His twenty-five years on the Interstate Commerce Commission remained a record until surpassed by Balthasar H. Meyer, who served 28 years from 1911 to 1939.
Russ Meyer | Meyer Lansky | Meyer Schapiro | Joyce Meyer | Roelf Meyer | Urban Meyer | Nicholas Meyer | Hans Urs von Balthasar | Balthasar | Stephenie Meyer | Paul Meyer | Egon Meyer | Russ Meyer's | Meyer Lutz | Johannes Meyer | Eric Meyer | Eric A. Meyer | Christopher Meyer | Stephen C. Meyer | Sabine Meyer | Philipp Meyer | Eve Meyer | Conrad Ferdinand Meyer | Breckin Meyer | Yves Meyer | Werner Meyer-Eppler | Paul Meyer (clarinetist) | Meyer Werft | Meyer Corporation | Meyer Berger |
He has supervised numerous PhD students who are now famous computer scientists; these include Nancy Lynch, Leonid Levin, Jeanne Ferrante, Charles Rackoff, Larry Stockmeyer, David Harel, Joseph Halpern, and John C. Mitchell.
:For the New York judge, see Bernard S. Meyer.
In 1979, he was appointed by Governor Hugh L. Carey to the Court of Appeals, to the seat vacated by the appointment of Lawrence H. Cooke as Chief Judge.
Schapiro, Meyer, Selected Papers, volume 3, Late Antique, Early Christian and Mediaeval Art, 1980, Chatto & Windus, London, ISBN 0-7011-2514-4 (includes The Religious Meaning of the Ruthwell Cross (1944), etc.
In 1935 against Notre Dame before a capacity crowd of 78,114 in Yankee Stadium, it was Meyer's 41-yard first-quarter TD pass and stellar performance in a 6-6 tie that brought him into the limelight.
•
This time the Army ace outdueled famed Columbia passer and future Chicago Bears Hall of Fame quarterback Sid Luckman as the Black Knights prevailed, 27-16, over the Lions.
•
The Meyer family relocated to the Lehigh Valley area in time for Monk to play football, basketball and baseball at Allentown High School.
Web design consultant Eric A. Meyer focused upon the letter, itself: "Considered Harmful Essays Considered Harmful".
Daniel P. Meyer (born 1965), federal supervisory investigator specializing in protection of whistleblowers
After earning his Ph.D., Dr. Meyer worked with Saul Sternberg at Bell Labs before returning to the faculty of the Psychology Department of the University of Michigan in 1977.
In May 2010, the Discovery Institute released a free 105 page eBook titled Signature of Controversy: Responses to Critics of Signature in the Cell edited by Klinghoffer with chapters by Discovery Institute fellows David Berlinski, Casey Luskin, Stephen C. Meyer, Paul Nelson, Jay Richards and Richard Sternberg.
The Web Standards movement pioneered by Glenn Davis, George Olsen, Jeffrey Zeldman, Steven Champeon, Todd Fahrner, Eric A. Meyer, Tantek Çelik, Dori Smith, Tim Bray, Jeffrey Veen, and other members of the Web Standards Project in the 1990s replaced bandwidth-heavy tag soup with light, semantic markup and progressive enhancement, with the goal of making web content "accessible to all".
Meyer earned a number of nicknames through the years, including "Mr. Football," "The Saturday Fox," "Old Iron Pants" and "Old Dutch," in reference to his nephew, L. D. Meyer, who played for him at TCU and was known at "Little Dutch."
His daughter, Nancy, is an actress who is married to Michael Cartellone, the drummer for the band Lynrd Skynyrd.
Eric K. Meyer (born 1953), University of Illinois journalism professor
The Global Multimedia Protocols Group (GMPG) was founded in March 2003 by Tantek Çelik, Eric A. Meyer, and Matt Mullenweg.
She was appointed to the Supreme Court in 2002 by Governor Jesse Ventura, and was sworn in on August 5 of that year.
Jacob O. Meyer (1934–2010), founder and directing elder of a small fundamentalist Christian sect
He wrote extensively in his monthly magazines The Sacred Name Broadcaster and the The Narrow Way, created the conservative Sacred Name Bible, the Sacred Scriptures Bethel Edition and published several books.
General Meyer then returned to a tactical flying unit in August 1950 when he assumed command of the 4th Fighter Wing at New Castle, Delaware.
•
His foresight in having the 487th squadron preflighted and ready to take off on 1 January averted a major disaster when the field was attacked by fighters of Jagdgeschwader 11 in the massive aerial assault known as Operation Bodenplatte.
He died on October 20, 2009 after a long period of battling with Parkinson's disease.
Joseph A. Meyer (c. 1895–1970), American football and basketball coach
He kicked the winning field goal in the famous 3-2 TCU victory over LSU in the 1936 Sugar Bowl.
•
The next year, he scored all the points in TCU's 16-6 victory over Marquette in the Cotton Bowl Classic.
In 1953 while assigned in Massachusetts, Meyer met Dr. Ralph Bussler, an osteopathic doctor who had established a business making 54mm lead figures, "Tin soldiers" (soldiers, horses, and weapons) for collectors and war game enthusiasts.
Leo J. Meyer, U.S. Army officer and Combat Infantryman Badge recipient
Schapiro, Meyer, "The Joseph Scenes on the Maximianus Throne", in Selected Papers, volume 3, Late Antique, Early Christian and Mediaeval Art, 1980, Chatto & Windus, London, ISBN 0701125144, also on JSTOR from the Gazette des Beaux-Arts, 1952
John S. Meyer (-2011) is called the "founder of neurology in Japan".
Meyer, Karl E. and Shareen Blair Brysac, Kingmakers: the Invention of the Modern Middle East, W.W. Norton, 2008.
Late in that year, he wrote the lyrics for and produced the Chicago Bears' novelty record, "The Super Bowl Shuffle".
It was founded as the "Songwriters Protective Association" by Billy Rose, George W. Meyer and Edgar Leslie.
The Mark of the Golden Dragon is a historical fiction novel by L.A. Meyer.
However, by May 1982, the project was put under Meyer's control in PMS 400, with a lead ship awarded 1985 to Bath Iron Works, Bath, Maine.
•
Withington delivered a report to the Secretary on May 15, 1965, recommending a phased array S-Band radar to search and track air targets, six slaved X-band radars for illumination and fire control, a digital control system compatible with the Naval Tactical Data System, a standard missile that could be directed in flight, and a dual-rail launcher.
Stephen C. Meyer (1980), executive officer and co-founder of the Discovery Institute, a Seattle based think tank promoting the inclusion of Intelligent Design in the biological sciences, and one-time philosophy professor at Whitworth.
He was the unsuccessful candidate for election in 1972 to the Ninety-third Congress.
•
He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1960 to the Eighty-seventh Congress, when he was defeated by Republican Governor Robert Stafford.
•
He was elected as a Democrat to the Eighty-sixth Congress (January 3, 1959 – January 3, 1961), defeating the Republican candidate, former Governor Harold Arthur.
William H. Meyer (29 December 1914 - 16 December 1983), member US House of Representatives