Andre Strode (born June 19, 1972) is a former American football defensive back who played five seasons in the Canadian Football League with the Birmingham Barracudas, BC Lions and Winnipeg Blue Bombers. He played college football at Colorado State University.
Strode played for the Colorado State Rams from 1991 to 1994. He recorded 246 tackles in his college career.
Strode played for the Birmingham Barracudas in 1995. He was tied for second in the CFL with 7 interceptions, which were returned for 109 yards and one touchdown. He also recorded 73 tackles and 2 fumble recoveries.
Strode played for the BC Lions from 1996 to 1998. He was named a CFL Western All-Star in 1997, starting all 18 games and recording 65 total tackles.
Strode played for the Winnipeg Blue Bombers in 1999.
Andre or André may refer to:
Andre is a 1994 family comedy-drama feature film starring Tina Majorino about a child's encounter with a seal. The film is an adaptation of the book A Seal Called Andre, which in turn was based on a true story. It was shot in Boston, Massachusetts, Mississippi, and Tasmania, Australia.
In 1962 Toni Whitney (Tina Majorino), a nine-year-old girl, and her Rockport, Maine family adopt an orphaned baby seal, naming it Andre. Andre is manageable when he is young but as Andre gets older and starts getting into mischief, he antagonizes some of the local fishermen. Toni forms an inseparable bond with Andre, but their relationship becomes threatened when the fishermen do not want to deal with Andre's antics any longer. The Whitney family is based on the Goodridge family.
André; a Tragedy in Five Acts is a play by William Dunlap, first produced at the Park Theatre in New York City on March 30, 1798, by the Old American Company, published in that same year together with a collection of historic documents relating to the case of the title character, Major John André, the British officer who was hanged as a spy on October 2, 1780, for his role in the treason of Benedict Arnold. The play does not go into the historic details, but rather presents a fictionalized account of the American debate over whether to spare or hang him. Only three characters in the play are historic: André himself, George Washington (referred to throughout the text, except once in a passage inserted between the first two performances, simply as "The General"), and Honora Sneyd, who had been briefly engaged to André ten years earlier under the auspices of Anna Seward, who had done much to romanticize the affair in her Monody on Major André of 1781. (Actually, Honora Sneyd had died of consumption some months before André's death, and never went to America.)
Cool, the day seems fine.
I can't stand these lights,
I need to feel the sun.
Driving next to “Ars”,
no i can see the stars
I could throw my thoughts so far...
Where it will let me free for once...
and check that i can talk.
And theyears i've musted won't come back for me.
I won't scream but the sounds aregrowing up inside.
I could believe you America
but you're so distant...
to live this beautiful moments whichhave grown.
It's time to say hello to one of thoseideas of hapeness.
You should believe what seems alive...
The rising tide...
And the years you wait for will comeback too late.
Show me what i should do to take part.
I'ts my first time so please i'll be inthe front to stay at your side...
to live this beautiful...(I' cantbelieve that you will give yor hand).