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William T. Powers (August 29, 1926 – May 24, 2013) was a medical physicist and an independent scholar of experimental and theoretical psychology [1] [2] [3] who developed the perceptual control theory (PCT) model of behavior as the control of perception. He was the son of the well-known cement scientist and economist Treval Clifford Powers. [4]
Pomeroy Wells Powers (February 19, 1852 – December 3, 1916) was an attorney and property developer in Kansas City, Kansas, and Los Angeles, where he was president of the Los Angeles City Council from 1900 to 1902.
Shook, Hardy & Bacon (SHB), L.L.P. (previously Shook, Hardy, Ottman, Mitchell and Bacon) is a U.S. law firm based in Kansas City, Missouri. In 2012, The National Law Journal ranked the firm as the 87th largest in the United States. [4] The firm has offices in Miami, New York, Los Angeles, Atlanta, and Boston. [5]
Kansas City's three largest law firms maintain their headquarters in other skyscrapers in the neighborhood. The neighborhood's grounds include parks, fountains, green spaces, and unique sculptures . The global headquarters campus for Hallmark Cards is located on the eastern side of Crown Center.
2345 Grand (formerly the IBM Plaza, IBM Building and Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company Building) is a high-rise office building located in Kansas City, Missouri. [1] It is listed on many sites as being the work of Mies van der Rohe; however, he died in 1969 before the building could be opened in 1977.
William Powers may refer to: William Powers Jr. (1946–2019), former president of the University of Texas at Austin; William T. Powers (1926–2013), scientist associated with perceptual control theory; William T. Powers (industrialist) (1820–1909), manufacturer and capitalist; William Powers (writer) (born 1961), American writer, journalist ...
Map of Kansas City, Missouri. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Kansas City, Missouri outside downtown.. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in the Jackson County portions of Kansas City, Missouri, United States, outside downtown.
He was a law graduate of Washington University School of Law in 1917 and a veteran of World War I. In 1940, Kemp was appointed by mayor Joe Gage to be city counsel and prosecuted several city employees in the fall of the Thomas Pendergast machine. He was elected to a two-year term in 1946, re-elected to a three-year term in 1949 and then again ...