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unusual facts about Howard C. Gentry


Howard Gentry

Howard C. Gentry, head college football coach for the Tennessee State University Tigers, 1955–1960


Brady P. Gentry

Gentry was elected as a Democrat to the Eighty-third and Eighty-fourth Congresses (January 3, 1953 – January 3, 1957).

He was not a candidate for renomination in 1956 to the Eighty-fifth Congress.

Francis Landey Patton

Patton appointed many prominent Princeton professors, including: Woodrow Wilson, Bliss Perry, John Grier Hibben, Henry van Dyke, Paul Van Dyke, and Howard C. Warren.

Howard C. Hillegas

In 1901, after returning from traveling abroad, Hillegas worked for the Saratoga Sun in Saratoga Springs, New York as an editor and publisher.

Howard C. Petersen

Petersen was chairman of the boards of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey, the University of Pennsylvania Museum, and the Marshall Foundation, and chairman and advisory committee member of Export-Import Bank.

Petersen joined Fidelity-Philadelphia Trust Company in 1947 as executive vice president and went on to serve as the bank's president (1950-66), CEO (1966-75) and chairman (1966-78).

In addition, Petersen served as a Director of the Panama Canal Corporation, and a trustee of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

Howard C. Reiche Community School

The students spoke 27 different languages other than English in their homes, including Arabic, Spanish, Somali, Khmer, Vietnamese, Serbo-Croatian, and Acholi.

Howard C. Samuels

In November 2010, Dr.Howard C. Samuels was presented with the Hollywood Arts Inspiration Award, by actress Tatum O'neal, for his accomplishments in the drug treatment and recovery field.

Jerauld R. Gentry

Gentry was the project pilot on a series of F-4E spin susceptibility and prevention tests with Burt Rutan as project engineer.

Nielson

Howard C. Nielson (b. 1924), American politician from Utah; U.S. Representative 1983–91

Olivet Discourse

Within conservative, evangelical Christian thought, two opposite viewpoints have been expressed in a debate between theologians Kenneth L. Gentry and Thomas Ice.


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