Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "ShopRite (United States)" ¶ 44
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Brown's and Super
Both musicians also sampled Brown's work, with Hammer having sampled the rhythms from " Super Bad " for his song, " Here Comes the Hammer ", from his best-selling work, Please Hammer, Don't Hurt ' Em.
* Schulz, Charles M. ( 1984 ) Charlie Brown's Super Book of Things to Do and Collect: based on the Charles M. Schulz characters.
The Highlanders travelled back to Dunedin for the 1999 Super 12 Final, which was against South Island rivals the Canterbury Crusaders, and was billed as " the party at Tony Brown's house " after Highlanders first five-eighth Tony Brown.
This version of the J. B .' s played on some of Brown's most intense funk recordings, including " Get Up ( I Feel Like Being a ) Sex Machine ", " Super Bad ", " Soul Power ", and " Talkin ' Loud and Sayin ' Nothing ".
After his death, Eagles players and fans started the unofficial motto, " Bring it home for Jerome ," an indirect reference among Eagles fans to bringing a Super Bowl title to the city in Brown's honor.

Brown's and Inc
However much like the situation with 2Pac, Murder Inc. began dissolving, leading to Brown's tenure with them brief.
* In the 2009 case of James " Jim " Brown v. Electronic Arts, Inc., the District Court of the Central District of California dismissed athlete Jim Brown's theory of false endorsement under the Lanham Act and determined that the First Amendment protects the unauthorized use of a trademark in an artistic work when the mark has artistic relevance to the work and does not explicitly mislead as to the source or content of the work.
* Sept. 1986-Outfit juice loan collector and one-time, no-show union official John Fecarotta was gunned down while being chased on foot in front of Brown's Banquet's, Inc., 6050 W. Belmont Avenue, after he realized the " hit " he was on was for him.

Brown's and .
On New Year's Eve, Alfred Harcourt drove him up the Hudson to Bill Brown's Training Camp, a well-known establishment for the speedy if temporary rehabilitation of drunkards who could no longer help themselves.
Carvey considers that former Vice President Nixon would be Brown's most formidable foe, with ex-Gov. Knight a close second.
That's Brown's trouble.
The turret screw machine, now known as the Brown & Sharpe hand screw machine, takes its ancestry directly from Mr. Brown's efforts to introduce equipment to simplify the manufacture of the sewing machine.
In 1861, Mr. Brown's attention was called to yet another basic production problem -- the manufacture of twist drills.
This process neither satisfied the urgent production schedules nor Mr. Brown's imagination of the possibilities in the situation.
The child of this problem was Mr. Brown's famous Serial No. 1 Universal Milling Machine, the archtype from which is descended today's universal knee-type milling machine used throughout the world.
Mr. Brown's invention achieved this and, as a byproduct, formed the cornerstone of Brown & Sharpe's position of leadership in the gear making equipment field which lasted until the 1920's when superceded by other methods.
The final achievement of Mr. Brown's long and interesting mechanical career runs a close second in importance to his development of the universal milling machine.
Along with J. R. Brown's other major developments, the universal grinding machine was profoundly influential in setting the course of Brown & Sharpe for many years to come.
Following Mr. Brown's death, there came forward in the Brown & Sharpe organization many other men who contributed greatly to the development of the company.
Perhaps the outstanding standard bearer of Mr. Brown's tradition for accuracy was Mr. Oscar J. Beale, whose mechanical genius closely paralleled that of Mr. Brown, and whose particular forte was the development of the exceedingly accurate measuring machinery that enabled Brown & Sharpe to manufacture gages, and therefore its products, with an accuracy exceeding anything then available elsewhere in the world.
Although Rhode Islanders were preparing for the state elections, they watched John Brown's trial with extreme interest.
In the eastern section of the state the newspapers' reaction to Brown's trial and sentence were basically identical.
Concerning the sentence, Foss wrote, `` If it be possible that mercy shall override vengeance and that John Brown's sentence shall be commuted to imprisonment, it would be well -- well for the country and for Virginia ''.
In reference to Brown's raid she wrote, `` though we are non-resistants and religiously believe it better to reform by moral and not by carnal weapons, we know thee was anemated by the most generous and philanthropic motives ''.
During the latter days of November to the day of Brown's execution, it seems that most Rhode Islanders did not concur in `` E. B.'s '' suggestion.
On November 22, 1859, the Providence Daily Journal stated that although Brown's `` pluck '' and honest fanaticism must be admired, any honor paid to Brown would only induce other fanatics to imitate his actions.
Following Day was Woodbury who spoke of his disapproval of Brown's attempt at servile insurrection, his admiration of Brown's character, and his opposition to slavery.
Stephen Vincent Benet's John Brown's Body comes immediately to mind in this connection, as does John Steinbeck's The Grapes Of Wrath and Carl Sandburg's The People, Yes.
But political debate was cut short throughout the South with Northern abolitionist John Brown's 1859 raid at Harpers Ferry Armory in an attempt to incite slave insurrections.
* http :// www. gps. caltech. edu /~ mbrown Mike Brown's Caltech Home Page

Brown's and Westville
This area was called Brown's Settlement and was part of the Town of Berkshire until it was organized as the " Town of Westville " in 1823.

Brown's and New
The main guitar ostinatos for " Ain't it Funky " ( c. late 1960s ), and " Give it Up or Turn it Lose " ( 1969 ), are examples of Brown's refinement of New Orleans funk ; irresistibly danceable riffs, stripped down to their rhythmic essence.
Alexander Stewart states that this popular feel was passed along from " New Orleans — through James Brown's music, to the popular music of the 1970s.
Alexander Stewart states that the popular feel was passed along from " New Orleans — through James Brown's music, to the popular music of the 1970s ," adding: " The singular style of rhythm & blues that emerged from New Orleans in the years after World War II played an important role in the development of funk.
O ' Donnell's tenure in New York, like Brown's in Oakland, was plagued by injuries and ineffective play and he was released from his contract following the 1997 season.
In early 1916 a promoter from Chicago approached clarinetist Alcide Nunez and drummer Johnny Stein about bringing a New Orleans-style band to Chicago, where the similar Brown's Band From Dixieland led by trombonist Tom Brown already was enjoying success.
John Brown's Farm, North Elba, New York
Brown's first full lead vocal performance was on the New Edition ballad, " Jealous Girl ", which was a minor hit when it charted in 1983.
The tour became a success with Brown's former group New Edition sometimes opening for him.
This film re-interpreted Ford Madox Brown's famous painting of emigrants leaving the English shores for a life in the New World, and has been compared to Humphrey Jennings's documentary Listen to Britain ( 1942 ) which constitutes its very antithesis.
Brown's first novel was a satire of New Deal bureaucracy, but it was not published due to the bombing of Pearl Harbor.
* Tom Brown's band from New Orleans goes to Chicago, Illinois and start advertising themselves as a " Jass Band "
Alexander Stewart states that the popular feel was passed along from " New Orleans — through James Brown's music, to the popular music of the 1970s ," adding: " The singular style of rhythm & blues that emerged from New Orleans in the years after World War II played an important role in the development of funk.
He was one of the early New Orleans musicians to go to Chicago, first heading north in the summer of 1915 to join Bert Kelly's band, then with Tom Brown's band, before joining the Original Dixieland Jass Band in November 1916.
After some time playing with Tom Brown's band in Chicago, he went to New York City with Bert Kelly's band. Pee Wee Russell announced in Chicago and New York that Nunez was the greatest jazz clarinetist of the world.
One picketer's placards intended to link Brown's band with the Storyville prostitution district of New Orleans and the implied disreputable low life status ; the signs read " Don't Patronize This Jass Music ".
Tom Brown's Band enjoyed over four months of success in Chicago before moving to New York City, where it played for four months more before returning to New Orleans in February 1916.
The New York group included a number of young male professionals who called themselves the Friendly Club ( including Dr. Elihu Hubbard Smith, Brown's closest friend during this period, and William Dunlap ), along with female friends and relatives who were interested in companionship and cultural-political conversation.
" New editions of his works were published and reviewed widely in North America and England during the 1820s, for example, when Brown's novels were also published in combined editions with those of Schiller and Mary Shelley.
A few years prior to Brown's article, New York State in 1886 established a committee to determine a new, more humane system of execution to replace hanging.
The name jazz ( and its early variations jass or jas ) may have first been applied to the music in Chicago in the 1910s, as such hot New Orleans bands as Tom Brown's made a hit up north.

2.275 seconds.