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10FP Choate .308 Win..223 Rem. 1,111 mm (43.75 in) 660 mm (26 in) 5,100 g (11.25 lb) Black synthetic Choate adjustable stock w/accessory rail Drilled and tapped for scope 10FP Folding Choate .308 Win. 1,022 mm (40.25 in) 510 mm (20 in) 4,800 g (10.5 lb) Black synthetic Choate folding stock w/accessory rail Drilled and tapped for scope
Savage Seven Tommy Steiner 1981 (tie) Savage Seven Tommy Steiner 1981 (tie) No. 105 Dell Hall 1980 No. 777 Harry Vold Rodeo 1979 No. 777 Harry Vold Rodeo 1978 Red Lightning Tommy Steiner 1977 General Isomo Beutler Brothers and Cervi 1976 Panda Bear Harry Vold Rodeo 1975 (tie) Black 6 Tommy Steiner 1975 (tie) Tiger Cervi Rodeo 1974 Tiger
Original wooden stocks were replaced with Choate black plastic stocks about 1990. [ 55 ] [ 58 ] The regiment received L85A2 rifles in August, 2015, and the Ruger was phased out in January, 2016. [ 59 ]
The Jerry D. Choate Stock Index From January 2008 to December 2012, if you bought shares in companies when Jerry D. Choate joined the board, and sold them when he left, you would have a -51.4 percent return on your investment, compared to a -2.8 percent return from the S&P 500.
It was the standard-issue rifle of the South African Marine Corps and South African Air Force, as well within the South West African Territorial Force as a substitute for the R1 Rifle (FN FAL) until it was replaced by the R4 assault rifle in the 1980s [54] The rifle's stock would soon break down in the heat and become loose, so a replacement ...
Randy Choate (born 1975), American baseball player; Randy Churchill (born 1960), Canadian stock car racer; Randy Ciarlante, American musician; Randy Clark (disambiguation), multiple people; Randy Clay (1928–2006), American football player; Randy Cohen, American writer; Randy Collins (born 2001), Japanese fashion designer
w00tstock was a touring variety show billed as "3 Hours of Geeks & Music". It was created in 2009 by Wil Wheaton, Adam Savage and Paul and Storm. [1] [2] The first shows took place in 2009 in San Francisco and Los Angeles, and continued until 2016, a total of 21 shows having been presented.
Naumkeag was designed by architect Stanford White of McKim, Mead & White in 1885 as the summer estate for Joseph Hodges Choate (1832–1917), a prominent New York City attorney and American ambassador to the United Kingdom from 1899 to 1905, and his wife Caroline Dutcher Sterling Choate, an artist and advocate for women's education.