Francisco Urroz may refer to:
The Summer of Love was a social phenomenon that occurred during the summer of 1967, when as many as 100,000 people, mostly young people sporting hippie fashions of dress and behavior, converged in San Francisco's neighborhood of Haight-Ashbury. More broadly, the Summer of Love encompassed the hippie music, hallucinogenic drugs, anti-war, and free-love scene throughout the West Coast of the United States, and as far away as New York City.
The Clipper card is a reloadable contactless smart card used for automated fare collection in the San Francisco Bay Area. First introduced as TransLink in 2002 by the Metropolitan Transportation Commission (MTC) as a pilot program, it was rebranded in its current form on June 16, 2010. Like other transit smart cards such as the Oyster card, the Clipper card is a credit card-sized stored-value card capable of holding both cash value and transit passes for the participating transit agencies. In addition to the traditional plastic card, Clipper is available as a virtual card in Google Pay and Apple Wallet. Clipper is accepted by nearly all public transit services in the Bay Area, including Muni, BART, Caltrain, AC Transit, SamTrans, Golden Gate Transit, Golden Gate Ferry, San Francisco Bay Ferry, VTA, and many others.
Urroz is a town and municipality located in the province and autonomous community of Navarre, northern Spain. The town has a small cemetery, and a "pelota" court, a church, and two or three small bars around a little plaza.
Deportivo Masatepe is a Nicaraguan football team.
Alberto Urroz is a Spanish classical pianist. He studied piano with Joaquín Soriano at the Madrid Royal Conservatory. Later, he moved to Israel to study with Pnina Salzman at the Tel Aviv University, and subsequently, on a Navarre state scholarship, with Oxana Yablonskaya in New York City. Other teachers include Solomon Mikowsky and Donn-Alexander Feder at Manhattan School of Music in New York, and masterclasses with György Sándor (Zumaia), Fanny Waterman (Valencia), Ena Bronstein Barton (Princeton) and Ana María Trenchi (NYC). He performs as a soloist throughout Europe, Asia and the USA in such venues as Carnegie Hall in New York, Sejong Center in Seoul and the Festival Internacional de Santander and Peralada in Spain. Urroz is piano professor at the Alfonso X el Sabio University, Musical Arts Madrid and Arturo Soria Conservatory in Madrid. Since 2004, he is artistic director and founder of the Mendigorría International Music Festival in Spain. President of the European Piano Teachers Association EPTA Spain since 2018. Cofounder and Artistic Director of the Madrid Shigeru Kawai Piano Competition (2019). Urroz has recorded works by D. Scarlatti, M. Sánchez Allú, I. Albéniz, Granados, de Falla and Mompou for Ibs Classical.
Martín Cuevas Urroz is a Uruguayan professional tennis player. Martín Cuevas is the brother of the Uruguayan player Pablo Cuevas. They have played together in the ATP Challenger Tour, winning the Copa Petrobras in Montevideo twice and Lyon once. Martín made his debut in Davis Cup against Dominican Republic, losing to Jhonson García. In total, he has a W/L record in Davis Cup of 15–19. Cuevas won 11 ITF Future singles titles and 12 ITF doubles titles.
Francisco Urroz Martínez was a Chilean football defender.
Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Nicaragua – Managua is a Nicaraguan football team playing in the Primera División de Nicaragua of the Nicaragua football system. It is based in Managua.
León Airport is an airport serving León, the capital of the León Department of Nicaragua. The airport is on the southwest side of the city.
Eduardo Miguel Urroz Cuadra is a Nicaraguan football player and former coach who coaches UNAN Managua in the Primera División de Nicaragua.
The following lists events that happened during 1920 in Chile.
Dragon Gate may refer to:
Eloy Urroz is a Mexican writer and Professor of Spanish and Latin American Literature at The Citadel in South Carolina. Though born in New York, Urroz grew up in Mexico City and is of Mexican nationality. He is one of the founding members of the Crack Movement, along with such writers as Ignacio Padilla and Jorge Volpi. Urroz has written eight novels, four books on literary criticism, four books of poetry, three political reportages and dozens of essays, articles, and reviews on Latin American and Peninsular Culture and Literature. Some of his novels have been translated into English, French, Italian, Portuguese, and German. In the United States, his novels are published by Dalkey Archive Press.
Manuela Urroz is a Chilean field hockey player.
Players who neither had high enough rankings nor received wild cards to enter the main draw of the annual French Open Tennis Championships participated in a qualifying tournament held in the week before the event.
Urroz may refer to:
KQED may refer to:
Andrea Valentina del Rosario López Urroz, known as Andrea Urroz, is a Nicaraguan footballer who plays as a midfielder for the Nicaragua women's national team.
Francisco Urroz is a Chilean rugby union player, currently playing for Súper Liga Americana de Rugby side Selknam. His preferred position is fly-half.