Julia Marton-Lefèvre, a global expert and leader in development and conservation, has been its Director General since 2 January 2007.
Julia Roberts | Julia Kristeva | Julia Child | Julia Smith | Marton | Julia Ward Howe | Julia Fischer | Julia Sweeney | Julia Ormond | Julia Stiles | Julia Fordham | Julia Copus | Julia | Raúl Juliá | Raul Julia | Julia Foster | Julia Donaldson | Julia Smit | Julia Phillips | Julia Morley | Julia Morgan | Julia McKenzie | Julia Margaret Cameron | Julia Lathrop | Julia de Burgos | Julia Davis | Julia Cho | Julia Bradbury | Edvin Marton | Andrew Marton |
A portrait of Napoleon from 1807 (produced by Louis-André-Gabriel Bouchet) and one of his wife Joséphine from 1805 (made by Robert Lefèvre) are viewable as part of the tour.
Notable art and architecture critics are still writers for Archistorm : Christophe Le Gac, Paul Ardenne, Stéphane Delage, Jérôme Lefèvre, Etienne Bernard, Juliette Soulez.
Throughout his career, Lefevre remained concerned with social issues, participating in charitable works and maintaining relations with the middle left-liberal among artists as Eugène Carrière and journalist Jules Lermina.
Charles Shaw-Lefevre, 1st Viscount Eversley (1794–1888), his son, Speaker of the House of Commons
Claude Izner is the pseudonym of two sisters, Liliane Korb (born in 1940) and Laurence Lefèvre (born in 1951), both booksellers on the banks of the Seine in Paris, who jointly write the popular "Victor Legris" series of crime novels.
She appeared on Broadway in 1959 in La Plume de Ma Tante, and was, along with the rest of the entire cast (Pamela Austin, Roger Caccia, Yvonne Constant, Genevieve Coulombel, Robert Dhéry, Michael Kent, Jean Lefevre, Jacques Legras, Michael Modo, Pierre Olaf, Nicole Parent, Ross Parker, Henri Pennec) awarded a Special Tony Award 1959 for contribution to the theatre.
Mr. Lefèvre sent his son Edwin to the United States when he was a boy and he was educated at Lehigh University where he received training as a mining engineer.
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Following his father's death, he inherited some wealth and became an independent investor; and while living in Hartsdale, New York a collection of Edwin Lefèvre's short stories were published (1901) under the title "Wall Street Stories."
Guy Lefèvre de la Boderie (b. near Falaise, Calvados in Normandy, 9 August 1541; d. in 1598 in the house in which he was born) was a French Orientalist, Bible scholar and poet.
Jacob Faber is a German form of what was presumably his original name, Jacques Lefèvre, a common French name – the equivalent of John Smith – shared by several other figures active in similar circles at the period; the main ones are mentioned below.
Here Lefèvre gives a very curious description of this ancient pythagorean game, but with such little detail that cannot understand it properly except by joining it to the extended notice which Boissière gave to the same game
Lai previously held the LeFevre Fellowship at the Knowlton School of Architecture at the Ohio State University in 2007 and the Howarth-Wright Fellowship at Taliesin (studio)/Taliesin West.
Lefevre Peninsula, South Australia, was named by Governor John Hindmarsh on 3 June 1837 after Shaw-Lefevre, who was one of South Australia's Colonisation Commissioners.
It has a French-language libretto based on Louis Anseaume and Pierre-Augustin Lefèvre de Marcouville’s libretto for La fausse aventurière (The False Adventuress), an opéra comique by Jean Louis Laruette.
The Lefevre Peninsula lies approximately 15 kilometres northwest of the centre of the city of Adelaide, South Australia.
Old Orchard Beach is the twin city of the French seaside resort of Mimizan, as a reminder of Oiseau Canari, the pioneer aircraft crossing of the Atlantic by Assollant, Lefèvre and Lotti in 1929 to Oyambre (Cantabria, Spain).
Its founders and early members included John Stuart Mill, Lord Eversley, William Morris, Sir Robert Hunter, and Octavia Hill.
The Camp des Loges in Saint-Germain-en-Laye, near Paris, serves as the home facility for the capital club's youth sides, which play their home matches at the Stade Georges Lefèvre.
In 2009, Slovak avant-garde drummer, Lucas Perny, remixed and recorded drums to Raymond Lefèvre's title song from the French 1981 movie comedy La Soupe Aux Choux (Cabbage soup).
George Shaw-Lefevre, 1st Baron Eversley (1831–1928), British Liberal Party politician, son of John Shaw-Lefevre
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Charles Shaw-Lefevre, 1st Viscount Eversley (1794-1888), Speaker of the House of Commons, son of Charles Shaw-Lefevre (MP)
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John Shaw-Lefevre (1797-1879), British politician and civil servant, son of Charles Shaw-Lefevre (MP)
Since the Speakership of Mr Shaw-Lefevre the coach has always been pulled by a pair of Whitbread Shire horses (Shaw-Lefevre having been a partner in Messrs Whitbread & Co.).
LeFevre was the associate to Bob Crowley for the 2000 production of Elton John and Tim Rice's Aida, which won a Tony Award for "Best Scenic Design".
The album's best-known song, "Ms. Lefevre", is a silly romp celebrating the character "Renee Lefebvre" from Woody Allen's movie What's New, Pussycat? The album also includes covers of songs by Wanda Jackson ("Mean Mean Mean") and Nancy Sinatra ("How Does That Grab You?").