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・ Andrew J. Grigsby
・ Andrew J. Guilford
・ Andrew J. Hanscom
・ Andrew J. Harlan
・ Andrew J. Hickey
・ Andrew J. Hinshaw
・ Andrew J. Hunter
・ Andrew J. Karnley
・ Andrew J. Kuehn
・ Andrew J. Kuykendall
・ Andrew J. Landrum House
・ Andrew J. Lederer
・ Andrew J. Levander
・ Andrew J. Lewis
・ Andrew J. Lorish
Andrew J. May
・ Andrew J. McDonald
・ Andrew J. McGonnigle
・ Andrew J. McKenna
・ Andrew J. McShane
・ Andrew J. Moonen
・ Andrew J. Morrison School
・ Andrew J. Moyer
・ Andrew J. Nathan
・ Andrew J. Newman
・ Andrew J. O'Conor III House
・ Andrew J. Offutt
・ Andrew J. Olmsted
・ Andrew J. Ouderkirk
・ Andrew J. Paterson


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Andrew J. May : ウィキペディア英語版
Andrew J. May

Andrew Jackson May (June 24, 1875 – September 6, 1959) was a Kentucky attorney and influential New Deal-era politician, best known for his chairmanship of the House Military Affairs Committee during World War II, and his subsequent conviction for bribery. May was a Democratic member of United States House of Representatives from Kentucky during the Seventy-second to Seventy-ninth sessions of Congress.〔(Biographical Directory of the United States Congress: Andrew Jackson May ), URL accessed 2008-02-14.〕
==Education and early career==
May was born on Beaver Creek, near Prestonsburg in Floyd County, Kentucky, on June 24, 1875. On June 25, 1898, he and his twin brother William H. May graduated from Southern Normal University Law School in Huntingdon, Tennessee (later named Union University, Jackson, Tennessee), and was admitted to the bar the same year, commencing his law practice in Prestonsburg. May and his brother formed the law firm of May & May which was not dissolved until the death of his brother on February 20, 1921. May was county attorney of Floyd County, Kentucky, 1901–1909; special judge of the circuit court of Johnson and Martin Counties in 1925 and 1926. During this time, May also engaged in Democratic Party politics, agricultural pursuits, coal mining and banking.〔
May was elected as a New Deal Democrat to the Seventy-second Congress and to seven succeeding Congresses (March 4, 1931 – January 3, 1947). He was Chairman of the powerful Committee on Military Affairs during the Seventy-sixth through Seventy-ninth Congresses, and a consistent supporter of the Franklin D. Roosevelt administration. During World War II, May became involved with Murray and Henry Garsson, New York businessmen who sought lucrative munitions contracts then being awarded by the U.S. Government.〔''Time'' magazine, ("Murray Garsson's Suckers" ), August 12, 1946.〕

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