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❤️ KJCM 🐨

"KJCM may refer to: * KJCM-FM, the fictional radio station featured in the television series Midnight Caller * KJCM (FM), a radio station (100.3 FM) licensed to Snyder, Oklahoma, United States "

❤️ Jenő Kalmár 🐨

"Jenő Kalmár (21 March 1908 – 13 January 1990), also referred to as János Kalmar or Kálmár Jenő, was a former Hungarian footballer and coach. As a player, Kalmar played for both MTK Hungária FC and Hungary. During the 1928-29 season he finished as top goalscorer for MTK, scoring 20 goals. In the early 1950s, Kálmár was manager at Honvéd and with a team that included Ferenc Puskás, Zoltán Czibor, Sándor Kocsis, József Bozsik, László Budai, Gyula Lóránt and Gyula Grosics, he guided them to four Hungarian League titles. As the Honvéd manager, he also played a prominent role in the development of the legendary Hungary team known as the Mighty Magyars and during this era he also served as an assistant coach to the national team coach, Gusztáv Sebes. At the end of Second World War he found himself in Yugoslavia and he joined third league side FK TSC Bačka Topola, known at time as Egység."100 goodina fudbala u Bačkoj Topoli" page 79 After the Hungarian Revolution, Kálmár like his former players, Puskás, Czibor and Kocsis, ended up in Spain where he managed several La Liga clubs with moderate success. He coached Wacker Wien,http://fairplay.vidc.org/fileadmin/Bibliothek/Fairplay/images/Migration/Daten/trainer_final.pdf and after a brief spell at Sevilla CF, he guided Granada CF to the 1959 Copa del Generalísimo final. They lost 4-1 to a CF Barcelona team that included Kocsis. Kocsis scored twice for Barça while the Granada CF goal was scored by Arsenio Iglesias. In 1967, Kálmár took RCD Español to third in La Liga and during two spells with CD Málaga in the 1970s he guided them to promotion twice. Honours Manager Honvéd *Hungarian League: 4 **1950, 1952, 1954, 1955 Granada CF *Copa del Generalísimo **Runner-up 1959 CD Málaga *Segunda División ** Runners-Up 1970, 1979: 2 Player MTK Hungária FC/Hungária FC *Hungarian League **Runner-up : 1928-29, 1930-31, 1932-33, 1939-40: 4 *Hungarian Cup **Winner : 1931-32 1 See also * List of Eastern Bloc defectors References External links and references * *La Liga manager stats * Sevilla CF *Jenő Kalmár Hungarian league stats at nela.hu Category:1908 births Category:1990 deaths Category:Association football forwards Category:Hungarian footballers Category:Hungary international footballers Category:MTK Budapest FC players Category:Excelsior AC Roubaix players Category:RC Roubaix players Category:Stade de Reims players Category:Ligue 1 players Category:Ligue 2 players Category:Hungarian football managers Category:Budapest Honvéd FC managers Category:La Liga managers Category:Granada CF managers Category:Sevilla FC managers Category:Real Zaragoza managers Category:RCD Espanyol managers Category:CD Málaga managers Category:FC Porto managers Category:Halmstads BK managers Category:Hungarian refugees Category:Hungarian defectors Category:Hércules CF managers Category:FK TSC Bačka Topola players Category:Expatriate football managers in Austria Category:Expatriate football managers in Portugal Category:Expatriate football managers in Spain Category:Expatriate football managers in Sweden Category:Hungarian expatriate football managers Category:Hungarian expatriate sportspeople in Austria Category:Hungarian expatriate sportspeople in Portugal Category:Hungarian expatriate sportspeople in Spain Category:Hungarian expatriate sportspeople in Sweden Category:Expatriate footballers in Yugoslavia Category:Hungarian expatriate sportspeople in Yugoslavia "

❤️ Midland Square 🐨

", officially called , is a skyscraper located in the Meieki district of Nakamura-ku, Nagoya, Japan. It opened in early 2007. It is the tallest building in Nagoya and the fifth tallest building in Japan as of 2015. At 247m (810 feet), it is slightly taller than the nearby JR Central Towers. Midland Square houses offices of many companies including Toyota Motor Corporation, Towa Real Estate and Mainichi Shimbun. It features a shopping center with 60 name-brand stores, two automobile showrooms and a cinema. It also holds the record for the highest open-air observation deck in Japan. Also of note are the unusual double-floored elevators, which take only 40 seconds to rise to the top. The name of the building derives from the Chūbu region (which means "central region") of which Nagoya is the capital. Gallery File:Midland Square Atrium 2014.jpgShopping Arcade File:Midland Square Basement Entrance 2014.jpgBasement Entrance File:Midland Square Cinema 2014.jpgMidland Square Cinema File:Midland Square 42-F Sky Lobby 2014.jpg42/F Sky Lobby File:Midland Square Sky Promenade.jpgSky Promenade File:Lexus LFA Blue 1101.jpgLexus LFA in Midland Square References External links * Midland Square, official site Category:Skyscrapers in Nagoya Category:Buildings and structures completed in 2007 Category:Tourist attractions in Nagoya Category:Skyscraper office buildings in Japan Category:Retail buildings in Japan "

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