a family oriented organisation and endeavours to promote four wheel driving as a responsible and legitimate recreation
The Club is a satirical play by Australian playwright David Williamson, that follows the fortunes of a football club over the course of a season. It explores the clashes between "human loyalty versus materialistic gain". http://www.ausport.gov.au/fulltext/1998/sportsf/sf980522.htm The Sports Factor - Interview with David Williamson (1998) It was inspired by the backroom dealings and antics of the Victorian Football League's Collingwood.
The Club is the trademark version of a popular automotive steering wheel lock, produced by Sharon, Pennsylvania-based Winner International. Some claim that inventor James E. Winner Jr. derived the idea for the device from his service in the Korean War, where he and his fellow soldiers were instructed to secure the steering wheels of their Jeeps with metal chains.
The Club was a Trotskyist group in the United Kingdom. It operated inside the Labour Party and was the official section of the Fourth International from 1950. Led by Gerry Healy, it published the newspaper Socialist Outlook until this was banned by Labour, whereupon it began selling Tribune, and eventually began a new paper, The Newsletter.
"The Club" is Tenjo Chiki's 2nd Japanese under the Rhythm Zone label and was released in both CD and CD+DVD (Limited Edition) versions. The title track also features Japanese rapper SEAMO.
The Club was a short-lived Australian reality television show about an Australian rules football sporting side called the Hammerheads which featured on the Seven Network in 2002. It was seen as a way for Seven to stay involved in football after losing the broadcast rights to the Australian Football League after the 2001 season.
The Club was a London dining club founded in 1764 by essayist Samuel Johnson, and Joshua Reynolds, the painter.