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John and Barclay
* John Frederick William Herschel, A brief notice of the life, researches, and discoveries of Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel, London: Barclay, 1847 ( on-line )
* 1947 John Lees, English Musician ( Barclay James Harvest )
According to theologian John Barclay, the Moses of Artapanus " clearly bears the destiny of the Jews, and in his personal, cultural and military splendor, brings credit to the whole Jewish people.
Other historical non-Sabbatarians from more recent times include the Anglicans Peter Heylin, William Paley and John Milton ; the nonconformist Philip Doddridge ; the Quaker Robert Barclay ; and Congregationalist James Baldwin Brown.
* May 1 John Barclay Armstrong, Texas Ranger and U. S. Marshal ( b. 1850 )
* January 28 John Barclay, Scottish satirist and Latin poet ( d. 1621 )
* January John Barclay Armstrong, Texas Ranger and U. S. Marshal ( d. 1913 )
* August 15 John Barclay, Scottish writer ( b. 1582 )
In similar vein Barclay follows Carr in finding Josephus ' silence not relevant, drawing a parallel with the diarist John Evelyn's failure to mention the masscre at Glencoe.
In the John Vornholt series Gem World Barclay becomes, through a series of incidents involving the planet's native species, the senior engineer on the ancient and crumbling planet of Gem World.
In 1986 Finn performed with The Rock Party a charity project initiated by The National Campaign Against Drug Abuse ( NCADA ), which included many Australasian musicians such as Reg Mombassa from Mental As Anything, Eddie Rayner, Tim Finn, Nick Seymour and Paul Hester of Crowded House, Geoff Stapleton, Mark Callaghan and Robbie James of GANGgajang, Mary Azzopardi of Rockmelons, Andrew Barnum of The Vitabeats, Lissa Barnum, Michael Barclay, Peter Blakely, Deborah Conway, Jenny Morris, Danny De Costa, Greg Herbert ( The Promise ), Spencer P Jones, Sean Kelly ( Models ), John Kennedy, Paul Kelly, Martin Plaza ( Mental as Anything ), Robert Susz ( Dynamic Hepnotics ) and Rick Swinn ( The Venetians ).
Medaris took command of AOMC in 1958 and BG John A. Barclay became the ABMA commander.
John Barclay may refer to:
* John Barclay ( poet ) ( 1582 1621 ), Scottish satirist and Latin poet
* John Barclay ( Berean ) ( 1734 1798 ), Scottish theological writer
* John Barclay ( clergyman ) ( 1795 1826 ), Canadian Church of Scotland clergyman
* John Barclay ( cricketer ) ( born 1954 ), cricketer
* John Barclay ( rugby union ) ( born 1986 ), Scottish international rugby union player, playing for Glasgow
* John Barclay ( anatomist ) ( 1758 1826 ), anatomist
* John Barclay, Captain in Danish-Norwegian military, 1643 to 1645, thought to have been the first male member of Clan Barclay
* John Barclay ( mayor ) ( 1749 1824 ), American soldier, politician, and jurist ; mayor of Philadelphia in 1791
* John Barclay, survivor of the shipwreck of HMS Birkenhead in 1852
* John Barclay Armstrong ( 1850 1913 ), Texas ranger

John and marine
When the UK Channel 4 television program " The Bermuda Triangle " ( c. 1992 ) was being produced by John Simmons of Geofilms for the Equinox series, the marine insurance market Lloyd's of London was asked if an unusually large number of ships had sunk in the Bermuda Triangle area.
The game's designer, John Romero, has pointed out that this is so the player feels more involved in the game: " There was never a name for the DOOM marine because it's supposed to be YOU.
Following Harrison, the marine timekeeper was reinvented yet again by John Arnold who while basing his design on Harrison's most important principles, at the same time simplified it enough for him to produce equally accurate but far less costly marine chronometers in quantity from around 1783.
John Harrison, a self-educated English clockmaker then invented the marine chronometer, a key piece in solving the problem of accurately establishing longitude at sea, thus revolutionising and extending the possibility of safe long distance sea travel.
Though the British rewarded John Harrison for his marine chronometer in 1773, chronometers remained very expensive and the lunar distance method continued to be used for decades.
In 1873, a private philanthropist ( John Anderson ) gave Agassiz the island of Penikese, in Buzzards Bay, Massachusetts ( south of New Bedford ), and presented him with $ 50, 000 to permanently endow it as a practical school of natural science, especially devoted to the study of marine zoology.
The term lunatic was also used by supporters of John Harrison and his marine chronometer method of determining longitude to refer to proponents of the Method of Lunar Distances, advanced by Astronomer Royal Nevil Maskelyne.
* 1916 John Basilone, American marine and Medal of Honor recipient ( d. 1945 )
Stanford is home to the John S. Knight Fellowships for Professional Journalist and the Center for Ocean Solutions, which brings together marine science and policy to develop solutions to challenges facing the ocean.
* June 17 Major John Pitcairn, British marine ( killed in battle ) ( b. 1722 )
Today the buildings include a museum of astronomical and navigational tools, which is part of the National Maritime Museum, notably including John Harrison's prize-winning longitude marine chronometer, H4, and its three predecessors, although all four are the property of the Ministry of Defence.
The four-month 1910 North Atlantic expedition headed by Sir John Murray and Johan Hjort was at that time the most ambitious research oceanographic and marine zoological project ever, and led to the classic 1912 book The Depths of the Ocean.
Though produced on a very small scale, Crimean War gunboat engines designed and assembled by John Penn of Greenwich are recorded as the first instance of the application of mass production techniques ( though not necessarily the assembly-line method ) to marine engineering.
The John Huston war drama Heaven Knows, Mr. Allison starred Mitchum as a marine corporal shipwrecked on a Pacific Island with a nun, Sister Angela ( Deborah Kerr ), being his sole companion.
Other people who have lived in Deptford, range from the First Governor of the Honourable East India Company, and Ambassador to the court of Russia, Sir Thomas Smith, whose magnificent house was destroyed by fire in 1618 ; to early members of the Chartist movement, John Gast and George Julian Harney ; and the Cleveleys, John Cleveley the Elder and his sons John and Robert, a family of marine artists who also worked as tradesmen in the Dockyard.
John Sell Cotman ( 16 May 1782 24 July 1842 ) was an English marine and landscape painter, etcher, illustrator and author, a leading member of
Before the 19th-century development of the marine chronometer and the lunar distance method, dead reckoning was the primary method of determining longitude available to mariners such as Christopher Columbus and John Cabot on their trans-Atlantic voyages.
Charles Elton ( ecology ), Alister Hardy ( marine biology ) and John Baker ( cytology ) all became highly successful, and Baker eventually wrote Huxley's Royal Society obituary memoir.
He, however, died within two months of work beginning, and was succeeded by his son, John, later Sir John Rennie, who had as his resident engineer a fellow Scot, the seasoned marine builder, David Logan, who had assisted Robert Stevenson at the Bell Rock Lighthouse ( 1807 1810 ).
The Englishman Sir John Acton, who in 1779 was appointed director of marine, won Maria Carolina's favour by supporting her scheme to free Naples from Spanish influence, securing rapprochement with Austria and Great Britain.

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