Answers
What years was the Conn Strummer organ made and does it have vacuum tubes?
it is a Conn organ, Strummer type
I have never heard of a "Conn Strummer organ." Does it have any other name?
Me messing around
My mother recently found an old, box-shaped tuner of some sort. It was made by a company called "CONN", who deals(or dealt) mostly in organs, and the name of the model is Strobotuner. After a bit of...
Awesome piece of equipment you found. They actually work way better than most of the modern stuff. The people who still use them will pay a good price, but they are hard to find. Most shops today don't even know about them.
Your...
I'm wanting to buy a used full sized Conn orgain. Would you buy such a musical instrument from an Ebay dealer?
No, I wouldn't. It's a B-3 or nothin'... (WITH PERCUSSION)
Choose adipose conn. tissue, areolar conn. tissue, dense fibrous conn. tissue, osseous tissue, reticular conn. tissue, and hyaline cartilage.
1.Provides great strength through parallel bundles of collagenic fibers;found in...
I think the answer is 3
Choose adipose conn. tissue, areolar conn. tissue, dense fibrous conn. tissue, osseous tissue, reticular conn. tissue, and hyaline cartilage.
1.Provides great strength through parallel bundles of collagenic fibers;found in...
This is homework *help*; you've merely posted your assignment. Show what you've done so far, explain where you're stuck, and we can help you over the rough spot. Simply doing the whole problem for you would be cheating.
Trolley parks: Survivors of an earlier era
Top 10 spots every kid should see
Plan to spice up the summer season with a visit to one (or more) of these stateside attractions that every youngster should see.
Feeling adventurous? Strangest state fair food World's most delicious street foodsThe parks were built by trolley companies at the end of the line in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, as a way to get workers and their families to ride streetcars and railways on weekends. They had carousels, picnic grounds and live entertainment, and they were often located by lakes, rivers or beaches where visitors could take a boat ride or swim.
By 1919, just after World War I, there were 1,000 amusement parks around the country, and most of them were trolley parks, according to Jim Futrell, historian for the National Amusement Park Historical Association. But as cars replaced trolleys, the streetcars and their parks faded away.
Today, only 11 trolley parks remain in operation: Camden Park in Huntington, W.Va., which opened in 1903; Canobie Lake Park, in Salem, N.H., dating to 1902; Clementon Park in Clementon, N.J., which opened in 1907; Dorney Park in Allentown, Pa., 1884; Kennywood in West Mifflin, Pa., 1898; Lakemont Park in Altoona, Pa., 1894; Midway Park, in Maple Springs, N.Y., 1898; Oaks Amusement Park, in Portland, Ore., 1905; Quassy Amusement Park, in Middlebury, Conn., 1908; Seabreeze Amusement Park, in Rochester, N.Y., 1879; and Waldameer Park in Erie, Pa., 1896. (Clementon Park was not owned by a trolley company, but it was located at the end of a trolley line, and some parks were recreation areas before trolley companies bought them.)
News
Trolley parks: Survivors of an earlier eramsnbc.com - Jul 26, 2010
Then as now, a roller rink, one of the largest on the West Coast, was a park centerpiece, with live music from a Wurlitzer pipe organ.
FOXNews - Jul 21, 2010
Late last year, he was at a clinic in his home town of East Haven, Conn., getting tested to be put on the kidney transplant list.South Devon Herald Express - Jul 28, 2010
Cornwood 4th XI 170-7 (L Smith 30, B Fitzpatrick 39no, M Organ 35no; A Squire 4-28), Bovey Tracey 3rd XI 160-7 (S Preston 61no; D Harris 3-22).