- Pete
Fredenburg (born
September 15, 1949) is a
former American football coach. He
served as the head
football coach at
University of Mary Hardin–Baylor...
-
Fredenburg Butte is a
summit in the U.S.
state of Oregon. The
elevation is 4,298 feet (1,310 m).
Fredenburg Butte was
named in the 1870s
after one Francis...
-
serving the
previous twenty as the team's
defensive coordinator under Pete
Fredenburg. Mary Hardin–Baylor has won
three NCAA
Division III
football championships:...
-
Fredenburg House is a
historic home
located at Rhinebeck,
Dutchess County, New York,
located about one and one-half
miles south of the
village and west...
-
University of Mary Hardin-Baylor Athletics.
Retrieved July 22, 2023. "Pete
Fredenburg retires; Mary Hardin-Baylor
promotes Larry Harmon to head coach". Dave...
- destroyer, for
example providing naval surface fire support, can be met. Mike
Fredenburg analyzed the
program for
National Review after Zumwalt broke down in the...
-
Fredenburg (January 12, 1923 –
January 12, 2020) was an
American nurse and a
missionary in Eku,
Nigeria for over
forty years. Mary
Evelyn Fredenburg was...
- 2011: Beck 2012:
Rossomando 2013:
Wiese Division III 2007:
Gagliardi 2008:
Kehres 2009:
Staker 2010:
Caruso 2011:
Caruso 2012:
Caruso 2013:
Fredenburg...
-
careers with 200 wins and a
winning percentage of .800 or greater: Pete
Fredenburg (.856), Jake
Gaither (.844), Tom
Osborne (.836), Mike
Kelly (.819), Joe...
- Rice
Research Institute.
Archived from the
original on May 5, 2017. "
Fredenburg, P. (2007). "Less salt, please".
International Rice
Research Institute...