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Don Shula Stadium was built around the preexisting Wasmer Field.Wasmer Field has been the "home turf" for the JCU Blue Streaks since 1968. Don Shula Stadium was opened in 2003 with the official dedication and opening event held on September 27 of that year in a football game between the John Carroll Blue Streaks and the Polar Bears of Ohio Northern University.
Theodore "Ted" [1] Milton Wassmer was born on February 23, 1910, in Salt Lake City, Utah.His parents were Theodore James and Hester Hall Wassmer. He was the oldest of their eight children. [2]
Sometimes the prewritten obituary's subject outlives its author. One example is The New York Times' obituary of Taylor, written by the newspaper's theater critic Mel Gussow, who died in 2005. [7] The 2023 obituary of Henry Kissinger featured reporting by Michael T. Kaufman, who died almost 14 years earlier in 2010. [8]
Wasmer in 2010. Étienne Wasmer (born 1970) is a French economist. He specializes in labor economics, job search theory, discrimination and human capital. He was awarded the "Prix du meilleur jeune économiste de France" by Le Monde and the "Cercle des économistes" in 2006, a prize shared with Thierry Mayer (Paris-I).
The company entered into aircraft production in 1955 when it produced under licence a batch of Jodel D.112 two-seater aircraft at its factory at Issoire. The company also produced the single-seat WA-20 and two-seat WA-30 gliders.
Fred Wasmer (born 7 August 1938) is an Australian sprint canoeist who competed in the mid-1960s. At the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo , he was eliminated in the semifinals of both the C-1 1000 m and C-2 1000 m events.
Having manufactured glass-fibre cowlings for Bébé, D112 and D120 Jodels, increasing number of glass-fibre parts for their Javelot, Bijave and Super-Javelot gliders, and then Super-IV aircraft, in 1966 Wassmer first flew the glass-fibre WA-50 prototype, a single-engined four-seat cabin monoplane with a retractable tricycle landing gear.
The Wassmer WA 26 Squale (English: Shark) is a single seat, 15 m (49 ft 3 in) span competition glider, designed and produced in France in the late 1960s. It has wooden wings and a glass fibre fuselage.