User:Eurodog/sandbox
Appearance
- Error in Template:Internet Archive author: Eurodog/sandbox doesn't exist.
- Given that CrowdStrike itself didn't experience an outage, but rather, its faulty update caused global disruptions, a more accurate title would be: 2024 CrowdStrike faulty update incident. This title clarifies that the issue was caused by a faulty update from CrowdStrike, which, in turn, led to widespread outages across various sectors globally. Sources like SiliconANGLE provide detailed coverage on this incident, noting the disruptions caused by the faulty Falcon update and its widespread impact. → Deutscher, Maria (July 19, 2024). "Faulty CrowdStrike Update Causes One of the Largest-Ever IT Outages". SiliconANGLE. Palo Alto: SiliconANGLE Media Inc. Retrieved July 20, 2024. .
- Lawson, Elizabeth (1952). The Reign of Witches: The Struggle Against the Alien and Sedition Laws, 1789–1800 (pamphlet). New York: Civil Rights Congress. Retrieved July 14, 2024. OCLC 969409160 (all editions); OCLC 2504847 (all editions).
- Wilson, James Grant (1832–1914); Fiske, John (1842–1901), eds. (1898). . Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography (supplement). Vol. 4: "Lodge–Pickens". New York: D. Appleton and Company. p. 547 – via Wikisource.
{{cite encyclopedia}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: editors list (link) Retrieved March 29, 2012. LCCN unk80018968; OCLC 1647333 (all editions).
- Barnhart, John Hendley (1871–1949) (September 1904). "The Date of Pursh's Flora". Journal of the Torrey Botanical Society. 4 (9). New York: Torrey Botanical Society: 132–136.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) Retrieved July 8, 2024. JSTOR 40594321 (article); ISSN 0096-3844 (journal); OCLC 9987303948 (article).
"Ipomoea Jalapa (L.) Pursh" first appeared as a synonym in Curtis's Botanical Magazine → plate 1572 → published by Samuel Curtis, Walworth. August 1, 1813. This, however, according to the most recently formulated American code of nomenclature, does not constitute "publication" of the name in a technical sense.
- Nuttall, Thomas; Cox, T. (1830). "An Account of the Jalap Plant as An Ipomœa". The American Journal of the Medical Sciences (appended to a paper on the subject by Dr. R. Cox). 5: 305. ISSN 1538-2990 (Online)The name "Ipomoea jalapa" as used by Nuttall and Cox is considered illegitimate (nomen illegitimum = illegitimate name) because the valid publication of the name was made by Pursh in 1813, and any subsequent usage that did not follow proper nomenclatural protocols is not accepted. This ensures that botanical names remain consistent and traceable to their original valid descriptions.
- * "Eurodog/sandbox". Germplasm Resources Information Network. Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture. Retrieved December 24, 2017.
- hypercatharsis
- Zuccarini, Joseph Gerhard (1797–1848) (1831). "Ipomoea Schiedeana Zuccar". Flora Oder Allgemeine Botanische Zeitung (in German). 14, no. 48. Regensburg Botanical Society: 801–816.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) ISSN 0367-1615; ISSN 0373-6490; OCLC 64210234 (all editions).
- Schiede, Christian Julius Wilhelm (1798–1836); Deppe, Paul Ferdinand (1795–1861) (1838). Don, George (1798–1856) (ed.). "Ipomoea jalapa". A General History of the Dichlamydeous Plants. 4: 271.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
- Pursh, Frederick Traugott (1774–1820) (1813). "Convolvulus Jalapa. The True Jalapa". Curtis’s Botanica Magazine: Or, Flower-Garden Displayed: In Which the Most Ornamental Foreign Plants, Cultivated in the Open Ground, the Green-House, and the Stove, Are Accurately Represented in Their Natural Colours. To Which Are Added, Their Names, Class, Order, Generic and Specific Characters, According to the Celebrated Linnæus; Their Places of Growth, and Times of Flowering: Together With the Most Approved Methods of Culture. A Work Intended for the Use of Such Ladies, Gentlemen, Gardeners, as Wish to Become Scientifically Acquainted With the Plants They Cultivate (plate 1572). 37. Sherwood, Neeley & Jones, Publisher.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) ISSN 0011-4073; OCLC 1355908 (all editions).
- Pelletan, Philippe Gabriel (1792–1879) (1834). François Fulgis Chevallier (1796–1840); Antoine Laurent Apollinaire Fée (1789–1874); Nicolas-Jean-Baptiste-Gaston Guibourt (1790–1867); Jean-Sébastien-Eugène Julia de Fontenelle (1780–1842) [in French]; Jean Louis Lassaigne (1800–1859); Mathieu Orfila (1787–1853); Anselme Payen (1795–1871); Gabriel Palletan (1792–1879); Théophile-Jules Pelouze (1807–1867); Achille Richard (1794–1852); Cora Millet-Robinet (1798–1890) (eds.). "Note sur deux espèces de jalap du commerce" [Note on Two Species of Commercial Jalap]. Journal de Chimie Médicale, de Pharmacie et de Toxicologie [Journal of Medical Chemistry, Pharmacy, and Toxicology] (in French). 10. Paris: fr:Faculté de médecine de Paris (University of Paris, School of Medicine). Béchet Jeune, Publisher. Félix Locquin, Printer: 1–22.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) Retrieved July 5, 2024. ISSN 0368-167X (journal); OCLC 13223903 (all editions) (journal); OCLC 1366386602 (all editions) (journal); OCLC 867256412 (all editions) (article).
Note: Philippe Gabriel Pelletan (1792–1879) was the son of Philippe-Jean Pelletan (1747–1829).
- Species: Ipomoea purga. Retrieved December 2, 2013 – via Wikispecies.
- "Eurodog/sandbox". Germplasm Resources Information Network. Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture. Retrieved December 24, 2017.
- King, John (1813–1893) (1905) [1898; 1854]. Felter, Harvey Wickes, M.D. (1865–1925); Lloyd, John Uri, Phr.M., PhD (eds.). King's American Dispensatory (19th ed.; 3rd rev.; 2 Vols.; re: King's American Dispensatory). pp. 1083–1087 – via Internet Archive (University of Toronto).
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) Retrieved July 2, 2024. LCCN 98-1036 (1898 ed.); OCLC 1153364973 (all editions). .
- Wenderoth, Herrn Doktor Professor Georg Wilhelm Franz (1840). "Exogonium purga". In Bentham, George (1880–1884) (ed.). Plantæ Hartwegianæ – Imprimis Mexicanas Adjectis Nonnullis Grahamianis Enumerat Novasque Describit [Hartweg's Plants – Primarily Mexican – With Some Graham's Plants Added – Enumerates and Describes New Species] (in Latin). p. 46.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: editors list (link) Retrieved July 2, 2024. OCLC 5722320 (all editions).
Re:
- Karl Theodor Hartweg (1812–1871)
- Robert Graham (1786–1845)
- Don, George (1798–1856) (1840). A General System of Gardening and Botany. Founded Upon Miller’s Gardener’s Dictionary, and Arranged According to the Natural System. Issued also during the same years under other titles, including: A General History – Dichlamydeous Plants, Comprising Complete Descriptions of the Different Orders; Together With the Characters of the Genera and Species, and an Enumeration of the Cultivated Varieties; Their Places of Growth, Time of Flowering, Mode of Culture, and Uses in Medicine and Domestic Economy; The Scientific Names Accentuated, Their Etymologies Explained, and the Classes and Orders Illustrated by Engravings, and Preceded by Introductions to the Linnæan and Natural Systems, and a Glossary of the Terms Used: The Whole Arranged According to the Natural System (4 vols.). Printed for Charles James Gage Rivington and Francis Rivington (Rivington Publishers), et. al.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) Retrieved July 2, 2024. OCLC 6825168 (all editions).
- Vol. 4. 1838. p. 271: "Ja'lapa" – via Internet Archive (North Carolina State University Libraries).
- Wenderoth, Herrn Doktor Professor Georg Wilhelm Franz (November 1830). "Uberdie Abstammrung der Japalenwurzel" [On the Origin of the Japalen Root]. Pharmaceutisches Central-Blatt (presented in Marburg November 1, 1830) (in German). 1 (29): 456–458. Retrieved July 2, 2024. ISSN 2194-2064; OCLC 8580665 (all editions).
- 41°33′54″N 96°32′54″W / 41.5650544°N 96.5484314°W → Estimated spot of Home
- 41°33′22″N 96°32′28″W / 41.5561544°N 96.5410114°W → Post Office
- OCLC 988617557 (all editions)
- 120-acre (0.1875 sq mi)
- OCLC 10131949584 (all editions)
- Perry, Theodore Bolivar (1833–1921) (October 1897). Aldrich, Charles John (1828–1908) (ed.). "The Board of Education". Annals of Iowa. Third Series. 3 (3). State Historical Society of Iowa: 200–207.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) Retrieved May 10, 2021. LCCN 05-32209; ISSN 2473-9006 (publication online); ISSN 0003-4827 (publication print); OCLC 1481386 (all editions) (publication); doi:10.17077/0003-4827.2259 (article); OCLC 8598293702 (article).
https://pubs.lib.uiowa.edu/annals-of-iowa/article/13220/galley/121686/download/
- (subscription required)
- English,, Carleton (March 10, 2023). "Big Bank Stocks Look Like Buys After Selloff" (print ed.). Vol. 103, no. 11. p. 12.
{{cite news}}
: CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)
- {{cite book |last1=Lebanon |first1=Guy |last2=Bruckstein |first2=Alfred M.
- Brown, Marisa. Jazzmatazz, Vol. 1 at AllMusic. Retrieved date=April 3, 2021.
- Brown, Marisa (2008). "Jazzmatazz. Vol. 1". AllMusic.
- Hardbound: Print: Woodstra, Chris; John; Erlewine, Sgtephen Thomas, eds. (2008). Old School Rap and Hip-Hop (limited preview). All Music Guide Required Listening Series: No. 2. Backbeat Books. pp. 39–40. Retrieved September 25, 2023 – via Google Books.; ISBN 978-0-8793-0916-9, 0-8793-0916-4; OCLC 154751936 (all editions).
- AllMusic (AllMusic Album ID: mw0000098545). RhythmOne https://www.allmusic.com/album/mw0000098545. Retrieved April 3, 2021.
{{cite web}}
: Missing or empty|title=
(help) - Nelson, Havelock. "The Rap Column" – "Guru Dazzles With New Jazzmatazz" (PDF) (Nelson interviews Guru). p. 21.
{{cite magazine}}
: Cite magazine requires|magazine=
(help) - Flick, Larry (ed.). "Single Reviews" – "New and Noteworthy: Guru and Donald Byrd: Loungin'" (PDF). p. 62.
{{cite magazine}}
: Cite magazine requires|magazine=
(help) - Wasserman, Herbert (1922–2001) (2000). A Different Drummer: What Makes Me Tic, a Memoir. Writers Club Press. p. 134 – via Google Books (limited preview).
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) LCCN 2008-934363; ISBN 978-1-5986-3852-3, 1-5986-3852-1, ISBN 1-5986-3921-8; OCLC 52229234 (all editions). - New York Times (The). "182D Annual Commencement Exercises Will Be Held at Columbia Today – Columbia to Give Degrees to 4,500 – Nine Honorary Awards and 273 Diplomas to Be Bestowed at University Exercises". Vol. 85, no. 28619 (Late City ed.). pp. 30, 31 – via TimesMachine (permalink).
- Who's Who in the World, 1997. "Windsor, William Earl" (14th ed.). Marquis Who's Who, Inc. – via Internet Archive (Kahle/Austin Foundation). LCCN 79-139215; ISSN 0083-9825; ISBN 08379-1117-6 (Classic ed.); ISBN 0-8379-1118-4 (Delux ed.); OCLC 01133198 (all editions).
- New York Times (The) (September 23, 1950). "Manhattan Transfers" → "48th St. 112–114 W.". Vol. 100, no. 33845 (Late City ed.). p. 24 (col. 6, middle) – via TimesMachine (permalink).
- Simons, Dave (2004). Studio Stories: How the Great New York Records Were Made : From Miles to Madonna, Sinatra to the Ramones. Backbeat Books – via Google Books (limited preview). LCCN 2013-569151; ISBN 1-4768-5276-6, 978-1-4768-5276-8; OCLC 57543979 (all editions).
- Via Google Books. (limited preview).
- Via Google Books. (limited preview).
- Via Internet Archive. (ARChive of Contemporary Music).
- Hinton, Milt; Berger, David G. (2008). Playing The Changes: Milt Hinton's Life in Stories and Photographs. Vanderbilt University Press. LCCN 2007-30389; ISBN 978-0-8265-1574-2; OCLC 156975394 (all editions)
- Lees, Gene (1888). Meet Me at Jim & Andy's: Jazz Musicians and Their World. Oxford University Press. p. 7 – via Internet Archive (ARChive of Contemporary Music). LCCN 88-4865ISBN 0-1950-4611-0, 978-0-1950-4611-3; OCLC 17677072 (all editions).
- New York Times (The); Goldman, Ari L. (August 23, 1985). "U.S. Clerics Debating Ethics of Giving Sanctuary to Aliens".
- Blog. .
- Permalink. Vol. 134 (Late ed.). p. 1 & B18 (digital image 42) (col. 1) – via TimesMachine.
- Billboard (December 15, 1984). "Audio Track: New York" → "The Aura Sonic Ltd". Vol. 96, no. 50. p. 41 – via Google Books.
{{cite magazine}}
: Cite magazine requires|magazine=
(help) - 40 years, 10 months and 10 days
-
{{cite journal}}
: Empty citation (help) - New York Times (The); Fox, Margalit (February 2, 2011). "Brian Rust, 88; Compiled Extensive Guides to Recorded Jazz" (print). (Late ed.; East Coast). ProQuest 848657905 (US Newsstream database)."The elder Mr. Rust, according to family oral tradition, declined a friend's suggestion that he name Victor's twin sister Decca. Often described as the father of contemporary discography, Mr. Rust embarked in the 1940s on a rigorous, deeply personal project that continued long afterward as he haunted archives and hunted down artists to reconstitute long-vanished recording sessions on paper. For decades, Jazz Records — known to jazz mavens simply as "J.R." — has been the de facto standard reference work in the field, furnishing meticulous information on session dates, personnel and much else for tens of thousands of recordings."
- Blog editions:
- "Brian Rust, Father of Modern Discography, Dies at 88". . January 25, 2011. Retrieved February 2, 2011. ProQuest 2217511827 (US Newsstream database).
- "Brian Rust, Father of Modern Discography, Dies at 88". February 2, 2011. ProQuest 2217289081 (US Newsstream database).
- Crisis (The) (July 1921). "Black Swan Records – July Releases" (advertisement). 24 (3 (whole no. 141): 139 – via Google Books (Harvard) .
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help) ISSN 0011-1422. - Smith, Jessie Carney, ed. (1996) [1992]. Notable Black American Women (re: Florence Cole-Talbert). Vol. 2 (of 3). Detroit: Gale Research. LCCN 91-35074; ISBN 0-8103-9177-5 (Vol. 2); OCLC 24468213 (all editions).
- Via Internet Archive.
- Via Google Books (limited preview).
- Gibbs, Craig Martin (December 18, 2012). Black Recording Artists, 1877–1926: An Annotated Discography. McFarland & Company, Inc. p. 105 – via Google Books (limited preview). LCCN 2012-44588; ISBN 978-1-4766-0085-7; OCLC 818293616 (all editions).
- Via Google Books (limited preview).
- Morgenstern, Dan; Gitler, Ira; Bradley, Jack (né John N. Bradley III; 1934–2021), eds. (1973). Bird & Diz – A Bibliography. New York Jazz Museum.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: editors list (link) LCCN 77-374454; OCLC 3630048 (all editions). - Morgenstern, Dan; Bradley, Jack (1975). Count Basie and His Bands. New York Jazz Museum (publisher). LCCN 77-373174; OCLC 3540251 (all editions).
- Kuehl, Linda (né Linda Victoria Lipnack; 1940–1978); Schocket, Ellie (née Elsa D. Schocket; born 1941) (1973). Billie Holiday Remembered (booklet for exhibition of pictures, records, films, momentos and spoken recollections, April 7, 1972 – June 30, 1972, compiled and arranged by Kuehl & Schocket; assisted by Dan Morgenstern). New York Jazz Museum (publisher).
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) LCCN 77-373175; OCLC 1358163 (all editions).Note: One year, eleven months, three weeks, and three days after the exhibition opening, Schocket married Morgenstern. - Giddins, Gary; Keepnews, Peter; Morgenstern, Dan (1974). The Sax Section – Biographical Sketches (research assistance by Joe Klee and Howard Fischer). New York Jazz Museum (publisher). OCLC 3842152 (all editions)
- Martin, David Stone. Cover illustration.
- Morgenstern, Dan. "The Saxophone in Jazz, an Outline History".
- Music America Magazine (April 1977). "New York Jazz Museum". 1 (6). Boulder, Colorado: Amordian Press Inc.: 38 – via Internet Archive (Kahle/Austin Foundation).
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help) ISSN 0145-5419; OCLC 2750697 (all editions). - Washington International Arts Letter (1974). Millsaps, Daniel Webster, III (1919–1984) (ed.). "Private Foundations & Business Corporations Active in Arts / Humanities / Education" → "Ford Fdn" (a $140,000 grant → equivalent to $960,900 in 2023). The Arts Patronage Series. Vol. 2. Washington, D.C. p. 76 – via Internet Archive.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: editors list (link) LCCN 77-140925; ISBN 978-0-9120-7205-0, 0-9120-7205-9; OCLC 1602135 (all editions). - Record Research; Kunstadt, Leonard Richard (1925–1996) (August 1972). "New York Jazz Museum Opens, Friday, June 16, 1972" (117): 1, 5. Retrieved September 22, 2022 – via Internet Archive.
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - Primary source → Fischer, Howard E. (2003) [2004]. Jazz Exposé: The New York Jazz Museum and the Power Struggle That Destroyed It. Nashville: Sundog, Ltd. – via Google Books. ISBN 978-1-9322-0387-5, 1-9322-0387-7; OCLC 57394563.
- Fischer, Howard E. (August 13, 2021). "The New York Jazz Museum: 1972–1977". All About Jazz. Retrieved September 22, 2022.
- 1: Robbins Music Corporation
- 2:
- 3: Blank
- 4: Frederick Leypoldt
- 5: Riviera-LM Recording System
- 6: Robert Turgot Brinsmade
- 7: (blank)
- 8: DNAinfo.com)
- 9:
- 10: Straube Piano building
- 11: Tops
- 12: Music Trades addresses
- 13: Selmer Records matrices
- 14: Blank
- 15: Boericke and Runyon
- 16: Hellmuth photo
- 17: Lucy Hannah Clinton
- 18: Blank
- 19: Roger Beacon High School
- 20: A & R Recoarding discography
- 21: GreatSchools, Inc.
- 22: BestColleges
- 23: Lïfe Andruszkow
- 24: For-profit music schools
- 25: Jack Aaron – A & R Recording
- 26: Discography
- 27: Earl J. Morris, newspaper journalist
- 28: Lewis Music Publishing Company, Inc.
- 29: Blank
- 30: Music Trade Review
- 31: Blank
- 32: Broadway Music Corporation
- 33: Morris Rosenbaum
- 34: Floyd (sheet music artist)
- 35: Joe Mittenthal
- 36: Sources
- 37: more on Anne Caldwell
- 38: Tin Pan Alley era music publishing industry
- 39: Charlie Carl
- 40: "Some Changes Made"
- 41: Al Lentz
- 42: Blank
- 43: Manolo Alvarez Mera, Cuban tenor
- 44: Francis Edwin Stroup
- 45: Rack (retail merchandising)
- 46: Elliott Wexler
- 47: American Rack Merchandisers Institute
- 48: National Association of Rack Merchandisers
- 49: Maxine Kirk
- 50: Onyx Records
- 51: D & L Sound
- 52: Piantadosi
- 53: AMC
- 54: Herman Ferdinand
- 55: UNT tidbits
- 56: Rainbow Palm Gardens, Indianapolis
- 57: Ollie Shepard
- 58: Billy Higgins
- 59: Willie Bendon Overstreet
- 60: Central Booking
- 61: Puchito
- 62: Garwood Van
- 63: Martin-Smith School of Music
- 64: Kimati Dinizulu
- 65: Leon Claxton
- 66: Cotton Club Tramp Band
- 67: Doc Tyson
- 68: Blank
- 69: Bernuthsche Konservatorium
- 70: Marjorie Norton
- 71: Terri Lee (female vocalist)
- 72: Murray Katz (Treat Records)
- 73: Delta Records
- 74: Maurice Thompson Singers
- 75: Otto Börs
- 76: Wally Stoefler
- 77: Bill Spottswood
- 78: Jolly Coburn
- 79: Nathan & Leon Brusiloff
- 80: Charles Leighton
- 81: Blank
- 82: Phyllis Lynne
- 83: Lee Sisters
- 84: Lynn Wakefield
- 85: Colors
- 86: Peer Music
- 87: Cotton Club Boys
- 88: Watermelon Trust (song)
- 89: Lulu Leslie ("Beef Trust") member
- 90: Cotton Club Girls
- 91: Closing of the Cotton Club
- 92: Music Journal Annual Anthology
- 93: Century Custom Recording Service
- 94: NL
- 95: Texas Times
- 96: Barton Music
- 97: Sol Parker
- 98: Johnny Kay (pseudonym)
- 99: Fay Tishman
- 100: Marjorie Goetschius
- 101: 97th Army Band
- 102: BLANK
- 103: Tyrone Daily Herald
- 104: Hospital for Joint Diseases
- 105: Helene Fuld School of Nursing at McKinley Memorial Hospital in Trenton
- 106: National Association of Practical Nurse Schools
- 107: Leonhard Felix Fuld
- 108: Alexsandra Mitchell
- 109: Rev. Dr. Sadie S. Mitchell, EdD
- 110: 97th
- 111: Dwight Beckham, of the 97th Army Band
- 112: Pittsburgh theatres
- 113: Webb
- 114: Glenn Parker
- 115: Daisy Dean
- 116: Adam Kessel
- 117: CCSO
- 118: JS
- 119: One-Eleven, Ltd.
- 120: Philly Chamber Symphony
- 121: Schumm
- 124: Schumm talk
- 122: Gloria Whitney
- 123: Dick Messner
- 125: Empty
- 126: Empty
- 127: Walden
- 128: Blank
- 129: Carhart
- 130: Castle
- 131: Apex
- 132: Renaissance Theatre
- 133: Wm. H. Roach
- 134: The Arctic Social Club, Harlem
- 135: Hyacinth Club
- 136: Renaissance Casino events
- 137: Association of Trade and Commerce, Harlem
- 138: National Design Model and Dressmakers' Association, Harlem
- 139: Guild Records
- 140: Kenton: Easton's book
- 141: Metronome
- 142: Musical Courier
- 143: The Dominant
- 144: Frank R. Seltzer, cornetist
- 145: Jacobs' Band Monthly
- 146: Amelia Tilghman
- 147: Tom Clark
- 148: Chestnut Street Opera House
- 149: Antonio de la Mora
- 150: Wichita Beacon
- 151: Rev. W. Perkins
- 152: Presbyterian of the West
- 153: Bridge
- 154: Cornish Wildlife
- 155: Bowers Bridge
- 156: Garfield Covered Bridge
- 157: T
- 158: Recovery Room
- 159: Mad Cap
- 160: Marchel Ivery
- 161: Tim Schuller, blue-jazz musicologist-journalist
- 162: Buddy
- 163: Chirillo
- 164: Pinn
- 165: Blackstone
- 166: Jazz Information
- 167: Eugene Williams
- 168: Paul Barnes
- 169: Thomas Q. Seabrooke
- 170: Edward Schuberth & Co.
- 171: Henry Wilson (Trow's)
- 172: Manhattan Directories (historic)
- 173: Kendall
- 174: Gibbons HS
- 175: Texas HBS template
- 176: Texas HBS
- 177: Spizzy Canfield
- 178: Will Henry Bennett
- 179: Teddy Hale
- 180: George E. Pitts
- 181: LI
- 182: American Bookbinding
- 183: Black Rock Press
- 184: McKissack Beach
- 185: RL Christie, Edinburgh
- 186: ALR
- 187: McKissack family
- 188: Showman's
- 189: Sara Louise Slack
- 190: Mae Doelling
- 191: William Joseph Schmidt
- 192: Alexander Zukowski
- 193: Theodore Du Moulin
- 194: Women's Symphony Orchesra (Chicago)
- 195: Lois Bichl
- 196: Adeline Schmidt
- 197: Southern Pacific Railroad Concert Band
- 198: Moffett Studio
- 199: Francis White
- 200: Robert Gordon Williams
- 201: Skippy Adelman
- 202: Hefti's "Duet"
- 203: Eaves
- 204: Samuel Juster
- 205: Salmi Morse
- 206: Knighthood
- 207: Nella Webb
- 208: Linc
- 209: Repertory (medical cross-references)
- 210: Hagen
- 211: Eugene Williams disambiguation
- 212: Ed Fuerst
- 213: Tune Twisters
- 214: Love Makes the World Go Round
- 215: Hopkins marriages
- 216: Anita Hemmings
- 217: Andy Love
- 218: Jack Lathrop
- 219: Mayfair Music
- 220: Screen & Radio Weekly
- 221: Robert Herzberg
- 222: Jack Sher
- 223: Pepsi's "Nickel, Nickel"
- 224: Newell-Emmett
- 225: Top jingles
- 226: Austen Croom Johnson
- 227: Annoyance factor
- 228: Andrew C. Love
- 229: Continuity acceptance editor
- 230: Mister Softee jingle
- 231: Turkey in the Straw
- 232: Donald Byrd (choreagrapher)
- 233: Greenwood Apts.
- 234: Pinellas High School
- 235: FolkWax
- 236: Charles E. Drayton, baritone
- 237: Herbert Wright, drummer
- 238: Ford Dabney
- 239: Dabney-Disco
- 240: Carl F. Williams, arranger
- 241: Rang Tang
- 242: S-H-I-N-E
- 243: Mose Ross, drummer
- 244: Charleston Chronicle
- 245: National Conservatory of Music
- 246: H. Mahieu Costumes, Inc.
- 247: NYC Theaters
- 248: Inter-State Tattler
- 249: Bennie Butler
- 250: other Tattlers
- 251: CCC pubs
- 252: Wallace
- 253: Billy Butler
- 254: Robbins-Engel
- 255: Choc
- 256: Hillard
- 257: Arthur
- 258: Refs
- 259: 537th
- 260: Hillard, Dallas News article
- 261: Eaton
- 262: Chess
- 263: Chess1
- 264: School
- 265: Armed Forces Chess
- 266: Tex. Lt. Gov. Johnson
- 267: Infobox embed
- 268: Hall County Herald
- 269: J.P. Kimball, M.D.
- 270: Agnes Sjösten
- 271: AWH
- 272: Judy's
- 273: IBW
- 274: Illinois Women's Suffrage
- 275: People's Grocery
- 276: Rev. Charles Frederic Aked
- 277: W. & J. Mackay
- 278: Royal Engineers Journal
- 279: "Little Bird Told Me" (song)
- 280: "K-C Records
- 281: Ada Kurtz
- 282: Lavern Baker
- 283: Abie "Available" Baker
- 284: 1
- 285: Henry Mason
- 286: Silas Green
- 287: Tutt Brothers
- 288: Al H. Wilson, actor
- 289: Sisters Don
- 290: Ormond Hood Butler
- 291: Washington Light Infantry Corps
- 292: Sally Shadd
- 293: Ida V. Wells
- 294: Guido Borgianni
- 295: Herreshoff family tree
- 296: Prudence Island
- 297: Fenzi
- 298: Meyer Memorial Award
- 300: Excel date serial number
- 301: Rotondi
- 302: Jewell Fenzi
- 303: Phi Sigma Rho
- 304: Weldon Rogers
- 305: Pumper
- 306: JB Floyd
- 307: CDCM
- 308: Library
- 309: Cole
- 311: Sam Furnace
- 312: Bendery
- 313: Samuelson
- 314: Lucille Cardin Crain
- 315: Trane's "Alabama"
- 316: USS Utah (BB-31)
- 317: voting legislation
- 318: Col. Billy Mayfield
- 319: Houston labor unions
- 320: Houston Press
- 321: Mitchell "Tiny" Webb (guitarist)
- 322: Watson, Robinson, Indiana
- 323: Wendy Wolff
- 324: American National Biography
- 325: Senate history
- 326: American National Biography
- 327: Sherman, Texas – Hughs lynching
- 328: Texas HB 3979
- 329: VU
- 330: Sax
- 331: 1930
- 332: Ada Lois Sipuel Fisher
- 333: Black Dispatch
- 334: Willey & Co.
- 335: James Harvey Robinson
- 336: U. Penn History Translations
- 337: Read Lewis
- 338: Simon Willard
- 339: Kieran Smith
- 340: Old Say-Brook
- 341: Lou Nolan
- 342: Robert Lewis Reid (artist)
- 343: The Popular Educator
- 344: Cassell's Popular Educator
- 345: Popular Educator Company (1919)
- 346: Peale's Popular Educator
- 347: Stanton's Popular Educator
- 348: 20th century African American literature
- 349: Cecil Mack
- 350: Long Island
- 351: Staten Island
- 352: Queens
- 353: Brooklyn
- 354: Cemetery Belt
- 355: Miscellaneous
- 356: NYC Death Registers
- 357: Queens flag
- 358: Ramacciotti
- 360: War Film
- 361: Queens final
- 362: Martin's Field
- 363: KA
- 364: Bibliography fixes
- 365: Alt
- 366: Picard
- 367: Minicam Photography
- 368: Culver Pictures
- 369: Windsor Mansion
- 370: BS
- 371: The Crisis
- 372: Mantle Fielding
- 373: Linder, Eddy, Claus, lithographers
- 374: Frederick Winslow Taylor
- 375: Hawthorne Films
- 376: Billie Holiday
- 377: Howard Barrie
- 378: "I've Got My Love to Keep Me Warm"
- 379: Stanley J. Damerell
- 380: Montague Ewing
- 381: Henry Bailey Tilsley
- 382: The War Illustrated
- 383: The Recorder
- 384: Frank Tilsley
- 385: Gramophone
- 386: "I Never See Maggie Alone" (song)
- 387: Sid Silvers
- 388: Wag Abbey
- 389: Memory Lane
- 390: Phonograph Monthly Review
- 391: R.D. Darrell
- 392: Disques
- 393: Gramophone Shop
- 394: Music Lovers' Encyclopedia
- 395: Gauldin
- 396: Music Lovers' Guide
- 397: David Hall
- 398: Boetsch Bros.
- 399: Simpson
- 400: Harriet Margulies
- 401: Papa John Gordy
- 402: Historic underground NYC
- 403: Kathy Barr
- 404: Look of Love, tenor sax
- 405: Riverside Research Institute
- 406: Murray, Iowa
- 407: Brush College
- 408: Jalapa, Nebraska
- 409: Crittenden, T.D.
- 410: Govt using fake social media
- 411: North American Sylva
- 412: Boquet family
(permalink – via TimesMachine.)