He gave collections of rare books and fine printing to Mills College, Stanford University, the University of California and the San Francisco Public Library.
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Albert M. Bender (1866–1941) was a leading patron of the arts in San Francisco in the 1920s and 1930s, who played a key role in the early career of Ansel Adams and was one of Diego Rivera's first American patrons.
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 | Bender | 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 M. Craig (born 1927), American professor of Japanese history
He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1952 to the Eighty-third Congress.
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Cole was elected as a Republican to the Seventy-ninth and to the three succeeding Congresses (January 3, 1945 – January 3, 1953).
His research focused primarily on the transition from the Edo period through the Meiji period.
Albert M. Todd (1850–1931), businessman and politician from the U.S. state of Michigan
It was named by the Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names (2006) after Professor Michael L. Bender at the Department of Geosciences (Geochemistry), Princeton University (earlier at the Graduate School of Oceanography, University of Rhode Island), whose paleoclimate research from 1984 centered on the glacial-interglacial climate change and the global carbon cycle.
After spending 1953–1959 teaching in the Marshall Islands in what was then the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands under U.S. administration, he returned to teach linguistics and anthropology at Goshen College in 1960–1962 before completing a Ph.D. in linguistics from Indiana University in 1963.
These included Louis Sockalexis (Cleveland Spiders, 1897–1899), Charles Albert (Chief) Bender (primarily the Philadelphia Athletics, 1903–1917), and John (Chief) Meyers (primarily the New York Giants, 1909–1917).
Albert M. Wolters, Creation Regained: Biblical Basics For A Reformational Worldview. Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans (1985).
Travers was sent back from fifteen years in the future (using a copy of the time travel code from Futurama: Bender's Big Score) to stop Nixon from winning this election.
In 1952, she was co-awarded the prestigious Albert M. Bender Award (known informally in the West as the “Little Guggenheim”) which financed a year's work in photography.
He served in the United States House of Representatives from 1939 to 1947 and 1951 to 1954, and also in the U.S. Senate from 1954 to 1957.
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Bender then worked as special assistant to the Secretary of the Interior from June 1957 to May 1958, during which time he campaigned for the incorporation of Alaska as the 49th state.
John R. Bender (1882–1928), American football player and coach, basketball coach, baseball coach
Young professors Harold S. Bender, Ernst Correll and Guy Hershberger were among those active in promoting the concurrent resurrection of the college's Mennonite Historical Society.
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The specialty library was founded in 1906 under the guidance of Harold S. Bender and Ernst Correll.
Published continuously since its conception in 1927 by Harold S. Bender and the Mennonite Historical Society, the journal is now a cooperative publication along with Goshen College and the Associated Mennonite Biblical Seminary.
Bender was first appointed to the Colorado Supreme Court January 2, 1997 by Governor Roy Romer.
A cover of "30 Century Man" by the Jigsaw Seen was used in the animated film Futurama: Bender's Big Score.