553 resultados para Ballet dancing
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On verso: Bay City, 1960
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[Appended caption reads: "Wolverines ballet master Jim Pace leapt his own right end and fell one yard short of a TD in the second quarter. On the next play John Herrnstein drove over the goal line for the score."]
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[Morris dancing on Ark I, lawn]
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[Morris dancing on Ark I, lawn]
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[Morris dancing on Ark I, lawn]
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Doctor Gradus ad Parnassum. -- Jimbo's lullaby. -- Sérénade for the doll. -- The snow is dancing. -- The little shepherd. -- Golliwogg's cake walk.
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Duration: 33:00.
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v. 3, 1915.
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Vol. 68-99 called 2. série, with duplicate volume numbering from 1-32.
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Extinction of the ballet. Operatic management. Musical agents. Libretti. Operatic and theatrical anomalies. The literary maltreatment of music. Dictionaries of music. Grove's musical dictionary. Quartett concerts and the classical in music. Reasonableness of opera. Tatra Füred, and the music of the Hungarian gipsies. The byeways of bookmaking.
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Signals transmit information to receivers about sender attributes, increase the fitness of both parties, and are selected for in cooperative interactions between species to reduce conflict [1, 2]. Marine cleaning interactions are known for stereotyped behaviors [3-6] that likely serve as signals. For example, dancing and tactile dancing in cleaner fish may serve to advertise cleaning services to client fish [7] and manipulate client behavior [8], respectively. Cleaner shrimp clean fish [9], yet are cryptic in comparison to cleaner fish. Signals, therefore, are likely essential for cleaner shrimp to attract clients. Here, we show that the yellow-beaked cleaner shrimp [110] Urocaridella sp. c [11] uses a stereotypical side-to-side movement, or rocking dance, while approaching potential client fish in the water column. This dance was followed by a cleaning interaction with the client 100% of the time. Hungry cleaner shrimp, which are more willing to clean than satiated ones [12], spent more time rocking and in closer proximity to clients Cephaiopholis cyanostigma than satiated ones, and when given a choice, clients preferred hungry, rocking shrimp. The rocking dance therefore influenced client behavior and, thus, appears to function as a signal to advertise the presence of cleaner shrimp to potential clients.