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Examples
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Peggy Lee was "too good for her own good," as the jazz critic George Hoefer discerned in 1959 (a remark quoted in this book, though it's misattributed to John Tynan).
Lee and Sherman 2006
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She was, as Hoefer declared, simply “the greatest white female jazz singer since Mildred Bailey.”
Lee and Sherman 2006
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She was, as Hoefer declared, simply "the greatest white female jazz singer since Mildred Bailey."
Lee and Sherman 2006
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She was, as Hoefer declared, simply “the greatest white female jazz singer since Mildred Bailey.”
Lee and Sherman 2006
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She was, as Hoefer declared, simply "the greatest white female jazz singer since Mildred Bailey."
Lee and Sherman 2006
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Peggy Lee was "too good for her own good," as the jazz critic George Hoefer discerned in 1959 (a remark quoted in this book, though it's misattributed to John Tynan).
Lee and Sherman 2006
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Hoefer (2002) uses these considerations to argue in a novel way for the compatiblity of determinism with human free agency.
Causal Determinism Hoefer, Carl 2008
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Helen Hoefer, whose vote made it possible, was also one of the trustees.
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Helen Hoefer, a city representative, changed her vote, and it went through.
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Helen Hoefer, a city representative, changed her vote, and it went through.
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