Given the Milwaukee clue, correctamundo might have been appropriate. It sounds like something The Fonz would cay, in a Happy Days episode.Rectus! (I can't bring myself to use the awful slang "correctamundo".)
Given the Milwaukee clue, correctamundo might have been appropriate. It sounds like something The Fonz would cay, in a Happy Days episode.Rectus! (I can't bring myself to use the awful slang "correctamundo".)
answer: Argonaut, Zenon Andrusyshyn- in a game against the Eskimos, his punt took an "Argo Bounce", after hitting the ground, the ball bounce approx. 20 yards before being touched by the returner. The ball travelled 108 yards in total.Who hods the record for the longest punt in football?
Correct!Minnie Minosa?
hint: "Pass Interference"What is "The Mel Blount Rule"?
Does expert/colour commentator count?Who was Canada's first female sportscaster?
Defensive pass interference. Mel was so big and so fast that he was able to overpower most wide receivers. The league eventually instituted the pass interference rule because Mel had such an unfair advantage.What is "The Mel Blount Rule"?
Cee Lo GreenWhat singer performs live with an all female backing band named Scarlet Fever?
They mixed it with gunpowder. If the alcohol was diluted, the gunpowder would not ignite.
The French Revolutionaries (1789) defined the new standard metre as one ten-millionth of the distance from the north pole to the equator, on the line of longitude passing through Paris.Since 1983, a meter has been defined as the distance light travels in a vacuum in 1/299,792,458 of a second. How was the length of a meter originally calculated?
In that case, the Jacobins sure had a long measuring tape.The French Revolutionaries (1789) defined the new standard metre as one ten-millionth of the distance from the north pole to the equator, on the line of longitude passing through Paris.
This is close enough to be considered correct!The French Revolutionaries (1789) defined the new standard metre as one ten-millionth of the distance from the north pole to the equator, on the line of longitude passing through Paris.