「Utica」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 268件
He was educated at the | Utica Academy. |
tte, Lorman, Hermanville, Carlisle, Carpenter, | Utica, Adams Station, Learned, Oakley, Raymond and J |
or Switalski worked as a Sports Editor for the | Utica Advisor and C&G Newspapers, and contributed to |
anada and situated on Lake Erie, Rochester and | Utica, along the Mohawk River as far east as Amsterd |
5 years with New Jersey's top AHL affiliate in | Utica, and also managed to appear 65 NHL games for t |
land, and Ashtabula (Ohio), Buffalo, Syracuse, | Utica, and Albany (New York) before joining the trai |
Baker died on November 6, 1871, at his home in | Utica, and was interred in Forest Hill Cemetery in U |
He died at | Utica, and was buried at the Forest Hill Cemetery. |
Little Belt Mountains and flows northeast past | Utica and Hobson. |
Henry Burtt grew up on his homestead in | Utica and had ten other siblings. |
inting and worked as a printer in Cooperstown, | Utica, and Albany, New York. |
ivate school serving Raymond, Edwards, Bolton, | Utica, and Learned, Mississippi. |
During his tenure, he erected churches in | Utica and Rochester, founded an orphanage, and intro |
e Chenango Canal, built from 1836-1837 between | Utica and Binghamton, connected the Erie Canal in th |
Utica annually hosts the Burgoo Festival in October. | |
In the 1980s, the district was centered in the | Utica area (now the 24th District) and the Syracuse |
Remsen, New York, USA, the station serves the | Utica area. |
h as Hall of Famer Richie Ashburn (who came to | Utica as a catcher but within a month was moved to c |
Thomas Hubbard died in | Utica at the age of 75 and was interred in Forest Hi |
s a large swath of central New York, including | Utica, Auburn, Rome and most of the suburbs of Bingh |
nction to the IND Houston Street Line, the IND | Utica Ave Line and a connection to the Rockaways). |
of the ceiling on top of the four trackways at | Utica Ave, therefore it appears that there are four |
service runs between Woodlawn in the Bronx and | Utica Avenue in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, making all |
section east of the Atlantic Avenue station to | Utica Avenue and down the Nostrand Avenue Subway to |
d Bedford Avenue on the west, Clarkson Avenue, | Utica Avenue and East New York Avenue on the north, |
Fulton Street was supposed to be built for the | Utica Avenue Line as part of the IND Second System. |
After passing Crown Heights - | Utica Avenue, the line rises onto an elevated struct |
cture that begins just east of Crown Heights - | Utica Avenue, and continuing to New Lots Avenue in N |
From 1938 to 1950, weekend trains ran to | Utica Avenue. |
1925, rush hour trains ran to Crown Heights - | Utica Avenue. |
es with the two northern layup tracks south of | Utica Avenue. |
way on the north, Rochester, East New York and | Utica Avenues on the east, as well as by Clarkson Av |
call on her voyage to the Great Lakes included | Utica, Baldwinsville, Rochester, and Buffalo, New Yo |
It is served by trains heading south to | Utica beginning around the month of May each year. |
d played for the Lakeland Ice Warriors (SuHL), | Utica Blizzard (CoHL), Richmond Renegades (ECHL), Hu |
normal point per game pace and signed with the | Utica Blizzard for the 1994-95 season. |
He shattered the | Utica Blizzard's single season scoring record by sco |
ional season with their Class-A (Short Season) | Utica Blue Sox and Class A South Bend White Sox in 1 |
ional season with their Class-A (Short Season) | Utica Blue Sox in 1991, and his last with the New Yo |
it the season between the Class-A Short-Season | Utica Blue Sox of the New York - Penn League, and th |
ional season with their Class-A (Short Season) | Utica Blue Sox in 1991, and his last with the Triple |
in the minors with the New York-Penn League's | Utica Blue Sox in 1991. |
lez played with the Gulf Coast League Marlins, | Utica Blue Sox, Portland Sea Dogs (2002), Albuquerqu |
The | Utica Braves were initially a Boston Braves farm tea |
Baseball returned with the | Utica Braves of the Class C Canadian-American League |
ayed for the Springfield club's farm team, the | Utica Braves of the Can-Am League, in 1942, where he |
In 2007 he was hired to be the Manager of the | Utica Brewmasters in the New York State League of Pr |
By the fourth century BC, | Utica came under Punic control but continued to exis |
The | Utica cars ran until the end of passenger service on |
Utica Celestia Welles, Lady Beecham, 1st wife of Sir | |
Faggiano is the current head football coach at | Utica College in Utica, New York. |
He also has received honorary degrees from | Utica College (2008) and Montclair State University |
David Ancrum played for | Utica College basketball team from 1979 to 1981. |
1963 respectively after receiving a B.A. from | Utica College in 1962. |
Born in 1963, McKeon is a 1985 graduate of | Utica College. |
Morehouse started curling for the | Utica Curling Club in 1972. |
1834), worked for the | Utica Daily Observer from 1853 on, later became its |
his time between the NHL and the AHL with the | Utica Devils and then the Albany River Rats. |
urned to junior then turned pro with the AHL's | Utica Devils in 1988-89. |
d his professional career broadcasting for the | Utica Devils after graduating from Syracuse Universi |
He had previously spent two seasons with the | Utica Devils of the American Hockey League and spent |
Following his third year with the | Utica Devils he was named the toughest player in the |
he Devils in 1988-89, he returned to the AHL's | Utica Devils and played in 20 games with New Jersey |
The Calgary Flames bought and relocated the | Utica Devils, to be their AHL affiliate. |
"Although | Utica did not lose its status as one of the foremost |
Utica Elementary/Middle School | |
Academy in Clinton, New York, was a trustee of | Utica Free Academy and was the first President of th |
1901 in Brooklyn, New York and graduated from | Utica Free Academy in 1917. |
824 and was admitted to the bar, practicing in | Utica from 1829 to 1831. |
Miller was a trustee of the village of | Utica from 1829 to 1831; served as member of the fir |
resumed the practice of law, and was Mayor of | Utica from 1832 to 1836. |
l church synods (those of the Western Reserve, | Utica, Geneva, and Genesee) were refused recognition |
The town of | Utica had previously been established on the banks o |
Utica has been assigned the ZIP code 57067 and the F | |
Born in | Utica, he later established his practice in the city |
at Hamilton College in Clinton, New York (near | Utica), he was a prolific discoverer of asteroids, d |
After graduation from | Utica High School in 1957, he attended he attended t |
Miller died in | Utica; his remains were interred in Forest Hill Ceme |
iting for her account of the deadly April 2004 | Utica, Illinois tornado outbreak, which was publishe |
1930 in | Utica, Illinois) is a former head coach and general |
ed in 1992 due to the efforts of Bill Brown of | Utica, Illinois, M. Blouke Carus of Peru, Illinois a |
t the former Rock Island Line station in North | Utica, Illinois. |
imitive camping sites between Buffalo Rock and | Utica, Illinois. |
Harmon finished that season as player-coach of | Utica in the American Basketball League, in the proc |
f the German Republican executive committee of | Utica in 1854, a presidential elector in 1872, and a |
former railroad town located seven miles from | Utica in the extreme northwestern corner of the coun |
Schraer was born near | Utica in upstate New York. |
He was elected mayor of | Utica in 1865. |
He was moved to Fort Schuyler, now | Utica, in New York State, in 1797. |
Mills first pitched for | Utica in the New York State League in 1899. |
Beardsley died in | Utica in 1860, and was buried at the Forest Hill Cem |
He removed to | Utica in 1813, and was District Attorney for the Six |
t Anti-Masonic Party State convention, held in | Utica in August 1828. |
In AD 439, the Vandals captured | Utica, in AD 534 the Byzantines captured it once mor |
(October 8, 1852 - February 3, 1932) was from | Utica, Indiana and was a mayor of Jeffersonville, In |
North | Utica is a village in Utica Township, LaSalle County |
While North | Utica is the proper name for the city, advertising o |
Utica is a town in Yankton County, South Dakota, Uni | |
The Town of | Utica is served by the Hinds County School District. |
Utica is a census-designated place (CDP) in Oconee C | |
However, | Utica is unlikely to see much more growth due to bei |
ith chicken riggies, sausage and peppers, and " | utica greens", tomato pie is regarded as an idiomati |
st in Holland with Ed Swayzee, Leon Abbey, the | Utica Jubilee Singers, the Louis Douglass Revue, Lit |
Despite the signal boost for downtown | Utica, Kool 93.5 was no match for WODZ and in Decemb |
Maas was born in | Utica, Michigan and later died in Mt. |
George G. Sadowski died in | Utica, Michigan and is interred in Mount Olivet Ceme |
He was born Eugene Powell, in | Utica, Mississippi, the child of an interracial affa |
Jones, and was originally licensed for | Utica, Mississippi. |
odist Church is a historic Methodist church in | Utica, Mississippi. |
church on Lebanon Presbyterian Church Road in | Utica, Mississippi. |
The | Utica Morning Herald (NY) of December 16, 1862 gives |
In 1943, | Utica moved up to the Class A Eastern League and bec |
served as a vice president and director of the | Utica Mutual Insurance Co., and as vice president an |
storates at Stillwater, N. Y. (1882-85) and at | Utica, N. Y. (1885-91). |
He was born at | Utica, N. Y., and was for seven years an apprentice |
Entered service at: | Utica, N.Y. |
The family moved to | Utica, N.Y. in 1926 where his father was now Treasur |
e at: Washington, D.C. Born: October 31, 1831, | Utica, N.Y. |
He also served two terms as City Surveyor of | Utica, N.Y. |
gan engineering work with the City Surveyor of | Utica, N.Y., and was on the survey of the Canastota |
ed the rebellion of the first Tyrean colony at | Utica, near the later site of Carthage (Against Apio |
euter was born in York, Nebraska and reared in | Utica, Nebraska. |
Rhoda Lavinia Goodell (born May 2, 1839, | Utica, New York; died March 31, 1880, Janesville, Wi |
in a store in Herkimer, New York, then went to | Utica, New York and learned how to build canals. |
iod photographs of O'scugnizzo's Pizza in East | Utica, New York, tomato pie was sold as early as 191 |
istown, Pennsylvania area, Rome, New York, and | Utica, New York. |
On September 18, 1905 in | Utica, New York he was in a railroad accident and lo |
He died in | Utica, New York on January 15, 1946, and was interre |
born to Abraham Clemmer and Margaret Kneale in | Utica, New York. |
Anthony Lazzaro (Born January 31, 1921, | Utica, New York) is a senior vice president emeritus |
rts and news anchor and reporter at WUTR-TV in | Utica, New York, and sports director at KCOY-TV in S |
assachusetts, and made his first appearance at | Utica, New York, in Donizetti's The Daughter of the |
Swami (born Brian Rumbaugh, December 27, 1948, | Utica, New York) is a Vaishnava sannyasi, initiating |
while attending John F. Kennedy High School in | Utica, New York, where he graduated in 1976. |
Harry H. Raymond (born February 20, 1862 in | Utica, New York - March 21, 1925 in San Diego, Calif |
83 in Augusta, New York - February 18, 1968 in | Utica, New York), was an American professional baseb |
Union Station ( | Utica, New York), Utica, New York, 1913 |
vy acquired her from her owner, W. J. Green of | Utica, New York, for use as a section patrol boat du |
ite (March 18, 1919 - April 21, 2001), born in | Utica, New York, was a pitcher for the Detroit Tiger |
he Socialist state convention met on July 3 at | Utica, New York, and nominated Louis Waldman for the |
rn, which was founded by Kirk's grandfather in | Utica, New York, in 1839, relocated to Chicago in 18 |
er 28, 1870, New York City - January 15, 1946, | Utica, New York) was an American Democratic Party po |
Allard moved from his hometown of | Utica, New York to New York City to work for McKinse |
North Country Books Inc. | Utica, New York, 1998. |
bition state convention met on September 15 at | Utica, New York and nominated Stephen Merritt for Se |
In 1817, he removed to | Utica, New York. |
alo mafia such as those based in Rochester and | Utica, New York and in Northeastern Pennsylvania. |
The town is east of | Utica, New York. |
t, New York, and New Jersey, and especially in | Utica, New York, a city whose sizable Italian-Americ |
Long was born in | Utica, New York in 1852. |
David Cash, Jr. (born June 11, 1948 in | Utica, New York) is a former Major League Baseball s |
Trustee of the State lunatic asylum in | Utica, New York. |
Robert George "Rob" Thrasher II (born in | Utica, New York on February 20, 1967) is a serial en |
Breitenstein was born and died in | Utica, New York. |
y, New York, he attended the public schools of | Utica, New York and graduated from Lawrenceville Sch |
mination in the Republican State Convention at | Utica, New York in October 1891 as the candidate of |
station in New York state, see Union Station ( | Utica, New York). |
d to the bar in 1833 and commenced practice in | Utica, New York. |
Whaley was born in | Utica, New York on May 6, 1821. |
epublican state convention met on August 21 at | Utica, New York. |
tion met on September 23 at the Opera House in | Utica, New York. |
There is a Tilden Ave. in the city of | Utica, New York. |
He was mayor of | Utica, New York from 1902 until 1906. |
He died in | Utica, New York and was interred in Forest Hill Ceme |
Dan Cameron (born 1956 in | Utica, New York) is an American art curator. |
Annette Joanne Funicello was born in | Utica, New York to Italian-Americans Joseph and Virg |
Postal Stationary for Post offices in | Utica, New York, with Butterfield Sta. |
Nordkvist was arrested in | Utica, New York where he went after leaving the hote |
He was educated at | Utica, New York, and studied engineering in his brot |
Brothers Tom and Mike Gossin were born in | Utica, New York. |
Bill Morehouse (November 7, 1960, in | Utica, New York) is an American curler and curling b |
He was born Gabriel Richard Mancuso in | Utica, New York in 1934. |
ylvania in Philadelphia, but grew up mainly in | Utica, New York. |
second marriage, to Clarissa Eames Millard of | Utica, New York, produced three daughters: Clarissa, |
Merrill was born in | Utica, New York in 1804, and moved with his family t |
urtroom at the United States District Court in | Utica, New York. |
as a partner in a public relations business at | Utica, New York. |
lthough the new church group was formalized in | Utica, New York. |
he Roman Catholic Church at St. John's Church, | Utica, New York by Bishop McFarland. |
re, and in 1805, at the age of 20, he moved to | Utica, New York. |
The regiment was raised and organized in | Utica New york, and was known as the 5th Oneida Regi |
In 1816, he removed to | Utica, New York, and was appointed an associate judg |
ged with beating a 15-year-old boy to death in | Utica, New York, in January 2007. |
rners state convention which met on June 22 at | Utica, New York and nominated Martin Van Buren for U |
He settled in | Utica, New York, where he worked as a stone cutter a |
Born in | Utica, New York, Beekman moved to Hawaii as a young |
A native of | Utica, New York, DuRoss was the catalyst in the Rhin |
Wynn was raised in | Utica, New York, and graduated from The Manlius Scho |
property is located at 1605 Genesee Street in | Utica, New York, at the corner of Faxton Street and |
He was admitted to the bar in | Utica, New York, in 1821 and commenced practice in C |
subsequently worked for ABC affiliate WUTR in | Utica, New York, CBS affiliate WTVH in Syracuse, New |
Jones, who grew up in | Utica, New York, is notable as the first Protestant |
Latham was born on September 16, 1852, in | Utica, New York, and is credited as the first major |
Residency at Sculpture Space, | Utica, NY (2006) |
he was born in Pittstown, NY, but the page for | Utica, NY says that Singer was born in Utica, someth |
The first general conference was held in | Utica, NY in October, 1844. |
It was also used by WUUU-FM, 102.5 and 93.5 in | Utica, NY which was an oldies station and later an A |
Dried Up, Tied and Dead to the World (Live in | Utica, NY) |
The First Presbyterian Church ( | Utica, NY) and its related McKinnon House were added |
David Perley Lowe (born near | Utica, NY, August 22, 1823 - died April 10, 1882) wa |
こんにちは ゲスト さん
ログイン |
Weblio会員(無料)になると 検索履歴を保存できる! 語彙力診断の実施回数増加! |
こんにちは ゲスト さん
ログイン |
Weblio会員(無料)になると 検索履歴を保存できる! 語彙力診断の実施回数増加! |