Crystal dunn net worth
- •
“Elder Loren C. Dunn Dies at 70,” Ensign, July 2001, 77
Elder Loren C. Dunn, 70, an emeritus member of the First Quorum of the Seventy, died on 16 May of complications incident to surgery. At the time of his death he was serving as president of the Boston Massachusetts Temple.
Elder Dunn was sustained as a General Authority on 6 April 1968. He served as President of six of the Church’s geographical areas around the world and, in addition, was an executive administrator or counselor in other Area Presidencies.
He served as executive director or assistant executive director in the Church’s Correlation, Curriculum, Family History, Historical, and Missionary Departments. He also served as president of the Australia Sydney Mission and of Nauvoo Restoration, Inc.
Loren Charles Dunn was born on 12 June 1930 in Tooele, Utah. He graduated from Brigham Young University in 1953 with degrees in journalism and economics. He served a Church mission to Australia, then a tour of duty with the U.S. Army in Germany. He later received a master’s degree in public relations from Boston Universit
- •
Manuscript Collections - Rogers C. Dunn Papers
Rogers C. Dunn Papers, 1902-1990
1 linear foot, 9 linear inches (4 manuscript boxes)
Herbert Hoover Presidential Library
BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
Rogers Cleveland Dunn was born September 14, 1902, in Scarsdale, New York, and died April 22, 1985. He married (and later divorced) Elizabeth Holton in 1931 with whom he had three children: Peter, Diana, and Linda. Dunn spent the bulk of his career as a political analyst and writer, although he also worked for the Department of Commerce during the tenure of Secretary Herbert Hoover. Dunn left government service to work on Wall Street, a career that ended with the onset of the Great Depression.
In the early 1930’s he initiated the Dunn Survey, a publication that researched the relationship between government and public opinion by tracking editorials from thousands of newspapers across the nation. Dunn also incorporated the influence of the “relief vote” into the survey. He argued that if one person was employed by the Federal government he would vote Democrat at the polls and bring t
- •
Christopher Chase-Dunn
20th and 21st-century American scholar, sociologist, and educator
Christopher Chase-Dunn | |
---|---|
Christopher Chase-Dunn | |
Born | (1944-01-10) January 10, 1944 (age 81) Corvallis, Oregon, U.S. |
School or tradition | World-systems |
Main interests | Systems theory, world-systems, sociology |
Notable works | Global Formation: Structures of The World-Economy (1991) |
Christopher K. Chase-Dunn (born January 10, 1944, Corvallis, Oregon) is an American sociologist best known for his contributions to world-systems theory.[1]
Education and career
Chase-Dunn earned his PhD in 1975 at Stanford University[2] (studying under John W. Meyer) and has taught at The Johns Hopkins University (1975–2000) and at the University of California, Riverside (2000–present). He is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and served as President (2002–06) of Research Committee 02 (Economy and Society) of the International Sociological Association from 2002 to 2006. He was chair of the Section on International
Copyright ©momitem.pages.dev 2025