Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Robert Mohr (5 April 1897 – 5 February 1977) was an interrogation specialist of the Gestapo. He headed the special commission responsible for the search and arrest of the White Rose , part of the German Resistance to Nazism.
In 2014, Robert Shibuya joined Mohr Partners as the company's president, [3] [4] and helped expand the firm to offices in multiple locations including Nashville, [5] Phoenix, [6] St. Louis, [7] and Austin. [8] In 2017, Shibuya completed a management buyout of Mohr Partners, assuming the role of chairman and CEO. Mohr was named chairman emeritus.
Robert Mohr (born 25 August 1978) is a retired German international rugby union player, having played professionally in France for Bourgoin, La Rochelle, Niort and for the German national rugby union team. He is one of the few players in the history of the German team who was a professional.
"The play has roles for seven males and one female. The strongest roles belong to Robert Mohr, the head of the Munich Gestapo, and Sophie Scholl, one of the students. Mohr, moved by Scholl's passion (and mindful that she is German, but not Jewish), attempts to save her by giving her a chance to recant, but she refuses.
MAJGEN The Hon. Robert Mohr RFD ED: Supreme Court of South Australia: 1985 () 30 July 1987 () [3] 2: AVM The Hon. Alastair Nicholson AO RFD: Chief Justice of the Family Court of Australia: February 1988 () 1992 () 3: RADM The Hon. Alwynne Rowlands AO RFD RANR: Family Court of Australia: 1992 () 1996 () 4: MAJGEN The Hon. Kevin Duggan AM RFD
In December 2008, Mohr petitioned a Los Angeles court to allow him to legally add her last name to his, changing his name to Jon Ferguson Cox Mohr. [6] Cox and Mohr have a son. On the May 16, 2017, episode of The Adam Carolla Show, Mohr confirmed that he and Cox were "in the middle" of a divorce. [7] Their divorce was finalized in August 2018. [8]
Credited Featured Players: Laura Kightlinger, Jay Mohr; Des'ree performs "You Gotta Be" and "Feels So High". At the end of the episode, Bob Newhart wakes up next to Suzanne Pleshette (as he did on the last episode of "Newhart") and tells her about his nightmare hosting SNL.
Of the judges of the Supreme Court of South Australia, [1] as of September 2018, 14 had previously served in the Parliament of South Australia Edward Gwynne, Sir Richard Hanson, Randolph Stow, Sir Samuel Way, Sir James Boucaut, Richard Andrews, Sir William Bundey, Sir John Gordon, Robert Homburg, Sir Angas Parsons, Sir Charles Abbott, Leo Travers, Len King and Robin Millhouse.