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Peters and Edward
* Ronald M. Enroth, Edward E. Ericson and C. Breckinridge Peters, The Jesus People: Old-Time Religion in the Age of Aquarius ( Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans, 1972 ).
Edward Peters, trans.
* Peters, Edward.
* December 29 — Arthur Peters becomes Premier of Prince Edward Island, replacing Donald Farquharson
Peters, Edward,The Death of the Subdean: Ecclesiastical Order and Disorder in Eleventh-Century Francia ,” in Law, Custom, and the Social Fabric in Medieval Europe: Essays in Honor of Bryce Lyon, ed.
* April 27-Frederick Peters becomes premier of Prince Edward Island, replacing Neil McLeod
* July 29-Frederick Peters, lawyer, politician and Premier of Prince Edward Island ( b. 1851 )
A 1775 portrait of Edward Wortley Montagu by Matthew William Peters
* Witchcraft in Europe, 400 – 1700: A Documentary History ( Middle Ages Series ) by Alan Charles Kors ( Editor ), Edward Peters ( Editor ) ISBN 0-8122-1751-9
* Premier of Prince Edward Island: A. Peters
* Premier of Prince Edward Island: Arthur Peters then F. L. Haszard
* January 29 – Arthur Peters, Premier of Prince Edward Island, dies in office
* January 29-Arthur Peters, Premier of Prince Edward Island ( b. 1854 )
* April 8-Frederick Peters, lawyer, politician and Premier of Prince Edward Island ( died 1919 )
* August 29-Arthur Peters, politician and Premier of Prince Edward Island ( died 1908 )
; Galat, David L .; Berry, Charles R., Jr .; Peters, Edward J., and White, Robert G. ( 2005 ).
Frederick Peters ( April 8, 1851 – July 29, 1919 ) was a lawyer and Prince Edward Island politician, who served as the sixth Premier of Prince Edward Island.
Frederick's brother, Arthur Peters was also active in politics, serving as premier of Prince Edward Island from 1901 to 1908.
Arthur Peters ( August 29, 1854 – January 29, 1908 ) was the ninth Premier of Prince Edward Island.
Lawrence A. MacAulay, PC ( born September 9, 1946 in St. Peters Bay, Prince Edward Island ) is a Canadian politician.
According to fellow astronomer Edward S. Holden, Peters deliberately chose a name from the Bible so as to annoy an overly pious theology professor of his acquaintance.
Some of the notable exceptions listed on the National Register of Historic Places include the Margaret Mitchell House, Rhodes Hall, Edward C. Peters House, and the Academy of Medicine.
Stone, Pat Morita, producer Ismail Merchant, Sir John Mills, Richard Pryor, Kay Walsh, Teresa Wright, Suzanne Flon, art director John Box, Jocelyn Brando, producer Ernest Lehman, composer Linda Martinez, director Morris Engel, Barbara Bel Geddes, director Robert Wise, June Haver, Brock Peters, Edward Bunker, Ruth Warrick, Lane Smith, Stanley DeSantis, Jean Parker, Sheree North and Anne Bancroft.

Peters and ed
* Peters, A., Palay, S. L., Webster, H, D., 1991 The Fine Structure of the Nervous System, 3rd ed., Oxford, New York
In 2001, Edition Peters published a further revised edition ( ed.
* Peters, Jason, ed.
* Nellie Peters Black ( ed.

Peters and .,
* December 7 – House Peters, Sr., British-born actor ( b. 1880 )
* 1972: Frank Peters Jr., St. Louis Post-Dispatch, " for his music criticism during 1971.
In the late 1970s, his two sons, Salvatore and Joe Jr., brought high heat in Northern California after getting involved with Lou Peters, a Cadillac-Oldsmobile dealer, in particularly San Jose, Lodi, and Stockton, California.
* Peters, Lisa N., James McNeil Whistler.
In 1965, the Quaker Oats Company awarded Robert Rountree Reinhart, Sr., the Fredus N. Peters Award for his leadership in directing the development team of Cap ' n Crunch.
* Selting, M., Auer, P., Barth-Weingarten, D., Bergmann, J., Bergmann, P., Birkner, K., Couper-Kuhlen, E., Deppermann, A., Gilles, P., Günthner, S., Hartung, M., Kern, F., Mertzlufft, C., Meyer, C., Morek, M., Oberzaucher, F., Peters, J., Quasthoff, U., Schütte, W., Stukenbrock, A., Uhmann, S. ( 2009 ): Gesprächsanalytisches Transkriptionssystem 2 ( GAT 2 ).

Peters and First
First school, Berenice T. Peters Elementary School, dedicated.
In response to a backlash against the Treaty, politician Winston Peters, the 13th Deputy Prime Minister of New Zealand ( and founder of the New Zealand First Party ), and others have campaigned to remove vague references to the Treaty from New Zealand law, although the New Zealand Māori Council case of 1990 indicated that even if this does happen, the Treaty may still be legally relevant.
The 2006 celebration was attended by Labour leader and Prime Minister Helen Clark, leader of the National Party Don Brash, co-leaders of the Māori Party Tariana Turia and Pita Sharples, and leader of New Zealand First Winston Peters.
In June, 2000, Winston Peters, leader of the New Zealand First party, described the program as " social apartheid ".
In 1996, the National Party required the support of the New Zealand First party to form a government, and part of the coalition agreement gave the office of Deputy Prime Minister to New Zealand First leader Winston Peters.
This occurred with Winston Peters, leader of New Zealand First, and Jim Anderton, leader of the Alliance.
Winston Raymond Peters ( born 11 April 1945 ) is a New Zealand politician and leader of New Zealand First, a political party he founded in 1993.
On 29 August 2008 he stood down as a Minister pending a police investigation into a funding scandal involving Peters and New Zealand First.
In the 2008 general election, New Zealand First failed to reach the five percent threshold and Peters did not regain his seat.
As a result, neither Peters or New Zealand First were returned to Parliament.
Shortly before the 1993 election, Peters established New Zealand First and retained his Tauranga seat.
Another New Zealand First candidate, Tau Henare, unseated the Labour incumbent in Northern Maori, helping to convince people that New Zealand First was not simply Peters ' personal vehicle.
Neither party could form a majority without the backing of New Zealand First, meaning Peters could effectively choose the next prime minister.
Additionally, there was a wide perception that Peters had led voters to believe a vote for New Zealand First would get rid of National, only to turn around and go into coalition with National.
New Zealand First collapsed to 4. 3 percent of the vote, and would have been shut out of Parliament had Peters not managed to hold onto Tauranga by 63 votes.
This message regained much support for both Peters and his party, especially from among the elderly who had in the past backed Winston Peters, and New Zealand First won 10 percent of the vote and 13 seats.
Peters seemed to hope that Labour would choose to ally with New Zealand First in order to stay in power.
Peters himself narrowly lost his longstanding hold on Tauranga to National MP Bob Clarkson, but New Zealand First did well enough to receive seven seats ( down from 13 in 2002 ), allowing Peters to remain in Parliament as a list MP.
With New Zealand First gaining 4. 07 percent of the vote and failing to reach the 5 percent threshold to enter Parliament without winning an electorate seat, Peters did not enter the 49th New Zealand Parliament.
In his concession speech, Peters promised, " This is not the end ", and alluded to the fact that while New Zealand First would not have any members in Parliament, it was still New Zealand's fourth largest political party, with 4. 07 percent of the vote.
As of 2011 Peters and New Zealand First still register in major political polls.

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