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  1. Joseph Eugene Ransdell (October 7, 1858 – July 27, 1954) was an attorney and politician from Louisiana. Beginning in 1899, he was elected for seven consecutive terms as United States representative from Louisiana's 5th congressional district.

  2. the historical record clearly shows that Joseph E. Ransdell was actually a progressive, innovative policymaker and a precursor of the New Deal. Joseph E. Ransdell was born October 7, 1858, on Elmwood Plantation, nine miles south of Alexandria, La. His father, John Ransdell, had migrated to Alexandria from Kentucky.

  3. Abstract. In the last decades of his life, Joseph Rans-dell experimented with the communica-tional process of philosophy with the use of recent technological developments and envisioning what he called a telecommunity, a world- wide community centered espe-cially on the ideas of Charles S. Peirce.

  4. Correspondence, addresses, and newspaper clippings of Joseph E. Ransdell, Representative in Congress, United States Senator, and prominent Catholic layman of Lake Providence, East Carroll Parish.

  5. 28 de mai. de 2020 · After the 1918 Spanish flu, Louisiana Sen. Joseph E. Ransdell founded the National Institutes of Health, now leading the war against the coronavirus.

  6. Joseph Ransdell (1931–2010), who re-ceived his Ph.D in philosophy from Co-lumbia University in 1966, where he was advised by Sidney Morgenbesser, and spent most of his career at Texas Tech University, offered an original and focused challenge to academic philosophy at the end of the Sec-ond Millennium.

  7. The legislative struggle was led by Senator Joseph E. Ransdell, a 30-year congressional veteran from Louisiana. Although in 1930 Herty and Ransdell finally succeeded in establishing the NIH, the economic realities of the Great Depression meant that their vision of the role of the institution was not to be achieved until after World War II.