enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Badminton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Badminton

    Games employing shuttlecocks have been played for centuries across Eurasia, [a] but the modern game of badminton developed in the mid-19th century among the expatriate officers of British India as a variant of the earlier game of battledore and shuttlecock. ("Battledore" was an older term for "racquet".) [4] Its exact origin remains obscure.

  3. Music Box Dancer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_Box_Dancer

    "Music Box Dancer" is an instrumental piece by Canadian musician Frank Mills that was an international hit in the late 1970s. It features an arpeggiated piano theme in C-sharp major (enharmonic to D-flat major ) designed to resemble a music box , accompanied by other instruments playing a counterpoint melody as well as a wordless chorus.

  4. Battledore and shuttlecock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battledore_and_shuttlecock

    Battledore and shuttlecock, or jeu de volant, is a sport related to the professional sport of badminton. The game is played by two or more people using small rackets (battledores), made of parchment or rows of gut stretched across wooden frames, and shuttlecocks, made of a base of some light material, such as cork, with trimmed feathers fixed ...

  5. Music box - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_box

    A music box (American English) or musical box (British English) is an automatic musical instrument in a box that produces musical notes by using a set of pins placed on a revolving cylinder or disc to pluck the tuned teeth (or lamellae) of a steel comb.

  6. Frank Mills - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Mills

    "Music Box Dancer" was Mills' only US Top 40 pop hit. The follow-up, another piano instrumental, "Peter Piper", peaked at number 48 on the Billboard Hot 100 but became a Top 10 hit on the Billboard Adult Contemporary chart. [7] Mills managed one final Adult Contemporary chart entry, "Happy Song", which peaked at number 41 at the beginning of ...

  7. William G. Morgan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_G._Morgan

    William George Morgan (January 23, 1870 – December 27, 1942) was the inventor of volleyball, originally called "Mintonette", a name derived from the game of badminton which he later agreed to change to better reflect the nature of the sport. [1]

  8. Tony Verna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tony_Verna

    Verna's broadcast hallmark was an ability to continually come up with advances in the use of cameras, program content and creative interplay. It was this skill that prompted him to use a trick left over from radio days in order to outwit the technology of the times and allow for a play on the field to be re-broadcast "instantly."

  9. Judson Laipply - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judson_Laipply

    Judson Laipply (/ ˈ l aɪ p l i / ⓘ LYPE-lee; born March 22, 1976) is an American internet celebrity from Bucyrus, Ohio. [6] He served as the state president of The Ohio Association of Student Councils from 1993 to 1994.