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House GOP Women Respond To New Breast Cancer Guidelines

House GOP Women Respond To New Breast Cancer Guidelines

from recent posts tagged care - blip.tv (beta) on November 18, 2009
Duration: 104
House GOP women express their disapproval over the new breast cancer guidelines released from the U.S. Preventative Services Task Force. Distributed by Tubemogul.
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Let's Try - Madden NFL 10 Part 1

Let's Try - Madden NFL 10 Part 1

from YouTube :: Tag // NFL on November 16, 2009
Duration: 590
Author: CatpawCoCorp Keywords: Madden NFL 10 Dallas Cowboys Green Bay Packers Tony Romo Aaron Rodgers Wii Added: November 16, 2009
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Let's Try - Madden NFL 10 - Part 1

Let's Try - Madden NFL 10 - Part 1

from YouTube :: Tag // NFL on November 16, 2009
Duration: 495
Author: CatpawCoCorp Keywords: Madden NFL 10 Dallas Cowboys Green Bay Packers Tony Romo Aaron Rodgers Wii Added: November 16, 2009
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Let's Try - Madden NFL 10 - Part 3

Let's Try - Madden NFL 10 - Part 3

from YouTube :: Tag // NFL on November 16, 2009
Duration: 325
Author: CatpawCoCorp Keywords: Madden NFL 10 Dallas Cowboys Green Bay Packers Tony Romo Aaron Rodgers Wii Added: November 16, 2009
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Love Me Dead

Love Me Dead

from Castle on November 15, 2009
Duration: 2498
Castle and Beckett are thrust into the world of ex-cons and escorts.
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FEDOR EMELIANENKO Rogers Post Fight Review

FEDOR EMELIANENKO Rogers Post Fight Review

from YouTube :: Tag // cage fights on November 08, 2009
Duration: 296
Author: pissballs Keywords: Fedor Emelianenko Brett Rodgers Post Fight Interview Федор Емельяненко против Бретт Роджерс нокаутирован и after fight Фёдор Review wins conderence Defended WAMMA World Heavyweight Championship vs versus CBS Sears Strikeforce M-1 Global Added: November 8, 2009
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'Black Betty' LEADBELLY, Blues Legend

'Black Betty' LEADBELLY, Blues Legend

from Favorites of Fearless13Z on April 15, 2009
Duration: 115
BLIND BLAKE GUITAR LESSONS http://playblindblake.com/dancinrdg.php ' Dancin' Inside DVD ' How to Play Blind Blake exactly as Blake played it ! Comment jouer du Blind Blake excactement comme lui ! = = = = = = = = Black Betty by LEADBELLY = = = = = = = = = The RED HOT BLUES (1925-1945) Texas Alexander Pink Anderson Kokomo Arnold Barbecue Bob Scrapper Blackwell Black Ace Ed Bell Blind Blake Ishman Bracey Big Bill Broonzy Richard Rabbit Brown Willie Brown Bumble Bee Slim Gus Cannon Bo Carter Sam Collins Floyd Council Gary Davis Sleepy John Estes Blind Boy Fuller Son House Peg Leg Howell Mississippi John Hurt Papa Charlie Jackson Jim Jackson Skip James Blind Lemon Jefferson Blind Willie Johnson Lonnie Johnson Robert Johnson Tommy Johnson Charley Jordan Luke Jordan Leadbelly Furry Lewis Cripple Clarence Lofton Tommy McClennan Robert Lee McCoy Blind Willie McTell The Memphis Jug Band Buddy Moss Memphis Minnie Hambone Willie Newbern Charley Patton Robert Petway Jimmie Rodgers Frank Stokes Sonny Terry Henry Thomas Ramblin Thomas Curley Weaver Casey Bill Weldon Peetie Wheatstraw Bukka White Josh White Robert Wilkins Big Joe Williams
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JIMMIE RODGERS-ROLL ALONG KENTUCKY MOON

JIMMIE RODGERS-ROLL ALONG KENTUCKY MOON

from Favorites of Fearless13Z on May 22, 2008
Duration: 207
Early years James Charles Rodgers was born in Meridian, Mississippi, the youngest of three sons. His mother died when he was very young, and Rodgers spent the next few years living with various relatives in southeast Mississippi and southwest Alabama. He eventually returned home to live with his father, Aaron Rodgers, a foreman on the Mobile and Ohio Railroad, who had settled with a new wife in Meridian. Jimmie's affinity for entertaining came at an early age, and the lure of the road was irresistible to him. By age 13, he had twice organized and begun traveling shows, only to be brought home by his father. Mr. Rodgers found Jimmie his first job working on the railroad, as a waterboy. This is where he learned the cries and moans of the blues and was taught to pick and strum by the rail workers and the hoboes. A few years later, he became brakeman on the New Orleans and Northeastern Railroad, a position secured by his oldest brother, Walter, a conductor on the line running between Meridian and New Orleans. In 1924 at the age of 27, Jimmie contracted tuberculosis. The disease temporarily ended his railroad career, but, at the same time, gave him the chance to get back to his first love, entertainment. He organized a traveling road show and performed across the southeast until, once again, he was forced home after a cyclone destroyed his tent. He returned to railroad work as a brakeman on the east coast of Florida at Miami, but eventually his illness cost him his job. He relocated to Tucson, Arizona and was employed as a switchman by the Southern Pacific. The job lasted less than a year, and the Rodgers family (which by then included wife Carrie and daughter Anita) had settled back in Meridian by early 1927. Rodgers decided to travel to Asheville, North Carolina, later that same year. On April 18, at 9:30 p.m., Jimmie and Otis Kuykendall performed for the first time on WWNC, Asheville's first radio station. A few months later Jimmie recruited a group from Tennessee called the Tenneva Ramblers and secured a weekly slot on the station as the Jimmie Rodgers Entertainers. The Tenneva Ramblers originally hailed from Bristol, Tennessee, and in late July 1927, Rodgers' bandmates got word that Ralph Peer, a representative of the Victor Talking Machine Company, was coming to Bristol to audition and record area musicians. Rodgers and the group arrived in Bristol on August 3, 1927. Later that same day, they auditioned for Peer in an empty warehouse. Peer agreed to record them the next day. That night, as the band discussed how they would be billed on the record, an argument ensued and the band broke up and Rodgers arrived at the recording session alone. On Wednesday, August 4, 1927, Jimmie Rodgers completed his first session for Victor. It lasted from 2:00 p.m. to 4:20 p.m. and yielded two songs: The Soldier's Sweetheart and Sleep, Baby, Sleep . For the test recordings, Rodgers received $100. The recordings were released on October 7, 1927, to modest success. In November; Rodgers, determined more than ever to make it in entertainment, headed to New York City in an effort to arrange another session with Peer. Peer agreed to record him again, and the two met in Philadelphia before traveling to Camden, New Jersey, to the Victor studios. Four songs made it out of this session, including Blue Yodel , better known as T for Texas . In the next two years, this recording sold nearly half a million copies, which was impressive enough to rocket Rodgers into stardom. After this, he got to determine when Peer and Victor would record him, and he sold out shows whenever and wherever he played. In the next few years, Rodgers was very busy. He did a movie short for Columbia Pictures, The Singing Brakeman, and made various recordings across the country. He toured with humorist Will Rogers as part of a Red Cross tour across the Midwest. On July 16, 1930, he recorded Blue Yodel No. 9 with jazz trumpeter Louis Armstrong, whose wife, Lillian, played piano on the recording. THIS SEGMENT OF JIMMIE'S BIOGRAPHY WAS TAKEN FROM WIKIPEDIA. THE REMAINDER OF THE BIO IS AVAILABLE TO ANYONE THERE. THIS SONG IS LISTED IN WIKIPEDIA AS THE ONLY COUNTRY MUSIC HIT OF 1932.
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Jimmie Rodgers - T for Texas (1936)

Jimmie Rodgers - T for Texas (1936)

from Favorites of Fearless13Z on October 24, 2006
Duration: 177
Blue Yodel
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