John McCloud (producer)
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John McCloud (producer)
John MacLeod may refer to: Politics * John Norman MacLeod (1788–1835), British Member of Parliament for Sudbury, 1828–1830 * Sir John MacLeod, 1st Baronet (1857–1934), British Member of Parliament for Glasgow Kelvingrove, 1918–1922 * John Macleod (Sutherland MP) (1862–?), Member of Parliament for Sutherland, 1894–1900 *Sir John MacLeod (solicitor) (1873–1946), Lord Provost of Edinburgh, 1916–1919 *Sir John MacLeod (Ross and Cromarty MP) (1913–1984), Member of Parliament for Ross and Cromarty, 1945–1964 * John MacLeod (clan chief), 16th-century clan chieftain, of the Isle of Lewis in the 1520s and 1530s * John MacLeod of MacLeod (1935–2007), 29th chief of the Scottish clan Clan MacLeod Sports * John MacLeod (basketball) (1937–2019), American basketball coach * Johnny MacLeod (born 1938), Scottish footballer * John MacLeod (rugby union) (born 1973), Scottish former rugby union player for Glasgow Warriors * Jack Macleod (born 1988), English footballer ...
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John Norman MacLeod
John Norman MacLeod (3 August 1788 – 25 March 1835) was a British politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1828 to 1830. He was the 24th Chief of Clan MacLeod. John was born in India, the son of Major-General Norman MacLeod of MacLeod, 23rd Chief of Clan MacLeod. He married Anne Stevenson and had nine children. In 1828, John was elected at a by-election as a Member of Parliament (MP) for Sudbury and held the seat until 1830. He died in 1835 and was buried at Old Kilmuir Cem, Dunvegan, Skye, Scotland. His son, Norman MacLeod of MacLeod Norman MacLeod of MacLeod (18 July 1812 – 5 February 1895) was the 25th Chief of Clan MacLeod. Biography Norman MacLeod of MacLeod was born on 18 July 1812 at Dunvegan, Skye. He was the son of John Norman MacLeod of MacLeod (1788–1835 ..., succeeded him as the 25th Chief of Clan MacLeod. Ancestry References {{DEFAULTSORT:MacLeod, John 1788 births 1835 deaths John MacLeod UK MPs 1826–1830 Members of the ...
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John MacLeod (water Polo)
John MacLeod (born 21 February 1957) is a Canadian water polo player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1976 Summer Olympics Events January * January 3 – The International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights enters into force. * January 5 – The Pol Pot regime proclaims a new constitution for Democratic Kampuchea. * January 11 – The 1976 P .... References External links * 1957 births Living people Canadian male water polo players Olympic water polo players for Canada Water polo players at the 1976 Summer Olympics Place of birth missing (living people) {{Canada-waterpolo-bio-stub ...
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John Macleod (art Director)
John Macleod is the deputy design director of the ''New York Times''. Prior to that he art directed the Business and Science sections of that paper. Before rejoining the Times in 1997, he was a founding partner in Design 5 a New York based design studio that specialized in book design, corporate identity and packaging. Under the tutelage of Milton Glaser he worked on the launch of ''American Lawyer'' and designed and art directed ''Corporate Finance Magazine''. Macleod started and was principal in John Macleod Associates, a small studio that specialized in publication design. Clients included ''Asahi Shimbun is one of the four largest newspapers in Japan. Founded in 1879, it is also one of the oldest newspapers in Japan and Asia, and is considered a newspaper of record for Japan. Its circulation, which was 4.57 million for its morning edition a ...'' in Tokyo, ''Business Day'' in Bangkok and the New York Times Regional Newspaper group. In 1980 he cofounded and was first pr ...
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John Macleod (songwriter)
John Macleod (sometimes spelled McLeod) is a Canadian-born English songwriter and musician. Career Macleod moved to Britain in the 1940s, and lived in the Halifax area with his wife before moving to Brighton. In the 1950s, he was a member of the vocal group the Maple Leaf Four, with his brother, baritone Norman, Alan Harvey as tenor and Joe Melia (stagename Joe Ross) as second tenor. The group made regular appearances on British TV, and released at least two albums, ''Home on the Range'' and ''Old Familiar Favourites''. The Maple Leaf Four, ''Boot Sale Sounds'', 30 March 2012
Retrieved 6 March 2014
By the early 1960s, Macleod worked on writing advertising s.< ...
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John MacLeod (minister)
John MacLeod (born 14 May 1948 in Fearn, Scotland – died 17 December 2020 in Portmahomack, Scotland), known in Scottish Gaelic as Iain MacLeòid, was educated at the University of Aberdeen and the Free Church College, Edinburgh, and was a minister of the Free Church of Scotland (Continuing) who served in congregations of the Free Church of Scotland and Free Church of Scotland (Continuing) in Scotland and North America. He came to prominence in connection with allegations against Donald Macleod, Professor of Systematic Theology at the Free Church College: the professor was answerable to the Training of the Ministry Committee, of which Rev. MacLeod was clerk. This led, in January 2000, to an attempt to suspend him and over twenty other ministers from the functions of the ministry and to their formation of the "Free Church of Scotland Continuing", of which MacLeod was subsequently appointed the Principal Clerk of Assembly. He was moderator of the 2006 FCC General Assembly A gen ...
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John MacLeod (moderator)
John MacLeod may refer to: Politics * John Norman MacLeod (1788–1835), British Member of Parliament for Sudbury, 1828–1830 * Sir John MacLeod, 1st Baronet (1857–1934), British Member of Parliament for Glasgow Kelvingrove, 1918–1922 * John Macleod (Sutherland MP) (1862–?), Member of Parliament for Sutherland, 1894–1900 *Sir John MacLeod (solicitor) (1873–1946), Lord Provost of Edinburgh, 1916–1919 *Sir John MacLeod (Ross and Cromarty MP) (1913–1984), Member of Parliament for Ross and Cromarty, 1945–1964 * John MacLeod (clan chief), 16th-century clan chieftain, of the Isle of Lewis in the 1520s and 1530s * John MacLeod of MacLeod (1935–2007), 29th chief of the Scottish clan Clan MacLeod Sports * John MacLeod (basketball) (1937–2019), American basketball coach * Johnny MacLeod (born 1938), Scottish footballer * John MacLeod (rugby union) (born 1973), Scottish former rugby union player for Glasgow Warriors * Jack Macleod (born 1988), English footballer ...
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John George Macleod
John George Macleod (8 May 1915 in Kirkhill – 4 April 2006 in Edinburgh) was a Scottish doctor of medicine and an author of medical textbooks. Family Macleod was the elder brother of Professor Dr Anna MacGillivray Macleod, the world famous professor of Brewing at Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh. His younger brother was Dr Alasdair MacGillivray Macleod, a general practitioner in Linlithgow. He was the son of Margaret Ingram Sangster, MA, and Rev. Alasdair MacGillivray Macleod, who both graduated in 1914 at Aberdeen University. He was the grandson of Rev. George Macleod of Garrabost, Isle of Lewis. He was second cousin to the Right Hon. Iain Norman Macleod, who served as Chancellor of the Exchequer in 1970. The branch of the Macleods of Pabbay and Uig belongs to the Lewis family MacLeod. On 21 December 1942, John George Macleod married Nancie Elizabeth Clark. Their issue are two sons, Peter and Keith. who both have died by 2023 and a daughter, Gillian Lesley, who is al ...
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John Macleod (physiologist)
John James Rickard Macleod (6 September 1876 – 16 March 1935) was a Scottish biochemist and physiologist. He devoted his career to diverse topics in physiology and biochemistry, but was chiefly interested in carbohydrate metabolism. He is noted for his role in the discovery and isolation of insulin during his tenure as a lecturer at the University of Toronto, for which he and Frederick Banting received the 1923 Nobel prize in Physiology or Medicine. Awarding the prize to Macleod was controversial at the time, because according to Banting's version of events, Macleod's role in the discovery was negligible. It was not until decades after the events that an independent review acknowledged a far greater role than was attributed to him at first. Biography Macleod was born in Clunie, near Dunkeld in Perthshire. Soon after he was born, his father Robert Macleod, a clergyman, was transferred to Aberdeen, where John attended Aberdeen Grammar School and enrolled in the study of med ...
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John Macleod (theologian)
John Macleod (1872–1948) was a Scottish minister and Principal of the Free Church College from 1929-43. He served as Moderator of the General Assembly of the Free Church of Scotland and was the author of ''Scottish Theology in relation to Church History''. Divinity studies Having begun divinity studies in the Free Church College, his opposition to the Declaratory Act passed by the Free Church of Scotland General Assembly in 1892 led to his continuing his studies in divinity at the Assembly's College, Belfast, the Theological College of the Presbyterian Church in Ireland, where he obtained first place in Ecclesiastical History and Biblical Criticism. In May 1893, when the Free Church of Scotland confirmed the Declaratory Act passed by its General Assembly of 1892 to be a binding constitutional Act, which modified the Westminster Confession of Faith to which the Free Church adhered, he was one of a number of Free Church divinity students to join the Free Presbyterian Church of ...
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John Macleod (British Army Officer)
Lieutenant General Sir John Angus Macleod GCH (29 January 1752 – 26 January 1833) was Master Gunner, St James's Park, the most senior ceremonial post in the Royal Artillery after the sovereign. Military career Educated at the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich, Macleod was commissioned into the Royal Artillery in 1771. In 1781, he was ordered to join the force under Earl Cornwallis which was sent to North Carolina and which took part in the Battle of Guilford. He was, in 1782, appointed Commander of the Royal Artillery at a time when they had just five battalions. He was appointed Deputy Adjutant-General of the Royal Artillery, an honorary position, in 1795. Under Macleod's direction the Royal Artillery had been expanded to ten battalions by 1808. He also held the position of Master Gunner, St James's Park from 1808. In 1809, he was involved in the expedition to Walcheren. After the Battle of Waterloo, the Duke of Wellington appointed him Director-General of the Royal Artiller ...
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John MacLeod (canoeist)
John Arthur Torquil G. MacLeod (born 31 March 1947) is a British retired slalom canoeist who competed in the 1960s and the 1970s. He won a silver medal in the K-1 team event at the 1969 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships in Bourg St.-Maurice. MacLeod finished 30th in the K-1 event at the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich. Having coached Junior athletes for two years John very successfully coached senior GB team kayaks from 1979 to 1981 followed by two years as senior GB team chief coach culminating in 7 medals being won by GB Team at the 1983 World Championships. In 1989 John was appointed Manager to the senior team and worked through to the Barcelona Olympic Games and beyond, all voluntary. By 1999 he had left teaching and was appointed as paid full-time Manager to GB teams, later focusing on senior and Olympic teams management. Within his coaching and management years 8 world championship gold medals have been awarded to GB team. In 2009 he was appointed as Canoe Manager ...
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Sir John MacLeod, 1st Baronet
Sir John Mackintosh MacLeod, 1st Baronet (5 May 1857 – 6 March 1934) was a Scottish MP for the Unionist Party. He sat for Glasgow Central from a by-election in 1915 to 1918, and for Glasgow Kelvingrove from 1918 to 1922. He was elected in 1918 as a supporter of David Lloyd George's coalition government. He was the second son of Rev. Norman MacLeod. He had an younger brother, the Scottish international rugby union footballer William MacKintosh MacLeod, and six sisters. McLeod was created a baronet in the 1924 Prime Minister's Resignation Honours. He married Edith Fielden in 1888. They had two sons, the second baronet (and father of the third baronet), and George MacLeod, the fourth baronet, founder of the Iona Community, Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland and Minister at Govan Old Parish Church Govan Old Parish Church is the name of the original parish church serving Govan in Glasgow from the 5th or 6th century AD until 2007. In that year, th ...
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