Family member Alanna Marie Orton

Alanna Marie Orton

Living place: St. Louis

Birthday: 12-7-2008 (16 years old)

Population of US 2008: 302 millions

Global rank: #72941

Email: updating

Phone number: updating

Family member Alanna Marie Orton profile

Who is Family member Alanna Marie Orton?
Best recognized is the daughter of WWE Heavyweight champion Randy Orton and his ex-wife Samantha Speno.
Randy Orton has a rose tattooed on his arm to represent the love he has for his daughter.
 
 

Young / Before famous

Her parents were married in September 2007 and almost a year later, she was born.

Family life info

She has two uncles, Nathan and Roderick, and an aunt, Becky. Her father remarried to

Close relationship

Who is Boy (girl) friend/ wife (husband)/ darling Family member Alanna Marie Orton?
Her grandfather Bob Orton Jr. and her wonderful grandfather Bob Orton were both wrestlers like his father.

Body measurements of

How tall is Family member Alanna Marie Orton? What Alanna Marie Orton's weight?
Height: updating
Weight: updating
Measurements: updating

Summary of Alanna Marie Orton profile

When was Family member Alanna Marie Orton born?
Alanna Marie Orton birthday 12-7-2008 (at the age of 16).
Where is Family member Alanna Marie Orton's birth place, what is Zodiac/Chinese Zodiac?
Alanna Marie Orton was born in St. Louis, Missouri- United States. is a Family member, whose Zodiac is Cancer, and who Chinese Zodiac is The Rat. Alanna Marie Orton's global rank is 72941 and whose rank is 969 in list of famous Family member. Population of US in 2008 is about 302 millions persons.
Celebrities born in:
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Events in 2008 and 12-7

Events in US in the birth year of Alanna Marie Orton

  • Jan. 3: The presidential primary season begins with Democrat Barack Obama and Republican Mike Huckabee.
  • Feb. 5: Arizona senator John McCain emerges as the clear front runner among Republicans in the Super Tuesday primary races. On the Democratic side, New York senator Hillary Clinton wins big states such as California and Massachusetts, but Illinois senator Barack Obama takes more states.
  • March 4: Sen. John McCain has enough delegates to secure the Republican presidential nomination.
  • March 8: President George W. Bush, saying intelligence officials must have "all the tools they need to stop the terrorists," vetoes legislation that would have outlawed all methods of interrogation that are banned in the Army Field Manual, which prohibits waterboarding and other harsh techniques that have been used by the CIA.
  • March 18: Sen. Barack Obama delivers a pivotal speech on race, denouncing the provocative remarks on race made by his former pastor, Rev. Jeremiah Wright, Jr., but explains that the complexities of race in America have fueled anger and resentment among many African Americans.
  • March 11: The government begins to intervene in the U.S. financial system to avoid a crisis. The Federal Reserve outlines a $200 billion loan program that lets the country's biggest banks borrow Treasury securities at discounted rates and post mortgage-backed securities as collateral. March 16: The Federal Reserve approves a $30 billion loan to JPMorgan Chase so it can take over Bear Stearns, which is on the verge of collapse.
  • May 15: California's Supreme Court rules, 4 to 3, that same-sex couples have a constitutional right to marry.
  • May 20: Senator Edward Kennedy, a Democrat from Massachusetts who's been in office since 1963, is diagnosed with malignant glioma, a brain tumor.
  • June 3: On the final day of the 2008 primary season, Sen. Barack Obama secures 2,154 delegates and becomes the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee. He's the first black candidate to head a major party ticket in a presidential election. Aug. 28: Obama accepts the Democratic presidential nomination, becoming the first African American to be selected by a major party as its nominee for president.
  • June 12: The U.S. Supreme Court rules, 5 to 4, that prisoners at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, have a right to challenge their detention in federal court.
  • June 26: The U.S. Supreme Court rules, 5 to 4, that the Constitution protects an individual's right to possess a gun, but insists that the ruling "is not a right to keep and carry any weapon whatsoever in any manner whatsoever and for whatever purpose."
  • Sep. 4: Sen. John McCain accepts the the Republican presidential nomination.
  • Sep. 29: An internal inquiry by the U.S. Justice Department's inspector general and its Office of Professional Responsibility reports "significant evidence that political partisan considerations were an important factor in the removal of several of the U.S. attorneys." (Nine federal prosecutors were fired in 2006.)
  • Oct. 1: The U.S. Senate ratifies an agreement that allows India to buy nuclear fuel on the world market for its reactors as long as it uses the fuel for civilian purposes only.
  • Oct. 10: Connecticut's Supreme Court rules that a state law that limits marriage to heterosexual couples and a civil union law that protects gay couples violate equal protection rights guaranteed by the constitution.
  • Oct. 27: A jury finds Sen. Ted Stevens (R-AK) guilty of seven felony charges for lying on financial disclosure forms and failing to report more than $250,000 in gifts from the VECO Corporation, one of Alaska's biggest oil-field contractors.
  • Nov. 4: Democratic senator Barack Obama wins the presidential election against Sen. John McCain, taking 338 electoral votes to McCain's 161. Obama becomes the first African American to be elected president of the United States. Also in the election, Democrats increase their majority in the House and pick up five seats in the Senate.
  • Nov. 4: Voters in California narrowly pass a ballot measure, Proposition 8, that overturns the May 15, 2008, California Supreme Court decision that said same-sex couples have a constitutional right to marry.
  • Dec. 19: President George W. Bush announces plans to lend General Motors and Chrysler $17.4 billion to survive the next three months.

Birthday Alanna Marie Orton (12-7) in history

  • Day 12-7 year 1543: King Henry VIII of England married his sixth and last wife, Catherine Parr.
  • Day 12-7 year 1690: In the Battle of Boyne in Ireland, Protestant William of Orange defeated James II of Roman Catholicism.
  • Day 12-7 year 1862: Congress authorized the Medal of Honor.
  • Day 12-7 year 1960: The first Etch-A-Sketch went on sale.
  • Day 12-7 year 1979: Kiribati, formerly the Gilbert Islands, gained its independence from the United Kingdom.
  • Day 12-7 year 1984: Democratic presidential nominee Walter Mondale became the first major-party candidate to choose a woman as a running mate when he announced his choice of Geraldine Ferraro.
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Note about Family member Alanna Marie Orton

Alanna Marie Orton infomation and profile updated by nguoinoitieng.tv.