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John and Walker
Gallery Director John Walker greeted the group, standing on one of the benches in the downstairs lobby to speak to them.
William Walker ( composer ) | William Walker, the composer who first joined John Newton's verses to " New Britain ", to create the song that has become " Amazing Grace "
Carnegie's empire grew to include the J. Edgar Thomson Steel Works, ( named for John Edgar Thomson, Carnegie's former boss and president of the Pennsylvania Railroad ), Pittsburgh Bessemer Steel Works, the Lucy Furnaces, the Union Iron Mills, the Union Mill ( Wilson, Walker & County ), the Keystone Bridge Works, the Hartman Steel Works, the Frick Coke Company, and the Scotia ore mines.
* 1827 John Walker, an English chemist, sells the first friction match that he had invented the previous year.
The software is developed and sold by Autodesk, Inc., first released in December 1982 by Autodesk in the year following the purchase of the first form of the software by Autodesk founder, John Walker.
This early version ran on the Marinchip Systems 9900 computer ( Marinchip Systems was owned by Autodesk co-founders John Walker and Dan Drake ).
* In 2005 Powell received the Bishop John T. Walker Distinguished Humanitarian Service Award for his contributions to Africa.
* 1981 John Walker Lindh, American Taliban fighter
" Other egoists include James L. Walker, Sidney Parker, Dora Marsden, John Beverly Robinson, and Benjamin Tucker ( later in life ).
American anarchists who adhered to egoism include Benjamin Tucker, John Beverley Robinson, Steven T. Byington, Hutchins Hapgood, James L. Walker and Victor Yarros and E. H. Fulton.
In the second week of January 2002, he was flown to the USS Bataan in the northern Arabian Sea, the ship which was being used to hold eight other notable prisoners, including John Walker Lindh.
After 18 months, not proving suitable for shop work, Cook travelled to the nearby port town of Whitby to be introduced to friends of Sanderson's, John and Henry Walker.
* 1941 John E. Walker, English chemist, Nobel Prize laureate
* 2002 " American Taliban " John Walker Lindh returns to the United States in FBI custody.
* 2002 " American Taliban " John Walker Lindh pleads guilty to supplying aid to the enemy and to possession of explosives during the commission of a felony.
L-R: Judah P. Benjamin, Stephen Mallory, Christopher Memminger, Alexander Stephens, LeRoy Pope Walker, Jefferson Davis, John H. Reagan and Robert Toombs.
John Walker may refer to:
* John Walker ( Virginia politician ) ( 1744 1809 ), U. S. Senator, public official, and soldier
* John Walker ( Missouri politician ) ( 1770 1838 ), State Treasurer of Missouri
* John M. Walker, Jr. ( born 1940 ), former chief judge of the U. S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
* John Randall Walker ( 1874 1942 ), U. S. Representative from Georgia
* John Williams Walker ( 1783 1823 ), U. S. Senator from Alabama
* John Walker ( Canadian politician ) ( 1832 1889 ), industrialist and member of the Canadian House of Commons
* John Archibald Walker ( born 1890 ), lawyer and political figure in Nova Scotia, Canada

John and clerical
At first, although Lollardy was denounced as a heresy, Wycliffe and the Lollards were sheltered by John of Gaunt and other anti-clerical nobility, who may have wanted to use Lollard-advocated clerical reform to acquire new sources of revenue from England ’ s monasteries.
Pope John Paul II often instructed Catholic priests and religious to always wear their distinctive ( clerical ) clothing, unless wearing it would result in persecution or grave verbal attacks.
Their oldest son, John, inherited the family estate, whereas Thomas and his younger brother Edmund were placed on the path to a clerical career.
* John Bridgewater ( c. 1532-c. 1596 ), English clerical historian
In the early 19th century, the reforming zeal of Provosts John Eveleigh and Edward Copleston gained Oriel the reputation of being the most brilliant college of the day and the centre of the " Oriel Noetics " — clerical liberals such as Richard Whately and Thomas Arnold were Fellows, and the during the 1830s, two intellectually eminent Fellows of Oriel, John Keble and The Blessed John Henry Newman, supported by Canon Pusey ( also an Oriel fellow initially, later at Christ Church ) and others, formed a group known as the Oxford Movement, alternatively as the Tractarians, or familiarly as the Puseyites.
The council of 1125 met under the direction of John of Crema and prohibited simony, purchase of the sacraments, and the inheritance of clerical benefices.
Elder John went before the higher church authorities and was permitted to continue his clerical labors.
He suggested that the poet John Milton had employed both an amanuensis and an editor, who were responsible for clerical errors and interpolations, but it is unclear whether Bentley believed his own position.
His hand had been forced in this effort by a lawsuit by John and Jane Doe over the abuse of their child, one of the many clerical sex abuse cases that occurred during his tenure ( and documented in the Sun Times by Andrew Greeley ).
John of Avila is also remembered as a reformer of clerical life in Spain.
In 1780 he gained a clerical appointment with the Board of Trustees for the Encouragement of Art and Manufacture in Scotland on the recommendation of John Home, and spent the rest of his career with this body set up under the Treaty of Union to promote Scottish trade with money given by Parliament in compensation for losses in the Darien Scheme and for taking on a share of England's national debt, eventually becoming Chief Clerk.
In 1805 he was elected to succeed John Playfair in the chair of mathematics at Edinburgh, not, however, without violent, though unsuccessful, opposition on the part of a narrow-minded clerical party who accused him of heresy in something he had said as to the unsophisticated notions of mankind about the relation of cause and effect.
Louis had got already a few clerical refugees in his land, and was then called Rex Christianisimus ( most Christian king ) by John of Salisbury.
Republican senator John Heinz from Pennsylvania wanted to make the site a national park but the Bill was pocket-vetoed due to a clerical error by President Jimmy Carter.
First initiated by John Hooper's rejection of clerical vestments in the Church of England under Edward VI and revived under Elizabeth I, the controversy sheds much light on the development of English forms of Puritanism and Anglicanism, though both of these are problematically broad labels covering a manifold of different positions.
* The Rev Dr John Pender is a retired Uniting Church Minister and has been a clerical appointment to Council since 1997 and Deputy Chairman since 2002.
The Russian Orthodox John ( Maximovitch ) of Shanghai and San Francisco | Archbishop John Maximovich in 1934, in clerical garb with many Byzantine features

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