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John and Norman
Mrs. William Odell, Mrs. Clinton B. King, John Holabird Jr., Norman Boothby, and Actress Maureen O'Sullivan will judge the costumes in the grand march at the Affaire Old Towne Bal Masque tomorrow in the Germania club.
Granatstein and Norman Hillmer found that Mackenzie was in the # 11 place just after John Sparrow David Thompson.
John of Worcester, a medieval chronicler, stated that Ealdred crowned King Harold II in 1066, although the Norman chroniclers mention Stigand as the officiating prelate.
* The Archbishopric of Canterbury, from Its Foundation to the Norman Conquest, by John William Lamb ", Published 1971, Faith Press, from Google Book Search
In his biography of rock legend Elton John, Philip Norman recounted that by his early teens, John ( then known as Reg Dwight ) was wearing glasses " not because he needed them, but in homage to Buddy Holly.
County Dublin was one of the first parts of Ireland to be shired by King John of England following the Norman invasion of Ireland.
Various other conservative Christian leaders among them John Ankerberg and Norman Geisler have emphasized themes similar to Martin's.
Dublin Castle, which became the centre of Norman power in Ireland, was founded in 1204 as a major defensive work on the orders of King John of England.
One of the oldest is Dublin Castle, which was first founded as a major defensive work on the orders of King John of England in 1204, shortly after the Norman invasion of Ireland in 1169, when it was commanded that a castle be built with strong walls and good ditches for the defence of the city, the administration of justice, and the protection of the King ’ s treasure.
In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, John Horace Round and Frederic William Maitland, both historians of medieval Britain, arrived at different conclusions as to the character of English society before the Norman Conquest in 1066.
" According to writer Philip Norman, when Groucho jokingly pointed his index fingers as if holding a pair of six-shooters, Elton John put up his hands and said, " Don't shoot me, I'm only the piano player ," thereby naming the album he had just completed.
* 1931 – John Norman, American author
Private Eye parodied Sue Townsend's The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole, age 13¾ to write The Secret Diary of John Major, age 47¾, in which Major was portrayed as a naive nincompoop ( e. g. keeping lists of his enemies in a Rymans Notebook called his " Bastards Book ") and featuring " my wife Norman " and " Mr Dr Mawhinney " as recurring characters.
John Norman " Johnny " Haynes ( 17 October 1934 – 18 October 2005 ) was an English footballer, best known for his 18 years at Fulham.
John ( 24 December 1166 – 18 / 19 October 1216 ), also known as John Lackland ( Norman French: Johan sanz Terre ), was King of England from 6 April 1199 until his death.
When war with France broke out again in 1202, John achieved early victories, but shortages of military resources and his treatment of Norman, Breton and Anjou nobles resulted in the collapse of his empire in northern France in 1204.
With Norman law favouring John as the only surviving son of Henry II and Angevin law favouring Arthur as the heir of Henry's elder son, the matter rapidly became an open conflict.
John was supported by the bulk of the English and Norman nobility and was crowned at Westminster, backed by his mother, Eleanor.
* Moss, V. D. ( 2007 ) " The Norman Exchequer Rolls of King John ," in Church ( ed ) 2007.
( 2007 ) " King John and the Norman Aristocracy ," in Church ( ed ) 2007.
Founded in the 1120s around a powerful Norman great tower, the castle was significantly enlarged by King John at the beginning of the 13th century.
* Pounds, Norman John Greville.
The theorem is named after Henry Gordon Rice, and is also known as the Rice-Myhill-Shapiro theorem after Rice, John Myhill, and Norman Shapiro.

John and
In The John W. Campbell Letters, Campbell says, " The son-of-a-gun gets hold of you in the first paragraph, ties a knot around you, and keeps it tied in every paragraph thereafter including the ultimate last one.
This incident shows the strong position of a bishop in the Western part of the empire, even when facing a strong emperor the controversy of John Chrysostom with a much weaker emperor a few years later in Constantinople led to a crushing defeat of the bishop.
In reply to this the French sovereign dispatched Andrew as his ambassador to Güyük Khan ; with Longjumeau went his brother William ( also a Dominican ) and several others John Goderiche, John of Carcassonne, Herbert " Le Sommelier ," Gerbert of Sens, Robert ( a clerk ), a certain William, and an unnamed clerk of Poissy.
John Young and Charles Duke spent 71 hours just under three days on the lunar surface, during which they conducted three extra-vehicular activities, or moonwalks, totaling 20 hours and 14 minutes.
He went to Rome in 1007 to receive his pallium symbol of his status as an archbishop from Pope John XVIII, but was robbed during his journey.
It became the expectation rather than the exception that those in the public eye should write about themselves not only writers such as Charles Dickens ( who also incorporated autobiographical elements in his novels ) and Anthony Trollope, but also politicians ( e. g. Henry Brooks Adams ), philosophers ( e. g. John Stuart Mill ), churchmen such as Cardinal Newman, and entertainers such as P. T. Barnum.
It acquired its distinctive large crack sometime in the early 19th century a widespread story claims it cracked while ringing after the death of Chief Justice John Marshall in 1835.
Fans of the strip ranged from novelist John Steinbeck, who called Capp " possibly the best writer in the world today " in 1953, and even earnestly recommended him for the Nobel Prize in literature to media critic and theorist Marshall McLuhan, who considered Capp " the only robust satirical force in American life.
The traditional theory holds that John the Apostle considered to have written the Gospel and the epistles of John was exiled on Patmos in the Aegean archipelago during the reign of Domitian, and there wrote Revelation.
In 1981, nominee John Banville wrote a letter to The Guardian requesting that the prize be given to him so that he could use the money to buy every copy of the longlisted books in Ireland and donate them to libraries, " thus ensuring that the books not only are bought but also read surely a unique occurrence.
) Where the irony with which Reefer Madness was adopted as a midnight favorite had its roots in a countercultural sensibility, in the latter's place there is now the paradoxical element of nostalgia: the leading revivals currently on the circuit ironically include clearly non-cult films like John Hughes oeuvre The Breakfast Club ( 1985 ), Pretty in Pink ( 1986 ), and Ferris Bueller's Day Off ( 1986 ), which were major studio productions and popular and financially successful during their original releases, and the teen adventure film The Goonies ( 1985 ).
Hedonism, for example, teaches that this feeling is pleasure either one's own, as in egoism ( the 17th-century English philosopher Thomas Hobbes ), or everyone's, as in universalistic hedonism, or utilitarianism ( the 19th-century English philosophers Jeremy Bentham, John Stuart Mill, and Henry Sidgwick ), with its formula of the " greatest pleasure of the greatest number.
In Joan Ruddock's file, MI5 recorded special branch references to her movements usually public meetings and kept press cuttings and the products of mail and telephone intercepts obtained through active investigation of other targets, such as the Communist party and John Cox.
1813 English missionary John Williams made the first official sighting of Rarotonga.
1823 English missionary John Williams lands in Rarotonga, converting Makea Pori Ariki to Christianity.
From his religious training, Mather viewed the importance of texts for elaborating meaning and for bridging different moments of history linking, for instance, the Biblical stories of Noah and Abraham with the arrival of such eminent leaders as John Eliot ; John Winthrop ; and his own father, Increase Mather.

John and pseudonym
Contributors included Erich Mühsam, Kurt Hiller, John Henry Mackay ( under the pseudonym Sagitta ) and artists Wilhelm von Gloeden, Fidus and Sascha Schneider.
King wrote a 1973 short story, " The Fifth Quarter ", under the pseudonym John Swithen.
In the introduction to the novel Blaze, King ( writing about Bachman ) claims, with tongue-in-cheek, that " Bachman " used the pseudonym John Swithen for The Fifth Quarter.
Two science-fiction novels – Genius Unlimited by John Rackham ( a pseudonym used by Phillifent ) and The Arsenal Out of Time by McDaniel – appear to be rewrites of " orphaned " U. N. C. L. E novel outlines or manuscripts.
In response, Kelly fakes his own death and goes to work for the CIA full-time, under the pseudonym " John Clark ".
The list of supposed members is immense ; among the more probable candidates are George Bubb Dodington, a fabulously corpulent man in his 60s ; William Hogarth, although hardly a gentleman, has been associated with the club after painting Dashwood as a Franciscan Friar and John Wilkes, though much later, under the pseudonym John of Aylesbury.
* Jane Doe ( pseudonym ), the female equivalent of John Doe
He not only wrote, directed and scored it, but also edited the film under the pseudonym " John T. Chance " ( the name of John Wayne's character in Rio Bravo ).
A more modern example is all of the Federalist Papers, which were signed by Publius, a pseudonym representing the trio of James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, and John Jay.
Ernest George Henham was a novelist resident in Devon who used the pseudonym, John Trevena, for many of his books.
He also paid homage to the original film by using the pseudonym " John T. Chance ," the name of Wayne's character, for his editing credit.
* John Watson, who wrote under the pen name / pseudonym Ian Maclaren ( 1850 – 1907 ), Scottish reverend / minister, theologian and author
Other authors take delight in cherishing their alter egos: Ruth Rendell ( born 1930 ) writes one sort of crime novels as Ruth Rendell and another type as Barbara Vine ; John Dickson Carr also used the pseudonym Carter Dickson.
In the late 1800s into the early 1900s author John Woodroffe, an Oxford graduate, translated some twenty original Sanskrit texts under the pseudonym Arthur Avalon.
( 1857 – 1935 ), who published under the pseudonym ' John Knowlittle ', extensively documented the wildlife of Breydon and the disappearing lifestyles of those boatmen, wildfowlers and fishermen who made a living from the estuary.
Some of the most famous included Larry Storch, Dallas McKennon ( best known as the voice of Archie in the Archie cartoon and as Cincinnatus, in the Daniel Boone TV series ), Adam West and Burt Ward ( who recreated their roles as " Batman and Robin " from their 1960s live-action series for Filmation's 1977 animated incarnation ), Jane Webb, and good friends and colleagues Ed Asner and Linda Gary ( Gary voiced a majority of Filmation's work in the 1980s ), along with John Erwin ( voice of Reggie Mantle, and later the voice of He-Man ), Alan Oppenheimer ( character actor in TV and film ), Ted Knight, George DiCenzo ( John BlackStar, Hordak, Bow on She-ra ), Melendy Britt, Howard Morris, Pat Fraley, Charlie Adler, Ed Gilbert, Susan Blu, Erika Scheimer ( daughter of Lou Scheimer ), and even Lou Scheimer himself ( either uncredited, or under the pseudonym of " Erik ( sometimes " Eric ") Gunden ").
* John Jughead, the pseudonym of Screeching Weasel guitarist John Pierson
Recorded at the Caribou Ranch, it featured backing vocals and guitar by John Lennon under the pseudonym Dr. Winston O ' Boogie ( Winston being Lennon's middle name ).
The Matthew Bible, also known as Matthew's Version, was first published in 1537 by John Rogers, under the pseudonym " Thomas Matthew ".

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