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Baker, Nancy Kassebaum, 1932-

LC control no.n 82208664
Descriptive conventionsrda
Personal name headingBaker, Nancy Kassebaum, 1932-
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Variant(s)Kassebaum, Nancy L. (Nancy Landon), 1932-
Landon, Nancy, 1932-
Birth date19320729
Place of birthTopeka (Kan.)
AffiliationUniversity of Kansas
University of Michigan
Kansas. Governmental Ethics Commission
Kansas Committee for the Humanities
United States. Congress. Senate
Republican Party (U.S. : 1854- )
Profession or occupationLegislators
Found inHer Report of the U.S. official observer mission to the El Salvador constituent assembly elections of March 28, 1982: t.p. (Senator Nancy L. Kassebaum, Committee on Foreign Relations, U.S. Senate) p. III (Wash., D.C.) p. 7 (Nancy Landon Kassebaum)
NUCMC data from Univ. of Virginia Lib. for Scott, H. Papers, 1941-1983 (Kassebaum, Nancy Landon, 1932-)
WW Am. Women, 1987/88: p. 421 (Kassebaum, Nancy Landon; U.S. Sen. from Kansas; b. 1932; d. Alfred M. and Theo Landon; m. Philip Kassebaum, 1955 (div. 1979))
Report of the Federal Advisory Committee on gender-integrated training and related issues to the Secretary of Defence, 1997: appendix (The Hon. Nancy Kassebaum Baker (Chairman), former U.S. Senator)
Time magazine, Dec. 16, 1996: p. 27 (Nancy Kassebaum and Howard Baker married)
Biographical directory of the United States Congress website, October 22, 2013 (Kassebaum, Nancy Landon, (wife of Howard Henry Baker, Jr., now Nancy Kassebaum Baker), a Senator from Kansas; born in Topeka, Shawnee County, Kans., July 29, 1932; attended the public schools of Topeka, Kans.; graduated, University of Kansas 1954; received a graduate degree from the University of Michigan 1956; radio station executive, Wichita, Kans.; member, Kansas governmental ethics commission 1975-1976; member, Kansas committee for the humanities 1975-1979; elected as a Republican to the United States Senate, November 7, 1978, for the six-year term commencing January 3, 1979; subsequently appointed by the Governor, December 23, 1978, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of James B. Pearson, for the term ending January 3, 1979; reelected in 1984 and again in 1990 and served from December 23, 1978, to January 3, 1997; not a candidate for reelection in 1996; chairman, Committee on Labor and Human Resources (One Hundred Fourth Congress))
Invalid LCCNno 94039306