Frank J. Lingelbach
Frank J. Lingelbach (July 7, 1888 – June 7, 1947) was an American businessman and politician.
Born in Sheboygan, Wisconsin, Lingelbach grew up in Oconto, Wisconsin. He went to Green Bay Business College and was in the insurance and real estate business. From 1927 to 1934, Lingelbach served on the Oconto County, Wisconsin Board of Supervisors and was chairman of the board. In 1937, Lingelbach served in the Wisconsin State Assembly and was a Democrat. Lingelbach died of a heart attack at his home in Oconto, Wisconsin.[1][2]
Notes
- 'Wisconsin Blue Book 1937,' Biographical Sketch of Frank J. Lingelbach, pg. 60
- 'Former Oconto Assemblyman Dies at Home,' Racine Times Bulletin, June 8, 1947, pg. 4
gollark: Also, how does the interface work?
gollark: You also run into the problem that you couldn't cryptographically validate that something was signed by someone's brain-TPM-thing™ and not just a computer running the signature algorithm, unless you have some organization give it a certificate, which then gives them unreasonable amounts of power.
gollark: It's much easier to remember a sequence of random words than a long string of numbers, but if you want to operate on the wordy one you also need to store a big lookup table, which defeats the point.
gollark: Besides, the easy to operate on forms are also annoyingly hard to remember.
gollark: Oh yes, I'll just ??? elliptic curves mentally.
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