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2 unusual facts about Louis L. Stanton


Exogenesis: Symphony

The lawsuit was finally dismissed in April 2013 by Judge Louis L. Stanton after an earlier attempt to dismiss had failed in 2012.

Louis L. Stanton

Judge Stanton is the judge in the civil complaint filed by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) against Bernard Madoff.


Burton v. Wilmington Parking Authority

Louis L. Redding, a local civil rights attorney who helped litigate Brown v. Board of Education, became involved in the dispute.

Charles E. Stanton

On July 4, 1917 he visited the tomb of French Revolution and American Revolution hero Marquis de La Fayette and (according to Pershing) said, "Lafayette, we are here!" to honor the nobleman's assistance during the Revolutionary War.

Clark Henry Wells

During this time, sent a letter to the United States Secretary of War, Edwin M. Stanton, that accused Maj. Granville O. Haller, former commander of George B. McClellan's headquarters guard, of disloyal sentiments to the Union.

Clearwire

On December 31, 2010, McCaw resigned as Chairman of Clearwire and was replaced by John W. Stanton.

Colt M1878

Louis L'Amour often inserted guns that he thought were interesting into his works.

Commanding General of the United States Army

The gap from 11 March 1862, to 23 July 1862, was filled with direct control of the army by President Abraham Lincoln and Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton, with the help of an unofficial "War Board" that was established on 17 March 1862.

David John Nevin

However, in April 1863 his sentence was disapproved by the Secretary of War, Edwin M. Stanton and he was released from arrest, and restored to his command.

Douglas Netter

The next year he began a period when he concentrated on the Western genre, producing The Sacketts, a TV miniseries based on Louis L'Amour's Sackett family and serving as executive producer of the NBC TV movie Buffalo Soldiers.

Funeral and burial of Abraham Lincoln

Edwin M. Stanton, Gideon Welles, Hugh McCulloch, John Palmer Usher, Lieutenant General Ulysses S. Grant, and Montgomery C. Meigs left the escort at the depot, and at 8 A.M. the train departed.

Gebhart v. Belton

Gebhart was filed in 1951 in the Delaware Court of Chancery by lawyers Jack Greenberg and Louis L. Redding under a strategy formulated by Robert L. Carter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.

James V. Stanton

In the 2012 election, he endorsed Republican nominee Mitt Romney over his party's nominee President Barack Obama.

John Stanton

John W. Stanton, founder and former CEO of Western Wireless Corporation

Louis L. Goldstein

All of Maryland Route 2/4 in Calvert County is named after Goldsteinwho always loved to pronounce it in its traditional "down-shore" way: "Caww--lll ---vert County"!

Louis L. Jacobs

In recent years he has focused on the middle portion of the Cretaceous and the Cenozoic, especially with respect to terrestrial ecosystems.

Louis L. Redding

Redding, the first African American to be admitted to the Delaware bar, was part of the NAACP legal team that challenged school segregation in the Brown v. Board of Education case in front of the U.S. Supreme Court.

Gebhart v. Belton was combined with cases from three other states and the District of Columbia to become part of the landmark U.S. Supreme Court case in 1954 known as Brown v. Board of Education.

Pat LoBrutto

Edited by LoBrutto, the book introduced a new side of Louis L'Amour – one that extended beyond the boundaries of the Western – and the book found its audience.

Radical Republican

Lincoln put all factions in his cabinet, including Radicals like Salmon P. Chase (Secretary of the Treasury), whom he later appointed Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, James Speed (Attorney General) and Edwin M. Stanton (Secretary of War).

Robert Stanton

Robert L. Stanton (1810–1885), American Presbyterian minister, teacher and president of Miami University, 1868–1871

San Francisco Plaza, New Mexico

Author Louis L'Amour included Upper San Francisco Plaza in his novel Conagher, calling it "The Plaza".

Seri people

The Seri Indians figure in the plot of the Louis L'Amour novel Catlow (1963), made into a (1971) movie by the same name starring Yul Brynner, Richard Crenna, and Leonard Nimoy.

Stanton College Preparatory School

The school was a wooden structure and was named in honor of Edwin McMasters Stanton, President Abraham Lincoln's second Secretary of War.

The Institute of Ergonomics and Human Factors

In 2008, to mark the Journal’s 50th year of publication, a Special Issue of "Ergonomics" (Volume 51, Number 1), overseen by guest editors Neville A. Stanton and Rob Stammers, was published, covering the history of the society and including a re-print of the Ergonomics Research Society lecture given by Sir Frederick Bartlett in 1962.

Upthorpe Mill, Stanton

Rex Wailes inspected the mill on behalf of the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings and an appeal for funds to restore the mill was launched in 1938.

Western fiction

Many other Western authors gained readership in the 1950s, such as Luke Short, Ray Hogan, and Louis L'Amour.

William Marshall Swayne

Swayne was a self taught artist who sculpted many figure from history and from life including General Anthony Wayne, Salmon P. Chase, Edwin M. Stanton, William H. Seward, Andrew Johnson, Bayard Taylor, General George Meade, Sam Houston, and John Hickman.


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