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427 result(s) for "Mason, Philip"
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Kingston man wins $1,000,000 playing ONTARIO INSTANT MILLIONS
OLG is a provincial agency responsible for province-wide lottery games and gaming facilities. Since 1975, OLG lotteries, casinos, slots, and resort casinos have generated more than $28 billion for the benefit of the Province of Ontario.
Philip Mason
  He is survived by his mother, Adriane Sims of Houma, five brothers, John Mason of Alexanderia, Stafford Mason, Chris Celestine, Clarence Celestine and Carl Celestine, all of Houma; and five sisters, Janice Mason, Denise Mason and Lulay Mason, all of Houma, Ann Stovall,...
Schedule in a stop at the Green Room
This crisp red wine had a slender bouquet, with a seductive fruitiness and veil of peppery fizz, more like a catwalk model than a burly bouncer, sashaying beside the silky, lightly-roasted cheese as it oozed from its velvety skin. The mildly acidic dressing added a gloss to the crunchy salad leaves. A great start. My companion was blissfully happy. Mr [Philip Mason] had exercised a light touch in bringing together smoked chicken and beetroot salad with crme fra'che and mustard dressing. Lozenges of chicken, with only a hint of smokiness, alternated with discs of purple beetroot to encircle a mound of salad leaves. The dressing was a creamy, pungent haze of flavour that linked this band of happy brothers. I barely have space left to tell you that my crme brule with apple was just as it should be. A crystal-sharp topcoat gave way to creamy custard with a delicious thread of light apple pure below the surface. My companion had a huge slice of bread and butter pudding in crme Anglaise.
Boat franchise sale Dealership snapped up
Former Honeycombes automotive group business manager Philip Mason has teamed with Honeycombes Cars partners Jason Collins and Alan Baxter to buy the Rising Sun property and the Yamaha marine franchise which trades in it. \"That's an indication of how well the economy is going,\" Mr Collins said. \"We think that will flow on to boat sales if it hasn't already. We are very bullish about Townsville and the future of the boat market.\" Mr Mason has worked with the Honeycombes automotive group at Townsville and Darwin and is a long-time Townsville resident.
War spies divulge tales, sparingly Intelligence officers from World War II come to Maine for a tight- lipped reunion
About 50 ex-spies, including some who gathered intelligence for the Allied effort, gathered to hear author Mason Philip Smith, a historian and Cape Elizabeth resident, describe the last German landing on American soil during World War II. Smith, a Portland Press Herald photo intern in 1959, ran a studio in Portland for 30 years and now writes maritime-history books. His latest book, \"Spies Ashore,\" to be published this spring, will focus on the half-dozen landings by Nazi spies in North America. PHOTO: color; Caption: Author Mason Philip Smith, a historian and Cape Elizabeth resident, will have his latest book, \"Spies Ashore,\" published this spring. The book is about Nazi spies landing on North American shores.
PHILIP A. MASON
Philip A. Mason, 94, widower of Dorothy C.
Broker in court over trader
Instead of carrying out trades in accordance with instructions, Mr [Philip Mason] used the warehousing strategy to dump loss- making trades into Geniki's account over eight months in 2001, Mr [George Pavlides] says. Neil Badger, [Ellis]'s chief executive, yesterday admitted that some of Mr Mason's activities did not comply with the brokerage's internal procedures, nor were they spotted by the firm's compliance department. \"I would not approve of this method of trading other than in special circumstances, which ought to be fully documented,\" Mr Badger says in a statement submitted to the High Court. \"Mr Mason does not appear to have complied with Ellis's internal procedures.\"
Births
Samuel Nicholas Armstrong, a boy born to Crystal Anne MacGown and Adam Read Armstrong May 4, of Woolwich. Grandparents, Gina Morgan of Bowdoinham, Mark MacGown of Hancock, Anne and Read Armstrong of Woolwich. Sera Raye Campbell, a girl to Ashley Jeanne (Morin) Campbell and Leighton Ray Campbell of Brunswick, April 13. Grandparents, Philip and Donna Morin of Brunswick, Maureen and Davil Campbell of Mechanic Falls, the late Raymond Jasper; great-grandparents, J. Roland and Dorina Morin, Jeannette Tremblay, Catherine Estabrook. Lexie Leigh O'Camb, a girl born to Echo [Kraig Lee Osborne] (Alexander) and Brian James O'Camb May 12, of Waldoboro. Sibling, Alexander O'Camb; grandparents, Robert and Arlene Alexander of Bath.
HONEY OF A HOBBY
Still in his chalk stripes, [Philip A. Mason] shoots over in his Porsche to Bay 11. He turns up the air conditioning because bees are less active in the cold and he expects to take some home. He walks into the area to find a number of terrified postal workers cowering behind cardboard boxes, the blood drained from their faces, as upward of 25,000 bees play tag. He tells everyone to stay still and then to open, slowly, the bay doors. Many bees leave. Mason then gingerly carries the three boxes, one by one, to his frigid car. Like an upland hunting dog near a covey of quail, his interest in bees is complete. After his epiphany, Mason attended bee meetings, devoured bee books. In 1993, he bought the whole enchilada and began commuting to Cornell in Ithaca, N.Y., to get a PhD in bees (entomology) under the late Roger Morse, who, he explains, was to bees what E.O. Wilson at Harvard is to ants. All while keeping his law practice alive. Five years later, he got his degree, with distinction. His wife identified him at the time as \"a trophy grad student.\" Mason doesn't just study bees. He has 300,000 bees in his hives in Brookline and more on Nantucket. Every year, he and his family take the Nantucket honey and bottle it in Brookline to sell on island. (Incredibly, honey is not judged by its taste, but rather criteria such as color and clarity.)