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・ Jonathan Reed
・ Jonathan Reed encounter
・ Jonathan Reed Winkler
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・ Jonathan Rees-Williams
・ Jonathan Reguero
・ Jonathan Reid
・ Jonathan Reis
・ Jonathan Remington
・ Jonathan Rendall
・ Jonathan Overend
・ Jonathan Oxer
・ Jonathan P. Cushing
・ Jonathan P. Dolliver
・ Jonathan P. Folsom
Jonathan P. Jackson
・ Jonathan P. Stoye
・ Jonathan Page
・ Jonathan Page (cyclist)
・ Jonathan Page (footballer)
・ Jonathan Paget
・ Jonathan Paiement
・ Jonathan Palma
・ Jonathan Palmer
・ Jonathan Palmer (American football)
・ Jonathan Papelbon
・ Jonathan Paredes
・ Jonathan Paredes (cyclist)
・ Jonathan Paredes (diver)
・ Jonathan Parker


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Jonathan P. Jackson : ウィキペディア英語版
Jonathan P. Jackson

Jonathan Peter Jackson (June 23, 1953 – August 7, 1970)〔(California Deaths, 1940-1997 )〕 is primarily known for initiating an attempt to negotiate the freedom of the Soledad Brothers (including his older brother George) through the kidnapping of Superior Court judge Harold Haley from the Marin County Civic Center in San Rafael, California, an incident in which he was one of four people killed.
==Personal==
Jackson was the youngest of five children born to Lester and Georgia Bea Jackson. Raised in Pasadena, California, he attended St Andrew's School from 1965-1967 for grades seven and eight, La Salle High School for ninth grade (1967–1968), and then Blair High School through his junior year. Jackson was nicknamed "the Man-Child" by his brother George because of his tall, manly stature as a teenager. Jackson's son, Jonathan Jackson Jr., was born eight and a half months after his father's death. As a writer living in San Francisco, California, Jackson Jr. eventually wrote the foreword to the reissue of George Jackson's ''Prison Letters''.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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