「cincinnati」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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f the United States Northwest of the Ohio in | Cincinnati, a two-hundred and twenty-five page book wit |
Cincinnati: A Guide to the Queen City and Its Neighbors | |
elig Sharfstein served as the Chief Rabbi of | Cincinnati, a position he assumed after the passing of |
IT Manager he was transferred to WXIX-TV in | Cincinnati, a sister station of WOIO, and worked with D |
r played college soccer at the University of | Cincinnati a starter as a freshman in 2001 to 2003. |
is now part of Jewish Cemeteries of Greater | Cincinnati, a non-profit organization that resulted in |
The Greater | Cincinnati Academic League, meanwhile, consists of scho |
The | Cincinnati Academic League consists of teams from Cinci |
The | Cincinnati Academic League (CAL) and Greater Cincinnati |
When he returned to | Cincinnati after serving for President Truman, he joine |
played college football at the University of | Cincinnati after playing football at Ellet High School, |
McCrackin started a community church in | Cincinnati after gaining notoriety for refusing to pay |
He left 700 WLW in | Cincinnati after 25 years in 2010. |
lor of arts degree from Xavier University in | Cincinnati, after having earned some credits at Bowling |
fifth attempt at arena or indoor football in | Cincinnati, after the Cincinnati Rockers (AFL 1992-93), |
have a new outfielder, as Jim Canavan joined | Cincinnati after spending the previous season with the |
ordained as a priest on December 8, 1847 at | Cincinnati, after which he was stationed for ten years |
r 1, 1862, in preparation for the Defense of | Cincinnati against a threatened Confederate invasion by |
y difficult emergency landing at the Greater | Cincinnati Airport, located in Boone County, Kentucky a |
t, and many others have come to decorate the | Cincinnati airport, local hotels, and other buildings. |
Cincinnati also signed two 21-year-olds, catcher Jerry | |
sas played most of the next three seasons in | Cincinnati, although he spent time at AAA in both 1988 |
Engaging the enemy in a fierce battle, the | Cincinnati, amidst an incessant fire of shot and shell, |
The Louisville, | Cincinnati and Charleston Railroad was an antebellum ra |
named the first president of the Louisville, | Cincinnati and Charleston, and other board members incl |
in 2004, Oberlin College, the University of | Cincinnati and Willamette University in 2005, Lewis & C |
during the 1948 season, his last playing in | Cincinnati, and was relieved late in 1949. |
ia, Cornell University and the University of | Cincinnati, and received an M.H.L. degree from the Hebr |
structor on the faculty of the University of | Cincinnati, and an assistant city solicitor and assista |
secrators were Archbishop Joseph Bernadin of | Cincinnati and Bishop William Michael Cosgrove of Belle |
er coaching legends Sid Gillman at Miami and | Cincinnati and under Earl Blaik at the United States Mi |
yed at the collegiate level at University of | Cincinnati and Marquette University. |
From 1934-1939 she lived in | Cincinnati and worked for the Federal Writer's Project |
hitects of several unidentified buildings in | Cincinnati and St. Louis. |
s held at the Duke Energy Center in downtown | Cincinnati and hosted by Hall of Fame broadcaster Marty |
ovincetown, through New York, Cleveland, and | Cincinnati, and on to San Francisco (Caine) or possibly |
Cleveland, Columbus, | Cincinnati and Indianapolis Railway |
I and K were mustered in on March 1, 1864 at | Cincinnati and mustered out July 22, 1865 at Louisville |
ch pastor, Arnett served parishes in Toledo, | Cincinnati, and Columbus; under his leadership, the lan |
y in 1901 (although Edward Bloch remained in | Cincinnati, and held the title of president, until his |
It was constructed to protect | Cincinnati and the Ohio River valley. |
m printing, the oldest practicing printer in | Cincinnati, and sold his shop to Vehr. |
was nineteen years old, Watson had moved to | Cincinnati and established the clock making partnership |
was made rector of St. Peter's Cathedral in | Cincinnati, and remained there until he was consecrated |
published by American Book Company New York, | Cincinnati and Chicago from the press of D. Appleton & |
of Oak Hills High School, the University of | Cincinnati, and the Salmon P. Chase College of Law. |
I-74 turning west to its current east end in | Cincinnati, and I-73 continuing north to Detroit. |
ston Railway, a successor of the Charleston, | Cincinnati and Chicago Railroad. |
He was an art major at the University of | Cincinnati, and continues to paint. |
Twenty Red Devils were sold to | Cincinnati and Lake Erie Railroad. |
He settled in | Cincinnati and was employed in the lumber business unti |
Carolina Midland merged with the Charleston, | Cincinnati and Chicago Railroad in August 1887, a move |
He played in 14 games in 1977 with | Cincinnati and two games in 1978 with Tampa Bay, but ne |
e as a book shelver at the Public Library of | Cincinnati and Hamilton County. |
He was a member of the Society of the | Cincinnati and an organizer and the first president of |
UBE hosts the "Free Music Stage" At Taste of | Cincinnati and Jammin' in the Country in neighboring Cl |
ion (1941) and four-time singles finalist at | Cincinnati, and won the Canadian title in 1938. |
munities with a special focus on the Jews of | Cincinnati; and the records of the Hebrew Union College |
He played only 27 games for | Cincinnati, and didn't return to the major leagues for |
casinos that are coming to Toledo, Columbus, | Cincinnati and Cleveland. |
came under the control of the University of | Cincinnati and in 1873 it was moved from Mt. Adams to M |
"dark" (unsignaled) between Parkersburg and | Cincinnati, and traffic was governed by train orders. |
railroad started in 1854 and paralleled the | Cincinnati and Whitewater Canal. |
rabbi, the Chief Rabbi of the Vaad Ho'ir of | Cincinnati, and an international authority on Jewish la |
Cincinnati and Suburban Telephone Company Building is a | |
t was presented to industrial expositions in | Cincinnati and Atlanta during 1881 winning gold medals |
h as Designing Women, Lenny, The New WKRP in | Cincinnati and a starring role in the TV movie Revenge |
was a founding member of the Society of the | Cincinnati, and helped form the American Union Lodge No |
college football head coach at University of | Cincinnati, and West Virginia University. |
Floyd was born in | Cincinnati and moved to Miami as a child with his mothe |
played college football at the University of | Cincinnati and is known as the last of the field goal k |
vatory itself, the Bonsai Society of Greater | Cincinnati, and private individuals. |
ky; Mount St. Mary's Seminary of the West in | Cincinnati; and the Pontifical North American College i |
or visiting professor in such centers as the | Cincinnati and San Francisco conservatories, the Juilli |
She also won a doubles title (1911) at | Cincinnati and reached two doubles finals (1915 & 1920) |
ed by ballet companies in Oakland, Richmond, | Cincinnati and Florida. |
Register of Hannaford-designed buildings in | Cincinnati and surrounding portions of Hamilton County; |
d Tarlek in the 1991 spinoff The New WKRP in | Cincinnati, and in a 2004 rock video for Canadian indie |
In 1883 she had returned to | Cincinnati and made her living decorating home interior |
Dobkins still lives in | Cincinnati and performs upon individual request. |
ganized in 1894 to take over the Charleston, | Cincinnati and Chicago Railroad. |
Between the | Cincinnati and the two guns was a Confederate eleven-pi |
District of Ohio which included the city of | Cincinnati and counties bordering Kentucky and Indiana. |
Smith later returned in 1897, when | Cincinnati and Brooklyn swapped shortstops, with Tommy |
tute, Columbia University, the University of | Cincinnati, and the University of Michigan where she be |
Calisch studied at the University of | Cincinnati and was ordained as Rabbi after graduating i |
ool owned and operated by the Archdiocese of | Cincinnati and located in Sidney, Ohio. |
In 1926, the former | Cincinnati and Dayton Traction Company reorganised unde |
a community branch of the Public Library of | Cincinnati and Hamilton County. |
Davis attended the University of | Cincinnati and was a quarterback and wide receiver on t |
erected near a gate on the toll road between | Cincinnati and Brookville, Indiana; its name is derived |
This district includes parts of | Cincinnati, and borders both Kentucky and Indiana. |
However, after an overtime loss to | Cincinnati and a rivalry loss to Pittsburgh, questions |
t of Natural Resources, and local units from | Cincinnati, and Covington. |
hmond, as well as the suburbs of Fort Wayne, | Cincinnati, and Indianapolis. |
ond Empire hotel was the tallest building in | Cincinnati and designed by the same architect as Cincin |
and Johnny's Charity" on the sitcom WKRP in | Cincinnati, and in 1983 as Farley in the episode "Betty |
y Dr. Clarence A. Mills of the University of | Cincinnati and released in December 1948 showed that th |
tedly had 7 fielding chances at 2nd base for | Cincinnati and made 7 errors. |
e superintendent of the Cleveland, Columbus, | Cincinnati and Indianapolis Railway from 1859 to 1878. |
t parts in the TV shows Perry Mason, WKRP in | Cincinnati and '68.. |
ppointed general solicitor of the Pittsburg, | Cincinnati and St. Louis Railway Company, where he serv |
iddletown, Ohio, USA, the station serves the | Cincinnati and Dayton areas. |
e continued to play solid defense while with | Cincinnati, and he led all shortstops in fielding on tw |
played college football at the University of | Cincinnati and was drafted in the ninth round of the 19 |
by a group of students at the University of | Cincinnati, and for over forty years have been sponsori |
The Louisville, | Cincinnati and Charleston was chartered in 1836 to cons |
Chicago (Riverview Amusement Park), Detroit, | Cincinnati and a one week train trip to a dude ranch in |
gan before Interstate 75 between Detroit and | Cincinnati and Interstate 94 between Detroit and Port H |
ook a position teaching at the University of | Cincinnati and became director of the university's Cent |
ed as superintendent of the City Hospital in | Cincinnati, and later, as the head of the University of |
tched and McNicholas was named Archbishop of | Cincinnati and Chartrand was reappointed to Indianapoli |
d setting two day, sixteen hour trip between | Cincinnati and St. Louis. |
Jewish American politician, former mayor of | Cincinnati and son of Charles Louis Fleischmann. |
William McLean died at his home in | Cincinnati and was interred in the Catharine Street Bur |
at Mount St. Mary's Seminary of the West in | Cincinnati, and was ordained to the priesthood on June |
t Lowry, then a student at the University of | Cincinnati, and the two launched The Little Man Press, |
cholas Longworth, once the wealthiest man in | Cincinnati and patriarch of the Longworth family. |
tcher for Andy Seminick and Smoky Burgess in | Cincinnati, and later a regular with the Cubs in 1956. |
They moved to the Ohio cities of | Cincinnati and Piqua and finally settled in Columbus, O |
ce from Chicago, WLW Midwestern Hayride from | Cincinnati, and WWVA Jamboree from Wheeling, West Virgi |
now the 900 block of Main Street in downtown | Cincinnati, and upon this lot he erected a frame buildi |
He was in private practice in | Cincinnati and in Columbus, Ohio from 1935 to 1961. |
the linebacker coach for Maine, followed by | Cincinnati and Army. |
Pilarczyk was appointed Auxiliary Bishop of | Cincinnati and Titular Bishop of Hodelm by Pope Paul VI |
It sits in the same valley as downtown | Cincinnati and has been dominated by industrial and com |
ate Northridge, the offensive coordinator at | Cincinnati, and the offensive coordinator at Baylor. |
The Judge's parents owned a grocery in | Cincinnati and both were related to President Benjamin |
ayton learned masonry and building design in | Cincinnati, and came to Galveston in 1872 on behalf of |
ted States where he played for University of | Cincinnati and later Richmond Kickers in the USL Second |
n January 1967; the single would reach #4 in | Cincinnati and #3 in Erie PA. |
nderson, meanwhile, continued to struggle in | Cincinnati and was sent to the minor leagues during the |
n, and the Lima-Toledo Railroad, to form the | Cincinnati and Lake Erie Railroad. |
s 16.5 miles (26.5 km) northeast of downtown | Cincinnati and is owned by the City of Cincinnati. |
812, Chaplain of the Delaware Society of the | Cincinnati, and Vice President of the Delaware Historic |
which dock along the Ohio River shoreline in | Cincinnati and across the river in Covington and Newpor |
He served nine years in the city council of | Cincinnati and served as mayor for three terms, from 19 |
r population centers, stopping short of both | Cincinnati and Athens. |
In 1893 he returned to | Cincinnati and worked as a designer for several lithogr |
of the Georgia chapter of the Society of the | Cincinnati, and served as a trustee of the Chatham Coun |
Cloninger finished his career pitching with | Cincinnati and St. Louis. |
Although primarily from Greater | Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky, students from about 2 |
1980s, with the two eventually competing in | Cincinnati and Louisville by the end of the decade. |
In 1970, he moved to | Cincinnati and in 1972 he gained a more important posit |
m Cleveland to Medina in Northeast Ohio, the | Cincinnati and Lebanon Pike in southwestern Ohio and Br |
cago, Kansas City, Louisville, Indianapolis, | Cincinnati and Philadelphia, as well as minor league sq |
The following season, Sabo was promoted to | Cincinnati and was also named the 1988 National League |
roved by William Jensen of the University of | Cincinnati and by the German researcher Andreas Pechtl |
of Mercy, the Little Sisters of the Poor in | Cincinnati, and other institutions, owed much to her ge |
ck, was a judge of the old Superior Court of | Cincinnati and a member of the Ohio Constitution Conven |
Repository was a monthly periodical based in | Cincinnati and produced by members of the Methodist Epi |
ay from 9:00 am to 12:00 noon (ET) on WLW in | Cincinnati and formerly nationwide on XM Satellite Radi |
series of residences including Philadelphia, | Cincinnati, and a number of unsettled regions he was co |
Clare, and a son, Jack, live in Price Hill, | Cincinnati and attend the Roman Catholic St. Teresa of |
ouston, Washington, D.C., Dallas, San Diego, | Cincinnati, and Portland. |
More surprisingly, the cities of | Cincinnati and Columbus gave him strong support. |
Archbishop of Roman Catholic Archdiocese of | Cincinnati and founder of the Catholic Legion of Decenc |
he graduated from St. Xavier High School in | Cincinnati, and subsequently studied at New York Univer |
From 1899 to 1900 he coached at | Cincinnati, and guided the Bearcats to a 8-6-1 record. |
itus Professor of Opera at the University of | Cincinnati and co-founder of the Buxton Festival. |
power forward and attended the University of | Cincinnati and Bradley University. |
She attended the University of | Cincinnati, and majored in Criminal Justice. |
continued his studies at the Art Academy of | Cincinnati and Ohio State University in Columbus. |
Nearly 40 other properties in | Cincinnati and other parts of Hamilton County, includin |
Cincinnati and Clifton Incline Plane Railroad 1876-1880 | |
Cincinnati and Columbia Street Railway 1866-1896 | |
March 1863, established his headquarters in | Cincinnati and garrisoned the area with veteran units f |
He enrolled in the University of | Cincinnati and UCLA, followed by the USC School of Medi |
Herbert is a resident of | Cincinnati and is corporate counsel to the Ace Doran Ha |
has served as defensive coordinator at both | Cincinnati and South Florida, has been named defensive |
Instead of relocating, he kept the team in | Cincinnati, and survived a challenge from a short-lived |
appears on the website of the Archdiocese of | Cincinnati, and the church has been destroyed. |
Cincinnati and Birmingham, the other surviving WHA team | |
Johnson is a native of | Cincinnati and a graduate of Wittenberg University. |
played college football at the University of | Cincinnati and was drafted in the third round of the 19 |
rict, which includes the cities of Columbus, | Cincinnati and Dayton. |
od," on the 50,000-watt clear channel WLW in | Cincinnati, and the program became the most listened to |
Super Bowl Champion Chicago Bears went into | Cincinnati and trucked the Bengals 44-7. |
It merged with the Louisville, | Cincinnati and Charleston Railroad in 1843 to become th |
ing an especially large number pertaining to | Cincinnati and Ohio. |
osed of relatively rural areas combined with | Cincinnati and Columbus' heavily Republican suburbs. |
Stallo returned to | Cincinnati and was there admitted to the bar in 1849, p |
priest, Francis Massarella served in several | Cincinnati and Kentucky parishes in the '40s and early |
In 1793 he left for | Cincinnati and began his weekly newspaper, which consis |
or promoting Agriculture, the Society of the | Cincinnati, and the Lyceum of Delaware. |
ns by defeating World No. 1 Roger Federer in | Cincinnati and then made it to the quarter-finals of th |
In 1865, Okey moved to | Cincinnati, and with Judge Gholson he wrote Gholson and |
Edwards attended Woodward High School in | Cincinnati and was a student and a letterman in footbal |
y of 1925, Chartrand was named Archbishop of | Cincinnati and John McNicholas, Bishop of Duluth, Minne |
uspices of the Western Settlement Society of | Cincinnati and continued with the development of the le |
d Holmes A. Semken, Jr. of the University of | Cincinnati and the University of Iowa, respsectively. |
rt of the township, it is located on the old | Cincinnati and Xenia Pike, now U.S. Route 42, about hal |
his college football at Xavier University in | Cincinnati and professionally as an original New Orlean |
he neighborhood, more than large cities like | Cincinnati and San Francisco. |
Both | Cincinnati and Rubery Owen Holdings made component part |
The Cleveland, Columbus, | Cincinnati and Indianapolis Railway was formed from the |
ed violence in Chicago, St. Louis, Columbus, | Cincinnati and New Orleans. |
nancial aid agreement with the University of | Cincinnati and, he joined them for the Bearcats for the |
He played collegiately at the University of | Cincinnati and, after being selected by the Boston Celt |
He graduated in 1902 from the University of | Cincinnati and, in 1906 was valedictorian of his HUC cl |
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