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Alan Anderson (British Public Servant)
Alan or Allan Anderson may refer to: *Alan Anderson (basketball) (born 1982), basketball player *Alan Anderson (British public servant) (1877–1952), public servant and shipowner *Alan Anderson (footballer) (1939–2022), Scottish former professional footballer *Alan Orr Anderson (1879–1958), Scottish historian *A. Paul Anderson (born 1961), American commissioner for the Federal Maritime Commission *Alan Ross Anderson (1925–1973), American logician *Allan Anderson (baseball) (born 1964), American baseball player *Allan Anderson (cricketer) (born 1949), Australian cricketer *Allan Anderson (footballer) (1944–2013), Australian rules footballer *Allan Anderson (theologian) (born 1949), Anglo-Zimbabwean theologian *Allan Cunningham Anderson (1896–1986), Canadian newspaperman and diplomat See also

*Al Anderson (other) {{hndis, Anderson, Alan ...
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Alan Anderson (basketball)
Alan Jeffery Anderson (born October 16, 1982) is an American former professional basketball player. He played for eight seasons in the National Basketball Association (NBA) with the Charlotte Bobcats, Toronto Raptors, Brooklyn Nets, Washington Wizards and Los Angeles Clippers. Anderson also played internationally in Italy, Russia, Croatia, Israel, Spain and China. College career Anderson attended Michigan State University (MSU), where he played college basketball with the Michigan State Spartans men's basketball, Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team. During his college career he was one of MSU's best ball handlers. He was the team's primary point guard during his junior season. Anderson, as a college senior, averaged 13.2 points, 5.6 rebounds and 1.7 assists per game, earning All-Big Ten Conference Team honors. He also helped lead the Spartans to the 2005 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament's Final Four. He was voted the team's Most valuable player, MVP by the te ...
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Alan Anderson (British Public Servant)
Alan or Allan Anderson may refer to: *Alan Anderson (basketball) (born 1982), basketball player *Alan Anderson (British public servant) (1877–1952), public servant and shipowner *Alan Anderson (footballer) (1939–2022), Scottish former professional footballer *Alan Orr Anderson (1879–1958), Scottish historian *A. Paul Anderson (born 1961), American commissioner for the Federal Maritime Commission *Alan Ross Anderson (1925–1973), American logician *Allan Anderson (baseball) (born 1964), American baseball player *Allan Anderson (cricketer) (born 1949), Australian cricketer *Allan Anderson (footballer) (1944–2013), Australian rules footballer *Allan Anderson (theologian) (born 1949), Anglo-Zimbabwean theologian *Allan Cunningham Anderson (1896–1986), Canadian newspaperman and diplomat See also

*Al Anderson (other) {{hndis, Anderson, Alan ...
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Alan Anderson (footballer)
Arthur Alan Duncan Anderson (21 December 1939 – 27 February 2022) was a Scottish professional footballer who played as a centre half for Alloa Athletic, Falkirk, Millwall, Scunthorpe United and Hearts. Career Anderson joined Millwall from Falkirk Falkirk ( ; ; ) is a town in the Central Lowlands of Scotland, historically within the county of Stirlingshire. It lies in the Forth Valley, northwest of Edinburgh and northeast of Glasgow. Falkirk had a resident population of 32,422 at the ... in October 1959 and helped the London club to win the championship of Division Four before being transferred to Scunthorpe United in 1962. However, Anderson could not settle in England. In November 1963 he was transferred to Heart of Midlothian. Anderson was the Hearts team captain for over 200 games. After long service and 38 goals for the club, he ended his career in May 1976. He played seven times for a Scotland XI during their 1967 tour of Asia and Oceania, playing alo ...
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Alan Orr Anderson
Alan Orr Anderson (1879–1958) was a Scottish historian and compiler. The son of Rev. John Anderson and Ann Masson, he was born in 1879. He was educated at Royal High School, Edinburgh, and the University of Edinburgh. In 1908, after five years of work sponsored by the Carnegie Trust, he published ''Scottish Annals from English Chroniclers'', a reasonably comprehensive compilation of sources about Scottish history before 1286 written either in England or by chroniclers born in England. Fourteen years later, he was able to publish the 2-volume work entitled ''Early Sources of Scottish History, A.D. 500 to 1286'', a similar but larger collection of sources, this time taken from non-English (mostly Gaelic) material. To a certain extent, the latter work overlapped with the compilations published by Skene's ''Chronicles of the Picts and Scots'' (Edinburgh, 1867), but both of Anderson's compilations differed from Skene's in that all were translated into English. Years o ...
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Alan Ross Anderson
Alan Ross Anderson (1925–1973) was an American logician and professor of philosophy at Yale University and the University of Pittsburgh. A frequent collaborator with Nuel Belnap, Anderson was instrumental in the development of relevance logic and deontic logic. Anderson died of cancer in 1973. Relevance logic Anderson believed that the conclusion of a valid inference ought to have something to do with (i.e. be ''relevant'' to) the premises. Formally, he captured this " relevance condition" with the principle that : ''A'' entails ''B'' only if ''A'' and ''B'' share at least one non-logical constant. As simple as this idea appears, implementing it in a formal system requires a radical departure from the semantics of classical logic. Anderson and Belnap (with contributions from J. Michael Dunn, Kit Fine, Alasdair Urquhart, Robert K. Meyer, Anil Gupta, and others) explored the formal consequences of the relevance condition in great detail in their influenti ...
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Allan Anderson (baseball)
Allan Lee Anderson (born January 7, 1964) is an American former professional baseball player. He was a pitcher over parts of six seasons (1986–1991) with the Minnesota Twins, where he led the American League in ERA in 1988. For his career, he compiled a 49–54 record in 148 appearances, with a 4.11 ERA and 339 strikeouts. Anderson, though he pitched for the Twins during the team's World Series The World Series is the annual championship series of Major League Baseball (MLB). It has been contested since between the champion teams of the American League (AL) and the National League (NL). The winning team, determined through a best- ... Championship seasons of 1987 and 1991, did not pitch in either postseason. Anderson was born and raised in Lancaster, Ohio, and starred as a pitcher for Lancaster High School and for his American Legion Baseball team. He was drafted by the Twins in the second round of the 1982 MLB amateur draft. Currently with; Columbus Division ...
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Allan Anderson (cricketer)
This is a list of male cricketers who have played for New South Wales in first-class, List A and Twenty20 cricket. It is complete to the end of the 2017–18 season. The list refers to the sides named as "New South Wales" and does not include players who have appeared for the Sydney-based T20 sides unless they have appeared also in games under the NSW name. ''Players are listed in alphabetical order.'' A *Sean Abbott (2010–11 to date) : S. A. Abbott * Claude Achurch (1921–22) : C. S. Achurch * Ted Adams (1919–20) : E. W. Adams * Francis Adams (1858–59) : F. Adams * Warwick Adlam (1993–94 to 1996–97) : W. J. Adlam * Henry Allan (1871–72) : H. A. Allan * Reginald Allen (1878–79 to 1887–88) : R. C. Allen * Phil Alley (1990–91 to 1997–98) : P. J. S. Alley * Bill Alley (1945–46 to 1947–48) : W. E. Alley * John Alleyne (1927–28) : J. P. Alleyne * Arthur Allsopp (1929–30 to 1930–31) : A. H. Allsopp * Gordon Amos (1926–27 to 1931–32) : G. S. Amos ...
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Allan Anderson (footballer)
Allan Anderson (4 February 1944 – 2 November 2013) was an Australian rules football Australian football, also called Australian rules football or Aussie rules, or more simply football or footy, is a contact sport played between two teams of 18 players on an Australian rules football playing field, oval field, often a modified ...er who played for the Fitzroy Football Club in the Victorian Football League (VFL). Anderson crossed to Williamstown in the VFA in 1966 and played 15 games in his only season with the Seagulls, kicking one goal. Notes References Stone, Peter (1966), "League Players top Gift hopes, ''The Age'', (Saturday, 9 April 1966), p. 24. External links * * 1944 births 2013 deaths Australian rules footballers from Victoria (state) Fitzroy Football Club players 20th-century Australian sportsmen {{AFL-bio-1940s-stub ...
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Allan Anderson (theologian)
Allan Anderson (born 21 September 1949) is a British theologian and the Professor of Mission and Pentecostal Studies at the University of Birmingham.University of Birmingham (School of Philosophy, Theology and Religion)Staff profile: Professor Allan Anderson Retrieved May 2016. He is frequently cited as one of the foremost scholars on Global Pentecostalism. Early life and education Anderson was born in London to Salvation Army officers Keith and Gwen Anderson, a Zimbabwean father and an English mother. His father was the son of a fourth generation London Missionary Society (Congregational) minister in Southern Africa, of Scottish and Cape Dutch descent, and his mother was born in Sheffield, England, the daughter of Salvation Army officers originally from South Yorkshire. Anderson was raised in Zimbabwe, and his secondary education was at Gilbert Rennie School in Lusaka (Zambia), Prince Edward School in Harare (then Salisbury) and Milton High School, Bulawayo (Zimbabwe). ...
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Allan Cunningham Anderson
Allan Cunningham Anderson (August 1896 – 16 April 1986) was a Scottish-born Canadian newspaperman and diplomat. In 1959, he was appointed Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to Cuba and Haiti Haiti, officially the Republic of Haiti, is a country on the island of Hispaniola in the Caribbean Sea, east of Cuba and Jamaica, and south of the Bahamas. It occupies the western three-eighths of the island, which it shares with the Dominican .... Anderson was born in Scotland, emigrating to Canada in 1912. He died in Calgary on 16 April 1986 at the age of 89. References External links Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada Complete List of Posts Ambassadors of Canada to Cuba Ambassadors of Canada to Haiti 1896 births 1986 deaths {{Canada-diplomat-stub ...
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