Arthur B. Chapman (1908–2004), British-American animal genetic researcher
Arthur Conan Doyle | King Arthur | Arthur Miller | Arthur C. Clarke | Arthur | Arthur Ransome | Port Arthur | Chester A. Arthur | Arthur Balfour | Arthur Sullivan | Arthur Rubinstein | Arthur Andersen | Sir Arthur Conan Doyle | Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught and Strathearn | Arthur Wellesley | Arthur Godfrey | Arthur Fiedler | Arthur Schopenhauer | Arthur Honegger | Arthur Rimbaud | Arthur (TV series) | Arthur Machen | Arthur Askey | Tracy Chapman | Steven Curtis Chapman | Arthur Symons | Arthur Streeton | Arthur Phillip | Arthur Lowe | Arthur Ashe |
Among his students were Kathleen Hale, the creator of Orlando the Marmalade Cat: A Camping Holiday (1938) and its sequels, and C.H. Chapman, who went on to take over the drawing of Billy Bunter.
He successfully contested as a Democrat the election of Arthur B. Jenks to the Seventy-fifth Congress and served from June 9, 1938, to January 3, 1939.
He was captured by bounty hunter Duane "Dog" Chapman, his son Leland Chapman, Tim Chapman, and two TV crewmen in a noisy scuffle on June 18, 2003, and was then taken into custody by Mexican authorities.
Through H-G-W Partners, Hancock owned and raced 1989 U.S. Horse of the Year Sunday Silence whose wins included the Kentucky Derby, Preakness Stakes, and Breeders' Cup Classic.
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After graduating from Vanderbilt University, Hancock moved to the New York City area where he worked as an apprentice under future Hall of Fame trainer Edward A. Neloy.
He was educated at two prep schools: St. Mark's School in Massachusetts and Woodberry Forest School in Virginia.
He was an unsuccessful candidate for election in 1934 to the Seventy-fourth Congress.
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He was served as a Republican in the Seventy-fifth Congress from January 3, 1937, until June 9, 1938, when he was succeeded by Alphonse Roy, who contested his election.
He moved to Cleveland in 1913, when he was in his mid-twenties, to be circulation manager for the Cleveland News.
Theoretical models of the Sun predict that neutrinos should be made in staggering numbers.
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McDonald and Yoji Totsuka were awarded the 2007 Benjamin Franklin Medal in Physics "for discovering that the three known types of elementary particles called neutrinos change into one another when traveling over sufficiently long distances, and that neutrinos have mass".
Tragedy struck the family on July 8, 1903, when A.B.'s son Roger aged one year and a half was drowned while they were vacationing at Lake Winnipesaukee, New Hampshire.
Rouse was elected as a Democrat to the Sixty-second and to the seven succeeding Congresses (March 4, 1911-March 3, 1927).
He has frequently been hired by film director John Badham, and the majority of his movie soundtracks are to be found in Badham's work.
As was the case with many non-prestige British films of the 1930s, little attention or care was given to Woods' films after their original cinema run, and most of his films from the mid-1930s are now considered lost.
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This was a thriller, but Woods spent the next four years making comedies and musical films (including three with popular singer Keith Falkner which represented Falkner's entire screen output) before starting also to take on crime films, starting with The Dark Stairway, made in 1937 and released in early 1938.
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Many of his films involved collaborations with producer Irving Asher, cinematographer Basil Emmott and screenwriter Brock Williams, while another frequent association was with actress Chili Bouchier.
Arthur B. English, Canada's official hangman who used the pseudonym Arthur Ellis, as did some of his successors
Arthur B. Hancock, Jr., Arthur B. "Bull" Hancock (1910–1972), American horse breeder
Arthur B. Jenks (1866–1947), U.S. Representative from New Hampshire
Major General Lemuel C. Shepherd, Jr. was the first to hold the billet and went on to become Commandant, as well as five others: Randolph M. Pate, Leonard F. Chapman, Jr., Robert H. Barrow, Paul X. Kelley and James F. Amos.
He had his first drawing published in the story paper The Captain in 1900, and over the next ten years drew for story papers and comics including Marvel, Pluck, the Boy's Friend, Boy's Herald, Boy's Leader, Illustrated Chips, Comic Cuts, Jester, Big Budget, and Ally Sloper's Half Holiday.
The school was founded by Charles F. Chapman and Glen D. Castle in 1971 with a training fleet of one vessel.
The awards are named for Arthur B. English, a British expatriate who, under the pseudonym Arthur Ellis, became Canada’s official hangman in 1913.
David C. Chapman (1876–1944), led initiative to create the Great Smoky Mountains National Park
The name was proposed by Peter Bermel and Arthur B. Ford, co-leaders of the United States Geological Survey (USGS) Thiel Mountains party which surveyed these mountains in 1960–61.
H. E. Chapman (Harry Ernest Chapman, c. 1871–1944), Chief Constable of Kent, 1921–1940
In June 1867, mayor Thomas J. Holmes, who had been appointed the previous year after the resignation of Henry Failing, was elected to a full term, and then died the following morning.
He was trained at first by Ex Champ Michael Moorer than by Jeff Mayweather and now by Norman Wilson, his manager is the very powerful Scott Hirsch who recently netted his fighters Jameel McCline and Shannon Briggs Don King-arranged title fights.
J. A. Chapman (1821–1885), three-term mayor of Portland, Oregon
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James A. Chapman (1881–1966), Oklahoma oil magnate and philanthropist
The Mowbray-Clarkes lived in Rockland County, New York at a farm and studio called Brocken, just six miles from Arthur B. Davies.
On September 14, 2006, Leland Chapman was arrested along with Duane "Dog" Chapman and Tim Chapman by U.S. Marshals at the request of the Mexican government and was to be extradited to Mexico to face charges of "deprivation of liberty".
In retirement, he served as the Commissioner of the Immigration and Naturalization Service.
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After completing The Basic School at the Philadelphia Navy Yard, Chapman served with the 1st Battalion, 10th Marines at Quantico, Virginia, from April 1936 until August 1937.
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General Chapman retired January 1, 1972 and became Commissioner of the Immigration and Naturalization Service.
In 1951, Youngstein joined Arthur Krim, Robert Benjamin, Arnold Picker and Bill Heineman in purchasing the then financially troubled United Artists studio from Charles Chaplin and Mary Pickford.
Chapman was the father of Justice Melissa Chapman of the Illinois 5th District Appellate Court.
Named by Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names (US-ACAN) at the suggestion of Arthur B. Ford, leader of the United States Geological Survey (USGS) geological party in the Dufek Massif, 1976–77, after Constance J. Nutt, geologist, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, a member of the USGS party.
He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1910 to the Sixty-second Congress.
Retired after his four-year-old racing season, Princequillo was purchased by Arthur B. Hancock and sent to the Hancock family's Ellerslie Stud in Albemarle County, Virginia and later to their Claiborne Farm near Paris, Kentucky.
He tried his hand at film directing in 1937 with two comedies Don't Get Me Wrong, a Max Miller vehicle co-directed with Arthur B. Woods, and Patricia Gets Her Man.
Chapman is arguably best remembered for editing the fourth and fifth editions of Roget's Thesaurus, published by Harper Collins in 1977 and 1992.
On September 14, 2006, Tim Chapman was arrested along with Duane "Dog" Chapman and Leland Chapman by U.S. Marshals at the request of the Mexican government, and were to be extradited to Mexico to face charges of "deprivation of liberty".
This flag was designed by Roger Upton and Charles F. Chapman for the United States Power Squadrons, and by 1915, the flag was officially adopted by the organization.
With painters Arthur B. Davies and Walt Kuhn, he brought together leading contemporary European and American artists.
In 1960, through his Gamely Corporation William Perry entered into an annual foal sharing partnership with Arthur Hancock of Claiborne Farm.