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more info James Earl Carter Jr., n.
more info James Edmund Scripps, n.
United States newspaper publisher and half-brother of Edward Wyllis Scripps (1835-1908)
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more info James Edward Meade, n.
English economist noted for his studies of international trade and finance (1907-1995)
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more info James Fenimore Cooper, n.
United States novelist noted for his stories of American Indians and the frontier life (1789-1851)
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more info James Francis Thorpe, n.
outstanding United States athlete (1888-1953)
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more info James Franck, n.
United States physicist (born in Germany) who with Gustav Hertz performed an electron scattering experiment that proved the existence of the stationary energy states postulated by Niels Bohr (1882-1964)
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more info James Garfield, n.
20th President of the United States; assassinated by a frustrated office-seeker (1831-1881)
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more info James George Frazer, n.
English social anthropologist noted for studies of primitive religion and magic (1854-1941)
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more info James Grover Thurber, n.
United States humorist and cartoonist who published collections of essays and stories (1894-1961)
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more info James Hargreaves, n.
English inventor of the spinning jenny (1720-1778)
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more info James Harold Doolittle, n.
United States Air Force officer who electrified the world in 1942 by leading a squadron of 16 bombers on a daylight raid over Tokyo (1896-1993)
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more info James Harvey Robinson, n.
United States historian who stressed the importance of intellectual and social events for the course of history (1863-1936)
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more info James Henry Leigh Hunt, n.
British writer who defended the Romanticism of Keats and Shelley (1784-1859)
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more info James Hogg, n.
Scottish writer of rustic verse (1770-1835)
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more info James Howard Meredith, n.
United States civil rights leader whose college registration caused riots in traditionally segregated Mississippi (born in 1933)
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more info James Hutton, n.
Scottish geologist who described the processes that have shaped the surface of the earth (1726-1797)
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more info James I, n.
the first Stuart to be king of England and Ireland from 1603 to 1625 and king of Scotland from 1567 to 1625; he was the son of Mary Queen of Scots and he succeeded Elizabeth I; he alienated the British Parliament by claiming the divine right of kings (1566-1625)
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more info James II, n.
the last Stuart to be king of England and Ireland and Scotland; overthrown in 1688 (1633-1701)
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more info James IV, n.
a Stuart king of Scotland who married a daughter of Henry VII; when England and France went to war in 1513 he invaded England and died in defeat at Flodden (1473-1513)
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more info James Ives, n.
United States lithographer who (with his partner Nathaniel Currier) produced thousands of prints signed `Currier & Ives' (1824-1895)
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more info James Jerome Hill, n.
United States railroad tycoon (1838-1916)
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more info James John Corbett, n.
United States heavyweight boxing champion (1866-1933)
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more info James Joseph Tunney, n.
United States prizefighter who won the world heavyweight championship by defeating Jack Dempsey twice (1898-1978)
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more info James Joyce, n.
influential Irish writer noted for his many innovations (such as stream of consciousness writing) (1882-1941)
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more info James K. Polk, n.
11th President of the United States; his expansionism led to the Mexican War and the annexation of California and much of the southwest (1795-1849)
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more info James Knox Polk, n.
11th President of the United States; his expansionism led to the Mexican War and the annexation of California and much of the southwest (1795-1849)
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more info James Langston Hughes, n.
United States writer (1902-1967)
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more info James Leonard Farmer, n.
United States civil rights leader who in 1942 founded the Congress of Racial Equality (born in 1920)
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more info James Madison, n.
4th President of the United States; member of the Continental Congress and rapporteur at the Constitutional Convention in 1776; helped frame the Bill of Rights (1751-1836)
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more info James Maitland Stewart, n.
United States film actor who portrayed incorruptible but modest heros (1908-1997)
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