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2 unusual facts about Thomas N. Barnes


Thomas Barnes

Thomas N. Barnes (1930–2003), fourth Chief Master Sergeant of the U.S. Air Force

Thomas N. Barnes

After retiring to Fannin County, Texas, he raised Longhorn cattle and two years in a row won the team penning at the Kueckelhan Rodeo.


Barnesville, New Brunswick

The community was first called South Stream and later changed to honour Thomas G. Barnes, the first postmaster.

Before You Kill Us All

"Before You Kill Us All" is the title of a song written by Max T. Barnes and Keith Follesé, and recorded by American country music singer Randy Travis.

Carol A. Barnes

Carleton University
postdoctoral training in neurophysiology at Dalhousie University, University of Oslo, and the Cerebral Functions Group at University College London

Center for National Policy

Other CNP Board members have included former U.S. Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin, former Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives Thomas Foley, former Republican Members of Congress Jack Buechner and Rod Chandler, and former Democratic Members of Congress John Brademas and Michael Barnes.

Charles B. Tanksley

During his time in the Senate, Tanksley was the Senate floor leader for Governor Roy E. Barnes from 1998 to 2002, who was a member of the United States Democratic Party and was Tankley’s former law partner.

Congressional Quarterly

Thomas N. Schroth, who had been managing editor of The Brooklyn Eagle, was elected in October 1955 as executive editor and vice president.

David Leonard Barnes

Eventually, Barnes won the case of West v. Barnes (1791) representing himself and his wife's family after being admitted to the Supreme Court bar that morning.

David Leonard Barnes (January 28, 1760 – November 3, 1812) was a United States District Court for the District of Rhode Island judge and a party in the first U.S. Supreme Court decision, West v. Barnes (1791).

Erb Institute

The Institute draws on faculty expertise throughout the University and has three core professors -- Thomas P. Lyon, Thomas N. Gladwin, and Andrew Hoffman, who have joint appointments in Ross and SNRE.

Eric Sheppard

He is identified with a group of radical economic geographers including Trevor J. Barnes and Jamie Peck, who are critical of the tendency of the modern capitalist economy to create great differences in wealth and poverty, and to create environmental problems and injustices.

Frank D. Schroth

His son, Thomas N. Schroth, was managing editor of the Brooklyn Eagle in the last three years of its existence, and went on to serve as editor of Congress Quarterly and to establish the National Journal.

Harry Barnes

Harry G. Barnes, Jr. (1926–2012), American diplomat, United States Ambassador to India

Horace Pippin

By the late 1930s, critic Christian Brinton, artists N. C. Wyeth and John McCoy, collector Albert C. Barnes, dealer Robert Carlen and curators Dorothy Miller and Holger Cahill championed Pippin's distinctive paintings that captured his childhood memories and war experiences, scenes of everyday life, landscapes, portraits, biblical subjects, and American historical events.

How Your Love Makes Me Feel

"How Your Love Makes Me Feel" is a song written by Trey Bruce and Max T. Barnes, and recorded by American country music group Diamond Rio that reached the top of the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart.

International Transfer of Offenders Act

According to The Globe and Mail on January 19, 2012, Justice Robert Barnes ruled that Vic Toews had failed to provide adequate reasons wh he declined to approve the transfer of Richard Goulet.

J. J. Barnes

J. Barnes (born James Jay Barnes, November 30, 1943, Detroit, Michigan) is an American R&B singer.

John E. Barnes, Jr.

In regard to a remarks by Todd McKenney that he voted for an abortion bill that he thought was unconstitutional, Barnes has stated that if the intent of legislation is to circumvent current law, it doesn't deserve to be passed.

Just Another Day in Parodies

#*parody of "A Night to Remember" by Joe Diffie (Max T. Barnes, T.W. Hale)

Linda L. Barnes

For ten years, Dr. Barnes also served as the consultant to faculty-development workshops, sponsored by the AAR and funded by the Lilly Endowment, the Henry Luce Foundation, and the National Endowment for the Humanities, for faculty in the study of religion.

She co-edits a series on religion and healing for Praeger Press, a division of Greenwood.

Lyman E. Barnes

He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1894 to the 54th United States Congress.

Max D. Barnes

Barnes was a BMI Award-winning songwriter and a writing partner of Harlan Howard, Merle Haggard, Vince Gill, his son Max T. Barnes, and sister Ruthie Barnes Steele.

Nonintercourse Act

Francis J. O'Toole & Thomas N. Tureen, State Power and the Passamaquoddy Tribe: A Gross National Hypocrisy, 23 Me.

Rooster Blues

Over the next 12 years, Rooster Blues released albums by artists like Magic Slim, Eddy Clearwater, John Littlejohn, Lonnie Pitchford, Roosevelt "Booba" Barnes, James "Son" Thomas, Larry Davis, Valerie Wellington, Carey Bell, Willie Cobbs, Super Chikan, and Lonnie Shields.

Samuel Barnes

Samuel A. Barnes (1876–1941), former member of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta

Scherod C. Barnes

He is a member of the Baltimore Urban League, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, Phi Beta Sigma fraternity and the Prince Hall Masons, A.F. & A.M.

The Fifth Missile

The Fifth Missile is a 1986 TV movie starring Robert Conrad, Sam Waterston and David Soul about an American ballistic missile submarine, based on the novel The Gold Crew by Frank M. Robinson and Thomas N. Scortia.

Thomas N. Armstrong III

He also served on the advisory committees of Mount Vernon Estate and Gardens and Winterthur Museum & Country Estate, and was an Honorary Trustee of the National Building Museum and a Trustee of the New York School of Interior Design.

Thomas N. Schroth

She was a reporter for United Press International and the daughter of James Russell Wiggins, who was managing editor of The Washington Post at the time of his marriage and later served as United States Ambassador to the United Nations.

Thomas N. Scortia

He attended Washington University in St. Louis, where he earned a degree in chemistry in 1949.

Thomas N. Taylor

Taylor ran as the Democrat candidate for Governor of Utah in 1920, losing the general election to Charles R. Mabey.

Thomas N.E. Greville

Greville was a member of the American Mathematical Society; the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics; the Society of Actuaries; the Institute of Mathematical Statistics; the American Statistical Association; and the Parapsychological Association.

Thomas N'Kono

Thomas 'Tommy' N'Kono (born 20 July 1956 in Dizangue) is a Cameroonian retired footballer.

Trevor J. Barnes

Sheppard, E., and Barnes, T.J. The Capitalist Space Economy: Geographical Analysis After Ricardo, Marx and Sraffa.

Barnes, T. J., Peck, J., and Sheppard, E. (eds.) The Wiley-Blackwell Companion to Economic Geography.

Sheppard, E. and Barnes, T. J. (eds.) A Companion to Economic Geography.

Trevor Barnes received his Ph.D. in 1983 at University of Minnesota with a thesis under the supervision of Eric Sheppard titled The Geography of Value, Production, and Distribution: Theoretical Economic Geography after Sraffa.

Tickell, A., Sheppard, E., Peck, J., and Barnes, T. J. (eds.) Politics and Practice in Economic Geography.

Barnes, T. J., Peck, J., Sheppard, E., and Tickell, A. (eds.) Reading Economic Geography.

West v. Barnes

Justice James Iredell was upset by the governing statute and wrote to President Washington to change the law which had required that only the clerk of the Supreme Court could issue writs of error.

William F. Barnes

He did have two seven win seasons in 1960 and 1961, leading the Bruins to the 1962 Rose Bowl.

He did have two seven-win seasons in 1960 and 1961, leading the Bruins to the 1962 Rose Bowl.

William Ludwig Detmold

During the war, he introduced a knife and fork for one-handed men, which was put by Surgeon General Barnes on the supply list, under the name of “Detmold's knife.” In 1884, he was a founder and the first president of the New York County Medical Association, and at one time he was president of the Medical Relief Fund for Widows and Orphans.


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