He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1912 to the Sixty-third Congress, and afterwards resumed the practice of law in Minneapolis, Kansas.
Rees, Germany | John Rawlings Rees | David Rees | Rees | Jean Rollin | John Rees | Alan Rees | William Rees-Mogg | Thomas Rees | Sarah Rees Brennan | Rees Jones | Jerry Rees | David Rees (mathematician) | Dave Rees | Richard Rees | Rees Hill | Papa Was a Rollin' Stone | Nathan Rees | Merlyn Rees | Edgar Rees Jones | David Rees (rugby union) | William Rupert Rees-Davies | William Gilbert Rees | Train Kept A'Rollin' | Train Kept A-Rollin' | The Train Kept A-Rollin' | Rollin' with the Nines | Rollin Township, Michigan | Rollin' & Scratchin' | Rollin' Rock Records |
John Paul Stevens wrote a concurrence in the judgement which attacked the thesis of the death penalty while Ruth Bader Ginsburg and David Souter dissented.
During his career, he supervised mathematicians like Dominique de Caen, Rolf S. Rees, and Bill Jackson, among others.
In August, 1994 Rees was again named Adjutant General of Oregon, by then Governor Barbara Roberts.
•
Beginning in 2009, Rees commenced another four-year term as Adjutant General, serving under both Governors Ted Kulongoski and John Kitzhaber.
Rees was elected as a Democrat to the Eighty-ninth Congress, by special election, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of United States Representative James Roosevelt, and reelected to the five succeeding Congresses (December 15, 1965-January 3, 1977).
In 1905 the New Zealand All Blacks toured Great Britain, and began beating every team they were pitted against.
•
Rees was educated in his home town and later in Barnstable, and on leaving school followed his father into the local building trade.