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・ William B. Rowe
・ William B. Royall
・ William B. Rudman
・ William B. Ruger
・ William B. Saxbe
・ William B. Scott (magazine editor)
・ William B. Shattuc
・ William B. Sherman Farm
・ William B. Shubb
・ William B. Slaughter
・ William B. Small
・ William B. Snow
・ William B. Spencer
・ William B. Spencer House
・ William B. Spofford
William B. Spong, Jr.
・ William B. Stacy
・ William B. Stansbury
・ William B. Steele
・ William B. Strang Jr.
・ William B. T. Trego
・ William B. Tabler
・ William B. Taliaferro
・ William B. Taylor (engineer)
・ William B. Taylor, Jr.
・ William B. Tennison (bugeye)
・ William B. Travis
・ William B. Travis High School (Austin, Texas)
・ William B. Trembley
・ William B. Trower Bayshore Natural Area Preserve


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William B. Spong, Jr. : ウィキペディア英語版
William B. Spong, Jr.

William Belser Spong, Jr. (September 29, 1920October 8, 1997) was a Democratic Party politician and a United States Senator who represented the state of Virginia from 1966 to 1973.
==Biography==
Spong was born in Portsmouth, Virginia, and attended public schools, Hampden-Sydney College in Hampden-Sydney, the University of Virginia in Charlottesville, and the University of Edinburgh in Scotland. He studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1947, commencing practice in Portsmouth soon thereafter. During World War II, Spong served in the Army Air Corps, Eighth Air Force from 1942 to 1945. After the War, Spong was a lecturer in law and government at the College of William and Mary from 1948 to 1949.
Spong entered Virginia politics as a member of the Virginia House of Delegates from 1954 to 1955, and afterwards as a member of the Virginia State Senate from 1956 to 1966. While in the Senate, Spong was chairman of the Virginia Commission on Public Education from 1958 to 1962.
In 1966, Spong was personally recruited by President Lyndon Johnson to mount a primary challenge against 20-year incumbent Senator A. Willis Robertson. Johnson was angered at Robertson's opposition to the Civil Rights and Voting Rights Acts. Spong defeated Robertson in one of the biggest upsets in Virginia political history and breezed to victory in November. Robertson resigned on December 31, 1966; Governor Mills Godwin appointed Spong to the seat, giving Spong higher seniority than other senators elected that November. Spong's primary victory marked the beginning of the end of the Byrd Organization's long dominance of Virginia politics.
However, Spong's Senate career was short-lived. He was narrowly defeated in 1972 for reelection by 8th District Congressman William L. Scott. Spong probably would have won had it not been for Richard Nixon's gigantic landslide that year; Nixon carried Virginia by almost 38 points, winning all but one of the state's counties and independent cities in the process.
After his Senate career, Spong returned to the practice of law, and also served as a law professor and the dean of the Marshall-Wythe School of Law at the College of William and Mary from 1976 to 1985. For 1976, Spong was president of the Virginia Bar Association. He was appointed interim president of Old Dominion University in 1988, and was a resident of Portsmouth until his death. He is interred at the University of Virginia Cemetery in Charlottesville, Virginia.

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