Event class: joined, career, service, department, worked, police, began, office, became, officer
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de-normalize
Events with high posterior probability
Martin Ihoeghian Uhomoibhi | He began his diplomatic career in 1984 by joining the Ministry of Foreign Affairs as a Senior First Secretary. |
Ivor Stanbrook | He completed postgraduate study at Pembroke College, Oxford then left for Nigeria in 1950 where he worked for ten years in the Colonial Service as District Officer in various regions of Northern and Western Nigeria, including Ilorin, Western Region. |
Mohd Sidek Hassan | He began his career in the Administrative and Diplomatic Service on 15 April 1974 as an Assistant Director at the International Trade Division, Ministry of Trade and Industry. |
Eugene Lee-Hamilton | In 1869 he entered the British diplomatic service. |
Isaac Babalola Akinyele | Isaac Akinyele worked for a time as a civil servant, entering government services in the junior ranks to which Nigerians were confined in those days, becoming a customs inspector for the Ibadan District Council in 1903. |
Catherine Shipe East | Catherine Shipe East began her career an a junior civil service examiner with the U. S Civil Service Commission in 1939. |
John Boreham | He joined the Agriculture Economic Research Institute in Oxford and shortly afterward in 1950, joined the statistics division of the Ministry of Food as a higher executive officer. |
Komba Mondeh | It was because of this exceptional performance that he was sent as a true patriot to pursue his Senior Division Staff Course in the Federal Republic of Nigeria in July 1996. |
Anne E. Derse | Derse joined the Department of State in 1981, and served in Trinidad and Tobago from 1981 -- 83. |
Henry Willard Denison | In 1869, Denison was appointed Vice Consul at the United States Consulate at Yokohama, Japan, where his duties were primarily to serve as public prosecutor in the consulate court. |
K. Jayakumar | He began his civil service career as an assistant collector in 1980. |
Richard Carnac Temple | His first experience of Civil Service was in 1879 as Cantonment Magistrate in the Punjab. |
Ferdinando Imposimato | After one year in Rome as a functionary of the Ministry of Treasury, he become a magistrate in 1964. |
Kapil Sibal | In the year 1973, he qualified for Indian Administrative Services and was offered an appointment. |
Lynn Compton | He attended Loyola Law School in Los Angeles, joined the Los Angeles Police Department in 1946 and became a detective in the Central Burglary Division. |
Edward Albert Gait | He sat the competitive examination for the Indian Civil Service in 1882 and was subsequently appointed, arriving in India on 11 December of that year. |
Nigel Thorpe | He was posted as Third Secretary later Second Secretary to Warsaw in 1970. |
Edmund Compton | Compton entered the civil service in 1929 and was transferred to the Colonial Service, during which he visited Nigeria. |
Craig Murray | He joined HM Diplomatic Service through the 1984 Civil Service Open Competition. |
Sara Josephine Baker | In 1901, Baker passed the civil service exam and qualified to be a medical inspector at the Department of Health, working as a school inspector. |
T. Ramachandra Rao | Ramachandra Rao's proficiency in multiple languages won him rapid promotions until 1854, when he was appointed Interpreter to the Chief Magistrate. |
Polly Hill (economist) | Hill spent eleven years (1940 -- 51) as a civil servant in London, in the statistics department of the Colonial Office. |
Donald Luddington | In February 1949, Luddington arrived at Hong Kong as a cadet and began his career as a colonial official in Hong Kong. |
Ranjan Mathai | Ranjan Mathai is a 1974 batch Indian Foreign Service Officer. |
Alexander Belyayev | He served a brief stint as a police inspector, tried other odd jobs such as a librarian, but life remained difficult, and in 1923 he moved to Moscow where he started to practice law again, as a consultant for various Soviet organizations. |
John Wesley Greenway | Greenway joined the civil service in 1898 with his appointment as Inspector for School Lands with the Manitoba Government. |
Edward Ingram (diplomat) | After the war he entered the Foreign Office and Diplomatic Service in 1919, where he acted as private secretary to Sir Arthur Steel-Maitland and Sir Hamar Greenwood (when they were additional Parliamentary Under Secretaries for Foreign Affairs). |
Alexander Burnes | Burnes was born in Montrose, Scotland, to the son of the local provost, At the age of sixteen, Alexander joined the army of the East India Company and while serving in India, he learned Hindi and Persian, and obtained an appointment as interpreter at Surat in 1822. |
Nadia Younes | From 1974, she worked with the Department of Public Information in various capacities, initially as a press officer in both the English and French Sections. |
Henry Whitelock Torrens | After a short service under the Foreign Office, he obtained a writership from the Court of Directors of the East India Company and arrived in India in Nov. 1828 and held various appointments at Meerut. |
Sabur? Kurusu | The following year, he entered diplomatic service and, in 1914, first came to the United States as the Japanese Consul in Chicago. |
Robert Scott Troup | Troup joined the Imperial Forestry Service in 1897 and was posted to Burma as a Deputy Conservator of Forests. |
Thomas Mayr-Harting | He joined the Austrian diplomatic service in 1979. |
Rafael Bielsa | After a period in Spain, he returned to Argentina in 1980, and started working in different positions of the military government, mainly in the Ministry of Justice. |
Doris E. Saunders | In May 1942, she became a Junior Library Assistant and shortly thereafter she passed the Civil Service examination for Senior Library Assistant. |
Mario Biaggi | In 1942, Biaggi joined the New York City Police Department. |
Christine Nixon | The daughter of a police officer, Nixon began her policing career with the New South Wales Police Force in 1972, rising to the rank of Assistant Commissioner. |
Izzat Darwaza | In 1906, he served in the local Ottoman administration as a clerk in the Department of Telegraphic and Postal Services (DTPS) in Nablus. |
Robin Abbott | After graduating from high school in 1970, Abbott moved to Washington, D. C., and worked for the Federal Bureau of Investigation as a stenographer and the United States Department of Justice as a legal secretary. |
Atul Khare | Khare started his career as an Indian diplomat in 1984. |
Henry Shelton Sanford | Sanford began diplomatic work in 1847, when he was named the Secretary of the American legation to St. Petersburg. |
Andrew Kayiira | He was recruited by the Uganda Government civil service as a cadet officer trainee, and in 1966 he was appointed an Assistant Superintendent of Uganda Prisons. |
Ashley Eden | In 1852 he reached India, and was first posted as assistant to the magistrate and collector of Rájsháhí. |
Richard Luce, Baron Luce | He then briefly joined the Overseas Civil Service, first as a district officer in Kenya, 1960 -- 62. |
Edward Cassidy | After finishing his studies, he joined the Vatican diplomatic service in July 1955. |
Evelyn Ruggles-Brise | Ruggles-Brise came sixth in the civil service exam, and became a clerk in the Home Office in 1880. |
Boris Rybkin | Starting from September 1935, Rybkin was posted as a second-class secretary to the Soviet embassy in Helsinki. |
Maynard W. Glitman | Ambassador Glitman started his 38-year career in the U. S. Foreign Service in 1956. |
Chris Laidlaw | In 1972, Laidlaw joined the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and served as Assistant to Commonwealth Secretary-General Sonny Ramphal. |
Humayun Rashid Choudhury | Before the emergence of Bangladesh as an independent nation, he joined the Pakistan Foreign Service in 1953 and received extensive training in the Pakistan Foreign Office and other government departments as well as in the British Foreign and Commonwealth Office in London. |
Charles Thomas Newton | He joined the British Museum in 1840 as an assistant in the Antiquities Department. |
Igor Shuvalov | In 1993, upon graduating with a degree in Jurisprudence, Shuvalov was assigned as Attaché to the Legal Department of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, where he was responsible for pursuing developments in international law. |
Bill English | In 1987, he returned to Wellington to work as a policy analyst in the New Zealand Treasury, returning to Dipton two years later. |
Taslim Olawale Elias | In 1935 he joined the Nigerian Railway and served in the Chief Accountant's Office for nine years. |
J. K. Stanford | Appointed to the Indian Civil Service on 24 October 1919, he arrived in India on 24 December 1919. |
Vladimir Kryuchkov | Kryuchkov joined the Soviet diplomatic service, stationed in Hungary until 1959. |
Agostino Cacciavillan | Attending the Pontifical Ecclesiastical Academy as well, he entered the diplomatic service of the Holy See in 1959. |
Patrick Mullee | He joined the Foreign and Commonwealth Office in 1974. |
Ahmed Hussain A. Kazi | He later opted to serve in Pakistan after independence in 1947 and held senior positions such as Commissioner of Income Tax in Karachi, Lahore, Sindh and Balochistan, Member Central now Federal Board of Revenue (Pakistan), and Finance Director Pakistan Steel Mills Corporation. |
Helen Ghosh | Ghosh joined the Department of the Environment in 1979 as an Administration Trainee and held a series of policy roles. |
Arthur A. Kimball | Arthur Kimball entered government service in 1928 when he went to work for the U. S. Department of Commerce. |
Abang Muhammad Salahuddin | After the Japanese occupation, he worked as Municipal Inspector until 1947 under the new British colonial administration. |
S. Satthianadhan | Satthianadhan returned to Madras in 1883 and joined the Indian government service. |
Delcia Kite | In 1941 she was employed by the Commonwealth Department of the Interior as a draughtswoman. |
Cipriano Primicias, Sr. | He enrolled in the National Law College and at the same time worked as a clerk in the Bureau of Commerce in 1919 where he rose to the rank of Chief, Commercial Section. |
Lena Jeger, Baroness Jeger | She joined the Civil Service in 1936, initially in HM Customs & Excise. |
Dunduzu Chisiza | He worked as a clerk in the records office of the Tanganyika (now Tanzania) police in 1949 and later for four years continued his education at Aggrey Memorial College in Uganda, where he joined and became secretary of the Nyasaland Students' Association centred at Makerere College, supporting himself with odd jobs. |
Mori Koben | Mori was selected to work as a resident representative of the company's branch in Micronesia, and left Japan from Yokohama, on board the Tenyu Maru in November 1891 with eight other employees. |
Eugene Nugent | In the same year, he graduated from the Pontifical Ecclesiastical Academy and entered the diplomatic service of the Holy See on 1 July 1992. |
Sir Charles Trevelyan, 1st Baronet | On 21 January 1840, he entered on the duties of assistant secretary to Her Majesty's Treasury in London, and discharged the functions of that office for nineteen years. |
Abid Qaiyum Suleri | Upon returning to Pakistan, he joined the Punjab Food Department in 2000. |
Henry Howard (diplomat) | He joined the Diplomatic Service as an attaché to the Legation in Washington, D. C. in 1865. |
Stewart Perowne | In 1930 Perowne transferred to the administrative branch of the Palestine Government, working for a time as Assistant District Commissioner for Galilee. |
Jan Eliasson | Eliasson started his diplomatic career in 1965, when he was employed at the Swedish Ministry for Foreign Affairs. |
Alastair Craig Paterson | He completed his service in 1948 having gained the position of Deputy Assistant Director Mechanical Engineering (North Burma and China). |
Ivor Roberts (diplomat) | Roberts joined the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) as Third Secretary in 1968. |
Adamantios Vassilakis | Vassilakis joined the Diplomatic Service of the Greek Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1972 as Embassy Attaché. |
Gladwyn Jebb | Jebb entered the Diplomatic Service in 1924, served in Tehran, where he became known to Harold Nicolson and to Vita Sackville-West and in Rome, as well as at the Foreign Office in London where, amongst other positions, he served as the Private Secretary to the Head of the Diplomatic Service. |
David A. Salmon | Salmon joined the U. S. Department of War in 1896 as a junior clerk. |
Jon R. Thomas | Upon graduating, he joined the United States Department of State and served as a Foreign Service reserve officer in Spain and Switzerland until 1977. |
George Abell (civil servant) | In 1928, Abell entered the Indian Civil Service. |
George Francis Hill | In 1893, Hill joined the British Museum in the Coins and Medals Department. |
Isidro Fabela | Isidro Fabela worked in various roles of local government, his earliest role is most closely connected to his work as a lawyer, serving as Chief Public Defender for the Federal District (Mexico State) in 1911. |
Dennis O'Driscoll | After completing his secondary education, at age sixteen (1970), O'Driscoll was offered a job at Ireland's Office of the Revenue Commissioners the internal revenue and customs service. |
Arturo Durazo Moreno | In 1948, he switched careers to that of traffic inspector, moving on to becoming an agent of the Federal Security Directorate (DFS). |
Muhammadu Kabir Usman | On completion in 1947, he joined the Katsina Native Authority Police and was sent to the Nigeria Police College, Kaduna for a one-year training. |
Yuri Bezmenov | After graduating in 1963, Bezmenov spent two years in India working as a translator and public relations officer with the Soviet economical aid group Soviet Refineries Constructions, which built refinery complexes. |
W. Ralph Basham | Basham's career with the United States Secret Service began in 1970, when he was appointed a Special Agent in the Washington Field Office. |
Saul Rae | Saul Rae joined the Department of External Affairs in 1940, and would spend four decades with the civil service as a career diplomat. |
Malcolm Delevingne | Delevingne entered the British Home Office in 1892 at the age of twenty-four. |
Komba Mondeh | During his undergraduate course at the Njala University College, he seized the window of opportunity in 1991 for enlistment as cadet in the Sierra Leone Army, after doing some job stints in various organizations. |
Hesham Qandil | After graduation, Qandil joined the Egyptian civil service in the water resources department in 1985. |
Kaliopate Tavola | A native of the small island of Dravuni in the Kadavu archipelago, Tavola was educated at Ratu Sukuna Memorial School and began his career in 1973 as an agricultural economist with the Ministry of Agriculture. |
Gideon Spiro | In the early 1960s Spiro held various positions in the public service, and in 1962 he visited East Germany. |
Ofir Gendelman | In 2001 he joined the diplomatic training program at the ministry and graduated as a political officer with the rank of Second Secretary. |
Funsho Williams | html In 1974 Williams returned to Nigeria and joined the Lagos State civil service. |
Basanta Mullick | In 1890 he was posted to Bengal as an assistant magistrate and collector. |
Nilakanta Mahadeva Ayyar | He was initially posted in Bengal as Assistant Magistrate and Collector and subsequently rose to the post of Sub-Divisional Officer in 1924. |
Herb Graham | In 1928 Graham joined the Western Australian Government Department of Lands and Surveys as a cadet draftsman. |
Rehman Malik | In 1973, Malik joined the National Alien Registration Authority (NARA) as the immigration agent and subsequently served in the various services of the intelligence community, working in various criminal offense cases. |