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MacMillan and was
In 1969 he was invited to deliver the MacMillan Memorial Lecture to the Institution of Engineers and Shipbuilders in Scotland.
London was introduced to Kittredge by his MacMillan publisher, George Platt Brett, Sr., while Kittredge served as Brett's secretary.
Yet his diary for this time and place says " No land visible " and Crocker Land was in 1914 found to be non-existent by Donald MacMillan and Fitzhugh Green.
Head coach Bill MacMillan was fired midway through the season and replaced with Tom McVie, and the Devils won only 17 games.
His paternal grandfather, Daniel MacMillan ( 1813 – 1857 ), was the son of a Scottish crofter who founded Macmillan Publishers.
By then Norman MacMillan was Fairey Aviation's chief test pilot.
In 1995, the film was nominated for three Academy Awards for Best Film Editing, Best Sound ( Gregg Landaker, Steve Maslow, Bob Beemer, David MacMillan ) and Best Sound Effects Editing, winning the latter two.
On 21 September 1940, Lt John MacMillan Stevenson Patton of the Royal Canadian Engineers risked his life when he and five others manhandled an unexploded German bomb away from the Hawker aircraft factory at Brooklands and rolled it into an existing bomb crater where it later exploded harmlessly-his bravery was subsequently recognised by the award of the George Cross.
In 1966 he was invited to deliver the MacMillan Memorial Lecture to the Institution of Engineers and Shipbuilders in Scotland.
While perhaps Bowdoin's better-known alumnus in the sciences is the controversial entomologist-turned-sexologist Alfred Kinsey, class of 1916, the College's reputation in this area was cemented in large part by the Arctic explorations of Admiral Robert E. Peary, class of 1877, and Donald B. MacMillan, class of 1898. View of the campus from Coles Tower ( constructed as the " Senior Center "), the second tallest building in Maine Peary led the first successful expedition to the North Pole in 1908, and MacMillan, a member of Peary's crew, became famous in his own right as he explored Greenland, Baffin Island and Labrador in the schooner Bowdoin between 1908 and 1954.
Bowdoin's Peary-MacMillan Arctic Museum honors the two explorers, and the College's mascot, the Polar Bear, was chosen in 1913 to honor MacMillan, who donated a particularly large specimen to his alma mater in 1917.
As he was not to begin tutorials until 1911, he took the job of classics tutor to Harold MacMillan in the sabbatical, although he was later fired by Nellie MacMillan for being a high-church Anglican.
In 1968 he was invited to deliver the MacMillan Memorial Lecture to the Institution of Engineers and Shipbuilders in Scotland.
In 1934, Brownlee was sued for seduction by Vivian MacMillan, a family friend.
In 1934, Brownlee was sued for the seduction of Vivian MacMillan, a Brownlee family friend and clerk in the provincial Attorney-General's office.
MacMillan alleged that Brownlee had seduced her in 1930 and that the subsequent affair had lasted until 1933 ; Brownlee denied her story completely and said that the lawsuit was the result of a conspiracy between MacMillan, her fiance, and Brownlee's opponents in the Liberal Party.
Brownlee's father had died in January 1934, while the MacMillan suit was still pending.
Philby was officially cleared by then Foreign Secretary Harold MacMillan ; this later turned out to be an error based on incomplete information and bureaucratic inefficiency in the British intelligence organisations.
The situation escalated in the late 1980s when MacMillan Bloedel Corporation ’ s permit to log Meares Island was approved.
Opposition to the MacMillan Bloedel Corporation logging in the Clayoquot Sound was expressed in several peaceful protests and blockades of logging roads ranging from 1980-1994.

MacMillan and by
The first mechanically-propelled 2-wheel vehicle may have been built by Kirkpatrick MacMillan, a Scottish blacksmith, in 1839, although the claim is open to dispute.
Production continued through 1966 – 1968, by which time Norma MacMillan voiced Gumby.
The films were directed by J. Farrell MacDonald, with casts that included Violet MacMillan, Vivian Reed, Mildred Harris, Juanita Hansen, Pierre Couderc, Mai Welles, Louise Emmons, J. Charles Haydon, and early appearances by Harold Lloyd and Hal Roach.
* The Art of the Puppet by Bil Baird ( 1965 ) Ridge Press / MacMillan
* Videography: Video Media as Art and Culture by Sean Cubitt ( MacMillan, 1993 ).
The large scale dramatic works of Karl Jenkins seem to hearken back to the theatricality of Orff, and the music of James MacMillan continues the tradition of boundary-pushing choral works from the United Kingdom begun by Britten, Walton, and Leighton.
* Walter Terence Stace, The Concept of Morals, ( The MacMillan Company, 1937, reprinted, 1975 by Permission of Macmillan Publishing Co., Inc., ( Macmillan Publishers ), ISBN 0-8446-2990-1 ), See Chapters 1 and 2 entitled " Ethical Relativity ", pp 1 – 68.
* Article Baal ( PDF format ) by W. Robertson Smith and George F. Moore in Encyclopædia Biblica, edited T. K. Cheyne and J. Sutherland Black, MacMillan: London, 1899.
* The Baseball Encyclopedia, published by MacMillan, 1968 and later.
* Yohanan Aharoni & Michael Avi-Yonah, " The MacMillan Bible Atlas ", Revised Edition, p. 156 ( 1968 & 1977, by Carta Ltd .).
* Yohanan Aharoni & Michael Avi-Yonah, " The MacMillan Bible Atlas ", Revised Edition, p. 156 ( 1968 & 1977 by Carta Ltd .).
MacMillan being welcomed by Osei Tutu Agyeman Prempeh II | Prempeh II in January 1960
* MacMillan: Portrait of a Politician, by Emrys Hughes, Allen & Unwin, 1962.
* Klee, Ernst, Dressen, Willi, and Riess, Volker, " The Good Old Days " -- The Holocaust as Seen by its Perpetrators and Bystanders, ( translation by Deborah Burnstone ) MacMillan, New York, 1991 ISBN 0-02-917425-2
1, A-D, chpt: " Canteloube ( de Malaret ), ( Marie ) Joseph " by Richard Langham Smith, New York: MacMillan.
The Confession of Isobel Gowdie is a work for symphony orchestra by the Scottish composer James MacMillan.

MacMillan and German
* Howard, Michael The Franco-Prussian War: German Invasion of France MacMillan 1962

MacMillan and then
A modern hump yard in Maple, first named Toronto Yard and then MacMillan Yard, the freight by-pass opened in 1965 at which time Mimico was downgraded considerably, resulting in the loss of much employment.
The Fraser Institute was founded in 1974 by Michael Walker, an economist from the University of Western Ontario, and businessman T. Patrick Boyle, then a vice-president of MacMillan Bloedel.
According to an article published in CBC News Online, some people allege that Michael Walker helped set up the Institute after he received financial backing from forestry giant MacMillan Bloedel, largely to counter British Columbia's NDP government then led by premier Dave Barrett.
Highway 4 hugs the shore of Cameron Lake for 5 km, then winds its way through MacMillan Provincial Park, which includes the well-known area of Cathedral Grove.
John MacMillan then married William Cargill's eldest daughter, Edna.
The park was originally named Ross Park, then renamed Patton Park in 1946, in honour of captain John MacMillan Stevenson Patton, a Hamiltonian who risked his life during World War II by detonating an unexploded bomb.

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