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Rawson and spent
Geoffrey Hindle, ( Jolley Geoff ); son of Bob Hindle, the driving force behind the very successful sales organisation ; also nephew of Desmond Rawson, has spent many hours recording both of their life's work, donated all the family's pieces of pottery and many photographs to help the collection's guardians Carol Harker and Museum founder Dr Stuart Walker tell the full story of the company's success and eventual demise.

Rawson and year
Rawson sports are played throughout the university year and include cricket, rowing, Rugby, swimming and diving, soccer, tennis, basketball and athletics.
The following year Beers was elected to the Nevada Senate, defeating 20-year incumbent Republican Ray Rawson who had supported the increases.

Rawson and Paris
*** Priscilla Wittig y Sanz ( b. Paris, 1945 ), married to Gonzalo García y Rawson ( b. Valparaiso-Chile ), and had issue:
In 1949, Desmond and Colin Rawson started a business making plaster of Paris models to sell as souvenirs to tourists who were visiting the seaside town of Hornsea.

Rawson and 1881
*" History of Henry VII ", by Francis Bacon, edited by Joseph Rawson Lumby ( Cambridge, 1881 ).

Rawson and for
In late 2010, Mosman Municipal Council decided to name the new Sports centre in Rawson Park for Bashir in recognition of her service to both New South Wales and the Mosman community.
* Rawson Marshall Thurber, director of Dodgeball: a True Underdog Story and " Terry Tate " commercials for Reebok
Both tracks meet at Rawson Pass for the final climb to the Kosciuszko summit.
* President who held office for least time ( not counting interim presidents ): Arturo Rawson, for just three days ; June 4, 1943 to June 6, 1943.
Admiral Sir Harry Holdsworth Rawson, GCB, GCMG ( 5 November 1843 – 3 November 1910 ), is chiefly remembered for overseeing the British Benin Expedition of 1897 that burned and looted the city of the Kingdom of Benin, now in Nigeria.
Rawson was also the commanding officer of the British forces in the Anglo-Zanzibar War, the shortest war in history, which lasted for 38 minutes on 27 August 1896.
In the belief she was recovering, the four of them set sail for Australia in December 1905, but Lady Rawson died on board the ship " Ormuz " in the Red Sea on 3 December 1905 and was buried at sea.
Rawson died on 3 November 1910 in London after an operation for appendicitis ; he was survived by two sons and a daughter.
The four male colleges of the University of Sydney now compete for the ' Rawson Cup.
All of his novels were written before the founding of this group, but in 1949 and 1967 Rawson received Special Edgar Awards for his various contributions to mystery writing and the MWA, including the founding of the organization's first newsletter, " The Third Degree ".
Miracles for Sale ( 1939 ) was based on the novel Death From A Tophat by Clayton Rawson.
He thus declared his preference for the 19th-century narrative by Samuel Rawson Gardiner over the new interpretation, and, true to form, even adopted an exaggerated Whig-style argument: that one should recognize and accept the principles of the Parliamentary rebels because these ideas about freedom were the very foundation for our modern sense of political liberty.
Horchow is the author of three books, " The Art of Friendship: 70 Simple Rules for Making Meaningful Connections " ( St. Martin's Press, 2006 and Neiman Marcus Exclusive, 2005 ) ISBN 0-312-36039-8, Elephants in Your Mailbox: How I Learned the Secrets of Mail-Order Marketing Despite Having Made 25 Horrendous Mistakes ( Times Books, 1980 ) ISBN 0-8129-0891-0, and Living in Style: In A Time When Taste Means More Than Money ( Rawson Assoc, 1981 ) ISBN 0-89256-166-1.
Terry Tate: Office Linebacker was a series of short comedy television commercials created by Rawson Marshall Thurber, for Reebok, based on a short film pilot he created in 2000 ; Tate was first shown at Super Bowl XXXVII in 2003.
It also calls for a complementary project for another motorway called South Corridor, connecting downtown San Juan with Rawson and other southern suburbs.
E. W. O ' Sullivan and the bridge was opened for traffic on 28 June 1902 by the Governor of New South Wales, His Excellency Sir Harry Holdsworth Rawson KGB.
" At 08: 55, having received no further word from the palace, aboard St George Rawson hoisted the signal " prepare for action ".
Harry Rawson was appointed a Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath for his work in Zanzibar and would later be Governor of New South Wales in Australia and receive promotion to Admiral.
King, to be followed by H. Byson, and then Dr. C Rawson, who served for two years before vacating for the first ever non-British personality to take over the helm.
The river flows eastwards for approximately, from the Andes to the Atlantic Ocean, emptying at Engaño Bay near Rawson.

Rawson and medical
Dr. Guillermo Rawson ( 24 June 1821-20 January 1890 ) was a medical doctor and politician in nineteenth-century Argentina.

Rawson and before
Rawson, who had been scheming to overthrow the government even before he was contacted by the GOU, agreed to their plan.
In 1945, Rawson was arrested and brought before a military tribunal for opposing the government of President Edelmiro Farrell, but he was quickly released.

Rawson and Argentina
* Rawson, Chubut, the capital of Chubut Province in Argentina, named after Guillermo Rawson
* Rawson Department, Chubut, Argentina
* Rawson Department, San Juan Province, Argentina
It was named after Dr. Guillermo Rawson, the Argentine Interior Minister of the time, who supported the Welsh settlement in Argentina.
no: Rawson ( Argentina )
His parents were Dr. Aman Rawson, a doctor who had emigrated from the United States to Argentina, and Justina Rojo, a daughter of a wealthy family in San Juan, where Guillermo was born.
Arturo Rawson ( June 4, 1885 – October 8, 1952 ) was the President of Argentina from June 4, 1943 to June 7, 1943.
Born in Santiago del Estero, Rawson attended Argentina ’ s Military College, which he graduated from in 1907 and subsequently taught at for a time.
On June 3, 1943, Rawson was contacted by members of the GOU ( United Officers ' Group ), a group of military officers planning to overthrow Argentina ’ s civilian government.
Rawson promptly declared himself president of Argentina the same day, beating Pedro Pablo Ramírez to do so.
Rawson, as Castillo, supported the Allies of World War II, but the bulk of the military that organized the coup wanted Argentina to stay neutral in the conflict, considering that joining the war would prove destructive for the country.
Thus, Rawson is the president of Argentina with the shortest mandate, just three days.
Argentina surprisingly reduced Zimbabwe to 98 / 5, but then a stand of 174 between Rawson ( 125 ) and Gary Wallace ( 77 ) saw the Africans through to a daunting 357 / 7.

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