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The Dixie Series was an interleague postseason series between the playoff champions of Minor League Baseball's Southern Association (SA) and Texas League (TL). The best-of-seven series was held at the conclusion of each season from 1920 to 1958, with the exception of 1943 to 1945 due to World War II .
The 1919 Women's Amateur trophy presentation. After the war, she came back to win the 1919 and 1920 U.S. Women's Amateur titles. She was also the U.S. Amateur runner-up in 1921 to Marion Hollins, in 1923 to Edith Cummings, and again in 1925 to Glenna Collett, a year when she broke Dorothy Campbell's single-round scoring record in qualifying.
Dowling won the Canadian Women's Amateur Championship in 2000, helping her earn the Female Canadian Amateur Golfer of the Year Award; she was also individual champion of the Mid-American Conference in 1999 and 2000 while a student at Kent State University, and in her senior year at Kent State in 2002, she was given the Janet Bachna Award for ...
Gaut was a champion amateur golfer based in Memphis. [3] She won the Tennessee Women's Amateur Championship six times, [4] [5] starting at the inaugural event in 1916 [6] and ending in 1938. [7] [8] [9] She won the Southern Women's Championship four times, beginning in 1920, when she defeated Alexa Stirling in Atlanta.
[23] [24] In May 2011, Hart of Dixie officially picked up to series. [25] On October 12, 2011, the series received a back nine order for a full season consist of 22 episodes. [26] The show's executive producer Josh Schwartz, compared the show to The WB classics such as Felicity, Everwood and Gilmore Girls. [27]
In the Vice documentary series "Sex Before The Internet", series creator Sheila Nevins lamented the show's lost media status; stating that HBO largely disowned the series after finding mainstream critical success with shows like "The Sopranos" and "The Wire" and considers the series and other sexually explicit shows such as "The Cathouse", as ...
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Mack's career in show business began in 1926 when he joined Ben Pollack's orchestra. [4] In the late 1920s, clarinetist and saxophonist [ 2 ] Mack formed a dance band, under his real name. A nightclub owner disliked how "Edward Maguiness" looked on his marquee, so he changed the bandleader's name to the shorter and snappier "Ted Mack". [ 5 ]