- Magnus Lund
Magnus Lund (born in 25 June 1983) in Manchester, is an English rugby union footballer, who plays in the back row for Sale Sharks. He was educated at the Lancaster Royal Grammar School where he played for the first XV. He also studied Business Enterprise at the Manchester Metropolitan University. During his youth he represented England in both the under-16 and under-18 national sides. Lund made his debut for the Sale Sharks in 2002 against the Bristol Shoguns. - Kevin Roberts
Kevin Roberts (born 1949) has been the Chief Executive Officer Worldwide of the advertising agency Saatchi & Saatchi since 1997. Roberts is a highly-regarded figure in the advertising industry due to his deep insight and creative mind. In September 2006, Saatchi & Saatchi won a US$430 million JC Penney contract because of the idea of "lovemarks", which was invented and promoted by Roberts. Kevin Roberts is currently attending UCLA. - Jason Queally
Jason Queally (born 11 May 1970) is an English track cyclist from Chorley, England. He won an Olympic Gold at the 2000 Olympics in Sydney. While a student at Lancaster University, he represented Lancaster and British Universities in water polo. He took up competitive cycling aged 25. In 1996, he was nearly killed in an accident at the Meadowbank cycling track in Edinburgh, where an 18-inch sliver of the wooden track entered his chest cavity via his armpit. - Richard Owen
Sir Richard Owen KCB (July 20 1804-December 18 1892) was an English biologist, comparative anatomist and palaeontologist. - Edward Frankland
Sir Edward Frankland, FRS (January 18, 1825 - August 9, 1899) was an English chemist, one of the foremost of his day. He was an expert in water quality and analysis, and originated the concept of combining power, or valence, in chemistry. He was also one of the originators of organometallic chemistry. - William Whewell
William Whewell (May 24, 1794 - March 6, 1866) was an English polymath, scientist, Anglican priest, philosopher, theologian, and historian of science. His surname is pronounced "H-you-el." - Cecil Parkinson
Cecil Edward Parkinson, Baron Parkinson, PC (born 1 September 1931), is a British Conservative politician and former Cabinet Minister. He had humble origins, being the son of a railway worker and educated at Lancaster Royal Grammar School, from where he won a scholarship to Cambridge. - Nigel Morris
Nigel Morris is a businessman who co-founded Capital One with Richard Fairbank, and retired as COO in 2004. He lent the Labour Party (UK) £1,000,000 as part of the Cash for peerages affair. He was educated at Lancaster Royal Grammar School in the North West of England. He is a governor of the London Business School, and a director of the The Economist Group and Quanta Capital Holdings. - Phil Christophers
Philip Derek Christophers (born 16 June 1980 in Heidelberg) is a rugby union footballer who plays on the wing for Castres and England. Christophers was born and raised in Germany with an English father and a German mother. At 16 he moved to England to attend the sixth form at Lancaster Royal Grammar School, where he represented England at under-16 and under-18 level. He studied gynacology (I think you will find this is meant to be Geography!) at Loughborough University, … - Donald Foster
Donald Michael Ellison Foster, MP, better known as Don Foster (born 31 March 1947) is a British Liberal Democrat Member of Parliament, representing Bath. - Robert Woof
Robert Edward Woof (24 November 1911 - 27 November 1997) was a British Labour Party politician. He was first elected to the House of Commons in a by-election in 1956, following the death of the sitting MP, Labour's William Whiteley. He held the seat at the next six general elections, before stepping down from Parliament at the 1979 general election. - John Wrathall
John James Wrathall (August 28, 1913 - August 31, 1978) was a Rhodesian politician. He formerly worked as an accountant. - D. R. Shackleton Bailey
David Roy Shackleton Bailey, FBA, (December 10, 1917 - November 28, 2005 in Ann Arbor, Michigan) was an English scholar of Latin literature (particularly in the field of textual criticism) who spent his academic life teaching at the University of Cambridge, the University of Michigan, and Harvard.
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