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  2. Lindy Legendary Fishing Tackle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lindy_Legendary_Fishing_Tackle

    Lindy Tackle Company was founded in 1968 by Al and Ron Lindner and Nick Adams. The Lindners left the company to form In-Fisherman in 1975. The first major expansion came in 1973 with Lindy's takeover by Ray-O-Vac and its merger with Mille Lacs Manufacturing to form Lindy-Little Joe. This company was incorporated in 1978 to acquire the Fishing ...

  3. Al Lindner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al_Lindner

    Al Lindner. Al Lindner (born 1944 in Chicago, IL) is a sportsman, television and radio personality, and fishing industry innovator who has invented, along with his older brother Ron Lindner, many fishing lures and rigs including the Lindy Rig which has been used by tens of millions of anglers to catch walleye since it first hit the market in ...

  4. Lindy effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lindy_effect

    The Lindy effect (also known as Lindy's Law[1]) is a theorized phenomenon by which the future life expectancy of some non-perishable things, like a technology or an idea, is proportional to their current age. Thus, the Lindy effect proposes the longer a period something has survived to exist or be used in the present, the longer its remaining ...

  5. Lindy Woodhead - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lindy_Woodhead

    Woodhead turned to writing biographies in 2000 when she turned 50 after a long career as a journalist and as a publicist in the film and fashion industry and running her own public relations company. [1][2] Her first book, published in 2003, was War Paint and is a dual biography of make-up pioneers Elizabeth Arden and Helena Rubinstein and ...

  6. Paul Skallas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Skallas

    Lindy effect. The Lindy effect (also known as Lindy's Law[1]) is a theorized phenomenon by which the future life expectancy of some non-perishable things, like a technology or an idea, is proportional to their current age. Thus, the Lindy effect proposes the longer a period something has survived to exist or be used in the present, the longer ...

  7. USS Sailfish (SS-192) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Sailfish_(SS-192)

    USS Sailfish (SS-192), was a US Sargo -class submarine, originally named Squalus. As Squalus, the submarine sank off the coast of New Hampshire during test dives on 23 May 1939. The sinking drowned 26 crew members, but an ensuing rescue operation, using the McCann Rescue Chamber for the first time, saved the lives of the remaining 33 aboard.

  8. Ice jigger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ice_jigger

    Two ice jiggers inside the fish loading and weighing area of J. Waite Fisheries Inc. in Buffalo Narrows Saskatchewan, Canada. These are about eight feet long. The ice jigger also known as prairie ice jigger, or prairie jigger, is a device for setting a fishing net under the ice between two ice holes, invented by indigenous fishermen of Canada in early 1900s.

  9. Lundy's Restaurant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lundy's_Restaurant

    Lundy's Restaurant, also known as Lundy Brothers Restaurant, was an American seafood restaurant in the Sheepshead Bay neighborhood of Brooklyn in New York City, along the bay of the same name. Lundy's was founded in 1926 by Irving Lundy as a restaurant on the waterfront of Sheepshead Bay; five years later, the original building was condemned to ...