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unusual facts about James V. Oliver


Spring Street Historic District

In 1988, 7 protesters, include State Representative James V. Oliver, were arrested while trying to block the demolition of an 1857 building on Park Street.


Atomic Bomb Casualty Commission

However, James V. Neel made an appeal and the AEC decided to fund them $20,000 a year, for three years, to continue research.

Daniel C. Oliver

Oliver was elected as a Democrat to the 65th United States Congress, holding office from March 4, 1917, to March 3, 1919.

Eileen I. Oliver

She was the Associate Dean of the University of Florida Division of Continuing Education and in 2008 she accepted the position as Interim Dean of the Division of Continuing Education.

F. S. Oliver

The main members included: Oliver, Lord Milner, Lord Carson, Geoffrey Robinson (Geoffrey Dawson), Waldorf Astor, General Henry Wilson, Philip Kerr, Leander Starr Jameson, and David Lloyd George.

Four Freshmen and 5 Trombones

# “You Made Me Love You” (James V. Monaco, Joseph McCarthy) – 2:14

George T. Oliver

Oliver owned a summer estate named Dungannon Hall in Hamilton Twp, Ontario, just north of Cobourg.

Hampden Clubs

Private rooms were found, but by April 1817, in an atmosphere of suspicion and with the government spy and agent provocateur Oliver active in the city, regular club meetings were suspended.

Herbert D. Riley

In the late 1940s he had duty in the Strategic Plans Section of the office of the Chief of Naval Operations and served as an assistant to United States Secretary of Defense James V. Forrestal and hus successor Louis A. Johnson, and then was student at the National War College.

Jack Oliver

Jack P. Oliver, former Republican member of the Ohio House of Representatives

James Crosby

James V. Crosby (born 1952), former U.S. public figure, jailed for corruption

James V. Buckley

He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1950 to the Eighty-second Congress.

James V. Downton

He was the first to coin the term "Transformational leadership", a concept further developed by James MacGregor Burns, and one of the key concepts in leadership research over the past 25 years.

James V. Ganly

Ganly was elected to the Sixty-eighth Congress and served from March 4, 1923, until his death in an automobile accident in New York City September 7, 1923, before the convening of Congress.

He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1920 to the Sixty-seventh Congress.

James V. Grimaldi

His work has focused on accountability stories bout Congress, politicians, presidential campaigns, D.C. public schools, the Washington Redskins, the {Smithsonian Institution, the National Zoo, and any other areas.

James V. Hansen

In 1990 Hansen was one of the two main House sponsors of a resolution calling on the George H. W. Bush administration to stop pressure on Thailand to allow the sale of U.S. cigarettes.

James V. Hart

He wrote the 2005 children's novel Capt. Hook: The Adventures of a Notorious Youth, a prequel depicting J. M. Barrie's villain Captain Hook, the nemesis of Peter Pan, when Hook was a youngster.

Recently it has been announced that screenwriter James V. Hart wrote an adaptation of The Sirens of Titan, which Kurt Vonnegut approved of before he died.

James V. Heidinger

Heidinger was elected as a Republican to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses and served from January 3, 1941, until his death in Phoenix, Arizona, on March 22, 1945.

He was an unsuccessful candidate for election to the Seventy-second and Seventy-fourth Congresses.

James V. Lafferty

(1856-1898) was an Irish-American inventor, most famous for his construction of Lucy the Elephant, the Elephantine Colossus and Old Dumbo.

James V. McClintic

McClintic once again attempted to secure a Democratic Party nomination to fill a vacancy in the 67th Congress, but was again unsuccessful.

When the southern portion of Kiowa County broke away to form Swanson County, with Snyder as its county seat, he was elected to the Oklahoma House of Representatives.

James V. McConnell

In 1985, he suffered a hearing loss when a bomb, disguised as a manuscript, was opened at his house by his research assistant Nicklaus Suino.

Georges Chapouthier, Behavioral studies of the molecular basis of memory, in: The Physiological Basis of Memory (J.A. Deutsch, ed.), 1973, Academic Press, New York and London, Chap.

He decided to publish the satirical Worm Runner's Digest upside down with its cover as the back of the Journal of Biological Psychology to make it clear which articles were satire.

He was an unconventional scientist, setting up his own refereed journal, the Journal of Biological Psychology, which was published in tandem with the Worm Runner's Digest, a planarian-themed humor magazine.

James V. Neel

Of particular interest to Neel was an understanding of the human genome in an evolutionary light, a concept he addressed in his fieldwork with cultural anthropologist Napoleon Chagnon among the Yanomamo in Brazil and Venezuela.

James V. Selna

Selna is currently serving as a federal judge on the United States District Court for the Central District of California at the Santa Ana courthouse.

James V. Stanton

In the 2012 election, he endorsed Republican nominee Mitt Romney over his party's nominee President Barack Obama.

Jeff K. Oliver

Oliver and his wife, Holly, and their two sons, Evan and Gavin, live in Highland, California

Liberal arts education

Schall, James V. Another Sort of Learning, Ignatius Press, 1988.

Lunsford E. Oliver

MG Oliver led the division throughout the remainder of the war, including training in the Mojave Desert near Needles, California through March 1943, the Tennessee Maneuvers through the Summer, and final validation and reorganization of the division at Pine Camp (Now Fort Drum, New York) through the Winter into early 1944.

McClintic

James V. McClintic (1878-1948), American politician from Texas and Oklahoma

Memory RNA

Memory RNA is a now-discredited hypothetical form of RNA that was proposed by James V. McConnell and others as a means of explaining how long-term memories were stored in the brain.

Norm L. Oliver

Also a talented tennis player, there was a possibility of a future Davis Cup appearance.

Norm Oliver

Norm M. Oliver (born 1885), Australian rules footballer for Collingwood

Robert Oliver

Robert T. Oliver (1909–2000), American author, lecturer, and authority on public speaking

Roy Clippinger

Clippinger was elected as a Republican to the Seventy-ninth Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death of James V. Heidinger.

Russell D. Oliver

He enrolled at the Culver Military Academy in Culver, Indiana, where he played football, basketball, and baseball, competed in varsity shell crew, and was the academy's heavyweight boxing champion.

Saturday Night with Mr. C

#"You Made Me Love You" (Music by James V. Monaco and lyrics by Joseph McCarthy)

Ted Stewart

He then served as an assistant to Utah Sen. Orrin Hatch in 1980, and then worked as an administrative assistant to U.S. Rep. James V. Hansen from 1981 until 1985.

University of Florida Division of Continuing Education

The former dean of the Division of Continuing Education, Dr. James W. Knight, retired in 2008, and the former associate dean, Dr. Eileen I. Oliver, is now the current interim dean.

Victor Kraft

Vollbrecht, Oliver: Victor Kraft: rationale Normenbegründung und logischer Empirismus: eine philosophische Studie, Munich: Utz 2004 in German.

West End, New Orleans

Joe "King" Oliver wrote the tune West End Blues in commemoration of the area; a recording of the number by Louis Armstrong is one of the most famous jazz recordings of the 1920s.

William M. Oliver

Elected as a Democrat to the 27th United States Congress, Oliver was United States Representative holding office from March 4, 1841, to March 3, 1843.


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