LDS archaeologist Bruce W. Warren has noted that some Jaredite names may have become a part of later Nephite culture, suggesting that there may have been survivors or refugees of the great Jaredite battle besides Coriantumr.
Bruce Springsteen | Bruce Lee | Bruce Willis | Warren G. Harding | Bruce Dickinson | Warren | Warren Buffett | Bruce Cockburn | Warren Beatty | Bruce Campbell | Lenny Bruce | Bruce Sterling | Earl Warren | Diane Warren | Bruce Forsyth | Warren Zevon | Robert the Bruce | Bruce Beresford | Bruce | Bruce Weber | Bruce Weber (photographer) | Warren G | Warren County | James Bruce | Lesley Ann Warren | Jack Bruce | Warren E. Burger | Elizabeth Warren | Bruce Broughton | Warren Commission |
The Webfoots, coached by John Warren, played in the Pacific Coast Conference (PCC) and compiled a 30–15 win–loss record in regular and postseason competition and an 11–5 record in conference play.
While scoring the try, Channel 9 commentator Ray "Rabbits" Warren mistakenly called him "Russell Mullins", before quickly correcting himself.
Bruce W. Carter (1950–1969), Vietnam War veteran and Medal of Honor recipient
Bruce W. Smith (born 1961), African-American animator, film director, and television producer
He received his early schooling at Queens Elementary School in Pasadena, Texas.
In 1998 he joined Walt Disney Feature Animation, Smith served as a supervising animator on four of its films: Tarzan, The Emperor's New Groove, Home on the Range and The Princess and the Frog.
In 1973, he left Australia and began parish ministry at the Anglican Saint George's Church, Singapore.
During World War I, He served in the U.S. Army on the staff of the Judge Advocate General, ending his service with a rank of Lieutenant Colonel and a Distinguished Service Medal.
Patton appointed many prominent Princeton professors, including: Woodrow Wilson, Bliss Perry, John Grier Hibben, Henry van Dyke, Paul Van Dyke, and Howard C. Warren.
Francis E. Warren (1844–1929), American politician, U.S. senator from Wyoming
George F. Warren, agricultural economist and author, contemporary of Henry Charles Taylor
Unna, Warren: Key Czech General Asks U.S. Asylum, The Washington Post, Washington, D.C.: March 7, 1968 (pg. A1)
She has spoken widely on environmental issues, feminism, critical thinking skills and peace studies in many international locations including Buenos Aires, Gothenburg, Helsinki, Oslo, Manitoba, Melbourne, Moscow, Perth, the U.N. Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro (1992), and San Jose.
Kenneth John Warren (born 25 September 1929, Parramatta, New South Wales - died 27 August 1973, Effingham, Surrey, England) was an Australian actor.
Kenneth F. Warren, American professor of political science at Saint Louis University
Claude N. Warren relabelled the complex as the Encinitas Tradition, which extended as far north as the Santa Barbara Channel region but was replaced by the Campbell Tradition in its northern reaches after about 2000 BC.
For research, Roberson used many of the same sources that she employed for Lady of the Forest, including J. C. Holt's Robin Hood, Maurice Keen's The Outlaws of Sherwood, Jim Lees' The Ballads of Robin Hood, Elizabeth Hallam's The Plantagenet Chronicles, and Robert Hardy's Longbow: A Social and Military History, as well as W. L. Warren's King John and the work Swords and Hilt Weapons.
He became a teacher at Peterhouse School in Zimbabwe from 1985 until 1987.
Along with Peter Camejo, Donna J. Warren, Forrest Hill, Michael Wyman, Larry Cafiero, and Todd Chretien, Mehul comprised the MVP slate of the 2006 Green Party of California candidates.
An avid film fan from childhood, Warren entered the film industry as a runner on The Millionairess (1960) and as an assistant director (The Dock Brief, 1962) before directing the short film Fragment in 1965.
In addition to publishing numerous essays on contemporary Canadian art and artists, she has written extensively on the theory and practice of exhibition experience in the contemporary museum, most notably in the book Thinking about Exhibitions (1996), that she co-edited with Sandy Nairne and Bruce W. Ferguson.
He graduated from Yankton High School in 1934, attended Yankton College for two years, and then attended the United States Military Academy, graduating in 1940.
Robert W. Warren (1925–1998), American politician and judge in Wisconsin
Samuel D. Warren (1852–1910), US attorney, co-author (with Brandeis) of the classic law review article The Right to Privacy (1890)
In 1996, Nairne co-edited with Reesa Greenberg and Bruce W. Ferguson the book Thinking about Exhibitions (1996), a review of international practice in contemporary art exhibitions.
Spiderwood Studios is a Motion Picture, Music and Animation studio that opened in 2009 by Producer Tommy G. Warren.
The fountain was a gift to the city by G. Herbert Morrell, designed by E. P. Warren and officially opened on 25 May 1899 by Princess Louise.
In his two debates on the existence of God, Warren prefers versions of the Teleological Argument for the existence of God, using (in his debate with Flew) the alveoli in the lungs and the process of oxygen/carbon dioxide exchange as proof for an intelligent designer; in his debate with Matson, he used the circulatory system.
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In the context of the Churches of Christ and the Restoration Movement, Warren was a strict restorationist: he believed that the noninstrumental Churches of Christ followed the strict New Testament pattern of Christian doctrine, worship, and practice.
The studio sits on 200 acres of land along the Colorado River and contains the only groomed for production back-lot in the state of Texas.
The Warren Training School was a boys-only day school in Chatham, Virginia founded in 1906 by Charles R. Warren.
After practicing with a private law firm in Madison, Wisconsin, Eich served as an Assistant and Deputy Attorney General of Wisconsin with Attorneys General Bronson La Follette and Robert W. Warren.
He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1876 to the Forty-fifth Congress.
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Born in Brighton (now a part of Boston), Massachusetts, Warren pursued classical studies, and was graduated from Harvard University in 1856.
He was taught by Caleb King to play the guitar, and played in his own blues ensemble around the Mississippi Delta.