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Hackmann
Hackmann is a surname of German origin, originating as an occupational surname for a butcher or woodcutter. Notable people with the surname include: * Barbara Ann Hackmann (1943 – c. 1967), American homicide victim * Heide Hackmann, South African interim director and CEO *Hermann Hackmann (1913-1994), German war criminal See also *Hackman (surname) Hackman is an English surname of German origin (German: Hackmann). Notable people of the name include the following: * Alfred Hackman (1811–1874), English librarian * Barbara Franklin (née Hackman; b. 1940), U.S. Secretary of Commerce * Ge ...
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Barbara Ann Hackmann
Barbara Ann "Bobbie" Hackmann Taylor (; September 12, 1943 – December 1967), also known as the "Tent Girl", was notable as an unidentified homicide victim for nearly 30 years after her body was found on May 17, 1968, near Georgetown, Kentucky. She was referred to as "Tent Girl" because of the material wrapped around her. On April 23, 1998, the Scott County Sheriff's Office announced that this victim had been identified. Hackmann Taylor, born in Illinois, was married and had an eight-month-old daughter when she went missing from her home in Lexington, Kentucky. Her late husband, George Earl Taylor, was a carnival worker and the prime suspect in the murder case. He did not file a missing person report but told her family that she had left him for another man. He died of cancer in October 1987. Because he was a prime suspect, Hackmann's family excluded his name when they commissioned a new tombstone for her gravesite. This gave her full name and dates and was added beneath ...
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Hermann Hackmann
Hermann Wilhelm Hackmann (November 11, 1913 – August 20, 1994) was a German war criminal, Nazi SS captain in two extermination camps during World War II. He was a roll call officer at KL Buchenwald, and lead guard in charge of the so-called protective custody at Majdanek concentration camp in German-occupied Poland. Described as a brutal man with a cynical sense of humour, Hackmann was tried three times. The first time, he was prosecuted for murder and embezzlement and sentenced to death by SS Judge Georg Konrad Morgen in connection with the Koch trial. However, Hackmann's sentence was later commuted to a prison term. He spent at least five months as a regular prisoner in Dachau concentration camp before being transferred to a penal battalion.David A. Hackett, ''The Buchenwald Report'', , . Trials Hackmann came from Osnabrück. At the age of 24 he first assumed the post of SS officer at Buchenwald. After the war, Hackmann was prosecuted this time by the U.S. government at ...
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Heide Hackmann
Heide Hackmann is the Interim Director of the Future Africa Institute and Strategic Advisor on Transdisciplinary and Global Knowledge Networks at the University of Pretoria in South Africa. Formerly, she served as the CEO of the International Science Council, an international organization of national and international science councils. Early life Hackmann studied contemporary social theory at the University of Cambridge, UK, and holds a PhD in science and technology studies from the University of Twente in the Netherlands. Career Hackmann worked as a science policy maker, researcher and consultant in the Netherlands, Germany, the UK, and South Africa. She was Head of the Department of International Relations and Quality Assessment of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. From 2007 to 2015, Hackmann was Executive Director of the International Social Science Council (ISSC), and from 2015 to 2018, she was Executive Director of the International Council for Science (I ...
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