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Ray Allen Allen in 2016 Personal information Born (1975-07-20) July 20, 1975 (age 48) Merced, California, U.S. Listed height 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) Listed weight 205 lb (93 kg) Career information High school Hillcrest (Dalzell, South Carolina) College UConn (1993–1996) NBA draft 1996: 1st round, 5th overall pick Selected by the Minnesota Timberwolves Playing career 1996–2014 Position Shooting ...
Ray Allen and his wife Shannon open up about parenting and supporting their son in his treatment for Type 1 diabetes. (Getty/Quinn Lemmers) Welcome to So Mini Ways , Yahoo Life's parenting series ...
Ray Alan. Raymond Alan Whyberd (18 September 1930 – 24 May 2010) was an English ventriloquist, television entertainer, and writer. His career spanned over half a century, though he was most popular from the 1950s until the 1980s. He was associated primarily with the dummies Lord Charles and Ali Kat and later with the puppets Tich and Quackers.
Clarence Ray Allen (January 16, 1930 – January 17, 2006) was an American criminal and proxy killer who was executed in 2006 at the age of 76 by lethal injection at San Quentin State Prison in California for the murders of three people. Allen was the second-oldest inmate at the time to be executed in the United States since 1976.
It would have taken Allen 648 more games (eight more fully healthy seasons) to catch 4,441 3-pointers at his career rate of 40% on 5.7 3-point attempts per game.
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Allen was born as Rae Julia Theresa Abruzzo in Brooklyn, New York City on July 3, 1926, [3] to Julia (née Riccio), a seamstress and hairdresser and Joseph Abruzzo, an opera singer and chauffeur, whose brothers acted in vaudeville. [4] At the age of 25, she played Buttercup in H.M.S. Pinafore. [5] Rae Allen trained at the HB Studio [6] in New ...
First given in 1981, this prize honors Ray Allen Billington, OAH President (1962-1963) and prolific writer about American frontiers. A three-member committee, chosen by the OAH President for a two-year term, selects the winner who receives $1000. The first award was made posthumously to John D. Unruh who died in 1976. [1]