Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Norman Josiffe (born 12 February 1940), better known in the media as Norman Scott, is an English former dressage trainer [citation needed] and model who was a key figure in the Thorpe affair, a major British political scandal of the 1970s.
Norman (Nicholas) Scott (August 10, 1889 – November 13, 1942) was a rear admiral in the United States Navy.He was killed along with many of his staff when the ship he was on – the light cruiser USS Atlanta – was hit by gunfire from the heavy cruiser USS San Francisco during the nighttime fighting in the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal.
Scott (known then as Norman Josiffe) had first met Thorpe early in 1961 when the former was a 20-year-old groom working for one of Thorpe's wealthy friends. The initial meeting was brief, but nearly a year later Scott, by then in London and destitute, called at the House of Commons to ask the MP for help. [122]
Norman Scott (admiral) (1889–1942), admiral in the United States Navy; Norman Scott (bass) (1921–1968), American opera singer; Norm Scott (1921–1957), Australian footballer for Geelong; Norman M. Scott, Canadian figure skater; Norman Josiffe, also known as Norman Scott, key figure in the Thorpe affair
Bessell's evidence against Thorpe, reported in the Daily Mirror during the pre-trial committal proceedings, November 1978. The Thorpe affair of the 1970s was a British political and sex scandal that ended the career of Jeremy Thorpe, the leader of the Liberal Party and Member of Parliament (MP) for North Devon.
Norman Scott is facing two counts of first-degree murder following his arrest in the shooting deaths of Tara Marie Jones and Taylor Glenn Jones. Scott's arrest report did not disclose the victims ...
USS Scott (DDG-995) was a Kidd-class destroyer of the United States Navy.She was named for Rear Admiral Norman Scott, who was killed during a surface action at the First Naval Battle of Guadalcanal (sometimes referred to as the Battle of Friday the 13th) aboard USS Atlanta, receiving a posthumous Medal of Honor for his actions.
USS Norman Scott (DD-690) was a United States Navy Fletcher-class destroyer named for Rear-Admiral Norman Scott (1889–1942), who was killed in the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal and awarded the Medal of Honor. Norman Scott was laid down 26 April 1943 by Bath Iron Works, Bath, Maine.