Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Stars and Stripes Forever (disambiguation)" ¶ 0
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Stars and Stripes
Henry Hall Wilson, a student at the music camp 25 years ago and now on the President's staff as liaison representative with the House of Representatives, turned guest conductor for a Sousa march, the `` Stars and Stripes Forever ''.
Wills favored jazz-like arrangements and the band found national popularity into the 1940s with such hits as " Steel Guitar Rag ", " New San Antonio Rose ", " Smoke on the Water ", " Stars and Stripes on Iwo Jima ", and " New Spanish Two Step ".
McCarry served in the United States Army, where he was a correspondent for Stars and Stripes, has been a small-town newspaperman, and was a speechwriter in the Eisenhower administration.
The navy ( PMS 289 C ) road jerseys ( nicknamed the " Stars and Stripes " jersey ) have white lettering and numbers with navy pinstripes.
* 1775 – The becomes the first vessel to fly the Grand Union Flag ( the precursor to the Stars and Stripes ); the flag is hoisted by John Paul Jones.
The design of the first Stars and Stripes by Hopkinson had the thirteen stars arranged in a " staggered " pattern technically known as quincuncial because it is based on the repetition of a motif of five units.
* The flag of the United States, also nicknamed The Stars and Stripes or Old Glory.
Nicknames for the flag include the " Stars and Stripes ", " Old Glory ", and " The Star-Spangled Banner " ( also the name of the national anthem ).
Suddenly the Stars and Stripes flew — as it does today, and especially as it did after the September 11 attacks in 2001 — from houses, from storefronts, from churches ; above the village greens and college quads.
* 1777 – The Stars and Stripes is adopted by Congress as the Flag of the United States.
In 1890, the Third Imperial Guard of the Imperial Japanese Army was moved to a site near Roppongi ( now home to the Pacific bureau of Stars and Stripes ).
US Army heliport and Stars and Stripes ( newspaper ) | Stars and Stripes office in Roppongi-Nanachōme
Several large US military installations were located in the nearby area, with Hardy Barracks probably the most significant ( the US Embassy Housing Compound, Hardy Barracks Recreational Lodging, Stars and Stripes office and heliport are still there ).
** Team New Zealand wins the America's Cup in San Diego, beating Stars and Stripes 5 – 0.
* December 25 – John Philip Sousa composes his magnum opus, the Stars and Stripes Forever, on Christmas Day.
* March 6 – John Philip Sousa, American band leader, conductor, and composer ( The Stars and Stripes Forever ) ( b. 1854 )
* November 6 – John Philip Sousa, American composer and conductor ( Stars and Stripes Forever ) ( d. 1932 )
* June 14 – The Stars and Stripes is adopted by the Continental Congress as the Flag of the United States.
* Booknotes interview with Jack Germond and Jules Whitcover on Whose Broad Stripes and Bright Stars?
Among his best known marches are " The Washington Post ", " Semper Fidelis " ( Official March of the United States Marine Corps ), and " The Stars and Stripes Forever " ( National March of the United States of America ).
He had conducted a rehearsal of " The Stars and Stripes Forever " the previous day with the Ringgold Band.
* " Stars and Stripes Forever " ( 1896 ) ( National March of the United States )

Stars and Forever
The group had hoped to cover a number of different artists, but only two albums from this period saw completion and release-1984's George and James ( dedicated to George Gershwin and James Brown ) and 1986's Stars & Hank Forever: The American Composers Series ( featuring tributes to Hank Williams and John Philip Sousa ).
* Stars & Hank Forever: The American Composers Series – 1986
Harpo tries the combination to the safe on a box which proves to be a radio, and it starts blaring the break-up strain of John Philip Sousa's " Stars and Stripes Forever ".
*" Stars and Stripes Forever " ( Sousa )-on radio, turned on ( loudly ) by Harpo, who mistakes it for a safe
The cover of The Stars and Stripes Forever by John Philip Sousa.
) His Stars and Stripes Forever is the official march of the United States of America.
*" Stars and Stripes Forever "-John Philip Sousa, composed December 25, 1896
The most famous cut-time march would probably be Stars and Stripes Forever by Sousa.
Marches that commonly have the first playing of the second strain quiet and the second loud include The Stars and Stripes Forever, His Honor, The Washington Post, Hands Across the Sea, On the Mall, and a load of others, particularly by Sousa.
For a good example, listen to Stars and Stripes Forever.
The Stars and Stripes Forever in fact has a twenty-four bar breakstrain.
The grandioso sometimes adds yet another counter-melody or obbligato, such as the one in Stars and Stripes Forever.
* Examples of military marches include Stars and Stripes Forever by John Philip Sousa, Barnum and Bailey's Favorite by Karl L. King, and On the Mall by Edwin F. Goldman
Examples of Grade 4 marches would be " Stars and Stripes Forever " and " Barnum and Bailey's Favorite.
Piccolos are now only manufactured in the key of C ; however, they were once also available in D. It was for this D piccolo that John Philip Sousa wrote the famous solo in the final repeat of the closing section ( trio ) of his march " The Stars and Stripes Forever ".
Music ranges from rudimentary drum cadences to Dixieland arrangements of " The Stars and Stripes Forever ".
Recent themes include " Stars and Stripes Forever " and " Television Classics ".
Lovington High's fight song utilizes the stirring tune of " Stars and Stripes Forever.

Stars and is
* Absalom is the name of Stephen Kumalo's son in " Lost in the Stars ", Kurt Weil's play based on the novel " Cry the Beloved Country ".
The False Cross is diamond-shaped, somewhat dimmer on average, does not have a fifth star and lacks the two prominent nearby " Pointer Stars.
The drama associated with this disagreement is one of the main themes of Empire of the Stars, Arthur I. Miller's biography of Chandrasekhar.
* The Plough and the Stars is a play by Seán O ' Casey that takes place during the Easter Rising.
The Vail Film Festival in Vail, Colorado, is one of the " Top 10 destination film festivals in the world " ( MovieMaker magazine ), screens over 90 films, features mostly new filmmakers and honors Rising Stars, including Jesse Esienberg, Olivia Wilde, and many more.
The grail is central in many modern Arthurian works, including Charles Williams's novel War in Heaven and his two collections of poems about Taliessin, Taliessin Through Logres and Region of the Summer Stars, and in feminist author Rosalind Miles ' Child of the Holy Grail.
Lemmy is one of the characters in the book Sex Tips from Rock Stars by Paul Miles.
* 1861 – The first national flag of the Confederate States of America ( the " Stars and Bars ") is adopted.
* In Vladimir Savchenko's Black Stars ( 1960 ), neutronium is mechanically and thermally indestructible substance.
Ophiuchus in a manuscript copy of Azophi's Book of Fixed Stars | Uranometry, 18th-century copy of a manuscript prepared for Ulugh Beg in 1417 ( note that as in all pre-modern star chart s, the constellation is mirrored, with Serpens Caput on the left and Serpens Cauda on the right ).
It is known as (, " The Seventh of the Three Stars ") in Chinese.
The name is because the Asterism of Three Stars was originally composed of just three stars, all of them in the girdle of the Orion.
Serpens and Ophiuchus in a manuscript copy of Azophi's Book of Fixed Stars | Uranometry, 18th-century copy of a manuscript prepared for Ulugh Beg in 1417 ( note that as in all pre-modern star chart s, the constellation is mirrored, with Serpens Caput on the left and Serpens Cauda on the right ).
The PPM was built from BD, SAO, HD and more, with sophisticated algorithm and is an extension for the Fifth Fundamental Catalogue, " Catalogues of Fundamental Stars ".
Colonel David Hackworth is likely the record holder for most Silver Stars awarded to one individual.
Stars with large debris disks have altered astronomical thinking about planet formation ; debris disk stars, where dust is continually generated by collisions, appear to form planets readily.
* In the 1950 western Stars in My Crown, the town is devastated by typhoid spread by a school's well.
In theosophy, it is believed the Seven Stars of the Pleiades focus the spiritual energy of the Seven Rays from the Galactic Logos to the Seven Stars of the Great Bear, then to Sirius, then to the Sun, then to the god of Earth ( Sanat Kumara ), and finally through the seven Masters of the Seven Rays to the human race.
* In the 1960 Cold War novel Village of Stars by David Beaty ( writing as Paul Stanton ), an RAF V-bomber of the fictional Venger type is sent to drop a nuclear bomb on a rebel force in the Middle East.
She is ranked 16th on AFI's 100 Years ... 100 Stars list, unveiled on 15 June 1999 by the American Film Institute.
Sternberg publishes the General Catalog of Variable Stars ( GCVS ), which is periodically ( approximately once every two years ) amended by the publication of a new " Name-List " of variable stars.

0.116 seconds.