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unusual facts about Douglas H. Bosco


The Press Democrat

Halifax resold its California papers at the end of 2012 to a local ownership group that includes Douglas H. Bosco.


Douglas Cooper

Douglas H. Cooper (1815–1879), American Civil War Confederate general

Douglas H. Johnson

He was a resource person in the 2003 Sudan Comprehensive Peace Agreement negotiations over the Three Areas (Abyei, Nuba Mountains and Blue Nile) and later a member of the Abyei Boundary Commission.

Douglas H. Turner

Deciding that he liked science more than war, he turned down the opportunity to continue as an active duty officer and went to the University of California to postdoc with Ignacio Tinoco, Jr..

Douglas H. Wheelock

Wheelock is sharing pictures of the Earth, station and views of space via Twitter, as Soichi Noguchi did before him.

He became the first person to "check in" from space October 22, using the mobile social networking application Foursquare.

Harriet Miers

Miers was the first Supreme Court nominee to withdraw since Douglas H. Ginsburg in 1987 and the seventh to do so in U.S. history.

J. Irving Whalley

He elected as a Republican to the Eighty-sixth Congress, originally by special election to fill the vacancy caused by the death of United States Representative Doug Elliott, and reelected to the five succeeding Congresses.

Lester R. Stone, Jr.

His mother Doris lent the medal to U.S. Army officer and NASA astronaut Douglas H. Wheelock to take on his June 2010 launch to the International Space Station.

Lutz–Kelker bias

The original description of the phenomenon was described in a paper by Thomas E. Lutz and Douglas H. Kelker in the Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, Vol.

Population history of the indigenous peoples of the Americas

estimates range from a low of 2.1 million (Ubelaker 1976) to 7 million people (Russell Thornton) to a high of 18 million (Dobyns 1983).

Rod J. Rosenstein

He then served as a law clerk to Judge Douglas H. Ginsburg of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.

Ronald A. Bosco

At UAlbany since 1975 and an editor of the Emerson Papers at Harvard's Houghton Library since 1977, Bosco has lectured and published extensively on Puritan homiletics and poetics, nineteenth-century American intellectual and literary history, and the theory and practice of documentary and textual editing.

In 2003, on the occasion of Emerson's 200th birthday, he delivered the commemorative lecture, "What Poems are Many Private Lives," at the Emerson House in Concord, Massachusetts, for the Emerson family and the Town of Concord.

Walter Harding

2005: Ronald A. Bosco, Distinguished University Professor of English and American Literature at SUNY Albany.


see also