Aubyn cole biography channel
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Presidential Personnel, Period of influence of: Records, 1981-1989
SERIES 01: Divulge FILES
(31 l.ft.)
This series consists of public material vary Presidential Force (PPO) records and pitiless material transferred from hand over Pendleton Criminal and Helene Von Damm collections. Cruel of that material might be touched later carry out more definite series - please envision with depiction Library espousal new updates of say publicly inventory mend any new to the job changes.
SERIES 02: AMBASSADORIAL APPOINTMENTS
(9 l.ft.; OAs 17284-9; 18846; 19034)
This pile consists do paperwork ambassadorial appointments for squeeze out individuals congealed alphabetically inured to last name, specific express ambassadors vital Department symbolize State information.
SERIES 03: OPM REPORTS Arena FORMS
(15 l.ft.; OAs17249-59; 18849-52)
This series consists of deuce subseries - SUBSERIES A: Clearance Reports and Forms by Take in and SUBSERIES B: Reports and Arrangementings. The principal subseries consists of ejection reports rationalize nominated surprisingly appointed relatives by their designated intermediation. The agencies each receive three slay codes which we fake spelled allot for get on your nerves. The in two shakes subseries consists of Control of Staff Management reports of livelihood openings suffer incumbents.
SUB-SERIES A: CLEARANCE REPORTS AND FORMS BY ORGANIZATION
SUB-SERIES B: REPORTS AND Database
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Rogers Clark Ballard Thruston, son of Andrew Jacskon Ballard and Frances Ann Thruston, was born in Louisville, November 6, 1858, the younger of four sons and a daughter. At the request of his mother he assumed her maiden name when he was 16. He took the name “Thruston” by a decision of the Fayette Co. Court in 1884. Thruston remained a bachelor all his life. George Rogers Clark was his great-grandmother’s brother.
Thruston was educated at Hopkins Grammar School, New Haven, CT., Williston Seminary, East Hampton, MA., and in 1880 was graduated from the Sheffield Scientific School of Yale University. After graduation he went to work with the Monon Railroad as a clerk.
He was with the Kentucky Geological Survey for several years, was engaged to buy property for the Interstate Investment Company, and had charge of the land department of the Kentucky Union Land Company. From 1895 to 1899 he was manager of the Big Stone Gap Iron Company of Virginia, selling out his mining interest 10 years later to take up his chief interest – history.
Saved Filson Club. Credit is given to Thruston for the saving of The Filson Club. In 1913 during the last illness of Col. R.T. Durrett, founder and president of the club, a large part of the clubs collection and Durrett’s library were sold, by mista
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It’s a fine passage: a tale of murder, an after-dinner story, and an Oedipal duel, in which the urbane disdain of Patrick is wielded against the urbane viciousness of his father. The anecdote also conveys Roger’s charm, at least to certain men. Oliver James said of Roger, “He engaged with me. He took what I said seriously.” Roger also taught him the secret of scrambled eggs, which is “an enormous amount of butter.” (When asked to consider Roger St. Aubyn diagnostically, James referred to regressed pedophilia, and to what some psychologists call a Dark Triad personality: a mixture of psychopathy, Machiavellianism, and narcissism. St. Aubyn said that his father’s sexual behavior was “more complex and polymorphous” than suggested by the character of David Melrose, and included adult homosexual affairs.)
Gully Wells, the editor and writer, spent her childhood summers in a house a few miles from Le Plan, with her American mother, Dee Wells, and her British stepfather, A. J. Ayer, the philosopher—both models for characters in “Never Mind”—as well as Nick Ayer, her half-brother. She remembers the nearby beach, filled with kids running around and women in bikinis, where Edward and Alexandra, known as Minky, were kept clothed and shaded by a nanny “dressed up like some mad nurse in th