Rawlings - People

People

  • Angela Rawlings, Canadian author and poet (also known as "a.rawlings")
  • David Rawlings, American guitar player
  • Donnell Rawlings, American actor and comedian
  • Edwin W. Rawlings, U.S. Air Force general
  • George C. Rawlings, American politician
  • Hunter R. Rawlings III, American classics scholar
  • Ian Rawlings, Australian actor - in cast of Neighbours
  • Jade Rawlings, Australian rules footballer
  • James Rawlings, British comedian
  • Jerry Rawlings, Ghanaian politician and military leader
  • John Joseph Rawlings, British engineer and inventor
  • Johnny Rawlings, American baseball player
  • Nana Konadu Agyeman Rawlings, Former First Lady of Ghana
  • Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, American author of short-stories and novels
  • Moses Rawlings, colonel in the American Revolution who fought for the American army
  • Steven Rawlings, British astrophysicist; one of the lead scientists in the Square Kilometre Array project
  • William Reginald Rawlings, Aboriginal Australian who received the Military Medal during World War 1

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Famous quotes containing the word people:

    When people do not respect us we are sharply offended; yet deep down in his private heart no man much respects himself.
    Mark Twain [Samuel Langhorne Clemens] (1835–1910)

    It is impossible for a stranger traveling through the United States to tell from the appearance of the people or the country whether he is in Toledo, Ohio, or Portland, Oregon. Ninety million Americans cut their hair in the same way, eat each morning exactly the same breakfast, tie up the small girls’ curls with precisely the same kind of ribbon fashioned into bows exactly alike; and in every way all try to look and act as much like all the others as they can.
    Alfred Harmsworth, Lord Northcliffe (1865–1922)

    At no time in history ... have the people who are not fit for society had such a glorious opportunity to pretend that society is not fit for them. Knowledge of the slums is at present a passport to society—so much the parlor philanthropists have achieved—and all they have to do is to prove that they know their subject. It is an odd qualification to have pitched on; but gentlemen and ladies are always credulous, especially if you tell them that they are not doing their duty.
    Katharine Fullerton Gerould (1879–1944)