「pittsburgh」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)5ページ目
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Pittsburgh Hilton & Towers (1959) | |
6,000 copies, an unprecedented amount for a | Pittsburgh hip hop group at the time. |
ctober 11, 1993, the church received City of | Pittsburgh Historic Designation as a local landmark. |
The Garden Theater is on the List of City of | Pittsburgh historic designations. |
According to | Pittsburgh History and Landmarks Foundation, it is the |
he house also has a landmark plaque from the | Pittsburgh History and Landmarks Foundation, and it was |
designated a local historic landmark by the | Pittsburgh History and Landmarks Foundation, |
Lobbying by | Pittsburgh History and Landmarks Foundation on the meri |
As well, it is listed as a landmark by the | Pittsburgh History and Landmarks Foundation. |
e building achieved landmark status from the | Pittsburgh History and Landmarks Foundation in 1976, an |
Pittsburgh History is an on-line service maintained by | |
Historic Places in 1986 and was listed as a | Pittsburgh History & Landmarks Foundation landmark in 1 |
001, the Church Brew Works was listed on the | Pittsburgh History and Landmarks Foundation's List of H |
at the same station, is still the longest in | Pittsburgh history. |
amily was already embedded in the history of | Pittsburgh hockey. |
gue All-Star Game was held in Civic Arena in | Pittsburgh, home to the Pittsburgh Penguins, on January |
Homewood North ( | Pittsburgh), Homewood South (Pittsburgh), Wilkinsburg, |
While he was head of the | Pittsburgh homicide squad, the unit solved 57 homicides |
University of | Pittsburgh, honorary Doctor of Public and International |
rary magazine published by the University of | Pittsburgh Honors College. |
In | Pittsburgh, Honus Wagner soon emerged as the National L |
is first season with the Maple Leafs and the | Pittsburgh Hornets of the American Hockey League (AHL). |
th Vancouver Canucks, Oklahoma City Blazers, | Pittsburgh Hornets and Rochester Americans. |
In 1944-45, he played with the | Pittsburgh Hornets in the American Hockey League. |
Juzda played for the | Pittsburgh Hornets of the AHL in 1952 and earned an AHL |
hree more seasons, before moving down to the | Pittsburgh Hornets of the American Hockey League. |
career in the minor leagues, mostly with the | Pittsburgh Hornets of the American Hockey League. |
who had coached the American Hockey League's | Pittsburgh Hornets to a Calder Cup championship in 1967 |
Wore Uniform # 2 for the | Pittsburgh Hornets |
was with Sioux City of the USHL and with the | Pittsburgh Hornets AAA program. |
et the job for creating the new logo for the | Pittsburgh Hornets of the American Hockey League. |
e Indianapolis Capitals, Providence Reds and | Pittsburgh Hornets before retiring. |
air signed with the American Hockey League's | Pittsburgh Hornets in 1950. |
He played for the | Pittsburgh Hornets of the AHL in 1956 before retiring f |
Bastien was sent by the Maple Leafs to the | Pittsburgh Hornets, their top professional affiliate. |
Hockey League's Springfield Indians and the | Pittsburgh Hornets. |
was sent down to the Red Wings AHL affiliate | Pittsburgh Hornets. |
ed Wings after being promoted from the AHL's | Pittsburgh Hornets. |
o Shamrocks players to become members of the | Pittsburgh Hornets. |
James Celebrezze, currently is employed at a | Pittsburgh hospital as head colorectal surgeon. |
r Village is a public housing project of the | Pittsburgh Housing Authority. |
The City of | Pittsburgh, however, claims that Bloomfield extends eas |
Pittsburgh IAP ARS | |
Location of | Pittsburgh IAP Air Reserve Station, Pennsylvania |
The | Pittsburgh ICA was charged with "providing for financin |
The | Pittsburgh ICA operates within the context of an "Inter |
ow staged on the campus of the University of | Pittsburgh in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. |
and he accompanied Warhol to Manhattan from | Pittsburgh in 1949. |
86 and was also named an assistant coach for | Pittsburgh in 1986. |
Fischer returned to | Pittsburgh in 1977 where she became the first female as |
He was drafted first overall by | Pittsburgh in the 1986 June Amateur Draft after playing |
The Tuberculosis Hospital of | Pittsburgh in the Bedford Dwellings neighborhood of Pit |
Manheim owns Manheim | Pittsburgh in Cranberry Township PA. |
He resumed the practice of law and died in | Pittsburgh in 1867. |
d by Meriwether Lewis from Harper's Ferry to | Pittsburgh in 1803. |
ional rabbi, at Shaare Torah Congregation of | Pittsburgh in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and presently in |
After injuring his leg and being released by | Pittsburgh in 1952, he retired from baseball and return |
a cupola, like many other public schools in | Pittsburgh in the mid-19th century. |
It is situated 24 miles (39 km) northeast of | Pittsburgh in Harrison Township. |
wnship before being annexed into the city of | Pittsburgh in 1907. |
He moved to | Pittsburgh in 1991 to study with Fritz Ringer in the De |
e was a surgical intern at the University of | Pittsburgh in both general and cardiothoracic surgery b |
Paige was unapologetic when he returned to | Pittsburgh in September to help the Crawfords win the s |
He died in | Pittsburgh in 1856. |
l disc jockeys hired for the all new 13-Q in | Pittsburgh in the early 1970s. |
rough prior to its annexation by the City of | Pittsburgh in 1868. |
career as an instructor at the University of | Pittsburgh in 1969; he also lectured at the University |
nced his resignation when he arrived back in | Pittsburgh in May 1936. |
building on the campus of the University of | Pittsburgh in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States. |
is an academic building at the University of | Pittsburgh in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States t |
uncompleted fort on what is now the site of | Pittsburgh in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania. |
park is sited 15 miles northeast of Downtown | Pittsburgh in Frazer and West Deer townships. |
Wisconsin, Stuhldreher joined U.S. Steel in | Pittsburgh in 1950. |
his PhD in chemistry from the University of | Pittsburgh in 1956. |
born in Butler County, Pennsylvania north of | Pittsburgh in 1842. |
oubt built by free Blacks for the defense of | Pittsburgh in 1863. |
He had returned to | Pittsburgh in 1946, as the Radiation Laboratory was bei |
is a physics professor at the University of | Pittsburgh in the Department of Physics and Astronomy. |
Customs (then called surveyor of customs) at | Pittsburgh in 1898. |
is an academic building of the University of | Pittsburgh in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States, |
nsylvania in 1927 and from the University of | Pittsburgh in 1929. |
1898 map with Allegheny in yellow, | Pittsburgh in red, and parks in green |
t of the township, absorbed into the City of | Pittsburgh in 1920, is the current St. Clair neighborho |
While with | Pittsburgh in 1994, he helped the Steelers reach the AF |
at home, including a 19-16 upset of then-#8 | Pittsburgh in the Backyard Brawl. |
ved his Master's Degree at the University of | Pittsburgh in 1988. |
He earned 2 shutouts, both for | Pittsburgh in 1975-76. |
egular season with a 6-5 record and defeated | Pittsburgh in the 1987 Bluebonnet Bowl. |
He received his Ph.D. from the University of | Pittsburgh in 1928, and was promoted to Assistant Profe |
from the University of | Pittsburgh, in 1938. |
formed in public at the Colony Restaurant in | Pittsburgh in 1968. |
e was an unsuccessful candidate for Mayor of | Pittsburgh in 1913. |
mmons received a B.A. from the University of | Pittsburgh in 1946 and a J.D. from Harvard Law School i |
the preaching of Rigdon and was baptized at | Pittsburgh in 1845. |
He moved to | Pittsburgh in the United States to work in February 191 |
Polymath Park, located 60 miles southwest of | Pittsburgh in the Laurel Highlands and sited near Wrigh |
Volz was born in | Pittsburgh in 1823. |
He was a member of the select council of | Pittsburgh in 1886 and 1887. |
ties, and assisted in laying out the city of | Pittsburgh in 1784. |
e earned a history degree from University of | Pittsburgh in 1971. |
Pittsburgh in 1874, by Otto Krebs | |
He earned his Ph.D. from the University of | Pittsburgh in 1969 under the direction of Wilfrid Sella |
d received his M.B.A. from the University of | Pittsburgh in 1964. |
She joined the staff of CBS-owned KDKA-TV in | Pittsburgh in 1999 as the morning and noon co-anchor. |
rthern Illinois University and University of | Pittsburgh in American History and International Politi |
sferred and graduated from the University of | Pittsburgh in 1932. |
ed as a Legacy Laureate by the University of | Pittsburgh in 2007. |
ff moved to the United States in 1952 and to | Pittsburgh in 1961. |
or the Women's Center and Shelter of Greater | Pittsburgh in an attempt to spread the word on domestic |
stop from which residents can be in Downtown | Pittsburgh in mere minutes. |
eceived his Bachelors from the University of | Pittsburgh in 1971 and his Medical Degree from the same |
building on the campus of the University of | Pittsburgh in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States. |
For the mayor of | Pittsburgh in the 1930s, see John S. Herron. |
He moved to | Pittsburgh in 1919 to take an administrative position a |
Ph.D. in mathematics from the University of | Pittsburgh in 1964. |
grew quickly and was annexed by the City of | Pittsburgh in 1907. |
ved his B.A. and J.D. from the University of | Pittsburgh in 1981 and 1984, respectively. |
's name was engraved on the Stanley Cup with | Pittsburgh in 1991, and 1992. |
octorate in education from the University of | Pittsburgh in 1980. |
Arts degree from Carnegie Mellon University, | Pittsburgh, in 1962. |
mercial Journal, and served as Postmaster of | Pittsburgh in 1841. |
ce Max Starks was a third-round selection by | Pittsburgh in 2004. |
He died in | Pittsburgh in 1854 and was interred in Allegheny Cemete |
the school of pharmacy of the University of | Pittsburgh in 1906. |
biological anthropology at the University of | Pittsburgh in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, President of th |
repertory theatre based at the University of | Pittsburgh in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States. |
after received a B.A. from the University of | Pittsburgh in 1954, and an LL.B. from the University of |
Pennsylvania, now known as the University of | Pittsburgh in October 1834, graduating in 1837. |
ext year, before losing to Myrtle McAteer of | Pittsburgh in both matches. |
He continued in practice until his death, in | Pittsburgh, in 1927. |
District on the campus of the University of | Pittsburgh in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States. |
is the business school of the University of | Pittsburgh in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA, and ranks |
After she graduated from the University of | Pittsburgh in 1969, she taught high school physics in P |
held the previous record of 48, set against | Pittsburgh in 1991. |
a now defunct nightclub that was located in | Pittsburgh in the South Side Flats neighborhood. |
ion was located in the South Oakland area of | Pittsburgh in a former police horse stable. |
r 10 jersey was retired by the University of | Pittsburgh in 1968. |
in the real estate and insurance business in | Pittsburgh in 1922, and president of the Pittsburgh Rea |
He made his major league debut for | Pittsburgh in 1988, but saw only limited playing time e |
n Hall", a dormitory of the Art Institute of | Pittsburgh) in the Central Business District of Pittsbu |
With | Pittsburgh in a youth movement and declining to renew h |
Clair Township to be annexed by the City of | Pittsburgh in 1920. |
erranean until relieved by the heavy cruiser | Pittsburgh in October 1922. |
He was graduated from Duquesne University in | Pittsburgh in 1908. |
facility on the campus of the University of | Pittsburgh in the Oakland section of Pittsburgh, Pennsy |
nnsylvania, known today as the University of | Pittsburgh, in 1834. |
He also served as a manager for | Pittsburgh in the 1889 season. |
County, Pennsylvania, in 1790 and arrived in | Pittsburgh in 1812. |
Marvin arrived in | Pittsburgh in 1863 and established himself in the crack |
Winter was born in Beechview, | Pittsburgh in 1930. |
just in time to run for District Justice in | Pittsburgh in 2009, where he faced and lost to his form |
a, he earned a degree from the University of | Pittsburgh in 1966 and from Penn State University in 19 |
He also played for the Expos and returned to | Pittsburgh in 1982 for a last run. |
But | Pittsburgh inched further ahead with another run-scorin |
harge throughout the Oakland neighborhood of | Pittsburgh, including coffee shops, art galleries, and |
Rustbelt Radio is the | Pittsburgh Independent Media Center's weekly radio prog |
Rustbelt Radio: The | Pittsburgh Independent Media Center's weekly round-up o |
Chahrour began as a member of the | Pittsburgh indie rap group Strict Flow. |
elen Clay Frick (1888-1984), daughter of the | Pittsburgh industrialist and art patron Henry Clay Fric |
rick, invertebrate paleontologist and son of | Pittsburgh industrialist Henry Clay Frick |
The windows, manufactured by Canadian | Pittsburgh Industries, were coloured using 2,500 ounces |
The | Pittsburgh Institute of Aeronautics, known to the indus |
mpanies before becoming an Instructor at the | Pittsburgh Institute of Aeronautics. |
Pittsburgh Institute of the Mortuary Science is a medic | |
Pittsburgh Institute of Aeronautics | |
Pittsburgh Institute of Aeronautics was founded in 1929 | |
He later graduated from the | Pittsburgh Institute of Mortuary Science in 1958. |
ent of the Inventor of the Year Award by the | Pittsburgh Intellectual Property Law Association in 199 |
Not to be confused with | Pittsburgh Intergovernmental Cooperation Authority. |
The | Pittsburgh Intergovernmental Cooperation Authority (als |
The | Pittsburgh Intergovernmental Cooperation Authority, a s |
ry close proximity to downtown as opposed to | Pittsburgh International Airport. |
primary FAA designated reliever airport for | Pittsburgh International Airport. |
Abhisit with U.S. officials at | Pittsburgh International Airport. |
) was forced to make an emergency landing at | Pittsburgh International Airport on June 12, 2006 after |
At present there is no rapid transit to | Pittsburgh International Airport. |
est Allegheny School District is home of the | Pittsburgh International Airport terminal. |
eralded the arrival of Southwest Airlines at | Pittsburgh International Airport along with Pittsburgh |
Pittsburgh International took over commercial flights i | |
hange with Interstate 376 at the entrance to | Pittsburgh International Airport. |
Greater | Pittsburgh International Airport was replaced by Pittsb |
For example, | Pittsburgh International Airport's abbreviation is PIT, |
esulted in projects that ranged from the new | Pittsburgh International Airport to The Andy Warhol Mus |
long proposal to install a Maglev line from | Pittsburgh International east to Downtown Pittsburgh an |
The | Pittsburgh International Airport People Movers are two |
augherty Run Road (Exits 50 and 51) north of | Pittsburgh International Airport (PIT). |
flights a day when US Airways cut flights to | Pittsburgh International Airport. |
oser to the South Hills and Monroeville than | Pittsburgh International. |
lected President, McCaskey raised funds from | Pittsburgh investors including W. H. McFadden, a retire |
The | Pittsburgh Ironmen were a charter member of the Basketb |
He played for the | Pittsburgh Ironmen (1946-47) in the BAA for 60 games. |
Drafted by the | Pittsburgh Ironmen in the 1947 BAA Draft, Fritz played |
He played for the | Pittsburgh Ironmen, Boston Celtics and Detroit Falcons |
was a professional basketball player for the | Pittsburgh Ironmen. |
Pittsburgh is a neighborhood of Atlanta, Georgia, found | |
s WTZN-FM, the only other FM talk station in | Pittsburgh is WPGB. |
The Mayor of | Pittsburgh is elected every 4 years. |
trict Attorney for Allegheny County of which | Pittsburgh is the County Seat. |
Overheard in | Pittsburgh is a blog edited by Chris Griswold that publ |
he presence of the -h at the end of the word | Pittsburgh is occasionally recognized in Pittsburgh cul |
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