Salvador Ponce Lopez (May 27, 1911 – October 18, 1993), born in Currimao, Ilocos Norte, was an Ilokano writer, journalist, educator, diplomat, and statesman.
El Salvador | San Salvador | Salvador Dalí | Jennifer Lopez | Ruy Lopez | San Miguel, El Salvador | Salvador Allende | Salvador | Santa Ana, El Salvador | Salvador, Bahia | Antonio López de Santa Anna | El Salvador national football team | George Lopez | Santa Tecla, El Salvador | San Salvador Island | Barry Lopez | Omar Rodríguez-López | Juan López de Padilla | Salvador Caetano | Francisco Solano López | Antonio López García | University of El Salvador | Oscar Lopez | Mario Lopez | Jesús López-Cobos | San Vicente, El Salvador | San Salvador de Jujuy | Henri Salvador | Héctor López | Dom Salvador |
Andrés W. López, Puerto Rico member of the Democratic National Committee
Lopez began his professional riding career at Keystone Racetrack in Bensalem Township, Pennsylvania where he got his first win aboard Foolish Tracy on January 15, 1979.
Lopez is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and has written and edited many books on various aspects of the religions of Asia.
(July 15, 1923 – March 3, 2008) was a U.S. Army and U.S. Air Force fighter and test pilot and until his death the deputy director of the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum.
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He and Glindel have two children, Joy Lopez and Donald S. Lopez, Jr. (currently a professor of Buddhist studies at the University of Michigan), and one grandchild, Laura V. Lopez.
He is a member of the prominent López family of Iloilo; his father, the late Eugenio "Geny" Lopez, Jr., is known as one of the innovators of Philippine television.
Frances López-Morillas, née Frances Elinor Mapes (September 3, 1918 – ) is a leading translator of Spanish literature into English.
Lopez's work has been published in Human Rights Quarterly, International Studies Quarterly, Journal of International Affairs, The International Journal of Human Rights, Foreign Policy, Foreign Affairs, and Ethics and International Affairs.
The constitutionality of the federal Gun-Free School Zone Act is in question due to the U.S. v. Lopez ruling.
The North East Independent School District in San Antonio, Texas, has recognized Sgt. López by naming a middle school in his honor, José M. López Middle School.
In newer times, he opened a boxing gym with former contender Alvaro "Yaqui" Lopez in Stockton, which is the location in his novel Fat City.
Very notable among these are the Polytechnic University of the Philippines, Lopez, Philippine Normal University-Quezon, Eastern Tayabas College and the Lopez National Comprehensive High School.
When he was a child his father gave him a telescope as a birthday present, and the Apollo 11 moon landing on July 20, 1969 inspired him to seek an education in the field of Space Physics.
Pilon states, however, that United States v. Lopez fixed this problem to a small degree, but, then again, Gonzales v. Raich weakened that decision.
In November 1974, he embarked on a hunger strike along with his cellmate -- ABS-CBN's Eugenio "Geny" Lopez, Jr. -- to protest the unjust detention of thousands of innocent Filipinos.