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Doodle Car conflict over Territory 😂 Car Crash - Funny Car Wars 3D Doodle Cartoon #96Welcome to Woa Doodoo! Enjoy a silly moment with our doodle Don't For.

  1. May 02, 2012 Doodle 4 Google is a competition open to K-12 students of U.S. Schools to create their own Google doodle. This year’s theme for the doodles is 'If I could travel in time, I’d visit' Google has been hosting the Doodle 4 Google competition every year since 2008.
  2. Mar 16, 2021 Google Doodle shows us Ireland for St. Patrick's Day 2021. The artwork depicts the Emerald Isle's diverse geography, architecture and history.

'Polly Wolly Doodle' is a traditional American children's song. It was sung by Dan Emmett's Virginia Minstrels, who premiered at New York's Bowery Amphitheatre in February 1843,[1] and is often credited to Emmett (1815–1904).[2][3]

It was known to have been performed by the Yale Glee Club in 1878,[4] and was first published in a Harvard student songbook in 1880.[citation needed]

'Polly Wolly Doodle' appears in the manuscript for Laura Ingalls Wilder's novel, These Happy Golden Years (1943), exactly as it is used in the published version.[citation needed] Free mpeg editor for mac.

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The melody of the song, as it is usually sung, formed the basis for Boney M.'s hit 'Hooray! Hooray! It's a Holi-Holiday' in 1979,[5] and for Alexandra Burke's song 'Start Without You'. The tune is also found in children's music, including the Sunday school song 'O-B-E-D-I-E-N-C-E', 'Radio Lollipop' by the German group die Lollipops, and the Barney & Friends songs 'Alphabet Soup' (using only the tune of the first verse) and 'If I Had One Wish' (which uses both verses).

Notable recordings[edit]

  • 1917: Harry C. Browne[6]
  • 1926: Gid Tanner and the Skillet Lickers (as 'Polly Wolly Doo').[7][6]
  • 1939: Carter Family (as 'Polly Wolly Doodle All Day')[6]
  • 1940: Shirley Temple
  • 1961: Bing Crosby included the song in a medley on his album 101 Gang Songs.
  • 1962: Alvin and the Chipmunks on their album The Chipmunk Songbook
  • 1964: Burl Ives[6]
  • 1976: Leon Redbone on his album On the Track
  • 1979: Boney M. (as 'Hooray! Hooray! It's a Holi-Holiday')[6]
  • 1979: Baton Baton Mein (as 'Uthe sabke Kadam' by Amit Kumar, Pearl, Rajesh Roshan and Yogesh)
  • 1989: Wee Sing Fun 'n' Folk
  • 1991: The Singing Kettle (as 'Mice on Ice' on their Christmas Cracker Show video; coincidentally two years later they recorded 'Polly Wolly Doodle' with a different tune and set of lyrics for the Adventures in Kettleland video)
  • 2002: VeggieTales on their album on CD, Bob and Larry's Backyard Party
  • 2003: The Cheeky Girls (as '(Hooray, Hooray) It's A Cheeky Holiday')
  • 2009: Alexandra Burke (as 'Start Without You')

Appearances in film and television[edit]

  • Shirley Temple sings 'Polly Wolly Doodle' in the 1935 film The Littlest Rebel.
  • The song is featured in two Frank Capra films: You Can't Take It with You (1938) and Pocketful of Miracles (1961).
  • The song is the theme of the 1938 Donald Duck short film Good Scouts, in which it is played over the opening credits and sung by Donald and his nephews on their march.
  • Clark Gable sings the song while wildcatting in the 1940 film Boomtown.
  • Woody Woodpecker sings ths song while driving his car in the opening scene of the 1947 short film Well Oiled.
  • Character actor Frank Puglia sings the song continually (and eventually gets the whole Anderson family to sing along) in the first episode of season three of the TV show Father Knows Best. This episode originally aired 12 September 1956.
  • The song appears at the 2:19 mark of Sam Peckinpah's 1969 The Wild Bunch, sung by Strother Martin's character, Coffer.
  • Julie Andrews sings the song in the opening faux-musical set piece of S.O.B (1981) and the tune is heard several times throughout the film.
  • The Kidsongs kids sing the song in the 1987 video 'A Day at the Circus'.
  • The Juke Box Puppet Band performs the piece in an episode of Shining Time Station
  • Mr. Hollywood sings the song constantly in episodes of 2 Stupid Dogs.
  • In the video games Pokémon Red, Green, Blue, and Yellow, as well as the Pokémon: Indigo League anime, the composition 'Road to Viridian City Leaving Pallet Town' sounds similar to 'Polly Wolly Doodle'.
  • The song is played in a get-well card in the Monk season 4 episode 'Monk Stays in Bed' (2005).
  • In the Even Stevens episode, “Little Mr. Sacktown”, Beans armpit farts to the tune of “Polly Wolly Doodle'.
  • In the video game Red Dead Redemption 2, NPC's can occasionally be heard playing the song on a banjo.

References[edit]

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  1. ^Lee Davis, Scandals and Follies: The Rise and Fall of the Great Broadway Revue (New York: Limelight Editions, 2000), p. 31., according to http://civilwartalk.com/threads/polly-wolly-doodle.15345/
  2. ^Cooper, Karen (February 8, 2019). 'Minstrelsy in Minnesota: Blackface wasn't only a southern problem'. MinnPost. Retrieved August 28, 2020.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
  3. ^Miller, Michael (2008). The Complete Idiot's Guide to Music History: From Pre-Historic Africa to Classical Europe to American Popular Music. Penguin. p. 148.
  4. ^'Mention of Polly Wolly Doodle, sung by the Yale Glee Club in 1878'. May 26, 1878. p. 2 – via newspapers.com.
  5. ^https://www.sonymusic.de/kuenstler/boney-m; in German
  6. ^ abcdehttp://www.originals.be/en/originals.php?id=4933
  7. ^'Country Music – Music News, New Songs, Videos, Music Shows and Playlists from CMT'.
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Polly_Wolly_Doodle&oldid=1018818605'

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Dr. Vera Gedroits Google Doodle: Google on Monday celebrated the 151st birthday of a Russian surgeon, professor, poet, and author Dr. Vera Gedroits. Dr. Gedroits is credited as the country’s first female military surgeon and one of the world’s first female professors of surgery.

“Thank you, Vera Gedroits, for pushing the world of medicine forward, even with the odds stacked against you,” Google wrote in its description.

Gedroits was born in 1870 into a prominent family of Lithuanian royal descent in Kiev, then part of the Russian Empire. In her late teens, she left Russia to study medicine in Switzerland. Dr. Gedroits returned home at the turn of the 20th century, and she soon began her pioneering medical career as a surgeon at a factory hospital.

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“When the Russo-Japanese War broke out in 1904, Dr. Gedroits volunteered as a surgeon on a Red Cross hospital train. Under threat of enemy fire, she performed complex abdominal operations in a converted railway car with such unprecedented success that her technique was adopted as the new standard by the Russian government. Following her battlefield service, Dr. Gedroits worked as a surgeon for the Russian royal family before her return home to Kiev, where she was appointed professor of surgery at the University of Kiev in 1929,” Google added. Website blocker download.

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Gedroits authored several medical papers on nutrition and surgical treatments during her time as a professor. She also published multiple collections of poems, and several nonfiction works, including the 1931 memoir simply titled “Life,” which told the story of her personal journey that led to service on the front lines in 1904.