「pershing」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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| The Persian is a variation of the | Pershing, a doughnut made from a yeast dough that is c |
| In addition to portions of Houston, | Pershing also serves the cities of Bellaire, Southside |
| Bullard was enraged, but | Pershing always favored the 1st Division, and reassure |
| ing percussion with John Bergamo, Karen Ervin | Pershing, and Ruth Underwood. |
| ke in the Humboldt Sink on the border between | Pershing and Churchill counties, approximately 20 mile |
| General | Pershing and General Bliss inspecting the camp, with C |
| With the close of Operation | PERSHING and the beginning of the new year, 1st Battal |
| Pershing's Personal Staff and Other Members of General | |
| In January 1914, John J. | Pershing arrived in El Paso to take command of the Arm |
| Douglas MacArthur saw | Pershing as a desk soldier, and the relationship betwe |
| Diane | Pershing as Dale Arden |
| John J. | Pershing as himself |
| 1917: 3575 | Pershing Avenue |
| 1917: 3543 | Pershing Avenue |
| General John J. | Pershing awarded him the Distinguished Service Award f |
| Labor Day weekend, Brookfield hosts the Great | Pershing Balloon Derby. |
| ernship Co-Op program at Myrill Lynch, Hyatt, | Pershing, Bank of Tokyo, or the Board of Ed. |
| n was named for U.S. general John 'Blackjack' | Pershing but the exact date of its inception and circu |
| n 1935 bas-reliefs of Foch, Jacques, Diaz and | Pershing by sculptor Walker Hancock were added to the |
| General John | Pershing, commander of the American Expeditionary Forc |
| John J. | Pershing, commander of the American Expeditionary Forc |
| It was pinned on his chest by General John J. | Pershing, Commander-in-Chief, American Expeditionary F |
| In 1907, he moved to Rosebud in | Pershing County, Nevada and continued the practice of |
| outhwest, flowing past Winnemucca and through | Pershing County, along the western side of the Humbold |
| Now in | Pershing County, Unionville was the original county se |
| s bounded by Rindge Avenue, Waterview Street, | Pershing Drive, West Imperial Highway, and Vista del M |
| quadron which was attached to General John J. | Pershing during the Punitive Expedition. |
| He was recommended by General John J. | Pershing for immediate commission as a Captain. |
| 925, the first US arbitrator, General John J. | Pershing; General William Lassiter followed in 1926. |
| Gloria Swanson, General John J. "Black Jack" | Pershing, General Alvaro Obregon, John Reed (journalis |
| Thomas Cecchini, Detroit, Michigan, | Pershing H.S. - 2 games at center |
| doctrine of open warfare that he and General | Pershing had practiced in France. |
| Pershing has a neighborhood program, a Pre-AP Gifted a | |
| amed in honor of General John J. (Black Jack) | Pershing, he was the riderless horse in more than 1,00 |
| Most were M4A3 Shermans, and newer-model M26 | Pershing heavy tanks, although a limited number of M46 |
| She graduated from Detroit's | Pershing High School, and earned her bachelor's degree |
| Robinson left Miller High and later went to | Pershing High School in Detroit, where he won the stat |
| 3 (R.L. Altman), and Baatin (Titus Glover) at | Pershing High School. |
| He attended | Pershing High School along with Levi Stubbs. |
| He attended | Pershing High School where he was selected as a High S |
| d Jamal, recorded while live on tour from The | Pershing Hotel's nightclub (southwest corner of 64th S |
| Seventy nine | Pershing IA and 49 Pershing II missiles were launched |
| The | Pershing Ia missile was armed with a 400 kiloton W50 w |
| lel with the W86, was used for all production | Pershing II missiles. |
| y BGM-109G Gryphon Ground Launched Cruise and | Pershing II IRBM missiles to counter the growing Sovie |
| esign was canceled in September 1980 when the | Pershing II missile mission shifted from destroying ha |
| ker buster) which was intended for use on the | Pershing II IRBM missile. |
| The W86 was cancelled after the | Pershing II was changed from hard target to soft targe |
| The | Pershing II had a high accuracy maneuverable reentry v |
| The US destroyed its stock of road mobile | Pershing II IRBM's and ground launched cruise missiles |
| nce after the announcement of plans to deploy | Pershing II nuclear-capable missiles to West Germany. |
| wing the struggle against the installation of | Pershing II and SS-20 nuclear missiles in Germany (Mut |
| wing the struggle against the installation of | Pershing II and SS-20 nuclear missiles in Germany (Mut |
| s a planned earth-penetrating warhead for the | Pershing II missile. |
| atement confirming the deployment of American | Pershing II-nuclear rockets in West Germany later in 1 |
| The GLCMs (and their strategic cousins, the | Pershing IIs) had a destabilizing effect on the Soviet |
| uring World War I. Fries served under John J. | Pershing in the Philippines and oversaw the constructi |
| warhead was a nuclear bomb used on the MGM-31 | Pershing intermediate range nuclear missile. |
| Any portion zoned to Long or | Pershing is eligible to apply for Pin Oak Middle Schoo |
| Headed by Major General John J. | Pershing, its commander, the first representation of t |
| West University Place | Pershing Junior High School, which was named after Joh |
| The last | Pershing launch from the facility was conducted on 21 |
| der the command of General Frederick Funston, | Pershing led the 8th Brigade on the failed 1916-1917 P |
| der the command of General Frederick Funston, | Pershing led the 8th Brigade on the failed 1916-17 Pun |
| General John | Pershing listed George Dilboy as one of the 10 greates |
| General | Pershing lists Guyton as killed in action on May 24, 1 |
| adowing programs once a month at the Hyatt or | Pershing LLC. |
| Pershing, located in the Braeswood Place neighborhood, | |
| clamped to a Time magazine on whose cover is | Pershing medium-range ballistic missile. |
| Zindler attended | Pershing Middle School and Lamar High School in Housto |
| on Middle School, Jane Long Middle School, or | Pershing middle schools may apply to Pin Oak's regular |
| Pershing Middle School | |
| chool opened sometime around 1928; originally | Pershing Middle School was connected to WUES; Pershing |
| Pershing Middle School with Pin Oak Middle School as a | |
| ar devices, including the ST-120 (used in the | Pershing missile), the ST-90 (used on the Jupiter and |
| Subsequent missile systems, including the | Pershing missile, had the capability to carry warheads |
| orce in 1972, it was converted for use by the | Pershing missile, which made its first flight from the |
| erpowers following the deployment of American | Pershing missiles in Western Europe, SS20s in the Sovi |
| the US military and used for tests of MGM-31 | Pershing missiles. |
| er by the U.S. Army to test launch ten MGM-31 | Pershing missiles. |
| ral Armando Diaz of Italy and General John J. | Pershing of the United States. |
| Hoping to be the General | Pershing of the next great war, he was disappointed wi |
| atch was presented by Cartier to General John | Pershing of the American Expeditionary Force. |
| in the infantry and accompanied Gen. John J. | Pershing on the Pancho Villa Expedition into Mexico in |
| Pershing ordered the 40th and 85th Divisions to serve | |
| Pershing originally was connected to West University E | |
| "Baltic Carried | Pershing Over. |
| Final 1921 was a football match held at Stade | Pershing, Paris on April 24, 1921, that saw Red Star d |
| at to the United States, with General John J. | Pershing personally seeing Cher Ami off as he departed |
| ambo Kings, The Invisible Maniac, Lost in the | Pershing Point Hotel, and Cake. |
| e University of Chicago to a location on west | Pershing Rd. |
| While scrambling for personnel, | Pershing reorganized the replacement system, and tried |
| re he participated in The National Society of | Pershing Rifles, graduating with a bachelor's degree i |
| Carolina State University and was a member of | Pershing Rifles. |
| ence Robitaille was a member of the ROTC, and | Pershing Rifles. |
| Pershing Road and public stairs connect the road to We | |
| until the 1927 opening of the Holland Tunnel, | Pershing Road was a component of the Lincoln Highway, |
| Park/Wentworth Gardens site is located across | Pershing Road from a junkyard site which was named a S |
| Pershing Road travels for 0.42 miles (0.68 km) on the | |
| ive to the East, 31st Street to the north and | Pershing Road (39th street) to the south. |
| ew York, 23 Palisade, 25 Weehawken, ran along | Pershing Road providing local access to the terminal. |
| ilroad intermodal freight terminal located at | Pershing Road (39th Street) & Kedzie Avenue in the sou |
| ving down State Street, Ragen was ambushed at | Pershing Road and was seriously wounded in the arms an |
| Pershing Road Park along the Hudson River Waterfront W | |
| It is located inside Union Station at 30 West | Pershing Road in Kansas City, Missouri. |
| oad between Van Buren Street and 39th Street ( | Pershing Road). |
| Pershing Road, like the Hackensack Plank Road and the | |
| rminal in Weehawken climbing the Palisades at | Pershing Road. |
| thbound), Bergenline Avenue, 48th Street, and | Pershing Road. |
| class of 1903); General of the Armies John J. | Pershing Room (class of 1886 who led our armies in WWI |
| eles Times columnist Steve Lopez met Ayers at | Pershing Square in 2005, and discovered his background |
| public transportation through the Red Line to | Pershing Square station. |
| ment for the Hollywood Subway, was built, the | Pershing Square station was located nearby. |
| ing is an Art Deco style highrise building on | Pershing Square in Downtown Los Angeles that was built |
| United States, which was hung in 1924 in the | Pershing Square area. |
| 4th Streets, and operate the Civic Center and | Pershing Square stations along the way. |
| for "Bad Day" by Daniel Powter, the Red Line | Pershing Square Station and vicinity is used as part o |
| Pershing Square | |
| Downtown Los Angeles, past such landmarks as | Pershing Square, the Subway Terminal Building, Angels |
| t of a park site, which later became known as | Pershing Square. |
| uisiana University, viewed from North General | Pershing Street. |
| in North Park, San Diego, along both 28th and | Pershing Streets (bordered to the south by Upas Street |
| Firefly, M10 Tank Destroyer, M48 Patton, M26 | Pershing, T17 Staghound, Hamilcar, DUKW, SU-76, T-26, |
| None of the 8th Armored | Pershing tanks engaged in combat before the close of h |
| nd against waves ranging from Riflemen to M26 | Pershing tanks. |
| visits to senior commanders including General | Pershing, the American Commander-in-Chief, who paid Br |
| parade celebrated the return of Gen. John J. | Pershing, the hero of the American Expeditionary Force |
| in the Europe due to the feud between General | Pershing, then commander-in-chief of the American Expe |
| formed in 1917 from a call by General John J. | Pershing to improve communications on the Western fron |
| Mexico, during the attempt by General John J. | Pershing to capture the Mexican bandit Pancho Villa. |
| In January 1914, | Pershing was assigned to command the Army 8th Brigade |
| t Train International in New York, along with | Pershing Wells and Michael Vice of Houma, Louisiana. |
| t the Soviet IS-2 heavy tank and American M26 | Pershing were more comparable. |
| Pershing, which is located in the Braeswood Place neig | |
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