26,053 research outputs found

    Joe Slater's popular Tivoli album. No. 22, Christmas number [music].

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    For voice and piano.; Cover title.; Cover bears portrait of Miss Maud Perman ... [et al.]; Date approximated from publisher's advertisement, The Sydney Morning Herald, Tuesday 31 May 1904, p. 2.; Library's copy: p. 25-26 missing. ANL; Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.mus-vn4802991. Never too late to mend -- Salome : (intermezzo) -- Coon band contest -- Christmas without daddy -- Cloe -- My creole Sadie -- Down on the farm -- Ragged Jim cake walk -- My sunflower daisy -- Volunteer organist -- Divorced -- Lady from Madrid -- You'll never know her worth until she's gone -- Donau-wellen waltz -- Sadie Ray -- I don't want a lady to be my wife -- Red hot member -- Dan Crawley's parody on 'Boney Mary'.Joe Slater's Tivoli albu

    Dr. Joe Hoyle – Faculty Author Interview

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    Dr. Joe Hoyle, Associate Professor of Accounting in the E. Claiborne Robins School of Business, discusses Introduction to Financial Accounting, a unique online textbook that incorporates many different learning and media techniques. By offering introductory videos, embedded multiple-choice questions and real-life interviews with an investment manager, Hoyle and his co-author include something for every student. The book will be published by Flat World Knowledge in early 2010

    pisode 103: A general law against killing with Joe Wills

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    This episode of Knowing Animals is recorded before a live studio audience at the 2018 Sheffield Animal Studies event: ShARC Tails! I speak to Dr. Joe Wills. Joe is Lecturer in Law at the University of Leicester. We discuss his article "A Nation of Animal Lovers? the case for a general animal killing offence in UK law', which will soon appear in King's Law Review

    Joe Warner

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    Joe Warner, the author of Biscuits and 'Taters, at the Manatee Historical Commission booth at the 1983 Manatee County Fair

    My name it is Joe Bowers

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    voiceReel 301 Side #1 No. 11 Collected by Joe Moore For M.C. Parler Transcribed by Linda Humphrey Joe Bowers My name it is Joe Bowers I have a brother Ike I come from old Missouri And all the way from Pike. And let me tell you how come here And how come me to roam And leave my dear old parents So far away from home. Sung by Mrs. Zoe Bates December 30, 1964 ( Mrs. Bates learned this fifty years ago from her mother)Funding for digitization provided by the Arkansas Humanities Council and the Happy Hollow Foundation

    The Running Revolution: Observations and Advice from Joe Henderson

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    Joe Henderson has been the heartbeat of the running revolution since its beginnings in the early 1970s. Hiz eighth book offers the best of his running and writing career to this point (1980). Best-selling author Dr. George Sheehan says of him, Joe is a deceptively simple writer who makes it look easy. His instincts and intuitions about the running experience give him complete control, complete confidence. When it comes to writing about running, Joe has perfect pitch. Fellow author Jim Fixx adds that Henderson is as good a mentor as anyone could be lucky enough to have.https://openprairie.sdstate.edu/prairiestriders_pubs/1193/thumbnail.jp

    I Ain't Got Nobody

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    Two cousins, Joe Moore and Ray Nichols, play guitar and fiddle for Spencer Moore. Joe and Spencer were raised in Mountain City, Tennnessee

    Novelist Eugene Burdick

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    1964 photograph taken by Joe Munroe of famed author Eugene Burdick as he plays racquetball. Burdick was a political science professor at the University of California. His famous works include 'The Ugly American' (1958), 'Fail-Safe' (1962) and 'The 480' (1965). Joe Munroe's career began in 1939 at the Cranbrook Academy of Art. He served in the Air Force during World War II and then joined Cincinnati-based Farm Quarterly magazine. Though raised in Detroit, agriculture became an important subject of Joe's photographs. He moved to California in 1955 and free-lanced, taking magazine assignments and selling his own work

    View of Malabar Farm from nearby hill

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    In this 1948 photograph Joe Munroe captures Malabar Farm from a neighboring hill. The farm was owned and worked by famed author Louis Bromfield, who was an early advocate of conservation and environmentally-sound farming techniques. Joe Munroe's career began in 1939 at the Cranbrook Academy of Art. He served in the Air Force during World War II and then joined Cincinnati-based Farm Quarterly magazine. Though raised in Detroit, agriculture became an important subject of Joe's photographs. He moved to California in 1955 and free-lanced, taking magazine assignments and selling his own work
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