Books on the topic 'Bingo hall'

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1

Bingo night at the fire hall: Rediscovering life in an American village. San Diego: Harcourt Brace, 1999.

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2

Rowe, Rachael. Collapse in a bingo hall: A perspective on collapse in a public place. Birmingham: University of Central England in Birmingham, 1997.

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3

Holland, Barbara. Bingo night at the fire hall: The case for cows, orchards, bake sales, & fairs. New York: Harcourt Brace, 1997.

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4

Holland, Barbara. Bingo night at the fire hall: The case for cows, orchards, bake sales & fairs. Hampton Falls, N.H: Beeler Large Print, 1999.

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5

Hemken, Rod. The bingo passport: A nationwide guide of top bingo halls : your passport to nationwide bingo fun. Frontier, Wy: H.I. Co., 1998.

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6

Mason, Sheryl. The directory of American Indian casinos and bingo halls. Lone Star, Tx: Lone Star Connection, 1995.

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7

Scale + timbre: The Chan Centre for the Performing Arts, Bing Thom Architects. London: Black Dog Pub., 2002.

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8

Bingo Hall Detectives. HarperCollins Publishers, 2022.

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9

Whitelaw, Jonathan. Bingo Hall Detectives. HarperCollins Publishers, 2022.

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10

Notebooks, Dabber Bingo Score. Born to Yell Bingo: Game Score Tracking Sheet - Gift for Bingo Hall Callers and Players. Independently Published, 2019.

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11

Notebooks, Dabber Bingo Score. Eat Sleep Bingo Repeat: Score Sheets to Track Game Rounds - Gift for Bingo Hall Callers. Independently Published, 2019.

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12

Pohl, Linda Perelman. Murder at the Bingo Hall: An Ethel Dinwiddie Cozy Mystery - Book 1. Linda P Pohl, 2021.

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13

Wilson, Pat, and Kris Wood. Extreme Sports Of The Maritimes: Lobster Suppers, Fire Hall Bingo, Flea Markets, Church Chowder And All The Rest. Pottersfield Press, 1999.

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14

Yellow Pages of Bingo Halls (1999). Aruba Pub, 1999.

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15

Van, Jimmy. Wrestling's Underbelly: From Bingo Halls to Shopping Malls. PublishAmerica, 2005.

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16

Temiroglu, Ali. Bingol dagi guzel koyum: Turk halk kulturunden bir demet deyisler. Inanc Yayinlari, 1992.

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17

Courant, Paul N., and Edward M. Gramlich. Federal Budget Deficits: America's Great Consumption Binge (Prentice-Hall International Series in Systems and Control En). Prentice Hall, 1985.

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Courant, Paul N., and Edward M. Gramlich. Federal Budget Deficits: America's Great Consumption Binge (Prentice-Hall International Series in Systems and Control En). Prentice Hall, 1985.

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19

Notari, Angelo. Collected Works, Part 2. Edited by Jonathan P. Wainwright. A-R Editions, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.31022/b231.

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These volumes bring together, for the first time in a critical edition, the complete music of Angelo Notari (1566/1573–1663), an Italian musician who worked in England from 1611. An important aspect of this edition is the inclusion of a large corpus of works newly attributed to Notari. This music appears in two surviving manuscripts (a score book and a fragmentary set of parts) copied by Notari and a set of manuscript parts copied by a London associate, Stephen Bing. The sources are examined in detail, and the reasoning for the attributions is made clear. The edition also includes a number of arrangements of music by other composers that appear in the Notari manuscripts; these range from ornamented versions and variant readings to reworkings that together represent the full gamut of compositional practice in the late sixteenth century and in the first half of the seventeenth century.
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20

Notari, Angelo. Collected Works, Part 3. Edited by Jonathan P. Wainwright. A-R Editions, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.31022/b232.

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These volumes bring together, for the first time in a critical edition, the complete music of Angelo Notari (1566/1573–1663), an Italian musician who worked in England from 1611. An important aspect of this edition is the inclusion of a large corpus of works newly attributed to Notari. This music appears in two surviving manuscripts (a score book and a fragmentary set of parts) copied by Notari and a set of manuscript parts copied by a London associate, Stephen Bing. The sources are examined in detail, and the reasoning for the attributions is made clear. The edition also includes a number of arrangements of music by other composers that appear in the Notari manuscripts; these range from ornamented versions and variant readings to reworkings that together represent the full gamut of compositional practice in the late sixteenth century and in the first half of the seventeenth century.
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21

Notari, Angelo. Collected Works, Part 1. Edited by Jonathan P. Wainwright. A-R Editions, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.31022/b230.

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These volumes bring together, for the first time in a critical edition, the complete music of Angelo Notari (1566/1573–1663), an Italian musician who worked in England from 1611. An important aspect of this edition is the inclusion of a large corpus of works newly attributed to Notari. This music appears in two surviving manuscripts (a score book and a fragmentary set of parts) copied by Notari and a set of manuscript parts copied by a London associate, Stephen Bing. The sources are examined in detail, and the reasoning for the attributions is made clear. The edition also includes a number of arrangements of music by other composers that appear in the Notari manuscripts; these range from ornamented versions and variant readings to reworkings that together represent the full gamut of compositional practice in the late sixteenth century and in the first half of the seventeenth century.
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22

Shuback, Alan. Hollywood at the Races. University Press of Kentucky, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813178295.001.0001.

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An examination of the symbiotic relationship that existed between the Hollywood film community and horse racing, primarily between 1930 and 1960, Hollywood at the Races explores the extraordinary participation of producers, directors, and actors in the sport of kings. All three of Southern California’s major racetracks were founded in part or in whole by Hollywood luminaries: Hal Roach was cofounder of SantaAnita; Bing Crosby founded Del Mar with help from Pat O’Brien; and the Warner brother founded Hollywood Park with assistance from dozens of people in the film community. Moreover, people like Crosby, Betty Grable, Mervyn LeRoy, and Don Ameche owned racehorses, while MGM’s chief of production, Louis B. Mayer, was one of the nation’s leading owner-breeders. Racing also had an interest in Hollywood, as evidenced by the exploits of breeder-owner Jock Whitney, who helped finance David O. Selznick’s productions of GonewiththeWind and Rebecca. A horse owned by Rita Hayworth (aka the Princess Aly Khan) nearly won Europe’smost important race, the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe, and screenwriter- producer Gene Markey became the co-owner of Calumet Farm when he married his fourth wife.During this period, Hollywood produced at least 120 racing-themed films, among them A Day at the Races, National Velvet, and Thoroughbreds Don’t Cry. Thelast two starred Mickey Rooney, an inveterate horseplayer who, like Chico Marx and Jimmy Durante, lost a fortune at the track.The book concludes with an analysis of the twin declines of racing and cinema in America in recent decades.
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23

Gilmore, Sir Ian, and William Gilmore. Alcohol. Edited by Patrick Davey and David Sprigings. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199568741.003.0339.

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Alcohol has been used for thousands of years and, indeed, in very different ways. Two thousand years ago, the occupying Romans sipped wine regularly but reasonably moderately, and marvelled at the local English serfs who celebrated bringing in their crops with brief episodes of unrivalled drunkenness. The use of alcohol was not only tolerated but sometimes encouraged by the ruling classes as a way of subjugating the population and dulling their awareness of the conditions in which they had to live and work. The adverse impact of gin consumption was famously recorded by Hogarth’s painting of ‘Gin Lane’ but, at the same time, beer was reckoned a safer alternative to water for fluid intake and was linked to happiness and prosperity in the sister painting of ‘Beer Street’. It was against the ‘pernicious use of strong liquors’ and not beer that the president of the Royal College of Physicians, John Friend, petitioned Parliament in 1726. Some desultory attempts were made by Parliament in the eighteenth century to introduce legislation in order to tax and control alcohol production but they were eventually repealed. It was really the onset of the Industrial Revolution in nineteenth-century England that brought into sharp relief the wasted productivity and lost opportunity from excess consumption. England moved from a rural, relatively disorganized workforce to an urban, more closely scrutinized and supervised one—for instance, in factories, where men needed their wits about them to work heavy machinery, workers that were absent (in body or mind) were noticed. And, in Victorian Britain, there arose a greater social conscience—an awareness, for example, of the harm, through neglect, inflicted on the children of those who spent their wages and their days in an alcoholic stupor. Nonetheless, the per capita consumption of alcohol in the UK at the end of the nineteenth century was greater than it is today. It fell progressively through the first half of the twentieth century, with two marked dips. The first coincided with the introduction of licensing hours restrictions during the First World War, and the second with the economic depression of the 1930s. Following the Second World War, there was a doubling of alcohol consumption between 1950 and the present day, to about 10 l of pure alcohol per capita. There has been a small fall of 9% in the last 5 years; this may be, in part, related to the changing ethnic mix and increasing number of non-drinkers. There has always been a mismatch between the self-reported consumption in lifestyle questionnaires, and the data from customs and excise, with the latter being 40% greater. From the latter, it can be estimated that the average consumption of non-teetotal adults in England is 25 units (0.25 l of pure alcohol) per week, which is well above the recommended limits of 14 units for women, and 21 units for men. Of course, average figures hide population differences, and it is estimated that the heaviest-consuming 10% of the population account for 40% of that drunk. While men continue to drink, on average, about twice the amount that women do, the rate of rise of consumption in women has been steeper. Average consumption is comparable across socio-economic groups but there is evidence of both more teetotallers and more drinking in a harmful way in the poorest group. In 2007, 13% of those aged 11–15 admitted that they had drunk alcohol during the previous week. This figure is falling, but those who do drink are drinking more. The average weekly consumption of pupils who drink is 13 units/week. Binge drinking estimates are unreliable, as they depend on self-reporting in questionnaires. In the UK, they are taken as drinking twice the daily recommended limits of 4 units for men, and 3 units for women, on the heaviest drinking day in the previous week. In 2010, 19% of men, and 12% of women, admitted to binge drinking, with the figures being 24% and 17%, respectively, for those aged 16–24. The preferred venue for drinking in the UK has changed markedly, mainly in response to the availability of cheap supermarket drink. Thirty years ago, the vast majority of alcohol was consumed in pubs and restaurants, whereas, in 2009, the market share of off-licence outlets was 65%. However, drinkers under 24 years of age still drink predominantly away from home. The UK per capita consumption is close to the European average, but consumption has been falling in Mediterranean countries and rising in northern and eastern Europe. Europe has the highest consumption of all continents, but there is undoubtedly massive under-reporting in many countries, particularly because of local unregulated production and consumption. It is estimated that less than 10% of consumption is captured in statistics in parts of Africa.
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