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Knoebels Amusement Resort (/ k ə ˈ n oʊ b əl z /) is a family-owned and operated amusement park, picnic grove, and campground in Elysburg, Pennsylvania.Opened in 1926, it is the United States's largest free-admission park.
Crazy John's was a mobile phone retail chain in Australia started by Turkish Australian businessman John Ilhan. [2] Crazy John's was the largest independent phone retailer in Australia, employing more than 400 people with more than 600 retail stores.
The Crazy Horse Memorial is a mountain monument under construction on privately held land in the Black Hills, in Custer County, South Dakota, United States. It will depict the Oglala Lakota warrior Crazy Horse , riding a horse and pointing to his tribal land.
J.C. (Clarence) "Pappy" Hoel (May 30, 1904 – February 1, 1989) was an American motorcycle racer, dealer, businessman, and founder of the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally. In 1983, he received the American Motorcyclist Association 's (AMA) Dud Perkins Award for outstanding contributions to motorcycling.
The Big Timber Stock, a large igneous intrusion, forms the bedrock in the Crazy Mountains. [1] The stock is of Tertiary age, and consists of diorite and gabbro with zones of Quartz Monzodiorite, which has been intruded by many dikes and sills. Geological features of the Crazy Mountains include: Shields River; South Fork Musselshell River; Sweet ...
Crazy little girl who used to f---ing be wild and no limits, all dreams.” The video's caption references Lopez's 2002 song "Jenny from the Block," in which she sings about her come up: “She ...
The state park's main feature is the C. J. Brown Reservoir, a flood control reservoir created by the USACE on Buck Creek (or Lagonda Creek) as part of a flood control system in the Ohio River drainage basin. The park offers year-round recreation including camping, boating, hunting, fishing, swimming, picnicking, and hiking. [3]
"I'm Crazy" is a short story written by J. D. Salinger for the December 22, 1945 [1] issue of Collier's magazine. [2] Despite the story's underlying melancholy, the magazine described it as "the heart-warming story of a kid whose only fault lay in understanding people so well that most of them were baffled by him and only a very few would believe in him".