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Paul and Cantor
While extending the notion of number by means of his revolutionary concept of infinite cardinality, Cantor was paradoxically opposed to theories of infinitesimals of his contemporaries Otto Stolz and Paul du Bois-Reymond, describing them as both " an abomination " and " a cholera bacillus of mathematics ".
* Cantor, Paul A.
As Cantor and Dedekind were developing more abstract versions of Stevin's continuum, Paul du Bois-Reymond wrote a series of papers on infinitesimal-enriched continua based on growth rates of functions.
" Shakespeare scholar Paul A. Cantor argues that this association is appropriate — the warlike Klingons find their literary matches in the characters Othello, Mark Antony, and Macbeth — but that it also reinforces a claim that the end of the Cold War means the end of heroic literature such as Shakespeare's.
* Paul Cantor ( born 1945 ) is an American literary critic
They are typically hosted by a senior faculty member or noted scholar ( such as historian Charles Adams and literary critic Paul Cantor ).
When Al Flood became CEO, one of his first acts was to fire his chief rival Paul Cantor.
The musical starred Eddie Cantor as Henry Williams, Ruth Etting as Leslie Daw, Frances Upton as Sally Morgan, Jack Rutherford as Bob Wells, Paul Gregory as Wanenis, Ethel Shutta as Mary ( replacing Ruby Keeler ), and featured Buddy Ebsen in the chorus.
During its heyday, the Cotton Club served as a hip meeting spot featuring regular " Celebrity Nights " on Sundays which featured celebrity guests such as Jimmy Durante, George Gershwin, Sophie Tucker, Paul Robeson, Al Jolson, Mae West, Richard Rodgers, Irving Berlin, Eddie Cantor, Fanny Brice, Langston Hughes, Judy Garland, Moss Hart, and New York City Mayor Jimmy Walker, among others.
* 1975 Northeast Ridge ( to north peak ), FA by Cliff Cantor, Bab Dangel, Paul Ledoux, Rob Milne, Hal Murray, Bob Walker, John Yates and Barton DeWolf.
Founded in the 2007 – 2008 election cycle by Congressmen Eric Cantor, Kevin McCarthy and Paul Ryan, the Young Guns Program began as an organization of House Republicans dedicated to electing open seat and challenger candidates nationwide.
* Cantor, Paul A.
" In: Paul A. Cantor and Stephen Cox, eds.
Paul A. Cantor, the author of the book Gilligan Unbound: Pop Culture in the Age of Globalization, said the " once again Brian K. Roberts proves his genius with ' Brush with Greatness ' in a superb work where Marge cultivates her wonderful artistic side.
* Gamboge was a local New York City ( Brooklyn ) Rock Group during May 1965 to April 1970-members were Gabor Barabas ( Lead Singer ), Phil Cantor ( Lead Guitarist ), Martin Cohen ( Drums ), Paul Wax ( Rhythm / Sometimes Guitar ), George Reisman ( Bass Guitar ).
In his book Gilligan Unbound, American literary critic Paul Cantor described how " Thirty Minutes Over Tokyo " references and mocks several aspects of Japanese and American culture, as well as differences between the two.
" According to Reed University Professor of Music David Schiff, " With the appearance of black musicals like Shuffle Along and the emergence of black stars such as Paul Robeson and Ethel Waters, the minstrel convention of blackface, which survived in the vastly popular performances of Al Jolson and Eddie Cantor, had become an embarrassment-at least to some critics.

Paul and literary
* 1919 – Paul de Man, Belgian literary critic ( d. 1983 )
* 1983 – Paul de Man, Belgian-born literary critic ( b. 1919 )
An interesting literary interpretation of this period of Christianity and the character of Paul can be found in Rudyard Kipling's short story " The Church that was at Antioch ".
The second French school was Symbolism, which literary historians see beginning with the poet Charles Baudelaire ( 1861 – 67 ) ( Les fleurs du mal, 1857 ), and including the later poets, Arthur Rimbaud ( 1854 – 91 ), Paul Verlaine ( 1844 – 96 ), Stéphane Mallarmé ( 1842 – 98 ), and Paul Valéry ( 1871 – 1945 ).
His literary achievements attracted the notice of Charlemagne, and Paul became a potent factor in the Carolingian Renaissance.
* December 6 – Paul de Man, Belgian-born literary critic ( d. 1983 )
* June 27 – Paul Viiding, Estonian poet, author and literary critic ( b. 1904 )
Within his literary work, John Paul II also has written a number of dramas, the best-known of which are Our God's Brother and The Jeweller's Shop.
Other notable people born in or associated with Newcastle include: engineer and industrialist Lord Armstrong, engineer and father of the modern steam railways George Stephenson, his son, also an engineer, Robert Stephenson, engineer and inventor of the steam turbine Sir Charles Parsons, inventor of the incandescent light bulb Sir Joseph Swan, modernist poet Basil Bunting, Lord Chief Justice Peter Taylor, the Portuguese writer Eça de Queiroz who was a diplomat in Newcastle from late 1874 until April 1879 — his most productive literary period, The Prime Minister of Thailand Abhisit Vejjajiva, singers Eric Burdon, Sting and Brian Johnson, lead singer of AC / DC from 1980 to the present, actors Charlie Hunnam multiple circumnavigator David Scott Cowper, Neil Tennant, Alan Hull, Mark Knopfler, Hank Marvin, Bruce Welch, Cheryl Cole, entertainers Ant and Dec, and international footballers Peter Beardsley, Michael Carrick, Andy Carroll, Paul Gascoigne and Alan Shearer.
With the help of Paul Foucher, Victor Hugo's brother-in-law, he began to attend, at the age of 17, the Cénacle, the literary salon of Charles Nodier at the Bibliothèque de l ' Arsenal.
After her death ( 1824 ), her Essai sur l ' éducation des femmes was published and received academic approval, but it was not until her grandson, Paul de Rémusat, published her Mémoires ( 3 vols., Paris, 1879 – 80 ), which followed by some correspondence with her son ( 2 vols., 1881 ), that justice could be done to her literary talent.
He was befriended by the influential literary critic Kobayashi Hideo, who introduced him to the French symbolist poets Arthur Rimbaud and Paul Verlaine, whose poems he translated into Japanese.
* Tinkers ( 2009 )— In this Pulitzer Prize-winning novel by Paul Harding, one of the characters, Gilbert, is a semi-legendary literary figured that graduated from Bowdoin and is rumored to been one of Nathaniel Hawthorne's classmates.
Millar was a literary hero of Zevon's who met the singer for the first time while participating in an intervention organized by Rolling Stone journalist Paul Nelson that helped Zevon temporarily curtail his addictions.
Paul Lafargue ( January 15, 1842 – November 26, 1911 ) was a French revolutionary Marxist socialist journalist, literary critic, political writer and activist ; he was Karl Marx's son-in-law, having married his second daughter Laura.
Howson's chief literary production was The Life and Epistles of St Paul ( 1852 ) in which he collaborated with Conybeare.
New Humanism or neohumanism were terms applied to a theory of literary criticism, together with its consequences for culture and political thought, developed around 1900 by the American scholar Irving Babbitt, and the scholar and journalist Paul Elmer More.
As a result, Fernand Pouey, the director of dramatic and literary broadcasts for French radio, assembled a panel to consider the broadcast of Among the approximately 50 artists, writers, musicians, and journalists present for a private listening on 5 February 1948 were Jean Cocteau, Paul Éluard, Raymond Queneau, Jean-Louis Barrault, René Clair, Jean Paulhan, Maurice Nadeau, Georges Auric, Claude Mauriac, and René Char.
In 1922, at age eleven, he bought his first book of poetry, Arthur Waley's A Hundred and Seventy Chinese Poems, and at age seventeen one of his poems, " Spire Song ", was accepted for publication in the twelfth volume of Transition, a literary journal based in Paris that served as a forum for some of the greatest proponents of modernism — Djuna Barnes, James Joyce, Paul Éluard, Gertrude Stein and others.
After a brief sojourn in France they were prominent among the literary figures of New York throughout the 1940s, with Paul working under Virgil Thomson as a music critic at the New York Herald Tribune.
In the summers of 1980 and 1982, Paul Bowles conducted Writing Workshops in Morocco, ( under the auspices of the School of Visual Arts in New York ) at the American School of Tangier which were both very successful, so much so that several of his former students including Rodrigo Rey Rosa who was the 2004 Winner of the Miguel Ángel Asturias National Prize in Literature and who is also the literary heir of the estate of Paul Bowles and Mark Terrill went on to become successful authors.

Paul and critic
The opening of the Louvre Pyramid coincided with four other projects on which Pei had been working, prompting architecture critic Paul Goldberger to declare 1989 " the year of Pei " in The New York Times.
The director's male characters have been described by critic Jennie Yabroff as " three time losers, petty thiefs and inept con men, all [...] eminently likeable, if not down right charming ", and by novelist Paul Auster as " laconic, withdrawn, sorrowful mumblers ".
* 1852 – Paul Bourget, French novelist and critic ( d. 1935 )
* March 9 – Paul Elmer More, American critic and essayist ( b. 1864 )
* December 12 – Paul Elmer More, American critic and essayist ( d. 1937 )
Film critic Paul Rotha said that it " definitely established the film as an independent medium of expression ... Everything that had to be said ... was said entirely through the camera ... The Last Laugh was cine-fiction in its purest form ; exemplary of the rhythmic composition proper to the film.
After returning to the States in 1929, Kahn worked in the offices of Paul Philippe Cret, his former studio critic at the University of Pennsylvania, and in the offices of Zantzinger, Borie and Medary in Philadelphia.
Current well-known economists include 2008 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences winner Paul Krugman, a public intellectual and advocate of modern liberal policies ; Alan Greenspan, the former chairman of the Federal Reserve ; Ben Bernanke, the current Chairman of the Federal Reserve ; Joseph Stiglitz, an American economist, Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics winner, critic of inequality and the governance of globalization, and Chief Economist of the World Bank.
A local reporting team won the award in 1976, and architecture critic Paul Gapp won a Pulitzer in 1979.
In 1998, reporter Paul Salopek won a Pulitzer for explanatory writing, and in 1999, architecture critic Blair Kamin won it for criticism.
In nineteenth century France, the radical theories of Louis Pasteur ( Paul Muni ) are dismissed by most doctors, particularly his most vocal critic, Dr. Charbonnet ( Fritz Leiber, Sr .).
Pola ( Paul Rollon ) became an artist and art critic and wrote a memoir, My Father, Paul Gauguin ( 1937 ).
According to this reading, Egypt is viewed as destructive and vulgar ; the critic Paul Lawrence Rose writes: “ Shakespeare clearly envisages Egypt as a political hell for the subject, where natural rights count for nothing .” Through the lens of such a reading, the ascendancy of Rome over Egypt does not speak to the practice of empire-building as much as it suggests the inevitable advantage of reason over sensuality.
Paul Abraham Dukas ( 1 October 1865 – 17 May 1935 ) was a French composer, critic, scholar and teacher.
There is also a booklet featuring an essay by critic Gary Giddins, notes about the film and two short stories introducing its characters by screenwriter Ernest Lehman, and an excerpt about Clifford Odets from Mackendrick ’ s book On Film-making, introduced by the book ’ s editor, Paul Cronin.
* Paul Bourget ( 2 September 1852 – 25 December 1935 ), novelist and critic
English film critic Mark Kermode, a dissenting voice amongst Showgirls positive critical reevaluation, has stated, " If Showgirls had any appeal at all, it was that it was so spectacularly vulgar and crude ," and " I still think it's just rubbish, and I like Paul Verhoeven.
The critic Paul Goldberger later wrote that, before Wright's modernist building, " there were only two common models for museum design: Beaux-arts Palace ... and the International Style Pavilion.
Some famous people who have lived in Warren are Minnesota Supreme Court Justice Julius J. Olson, Minnesota Chief Justice Oscar Knutson, ophthalmologist Harold Scheie, founder of the Scheie Eye Institute, abstract painter Gerome Kamrowski, Civil Rights activist Joseph Steffan, and rock critic Paul Nelson.
In his analysis, German critic Paul Bekker states that " The opening sonata-allegro movement gave the work a definite character from the beginning ... which succeeding movements could supplement but not change.

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