Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Wise Foods, Inc. is a company based in Berwick, Pennsylvania, that makes snacks and sells them through retail food outlets in 15 eastern seaboard states, as well as Vermont, Ohio, West Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, and Washington, D.C. Best known for its several varieties of potato chips, Wise also offers Cheez Doodles, bagged popcorn, tortilla chips, pork rinds, onion rings, Dipsy Doodle ...
Larry Clinton (August 17, 1909 – May 2, 1985) [1] was an American musician, best known as a trumpeter who became a prominent American bandleader and arranger. [2]His jazz and pop standards were "The Dipsy Doodle" (1937), "My Reverie" (1938), and "Heart and Soul" (1938).
By 1960, King Kone's products were sold in 250,000 supermarkets and restaurants in the United States and its "Dipsy Doodles" brand of corn chips was the second-best selling corn chip in the country behind Fritos. King Kone's snack division also produced popcorn in caramel, cheese and unflavored varieties, and was the largest producer of popcorn ...
John Simmit is a British actor and stand-up comedian, [1] he is best known for playing Dipsy in BBC TV's global hit Teletubbies from 1997 to 2001. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] Career
Dipsy-Doodle-Dandy [42] Gordon Berenson: Red, The Red Baron [43] Andrew Berenzweig: Bubba, Backdoor Bubba, Andy [44] [45] Aki Berg: Birdie, The King [46] Patrice ...
However the film originally had no sound, and the song "Dipsy Doodle" was artificially superimposed on that section of the film. Dipsy Doodle's structure does not fit the structure of the Tranky Doo, since the song is a 12-bar blues structure and the choreography is 32-bar swing structure. It was common to Lindy hoppers, like the shim sham.
Drake's Fruit Doodles, a trademarked name for fruit pies, were introduced on October 29, 1964, [70] but were known as Drake's Fruit Pies by the early 1970s. [71] In 1969, a bakery in Wayne, New Jersey, was built to supplement the existing bakeries in Brooklyn, Boston, Long Island City, and Newark. [72]
Players were also known to "dipsy-doodle" with the puck or come out of their own zone "rather gingerly". Gallivan would comment that late in the game was an "inopportune time" for a team to take a penalty, would mention that a penalty killer was "wasting valuable seconds in the penalty" when he was ragging the puck, and would almost always ...