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John Steel (born 4 February 1941) [1] is an English musician who is the long-serving drummer for the Animals. Having served as the band's drummer at its inception in 1963, he is the only original band member playing in the current incarnation of the Animals.
Private John Marvin Steele (November 29, 1912 – May 16, 1969) was an American paratrooper who landed on the pinnacle of the church tower in Sainte-Mère-Église on June 6, 1944 during Operation Overlord.
John Steel (singer) (1895–1971), American tenor; John Steel (swimmer) (born 1972), New Zealand Olympic swimmer; John Miles Steel (1877–1965), first Commander-in-Chief of the RAF's Bomber Command; John R. Steel (born 1948), American mathematician at University of California, Berkeley; Leslie White, who wrote as "John Steel" for newspaper of ...
John W. Steel (January 11, 1895 – June 25, 1971; sometimes referred to as John Steele) was an American tenor. He was featured in the Ziegfeld Follies of 1919 and 1920 and Irving Berlin's Music Box Revues of 1922 and 1923 .
John Steele has superhuman strength, speed, durability and stamina. The extent of these abilities is unknown, but he is strong enough to easily bend steel, fast enough to out-fight Captain America and bulletproof. John possesses a healing factor and is an expert in hand-to-hand combat.
John Meredith Steel (born 27 October 1972 in Auckland) is a former freestyle swimmer from New Zealand, who competed at two consecutive Summer Olympics for his native country, starting in 1992 in Barcelona, Spain.
John Steele (Nova Scotia politician) (died c. 1762), surgeon and political figure in Nova Scotia John Steele (North Carolina politician) (1764–1815), U.S. Representative from North Carolina John Hardy Steele (1789–1865), Governor of New Hampshire
John Steel in 2004. John Robert Steel (born October 30, 1948) is an American set theorist at University of California, Berkeley (formerly at UCLA). He has made many contributions to the theory of inner models and determinacy. With Donald A. Martin, he proved projective determinacy, [1] assuming the existence of sufficient large cardinals.