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The former Hornet's Nest in Malvern is among the blighted buildings in Carroll County which are targeted for demolition by county officials. Former Malvern restaurant among structures targeted for ...
Damascus proper is a locally high spot at 847 ft (258m) above sea level, while other portions of the area described as Damascus are as high as 866 ft (264m) above sea level. Due to a quirk in the layout of Montgomery County, the highest elevation in the county is actually within what is considered Mt. Airy, MD, measuring 883 ft (269m) above sea ...
Hornets' Nest (1970), an Italian-American war film directed by Phil Karlson; Hornet's Nest, a 1997 novel; The Hornet's Nest: A Novel of the Revolutionary War, a 2003 novel by former president Jimmy Carter; Hornets' Nest (audio drama), a 2009 Doctor Who audio play; The Hornet's Nest (2014), an American documentary film about the Afghanistan War
Damascus' school colors are green and gold, and their mascot is the Swarmin' Hornet. [4] The school's biggest rivalries are with the neighboring Seneca Valley High School and Clarksburg High School. Damascus has a prestigious football program which has won twelve Maryland state championships.
The Hornets Nest is a 1,012-seat multi-purpose gymnasium at California State University, Sacramento (Sacramento State) in Sacramento, California. The arena opened in 1955, and is one of the oldest in D-I sports. [1] It is home to the Sacramento State Hornets men's basketball, women's basketball, and women's volleyball teams.
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The Hornet's Nest is a 2014 American documentary film about the Afghanistan war, directed and produced by David Salzberg and Christian Tureaud.. The film follows two journalists, Mike Boettcher and Carlos Boettcher (a father and son), embedded with a group of United States Army soldiers from 101st Airborne Division sent on a mission into one of Afghanistan's most hostile valleys.
The Eagle's Nest is a historic home located at Phoenix, Baltimore County, Maryland.It is a large fieldstone dwelling begun, it is believed, in the 1690s and completed in 1802 on part of a 2500-acre tract named "The Valley of Jehosaphat" by Richard Smith, Jr., who was granted the land by Lord Baltimore in 1684 in recognition of Smith's service as the first attorney general of Maryland.