Alan Roland (died July 22, 2023) was an American psychoanalyst and author. [1]
The Liberal Party of South Africa was a South African political party from 1953 to 1968.
The term alternative process refers to any non-traditional or non-commercial photographic printing process. Currently, the standard analog photographic printing process for black-and-white photographs is the gelatin silver process. Standard digital processes include the pigment print, and digital laser exposures on traditional color photographic paper.
Martin Stokes is a British ethnomusicologist and King Edward Professor of Music at the King's College London. He has special research interests in ethnomusicology and anthropology, as well as Middle Eastern popular music.
Paul D. Gewirtz is the Potter Stewart Professor of Constitutional Law at Yale Law School and the Director of the Paul Tsai China Center at Yale.
Thompson Island is a 170-acre (69 ha) island in the Dorchester Bay section of Boston Harbor, offshore from downtown Boston, Massachusetts. It is located slightly more than 4 miles (6.4 km) from Boston's Long Wharf via boat, while approximately 1 mile (1.6 km) straight-line distance from Boston's Columbia Point.
Sudhir Kakar was an Indian psychoanalyst, novelist and author in the fields of cultural psychology and the psychology of religion.
Valentine v. Chrestensen, 316 U.S. 52 (1942), was a case in which the Supreme Court of the United States ruled that commercial speech in public thoroughfares is not constitutionally protected.
The Huntsville massacre was the Civil War killing of eight men, including Confederate officers, by Union soldiers on January 10, 1863, outside Huntsville, Arkansas. The commanding officer resigned and faced charges, but they were dropped after witnesses for a trial could not be produced. A few months before, Confederates had ambushed 25 Union troops escorting prominent local politician Isaac Murphy's daughters back home, killing most. Murphy's daughters were also robbed repeatedly and constantly harassed.
Betty Binns Fletcher was an American lawyer and judge. She served as a United States circuit judge of the San Francisco-based United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit between 1979 and 2012. Fletcher was one of the first women to become a partner in a major American law firm and the second woman to be appointed to the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.
Kurt Borcherding is a retired American rower. He is one of University of Wisconsin former rowers who are smokejumpers. He is an Alaska Smokejumper.
Michael Murphy Andregg is an American biologist, educator, researcher, and author known for his study of the causes of war, global problems related to war, sustainable development, intelligence ethics and his peace activism. He founded and directed for 30 years a non-profit organization called Ground Zero Minnesota dedicated to "top-quality, non-partisan education for informed democracy and human survival." Andregg has published numerous articles, study guides, documentaries and papers on biology, genetics, technology and contemporary social problems related to armed conflict. He has produced over 50 educational videos on wide-ranging subjects and his national award-winning book, On the Causes of War, was released in November 1997.
The Ministry of Planning and Finance administers Burma's monetary, fiscal policies and national planning.
Larry Lee is an American multimedia artist, curator, and professor at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (SAIC). He works primarily in video, installation and sculptural projects with a strong conceptual approach. His work focuses on political, cultural and historical issues concerning the Asian American experience. He calls this "Orientalia" which he describes as "[having] to do with... the physical and nonphysical, with what people associate with being oriental."
Henri J. Haskell (1843–1921) was the first Montana Attorney General from 1889 to 1897.
Stanford Everett Morse Jr., was a Mississippi lawyer who served two terms in the Mississippi State Senate. Initially a Democrat, Morse became a Republican in 1963 as part of an unsuccessful candidacy for the office of Lieutenant Governor of Mississippi.
Daniel Takawambait was likely the first ordained Native American Christian pastor in North America, and served the church in the praying town of Natick, Massachusetts from 1683 to 1716. Takawambait also advocated for indigenous land rights in colonial Massachusetts, and authored at least one publication.
Neela Vaswani is an American writer of Indian extraction. She was born on the 11th September 1974 in Port Jefferson, New York. She narrated the audio version of I am Malala and won a Grammy for this in 2015. She lives in New York City. She is the founder of the Storylines Project, which she did with the New York Public Library.
Merle Franklin Palmer was a state legislator and judge in Mississippi. He served in the Mississippi House of Representatives from 1960 to 1964 and the Mississippi Senate from 1964 to 1970, when he was appointed to the State Circuit Court. He served as president pro tempore of the Mississippi Senate and was acting governor of the state for part of January 1968.
Rosa Lechner Schupbach was an American economist, philanthropist and former auxiliary police officer of the New York City Police Department. She was primarily known for her work associated with the National Bureau of Economic Research between 1983 and 1990.
De Pury is a family of the Neuchatel Patriciate which has been nobilitated in 1651 by Henri II. d'Orléans, Duke of Longueville and had their origins in Val-de-Ruz. They have been settled in Neuchatel since before 1396. Members of the family held several positions in government, business and industry.
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