The tune was adapted from Miami University's "Marching Song" written in 1908 by Raymond H. Burke, a University of Chicago graduate who joined Miami's faculty in 1906.
Raymond Burke was personnel and employment manager for The Hooven-Owens-Rentschler Company tool works, a major Hamilton, Ohio employer, from 1918 to 1923.
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Burke organized the Miami University Men's Glee Club in 1907.
Raymond Chandler | Edmund Burke | Everybody Loves Raymond | Raymond Carver | Solomon Burke | Burke | Raymond Queneau | Raymond Dart | Alexandra Burke | Eric S. Raymond | Burke (surname) | Raymond Briggs | Kenneth Burke | Raymond Pettibon | Raymond | Kathy Burke | Raymond Poincaré | Raymond Massey | Raymond Loewy | Raymond Kelly | Raymond James Stadium | Raymond van Barneveld | Raymond E. Feist | Raymond Burr | Raymond Benson | Kevin Burke | Gene Raymond | Brooke Burke | Arleigh Burke | Raymond Williams |
Colonel Patrick E. Burke - mortally wounded at the Battle of Rome Cross Roads on May 16, 1864 while commanding 2nd Brigade, 2nd Division, Left Wing, XVI Corps, Army of the Tennessee.
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On July 8, 1862, the regiment's new commander Colonel Patrick E. Burke arrived.
Andrew H. Burke (1850–1918), American politician who served as governor of North Dakota
He next became a cashier of the First National Bank of Casselton and then, for six years, the Treasurer of Cass County.
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The state participated in the 1892 U.S. presidential election, when Grover Cleveland was elected to a second term as President of the United States.
In 1987 Illinois Governor James R. Thompson appointed her a judge of the Illinois Court of Claims, and she was reappointed by Governor Jim Edgar in 1991.
Anthony Burke, Australian international relations scholar and political theorist
He is Associate Professor of Politics and International Relations in the University of New South Wales.
He published three issues of a science fiction magazine called The Satellite which he co-edited along with J. F. Burke.
Daniel J. Burke (born 1951), Democratic member of the Illinois House of Representatives
David J. Burke (born 1948), producer, screenwriter and film and television director
In 2013, Burke partnered with Noah Kroloff, Mark Sullivan, David Aguilar, John Kaites and Jerry Reinsdorf to found Global Security and Intelligence Strategies.
Humetewa resigned effective August 2, 2009 when President Barack Obama nominated Dennis K. Burke as the next United States Attorney for the District of Arizona.
In 1886 as an inducement to Burke, Bográn offered two large mining concessions along the Jalán and Guayape rivers in return for Burke’s promise to help build an industrial school in Tegucigalpa, Honduras’ capital city.
He was a Washington representative and general counsel for Hawaiian Statehood Commission until 1950, when he retired to Kensington, Maryland.
Three years later, U.S. Commissioner for Indian Affairs Charles H. Burke was asked to resign for the Oklahoma scandal.
Frank G. Burke (born 1927), Acting Archivist of the United States
The judges in this case, heard before Military Tribunal V, were Charles F. Wennerstrum (presiding judge) from Iowa, George J. Burke from Michigan, and Edward F. Carter from Nebraska.
The hearings led to criticism of BIA administrator Charles H. Burke's actions, and during the 1930s, to the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934.
At one point the United States Golf Association asked him to prepare a set of rules which was ultimately presented to the international committee at St Andrews in Scotland.
Axelrod, Melissa; Gómez de García, Jule; Lachler, Jordan; & Burke, Sean M. (Eds.).
At age 76, Burke died in Rome during the first week of the Second Vatican Council.
Edward T. Burke (1870–1935), American judge who served as a Justice of the Supreme Court of North Dakota
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Anne M. Burke (born 1944), Illinois Supreme Court Justice for the First Judicial District
Kevin M. Burke (born 1946), American attorney and politician in the Massachusetts House of Representatives
Anne M. Burke, justice of the Illinois Supreme Court, "2008 Joseph E. O’Neil Award Acceptance Speech," 19 Marq. L. Rev. 339 (2008).
In June, two months after America's entry into the European war, Paulist Father and Catholic World editor John J. Burke, Catholic University sociology professor William Kerby, Paulist Father Lewis O'Hern, and the former Secretary of Labor, Charles O'Neill, met in Washington, D.C. to formulate an official Catholic response to the war.
On 6 May 1882 two leading members of the British Government in Ireland, Chief Secretary for Ireland Lord Frederick Cavendish and the Permanent Under-Secretary for Ireland T.H. Burke were stabbed to death in Phoenix Park, Dublin by the Irish National Invincibles (see Phoenix Park Murders).
Patrick E. Burke (1830–1864), lawyer, Missouri state legislator, and Civil War officer
He joins then the United-Nations Mission in Bosnia and Herzegovina in 2000 as Head of the International Police Task Force High Commissioner’s cabinet of the high-commissioner; he will take, in particular, the lead of the anti-terrorism cell of Nations United in Sarajevo there and will also work against the Transnational Organized Crime prevention and war crimes and crimes against humanity.
Seen as an ally of the political organization run by Senator Huey Long and Governor O.K. Allen, in 1934 Fleming deployed National Guardsmen to the offices of election officials in New Orleans when Allen declared martial law during a disputed election between the Long-Allen group and a group headed by Mayor T. Semmes Walmsley.
He worked at W. T. Grant and Montgomery Ward, ultimately serving as president of each of those companies.
By 1929, with the help of New Jersey state park officials a 43-mile (69 km) section from the Delaware River to High Point along the Kittatinny Ridge was completed.
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In the early 1920s Torrey developed a weekly outdoor column for the Post, called the Long Brown Path which was named for a line in Walt Whitman's Song of the Open Road.
Raymond H. Wilkins (1917–1943, US Air Force officer, posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor
He was married on October 19, 1940 to Josephina Battaglia the daughter of Carmelo Battaglia of Monte Maggiore Belsito, Palermo, Sicily, and Antonia Fasulo of Burgio, Agrigento, Sicily.
Robert's Lounge was a saloon in New York City owned by Lucchese crime family associate James 'Jimmy the Gent' Burke.
The lawsuit, which stemmed from the firefight in Nisoor Square in Baghdad, alleged Blackwater had violated the federal Alien Tort Statute by committing extrajudicial killing and war crimes, and that the company was liable for assault and battery, wrongful death, intentional and negligent infliction of emotional distress, and negligent hiring, training and supervision.
On January 22, 2010, Burke performed a rendition of Larry Platt's "Pants on the Ground" when criticizing conservative opposition leader David Alward during a session of the New Brunswick provincial legislature, garnering international attention.
Mr. Conrad has since joined the criminal division of U.S. Attorney Dennis Burke's office.
The Prosecution of an American President is a 2012 American documentary film about the Iraq War directed by Dave Hagen and David J. Burke.
Lloyd L. Burke, awarded a Medal of Honor for this actions in the Korean War, was born in Tichnor.
Representative of South Dakota, Charles H. Burke, saw the need to correct the situation in order to protect Native Americans from the sale of liquor.
Burke began his political involvement in 1934 when he assisted James Michael Curley during his successful run for Governor of Massachusetts.