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Deakin and played
On television, Deakin played Stella Tulley in Side by Side and Marsha, the ageing divorcée landlady, in the British sitcom Spaced ( 1999 ).
" In addition to band members Malo, Reynolds, Deakin, and Kane, Jerry Dale McFadden played piano and organ, and added background vocals.
Jack deeply loves his wife May ( played by Sherrie Hewson in the pilot episode, with her scenes re-recorded by Julia Deakin when repeated as the first episode of the regular series ) who runs the station buffet, but is prone to becoming very jealous of her around other men.
John Deakin was played by Tony Doyle, another well-established character actor.
In his junior years he played for Croatia Deakin.

Deakin and landlady
Despite barely knowing each other, they conspire to pose as a young professional couple in order to meet the requisites of an advertisement for a relatively cheap flat in the distinctive building at 23 Meteor Street, Tufnell Park, which is owned by and also houses the landlady, Marsha Klein ( Julia Deakin ).

Deakin and Mary
Other sitting Councillors are Gary Bramich ( until 2015 ), Kevin Deakin ( 2015 ), Colleen Dibley ( 2013 ), Mary Duniam ( 2013 ), Darren Fairbrother ( 2013 ), Clayton J Hawkins ( 2013 ), David Moore ( 2015 ) and StJohn Smith ( 2015 ).

Deakin and film
Pearce starred in several theatre productions when he was young and at 17 years of age auditioned for his first film role " Life and Study at University " a promotion for University study, produced and directed by Peter Lane of Deakin University.

Deakin and by
In recognition of his distinguised services to the Victorian community, he was awarded the degree of Doctor of Laws ( honoris causa ) – LL. D ( h. c .) by Deakin University on 27 April 2010.
* September 24 – Edmund Barton steps down as Prime Minister of Australia and is succeeded by Alfred Deakin.
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 study by Deakin University concluded that a big cat population in the Grampians mountain range is " beyond reasonable doubt ".
He was succeeded as Prime Minister by Deakin on 24 September.
After 1906, Sir Edmund increasingly clashed with Isaac Isaacs and H. B. Higgins, the two advanced liberals appointed to the court by Deakin.
Alfred Deakin appointed Isaacs Attorney-General in 1905 but he was a difficult colleague and in 1906 Deakin was keen to get him out of politics by appointing him to the High Court bench.
The 18 Welsh Premier League clubs met on April 13, 2008 and voted to support a restructuring proposal put forward by Welsh Premier League secretary John Deakin which would replace the single Welsh Premier League with a First and Second Division with 10 teams in each Division for the 2010 – 11 season.
Alfred Deakin described him as " though not rich or versatile, his personality was massive, durable and imposing, resting upon elementary qualities of human nature elevated by a strong mind.
Although Deakin and Griffith had produced a draft bill as early as February 1901, it was continually delayed by opponents in the parliament, and the success of the bill is generally attributed to Deakin's passion and effort in pushing the bill through the parliament despite this opposition.
In 1891, when the Victorian Parliament was considering the federation bill, it was the ANA which organised public meetings around the colony to rally support for the bill, many of them addressed by Deakin.
Cook served as Defence Minister in Deakin's 1909 – 1910 ministry, then succeeded Deakin as Liberal leader when the government was defeated by Labor in the 1910 elections.
He settled on opposition to socialism, criticising both the Australian Labor Party and the support offered to it by the Protectionist Party, led by Alfred Deakin.
The Prime Minister, Alfred Deakin, insisted that the Governor-General's official secretary must be appointed and paid by the Australian government.
In April 1904 the Prime Minister, Alfred Deakin, resigned, and was succeeded in quick succession by the Labor leader Chris Watson, the Free Trade leader George Reid and then Deakin again.
Additional sources listed by the Australian Dictionary of Biography: Dictionary of National Biography, 1931 – 40 ; ' High Court of Justice: Lady Dudley's Separation Allowance ', The Times ( London ), 7 Nov 1918, p 2 ; ' Death of Lady Dudley ', Times ( London ), 28 June 1920, p 16 ; ' Obituary: Lord Dudley ', Times ( London ), 30 June 1932, p 16 ; C. Cunneen, The Role of the Governor-General in Australia 1901-1927 ( PhD thesis, Australian National University, 1973 ); Alfred Deakin papers, MS 1540 / 19 / 275 ( National Library of Australia ).
The next installment of The Book of Mozilla was written by Neil Deakin.
* Consuming Public Services by Nicholas Deakin, Anthony Wright ( Routledge, 1990 ) ISBN 0-415-03208-3

Deakin and Simon
* Simon Deakin and Gillian Morris, Labour Law ( 2005 ) Hart Publishing ISBN 978-1-84113-560-1
Contributors: Jean-Louis Beffa, Margaret Blair, Wendy Carlin, Christophe Clerc, Simon Deakin, Jean-Paul Fitoussi, Donatella Gatti, Gregory Jackson, Xavier Ragot, Antoine Rebérioux, Lorenzo Sacconi and Robert M. Solow.
Catharine Barnard, Gillian S. Morris, and Simon Deakin, eds.

Deakin and she
May Skinner ( nee Blanchflower ) ( Julia Deakin and Sherrie Hewson ) Buffet Manageress-She had a passionate affair with Cecil Parkin before she married Jack, which ended when Parkin was called up to serve in the Army.
Crossin was born in Melbourne and was educated at Deakin University, where she graduated in education.

Deakin and had
* British — Ashton, Helen: Pierrot in Town ( 1913 ); Barrington, Pamela: White Pierrot ( 1932 ); Callaghan, Stella: " Pierrot and the Black Cat " ( 1921 ), Pierrot of the World ( 1923 ); Deakin, Dorothea: The Poet and the Pierrot ( 1905 ); Herring, Paul: The Pierrots on the Pier: A Holiday Entertainment ( 1914 ); Priestley, J. B .: The Good Companions ( 1929 ; plot follows fortunes of a Pierrot troupe, The Dinky Doos ; has had many adaptations, for stage, screen, TV, and radio ).
Deakin was the second child of English immigrants, William Deakin and his wife Sarah Bill, daughter of a Shropshire farmer, who had migrated to Australia in 1850 and settled in the Melbourne suburb of Collingwood in 1853.
Deakin had proposed that the court be composed of five judges, specially selected to the court ; opponents instead proposed that the court should be made up of state Supreme Court justices, taking turns to sit on the High Court on a rotation basis, as had been mooted at the Constitutional Conventions a decade before.
Deakin had envisaged that the court would sit in many different locations, so as to truly be a federal court.
In 1907 Northcote and Deakin had a falling out when the Governor-General, on instructions from London, declined to give his assent to a bill restricting appeals from the Australian courts to the Privy Council in London.
The 2011 Deakin ward by-election, caused by the vacation of the seat by former Cr Andrew Katos, who had won the State seat of South Barwon at the November 2010 Victorian State election, will be held on Saturday 5 March 2011.
The government of prime minister Alfred Deakin and other non-Labor governments had introduced a form of conscription for boys from 12 to 14 years of age and for youths from 18 to 20 years of age between 1905 and 1909.
By the time that the Act was passed two Prime Ministers ( Watson and Deakin ) had both lost their control of Parliament due to disagreements about the content of the Act.
" The introduction by Deakin of James Bryce's The American Commonwealth also had far-reaching influence.
Beginning in 1900, the Australian politician Alfred Deakin wrote anonymous commentaries on Australian politics for the paper, continuing even when he had become Prime Minister.
Deakin was unimpressed and had previously invited the American Great White Fleet to visit Australia in 1908.
Impetus had built in recent years for changes to state-federal financial relations, and Deakin made several important administrative decisions on this matter.
The Deakin University campus at Waurn Ponds had the beginnings in the Gordon Institute of TAFE, who purchased land there in 1969.
Founded by Joseph Deakin in 1891, the Echo has only had four editors in its history.
Maclean made contact with Bill Deakin, an Oxford history don who had served as a research assistant to Churchill ; Anthony Hunter, a Scots Fusilier, and Major William Jones, an enthusiastic but unorthodox one-eyed Canadian.
Reynolds persuaded his friend Paul Deakin to join them on drums, and by the late 1980s, they had added guitarist Ben Peeler and were performing as the Mavericks.
That decision was controversial, as many in the local community had wanted the station be built in Grovedale itself, while others were pushing for the station to be at Waurn Ponds to serve the nearby Deakin University.
His memoir was published as The Embattled Mountain the title referring to Mount Durmitor, the environs of which Deakin and Tito's army had been pursued over by German and Italian forces ; see Battle of the Sutjeska

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