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routine and ends
Each routine ends with a dismount from either the ends of the bars or the side of the apparatus.
They are deleted when the routine ends.
The story ends with Dorothy back in her old routine, only without the self-mortification.
The opening routine is the main area where the drum major displays his / her skill at spinning a mace / military baton and ends in what can be referred to as a ' pike ' ( the mace is still and pointing straight up ) followed by a whistle or vocal count off.
* Comedian Bill Bailey produced a humorous interpretation, " Dr. Qui ", in the style of Belgian jazz ; he also has a routine about incidental music from Doctor Who that ends with a more traditional version.
Although this particular sub-plot seems to have only a marginal connection with the main storyline, the recorded voice of a long-deceased John Preston ends the novel on a positive note by exhorting his audience to "... spread out, reach areas, experiences, comprehend and live in an evolving fashion ....", to " push aside routine and repetition, to break out of mindless monotony and thrust forward ....", to " keep moving on ...".
The video climaxes with a group performance and dance routine that ends in the threesome standing side by side.

routine and Astaire
In Ziegfeld Follies ( 1946 ) – which was produced in 1944 but not released until 1946 – Kelly collaborated with Fred Astaire – for whom he had the greatest admiration – in the famous " The Babbitt and the Bromide " challenge dance routine.
Thereafter, Astaire nicknamed Rogers " Feathers " — also a title of one of the chapters in his autobiography — and parodied his experience in a song and dance routine with Judy Garland in Easter Parade ( 1948 ).
" routine: " shows Astaire dressed in the style he would make famous: soft-shouldered tweed sports jacket, button-down shirt, bold striped tie, easy-cut gray flannels, silk paisley pocket square, and suede shoes.
Astaire incorporates this into his routine, first startling him with a tap burst then escorting him ostentatiously to the telephone.
For " Top Hat, White Tie and Tails ", probably Astaire's most celebrated tap solo, the idea for the title song came from Astaire who described to Berlin a routine he had created for the 1930 Ziegfeld Broadway flop Smiles called " Say, Young Man of Manattan ," in which he gunned down a chorus of men – which included teenagers Bob Hope and Larry Adler – with his cane.
For special praise, they have singled out her performance in " Waltz in Swing Time " from Swing Time ( 1936 ), which is generally considered to be the most virtuosic partnered routine ever committed to film by Astaire.
She generally avoided solo dance performances: Astaire always included at least one virtuoso solo routine in each film, while Rogers performed only one: " Let Yourself Go " from Follow the Fleet ( 1936 ).
Typically, an Astaire picture would include a solo performance by Astairewhich he termed his " sock solo "— a partnered comedy dance routine, and a partnered romantic dance routine.
She first appeared with Astaire in a brief routine in Ziegfeld Follies ( produced in 1944 and released in 1946 ).
* Fred Astaire paid tribute to Bill Robinson in the tap routine Bojangles of Harlem from the 1936 film Swing Time.
The dance is a nostalgic celebration of love, in the form of a syncopated waltz with tap overlays-a concept Astaire later reworked in the similarly impressive " Belle of New York " segment of the " Currier and Ives " routine from The Belle of New York ( 1952 ).
Here the music switches again to a frantic, fast-paced, recapitulation of " Never Gonna Dance " as the pair dance a last, desperate, and virtuosic routine before Ginger flees and Astaire repeats his pose of dejection, in a final acceptance of the affair's end.
This final routine was shot forty-seven times in one day before Astaire was satisfied, with Rogers ' feet left bruised and bleeding by the time they finished.
* The opening dance sequence from The Barkleys of Broadway with the credits overlay removed so that the dance routine by Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers can be viewed unobstructed for the first time.
* Image illustrates Fred Astaire and Eleanor Powell in a celebrated dance routine to Cole Porter's " Begin the Beguine " as performed in Broadway Melody of 1940.
* An extensive search of the Astaire bibliography has uncovered no public domain images of this partnership in this or in any other routine, and no references have been located which point to the possible existence of such material.
** Image is used in Eleanor Powell for the purposes of illustration and for critical commentary of the particular routine illustrated in this image and, in particular, serves to illustrate comments on Powell's dance ability by Astaire.
Fred Astaire and Hermes Pan working out a dance routine
Astaire called Pan his " ideas man ", and while he generally choreographed his own routines, and sometimes worked with other choreographers, he greatly valued the assistance of Pan not just as a source and critic of ideas, but also as a rehearsal partner for the purposes of fine-tuning a routine.
* " Put Me to the Test ": Astaire, Burns, and Allen comic tap dance with whisk brooms, a routine inspired by vaudeville duo Evans and Evans and introduced to Astaire by Burns, who quipped: " Gracie and I ended up teaching Astaire how to dance ".

routine and now
Steam locomotives remained in routine passenger use in South Africa until the late 1990s, but are now reserved to tourist trains.
His villa in Moscow is now the Tunisian Embassy and routine work on the grounds have turned up a number of bodies of young girls buried in the gardens.
For routine emergencies, many locales in Canada now employ the Canadian Triage and Acuity Scale ( CTAS ) for all incoming patients.
This follows the lessons learned from the history of the discovery and ( by now ) routine detection of the neutrino.
The term originates from the white color of the wedding dress, which first became popular with Victorian era elites, after Queen Victoria wore a white lace dress at her wedding ; however, the term now also encapsulates the entire Western wedding routine, especially in the Christian religious tradition, which generally includes a ceremony during which the marriage begins, followed by a reception.
Apart from routine official duties, Holbein now occupied himself with private commissions, turning again to portraits of Steelyard merchants.
As now formulated, the theorem of Wiener does not have any obvious association with Tauberian theorems, which deal with infinite series ; the translation from results formulated for integrals, or using the language of functional analysis and Banach algebras, is however a relatively routine process.
English policy now turned back to a negotiated peace ( or at least a truce ) with France, so the remainder of York's time in France was spent in routine administration and domestic matters.
" In English variety halls ( Britain's equivalent of vaudeville theatres ), comedian Will Hay performed a routine in the early 1930s ( and possibly earlier ) as a schoolmaster interviewing a schoolboy named Howe who came from Ware but now lives in Wye.
Most physicians have now abandoned routine monitoring of liver enzymes and creatine kinase, although they still consider this prudent in those on high-dose statins or in those on statin / fibrate combinations, and mandatory in the case of muscle cramps or of deterioration in renal function.
The switch to the T-38 also saw an alteration of the flight routine to exhibit the aircraft's maneuverability in tight turns, and also ended the era of the black tail on the # 4 slot plane, which would now be regularly cleaned and shined like the others.
It was now routine for 1, 000 bomber raids to be mounted by both American and British forces flying from the UK.
Wilson found the repetitive nature of the questions to be so amusing -- and annoying -- that he wrote a song about them entitled " Biff's Question Song " which he now features regularly in his stand-up routine.
Traditionally the routine was performed on the ground, but now it's more commonly performed on a table.
On the other hand, another study concluded that " although the validity of the technique for research and clinical assessment is now established, justification for the routine use of the technique must await a proper standardization of the technique and the publication of reliable norms.
The affected children will soon return to their normal routine when they realize that they now have just as important a place in the family as the new sibling.
Under the status, responsibility would now lie with the bailies and council to deal with the routine administration of the town and its fiscal policies ; conditioned on an annual payment of 33s 4d (£ 49. 65 ) to the Abbot of Dunfermline.
Official routine now occupied much of his time, but he found opportunity for the Highland researches just alluded to, and also for preparing successive editions of his work Siluria ( 1854, ed.
CT scans and ultrasounds are now the tests of choice for the initial evaluation of abdominal masses, and colonoscopies are becoming the standard for routine colon screening for those over age 50 or with a familial history of polyps or colon cancer, although it is not uncommon for a barium enema to be done after a colonoscopy for further evaluation.
First Frankie Laine, then Tony Bennett, and now Johnnie ( Ray ), dubbed ' the Belters ' and ' the Exciters ,' came along with a brash vibrancy and vulgar beat that made the old bandstand routine which Frank meticulously perfected seem almost invalid.
Fenn's contributions specifically related to the development of electrospray ionization, now a commonly used technique for large molecules and routine liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry.
Thousands of these systems are now in routine operation.
In 1921, he joined Lee Nash, who was now firmly established in show business as Ted Healy, in a vaudeville routine.
The postal counties of the United Kingdom, now known officially as the former postal counties, were postal subdivisions in routine use by Royal Mail until 1996.

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