Knoxville Escape Rooms for Date Nights
Knoxville Escape Rooms are perfect for dates and for Valentine's Day. To create a memorable date night, you should consider booking an escape room. There are many escape rooms in Knoxville, Tennessee that include a wide variety of themes. If you're looking for a special place to bring a special someone or if you and your friends need an escape from the ordinary Valentine's Day, come check out Breakout Games - Knoxville.
The escape room industry is growing throughout the country and here in Knoxville, TN there are some unique opportunities for escape room enthusiasts to play a variety of escape rooms at Breakout Games. Breakout now has 44 escape room locations in operation and over 250 escape rooms throughout the United States. If you have not taken the opportunity to play one of these themed escape room games, then we invite you to visit our Knoxville, Tennessee locations and experience the fun for yourself. On Valentine's Day and any day, throughout the year we're feeling the LOVE here at Breakout Games - Knoxville!
In addition to date nights, Escape rooms are also great for families, groups of friends, co-workers as a team building exercise, and just for fun! Escape rooms are unique games that are an immersive experience unlike anything else in Knoxville, Tennessee. To view the complete list of escape rooms at the Knoxville locations, visit
Subscribe to our YouTube channel for more videos about escape rooms and to be notified of new game releases from the leading company in the escape room industry. Will you escape ordinary?
Bookfest 2012: Elizabeth Kostova
An interview with 2012 Blue Ridge Bookfest Honoree, Elizabeth Kostova, author of The Historian and The Swan Thieves.
WHDH-TV Bozo the Clown 1966
Boston's original Channel 5, WHDH-TV, produced a local, weekday version of the Bozo the Clown children's program between 1959 and 1970. Booth announcer Frank Avruch played the title role. These excerpts are from a 1966 broadcast.
Episodes videotaped at WHDH between 1965 and '67 were syndicated to markets that did not produce a local version of the show.
All rights are acknowledged.
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* Recollections from former WHDH-TV employee Ron Hopkins via tvdvdreviews:
I worked in the Music Dept. of WHDH-TV/Channel 5 in the 1960s. Ed Carroll Spinney was Grandma Nellie, Mr. Lion and Kookie Kangaroo, along with a few others. Del Grosso was Clank the Robot. The reason for each playing more than one character was that it gave the show more variety and allowed them to work several days a week.
During the Holiday Season, those of us in the Music Dept. would wear the costumes of the characters so that they could appear all on the same show. Ed Spinney would do the voice of each character off camera.
When Frank Avruch was sick or injured - he broke his hip playing handball - Romper Room's Miss Jean's husband Bill Harrington would play Bozo's brother Nozo.
Ed Spinney went on to become Big Bird and Oscar the Grouch on Sesame Street.
Farm Monitor - February 23, 2019
This week on the Farm Monitor ... After years of waiting, Henry County Farm Bureau President Ross McQueen is finally in the Hall of Fame. Newton County is stepping up it's game with an all new ag center, and Ray and Marcia whip up some recipes containing and ignored and forgotten vegetable...cabbage.
WWE Super Showdown 2018 Full Show Review & Results Recap: UNDERTAKER VS TRIPLE H
Squaringthecircle 150
WWE Super Showdown 2018 Full Show Review & Results Recap: UNDERTAKER VS TRIPLE H
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Southern American English | Wikipedia audio article
This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
Southern American English
Listening is a more natural way of learning, when compared to reading. Written language only began at around 3200 BC, but spoken language has existed long ago.
Learning by listening is a great way to:
- increases imagination and understanding
- improves your listening skills
- improves your own spoken accent
- learn while on the move
- reduce eye strain
Now learn the vast amount of general knowledge available on Wikipedia through audio (audio article). You could even learn subconsciously by playing the audio while you are sleeping! If you are planning to listen a lot, you could try using a bone conduction headphone, or a standard speaker instead of an earphone.
You can find other Wikipedia audio articles too at:
You can upload your own Wikipedia articles through:
The only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing.
- Socrates
SUMMARY
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Southern American English or Southern U.S. English is a large collection of related American English dialects spoken throughout the Southern United States, though increasingly in more rural areas and primarily by white Americans. Commonly in the United States, the dialects are together simply referred to as Southern. Other, much more recent ethno-linguistic terms within American linguistics include Southern White Vernacular English and Rural White Southern English.A regional Southern American English consolidated and expanded throughout all the traditional Southern States since the last quarter of the nineteenth century until around World War II, largely superseding the older Southern American English dialects. With this younger and more unified pronunciation system, Southern American English now comprises the largest American regional accent group by number of speakers. As of 2006, its Southern accent is strongly reported throughout the U.S. states of Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee, Arkansas, Louisiana, and Kentucky, as well as most of Texas, eastern and southern Oklahoma, southern Missouri, southeastern Maryland, West Virginia, northern Florida, and southeastern New Mexico. The accent of some Midland American English (often identified as a South Midland accent) is documented as sharing key features with Southern American English, though to a weaker extent, including in northern Oklahoma, eastern and central Kansas, Missouri generally, the southern halves of Illinois and Indiana, southern Ohio, western Delaware, and south-central Pennsylvania.Southern American English as a regional dialect can be divided into various sub-dialects, the most phonologically advanced (i.e., the most innovative) ones being southern varieties of Appalachian English and certain varieties of Texan English. African-American English has many common points with Southern American English dialects due to the strong historical ties of African Americans to the South. Recently, the Southern accent has been receding, particularly among younger people and in urban areas.