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Chicago and Sting
* Chicago Sting, an American soccer team ( 1975 1988 )
However, four NASL teams ( Chicago Sting, Minnesota Strikers, New York Cosmos, and San Diego Sockers ) joined the Major Indoor Soccer League for its 1984 85 season.
The Fire keeps a close connection with the Chicago Sting ( its predecessor team in the NASL ) by holding frequent commemorative events, reunions, and wearing Sting-inspired shirts.
Third shirts have often been yellow ( for the Chicago Sting, later for the partnership with Morelia.
Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times said, " The plot ... is not as complex as a movie like The Sting, and we can see some of the surprises as soon as they appear on the horizon.
# 4. 18 Victor Nogueira ( Chicago Sting, Cleveland Force, San Diego Sockers )
In 1978, Advocaat made the move to the United States to play with the Chicago Sting in the North American Soccer League ( NASL ).
The series won two silver plaques in Chicago for the episodes Scarlet Cinema and The Sweetest Sting.
In October 1985, Rongen signed as a free agent with the Chicago Sting of MISL.
Category: Chicago Sting ( MISL ) players
That same year the Carousel and Hippodrome were memorable sets in the film The Sting, although the story was set in Chicago.
The Chicago Sting ( 1974 1988 ) was an American professional soccer team based in Chicago, Illinois.
The Sting were founded in 1974 by Lee Stern of Chicago and competed in the NASL for the first time in the 1975 season.
The team was named in reference to the popular 1973 film, The Sting, whose action was set in Chicago of the 1930s.
1974 75: The Chicago Sting were the dream child of Lee Stern, a leading Chicago commodities broker, who in 1974 took an expensive gamble that his hometown would accept soccer as a major league sport.
In Chicago he hit six goals in the Sting s inaugural season and firmly established himself as a fan s favourite.
1976: The Sting s second season saw the arrival of more players from the British Isles and the return to Chicago of Polish striker Janusz Kowalik.
The Fort Lauderdale Strikers were beaten in the first round of the playoffs ( the Sting winning the best of three series by two wins to none ) but the San Diego Sockers proved to be too strong for Chicago and booked a place at Soccer Bowl 79 with a 2 0 win in California followed by a 1 0 victory at Wrigley Field.
1980: Phil Parkes, the former Wolverhampton Wanderers ‘ keeper, became the Sting s number 1, moving to Chicago from the Vancouver Whitecaps where he had played for the past three seasons and established himself as the NASL s top glovesman.
The 1980 campaign, and the 1980 81 Indoor Season that followed ( the Sting s first foray into the world of the indoor game ), were major turning points as far as the Chicago public were concerned and the club started to attract large crowds on a regular basis.
26, 468 saw the Sting take on the Tampa Bay Rowdies at Wrigley Field, 18, 112 watched the Washington Diplomats home fixture, and two other matches drew crowds in excess of 16, 000, while indoors 16, 257 packed the Chicago Stadium for one game as the Sting s reached but lost the NASL Championship finals.

Chicago and Stanley
According to The Chicago Tribune News Service, State Atty. Gen. Stanley Mosk of California has devised a series of questions which the joiner might well ask about any organization seeking his money and his name: 1.
Two English translations of the Various History, by Fleming ( 1576 ) and Stanley ( 1665 ) made Aelian's miscellany available to English readers, but after 1665 no English translation appeared, until three English translations appeared almost simultaneously: James G. DeVoto, Claudius Aelianus: Ποιϰίλης Ἱοτορίας (" Varia Historia ") Chicago, 1995 ; Diane Ostrom Johnson, An English Translation of Claudius Aelianus ' " Varia Historia ", 1997 ; and N. G. Wilson, Aelian: Historical Miscellany in the Loeb Classical Library.
After losing the first three games of the series against the Sharks, the Red Wings won three consecutive games to force a Game 7, becoming just the eighth team in NHL history to accomplish the feat ( the Chicago Blackhawks became the seventh team to do so earlier in the 2011 Stanley Cup Playoffs, against the Vancouver Canucks ).
Considered to be the classic experiment on the origin of life, it was conducted in 1952 and published in 1953 by Stanley Miller and Harold Urey at the University of Chicago.
In 2008, Chicago agreed to lease its parking meter system to an operating company created by Morgan Stanley in a 75-year, $ 1. 16 billion deal as it struggled to close a yawning budget deficit.
Stanley Jordan was born in Chicago, Illinois, and he received a BA in digital music composition from Princeton University in 1981, studying under computer-music composers Paul Lansky and Milton Babbitt.
Under Bowman, they swept the Chicago Blackhawks to repeat as Stanley Cup champions in 1991 92.
In, Chicago was poised to fare even better in the playoffs, winning the Presidents ' Trophy for best regular-season record, but the Cinderella Minnesota North Stars stunned them in six games in the first-round en route to an improbable Stanley Cup Final appearance.
However, they were swept four games to none by the Mario Lemieux-led defending Stanley Cup champion Pittsburgh Penguins ( who, in sweeping the Blackhawks, tied the record Chicago had set only days before ).
Although this was the only year the city of Chicago would host a concurrent NBA / NHL finals in the same year, Blackhawks Coach Mike Keenan would see this again in New York when he coached the Rangers to their first Stanley Cup in 54 years two years later.
Chicago skyline with the CNA Center showing the Blackhawks logo, the Smurfit-Stone Building saying Go Hawks and the Blue Cross Blue Shield Tower saying Hawks win the night after the 2009 10 Chicago Blackhawks season | 2009 10 Chicago Blackhawks won the 2010 Stanley Cup Finals, viewed from the Petrillo Music Shell lawn in Grant Park ( Chicago ) | Grant Park
President Barack Obama talks with members of the Stanley Cup Champion Chicago Blackhawks following a ceremony to honor the team's 2009-10 championship season on the South Lawn ( White House ) | South Lawn of the White House, March 11, 2011.
On April 8, 2009, the Columbus Blue Jackets secured the first Stanley Cup Playoff berth in the franchise's eight-year history with a 4-3 shootout win over the Chicago Blackhawks.
They won the first two games of the Campbell Conference Finals against the Chicago Blackhawks, but lost the next two before winning the final two and returning to the Stanley Cup Finals.
Continuing their success in the playoffs, the Canucks made the Stanley Cup Finals with a combined 11 2 record in series against the Calgary Flames, Los Angeles Kings, and Chicago Black Hawks.
Morgan Stanley agreed to pay a $ 5 million fine to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and an addition $ 1. 75 million to CME and the Chicago Board of Trade.
The Canadiens would win the Stanley Cup, sweeping Chicago in four games.
He went on to lead the Chicago Black Hawks to the Stanley Cup in 1961 — their third overall and first in 23 years.
In 1931, when the show debuted, radio had yet to establish coast-to-coast networks so two separate casts performed — one in San Francisco starring Floy Margaret Hughes and the other in Chicago starring Shirley Bell as Annie, Stanley Andrews as " Daddy ", and Allan Baruck ( and later Mel Tormé ) as Joe Corntassel.
* Stanley Cup Montreal Canadiens defeat the Chicago Black Hawks 4 games to 2
* Stanley Cup Montreal Canadiens win 4 games to 3 over the Chicago Black Hawks
The field contains individuals trained in philosophy such as H. Tristram Engelhardt, Jr. of Rice University, Baruch Brody of Rice University, Peter Singer of Princeton University, Daniel Callahan of the Hastings Center, and Daniel Brock of Harvard University, medically trained clinician ethicists such as Mark Siegler of the University of Chicago and Joseph Fins of Cornell University, lawyers such as Nancy Dubler of Albert Einstein College of Medicine or Jerry Menikoff of the federal Office of Human Research Protections, political scientists like Francis Fukuyama, religious studies scholars including James Childress, and theologians like Lisa Sowle Cahill and Stanley Hauerwas.

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