Albert L. Osborn (1858–1940), member of the Wisconsin State Assembly
Albert Einstein | Royal Albert Hall | Victoria and Albert Museum | Albert Camus | Prince Albert | Albert Park | Albert Speer | Albert Schweitzer | Albert, Prince Consort | Albert Campion | Albert | Albert Park, Victoria | Albert II, Prince of Monaco | Albert Bierstadt | Albert Finney | Johann Albert Fabricius | Albert R. Broccoli | Albert Lee | Eddie Albert | Albert Einstein College of Medicine | Albert Bandura | Albert Watson (photographer) | Albert Watson | Albert King | Albert II of Belgium | Albert Brooks | Albert I of Belgium | Albert Gleizes | Mount Albert | Albert, Somme |
worked at the US MIT Instrumentation Laboratory (now known as the Draper Lab) during the development of the Apollo Guidance, Navigation, and Control System, or the GN&C.
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The system was designed in two forms, one for the command module and one for the lunar module.
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After leaving Draper Labs, Albert Hopkins, with his wife Lynne Zaccaria, opened a pottery and antiques shop in South Danbury, New Hampshire.
General Nelson A. Miles had been installed by the President of the United States as the first American military governor of the Island, and Francisco Porrata Doria had been elected mayor by the people of Ponce as was the custom for many decades under the old Spanish system.
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Major Myer was appointed by the first military governor of Puerto Rico, Major General Nelson A. Miles.
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A year earlier the United States had invaded the island and installed a military central government based in San Juan.
He attended the public schools and was employed as an ambulance driver for the American Red Cross in 1918 and 1919.
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He was not a candidate for renomination in 1942 to the 78th United States Congress.
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After leaving Congress, he reentered the Army on January 4, 1943, and served two years in Australia and New Guinea.
Albert S. Osborn (1858–1946), considered the father of the science of questioned document examination in North America
In 1978, Haro teamed up with R. L. Osborn to form the very first freestyle BMX team, which made its debut at ABA's Winternationals in Chandler, AZ.
Later he visits Paris for a demonstration with fellow American freestyler R. L. Osborn at the 1st Bicross International in the Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy arena.
The crowd then marched to the City Hall of Paris, where it proclaimed an "insurrectionary government" with Blanqui, Ledru-Rollin, Albert L'Ouvrier, Louis Blanc, Aloysius Huber, Thoré, Pierre Leroux, and Raspail to serve as ministers.
Son of the prominent railroad tycoon William Henry and Virginia Reed Osborn, Henry Fairfield Osborn was born in Fairfield, Connecticut, 1857.
He loaned the city enough to buy the park, and encouraged the Bay Area architect Albert L. Farr to create the Civic Center Plan.
His father was a lawyer, and his maternal grandfather was a prominent airline industry executive who also worked in the Pentagon and was close to former U.S. Secretary of Defense Louis A. Johnson.
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In the private sector, Osborn has been a senior executive for several prominent firms in life sciences and healthcare, including biopharmaceutical companies Cephalon, Dendreon and Onyx Pharmaceuticals, and the cancer services company US Oncology, Inc. (which now operates as part of McKesson Specialty Health, a unit of McKesson Corporation).
John E. Osborn (born 1957), American lawyer, health care industry executive, diplomat
He served for ten years as president of the LDS Church's Granite Stake in Salt Lake County, Utah.