In 2001 she received the Frederick G. Kilgour Award for Research in Library and Information Technology.
Bates College | Kathy Bates | Joshua Bates | Django Bates | Marcia Cross | Marcia | Marcia Griffiths | Bates | Simon Bates | Peggy Thorpe-Bates | Marcia Hines | Marcia Falkender, Baroness Falkender | Ken Bates | Tom Bates | Mason Bates | Marcia Muller | Marcia Bell | Joseph E. Bates | John Bates | H. E. Bates | William John Bates van de Weyer | Simon Bates at Breakfast | Ralph Bates | Michael Bates, Baron Bates | Marcia Brown | Marcia A. Karrow | Marcia A. Invernizzi | Katharine Lee Bates | John D. Bates | John Bates Thurston |
Bates was brother-in-law of Gerrit P. Judd, a former American missionary doctor who was then a power cabinet minister.
Carl Sterling Bates (January 1, 1884 - August 27, 1956) was an aviation pioneer from Clear Lake, Iowa.
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After changing ownership several times, the company switched products to the emerging kit electronics market, becoming Heathkit.
Charles J. Bates (May 4, 1930 – September 28, 2006) was an American food scientist who was involved in the development of baking formulas for angel food and devil's food cake, then later developed high fructose corn syrup sweetener for Coca-Cola.
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After earning his Ph.D. from MIT, Bates went to work at Procter & Gamble in Cincinnati, Ohio where he developed formulas for cake mixes of angel food and devil's food cakes as part of the Duncan Hines brand during the 1960s.
In 1872 a group of businessmen led by Judge Hiram Bond (formerly one of the largest brokers on the New York Gold Exchange), Joseph Miner and Denver Mayor Joseph E. Bates set up a firm Denver Smelting and Refining Works which built an independent complementary plant which processed ore into ingots which were then assayed, weighed and stamped by the Denver Mint.
As a result, Evans, together with other local business leaders, including David Moffat, William Byers (founder of the Rocky Mountain News), Joseph E. Bates, Bela Hughes, Walter Cheesman and Luther Kountze partnered with East Coast investors to form a railroad company that would link Denver and the Colorado Territory with the national rail network.
Initially having a patriotic impetus, and counting a number of leading literary figures among its supporters (G. K. Chesterton, Humbert Wolfe, L. A. G. Strong and the novelists H. E. Bates and A. G. Street 1892–1966) as members, it shortly became a vehicle for Sydney Fowler Wright (1874–1965), now remembered mainly for
The local author H. E. Bates often would come through the village on his nocturnal walks in the 1920s and 1930s.
They had a daughter named Kathleen Doyle Bates, better known as actress Kathy Bates.
George J. Bates (1891–1949) was a member of the United States House of Representatives from the state of Massachusetts.
He was reelected to the Seventy-sixth and to the six succeeding Congresses and served from June 4, 1938, to January 3, 1953.
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Bates was elected as a Democrat to the Seventy-fifth Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Fred M. Vinson.
"In a December 30, 2002 decision, Judge John Bates of the U.S. District Court ruled that lead plaintiff Representative Dennis Kucinich and 31 other members of the United States House of Representatives have no standing to challenge President Bush’s withdrawal from the Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty without congressional approval. He also ruled that the case presents a "political question" not suitable for resolution by the courts."
Joshua T. Bates is a fictional character from the series of books Joshua T. Bates by Susan Shreve.
On September 30, 1969, he won a special election to fill the vacancy caused by the death of U.S. Representative William H. Bates.
After earning his PhD, Bates worked for Frigidaire in Dayton, Ohio in their research laboratory where he studied freezing's effect on bacteria in foods.
Robert B. Bates (1789–1841), attorney and politician who served as Speaker of the Vermont House of Representatives
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Robert W. Bates (born 1941), former agent of the United States Secret Service
Sharnbrook is the village where the prototype of Uncle Silas, Joseph Betts, the protagonist of H.E. Bates's My Uncle Silas lived.
The band formed in 1986 and were named after the H. E. Bates novel The Darling Buds of May – a title taken in turn, from the third line of Shakespeare's Sonnet 18: "Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May".
In September 2012, a U.S. federal judge John D. Bates threw out the libel suit against Daioleslam on the grounds that "NIAC and Parsi had failed to show evidence of actual malice, either that Daioeslam acted with knowledge the allegations he made were false or with reckless disregard about their accuracy."
The three labor representatives were Harry C. Bates, president of the International Union of Bricklayers and Allied Craftworkers; Emil Rieve, president of the Textile Workers Union of America; and Elmer Walker, president of the International Association of Machinists.