C R Hewitt - définition. Qu'est-ce que C R Hewitt
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est C R Hewitt - définition

LONDON POLICE OFFICER, JOURNALIST, EDITOR, AND AUTHOR
C. H. Rolph; C R Hewitt; CR Hewitt; C.R. Hewitt; Cecil Rolph Hewitt

C. R. Hewitt         
Cecil Rolph ("Bill") Hewitt (1901–1994) was a police officer, journalist, editor, and writer. He served with the City of London Police from 1921 to 1946, rising to the level of Chief Inspector.
Charles Gordon Hewitt         
  • Charles Gordon Hewitt}}
CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST
Wikipedia talk:Articles for creation/Charles Gordon Hewitt; C. Gordon Hewitt; Gordon Hewitt; C. G. Hewitt
Charles Gordon Hewitt (February 23, 1885February 29, 1920) was a Canadian economic entomologist and pioneer of conservation biology. He was appointed dominion entomologist of Canada in 1909.
W. A. Hewitt         
  • alt=Black and white team photo, with fourteen men dressed in football uniforms and two men dressed in suits
  • alt=Black and white photo of a hockey team outside on natural ice, including fourteen players dressed in hockey equipment white sweaters with a maple leaf crest, and four men dressed in dark suits and overcoats
  • alt=Silver bowl trophy with two large handles, mounted on a black plinth.
  • alt=Black and white photo of a late middle-aged man wearing a Canadian Expeditionary Force officer's uniform
  • alt=Black and white photo of a man aged 21 years, wearing a dark-coloured hockey sweater
  • alt=Large silver bowl engraved with a several designs mounted on a square wooden plinth adorned with engraved name plates of recipients
  • alt=Black and white photo of a man aged 27, clean-shaven, wearing a white dress shirt and a dark suitcoat
  • alt=Black and white photo of a middle-aged man dressed in suit, sitting a desk using a typewriter.
  • alt=Black and white photo of a middle-aged man wearing a suit and necktie
  • alt=Trophy with a large ornate silver bowl mounted on a square wooden base on display at the Hockey Hall of Fame
  • alt=Large grey granite monument with three sections engraved with names of Hewitt and Massey family members
  • alt=Diagram of an ice hockey rink with labels for on-ice markings and dimensions
  • alt=Exterior of the Great Hall at the Hockey Hall of Fame, housed inside of a former bank building
  • alt=Four-storey red brock building constructed in Victoria Era architecture
  • alt=Black and white photo of a middle-aged seated in a chair, wearing a suit and tie
  • alt=Black and white of a 17-year-old male dressed in a graduate's gown and cap with tassle
  • alt=Panorama of the arena exterior with beige-coloured bricks and street scene at a downtown intersection
  • alt=Black and white photo of a man wearing a dark suit jacket, a high-collared white dress shirt, and a striped necktie
  • alt=Black and white photo of a middle-aged man facing toward the photo's left, with a large moustache, wearing a dark suitcoat and a white dress shirt
  • alt=Black and white image of building exterior, including a group of people reading news bulletin boards
  • alt=Black and white photo of a hockey team outside on natural ice, including a coach dressed in a dark overcoat, and seven players dressed in hockey equipment white sweaters with a maple leaf crest
  • alt=Black and white photo of a middle-aged man wearing a suit and necktie
  • alt=Black and white photo of eight hockey players wearing equipment and uniforms standing on an ice rink, along with four men wearing suits and full-length overcoats
  • alt=Black and white photo of horses running around a dirt track with a grandstand full of spectators in the background
CANADIAN JOURNALIST (1875-1966)
William A. Hewitt; W.A. Hewitt; W A Hewitt; WA Hewitt; Billy Hewitt; William Abraham Hewitt
William Abraham Hewitt (May 15, 1875 – September 8, 1966) was a Canadian sports journalist and sportsman.

Wikipédia

C. R. Hewitt

Cecil Rolph ("Bill") Hewitt (1901–1994) was a police officer, journalist, editor, and writer. He served with the City of London Police from 1921 to 1946, rising to the level of Chief Inspector. He then left the force and became a journalist, writing on issues such as censorship and capital punishment. Known as C.R. Hewitt, he also wrote many books and articles, such as Believe What You Like, under the pen name of C.H. Rolph.

As C.H. Rolph he was a founding member of the Homosexual Law Reform Society, of which he served as Chairman in the 1960s.

He was on the editorial staff of the New Statesman (1947–1970), where he "acquired an outstanding reputation as one of the foremost commentators in the country on legal and social matters". He also contributed to the Encyclopædia Britannica, Chambers Encyclopedia, Punch, The Week-End Book, The New Law Journal, The Times Literary Supplement, and The Author.