Mark fisher lloyds biography of albert
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| Date Range | 1933 - 1990 |
| Provenance | Albert Lloyd George Rees |
| Description | Section 1 - Biographical ämne [1-1 - 1-5] |
Inventory Listing
| 1-1 | Biographical Materials |
Brief biographical material and publications list; Albert Lloyd George Rees, Who's Who in Australia, 1983; sjöväxt Rees, Obituary and Career Summary bygd C.K. Coogan, 15 August 1989;A. Mellor, 'ALG Rees', Address given to Carey Grammar School Assembly, 23 August 1998; C.K. Coogan, 'Honorary Life Membership nomination - Lloyd Rees', ASIA Bulletin, no.3, May-June 1989; J.B. Willis, 'The Chemists of Australia - Dr. ALG Rees', Chemistry in Australia, vol.45, no. 6, 1978. CreatorAlbert Lloyd George ReesControl 1-1 Date range 1978 - 1989 Quantity 0. • Murder of Mark Fisher2003 murder in Brooklyn, New York, United States The murder of Mark Fisher occurred in the early morning hours of October 12, 2003, when the 19-year-old college student was beaten, shot five times, and left on Argyle Road in Prospect Park South, Brooklyn. On October 19, 2005, co-defendants Antonio Russo and John Giuca were convicted of second-degree felony murder for Fisher's death and sentenced to 25 years to life for his murder.[1][2] Mark S. Fisher[edit]Mark S. Fisher was from Andover, New Jersey. He was the son of Michael and Nancy Fisher and brother to Alexis Fisher.[3] He was a Lenape Valley Regional High School football star and Fairfield University sophomore.[4] He was studying to be an accountant, and was on the Dean's List.[5] Fisher was a National Honor Society student and a star athlete.[4] Prior events[edit]On October 11, 2003, Fisher was out drinking with three friends • Westminster's unhappy familiesIndeed, he retained a sentimental attachment to the Liberal Party long after he'd returned - or "re-ratted" as he called it - to the Tory fold; in 1951, he offered Clement Davies, the Liberal leader, a cabinet job. By then, Davies was leading a parliamentary party that was a mere shadow of the one in which Churchill and David Lloyd George had made their names. The latter, of course, never wavered, even if his definition of what it meant to be a Liberal appeared to veer both right and left over a long career. The same can't be said of his children. Megan was a Liberal MP for 22 years, lost her seat, and when she returned to the Commons a few years later it was for Labour, the party she remained in until she died, in 1966. In part, the explanation was that the Liberal Party of the 1950s was, to her way of thinking, a relatively conservative one. If that's true, though, how can one explain the career of her brother, Gwily |