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Page "The Cure" ¶ 15
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Cure and then
The Cure then embarked as the support band for Siouxsie and the Banshees ' Join Hands promotional tour of England, Northern Ireland, and Wales between August and October.
" The Cure then embarked on their worldwide " Top Tour " with Thompson, Anderson, and producer-turned-bassist Phil Thornalley on board.
Since then he has written and recorded with a wide range of artists, from Andreas Scholl in the classical world, to Beck, Pink, The Cure, Kraftwerk ( a project with Ralf Hütter ),
Matmos gained notoriety for their use of samples including " freshly cut hair " and " the amplified neural activity of crayfish " on their first album and " recorded the snips, clicks, snaps, and squelches of various surgical procedures, then nipped and tucked them into seven remarkably accessible, melodic pieces of experimental techno " for their album A Chance to Cut Is a Chance to Cure.
Arudou and two co-plaintiffs, Kenneth Lee Sutherland and Olaf Karthaus, in February 2001 then sued Earth Cure in district court pleading racial discrimination, and the City of Otaru for violation of the United Nations Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, a treaty which Japan ratified in 1996.
They are the setting for the opening scenes of the second Cornelius novel, A Cure for Cancer ( 1971 ), where Jerry encounters a helicopter firing on a party of tea-drinking old ladies in a satire on the ( then contemporary ) Vietnam war.
Palumbo then recruited the other current members as a touring group, and toured the United States, playing with bands such as Interpol, The Rapture, The Used and The Cure.
The station's programming was initially heavily weighted to what was then considered " alternative " popular music, with a strong emphasis on such artists as Bauhaus, Ministry, Kate Bush and the Cure.
Her performance caught the eye of many viewers, although she had previously performed it on French television only some weeks before, upstaging more established acts such as The Cure, Embrace, and The Futureheads ; she then went on to top the post-show poll on the website for that episode.
Scarling was then invited to join the lineup of the Robert Smith-organized Curiosa Festival, performing on select West Coast dates alongside Interpol, The Rapture, Mogwai, Cursive, The Cooper Temple Clause, and longtime inspirations The Cure.
Regarding the experience of shooting the film, Cure said " It was a once-in-a-lifetime experience, and then they yell, ' Cut!
Neil's sneezing fit then prompts Vyvyan to send Mike out to get a cure ( prompting a joke about the Cure ).

Cure and embarked
The Cure also embarked on the " Wish Tour " with Cranes, and released the live albums Show ( September 1993 ) and Paris ( October 1993 ).
On 26 May, The Cure embarked on a 19-date summer festival tour of Europe, commencing at the Pinkpop Festival, joined by former Cure / COGASM collaborator Reeves Gabrels on guitar.

Cure and on
In July 2010, Cronenberg completed production on A Dangerous Method, an adaptation of Christopher Hampton's play The Talking Cure, starring Keira Knightley, Michael Fassbender, and frequent collaborator Viggo Mortensen.
By chance he encountered a copy of " Captain Claridge's work on the ' Water Cure ,' as practised by Priessnitz, at Graefenberg ", and " making allowances for certain exaggerations therein ", pondered the option of travelling to Graefenberg, but preferred to find something closer to home, with access to his own doctors in case of failure: " I who scarcely lived through a day without leech or potion!
In Search of a Cure: A History of Pharmaceutical Discovery ( 1990 ), emphasis on antibiotics.
Laura Bush has become a breast cancer activist on her mother's behalf through her involvement in the Susan G. Komen for the Cure.
The song " The Drowning Man ", by British band The Cure, is inspired by events in Gormenghast, and the song " Lady Fuchsia " by another British band, Strawbs, is also based on events in the novels.
" Ellis published his main work on homosexuality, Homosexuality: Its Causes and Cure, in 1965.
* Robert Smith ( lead singer of The Cure )-backing vocals on " The Affectionate Punch ".
The most frequently used of these was Denis Leary, who he directed as a lead or star in No Cure for Cancer, The Ref, Denis Leary: Lock ' n Load, and Monument Ave .. Leary also worked as a producer on the 2001 crime drama film Blow which starred Johnny Depp as George Jung.
The 1979 first single " Killing an Arab " by The Cure was recorded at the same time as their first LP in the UK, Three Imaginary Boys ( 1979 ) but not included on the album.
The Cure released their debut single " Killing an Arab " in December 1978 on the Small Wonder label as a stopgap until Fiction finalised distribution arrangements with Polydor.
An early NME article on the band wrote that The Cure " are like a breath of fresh suburban air on the capital's smog-ridden pub-and-club circuit " and noted " With a John Peel session and more extensive London gigging on their immediate agenda, it remains to be seen whether or not The Cure can retain their refreshing joie de vivre.
The Associates toured as support band for The Cure and The Passions on the Future Pastimes Tour of England between November and December — all three bands were on the Fiction Records roster — with the new Cure line-up already performing a number of new songs for the projected second album.
The Cure set out on their first world tour to promote both releases.
Smith in 1985In 1984, The Cure released The Top, a generally psychedelic album on which Smith played all the instruments except the drums — played by Andy Anderson — and the saxophone — played by returnee Porl Thompson.
The first single stateside, " Fascination Street ", reached number one on the American Modern Rock chart, but was quickly overshadowed when its third US single, " Lovesong ", reached number two on the American pop charts ( the only Cure single to reach the US Top 10 ).

Cure and Prayer
Artists and songs covered included " Into The Groove " by Madonna, " Message in a Bottle " by The Police, " Gloria " by Laura Branigan, " Hip Hop Hooray " by Naughty by Nature, " Friday I'm in Love " by The Cure, " Livin ' on a Prayer " by Bon Jovi, " Physical " by Olivia Newton-John, " Heaven Is A Place On Earth " by Belinda Carlisle, " Everybody Have Fun Tonight " by Wang Chung, " All Fired Up " by Pat Benatar, " Workin ' Overtime " by Diana Ross, " The Promise of a New Day " by Paula Abdul, " Pump up the Jam " by Technotronic, " Motownphilly " by Boyz II Men, " I Have Nothing " by Whitney Houston and " Breakaway " by Tracey Ullman in addition to hundreds of other songs over the entire run.

Cure and Tour
A concert at The Palace by British Rock Band The Cure in 1992, during the band's Wish Tour, was recorded on both CD and Video, and released as Show.
In 2004, Gold's Gym became a national fitness sponsor of the American Diabetes Association's Tour de Cure.
The Roman ruins of Aventicum, Avenches Castle, the Cure at Rue du Jura 2, the Swiss Reformed Church, the Temple à Donatyre and the Tour de l ’ évêque ( Bishops tower ) with amphitheater and Roman Museum are listed as Swiss heritage site of national significance.
Tour de Cure is a series of fund-raising cycling events held in 40 states nationwide to benefit the ADA.
In 2009, Tour de Cure events across the nation began to recognize participants who have diabetes by awarding them with red shirts or cycling jerseys to signify that they are Red Riders.

Cure and which
A partnership was formed with Isaac Mizrahi in which Mizrahi designed Teletubbies-inspired bags to be auctioned off to benefit the Cure Autism Now and Autism Speaks charities.
In 1676 Sydenham published a seminal work, Medical Observations Concerning the History and Cure of Acute Diseases, in which he promoted his brand of opium tincture, and advocated its use for a range of medical conditions.
But in 1993 Hicks was angered by Leary's album No Cure for Cancer, which featured lines and subject matter similar to Hicks's routine .< ref name =" Outhwaite ">
In 1987, The Cure released the double LP Kiss Me, Kiss Me, Kiss Me, which reached number six in the UK, the Top 10 in several countries and was the band's first entry into the U. S. Top 40 at number 35 ( where it was certified platinum ), due to the combination of the band's rising popularity and the success of lead single, " Why Can't I Be You ?".
In 1989, The Cure released the album Disintegration, which saw a return to the gothic atmospheres of earlier releases like Faith and Pornography.
In 2001, The Cure left Fiction and released their Greatest Hits album and DVD, which featured the music videos for a number of classic Cure songs.
The band released their twelfth album The Cure on Geffen in 2004, which was produced by Ross Robinson.
Another ballad opera version followed with James Worsdale's A Cure for a Scold which was performed at Drury Lane in 1735 and subsequently in Dublin, and was itself an adaptation of Lacy's Sauny the Scot.
Volla is attested in the " Horse Cure " Merseburg Incantation, recorded anonymously in the 10th century in Old High German, in which she assists in healing the wounded foal of Phol and is referred to as Frigg's sister.
There's a historical marker, located near the point where Fourth Street meets Route 18, which reads: " Water Cure Sanatorium founded 1848 by Dr. Edward Acker.
Jackson noted his enthusiasm for real ale in his autobiography, A Cure For Gravity, published in 1999, which Jackson has described as a " book about music, thinly disguised as a memoir ".
In grief over his losses, which included his library and manuscripts ( his " upper and nether millstone "), and over the calamities of the country, he wrote his work on the Cause and Cure of a Wounded Conscience ( 1647 ).
Some of his lyric output is inserted in his narrative poems or " dits ", such as Le remède de fortune (" The Cure of Ill Fortune ") which includes one of each genre of lyric poetry, and Le voir dit (" A True Story "), but most are included in a separate, unordered section entitled Les loanges des dames.
Nocturne is a live double-album by Siouxsie and the Banshees, released in 1983 and remastered in 2009, which features performances recorded at two shows at the Royal Albert Hall on September 30 and October 1, 1983, featuring Robert Smith ( of The Cure ) on guitar.
In 1743 he published the paper On the structure and diseases of articulating cartilages – which is often cited – especially the following sentence: “ If we consult the standard Chirurgical Writers from Hippocrates down to the present Age, we shall find, that an ulcerated Cartilage is universally allowed to be a very troublesome Disease ; that it admits of a Cure with more Difficulty than carious Bone ; and that, when destroyed, it is not recovered ”.
That same year, they played a one-night-only gig at Wembley Arena in which Robert Smith of The Cure made a guest appearance on two tracks, " Without You I'm Nothing " and a cover of The Cure's " Boys Don't Cry ".
In 1965 Ellis published a book entitled Homosexuality: Its Causes and Cure, which partly saw homosexuality as a pathology and therefore a condition to be cured.
In the 1930s, the hotel's resident physician, Dr. William E. Fitch, established the " Bedford Cure ," a health regimen that required a three-week stay at the resort, which still operated successfully throughout the 1930s and 1940s.
* Moira appears in these episodes of X-Men voiced by Lally Cadeau First she appeared in the episode " The Cure " who supposedly knew a doctor with a cure for mutants, the next episode was " The Phoenix Saga " Part 2 who was worried about Professor Xavier, in the " Dark Phoenix Saga " was working to help Jean Grey freed from the Phoenix, the next appearance was in " Proteus " which she reveled to Xavier Proteus was her son.
One series of Latin manuscripts includes as an appendix or continuation, the episode Cura Sanitatis Tiberii (" The Cure of Tiberius "), the oldest form of the Veronica legend, according to the Catholic Encyclopedia, in which Emperor Tiberius is cured of his malady.
Stanley Lief ( 1890 — 1962 ) converted the stately home Champneys into a Nature Cure sanatorium which he ran in the 1930s for about 20 years.

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