Schneider focused on East Africa in his field work, and was especially influenced by his study of the Turu in Tanzania.
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Harold K. (Hal) Schneider (1925–1987), a seminal figure in economic anthropology, was born in 1925, in Aberdeen, South Dakota.
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He then went to Northwestern University, where he was a student of Melville Herskovits, basing his dissertation on field research among the Pokot of Kenya.
Harold Pinter | Harold Wilson | Harold Macmillan | Harold Bloom | Romy Schneider | Harold Godwinson | Rob Schneider | Harold Lloyd | Schneider Electric | Harold Stassen | Harold Prince | Schneider | J. Harold Ellens | Harold Holt | Sir Harold Hillier Gardens | Harold Washington | Harold Hitz Burton | Harold Alexander, 1st Earl Alexander of Tunis | Harold Peto | Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle | Harold Arlen | Harold | Harold Budd | Harold Eugene Edgerton | Harold Bauer | Harold von Schmidt | Harold Robbins | Harold Laski | Harold Gould | Harold Gillies |
George J. Schneider (1877–1939), U.S. Representative from Wisconsin
He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1942 to the Seventy-eighth Congress.
John A. Schneider (born 1926), president of the CBS Television Network
Joseph T. Ferraracci was appointed to the position of State Senator for District 8, which covers portions of Baltimore County and Baltimore City, by former Maryland Governor Parris Glendening when John R. Schneider died.
Mark L. Schneider (born 1941), director of the Peace Corps, 1999–2001
Michelle G. Schneider, former Republican member of the Ohio House of Representatives
Paul A. Schneider (b. 1944), Deputy Secretary of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security 2008–09
It is 1961 and an Albanian student (Nik Xhelilaj) of the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague, together with a group of Czech students, is shooting his graduate movie on a motorcycle factory, in the small market-town of Český Šternberk, in then Czechoslovakia.
One experiment designed with that purpose was performed by Wegner, Schneider, Carter & White (1987).
Among her most notable legislative achievements is sponsoring the bill which created Missouri's AMBER Alert system.
Warner Amex Cable Company, run by Gus Hauser, would build local cable systems across the United States (today as Time Warner Cable, the second largest cable operator in America), and Warner Amex Satellite Entertainment Company (WASEC), run by former CBS Network President John A. Schneider, to supply programming to the rapidly expanding cable television universe.