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unusual facts about Will P. Stephenson


Will P. Stephenson

Will Prettyman Stephenson was born in Bentonville, Adams County, Ohio on July 31, 1868 to Robert Amasa and Arcadia Hopkins Stephenson.


Barbara J. Stephenson

In August 2009, Stephenson wrote in a diplomatic cable that Panamanian president Ricardo Martinelli had asked her for wiretaps on his political opponents, and she complained of his "bullying style" and "autocratic tendencies".

Barbara J. Stephenson is the Deputy Chief of Mission at the US Embassy in London, and is acting as Charge d'Affaires following the departure of Ambassador Louis Susman.

Carolyn S. Griner

She resumed her duties as deputy director of the Marshall Center when Arthur G. Stephenson was installed at the ninth official Director.

Cedar Cove

Ormonde, designed by architect Frank Furness; Notleymere, designed by architect Robert W. Gibson; Scrooby, designed by architect Robert S. Stephenson; and Shore Acres, designed by architect Stanford White.

Charles C. Stephenson, Jr.

The University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center in Oklahoma City has also been the beneficiary of Stephenson’s philanthropy.

Antlers, Oklahoma—Stephenson’s hometown—and Pushmataha County of which it is the county seat have not, to date, been beneficiaries of Stephenson’s philanthropic efforts.

Charles Stephenson

Charles C. Stephenson, Jr., American petroleum industry executive and philanthropist

Charles W. Stephenson (1853–1924), English amateur international footballer

Clement Scott

He wrote several English adaptations of Victorien Sardou's plays, some of which were written in collaboration with B. C. Stephenson, such as Nos intimes (as Peril) and Dora (1878, as Diplomacy).

Eastern Oval

The first recorded match on the ground in 1862 when Ballarat played HH Stephenson's XI.

Edward Jakobowski

Two short operettas in 1893 with libretti by B. C. Stephenson, The Improvisatore and A Venetian Singer, made little impact.

Geoffrey D. Stephenson

, the party of Air Commodore Stephenson, accompanied by 30 RAF and USAF officers, flew to Maxwell Air Force Base, Montgomery, Alabama, for interment at the Royal Air Force plot there.

They were at Eglin Air Force Base, Florida, home of the Air Proving Ground Center, on an exchange tour.

in a pine forest on the Eglin Reservation, one mile NE of the runway of Pierce Field, Auxiliary Fld.

Hugh Talbot

After leaving D'Oyly Carte, Talbot appeared with the Blanche Roosevelt English Opera Company in an unsuccessful production of B. C. Stephenson and Alfred Cellier's The Masque of Pandora in Boston in 1881.

John B. Stephenson

John Stephenson established ties with a diverse group of notable people whom he brought to speak at Berea College, from Roots author Alex Haley, and Archbishop Desmond Tutu of South Africa, to His Holiness, The Dalai Lama.

M. F. Stephenson

In the 1870s, several of his articles were published by the Smithsonian Institution, including Account of Ancient Mounds in Georgia and Mounds in Bartow County near Cartersville, Georgia.

Phil Clarke

He began working with Sky television in 1999 alongside Bill Arthur on Academy matches but nowadays he can be seen working with Eddie Hemmings and Mike "Stevo" Stephenson on Sky Sports Super League broadcasts and is respected for his in depth analysis of games and regularly "knocks sense" into colleague Mike Stephenson.

Randall L. Stephenson

December 2011 — Following an antitrust challenge by the U.S. Department of Justice, AT&T announced it had withdrawn the bid, and pay Deutsche Telekom the $4 billion in cash and wireless spectrum access specified in the original acquisition agreement.

Robert J. Harris

That year, the liberal/radical coalition lost power, as Republican James E. Stephenson won the mayoralty and local Republicans took control of seven seats on the ten-seat city council.

Sinsinawa Mound raid

When news of the raid reached Galena, Illinois, Captain James W. Stephenson set out with thirty soldiers to pursue the raiding party.

In the aftermath of the raid, Captain James W. Stephenson set out to pursue the attackers—a straggling band of Sauk Native Americans—but lost their trail at the Mississippi River.


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