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Rutherford and Davis
Rutherford, who was 70 years old when the first film was made, insisted that she wear her own clothes during the filming of the movie, as well as having her real-life husband, Stringer Davis appear alongside her as the character ' Mr Stringer '.
In 2005, C. Davis and C. Johnson, working at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory in Oxfordshire, UK, demonstrated that the Es layer was indeed enhanced as a result of lightning activity.
Rutherford married character actor Stringer Davis in 1945 and the couple appeared in many productions together.
Davis adored Rutherford, with one friend noting: " For him she was not only a great talent but, above all, a beauty.
In the 1950s, Rutherford and Davis unofficially adopted the writer Gordon Langley Hall, then in his twenties.
Miss Marple, a character created by Agatha Christie and portrayed by Margaret Rutherford, and Margaret's husband Stringer Davis had a cameo role in The Alphabet Murders, a movie based on another of Christie's books and which featured Hercule Poirot.
* Mr. Stringer, the part that Davis played alongside his wife Margaret Rutherford in four Miss Marple films
* Producers: Nick Davis, Tony Banks, Mike Rutherford
Rutherford and Davis are interred alongside each other in the graveyard of St. James's Church, Gerrards Cross, Buckinghamshire.
Gilmore's father became a Los Angeles Police Department ( LAPD ) officer, and also wrote and acted on radio shows, a police public service ( the shows featured promising movie starlets as well as established performers like Bonita Granville, Ann Rutherford, the " jungle girl " Acquanetta, Joan Davis, Hillary Brooke, Ann Jeffreys, Brenda Marshall and other players young John Gilmore became acquainted with.
* Sam Davis House ( Smyrna, Tennessee ), listed on the NRHP in Rutherford County, Tennessee

Rutherford and who
Other names connected to the city include Max Born, physicist and Nobel laureate ; Charles Darwin, the biologist who discovered natural selection ; David Hume, a philosopher, economist and historian ; James Hutton, regarded as the " Father of Geology "; John Napier inventor of logarithms ; chemist and one of the founders of thermodynamics Joseph Black ; pioneering medical researchers Joseph Lister and James Young Simpson ; chemist and discoverer of the element nitrogen, Daniel Rutherford ; mathematician and developer of the Maclaurin series, Colin Maclaurin and Ian Wilmut, the geneticist involved in the cloning of Dolly the sheep just outside Edinburgh.
Frederick Soddy ( 2 September 1877 – 22 September 1956 ) was an English radiochemist and monetary economist who explained, with Ernest Rutherford, that radioactivity is due to the transmutation of elements, now known to involve nuclear reactions.
Nitrogen is formally considered to have been discovered by Scottish physician Daniel Rutherford in 1772, who called it noxious air or fixed air.
The Americans, however, proposed rutherfordium ( Rf ) for the new element to honor Ernest Rutherford, who is known as the " father " of nuclear physics.
** 104. rutherfordium, Rf, named after Ernest Rutherford, who was responsible for the concept of the atomic nucleus ( 1968 ).
* Alan Astbury, physics professor emeritus who played a part in the Nobel-prize winning discovery of a new subatomic particle and winner of the Rutherford Medal and Prize for physics
He intensely disliked Robert Rutherford McCormick who published the Chicago Tribune.
Dame Margaret Taylor Rutherford, DBE ( 11 May 1892 – 22 May 1972 ) was an English character actress, who first came to prominence following World War II in the film adaptations of Noël Coward's Blithe Spirit, and Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest.
In the Lucky Luke comic book Sarah Bernhardt, which is set in the late 19th-century Wild West, President Rutherford B. Hayes ’ wife is portrayed as being one of many who strongly disapproves of the titular actress ' tour of the United States, given her reputation for loose morality.
During wartime research on the atomic bomb, American physicists at Purdue University who were deflecting neutrons off uranium nuclei ( similar to Rutherford scattering ) described the uranium nucleus as " big as a barn ".
Among the then lesser-known contributors were some who would later become distinguished, such as Ernest Rutherford and Bertrand Russell.
The Spitfire Boys were mainly notable for including in their line-up Peter Clarke, who went on to drum for The Slits and later Siouxsie and the Banshees ( as well as marrying Siouxsie of the Banshees ) as Budgie, and Paul Rutherford, later better known for being a member of 1980s pop band Frankie Goes to Hollywood.
After that, the group sacked off Michael Rigby, who was replaced, as suggestion of Clarke, by Paul Rutherford.
Her parents were Major James Rutherford Lumley, who served in the 6th Gurkha Rifles, a regiment of the British Indian Army, and Beatrice Rose Weir.
Rutherford was a North Carolina colonial legislator and an American Revolutionary War general who settled in Middle Tennessee after the Revolution and served as President of the Council of the Territory of Tennessee before Tennessee attained statehood.
The Island was named after the Reverend Robert Rutherford who came with David Dunbar's group to the area from North Ireland, in 1729.
Cox was the great-grandson of William M. Evarts, who defended President Andrew Johnson during his impeachment hearing and became Secretary of State in Rutherford B. Hayes ' administration.
Long Branch is home to Seven Presidents Oceanfront Park, named for the United States presidents who visited the fashionable resort town, including Ulysses S. Grant, Chester A. Arthur, Rutherford Hayes, Benjamin Harrison, William McKinley, Woodrow Wilson and James Garfield.
It was the home of Rutherford B. Hayes, who served as President of the United States from 1877 to 1881.
The spelling change may have been the result of name recognition of the Ohio politician Rutherford B. Hayes, who was elected President in 1876, or could have been because of a clerical error done by the Post Office.
In the 2004 presidential election, Democrat John Kerry received 52. 2 % of the vote in Rutherford ( 4, 539 cast ), ahead of Republican George W. Bush, who received around 46. 3 % ( 4, 030 votes ), with 8, 698 ballots cast among the borough's 11, 077 registered voters, for a turnout of 78. 5 %.
William Carlos Williams, the Pulitzer Prize-winning poet who died in 1963, was born in Rutherford in 1883.
In 1799, Rutherford sold his Forks of Buffalo holdings to James Brown of Berkeley County, Virginia, who, after experiencing financial setbacks, eventually sold the property at public sale in 1824 to a group of Baltimore, Maryland, investors which included William Baker.

Rutherford and died
Williams died on March 4, 1963 at the age of seventy-nine at his home in Rutherford.
Two died just east of Rutherford.
Tilden died shortly after the dispute was decided in favor of his rival, Rutherford B. Hayes, and Bigelow then acted as one of Tilden's Estate Trust Executors.
September 13, 1940, Mattie Rutherford died of cancer.
William G. Rutherford died on 19 July 1907, two days after his 54th birthday.
By 1916 Rutherford had become one of the seven directors of the Watch Tower Society ; when Russell died on October 31, 1916 he joined vice-President Alfred I. Ritchie and Secretary-Treasurer William E. Van Amburgh on a three-man executive committee that ran the Pennsylvania corporation until a new president was elected at the annual general meeting the following January.
Rutherford died at the property in 1942. Rutherford married Mary Malcolm Fetzer of Boonville, Missouri on December 31, 1891.
Rutherford died at Beth Sarim on January 8, 1942 at the age of 72.
Rutherford kept a mouse in a space with a confined quality of air until it died.
Rutherford died of complications of Alzheimer's disease in Arlington, Virginia, where he spent his later years.
* February 2 — Alexander Cameron Rutherford, lawyer and politician, first premier of Alberta ( died 1941 )
To help promote the song, Rutherford and the record label perpetuated the impression that " The Living Years " was inspired by Rutherford's relationship with his father, who died during Genesis's Invisible Touch Tour.
Hayes died on July 26, 1934 in Cincinnati, Ohio and was buried at the Rutherford B. Hayes Home, Spiegel Grove, in Fremont, Ohio.
As an interesting point of closure to the history of the mill, the manager of Farnborough Sugar Plantation, Rutherford Armstrong, died in 1958 at age 97.
Samuel Rutherford ( D ), until February 4, 1932 ( died )
Rutherford was sentenced to life in prison and died there in 2003.
Andrew Rutherford, 1st Earl of Teviot ( died 4 May 1664 ) was the son of William Rutherford of Quarrelholes, Roxburghshire.

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