Vision Doctor

Doctor Steel – Vision
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Doctor Who In-vision Issue Sixty Six Terminus near mint $9.99 |
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Doctor Who In-vision Issue Sixty Four Snake Dance look! $9.99 |
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Doctor Who In-vision Issue Sixty Four Snake Dance look! $9.99 |
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Doctor Who In-vision Issue Sixty Six Terminus near mint $9.99 |
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DOCTOR OCTOPUS – MARVEL VISION EMBOSSED CARDS – ’96 $1.00 |
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Eye Doctor Optometrist Pin Matte Silver Ox Glasses Spec Ophthalmologist Vision $15.00 |
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Ford Paint Chip Scratch Touch Up VISION BLUE – 8CPC $13.95 |
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JUNGLE DOCTOR 12 BOOK SET!! VISION FORUM HOMESCHOOL $43.99 |
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In-Vision, The Talons Of Weng-Chiang, Doctor Who $10.00 |
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In Vision MAGAZINE No. 34 (1991) MINT Doctor Who $7.99 |
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In Vision MAGAZINE No. 33 (1991) MINT Doctor Who $6.99 |
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Doctor Occult (1994) Vertigo Visions #1 VF $1.60 |
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Doctor Occult (1994) Vertigo Visions #1 FN $1.20 |
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Doctor Thirteen (1998) Vertigo Visions #1 NM $3.00 |
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Doctor Thirteen (1998) Vertigo Visions #1 VF $2.40 |
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Doctor Who In-Vision (UK) #53 VF- $6.00 |
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Doctor Who In-Vision (UK) #53 FN/VF $5.60 |
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Sunday v Rapture book-Doctor & Visions of Daniel & John $15.00 |
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DOCTOR OCTOPUS #10 1996 Marvel Vision card SPIDER-MAN $1.00 |
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In-Vision Magazine #27 DOCTOR WHO SUN MAKERS uk mag $6.39 |
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Vertigo Visions Dr Doctor Occult #1 DC 1994 VF/NM $1.50 |
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Vertigo Visions: Doctor Occult #1 (1994) $1.49 |
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Vertigo Visions: Doctor Occult #1 (1994) $1.99 |
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DOCTOR WHO IN VISION DELTA AND THE BANNERMEN TV SERIES SCIENCE FICTION BOOK 1986 $5.99 |
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1996 Marvel Vision #10 DOCTOR OCTOPUS trading card DIMENSIONAL $1.50 |
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1996 Marvel Vision #21 SPIDER-MAN vs DOCTOR OCTOPUS trading card DIMENSIONAL $1.50 |
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Doctor Occult 1 NM DC Vertigo Visions Dr. $4.00 |
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In-Vision #50 Doctor Who coverage 1994 $5.99 |
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Eye Doctor Optometrist Vision Reading Chart Cufflinks $29.99 |
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Doctor Who CMS In-Vision Magazine #63 Arc Of Infinity $7.95 |
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Doctor Who Exterminator 272 Wolf Vision 272/275 Common $1.55 |
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Doctor Thirteen (1998) Vertigo Visions #1 NM $2.42 |
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Optometrist Optician Eye Doctor Vision Chart Wall Clock $14.99 |
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The Old Doctor’s Vision Poems T.J.Savage HB/1920 $24.95 |
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HONEYWELL THERMOSTAT MODEL FOCUS PRO 5000 $41.40 Honeywell’s TH5110D 1022 Focus Pro non programmable digital 24 volt or battery powered thermostat with extra large display. Single stage. System Heat-Off-Cool-Auto, Fan Auto-On. Can be configured for heat only. Large easy to read display…. |
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PHARMACY Wall Clock pharmacist drug store decor gift $17.99 This BRAND NEW wall clock measures 10 inches in diameter. It has a black plastic frame with a clear cover. Graphics are rich and vibrant and will last a lifetime. These clocks make a great accent to any room in your home or business. A perfect addition to your kitchen, bathroom, bedroom, family room or anywhere. The clock has precision quartz movement and operates on 1 AA battery (not included). P… |
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NURSE ~Novelty Sign~ parking rn nurses medical gift $8.99 BRAND NEW SIGN!! 12″ tall and 8″ wide sign. Our novelty signs are made from outdoor durable plastic with professional grade vinyl graphics. These signs will never rust or fade, perfect inside or out (4-5 years outdoors)! The sign has round corners and a hole pre-drilled for easy mounting. This item is in stock and ready to ship, generally the following business day. Please check out all our other … |
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Foreigner – Complete Greatest Hits $12.97 On the cover of Foreigner’s newest collection, the letters that spell out Complete Greatest Hits are cut out from world currency. For example, there’s an A from Antarctica, a T from Trinidad, an M from Mongolia, and so on. At least the drive behind this third greatest-hits compilation (fourth, if you count The Best of Foreigner Live) is clearly admitted. Still, if anyone deserves your money, an ar… |
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Vision Thing $8.96 2006 Digitally Remastered Edition of this Sisters Classic. After Scoring Big Time with “Floodland”, Frontman Andrew Eldritch Changed Direction Once Again, Heading this Time for a Guitar-based Techno-rock Feel. The Title Track Became a Club Hit, Where the Driving Tempo and Distorted Guitars Provided a Perfect Dancefloor Atmosphere. On the Single “Doctor JEEP” and on “Detonation Boulevard”, the Temp… |
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Right Now You’re in the Best of Hands $12.98 Bear Vs. Shark creates music for people like them who need to be inspired in the same way as they have been by music. The b…see site for more info…. |
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Fatal Vision [VHS] $9.99 … |
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The Terror of Doctor Hitchcock … |
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Fatal Vision [VHS] $69.99 … |
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Honeywell TH8110U1003 Vision Pro 8000 Digital Thermostat $112.99 VisionPRO® Touchscreen 7-Day Programmable 1 Heat/1 Cool Conventional and Heat Pump Thermostat… |
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Doctor No $10.63 Doctor No |
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The Doctor Is in $18.23 The Doctor Is in |
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The Doctor $5.11 The Doctor |
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Call the Doctor $11.98 Sleater-Kinney’s masterful sophomore effort Call the Doctor fulfills all the promise of the group’s debut and more, forging taut melodicism and jaw-dropping sonic complexity out of barbed-wire emotional potency. The emergence of Carrie Brownstein as an equal shareholder in Corin Tucker’s vision is the key — her four contributions (particularly “Stay Where You Are” and “I Wanna Be Your Joey Ramone”) are stellar, while her harmonies complete Tucker’s equally superb lead turns by reading between the lines to verbalize the naked aggression at the core of the songs’ polemic power. Forget the riot grrrl implications inherent in the trio’s music — Call the Doctor is pure, undiluted punk, and it’s brilliant. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi Performers: Carrie Brownstein – Guitar, Vocals; Corin Tucker – Drums, Vocals, Guitar |
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Doctor Who: The Deadly Assassin $18.31 The Deadly Assassin: Gallifrey. Planet of the Time Lords. The Doctor has finally come home, but not by choice. Summoned by a vision from the Matrix, he is drawn into a web of political intrigue and assassination. Nothing is quite what it seems, and in the |
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Sound And Vision $9.97 STEREO REVIEW SOUNDS AND VISION covers stereo equipment, including articles on recent technical developments, choosing home and car stereo components and integrating audio and video systems. It includes reviews of laboratory testing and equipment, recordings on disc and tape, popular and classical music composers, conductors and performers. Sound And Vision is part of the Music family of magazines. It is generally sold to individuals and businesses and quite often can be found in a reception room or waiting room of a company or a professional office like a dentist, doctor, health club, gym, or beauty and hair salon. A full year magazine subscription to Sound And Vision includes issues delivered right to your mailbox. |
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Doctor Velvet $13.58 Fevered anticipation surrounded the recording of roots music phenomenon Nick Curran’s third album and debut for Blind Pig Records. Attaching himself to such a pinnacle of mainstream blues as Blind Pig seemed at first a mixed blessing. While it affords the ex-rockabilly twanger greater visibility on a reputable blues label, it nonetheless raised the fear that he may have been attempting some type of ill-advised commercial crossover. One listen to Doctor Velvet, though, and such fears melt away into pure joy. Perhaps “purist” joy would be more apt, as Curran continues on his time-traveling blues odyssey. Having already proven himself as the most worthy heir to the Texas blues throne — or at least Guitar Slim reincarnate — Doctor Velvet finds the guitarist/vocalist channeling the spirits of Albert King, Freddy King and Otis Rush in one long, funky burst of late-’50s and early-’60s go-go blues ectoplasm. From the inspired reworking of garage rock icons the Sonics’ “Shot Down” to the Louis Prima-meets-Fats Domino vocals on “Don’t Be Angry,” Curran has deftly expanded his vision. Throw in a cameo appearance by Jimmie Vaughan on two tracks and Doctor Velvet packs some serious blues mojo. The “State of Texas” sunglasses Curran sports on the CD cover are merely an exclamation point. ~ Matt Collar, Rovi Performers: Bobby Horton – Vocals (Background); Gary Primich – Harmonica; Mike Barfield – Vocals (Background); Rachel Fenton – Vocals (Background); Damien Llanes – Drums; Eric Mathew Przygocki – String Bass, Bass; Jimmie Vaughan – Guitar; Joe Morales – Sax (Tenor); Nick Curran – Vocals, Guitar |
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Doctor Faustus $12.78 Mitteleuropa Orchestra, the brainchild of Italian percussionist, Andrea Centazzo, was an unusual band, featuring a forward-looking all-star lineup that immersed itself in the often chamber-like compositions of its leader, mixing genres, exploiting the extraordinary improvisational skills of some of its participants, and exhibiting one of the most complete realizations of Centazzo’s vision. The large group focuses on breakaway combinations of musicians within the larger structure so that the resulting sounds often project the feel of much smaller groups. The previously issued first four tracks of Doctor Faustus were recorded live in Bologna, Italy, in the first year of the band’s existence, and are wonderful examples of the group at its finest, where the composer’s landscapes set up a fiery contribution by violinist Carlos Zingaro on the opening “Musicaschema,” followed by an extended trenchant solo by trumpeter Enrico Rava on “Third Environment for Orchestra,” and a brilliant contribution by one of the string bassists on “Chirimia.” The high proportion of reeds and percussion shifts the sound, giving it an airy quality, with strong individual improvisational efforts from a collective of Italians who include Gianluigi Trovesi on bass clarinet and alto sax, Carlo Actis Dato (who soars brilliantly on “Third Environment”) on clarinet and baritone sax, and Roberto Ottaviano on soprano saxes. The last three previously unreleased numbers broaden the base, with radical trombonist Radu Malfatti joining on one piece, and trombonist Albert Mangelsdorff and clarinetist Theo Jörgensmann added on “Doctor Faustus,” which is also bolstered by extra percussionists. There are flashes of brilliance throughout, with Centazzo’s compositional backdrops and sometimes startling solos laying the groundwork. “Chirimea” offers a unique collective improvisation from Rava and flugelhornist Franz Koglmann, followed by two reeds, and throughout the piece there are surprises galore, with oddball rhythms and Zorn-like rapidly changing directions. The trumpet is featured again on “First Environment” and “Lost in the Mist,” each to good effect, while the short but frenetic “Mittelmarch” allows Zingaro more space. “Dr. Faustus,” dedicated to Manglesdorff, gives the trombonist considerable solo space, at first backed by sympathetic percussion and later performing a cappella. In all, a solid performance. ~ Steven Loewy, Rovi |
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The Vision $7.19 The Vision |
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Vision $5.34 Vision |
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