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{{Infobox_Politician
{{Cambridge College Infobox
|image = Jonathan_Denis_in_2008.jpg
| name = St John's College
|imagesize = 150px |
| infobox_colour = #000066
| name = Jonathan Denis
| text_colour =
| small| caption =
| link_colour = #FFCD00
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1975|9|22}}
| image = [[Image:Johns shield.png|128px|St John's College heraldic shield]]
| birth_place = [[Regina, Saskatchewan]]
| colours = <td bgcolor="#000066">&nbsp;</td>
| residence = [[Calgary]], [[Alberta]]
<td bgcolor="#000066">&nbsp;</td>
| office = [[Legislative Assembly of Alberta|MLA]] for [[Calgary Egmont]]
<td bgcolor="#000066">&nbsp;</td>
| term_start = 2008
<td bgcolor="#FF0000">&nbsp;</td>
| term_end =
<td bgcolor="#66CCFF">&nbsp;</td>
| predecessor = [[Denis Herard]]
<td bgcolor="#FF0000">&nbsp;</td>
| successor = incumbent
<td bgcolor="#000066">&nbsp;</td>
| party = [[Progressive Conservative Party of Alberta|Progressive Conservative]]
<td bgcolor="#000066">&nbsp;</td>
| alma_mater = [[University of Regina]], [[University of Saskatchewan]]
<td bgcolor="#000066">&nbsp;</td>
| religion = Christian
<td bgcolor="#FF0000">&nbsp;</td>
| occupation = Lawyer, businessperson
<td bgcolor="#66CCFF">&nbsp;</td>
<td bgcolor="#FF0000">&nbsp;</td>
<td bgcolor="#000066">&nbsp;</td>
<td bgcolor="#000066">&nbsp;</td>
<td bgcolor="#000066">&nbsp;</td>
| full_name = The College of Saint John the Evangelist of the University of Cambridge
| latin_name =
| latin_motto = Souvent me Souvient
| english_motto = I often remember
| motto_language = Old French
| founder =
| founder_pl =
| named_for = The Hospital of [[Saint John the Evangelist]]
| established = [[1511]]
| old_names =
| location = [http://www.cam.ac.uk/map/v3/drawmap.cgi?mp=main;xx=1681;yy=590;mt=c;ms=180;tl=St%20John%27s%20College St. John's Street]
| women_only =
| mature_students =
| head_label = Master
| head = Professor Chris Dobson
| undergraduates = 550
| graduates = 330
| sister_college = [[Balliol College, Oxford]]<br>[[Trinity College, Dublin]]
| sister_college_pl = yes
| homepage = http://www.joh.cam.ac.uk
| boat_club = http://www.lmbc.net
}}
}}
'''St John's College''', an institution known formally as '''''The Master, Fellows and Scholars of the College of St John the Evangelist in the University of Cambridge''''' <ref>'A History of St John's College', produced by Tim Rawle Associates, Cloister Press</ref> is a constituent college of the [[University of Cambridge]] founded by [[Lady Margaret Beaufort]] in 1511. It is geographically the largest college of the [[University of Cambridge]], and the third largest in terms of its membership. One of the richest of all the Oxbridge colleges, St John's has fixed assets of £504,109,000 and an annual income from endowments estimated at £7,000,000. Eleven [[Nobel Prize]]s have been awarded to members of St John's<ref>[http://www.joh.cam.ac.uk/library/biographical/bioghistory/ College website -biographical history page]</ref>, and the college has educated six [[Prime Ministers]]. The college is also known for its famous [[Choir of St John's College, Cambridge|choir]].


'''Jonathan Denis''' (born [[September 22]], [[1975]] in [[Regina, Saskatchewan]]) is a [[Canada|Canadian]] politician and current Member of the [[Legislative Assembly of Alberta]] representing the constituency of [[Calgary Egmont|Calgary-Egmont]] as a [[Progressive Conservative Party of Alberta|Progressive Conservatives]]. He was first elected in the [[Alberta general election, 2008|2008 provincial election]].
==History==
The college was founded on the site of the 13th century Hospital of St John in Cambridge at the suggestion of [[Saint John Fisher]], [[Bishop of Rochester]] and [[chaplain]] to Lady Margaret. However, Lady Margaret died without having mentioned the foundation of St John's in her will, and it was largely the work of Fisher that ensured that the college was founded. He had to obtain the approval of King [[Henry VIII of England]], the [[Pope Julius II|Pope]] through the intermediary [[Polydore Vergil]], and the [[Bishop of Ely]] to suppress the religious hospital and convert it to a college. The college received its charter on [[April 9]] [[1511]]. Further complications arose in obtaining money from the estate of Lady Margaret to pay for the foundation and it was not until [[October 22]] [[1512]] that a [[codicil]] was obtained in the court of the Archbishop of Canterbury. In November 1512 the [[Court of Chancery]] allowed Lady Margaret's executors to pay for the foundation of the college from her estates.


==Early life==
==Buildings and Grounds==


Denis was born September 22, 1975 in [[Regina, Saskatchewan|Regina]]. He pursued a university education, obtaining a commerce degree from the University of Regina in 1997 and a law degree from the University of Saskatchewan in 2000. Prior to becoming an MLA, Denis was a senior associate, specializing in government relations, at [[Miller Thomson LLP]], a major national law firm. He was also the President of a national communications firm which he founded with Member of Parliament [[Pierre Poilievre]].
;'''First Court (1511-1520)''':The first three courts of St John's college are simply called first, second and third court in order of their construction. First Court was converted from the hospital on the foundation of the college, and constructed between 1511 and 1520. Though it has since been gradually changed, the front (east) range is still much as it appeared when first erected in the 16th-century.<ref>'A History of St John's College', produced by Tim Rawle Associates, Cloister Press</ref> The south range was refaced between 1772-6 in the Georgian style by the local architect James Essex, as part of an abortive attempt to modernise the entire court in the same fashion. The most dramatic alteration to the original, Tudor court however remains the Victorian ammendment of the north range, which involved the demolition of the original mediaeval chapel and the construction of a new, far larger set of buildings in the 1860s. These included the imposing Chapel, designed by Sir [[George Gilbert Scott]], which includes in its interior some pieces saved from the original chapel. It is the tallest building in Cambridge, standing six feet taller than the University Library. The alteration of the north range necessitated the restructuring of the connective sections of First Court; another bay window was added in order to enlarge the College's hall, and a new building constructed to the north of Great Gate. Parts of First Court was used as a prison in 1643 during the [[English Civil War]].


During the boom in Calgary real estate in the early 2000's, Denis made close to a million dollars in residential real estate.
[[Image:StJohnsCambridge Gatehouse02.jpg|thumb|right|180px|The Main Gate of St John's College, decorated with the [[coat of arms|arms]] of the foundress.]]
;'''The Great Gate (1516)''':St John's Great Gate is one of the most famous in Cambridge, and follows the standard contemporary pattern employed previously by [[Christ's College, Cambridge|Christ's College]], and later imitated by the Great Gate of the neighbouring [[Trinity College, Cambridge|Trinity College]]. With its extensive crenelations, the gate the arms of the foundress [[Lady Margaret Beaufort]], as well as her ensigns, the Red Rose of Lancaster and Portcullis. The College Arms are flanked by curious creatures known as [[yales]], mythical beasts with elephants' tails, antelopes' bodies, goats' heads, and swivelling horns. Above them is a [[tabernacle]] containing a [[socle]] figure of St John the Evangelist, an Eagle at his feet and symbolic, poisoned chalice in his hands. The doors date from 1665-6, and the fine fan vaulting above the [[tholobate]] was built by [[William Swayne]], the master mason of King's College Chapel.<ref>'A History of St John's College', produced by Tim Rawle Associates, Cloister Press</ref>


==Political career==
;'''St John's Chapel (1866-9)''':The Chapel of St John's College is entered by the north west-corner of First Court, and was constructed between 1866-9 in order to replace the far smaller, mediaeval chapel which dated back to the 13th-century. When in 1861 the College's administration decided that a new building was needed, [[Sir George Gilbert Scott]] was selected as architect. He had recently finished work on a similar project at [[Exeter College, Oxford]], and went about constructing the Chapel of St John's College along similar lines, drawing inspiration from the Church of [[Saint Chapelle]] in Paris. The benefactor Henry Hoare offered a downpayment of £3000 to finance the chapel's construction, in addition to which he promised to pay £1000 a year if a tower were added to Scott's original plans, which had included only a diminuitive [[fleche]]. Work began, but Mr Hoare's unexpected death in a railway accident left the college without £3000 of his expected benefaction. The tower, based on [[Pershore Abbey]], was thus left without belld, its [[louvres]] purely decorative.<ref>'A History of St John's College', produced by Tim Rawle Associates, Cloister Press</ref> The Chapel's antechamber contains statues of Margaret Beaufort and John Fisher, the niches around the building commemorating other College benefactors. Inside the building is a stone-vaulted antechapel, at the end of which hangs a 'Deposition of the Cross' by [[Anton Rafael Mengs]], completed around 1777. Freestanding statues and plaques commemorate College benefactors such as James Wood, Master 1815-39, as well as alumni who include [[William Wilberforce]], [[Thomas Clarkson]] and [[William Gilbert]].


Denis first became interested in politics as a teenager. In 1995, he was a staffer of former Saskatchewan Leader of the Opposition, [[Lynda Haverstock]]; however, he later abandoned the Liberal party in favour of the Conservatives when the Liberals joined forces with the socialist NDP to form a coalition government. Denis first sought public office in the [[Alberta general election, 2008|2008 provincial election]] in the constituency of [[Calgary Egmont|Calgary-Egmont]] and received 44% of the vote. During the campaign, Denis received endorsements from Conservative Members of Parliament [[Jason Kenney]] and [[Lee Richardson]], whose ridings overlap upon [[Calgary Egmont|Calgary-Egmont]], as well as Calgary Alderman Ric McIver and provincial cabinet minister [[Ted Morton]]. He currently serves as a member of the Cabinet Policy Committee on Health, the Standing Committee on Health, the Standing Committee on Public Accounts, the Land-Use Framework MLA Committee, the Alaska/Alberta Bilateral Council, and the Private Members Business House Strategy Committee. In June 2008, [[Ed Stelmach|Premier Stelmach]] appointed Denis as the shadow MLA for [[Calgary Currie|Calgary-Currie]].
[[Image:StJohnsCambChapel02.jpg|thumb|right|220px|St John's College Chapel was designed by Sir [[George Gilbert Scott]]]]


==Personal life==
;'''Second Court (1598-1602)''':Second Court, built from 1598 to 1602, has been described as 'the finest [[Tudor period|Tudor]] court in England'. Reputedly under the [[Oriel window]] in the north range of the court the treaty between England and France was signed that established the marriage of King [[Charles I of England]] to Queen [[Henrietta Maria]]. Parts of the [[D-day]] landings are also said to have been planned here. Now the Senior Combination Room, but before the 19th century part of the Master's Lodge, the first-floor gallery along the north range has the largest unsupported ceiling in Cambridge. The college has blocked the installation of electrical power sockets and lighting (as well as smoke alarms) in the room, and all meals held after dark are lit by numerous candles. The Old Library was built in 1624, largely with funds donated by [[John Williams, Bishop of Lincoln]]. It includes a very fine bay window overlooking the River Cam that has the letters ILCS on it, standing for Iohannes Lincolniensis Custos Sigilli, or John of Lincoln, Keeper of the Seal. The remaining parts of Third Court were added in 1669 - 1672.


Denis has been a volunteer with the Heart and Stroke Foundation, Multiple Sclerosis Society, Canadian Cancer Society, and has been a health care champion for patients throughout Calgary. He has also served as a Director of the Institute of Public Sector Accountability, a group that promotes government accountability.<ref name="leg bio">{{cite web|url=http://www.assembly.ab.ca/net/index.aspx?p=mla_bio&rnumber=07|title=Denis' Legislative Assembly of Alberta biography}}</ref>
;'''The New Buildings (1831-1967)''':Connecting Third Court to New Court is New Bridge, commonly known as the [[Bridge of Sighs (Cambridge)|Bridge of Sighs]]. It is named after the [[Bridge of Sighs]] in Venice, which it resembles. The other bridge over the river, the Kitchen Bridge (named after the lane it followed the line of, Kitchen Lane), which is to the south of the Bridge of Sighs, was partly based on plans made by Sir [[Christopher Wren]], and is therefore also known as the Wren Bridge.


==Election results==
:The 19th century neo-Gothic New Court, probably one of the most famous buildings in Cambridge, was the first College building on the west side of the river. It was designed by [[Thomas Rickman]] and [[Henry Hutchinson]] and built between 1826 and 1831. It was built mainly as a result of the need to accommodate the increased numbers of students. Its prominent location (especially when seen from the river) and flamboyant design have led it to be nicknamed the "wedding cake."
{| class="wikitable"

| colspan="3" align=center|'''[[Alberta general election, 2008|2008 Alberta general election]] results ([[Calgary Egmont|Calgary-Egmont]])'''
:New Court connects to the Fisher Building, named after [[John Fisher]]; the Cripps Building, named after its benefactor, the [[Cripps Foundation]] (see [http://www.queens.cam.ac.uk/default.asp?MIS=864 Sir Humphrey Cripps]); the School of Pythagoras; and Merton Hall.
| colspan="2"|<font style="font-size: 90%;">'''Turnout 43.7%'''</font>

|-
:The Fisher Building was designed by [[Peter Boston]] and completed in [[1987]].
| colspan="2" rowspan="1" align="left" valign="top" | '''Affiliation'''

| valign="top" |'''Candidate'''
:The Cripps Building was built in [[1966]]-[[1967|67]] to meet a post-[[1945]] expansion in the numbers of students. It has two courts, and was designed by [[architect]]s [[Philip Powell]] and [[Hidalgo Moya]]. The building received many awards, and has become a famous example of later 20th-century architectural style.
| valign="top" |'''Votes'''

| valign="top" |'''%'''<br>
The School of Pythagoras was built around 1200, predating the foundation of the College ([[1511]]). Merton Hall is so called because from [[1266]]<ref>{{cite book | title=A History of Merton College | author = Martin, G.H | year = 1997 | publisher = [[Oxford University Press]] | isbn = 0-19-920183-8 | pages = pp.17 and 342 }}</ref> until [[1959]] both the School of Pythagoras and Merton Hall were property of [[Merton College, Oxford]].
{{Canadian_politics/party_colours/Progressive Conservatives/row}}

|[[Alberta Progressive Conservative Party|Progressive Conservative]]
==Choir==
|Jonathan Denis
{{main|Choir of St John's College, Cambridge}}
|5414
[[Image:StJohnsCambridge DiningHall.jpg|thumb|right|The 16th century dining hall has a [[hammerbeam roof]].]]
|42%
The choir has a tradition of religious music and since the 1670s has sung the daily services in the College Chapel during the University Term. The services follow the cathedral tradition of the Church of England, [[Evening Prayer (Book of Common Prayer)|Evensong]] being sung during Term six days a week and Sung [[Eucharist]] on Sunday mornings. The boys of the choir are all educated at the St John's College School. During university vacations the choir carries out engagements elsewhere. Recent tours have taken it to places including Holland, the USA and France. The choir has made a large number of recordings.
{{Canadian_politics/party_colours/Liberal/row}}

|[[Alberta Liberal Party|Liberal]]
The men of the choir, or choral scholars, also form their own close harmony group, The Gentlemen of St John's. Their repertoire spans the 15th century through to the modern day, and concert tours have taken them to Europe, the USA and Japan. They provide a mixture of classical a capella music and folksongs, as well as covers of recently chart hits and light-hearted entertainment.
|Cathie Williams

|3257
==College life==
|25%
[[Image:StJohnsCambNewCourt.jpg|thumb|left|220px|St John's College New Court (19th-century)]]
{{Canadian_politics/party_colours/NDP/row}}

|[[Alberta New Democratic Party|NDP]]
The College is on [[the Backs]], the area of College parkland on the banks of the river Cam, providing a particularly beautiful setting. This allows the college to maintain a significant fleet of [[punt (boat)|punt]]s in its purpose-built punt pool behind the Cripps Building.
|Jason Nishiyama

|451
The School of Pythagoras predates the College proper, and was originally a private house. It is said to be the oldest building continuously in use by a university in Britain. In addition to its Nobel prize winners, St John's is usually placed highly in the [[Tompkins Table]] of undergraduate degree results, but has not been in the top ten since 2001.
|3%

{{Canadian_politics/party_colours/Canadian Alliance/row}}
[[Image:St johns rear buildings.jpg|thumb|right|220px|View over the rear buildings of St John's from the Chapel.]]
|[[Wildrose Alliance Party of Alberta|Wildrose Alliance]]

|[[Barry Chase]]
The 'Red Boys' is the nickname of the 1<sup>st</sup> XV Men's Rugby Team, and the Red Boy is the name of the red jumper they wear. The 'Red Girls' is the nickname of the 1<sup>st</sup> Women's Rugby Team. St John's College Men's Rugby Club has won the Division One League title for the last eight years in a row and the cuppers trophy for the last four making it one of the most successful collegiate rugby teams in Cambridge's history. The women's team has also experienced success this year with them securing the inter collegiate cup on the same day that the red boys won the double for the fourth year in a row.
|676

|5%
The college rowing club, the [[Lady Margaret Boat Club]] (LMBC), was founded in 1825. Despite many gruesome rumours concerning the name of the club, it was merely the most successful of the many boat clubs established in the College in the 19th century. In a similar fashion the traditional rival of the LMBC, the Boat Club of [[Trinity College, Cambridge|Trinity College]], is known as '[[First and Third]]' in a reference to its formation from two original clubs.
{{Canadian_politics/party_colours/Green/row}}

|[[Green Party of Alberta|Green]]
Every year the college awards scholarships to a handful of graduate students under the Benefactors' Scholarships Scheme.<ref>[http://www.joh.cam.ac.uk/admissions/graduate_admissions/finances/scholarships/ Benefactors' Scholarships Scheme]</ref> The scholarships include the Craik Scholarship, the J.C. Hall Scholarship, the Luisa Aldobrandini Studentship Competition, the Paskin Scholarship and the Pelling Scholarship. Competition for these scholarships is very fierce as students from any country reading for any graduate degree&mdash;not only members of the college&mdash;can apply.
|Mark McGillvray

|579
==St John's and the abolition of the British slave trade==
|4%
Several of St John's graduates were deeply involved in the efforts to abolish the British Slave Trade which culminated in the Act of 1807. In particular, [[Thomas Clarkson]], [[William Wilberforce]], [[Thomas Gisborne]] and [[Thomas Babington]] were active in the [[Committee for the Abolition of the Slave Trade]] and other abolitionist efforts.<ref>[http://www.joh.cam.ac.uk/chapel_and_choir/bicentenary_2007/ St John's Bicentenary 2007]</ref>
{{Canadian_politics/party_colours/Independents/row}}

|Independent
As part of the commemoration of the bicentenary of the 1807 Act, and as a representative of one of the [[Ivy League]] universities offering American historical perspective on the [[Triangular Trade]], President [[Ruth J. Simmons]] of [[Brown University]] (herself a direct descendant of American slaves) gave a public lecture at St John's College entitled "Hidden in Plain Sight: Slavery and Justice in Rhode Island"<ref>[http://www.stjohnscollegecambridge.co.uk/index.php?id=48 St John's College Webcasts - Listen to webcasts from the College<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> on [[February 16]] [[2007]]. St John's College hosted some of the key events relating to the commemoration,<ref>[http://www.admin.cam.ac.uk/news/press/dpp/2007021501 University of Cambridge: 15 February 2007: Cambridge marks 200th anniversary of slavery's abolition<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> including an academic conference and a Gospel Mass in the College Chapel with the London Adventist Chorale.
|[[Craig Chandler]]

|2637
==May Ball==
|20%
St John's traditionally holds its annual [[may ball]] on the Tuesday of [[May Week]], and it is one of the most sought after balls in Cambridge. In recent years, tickets have only been available to Johnians and their guests. Highlights include an extravagant fireworks display and a variety of musical acts - in 2008 including [[Dizzee Rascal]] and [[Lesley Garrett]]. (More details on past acts can be seen on the [[May Ball]] page).
|-

|colspan="3" align ="right"|'''Total'''
==Famous alumni==
|'''13014'''
''See also [[:Category:Alumni of St John's College, Cambridge]]''<br>
|'''100%'''
''See also [[:Category:Fellows of St John's College, Cambridge]]''
|}


===Prime Ministers of the United Kingdom===

* [[Charles Watson-Wentworth, 2nd Marquess of Rockingham]], Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1765-1766, and 1782

*[[Frederick John Robinson, 1st Viscount Goderich|Frederick John Robinson, 1st Earl of Ripon]], Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1827-1828

*[[George Hamilton-Gordon, 4th Earl of Aberdeen]], Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1852-1855

*[[Henry John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston]], Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1855-1858, and 1859-1865

===Politics===

[[Image:SINGHUSA.jpg|thumb|200px|right|Famous former student of St John's College, the current [[Prime Minister of India]] Dr [[Manmohan Singh]] ''(See also: [[Dr Manmohan Singh Scholarship]])'']]
[[Image:William-Cecil-1st-Baron-Burghley.jpg|thumb|right|200px|[[William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley]], Elizabeth I's chief advisor, attended St John's College from 1535.]]
*[[William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley]], chief advisor to [[Queen Elizabeth I of England]]
*[[Thomas Clarkson]], [[abolitionist]] (1760&ndash;1846)
*[[Nigel Dodds]], [[Democratic Unionist Party]] MP, MLA
*[[Thomas Fairfax, 3rd Baron Fairfax of Cameron]], [[English Civil War]] General and Commander-in-Chief
*[[Richard Hill of Hawkstone]], diplomatist, statesman and public servant (1655&ndash;1727)
*[[Suematsu Kencho]], Japanese Minister of Communication and the Interior, [[statesman]], [[journalist]] and [[historian]]
*[[Dudley Ryder, 1st Earl of Harrowby]], [[politician]]
*Sir [[Francis Bell (New Zealand Prime Minister)]], [[Prime Minister]] of [[New Zealand]]
*Sir [[Michael Scholar]], former [[Permanent Secretary]] at the [[Department of Trade and Industry]], now President of [[St John's College, Oxford]]
*[[Manmohan Singh]], Current [[Prime Minister of India]] ''(2004&ndash;)'', [[Honorary Fellow]]. ''(See also: [[Dr Manmohan Singh Scholarship]])''
*[[Robert Stewart, Viscount Castlereagh|Robert Stewart, 1st Viscount Castlereagh]], politician
*[[Malcolm Moss]], Conservative Member of Parliament for North East Cambridgeshire (1987-) (Parliamentary Under-Secretary Northern Ireland Office 1994-1997)
*[[Sarah Teather]], [[Member of Parliament|MP]] for [[Brent East (UK Parliament constituency)|Brent East]], Liberal Democrat Education Spokesman
*[[George William Frederick Villiers, 4th Earl of Clarendon]], English diplomat and statesman
*[[Thomas Wentworth, 1st Earl of Strafford]], notable English statesman during the reign of [[Charles I of England|Charles I]]
*[[William Wilberforce]], [[Member of Parliament]], [[abolitionist]]
*Professor [[Walter Woon]], Attorney-General, [[Singapore]]
*[[John Williams (archbishop)|John Williams]], [[Bishop of Lincoln]] (1621&ndash;41), [[Lord Chancellor]] (1621&ndash;25), [[Archbishop of York]] (1641&ndash;50)

===Nobel Prize Winners===
*Sir [[Edward Appleton]], winner of the Nobel prize for Physics, for discovering the [[F region|Appleton layer]]
*Sir [[John Cockcroft]] KCB, [[Nobel laureate|Nobel prize-winning]] physicist, who first split the atom
*[[Allan Cormack]], [[Nobel laureate]] in Medicine or Physiology for the invention of the CAT scan
*[[Paul Dirac]], [[Nobel laureate]] in Physics and one of the founders of [[Quantum Mechanics]]
*Sir [[Nevill Francis Mott]], [[Nobel laureate|awarded]] [[Nobel prize for Physics]] for work on the behaviour of electrons in magnetic solids
*[[Abdus Salam]], [[Nobel laureate]] in Physics, for unifying the electromagnetic force and the weak force
*[[Frederick Sanger]], molecular biologist and one of only four double Nobel Prize winners
*[[Maurice Wilkins]], awarded Nobel prize for Medicine or Physiology with Watson and Crick for discovering the structure of DNA

===Science, mathematics, and technology===
[[Image:Dirac.gif|left|140px|thumb|[[Paul Dirac]], the discoverer of [[antimatter]], attended St John's College from 1923, winning the Nobel prize for Physics in 1933.]]
[[Image:Sir John Douglas Cockcroft.jpg|left|140px|thumb|[[Sir John Douglas Cockcroft]], who received the Nobel Prize in Physics for splitting the atom, attended St John's College from 1924, and was elected a Fellow in 1929.]]

*[[John Couch Adams]], mathematician and discoverer of Neptune
*[[George Alfred Barnard|George Barnard]], statistician known for his work on the foundations of statistics.
*[[John Browne, Baron Browne of Madingley]], FRS; former Chief Executive of BP
*Sir [[David Cox (statistician)|David Cox]], prominent statistician
*[[John Dee (mathematician)|John Dee]], [[mathematics|mathematician]], [[astronomy|astronomer]], [[astrology|astrologer]], [[geography|geographer]], and consultant to Queen [[Elizabeth I of England|Elizabeth I]]
*[[Fearon Fallows]], astronomer
*[[Thomas Fink]], physicist and author
*[[William Gilbert]], physician and natural philosopher, discoverer of the earth's magnetic field and inventor of the word 'electricity'
*[[William Gregor]], discoverer of titanium.
*[[David Harvey]], Marxist geographer, social scientist
*[[William Heberden]], British physician, who gave the first clinical description (1768) of angina pectoris and demonstrated that chicken pox was different from smallpox
*[[John Herschel]], mathematician and astronomer
*[[Robert Hinde]], Professor of Zoology, and former master of St. Johns.
*Sir [[Fred Hoyle]], pioneering but controversial cosmologist who first used the term 'Big Bang'.
*Sir [[Harold Jeffreys]], applied mathematician and geophysicist
*[[Joseph Larmor]], mathematician and physicist
*[[Alfred Marshall]], economist
*Sir [[Charles Algernon Parsons]], inventor of the steam turbine
*Sir [[Roger Penrose]], mathematical physicist and philosopher
*[[Vikram Sarabhai]], father of the Indian space programme
*[[James Joseph Sylvester]], mathematician
*[[Brook Taylor]], mathematician
*Sir [[Maurice Wilkes]], one of the founding fathers of modern computer science, and inventor of the first stored program digital computer.

===Literature===
[[Image:Benjamin_Robert_Haydon_002.jpg|thumb|200px|right|[[William Wordsworth]] attended St John's College from 1787]]
*[[Douglas Adams]], author
*[[Samuel Butler (1835-1902)]], author
*[[William Wordsworth]], poet
*[[Thomas Nashe]], pamphleteer, satirist & playwright
*[[Robert Herrick (poet)|Robert Herrick]], poet.
*[[Jinyong|Louis Cha]], famous Chinese novelist and newspaper editor
*[[Frederic Raphael]], screenwriter, novelist and journalist

===Other===
*[[Jamie Bamber]], actor
*Sir [[Cecil Beaton]], photographer
*[[Chris Brasher]], Olympic gold medallist runner, founder of the London Marathon
*[[Mike Brearley]], cricketer, England Captain
*[[Logie Bruce Lockhart]], Scotland rugby footballer
*[[Damon Buffini]], head of private equity firm [[Permira]]
*[[William George Constable]], art historian
*[[Rob Andrew]], England rugby footballer
*[[D'Ewes Coke]], clergyman and colliery master
*[[Kikuchi Dairoku]], first Japanese graduate of Cambridge University
*[[Hugh Dennis]], Actor/ Comedian
* Dr [[Jonathan Shin]], Prince [[Shin de Pyeongsan]], member of the [[Pyeongsan Shin clan]]
*Dr [[Peter Carnley]], Archbishop of Perth 1981-2005, Primate of Australia 2000-2005
*Dr [[Frederick Donald Coggan, Baron Coggan]], [[Archbishop of Canterbury]] 1974-1980
*[[Charles Sydney Gibbes]], English tutor of [[Tsarevich Alexei Nikolaevich of Russia]].
*[[Andrew Gilligan]], controversial journalist
*[[Saint Richard Gwyn]], martyr
* Sir [[Harry Hinsley]], historian and World War II codebreaker
* [[George Guest]], Welsh choral conductor, college organist 1951-1991
*[[Herbert Howells]], English composer, college organist during WWII.
* Dr [[John Scott (organist)|John Scott]], [[LVO]], English organist, organ scholar 1974-78, organist of [[St Paul's Cathedral|St Paul's]] 1990-2004
*Sir [[Derek Jacobi]], actor
*[[Donald MacAlister]], physician and academic
*Dr [[Jonathan Miller]], physician, theatre and opera director and television presenter
*Prof [[Stephen Sykes]], theologian, former Dean of St John's and [[Bishop of Ely]], and principal of [[St John's College, Durham]]
*[[Kenneth Thomson]], of Canada's wealthiest family and [[Thomson Corp.]] (information services)
*[[Sid Waddell]], darts commentator
*Sir [[Thomas Wyatt (poet)|Thomas Wyatt]] 1503-1542, courtier and poet
*[[Edward Latymer]]
*[[G. R. S. Mead]]
*[[Tshilidzi Marwala]], academic and businessman
*A more extensive list is located on the [http://www.joh.cam.ac.uk/johnian/biographical/history/ St John's website]


==References==
==References==
<references/>


{{reflist|2}}
==External links==
{{Commonscat}}
*[http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&q=&ie=UTF8&t=k&om=1&ll=52.208392,0.116258&spn=0.001538,0.004962 St Johns College on Google maps]
*[http://www.joh.cam.ac.uk St John's College]
*[http://www.stjohnscollegecambridge.co.uk Choir of St John's College webcasts]
*[http://www.ofchoristers.net/Chapters/CambridgeStJohns.htm A history of St John's choir school and choristers]
*[http://www.sjcjcr.com St John's College JCR Website]


{{University of Cambridge}}


{{Alberta MLAs}}
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[[Category:St John's College, Cambridge| ]]
[[Category:1975 births]]
[[Category:Colleges of the University of Cambridge]]
[[Category:Alberta Progressive Conservative MLAs]]
[[Category:1511 establishments]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Educational institutions established in the 1510s]]


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Revision as of 20:24, 13 October 2008

Jonathan Denis
File:Jonathan Denis in 2008.jpg
MLA for Calgary Egmont
Assumed office
2008
Preceded byDenis Herard
Personal details
Born (1975-09-22) September 22, 1975 (age 48)
Regina, Saskatchewan
Diedsmall
Resting placesmall
Political partyProgressive Conservative
Parent
  • small
ResidencesCalgary, Alberta
Alma materUniversity of Regina, University of Saskatchewan
OccupationLawyer, businessperson

Jonathan Denis (born September 22, 1975 in Regina, Saskatchewan) is a Canadian politician and current Member of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta representing the constituency of Calgary-Egmont as a Progressive Conservatives. He was first elected in the 2008 provincial election.

Early life

Denis was born September 22, 1975 in Regina. He pursued a university education, obtaining a commerce degree from the University of Regina in 1997 and a law degree from the University of Saskatchewan in 2000. Prior to becoming an MLA, Denis was a senior associate, specializing in government relations, at Miller Thomson LLP, a major national law firm. He was also the President of a national communications firm which he founded with Member of Parliament Pierre Poilievre.

During the boom in Calgary real estate in the early 2000's, Denis made close to a million dollars in residential real estate.

Political career

Denis first became interested in politics as a teenager. In 1995, he was a staffer of former Saskatchewan Leader of the Opposition, Lynda Haverstock; however, he later abandoned the Liberal party in favour of the Conservatives when the Liberals joined forces with the socialist NDP to form a coalition government. Denis first sought public office in the 2008 provincial election in the constituency of Calgary-Egmont and received 44% of the vote. During the campaign, Denis received endorsements from Conservative Members of Parliament Jason Kenney and Lee Richardson, whose ridings overlap upon Calgary-Egmont, as well as Calgary Alderman Ric McIver and provincial cabinet minister Ted Morton. He currently serves as a member of the Cabinet Policy Committee on Health, the Standing Committee on Health, the Standing Committee on Public Accounts, the Land-Use Framework MLA Committee, the Alaska/Alberta Bilateral Council, and the Private Members Business House Strategy Committee. In June 2008, Premier Stelmach appointed Denis as the shadow MLA for Calgary-Currie.

Personal life

Denis has been a volunteer with the Heart and Stroke Foundation, Multiple Sclerosis Society, Canadian Cancer Society, and has been a health care champion for patients throughout Calgary. He has also served as a Director of the Institute of Public Sector Accountability, a group that promotes government accountability.[1]

Election results

2008 Alberta general election results (Calgary-Egmont) Turnout 43.7%
Affiliation Candidate Votes %

Template:Canadian politics/party colours/Progressive Conservatives/row

Progressive Conservative Jonathan Denis 5414 42%

Template:Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row

Liberal Cathie Williams 3257 25%

Template:Canadian politics/party colours/NDP/row

NDP Jason Nishiyama 451 3%

Template:Canadian politics/party colours/Canadian Alliance/row

Wildrose Alliance Barry Chase 676 5%

Template:Canadian politics/party colours/Green/row

Green Mark McGillvray 579 4%

Template:Canadian politics/party colours/Independents/row

Independent Craig Chandler 2637 20%
Total 13014 100%

References

  1. ^ "Denis' Legislative Assembly of Alberta biography".