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Born | San Rafael, California, United States | December 3, 1944
Emile Waldteufel (born December 3, 1944) is an American former cyclist. He competed in the individual road race at the 1972 Summer Olympics. [1]
España—endonymously—is Spain, a country in southwestern Europe.
Les Patineurs, Op. 183, is a waltz by Émile Waldteufel.
Dolores, Spanish for "pain; grief", most commonly refers to:
A major is a major scale based on A, with the pitches A, B, C♯, D, E, F♯, and G♯. Its key signature has three sharps. Its relative minor is F-sharp minor and its parallel minor is A minor. The key of A major is the only key where the Neapolitan sixth chord on (i.e. the flattened supertonic) requires both a flat and a natural accidental.
Antarctic Adventure is a video game developed by Konami in 1983 for the MSX, and later for video game consoles, such as NES and ColecoVision. The player takes the role of an Antarctic penguin, racing to various research stations owned by different countries in Antarctica.
Pomona may refer to:
In dance, the galop, named after the fastest running gait of a horse, a shortened version of the original term galoppade, is a lively country dance, introduced in the late 1820s to Parisian society by the Duchesse de Berry and popular in Vienna, Berlin and London. In the same closed position familiar in the waltz, the step combined a glissade with a chassé on alternate feet, ordinarily in a fast 2
4 time.
The Estudiantina waltz is a musical arrangement, made in 1883, by Émile Waldteufel, his Opus 191, No. 4. Its melody was composed earlier in 1881 by Paul Lacôme, with lyrics by Julien de Lau Lusignan.
Minuit may refer to:
Markus Wolff is a German born American artist, musician and writer.
Sir Daniel Eyers Godfrey was a British music conductor and member of a musical dynasty that included his father Daniel Godfrey (1831–1903). His son, also Dan Godfrey, was also a musician, station manager at BBC Manchester in the 1920s, and the first full-time conductor of the BBC Wireless Orchestra (1924–1926).
Parliamentary elections were held in France on 24 May and 1 June 1869, with a second round on 6 and 7 June. These elections resulted in a victory for the regime of the Second Empire, but the opposition strengthened its presence in the legislature. Nationwide, the regime won 55% of the vote. In Paris, the opposition parties won 75% of the vote; however, the regime won large majorities in the countryside.
Émile Henri Delchambre was a French rower who competed in the 1900 Summer Olympics.
Émile Henri Lachapelle was a Swiss rowing coxswain and sailor who competed in the 1924 Summer Olympics and in the 1948 Summer Olympics.
Émile Albrecht was a Swiss rower who competed in the 1924 Summer Olympics.
Charles Émile Waldteufel was a French pianist, conductor and composer known for his numerous popular salon pieces.
Les Patineurs may refer to:
The name Emil, Emile, or Émile is a male given name, deriving from the Latin Aemilius of the gens Aemilia. The female given name is Emily.
Count Imre (Emmerich) Széchényi of Sárvár-Felsővidék, was a Hungarian nobleman and landowner, and Austro-Hungarian diplomat and politician. Grandson of Ferenc Széchényi he was Austrian ambassador in Berlin during the government of Bismarck. He signed for the Austrian emperor Bismarck's Alliance of the Three Emperors 1873, and represented Austria at the Berlin Conference on the Congo 1884.