Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; Appearance. move to sidebar hide ... Sir Roger Michael De Haan, CBE, DL (born October 1948, [3] ...
Sir Roger De Haan told The Independent he has spent “20-25 years regenerating Folkestone” and that before the recent improvements the local economy was “really struggling”.
The business was founded by Sidney De Haan in 1951 and was passed to his son Roger De Haan who took over in 1984 after his father's retirement. [5] Saga was acquired by staff (20%) backed by the private equity firm Charterhouse in October 2004. [6] Saga merged with The AA (owned by CVC and Permira) to form Acromas Holdings. [7]
De Haan died at his home in Folkestone, Kent, on Saturday 16 February 2002, after suffering a heart attack. Margery pre-deceased him in 1994. [2] In memory of Sidney De Haan, the Roger De Haan Charitable Trust funded the Sidney De Haan Research Centre led by the university's music department and the Centre for Health Education and Research in ...
Controversial plans to transform a Kent seafront town have been turned down. Spearheaded by multi-millionaire Sir Roger De Haan, the huge revamp of Folkestone Harbour would have seen hundreds of ...
Our Daily Bread Ministries is a Christian organization founded by Martin De Haan in 1938. It is headquartered in Grand Rapids, Michigan , and has over 600 employees. The organization produces several devotional publications, which are read globally.
pointed to oversee reforms in the police de-partment. Some progress had been made since the riots, but Operation Vortex threat-ened to undo it. Vortex did reduce street crime, according to the police. But it had little effect on the city’s murder count, which, with twelve murders in September of 2006 and a deadly
The Rotherwas Room is an English Jacobean room currently in the Mead Art Museum, in Amherst College. [2]It was originally installed in the estate of the Bodenham family called Rotherwas Court, in Herefordshire, England, as part of the country house where the family lived.