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         Baker Ray Stannard:     more detail
  1. Contemporary Authors: Biography - Baker, Ray Stannard (1870-1946)
  2. Baker, Ray Stannard (1870-1946): An entry from SJP's <i>St. James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture</i> by Daniel Lindley, 2000
  3. The spiritual unrest by Baker Ray Stannard 1870-1946, 1910-01-01
  4. Adventures in contentment. by David Grayson [pseud.] illustrated by Baker. Ray Stannard. 1870-1946., 1907-01-01
  5. The friendly road; new adventures in contentment. by David Grays by Baker. Ray Stannard. 1870-1946., 1913
  6. The new industrial unrest: reasons and remedies. by Ray Stannard by Baker. Ray Stannard. 1870-1946., 1920-01-01
  7. The lowly estate. by Baker. Ray Stannard. 1870-1946., 1910-01-01
  8. Boy's second book of inventions by Baker. Ray Stannard. 1870-1946, 1909-01-01
  9. Hempfield; a novel. by David Grayson [pseud.] illustrated by by Baker. Ray Stannard. 1870-1946., 1915-01-01
  10. The friendly road new adventures in contentment by David Grayson by Baker. Ray Stannard. 1870-1946., 1915-01-01
  11. The President and His Biographer: Woodrow Wilson and Ray Stannard Baker by Merrill D. Peterson, 2007-08-13
  12. Adventures in Contentment by Ray Stannard Baker, 1987-10

1. Ray Stannard Baker (1870-1946)
Ray Stannard Baker. A Guide to Resources. Works by Ray Stannard Baker (bibliography).Books and Articles about Ray Stannard Baker (bibliography).
http://www.swarthmore.edu/SocSci/rbannis1/Baker/
Ray Stannard Baker A Guide to Resources Ray Stannard Baker , journalist, author, and biographer of Woodrow Wilson, was born in Lansing, Michigan on April 17, 1870 and died in Amherst, Massachusetts on July 12, 1946. After graduating from Michigan Agricultural College (later Michigan State) he briefly attended the University of Michigan Law school (1891) before launching a career as one of the leading journalists of his generation. After four years as reporter for the Chicago News-Record (1892-96), he joined the staff of McClure's Magazine , a leader in the "New Journalism" then transforming the national press. During the 190s he dreamed of writing the "Great American Novel," and published numerous stories for young people in the Youth's Companion, a magazine he himself enjoyed as a boy. But with McClure's colleagues Lincoln Steffens and Ida Tarbell, Baker soon gained a national reputation as one of the leading "muckrakers," the term Theodore Roosevelt applied to crusading journalists in 1906. That same year Baker published the first of a series of "adventures in contentment" under the pen name "David Grayson." Totaling nine volumes in all, the David Grayson adventures attracted millions of readers world-wide. Uneasy with the "muckraker" label, Baker joined several colleagues to found the American Magazine (1906). In later years, he abandoned the hard-hitting journalism of the

2. Creative Quotations From Ray Stannard Baker [David Grayson] (1870-1946)
Creative Quotations from . . . Ray Stannard Baker David GRayson (18701946)born on US journalist, writer. He was a leading muckraking
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Creative Quotations from . . . Ray Stannard Baker [David Grayson] 1870-1946) born on US journalist, writer. He was a leading muckraking crusader for McClure's Magazine; wrote essays using pen name David Grayson, including "Adventures in Contentment," 1907. Search millions of documents for Ray Stannard Baker [David Grayson]
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Adventure is not outside a man; it is within. We fail far more often by timidity than by over-daring. Happiness, I have discovered, is nearly always a rebound from hard work. Goodness is uneventful. It does not flash, it glows.
Published Sources for Quotations Above:
F: In "Webster's Electronic Quotebase," ed. Keith Mohler, 1994. R: In "Correct Quotes for DOS," WordStar International, 1991. A: N: Adventures in Contentment K: In "Webster's Electronic Quotebase," ed. Keith Mohler, 1994.
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3. Ray S. Baker & Progressivism: Summary
As a toprated journalist and best-selling author Ray Stannard Baker (1870-1946)and his literary alter ego David GRayson provide an excellent window on
http://www.swarthmore.edu/SocSci/rbannis1/Baker/synopsis.html
Robert C. Bannister Ray Stannard Baker and the Legacy of Progressivism Synopsis *latest revision 9/3/00. For an extended version of these remarks click here Introduction : During the past decade, representative of the center, left and right have appropriated the label "progressive." Parallels between the newly nationalized economy , modern society of 1900 and our globalized, post-modern world of 2000 suggest that a need and perhaps the possibility of a new progressive era exists. a. Unitarians through the 1960s sought to identify a single explanation or ethos : democratic/egalitarian sentiment coming especially from the midwest; a "status revolution" centered in middle class, urbanites in the East; the creation of a new "corporatism" led by big business or, alternately, a "search for order" emanating from a new class of professionals. Although Baker figured in most of these interpretations, he never quite fit: * my Ray Stannard Baker : The Mind and Thought of a Progressive (1966) echoed a "status" interpretation of Richard Hofstadter's Age of Reform (1955), adding that David Grayson's post-transcendental idealism finally undercut Baker's reformism. But little or no evidence of "status" anxieties or the "souring" that Hofstadter described.

4. Baker, Ray Stannard
Baker, Ray Stannard 18701946, American author, b. Lansing, Mich., grad. Michigan State College, 1889. At first a Chicago newspaper reporter, he joined the staff of McClure's Magazine in 1897, B
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5. MSN Encarta - Baker, Ray Stannard
Baker, Ray Stannard (18701946), author and journalist, and adviser to UnitedStates president Woodrow Wilson after World War I (1914-1918). Baker was
http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_762510753/Baker_Ray_Stannard.html
MSN Home My MSN Hotmail Shopping ... Money Web Search: logoImg('http://sc.msn.com'); Encarta Subscriber Sign In Help Home ... Upgrade to Encarta Premium Search Encarta
Subscription Article MSN Encarta Premium: Get this article, plus 60,000 other articles, an interactive atlas, dictionaries, thesaurus, articles from 100 leading magazines, homework tools, daily math help and more for $4.95/month or $29.95/year (plus applicable taxes.) Learn more. This article is exclusively available for MSN Encarta Premium Subscribers. Already a subscriber? Sign in above. Baker, Ray Stannard Baker, Ray Stannard (1870-1946), author and journalist, and adviser to United States president Woodrow Wilson after World War I (1914-1918). Baker was... Related Items muckraker Want more Encarta? Become a subscriber today and gain access to:
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Find more about Baker, Ray Stannard from Related Items Other Features from Encarta Try MSN Internet Software for FREE! ... Feedback

6. MSN Encarta - Baker, Ray Stannard
Baker, Ray Stannard. Baker, Ray Stannard ( 18701946), author and journalist, and adviser to United States president Woodrow Wilson after World War I (1914-1918). Baker was
http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_762510753/Ray_Stannard_Baker.html
MSN Home My MSN Hotmail Shopping ... Money Web Search: logoImg('http://sc.msn.com'); Encarta Subscriber Sign In Help Home ... Upgrade to Encarta Premium Search Encarta
Subscription Article MSN Encarta Premium: Get this article, plus 60,000 other articles, an interactive atlas, dictionaries, thesaurus, articles from 100 leading magazines, homework tools, daily math help and more for $4.95/month or $29.95/year (plus applicable taxes.) Learn more. This article is exclusively available for MSN Encarta Premium Subscribers. Already a subscriber? Sign in above. Baker, Ray Stannard Baker, Ray Stannard (1870-1946), author and journalist, and adviser to United States president Woodrow Wilson after World War I (1914-1918). Baker was... Related Items muckraker Want more Encarta? Become a subscriber today and gain access to:
  • Daily Math Help Literature Guides Researcher Tools Paper-Writing Guides 60,000 + articles Interactive Atlas Magazine Center
Find more about Baker, Ray Stannard from Related Items Other Features from Encarta Try MSN Internet Software for FREE! ... Feedback

7. HighBeam Research: Search Results: Article
Baker, Ray Stannard (18701946). The The Hutchinson Dictionary of theArts 01-01-1998 Baker, Ray Stannard (1870-1946) US writer. Among
http://www.highbeam.com/library/doc0.asp?DOCID=1P1:28924787&num=8&ctrlInfo=Round

8. HighBeam Research: ELibrary Search: Results
States. World War I was known 4. Baker, Ray Stannard (18701946)The Hutchinson Dictionary of the Arts; January 1, 1998
http://www.highbeam.com/library/search.asp?FN=AO&refid=ency_refd&search_dictiona

9. Baker, Ray Stannard
Baker, Ray Stannard. 18701946, American author, b. Lansing, Mich.,grad. Michigan State College, 1889. At first a Chicago newspaper
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10. Ray Stannard Baker And The Legacy Of Progressivism:
Ray Stannard Baker and the Legacy and Future of Progressivism. Draft 9/8/00. For a brief outline/summary see Synopsis. the career of the journalist and author Ray Stannard Baker (18701946). Baker provides a useful case study because as
http://www.swarthmore.edu/SocSci/rbannis1/Baker/baker2.html
Ray Stannard Baker and the Legacy and Future of Progressivism
Draft 9/8/00 . For a brief outline/summary see Synopsis . This essay is a working paper and intended to expand brief remarks to be presented at the Maple Leaf and Eagle Conference, Helsinki, Finland September 11-14,200. Not to be quoted without permission of author at rbannis1@swarthmore.edu Introduction A revival of the term "progressive" in American politics raises questions about the meaning of the term as applied to the "progressive era" (1900-1920) and the prospects of a new progressive era. This essay revisits the period through the career of the journalist and author Ray Stannard Baker (1870-1946). Baker provides a useful case study because as a journalist he saw himself as spokesman for mainstream America. "That a man is 'ahead of his time' or 'behind his time,'" he once wrote, "is an admission that he is second rate." Baker's varied career also mirrored the complexity of the age. A reporter for McClure's Magazine he was one of the best-known of the journalists whom Roosevelt branded as "muckrakers" in 1906. That same year, he launched a second career under the pen name "David Grayson," with the first of nine "adventures in contentment." A political independent in the 1890s, he supported Theodore Roosevelt after 1901, then flirted briefly with socialism before turning first to Robert Lafollette and finally to Woodrow Wilson in 1912. He later served as Wilson's press secretary at Versailles, and became a major defender and interpreter of "Wilsonianism" in books on the Versailles peace conference and in an eight-volume biography

11. Portraits De Personnages Celebres : BAK
Photo 1/2 (A)/3 Voix 1 (.wav)/2 (.ra); Baker (Mrs. Peter William)Peinture 1; Baker (Ray Stannard)(18701946) Photo de groupe 1 (A
http://www.onlipix.com/personnages/bak.htm
BAK A B C D ... Z
  • BAKER (Alan)
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  • BAKER (David)(1827-1894)
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  • BAKER (Edward Dickinson)(1811-1861)
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  • BAKER (Fred, doctor
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  • BAKER (Ginger)(1939-)
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  • BAKER (Henry Frederick)(1866-1956)
      Photo (en 1926)/ (en 1930)/3/4
  • BAKER (Sir Herbert)(1862-1946)
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    • BAKER (Josephine)(1906-1975)
        Photo (en 1949)/3 (en 1949)/4 (en 1951)
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    • BAKER (Kenny)
    • BAKER (La Fayette Curry.
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    • BAKER (Laurence Simmons)
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    • BAKER (Newton Diehl)
        Photo (A)/3
        Voix 1 (.wav)/2 (.ra)
    • BAKER (Mrs. Peter William)
        Peinture
    • BAKER (Ray Stannard)(1870-1946)
    • BAKER (Richard St Barbe)(1889-1982)
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    • BAKER (Richard Thomas)(1854-1941)
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    • BAKER (Royal N.)
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    • BAKER (Thomas B.)(-1896)
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    • BAKER (Warden)
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      • BAKER (William)(1841-1905)
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      • BAKER (William)(-1929)
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      • BAKER (Wilson)(1900-)
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      • BAKER-CRESSWELL (Joe)(1901-1997)
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      • BAKEWELL (Robert)(1725-1795)
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      • BAKEWELL (William)
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      • BAKLANOV (Georges)(1880-1938)
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      • BAKOUNINE (Alexander)
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      • BAKOUNINE (Catherine)
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      • BAKOUNINE (Mikhail ou Michel)(1814-1876)
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      • BAKSHI DORON (Eliyahu)
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      • BAKY (Laszlo)(1898-1946) Onlipix.com

12. ONLIPIX - Great Names Pictures : BAK
Baker (Mrs. Peter William) Painting 1; Baker (Ray Stannard)(18701946)Group photo 1 (E-in 1919, with Claude Augustus SWANSON) Drawing 1;
http://www.onlipix.com/personages/bak.htm
BAK A B C D ... Z
  • BAKER (Alan)
      Photo
  • BAKER (Alpheus)(1828-1891)
      Photo
  • BAKER (Charles Henry Collins)(1880-1959)
      Painting
  • BAKER (Charlotte, wife of Fred BAKER
      Painting
  • BAKER (David)(1827-1894)
      Photo
  • BAKER (Earle)
      Photo
  • BAKER (Edward)
      Drawing
  • BAKER (Edward Dickinson)(1811-1861) Photo
  • BAKER (Fred, doctor
      Photo
  • BAKER (Ginger)(1939-)
      Painting
  • BAKER (Henry Frederick)(1866-1956)
      Photo (in 1926)/ (in 1930)/3/4
  • BAKER (Sir Herbert)(1862-1946)
      Painting
  • BAKER III (James A.)(1930-)
      Painting
  • BAKER (Janet)(1933-)
      Photo
      Painting
  • BAKER (Josephine)(1906-1975) Photo (in 1949)/3 (in 1949)/4 (in 1951)
    Cartoon
  • BAKER (Kenny)
  • BAKER (La Fayette Curry. general
      Photo
  • BAKER (Laurence Simmons)
      Photo
  • BAKER (Newton Diehl)
      Photo (E)/3
      Voice (.wav)/2 (.ra)
  • BAKER (Mrs. Peter William)
      Painting
  • BAKER (Ray Stannard)(1870-1946)
  • BAKER (Richard St Barbe)(1889-1982)
      Painting
  • BAKER (Richard Thomas)(1854-1941)
      Photo
  • BAKER (Royal N.)

13. Zaadz Quotes By Author - Ray Stannard Baker Quotes
1. Nothing lasts—not even pain. ~ Ray Stannard Baker (18701946)pseudonym David GRayson US author, biographer. More quotes about Pain
http://www.zaadz.com/quotes/authors/ray_stannard_baker/

14. Michigan Journalism Hall Of Fame
Ray Stannard Baker (18701946) was a journalist and biographer who won the1939 Pulitzer Prize for his biography of President Woodrow Wilson.
http://hof.jrn.msu.edu/bios/baker.html
Ray Stannard Baker (1986) Ray Stannard Baker (1870-1946) was a journalist and biographer who won the 1939 Pulitzer Prize for his biography of President Woodrow Wilson. Born in Lansing, Baker graduated from Michigan Agricultural College (now MSU) in 1889. He began his journalism career at the Chicago News Record and went on to become the associate editor of McClure's Magazine from 1899 to 1905 and of American Magazine from 1906 to 1915. Baker was a leading "muckraking" journalist along with Lincoln Steffens, Ida Tarbell and William Allen White. He became a close associate of President Wilson and in 1925 became his official biographer. In addition to his eight-volume biography of Wilson, Baker wrote nearly five hundred articles, stories, essays and books during his distinguished career.

15. Nicholson Baker Fan Page: Biography
Location Southern Maine (USA); Lineage Greatgrandson of Pulitzer Prize winningjournalist Ray Stannard Baker (1870-1946). Nick at Nine , Nick and Rachel .
http://www.j-walk.com/nbaker/biography.htm
Home Books Other Writing Critiques ...
Baker..
Nicholson Baker Fan Page
Biographical Information
  • Born:
    January 7, 1957, Rochester, NY (USA) Education:
    1970-1975 The School Without Walls, Rochester; '75 Eastman music school, Rochester; '75-79 Haverford College, Pennsylvania (English literature). Family:
    Married 1985 Margaret Brentano (two children, Alice15, Elias nine). Location:
    Southern Maine (USA) Lineage:
    Great-grandson of Pulitzer Prize winning journalist Ray Stannard Baker (1870-1946).
"Nick at Nine" "Nick and Rachel"
Photos by Doug Baker. Courtesy of Ann Baker.

16. Noted Relations: BAKER Family
English architect Baker, Newton Deihl 18711937 American lawyer and politician,Baker, Ray Stannard (a/k/a David GRayson) 1870-1946 American journalist and
http://freepages.history.rootsweb.com/~dav4is/people/BAKER.htm
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NEWS BAKER pages Pedigrees ODTs Celebs Sources Gallery Annex A B C ... Z
Noted Relations: BAKER Family
BAKER Family ODT Contents: Name forms Bacer, Bachor, Backer, Baker, Bakor These people are all related to me.
Relatives
=ancestor, =cousin, =spouse EDDY, Mary Baker
Candidates Work List
This is my working list of candidates to include. As candidates are eliminated (proven not related) they are struck out and an explanation included. They are kept in the list in case future research proves they can be included. (And to keep them from popping up on the list again!) Never discard good research! Proven candidates' names are marked with an asterisk (*) until they can be added to the database.
BAKER, Augustine (David)
Welsh religious
BAKER, Benjamin

17. Miscellaneous Items In High Demand: Creators/Related Names: 2
Baker, Lamar, 19081994, artist. Baker, Ray Stannard, 1870-1946, photographer.Baker, Samuel F., engraver. Baker, WJ (William J.), photographer.
http://lcweb2.loc.gov/pp/cphAuthors02.html
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Aparo, Jim, 1932- artist.
Apfelbaum, Polly, 1955- artist.

Apian, Peter, 1495-1550.

Applegate, James R., fl. 1890s, photographer.
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18. Miscellaneous Groups Of Images: Creators/Related Names: 1
Bain, George Granthan, 18651944. Baker, Ray Stannard, 1870-1946,photographer. Baldus, Edouard, 1813-1889, photographer. Baldwin
http://lcweb2.loc.gov/pp/collAuthors01.html
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Abbey, Edwin Austin, 1852-1911, artist.

Adams, Ansel, 1902- photographer.

Agee, James, 1909-1955

Agfa Ansco (Firm), printer, donor.
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19. The Story Of The Phonograph (1904) By Raymond Stannard Baker
The following is a Gaslight etext . A message to you about copyright and permissions.THE STORY OF THE PHONOGRAPH. (1904). By Ray Stannard Baker. (18701946).
http://www.geocities.com/athens/forum/7227/phonograph.htm
The following is a Gaslight etext.... A message to you about
THE STORY OF THE PHONOGRAPH.
By RAY STANNARD BAKER.
T HIS is the wonder of the phonograph: it is a machine which makes pictures of sounds, and then, at will, changes these pictures back into sounds again. A picture of a matchless solo by Melba is made in Paris on a little wax cylinder; the cylinder is sent through the mails to New York like any other picture, here to be transformed again into the voice of Melba, repeating all the sweetness and richness of the original tones. The voice of Nicolini, preserved in pictures, still sings, although the singer himself is dead. And this is something hard to realize, even at this day when the phonograph has become almost as familiar as the sewing-machine. Every man has in his throat a delicate membrane which is set to quivering every time he speaks. The vibrations thus produced in turn set the air to quivering, and these waves roll through space, very much like the waves on the seashore, until they strike on the drum or membrane of the ear. That is the way we hear; it is nature's telephone. If the vibrations are rapid we say that the voice is high; if slow, we say that it is deep. Each note has its own different vibrations. It was in 1877, long before Edison had become widely famous. At that time his experiments were carried on in a shop in Newark, New Jersey, where he was surrounded with a little company of trusted workmen. It was at the time when Edison often became so absorbed in his schemes for inventions that he forgot his meals, and frequently worked night and day for two or three days together, keeping all of those about him as busy as he was himself. Sometimes he would call in an organ-grinder to keep the men awake and cheerful until the strain was over, and then he would hire a boat and take all hands down the bay with him on a fishing excursion. It was with this singleness of purpose and loyalty that Edison and his men always worked together.

20. Ray
Ray Brown (1926) American jazz musician. Educators, Scholars, and Social WorkersRay Stannard Baker (David GRayson) (1870-1946) American journalist.
http://www.geocities.com/edgarbook/names/r/ray.html
For many more names, please Return to Edgar's Main Page. Ray
Gender : Masculine and Feminine
Language : English
Etymology
Ray
History
Ray has several different meanings.
1. It is short for Raymond , the English form of a Germanic name, Raginmund
or-
2. It is from the surname Ray
-or- 3. As a feminine name, it is short for Rachel , the English, French, and German form of a Hebrew name, Rachael Pronunciation : ray. Famous Bearers Artists and Authors Ray Bradbury American writer. Ray Brown American jazz musician. Educators, Scholars, and Social Workers Ray Stannard Baker (David Grayson) (1870-1946) American journalist. Miscellaneous Ray C. Ewry American Olympic athlete. Ray Kroc The man who built McDonalds into a world-wide empire. Ray Meyer American college basketball coach. Ray E. Nitschke American football player. Sugar Ray Leonard American boxer. Scientists Ray McIntire American chemical engineer. Creator of Styrofoam. Ray W. Fuller American biochemist. Singers and Entertainers Ray Lawler Australian actor.

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