- Tim Paterson
Tim Paterson (born 1956) is an American computer programmer, best known as the original author of the popular MS-DOS operating system. Educated at the University of Washington, Paterson worked as a repair technician for a computer store in Seattle, Washington. After he graduated "magna cum laude" in June 1978, he went to work for Seattle Computer Products as a designer and engineer. - William Paterson
- Owen Paterson
Owen William Paterson (born 24 June 1956, Whitchurch) is a British Consevative Party politician, and Member of Parliament for North Shropshire and Shadow Secretary of State for Northern Ireland. - David Paterson
David A. Paterson (born May 20, 1954) is an American politician and the current Lieutenant Governor of New York. He is the first African American to hold this position. He was selected as running mate by New York Attorney General and Democratic Party nominee Eliot Spitzer in the 2006 New York gubernatorial election. Paterson was born legally blind in Brooklyn in 1954. He received a BA from Columbia University in 1977 and later his law degree from Hofstra Law School. - Jodi Ann Paterson
Jodi Ann Paterson (born July 31, 1975) is an American model, actress and former beauty queen. - Katherine Paterson
Katherine Paterson is an award-winning American author of books for children. She was born in China on October 31, 1932 to missionary parents. She graduated with a degree in English from King College in Bristol, Tennessee. She then spent a year at a rural school in Virginia before going to graduate school. She received a Master's degree and worked as a missionary in Japan. - William Paterson
Sir William Paterson (born April, 1658 in Tinwald, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland - died in Westminster, London, on January 22, 1719) was a Scottish trader and banker. - Chris Paterson
Chris "Mossy" Paterson (born March 30 1978 in Edinburgh) is a Scottish rugby union footballer. He is a fullback or wing or fly-half who plays for Edinburgh and Scotland. He is probably Scotland's most naturally gifted rugby footballer since Gregor Townsend who also attended Galashiels Academy. Chris recently earned his 64th cap for Scotland, and will serve as captain of the Scotland team in the 2007 Six Nations Championship, … - Pat Paterson
Pat Paterson (April 7, 1910 - August 24, 1978) was a British-born actress. Born Patricia Paterson in Bradford, Yorkshire, England, UK. During the 1930s, she appeared in British and Hollywood films. She was married to French-American actor Charles Boyer, who committed suicide two days after she died of cancer. They are buried together in the Holy Cross Cemetery in Culver City, California. - Andrew J. Paterson
Andrew J. Paterson (B. 1952 in Toronto, Ontario) is a Canadian inter-disciplinary artist, working with video, live performance, original text, film, and music. Paterson is also a published author and editor, who sees his multidisciplinary activities as existing parallel to his media-art practice. During the 1980's he was the singer, songwriter and guitarist for the Toronto punk band The Government, … - Norman McLeod Paterson
Norman McLeod Paterson, D.C.L., LL.D., K.G St. J. (August 3, 1883 - August 10, 1983) was a Canadian businessman and politician. Born in Portage la Prairie, Manitoba, the son of H.S. Paterson, he started working with the Manitoba Railway and Canal Company in 1897. He later worked for the the Great Northern Railway of Canada as a telegrapher eventually becoming a purchasing agent. In 1903, he started working with his father in the grain business and started a company, … - John Paterson
John Paterson sometimes Patterson (1744-1808) was born in New Britain, Connecticut and graduated from Yale in 1762. After graduation John practiced law, and was a justice of the peace at New Britain until 1774 when he moved to Lenox, Massachusetts. He married elizabeth Lee and had at least one son and one daughter. He was elected to the Massachusetts Provincial congress in October of that year and in 1775. In April 1775 when work reached the Berkshires, … - William Paterson
William Paterson (December 24 1745 - September 9, 1806) was a New Jersey statesman, a signer of the United States Constitution, and Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court, who served as the 2nd Governor of New Jersey, from 1790 to 1793. William Paterson was born on December 24 1745, in County Antrim, in Northern Ireland, moved to what is the United States at age 2, and entered the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University) at age 14. After graduating, … - Steve Paterson
Steven William (Steve) Paterson (born on 8th April 1958 in Elgin, Moray) is a football manager and former Scottish footballer. During his professional playing career, he was a central defender and joined Manchester United from Nairn County in July 1975 and made a total of 6 league appearances for the Red Devils over four seasons. He also had spells playing for clubs in Hong Kong and Japan, before his playing career was cut short by persistent injury problems. - Gil Paterson
Gil Paterson, born in Glasgow, 1942 is a Scottish National Party Member of the Scottish Parliament for the West of Scotland region, having been elected on 3 May 2007. From 1999 to 2003 he was an MSP for Central Scotland. Brought up in the North of Glasgow, Paterson attended Possilpark Secondary School, before building up his own business "Gil's Motor Factors". - Scott Paterson
Scott Paterson (born 13 May, 1972 in Aberdeen) is a Scottish footballer who currently plays in defence for Highland League side Cove Rangers. - Tom Paterson
Tom Paterson is a Scottish comic artist who drew characters for Fleetway in 1973-1990, and D.C Thomson from 1986-onwards. He is famous for drawing comics such as - William A. Paterson
William A. Paterson (1838-1921) was an American automobile maker associated with the founding of the Buick Motor Company. He created the Paterson automobile and briefly served as mayor of Flint, Michigan. - Bill Paterson
Bill Paterson (June 3, 1945 in Glasgow) is a Scottish actor who has appeared in many films, plays and television series. - Alex Paterson
Alex Paterson (Duncan Robert Alex Paterson also known and abbreviated as Dr Alex Paterson, born October 15, 1959 in London) near Battersea is an English musician and co-founder of the ambient group The Orb, in which he has worked since its inception. Paterson's father died when Alex Paterson was three years old. As a child, Alex Paterson ended up in a local school for children with "broken homes". - Grant Paterson
Grant Andrew Paterson (born June 9, 1960 in Harare) is a Zimbabwean cricketer. He has played ten ODIs for Zimbabwe between 1983 to 1987. - Craig Paterson
Craig Paterson is a former Scottish footballer, who currently works as a pundit for BBC Radio Scotland. The son of former Hibernian defender John Paterson, Paterson played also played with the Edinburgh club until signed by Rangers for £200,000 in August 1982, where he won a League Cup medal. He later played for Motherwell (where he won the Scottish Cup in 1991), Kilmarnock and Hamilton Academical. He has worked in the Scottish sports media since his retirement, … - Jennifer Paterson
Jennifer Paterson (3 April, 1928 - 10 August, 1999) was a chef and TV personality who appeared on the television programme "Two Fat Ladies" with Clarissa Dickson-Wright. The pair were famous for their sometimes unhealthy, but presumably very delicious, meals made from scratch. Their preferred means of transportation was a motorbike with sidecar, which Paterson drove. Paterson, a devout Roman Catholic who died in 1999 of lung cancer at the age of 71 in England, … - Don Paterson
Don Paterson, Scottish poet, writer and musician, was born in Dundee, Scotland, in 1963. He won an Eric Gregory Award in 1990 and his poem 'A Private Bottling' won the Arvon Foundation International Poetry Competition in 1993. He was included on the list of 20 poets chosen for the Poetry Society's 'New Generation Poets' promotion in 1994. In 2002 he was awarded a Scottish Arts Council Creative Scotland Award. His first collection of poetry, Nil Nil (1993), … - Robert Paterson
Robert Paterson (1715 - 1801) was a Scottish stone-mason, who suggested to Sir Walter Scott the character of "Old Mortality". He was born near Hawick in 1715. Through the patronage of Sir Thomas Kirkpatrick, whose cook he had married, he obtained the lease of a quarry at Gatelawbrig, but in 1745 his house was plundered by the retreating Jacobites, and Paterson himself, a pronounced Cameronian, was carried off a prisoner. - Nancy Paterson
Nancy Paterson (b. 1957) is a Toronto-based electronic media artist. Working in the field of interactive installations, her mediaworks have included "BICYCLE TV", "THE MACHINE IN THE GARDEN" and "STOCK MARKET SKIRT" (a cyberfeminist fashion statement). - Sean Paterson
Sean Paterson (born March 26, 1987 in Greenock, Inverclyde) is a Scottish professional footballer who is currently without a club. He was on the books of Blackpool between 2004 and 2007 but only played two league games for the Seasiders. He went on loan to Southport between October 2006 and May 2007. He was released by Blackpool on May 31, 2007. - Fred Paterson
Frederick Woolnough Paterson (1897-1977) was an Australian politician. He was the only member of a Communist party ever to be elected to a parliament anywhere in Australia. - Eileen Paterson
Eileen Catterson is a Scottish fashion model and former Miss Scotland. She attended Park Mains High School in Erskine, Renfrewshire, and is the partner of the former lead singer of Wet Wet Wet, Marti Pellow. - Jeannie Paterson
Jeannie Marie Paterson is a Senior Lecturer in Contract Law at Monash University, Clayton, Victoria, Australia. She holds a Bachelor of Arts (Honours), a Bachelor of Laws and a PhD Doctor of Philosophy in Contract Law and has had extensive experience in banking and finance law at Mallesons Stephen Jaques, a top-tier Australian law firm. She has co-written two major Australian textbooks on Contract Law: "Contract: cases and materials" by Jeannie Paterson, … - Aileen Paterson
Aileen Paterson (b. 31st November 1934) is a Scottish writer and illustrator, best known for her series of children's books about Maisie the kitten, beginning with "Maisie Comes to Morningside". Born in the Fife town of Burntisland, she then moved to Kirkcaldy, before gaining a place at Edinburgh Art College where she specialised in pottery. - Basil Paterson
Basil A. Paterson is a longtime political leader in New York and Harlem. He is the second African American to be the nominee of a major party for statewide office in New York. (Edward R. Dudley, the Democratic nominee for attorney general of New York in 1962, was the first.) Secretary Paterson became involved in Democratic politics in Harlem in the 1950s and 1960s. Along with former New York Mayor David Dinkins, former Manhattan Borough President Percy Sutton, … - Martin Paterson
Martin Paterson is an English footballer, who played as a striker for Grimsby Town during the 2006-2007 season on loan from Football League Championship club Stoke City. He has also played at international level for Northern Ireland's U21 side. Paterson made his début for Stoke as a late substitute for Chris Greenacre in the 2-0 win over Plymouth Argyle on 16 April2005. His first start came in March 2006 against Leeds United and he hit his first goal six months later, … - Sandy Paterson
Sandy Paterson was born in Melbourne, Australia. She has worked as a Producer, Production coordinator and Administrator in commercial theatre and television production for over 20 years. In 2004 she became Executive Producer of Good Morning Australia. The show ended in 2005 when host Bert Newton returned to Channel Nine to host Family Feud. She then created and is now executive producer of 9am with David and Kim. - Algy Paterson
Algy Paterson (d. August 6, 1995) was the last fluent speaker of the Martuthunira language of Western Australia. Algy's father was a European, which made him eligible to be removed from his family by the authorities under the policy now known as the Stolen Generation. His family avoided this by hiding in the the bush, where they lived a traditional nomadic lifestyle. Algy grew up speaking Martuthunira and Kurrama, and did not learn any English until he was fifteen. - Rex Paterson
Rex Munro Paterson OBE (born 1902 in London, died 1978 in Hampshire) was a British agricultural pioneer whose extensive business and meticulous record keeping enabled him to carry out research and development in dairy farming systems on a scale that would have been beyond most research institutions. - Alexander Paterson
Alexander Paterson (January 24, 1844 - March 23, 1908), Australian politician, was an independent member of the Australian House of Representatives from March 30, 1901 to November 23, 1903, representing the Division of Capricornia, Queensland. He was born in Greenock, Scotland and had migrated to Australia in 1875. On June 15, 1901, during the first parliament of the Commonwealth, the "Immigration Restriction Bill 1901" was introduced. - Kathryn Paterson
Kathryn Paterson (October 17 1962-September 20 1999) was raised in the sea-side town of Umina, north of Sydney, Australia, the daughter of June, a teacher, and Phil Paterson, a pharmacist. Paterson obtained an honours degree in psychology from Macquarie University in 1991. Between 1984 and 1993, she was a senior researcher at the Australian Broadcasting Tribunal (a predecessor of the Australian Communications and Media Authority), … - Neil Paterson
Dr. Neil Paterson, 52, a native of Edmonton, Alberta, Canada was educated at the Athol Murray College of Notre Dame in Canada and Maharishi European Research University (MERU) in Switzerland and the Netherlands. Dr. Paterson received his undergraduate and graduate degrees from MERU. - William Paterson
Colonel William Paterson was a Scottish soldier, explorer, and botanist best known for leading early settlement in Tasmania. In 1794, Lieutenant Colonel William Paterson, from the New South Wales Marine Corps, granted more land and convict servants to the military, giving them great powers and undermining Governor Arthur Phillip's good naval government. He led an expedition to the Hunter Valley in 1801 and up the Paterson River (later named in his honour by Governor King).
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