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  2. John Macarthur (wool pioneer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Macarthur_(wool_pioneer)

    John Macarthur was born at Stoke Damerel near Plymouth, England in 1767.His exact date of birth is unknown, but his baptism was registered on 3 September 1767. [2] He was the second son of Alexander Macarthur, who had fled Scotland to the West Indies after the Jacobite rising of 1745 before returning to Plymouth to work as a linen draper and mercer.

  3. Nayirah testimony - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nayirah_testimony

    John MacArthur [57] On March 15, 1991, John Martin, an ABC reporter, reported that "patients, including premature babies, did die, when many of Kuwait's nurses and doctors stopped working or fled the country" and discovered that Iraqi troops "almost certainly had not stolen hospital incubators and left hundreds of Kuwaiti babies to die."

  4. John MacArthur bibliography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_MacArthur_bibliography

    In addition to more than 150 individual books and monographs, MacArthur has also contributed to more than 30 multi-author works. [1] His publications have been translated into more than two dozen languages, including ten or more titles each in French, Spanish, Romanian, German, Korean, Russian, Portuguese, and Italian.

  5. John MacArthur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_MacArthur

    John Macarthur (priest), 20th-century provost of the Cathedral of the Isles in Scotland; John Macarthur (wool pioneer) (1767–1834), Australian wool industry pioneer and Rum Rebel; John D. MacArthur (1897–1978), American philanthropist; John Gordon MacArthur, fictional murder victim from Agatha Christie's And Then There Were None

  6. Samuel Ullman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_Ullman

    Samuel Ullman (April 13, 1840 – March 21, 1924) was an American businessman, poet, humanitarian, and religious leader. He is best known today for his poem "Youth," [1] which was a favorite of General Douglas MacArthur. The poem was on the wall of MacArthur's office in Tokyo when he became Supreme Allied Commander in Japan.

  7. LaToya Ruby Frazier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LaToya_Ruby_Frazier

    Besides working on her most famous work Notion of Family, Frazier has worked with other contemporary issues such as the Flint water crisis. [29] This particular project, Flint is Family , depicts and focuses on a young woman and her family living their everyday lives amongst the crucial water conditions within their lower class Flint community.

  8. Vox Clamantis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vox_Clamantis

    Vox Clamantis ("the voice of one crying out") is a Latin poem of 10,265 lines in elegiac couplets by John Gower (1330 – October 1408) . The first of the seven books is a dream vision giving a vivid account of the Peasants' Rebellion of 1381.

  9. The Airs of Palestine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Airs_of_Palestine

    It is probably the most famous of his poems, and provided the title for his book Airs of Palestine and Other Poems (Boston: Munroe, 1840). The poem was a huge success; sale of its copyright funded Pierpont's Harvard Divinity School education and inspired his closest friend and former business partner John Neal to experiment with writing as a ...