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Howard and Hughes
* 1944 – Melvin Dummar, American forger of Howard Hughes estate
The AIM-7 Sparrow medium range missile ( MRM ) was purchased by the US Navy from original developer Howard Hughes
In addition, numerous faculty members are associated with the Howard Hughes Medical Institute as well as NASA.
* 1905 – Howard Hughes, American film producer and inventor ( d. 1976 )
* Bones, Stones and Genes: The Origin of Modern Humans, Howard Hughes Medical Institute 2011 Holiday Lecture Series.
The movie follows the exploits of a famous art forger, his biographer Clifford Irving, and the subsequent fake autobiography of Howard Hughes that Irving tries to publish.
Shooting began in late February 1930, about the same time that Howard Hughes was finally finishing his epic World War I aviation epic Hell's Angel's after being in production since September 1927.
In 1930 Howard Hughes hired Hawks to direct Scarface, a gangster film loosely based on the life of Chicago mobster Al Capone.
In 1941 Hawks began work on the Howard Hughes produced ( and later directed ) film The Outlaw, based on the life of Billy the Kid and starring Jane Russell.
* Millionaire Howard Hughes lived in hotels during the last ten years of his life ( 1966-76 ), primarily in Las Vegas, as well as Acapulco, Beverly Hills, Boston, Freeport, London, Managua, Nassau, Vancouver, and others.
* 1938 – Howard Hughes sets a new record by completing a 91 hour airplane flight around the world.
* 1946 – Howard Hughes nearly dies when his XF-11 spy plane prototype crashes in a Beverly Hills neighborhood.
* 1937 – Howard Hughes sets a new air record by flying from Los Angeles, California to New York City in 7 hours, 28 minutes, 25 seconds.
Whale next went to work for independent film producer and aviation pioneer Howard Hughes, who planned to turn the previously silent Hughes production Hell's Angels ( 1930 ) into a talkie.
William Jan Berry ( born in Los Angeles, California April 3, 1941 ; died March 26, 2004 ), was the son of aeronautical engineer William L. Berry ( born December 7, 1909 in The Bronx, NY ; died December 19, 2004 in Camarillo, California ), who had been project manager of the " Spruce Goose " and flew on its only flight with Howard Hughes, and Clara Lorentze Mustad Berry ( born September 2, 1919 in Bergen, Norway ; died July 9, 2009 ).
* 1947 – In California, designer Howard Hughes performs the maiden ( and only ) flight of the Spruce Goose or H-4 The Hercules ; the largest fixed-wing aircraft ever built.
He escapes the robot-controlled scow by repairing an old ship, the Aluminum Mallard ( a play on Howard Hughes ' " Spruce Goose " and Star Wars ' Millennium Falcon ).
* Howard Hughes was a friend of Mackenzie and played keyboards live and on his later albums Perhaps, The Glamour Chase and Wild and Lonely.
** Howard Hughes nearly dies in a test flight of the Hughes XF-11 and crashes it in a suburban Beverly Hills neighborhood because of a propeller malfunction.
* July 18 – Howard Hughes is sentenced to life imprisonment at Chester Crown Court for the rape and murder of 7-year-old Sophie Hook at Llandudno 12 months previously.
Howard Hughes
* April 5 – Howard Hughes, American aviation pioneer, film director, and eccentric ( b. 1905 )
** Howard Hughes speaks by telephone to denounce Clifford Irving's supposed biography of him.

Howard and visited
For example a number of explorers who visited the area in the mid 1800s ( e. g. Emmanuel Domenech, Howard Stansbury, Jules Rémy ) noted an abundance of yellow-flowered " onions " on several of the islands, which they identified as Calochortus luteus.
According to figures released by the Association of Leading Visitor Attractions, nearly 220, 000 people visited Castle Howard in 2010.
President William Howard Taft visited Reserve in 1909.
* Presidential candidates William Jennings Bryan visited and spoke in Vermillion on September 28, 1908, and William Howard Taft on the next day.
Prison reformer John Howard ( 1726 – 1790 ) visited Lancaster in 1776 and noted the conditions in the prison.
Among the world leaders who have visited Leinster House to address joint sessions of the Oireachtas are US Presidents John F. Kennedy, Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton, British Prime Minister Tony Blair, Australian Prime Ministers Bob Hawke, Paul Keating, John Howard and French President François Mitterrand.
During filming in Vienna, Howard visited the fairground which was, at that time, under the jurisdiction of the Russians, where, still wearing the uniform of a British Army Major, he was promptly arrested.
Having visited several hundred prisons across England, Scotland, Wales and wider Europe, Howard published the first edition of The State of the Prisons in 1777.
In that house, or the church itself, he was visited by Founding Fathers of the United States such as Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, and Thomas Paine ; other American politicians such as John Adams, who later became the second president of the United States, and his wife Abigail ; British politicians such as Lord Lyttleton, the Earl of Shelburne, Earl Stanhope ( known as " Citizen Stanhope "), and even the Prime Minister William Pitt ; philosophers David Hume and Adam Smith ; agitators such as prison reformer John Howard, gadfly John Horne Tooke, and husband and wife John and Ann Jebb, who between them campaigned on expansion of the franchise, opposition to the war with America, support for the French Revolution, abolitionism, and an end to legal discrimination against Roman Catholics ; writers such as poet and banker Samuel Rogers ; and clergyman-mathematician Thomas Bayes, of Bayes ' theorem.
On January 9, 2001, Lewis visited The Howard Stern Show to promote his book The Other Great Depression, which described his recovery from alcoholism.
Gen. Philip Kearny, who had lost his left arm, visited Howard and joked that they would be able to shop for gloves together.
Four United States presidents visited Charlotte to participate in the Mecklenburg Day celebration: William Howard Taft ( 1909 ), Woodrow Wilson ( 1916 ), Dwight D. Eisenhower ( 1954 ), and Gerald Ford ( 1975 ).
In the summer of 1816 Soane's and his late wife's mutual friend Barbara Hofland, persuaded him to take a holiday in Harrogate, there they visited Knaresborough, Plompton and its rocks, Ripon, Newby Hall, Fountains Abbey and Studley Royal Park, Castle Howard, Harewood House and Masham.
In 1635, Thomas Howard, 21st Earl of Arundel, visited Parr and brought him to London to meet Charles I. Charles asked what Parr had done that was greater than any other man, and the latter replied that he had performed penance ( for his affair ) at the age of 100.
Holmes was reported to have visited a local pharmacy to purchase the drugs which he used to kill Howard Pitezel, and a repair shop to sharpen the knives he used to chop up the body before he burned it.
On January 12, 2001, Roberts visited The Howard Stern Radio Show with his wife during a segment called " The Gossip Game " with Mike Walker of the National Enquirer.
Every U. S. President since William Howard Taft, and royalty from Greece, Thailand, Abyssinia, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Belgium, Denmark, and the United Kingdom have visited the hotel.
In spite of his paralyzed condition, he did what he could to entertain the other patients, and was visited regularly by his friend Moe Howard.
In one program, Stooge Moe Howard visited the set as a surprise guest.
King Henry VIII visited Gainsborough twice ; once in 1509 and again in 1541 with the doomed Queen Catherine Howard.
Former Prime Minister of Australia John Howard has visited Patterson Lakes Primary School to speak on their radio station, as have Bert Newton, the hosts of former radio show Get This, Tony Martin and Ed Kavalee.
The Golden Lamb has been visited by twelve American Presidents: William Henry Harrison, Benjamin Harrison, John Quincy Adams, Martin Van Buren, Ulysses S. Grant, Rutherford B. Hayes, James A. Garfield, William McKinley, Warren G. Harding, William Howard Taft, Ronald Reagan, and George W. Bush.
In the 1770s the castle was visited several times by the prison reformer John Howard, who criticised the size and quality of the establishment, including the extent of the vermin that infested the prison.
The most notable reformer was John Howard who, having visited several hundred prisons across England and Europe, beginning when he was high sheriff of Bedfordshire, published The State of the Prisons in 1777.

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