D. H. Lawrence | Lawrence Ferlinghetti | Lawrence, Kansas | Lawrence | Martin Lawrence | Saint Lawrence River | Lawrence, Massachusetts | Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory | Lawrence Ritter | Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory | T. E. Lawrence | Steve Lawrence | Lawrence Summers | Sarah Lawrence College | Lawrence Welk | Lawrence Taylor | Gertrude Lawrence | Lawrence v. Texas | The Lawrence Welk Show | Lawrence Weiner | Lawrence Kasdan | John Lindley | Jacob Lawrence | Tracy Lawrence | Thomas Lawrence | Lindley | Lawrence University | Lawrence Hayward | Lawrence of Rome | Lawrence Lessig |
In 2005, he was nominated for Wired magazine's top Rave Award, Renegade of the Year, opposite Larry Page, Sergey Brin and Jon Stewart.
The management of early Indian Rights Association's programs fell almost entirely to five men, all of whom had lengthy careers with the IRA: Herbert Welsh, Matthew Sniffen, and Lawrence E. Lindley, active in Philadelphia; and Charles C. Painter and Samuel M. Brosius, agents and lobbyists in Washington D.C.
He is a Visiting Research Professor at IHS Vienna and a member of the external faculty at the Santa Fe Institute, where he has served as Co-Director of the Economics Program and on the Institute's steering committee.
Lawrence E. Fouraker (October 28, 1923 - December 20, 1998) was the sixth dean of the Harvard Business School (1970–1980).
They had four children: Dorothy Roberts McEwen, Lawrence E. Roberts II, Sally-Ann Roberts Craft Nabonne, and Robin René Roberts.
Spivak's office was at the Sheraton-Park Hotel in Washington, D.C., which was also his home.
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Spivak published inexpensive digest-sized paperback editions, often abridged, of works by authors including Margery Allingham, Agatha Christie, Erle Stanley Gardner, Dashiell Hammett, Ellery Queen, Georges Simenon, Rex Stout and Cornell Woolrich.
Lawrence E. Knox (1836–1873), British Army officer and founder of The Irish Times
Mercury Publications (aka Mercury Press) was a magazine publishing company, owned and operated by Lawrence E. Spivak, which mainly published genre fiction in digest-sized formats.
On September 15, 1949, President Harry S. Truman nominated Lindley for elevation to the seat on the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit vacated by Truman's successful appointment of Sherman Minton to the United States Supreme Court.
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He was a master in chancery for the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Illinois from 1912 to 1918.
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On September 20, 1922, Lindley was nominated by President Warren G. Harding to a new seat on the Eastern District of Illinois created by 42 Stat.