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Darshan Darshan is a Sanskrit (also used to some extent in Urdu) term meaning sight (in the sense of an instance of seeing something or somebody), vision, apparition, or a glimpse. It is most commonly used for visions of the divine; that is, of a god or a very holy person or artifact.
Dart goby The dart goby, Parioglossus marginalis, is a dartfish of the genus Parioglossus, found along the east coast of Australia and in a few isolated localities in Northland and Great Barrier Island, New Zealand, in low gradient wetlands and small, brackish, coastal streams. Their length is up to 40 mm.
Dart leader A dart leader (also known as a continuous leader; may have been referred to by Feynman as a dark leader ) is the cloud-to-ground movement of electrons which occurs just before a secondary lightning strike. The dart leader is similar to a step leader, because it is not as intense as the main strike, yet serves to ionize the air between the cloud and the ground, allowing electrical breakdown of the path of the lightning strike.
Dart River, New Zealand The Dart River, Te Awa Wakatipu in Māori language, flows through rugged forested country in the southwestern South Island of New Zealand. Partly in Mount Aspiring National Park, it flows southwards for 60 kilometres from its headwaters in the Southern Alps, eventually flowing into the northern end of Lake Wakatipu near Glenorchy.
Dartford Cable Tunnel The Dartford Cable Tunnel is a tunnel upstream of the Dartford Crossing in 2003–4, of diameter ~3m. It is designed to carry and allow for maintenance of 400kV national electrical grid cable beneath the Thames; it is accessible by foot as a crossing of the Thames, but by authorised personnel only.
Dartford Grammar School Dartford Grammar School is a selective secondary (ages 11–18) foundation school in Dartford, Kent, England, which admits girls to its sixth form (ages 16–18). All of the students joining the school are from the top 25% of the ability range.
Dartford Warbler The Dartford Warbler, Sylvia undata, is an Old World warbler which breeds in the warmer parts of south west Europe and northwest Africa. Its breeding range lies west of a line from southern England to the heel of Italy.
Darth Bane Darth Bane is a fictional character in the Star Wars Expanded Universe. He is first mentioned in the novelization of Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace, and is the main character of the novel Darth Bane: Path of Destruction.
Darth Maul (comic) Darth Maul is a 4-issue comics series published by Dark Horse Comics featuring Darth Maul. The series is set in the Star Wars galaxy shortly before the Battle of Naboo in Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace, and about 32 years before the Battle of Yavin in Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope.
Darth Vader's Psychic Hotline Darth Vader's Psychic Hotline is a fan film that made its debut on the internet on April 16, 2002, created by fans of the Star Wars franchise. It is a spoof of Star Wars and Miss Cleo-type psychic hotline infomercials, with Darth Vader taking calls and giving advice to various Star Wars characters.
Dartington College of Arts Dartington College of Arts is a college near Totnes, Devon, South West England, specialising in Post-dramatic Theatre, Music, Performance Writing and Visual Performance, focusing on a performative and multi-disciplinary approach to the arts. In addition to this, lecturing staff are all in some way active arts practitioners.
Dartington Hall Dartington Hall, near Totnes, Devon, England, is a medieval hall built between 1388 and 1400 for John Holand, Earl of Huntingdon, half-brother to Richard II. After John was beheaded, the Crown owned the estate until it was acquired in 1559 by Sir Arthur Champernowne, Vice-Admiral of the West under Elizabeth I.
Dartitis Dartitis (pronounced dart-eye-tis) is a condition which can affect dart players, and severely damage their performance and results. It can be compared to the 'yips', a movement disorder which can affect golf players as they take their putting stroke.
Dartmeet Dartmeet is a popular tourist spot in the centre of Dartmoor, Devon, in the United Kingdom. As the name suggests, it is the meeting point of the two major tributaries of the River Dart: the East Dart and West Dart.
Dartmoor Beast The Dartmoor Beast is an annual charitable fundraising challenge run in aid of the charity Cancer Climber Association (CCA) UK. The challenge takes the form of a daytime navigation exercise held in the Dartmoor National Park in the county of Devon, England.
Dartmoor longhouse The Dartmoor longhouse is a type of traditional home, found on the high ground of Dartmoor, in the south west of the United Kingdom. The earliest are thought to have been built in the 13th century, and they continued to be constructed throughout the mediaeval period, using local granite.
Dartmoor reservoirs A number of reservoirs and dams were built in Dartmoor National Park, Devon, England, over the course of the 20th century to supply the rapidly growing towns in the surrounding lowlands. With its deep valleys and high rainfall, Dartmoor was an inevitable location, despite its protected status.
Dartmoor tin-mining The Dartmoor tin mining industry is thought to have originated as early as pre-Roman times, and continued right through to the 20th century. Tin is a mineral that is often found close to granite outcrops, so the uplands of Dartmoor, in Devon, United Kingdom, were a particularly productive area.
Dartmouth and Torbay Railway The Dartmouth and Torbay Railway was a broad gauge railway linking the South Devon Railway branch at Torquay with Kingswear in Devon, United Kingdom. It was operated from the outset by the South Devon Railway.
Dartmouth Bridge The Dartmouth Bridge is a box girder bridge that spans the Mississippi River in Minneapolis, Minnesota, between the Cedar-Riverside area and the University of Minnesota campus area. It was built in 1964 and was designed by Parsons Brinckerhoff, Quade and Douglas.
Dartmouth Broadcasting Dartmouth Broadcasting began in 1920s with the ambitions of a few Dartmouth College students that decided to give a new technology called radio a try. The first broadcast occurred over copper wires linked in all the dorms.
Dartmouth College Alumni Gymnasium Dartmouth College's Alumni Gymnasium is the center of Dartmouth athletic life and hosts venues for many of Dartmouth’s 34 varsity sports. After its completion in 1910 it was considered to be one of the most complete athletic facilities in the Eastern United States.
Dartmouth College Greek organizations Dartmouth College is host to many Greek organizations and a significant percentage of the undergraduate student body is active in Greek life. In 2005, the school stated that 1,785 students were members of a fraternity, sorority, or coeducational Greek house, about 60 percent of the eligible student body.
Dartmouth College residential communities As opposed to ungrouped dormitories or "residential colleges" as employed at such institutions as Yale or Princeton (in imitation of the colleges of Cambridge and Oxford), Dartmouth College is a single residential college divided into residential communities called "housing clusters." Housing clusters are groups of two to three dormitories (although some one-dorm clusters exist) that are located physically near one another.
Dartmouth College traditions This article concerns the traditions of Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire. Dartmouth's website counts the College's "special traditions" among its "essential elements", and in his inauguration address, current College president James W.
Dartmouth Commons The Dartmouth Commons was an approximately 300 acres area of land set aside by the government in the late 1700s for the settlers common use in Dartmouth Nova Scotia. Maintained by the Halifax Regional Municipality only a small portion of it remains today.
Dartmouth Dam Dartmouth Dam is a large dam on the Mitta Mitta River in the north-eastern portion of the Australian state of Victoria. The dam creates the artificial Lake Dartmouth, storing water from the Victorian "High Country" for summer release into the Mitta Mitta (and the downstream Lake Hume) and subsequently into the greater Murray River for irrigation.
Dartmouth Free Press The Dartmouth Free Press (DFP), founded in October 2000, is a biweekly liberal/progressive publication based on the campus of Dartmouth College. The paper publishes articles both on national/international, campus, and entertainment topics.
Dartmouth General Hospital The Dartmouth General Hospital is a 24-hour emergency , inpatient medical , surgical and critical care hospital in Dartmouth Nova Scotia since 1976 . It serves approximately 120,000 people in Dartmouth and eastern Halifax Regional Municipality areas.
Dartmouth High School Dartmouth High School is a public secondary school located in the Brightwood neighbourhood in the north end of Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, Canada. Encompassing grades 10 through 12, Dartmouth High School has always had a wide variety of courses, ethnic groups, and options for students.
Dartmouth High School (Sandwell) Dartmouth High School is a secondary school located in West Bromwich, England, near the border with Birmingham in the Great Barr area of the town. It is controlled by Sandwell MBC but was originally built in the post Second World War years to serve the expanding north-eastern area of West Bromwich.
Dartmouth Independent The Dartmouth Independent is the only online-based publication at Dartmouth College. Unlike most other campus magazines that offer political commentary, The Dartmouth Independent lacks a defined political allegiance.
Dartmouth Mall The Dartmouth Mall is a large, one-level, two-story, indoor shopping mall located off US 6 and Faunce Conner Road in North Dartmouth, Massachusetts. Currently anchoring the mall are JC Penney, Macy's, and Sears.
Dartmouth pong Dartmouth pong is a drinking game played at Dartmouth College that is loosely based on ping pong. A 2005 survey conducted by former Dartmouth College Statistician John Pryor and reported on in The Dartmouth found that 80% of Dartmouth students had played the game.
Dartmouth Skiway The Dartmouth Skiway is located about twenty minutes north of Dartmouth College in Lyme, New Hampshire. It has thirty trails from easiest (green circle) to most difficult (black diamond) on over 100 acres (400,000 m²) of skiable area.
Dartmouth Time Sharing System The Dartmouth Time-Sharing System, or DTSS for short, was the first large-scale time-sharing system to be implemented successfully. Its implementation began at Dartmouth College in 1963 by a student team under the direction of John Kemeny and Thomas Kurtz with the aim of providing easy access to computing facilities for all members of the college.
Dartmouth University Dartmouth University is the name frequently used by mistake to refer to Dartmouth College, the small Ivy League school in Hanover, New Hampshire. The school retains its original name of Dartmouth College, even though it displays the features that would typically deem it a university: it maintains several professional schools, one of which was established during the eighteenth century, and it grants graduate degrees in 18 areas of study.
Dartmouth, Devon Dartmouth is a town in Devon in the south-west of England. It is a major tourist destination set on the banks of the estuary of the River Dart, which is a long narrow tidal ria that runs inland as far as Totnes.
Dartmouth—Cole Harbour Dartmouth—Cole Harbour (formerly Dartmouth and Dartmouth—Halifax East) is a federal electoral district in Nova Scotia, Canada, that has been represented in the Canadian House of Commons since 2004. Its population in 2001 was 88,507.
Dartrey Forest Dartrey Forest, County Monaghan, Ireland was formerly the estate of the Dawson family, who had the title "Earl of Dartrey" from 1866 to 1933. It is currently managed by Coillte as a commercial forest.
Darts Darts is a game, or rather a variety of related games, in which darts are thrown at a circular target (dart board) hung on a wall. Though various different boards and games have been used in the past, the term 'darts' usually now refers to a standardized game involving a specific board design and set of rules.
Darts world rankings Darts world rankings are a system which should determine a list of the best dart players in the world based on their performances in tournaments. However, after a group of former world champions and other high-profile players separated from the British Darts Organisation in 1993 - there are now two major governing bodies.
Darug people The Darug (also spelt Dharuk, Dharug and Daruk) are a tribe of Indigenous Australians, who are traditional custodians of the geographic area that now includes Bidjigal Reserve in the Northwest region of Sydney.
Darul Huda Islamic Academy Darul Huda Islamic Academy is an Islamic institution situated on the banks of the River Kadalundy, located at Chemmad Tirurangadi, Kerala, India spreading over 11 acres of land (44,500 m²) with calm and serene surroundings. The Foundation stone was laid on 25 December 1983, and started functioning on 26 June 1986.
Darul Islam Darul Islam was an Islamic group in Indonesia that is considered to be more closely related to extremists than to Jemaah Islamiyah. It was started in 1942 by a group of Muslim militias, coordinated by a charismatic radical Muslim politician, Kartosuwiryo.
Darul Uloom Deoband The Darul Uloom, (dārul ulūm devband in Hindi and Urdu) is an Islamic madrassa (seminary) famous for being the inception place of the Deobandi Islamic movement. It is located at Deoband, a town in Uttar Pradesh, India.
Darvin Ham Darvin Ham (born July 23 1973 in Saginaw, Michigan) is a professional basketball player formerly in the NBA. He attended Saginaw High School and Texas Tech University, where he gained national attention by shattering a backboard on a slam dunk during a game.
Darwan Singh Negi Darwan Singh Negi (November 1881- 24 June 1950) was among the earliest Indian recipients of the Victoria Cross, the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces.
Darwen (UK Parliament constituency) Darwen was a parliamentary constituency in Lancashire, centred on the town of Darwen. It returned one Member of Parliament to the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom from 1885 until it was abolished for the 1983 general election.
Darwen railway station Darwen railway station serves the town of Darwen, a medium sized Lancashire town. It is served by Northern Rail services on the Ribble Valley Line from Manchester Victoria/Bolton to Blackburn and into Clitheroe.
Darwin (ESA) Darwin is a proposed European Space Agency (ESA) mission designed to directly detect Earth-like planets orbiting nearby stars, and search for evidence of life on these planets. The launch date will be at or after 2020 according to space.
Darwin (lunar crater) Darwin is a lunar crater of the type categorised as a walled plain. It lies in the southeastern part of the Moon, and is sufficiently close to the limb to appear significantly foreshortened when viewed from the Earth.
Darwin Awards A Darwin Award is a tongue-in-cheek "honor" given to people who supposedly improve the human gene pool as part of the natural-selection process by accidentally killing or sterilizing themselves during a foolish or careless mistake. Named after pioneering evolutionary theorist Charles Darwin, some of the "awards" are in fact urban legends.
Darwin — Wedgwood family The Darwin — Wedgwood family was a prominent English family, descended from Erasmus Darwin and Josiah Wedgwood, the most notable member of which was Charles Darwin. The family contained at least ten Fellows of the Royal Society and several artists and poets.
Darwin Calendar Server The Darwin Calendar Server is a standards-compliant server that allows multiple users to collaboratively share calendaring information. It provides a shared location on the network to store schedules, and allows users to send each other and manage invitations.
Darwin College, Cambridge Darwin College is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Cambridge. Standing on the bank of the River Cam adjacent to Queens' College, Cambridge, it was founded in 1964 by three of the University's older colleges Trinity College, Gonville and Caius and St.
Darwin Cubillán Darwin Harrikson Cubillán Salom (born November 15, 1972 in Bobures, Zulia State, Venezuela), better known as Darwin Cubillán (coo-be-YAHN), was a Major League Baseball right-handed relief pitcher who played for the Baltimore Orioles.
Darwin D. Martin House Frank Lloyd Wright (1867-1959), perhaps the most famous architect of the United States, designed the Darwin D. Martin House Complex built between 1903 and 1905 and located at 125 Jewett Parkway in Buffalo, New York.
Darwin from Orchids to Variation The life and work of Darwin from Orchids to Variation followed the reaction to Darwin's theory which ensued after the publication of Darwin's theory following twenty years of development of Darwin's theory of evolution.
Darwin Falls Darwin Falls is a waterfall located western edge of Death Valley National Park near the settlement of Panamint Springs, California. Although there exists a similarly named Darwin Falls Wilderness adjacent to the falls, the falls themselves are located in and administered by Death Valley National Park and the National Park Service.
Darwin Falls Wilderness The Darwin Falls Wilderness is a wilderness area and part of the National Wilderness Preservation System established by the California Desert Protection Act (Public Law 103-433) and managed by the Bureau of Land Management. The wilderness was established on October 31, 1994 with a total of 8,176 acres.
Darwin Glacier (Antarctica) Darwin Glacier is a large glacier flowing from the polar plateau eastward between the Darwin and Cook Mountains to the Ross Ice Shelf. The lower part of the glacier was mapped by the British National Antarctic Expedition (1901-04), and the whole area traversed by New Zealand parties of the CTAE (1956-58).
Darwin Gross Darwin Gross (1928-) is an American spiritual teacher who succeeded to the leadership of Eckankar in 1971 at the death of its previous leader Paul Twitchell. Gross held the positions of ECK master from 1971 to 1981 and Mahanta from 1971 to 1983, when he was removed from his position in 1983.
Darwin Hall Darwin Scott Hall (January 23, 1844 – February 23, 1919) was a Representative from Minnesota; born in Mound Prairie, Wheatland Township, Kenosha County, Wisconsin, January 23, 1844; moved with his parents to Waukaw, Winnebago County, in 1847, thence to Grand Rapids, Wisconsin, in 1856; attended the common schools, the local academy at Elgin, IL, and Markham’s Academy, Milwaukee, Wisconsin served as a private in Company K, Forty-second Regiment, Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry, during the Civil War; settled near Birch Cooley, Renville County, MN, in 1866 and engaged in agricultural pursuits until 1868; auditor of Renville County 1869 – 1873; clerk of the district court 1873 – 1878; member of the Minnesota House of Representatives in 1876; editor of the Renville Times, which he founded in 1876; register of the United States land office at Benson, MN, 1878 – 1886; served in the Minnesota Senate in 1886; elected as a Republican to the Fifty-first Congress (March 4, 1889 – March 3, 1891); unsuccessful can
Darwin Hindman Darwin Hindman is the current mayor of Columbia, Missouri. He is a strong advocate of building a pedestrian-based transportation system in Columbia and is active in political groups and committees across the state of Missouri.
Darwin Hobbs Darwin Hobbs is an American gospel music singer noted for his vocal similarity to classic soul singer Luther Vandross. In addition to his career as a gospel artist, Hobbs and his ensemble The Darwin Hobbs Choir have also performed both studio and live background vocals for artists such as Jars Of Clay, BeBe Winans, Michael W.
Darwin Island Darwin Island is named in honor of Charles Darwin, and is among the smallest in the Galapagos Archipelago at just one square kilometer in diameter. With no dry landing sites, Darwin Island's main attractions aren’t found above the surface, but rather in the depths of the Pacific, which is teeming with a spectacular variety of marine life.
Darwin IV Darwin IV is a fictional planet that was the subject of Wayne Barlowe's book Expedition and the television special, Alien Planet, based on Expedition. Although the details of the discovery and exploration of Darwin IV differ in the two presentations, both are essentially the same in their depiction of the planetary environment and its native lifeforms, whose abundance and variety prompt the name Darwin.
Darwin Mounds First discovered in 1998, the Darwin Mounds are unique. They are a collection of sandy and cold-water coral mounds, located some 1,000 m below the surface of the ocean, about 100 nautical miles (185 km) north-west of Cape Wrath, the north-west tip of mainland Scotland.
Darwin Mountains The Darwin Mountains () is a group of mountains between the Darwin and Hatherton glaciers. Discovered by the British National Antarctic Expedition (1901-04) and named for Major Leonard Darwin, at that time Honorary Secretary of the Royal Geographical Society.
Darwin Sound The Darwin Sound is an expanse of seawater which forms a westward continuation of the Beagle Channel and links it to the Pacific Ocean at Londonderry Island and Stewart Island, not far from the southern tip of South America. It thus forms a navigable link across Tierra del Fuego between the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans as an alternative to going round the hazardous rocky headland of Cape Horn.
Darwin Streaming Server Darwin Streaming Server (DSS), is the first open sourced RTP/RTSP streaming server. It was released March 16th, 1999 and is a fully featured RTSP/RTP media streaming server capable of streaming a variety of media types including H.
Darwin Vest Darwin Kenneth Vest (born April 22, 1951, presumed dead March 2004) was an internationally renowned expert on hobo spiders and other poisonous spiders and snakes. He went missing in Idaho Falls, USA on June 3, 1999, and his whereabouts are still unknown as of 2004; police suspect foul play.
Darwin's Black Box Darwin's Black Box: The Biochemical Challenge to Evolution is a 1996 book published by Free Press and written by Michael J. Behe in which he argues that many biochemical systems are irreducibly complex, and thus the result of intelligent design rather than evolutionary processes.
Darwin's finches Darwin's finches (also known as the Galápagos Finches) are 13 or 14 different but closely related species of finches Charles Darwin collected on the Galápagos Islands during the Voyage of the Beagle. 13 reside on the Galápagos Islands and one on Cocos Island.
Darwinbots DarwinBots is an open source, freeware artificial life simulator, originally developed by Carlo Comis, providing a virtual environment in which a number of digital organisms -called "bots" - interact, fight for resources, and eventually reproduce and evolve. In the same way Avida could be said to be the ALife version of Core Wars, Darwinbots could be seen as the ALife version of C Robots.
Darwinian Fundamentalism Darwinian Fundamentalism is the title of an article by Stephen Jay Gould in which he strongly criticizes Daniel Dennett and Richard Dawkins as extremists or "ultra-Darwinists"In it, he critiques Dennett's 1995 book Darwin's Dangerous Idea] as "the ultras' philosophical manifesto of pure adaptationism." He states that this book reads like a caricature of a caricature:
Darwinian Happiness Darwinian Happiness: Evolution As a Guide for Living and Understanding Human Behavior, ISBN 0-87850-159-2, is a 2002 book by the Norwegian biologist Bjørn Grinde from the Norwegian Institute of Public Health. He argues that human emotions find their cause in evolution and offers ways by which we can use this for our advantage.
Darwinian literary studies Darwinian literary studies is a branch of literary criticism that studies literature in the context of evolution through natural selection, specifically gene-culture coevolution. It represents an emerging trend of neo-Darwinian thought in intellectual disciplines beyond those traditionally considered as evolutionary biology; for example, the rapidly growing fields of evolutionary psychology and evolutionary epistemology.
Darwinian poetry Darwinian Poetry was a web project created in 2003 by David Rea to determine whether "non-negotiated collaboration" could evolve interesting and intelligent poetry using a process akin to natural selection. Visitors to the site were presented with two poems, both arbitrary splicings of two 'parent' poems.
Darwinism Darwinism is a term for the underlying theory in those ideas of Charles Darwin concerning evolution and natural selection. Discussions of Darwinism usually focus on evolution by natural selection, but sometimes Darwinism is taken to mean evolution more broadly, or other ideas not directly associated with the work of Darwin.
Darwinism (book) Darwinism: An Exposition of the Theory of Natural Selection with Some of Its Applications is an 1889 book on biological evolution by Alfred Russel Wallace, the co-discoverer of evolution by natural selection together with Charles Darwin.
Darwood "Waldo" Kaye Darwood Kenneth Smith, also known by the stagename Darwood Kaye (September 81929 - May 152002) was an American former child actor, most notable for his semi-regular role as the snooty rich kid Waldo in the Our Gang short subjects series from 1937 to 1940. Other minor roles included Best Foot Forward with Lucille Ball and Kansas City Kitty playing the role of Keller in both.
Darwyn Cooke Darwyn Cooke (b. 1962, Toronto, Canada) is an Eisner Award winning comic book writer, artist, cartoonist and animator, best known for his work on the DC Comics' Catwoman, DC: The New Frontier and Batman/The Spirit.
Daryaganj Daryaganj, also called Darya Ganj (Hindi: दरियागंज, Urdu: درِیاگںج, Punjabi: ਦਰਿਯਾਗਂਜ, lit. "River Trading Post/Warehouse"), is a neighborhood of Delhi which includes the walled city of Shahjahanabad (Old Delhi).
Daryl Daryl (born August 13, 1955) is the professional name of Daryl Easton, formerly Daryl Martinez, an American magician based in Las Vegas. In his marketing he uses the self-proclaimed title of "The Magician's Magician"
Daryl Brunt Daryl Milton Byron Brunt is a Greater Sudbury, Ontario resident and was contestant on the third season of the hit reality show Canadian Idol. He began his high school career in 2002 as a vocal major at Sudbury Secondary School and left the vocal program to became a drama major in his third year.
Daryl Dragon Daryl Frank Dragon (born August 27, 1942, in Los Angeles) is a keyboardist, known as The Captain of the successful & infamous 1970s (and on) pop musical duo The Captain & Tennille, with his wife Toni Tennille.
Daryl Johnston Daryl "Moose" Johnston (born February 10, 1966) is a former National Football League fullback who played his entire career with the Dallas Cowboys from (1989-1999). Johnston was a two time Pro Bowler and attended the game in 1993 and 1994.
Daryl Katz Daryl A. Katz is chairman and chief executive officer of The Katz Group, one of North America's leading drug store operators with over 1,800 stores and owns and operates Canada's only national mail order pharmacy business, Meditrust Pharmacy Inc.
Daryl Laub Daryl Laub is a noted television and radio personality who worked for stations in the Twin Cities region of Minnesota from the 1950s until his retirement in 1993. He worked in a variety of different roles and created some memorable children's show characters.
Daryl Millard Daryl Millard is a Rugby League player in the National Rugby League. He has signed up with the Canterbury Bulldogs for a 3 year contract, starting in 2007 He made his first grade debut for the St George Illawarra Dragons] in 2006, scoring four tries in the season He has played center, wing and fullback in jerseyflegg and premierleague and has established himself as a center in firstgrade.
Daryl Morey Daryl Morey (born 1972) was named assistant general manager of the Houston Rockets on April 3, 2006 and will replace Carroll Dawson as general manager in 2007. Morey comes to the Rockets after serving three years as SVP of Operations and Information for the Boston Celtics.
Daryl Palumbo Daryl Palumbo, (born February 10, 1979 in Long Island, New York), grew up in Bellmore, New York, is the lead singer for alternative post-hardcore band Glassjaw, electronic dance-rock band Head Automatica and a new project announced in January of 2006 entitled House of Blow, which also features Sean Martin of Hatebreed. As a youth he was a member of the Long Island Straight Edge band XbustedX.
Daryl Powell Daryl Powell (born July 21st 1965 in Ackworth, Yorkshire) is a former rugby league stand off for the Sheffield Eagles and Leeds Rhinos. He played over 450 games including 33 caps for Great Britain and appearances in the Super League Grand Final and in the Challenge Cup final (twice) for the Leeds Rhinos.
Daryl Reaugh Daryl "Razor" Reaugh (pronounced "Ray"), born February 13, 1965, in Prince George, British Columbia, Canada, is a retired professional ice hockey goaltender, now a color commentator for the Dallas Stars of the NHL.
Daryl Reid Daryl Gary Reid (born November 2, 1950 in Winnipeg) is a politician in Manitoba, Canada. He has served as a member of the Manitoba legislature since 1990, although he has never been appointed to a cabinet position.
Daryl Somers Daryl Somers (born Daryl Schultz August 6,1951 in Geelong, Victoria, Australia), sometimes referred to as Dazza or Dags, is an Australian television personality. The son of a dairy farmer and a cabaret singer, Somers rose to national fame as the host of the long-running comedy-variety program Hey Hey It's Saturday.
Daryl Tuffey Daryl Raymond Tuffey (born 11 June 1978 in Milton, Otago) is a New Zealand cricketer who played Test and ODI cricket for New Zealand between 2000 and 2005, and plays domestic first class cricket for Northern Districts Knights. He is playfully known as Daryl "Huffy-Puffy" Tuffey by his Nothern Districts team mates due to his heavy breathing when bowling.
Daryll Cullinan Daryll John Cullinan (born 4 March 1967, Kimberley, Cape Province) is a former South African cricketer, who played Test cricket and one-day internationals for South Africa as a specialist batsman. He was the youngest South African to score a first class century, at the age of 16.
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