Mark Evans
Mark Evans
Mark Whitmore Evansis an Australian bass guitarist who was an early member of hard rock band AC/DC from March 1975 to June 1977. His playing featured on their albums T.N.T, High Voltage, Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap, Let There Be Rock and '74 Jailbreak. Evans has played for numerous other groups, sometimes on lead guitar, including Finch, Cheetah, Swanee, Heaven and The Party Boys. Evans' autobiography, Dirty Deeds: My Life Inside/Outside of AC/DC was released in December 2011...
ProfessionGuitarist
Date of Birth2 March 1956
CityMelbourne, Australia
We played fairly well, and they just struggled. Butler had an off night.
We couldn't just let her get the ball. She's a fine ballplayer who's going to get better and better. She has great post moves. She has all it takes.
You'll be amazed at how much space is wasted. Just by adding shelves, you'll see how much linear additions that provides within an area.
We are not trained to really make any medical diagnoses. All we can say is there are high levels of some contaminants there, particularly uranium and arsenic, and there probably is -- or may be -- a dust problem.
Tomorrow, at dawn, we will venture out. Of course, we will see the size of the waves that are coming in and see if it is possible to get out, which hopefully it will be. And then we will get back to the routine, which has worked very well for the first two legs.
It would take a perfect game to beat them. It would take an awful good game.
He's rolled his ankle at training today, and as a precaution we sent him off for a scan. But the scans have confirmed there is no fracture.
Any de-emphasis on standards that prepare our kids for college is going to be of great concern to us.
I'm sure every coach says this about their team, but this is a special group. They never quite cease to amaze me.
His legs, his groin mainly, have been his problem and we put him through a rigorous three-month program before Christmas and he passed. So we're confident of getting a full season out of him and of him giving us flexibility up forward.
I'm never satisfied, but that was one fine basketball game from the Mercy side. We did all the little things we needed to do.
It's more of a blow for his school.
It makes you wonder what really went down with ex-COO Gary Daichendt, who apparently quit in May because he wanted to be CEO but Owens and/or the board showed no sign it was going to happen any time soon. In a nutshell, Owens' departure -- was he fired, pushed or did he resign? -- is another one step forward, two steps back move for Nortel, which has now had three CEOs in the past 18 months.
This makes up for all the other years (Mercy came close and lost). This team is very special. We're not the biggest, not the fastest, but by gosh today we felt like we were the best.