Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Jimmy Walter. James W. Walter, Jr. (born 1947) [1] is an American venture capitalist and author. [2] [3] He is best known for sponsoring advertisements asking to reopen the investigation of the September 11, 2001 attacks and offering financial rewards to anyone that could prove the World Trade Center was destroyed without the use of explosives.
Perry Caravello believes he has been given a chance to star in a movie called Windy City Heat, a crime film about a "sports private eye" named Stone Fury. However, there is no such film, as the entire project is an elaborate prank played on him by Don Barris and Mole with the help of producers Jimmy Kimmel and Adam Carolla and real celebrity cameos including Carson Daly, Dane Cook, Tammy Faye ...
When Project Grudge was ordered dissolved, Project Blue Book was developed to replace it, and Lt. Col. N. R. Rosengarten asked Edward J. Ruppelt to take over as the new project's leader, partly because Ruppelt "had a reputation as a good organizer". [4] 1985 UFO Fact Sheet (page 1 of 3) from the U.S. Air Force
AOL
James W. Walter Sr. (September 18, 1922 – January 6, 2000), of Tampa, Florida, United States, was a home builder who started Jim Walter Homes and Walter Industries, now doing business as Walter Energy, Inc., a leading producer of metallurgical coal for the global steel industry, in 1946 with $1,000 he borrowed from his father.
Madison Square Garden was the site of the 1980 Democratic National Convention Carter and Mondale stand together at the end of the convention. The 1980 Democratic National Convention nominated President Jimmy Carter and Vice President Walter Mondale for reelection.
The controversial conservative says she's used to people speculating about her relationship with the 'Good Times' actor.
The Northwest Clarion, initially published between 1943 and 1961, was revived under the direction of civil rights advocate and African American journalist Jimmy "Bang-Bang" Walker. [2] In January 1962, Jimmy "Bang-Bang" Walker took an investment of $15,000 and founded, edited, and published the Northwest Defender.