Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "WETA-TV" ¶ 3
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

1953 and Greater
Meacham was Fort Worth's airline airport until April 1953 when the airlines moved to Amon Carter Field, later known as Greater Southwest International Airport.

1953 and Washington
Mr. Devey first came to Sprague in 1953 as a Product Specialist in the Field Engineering Department, coming from the Office of Naval Research in Washington, D. C., where he was an electronic scientist engaged in undersea warfare studies.
* 1953 – The United States Supreme Court rules that Washington, D. C. restaurants could not refuse to serve black patrons.
* History of Missouri Indian Tribes, Access Genealogy, extracts for Missouria from John R. Swanton, The Indian Tribes of North America, Bureau of American Ethnology, Bulletin 145, Washington, DC: US Government Printing Office, 1953.
Paul Allen was born in Seattle, Washington, to parents Kenneth Samuel Allen, an associate director of the University of Washington libraries, and Edna Faye ( née Gardner ) Allen, on January 21, 1953.
In America in September 1953, Prince Akihito is noted as having served sushi at a dinner at the Japanese Embassy in Washington.
On his way to Florida, Clarke stopped in to see his friend Frederick C. Durant ( President, International Astronautical Federation, 1953 – 1956 ) and his family in the Washington Metropolitan Area where he continued working on the last chapter.
Another Mantle homer, hit right-handed off Chuck Stobbs at Griffith Stadium in Washington, D. C. on April 17, 1953, was measured by Yankees traveling secretary Red Patterson ( hence the term " tape-measure home run ") to have traveled 565 feet ( 172 m ).
* 1958: George Washington, Volumes I-VI by Douglas Southall Freeman, and Volume VII, written by John Alexander Carroll and Mary Wells Ashworth after Dr. Freeman's death in 1953
In the 1953 renumbering, Route 4 was defined to run along its current alignment between Route 20 in Paterson and the George Washington Bridge.
* Joe Pace ( born 1953 ), played for the NBA Washington Bullets from 1976 to 1978.
A trolley used to operate from Washington, Pennsylvania to Pittsburgh through Canonsburg until 1953.
The site of the Pennsylvania Trolley Museum is also located in the Township on the former Pittsburgh Railways Company ’ s trolley line to Washington which was abandoned in 1953.
Frank J. Gaffney, Jr. ( born April 5, 1953 ) is the founder and president of the American Center for Security Policy, columnist at The Washington Times, Big Peace, and Townhall, and radio host on Secure Freedom Radio.
Link meant his first wife, Elizabeth and married in 1953, had the first daughter, Beth July of 1954 then the family moved to Washington, D. C. August 1954, and in February 1959 Link's son Link3rd was born, finally to a farm in Accokeek, Maryland.
Loading up their 1947 Buick and traveling on a $ 600 loan from Clasby, they drove across country from Washington, D. C., and up the Alaska Highway in the dead of winter, arriving in Fairbanks in February 1953.
Ivan Stang, born Douglass St. Clair Smith ( August 21, 1953 ) in Washington, D. C., raised in Fort Worth, Texas, and attended the St. Mark's School of Texas.
This happened in 1953 to the Federal Express, a Pennsylvania Railroad train pulling in to Washington DC's Union Station, causing the train to crash into the passenger concourse and fall through the floor.
* Climber's Guide to the Cascade and Olympic Mountains of Washington ( American Alpine Club, 1949, revised edition 1953 )
It met in Washington, D. C. from January 3, 1951 to January 3, 1953, during the last two years of the second administration of U. S. President Harry S. Truman.
In international competition, at Woodbine Racetrack in Toronto Arcaro won the 1953 Queen's Plate ( Canada's most prestigious race ); at Laurel Park Racecourse in Laurel, Maryland, he won the 1954 Washington, D. C. International against the best horses and riders from Europe.
* David D. Caldwell ( 1870 – 1953 ), of Washington, D. C.
Beans, Bullets, and Black Oil-The Story Of Fleet Logistics Afloat In The Pacific During World War, Washington DC: Department of the Navy, 1953, p. 168.
* J. Bennett Johnston, Jr. 1953 — U. S. Senator from Louisiana, 1972 to 1997 ; Washington, D. C .- based lobbyist
Albizu was pardoned in 1953 by then governor Luis Muñoz Marín but the pardon was revoked the following year after the 1954 nationalist attack of the United States House of Representatives, when four Puerto Rican Nationalists, led by Lolita Lebrón opened fire from the gallery of the Capitol Building in Washington, D. C ..

1953 and Educational
In the United States, National Educational Television carried both WHA and CBC versions from 1953 until 1970, when NET ceded the network to the Public Broadcasting Service.
Category: Educational institutions established in 1953
From 1953 to 1961, Nitze served as president of the Foreign Service Educational Foundation while concurrently serving as associate of the Washington Center of Foreign Policy Research and the School of Advanced International Studies ( SAIS ) of the Johns Hopkins University.
Category: Educational institutions established in 1953
Category: Educational institutions established in 1953
Category: Educational institutions established in 1953
Category: Educational institutions established in 1953
Category: Educational institutions established in 1953
Alfred McBride ordained 1953, founder and executive director of the department of religious education at the National Catholic Educational Association, author of forty books on the Bible, history of the Mass, etc.
The television stations are licensed by the Alabama Educational Television Commission, which was created by the Alabama state legislature in 1953.
Alabama was one of the earliest states to enter educational television broadcasting when the state created the Alabama Educational Television Commission in 1953.
Category: Educational institutions established in 1953
Category: Educational institutions established in 1953
The Mohawk-Hudson Council on Educational Television was formed in 1953, through the financial support from television station WRGB Channel 6, its then-parent company General Electric and many supporters and local businesses in the Albany / Capital Region.
Category: Educational institutions established in 1953
Category: Educational institutions established in 1953
Category: Educational institutions established in 1953
Category: Educational institutions established in 1953
Category: Educational institutions established in 1953
Category: Educational institutions established in 1953
Category: Educational institutions established in 1953
Category: Educational institutions established in 1953
Category: Educational institutions established in 1953
Attended school in Balaoan, Vigan, San Fernando, and was appointed government student to the United States in 1905 ; graduate of the Western Illinois State Teachers College at Macomb in 1908 ; attended the University of Chicago, in 1906 and 1907 ; graduated from Columbia University in New York City, and from the Teachers College of New York City in 1910 ; first Filipino superintendent of schools in 1915 and 1916 ; assistant director of education 1917-1921 ; member of the first Philippine mission to the United States in 1919 and 1920 ; lecturer at the University of the Philippines 1919-1921 ; president of the National University 1921-1936 ; elected a member of the Philippine Senate in 1925 ; elected as a Resident Commissioner to the United States in 1928 ; reelected in 1931 and served from March 4, 1929, until January 3, 1935, when his term expired ; member of the Constitutional Convention in 1934 ; member of the first National Assembly in 1935 ; member of the Economic Mission to the United States in 1939 ; chairman of Educational Mission 1938-1941 ; chairman of National Council of Education in 1941 ; director of publicity and propaganda until January 1942 ; chairman of National Cooperative Administration in 1941 ; subsequently assistant commissioner of the Department of Education, Health, and Public Welfare, then Minister of Education of the Philippines until 1945 ; chancellor of Osias Colleges ; elected to the Philippine Senate in 1947 for the term expiring in 1953 ; served as minority and majority floor leader and then elected president of the Philippine Senate ; Philippine representative to the Interparliamentary Union in Rome and to the International Trade Conference in Genoa in 1948 ; elected to the Philippine Senate, 1961-1967, and served as president pro tempore ; a resident of Mandaluyong, Rizal, Philippines, until his death in Manila on May 20, 1976.

5.380 seconds.