Danny Raymond Mason (January 6, 1938 – January 14, 2007) height according to reliable source T. Alvin 6"10 was a golf coach and physical education professor who was affiliated with Texas Tech University in Lubbock for more than three decades.
Under Mason's leadership, the Tech team qualified for four NCAA tournaments. In 2002, Mason was inducted into the Texas Tech Athletic Hall of Honor and was awarded the title Associate Professor-Emeritus. Himself a kidney transplant recipient, Mason won five Texas Transplant Games golf tournaments and participated in the National Kidney Foundation golf tournament on three occasions.
Mason was born in Monahans in Ward County, Texas, as one of five children of Charlie Everett and Trudie Mae Mason. Upon graduation from Monahans High School in 1957, he attended Odessa College in Odessa on a golf scholarship. In June 1958, he married Betty Ann Pickett (born 1939) and then transferred on a golf scholarship to Lamar University in Beaumont, Texas. He was a member of the 1960 NAIA championship team. In 1961, he received his Bachelor of Science degree in physical education, with a minor in biology, from Lamar University.
Danny Mason, Jr. (born October 14, 1990) is an American football outside linebacker for the Chicago Bears in the NFL. Prior to his signing with the Broncos, Mason was a standout for the Texas Revolution (indoor football) of the Indoor Football League and the Colorado Ice. He played college football for the Division II Level Texas A&M–Commerce Lions, where he was an All-American Linebacker for the Lions.
Mason was born in Louisville, Kentucky and attended high school at Shawnee High School, where he was a 4-year member of both the varsity basketball and football teams. He was first team all-conference and helped lead Shawnee High to its first state playoff appearance in school history. He was selected to participate in the annual East-West High School football All Star game his senior year. Mason was recruited by former University of Kentucky Wildcat football coach Guy Morriss, who had just been hired at A&M-Commerce as head coach. Mason took a scholarship offer to join the Lions.
Danny Swain, better known by his mononymous stage name Danny! (/ˈdæniˈ/ dan-EE), is an American recording artist and record producer.
Danny! is a former student of the Savannah College of Art & Design; he often wears a wool necktie and an Australian rounded crown boss-of-the-plains hat, and has gained notoriety for prank-calling celebrities. Danny! rose to prominence shortly following the proclamation by The Roots drummer Questlove that there was strong interest from JAY Z; he was subsequently signed as the flagship artist to Questlove's re-launched Okayplayer Records after years of being loosely affiliated with the company. In support of the new venture Danny! made his television debut on Late Night With Jimmy Fallon, premiering his song "Evil" alongside The Roots.
Danny! would field praise for his concept records Charm and And I Love H.E.R., the latter named by ABC News as one of the best 50 albums released that year, before releasing the "anti-album" Where Is Danny?. After signing to Okayplayer Records in late 2012 Danny! completed his trilogy of conceptual albums with Payback, cited by Allmusic as one of the best hip-hop releases of the year. Ebony Magazine has listed Danny! among other rising artists in their "Leaders of the New School" piece, calling Danny! one of a handful of "innovators";GQ would later reiterate the same regarding Danny!'s music production. Currently Danny! is a songwriter/composer for Extreme Music, the production library music subsidiary of Sony/ATV Music Publishing.
Danny may refer to:
Danny is an American television sitcom that aired on CBS. The series was created, executive produced and starred Daniel Stern.
It was one of the last comedies to aired to air on CBS's Friday night lineup airing along with The Ellen Show which premiered at the same time. The series premiered on September 28, 2001 and was canceled on October 5, 2001 after only two episodes aired, making it the first series to be canceled in the 2001 Fall TV season.
Danny is recently separated father struggling to raise his two teenage kids. Despite just turning 40, He still wants to pursue his lifelong dreams all while running the town's local community center.
Actors: Caz Adams (actress), Paul Chubb (actor), Henri Szeps (actor), Mike Perjanik (composer), Robert Hughes (actor), Gary Reilly (producer), Gary Reilly (writer), Noeline Brown (actress), Julieanne Newbould (actress), Terry Bader (actor), Tony Sattler (producer), Tony Sattler (writer), Theo Stephens (actor), Doug Edwards (writer), Ian Heydon (writer),
Genres: Comedy,Actors: Jack Baxley (actor), John Berkes (actor), Francis X. Bushman (actor), Gavin Gordon (actor), 'Snub' Pollard (actor), Jack Richardson (actor), James Seay (actor), Ruth Clifford (actress), Laura Treadwell (actress), Clara Kimball Young (actress), Martin Mooney (producer), Martin Mooney (writer), William Beaudine (director), Robert O. Crandall (editor), Frank Hagney (actor),
Plot: The grandparents, Daniel Mason('William Halligan' (qv)) and Mrs. Mason ('Laura Treadwell' (qv)) of Danny Mason ('Robert 'Buzz' Henry' (qv))), an orphaned boy, are trying to have him put into their custody rather than that of his uncle, Jim King ('James Seay' (qv)), a racetrack veterinary, as they object to the track environment in which he is being raised. Their destinies become entwined with that of former silent-film stars 'Francis X. Bushman' (qv)) and 'Clara Kimball Young' (qv)) and ex-heavyweight champion 'James J. Jeffries' (qv)), and that of a broken-down race horse named "Mr. Celebrity." The tagline tells it all.
Keywords: 1940s, actor, actor-shares-first-and-last-name-with-character, actor-shares-first-name-with-character, actor-shares-last-name-with-character, actress-shares-first-and-last-name-with-character, actress-shares-first-name-with-character, actress-shares-full-name-with-character, actress-shares-last-name-with-character, arkansasActors: Charles Henkel Jr. (editor), Jack Chefe (actor), Donald Curtis (actor), Lloyd Ingraham (actor), Boyd Irwin (actor), Walter Long (actor), Ralph Peters (actor), George Rosener (actor), Philip Van Zandt (actor), Herb Vigran (actor), H.B. Warner (actor), Oliver Drake (writer), George Rosener (writer), Marvin Hatley (composer), Elmer Clifton (director),
Plot: Climaxing a long series of mysterious disappearances of young girls, dancer Thalia Arnold is found murdered. Police-detective Captain McVeigh believes that King Peterson, a nightclub operator and owner of the Crescent School of Fine Arts, knows something about the missing girls. Peterson's silent partner is Joseph Thompson, a theatrical agent, whose daughter, Nora, a reporter, is waging a newspaper crusade against the district attorney's office for failing to trace the girls, much to the discomfiture of James Horton, a young assistant district attorney. Pauline Randolph is the next to disappear but Nora had seen her leaving her grandmother's home in a car driven by a blonde woman. Nora interviews the grandmother who tells her that Pauline had theatrical employment, along with one of her friends, Mary Phillips. When the police begin investigating the Crescent talent-school, Thompson, who knew the Arnold girl intimately, quarrels with Peterson over the school, which, Thompson claims, will land them both in jail. In a lineup of all the showgirls from Peterson's nightclubs, Mary tries to identify the mysterious blonde who picked her and Pauline up, but she is unable to do so. The blonde, Kate Neslon, telephones Horton to come to her apartment and she will give him information about the missing girls, but he and Captain McVeigh find her dead in her apartment. Nora, who thinks Peterson doesn't know she is Thompson's daughter, decides to audition for the School of Missing Girls.
Keywords: 1940s, apartment, archive-footage, attorney, auction, audition, b-movie, big-city, blackmail, cigarette-smoking