Word: adderley
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...years ago might start you off on something; that's how loose it is. Maybe you'll never even remember it. There are five guys involved, and everybody has a little different thing. Like one guy in the group would remember very impressive horn lines by Cannonball Adderley. Somebody else would remember a singing harmony that J. E. Mainer and his Mountaineers did years ago. Over all the years we've been playing, we've been buying thousands of records by people nobody remembers the names of. Just the music. Right up to Edith Piaf...
...once did Green Bay draw an offside or illegal motion penalty-while Oakland, baffled by the staggered cadence counts of Packer Quarterback Bart Starr, twice jumped the center snap. The Packers never fumbled; the Raiders did three times. The only interception came when Green Bay's Herb Adderley picked off a sideline pass thrown by Oakland Quarterback Daryle Lamonica and scampered 60 yds. for a touchdown. Oakland Safetyman Rodger Bird was responsible for a swing of perhaps 17 points in the score: he fumbled a punt and got beaten twice on passes...
Rock music, like jazz, derives in part from the blues, and this common heritage provides the basis on which rock is injecting itself into the jazz idiom (at the same time, of course, absorbing elements of jazz into its own idiom). Recent recordings by Ramsey Lewis, Cannonball Adderley and Gabor Szabo demonstrate how successfully-and sometimes how superficially-jazz can be superimposed on a rock foundation. More significantly, several jazzmen young enough to be in the rock generation are emerging to show what can be done when the two strains are thoroughly fused. Two of the most original: - Jeremy Steig...
Perhaps, but only if the court chooses to apply Adderley v. Florida to all kinds of property, a choice it has not yet made-for now the country's demonstrators are clearly on notice to cool it. The Supreme Court, warned Black, emphatically rejects "the assumption that people who want to propagandize protests or views have a constitutional right to do so whenever and however and wherever they please...
Before the Supreme Court, Appellant Adderley and 31 others cited such key precedents as Edwards v. South Carolina (1963), which voided "breach of the peace" convictions of Negroes who had sung hymns and the Star-Spangled Banner outside the South Carolina statehouse. But in Edwards, countered Justice, Black, the Supreme Court merely ruled that the state law failed to regulate any specific conduct, such as statehouse visiting hours...