Percy Scott (contemporary innovator for the Royal Navy)
On February 11, 1903 he was succeeded by Bradley A. Fiske as Aide for Operations, and Vreeland finished out his naval career as member of both the General and Joint Boards.
Bill Bradley | Milton Bradley | Omar Bradley | James Bradley | Bradley | Marion Zimmer Bradley | Bradley Wiggins | John Fiske (philosopher) | John Fiske | Allen-Bradley | Milton Bradley Company | M2 Bradley | Harold Bradley | Bradley Cooper | Tom Bradley | Leslie Bradley | Edward R. Bradley | Bradley International Airport | Bradley Beesley | Will Bradley | Willard Fiske | Timothy Bradley | Lynde Bradley | James Bradley Thayer | Harry Lynde Bradley | Bradley E. Schaefer | Billy Fiske | Alexander Fiske-Harrison | Raymond S. Bradley | Lynde & Harry Bradley Technology and Trade School |
Bradley A. Buckles was sworn in as the fifth Director of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF) on December 20, 1999 by Secretary of the Treasury Lawrence Summers.
Having gained the attention of Republican leaders in Congress, in 1999 then Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott, on the recommendation of Senator Mitch McConnell, sent Smith's name to the Clinton White House as the Republican choice to fill an upcoming Republican vacancy on the bipartisan Federal Election Commission, which oversees enforcement of campaign finance laws.
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Bradley A. Smith (born 1958) is an American jurist and legal scholar, currently the Josiah H. Blackmore II/Shirley M. Nault Professor of Law at Capital University Law School, who was Commissioner, Vice Chairman and Chairman of the Federal Election Commission (FEC) between 2000 and 2005 and is best known for his writing and activities opposing campaign finance regulation.
The CCP's mission statement is "through legal briefs, studies, historical and constitutional analyses, and media communication, to educate the public on the actual effects of money in politics, and the results of a more free and competitive electoral process." It was founded in 2005 by former Federal Election Commission Chairman Bradley A. Smith and Stephen M. Hoersting, formerly an aide to Smith and later General Counsel at the National Republican Senatorial Committee.
He was, with Donald T. Campbell, co-author of a landmark paper regarding the Multitrait-Multimethod approach to evaluating construct validity.
With the help of his wife, the celebrated actress actress Minnie Maddern, as well as the likes of David Belasco, Sarah Bernhardt and the Shubert family staged a coup on the Theatrical Syndicate, helping to break the stranglehold they had maintained on theater bookings from coast to coast.
His Broadway stage successes include The Duchess of Dantzic (1903, as Napoleon), Salvation Nell (1908) in a breakout performance as the brutish husband of Mrs. Fiske, Within the Law (1912), Molière (1919), A Woman of No Importance (1916), The Lady of the Camellias (1917), and Getting Together (1918).
In 1863, Fiske entered the ministry for the Methodist Episcopal Church, served as pastor of the Methodist Episcopal in Jackson, 1863–66; of the Central Methodist Episcopal Church in Detroit, 1866–69; and of the First Methodist Church in Ann Arbor, 1869–72.
The multitrait-multimethod (MTMM) matrix is an approach to examining construct validity developed by Campbell and Fiske(1959).
Robert B. Fiske (born 1930), American lawyer and Whitewater special prosecutor
Bradley A. Smith, professor of law; Clinton appointee to the Federal Election Commission, born and raised in Trenton, and graduated from Trenton High School in 1976.