Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Frogger" ¶ 20
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Parker and Bros
171 and 3015 ), a vigorous business community developed which included seven stores ( Tidwell, Ricks Bros., Hicks & Richardson, Peyton, Hoell, Cook & Douglas, and George Parker ), a dentist ( Dr. Platt ), bank, post office, blacksmith shop, livery stable, two hotels ( Allen & Jackson ), four doctors ( Drs.
Caged is a 1950 film released by Warner Bros. and starring Eleanor Parker.
According to Jigsaw Puzzles: An Illustrated History and Price Guide, by Anne D. Williams, Parker Bros. closed the Pastime line in the 1950's and their die-cut puzzles were phased out in the late 1970's.
In the UK during the 1970s, Parker Bros. was the games division of Palitoy ( also a General Mills company ), and produced a variety of releases such as Escape From Colditz.
* New York Historical Society owns many examples of Parker Bros. games, such as:
Salem, MA: Parker Bros., ca. 1890
Sierra also sublicensed their magnetic-media rights to developers who published for systems not normally supported by Sierra ( e. g. Cornsoft published the official TRS-80, Timex Sinclair 1000 and Timex Sinclair 2068 ports ); because of this, even the Atari 2600 received multiple releases: a cartridge from Parker Bros. and a cassette for the Supercharger from Starpath.
Parker Bros. spent $ 10 million on advertising Frogger, along with The Empire Strikes Back, larger than the $ 6 million marketing budget for a movie at the time.
Parker returned to television in 1995 in the WB television series The Wayans Bros. opposite Shawn and Marlon Wayans.
Most of these variants are described in a book titled Rook in a Book published by Winning Moves, and in the official rules that come with Parker Bros editions of Rook.
# River Crossing-Frogger ( Parker Bros .)-1983 ( 016 )
His publishing and advertising client list includes America Online, Arista Records, AT & T, BellSouth, Capital Cities / ABC, Ciba-Geigy, Columbia Records, DreamWorks, Entertainment Weekly, ESPN, Ford, Golf Digest, Indianapolis Speedway, Kraft, MCI, Mennen, Michelob, NBC, NERF, Nestlé, Newsweek, Paramount Pictures, Parker Brothers, Pepsi, Procter & Gamble, Purina, Reader's Digest, Spalding, Sports Illustrated, Topps, Toyota, U. S. Postal Service, USA Networks, The Varsity drive-in in Atlanta, Georgia, Warner Books and Warner Bros.
Four boot knives, including a SOG Pentagon, custom stag handled boot knife, Ek knife and Parker Bros knife
He also appeared as himself in Bewitched, Laverne & Shirley, The Super Mario Bros. Super Show !, Parker Lewis Can't Lose and Moesha.
Warner Bros., which released the DVD set, refused to include the commentaries due to " standards " issues with some of the statements unless Parker and Stone allowed the tracks to be edited, which they refused.
Media outlets said the commentary that most bothered Warner Bros. executives was the one for " Tom's Rhinoplasty ", in which Parker and Stone say they agree with Mr. Garrison's character that the 1997 film Contact ( also released by Warner Bros .) was " terrible ".
The Top It is a kendama-style audio game developed by Parker Bros. ( under Hasbro ) that also issues commands which a player must respond to with the appropriate action.

Parker and .
Some preferred Judge Alton B. Parker of New York.
In his own state of New York, the two Democratic bellwethers, State Leader Hill and Tammany Boss Murphy, were saying nothing openly against Hearst but industriously boosting their own favorites, Murphy being for Cleveland and Hill for Parker.
More splenetic was Senator Edward Carmack of Tennessee, a Parker man.
The revolution in jazz that took place around 1949, the evolution from the `` bebop '' school of Dizzy Gillespie to the `` cool '' sound of Miles Davis and Lennie Tristano, Lee Konitz, and the whole legend of Charlie Parker, had made an impression on many academic and literary men.
Like the pillars of Hercules, like two ruined Titans guarding the entrance to one of Dante's circles, stand two great dead juvenile delinquents -- the heroes of the post-war generation: the great saxophonist, Charlie Parker, and Dylan Thomas.
Now Dylan Thomas and Charlie Parker have a great deal more in common than the same disastrous end.
Music, of course, is not so explicit an art, but anybody who knew Charlie Parker knows that he felt much the same way about his own gift.
It is the theme of Horace, who certainly otherwise bears little resemblance to Parker or Thomas.
I think all this could apply to Parker just as well, although, because of the nature of music, it is not demonstrable -- at least not conclusively.
Thomas and Parker have more in common than theme, attitude, life pattern.
Similarly, the innovations of bop, and of Parker particularly, have been vastly overrated by people unfamiliar with music, especially by that ignoramus, the intellectual jitterbug, the jazz aficionado.
What Parker and his contemporaries -- Gillespie, Davis, Monk, Roach ( Tristano is an anomaly ), etc. -- did was to absorb the musical ornamentation of the older jazz into the basic structure, of which it then became an integral part, and with which it then developed.
Again, contrary to popular belief, there is nothing crazy or frantic about Parker either musically or emotionally.
Parker and Pollock wanted to substitute a work of art for the world.
Technique pure and simple, rendition, is not of major importance, but it is interesting that Parker, following Lester Young, was one of the leaders of the so-called saxophone revolution.
A poem by Dylan Thomas, a saxophone solo by Charles Parker, a painting by Jackson Pollock -- these are pure confabulations as ends in themselves.
Parker certainly had much more of an influence.
Parker, who agreed with much of this criticism, did not conceal his dissatisfaction with procedural defects.
Parker insisted that the size of the record would have been drastically reduced but for an unavoidable duplication of testimony.
In a private communication written in 1911, Parker had been more to the point.
The vast industrial interests caught up in the Selden suit, as well as the complex character of the automotive art, encouraged both sides to exploit `` every possible chance '' for or against the patent, said Parker.
Parker listed the remedies he deemed essential for reducing the cost and mass of testimony.
Parker called for abolition of the indiscriminate or uncontrolled right of taking depositions before officers of the court who had no authority to limit testimony.
In the end Hough's acidulous protest, which Parker called the `` now somewhat famous note on this ' Selden ' case '', did not go unheeded.
Miss Betsy Parker was one of the speakers on the panel of the Eastern Women's Liberal Arts College panel on Wednesday evening in the Security Life Bldg..

0.404 seconds.