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Cruickshank and PGA
Robert Allan Cruickshank ( 16 November 1894 – 27 August 1975 ) was a prominent Scottish professional golfer on the PGA of America circuit from the early 1920s to the mid-1930s.

Cruickshank and times
The Collier / Cruickshank Punch has been republished in facsimile several times.
Cruickshank recorded her long life and aspects of her times in her autobiography, Octobiography ( 1987 ), which was published posthumously.

Cruickshank and champion
Mandy-Rae Cruickshank ( born May 10, 1974, in Canada ) is a world champion free-diver and record-holder from Vancouver, British Columbia.

Cruickshank and .
Architectural historian Dan Cruickshank selected the Palace as one of his five choices for the 2006 BBC television documentary series Britain's Best Buildings.
In 2009 the BBC broadcast Cruickshank on Kew: The Garden That Changed the World, a history of the relationship between Kew Gardens, David Attenborough's kingdom of plants 3D ( Aired on Sky Atlantic, and Sky 3D ' June 2012 '), and the British Empire.
In 2006 the BBC ran a series of programmes called The Lost World of Friese-Greene, presented by Dan Cruickshank about Claude Friese-Greene's road trip from Land's End to John o ' Groats, The Open Road, which he filmed from 1924 to 1926 using the Biocolour process.
The architects were Wilson & Womersley, in association with the University planning officer, H. Thomas ; for St Peter's House the architects were Cruickshank & Seward.
He worked as an investments analyst for Laing & Cruickshank Investment Management ( bought by UBS in 2004 ) from 1981-5, and then in corporate finance for S. G. Warburg Securities ( bought by UBS in 1994 ) from 1985 – 92, where he became a director from 1990-2.
Architectural historian Dan Cruickshank selected the Castle as one of his eight choices for the 2002 BBC book The Story of Britain's Best Buildings.
In 1836 he entered Marischal College where he came under the influence of Professor of Mathematics John Cruickshank, Professor of Chemistry Thomas Clark and Professor of Natural Philosophy William Knight.
Dr. Alexander Cruickshank Houston used chlorination of the water to stem the epidemic.
Dan Cruickshank also views the church in his Adventures in Architecture.
Also on the site is the Cruickshank Botanic Garden which was presented to the university in 1899 and is open to the public.
On the " Omnicide " 7 ", bass and some vocals were by Morag Cruickshank from the Aberdeen grindcore band Grunge.
Editor Tom Cruickshank came on board in 1996, after Telemedia sold Harrowsmith Country Life, and its sister publication Equinox, to its current owner Malcolm Publishing, a small Montreal company.
In 2000, the Sun-Times new editors, Michael Cooke and John Cruickshank, tapped longtime staff reporter Mark Brown, who had considered himself an investigative reporter, to write a column that would anchor page two of the paper.
Meg Morris became engaged to fellow officer Dennis Cruickshank, but the relationship ended when escapee Frank Burke shot and paralysed Cruickshank.
* Aldermen: N. Andreychuk, S. Berry, J. Cruickshank, N. DiFlavio, W. Fertich, J. Johnston, D. Kadwell, D. Wilson

rose and prominence
Because in early Anglo-Latin writing, paterfamilias (" head of a family, householder ") usually referred to a ceorl, Donald A. Bullough suggests that Alcuin's family was of cierlisc status: i. e., free but subordinate to a noble lord, and that Alcuin and other members of his family rose to prominence through beneficial connections with the aristocracy.
The Borgia family originally came from the Kingdom of Valencia, and rose to prominence during the mid-15th century ; Cesare's great-uncle Alonso Borgia ( 1378 – 1458 ), bishop of Valencia, was elected Pope Callixtus III in 1455.
Coming from modest beginnings in Savona, Liguria, the family rose to prominence through nepotism and ambitious marriages arranged by two Della Rovere popes, Francesco della Rovere, who ruled as Pope Sixtus IV ( 1471 – 1484 ) and his nephew Giuliano ( Pope Julius II, 1503 – 1513 ).
One such family, the Flavians, or gens Flavia, rose from relative obscurity to prominence in just four generations, acquiring wealth and status under the emperors of the Julio-Claudian dynasty.
This policy undermined senatorial power, as more reliable equestrian commanders rose to prominence.
Other niche programs such as The Lawrence Welk Show ( which targeted older audiences ) and Soul Train ( a black-oriented program ) also rose to prominence in syndication during the era.
The Vijayanagara Empire rose to prominence as a culmination of attempts by the southern powers to ward off Islamic invasions by the end of the 13th century.
He rose to prominence through his service in the First World War, receiving numerous honours and decorations, and continued his military career through various British campaigns across Europe and Asia.
" One such man, a warrior called Dingiswayo ( the Troubled One ) of the Mtetwa rose to prominence.
In the late 1940s, they quickly rose to national prominence, first with their popular nightclub act, next as stars of their own radio program.
He gained experience as an executive as the Governor of Virginia and rose to national prominence as a diplomat in France, when he helped negotiate the Louisiana Purchase in 1803.
Nehru quickly rose to prominence under the mentorship of Gandhi.
Joplin first rose to prominence in the late 1960s as the lead singer of the psychedelic-acid rock band Big Brother and the Holding Company, and later as a solo artist with her more soulful and bluesy backing groups, The Kozmic Blues Band and The Full Tilt Boogie Band.
Notably, the Phalange, a Maronite militia, rose to prominence around this time, led by members of the Gemayel family.
After the Khitans left Mongolia the Shiwei Mongols rose to prominence, when from the 1130s there were reciprocally hostile relations between the successive khans of the Khamag Mongol confederation ( Khaidu, Khabul Khan and Ambaghai Khan ) and the emperors of the Jin dynasty.
While the republican government had been restored, Munich subsequently became a hotbed of extremist politics, among which Adolf Hitler and the National Socialism rose to prominence.
The rich musical possibilities in the poetry of the late 16th and early 17th centuries provided an attractive basis for the madrigal, which quickly rose to prominence as the pre-eminent musical form in Italian musical culture, as discussed by Tim Carter:
The family rose to prominence in the late 1st century CE.
She first rose to prominence as an academic, barrister, campaigner and member of the Irish Senate ( 1969 – 1989 ).
Reconstructionism rose to prominence in the 1980s and 1990s.
The New Left in Japan began simultaneously with the British and American movements and rose to prominence in the country by occupying college campuses for several years in the 1960s.
In the first decades of the 19th century, three Oromo monarchies, Enarya, Goma and Guma, rose to prominence.
However, the rise of grasses in the Miocene ( about 20 Mya ) saw a major change: the even-toed ungulates with their more complex stomachs were better able to adapt to a coarse, low-nutrition diet, and soon rose to prominence.
After lumber baron William B. Cox purchased the team in 1943, the Phillies began a rapid rise to prominence in the National League, as the team rose out of the standings cellar for the first time in five years.
Commissioned in Pakistan Army in 1964, Musharraf rose to national prominence after being appointed to the four-star assignments in October 1998 by then-Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif.

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