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ALLEY OOP.
From:
Thrasher
| Date:
September 1, 2001| Author:
Lundry, Wez
| COPYRIGHT 2001 High Speed Productions, Inc. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan. All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group.Copyright information
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Florida is just great I could never say enough good things about that place, but ALLEY OOP number 7 just offered one more. Photocopied and primarily hand-written, Alley Oop documents some sick Sunshine
State skating as well as honest park reviews, an interview with Tallahassee's Plastic Mast...
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
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Jasper Johns, 'Alley Oop,' 1958. (painting)
Artforum International
; Familiarity obscures origins. I doubt I'll ever remember precisely when I first encountered Jasper Johns' Alley Oop, a touchstone for my thinking about physicality and process. Along with Johns' flags, targets, and numerals, Alley Oop instituted a new class of painting, at least in my experience.
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Here's the scoop behind `Alley Oop'
Chicago Sun-Times
; Q. While paging through my Top 40 book recently, I spotted "Alley Oop" by a group named Dante and the Evergreens. The book says this group released it on June 13, 1960. Since I have always thought that "Alley Oop" was performed by the Hollywood Argyles, I checked their section and found that they
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One-man band was behind the 1950s hit `Alley Oop'
Chicago Sun-Times
; Q. I have heard many stories about who the Hollywood Argyles - of "Alley Oop" fame - really were. One knowledgeable DJ says the group was just one man: Gary Paxton, also of Skip & Flip fame. But when I hear "Alley Oop," it sure sounds like more than one person. A. For perhaps the first time in
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DRIVEL REPLACES ALLEY OOP.(EDITORIAL)(Letter to the Editor)
The Capital Times (Madison, WI)
; Byline: Michael Lynch Madison Dear Editor: I am dismayed that you removed Alley Oop from your comics section and replaced it with drivel like Babs and Aldo. The total dialogue between the characters in the three strips you published between Monday and Wednesday has 88 words. By my count, 31 of them
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Ask the Globe
The Boston Globe
; Q. Who created the caveman comic strip character Alley Oop? K.H., Boston A. Oop and his partner Oola were the invention of Vincent Trout Hamlin, who died last summer in Spring Hill, Fla., at the age of 93. Born in Perry, Iowa, he landed a part-time job at the age of 13 as a movie projectionist and
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