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Johnson and cited
" Johnson is cited as calling the story of Ossian " as gross an imposition as ever the world was troubled with ".
Cabrel cited the artist as one of a number of blues influences, including Charley Patton, Blind Lemon Jefferson, Robert Johnson, Howlin ' Wolf, Blind Blake, Willie Dixon and Ma Rainey.
Samuel Johnson is often cited as the origin of that quote, but mistakenly: it is not to be found in his writings or recorded by Boswell.
The Johnson administration subsequently cited the resolution as legal authority for its rapid escalation of U. S. military involvement in the Vietnam War.
Inaugural winner Philip Johnson was cited " for 50 years of imagination and vitality embodied in a myriad of museums, theaters, libraries, houses, gardens and corporate structures ".
Andrew Johnson, writing in Us Weekly, cited it as one of the outstanding films at Sundance in 2001, describing it as " a heady blend of science fiction, spirituality, and teen angst.
The most commonly cited include the series of Chamber's Street loft concerts, New York, curated by Yoko Ono and La Monte Young in 1961 featuring pieces by Jackson Mac Low and Henry Flynt, the month-long Yam festival held in upstate New York by George Brecht and Robert Watts in May, 1963 with Ray Johnson and Allan Kaprow that was the culmination of a year's worth of Mail Art pieces, and a series of concerts held in Mary Bauermeister's studio, Cologne, 1960-61 featuring Nam June Paik and John Cage amongst many others.
The book South Park and Philosophy: You Know, I Learned Something Today includes an essay in which Johnson uses Cartman's actions and behavior as examples when discussing the logical problem of moral evil, and another essay by College of Staten Island professor Mark D. White cited the season two ( 1998 ) episode " Chickenlover ", in which Cartman is temporarily granted law enforcement powers, in its discussion regarding the command theory of law and what obligates a citizen to obey the law.
Calvin Johnson is also the founder and owner of the influential indie label K Records, and has been cited as a major player in the beginning of the modern independent music movement.
Davis ' A Tribute to Jack Johnson ( 1971 ) has been cited as " the purest electric jazz record ever made " and " one of the most remarkable jazz-rock discs of the era ".
In fact-checking Johnson's books Darwin on Trial and Defeating Darwinism by Opening Minds, one reviewer argued that almost every scientific source Johnson cited had been misused or distorted, from simple misinterpretations and innuendos to outright fabrications.
President Lyndon Johnson ( 1963 – 69 ) cited containment as a justification for his policies in Vietnam.
After winning their first match, Johnson repeatedly refused rematches against Langford, who was considered by some to be the most dangerous challenger for Johnson's crown, although Johnson cited Langford's inability to meet his $ 30, 000 appearance fee.
She considers herself a non-practicing Buddhist, and is often cited with Hank Johnson ( D-Georgia ), as the first Buddhist to serve in the United States Congress.
The Court most recently cited Terry v. Ohio in Arizona v. Johnson.
Longitudinal data collected by Gatz and Karel ( cited in Johnson et al., 2004 ) imply that internality may increase until middle age, decreasing thereafter.
In a March 2009 interview, he cited the works of Denis Johnson, Martin Amis, Roberto Bolaño and David Foster Wallace as being among his influences for the lyrics of Thursday's Common Existence album, which was released in February 2009.
The broadsword is defined as a " Long heavy double-edged sword held with two hands and used mainly during the Middle Ages ", and also " ‘ A cutting sword with a broad blade ’ ( Johnson )" ( cited from Oxford English Dictionary ( OED )).
Robert Palmer has cited it as the first record to feature a distorted power chord, played by Willie Johnson on the electric guitar.
In his May 24, 2001 speech announcing his departure from the Republican Party, Vermont Senator James Jeffords cited Flanders three times and spoke of him as one of five Vermont politicians who, “ spoke their minds, often to the dismay of their party leaders, and did their best to guide the party in the direction of those fundamental principles they believed in .” In speeches to Georgetown University Law Center and Johnson State College, Senator Patrick Leahy cited Flanders as one of three Vermont politicians who showed,the importance of standing firm in your beliefs ,” “ that conflict need not be hostile or adversarial ” and who, “ rose up against abuses, against infringements upon Americans ' rights when doing that was not popular .”
The artist often cited the Hudson River School artists as major influences, especially Martin Johnson Heade and Frederic Edwin Church in addition to Nineteenth-Century German Romantic Artist, Caspar David Friedrich.
In a review of Carr's sequel The Angel of Darkness, Malcolm L. Johnson of The Hartford Courant cited concerns over how to depict the mutilation of the murdered prostitutes in the film, writing: " Questions about how to treat this gruesome element has perhaps delayed the film of The Alienist.

Johnson and Waste
On December 28, 2008, a posting on the band's MySpace page announced that Goldfarb, Minino, and Johnson had joined with Tony Foresta, the vocalist from Municipal Waste, to form a band called No Friends.

Johnson and Land
The Higher Education Facilities Act of 1963, which was signed into law by Johnson a month after becoming president, authorized several times more college aid within a five-year period than had been appropriated under the Land Grant College in a century, and provided better college libraries, ten to twenty new graduate centers, several new technical institutes, classrooms for several hundred thousand students, and twenty-five to thirty new community colleges a year.
The Svea Land Company in Chicago, which advertised land for sale in Silverhill, was also founded by Oscar Johnson.
Johnson supported the California Alien Land Law of 1913.
Following brief talks with Johnson, he traveled to Texas, meeting with research scientists at ICASALS ( International Center for Arid and Semiarid Land Studies ), part of Texas Tech University.
The Labour Party, led by Thomas Johnson from 1917, as successor to such organisations as D. D. Sheehan's ( independent Labour MPs ) Irish Land and Labour Association, declined to contest the 1918 general election, in order to allow the election to take the form of a plebiscite on Ireland's constitutional status ( although some candidates did run in Belfast constituencies under the Labour banner against Unionist candidates ).
Current conservation efforts are supported by the Defense Logistics Agency and the U. S. Navy and implemented by the Palos Verdes Peninsula Land Conservancy, The Urban Wildlands Group, and The Butterfly Project led by biologist Jana J. Johnson, M. S., Ph. D at Moorpark College.
The exhibition contains some photographs of a number of world famous people including the aviator Amy Johnson, World War 1 flying Ace Wing Commander Ira Jones, Motor Racer Sir Malcolm Campbell and Parry Thomas, both of whom attempted World Land Speed Records at the famous Pendine sands.
" Land of Confusion " was used in " Freefall ," the final episode of the 1980s cop show Miami Vice ( a show on which Phil Collins had guest starred ) during a scene in which the characters Crockett ( Don Johnson ) and Tubbs ( Philip Michael Thomas ) were in the middle of a stakeout.
* Johnson, Brian D. " The Land of Look Behind.
Once, the largest industrial centre of Zambia, boasting, among many high-powered sites, a Land Rover vehicle assembly plant, Dunlop Tire manufacture, Johnson & Johnson Industry, Ndola's economy shrunk significantly between 1980 and 2000.
Johnson and L. A. Lewis Land Degradation: Creation and Destruction, 2nd edition, Rowman and Littlefield, Lanham, Boulder, New York, Toronto, Oxford, 2007.
Author Ward Johnson loosely adapted The Land Without Feelings into a book in the Tales from the Care Bears series, entitled Caring is What Counts ( ISBN 0-910313-05-9 ), with illustrations by Tom Cooke.
* March 5 – 7: MegaCon ( Orange County Convention Center, Orlando, Florida ) — guests include Kaare Andrews, Brian Michael Bendis, John Cassaday, Amanda Conner, Phil Jimenez, Andy Lee, Tony Lorenz, David W. Mack, James O ' Barr, Jimmy Palmiotti, Walter Simonson, Craig Thompson, Skottie Young, Luis Amado, Tony Bedard, Jose Caraballo, Patrick Carlucci, Jim Cheung, Laura DePuy, Chuck Dixon, Steve Epting, Glenda Finkelstein, Jeff Johnson, Greg Land, Ron Marz, Stanley Morrison, Mike Perkins, Brandon Peterson, Justin Ponsor, Ariel Rivero, Tone Rodriguez, Steven Sanchez, Bart Sears, Josh Sullivan, Kevin Smith, Jason Mewes, Allison Mack, Walter Koenig, Ken Foree, Brad Dourif, Noah Hathaway, Herbert Jefferson, Jr., Brian Thompson, Glenn Shadix, Marc Singer, Angela Cartwright, Bill Mumy, Virginia Hey, and Sid Haig

Johnson and poem
*" The Creation ," a 1927 poem by James Weldon Johnson, published in God's Trombones: Seven Negro Sermons in Verse
It was acclaimed by Samuel Johnson as " a performance which no age or nation could hope to equal " ( although the classical scholar Richard Bentley wrote: " It is a pretty poem, Mr. Pope, but you must not call it Homer.
* " London " ( Samuel Johnson poem )
Richard Emmons, from Great Crossing, Kentucky, followed this up with a play entitled Tecumseh, of the Battle of the Thames and a poem in honor of Johnson.
Emmons ' poem provided the line that became Johnson's campaign slogan: " Rumpsey Dumpsey, Rumpsey Dumpsey, Colonel Johnson killed Tecumseh.
Samuel Johnson, a devoted anti-militarian, wrote in his poem " The Vanity of Human Wishes ":
Though not exactly labelled as such, there were early precedents for " television movies ", such as the 1957 The Pied Piper of Hamelin, based on the poem by Robert Browning, and starring Van Johnson, one of the first filmed " family musicals " made directly for television.
John Gay, who came a little later was criticized for his poem's artificiality by Doctor Johnson and attacked for their lack of realism by George Crabbe, who attempted to give a true picture of rural life in his poem The Village.
So when the book appeared the book stated, ‘ Ray Johnson is a poet ,’ but I never said, ' this is a poem ,' I simply wrote what I wrote and it later became classified.
# his poem of The Minstrel, of which the first book was published in 1771 and the second in 1774, and which constitutes his true title to remembrance, winning him the praise of Samuel Johnson.
" Lift Every Voice and Sing " — often called " The Negro National Hymn ", " The Negro National Anthem ", " The Black National Anthem ", or " The African-American National Anthem "— is a song written as a poem by James Weldon Johnson ( 1871 – 1938 ) and set to music by his brother John Rosamond Johnson ( 1873 – 1954 ) in 1900.
Rodney's death was commemorated in a poem by Martin Carter entitled " For Walter Rodney " and by the dub poet Linton Kwesi Johnson in " Reggae fi Radni ".
Having been duped into a bad marriage, the hapless Levet was taken in by the author Samuel Johnson who wrote his poem " On the Death of Mr. Robert Levet " eulogizing his good friend and tenant of many years.
In literature, the epic was considered the highest form, for the reason expressed by Samuel Johnson in his Life of John Milton: " By the general consent of criticks, the first praise of genius is due to the writer of an epick poem, as it requires an assemblage of all the powers which are singly sufficient for other compositions.
Numerous well-known individuals have connections with the island including David Livingstone, Samuel Johnson and Walter Scott, who drew inspiration from Ulva for his 1815 poem, Lord of the Isles.
In 1979, Linton Kwesi Johnson wrote and recorded a dub poem about the Sus Law entitled " Sonny's Lettah ( An Anti-Sus Poem )".
Similarly, Samuel Johnson wrote a poem that falls into the Augustan period in his " imitation of Satire III " entitled London.
* Poet Elizabeth Bishop's poem " In the Waiting Room " references a picture of Martin and Osa Johnson in a February, 1918 National Geographic she read as a child.
*" The Dark Angel ", a poem by Lionel Johnson
The examples Aarseth gives include a diverse group of texts: wall inscriptions of the temples in ancient Egypt that are connected two-dimensionally ( on one wall ) or three dimensionally ( from wall to wall or room to room ); the I Ching ; Apollinaire ’ s Calligrammes in which the words of the poem “ are spread out in several directions to form a picture on the page, with no clear sequence in which to be read ”; Marc Saporta ’ s Composition No. 1, Roman, a novel with shuffleable pages ; Raymond Queneau ’ s One Hundred Thousand Billion Poems ; B. S. Johnson ’ s The Unfortunates ; Milorad Pavic ’ s Landscape Painted with Tea ; Joseph Weizenbaum ’ s ELIZA ; Ayn Rand ’ s play Night of January 16th, in which members of the audience form a jury and choose one of two endings ; William Chamberlain and Thomas Etter ’ s Racter ; Michael Joyce ’ s Afternoon: a story ; Roy Trubshaw and Richard Bartle ’ s Multi-User Dungeon ( aka MUD1 ); and James Aspnes ’ s TinyMUD.
The book also features a poem entitled " The Spirit of Nkosi Johnson.
Thomas Percy was angered by the parody, but Hester Thrale says that he soon came to his senses and realized that Johnson was satirizing the form, and not the poem.
* The Young Warrior ( poem of James Weldon Johnson, 1916 )

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