Sunday, September 30, 2007


This article is about the British tabloid. For the Queen album, see News of the World (album).
The News of the World is a British tabloid newspaper published every Sunday. It is published by News Group Newspapers of News International, itself a subsidiary of Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation, and can be considered the Sunday equivalent of The Sun. The newspaper tends to concentrate on celebrity-based scoops and populist news. But its tone has been raised after the recent change of regime at the paper. Its fondness for sex scandals gained it the nicknames "Sex 'n' Scandal weekly", "News of the Screws" and "Screws of the World". It is Britain's biggest selling newspaper, selling an average of 3,445,459 copies per week in October 2006 He has been replaced with Colin Myler, the former editor of the Sunday Mirror who has latterly been working at the New York Post. Previous editors of the paper include Piers Morgan and Rebekah Wade who replaced Phil Hall in 2000.

Murdoch purchase
The paper began a controversial campaign to name and shame alleged paedophiles in 2000 following the abduction and murder of Sarah Payne. The paper also campaigns for the introduction of 'Sarah's Law' to allow public access to the Sex Offenders Register.
The issue which announced the campaign also contained a centre page spread of former Atomic Kitten star Kerry Katona posing topless in a series of pictures taken when she was aged 16 , although Katona was within the legal age limit for topless photography.

Henry Purcell Anti-paedophile campaign

In 2005, England soccer captain David Beckham and his wife Victoria brought a legal action against the paper seeking libel damages over an article that carried the headline: "Posh and Becks on the Rocks." The legal action was withdrawn in 2006 and "resolved on a confidential basis," according to the couple's spokeswoman Jo Milloy.
In April 2006, England footballer Wayne Rooney received £100,000 in damages from the publishers of The News of the World and its sister paper The Sun over articles falsely reporting he had slapped his fiancée, Coleen McLoughlin. Both had always denied the reports.
In June 2006, England footballer Ashley Cole received damages from the publishers of The News of the World over articles falsely alleging the footballer had used a mobile phone as a gay sex toy. Together with its sister paper The Sun, The News of the World paid Cole £100,000 to settle the case
In July 2006, a libel action brought by the Scottish politician Tommy Sheridan came to court in Edinburgh. Sheridan denied allegations, made by the newspaper in November 2004 and January 2005, that he had an affair, engaged in group sex and attended a swinger's club in Manchester. Sheridan won the case and was awarded £200,000 in damages. The newspaper intends to appeal against the jury's decision , and has refused to pay out the money. Libel actions brought against the News of the World
The News of the World's royal editor Clive Goodman and two associates were arrested on August 8, 2006 for allegedly tapping phones of members of the royal family, political figures and celebrities. The arrests were the result of a seven month investigation by Scotland Yard. The News of the World's London office was searched by police as a result of the investigation. Goodman was also suspended by the newspaper.
On January 26, 2007 Clive Goodman was jailed for four months having pleaded guilty to the phone message interception charges. On the same day, it was announced that Andy Coulson had resigned as the editor of the News of the World, having given in his notice a fortnight earlier. He was immediately replaced by Colin Myler.

2006 phone tapping scandal
On December 13, 2006 the newspaper announced that it is putting up a reward of £250,000 (a sombre new record) for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons responsible for the murders in Suffolk.

2006 reward for information

David Beckham and Rebecca Loos (2004)
Mark Oaten and his relationship with a rent boy (January 2006)
Prince Harry underage drinking and drugs (January 2002)
Caroline Cossey the transsexual "Bond Girl" in For Your Eyes Only (film) (1981)
Angus Deayton and his indiscretion with a prostitute while under the influence of cocaine (2002) Famous scandals revealed

Colin Myler (editor, replaced Andy Coulson on January 26, 2007)
Neil Wallis (Deputy Editor)
Stuart Kuttner (Managing Editor)
Ian Edmondson (Assistant Editor, News)
Jules Stenson (Assistant Editor, Features)
Matt Nixson (Features Editor)
Paul Ashton (Pictures Editor) Current journalists and writers
Jim Keat

Saturday, September 29, 2007

André Hazes
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Friday, September 28, 2007

Career
His credits as a writer include Saturday Night Live, Late Show with David Letterman, Late Night with Conan O'Brien, The Dana Carvey Show and the Chris Rock Show. His work for the Chris Rock Show was nominated for an Emmy Award three times, including winning "Best Writing in a Variety or Comedy Series" in 1999. He was also nominated for an Emmy Award for his work writing Late Night with Conan O'Brien. However, the feature film, Pootie Tang, born from the sketch show received largely negative reviews.
In 2001, C.K. co-wrote the Chris Rock film Down to Earth. In 2007 he co-wrote the movie I Think I Love My Wife with Chris Rock.

Writing
He has performed his stand-up frequently on shows like Late Night with Conan O'Brien, The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, and Jimmy Kimmel Live. In August 2005, C.K. starred in a half-hour HBO special as part of the stand-up series One Night Stand. Most recently his subject matter reflected his frustrations and anxieties from raising his four-year-old daughter. He was ranked #98 on Comedy Central's list of the 100 Greatest Stand-ups of All Time. There was a small controversy about his placement. When '80s prop comic Gallagher was ranked #100 on the list, he was angry and remarked "I don't even know who Louis C.K. is!"
In 2007, C.K. starred in his own hour-long HBO special titled Shameless.

Louis C.K.Louis C.K. Stand-up
In June 2006, he began starring in Lucky Louie, a sitcom he created with executive producer Mike Royce. The series premiered on HBO. The show was filmed in front of a live studio audience; it was HBO's first series in that format. Lucky Louie is described as a bluntly realistic portrayal of family life. However, HBO cancelled the series after its first season.

Voice acting
Louis is a frequent guest on the Opie and Anthony radio show, which also stars his Lucky Louie co-star Jim Norton, and he will be a part of Opie and Anthony's Traveling Virus Comedy Tour with other comedians in 2007.
Louis frequently works with Robert Smigel on TV Funhouse shorts exclusively to Saturday Night Live, ranging from politics to surrealism.
Currently, C.K. is set to appear in the upcoming films The Better Man and Diminished Capacity.

Thursday, September 27, 2007


Teheranno (alternatively Teheranro, translation "Tehran Street") is a street in the Gangnam district of Seoul, South Korea. It is colloquially known as "Teheran Valley" (after Silicon Valley) due the number of internet-related companies operating there, including Yahoo!, and Korean rivals Daum and Naver. Various Korean and international financial and business institutions including POSCO, Standard Chartered and Citibank also maintain offices here. Some of Korea's tallest skyscrapers and most expensive real estate are on Teheranno, while Seoul Metropolitan Government estimates that more than half of Korea's venture capital, some 200,000,000,000 won (approximately $200,000,000), is invested in Teheran Valley.
Teheranno is a 3.5 km section of Korean Highway 90, and runs eastwards from Gangnam Station to Samseong Station and the COEX/KWTC complex. Yeoksam and Seolleung stations are also on Teheranno. All stations are on Seoul Subway Line 2.

Teheranno Photo gallery
Posteel Tower, Teheranno
Yahoo! Korea Tower
POSCO Center, Teheranno
Roadsign, COEX-KWTC intersection
POSCO Center at night

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Lousewies van der LaanLousewies van der Laan
Louse Wies Sija Anne Lilly Berthe (Lousewies) van der Laan (Rotterdam, February 18, 1966) is a former Dutch politician and the leader of the parliamentary group of the social liberal Democrats 66 (D66) in the Lower House for six months in 2006. She was a Member of the European Parliament between 1999 and 2003 in the ELDR group.

Life before politics
In 1999 she became head of the D66 list for the European Elections. She became chairwoman of the parliamentary party and member of the parliamentary party board of the ELDR. In the European Parliament she was active on a range of issue focusing on civil liberties, environmental affairs, budget and foreign affairs. In the European Parliament she was vice-chairwoman of the Committee on Budget Control between 1999 and 2002, vice-chairwoman of the Committee on Liberties and Civil Rights, Justice and Home Affairs between 2002 and 2003. She was member of the Committee on the Rights of the Woman and Equal Chances between 1999 and 2003, the delegation for relations with the Palestinian Authority between 1999 and 2002. Between 1999 and 2002 she was a substitute for the Committee on Environmental Protection, Public Health and Consumers' Policy and a substitute for the delegation for relations with Slovakia. Between 2002 and 2003 she was a substitute for the Budget Committee. She founded the Intergroup on Food Safety, the Campaign for Parliamentary Reform.

Tuesday, September 25, 2007


Ethics & objectivity Sources & attribution News & news values Reporting & writing Fourth estateLibel law Education & books Other topics
Advocacy journalism Alternative journalismNews management Arts journalism Business journalism Citizen journalism Fashion journalism Investigative journalism Literary journalism Photojournalism Science journalism Sports journalism Video game journalism Video journalism Infotainment "Infotainers" and personalities News management Distortion and VNRs PR and propaganda "Yellow journalism" Press freedom Newspapers and magazines News agencies Broadcast journalism Online and blogging Alternative media
Journalist, reporter, editor, news presenter, photo journalist, Columnist, visual journalist
 v  d  e 
Managing the news refers to acts which are intended to influence the presentation of information within the news media. The expression managing the news is often used in a negative sense.
An example cited by the Communication, Cultural and Media Studies infobase concerns the February 1996 Scott Report on arms sales to Iraq. In the United Kingdom, the report was given early to certain officials.
People or organizations who wish to lessen the publicity concerning bad news may choose to release the information late on a Friday, giving journalists less time to pursue the story.
Staying "on message" is a technique intended to limit questions and attention to a narrow scope favorable to the subject.

Monday, September 24, 2007

Curb Your Enthusiasm Concept
See also: List of celebrities appearing on Curb Your Enthusiasm
The show's natural, fly-on-the-wall style – together with the fact that David and many other characters play "themselves" – have contributed to the show's blurring of distinctions between fiction and reality, again echoing Seinfeld.
Guest stars frequently play key roles. Ted Danson and Wanda Sykes often appear as friends of the Davids. Shelley Berman plays Larry's father. Former Seinfeld stars Jason Alexander and Julia Louis-Dreyfus, along with Martin Scorsese, Alanis Morissette, Hugh Hefner, David Schwimmer, Mel Brooks, and Ben Stiller have all appeared as themselves. Jerry Seinfeld and Stephen Colbert made uncredited cameo appearances in the Season 4 finale. Dustin Hoffman, Sacha Baron Cohen and Bea Arthur appear in the Season 5 finale.

Larry David (as himself) – Rich, prickly, and socially obtuse, David has terrible luck in social situations and is often on the losing end of heated confrontations with "the help" — waiters, retail clerks, secretaries, etc. His problems are often caused by his own petty neuroses and obstinacy, which render him incapable of admitting fault, accepting blame and letting matters rest. At the same time, he is often a victim of circumstance and the over-sensitive and easily-offended natures of those he happens to encounter.
Cheryl David (played by Cheryl Hines) – David's wife. A foil for David, she is alternately patient with and exasperated by his eccentricities.
Jeff Greene (played by Jeff Garlin) – David's friend & manager. He doggedly sticks up for his client and friend. Obsessed with sex, Jeff often involves Larry in covering up his marital infidelities and hiding his pornography.
Susie Greene (played by Susie Essman) – Jeff's wife. Her relationship with Jeff is mercurial, leading to numerous separations in the course of the show. She often reacts to Jeff and Larry's shenanigans with angry, profane tirades in which Jeff is usually referred to as a "Fat Fuck." Often shows more affection to her dog, Oscar, than her husband.
Richard Lewis (as himself) – A neurotic, recovering alcoholic standup comedian. He is one of Larry's oldest and closest friends, having both moved from New York to LA to pursue their comedy careers. Characters
See also: List of Curb Your Enthusiasm episodes
With the exception of Season 1 (2000), seasons of Curb Your Enthusiasm are linked by a story arc. David took a similar approach on Seinfeld during seasons four and seven.

Season 2 (2001) – Larry David pursues a new television project, first with Jason Alexander, and then Julia Louis-Dreyfus. The premise: an actor who starred in a famous television show (Seinfeld being the obvious reference point) finds it difficult to secure work because of the public's strong association with their famous former character. David pitches the idea to executives for several different networks, who are initially receptive but ultimately back away for a variety of reasons, usually involving a mishap with Larry.
Season 3 (2002) – David joins a restaurant venture with a group of investors that includes Ted Danson. The season ends with the restaurant's grand opening. A sub-plot involves him being cast in a Martin Scorsese movie.
Season 4 (2004) – David works with Mel Brooks, Ben Stiller and David Schwimmer to star on Broadway in The Producers. He also struggles to fulfill his wife's tenth anniversary present to him – a one-time-only extramarital sexual encounter.
Season 5 (2005) – Larry's friend, comedian Richard Lewis, is in dire need of a kidney; out of sheer feelings of paranoid guilt, Larry offers one of his own kidneys to Richard if he cannot find a suitable donor in time. Larry then makes many concerted, ridiculous efforts in finding Richard a kidney donor, including frequent visits to Richard's estranged, comatose cousin, in the hopes that he will pass away, resulting in a perfect kidney for Richard, and also befriending an Orthodox Jew who happens to be the head of the kidney donation board. Larry also feels excited that he may be adopted due to a misunderstood word his father said (and no longer remembers) while in the hospital; Larry hires a private investigator (Mekhi Phifer) to look into it. Plots
HBO has officially confirmed that there will be a sixth season of Curb Your Enthusiasm.

Curb Your Enthusiasm Season 6

In "Chick Cancer", an episode of Family Guy, CYE's theme music is parodied when Luke Skywalker is left confused after arguing with a fellow Rebel fighter pilot about the attack on the Death Star during the Yavin 4 briefing.
In "Making a Stand", an episode of Arrested Development, Rolando asks Michael if the improvisation will be "unscripted like Curb". The same scene involves the actor Lobo Sebastian, who played Jesus in the "Christ Nail" episode of Curb Your Enthusiasm. Jeff Garlin (Jeff in Curb Your Enthusiasm), also appears as recurring character Mort Meyers on Arrested Development. Other actors who appear in both shows include Mo Collins (Richard Lewis' Nurse in Curb and Starla in Arrested Development) and Bob Einstein ("Marty Funkhouser" in Curb Your Enthusiasm and Larry Middleman in the third season of Arrested Development).
In the 2005 movie The Upside of Anger, Kevin Costner's character and two girls are watching TV, and though the screen is never shown and the sound barely audible, closed captioning confirms they are watching Curb Your Enthusiasm. They are watching "Trick or Treat", where David is complaining about two girls defacing his house after he refuses to give them candy. Mike Binder, who directed "The Upside of Anger", appeared in the CYE Season 2 episode "The Massage".
In The Sopranos episode "Where's Johnny?", Junior Soprano is seen watching the episode "The Doll". Due to his increasing dementia, he mistakes Larry David for himself and Jeff Garlin for Bobby Baccalieri, and is confused as to why they are on television. Perhaps in reference to this, one plot strand of the Curb episode "The End" revolves around a missing Sopranos DVD.
In "Hamburger", an episode of Tim and Eric Awesome Show, Great Job!, music commonly used in episodes of Curb Your Enthusiasm plays during awkward interactions between the title duo and comedian Neil Hamburger. The "Frolic" theme song to Curb Your Enthusiasm also plays over the end credits sequence. Trivia
A Curb Your Enthusiasm book was released October 19, 2006, published by Gotham Books (ISBN 1-59240-230-5). The book contains:

stories from Larry David's past
original interviews and commentary
episode outlines
episode guide
over 100 full-color photographs Music

Larry David
List of celebrities appearing on Curb Your Enthusiasm
Seinfeld

Sunday, September 23, 2007

Irwin Rose
Irwin A. Rose (born 16 July 1926 in NY) is an American biologist. Along with Aaron Ciechanover and Avram Hershko, he was awarded the 2004 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for the discovery of ubiquitin-mediated protein degradation.
Rose attended Washington State University for one year prior to serving in the Navy during WWII. Upon returning from the war he received his B.S. in 1948 and his Ph.D. in biochemistry in 1952, both from the University of Chicago. He is currently a distinguished professor-in-residence at the Department of Physiology and Biophysics of the College of Medicine at the University of California, Irvine.
Irwin (Ernie) trained several postdoctoral fellows while at the Fox Chase Cancer Center in Philadelphia, where the groundbreaking Ub work was done. These included Art Haas, the first to see Ubiquitin chains, Keith Wilkinson, the one to first identify APF-1 as Ubiquitin, and Cecile Pickart, a world class enzymologist in many parts of the Ub system.
Ernie would frequently tour the lab, with a harmonica, when Avram and Aaron were there working in the summer with Keith and Art.

Saturday, September 22, 2007

Lew Burdette
Selva Lewis Burdette, Jr. (November 22, 1926February 6, 2007) was an American right-handed starting pitcher in Major League Baseball who played primarily for the Boston and Milwaukee Braves. The team's top righthander during its years in Milwaukee, he was the Most Valuable Player of the 1957 World Series, leading the franchise to its first championship in 43 years, and the only title in Milwaukee history. An outstanding control pitcher, his career average of 1.84 walks per nine innings pitched places him behind only Robin Roberts (1.73), Carl Hubbell (1.82) and Juan Marichal (1.82) among pitchers with at least 3000 innings since 1920.
Born in Nitro, West Virginia, Burdette was signed by the New York Yankees in 1947, and after making two relief appearances for the team in September 1950, he was traded to the Braves in August 1951 for four-time 20-game winner Johnny Sain. Along with left-hander Warren Spahn and hardworking Bob Buhl, he gave the Braves one of the best starting rotations in the majors during the 1950s, winning 15 or more games eight times between 1953 and 1961. When Milwaukee won the 1957 World Series against the Yankees, Burdette became the first pitcher in 37 years to win three complete games in a Series, and the first since Christy Mathewson in 1905 to pitch two shutouts (Games 5 and 7). In the 1958 Series, however, the Yankees defeated Burdette twice in three starts. In addition to winning 20 games in 1958 and 21 in 1959, Burdette won 19 in 1956 and 1960, 18 in 1961, and 17 in 1957. In two All-Star games, he allowed only one run in seven innings pitched, and in 1956 he topped National League pitchers with a 2.70 earned run average. He also led the NL in shutouts twice, and in wins, innings and complete games once each.
Burdette was the winning pitcher on May 26, 1959 when the Pittsburgh Pirates' Harvey Haddix pitched a perfect game against the Braves for 12 innings, only to lose in the 13th. Burdette threw a 1-0 shutout, scattering 12 hits. In the ensuing offseason, he joked, "I'm the greatest pitcher that ever lived. The greatest game that was ever pitched in baseball wasn't good enough to beat me, so I've got to be the greatest!" The next year, facing the minimum 27 batters, Burdette pitched a 1–0 no-hitter against the Philadelphia Phillies on August 18, 1960. Tony González, the only opposing batter to reach base after being hit by a pitch in the fifth inning, was retired on a double play. Burdette helped himself by scoring the only run of the game. Following up his no-hitter, five days later he pitched his third shutout in a row.
As a hitter, he compiled a .183 batting average with 75 RBI and 12 home runs; his first two home runs came in the same 1957 game, and he later had two more two-homer games.
In 1963 Burdette was traded to the St. Louis Cardinals (1963-64), and was later sent to the Chicago Cubs (1964-65) and Phillies (1965). Signing with the California Angels, he pitched exclusively in relief for the team in 1966-67 before retiring. In an 18-year career, Burdette posted a 203-144 record with 1074 strikeouts and a 3.66 ERA in 3067.1 innings, compiling 158 complete games and 33 shutouts. His totals of wins, games and innings with the Braves ranked behind only Spahn and Kid Nichols in franchise history.
Burdette also cut a record in the 1950s entitled "Three Strikes and Then You're Out".
Burdette died of lung cancer at age 80 at his home in Winter Garden, Florida.

New York Yankees (1950)
Boston/Milwaukee Braves (1951-1963)
St. Louis Cardinals (1963-1964)
Chicago Cubs (1964-1965)
Philadelphia Phillies (1965)
California Angels (1966-1967)
World Series champion: 1957
National Leauge pennant: 1958
1957 World Series MVP
1957 Babe Ruth Award
2-time National League All-Star
National League ERA champion: 1956
National League wins champion: 1959
2-time National League shutout leader
2 20-win seasons Trivia

List of Major League Baseball ERA champions
List of Major League Baseball wins champions
List of Major League Baseball no-hitters

Friday, September 21, 2007


High Commissioner is the title of various high-ranking, special executive positions held by a commission of appointment.
The English term is also used to render various equivalent titles in other languages.

Bilateral diplomacy
The first Dominion High Commissioner was appointed by Canada as its envoy in London in 1880, but the Imperial Government did not appoint High Commissioners to the Dominions, where the crown was already represented by the relevant Governor-general. This began to prove problematic after the First World War when the Dominions demanded a far greater degree of control over their foreign affairs. In Canada matters would come to a head during the King-Byng Affair of 1926.
The Balfour Declaration made at the Imperial Conference of 1926 established that Governors-general in the independent dominions were not the representatives of the United Kingdom government but the personal representatives of the Sovereign, and with the constitutional development of the Dominions and their assumption of control over their own external and foreign relations it became standard for the United Kingdom and the Dominions to exchange high commissioners to each other's governments.
From as early as the 1930s, some Commonwealth members have indicated a preference for the title to be replaced with that of Ambassador, but over the years whenever the issue has been raised, a majority of members has been in favour of keeping the separate title and status of High Commissioner.

Dominions
Historically, in the British Empire (most of which would become the Commonwealth) High Commissioners were envoys of the Imperial Government appointed to manage protectorates or groups of territories not fully under the sovereignty of the British Crown, while Crown colonies (which were British sovereign territory) would normally be administered by a Governor and the most significant possessions, large confederations and the independent Commonwealth Dominions would be headed by a Governor-General.
Cases include:
A High Commission could also be charged with the last phase of a decolonisation, as in the crown colony of the Seychelles (12 November 1970 granted autonomy), where the last Governor, Colin Hamilton Allen (b. 1921 - d. 1993), stayed on as only colonial High Commissioner from 1 October 1975, when self-rule under the Crown was granted, till 28 June 1976 when the archipelago became an independent republic within the Commonwealth

the island of Cyprus, since 12 July 1878 under British administration (previously under Ottoman military rule), Istanbul retained nominal suzerainty until the 5 November 1914 full British annexation; there were 9 incumbents (all but one already knighted) from 22 July 1878 until on 10 March 1925 Cyprus became a crown colony, and the last incumbent stayed on as its first Governor British Colonial usage
As diplomatic Residents (as diplomatic ranks were codified, this became a lower class than Ambassadors and High Commissioners) were also appointed to native rulers, that position could on occasion similarly be filled be a colonial Governor. Thus High Commissioners could be charged with managing diplomatic relations with native rulers and their states (analogous to the Resident Minister), and might have under them several Resident Commissioners or similar agents attached to each state. In present Nigeria:
In certain regions of particular importance, a Commissioner-General would be appointed, to have control over several High Commissioners and Governors, e.g. the Commissioner-General for South-East Asia had responsibility for Malaya, Singapore and British Borneo.

Northern Nigeria, three incumbents 1900-1907, the last of which stayed on as first Governor
Southern Nigeria, three incumbent 1900-1906 (four terms), the last of which stayed on as first Governor. British Protectorates
The role of High Commissioner for Southern Africa was coupled with that of British Governor of the Cape Colony in the nineteenth century giving the colonial administrator in question responsibility both for administering British possessions and relating to neighbouring Boer settlements. The best known of these High Commissioners, Alfred Milner who was named to both positions in the 1890s, is considered responsible by some for igniting the Second Boer War.
Historically, in Southern Africa, the protectorates of Bechuanaland (now Botswana), Basutoland (now Lesotho) and Swaziland were administered as High Commission Territories by the Governor-General of South Africa was also the British High Commissioner for Bechuanaland, Basutoland, and Swaziland until the 1930s, with various local representatives, then by the British High Commissioner (from 1961 Ambassador) to South Africa, who was represented locally in each by a Resident Commissioner.
The British Governor of the crown colony of the Straits Settlements, based in Singapore, doubled as High Commissioner of the Federated Malay States, and had authority over the Resident-General in Kuala Lumpur, who in turn was responsible for the various Residents appointed to the native rulers of the Malay states under British protection.
The British Western Pacific Territories were permanently governed as a group of minor insular colonial territories, under one single, not even full time, Western Pacific High Commissioner (1905-1953), an office attached first to the governorship of Fiji, and subsequently to that of the Solomon Islands, represented in each of the other islands units: by a Resident Commissioner, Consul (representative) or other official (on tiny Pitcairn a mere Chief Magistrate).
Currently, there is still one High Commissioner who also serves in an additional capacity as a Governor: the British High Commissioner to New Zealand ex officio serves as British colonial Governor of the Pitcairn Islands.

Governors doubling as High Commissioners
In the (post-)colonial sense, some other powers had High Commissioners, or rather the exact equivalent in their language

Other (mainly former, colonial) empires & protectorates
Originally the French word Haut Commissaire, or in full Haut Commissaire de la république 'High Commissioner of the Republic', was rarely used for governatorial functions, rather (Lieutenant-)gouverneur(-général) and various lower titles. Exceptions were:
In the later period of decolonisation, the office of High Commissioner in a colony to become an allied nation was intended to become remarkably analogous to the Commonwealth's 'close relationship diplomats' in President General De Gaulle's project for a French Union to match the Commonwealth, but it soon started to fall apart, so they actually just presided over most of the peaceful decolonisation.
While the colonies above were generally artificially carved creations, Haut commissaires also were appointed by Paris to prepare the (de facto) independence of pre-existing monarchies that had formally been French protectorates, such as:
Yet a colony could achieve independence without a High Commissioner, e.g. Guinée (French Guinea).
In one case a French Haut Commissaire was the exact match and colleague of a British High Commissioner: they represented both powers in the south sea condominium (i.e. territory under joint sovereignty) of the New Hebrides, which became the present republic of Vanuatu.
A very special category was the Haut Commissaire as 'liquidator' of a gouvernement-général (the colonial echelon grouping several neighbouring colonies under a Governor-general), notably:
Another use for the title was found in the rare remaining insulara (formerly no longer colonial) overseas possessions, in these cases still functioning:

since 22 March 1907, the colonial Gouverneur of New Caledonia was also appointed as High Commissioner in the Pacific Ocean, to coordinate with the governors of the French Settlements in Oceania and the Governors-general of French Indochina; the French resident commissioner of the Anglo-French condominium Nouvelles Hébrides and the Residents to the island protectorates of Wallis and Futuna were subordinated to him

  • once Charles de Gaulle named someone else as High Commissioner for the French Territory of the Pacific and the Far East, January 1941 - 1945: Georges Thierry d'Argenlieu (b. 1889 - d. 1964), while in December 1941 the Vichy (pro-German) government named Jean Decoux (b. 1884 - d. 1963) to the post (who in fact was only responsible for Wallis and Futuna, which was the only Pacific territory not to have rallied to the Free French at that time).
    In Atlantic waters, from 14 September 1939 till September 1943, four French Possessions in the Americas (French Guiana, Guadeloupe and Martinique, all in the Caribbean, as well as Saint-Pierre and Miquelon, off the Canadian coast) were temporarily grouped together (from June 1940 under Vichy France, so remaining on the Allied side). The two consecutive 'High Commissioners in the Antilles' (quite a misleading title: French Guyana is in continental South America, St-Pierre&Miquelon off the Canadian coast, so in North America) held both administrative authority over the local Governors and equivalent officers (rather like a gouverneur général did elsewhere on a permanent basis) and military command in the 'Theater Atlantic West':

    • 14 September 1939 - 14 July 1943 Georges Robert (b. 1875 - d. 1965)
      14 July 1943 - September 1943 Henri Hoppenot (b. 1891 - d. 1977)
      Algérie (Algeria), once similar to Tunis, but transformed into a French popular colony (most of the time under its own governor-general; then a messy period as native and immigrated European interests were irreconcilable), got its only High commissioner on 19 March 1962: Christian Fouchet (b. 1911 - d. 1974), until its 3 July 1962 independence from France (Algerian State; 25 September 1962 People's Democratic Algerian Republic ruled by the FLN, the former armed revolt)
      in present Benin, since 13 October 1946 Dahomey overseas territory, on 4 December 1958 granted autonomy as Republic of Dahomey, the last (acting) governor, René Tirant (b. 1907), stayed on as only High commissioner till the 1 August 1960 independence
      Chad, since 27 October 1946 an overseas territory of France (part of AEF colony) under its own Governor, shortly after it was on 28 November 1958 granted autonomy as Republic of Chad, had a single High Commissioner from 22 January 1959: Daniel Marius Doustin (b. 1920) until its 11 August 1960 independence from France.
      Congo-Brazzaville (variously named, often Middle Congo) had a single High commissioner, a bit after it was granted on 28 November 1958 autonomy (as Republic of Congo), 7 January 1959 - 15 August 1960: Guy Noël Georgy (b. 1918 - d. 2003) after many Lieutenant governors since 11 December 1888 (under the governor-general of AEF, except the several cases when he governed the French Congo personally); afterwards it was an independent republic
      Côte d'Ivoire (Ivory Coast) had two High Commissioners since it was granted autonomy as republic of Ivory Coast:

      • 4 December 1958 - 15 July 1960 Ernest de Nattes (b. 1908), the last of the long list of governors since 10 March 1893 (colony till 27 October 1946, then overseas territory)
        15 July 1960 - 7 August 1960 Yves René Henri Guéna (b. 1922); thereafter it was an independent republic
        Gabon had two High Commissioners since on 28 Nov 1958 autonomy was granted (as Gabonese Republic) to the former overseas territory (since 1946)

        • November 1958 - July 1959 Louis Marius Pascal Sanmarco (b. 1912), also the last of the Governors since 1941 (after various otherwise styled chief executives before; it had since 15 January 1910 been part of French Equatorial Africa, AEF)
          July 1959 - 17 August 1960 Jean Risterucci (b. 1911 - d. 1982); thereafter it was an independent republic
          Mauritania had two High commissioners, after having been a protectorate since 12 May 1903 (under a single military Commandant), from 18 October 1904 the French civil territory of Mauritania under a Commissioner (part of French West Africa (AOF); under its Governor-general in Dakar, Senegal), and since 12 January 1920 a French colony under a Lieutenant governor (many incumbents, again under Dakar), on 28 November 1958 obtaining autonomy (as Islamic Republic of Mauritania):

          • 5 October 1958 - February 1959 Henri Joseph Marie Bernard (b. 1920)
            February 1959 - 28 November 1960 Amédée Joseph Émile Jean Pierre Anthonioz (b. 1913 - d. 1996); since independence from France it had its own President (or a junta chief);
            In Niger, since 13 October 1946 an overseas territory of France (part of French West Africa, see Senegal) under a lieutenant-governor, on 19 December 1958 granted autonomy as Republic of Niger, there was a single High commissioner 25 August 1958 - 10 November 1960: Jean Colombani (b. 1903), i.e. still several months after the formal 3 August 1960 independence whilst there was no President
            In Senegal, since 27 October 1946 an overseas territory of France, which on 25 November 1958 had obtained autonomy (as Republic of Senegal), the last Governor stayed on as first (and only?) Haut commissaire 25 November 1958 - 20 June 1960: Pierre Auguste Michel Marie Lami (b. 1909); meanwhile on 4 April 1959 the Sudanese Republic (now Mali) and Senegal formed the Mali Federation and his term ended at the 20 June 1960 independence of that Mali Federation from France (on 20 August 1960 the Republic of Senegal withdrew from the thus dissolved Mali Federation).
            in French Sudan, an overseas territory of France since 27 October 1946 (earlier a colony; stayed within French West Africa), which on 24 November 1958 obtained autonomy (as Sudanese Republic), there were two High commissioners:

            • 3 November 1956 - 24 November 1958 Henri Victor Gipoulon
              24 November 1958 - 20 June 1960 Jean Charles Sicurani (b. 1915 - d. 1977); during his term on 4 April 1959 this Sudanese Republic and Senegal (cfr. above) united to form the Mali Federation; his office ceased at the 20 June 1960 independence of the Mali Federation from France
              In Upper Volta (since 4 January 1947 a French territory; present Burkina Faso, renamed 4 August 1984), since the 11 December 1958 grant of Autonomy as a 'republic', République de Haute-Volta, there were two High commissioners:

              • 11 December 1958 - February 1959 Max Berthet, who stayed on, having been the last (acting) Governor
                February 1959 - 5 August 1960 Paul Jean Marie Masson (b. 1920), till the Independence from France as Republic of Upper Volta.
                Tunisia, known as the Régence (since 3 June 1955 autonomous), where France had a Resident-general (posted with the Basha bey of Tunis, who once the French protectorate was terminated on 20 March 1956 restyled his realm al-Mamlaka at-Tunisiyya 'Tunisian Kingdom'), in stead got a High commissioner from 13 September 1955 to 20 March 1956: Roger Seydoux Fornier de Clausonne (b. 1908 - d. 1985); in continued shortly as independent monarchy, but on 25 July 1957 became the Tunisian Republic.
                in Afrique Equatoriale Française (French Equatorial Africa, AEF), three High commissioners:

                • 4 April 1957 - 29 January 1958 Paul Louis Gabriel Chauvet (b. 1904), also the last of the long list of Governors-general since 28 June 1908 (before it had five Commissioners-general since 27 April 1886)
                  29 January 1958 - 15 July 1958 Pierre Messmer (b. 1916)
                  15 July 1958 - 15 August 1960 Yvon Bourges (b. 1921)
                  in Afrique Occidentale Française (AOF), i.e. French West Africa, the last of a long list of Governors-general since 1895 stayed on as first of only two High Commissioners:

                  • 4 April 1957 - July 1958 Gaston Custin (b. 1903 - d. 1993)
                    July 1958 - 22 December 1958 Pierre Messmer (b. 1916)
                    In French Polynesia it is the title of the representative of the French republic in the overseas territory (restyled 'overseas collectivity' in 2003, 'overseas country' on 27 February 2004) since 13 July 1977 (until 14 September 1984 he also presided the local council of ministers, the that got its own president, as the legislature already had)
                    In New Caledonia (Nouvelle Calédonie in French, colonised in 1853; its Governors had been High Commissioners in the Pacific Ocean from 22 March 1907, see above) the title (commonly corrupted to Haussaire) was chosen for the chief executive on 19 December 1981, when it was an overseas territory (since 1946), even before autonomy was granted on 18 November 1984, and maintained after its status was changed on 20 July 1998 to the unique French collectivité sui generis; he represents the Paris government, while there are a native legislature and government. French
                    On 30 July 1922, the Hellenic kingdom (Greece) declared Smyrna (the Anatolian Izmir district, occupied by Greece since 12 May 1919) a protectorate. Until on 9 September 1922 Greece restores Smyrna to Turkey after defeat of Greek forces, it had a Greek High Commissioner (21 May 1919 - 8 September 1922): Aristeidis Stergiadis (b. 1861 - d. 1950)

                    Greek

                    while only various military commanders and since 1916 a Secretary for Civil Affairs in Albania (Ugo Capialbi) had acted for Rome since Italy invaded on 27 December 1914 (occupying Valorë and parts of Southern Albania; on 3 June 1917 Albanian independence under an Italian protectorate was declared by Italy, opposed by most Albanians; adding in November 1918 the former Austro-Hungarian occupied areas to the Italian zone) only since in 1919 an Albanian provisional government recognized by Italy as the legal government of the protected zone, consecutive High Commissioners for the Crown were appointed until Italy effectively withdraw its troops on 3 September 1920 (as agreed on 22 August 1920 when formally recognizing the total independence of Albania):

                    • 1919 - 1920 ....
                      1920 Castoldi
                      1920 - 3 September 1920 Gaetano Conti Manzoni
                      two incumbents appointed by the kingdom in Fiume (a former Austrian province; now Rijeka, in Croatia), after an extraordinary commissionary, in the 31 December 1920 declared, short-lived "Independent State of Fiume", until the accession of its first President

                      • 13 June 1921 - 1921 Antonio Foschini (b. 1872 - d. 19..)
                        1921 - 5 October 1921 Luigi Amantea (b. 1869 - d. 19..)
                        in Slovenia, which after 6 - 17 April 1941 Italian-German occupation, was on 17 April 1941 partitioned between Italy, Hungary and Germany, the Italian portion was named province of Lubiana, from 3 May 1941 under a Civil Commissioner, from 3 May 1941 restyled the first of two High Commissioners:

                        • 18 April 1941 - 1942 Francesco Saverio Grazioli (b. 1869 - d. 1951)
                          1942 - 1943 Giuseppe Lombrassa (b. 1906 - d. 1966) Italian

                          Cabo Verde (Cape Verde) once: 30 December 1974 - 5 July 1975 Vicente Almeida d'Eça
                          São Tomé and Príncipe had a single High Commissioner, from 18 December 1974 (three days before the formal granting of autonomy): António Elísio Capelo Pires Veloso, actually the last of many governors (since 1753, before both islands were separate), staying on until it became an independent republic on 12 July 1975 Portuguese
                          Alto comisario was the Spanish title of the official exercing the functions of a governor in the following colonial possessions:
                          The title Alto Comisario was also used for the representative of Spain in its protectorate zone within the Sherifan sultanate of Morocco (most of the country was under French protectorate), known as el Jalifato after the khalifa (Jalifa in Spanish), the Sultan's fully mandated, princely Viceroy in this protectorate, to which the High Commissioner was formally accredited, but whose senior he was in reality. In 1934 - 1956 the Governors of the Western Sahara (which from 27 November 1912 were also Governors-general of Spanish West Africa) were subordinated to him. The office itself was however filled by the governors of Spanish West Africa from 1939 to 1956.

                          Equatorial Guinea had three consecutive High Commissioners:

                          • 15 December 1963 - 1964 Francisco Núñez Rodríguez (b. 1902 - d. 1972), also the last of many Governors since 7 June 1494
                            1964 - 1966 Pedro Latorre Alcubierre
                            1966 - 12 October 1968 Víctor Suances Díaz del Río; his term ended when it became an independent republic Spanish

                            while the Dominican Republic was under a 28 March 1905 - 1941 U.S. protectorate, it had first various native regimes, then US military Governors 29 November 1916 - 24 July 1922, and just before it again had the first of its own Presidents on 21 October 1922, a single U.S. High Commissioner, September 1922 - 1924: Benjamin Sumner Welles, its last 'guardian'
                            also in Haiti, the other (western) half of the island of Hispaniola, 28 July 1915 - 1936 under U.S. protectorate, after five U.S. Military Commanders, there was a single High Commissioner, 11 February 1922 - 16 November 1930: John Henry Russell, Jr. (b. 1872 - d. 1947), next three Envoys Extraordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary till 15 August 1934
                            the Commonwealth of the Philippines (since 13 August 1898 a U.S territory), since it got that more autonomous status on 15 November 1935, had the following U.S. High Commissioners:

                            • 15 November 1935 - 1937 Frank William Murphy (b. 1890 - d. 1949), also the last of a series of Governors-general
                              1937 - 1939 Paul Vories McNutt (1st time) (b. 1891 - d. 1955)
                              1939 - 7 September 1942 Francis Bowes Sayers (from 24 December 1941 in U.S. exile during Japanese military occupation) (b. 1885 - d. 1972)
                              7 September 1942 - 4 July 1946 Paul Vories McNutt (2nd time) (to August 1945 in U.S. exile during Japanese military occupation); his termed ended with the official independence of the new republic (the office was not affected by the 14 October 1943 - 17 August 1945 Nominal independence as Republic of the Philippines)
                              Okinawa and Ryukyu Islands (Japanese archipelago), next only Okinawa island (formerly a kingdom), had six U.S. incumbents, from 4 July 1957:

                              • James Edward Moore (b. 1902 - d. 1986), the last Deputy governor and Commanding General Ryukyu Islands Command;
                                1 May 1958 - 12 February 1961 Donald Prentice Booth (b. 1902 - d. 1993)
                                16 February 1961 - 31 July 1964 Paul Wyatt Caraway (b. 1905 - d. 1984)
                                1 August 1964 - 31 October 1966 Albert Watson II (b. 1909 - d. 1993)
                                2 November 1966 - 28 January 1968 Ferdinand Thomas Unger (b. 1913 - d. 1999); on 21 November 1967 most Ryukyu Islands (except Okinawa) were restored to Japan
                                28 January 1968 - 15 May 1972 James Benjamin Lampert (b. 1914 - d. 1978); only on 15 May 1972 Okinawa reverted to Japanese sovereignty as a prefecture, so the office, now of US High Commissioner on Okinawa, ceased; so did the US Civil Administrators that had been appointed since 18 July 1962 alongside them. United States
                                In many cases, a political vacuum created by war, occupation or other events discontinuing a country's constitutional government has been filled by those able to do so, one nation or often an alliance, installing a transitional (often minimal) governance administered by, or under supervision of, one or more High Commissioners representing it/them. For example:

                                22 November 1918 - 1919 Alsace-Lorraine, till then part of the defeated German Empire as Elsaß-Lothringen but just occupied by and restored to France, was under haut commissaire Maringer (it would be only fully reintegrated in 1925, after three Commissioners General)
                                When Mussolini's Italy occupied Montenegro 17 April 1941 - 10 September 1943, it first appointed a (Nominal) Governor (17 May 1941 - 23 July 1941? Mihajlo Ivanovic), then a Civil Commissioner 29 April 1941 - 22 May 1941 Conte Serafino Mazzolini (b. 1890 - d. 1945), who next stayed on as High Commissioner (from 12 July 1941, also styled Regent at the proclamation of Nominal independence under Italian control, but exiled King Mihajlo I refuses the throne, when offered the Montenegrin crown; Prince Roman Romanov of Russia (b. 1896 - d. 1978) also refuses to be enthroned) till 23 July 1941 followed by two Governors before the German occupation High Commissioners as Extraordinary Government Agents
                                In France, a high commissioner, in French haut-commissaire, is a civil servant appointed by the President of France to some high level position within France:

                                The High commissioner for atomic energy is the head of the CEA
                                cfr. Haute Autorité. High Commissioner Domestic High Commissioners

                                Multilaterally mandated
                                Often the main/locally concerned members of an alliance would not set up a joint occupation authority (as in Italy after the Nazi defeat) but simply each appoint one for each of the zones into which they physically divided amongst themselves an occupied state or territory, e.g. after World War II:

                                Even shortly before on 8 December 1918 the Allied occupation of the Bosporus, the Dardanelles, the eastern coast of the Sea of Marmara, the islands of Imros, Lemnos, Samothrace and Tenedos and 15 km deep into eastern and the eastern shores; entire area demilitarized (Zone of the Straits; complemented 16 March - 10 August 1920 as the allies occupy the Ottoman capital Istanbul) was a military fact, in November 1918 a double post was created: until the termination of allied occupation on 22 October 1923, there were at all times one British Senior Allied High Commissioner and one (junior) Allied High Commissioner (incumbents from France, thrice, Italy and the US, each twice).
                                in Austria, until 27 July 1955 when Allied occupation ends, restoring Austrian sovereignty, it was administered as a British Zone (6 consecutive High Commissioners, July 1945), a US Zone (4 incumbents from 5 July 1945), a Soviet Zone (4 from July 1945; only this had first been under a Military Governor from 8 April 1945) and a French Zone (2, from 8 July 1945);
                                in Germany there were also four major occupation zones: the British Zone (after three consecutive Military governors from 22 May 1945, the last stayed on as first of three consecutive High Commissioners 21 September 1949 - 5 May 1955), the US Zone (after five Military governors from 8 May 1945, four High Commissioners 2 September 1949 - 5 May 1955), the Soviet Zone (after a military commander April 1945 - 9 June 1945 who styed as first of three Military governors 9 June 1945 - 10 October 1949, the last of whom stayed on as only Chairman of the Soviet Control Commission 10 October 1949 - 28 May 1953, two High commissioners 28 May 1953 - 20 September 1955) and the French Zone (after a Military commander from May 1945 and a Military governor from July 1945, a single High commissioner 21 September 1949 - 5 May 1955); the Nazi capital, Berlin, enclaved in the Soviet zone, is separately quartered under four military City Commanders; only the small Dutch zone by the border is destined for annexation in 1949, so it is divided up in two districts, each under a landdrost (Tudderenen, attached to the province of (Dutch) Limburg and Elten, attached to Gelderland province), but returned to Germany after compensation payments and minor border corrections on 11 August 1963 Representing an international alliance
                                These 'guardianships' most often were simply awarded to the former colonial power or if that was a loser in the preceding World War, to the 'liberating' Allied victor(s).

                                As the 'world community' became a widely accepted ideal in diplomacy and was embodied first in the League of Nations and later the UNO, these often came to play a key role in extraordinary situations that would earlier probably have been dealt with by states as above, sometimes reflected in the appointment of High Commissioners under their auspices, sometimes just from the same leading powers, sometimes rather from 'neutral' member states.
                                The title of High Commissioner was specifically used for the administrators during the 'emancipation from colonial rule' of League of Nations mandates and United Nations Trust Territories, i.e. non-sovereign states under a 'transitional' regime established under the authority of the League of Nations or the UN, respectively, to prepare them for full independence. Emancipatory administrators under International law

                                Iraq, conquered on the Ottoman Walis by British forces, had four incumbents, after a single civilian Administrator (10 January 1919 - 1 October 1920 Sir Arnold Talbot Wilson), continuing ten years after the accession to the throne and most of the rule of the country's first Malik (King, resigned 23 August 1921 - 8 September 1933) Faysal I (b. 1885 - d. 1933) :

                                • 1 October 1920 - 4 May 1923 Sir Percy Zachariah Cox (b. 1864 - d. 1937)
                                  4 May 1923 - October 1928 Sir Henry Robert Conway Dobbs (acting to 15 September 1923) (b. 1871 - d. 1934)
                                  October 1928 - 11 September 1929 Sir Gilbert Falkingham Clayton (b. 1875 - d. 1929)
                                  3 October 1929 - 3 October 1932 Sir Francis Henry Humphrys (b. 1879 - d. 1971)
                                  The British Mandate of Palestine High Commissioners

                                  • 01 July 1920 – 1925 Sir Herbert Louis Samuel (1879–1963), until the 1922 establishment of the mandate actually the first civilian who took over, already as High Commissioner, from the three consecutive military administrators since the 1917 conquest by British forces
                                    1925 Sir Gilbert Falkingham Clayton (acting) (1875–1929)
                                    25 August 1925 – August 1928 Herbert Charles Onslow Plumer, Baron Plumer (1857–1932)
                                    August 1928 – 06 December 1928 Sir Harry Charles Luke (acting) (1884–1969)
                                    06 December 1928 – 1931 Sir John Robert Chancellor (1870–1952)
                                    1931 – 1932 Mark Aitchison Young (acting) (1886–1974)
                                    1932 – September 1937 Sir Arthur Grenfell Wauchope (1874–1947)
                                    September 1937 – March 1938 William Denis Battershill (acting) (1896–1959)
                                    03 March 1938 – 03 September 1944 Sir Harold Alfred MacMichael (1882–1969)
                                    03 September 1944 – 21 November 1945 John Standish Surtees Prendergast Vereker, Viscount Gort (1886–1946)
                                    21 November 1945 – 14 May 1948 Sir Alan Gordon Cunningham (1887–1983) League of Nations - Mandate territories

                                    United Nations

                                    In Togo, once a German colony, then a League of Nations mandate, * three High commissioners

                                    • 21 September 1956 - 23 March 1957 Jean Louis Philippe Bérard (b. 1910), in fact the last of many Commissioners since 4 September 1916
                                      23 March 1957 - June 1957 Joseph Édouard Georges Rigal (acting)
                                      June 1957 - 27 April 1960 Georges Léon Spénale (b. 1913 - d. 1983); next it was an independent republic.
                                      The UN Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands (originally comprising Marshall Islands, Micronesia, Northern Mariana Islands and Palau), after Allied military occupations, since 18 July 1947, had a dozen incumbents, also presiding over the splitting off of Palau and Marshall Islands in 1980 and the 10 May 1979 granting of autonomy to the Federated States of Micronesia (former Ponape, Truk and Yap districts of the Trust Territory) until on 3 November 1986 the Trust territory was dissolved by the U.S. (a single Director of the Office of Transition stepped in 3 November 1986 - 30 September 1991: Charles Jordan, so a while after the 22 December 1990 proclamation of final independence as the UN Security Council ratifies the termination of US trusteeship). UN Trust territories

                                      After the former Italian colony of Eritrea had been under victor Britain's administration since 5 May 1941, a specific United Nations administration, under Britain, was installed on 19 February 1951, under a UN High Commissioner, Edoardo Anze Matienzo (Bolivian, b. 1902), whose office ceased on 15 September 1952 when it was Federated with Ethiopia under the sovereignty of the Ethiopian emperor. Representing the world universally

                                      Lord High Commissioner
                                      List of Canadian High Commissioners to the United Kingdom
                                      High Representative