Harry L. Corl (1914-1942), a United States Navy officer and Navy Cross recipient
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Brand of the Devil is a 1944 American western directed by Harry L. Fraser for Producers Releasing Corporation.
The collection was available both as a piano folio and as a set of orchestral parts arranged by Harry L. Alford, whom Fuller brought out from Chicago to make the arrangements; among other pieces in the collection were early works composed by future bandleaders Lou Gold and Irving Aaronson.
Harry L. Fraser (unclear if this was short for Harold), film director
Fisher was born on Jan. 19, 1885, in Kingston, New York His father was the engineer, who in 1883, took the first locomotive from Kingston, N. Y., to Weehawken, New Jersey, along the tracks of the old New York, West Shore and Buffalo Railroad.
Mayor Tafel appointed him a member of the Board of Supervisors, and he became president of the body in 1900.
Haines attended the State Normal School at Lock Haven, Pennsylvania, and Patrick's Business College at York, Pennsylvania.
He studied at Haverford College in 1933, and continued on at Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration to earn his master's degree in 1935, and a doctorate in 1939.
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After his years at Harvard, he took the position of dean of Institut pour l'Etude des Methodes de Direction de l'Entreprise in Lausanne, Switzerland until 1981, and then became a distinguished professor at Instituto de Estudios Superiores de la Empresa (IESE), in Barcelona, Spain.
He was a member of Sigma Alpha Fraternity and served two years in the Cavalry unit of the ROTC.
Maynard was elected as a Democrat to the Fifty-seventh and to the four succeeding Congresses (March 4, 1901-March 3, 1911).
Mr. Norris lived with his wife and 3 children for many years on Leeds Avenue in Arbutus, Maryland, a short walk from the railroad tracks.
His parents were William Henry Rattenberry (1834-1889) and Mary Ann Broomhead (c. 1829-1909), a former wife of notable Mormon missionary Cyrus H. Wheelock.
He was instrumental in passing legislation that created the New Jersey Lottery and the Meadowlands Sports Complex, signed into law by Governor Cahill.
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He was the New Jersey chairman for the 1972 re-election campaign of President Richard Nixon and was later indicted on charges stemming from the secret delivery of $200,000 from financier Robert Vesco to Nixon's campaign.
On April 26, 1927, Harry Straus was at a racetrack in Havre de Grace, Maryland.
Harry L. Watson is an American historian of the antebellum American South, Jacksonian America, and the history of North Carolina.
Harry L. Shapiro (1902–1990), American author, eugenicist, and professor of anthropology
Vesco wanted Richard Nixon's Attorney General John N. Mitchell to intercede on his behalf with SEC chairman William J. Casey, and in April 1972 he sent his counsel, former New Jersey State Senator Harry L. Sears, along with ICC president Lawrence Richardson, to deliver a cash contribution of $200,000 to Maurice Stans, finance chairman for the Committee to Re-elect the President.
In 1898 he moved to Chicago, Illinois, where he obtained work as a staff arranger with Harry L. Alford's music publishing company.
As counsel to International Controls Corporation, New Jersey lawyer Harry L. Sears delivered the contribution to Maurice Stans, finance chairman for the Committee to Re-elect the President.
Harry L. Ott, Jr., Russell's father, represented the 93rd district in the South Carolina House of Representatives, but resigned on June 30, 2013, to take a job with the Farm Service Agency.