Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
John Lowell McLaren (born September 29, 1951) is an American former professional baseball coach and manager. He is best known for his brief tenure as manager of the Seattle Mariners , from July 1, 2007 to June 19, 2008 .
John McLaren (public servant) (1871–1958), Australian public servant; John McLaren, Lord McLaren (1831–1910), Scottish Liberal MP and judge; John Inglis McLaren (1865–1948), Canadian politician; John Francis McLaren (1919–1953), Welsh barrister and RAF officer; John F. McLaren (1855–1888), Chancellor of the University of Pittsburgh ...
A year later, in 2008, the Mariners front office decided McLaren was not performing by their standards, and was fired and replaced by interim manager Jim Riggleman. [11] New general manager Jack Zduriencik hired Don Wakamatsu as skipper for the 2009 season; after finishing the season with a .525 winning percentage , the team's poor performance ...
AES, headquartered in Arlington, Virginia, is one of the world's leading power companies, generating and distributing electric power in 15 countries [2] and employing 10,500 people worldwide. AES Corporation is a global Fortune 500 power company. [3] AES Ranks in the Top Ten of Fast Company's 2022 Best Workplaces for Innovators. [4]
In one hand McLaren is holding a pine cone. Saw marks are on his right leg from an attempt to steal the statue on December 17, 1953. Two attempts were made, in the first of which the thieves tried to "crowbar the statue off its base." Three days later, on what would have been McLaren's birthday, a hacksaw was used to try to cut the statue down ...
Masterprize International Composing Competition, informally known as Masterprize, was an international composing competition founded in April 1996 by author, investment banker and former diplomat, John McLaren.
John Hays McLaren (December 20, 1846 – January 12, 1943) was a Scottish-born American horticulturalist. For 53 years (1890–1943 [ 1 ] ) he served as superintendent of Golden Gate Park in San Francisco , California.
John F. McLaren is generally numbered as the fourth chancellor of the University of Pittsburgh, then called the Western University of Pennsylvania, serving from 1855 to 1858, although McLaren's official title at the time was "Principal" which was a holdover from the institutions academy days.