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John and Tyndall
* 1820 – John Tyndall, British physicist ( d. 1893 )
John Tyndall first described antagonistic activities by fungi against bacteria in England in 1875.
* 1893 – John Tyndall, Irish physicist ( b. 1820 )
The argument and the evidence was further strengthened by Claude Pouillet in 1827 and 1838, and reasoned from experimental observations by John Tyndall in 1859, and more fully quantified by Svante Arrhenius in 1896.
Early versions were constructed by the Scottish chemist John Stenhouse in 1854 and the physicist John Tyndall in the 1870s.
The first published reference appears in the publication of the Royal Society in 1875, by John Tyndall.
* July 14 – John Tyndall, British politician ( d. 2005 )
Initiated by Thomas Henry Huxley, the group consisted of such important scientists as Joseph Dalton Hooker, Herbert Spencer, and John Tyndall, along with another five scientists and mathematicians ; these scientists were all avid supporters of Darwin ’ s theory of evolution as common descent, a theory which, during the latter-half of the 19th century, received a great deal of criticism among more conservative groups of scientists.
Hermann von Helmholtz used the German Klangfarbe ( tone color ), and John Tyndall proposed an English translation, clangtint.
In the 17th century, the tip of land protruding into the York River, across from Yorktown, was named Tyndall's Point by Robert Tyndall, mapmaker for Captain John Smith.
The Wilbur A. Tyndall Tractor Museum has a collection of John Deere, Massey, and other tractors from various years.
Many of these residual objections were routed by the work of John Tyndall, succeeding the work of Pasteur.
The investigations of John Tyndall, a correspondent of Pasteur and a great admirer of Pasteur's work, were decisive in dispelling lingering difficulties.
Some of the most prominent British scientists of the 19th century, including William Rowan Hamilton, George Gabriel Stokes, and John Tyndall, were Anglo-Irish.
* John Tyndall
The scientist John Tyndall ( 1820-1893 ) lived and died in the village at a house now on " Tyndalls ", named after him.
John Tyndall was also influential in the teaching of physical science.
* John Tyndall Award, recognizes contributions to fiber optic technology ( co-sponsored with the IEEE Photonics Society ).
They also introduced Muir to notables such as Emerson, as well as leading scientists such as Louis Agassiz, John Tyndall, John Torrey, Clinton Hart Merriam, and Joseph LeConte.
Members included physicist-philosopher John Tyndall and Darwin's cousin, the banker and biologist Sir John Lubbock.
Most of the ANL's leafleting and other campaigns in the 1970s were in opposition to far right groups which it claimed were not just racist but fascist, such as the National Front, an organisation led by John Tyndall who had a long history of involvement with openly fascist and Nazi groups.

John and right-wing
Soon afterward, Lyons, Fenton and four other right-wing Labor MPs -- Moses Gabb, Allan Guy, Charles McGrath and John Price -- resigned from the ALP in protest of the Scullin government's economic policies.
Political leaders and reformers like Mahatma Gandhi, President John F. Kennedy, civil rights activist Martin Luther King, Jr., Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas, and Russian author Leo Tolstoy all spoke of being strongly affected by Thoreau's work, particularly Civil Disobedience, as did " right-wing theorist Frank Chodorov devoted an entire issue of his monthly, Analysis, to an appreciation of Thoreau.
In the party leadership of contest 1995, in which John Major won against John Redwood, Clarke kept faith in Major and commented " I don't think the Conservative Party could win an election in 1, 000 years on this ultra right-wing programme ".
Conservative and right-wing groups such as the John Birch Society and right wing conspiracy theorists such as Alex Jones also regularly tout this idea.
In 1961, John F. Kennedy's administration opted for a neutralist coalition rather than risk an armed confrontation with the Russians over Laos, and Phoumi was ordered to merge his right-wing government into a tripartite coalition under the leadership of Souvanna Phouma.
In fact, Buckley's biographer John B. Judis wrote that " Buckley was beginning to worry that with the John Birch Society growing so rapidly, the right-wing upsurge in the country would take an ugly, even Fascist turn rather than leading toward the kind of conservatism National Review had promoted.
After he returned to Australia, he tutored and lectured in politics at Perth's Murdoch University, recruited to Labor's right-wing faction by Graham Richardson and John Ducker, before being elected MP for the seat of Swan at the 1980 election.
He generally allied himself with right-wing Liberals critical of their party's support for the Labour minority governments, joining with Sir John Simon in becoming a ' Liberal National ' upon the formation of the National Government in 1931.
Perhaps his most notable case of dissent was his public condemnation of foreign and domestic policies, in particular, his concern that right-wing radicalism, as espoused by the John Birch Society and wealthy oil-man H. L. Hunt, had infected the United States military.
In 2003, it ran John Christopher Burton in the California recall gubernatorial elections, although it urged people to vote " No " on the recall because it saw the recall campaign as an anti-democratic attempt by right-wing forces to undo the results of the election that happened only a few months earlier.
Joe Clark's leadership was successfully challenged, and in the 1983 PC leadership convention, members endorsed Brian Mulroney who rejected free trade with the United States as proposed by another right-wing candidate, John Crosbie.
New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison prosecuted Clay Shaw on the charge that Shaw and a group of right-wing activists, including David Ferrie and Guy Banister, were involved in a conspiracy with elements of the Central Intelligence Agency ( CIA ) in the John F. Kennedy assassination.
Spearhead was a British far right-wing magazine edited by John Tyndall until his death in July 2005.
The wide reaching critiques that this conspiracy theory utilised meant that the LEL won membership from various sectors of right-wing opinion including former BUF activists like Chesterton himself and Barry Domvile, traditionalist patriots like General Sir Richard Hilton and young radicals like John Tyndall, John Bean, Colin Jordan and Martin Webster.
The British Columbia Party is a right-wing political party in the Canadian province of British Columbia, founded in 1998 as a populist party by John Motiuk, a North Vancouver lawyer.
In July 1996 Prime Minister John Howard said in an interview with journalist Peter Cole-Adams: " I think one of the weaknesses of the ABC is that it doesn't have a right-wing Phillip Adams.
According to journalist Murray Dobbin, 31 % of the Fraser Institute's revenue come from corporations and 57 % from " business-oriented charitable foundations " such as the right-wing Donner Foundation and the free-market-oriented John Dobson Foundation.
In the 1960s, right-wing populist individuals and groups with a producerist worldview, such as members of the John Birch Society, were the first to combine and spread an ultraconservative business nationalist critique of corporate internationalists networked through think tanks such as the Council on Foreign Relations with a grand conspiracy theory casting them as front organizations for the Round Table of the " Anglo-American Establishment ", which are financed by an " international banking cabal " that has supposedly been plotting from the late 19th century on to impose an oligarchic new world order through a global financial system.
FAIR also protested in 1995 when Liberty Media purchased a majority of the program, citing Liberty's majority owner, John Malone, for his " Machiavellian business tactics " and right-wing sentiments.
On Monday, a political discussion is held between right-wing commentator Matthew Hooton and a left-wing commentator, usually either Mike Williams, former President of the New Zealand Labour Party, or John Pagani.
In St Lucia, the Saint Lucia Labour Party was considered the traditional party for " political and constitutional advance " but, despite this, it lost the general election in 1964 to the United Workers Party, a right-wing party led by John Compton that continued to rule until 1979.

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