User:A Texas Historian/sandbox

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
  • Staff writer (December 1, 1882). "A Rousing Foot-Ball Game: The Clifton Club Gave the Naval Academy Team a Hard Struggle". The Sun (Morning ed.). Baltimore. p. 1. ISSN 1930-8965. OCLC 7909813.

During the Cooper Reservoir development controversy, the Review took an aggressively pro-development position that drew notice from other regional journalists.

Team Selection

After Georgia Tech defeated West Virginia by a blowout score of 42 to 19,[1] the Mid-Winter Sports Association, which operates the Sugar Bowl, decided that the game required altering. As part of this, the group began looking into providing bids for the game to the two service academies, Army and Navy. Both teams had finished the season well, and were both considered to be a possible "bowl coup".[2] Navy accepted a bid to the bowl after upsetting Army in the Army-Navy Game 27-20.[3] Mississippi was awarded a bid to the game after they defeated Mississippi State 14-0, becoming the Southeastern Conference (SEC) champions.[4]

Texas Highway Department (1956). Official Travel Map (Map) (1956 ed.). Scale not given. Austin: Texas Highway Department. Retrieved April 1, 2015 – via Wikimedia Commons.

Big Creek

Stuff for Sugar Bowl

Hawaii Bowl

References

  1. ^ Mulé, Marty (2012). "20th Annual Sugar Bowl Classic ~ January 1, 1954". Year–by–Year History. Allstate Sugar Bowl. Retrieved May 7, 2013.
  2. ^ Mulé, Marty (2012). "How Navy and Ole Miss Met in the 1955 Sugar Bowl". 21st Annual Sugar Bowl Classic. Allstate Sugar Bowl. Retrieved May 7, 2013.
  3. ^ Staff writer (December 7, 1990). "These Army-Navy games earned their stripes". The Baltimore Sun. ISSN 1930-8965. Retrieved May 7, 2013.
  4. ^ Johnson, Sam (November 28, 1954). "Mississippi Collects SEC Championship". Ocala Star-Banner. p. 15. ISSN 0163-3201.

Summary table

List of Shorty Awards and nominations received by Psych
Year Category Nominee Result Notes
2012 Best Social Media Campaign for Television Psych Hashtag Killer Won ref
2014 Best Use of Social Media for Television Psych Slumber Party Nominated ref
Most creative use of technology for a campaign Psych Pineapple Trifecta Nominated ref
Best Use of Gamification The S#cial Sector Finalist ref

[1]

Navy Stuff

McClung

Other

Before the season

Previous season

Navy began the 2013 season with a victory over Indiana and a blowout of Delaware, before they fell to Western Kentucky. The following week, Navy defeated rival Air Force in one of three games for the Commander-in-Chief Trophy. The win was followed by consecutive losses to Duke and Toledo, the latter of which Navy lost to in double-overtime on a missed extra point.[2][3] Recovering, Navy defeated Pittsburgh, before falling to rival Notre Dame in a game where the lead switched between the teams eight times.[2][4] The squad finished the regular season with four consecutive wins, including a 34-7 defeat of Army in the Army-Navy Game. Navy ended their season with a victory over Middle Tennessee in the Armed Forces Bowl. The 2013 season was ninth Commander-in-Chief Trophy win in eleven years, the tenth bowl game in the same period of time, and the twelfth consecutive victory over Army.[2][5]

Spring practices

Death of Will McKamey

References

  1. ^ Whittier Access Project (April–June 2001). "Whittier Access Project Recieves ASCE Award" (PDF). Technology for Alaskan Transport. 26 (2). Juneau: Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities: 1–3. Retrieved 17 October 2012. {{cite journal}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  2. ^ a b c Staff (2013). "2013 Navy Football–Game Results". NAVYSports. United States Naval Academy. Retrieved May 14, 2014.
  3. ^ Associated Press (October 19, 2013). "Toledo beats Navy 45-44 in 2 OTs after failed PAT". ESPN College Football. ESPN. Retrieved May 14, 2014.
  4. ^ Arnold, Keith (November 3, 2013). "The good, the bad, and the ugly: Notre Dame vs. Navy". Inside the Irish. NBCSports. Retrieved May 14, 2014.
  5. ^ Navy Midshipmen athletics (February 19, 2014). "Naval Academy Announces 2014 Football Schedule" (Press release). United States Naval Academy. Retrieved May 14, 2014.

Attempt at organization

At GA, get to FA

  1. William Wurtenburg
  2. Portage Glacier Highway
  3. Cooper, Texas
  4. Navy–Johns Hopkins football rivalry
  5. "Spellingg Bee"
  6. 1879 Navy Midshipmen football team
  7. "Woman Seeking Dead Husband: Smokers Okay, No Pets"

Need to finish/start

  1. Matthew McClung
  2. Whittier Access Project
  3. 1955 Sugar Bowl
  4. 1882 Navy Midshipmen football team
  5. 1883 Navy Midshipmen football team
  6. 2012 Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl
  7. Vaulx Carter
  8. John A. Hartwell (scientific publications list?)
  9. Bill Armstrong
  10. History of Navy Midshipmen football in the 19th Century
  11. Psych (season 1)
  12. Texas Recreational Road System
  13. Pecan Gap, Texas
  14. Liberty Grove, Delta County, Texas
  15. Cooper Independent School District
  16. Johnny Poe
  17. Hill Climb Racing
  18. Whale Trail
  19. "Somewhere Over The Rainbow/What A Wonderful World"
  20. Sharknado
  21. Haines Highway

Lists

  1. List of Navy Midshipmen head football coaches
  2. List of Psych cast members
  3. List of Navy Midshipmen football seasons
  4. List of Navy Midshipmen football All-Americans
  5. List of tallest buildings in Fort Worth

Big projects

  1. Navy Midshipmen football
  2. Racial integration of college football

Safekeeping

Craven stuff:

Reality


Table

Delta County vote[1][2]
by party in presidential elections
Year Republican Democratic Others
2016 80.5% 1,836 17.5% 400 2.0% 45
2012 75.5% 1,524 22.5% 454 2.0% 40
2008 72.3% 1,580 26.9% 589 0.8% 18
2004 69.5% 1,447 30.1% 627 0.4% 8
2000 60.2% 1,143 38.2% 726 1.6% 31
1996 42.7% 744 48.7% 849 8.6% 150
1992 29.7% 599 42.9% 864 27.4% 552
1988 40.4% 849 59.2% 1,244 0.4% 8
1984 51.2% 1,024 48.6% 973 0.2% 4
1980 35.8% 767 62.9% 1,347 1.3% 28
1976 21.1% 421 78.5% 1,563 0.4% 7
1972 61.9% 957 37.6% 581 0.5% 8
1968 19.7% 370 55.1% 1,037 25.2% 475
1964 17.3% 339 82.6% 1,619 0.1% 2
1960 25.1% 460 74.2% 1,360 0.7% 12
1956 32.2% 605 67.2% 1,262 0.6% 10
1952 30.8% 707 69.1% 1,585 0.1% 3
1948 7.6% 146 83.9% 1,594 8.4% 160
1944 6.7% 133 85.9% 1,706 7.4% 148
1940 7.9% 190 92.1% 2,214 0.0% 0
1936 5.3% 82 94.6% 1,594 0.1% 1
1932 4.1% 87 95.8% 2,013 0.1% 1
1928 44.0% 753 55.9% 958 0.1% 2
1924 17.6% 479 80.5% 2,186 1.9% 51
1920 21.1% 316 72.1% 1081 6.8% 102

Stuff

- Economy? - Media/culture?

Coaches

List of head football coaches showing season(s) coached, overall records, conference records, postseason records, championships and selected awards[A 1]
No. Name Season(s) GC OW OL OT O% CW CL CT C% PW PL PT DC CC NC Awards
1 Graydon Eggers 1928 9 3 6 0 0.333 0 0 0 0
2 C. B. Johnson 1929–32 42 26 9 7 0.702 5 1 0 0.833 0 0 0 1 0
3 Eugene Garbee 1933–34 17 10 6 1 0.618 2 0 0 1.000 0 0 0 0 0
4 Kidd Brewer 1935–38 38 30 5 3 0.829 12 2 1 0.833 1 1 0 1 0
  1. ^ McGilivray & Scammon (1994), pp. 732–777
  2. ^ McGilivray et al. (2001), pp. 829–879


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