Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In the USBL draft, the Gulls drafted 5-foot-3 Muggsy Bogues second overall. Bogues was named the league's Rookie of the Year, averaging 22.2 points and 8.4 assists per game and leading the league in minutes per game before an ankle injury ended his season. (Hank McDowell was also named to the USBL's second All-Star squad.)
Bogues has held the title ever since. In a hilarious coincidence, the point guard famously played along side the tallest player in NBA history (tied 1st) in his rookie season.
Anthony Jerome "Spud" Webb (born July 13, 1963) is an American former professional basketball player. A 5 ft 7 in (170 cm) point guard, Webb played college basketball at Midland College and at North Carolina State University.
The Quivering (also known as Spud II) [1] is a single-player point-and-click video game, developed by Charybdis and released by Alternative Software on CD-ROM for MS-DOS and Microsoft Windows. The game was later re-released for Steam on January 28, 2015. It is a sequel to Charybdis' earlier 1996 game Spud!.
The spud puppies were decently crispy, but unfortunately, I found the flavor a little underwhelming. McCain's quick-cooking tots reminded me of a latke. The McCain Foods Tasti Taters had an onion ...
Each dispersed Python group would be supported by dispersed sections of the United Kingdom Supply Agency and the National Air Transport Agency. In addition, in 1964 the Secretary of State for Scotland ordered three ships – MV Hebrides , MV Clansman and RMS Columba – which were chartered to David MacBrayne as car ferries but could be ...
A sorting algorithm introduced in the 2011 Google Code Jam. [6] As long as the list is not in order, a subset of all elements is randomly permuted. If this subset is optimally chosen each time this is performed, the expected value of the total number of times this operation needs to be done is equal to the number of misplaced elements. Bogobogosort
Jimmy Carter's official state funeral is set to be held on Thursday, Jan. 9 at the Washington National Cathedral in Washington, D.C.