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Brookes and list
The impressive entry list included ex-World Championship drivers Hannu Mikkola, Ari Vatanen ( partnered by his 1981 WRC winning co-driver David Richards ), Björn Waldegård, Stig Blomqvist, Malcolm Wilson, Russell Brookes, Jimmy McRae, Andrew Cowan and Louise Aitken-Walker, many competing in their original cars.

Brookes and tennis
* September 28 – Norman Brookes, Australian tennis champion ( b. 1877 )
* Mabel Brookes-Community worker and activist, who was president of the Queen Victoria Hospital from 1923 to 1970, lived in South Yarra with her tennis playing husband Norman Brookes.

Brookes and players
Harriers proved a rich source of young quality players picked up by professional football clubs at this time, those moving to bigger clubs including full back Billy Blake ( Crystal Palace ), winger Fred Leedham ( transferred to West Bromwich Albion for £ 300 ), Dennis Jennings ( to Huddersfield Town for £ 600 ) and forward Norman Brookes ( to Walsall for £ 70 ).

Brookes and put
The hotel manager Mr. Brookes ( Jeffrey Combs ) tells them the next few days will be rough and tells them to stay put in the meantime.

Brookes and Wilding
* Wimbledon Men's Singles Championship – Norman Brookes ( Australia ) defeats Anthony Wilding ( New Zealand ) 6 – 4 6 – 4 7 – 5

Brookes and fourth
Oxford Brookes University has three main campuses and a fourth in Swindon.
The rally was a big success for Talbot as the team also took the third and fourth places, driven by Fréquelin and Russell Brookes, respectively.
The fourth match was defaulted by Wright, and Larned stepped aside to give the younger McLoughlin the opportunity to play Brookes.

Brookes and behind
The driving force behind the meeting was James H. Brookes, a Presbyterian minister from St. Louis.
In September 2012, he was awarded an honorary doctorate from Oxford Brookes University, and in the same year he began to deliver public lectures across the United Kingdom on his experiences in front of and behind the lens.
The secretary of the class and driving force behind the Olympian Games was Dr William Penny Brookes who was inspired to create these events after he read of the premature deaths of weavers thought to be due to lack of exercise.

Brookes and Bill
After being divested from Coles Myer ( later Coles Group, then purchased by Wesfarmers ), new owners Newbridge Capital and the Myer family appointed chairman Bill Wavish and chief executive Bernie Brookes, both formerly of Woolworths.

Brookes and .
* Small, E., Catling, Paul M., Cayouette, J., and Brookes, B. Audubon: Beyond Birds: Plant Portraits and Conservation Heritage of John James Audubon, 2009.
However, Oxford Brookes University historian David Nash says the removal of the scene represented " a form of self-censorship " and the Otto sequence " which involved a character representative of extreme forms of Zionism " was cut " in the interests of smoothing the way for the film's distribution in America.
Thomas Arnold, the Head Master of Rugby School, was an important influence on Coubertin's thoughts about education, but his meetings with Dr. William Penny Brookes also influenced his thinking about athletic competition to some extent.
A trained physician, Brookes believed that the best way to prevent illness was through physical exercise.
Along with the Liverpool Athletic Club, who began holding their own Olympic Festival in the 1860s, Brookes created a National Olympian Association which aimed to encourage such local competition in cities across Britain.
Brookes also maintained communication with the government and sporting advocates in Greece, seeking a revival of the Olympic Games internationally under the auspices of the Greek government.
The efforts of Brookes to encourage the internationalisation of these games came to naught.
However, Dr Brookes did organise a national Olympic Games in London, at Crystal Palace, in 1866 and this was the first Olympics to resemble an Olympic Games to be held outside of Greece.
The idea for reviving the Olympic Games as an international competition came to Coubertin in 1889, apparently independently of Brookes, and he spent the following five years organising an international meeting of athletes and sports enthusiasts that might make it happen.
Dr Brookes had organised a national Olympic Games that was held at Crystal Palace in London in 1866.
In response to a newspaper appeal, Brookes wrote to Coubertin in 1890, and the two began an exchange of letters on education and sport.
That October, Brookes hosted the Frenchman at a special festival held in his honour at Much Wenlock.
Although he was too old to attend the 1894 Congress, Brookes would continue to support Coubertin's efforts, most importantly by using his connections with the Greek government to seek its support in the endeavour.
While Brookes ' contribution to the revival of the Olympic Games was recognised in Britain at the time, Coubertin in his later writings largely neglected to mention the role the Englishman played in their development.
* Mike Brookes: Matrix Reference Manual.
On 13 May 1952, in a meeting of the Executive Council, Prime Minister Robert Menzies established ASIS by the executive power of the Commonwealth under s 61 of the Constitution, appointing Alfred Deakin Brookes as head.
* A. Chorti and M. Brookes ( 2007 ), " Resolving near-carrier spectral infinities due to 1 / ƒ phase noise in oscillators ", ICASSP 2007, Vol.
It was here that, in October 1850, the local physician William Penny Brookes had founded the Wenlock Olympian Games, a festival of sports and recreations that included athletics and team sports, such as cricket, football and quoits.
The northern portion of the land grant was purchased by Henry Brookes, and he built his home ' Montpelier ' there in the late 1780s or early 1790s.
* 2006: Honorary doctorate from Oxford Brookes University.

1950 and compiled
In 1950 the All India Kabaddi Federation came into existence and compiled standard rules.
The Kabaddi Federation of India ( KFI ) was founded in 1950, and it compiled a standard set of rules.
Under his editorship, the first edition of the Dictionary of Welsh Biography was compiled, though not published until after his death ( 1950 ).
* A list of Cairo's Belle Époque architects 1900 – 1950, compiled by Samir Raafat.
* a shorthand for the Atlas Coeli Skalnate Pleso 1950. 0, a popular sky atlas for amateur astronomers that was compiled at the observatory.
The listing for the house, compiled in 1950, describes No 18 as having a painted facade, and that the first floor frames are enriched with a trellis pattern.
His writings appeared first in the Anthology of the Generation of 1950, compiled by Enrique Lafourcade, a well-known Chilean writer.
Snider compiled a total of 1, 031 RBI from 1950 to 1959 and Ennis knocked in 1, 025 in the decade of the 50's.
In 1950 he began his longest coaching stint, at Harvard University, where he compiled a record of 316 – 172 – 17 before retiring in 1971.
Phillip Fulmer ( born September 1, 1950 ) is a TV college football analyst and the former head coach of the Tennessee Volunteers football team, who compiled a 152 – 52 record from 1992 – 2008 as head coach, but was fired during a 5 – 7 season in 2008.
During 1949 and 1950, baritone saxophonist Gerry Mulligan participated in the Miles Davis Nonet, contributing arrangements to the recordings that were later compiled as Birth of the Cool ( 1957 ).
His career winning percentage was the highest of any pitcher prior to 1950 with at least 250 decisions ; some sources recognize him as having compiled the highest winning percentage of any pitcher with at least 200 decisions ( and retired as of 2006 ) in major league history.

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