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Jim Tracy may refer to: Jim Tracy (baseball) (born 1955), baseball manager and player; Jim Tracy (politician) (born 1956), Tennessee Director for Rural Development;
Jim Tracy (born October 9, 1956) is an American politician and was the Tennessee Director for Rural Development for the first Trump Administration. He is a former member of the Tennessee Senate for the 14th district , which is composed of Bedford County , Moore County , and part of Rutherford County .
The Rockies went on to accumulate a 37-65 record (.363) through August 1, leading to a front office reshuffle that left Jim Tracy and his staff intact. Tracy resigned as manager of the Rockies on October 7, 2012, following a disappointing and injury plagued 2012 season that saw the Rockies finish 64-98, the 2nd worst record in franchise history ...
Jim Tracy is an American skiing coach. Born in Mammoth Lakes, California , Tracy started skiing at the age of 10. [ 1 ] He was head coach of the U.S. women's Ski team from 2008 to 2010, coaching them at the 2010 Winter Olympics .
The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs agreed to give survivor benefits to the first-known same-sex war widow, Tracy Dice Johnson, whose wife Donna Johnson died in a suicide bombing attack in 2012. [ 212 ]
McGuire's death is the third such death in the Ballarat area allegedly caused by a male perpetrator following the alleged murders of Rebecca Young and Samantha Murphy, which sparks a national conversation about the prevention of violence against women, and the organisation of a snap rally to protest against men's violence. [115] [116] [117] [118]
Lieutenant James "Jim" Ronald Dangle (played by Thomas Lennon) is the flamboyant highest-ranking deputy in the department and is usually seen wearing his trademark short-shorts, which he claims that he wears for "mobility." In a season 6 episode where the officers watch a video of themselves in the late 1980s, Dangle is seen wearing full-length ...
Ingrid Jacobson was born and raised in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in a Jewish family that consisted of her parents, Shirley and Sidney, and twin sister, Phyllis. When Ingrid was eight years old, she worked at her grandmother's dress store in South Philadelphia as a helper and seamstress.