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Rutherford and reprised
Johns and Rutherford reprised their roles in the 1954 sequel, Mad About Men.
His role as the Beaver was reprised in 1983, when Mathers, along with original cast members Barbara Billingsley ( as " June Cleaver "), Tony Dow ( as " Wally Cleaver "), Ken Osmond ( as " Eddie Haskell "), and Frank Bank ( as " Clarence ' Lumpy ' Rutherford "), appeared in the CBS T. V.

Rutherford and role
Rutherford played Madame Arcati, the bumbling medium, a role which Coward had earlier envisaged for her.
His support for the insurgents ( though not as one of their leaders ) was offset by the continuation of Rutherford's Agriculture Minister Duncan Marshall, who had played no particular role during the scandal but had remained loyal to Rutherford.
Joseph Franklin Rutherford ( November 8, 1869 – January 8, 1942 ), also known as " Judge " Rutherford, was the second president of the incorporated Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society, and played a primary role in the organization and doctrinal development of Jehovah's Witnesses, which emerged from the Bible Student movement established by Charles Taze Russell.
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.
Zanuck insisted that she take the role, but she was replaced by Ann Rutherford after twelve days of shooting.
In addition to her work on Generations and Melrose Place, Rutherford starred in Homefront ( 1991 – 93 ) as Judy Owen ; in The Great Defender as Frankie Collet ( 1995 ); in Kindred: The Embraced as Caitlin Byrne ( 1996 ); in Threat Matrix as Special Agent Frankie Ellroy Kilmer ( 2003 ); and had a recurring role in The Adventures of Brisco County, Jr. as femme fatale Dixie Cousins.
In 1935, Rutherford began her Hollywood film career in the starring role of Joan O ' Brien in the dramatic film Waterfront Lady for Mascot Pictures, later to be Republic Pictures.
MGM boss Louis Mayer originally refused the loan because he considered the role too minor, but Rutherford passionately appealed to him to change his mind.
In mid-2004, Grace's agent sent her the script for the pilot episode of Lost ; she was given the role of Shannon Rutherford after a successful audition.
Jim Rutherford was chosen OHL Executive of the Year in 1992 – 93 for role as team president and general manager in building the expansion franchise into a winning team.
Though Cushing had hopes of being asked to replace Rutherford, that role fell instead to Arthur Sifton, the province's chief judge.
Aunt Clara was filmed in 1954 with Margaret Rutherford in the title role.
His wife always insisted that he be given a small role in every film she made and he appeared alongside Rutherford in a number of films, including ( as the character " Mr. Stringer ") in four adaptations of Agatha Christie novels featuring Rutherford as Miss Marple.

Rutherford and Miss
This education, history, and background are hinted at in the Margaret Rutherford films ( see below ), in which Miss Marple mentions her awards at marksmanship, fencing and equestrianism ( although these hints are played for comedic value ).
The other Rutherford films ( all directed by George Pollock ) were Murder at the Gallop ( 1963 ), based on the 1953 Hercule Poirot novel After the Funeral ( In this film, she is identified as Miss JTV Marple, though there was no indication as to what the extra initials might stand for ); Murder Most Foul ( 1964 ), based on the 1952 Poirot novel Mrs McGinty's Dead ; and Murder Ahoy!
Rutherford also appeared briefly as Miss Marple in the spoof Hercule Poirot adventure The Alphabet Murders ( 1965 ).
The Rutherford films are frequently repeated on television in Germany, and in that country Miss Marple is generally identified with Rutherford's quirky portrayal.
( Coincidentally, Hickson had played a housekeeper in the first film in which Margaret Rutherford played Miss Marple.
Michael Denison ( Algernon ), Michael Redgrave ( Jack ), Dame Edith Evans ( Lady Bracknell ), Dorothy Tutin ( Cecily ), Joan Greenwood ( Gwendolen ), and Margaret Rutherford ( Miss Prism ) were among the cast.
Rutherford made her first appearance in London's West End in 1933 but her talent was not recognised by the critics until her performance as Miss Prism in the play The Importance of Being Earnest at the Globe Theatre in 1939.
Both films were made by the same writer-director team behind the popular Margaret Rutherford Miss Marple film, Murder She Said.
In 1963, a film adaptation entitled Murder at the Gallop was released by MGM however this version replaced Poirot with the character of Miss Marple, played by Margaret Rutherford.
* Mr. Stringer, the part that Davis played alongside his wife Margaret Rutherford in four Miss Marple films
Hickson played the housekeeper in the Marple film Murder, She Said in 1961 ( based on Agatha Christie's original novel 4. 50 From Paddington ), which starred Margaret Rutherford as Miss Marple.
The BBC began filming the works of Agatha Christie in the early 1980s, and were conscious of the criticism that had been levelled at the most famous portrayal of Miss Marple given by Margaret Rutherford.
However, Miss Honey ( played by Margaret Rutherford, typecast as ever as an eccentric old lady ), who is director of a home for the orphans of London in Hampstead, recruits Wrigley to engage in a little light safebreaking, on the tenuous basis of having written Miss Robin Hood.
He produced the first Agatha Christie films, starring Margaret Rutherford as Miss Marple.
* Camilla Rutherford in a Primal Scream video Primal Scream Miss Lucifer
* Murder Most Foul, a 1964 film based on the novels of Agatha Christie, starring Margaret Rutherford as Miss Jane Marple
However, in an unusual move, the character of Poirot was replaced with Christie's other most famous detective Miss Marple ( portrayed by Margaret Rutherford ), who comes onto the case when she is a juror in the trial of the lodger who is accused of the murder.
Some elements of the plot were also incorporated into the 1964 film Murder Ahoy !, which starred Margaret Rutherford as Miss Marple, along with a token tribute to The Mousetrap.
Lucy Eyelesbarrow, a young professional housekeeper and an acquaintance of Miss Marple, is sent undercover to Rutherford Hall.
Lucy arranges an afternoon-tea visit to Rutherford Hall for Miss Marple, and Mrs McGillicuddy is also invited.

Rutherford and Marple
The book was made into a 1961 movie starring Margaret Rutherford in the first of her four appearances as Miss Marple.
He is currently editor of The Agatha Christie Collection partwork for Chorion, which brings together and presents the newer episodes of Poirot and Marple ; the 1983 series Partners in Crime, and Agatha Christie film adaptations such as the Margaret Rutherford Miss Marple films and the all-star adaptations of The Mirror Crack'd, and Murder On The Orient Express.

Rutherford and very
to imply a very small nucleus of the atom containing a very high positive charge ( in the case of gold, enough to balance about 100 electrons ), thus leading to the Rutherford model of the atom.
Henry Moseley's work showed experimentally in 1913 ( see Moseley's law ) that the effective nuclear charge was very close to the atomic number ( Moseley found only one unit difference ), and Moseley referenced only the papers of Van den Broek and Rutherford.
The discovery, beginning with Rutherford's analysis of the data in 1911, eventually led to the Rutherford model of the atom, in which the atom has a very small, very dense nucleus containing most of its mass, and consisting of heavy positively charged particles with embedded electrons in order to balance out the charge ( since the neutron was unknown ).
As in Rutherford scattering, deep inelastic scattering of electrons by proton targets revealed that most of the incident electrons interact very little and pass straight through, with only a small number bouncing back.
After all, during the Alberta and Great Waterways crisis only nine months earlier, a legislature of very similar makeup had endorsed the Rutherford government's handling of railway policy by a vote of twenty-three votes to fifteen ; would Sifton's bill, effectively a repudiation of the Rutherford policy, convince enough Liberals to change sides?
To Rutherford, the gold foil experiment implied that the positive charge was confined to a very small nucleus leading first to the Rutherford model, and eventually to the Bohr model of the atom, where the positive nucleus is surrounded by the negative electrons.
" On August 2, 1928 in a meeting with the Bible Student elders who had attended a general convention in Detroit, Michigan Rutherford listed his responsibilities and concluded " when I have attended to many other details, I have not had very much time to go from door to door.
Because the majority of the positive particles continued on their original path unmoved, Rutherford was forced to conclude that most of the remainder of the atom was a region of very low density.
Instead, Rutherford suggested that a large amount of the atom's charge and mass is instead concentrated into a very physically small ( as compared with the size of the atom ) region, giving it a very high electric field.
They remarked " it's doubtful that anyone ever got a richer sound out of a Mellotron on-stage than Tony Banks does on this album, and Steve Hackett, Mike Rutherford, and Phil Collins ' playing is all quite amazing as a whole unit, holding together some very complex music in a live setting.
He was named John Rutherford Alcock, but dropped the John very early.
At its height at the very end of the 19th century, the order had counted over 8, 000 Civil War veterans as members, including nearly all notable general and flag officers and several future presidents — Ulysses S. Grant, William T. Sherman, Philip H. Sheridan, George B. McClellan, Rutherford B. Hayes, Chester A. Arthur, Benjamin Harrison, and William McKinley, among others.
He was both supportive of Rutherford, whose earlier life had been somewhat troubled, and very protective of her: for example, after an alligator had attacked its keeper while she was filming An Alligator Named Daisy in 1955, he stood next to the cameraman wearing a long raincoat under which he concealed a claw hammer.
Upon being dropped from the New Zealand team in 1995, Rutherford moved to South Africa, where he played first-class cricket for five seasons, first for Transvaal and then for Gauteng ( which replaced Transvaal in 1994 ), before finally retiring, scoring a duck in his very last game.
* Luther Crackenthorpe – elderly widower and owner of Rutherford Hall, very selfish with money.
Rutherford has been described as hardworking and very intelligent.
Newcastle were a dominant force at the time ; Rutherford picked up three First Division medals, and played in no fewer than five FA Cup finals ( 1905, 1906, 1908, 1910 and 1911 ), though Newcastle only won the 1910 final against Barnsley, winning 2 – 1 in a replay after a 1 – 1 draw ; Rutherford himself scored the equaliser in the first match, in the very last minute of normal time.
Since William Rutherford was clearly a very able mathematician his motive for requesting a proof of a theorem that he could certainly have proved himself is unknown.

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