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American and businessperson
* March – Reggie Fils-Aimé, American businessperson
* David Lichtenstein, American businessperson
* Rose Fortune ( 1774-1864 ), African American businessperson and first female police officer in Canada
* Sara Blakely ( born 1971 ), American businessperson
* Bernard A. Newcomb, American businessperson and philanthropist, co-founder of E * TRADE
* Mitch Kapor ( born 1950 ), American businessperson
Daniel Alexander Sutherland ( April 17, 1869 – March 24, 1955 ), nicknamed " Fighting Dan ", was an American businessperson and politician who served in the United States House of Representatives during the 1920s as the delegate from what was then the Alaska Territory.
Bush, American businessperson
Carl Walter Salser, Jr. ( 16 August 1921-11 April 2006 ) was an American author, businessperson and educator.
Jeffrey Hollender ( born 1954 ) is an American businessperson, entrepreneur, author, and activist.
Fairfax Mastick Cone ( 21 February 1903-June 20, 1977 ) or Fax Cone, was an American businessperson, advertising executive and the former director of the American Association of Advertising Agencies.
Robert K. Hoffman ( 1947-August 20, 2006 ) was an American businessperson and philanthropist, most notable for co-founding the influential humor magazine National Lampoon.
Leonard S. Riggio ( Feb. 28, 1941, Bronx, N. Y .-) is an American businessperson and entrepreneur.
Cynthia " Cindi " Love is an American entrepreneur and businessperson.

American and has
But a young American has a bath next to his room and I shall ask him if you might use it this once.
As it is, they consider that the North is now reaping the fruits of excess egalitarianism, that in spite of its high standard of living the `` American way '' has been proved inferior to the English and Scandinavian ways, although they disapprove of the socialistic features of the latter.
Labor relations have been transformed, income security has become a standardized feature of political platforms, and all the many facets of the American version of the welfare state have become part of the conventional wisdom.
Even though in most cases the completion of the definitive editions of their writings is still years off, enough documentation has already been assembled to warrant drawing a new composite profile of the leadership which performed the heroic dual feats of winning American independence and founding a new nation.
Obviously there has been no agreement on what American conservatism is, or rather, what it should be.
In fact, over the years, the American farmer's capacity to over-produce has cost the taxpayers a large dollar.
Why has this form of gentility gone out of American life??
The possibility of recall into the Army is part of the price that a modern American has to pay for the enviable heritage of liberty which he enjoys.
Even apart from the fact that now at the age of 31 my personal life is being totally disrupted for the second time for no very compelling reason -- I cannot help looking around at the black leather jacket brigades standing idly on the street corners and in the taverns of every American city and asking myself if our society has gone mad.
-- Indonesia Military Supreme Court has confirmed the death sentence passed on Alan Lawrence Pope, an American pilot.
It seems to me the time has come for the American press to start experimenting with ways of reporting the news that will do a better job of communicating and will be less subject to abuse by those who have learned how to manipulate the present stereotype to serve their own ends.
He has become in this half century the grand old man of American history.
But this we know: Here is a great life that in every area of American politics gives the American people occasion for pride and that has invested the democratic process with the most decent qualities of honor, decency, and self-respect.
I pay my personal tribute to Sam Rayburn, stalwart Texan and great American, not only because today he establishes a record of having served as Speaker of the House of Representatives more than twice as long as Henry Clay, but because of the contributions he has made to the welfare of the people of the Nation during his almost half century of service as a Member of Congress.
No greater pleasure has come to me in my own service in this House than to be present today to participate in this tribute to this great Speaker, this great legislator, this great Texan, this great American.
Arthur Hays Sulzberger has been a distinguished publisher of this distinguished newspaper and it is fitting that we take due notice of his major contribution to American journalism on the occasion of his retirement.
The cooperation of our exclusive American licensee, Pratt & Whitney Aircraft Division of United Aircraft Corporation, has been important in this work.
By dealing with common landscape in an uncommon way, Roy Mason has found a particular niche in American landscape art.
The American is very lucky if he has three.
The American Institute of Interior Designers has published a recommended course for designers and a percentage layout of such a course.
One or two of the schools have a five year curriculum, but the usual pattern of American education has limited most of them to the four-year plan which seems to be the minimum in acceptable institutions.
There has been a tendency on the part of many American linguists to assume that a phonemic transcription will automatically be the best possible orthography and that the only real problem will then be the social one of securing acceptance.
He has announced results on Hokan, Penutian, Uto-Aztecan, and almost all other American families and phyla, and has diagrammed their degree of interrelation ; ;

American and coined
In 1964, Richard Kyle coined the term " graphic novel " to distinguish newly translated European works from genre-driven subject matter common in American comics.
The United States of America gained overseas territories after the Spanish-American War for which the term " American Empire " was coined.
In 1935, American radio commentator Walter Winchell coined the term " disc jockey " ( the combination of disc, referring to the disc records, and jockey, which is an operator of a machine ) as a description of radio announcer Martin Block, the first announcer to become a star.
The term exon derives from the expressed region and was coined by American biochemist Walter Gilbert in 1978: " The notion of the cistron … must be replaced by that of a transcription unit containing regions which will be lost from the mature messengerwhich I suggest we call introns ( for intragenic regions ) alternating with regions which will be expressedexons.
Generation Flux is a neologism and psychographic ( not demographic ) designation coined by Fast Company for American employees who need to make several changes in career throughout their working lives due to the chaotic nature of the job market following the 2008 – 2012 global financial crisis.
A curriculum-free philosophy of homeschooling may be called unschooling, a term coined in 1977 by American educator and author John Holt in his magazine Growing Without Schooling.
However, Michael Montgomery, in From Ulster to America: The Scotch-Irish Heritage of American English, states " In Ulster in recent years it has sometimes been supposed that it was coined to refer to followers of King William III and brought to America by early Ulster emigrants …, but this derivation is almost certainly incorrect … In America hillbilly was first attested only in 1898, which suggests a later, independent development.
Bonewits also coined much of the modern terminology used to define and articulate many of the conceptual themes and issues which affect the North American Neopagan community.
American writer Sylvia Wright coined the term in her essay " The Death of Lady Mondegreen ," published in Harper's Magazine in November 1954.
Originally, " maschinenpistole " was simply the German word for personal, automatic military weapons, while " submachine gun " was a term coined by John T. Thompson, American inventor of the Thompson submachine gun.
The term was coined in 1895 by the American philosopher and psychologist William James.
The term private international law was coined by American lawyer and judge Joseph Story, but was abandoned subsequently by common law scholars and embraced by civil law lawyers.
" Chambers ' Dictionary mentions the contemporary usage of the term " pop art "; Grove Music Online states that the " term pop music ... seems to have been a spin-off from the terms pop art and pop culture, coined slightly earlier, and referring to a whole range of new, often American, media-culture products ".
The word quark was coined by American physicist Murray Gell-Mann ( b. 1929 ) in its present sense.
To sell his regulator in English-speaking countries Cousteau coined the Aqua-Lung label, which was first licensed to the U. S. Divers company ( the American division of Air Liquide in the USA ) and later sold alongside with La Spirotechnique and U. S. Divers to finally constitute the name of the company itself, Aqua-Lung / La Spirotechnique, nowadays sited in Carros, near Nice.
The American theoretical physicist John Archibald Wheeler coined the term wormhole in 1957 ; however, in 1921, the German mathematician Hermann Weyl already had proposed the wormhole theory, in connection with mass analysis of electromagnetic field energy.
* March 23 – The term American Empire is coined in San Francisco.
The evil scheme uncovered late in the tale is an attempt to immanentize the eschaton ( a catchphrase coined by Eric Voegelin ), a secret scheme of the American Medical Association, an evil rock band, to bring about a mass human sacrifice, the purpose of which is the release of enough " life-energy " to give eternal life to a select group of initiates, including Adolf Hitler.
The term was coined in 1895 by the American philosopher and psychologist William James.
Otto Schmitt, an American academic and inventor, coined the term biomimetics to describe the transfer of ideas from biology to technology.
" It is derived from quotations by Theodore Sturgeon, an American science fiction author: while Sturgeon coined another adage that he termed " Sturgeon's law ", it is his " revelation " that is usually referred to by that term.
The word was coined in 1957 by British psychiatrist, Humphrey Osmond, the misspelling loathed by American ethnobotanist, Richard Schultes, but championed by the American psychologist, Timothy Leary.
Franz Halberg of the University of Minnesota, who coined the word circadian, is widely considered the " father of American chronobiology.

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