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Wallace and switched
In Florida's primary, Wallace carried every county to win 42 percent of the vote ; another of his opponents was John V. Lindsay, the liberal mayor of New York, who had switched from former Republican affiliation to enter the Democratic presidential primaries.
After this experience, he borrowed a page from the book of William Wallace and switched to the guerrilla warfare which the latter had usually preferred.
In 2003, Penske Racing switched to Dodge, and appropriately, in 2004, Wallace won his 55th, and final, race on a short track: the 2004 spring Martinsville Speedway race.
* 1933 – Henry A. Wallace switched to Democratic Party ( and served as Vice President of the U. S., 1941 – 1945 ), but left after being fired as Secretary of Commerce by Harry S. Truman.
Although Wallace missed the season opener at Daytona, he ran all following races until owner Armando Fitz announced on March 17 that the # 36 team would only run part-time due to a lack of product distribution, and the owner points of the 36 were switched the # 28 of Wallace's new team.

Wallace and Ford
* In 1927, a feature-length silent film Casey at the Bat was released, starring Wallace Beery, Ford Sterling, and ZaSu Pitts.
Wallace was succeeded by James Miller in November 1997, followed in December 1999 by Ford executive Mark Fields, who has been credited with expanding Mazda's new product lineup and leading the turnaround during the early 2000s.
* June 11 – Wallace Ford, English-born American actor ( b. 1898 )
** Wallace Ford, British actor ( d. 1966 )
It stars Victor McLaglen, Heather Angel, Preston Foster, Margot Grahame, Wallace Ford, Una O ' Connor and J. M. Kerrigan.
A brutish but well-meaning Irishman, Gypo Nolan ( Victor McLaglen ), informs on his best friend Frankie McPhillip ( Wallace Ford ), who is a member of the illegal Irish Republican Army, in order to collect the reward of £ 20 offered by the Irish government and sail to the United States with his girlfriend Katie Madden ( Margot Grahame ).
Venus and her clown boyfriend Phroso ( Wallace Ford ) come with Frieda to visit, and Frieda comforts Hans when he begins to cry.
* Wallace Ford as Phroso
* Wallace Ford as Detective Fred Saunders
* Wallace Ford as Stranger in Empire State Hotel Lobby
* Wallace is a named locality about a mile north of Bryant at the junction of Aldritch and Ford roads on the Wallace Creek ( a tributary of the South Branch Pine River ) at.
The cleanup was under the direction of Landon Wallace ; the local Ford salesman and also the Hopkins Fire Chief.
* Cab Driver: Wallace Ford
Selina D ' Arcey ( Elizabeth Hartman ) is an 18-year-old blind girl living with her prostitute mother Rose-Ann ( Shelley Winters ) and drunkard grandfather Ol ' Pa ( Wallace Ford ), who both work in a hotel, in a tiny apartment of a large city.
* Wallace Ford ( 1898 – 1966 ), actor
Investigative journalist Max Wallace noted that " whatever credibility this absurd claim may have had was soon undermined when James M. Miller, a former Dearborn Independent employee, swore under oath that Ford had told him he intended to expose Sapiro.
* Max Wallace: The American Axis: Henry Ford, Charles Lindbergh and the Rise of the Third Reich.
One of the longer-running police dramas of the day, the series featured appearances by a number of actors, familiar and unfamiliar, among whom were Lynn Borden, Kim Darby, Antonio Fargas, Tiny Tim ( in the pilot TV-movie ), Randolph Mantooth, Cal Bellini, Sharon Gless, Dabbs Greer, Bernie Kopell, Frank Gorshin, Jess Walton, Pernell Roberts, Alan Oppenheimer, Dan Kemp, E. G. Marshall, Harrison Ford, John Schuck, Ingrid Pitt, Susan Saint James, Ivan Dixon, Harry Townes, Pat Hingle, Norman Alden, Anne Francis, David Carradine, Charo, Joseph Campanella, Bill Quinn, Bernard Fox, Tyler McVey, Robert Webber, Alan Hale, Jr., Marion Ross, Marcia Strassman, Susan Sullivan, Suzanne Pleshette, Bo Hopkins, James Hong, Jeanne Cooper, Paul Winfield, Harold Gould, James Farentino, Robert Reed, Bill Bixby, David Cassidy, David Hartman, Dana Elcar, Tina Louise, Lincoln Kilpatrick, Robert Karnes, Tyler MacDuff, Greg Mullavy, Rod Serling, Gene Raymond, Francine York, Peter Mark Richman, Jennifer Gan, Clu Gulager, Joel Grey, Van Williams, John Hoyt, Scott Glenn, William Windom, Joshua Bryant, Dorothy Malone, Robert Alda, Barbara Rush, Jack Kelly, Jason Wingreen, George Takei, George Wallace, John M. Pickard, Diana Muldaur, Jodie Foster, William Katt, Lee Grant, Steve Forrest, Susan Olsen, Michael Lerner, Edward Asner, Eddie Garrett, Darwin Joston, John Rubinstein, Jack Lord, Scott Marlowe, Norman Fell, Gavin MacLeod, Gary Collins, Johnny Seven, William Shatner, Bobby Darin, Martin Sheen, Cheryl Ladd, William Daniels, William Schallert, Burgess Meredith, Vic Tayback, Arch Johnson, James Drury, Ed Flanders, Bruce Lee and Ellen Corby ( Grandma Walton of TV fame ).
Famous MSU alumni include former Michigan governors James Blanchard and John Engler, U. S. Senators Debbie Stabenow and Tim Johnson, U. S. Ambassador to Brazil Donna Hrinak, former Jordan Prime Minister Adnan Badran, billionaire philanthropists Tom Gores and Eli Broad, Chief Justice of the Texas Supreme Court Wallace B. Jefferson, trial lawyer Geoffrey Feiger, former Food and Drug Administration official Peter Rheinstein, Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist Richard Ford, Teamsters president James P. Hoffa, Quicken Loans founder and Cleveland Cavaliers owner and billionaire Dan Gilbert, Sergeant at Arms of the U. S. House of Representatives Wilson Livingood, former Michigan U. S. Senator and Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham, former Vice President of the Republic of Liberia Harry Moniba, and former U. S. Ambassador to Italy Peter Secchia.
Historians have used public records to identify Fard as Wallace Dodd Ford, a former restaurateur and Moorish Science Temple leader.
A World War I draft registration card for Wallace Dodd Ford, from 1917, indicated he was living in Los Angeles, California, unmarried, as a restaurant owner, and reported that he was born in Shinka, Afghanistan on February 26, 1893.
He was identified as Wallace Dodd Ford on the basis of photographs and matching fingerprints.
The Nation of Islam rejects this identification of Wallace Dodd Ford as Wallace Fard Muhammad, interpreting it as part of a smear campaign.

Wallace and 1994
** MacCaffrey Wallace T. Elizabeth I: War and Politics, 1588 – 1603 ( 1994 )
Her most notable roles include Mia Wallace in Quentin Tarantino's Pulp Fiction ( 1994 ), Debby Miller in the HBO miniseries Hysterical Blindness ( 2002 ), and Beatrix Kiddo in Tarantino's Kill Bill films ( 2003 / 2004 ).
William Vincent Wallace, Celtic Publications ( 1994 )
In 1994, the members relocated to New Orleans, Louisiana to begin work on their second album, Soup, with producer Andy Wallace.
In the 1994 – 95 NCAA season, the sophomore was soon called one of the most eligible NBA prospects, along with his peers Joe Smith, Rasheed Wallace and Jerry Stackhouse.
* Booknotes interview with Stephen Lesher on George Wallace: American Populist, February 27, 1994.
He was transferred to Hull in November, where he spent a number of months without incident before he took deputy governor Adrian Wallace hostage on Easter Monday 1994.
* Professor Sir David Wallace ( 1994 – 2005 )
" Wallace, whom she married on August 4, 1994, a few weeks after meeting at a Bad Boy photoshoot.
* 1994: W. Wallace McDowell Award " For the development of the Silicon Gate Process, and the first commercial microprocessor.
Wallace at Michigan International Speedway | Michigan in 1994 with his MGD paint scheme
* William Wallace, ' European-Atlantic security institutions: current state and future prospects ', “ International spectator ” XXIX: 3 37-52 ( 1994 )
* William Wallace, ' Evropsko-atlantické bezpecnostní instituce: stav a vyhlídky ' ( The European-Atlantic Security Organization: the current situation and prospects ) “ ezinárodní vztahy ” 1 21-30 ( 1994 )
* William Wallace, “ Regional integration: the West European experience ” ( Washington, DC: Brookings Institution, 1994 )
In a series of letters published in 1994 as Two Women Talking: Correspondence 1985-1987, Wallace and poet Erin Mouré discuss feminist theory.
The category of Best Juvenile Mystery is also part of the Edgar Award, with such notable recipients as Barbara Brooks Wallace having won the honor twice, for The Twin in the Tavern in 1994 and Sparrows in the Scullery in 1998, and Tony Abbott for his novel The Postcard, which received critical accolades in 2009.
These included a long-running workshop of Uncle Vanya ( adapted by David Mamet ) which was developed from 1990 to 1994 and featured Wallace Shawn and Julianne Moore.
Alfred Wallace ( Wally ) Downer ( May 1, 1904 — August, 1994 ) was a Canadian politician and longtime member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario.
During their deliberation of the vision and mission statements of the church at a 1994 Joint Council retreat, President Wallace B. Smith first suggested a new name for the church, Community of Christ.
Bruce Wallace Ariss, Jr. ( August 10, 1911 – September, 1994 ) was an American artist and writer.
Further studies have analysed the reaction times of saccadic eye movements ( Hughs et al., 1994 ); and more recently correlated these findings to neural phenomena ( Wallace, 2004 ).
Noah Lindsey Beery ( August 10, 1913 – November 1, 1994 ), known professionally as Noah Beery, Jr. or just Noah Beery, was an American actor specializing in warm, friendly character parts similar to the ones played by his uncle Wallace Beery, although Noah Beery, Jr., unlike his uncle, seldom broke away from playing supporting roles.
In 1994 she met British composer Simon Wallace with whom she collaborated for the rest of her life writing some 300 songs.
The festival was established in 1994 by Max Wallace ( Station Manager of the community radio station CKCU-FM and the festival's Director for its first two years of operation, 1994 & 1995 ) and Chris White ( a local singer-songwriter ) and a large committee of volunteers.

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