Louis hanna

Thomas Louis Hanna

Thomas Louis Hanna (November 21, 1928 – July 29, 1990) was a philosophy professor and movement theorist who coined the term somatics in 1976.[1][2][3][4][5] He called his work Hanna Somatic Education. He proposed that most negative health effects are due to what he called Sensory Motor Amnesia.[6] He claimed that many common age-related ailments are not simply a matter of time but the result of poor movement habits.[7]

Life

Thomas Hanna was born in Nov. 21, 1928 in Waco, Texas, the son of Winifred Hanna and John Dwight Hanna,[8][9] a traveling representative for a pharmaceutical firm.[10] He went to Waco High School.[9] In 1949, Thomas Hanna earned a bachelor's degree in theology from Texas Christian University.[11] The following year he married Susan Taft on 12 May 1950. They went to Paris and Thomas Hanna served as Director at Jean de Beauvais Club of the University of Paris.[citation needed]

Returning to the US he

About

LOUIS BENJAMIN HANNA, the eleventh governor of North Dakota, was born in New Brighton, Pennsylvania on August 9, 1861. His education was attained in the public schools of Ohio, New York, and Massachusetts. Hanna established a successful business career, with interests in the banking and lumber industries. He first entered politics in 1895, serving as a member of the North Dakota House of Representatives, a position he held two years. He also served in the North Dakota State Senate from 1897 to 1901 and 1905 to 1909; and was a member of the U.S. House of Representatives from 1909 to 1913. Hanna next secured the Republican gubernatorial nomination, and was elected governor by a popular vote in the 1912 general election. He went on to win reelection to a second term in 1914. During his tenure, an inheritance tax law was sanctioned; court regulations were initiated; and a teachers’ retirement and insurance fund was created. After completing his term, Hanna served as chairman of the 1917 and 1918 state liberty loan committee, as well as serving as chairman of the 1924 Repu

L. B. Hanna

American politician (1861–1948)

Louis Benjamin Hanna (August 9, 1861 – April 23, 1948) was an American businessman, banker, and North Dakota Republican Party politician, who served in the North Dakota House of Representatives and as the 11th governor of North Dakota.

Biography

Louis Benjamin Hanna was born in New Brighton, Pennsylvania. His parents, Jason R. and Margaret Hanna died when he was a small boy, leaving him to be raised by his aunts. Louis Hanna grew up and received his education in Massachusetts and New York. He came to the Dakota Territory in 1881 with his brother, Robert C. Hanna and began farming near what is now Hope, North Dakota. He was married on November 18, 1888, to Lottie L. Thatcher (1864–1933) and they had four children.[1]

Career

He sold his land in 1882 and moved to Page, where he began his career as a businessman. He started a retail lumber company, then expanded into grain handling. Soon he needed banking facilities, so he opened a private bank at Page. The bank became a state bank, then became the First

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