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* Ankerberg, John and John Weldon, Encyclopedia of Cults and New Religions, Harvest House, Eugene, 1999.
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Ankerberg and John
Various other conservative Christian leaders — among them John Ankerberg and Norman Geisler — have emphasized themes similar to Martin's.
In 1988, " The John Ankerberg Show " interviewed Gross in reference to the use of the term as he said, " I always looked at myself as not the Mahanta but a vehicle for it.
John and Weldon
It first saw the light of day on New Year's Eve 1759 sung by Samuel Thomas Champnes, grandson of John Weldon, in one of the first pantomimes, " Harlequin's Invasion ", at the Garrick Theatre.
The city is named for its first settler, North Carolina frontiersman John Weldon, who in 1790 built a log home overlooking the spring which bears his name.
Also in 1700 he finished second in a competition to write music for William Congreve's masque The Judgement of Paris ( John Weldon won ).
" Lift Every Voice and Sing " — often called " The Negro National Hymn ", " The Negro National Anthem ", " The Black National Anthem ", or " The African-American National Anthem "— is a song written as a poem by James Weldon Johnson ( 1871 – 1938 ) and set to music by his brother John Rosamond Johnson ( 1873 – 1954 ) in 1900.
The Bridport Literary Festival has been running since 2005 and has played host to the biggest literary lions including Elizabeth Jane Howard, Victoria Glendinning, Claire Tomalin, Jonathan Dimbleby, Max Hastings, Julian Fellowes, Alexander Waugh, John Julius Norwich, Minette Walters, Fay Weldon, Bill Oddie, Robin Hanbury – Tenison, Katharine Whitehorn, Kate Summerscale, Michael Dobbs and Ann Leslie DBE.
Exponents of this style range from Brinsley MacNamara ( 1890 – 1963 ) ( real name John Weldon ), whose 1918 The Valley of the Squinting Windows could be said to have created the genre, to John McGahern ( born 1934 ), whose first novel, The Dark ( 1965 ), a portrayal of child abuse in a rural community, cost him his job as a teacher.
In his district, Weldon secured funding for the John Heinz Wildlife Refuge in Tinicum and obtained funding for the preservation of the Paoli Battlefield, the site of a Revolutionary War battle that was slated for development.
" Investigative reporter John Gorenfeld then found a photo depicting Weldon as giving the opening " congratulatory remarks " from the stage.
In 1980 Weldon wrote the screenplay for director / producer John Goldschmidt's television movie Life for Christine, which told the true story of a 15-year-old girl's life imprisonment.
His letter found its way to Kees ’ s father, John, who eventually gave Justice permission to compile and edit The Collected Poems of Weldon Kees ( Iowa City, IA: The Stone Wall Press, 1959 ), which was subsequently released as a trade paperback in the 1960s.
However, a number of novelists, playwrights, and academics, including Fay Weldon, Beryl Bainbridge, Richard Adams, Ronald Harwood, and John Bayley, spoke positively of the work.
Valley of the Squinting Windows is a novel by Brinsley MacNamara ( born John Weldon ), set in the fictional village of " Garradrimna ", County Westmeath, Ireland.
John and Encyclopedia
One form is equality of persons in right, sometimes referred to as natural rights, and John Locke is sometimes considered the founder of this form .< ref > Arneson Richard, " Egalitarianism ", The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy ( 2002.
The author of the Catholic Encyclopedia article goes on to enumerate the accounts of each of these three persons ( the unnamed " sinner ", Mary Magdalene, and Mary of Bethany ) in the Gospel of Luke and concludes that based on these accounts “ there is no suggestion of an identification of the three persons, and if we had only Luke to guide us we should certainly have no grounds for so identifying them the same person .” He then explains first the Catholic position equating Mary of Bethany with the sinful woman of Luke by referring to, where Mary is identified as the woman who anointed Jesus, and noting that this reference is given before John ’ s account of the anointing in Bethany:
The Catholic Encyclopedia states the following concerning the alleged illicit relationship of Pope Sergius III with Marozia: " that he put his two predecessors to death, and by illicit relations with Marozia had a son, who was afterwards John XI, must be regarded as highly doubtful.
This line of argument has been articulated further in recent years by Canadian philosopher John McMurtry within the Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems ( http :// www. eolss. net ) published by UNESCO.
John Clute, for The Encyclopedia of Fantasy ( in which capitalized typesetting represents literary themes and categories for that book ), wrote: " an ANIMAL FANTASY about a philosophical gull who is profoundly affected by FLYING, but who demands too much of his community and is cast out by it.
* Marszalek, John F., « William Tecumseh Sherman », Encyclopedia of the American Civil War: A Political, Social, and Military History, Heidler, David S., and Heidler, Jeanne T., eds., W. W. Norton & Company, 2000, ISBN 0-393-04758-X.
In 2002, photojournalist John Bassett McCleary published a 650-page, 6, 000-entry unabridged slang dictionary devoted to the language of the hippies titled The Hippie Dictionary: A Cultural Encyclopedia of the 1960s and 1970s.
* Miller, Sean, ' Æthelstan ', in Michael Lapidge, John Blair, Simon Keynes and Donald Scragg eds ( 2001 ) The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Anglo-Saxon England, Blackwell Publishing
* Scragg, Donald, ' Battle of Brunanburh ', in Michael Lapidge, John Blair, Simon Keynes and Donald Scragg eds ( 2001 ) The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Anglo-Saxon England, Blackwell Publishing
Sir John Herschel, in a footnote of the 1845 edition of the Encyclopedia Metropolitana, posed two ideas for the visual correction: the first " a spherical capsule of glass filled with animal jelly ", and " a mould of the cornea " which could be impressed on " some sort of transparent medium ".
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