prime Ministers Margaret Thatcher and John Major, as well as former Leader of the Opposition Neil Kinnock, alongside those of eminent scientists and engineers, including Reginald Victor Jones, Rosalind Franklin and Sir Frank Whittle.
* Reginald Marsh — Andrew / Sir
Cat poses as a lady of loose morals and confronts town boss Sir Harry Percival ( Reginald Denny ), owner of the Wolf City Development Corporation.
* Reginald Denny as Sir Harry Percival
( The apostrophe was removed in a rebranding in 2006 ) Shortly after the merger, in 1907, the College added a new Arts building, designed by Sir Reginald Blomfield, at the back of the main building.
The road is featured briefly in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows when Harry and his friends were escaping from Death Eaters, by J. K. Rowling ; The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins ; Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf ; Pygmalion by George Bernard Shaw and its musical adaptation, My Fair Lady ; Saturday and Atonement by Ian McEwan ; several Sherlock Holmes stories by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle ; the Saki story Reginald on Christmas Presents ; several stories by John Collier ; A Room with a View by E. M. Forster ; The London Eye Mystery, The Late Mr Elvesham by Herbert G. Wells by Siobhan Dowd ; The Wish House by Celia Rees ; a The Matrix-based story, Goliath by Neil Gaiman ; features often in novels by Mark Billingham and The Lonely Londoners by Sam Selvon.
* Colonel Sir Reginald Dorman-Smith GBE, was the Conservative and Unionist Member of Parliament for Petersfield
* Sir Reginald Goodall-noted English conductor
The University's first classes in the Government house were held in 1911 with 83 commencing students and Sir William MacGregor is the first chancellor ( with Reginald Heber Roe as vice-chancellor ).
Among notable people who have chosen to retire to or have second homes in Bury St Edmunds are former members of parliament and government ministers Lord Tebbit, Sir John Wheeler, Sir Eldon Griffiths, and former senior Royal Air Force commander Air Marshall Sir Reginald Harland.

Sir and Eustace
The Maxwells, under their chief, Sir Eustace Maxwell, made a vigorous defence that repelled the English several times.
Possession of the castle was subsequently restored to Sir Eustace Maxwell, Sir Herbert's son, who at first embraced the cause of John Balliol, and in 1312 received from Edward I an allowance of £ 20 for the more secure keeping of the castle.
Fearing that this important stronghold might ultimately fall into the hands of the enemy, and enable them to make good their hold on the district, Sir Eustace dismantled the fortress, a service and sacrifice for which he was liberally rewarded by Robert Bruce.
By 1337 the castle was once again inhabited, and Sir Eustace now changed sides again, giving his support to Edward Balliol.
* 1640-1649: Sir Maurice Eustace
While staying at his London club as he has been doing every morning for many years, Sir Eustace Pennefather, a known womanizer whose divorce from his current wife is pending, receives a complimentary box of chocolates through the post.
Disapproving of such modern marketing techniques, Sir Eustace is about to throw away the chocolates in disgust but changes his mind when he learns that Graham Bendix, another member of the club whom he hardly knows, has lost a bet with his wife Joan and now owes her a box of chocolates.
Quite soon in the police investigations it becomes evident that the intended victim was Sir Eustace himself rather than the innocent Joan Bendix: No criminal could have predicted Sir Eustace giving away the box of chocolates to a man he hardly knew who just happened to be present when it was delivered.
Not surprisingly, they come up with various suspects: Sir Eustace's estranged wife ; the father of a young lady whom Sir Eustace intended to marry after his divorce got through ; one of Sir Eustace's discarded mistresses ; and some more.
The plot centres on Lizzie Greystock, a fortune-hunter who ensnares the sickly, dissipated Sir Florian Eustace and is soon left a very wealthy widow and mother.
* Sir Herbert Eustace Maxwell: The Life and letters of George William Frederick 4.
Sir Eustace Missenden General Manager ( 1939 Nationalisation ); Chairman, Railway Executive ( 1947 1951 ).
* Sir Maurice Eustace ( 1660 1665 )
Another member of the Tennyson family was the naval architect Sir Eustace Tennyson-d ' Eyncourt, 1st Baronet.
* Sir Eustace Missenden ( 1948 1951 )
Sir Reginald Eustace Goodwin ( usually known as Sir Reg Goodwin ) ( 3 July 1908-29 September 1986 ) was a British politician.

Sir and Goodwin
| Queen's Representative || Sir Frederick Goodwin KBE || || 9 February 2001 </ tr >
:" Mr Cotton Mather was the most active and forward of any Minister in the Country in those matters Goodwin children and Goody Glover, taking home one of the Children, and managing such intrigues with that Child, and after printing such an account of the whole, in his Memorable Provinces in 1689, as conduced much to the kindling of those Flames, that in Sir Williams time Salem Witch Trials threatened the devouring of this Country.
* January 16 Vice-Admiral Sir Richard Goodwin Keats Governor of Newfoundland ( d. 1834 )
* April 5 Vice-Admiral Sir Richard Goodwin Keats, Governor of Newfoundland ( b. 1757 )
As a result of a motion brought forward by Sir Edward Birkbeck, a Royal Commission was established to look at the issue of ' electrical communication ' and gave its first Report in 1892 ; the East Goodwin lightvessel was used during one of Guglielmo Marconi's early experiments in radio transmission in 1896.
It is a steel frame arch bridge with an unusual concrete veneer and was opened to traffic on 30 March 1932 by Sir John Goodwin, the Governor of Queensland.
* 1963 1966 Lieutenant-General Sir Richard Goodwin
by the University of Glasgow in 2002, the same year as Sir Fred Goodwin.
After the second defeat in 1970 Goodwin became more aggressive in his opposition to Sir Desmond Plummer's Conservative GLC.
More recent examples include Sir Roger Casement, whose knighthood was cancelled for treason during the First World War, Sir Anthony Blunt whose knighthood was withdrawn in 1979 and Fred Goodwin on 1 February 2012.
* Lieutenant-General Sir Richard Goodwin, 1966 1969
Admiral Sir Richard Goodwin Keats ( 16 January 1757 5 April 1834 ) was a British naval officer who fought throughout the American Revolution, French Revolutionary War and Napoleonic War.
Engraving of the Monument to Sir Richard Goodwin Keats in Greenwich Hospital © National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London.
The hills of Pinehaven were first planted with their trademark pine trees in 1928 by Sir Francis Chichester and Mr G. D. M Goodwin.
Sir Frederick Tutu Goodwin is the Queen's Representative to the Cook Islands.
Brisbane City Hall was opened in 1930 by Queensland Governor ( Sir John Goodwin ).

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