Abraham Lincoln | Abraham | F. Murray Abraham | Battle of the Plains of Abraham | Abraham Ortelius | Abraham Maslow | Arthur Abraham | Abraham Laboriel | Abraham Joshua Heschel | Abraham ben David | Spencer Abraham | Abraham ibn Ezra | Woodruff | Plains of Abraham | John Abraham | Bob Woodruff | Abraham Zapruder | Abraham Lincoln (1920 statue) | Abraham Darby | Stephen Abraham | John Abraham (actor) | Bille Woodruff | Abraham Foxman | Abraham Flexner | Abraham Clark | Abraham Chasanow | Abraham Buford | Abraham Beame | Wilford Woodruff | Samuel Abraham |
Directors included Charles Nibley, William Lewis, Abraham O. Woodruff, Rudger Clawson, William B. Preston, and Joseph Howell, with Charles Nibley as president, Lewis as vice president, and Charles W. Nibley Jr. as secretary.
He bequeathed the university's law school a $15 million endowment; the Woodruff Curriculum at Mercer's Walter F. George School of Law is named in his honor.
George W. Woodruff (1895–1987), American businessman and philanthropist
At 41 years old, Simons was recruited by the Georgia governor Roy Barnes and the Robert W. Woodruff Foundation of Atlanta to be the Founding Director of the Winship Cancer Institute at Emory University.
Votes against conviction: Judges Ward Hunt (Rep.), Lewis B. Woodruff (Rep.), Charles Mason (Rep.), William J. Bacon (Rep.), Thomas W. Clerke and Charles C. Dwight; State Senators Chapman, Banks, Campbell, Hubbard, Humphrey, Kennedy, Mattoon, Morgan, Wicks, Palmer, Parker, Thayer, Van Patten - 19
Another landmark of the area is Mount Holly Cemetery, at the intersection of 12th and Broadway streets, with one of the largest collections of gravesites of notable Arkansans, ranging from past governors, senators and mayors to Confederate spy David Owen Dodd and Arkansas Gazette founder William E. Woodruff.
Robert W. Woodruff (1889–1985), philanthropist and long-time president of The Coca-Cola Company
In 1912, Woodruff defeated incumbent Republican U.S. Representative George A. Loud to be elected as the candidate of the Progressive Party from Michigan's 10th congressional district to the 63rd Congress, serving from March 4, 1913 to March 3, 1915.
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In 1920, Woodruff returned to Congress, elected as a Republican from the same district to the 67th Congress.
He was elected as a candidate of the American Party to the Twenty-ninth Congress (March 4, 1845 – March 4, 1847).
In the process Woodruff became the only Lieutenant Governor in New York history to serve under three different Governors — Frank S. Black, Theodore Roosevelt, and Benjamin Barker Odell, Jr. As Lieutenant Governor, Woodruff took a leadership role in the Association for the Protection of the Adirondacks, helping to protect the forests there from the devastation of clear cutting and large scale damming projects.
He also coached Georgia's first All-American, Bob McWhorter, and George "Kid" Woodruff, who assumed the head coaching duties at Georgia in 1923.