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Bower is CEO and chairman of the Board of Numedeon Inc. a company he founded in 1998 to develop educationally related virtual worlds. The company's flagship effort, Whyville .net is now one of the largest education sites for young adults on the World Wide Web, with a player base of more than 7 million in 2006. [ 16 ]
She is the sister of Frances Daly of Edgemont, Virginia. She has seven living children: John Walton Jr., Jason Walton, Mary Ellen Walton, Erin Esther Walton, Benjamin Walton II, James Robert Walton, and Elizabeth Tyler Walton. An eighth child, Jim-Bob's twin brother Joseph Zebulon Walton, died at birth.
James Bower may refer to: Jamie Campbell Bower (born 1988), English actor, singer and former model; James Bower (agrarian leader) (1860–1921), farmer and farm leader in western Canada; James M. Bower (born 1954), American neuroscientist; James Paterson Bower (1806–1889), Scottish Royal Navy admiral
Iris Bower (1915–2005), a Royal Air Force nurse; James Campbell Bower (born 1988), English actor, singer, and model; Jeff Bower (American football) (born 1953), American football coach; Jeff Bower (basketball) (born 1961), American basketball executive; Johnny Bower (1924–2017), Canadian hockey goaltender; John Nott-Bower (1892–1972 ...
Bertha Muzzy Sinclair or Sinclair-Cowan, née Muzzy (November 15, 1871 – July 23, 1940), best known by her pseudonym B. M. Bower, was an American author who wrote novels, fictional short stories, and screenplays about the American Old West. Her works, featuring cowboys and cows of the Flying U Ranch in Montana, reflected "an interest in ranch ...
The grave of Major General Hamilton Bower, Dean Cemetery. He was born on 16 February 1806 [1] at Inverarity in Forfarshire. He was the son of Graham Bower (d.1844) of Meathie, Kinnettles and Kincaldrum. They were descended from Margaret St Clair of Roslin. His father was forced to sell most of the family estates in 1817 to settle family debts.
Bower was born between 1715 and 1723 in the borough of Westminster, London, where he was baptised in St Anne's Church, Soho, on 10 November 1723; [4] he was the second eldest son of Peter Bowyer (1691–1794) and his wife Elizabeth (née Williams).
The air raid, which came to be called the Doolittle Raid, after Lieutenant Colonel James "Jimmy" Doolittle, took place on April 18, 1942. [1] Bower piloted one of the sixteen B-25B Mitchell medium bombers that took off from the USS Hornet to attack cities on Honshu. [2] Bower and his five-member crew bombed the city of Yokohama during the raid. [1]