When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. John Turner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Turner

    John Napier Wyndham Turner PC CC QC (June 7, 1929 – September 19, 2020) was a Canadian lawyer and politician who served as the 17th prime minister of Canada from June to September 1984. He served as leader of the Liberal Party of Canada and leader of the Official Opposition from 1984 to 1990.

  3. Electoral history of John Turner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electoral_history_of_John...

    John Turner in 2018. This article is the Electoral history of John Turner, the seventeenth Prime Minister of Canada. A liberal, Turner served one term as prime minister (June 30 to September 17, 1984), as successor to Pierre Trudeau. He had the second shortest-tenure of office of all the prime ministers, with only Charles Tupper having a ...

  4. 1984 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1984_Liberal_Party_of...

    The Liberal Party of Canada held a leadership election on June 16, 1984, to replace retiring Liberal leader and sitting Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau.The convention elected former finance minister John Turner, who at the time was not sitting in the House of Commons, as its leader on the second ballot, defeating another former finance minister, Jean Chrétien.

  5. Geills Turner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geills_Turner

    She met John Turner when she was a campaign worker for his first election campaign [2] and she "brought computers into Turner's campaign." [ 1 ] They married in 1963 and had three children: Elizabeth (born 1964), Michael (born 1965), David (born 1968, died 2021), and James Andrew (born 1972).

  6. 1980 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1980_Liberal_Party_of...

    Former minister of finance John Turner, who had run in the 1968 leadership election that elected Trudeau, was seen as a likely candidate until his surprise December 10, 1979 announcement that he would not be a candidate. [4]

  7. John Napier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Napier

    John Napier of Merchiston (/ ˈ n eɪ p i ər / NAY-pee-ər; [1] Latinized as Ioannes Neper; 1 February 1550 – 4 April 1617), nicknamed Marvellous Merchiston, was a Scottish landowner known as a mathematician, physicist, and astronomer.

  8. Heraldic mark of the prime minister of Canada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heraldic_mark_of_the_Prime...

    Chronologically they are: Joe Clark, [1] Pierre Trudeau, [2] John Turner, [3] Brian Mulroney, [4] Kim Campbell, [5] Jean Chrétien, [6] and Paul Martin. [ 7 ] In addition, three children of Paul Martin were granted differenced versions of their father’s arms, all of which continue to feature the prime minister’s mark, thus demonstrating its ...

  9. Mirifici Logarithmorum Canonis Descriptio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mirifici_Logarithmorum...

    The volume has a preface by Robert and several appendices, including a section on John Napier's methods for more easily solving spherical triangles, and a section by Henry Biggs on “another and better kind of logarithms,” namely base 10 or common logarithms. An English translation by William Rae Macdonald was published, with annotations, in ...