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Browne and Willis
After an investigation, the party leadership censured Willis and admonished Browne, who denied any personal wrongdoing and responded in detail to allegations surrounding the controversy.
Whilst at Carmarthen he also conducted surveys of the cathedrals of St David's and Llandaff which were published by his friend Browne Willis in 1717 and 1718.
* Browne Willis Member of Parliament for Buckingham 1705-1708
The church was extensively restored by Browne Willis in 1757.
Browne Willis, a historian of the day, had raised the funds for the reconstruction.
In order to perpetuate his own memory, Browne Willis arranged for a sermon to be preached at St. Martin's Church on each St. Martin's Day, for which a fee was payable.
In 1740, Browne Willis bought a house in Aylesbury Street, Fenny Stratford and the rent from this was used to pay for the sermon and gunpowder.
Actor Michael Landon grew up in Collingswood, New JerseySome nationally known South Jerseyans include Bruce Willis, Roscoe Lee Browne, John Forsythe, Michelle Malkin, Ali Larter, Kelly Ripa, Tara Lipinski, Michael Landon, Linda Fiorentino, Joe Flacco, Carl Lewis, and Carli Lloyd.
Browne Willis.
Browne Willis ( 16 September 1682 – 5 February 1760 ) was an antiquary, author, numismatist and politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1705 to 1708.
Willis was born at Blandford St Mary, Dorset, the eldest Son of Thomas Willis of Bletchley, Buckinghamshire and his wife Alice Browne, daughter of Robert Browne of Frampton, Dorset.
Between 1724 and 1730, Browne Willis built St. Martin's Church on the site of the old Chantry Chapel of St. Margaret and St. Catherine at Fenny Stratford.
In order to perpetuate his own memory, Browne Willis arranged for a sermon to be preached at St. Martin's Church on each St. Martin's Day, for which a fee was payable.
In 1740, Browne Willis bought a house in Aylesbury Street, Fenny Stratford and the rent from this was used to pay for the sermon and gunpowder.
* Browne Willis Notitia parliamentaria, or, An history of the counties, cities, and boroughs in England and Wales: ...
It was founded by two-time Libertarian presidential candidate Harry Browne, his former campaign staff members Perry Willis and Jim Babka, and former National Chair of the Libertarian Party Steve Dasbach.
But bitter party infighting and mud-dragging of the man who had hired him to work on the Browne campaign, Perry Willis, discouraged him once again.
After the 2000 campaign was over, Harry Browne and Perry Willis formed the American Liberty Foundation, and Willis, the President of the organization, asked Babka to come on board as the Vice President.
In addition, Willis, Browne, Babka, and Stephanie Yanik started RealCampaignReform. org, Inc. Babka was named the President of this project.

Browne and built
The original House was built by Colonel John Browne, a Jacobite, who was at the Siege of Limerick, and his wife Maude Bourke.
Browne House, built ca.
With the momentum built up from Legends success, Poco played their new hit " Heart of the Night " on the live album No Nukes in support of nuclear-free energy, which featured several other big artists such as Bruce Springsteen and Jackson Browne.
It was built and is still privately owned by the Browne family, who are direct descendants of the 16th century pirate, Gráinne Ní Mháille, Queen of Umaill.
The original House was built by Colonel John Browne, a Jacobite, who was at the Siege of Limerick, and his wife Maude Bourke.
The lifeboat was the Solomon Browne, a wooden boat built in 1960 and capable of.
Downe is the location of Buckston Browne Farm, built in 1931 as a surgical research centre by the Royal College of Surgeons ( RCS ).
In 1704 Robert Browne built Frampton Court in the vicinity of the village.
It was the last folly to be built in 1865 by John Browne, Baron of Kilmaine in honour of his first title Lord Mount Temple.
It was built by the Browne family in the 18th Century, on the site of an O ' Malley castle whose dungeons are still present today.
Colonel John Browne ( 1638-1711 ) who built the original Westport House married Gráinne O ' Malley ’ s great great granddaughter, Maude Burke.
It was built and is still privately owned by the Browne family, who are direct descendants of the 16th-century Pirate Queen Gráinne O ' Malley.
The original House was built by Colonel John Browne, a Jacobite, who was at the Siege of Limerick, and his wife Maude Bourke.
The New York World Building was a skyscraper in New York City designed by early skyscraper specialist George Browne Post and built in 1890 to house the now-defunct newspaper, The New York World.
Enmore was named after Enmore House, built in 1835 by Captain Sylvester Browne, a master mariner with the British East India Company.

Browne and mansion
The 104-room mansion designed by Little & Browne would be razed in 1969.

Browne and 1711
No single document gives better evidence of the erudition of Sir Thomas Browne, physician, philosopher and encyclopedist than the 1711 Sales Auction Catalogue of the Library of Sir Thomas Browne.
* A Facsimile of the 1711 Sales Auction Catalogue of Sir Thomas Browne and his son Edward's Libraries.
* Sir John Browne, 3rd Baronet ( died 1711 )

Browne and was
Another instrumental called " Brother " was used as the theme to the BBC Radio 1 Top 20 / 40 when Tom Browne / Simon Bates presented the programme in the 1970s.
Years later in 1890 Edward Granville Browne described how ` Abdu ' l-Bahá was " one more eloquent of speech, more ready of argument, more apt of illustration, more intimately acquainted with the sacred books of the Jews, the Christians, and the Muhammadans ... scarcely be found even amongst the eloquent.
His reputation among Protestants was at the time so bad that he was charged by Thomas Browne in 1643 with the authorship of the legendary-apocryphal heretical treatise De tribus Impostoribus, as well as with having carried his alleged approval of polygamy into practice.
Charles Farrar Browne ( April 26, 1834 – March 6, 1867 ) was a United States humor writer, better known under his nom de plume, Artemus Ward.
Browne was born in Waterford, Maine.
* John Browne ( anatomist ) ( 1642 – 1702 ), was a British anatomist and surgeon
An early recorded lucid dreamer was the philosopher and physician Sir Thomas Browne ( 1605 – 1682 ).
Browne was fascinated by the world of dreams and described his own ability to lucid dream in his Religio Medici: "... yet in one dream I can compose a whole Comedy, behold the action, apprehend the jests and laugh my self awake at the conceits thereof ".
With the Labour Party the first name for a possible candidate was an elderly former minister for Health, and hero to the left, Noel Browne.
Browne was a household name for having done more than anybody else in Ireland for tackling Tuberculosis in the 1950s.
The fact that Browne was enthusiastic for candidacy, in a contest where Labour never before contested, now acted as pressure for Labour to find a candidate.
McVeigh was a registered Republican when he lived in Buffalo, New York in the 1980s, and had a membership in the National Rifle Association while in the military, but voted for Libertarian Party candidate, Harry Browne, in the 1996 presidential elections.
First owned and published by Alexander Macmillan, Nature was similar to its predecessors in its attempt to “ provide cultivated readers with an accessible forum for reading about advances in scientific knowledge .” Janet Browne has proposed that “ far more than any other science journal of the period, Nature was conceived, born, and raised to serve polemic purpose .” Many of the early editions of Nature consisted of articles written by members of a group that called itself the X Club, a group of scientists known for having liberal, progressive, and somewhat controversial scientific beliefs relative to the time period.
Bacon's innocence having been admitted, he was restored to favour, and replied to a writing by Sir Anthony Browne, who had again asserted the rights of the house of Suffolk to which Lady Catherine belonged.
Derek Parfit was born in Chengdu, China to Norman and Jessie Parfit ( née Browne ), both medical doctors who had moved to Western China in order to teach preventive medicine in missionary hospitals.
The site was chosen by his close friend, William Denis Browne, who wrote of Brooke's death:
Like most of Charles Dickens ' novels, David Copperfield was published in 19 monthly one-shilling installments, containing 32 pages of text and two illustrations by Hablot Knight Browne (" Phiz "), with the last being a double-number:
The English physician Sir Thomas Browne ( 1605 – 82 ) was one of the earliest scientists to adhere to the scientific empiricism of the Baconian method.
* Simon Browne, a dissenting preacher and theologian, was born in Shepton Mallet in 1680 and, after preaching at Old Jewry in London, and also in Portsmouth, died in the town in 1732.
Browne was allowed 2½ hours to play fifty moves, otherwise a draw would be claimed under the fifty-move rule.

1.159 seconds.