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Judith and Durham
* 1943 – Judith Durham, Australian singer-songwriter and musician ( The Seekers )
They were popular during the 1960s with their best-known configuration as: Judith Durham on vocals, piano and tambourine ; Athol Guy on double bass and vocals ; Keith Potger on twelve-string guitar, banjo and vocals ; and Bruce Woodley on guitar, mandolin, banjo and vocals.
His place was taken by Judith Durham, who was an established traditional jazz singer, having recorded an extended play disc on W & G Records with the Melbourne group Frank Traynor's Jazz Preachers.
* ' The Judith Durham Story – Colours Of My Life ' by Graham Simpson ( Random House, 1994, 1998, 2000 ), ( Virgin Books, 2004 ).
* Judith Durham
** Judith Durham, Australian singer
* Judith Durham ( born 1943 ), Australian singer, member of The Seekers
da: Judith Durham
* Judith Bookbinder, Boston modern: figurative expressionism as alternative modernism, ( Durham, N. H.: University of New Hampshire Press ; Hanover: University Press of New England, © 2005.
Some of the famous residents ( permanent and holiday ) of Rosebud were Judith Mavis Cock ( Judith Durham ), Arthur Boyd and William John Ferrier.
Judith spent her first six summers in the weatherboard house that stood on the west side of Durham Place.
Essendon is the birthplace of conservationist and television personality Steve Irwin, best known as " The Crocodile Hunter ,", singer Judith Durham and many famous business men.
Bryan Ferry, Colin Blunstone, Donavon Frankenreiter, Elkie Brooks, Bucks Fizz, Fairport Convention, Fury in the Slaughterhouse, Joe Brown, Judith Durham, Little Anthony & The Imperials, Phil Everly, Ricky Nelson, Ringo Starr, Rita Coolidge, Status Quo, The Fureys, Lemon Jelly, and Jim Capaldi.
release from 2002, " This Is My Song " follows " Ten Thousand Years Ago "-which only features the group's male members-to showcase Judith Durham as a solo vocalist.
The song also was released in 1997 by trio Judith Durham ( of The Seekers ), Russell Hitchcock ( from Air Supply ) and Yothu Yindi's Mandawuy Yunupingu.
), a song recorded by Judith Durham and the Preachers from their album Jazz From the Pulpit
* Written by Diane Lampert and Tom Springfield and performed by Judith Durham in 1967.

Judith and who
Oxnard, Calif., will be the home of the Rev. Robert D. Howard and his bride, the former Miss Judith Ellen Gay, who were married Saturday at the Munger Place Methodist Church.
The Book of Judith is not a part of the Jewish or most Protestant Bibles, who exclude the Book of Judith as apocryphal ), though it is a part of the Catholic Bible.
Judith Maltby cites a story of parishioners at Flixton in Suffolk who brought their own prayer books to church in order to shame their Vicar into conforming with it: they eventually ousted him.
In late 1992, friends introduced him to the artist Judith Kliban, widow of B. Kliban, a cartoonist who had died of a pulmonary embolism.
Hence the group included supporters of Trotskyism, like Judith Merril and others who would have been deemed far left for the era ( Frederik Pohl became a member of the Communist Party in 1936, but later quit in 1939 ).
His first wife died in 1845, and on 16 August 1846, he married Olympe Pélissier, who had sat for Vernet for his picture of Judith and Holofernes.
In 2009, it was announced that a thirty-year old ban of the film in the Welsh town of Aberystwyth was finally lifted, and the subsequent showing was attended by Terry Jones and Michael Palin alongside mayor Sue Jones-Davies ( who portrayed Judith Iscariot in the film ).
In 823 Judith gave birth to a son, who was named Charles.
Judith Oliver noted five Merovingian female saints in the diocese of Liège who appeared in a long list of saints in a late 13th-century psalter-hours.
His second wife is Judith Anne Shulevitz, who was a columnist for Slate and The New York Times Book Review ; married on November 7, 1999, they have a son and a daughter.
Petrus and Judith had a son, Nicolaes Willem Stuyvesant ( 1648 – 1698 ), who married Maria Beeckman, the daughter of Willem Beeckman.
Theorists who both complement and contrast Hassan include Michel Foucault, Judith Butler, Bruno Latour, N. Katherine Hayles, Peter Sloterdijk, Stefan Lorenz Sorgner, Evan Thompson, Francisco Varela and Douglas Kellner.
* Rhea Gallageher, American writer who co-writes books under the name Judith Gould
Gary K. Wolfe, professor of humanities and English at Roosevelt University, identifies the introduction of the term New Wave to SF as occurring in 1966 in an essay for the Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction written by Judith Merril, who was indirectly yet it seems unambiguously referring to that term in order to comment on the experimental fiction that had begun to appear in the English magazine New Worlds, after Michael Moorcock assumed editorship in 1964.
Hiding in the cellar of the farmhouse are white married couple Harry ( Karl Hardman ) and Helen Cooper ( Marilyn Eastman ) and their daughter Karen ( Kyra Schon ), who sought refuge after a group of zombies turned over their car ; and white teenage couple Tom ( Keith Wayne ) and Judy ( Judith Ridley ) who arrived after hearing an emergency broadcast about a series of brutal murders.
Tostig went into exile in Flanders, along with his wife Judith, who was the daughter of Count Baldwin IV of Flanders.
Though he loves his father, he and Fitz share a love-hate relationship whenever Fitz drives Judith away, and he takes a particular disliking to Penhaligon, who is nearer to his age than Fitz's, when Fitz begins an affair with her.
The story involved Fitz returning to Manchester after several years of living in Australia with Judith and his son James ( who had been born during the final series of the original programme ) to attend his daughter Katy's wedding.
" Goodall has a sister, Judith, who shares the same birthday, though the two were born four years apart.
He was saved only by the support of the bishops, who refused to crown Louis the German king, and by the fidelity of the Welfs, who were related to his mother, Judith.
Foucault appointed mostly young leftist academics ( such as Judith Miller ) whose radicalism provoked the Ministry of Education, who objected to the fact that many of the course titles contained the phrase " Marxist-Leninist ," and who decreed that students from Vincennes would not be eligible to become secondary school teachers.

Judith and had
He had spent two hours riding around the ranch that morning, and in broad daylight it was even less inviting than Judith Pierce had made it seem.
( A story was later circulated that, to prevent further escapes, Henry had Robert's eyes burnt out: this is not accepted by Henry's recent biographer, Judith Green.
Nothing is known about the political role that Judith had to play in Germany.
By his second wife, Judith of Bavaria, he had a daughter and a son:
Olivier's co-star in his 1937 Old Vic Theatre production, Judith Anderson, had an equally triumphant association with the play.
The following year ( October 830 ), after a brief rebellion and reconciliation between Louis and his sons, Gregory declared that Louis ’ second wife Judith was to be released from the convent where she had been forced to take the veil, and to be returned to Louis.
In 1993, Professor Judith Hauptman of JTS issued an influential paper arguing that women had historically always been obligated in prayer, using more detailed arguments than the Blumenthal and first Sigal responsa.
* Judith O ' Dea as Barbra: Judith O ' Dea, a 23-year-old commercial and stage actress, had once worked for Hardman and Eastman in Pittsburgh.
Author Judith Levine has argued that there might be a natural tendency of abstinence educators to escalate their messages: " Like advertising, which must continually jack up its seduction just to stay visible as other advertising proliferates, abstinence education had to make sex scarier and scarier and, at the same time, chastity sweeter.
By the close of 1868, Mussorgsky had already started and abandoned two important opera projects — the antique, exotic, romantic tragedy Salammbô, written under the influence of Alexander Serov's Judith, and the contemporary, Russian, anti-romantic farce Marriage, influenced by Alexander Dargomyzhsky's The Stone Guest.
She had a younger sister, Judith A. Solanas Martinez.
On 6 October 1942, a writer named Judith Cass had used the term " supermodel " for her article in the Chicago Tribune, which headlined " Super Models are Signed for Fashion Show ".
In addition, Judith had an older half-sister, Beatrix I, Abbess of Quedlinburg and Gandersheim, born from her father's first marriage with Gunhilda of Denmark.
Although it is generally believed that the union was childless, some sources state that Solomon and Judith had a daughter, Sophia, who later married Poppo, Count of Berg-Schelklingen.
The couple remained together until his death ; they had five children: Catherine, Judith, William Jr., Melanie and David.
He offered relative newcomers Gene Tierney and Dana Andrews little support, allowed theatrically trained Judith Anderson to play to the balcony instead of reining in her performance, and virtually ignored Webb, who had learned the director was unhappy with his casting.
Another matrimonial case in which Nicholas interposed was that of Judith of Flanders, daughter of Charles the Bald, who had married Baldwin I, Count of Flanders, without her father's consent.
Frankish bishops had excommunicated Judith, and Hincmar of Reims had taken sides against her, but Nicholas urged leniency in order to protect freedom of marriage.

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