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Examples

  • Than it is easy to choose from about 350 names total each of them belongs to one day in Callendar so we can celebrate name day.

    Linky Goodness, August 16 2007

  • I did call Callendar fraudulent, but he died in ‘64.

    Unthreaded #17 « Climate Audit 2007

  • She always spoke of Isabel as "Mistress David," and when John reminded her that David's wife was "Mistress Callendar," she said, "It was weel kent that there were plenty o 'folk called Callendar that werna

    Scottish sketches Amelia Edith Huddleston Barr 1875

  • References to people like Callendar or Keeling who came up with a good answer to his alleged "problems" 50-70 years ago just does not have any effect on this guy.

    Rabett Run EliRabett 2009

  • Some historians have dismissed Callendar because he was bitter that Jefferson did not appoint him Postmaster General during his administration, but who better to know where the bodies were buried so to speak than a former associate?

    Archive 2009-01-01 Elizabeth Kerri Mahon 2009

  • In 1938, Callendar published a paper titled The Artificial Production of Carbon Dioxide and its Influence on Temperature, the first of many articles on the subject ...

    Climate Change Biographies 2009

  • In 1938, Callendar published a paper titled The Artificial Production of Carbon Dioxide and its Influence on Temperature, the first of many articles on the subject.

    Callendar, Guy Stewart 2009

  • He sat quietly through the whole discussion, head bowed, until one point when he said "I would rather die than to think I could never have another piece of Marie Callendar pie."

    Assisted-Living Politics Susan Palwick 2009

  • In the election of 1800, one of the dirtiest in American history, the venomous hack writer James Callendar (secretly hired by Thomas Jefferson) assailed then-President John Adams as a “repulsive pedant” and “a hideous hermaphroditical character,” whatever that means.

    The Complete History of Dirty Politics: A Q&A on Anything for a Vote - Freakonomics Blog - NYTimes.com 2007

  • In the election of 1800, one of the dirtiest in American history, the venomous hack writer James Callendar (secretly hired by Thomas Jefferson) assailed then-President John Adams as a “repulsive pedant” and “a hideous hermaphroditical character,” whatever that means.

    The Complete History of Dirty Politics: A Q&A on Anything for a Vote - Freakonomics Blog - NYTimes.com 2007

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