Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Addison Road was a Christian alternative pop/rock band from Dallas, Texas. [1] The band was signed to INO Records in 2007 and released its self-titled debut album, Addison Road , on March 18, 2008. Its songs "All That Matters" and "Sticking With You" were the ninth and fifteenth most-played songs on R&R magazine's Christian CHR chart for 2008 ...
Easington Sports Football Club is an amateur football club based in the Easington ward of Banbury, Oxfordshire, England. They are currently members of the United Counties League Premier Division South and play at Addison Road.
Charlotteville Cycling Club is a cycling club in Guildford, southern England. The club incorporated in 1903, saw a national record broken in 1934 by Harry Ferris and organises the Guildford Town Centre Races , which have taken place since 1984.
PORTSMOUTH — The Music Hall announced construction is under way on a new Members Club and Box Office hub in the Kearsarge House 1866 building located on Congress Street adjacent to the historic ...
In November 2007, Addison Road was originally scheduled to be released in the week of February 26, 2008. [6] It reached #182 on the Billboard 200 within its first few weeks of release on March 18, 2008. [7] The album's first single, "All That Matters", was released early in January 2008, and quickly generated big success on Christian radio charts.
Nine third graders at Addison Elementary School were recognized for their entries in the Addison Woman's Club's writing contest. Addison Woman's Club installs new officers for 2023-24; awards ...
Jennifer Ann Simmons (born November 17, 1980, née, Chisolm), known professionally as Jenny Simmons, is an American Christian music artist, formerly of the band Addison Road. [ 3 ] Early life
anatomist and a founding member of the American Society for Psychical Research [1] Betty C. Monkman: 2004 curator of the White House [10] Charles Moore: 1891 Journalist, historian, city planner, and clerk to the Senate Committee on the District of Columbia [1] George Thomas Moore: 1903 botanist, plant physiologist, algologist, U.S. Department ...