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3 unusual facts about Terrell


Cynthea Rhodes

Cynthea Rhodes (born 30 September 1968 in Terrell, Texas) is a retired American triple jumper.

Rob Moroso

He was killed in a traffic accident on roads near his hometown of Terrell, North Carolina.

Terrell, Texas

Current Texas State Representative Lance Gooden is a native of Terrell.


Billy Hawks

He recorded his first album, The New Genius of the Blues, for Prestige Records in November 1966, with Terrell, and with guitarist Boogaloo Joe Jones replacing Parker.

Brandon Browner

He helped the program weather the 2002 departures of Dennis Weathersby, Calvin Carlyle and Terrell Roberts.

DeKalb County Police Department

In late 2006, then-county CEO Vernon Jones hired Terrell Bolton to serve as chief of police.

Glenn Terrell

In the late 1880s, Glenn Terrell's grandparents, Rev. William Henry Terrell and Lizzie Crawford Terrell, moved from Daleville, Mississippi, to Bushnell, Florida, Sumter County, Florida, north of Tampa.

International Center for Development Policy

ICDP investigator Jack Terrell said one document stolen was a hand-written document from Southern Air Transport, documenting an April 1983 flight supplying the Nicaraguan Contras with small arms.

Ken Terrell

Ken Terrell (April 29, 1904 - March 8, 1966) was an American western and action film actor and stuntman best known for playing Joe Marcella in the 1956 film The Indestructible Man.

Kenyatta Wright

Kenyatta Terrell Wright (born February 19, 1978 in Vian, Oklahoma) was an American football linebacker for the New York Jets of the NFL from 2003-2005.

KPWT

KTKX, a radio station (106.7 FM) licensed to Terrell Hills, Texas, United States, which held the call sign KPWT from 2006 to 2010

KWN31

It also broadcasts hourly weather observations for the following cities: Greenville, Sulphur Springs, Paris, McKinney, Terrell, Mineola, and Mount Pleasant; and elsewhere around the region: DFW Airport, Sherman-Denison, Tyler, and Texarkana.

Leo Terrell

After Terrell expressed support for Carolyn Kuhl, a judge nominated by President George W. Bush to the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit whose nomination was filibustered in the U.S. Senate, Terrell left the NAACP and accused the organization of "bullying" him out.

Terrell has provided legal and political commentary on TV and radio programs such as Nightline, Larry King Live, Hannity & Colmes, The O'Reilly Factor, Today, Good Morning America, and various radio programs.

Link Trainer

The British Flight Training School#1 Museum located on the grounds of the Terrell Municipal Airport in Terrell, Texas has a complete Link Trainer assembly with attached instructor's station on display at the museum dedicated to the 2,000 Royal Air Force Cadets were trained in Terrell from August 1941 through the end of World War II as a part of the Lend-Lease Act that allowed British aviation cadets to be trained in the US by civilian aviators.

Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell's Greatest Hits

Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell's Greatest Hits is a 1970 compilation album released by Motown stars Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell on the Tamla label.

Ponchai Wilkerson

On the day of his execution, Wilkerson refused to leave his cell at the Terrell Unit prison near Livingston, Texas.

Ray Terrell

Terrell attended the University of Mississippi, where he played as a halfback on its football team.

Slammiversary XI

Due to breaching her probation, TNA Knockouts Executive, Brooke Hogan, relieved Terrell of her referee duties and reinstated her as a wrestler, allowing Terrell and Kim to further feud.

Suzanne Haik Terrell

In 1996, Jenkins had opposed Terrell's later Senate opponent, Mary Landrieu, but he lost by about four thousand disputed votes.

Terrell made it into the general election with Landrieu, finishing in the primary ahead of Congressman John Cooksey of Monroe and Tony Perkins, a state representative from East Baton Rouge Parish.

Tammi Terrell

Following this relative failure, Terrell announced a semi-retirement from the music business and enrolled in the University of Pennsylvania where she majored in pre-med, staying at the school for two years.

Terrell County, Georgia

Formed from portions of Randolph and Lee counties on February 16, 1856, by an act of the Georgia General Assembly, Terrell County is named for Dr. William Terrell of Sparta, Georgia, who served in the Georgia General Assembly and the United States House of Representatives.

Terrell Myers

Terrell attended James Hillhouse after graduation then attended St. Thomas More Prep school in Waterbury, Connecticut, followed by Saint Joseph's University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania where he studied and played basketball from 1993-1997.

Terrell Peterson

The case came to light when Terrell was brought to the emergency room of Hughes Spalding Children's Hospital in Atlanta in cardiac arrest, where he subsequently died.

Roy Barnes, governor at the time who signed the Terrell Peterson Act, ran for Georgia governor again in 2010 but lost.

Terrell Tilford

Terrell Tilford (born in Los Angeles, California, US on July 22, 1969) is an American film, stage, and television actor, best known for roles as David Grant on The Guiding Light (1998–2001) and Greg Evans on the One Life to Live (2009–2010) and as Ramon Rush in the Lifetime drama series The Protector (2011) and as Sean Clarke on the sexy, scripted-series Single Ladies.

Terrell Williams

Terrell Williams (born June 19, 1974) is an American football coach, and currently the defensive line coach for the Oakland Raiders.

William Glenn Terrell

In 1903, when he was about 25, Glenn Terrell earned his law degree, an LL.B., from Cumberland University in Lebanon, Tennessee.

On May 17, 1982, an Oral History Dinner remembering the contributions of Justice William Glenn Terrell was held as part of an initiative sponsored by Florida Governor Bob Graham.

William McCraw

During his tenure as Attorney General he petitioned the United States Supreme Court unsuccessfully for Texas to take a share of the estate of Edward Howland Robinson Green who had lived for many years in Terrell, Texas.

William Terrell

Terrell was elected as a Democratic-Republican to the United States House of Representatives, serving in the 15th and 16th Congresses serving from March 4, 1817, until March 3, 1821.


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