Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "District Municipality of Muskoka" ¶ 43
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Macaulay and named
The original blocks are labelled A-J, though there is no " I Block " to be found and there is also a modern block of ensuite bedrooms, K Block, also called the Macaulay Suite, named after Lord Macaulay, G. M.
They are named for Francis Sowerby Macaulay, who proved the unmixedness theorem for polynomial rings in Macaulay ( 1916 ), and for Irvin S. Cohen, who proved the unmixedness theorem for formal power series rings in Cohen ( 1946 ).
* Cohen-Macaulay ring, a commutative ring, named after Irvin Cohen and Francis Sowerby Macaulay ( 1862-1937 ).
* Macaulay computer algebra system, a computer algebra system, named after Francis Sowerby Macaulay ( 1862-1937 ).
* Macaulay Duration, a special case of bond duration, named after Frederick Macaulay ( 1882-1970 ).
Spy was named after the fictitious magazine that employed James Stewart's character, Macaulay " Mike " Connor, in the movie The Philadelphia Story.
Macaulay duration, named for Frederick Macaulay who introduced the concept, is the weighted average maturity of cash flows.
Three of the people they named, Macaulay Culkin, Brett Barnes, and Wade Robson, all testified that they were long-time family friends of Jackson and had slept in his bed, but that Jackson never molested them or did anything sexual with them.
The houses, named after the first four headmasters of the school, are Lucas ( yellow ), Macaulay ( red ), Wanstall ( green ) and Speirs ( blue ).

Macaulay and for
Others, including Macaulay and Lord Acton, have historicized Machiavelli's Borgia, explaining the admiration for such violence as an effect of the general criminality and corruption of the time.
Now known as The Macaulay Honors College University Scholars Program, it graduated its first class in 2005, attracting students with a mean high school GPA of 3. 5 and SAT scores of 1365 for the Class of 2009.
* Acton Park often hosted filming for programmes such as Rose & Macaulay and The Deal.
Marlborough did not wish for a Jacobite restoration, but William was conscious of his military and political qualities, and the danger the Earl posed: " William was not prone to fear ," wrote Thomas Macaulay, " but if there was anyone on earth that he feared, it was Marlborough.
Baines soon began to take a prominent part in politics ; he was an ardent advocate of parliamentary reform, and it was mainly by his influence that Thomas Macaulay was returned for Leeds in 1832 ; and in 1834 he succeeded Macaulay as member.
He then attended St Paul's School in London for three years, where he was taught by F. S. Macaulay, now known for his contributions to ideal theory.
It was once rumoured that Macaulay had fallen for Maria Kinnaird, the wealthy ward of " Conversation " Sharp, but in fact he never married and had no children.
In 1830 the Marquess of Lansdowne invited Macaulay to become Member of Parliament for the pocket borough of Calne.
By doing so, Macaulay wanted to " educate a people who cannot at present be educated by means of their mother tongue " and thus, by incorporating English, he sought to " enrich " the Indian languages so " that they could become vehicles for European scientific, historical, and literary expression ".
This philosophy appears most clearly in the essays Macaulay wrote for the Edinburgh Review and other publications, which were collected in book form and a steady bestseller throughout the 19th century.
Macaulay goes to considerable length, for example, to absolve his main hero William III of any responsibility for the Glencoe massacre.
In 1888 he wrote that Macaulay " had done more than any writer in the literature of the world for the propagation of the Liberal faith, and he was not only the greatest, but the most representative, Englishman then living ".
His talk interested the P. M. ... Macaulay, Longman went on, was not read now ; there was no demand for his books.
In the five years of his conquests and administration in Bengal, the young man had crowded together a succession of exploits which led Lord Macaulay, in what that historian termed his " flashy " essay on the subject, to compare him to Napoleon Bonaparte, declaring that " gave peace, security, prosperity and such liberty as the case allowed of to millions of Indians, who had for centuries been the prey of oppression, while Napoleon's career of conquest was inspired only by personal ambition, and the absolutism he established vanished with his fall.
Macaulay is a computer algebra system for doing polynomial computations, particularly Gröbner basis calculations.
Macaulay is designed for solving problems in commutative algebra and algebraic geometry.
* James Tait Black Memorial Prize for fiction: Rose Macaulay, The Towers of Trebizond
However his voluminous notes on the Glorious Revolution came into the possession of Thomas Macaulay, who used them for his own History of the Revolution.
* Chancellor's Gold Medal for Poetry-Thomas Babington Macaulay, 1st Baron Macaulay
It was Macaulay, not Hunt, who set the keynote for the 19th century.
These charges were abolished for serious historical and literary researchers after a petition was signed in 1851 by 83 people including Dickens, Macaulay, and Carlyle.

Macaulay and Chief
In September 2006, The City University of New York received a $ 30, 000, 000 gift from philanthropist and City College alumnus, William E. Macaulay, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of First Reserve Corporation.
Warren Hastings and Sir Elijah Impey, the Chief Justice, were both impeached, and were accused by Edmund Burke and afterwards by Thomas Babington Macaulay of committing a judicial murder.

Macaulay and Justice
Mr. Justice Malcolm D. Macaulay of the Supreme Court of British Columbia heard oral arguments from both sides on January 6 and 7, 2011.
On February 1, 2011, Justice Macaulay ruled that the use of a ' counterpetition ' to nullify the original petition ' must fail ' and ordered that the process to hold a referendum on continued membership must move forward.
On the applicability of the second ' counterpetition ', Justice Macaulay wrote: “ The national executive of the CFS invoked a process that was not contemplated by the bylaws in effect at the time and, as a result, applied an irrelevant consideration in determining that the petition was not in order.
Justice Macaulay ignored the bylaws and ruled that the vote should take place regardless of outstanding dues.

Macaulay and Common
Some of South London's priciest residential streets can be found in Clapham, including The Chase, Macaulay Road, Orlando Road, Grafton Square, Elms Grove, Elms Road and Rodenhurst Road as well as the North, South and West sides of Clapham Common.

Macaulay and Sir
Macaulay by Sir Francis Grant.
Macaulay's nephew, Sir George Trevelyan, Bt, wrote a best-selling " Life and Letters " of his famous uncle, which is still the best complete life of Macaulay.
In 1800 Constable began the Farmer's Magazine, and in November 1802 he issued the first number of the Edinburgh Review, under the nominal editorship of Sydney Smith ; Lord Jeffrey, was, however, the guiding spirit of the review, having as his associates Lord Brougham, Sir Walter Scott, Henry Hallam, John Playfair and afterwards Lord Macaulay.
Trevelyan was the third son of Sir George Otto Trevelyan, 2nd Baronet, and great-nephew of Thomas Babington Macaulay, whose staunch liberal Whig principles he espoused in accessible works of literate narrative avoiding a consciously dispassionate analysis, that became old-fashioned during his long and productive career.
He was accused by Macaulay in the House of Commons of conspiring with Hastings to commit a judicial murder by having unjustly hanged Nandakumar ; but the whole question of the trial of Nuncomar was examined in detail by Sir James Fitzjames Stephen, who stated that " no man ever had, or could have, a fairer trial than Nuncomar, and Impey in particular behaved with absolute fairness and as much indulgence as was compatible with his duty.
They were accused by Burke ( and later by Macaulay ) of committing judicial murder ; but Sir James Stephen, who examined the trial in detail, states that the indictment for forgery arose in the ordinary course, was not brought forward by Hastings, and that Impey conducted the trial with fairness and impartiality.
Later recipients included Thomas Babington Macaulay ( 1853 ), John C. Frémont ( 1860 ), Theodor Mommsen ( 1868 ), Charles Darwin ( 1868 ), Thomas Carlyle ( 1874 ) ( who never accepted any other honor ), Henry Wadsworth Longfellow ( 1875 ), William Thomson, Lord Kelvin ( 1884 ), Heinrich von Treitschke ( 1887 ), Johannes Brahms ( 1887 ), Giuseppe Verdi ( 1887 ), William Henry Flower ( 1899 ), Camille Saint-Saëns ( 1901 ), Luigi Cremona ( 1903 ), John Singer Sargent ( 1908 ), Ferdinand von Zeppelin ( 1910 ), Otto Lessing ( sculptor ) ( 1911 ), Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen ( 1911 ), Sir William Ramsay ( 1911 ), Max Planck ( 1915 ), and Rudolph Sohm ( 1916 ).
Although some historians such as Macaulay have claimed Somers was made chairman of the committee which drew up the Declaration of Right, the committee's report was delivered to the Commons by Sir George Treby ( the chairman always delivered the report to the House ).
* Sir George Trevelyan ( New Age spiritualist ), 4th Baronet ( 1906 1996 ), son of Sir Charles Trevelyan, 3rd Baronet and George Macaulay Trevelyan's nephew
His son was General Sir George Macaulay Kirkpatrick Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath, Knight Commander of the Order of the Star of India.
Trevelyan was born in Rothley Temple, Leicestershire, the only son of Sir Charles Trevelyan, 1st Baronet, and Hannah, daughter of Zachary Macaulay and sister of the historian Lord Macaulay.
Under the 3rd Baron Holland and his wife, Lady Holland, the house became noted as a glittering social, literary and political centre with many celebrated visitors such as Byron, Thomas Macaulay, the poets Thomas Campbell and Samuel Rogers, ' Conversation ' Sharp, Benjamin Disraeli, Charles Dickens and Sir Walter Scott.
* Hannah More Macaulay ( 1810 1873 ) who married Sir Charles Trevelyan and was the mother of Sir George Otto Trevelyan
Sir, there is one Mrs. Macaulay in this town, a great republican.
Among the crayon portraits were Cardinal Newman ( 1844 ), John Keble, Henry Hallam ( 1843 ), Charlotte Brontë ( 1850 ), Elizabeth Gaskell ( 1851 ), Lord Macaulay ( 1844 and 1850 ), Sir Charles Lyell ( 1853 ), Michael Faraday ( 1852 ), and Lord Lyndhurst ( 1847 ).
Among the portraits painted during this period, in what may be termed his third style, are De Quincey ; General Sir Thomas Macdougall Brisbane ; the Prince of Wales, Lord Macaulay, Sir M. Packington, Lord Murray, Lord Cockburn, Lord Rutherford and Sir John Shaw-Lefevre.
* Essay on Sir William Temple, Thomas Babington Macaulay, 1st Baron Macaulay

0.593 seconds.