Donald Trump | Donald Duck | Donald Rumsfeld | Donald Knuth | Donald Sutherland | Donald Judd | Donald Honig | Donald Bradman | Donald Pleasence | Donald Byrd | Donald Tsang | William Donald Schaefer | Jiří Menzel | Idina Menzel | Donald Winnicott | Donald Fagen | Donald Tusk | Donald O'Connor | Donald Brashear | Donald | Donald Ross | Donald Kennedy | Donald E. Westlake | Donald Braswell II | Donald Baechler | Donald Smith, 1st Baron Strathcona and Mount Royal | Donald Ogden Stewart | Donald M. Fraser | Donald Glover | Donald Glaude |
Baucom lives in Chapel Hill, North Carolina where he is the Richard Lee Simpson Distinguished Professor of Psychology at UNC.
Clausen was elected as a Republican to the Eighty-eighth Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death of United States Representative Clement Woodnutt Miller who had been elected posthumously, and to the nine succeeding Congresses (January 22, 1963-January 3, 1983).
He also served on the Public Works Committee with oversight over the U.S. Army Corp of Engineers, Bureau of Reclamation, and the Atomic Energy Commission.
•
During his time in Congress he served on the Appropriations Committee subcommittee on Department of State, Justice and Judiciary, and the Department of the Interior.
•
After he retired in 1973, he resided in Seattle, where he died on October 5, 1979, and was interred in Evergreen Washelli Memorial Park in north Seattle.
•
Magnuson was elected in 1952 as a Democrat to the Eighty-third and was re-elected four times, serving from January 1953 until January 1963.
His research focused on ground squirrels, in particular, their interactions with predators such as rattlesnakes; and, more generally, on concepts of communication within and between species.
Tuck was born in Launceston, Tasmania, but his family soon moved to Hobart, where his father was Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering at the University of Tasmania.
•
The couple established a home in Lindisfarne, on Hobart's eastern shore, and had a son in 1961.
Donald H. Peterson (born 1933), retired United States Air Force officer and former astronaut
Donald H. Turner (born 1964), Republican politician in the Vermont House of Representatives
Senate conferees offered a compromise, based on suggestions made by President Richard Nixon and Representative Donald H. Clausen (a Republican from California).
From 1995 until he entered the United States Air Force in 2000, Vogt spent time chiefly in the private sector as an investment banker in the New York metropolitan area, advertising executive at Leo Burnett in Chicago, (beginning during the U.S. presidential election, 1996) executive assistant to then-former U.S. Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld, and at night a member of The Second City comedy troupe (1997–2000).
Publishing duties were assumed jointly by the Harvard College Observatory and the Bond Astronomical Club, under the editorship of Donald H. Menzel.
Donald H. Weihs (b. 192?), U.S. American soldier and Olympic biathlete
According to Don Frew, Valiente composed the couplet, following Gardner's statement that witches "are inclined to the morality of the legendary Good King Pausol, 'Do what you like so long as you harm none'"; he claims the common assumption that the Rede was copied from Crowley is misinformed, and has resulted in the words often being misquoted as "an it harm none, do what thou wilt" instead of "do what you will".