Dennis Jones may refer to:
Dennis Jones (14 May 1894 – 7 September 1961) was an English footballer who played at half back for various clubs in the 1920s.
Jones was born in Shirebrook and, after several years playing at centre-half in the Central Alliance League for his home-town team, joined Leicester City in June 1921, where he was switched to right-half.
After three seasons at Filbert Street, Jones moved to the south coast to join Southampton in May 1924 along with winger Fred Price as part of an exchange deal that saw full-back Harry Hooper move in the opposite direction. At The Dell, Jones found it hard to break into the first-team with Bert Shelley, Alec Campbell and George Harkus all well-established as the three half-backs. Jones replaced Campbell for four matches in September 1924, but made only three further appearances before returning to the Midlands at the end of the season.
Jones joined Mansfield Town in the summer of 1925 where he spent a season before dropping down to non-league football with spells at Shirebrook, Sutton Town and Wombwell, before becoming a scout for Leicester City and Mansfield Town.
Dennis Jones (13 November 1936 – 19 December 1999) was an Australian rules footballer who played with and coached Melbourne in the Victorian Football League (VFL).
Jones, a half-back, made his senior VFL debut in 1956 and was a member of Melbourne's 1959 premiership side. He retired from the VFL aged 25, and in 1968 became senior coach of South Australian National Football League (SANFL) club Central District. Jones remained in that role for four seasons before moving to the Western Australian Football League (WAFL) to coach West Perth, and getting them to a Grand Final. In 1978 Jones rejoined Melbourne, where he had been appointed coach, but he could not prevent the team finishing with the wooden spoon.
Sierra Madre (Spanish for "mother mountain range") may refer to one of several mountain ranges:
The Sierra Madre de Chiapas, as known in Mexico, with regional names in other countries, is a major mountain range in Central America.
The range runs northwest-southeast from the state of Chiapas in Mexico, across western Guatemala, into El Salvador and Honduras. Most of the volcanoes of Guatemala, part of the Central America Volcanic Arc, are within the range.
A narrow coastal plain lies south the range, between the Sierra Madre and the Pacific Ocean. To the north lie a series of highlands and depressions, including the Chiapas Depression, which separates the Sierra Madre from the Chiapas Plateau, the Guatemalan Highlands, and Honduras' interior highlands.
The range forms the main drainage divide between the Pacific and Atlantic river systems. On the Pacific side the distance to the sea is short, and the streams, while very numerous, are consequently small and rapid. A few of the streams of the Pacific slopes rise in the Guatemalan Highlands, and force a way through the Sierra Madre at the bottom of deep ravines. On the eastern side a number of the rivers of the Atlantic slopes attain a considerable volume and size.
The Sierra Madre Mountains is the longest mountain range in the Philippines. Running in the north-south direction from the provinces of Cagayan to the north and Quezon to the south, the mountains form the eastern backbone of Luzon Island, the largest island of the archipelago. It is bordered by the Pacific Ocean to the east. The Pacific coast of Luzon along the Sierra Madre is less developed as the lofty and continuous mountains forms a bold and an almost inaccessible shore, exposed to the full force of the northeast monsoon and the waves of the Pacific Ocean. Some of communities east of the mountain range and along the coast are so remote they are still only accessible by plane or by boat.
The Quezon Protected Landscape is situated at the southern part of the range.
The Sierra Madre is the longest mountain range in the Philippines. In the north, the range starts in the province of Cagayan and ends in the south in the province of Quezon. In the province of Nueva Vizcaya, its western tip to form the Caraballo Mountains, with which it connects with the Cordillera Central range.
Wenn der Morgen kommt und die letzten Schatten vergeh'n,
schau'n die Menschen der Sierra hinauf zu den sonnigen Hh'n.
Schau'n hinauf, wo der weie Condor so einsam zieht,
wie ein Gru an die Sonne erklingt ihr altes Lied:
Sierra, Sierra Madre del Sur, Sierra, Sierra Madre.
Oh, oh, Sierra, Sierra Madre del Sur, Sierra, Sierra Madre.
(Instrumental)
Wenn die Arbeit getan, der Abend-Frieden beginnt,
schau'n die Menschen der Sierra hinauf, wo das Abendrot brennt.
Und sie denken daran, wie schnell ein Glck oft vergeht,
und aus tausend Herzen erklingt es wie ein Gebet:
Sierra, Sierra Madre del Sur...