Belmont University

Belmont University
Former names
Belmont College for Young Women (1890–1913)
Ward–Belmont College (1913–1951)
Belmont College (1951–1991)[1]
Motto"Purpose Character Wisdom"
TypePrivate university
Established1890; 134 years ago (1890)
AccreditationSACS[2]
Religious affiliation
Christian (nondenominational)
Academic affiliations
NASAD[3]
NAICU[4]
Endowment$356.8 million (2022)[5]
PresidentL. Gregory Jones[6]
Academic staff
534 Full-time and 401 Part-time (2023)[7]
Students8,910 (Fall 2022)[7]
Undergraduates7,384[7]
Postgraduates1,526[7]
Location, ,
United States

36°07′59″N 86°47′38″W / 36.133°N 86.794°W / 36.133; -86.794
CampusUrban, 75 acres (30 ha)
NewspaperBelmont Vision[8]
ColorsBlue and red[9]
   
NicknameBruins
Sporting affiliations
NCAA Division IMVC[10]
MascotBruiser the Bruin
Websitewww.belmont.edu
Belmont (Acklen Hall)
LocationBelmont Blvd.
Nashville, Tennessee
Built1850
ArchitectWilliam Strickland
Architectural styleGreek Revival; Italianate
NRHP reference No.71000816
Added to NRHPMay 6, 1971

Belmont University is a private Christian university in Nashville, Tennessee. Descended from Belmont Women's College, founded in 1890 by schoolteachers Ida Hood and Susan Heron, the institution was incorporated in 1951 as Belmont College.[1]

With expansion of programs, it became Belmont University in 1991. Belmont's current enrollment consists of approximately 8,900 students representing every state and 28 nations.[11] Although the university cut its ties with the Tennessee Baptist Convention in 2007, it continues to emphasize a Christian identity.

History

The Belmont Tower and Carillon

The university originated with the founding of the Belmont Women's College in 1890 by Susan Ledley Heron and Ida Emily Hood,[12] on the site of the Belmont Mansion, built by Joseph Acklen and Adelicia (Hayes) Acklen.

Upon the retirement of Heron and Hood, Belmont Women's College merged with Ward Seminary in 1913 and was known as Ward—Belmont College, which included both a junior college and college-prep (or high) school for women.[13][14] The Belmont Mansion is owned by Belmont University but maintained by the Belmont Mansion Association, a non-profit group. The mansion is open for tours. It features Victorian art and furnishings. The water tower, gardens, with surviving gazebos and outdoor statuary from the Acklen era, are part of the college campus.[15] In 1991, the school became Belmont University.[16]

The university was awarded the Japanese Foreign Minister's Commendation for their contributions to the promotion of mutual understanding between Japan and the US on December 1, 2020.[17][18]

Nashville's first radio station

Nashville's first radio station

The first radio station in Nashville went on air in May 1922 when Boy Scout[19] John "Jack" DeWitt Jr., a 16-year-old high school student, installed a twenty-watt transmitter at Belmont. The station, WDAA, was born when Dr. C. E. Crosland, Associate President, realized the potential advertising value to the college of a radio station. The WDAA program on April 18, 1922, marked the first time a music program was broadcast in Nashville. The broadcast could be heard 150 to 200 miles (320 km) from the school.[20] DeWitt later became WSM (AM) radio station's chief engineer, 1932–1942, and president, 1947–1968.[21]

Ties to the Tennessee Baptist Convention

In 1951, the Tennessee Baptist Convention bought Ward–Belmont College, the finishing school operated in Nashville by Ward–Belmont, Inc., which was facing severe financial difficulties.[citation needed] The convention established the co-educational Belmont College in March 1951, selecting R. Kelly White as president.[citation needed] In 1959, Herbert Gabhart succeeded White and Belmont was accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools.[citation needed] Enrollment rose from 365 students to 2,000, and the college launched a music business program.[citation needed] He was succeeded by Bill Troutt in 1982, who, at 32, was the youngest college president in the nation.[citation needed] In 1991, it changed its name to Belmont University.[citation needed]

In 2005 Belmont's board of trustees sought to remove Belmont University from the control of the Tennessee Baptist Convention while remaining in a "fraternal relationship" with it.[22] Advocates of this plan presented a blueprint for change in which all board members would be Christians, but only 60 percent would be Baptists to affirm a Christian affinity while acknowledging the diversity of both the faculty and the student body.[citation needed] The head of the TBC would continue to be an ex officio board member.[citation needed] The TBC rejected this plan. In November 2005, TBC said it wanted to shift its financial support to two other institutions, Union University and Carson-Newman College. Belmont would replace the three percent of its budget that was funded by the TBC.[citation needed] However, on April 7, 2006, TBC sought to oust the existing board and replace it with one consisting entirely of Southern Baptists and amenable to ongoing TBC control.[23] After settlement talks failed, the Tennessee Baptist Convention Executive Board filed a lawsuit on September 29, 2006, against Belmont seeking the return of approximately $58 million.[24]

Belmont severed its ties with the Tennessee Baptist Convention in 2007, with the announcement that it would be a Christian university without any denominational affiliations. Under its terms, the TBC and Belmont would disaffiliate amicably, with Belmont agreeing to pay $1 million to the convention immediately and $250,000 annually for the next forty years, for a total cost of $11 million.[25] The university has stated its intent to maintain a Christian identity but no longer a specifically Baptist one.[26]

21st century

Belmont University became a catalyst for anti-discrimination protests in December 2010, when women's soccer coach Lisa Howe allegedly lost her job at the university on December 2 after announcing that she was having three children with her same-sex partner.[27] Howe's dismissal sparked protests from students and local and national gay-rights advocates. These events led to a citywide anti-discrimination ordinance being passed by the Nashville City Council in January 2011.[28] On January 26, 2011, President Bob Fisher announced that Belmont has added sexual orientation to the university's non-discrimination policies.[29] Belmont is a Christian university that was widely regarded for its progressive ideals until the controversy broke out over Howe's departure.[30] The college was criticized for not allowing a group with a mission to support gay students and explore the intersection of Christianity and homosexuality called Bridge Builders to officially form as a student group. At a news conference, Fisher stated that they had resubmitted the application.[30] On February 27, 2011, Belmont University officially recognized the gay student organization for the first time. Belmont Provost Thomas Burns and Bridge Builders President Robbie Maris announced the decision to recognize the student group in a joint statement.[31]

In February 2018, Belmont University took ownership of the O'More College of Design.[32] On March 6, 2019, Belmont University announced that its current College of Visual and Performing Arts will be separated into two distinct colleges with defined areas of focus: the College of Music and Performing Arts will include all music, theatre and dance programs while the O'More College of Architecture, Art and Design will house architecture, art, fashion, interior design and design communications.[33]

Two years later, Belmont University announced that they would merge with Watkins College of Art, Design & Film, located in Nashville.[34] Belmont and Watkins planned to evaluate employment needs based on the number of students transferring, existing capacities, and related considerations. As a long-standing Christian institution, Belmont's policy intention was to hire faculty and staff who support the Christian institution's mission, vision, and values; however, due to the nature of merging institutions, the university announced special consideration will be given to current Watkins employees regardless of their position of faith.[34][35] In May 2021, Belmont sold the former Watkins College campus for $22.5 million, funds which the university states will underwrite scholarships for students of the visual arts.[36]

In July 2020, a group of Belmont University students and alumni began to draw attention to the university's longstanding relationship with CoreCivic (formerly the Corrections Corporation of America), asking the school to divest from any financial ties to CoreCivic and for-profit prisons.[37] The relationship between CoreCivic and the university extends to the early 1980s. In 1983, notable Tennessee businessman Jack C. Massey, provided a portion of the initial funding to begin Corrections Corporation of America, along with Thomas Beasley.[38] Discussed as early as 1966, Belmont's Massey Graduate School of Business was founded shortly after in 1986.[39][40] Beasley has also funded major programs at the school, including a free enterprise institute at the Massey Business School.[41] In 2018, Damon Hininger, CEO of CoreCivic, joined the Belmont University Board of Trustees.[42] Shortly after students and alumni began a petition asking for his removal.[43] Hininger is not the first board member with ties to CoreCivic. The current board includes Andrea Overby (donor to CoreCivic PAC in 2018 and wife of Charles Overby, former CCA board member)[44][45] as well as John Ferguson (former CCA president).[46] As of April 2021, Damon Hininger was no longer a member of the board, having completed his allowed number of terms.[47]

Presidents

Academics

Belmont University offers bachelor's degrees in over 130 academic majors in twelve colleges with 29 master's and eight doctoral programs.[50] Belmont and HCA created a health sciences consortium with local universities to alleviate the shortage of nurses and health care professionals in the local community,[51] and provides students with shared office space and mentoring from faculty, local entrepreneurs, and attorneys.[52] Journalism students have gained work experience at The Oprah Winfrey Show, The Daily Show, CBS Evening News, and the British Broadcasting Corp.[53]

Rankings

Academic rankings
National
U.S. News & World Report[54]236 (tie) of 394
Washington Monthly[55]367 of 442
WSJ/College Pulse[56]401 (tie) of 600

In the 2024 U.S. News & World Report college rankings, Belmont was tied for 236 out of 394 in the category of National Universities.[57]

Music and music business programs

Belmont's Mike Curb College of Entertainment & Music Business (CEMB) consists of current/former authors, performers, expert witnesses (for industry lawsuits), artist managers, lawyers, record label executives, songwriters, and others. Mike Curb is the CEO of Curb Records. He was a producer, songwriter, and company executive and one of the most successful record men of the sixties and seventies. He is the department's namesake. The former dean of the CEMB, Jim Van Hook, is a legendary Nashville label head, especially as part of the Christian music industry. One of the hallmarks of the program is its internship program, which sends hundreds of students annually out into the Nashville, New York, and Los Angeles music industries to intern for record labels, management companies, publishing companies, booking agencies, publicists, recording studios, law firms, and other businesses.

Besides having three professional-quality recording studios on campus, Belmont owns the Belmont Studios (including Ocean Way Nashville), part of which is operated for-profit (used by such artists as Dave Matthews, Sheryl Crow, and Bob Seger), and part of which is used by students. Ocean Way Nashville, purchased by Belmont in 2001, has recorded thousands of tracks including the score for The Last of Us, a top-selling game that won Best Audio in the global GANG (Game Audio Network Guild) Awards.[58]

Schools and colleges

  • College of Education
  • College of Law
  • College of Liberal Arts & Social Sciences
  • College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
  • College of Sciences & Mathematics
  • College of Music & Performing Arts
  • Gordon E. Inman College of Nursing
  • Interdisciplinary Studies & Global Education
  • Jack C. Massey College of Business
  • Mike Curb College of Entertainment & Music Business (CEMB)
  • O'More College of Architecture & Design
  • Thomas F. Frist Jr., College of Medicine
  • Watkins College of Art

Campuses

Main campus (Nashville)

The Belmont Mansion

Belmont is located in an urban setting near Nashville's Midtown district, with the campus sandwiched by the Hillsboro-West End, Music Row, Edgehill, and Belmont-Hillsboro neighborhoods. Within a reasonable walk of the university are commercial areas 12South and Hillsboro Village.

In June 2006, Belmont opened the $18 million Gordon E. Inman Center that houses the Gordon E. Inman College of Health Sciences and Nursing.[59] The building has three stories of classroom space that contain learning labs equipped with Sim Man mannequins that respond to the actions of the nursing students. There are classrooms for adult and pediatric occupational therapy, maternity and neonatal care complete with Sim Man babies and a birthing Sim Woman, an orthopedics lab, and many classrooms of various sizes.

Belmont houses the Curb Event Center, a 5000-seat multi-purpose arena, which is used for basketball games, concerts, and other events like the 2006, 2007[60] and 2008 CMT Awards,[61] and the 2008 Presidential Debate.[62] The facility is connected to the Beaman Student Life Center and Maddox Grand Atrium—collectively, a $52 million development.

In 2015, the university opened its R. Milton and Denice Johnson Center, home to Belmont's Curb College, Department of Media Studies, Motion Pictures and Harrington Place Dining.[63]

Regional campus

  • "Williamson Center" in suburban Franklin, Tennessee. This center for professional education and corporate meetings opened in January 2015. It includes classrooms for Belmont's adult degree, professional, and continuing education programs. It also provides space for area businesses to lease for events and meetings. This facility replaced the university's first center in Cool Springs, which had opened in 2002 on Seaboard Lane.

National campuses

Student life

Belmont has over 190 student organizations. These include the Student Government Association (SGA), The Student Activities Programming Board (SAPB), Greek organizations, as well as other special interest organizations.[64]

The largest student organization on campus is Service Corps, which focuses on volunteer work inside the music industry and is open only to students enrolled in the Mike Curb College of Entertainment and Music Business.[65]

Belmont's Greek community consists of five sororities and four fraternities. The sororities are Alpha Gamma Delta, Alpha Kappa Alpha, Alpha Sigma Tau, Delta Sigma Theta, Kappa Alpha Theta, and Phi Mu.[66] The fraternities include Phi Kappa Tau, Alpha Phi Alpha, Phi Mu Alpha, and Phi Beta Sigma.[67] In the spring of 2017, approximately 17% of full-time undergraduate students at Belmont were members of fraternities and sororities.[68]

Belmont has a large music program, and a variety of musical ensembles exist on the campus. There are currently 15 vocal ensembles and 23 instrumental ensembles.[69] In addition, there are three student-run a cappella groups: The Beltones (mixed ensemble), Prismatics (mixed), and Pitchmen (TTBB). All three a cappella groups compete in the International Championship of Collegiate A Cappella (ICCA) regularly. The Beltones have advanced to ICCA finals three times and placed 4th at the event in 2014. The Pitchmen qualified for ICCA finals in 2020 but the event was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In April 2023, The Pitchmen won 1st place at the ICCA Finals, taking home their first championship. In 2020, The A Cappella Archive ranked The Beltones at #8 amongst all ICCA-competing groups since 1996.[70] Belmont is home to two Greek-lettered music fraternities, Sigma Alpha Iota and Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia, as well as a chapter for the national theatre fraternity, Alpha Psi Omega.

Belmont operates one student newspaper called The Vision, published monthly.[71]

Points of interest

Main campus attractions

Off-campus facilities

  • E.S. Rose Park – Metro Nashville Parks owned property in partnership with Belmont University – hosts NCAA Div.I baseball, soccer, softball, and track.[73]

Athletics

Belmont is a member of the NCAA Division I and is a member of the Missouri Valley Conference in all of Belmont's sports except men's soccer, which its previous conference, the Ohio Valley, does not sponsor. On September 28, 2021, Belmont announced that it would become a member of the Missouri Valley Conference, beginning in the Fall of 2022.[74] Until July 1, 2012, Belmont had been a member of the Atlantic Sun Conference, a non-football conference.[75] The men's soccer team was most recently an independent before joining the Horizon League effective with the 2014 season.[76]

In the mid-1990s, Belmont changed its nickname to the "Bruins", replacing the earlier mascot of Rebels due to its association with the Confederacy. Bruin is Middle English forbear from the Dutch fable "History of Reynard the Fox", translated by William Caxton.

In 2011 Belmont student-athletes won the Atlantic Sun Conference Academic Trophy for the eighth time in ten years with 76.32 percent of the student-athletes achieving at least a 3.0 grade-point average.[77]

In 2012 Belmont student-athletes won the Ohio Valley Conference Institutional Academic Achievement Award for the first time after joining the conference the previous year.[78]

In 2015, Belmont received the OVC's Institutional Academic Achievement Award, presented each year to the member institution with the greatest percentage of its eligible student-athletes that earn a 3.25 GPA or higher. This award marked the 4th straight year for Belmont, who joined the OVC only 4 years prior.[79]

Presidential debates

One of the on-campus advertisements for the Presidential Debate at Belmont

On November 19, 2007, The Commission on Presidential Debates chose Belmont University from sixteen finalists to host one of three Presidential election debates on October 7, 2008.[80] The debate at Belmont was a "town hall" style debate with questions fielded from the audience.[81]

In 2019, the Commission on Presidential Debates selected Belmont to host the third and final presidential debate on October 22.[82] The second presidential debate, scheduled for Oct. 15 in Miami, was canceled.[83] The Belmont debate, the final debate in the 2020 election cycle between then candidates President Donald Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden, occurred as scheduled with NBC News' Kristen Welker moderating.[84]

Notable alumni

Notable faculty

  • Alberto Gonzales, former United States Attorney General, is the Doyle Rogers Distinguished Chair of Law.[85]
  • Mark Volman, a founding member of the Turtles, is an associate professor of entertainment industry studies.
  • Alan Shacklock, music producer, is a professor of audio engineering technology.

References

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  17. ^ "Foreign Minister's Commendations for FY 2020". mofa.go.jp (Press release). Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan.
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Village in Dartmouth, Massachusetts United States historic placePadanaram Village Historic District (South Dartmouth, MA)U.S. National Register of Historic PlacesU.S. Historic district Southworth LibraryShow map of MassachusettsShow map of the United StatesLocationDartmouth, MassachusettsCoordinates41°35′8″N 70°56′30″W / 41.58556°N 70.94167°W / 41.58556; -70.94167ArchitectMultipleArchitectural styleColonial Revival, Late Victorian, FederalNRHP ref...

 

American college basketball season 2005–06 Memphis Tigers men's basketballC-USA Regular Season ChampionsC-USA tournament championsNCAA tournament, Elite EightConferenceConference USARankingCoachesNo. 6APNo. 4Record33–4 (13–1 C-USA)Head coachJohn Calipari (6th season)Assistant coaches Tony Barbee Derek Kellogg John Robic Home arenaFedExForumSeasons← 2004–052006–07 → 2005–06 Conference USA men's basketball standings vte Conf Overall Team W &...

 

2008 single by Kelly Rowland WorkSingle by Kelly Rowlandfrom the album Ms. Kelly ReleasedJanuary 18, 2008Recorded2006StudioHit Factory Criteria (Miami)GenreFunkgo-godance-popLength3:28 (album version)3:13 (Freemasons radio edit)LabelColumbiaMusic WorldSongwriter(s)Jason Poo Bear BoydScott StorchKelly RowlandProducer(s)Scott StorchJason Poo Bear BoydFreemasons (remix)Kelly Rowland singles chronology Ghetto (2007) Work (2008) Daylight (2008) Work is a song by American recording artist Kelly Ro...

Voce principale: Associazione Sportiva Bari. AS BariStagione 1950-1951Sport calcio Squadra Bari Allenatore Federico Allasio (1ª-7ª) Ambrogio Alfonso e Raffaele Costantino (8ª-12ª) Mario Sandron (13ª-19ª) Francesco Capocasale (20ª-21ª) Paolo Giammarco (22ª) Pietro Piselli (23ª-24ª) Paolo Giammarco (25ª) Raffaele Costantino e Francesco Capocasale (26ª-42ª) Presidente Rocco Scafi Serie B18º posto. Retrocesso in Serie C. Maggiori presenzeCampionato: Griffith(37) Miglior marca...

 

Untuk makhluk hidup, lihat porifera. Halaman ini berisi artikel tentang alat kebersihan. Untuk penggunaan lain, lihat Spons (disambiguasi). Artikel ini perlu dikembangkan agar dapat memenuhi kriteria sebagai entri Wikipedia.Bantulah untuk mengembangkan artikel ini. Jika tidak dikembangkan, artikel ini akan dihapus. Spons serat alami: Spons serat kayu yang dikombinasikan dengan sabut gosok. Spons adalah alat atau alat bantu pembersih yang terbuat dari bahan yang lembut dan berpori. Biasanya di...

 

Questa voce o sezione sull'argomento centri abitati della Spagna non cita le fonti necessarie o quelle presenti sono insufficienti. Puoi migliorare questa voce aggiungendo citazioni da fonti attendibili secondo le linee guida sull'uso delle fonti. Segui i suggerimenti del progetto di riferimento. Sotillo de las Palomascomune Sotillo de las Palomas – Veduta LocalizzazioneStato Spagna Comunità autonoma Castiglia-La Mancia Provincia Toledo TerritorioCoordinate40°06′19.08...

この項目には、一部のコンピュータや閲覧ソフトで表示できない文字が含まれています(詳細)。 数字の大字(だいじ)は、漢数字の一種。通常用いる単純な字形の漢数字(小字)の代わりに同じ音の別の漢字を用いるものである。 概要 壱万円日本銀行券(「壱」が大字) 弐千円日本銀行券(「弐」が大字) 漢数字には「一」「二」「三」と続く小字と、「壱」「�...

 

Prime Minister of Moldova from 2013 to 2015 Iurie LeancăORLeancă in 20139th Prime Minister of MoldovaIn office30 May 2013 – 18 February 2015PresidentNicolae TimoftiDeputy See list Natalia GhermanValeriu LazărEugen CarpovTatiana PotîngAndrian Candu Preceded byVladimir FilatSucceeded byChiril GaburiciLeader of the European People's PartyIn office26 July 2015 – 26 July 2019Succeeded byEugen Sturza (acting)Deputy Prime Minister of Moldova for European IntegrationIn offic...

 

Гербы земель чешской короны: щит с клетчатым орлом — Моравия; чёрный орёл в золотом поле — Нижняя Силезия, золотая стена — Верхняя Лужица; золотой орёл в синем поле — Верхняя Силезия; красный вол — Нижняя Лужица; в центре — Богемия Земли Чешской короны при правлении коро...

Downtown Miami skyline from Bayfront Park, February 2020 Brickell skyline from the south, December 2020 Miami skyline from William Powell Bridge in February 2018 Downtown viewed from the north in 2011 Downtown and Brickell skyline from the west in 2012 List of tallest buildings in Miami The city of Miami, Florida has the third-tallest skyline in the United States (after New York City and Chicago) with 439 high-rises, over 100 of which stand taller than 400 feet (120 m)[1] and 70...

 

Ini adalah nama Batak Angkola, marganya adalah Pane. Sanusi PaneLahir(1905-11-14)14 November 1905Muara Sipongi, Mandailing, Keresidenan TapanuliMeninggal2 Januari 1968(1968-01-02) (umur 62)JakartaPekerjaanPenulis, sejarawan, redakturBahasaIndonesia, BelandaKebangsaanIndonesiaAlmamaterKweekschool,Rechtshoogeschool te BataviaPeriodeAngkatan Pujangga BaruGenrePuisi, drama, terjemahan, nonfiksiTemaSejarah dan spiritualitas NusantaraKarya terkenalAirlanggaPenghargaanHadiah Sastra dari Pe...

 

Sherry LansingLansing, kanan, dengan William Friedkin di Festival Film Amerika Deauville 2012.LahirSherry Lee Duhl31 Juli 1944 (umur 79)Chicago, Illinois, Amerika SerikatPekerjaanEksekutif studio filmTahun aktif1968–2008Suami/istriMichael L. Brownstein (1967–1970; bercerai)William Friedkin (1991–sekarang) Sherry Lansing (lahir 31 Juli 1944) adalah seorang mantan aktris dan eksekutif studio film asal Amerika Serikat.[1][2][3] Ia adalah mantan CEO Paramo...

Principal residence of the Huu-ay-aht (Ohiaht) group of the Nuu-chah-nulth people Remains of one of the longhouses Kiix-in, or Kiix?in , earlier romanized as Keeshan, was the principal residence of the Huu-ay-aht (Ohiaht) group of the Nuu-chah-nulth people. The name is onomatopoeic, and comes from the sound of waves crashing against the rocks below the village. It was initially romanised as Keeshan, but was redesignated Kiix-in (Former First Nation Village) in line with the Maa-nulth Treaty.&...

 

Artery supplying blood to the left side of the heart muscle Left coronary arteryHeart viewed from above, atria removed, base of ventricles exposed. Left coronary artery visible at left.Heart viewed from the front. Coronary arteries (labeled in red text) and other major landmarks (in blue text). Left coronary artery is at upper right in the image.DetailsSourceAscending aortaBranches Anterior interventricular circumflex (ramus intermedius) IdentifiersLatinarteria coronaria sinistraTA98A12.2.03....

 

1916 armed insurrection in Ireland This article is about the armed insurrection in Ireland. For the musical, see Easter Rising (musical). Easter RisingÉirí Amach na CáscaPart of the Irish revolutionary periodO'Connell Street, Dublin, after the Rising. The GPO is at left, and Nelson's Pillar at right.Date24–29 April 1916LocationMostly Dublin; skirmishes in counties Meath, Galway, Louth, Wexford, CorkResult Unconditional surrender of rebel forces, execution of most leadersBelligerents Iris...

Donegal Gaelic footballer Ryan Bradley Bradley was ordered to bulk up by county manager Jim McGuinness prior to the 2012 All-Ireland Senior Football ChampionshipPersonal informationSport Gaelic footballPosition Left Half ForwardBorn 1985 (age 38–39)County DonegalHeight 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m)Occupation PlastererClub(s)Years Club Apps (scores)?–201?20052009 BuncranaDonegal BostonDonegal Boston 1Inter-county(ies)Years County2005–201? DonegalInter-county titlesUlster ti...

 

Maserati MC12 Maserati MC12 (MC12 singkatan dari Maserati Corse dengan 12 silinder) adalah mobil sport termewah buatan Maserati, Italia. Mobil ini diproduksi pada tahun 2004-2005 hanya sebanyak 50 unit.[1] Maserati MC12 diproduksi lima tahun setelah Ferrari mengambil alih kepemilikan Maserati pada tahun 2004. Tidak heran jika mesin mobil Maserati MC12 menggunakan mesin yang sama dengan Ferrari Enzo.[2] Maserati MC12 adalah mobil tercepat yang pernah dibuat oleh pabrik Maserati...