Bringing the center to Penn State was the idea of alumnus Lawrence G. Foster, who retired as corporate vice-president of public relations at Johnson & Johnson.
World Trade Center | center | Arthur Conan Doyle | King Arthur | Committee of Public Safety | Arthur Miller | New York Public Library | Arthur C. Clarke | Arthur | Public school (government funded) | Kennedy Space Center | Arthur Ransome | public school | public | Jimmy Page | Walker Art Center | Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars | Public Enemy | public relations | Port Arthur | GNU General Public License | public domain | Marshall Space Flight Center | Public-access television | Chester A. Arthur | Rockefeller Center | Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center | Arthur Balfour | Goddard Space Flight Center | Arthur Sullivan |
Arthur W. Barton (1899–1976), headmaster, academic author and football referee
Arthur W. Chickering, educational researcher in the field of student affairs
Arthur W. Hummel, Sr. (1884–1975), Christian missionary to China and Sinologist
•
Arthur W. Hummel, Jr. (1920–2001), American diplomat, ambassador to China, and son of Arthur W. Hummel, Sr.
Arthur W. Mitchell (1883–1968), first African-American elected to the United States House of Representatives as a member of the Democratic Party
Aleshire was elected as a Democrat to the Seventy-fifth Congress (January 3, 1937-January 3, 1939).
•
He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1938 to the Seventy-sixth Congress.
From 1922 to 1925 he was a research student at the Cavendish Laboratory (in Lord Rutherford's group).
•
He was a top-class football referee: he refereed the Semi-final between Austria and Poland in the 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin, and was linesman in the 1936 FA Cup Final between Arsenal and Sheffield United.
In the middle of the land was Indian Field which was the home for the Montaukett tribe.
•
Benson founded the Brooklyn Gas Light company in 1823, when Brooklyn had 9,000 people.
He was a Republican and a Unitarian, a Freemason, serving as Grand Master of Masons (1943–1944) and a member of the American Bar Association and Theta Delta Chi.
After studying at Guelph Collegiate, in 1888 a young Arthur Cutten left home, making his way to the United States where he settled in the rapidly growing city of Chicago.
Mackenzie was born at Nine Mile River, Hants County, Nova Scotia, the son of Benjamin MacKenzie and Minnie Scott.
Mitchell's suit was advanced to the U.S. Supreme Court, which ruled that the railroad violated the Interstate Commerce Act.
He managed a hunting club, flew some charter work for Mustang Aviation in Dallas then did some courtroom reporting for the Bosque County newspaper.
•
Arthur Warren Murray was born to Charles C. "Chester" and Elsie Murray in the small town of Cresson nestled in the Allegheny Mountains of Pennsylvania on December 26, 1918.
He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1918 to the Sixty-sixth Congress.
As a document of company disclosure, the book made a list of the current directors which at that time included Charles Francis Adams III, Winthrop W. Aldrich, Lewis H. Brown, John W. Davis, W. Cameron Forbes, Myron C. Taylor, and Daniel Willard.
He later went to work for the theatrical entrepreneur Philip Lytton, performing in a number of shows including The Waybacks.
He donated a cup - The Arthur Reeve Cup - which is played for in the Wellington Secondary Schools rugby competition in the Under 80 kg grade.
Arthur Wellington Woodworth, also known as the Honorable Arthur Woodworth (b. May 7, 1823), was the founder and President of the First National Bank of Enosburgh, a Vermont State Senator and Representative, and member of the Woodworth political family.
Chickering's Theory of Identity Development, as articulated by Arthur W. Chickering explains the process of identity development.
Reynolds received the Samuel Eliot Morison Award for Naval Literature from the Naval Order of the United States, and the Admiral Arthur W. Radford Award for Excellence in Naval Aviation History and Literature from the Naval Aviation Museum Foundation in Pensacola, Florida.
In 1954 Broger was recruited by Admiral Arthur W. Radford to develop an ideological framework for the U.S. Military.