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  2. Todd Shapiro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Todd_Shapiro

    Todd Michael Shapiro is the CEO and Directer of Red Light Holland. Red Light Holland is a publicly traded company that Shapiro Co-Founded and took public in May of 2020. Red Light Holland Corp. (CSE: TRIP) (FSE: 4YX) (OTCQB: TRUFF) is a company engaged in the production, growth and sale of functional mushrooms and mushroom home grow kits in ...

  3. 2 Kings 20 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2_Kings_20

    2 Kings 20 is the twentieth chapter of the second part of the Books of Kings in the Hebrew Bible or the Second Book of Kings in the Old Testament of the Christian Bible. The book is a compilation of various annals recording the acts of the kings of Israel and Judah by a Deuteronomic compiler in the seventh century BCE, with a supplement added in the sixth century BCE.

  4. Harold S. Shapiro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harold_S._Shapiro

    Harold Seymour Shapiro (2 April 1928 [1] – 5 March 2021) was a professor of mathematics at the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm, Sweden, best known for inventing the so-called Shapiro polynomials (also known as Golay–Shapiro polynomials or Rudin–Shapiro polynomials) and for work on quadrature domains. [citation needed] His main ...

  5. Boris Shapiro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boris_Shapiro

    Boris Shapiro (born 1957, Moscow, Soviet Union) is a Russian-Swedish mathematician, whose research concerns differential equations, commutative algebra and Schubert calculus. The ShapiroShapiro conjecture (or simply the Shapiro conjecture) was named after Michael Shapiro and him [1] (it is now the well-known Mukhin–Tarasov– Varchenko ...

  6. Robert B. Shapiro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_B._Shapiro

    Robert B. Shapiro (born August 4, 1938 in New York City) is an American businessman and attorney who has worked extensively with the biochemical corporations G. D. Searle & Company and Monsanto. Before working in this sector he was Vice-President and legal counsel at General Instrument from 1972 to 1979.

  7. Morton O. Schapiro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morton_O._Schapiro

    Morton Owen Schapiro (born July 13, 1953) is an American economist who served as the 16th president of Northwestern University from 2009 to 2022.. Schapiro previously served as president of Williams College in Massachusetts from 2000 to 2009, vice president for planning of the University of Southern California from 1998 to 2000, and dean of the University of Southern California College of ...

  8. Stewart Shapiro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stewart_Shapiro

    Stewart Shapiro (/ ʃ ə ˈ p ɪər oʊ /; born 1951) is O'Donnell Professor of Philosophy at the Ohio State University and distinguished visiting professor at the University of Connecticut. He is a figure in the philosophy of mathematics where he defends the abstract variety of structuralism .

  9. Shapiro v. Thompson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shapiro_v._Thompson

    Shapiro v. Thompson, 394 U.S. 618 (1969), was a landmark decision of the Supreme Court of the United States that invalidated state durational residency requirements for public assistance and helped establish a fundamental "right to travel" in U.S. law. Shapiro was a part of a set of three welfare cases all heard during the 1968–69 term by the Supreme Court, alongside Harrell v.