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Fitzgerald, Carol. The Rivers of America: A Descriptive Bibliography, 2001. The Rivers of America: A Selected Exhibition of Books from the Collection of Carol Fitzgerald, Bienes Center For the Literary Arts, Broward County Library, 100 S Andrews Avenue, Ft. Lauderdale, Florida 33301 (pamphlet) 1997. An America Rivers Saga by Nicholas Basbanes
Carol Chen: Lisa Lord: 2001 Judge Robert Chong: Keone Young: 2007 David Chow: Vincent Irizarry: 2007–08 Avery Bailey Clark: Jessica Collins: 2011–15 Joe Clark: Scott Elrod: 2014–15 Matt Clark (a.k.a. Carter Mills) Eddie Cibrian: 1994–96 Russell Lawrence 2000 Rick Hearst: 2000–01 Ron Clark: Dennis Haysbert: 1986 Brandon Collins: Paul ...
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 1 February 2025. American football player (born 1983) American football player Larry Fitzgerald Fitzgerald with the Arizona Cardinals in 2017 No. 11 Position: Wide receiver Personal information Born: (1983-08-31) August 31, 1983 (age 41) Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S. Height: 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) Weight: 218 ...
Fitzgerald was honored for his charitable and community work, most notably with his own First Down Foundation and the Carol Fitzgerald Memorial Fund, named after his mother who died of breast ...
Fitzgerald is the founder of Voices in Harmony, a non-profit community theater in Los Angeles. [2] From 1999 to 2006, she played Carol Fitzpatrick, assistant to press secretary C.J. Cregg, on The West Wing. On January 19, 2007, Nicholas D. Kristof of The New York Times announced that Fitzgerald had won a writing contest he had sponsored on ...
Crazy Sunday" is a short story by F. Scott Fitzgerald, originally published in the October 1932 issue of American Mercury. Fitzgerald's story is set in the brutal life of the great studios of 1930s Hollywood, with their flocks of actors, writers and directors seething with interpersonal and sexual politics. Although less than 6,400 words, it ...
An American Carol which opened on 1,639 screens nationwide, finished ninth at the box office that week, with a gross of $3.8 million, or a per-screen average of $2,325. For its second weekend, An American Carol had a 58.8 percent drop in box office receipts and dropped to #15, grossing $1,505,000 at 1,621 theaters or $928 per screen. [16]
The magazine was founded in late 1989 in Oxford, Mississippi, by Marc Smirnoff (born July 11, 1963). [2]The name "Oxford American" is a play on The American Mercury, H. L. Mencken's general interest magazine which Smirnoff long admired.