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  1. Jan 8, 2018 · In 1957-1958, Anderson was at his peak, reaching his career-high ranking of No.2. Also in 1957, he captured the doubles title at the French National Championships with Ashley Cooper. But it would be a further 16 years before Anderson would taste major doubles success again - this time he captured the Australian Open doubles title alongside John ...

  2. Biography. In 1957, Malcolm James Anderson became the first unseeded player to win the U.S. National Men’s Singles Championships, and he faced one of the stiffest challenges ever, needing to best the top three seeds to win. While pre-Open Era records aren’t as precise as those post-1968, unseeded players rarely, if ever, won a major title.

  3. In a testimonial supporting Malcolm’s university application, the Headmaster of Cramlington High School wrote: ‘Malcolm’s atti-tude to his work is exemplary…He is able to work very well on his own…He has a clear style which displays his arguments forcefully and logically using both sound analysis and his dry sense of humour’.

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  5. May 6, 2019 · Malcolm was born on 22 January 1970 and grew up in Cramlington, Northumberland. The schoolboy Malcolm showed a flair for leadership, serving as Deputy Head Boy and captain of the school football and cricket teams. He also displayed other characteristics which were to become familiar to all who knew him in later life.

    • Roy Chandler, John Richard Edwards
    • 2019
  6. Malcolm has an extensive background in conducting academic and consulting research and the use of research methods. He has conducted hundreds of interviews over the years, including interviews for his book ‘The Messengers’ in which he wrote the stories of over one hundred runners who have completed 100 marathons or more.

  7. He married Diane in St Austell, Cornwall in 1993. They had three daughters, Hannah, Rachel and Bethan. Malcolm took his own life at the Business School on 19 February 2018. He was posthumously promoted to the grade of senior lecturer. A Cardiff undergraduate Malcolm arrived in Cardiff for an interview in 1988.

  8. ANDERSON, Malcolm. British, b. 1934. Genres: History, Politics/Government, Translations. Career: Professor of Politics, University of Edinburgh, since 1979. Lecturer in Government, University of Manchester, 1960-64; Sr. Lecturer, 1965-73, and Professor of Politics, 1973-79, University of Warwick.