- Richard Doll
Sir William Richard Shaboe Doll CH OBE FRS (28 October 1912-24 July 2005) was a British physiologist who became the foremost epidemiologist of the 20th century, turning the subject into a rigorous science. He was a pioneer in research linking smoking to health problems. With Ernst Wynder, Bradford Hill and Evarts Graham, he was the first in the modern world to prove that smoking caused lung cancer and increased the risk of heart disease. - Brian May
Brian Harold May CBE (born July 19, 1947) is an English guitarist best known as the lead guitarist and backing (sometimes lead) vocalist for the English rock band Queen. As a guitarist, he is known for his memorable riffs and solos, distinctive tone, as well as for the fact that he built (with his father) his own guitar, called the "Red Special". He is also cited as a pioneer of the delay effect. He wrote many of Queen's most famous songs and biggest hits, … - Sir Harry Calvert 1st Baronet
Sir Harry Calvert, 1st Baronet GCB GCH (March 1763 - 3 September 1826) was a British general, during a civil war in the United States. He was born in 1763 at Hampton, near London. He was educated at Harrow, and at the age of fifteen entered the army. The following year he served with his regiment in America, being present at the siege of Charleston, and serving through the campaign of Lord Cornwallis which ended with the surrender of Yorktown. - Martin Salter
Martin John Salter (born 19 April 1954 in Hampton, in west London) is a United Kingdom politician. He is Labour Member of Parliament for the Reading West parliamentary constituency. - Peter Rhoades-Brown
Peter Rhoades-Brown (born 2 January 1962 in Hampton, London) is a retired English footballer. A pacy "old-fashioned" left-winger, Rhoades-Brown played for Chelsea from 1979 to 1983; during his four years with Chelsea, he scored only four League goals. The highlight of his time at the club was scoring the opener in a shock 2-0 FA Cup win over European champions Liverpool in 1982. When Chelsea signed winger Mickey Thomas in January 1984, … - Alan Sealey
Alan William Sealey (born Hampton, London, UK, 24 February 1942 – died February 1996) was an English football player. Sealey, an outside right, initially played for Leyton Orient in 1960, before moving to West Ham United, where he played from 1960 to 1966. Sealey scored both goals in West Ham's 2-0 win against against TSV 1860 Munich in the 1965 European Cup Winners' Cup final at Wembley Stadium. - Will Hall
i live in bradford, as u can see from my pic i have dark brown hair and blue eyes. im 6ft. if u kno me youll know most things about me anyway. - Lise
Born into a circus, the daughter of a bearded lady and three-legged lion tamer, I soon learnt that life just isn't fair. However, following some expensive facial hair laser treatment I have also learnt that you can make life fair, provided you have enough money and imagination. - Jon
--> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> --> Copied from MySpace.com -->. - Richard
- Christina
- Matt Rehm
- David Williams
- Shahin
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