Tokusou Sentai Dekaranger is a 2004-2005 Japanese children's television series in the Super Sentai series. In an iteration of the planet Earth when extraterrestrial contact has been made, the Dekaranger force battles the criminal syndicate of Alienizer.
Special Police Dekaranger (スペシャル・ポリス・デカレンジャー, Supesharu Porisu Dekarenjā, S.P.D.) is a police force who make sure that all aliens abide by intergalactic laws, and has advanced extraterrestrial technology at its disposal, giving its officers suits made out of Deka Metal that make them Dekarangers. The center of the Space Police is the Space Prosecution Office on Gowashichoru. Due to the Sion Morse time flow around the planet being faster than the rest of the universe, an eight-month trial on Gowashichoru last ten seconds in Earth time and the Dekarangers can use their SPD Arms to project a criminal's image to Gowashichoru for the Space Prosecution Office's verdict which is usually immediate execution if the crime is severe enough.
Murphy is an Anglicized version of two Irish surnames: Ó Murchadha/Ó Murchadh ("descendant of Murchadh"), and Mac Murchaidh/Mac Murchadh ("son of Murchadh") derived from the Irish personal name Murchadh, which meant "sea-warrior" or "sea-battler". (Muir meaning "sea" and cath meaning "battle").
It is said of Murrough (Murchadh) as he entered the thick of the fight and prepared to assail the foreign invaders, the Danes, when they had repulsed the Dal-Cais, that ‘he was seized with a boiling terrible anger, an excessive elevation and greatness of spirit and mind. A bird of valour and championship rose in him, and fluttered over his head and on his breath.
In modern Irish, "Ó Murchú", rather than "Ó Murchadha", is used.
Murphy is the most common surname in Ireland, the fourteenth most common surname in Northern Ireland and the fifty-eighth most common surname in the United States.
Forty-one individuals who played professional baseball at the major league level lack identified given names. Identification of players remains difficult due to a lack of information; a Brooklyn, New York directory, for instance, lists more than 30 men that could be the professional player "Stoddard". Possible mistakes in reading box scores from the 19th century could have also led to players without given names: "Eland", for example, could be another player from the Baltimore Marylands roster whose name was simply misread. Four of the 41, McBride, Stafford, Sterling, and Sweigert, were local players added to the Philadelphia Athletics team by manager Bill Sharsig for Philadelphia's last game of the season against the Syracuse Stars on October 12, 1890. Sterling pitched five innings for the Athletics and conceded 12 runs. McBride, Philadelphia's center fielder, and Stafford, the team's right fielder, both failed to reach base, but left fielder Sweigert reached base on a walk and stole a base. Society for American Baseball Research writer Bill Carle "doubt[s] we will ever be able to identify them".
Murphy is the first novel in Murphy series by Gary Paulsen. It was published in January, 1987 by Walker & Company.