Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The song became a worldwide hit in 1972, when it was covered by Hot Butter, an American pop band. [4] Since then, multiple versions of the piece have been produced and released, including those by Vyacheslav Mescherin, [5] Anarchic System, Popcorn Makers, the Boomtang Boys, M & H Band, Crazy Frog, and the Muppets.
In 2008, Benders published his first poetry collection, Karavanserai, with Nieuw Amsterdam publishers.The collection was nominated for the C. Buddingh'-prijs for best Dutch-language poetry debut.
The band was a support act for groups like Bakkushan, Callejon, Ohrbooten, We Butter the Bread with Butter and Neaera. At festivals, the group shared stage with acts like Casper, Distance in Embrace and Rantanplan. In 2011 they played at Traffic Jam Open Air and Mair1 Festival.
The company operates several manufacturing facilities in Texas, including one of the largest milk- and bread-processing plants in the Southwest. [31] H-E-B produces many of their own-brand products, including milk, ice cream, bread, snacks, and ready-cooked meats and meals. These and other private-label products are sold under various brands ...
M&H had a number of subsidiaries over the years: [6] Zinc Roofing and Ornament Company in Chicago, ended 1874. LaSalle and Bureau County Railroad, started in 1876 was a six mile line connecting the zinc plant to a major railway junction. Barnes Zinc Products, started in 1919 by the Caruses. It was bought by M&H in 1928.
The Middletown and Hummelstown Railroad (M&H) uses both steam and diesel locomotives for passenger excursions. Coaches are 1920s-vintage Delaware, Lackawanna & Western High-Roof MU Trailers . Passengers board at the 1891-era freight station in Middletown for an 11-mile (18 km) round-trip excursion along the Swatara Creek and Union Canal ; a ...
Metre hour (m h), a unit of absement; Metre per hour (m/h), a unit of speed; Metal-halide lamp, a type of electrical gas-discharge lamp; MH Message Handling System, an email client; MH, a symbol for a silt of high plasticity in the Unified Soil Classification System
M. H. Hoffman (March 21, 1881 – March 6, 1944) was an American motion picture studio owner and producer. From 1910 to 1917, Hoffman was general manager of the Universal Film Company, a film exchange in New England. [3] He resigned in 1917 to independently produce and distribute pictures. [4]