M E Grenander - meaning and definition. What is M E Grenander
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What (who) is M E Grenander - definition

AMERICAN ACADEMIC AND PHILANTHROPIST
M.E. Grenander; M E Grenander; ME Grenander; Mary Elizabeth Grenander

M. E. Grenander         
Mary Elizabeth Grenander (21 November 1918 – 28 May 1998), was a professor of English and philanthropist, for whom the M.E.
E and M signaling         
TYPE OF SUPERVISORY LINE SIGNALING
E&M wink; E and M signalling
E and M signaling is a type of supervisory line signaling that uses DC signals on separate leads, called the "E" lead and "M" lead, traditionally used in the telecommunications industry between telephone switches. Various mnemonic names have been used to memorize these letters, such as Ear and Mouth, the most common variation.
Mary Eileen Ahern         
AMERICAN LIBRARIAN (1860-1938)
Mary E. Ahern; M. E. Ahern
Mary Eileen Ahern (October 1, 1860 – May 22, 1938) was an American librarian, a leader of the modern library movement, and an early organizer of libraries in the United States. Throughout her career as a state librarian, journal editor, public speaker, and organizer, Ahern crusaded for the value of public libraries in educating the public.

Wikipedia

M. E. Grenander

Mary Elizabeth Grenander (21 November 1918 – 28 May 1998), was a professor of English and philanthropist, for whom the M.E. Grenander Department of Special Collections & Archives of the University Libraries of the University at Albany, the State University of New York is named. She was an authority on Ambrose Bierce.

Grenander was born in Rewey, Wisconsin. She served in the U.S. Navy during the Second World War. She received an AB (1940), AM (1941), and PhD (1948) from the University of Chicago, each in English. Grenander taught at the State University of New York at Albany from 1948 until her retirement as Distinguished Service Professor of English in 1989. She directed the university's Institute of Humanistic Studies from 1977 to 1980.

She and her second husband, James Corbett (a professor of physics at SUNY), prospered through long-term investment in the stock market, and she was able to contribute $1 million to SUNY in his memory after his death in 1994.

Grenander died in East Berne, New York, at 79 years of age.