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Bill Bryant Johnson (born July 18, 1951) is the senior leader of Bethel Church, a charismatic megachurch in Redding, California. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] The congregation has grown in membership from 2,000 when he joined in 1996, [ 5 ] to over 11,000 in 2019. [ 6 ]
Bill Johnson (reed player) (1912–1960), American alto saxophonist, clarinetist, and arranger; Bill Johnson (banjoist) (died 1955), American jazz banjoist and guitarist; Bill Johnson (blues musician), Canadian singer-songwriter and guitarist; Bill Johnson (musical theatre actor) (1916–1957), American actor and singer of stage and screen
Sons of Bill is a band from Charlottesville, Virginia [1] founded by brothers Sam, Abe, and James Wilson, along with bassist Seth Green and drummer Todd Wellons. The band took their name from the Wilson brothers' father, Bill Wilson, a musician and professor of philosophical theology and Southern literature at the University of Virginia where the band initially formed. [2]
Dauch was born in Norwalk, Ohio, in 1942 [1] to W.G. Albert and Helen Dauch, the youngest of their seven children. After high school, he attended Purdue University, where he played football before graduating in 1964 with a Bachelor of Science in Industrial Management and Science. [2]
Bill Johnson was born on January 9, 1954. He attended Pennsylvania State University, where he played football as an offensive lineman, but did not earn a degree. [2] [3] He later graduated from Duke University summa cum laude with a bachelor's degree in history. He also obtained a J.D. degree from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill ...
On November 16, 2023, the Board of Trustees at Youngstown State University offered Johnson the position of president of the university, which Johnson accepted. [17] His appointment was met with protests over his record as an election denier, his support for Trump's so-called "Muslim ban," and his opposition to LGBT rights, as well as the lack ...
William Manuel "Bill" Johnson (died December 3, 1972) was an American jazz musician who played banjo and double bass; [2] he is considered the father of the "slap" style of double bass playing. [ 3 ] In New Orleans, he played at Lulu White's legendary house of prostitution, with the Eagle Band, and with the Excelsior Brass Band. [ 4 ]
After his son, Mark Johnson, was appointed to the cabinet of Governor Frank White (a Republican), Johnson hinted he would switch parties. In 1983 he did so and ran as the GOP nominee for Chief Justice in 1984, but lost by a 58-42% margin to Jack Holt, Jr., a nephew of Frank Holt, whom Johnson had defeated for the gubernatorial nomination in 1966.