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The Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholarship is a United States Cultural Exchange Program. Named after the late Congressman Benjamin Gilman , former chair of the House Foreign Affairs Committee , the program is administered by the United States Department of State and supported in its implementation by the Institute of International Education .
Ronald Lee Gilman (born October 16, 1942 in Memphis, Tennessee) is a Senior United States circuit judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. Education and career [ edit ]
Gilman is a city in Benton County, Minnesota, United States. The population was 224 at the 2010 census . [ 4 ] It is part of the St. Cloud Metropolitan Statistical Area .
Gilman oversees the day-to-day operations and management of the 200-bed, 870,000-square-foot research center on NIH's Bethesda, Maryland, campus. [ 4 ] In 2015, the NIH Clinical Center had about 6,000 inpatient admissions and 100,000 outpatient visits, all participants in clinical trials.
Benjamin Ives Gilman was born in New York in 1852, the son of Winthrop Sargent Gilman and the former Abia Swift Lippincott. [1] He attended Williams College (class of 1872) but did not graduate on account of health problems. He joined his family's banking business in New York.
Joseph Gilman may refer to: Joseph Gilman (tackle), All-American football player at Harvard University; Joseph Gilman (guard) (1883–1933), All-American football player at Dartmouth College and, later, president and general manager of the Boston Garden; Joseph Gilman (1738–1806), New Hampshire State Senator and judge of the Northwest Territory
One of these was the establishment of the Seattle Coal and Iron Co. in the town of Squak. The SLS&E inevitably served the coal town. Squak was incorporated in 1892 as Gilman, and it later became the city of Issaquah. [7] Although he never sought public office, Gilman was chairman of the state Democratic party's central committee from 1890 to ...
Elisabeth Coit Gilman was born in New Haven, Connecticut, on December 25, 1867, to Daniel Coit Gilman and Mary Ketcham Gilman. Elisabeth was the second child, and had an older sister named Alice. Their mother, Mary, died in 1869 and, as a result, were cared for by Daniel's sister Louise. [1]