When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Raycom Media - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raycom_Media

    Raycom Media. Raycom Media, Inc. was an American television broadcasting company based in Montgomery, Alabama. Raycom owned and/or provided services for 65 television stations and two radio stations across 44 markets in 20 states. Raycom, through its Community Newspaper Holdings subsidiary, also owned multiple newspapers in small and medium ...

  3. Radar beacon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radar_beacon

    In the United States a longer duty cycle is used, 50% for battery -powered buoys (20 seconds on, 20 seconds off) and 75% for on-shore beacons. Ramarks are wide-band beacons which transmit continuously on the radar bands without having to be triggered by an incoming radar signal.

  4. Raycom Sports - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raycom_Sports

    Raycom Sports is a Charlotte, North Carolina –based producer of sports television programs owned by Gray Television . It was founded in 1979 by husband and wife, Rick and Dee Ray. In the 1980s, Raycom Sports established a prominent joint venture with Jefferson-Pilot Communications which made them partners on the main Atlantic Coast Conference ...

  5. ESPN reaches 4-year extension to carry England's FA Cup in ...

    www.aol.com/news/espn-reaches-4-extension-carry...

    ESPN will carry England's FA Cup in the U.S. through 2028 after reaching a four-year extension with England's Football Association. ESPN has carried the tournament since 2018. The deal includes 79...

  6. William Eskridge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Eskridge

    William Nichol Eskridge Jr. (born October 27, 1951) [1] is an American legal scholar who is the John A. Garver Professor of Jurisprudence at Yale Law School. [2] He is one of the most cited law professors in America, ranking fourth overall for the period 2016–2020. [3] He writes primarily on constitutional law, legislation and statutory ...

  7. Songbook (musical) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Songbook_(musical)

    Songbook (New York title The Moony Shapiro Songbook) is a musical with music by Monty Norman and book and lyrics by Monty Norman and Julian More. The musical tells the improbable life story of a fictional songwriter, born in Liverpool in 1908, who has a colourful career with extraordinary successes and setbacks, loves and losses, and brushes ...

  8. PromotionCode.org - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PromotionCode.org

    PromotionCode.org is a coupon website that provides promotional codes and print coupons to consumers. The corporation's headquarters is in Tallahassee, Florida and it has a west coast office in Las Vegas, Nevada.

  9. Zorya Shapiro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zorya_Shapiro

    Zorya Yakovlevna Shapiro ( Russian: Зоря Яковлевна Шапиро; 7 December 1914 – 4 July 2013) was a Soviet mathematician, educator and translator. She is known for her contributions to representation theory and functional analysis in her collaboration with Israel Gelfand, and the Shapiro-Lobatinski condition in elliptical ...

  10. Canzoni d'autore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canzoni_d'autore

    Canzoni d'autore. (1996) Cremona. (1996) Canzoni d'autore is a compilation album by Italian singer Mina, released on 21 July 1996 by PDU and EMI. The album contains tracks written by Italian songwriters, but they are only in Italian. The album was originally released in a limited jewel CD cases in different colors (red, yellow blue); [4] a ...

  11. Shapiro polynomials - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shapiro_polynomials

    In mathematics, the Shapiro polynomials are a sequence of polynomials which were first studied by Harold S. Shapiro in 1951 when considering the magnitude of specific trigonometric sums. In signal processing, the Shapiro polynomials have good autocorrelation properties and their values on the unit circle are small.