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Charles and Osborne
Charles Osborne novelised three of Christie's plays:
* Osborne, Charles, The Complete Operas of Puccini, New York: Da Capo Press, 1983
* Osborne, Charles ( 1991 ).
Frontiersman Charles " Buffalo " Jones lived in a sod house for a time in Osborne County prior to his co-founding Garden City, Kansas, in 1879.
The show went through several orchestras during its radio life, including those of Ennis, Charles Hoff, Matty Matlock, Matty Malneck, Jack Meakin, Will Osborne, Fred Rich, Leith Stevens, and Peter van Steeden.
Anthon was home to Charles Osborne, who had the hiccups continuously for 68 years, and was featured in the Guinness Book of World Records.
They were Charles Gavan Duffy, who became editor ; Thomas Osborne Davis, and John Blake Dillon.
Charles Osborne: " Cards on the Table is one of Agatha Christie's finest and most original pieces of crime fiction: even though the murderer is, as the author has promised, one of the four bridge players, the ending is positively brilliant and a complete surprise.
With the fall of the Cabal ( only Lauderdale lingered on in Scotland ), Charles II turned to Thomas Osborne ( Earl of Danby ) as his chief minister.
Charles was unimpressed, but handed the matter over to one of his ministers, Thomas Osborne, the Earl of Danby ; Osborne was more willing to listen and was introduced to Oates by Tonge.
Thomas Osborne, 1st Duke of Leeds | Thomas Osborne, Earl of Danby ( 1631-1712 ), who became Charles II's main adviser following the fall of the Cabal Ministry, and who drew support from former Cavaliers and the supporters of the established Church of England.
Charles II now turned to Thomas Osborne, Earl of Danby.
Thomas Osborne, 1st Duke of Leeds, KG ( 20 February 1632 – 26 July 1712 ), English statesman ( commonly known as Lord Danby and of Carmarthen when he was a prominent political figure ), served in a variety of offices under Kings Charles II and William III of England.
When he went for interview for entrance to the Royal Naval College, Osborne, Isle of Wight, Charles Rolls had completed his cross-channel flight the previous day and Blackett who had tracked the flight on his crystal set was able to expound lengthily on the subject.
Asa Osborne has released a CD and 7 " with Charles Brohawn of The Tinklers under the name Tear Jerks.
For a short time, he assisted Charles Osborne in editing the Philanthropist.
Osborne Gordon, the influential Oxford don, Sir John Josiah Guest, engineer, entrepreneur, and Member of Parliament, Sir Cedric Hardwicke, the Hollywood character actor, Ralph Lingen, 1st Baron Lingen, an influential Victorian civil servant ; Dr William Macmichael, physician to Kings George IV and William IV and author of The Gold-Headed Cane, Bishop Thomas Percy, Bishop of Dromore and author of Reliques of Ancient English Poetry, Henry John Roby, the classical scholar, writer on Roman law, and Member of Parliament, Bishop Francis Henry Thicknesse, inaugural Suffragan Bishop of Leicester, General Sir Charles Warren, Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police during the period of the Jack the Ripper Murders and a General in the Second Boer War, and Cyril Washbrook, the cricketer who played for Lancashire and England.
Brophy also wrote several non-fiction books and essays, including Black Ship to Hell ( 1962 ; an appreciation of Shavian and Freudian ideas ), Mozart the Dramatist ( 1964 ) and ( with her husband and Charles Osborne ) Fifty Works of English Literature We Could Do Without ( 1967 ).
* ( With husband, Michael Levey, and Charles Osborne ) Fifty Works of English and American Literature We Could Do Without ( 1967 )
These included Charles Godfrey, the Headmaster of Osborne ( whose brother became head of naval Intelligence during the Second World War ), two Naval instructors, Parish and Curtiss and scientist and mathematician Professor Henderson from Greenwich Naval College.
Charles Gavan Duffy was one of the founders of The Nation and became its first editor ; the two others were Thomas Osborne Davis, and John Blake Dillon.
In 1907, Governor Charles Evans Hughes selected Osborne to serve as upstate commissioner on the state's first Public Services Commission.

Charles and architect
Constantino Brumidi designed the decorative scheme as a whole, in collaboration with the architect Charles U. Walter, at the time when plans were being made to replace the wooden dome of Bullfinch with the present much larger iron structure.
* 1754 – Pierre Charles L ' Enfant, French-American architect and engineer, planner of Washington, D. C. ( d. 1825 )
File: Secondtempleplan. jpg | The Visionary Ezekiel Temple plan drawn by the 19th century French architect and Bible scholar Charles Chipiez.
Other well-known Coolidges, architect Charles Allerton Coolidge, General Charles Austin Coolidge, and diplomat Archibald Cary Coolidge among them, were descended from branches of the family that had remained in Massachusetts.
* 1928 – Charles Rennie Mackintosh, Scottish architect and illustrator ( b. 1868 )
Among the most prominent members were the loose collective of The Four: acclaimed architect Charles Rennie Mackintosh, his wife the painter and glass artist Margaret MacDonald, her sister the artist Frances, and her husband, the artist and teacher Herbert MacNair.
Pei and his team also designed a united urban area for Washington, D. C., L ' Enfant Plaza ( named for French-American architect Pierre Charles L ' Enfant ).
* 1907 – Charles Eames, American designer and architect ( d. 1978 )
* 1860 – Charles Barry, English architect ( b. 1795 )
* 1795 – Charles Barry, English architect ( d. 1860 )
Charles Welsford West ( architect ) designed the Romanesque chapel and annex ( 1903 – 05 ) at Mount St. Vincent Academy ( now University ).
The subsequent competition for the reconstruction of the Palace was won by architect Charles Barry and his design for a building in the Perpendicular Gothic style.
Charles Henry Wheeler ( architect ) designed the
** Charles Willard Moore, American architect ( b. 1926 )
* December 10 – Charles Rennie Mackintosh, Scottish architect ( b. 1868 )
* August 21 – Charles Eames, American architect and designer ( b. 1907 )
* March 17 – Peter Charles, architect
* May 12 – Sir Charles Barry, English architect ( b. 1795 )
* June 7 – Charles Rennie Mackintosh, Scottish architect ( d. 1928 )
* August 9 – Pierre Charles L ' Enfant, French architect ( d. 1825 )
* May 23 – Charles Barry, English architect ( d. 1860 )
Charles was the patron of the Nuremberg Frauenkirche, built between 1352 and 1362 ( the architect was likely Peter Parler ), where the imperial court worshiped during its stays in Nuremberg.
Famous pseudonyms of people who were neither authors nor actors include the architect Le Corbusier (Charles Édouard Jeanneret ), and the statistician Student ( né William Sealey Gosset ), discoverer of Student's < var > t </ var >- distribution in statistics ( Gosset's employer prohibited publication by employees to prevent trade secrets being revealed ).

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