Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Using a double-action revolver, Bill Jordan was recorded drawing, firing and hitting his target in .27 of a second. He appeared on such television programs as To Tell the Truth, I've Got a Secret, You Asked for It, and Wide Wide World. [1] Bill Jordan died on October 7, 1997 at 86 years of age in Linden, Texas. He was buried at Linden Cemetery.
William Jordan was a college football player and coach for the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets. A prominent end, he was selected All-SEC in 1937. He was a key feature in the defeat of Vanderbilt. [1] Jordan was selected for the All-Alexander era team, [2] and the Tech athletics hall of fame. [3] He later coached the ends for Tech. [4]
Bill Jordan (4 November 1906 – 11 November 1995) was an Australian rules footballer who played with South Melbourne in the Victorian Football League (VFL). [ 1 ] Notes
Bill Jordan (American lawman) (1911–1997), U.S. Marine, Border Patrol officer, gun writer; William-Jordan (died 1109), Crusader baron; William Jordan, Baron Jordan (born 1936), British economist and trade unionist; Bill Jordan (outdoorsman), American camouflage designer; William H. Jordan (died 1923), American herring merchant from Gloucester ...
Bill Jordan is the creator of the Realtree and Advantage brands of camouflage and the host of the Monster Bucks video series and the Realtree Outdoors television show. [1] [2] [3] He has made numerous appearances on outdoor television shows and has produced and assisted many up and coming leaders in the hunting industry. His slogan for Realtree ...
Jordan's 3rd (City of London) Rifle Volunteers tunic. Jordan was born in Ramsgate, Kent, the son and grandson of fishing boat captains. His father William Joseph Jordan was a member of the lifeboat crew that earned fame and exploits on the Goodwin Sands. His mother was Elizabeth Ann Catt.
Bill Kurtis (born William Horton Kuretich; September 21, 1940) is an American television journalist, television producer, narrator, and news anchor. Kurtis was studying to become a lawyer in the 1960s, when he was asked to fill in on a temporary news assignment at WIBW-TV in Topeka, Kansas .
Bill Jordan (born 1944), more formally William R. Jordan III, is an American botanist and journalist who has played a leading role in the development and critique of ecological restoration as a means of developing an environmentalism that is philosophically more coherent, psychologically more productive, politically more robust, and ecologically more effective.