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unusual facts about Duggan


Duggan, Edmonton

111 Street alsos give residents access to the new LRT stations at Southgate and Century Park.


26235 Annemaduggan

It is named after Annemarie Duggan, an American educator in Shrewsbury, Massachusetts.

Alfred Martin Duggan-Cronin

Duggan-Cronin was born on 17 May 1874 in Innishannon, County Cork, Ireland, and died on 25 August 1954 in Kimberley, South Africa.

Amy Duggan

Duggan started her training at Reavley Theatre School in Gateshead where Chelsea Halfpenny also attended.

Becky Duggan

In 2006, Duggan appeared in a Push Hockey magazine photoshoot dressed as Uma Thurman's character from Kill Bill.

Bert Bailey

He and Duggan collaborated on a number of follow up plays (with both men also acting in the productions), including The Man from Outback (1909), On Our Selection (1912), an adaptation of the stories of Steele Rudd and The Native Born (1913).

Cahirmee Horse Fair

Duggan is supposed to have been a direct descendant of Mogh Ruith and a Duggan, King of Fermoy, was one of Brian Boru's lieutenants to be killed at the battle of Clontarf.

Edmund Duggan

Eamonn Duggan (1874–1936) or Edmund S. Duggan, Irish lawyer, nationalist and politician

Grace Curzon, Marchioness Curzon of Kedleston

Her first husband was Alfred Hubert Duggan of Buenos Aires, Argentina, with whom she had three children, including two sons – Alfred Duggan, an author of historical fiction, and Hubert Duggan, later a British Member of Parliament.

Jinder

Memorable Candlefire appearances under the management of David Duggan's Mostly Music Management include their by-request performance at Coldplay's aftershow party following their Madison Square Garden show in New York City.

John Rose Holden

After being called to the bar, he entered a partnership with Richard Oliver Duggan (for whom Whitehern was built) in Hamilton, enjoying a lucrative practice.

Kym Worthy

Worthy was appointed Wayne County Prosecutor to replace Michael Duggan who resigned to become the head of the Detroit Medical Center.

Laurence Duggan

Duggan provided Soviet intelligence with confidential diplomatic cables, including from American Ambassador William Bullitt.

Madeline Duggan

Madeline Elizabeth Duggan (born 28 June 1994 in Bermondsey, London, UK) is an English actress best known for her portrayal of Lauren Branning in the BBC soap opera EastEnders.

Mart Duggan

In March, 1888, Duggan arrested a jewelry peddler, and when the charges were dropped and Duggan was fined $25 for unlawful arrest, he resigned from the police force.

Match-fixing in professional sumo

In 2002, Steven Levitt and Mark Duggan replicated and expanded upon Benjamin's research, although not crediting The Joy of Sumo.

Maurice Duggan

In 1960 Duggan was the second recipient of the newly established Robert Burns Fellowship (the first was Ian Cross), which provided a writer with a lecturer's salary for one year at Otago University.

It was published in Charles Brasch's quarterly, Landfall, in 1949, as was most of Duggan's later fiction.

Born in Auckland and raised on the city’s North Shore, Duggan was mentored by Frank Sargeson and was friendly with many of the important writers of the day, including Greville Texidor, John Reece Cole, Keith Sinclair and Kendrick Smithyman.

Patrick Duggan

In the 1872 Galway County by-election, Duggan organized support for Captain (later Lieutenant-Colonel) John Philip Nolan who was favourably disposed towards tenant rights.

Patrick J. Duggan

Born in Detroit, Michigan, Duggan received a B.S. from Xavier University in 1955 and an LL.B. from the University of Detroit in 1958.

Soghain

Descendants of the Soghain are still found in great numbers in County Galway, bearing names such as Mannion, Ward/Mac an Bhaird, Gill/Gillane, Scarry, Duggan, Megan/McGann, Martin, Cassain.

The Wild Colonial Boy

The Irish version is about a Jack Duggan, young emigrant who left the town of Castlemaine, County Kerry, Ireland, for Australia in the early 19th century.

Under His Very Windows: The Vatican and the Holocaust in Italy

According to a New York Times book review by Christopher Duggan of Reading University, the book is well researched, though Zuccotti follows the anti-Pius XII tone of Hitler's Pope by John Cornwell, and builds a case for the Pope having been anti-Semitic at heart - a view which, according to Duggan, available evidence "does not warrant".


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