X-Nico

2 unusual facts about Alan A. Dale


Alan A. Dale

From there, on December 21, she sailed as part of Convoy TAM 26, bound for Antwerp.

Under the name Nordvest she was owned and operated by D/S Norden of Copenhagen.


Alan A'Court

In January 1978 George Eastham was sacked and A'Court was put in caretaker charge.

Whilst still in Division 2 A'Court's skill alerted England manager Walter Winterbottom, who was looking for a player to replace an injured Tom Finney; Winterbottom handed the left winger the first of his 5 caps on 6 November 1957 in a British Championship match against Northern Ireland at Wembley.

Alan Stone

Alan A. Stone, scholar of law and psychology at Harvard, and film critic

Ben H. Love

It was Love's leadership during his tenure as Chief Scout Executive in defending the BSA during the Curran Case, the Randall case and later the Dale case that charted the course for the Boy Scouts eventual legal victories, but loss of public support.

Bruce E. Dale

In July, 2009 Dale and George W. Huber co-authored the front page article for Scientific American about the potential of organic food, specifically non-edible organic fuels.

Chip 'n' Dale

Chip and Dale retrieve their tree and make it fit to scale as a giant redwood tree.

George Dale

George N. Dale (1834–1903), American lawyer and politician in Vermont

George R. Dale (1867–1936), American newspaper editor and politician in Indiana

Grassoline

The term was coined by Matthew Scoggins, a graduate students of Bruce Dale, in 1991, to capture the idea of taking plant material and converting it into oil.

The result is minor biomass degradation with high yields The process was patented by Bruce Dale, Michigan State University professor.

Harry H. Dale

Dale was elected as a Democrat to the Sixty-third, Sixty-fourth, and Sixty-fifth Congresses and served from March 4, 1913, to January 6, 1919, when he resigned having been appointed judge of the magistrate's court in 1919.

Jack Hannah

Despite that, Hannah has often been noted for being responsible for Donald's most repetitive period when he constantly teamed Donald up with pint-sized vermin, like a little bee named Spike, the wise old Bootle Beetle and Chip 'n' Dale.

James Dale

Boy Scouts of America v. Dale, a Supreme Court case involving a New Jersey scoutmaster

Nutty Narrows Bridge

Upon its completion, the bridge was re-dedicated with special guests Chip 'n' Dale and Mickey Mouse from Disneyland.

Polygon Records

It was started in 1949 as the Polygon Record Company Ltd. by Alan A. Freeman and Leslie Clark, who was anxious to control distribution of his daughter Petula Clark's recordings.

Robert H. Knight

Following the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in Boy Scouts of America v. Dale, Knight was interviewed by anchor Bryant Gumbel on the CBS morning program The Early Show Thinking he was off air after the segment, Gumbel profanely cursed Knight, who has been featured on virtually every major network news or talk show.

Working for Peanuts

While collecting acorns, Chip 'n' Dale discover a peanut that had been thrown from the nearby zoo.


see also

Bernie Kopell

Kopell made memorable recurring appearances as KAOS agent Siegfried in Get Smart, Alan-a-Dale in When Things Were Rotten, Jerry Bauman in That Girl and Louie Pallucci in The Doris Day Show.

Jimmy Winkfield Stakes

He won it twice: with His Eminence in 1901 and with Alan-a-Dale in 1902.

Richard Coleman

Other television roles included Nick Allardyce in The Adventures of Ben Gunn (1958), Alan-a-Dale in The Adventures of Robin Hood (1958–60), and Jack Royston in the soap opera Weavers Green (1966).

Walk the Straight and Narrow

The Dynamic Duo chase the villains by Batboat and rout the Archer, Crier Tuck, Big John, Maid Marilyn, and Alan A. Dale before they get the chance.