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Hawkins and dominated
Certain lexical fields are dominated by non-Indo-European words according to Hawkins.

Hawkins and White
Notable performers there included among others: Pearl Bailey, Count Basie, Nat King Cole, John Coltrane, Miles Davis, Ella Fitzgerald, Coleman Hawkins, Billie Holiday, Lena Horne, Burl Ives, Leadbelly, Anita O ' Day, Charlie Parker, Les Paul and Mary Ford, Paul Robeson, Kay Starr, Art Tatum, Sarah Vaughan, Dinah Washington, Josh White, Teddy Wilson, Lester Young, and The Weavers, who also in Christmas 1949, played at the Village Vanguard.
Musicians appear frequently in key roles – John Lurie, Tom Waits, Gary Farmer, Youki Kudoh, RZA and Iggy Pop have featured in multiple Jarmusch films, while Joe Strummer and Screamin ' Jay Hawkins appear in Mystery Train and GZA, Jack and Meg White feature in Coffee and Cigarettes.
In July 1991, Screamin ' Jay Hawkins released the album Black Music for White People, which features covers of two Waits compositions: " Heartattack & Vine " ( which later that year was used in a European Levi's advertisement without Waits ' permission, resulting in a lawsuit ) and " Ice Cream Man ".
The White Sticks, mostly from the Lower Towns, sided with the United States government, as they had a closer relationship with the US Indian Agent, Benjamin Hawkins, and were more affected by American settlement in their lands.
The staircases of the interior façade are decorated with cartouches similar to those found in First Quad, and likewise bear the arms of important figures in the College's history ; ( 13 ) Sir Walter Raleigh who was an undergraduate from 1572 to 1574, ( 14 ) John Keble who was a Fellow between 1811 and 1835 ), ( archway ) Edward Hawkins who was Provost from 1828 until 1882 and ( 15 ) Gilbert White who was an undergraduate from 1739 until 1743 and a Fellow from 1744 until 1793.
Since New York Yankee Andy Hawkins ( who never gave up a hit during a game against the Chicago White Sox on July 1, 1990, despite the White Sox winning the game 4-0 ) played for the visiting team, the White Sox never batted in the ninth inning and Hawkins lost the credit for a no-hitter.
The cast included Jodi Benson as Polly, Harry Groener as Bobby Child, Bruce Adler as Bela Zangler, John Hillner as Lank Hawkins, Michele Pawk as Irene Roth, Jane Connell as Mother, Beth Leavel as Tess ( Leavel also understudied Benson ), Ronn Carroll as Everett Baker, and Stephen Temperley and Amelia White as Eugene and Patricia Fodor.
According to both Frank and Brad Hawkins, Hawkins was to replace Frank originally as the White Ranger on Power Rangers.
Although Hawkins was not attacked, he was dismayed by the damage to the Creek people from their civil war, with the White Sticks and Red Sticks at odds.
On July 1, 1990, Scott was the home plate umpire as Andy Hawkins of the New York Yankees pitched eight hitless innings in a road game against the Chicago White Sox, yet lost ; it was only the second game in history in which a pitcher lost a complete game no-hitter.
On July 1, 1990, Hawkins pitched a no-hitter for the Yankees against the Chicago White Sox at Comiskey Park but lost the game.
Since Hawkins played for the visiting team, the White Sox never batted in the ninth inning and Hawkins lost the credit for a no-hitter.
# White Cadillac ( Ode To Ronnie Hawkins )
* Topeka Tornado-Billy Thomas, Lawrence Nelson, Wayne Turner, Derek Grimm, Lonnie Jones, Juaquin Hawkins, Louis White, Majestic Mapp, Marvin Johnson, Michael Dyson, Travis Canby, Adrick Hills
The committee included Dean Acheson, Ester C. Brunauer, Lauchlin Currie, Laurence Duggan, Herbert Feis, Alger Hiss, Harry Hawkins, Philip Jessup, Archibald MacLeish, George C. Marshall, Henry Wadleigh, Henry Agard Wallace, and Harry Dexter White.
William Blount, governor the Southwest Territory ( created in 1790 ), chose the fort as the Territory's capital, and appointed White justice of the peace and a major in the Hawkins County militia.
: The Ultimate Sequels Book, in a similar vein with the further adventures of Frankenstein's Monster, The Artful Dodger, Snow White, Romeo, Big Bad Wolf, Pinocchio, Man Friday, Jane Eyre, Dorothy Gale from The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, and Jim Hawkins.

Hawkins and into
Evidence for this etymology comes from the OED, which notes the name " shark " first came into use after Sir John Hawkins ' sailors exhibited one in London in 1569 and used the word " sharke " to refer to the large sharks of the Caribbean Sea.
Although well known in his own time, Kyd fell into obscurity until 1773 when Thomas Hawkins ( an early editor of The Spanish Tragedy ) discovered that Kyd was named as its author by Thomas Heywood in his Apologie for Actors ( 1612 ).
Although Hawkins personally was never attacked, he was forced to watch an internal civil war among the Muscogee develop into a war with the United States.
After crossing into Lavallette a mile later, the northbound direction of Route 35 becomes Grand Central Avenue and the southbound direction of Route 35 becomes Anna O. Hawkins Boulevard.
American soldiers crossed into an area which was being shelled with live ammunition by the British heavy cruiser HMS Hawkins.
The Creek Indians of Georgia and Alabama had become divided into two factions: the Upper Creeks ( or Red Sticks ), a majority who opposed the American expansion and sided with the British and Spanish during the War of 1812, and the Lower Creek, who were more assimilated, had a stronger relationship with the US Indian Agent Benjamin Hawkins, and sought to remain on good terms with the Americans.
* 1978-Humphrey Hawkins Full Employment Act signed into law, adjusting the government's economic goals to include full employment, growth in production, price stability, and balance of trade and budget
Another curiosity is that the only other driver to crash into the harbour at Monaco in the circuit's history, Paul Hawkins, also died on 26 May.
Hawkins crashed into the harbour 10 years after Ascari, before dying when his Lola crashed into a tree at a Tourist Trophy race at Oulton Park in 1969.
The 4th of October was declared " Ronnie Hawkins Day " by the city of Toronto when Hawkins was inducted into Canada's Walk of Fame.
This aspect of her work is perhaps best represented by her 1992 album, The Singer, on which she covered Willie Dixon, Roy Acuff, and Screamin ' Jay Hawkins, as well as Gloomy Sunday ", a song written by Hungarian pianist and composer Rezső Seress in 1933 and translated into English by Desmond Carter.
Speaking about the announcement, Justin Hawkins said that " the main thing for us is to make sure that musically we turn the experience into something positive again.
Some scholars suggest that it was John Hawkins who introduced tobacco into Britain.
While Connie Hawkins, " Jumping " Johnny Green, Elgin Baylor, and Gus Johnson performed spectacular dunks before Erving's time, " Dr. J " brought the practice into the mainstream.
After the success of his 1957 hit " I Put a Spell on You ", Hawkins began to perform a recurring stunt at many of his live shows ; he would emerge from a coffin, sing into a skull-shaped microphone and set off smoke bombs.
In 1761, he married Sarah Hawkins, and gradually settled into a life of farming.
In 2005, Hawkins became the eighth person to be inducted into the Academy of Interactive Arts and Sciences ' Hall of Fame.
More recent examination, notably by Richard Atkinson, has proved Hawkins largely wrong as it is now established that the different features at the monument that he tried to incorporate into many of his alignment theories were in use at different times and could not have worked alone.
In 1964 she published, with Robert Hawkins of The Hotchkiss School, Landowska on Music a collection of Landowska's writings on music, which included material from Musique ancienne which Restout translated into English from the original French, and many of the master-class notes that Restout had saved during their flight from France.
Byas was one of the first tenor saxophonists to assimilate bebop into his style, in contrast to Young, Hawkins, and Webster, who stayed close to their swing roots through the development of bebop.
Born into a poor family in Mississippi, Hawkins lived a difficult early life, ending up at a reform school by age 12, and drifting, hitching, and stealing his way across the country for the next dozen years, earning several stays in prison including a three-year stint for stealing a leather jacket as a teenager.
Hawkins tentatively agreed and recorded some dozen songs for Bromberg but again got into trouble and spent much of the next decade in jail and addicted to heroin.
In 1978, Erskine Hawkins became one of the first five artists inducted into the Alabama Jazz Hall of Fame.

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