Cook retired from the senate in 2006, and joined the Rell ticket running for the post of state comptroller, losing to Nancy Wyman.
Andrew Jackson | Andrew Lloyd Webber | John Maynard Keynes | Andrew Carnegie | Andrew Johnson | Hurricane Andrew | Maynard Ferguson | Andrew Wyeth | Prince Andrew, Duke of York | Andrew Marvell | Andrew Sullivan | Andrew | Andrew W. Mellon Foundation | Andrew Lang | Andrew Loog Oldham | Andrew Davies | Andrew Cuomo | Saint Andrew | Andrew Rosindell | Andrew Motion | John Maynard Smith | Andrew Weil | Andrew Stevens | Andrew Hill | Andrew Young | Andrew Lincoln | Andrew Kötting | Andrew Hamilton | Andrew Davies (writer) | Andrew W.K. |
Andrew Michael Allen was born on 4 August 1955 in Richboro, Pennsylvania He graduated from Archbishop Wood Catholic High School in 1973, following an education at Richboro Junior High currently Richboro Middle School, and was interviewed in 2003 for the school's newspaper, The Viking Voice.
Dr. Manis recently received the Lillian Smith Book Award from the Southern Regional Council for his book, A Fire You Can't Put Out.
In November 2010, Medallion Financial Corp., as part of an investment group which includes Richard Petty and Douglas G. Bergeron, signed and closed sale on racing aseets of one of NASCAR's great names, Richard Petty Motorsports.
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In 2008 Murstein with former baseball star Hank Aaron and former New York Governor Mario Cuomo, both Medallion Financial board members, and former football star and Congressman Jack Kemp, now deceased, formed a special-purpose acquisition company (SPAC) which raised $230-million to buy a professional sports team.
He has won numerous awards, including the 1989 Leslie Fox Prize for Numerical Analysis, and the SIAM James Wilkinson and Germund Dahlquist Prizes in 1997.
Andrew M. T. Moore, archeologist at the Rochester Institute of Technology
Andrew M. Stuart, mathematics professor at the University of Warwick
Maynard was elected as a Democrat to the Fifty-seventh and to the four succeeding Congresses (March 4, 1901-March 3, 1911).
He worked as a manufacturer of plumbing supplies and was a director of the F.W. Webb Company, Fidelity Trust Company, Hibernia Savings Bank, and the McAuliffe Company.
In addition to Menis Ketchum, they were former Supreme Court of Appeals Justice Margaret Workman, the first woman to serve on the state's high court, WVU law professor and ballot access advocate Bob Bastress, and incumbent Justice Elliott "Spike" Maynard.
(However, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Wooley v. Maynard (1977) that those who object to the motto may tape over or cover up the words, either partially or completely.
Frank H. Maynard, this old-time cowboy author lived in Towanda for a time in the 1870s.
Maynard died on August 28, 1832, of cholera while preparing in New York City to attend the session of the Court for the Correction of Errors (then the highest court in the State, composed of the Chancellor, the Supreme Court justices and the State Senate); and was buried at the Hamilton College Cemetery in Clinton, NY.