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Stricker
Stricker: * Der Stricker, the pseudonym of a 13th-century Middle High German itinerant poet Family name * Dominic Stephan Stricker (born 2002), a Swiss professional tennis player * Eva (Amalia) Zeisel, ''née Stricker'' (born 1906), a Jewish Hungarian industrial designer * Johannes Paulus Stricker (1816 in The Hague – 1886 in Nieuwer-Amstel), a Dutch theologian and biblical scholar * John A. "Cub" Stricker (1859–1937), an American baseball player (second baseman) * John Stricker (1758–1825), a Maryland militia officer * Karol Stricker (born 1959 in Buffalo, NY) * Katy Hamman Stricker * Erwin Stricker, an Italian skier ** Katy Hamman-Stricker Library * Louis Anthony Stricker (1884 in Kimberley, South Africa – 1960 in Rondebosch, Cape Province) * Robert Stricker (1879 in Brno – 1944 in Auschwitz), a Jewish Czech-Austrian politician * Salomon Stricker (1834 in Waag-Neustadtl/Vágújhely – 1898), a Jewish Hungarian-Austrian pathologist, h ...
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Steve Stricker
Steven Charles Stricker (born February 23, 1967) is an American professional golfer who plays on the PGA Tour and the PGA Tour Champions. He has twelve victories on the PGA Tour, including the WGC-Match Play title in 2001 and two FedEx Cup playoff events. His most successful season on tour came at age 42 in 2009, with three victories and a runner-up finish on the money list. Stricker spent over 250 weeks in the top-10 of the Official World Golf Ranking, reaching a career-high world ranking of No. 2 in September 2009. Stricker served as U.S. Ryder Cup captain for the 2021 matches, winning at Whistling Straits in his home state of Wisconsin. Early life Born in Edgerton, Wisconsin, Stricker grew up playing golf at Lake Ripley Country Club in nearby Cambridge and Edgerton Towne Country Club in Edgerton. A 1990 graduate of the University of Illinois, Stricker earned All-American honors as a member of the Illini golf team in 1988 and 1989. Professional career Stricker turned prof ...
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Shtriker
Stricker: * Der Stricker, the pseudonym of a 13th-century Middle High German itinerant poet Family name * Dominic Stephan Stricker (born 2002), a Swiss professional tennis player * Eva (Amalia) Zeisel, ''née Stricker'' (born 1906), a Jewish Hungarian industrial designer * Johannes Paulus Stricker (1816 in The Hague – 1886 in Nieuwer-Amstel), a Dutch theologian and biblical scholar * John A. "Cub" Stricker (1859–1937), an American baseball player (second baseman) * John Stricker (1758–1825), a Maryland militia officer * Karol Stricker (born 1959 in Buffalo, NY) * Katy Hamman Stricker * Erwin Stricker, an Italian skier ** Katy Hamman-Stricker Library * Louis Anthony Stricker (1884 in Kimberley, South Africa – 1960 in Rondebosch, Cape Province) * Robert Stricker (1879 in Brno – 1944 in Auschwitz), a Jewish Czech-Austrian politician * Salomon Stricker (1834 in Waag-Neustadtl/Vágújhely – 1898), a Jewish Hungarian-Austrian pathologist, histo ...
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Salomon Stricker
Salomon Stricker (1 January 1834 – 2 April 1898) was an Austrian pathologist and histologist. Career Stricker was born in Waag-Neustadtl (Hungarian: Vágújhely, now Nové Mesto nad Váhom in Slovakia). He studied at the University of Vienna, and subsequently became a research assistant at the Institute of Physiology under Ernst Wilhelm von Brücke. Later he became head of the Institute of General and Experimental Pathology in Vienna. Stricker is remembered for his extensive studies in the fields of histology and experimental pathology, and is credited with making discoveries involving the diapedesis of erythrocytes and the contractility of vascular walls. He also made contributions in his research of cell division in vivo, on the histology of the cornea, and on the relationship of cells to the extracellular matrix. Among his written works is the ', a two-volume textbook that contains Stricker's essays on histology, along with treatises from several other prominent physicians ...
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Stricker's Grove
Stricker's Grove is a family owned amusement park located in Ross, Ohio, USA. Unlike other amusement parks, Stricker's Grove is closed to the public for most of the year. Instead, it is rented out for private functions, such as weddings. The park is open to the public for 8 days of every year, on July 4, 4 days in mid July for the Hamilton County 4-H Community Fair, the second Sunday in August (Family Day), Labor Day, and a Sunday in October called "Customer Appreciation Day". History The park was first started in 1924 in Mt. Healthy, Ohio by Henry Stricker on of property next to the Drive-in on Compton Rd. The Stricker's lived in a house on the property. Henry Stricker initially used the land for a place for coworkers to come to on weekends to picnic and enjoy the countryside. A dance hall was later added, and was designed so that if the park failed, it could be converted into a chicken coop. In the 1940s, a pony cart ride was added along with a horse and pony track. The fir ...
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Dominic Stricker
Dominic Stephan Stricker (born 16 August 2002) is a Swiss tennis player. He has a career high ATP singles ranking of No. 111 achieved on 7 November 2022. He also has a career high ATP doubles ranking of No. 161 achieved on 27 June 2022. On the junior tour, he had a career high junior ranking of No. 8, achieved on 3 February 2020. Junior career Stricker won the 2020 French Open boys' singles title, defeating compatriot Leandro Riedi in the final. He also won the 2020 French Open boys' doubles title, partnering Flavio Cobolli. Professional career 2021: Maiden ATP doubles title, ATP & Top 250 debut in singles, Top 200 in doubles In March, ranked No. 874 in the world, he received a wild card entry into the 2021 BSI Challenger Lugano, Switzerland. He won the tournament, defeating Vitaliy Sachko in straight sets in the final. He became the 3rd youngest Swiss player after Roger Federer and Stan Wawrinka to win an ATP Challenger title. Following this successful run, he made his top 50 ...
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Louis Stricker
Louis Anthony Stricker (26 May 1884 – 5 February 1960) was a South African cricketer who played in 13 Tests from 1910 to 1912. Of German parentage, Stricker was born in Beaconsfield, Kimberley. A few years later his family moved to Johannesburg, where he attended the Marist Brothers school. A batsman, Stricker scored two centuries in first-class cricket: 103 for Transvaal against the touring English team in 1909–10 (when he shared an opening partnership of 215 with Billy Zulch), and 146 against South Australia when he toured Australia with the South Africans in 1910-11."Obituary: L. A. Stricker", ''The Cricketer'', Spring Annual 1960, p. 79. He was less successful in Test cricket, with a top score of 48 in his 13 matches, scored twice: against Australia in Adelaide in 1910–11, when South Africa beat Australia for the first time, and against Australia at Lord's in the 1912 Triangular Tournament. His brother Henry Henry may refer to: People *Henry (given name) *Henry ...
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Robert Stricker
Robert Stricker (16 August 1879 – 1944) was a Jewish Austrian politician. Born in Brno (present-day Czech Republic), Stricker graduated from high school at the technical college. He entered the service of the Imperial Royal Austrian State Railways, where he was active in management. He was elected at the 1919 Austrian Constitutional Assembly election as the only representative of the Jewish National Party, founded in 1907 under the Austro-Hungarian Empire, which never again succeeded in sending a representative to the Austrian Parliament. In addition, Stricker was a Zionist activist, and for many years was a board member of the ''Israelitische Kultusgemeinde Wien''. He was the publisher of the Jewish weekly magazine '' Die Neue Welt'', established in 1926 as a replacement for the defunct Zionist journal ''Die Welt''. After the ''Anschluss'', Robert Stricker was sent to Dachau, but was eventually released. In 1942 he was sent to Theresienstadt, and is reported to have been kill ...
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Katy Hamman-Stricker Library
The Katy Hamman-Stricker Library is located at 404 E. Mitchell Street in Calvert, Texas, USA. It consists of a museum as well as a public library and community center and was the first chapter house built by the American Woman's League in the state. Calvert is located within the Golden Triangle (the area between the cities of Dallas, Houston and Austin) of Texas. The building was constructed in 1909 but its role changed thirty years later when it became the town library. It is designated as a Recorded Texas Historic Landmark. History The building housing the library and museum was built by the American Woman's League (AWL) The American Woman's League and the American Woman's Republic
.
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Tal Stricker
Tal Stricker (born May 29, 1979) is a breaststroke swimmer from Israel, who competed for Israel at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, Australia. Early life Stricker was born in Ramat Gan, Israel, and his parents are Rafi and Nava Stricker. He attended Tichon Hadash High School in Tel Aviv. Swimming career Competing for Israel at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, Australia, Stricker swam in three events. He won his preliminary heat in the 100m breaststroke (1:03.99), but did not advance to the semifinals and placed 32nd. He also finished 32nd in the 200m breaststroke (2:19.33). He was a member of Israel's 4 × 100 m Medley Relay Team that finished in 5th place in the preliminary heat (3:43.39), and did not advance; they ended up 17th overall. Stricker was a member of Israel's 4 × 100 m Medley Relay Team that finished in 8th place (3:43.48) at the European LC Championships 2000 in Helsinki, Finland. In 2000–01, he was a freshman at Florida State University. He finished 9th ...
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Der Stricker
Der Stricker is the pseudonym of a 13th-century Middle High German itinerant poet whose real name has been lost to history. His name, which means "The Knitter," may indicate he was a commoner; he was likely from Franconia but later worked in Austria. His works evince a knowledge of German literature and practical theology, and include both adaptations and works with no known sources.Gürttler, Karin R. (1991). "Der Stricker". In Lacy, Norris J., ''The New Arthurian Encyclopedia'', p. 434. New York: Garland. . Der Stricker's oeuvre includes the Arthurian romance ''Daniel von dem blühenden Tal'' and the epic ''Karl'', a German adaptation of the ''Song of Roland'', based directly on Konrad der Pfaffe's earlier German version but updated for his time. However, he was chiefly a writer of didactic poetry and exempla or bispel, and was one of the early pioneers of the genre. These poems dealt not only with the religious and moral matters typical of the form, but also with the praise of wom ...
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John Stricker
Brigadier General John Stricker (1758–1825) was a Maryland state militia officer who fought in both the American Revolutionary War in the First Maryland Regiment of the famous "Maryland Line" of the Continental Army and in the War of 1812. He commanded the Third Brigade (also known as the "City Brigade" or the "Baltimore Brigade") of the Maryland state militia in the Battle of North Point on Monday, September 12, 1814, (later known as " Defenders' Day, a state, county and city holiday) which formed a part of the larger Battle of Baltimore, along with the subsequent British naval bombardment of Fort McHenry on September 13-14th, and was a turning point in the later months of the War of 1812 and to the peace negotiators across the Atlantic Ocean for the Treaty of Ghent, in the city of Ghent then in the Austrian Netherlands, (now of future Belgium), which finally arrived at a peace treaty on Christmas Eve of December 1814, of which news finally reached America in February 1815. ...
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Cub Stricker
John A. "Cub" Stricker, born John A. Streaker (June 8, 1859 – November 19, 1937) was an American professional baseball second baseman. He played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for seven different teams during his 11-season career, mostly with the Philadelphia Athletics and Cleveland Blues/Spiders. Career Born in Philadelphia, Stricker was signed by the Athletics as a free agent in and played four seasons with moderate success. He would get his most playing time while with the Cleveland Blues though, and did well with the opportunity, especially his first season with them in , when he batted .264 in 131 games, scored 122 runs scored, and stole 86 bases. He stole 60 bases the following year, and finished his career with a respectable 278, along with 1,106 base hits and a .239 batting average. In , he was signed by the St. Louis Browns to be the team's player-manager. His time was cut short when after 23 games, the team had only won six of them. The final straw came after a h ...
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