About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 24. Chapters: Olive Winchester, James Van Der Beek, Stephen Stetler, Calvin O. Butts, Mark Jacobs, Albert Baez, James E. Cheek, William H. Gray, Deedee Corradini, Arturo Valenzuela, John T. Cunningham, Fred Pierce Corson, Clint Bolick, Michael L. Baird, Robert E. Hayes, Jr., Maria Mazziotti Gillan, Floyd W. Nease, David B. Audretsch, Peter Sprigg, Ed Lynch, John Lowden Knight, Raymond LeRoy Archer, John Edward Robinson, Soon-Yi Previn, Emerson Stephen Colaw, Roger H. Martin, Craig Stanford, Herbert George Welch, Peter Verniero, James Simester, Teresa Ruiz, John Wesley Lord, Bryan Zanisnik, Woodrow Whidden. Excerpt: Olive May Winchester (22 November 1879-15 February 1947) was an American ordained minister and a pioneer biblical scholar and theologian in the Church of the Nazarene, who was the first woman ordained by any Christian denomination in Scotland, the first woman admitted into and graduated from the Bachelor of Divinity course at the University of Glasgow, and the first woman to complete a Th.D. (Doctor of Theology) degree from the divinity school of Drew University. Olive May Winchester was born on November 22, 1879 in Monson, Maine, the oldest child of lawyer Charles B. Winchester (born August 8, 1851 in Corinna, Maine; died October 2, 1892 in Yankton, South Dakota), and Sarah A. "Sadie" Blackstone Winchester (born May 1, 1853 in Pownal, Maine; died February 6, 1949 in Los Angeles, California). Winchester's parents were married in Portland, Maine on February 22, 1879 in the Methodist Episcopal Church. After June 25, 1880, the Winchester family left Monson, Maine and by 1881 had relocated to Forestburg, in Sanborn County in Dakota Territory, where Charles taught school at upper Forestburg from its opening on November 7, 1881, until a permanent replacement started on December 26, 1881. Winchester's younger sister, Edith...