The St. Johns News. Volume Xxi—No

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The St. Johns News. Volume Xxi—No THE ST. JOHNS NEWS. VOLUME XXI—NO. 19 JOHNS. THUSSDAY AFTERNOON,—DECEMBER 16. 1909. TWELVE PAGES ONE DOLLAR A YEAR AFTER UNM ILLNESS BMCNTYOUMi NNNMM SAMIEL S. WALKER DEAN mwm c. UUUM DIIC1> M:N0AV FlilEB' Sll llIKIi Ml’UUACNIiY AT IHNN'ITAL IN inUAAtimCK OF MfCHUiAN MOWT* rnttm -------------- I BMA'IDKRIC. ILUNUUI. HCMUflNEi. AWAY. SMESMBB tsAOK tVA. HAN P.A Mr*. C. Oltoba tSI*«l At her 'IVMHL WliKWnj>(6« MATI7H JAM»N M«MII>MAN riMCli HIM lAMI MIsa Bsmice M. Hkinasr. eldsr «tau. IIAKKIt C'.t iiotm ovM Tf> Mamuel H. Walkor. at on* tima a ■ICl hume In the north part of thie city ahter of John Hklnnsr of Massx. disd vary well known resident of Cllntan fC IN PIW»M DAS'llt. .•Sunday aften- a lone weAiieooie lllneoe Mt'IUMT. .uMMenly last Thursday mornins NKXT' M OF oniTwr. county, died very* suddenly Friday, CITY. from »*ancer. I at the Amerlrsn hospital at Bsividsre, Dec. 1«, at his home at OM Mission Mr*. Glbha arhu was the dauehtrr of ! Illinois, where for some time she had where he had llvad for many ysars. naaaaaaw ClM£CO QAilT HMC' ”*^**"*** •** ’*****'^ ‘* bom In been w nurse. ly esata JnU Mewtenre The body won tahan to Ann Arbor IMNIMC rlWalCIl DUll I UiVC • Mouth Bristol. untArlo county. Now SANE TAU AT POWMMi The newh of her dsath was recelvsd Maiurday for Interment and the fun* York. Juno 3A. ISa3. In ItSS sh« _______ I a little latsr by her father who In or* ersl held In Ht. Andrew ’s Rpiscopal I romoved with her parents to Blue j ('ompsny with Isas*- Hewitt of Mspis church In that city. BATTIJ.: t»N- «1ANTN WAN j 'X .MKXT HI»MI>NA WITH tMdVKilUpIds left that day ti* biin* ths Mr. Walkar eras tha only aon of tha FA«r MOWlON mamt iHtdy ^home. returnlna to Ht. Johns lata Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Walker of KXSIOWnfFN. itM’Hsaum sNi>. I sioco roald* <1. i Haturday mornina. The remains (*ourt has been In saaslon tha acest- thla ctt)'. He woe twm in New Toth KBI' f$CfnC IN NFKW I Mhe coninionce«l Itor edui atton In ^ were immediately taken to the family er |*art of the week llatenina to evl- alxty*elaht yosrs mtgu, and came to t music and art at the academy of Nap* . Ixtme In Eaaex where on ftunday the deni*e In a number of oases that have MIchlMBn when a very youna boy. I j lea. New York, and •'umploted a 1jmn «* .^MtllsiMw of lawdins till IwtersatlMN tlmmp* !*■** ' I funeral services were held. been brouBht aaalnst alle«ed offend ­ Kducatetl In the University of Mlchl* j coure* at the Goneeee Wesleyan asm* Mtee Hkinner. who was twent>-el«ht ers of the total option law. aan, he araduated In lARl, comlna to I Torn .\ll Pnrtw oT IAm* oT fotmly Nnw Clewn .\lMetit' ) iiiar.\ and *fNne»ee <.*0110®* at lAma, )>ears of aae. waa a very brl«ht youmi on Monday James Cordrsy pleaded m. Johns where he took an actlva In­ I .New Yawk. juet Itefifre movliic West, I'onteat. tkMmly. ^ woman, and while In the hlph school aulliv to the charae of havina broken terest in politics. He was one of Che tin doptemtier 1H, 1S73 she teas uni* jin this city, was considered an excep- the iaw and was sentem*ed to thirty j principal mambers of the old Mlcht* ------------- - j ie«l In marrtasf to Charlsa A. Lossy :ilonallv brilliant student, completlnc itays In the c'ounty jail In addition to j aan Mortaaac Co., of this city that W Johns saw the fln. « w i. *iima ' "hw Pehrusry S. lltS. To them PfAMONA GRANUtL i the i-ourse with the «*laas of Itaylna a fine of IM and coats of tlO.i failed so dlaaatrously more than "You have been flabtina trusts and contest that It ever fwiw or will have we<e U.rn three children. Miss Grace iteport of the e«‘enlnc meefna of Hhe was a atrl of a very retliina na ­ If at the expiration of hie jail term twenty years since. other unlawful combinations which an opportunity t<» »ee aauin In a le*ae> <4 ttiia city, Mrs. Carrie D. Puntona Granse held at lAeWllt lie* ture. and while she was hlRhly re­ he has not paid the fine and costs he ! Hhortly after the failure that for veurs have bloclead. In the national ttme last niaht at AlM-.m's l»epa Mrake i4 MInneapulle. Minn., 190f. spected by a iarae circle of sequsin* Is to remain confined until he does i brouaht arlef to ao many Clinton senate, reform lealslallon arhKdi you house. The Iheatr* w:i« flMed with I*. I..••»e> of Lansin®. ail of whom Meeiina x>alle«i to order at 7:3n p. tancee. She kept her own counsel, and make payment for a period not to ex­ county* farmers. Mr. Walker moved to have been demandina. When you at* an audience re|*re»eninil»*- the clt> were with their mother when she m. b> W. M. Jerome Dills. HIncIna made no warm friendships, lovina the ceed idx months Did Miselon where he purchased a to the prlmartes next Heptembar to and surroundlna c«uinir> and It c»»n- passed away*. b> the Granac. "The Parmer Feeds companionship of t»ooka more than Prank Hlaler was brouaht Into fruU farm. Poliowina tha custom of vote fbr a candidate for United Htataa talned a lame number «»f the ilt>‘« In Jun« lhS5 the dccssa sd waa mar­ Them AM." that of her schoolmates. <oirt Momiay and pleaded not xullty j many of the reeidenta of hla nelahbor- senator look the candidatee over care­ bu«lneeii and luofeeelonal men and ried III Mel\ln K. Gibbs of Ht. Johns. In\'ocailon, Itev. G. T. Plstn-r. Home >'ears alnc*e Mias Hkinner's l« the crime for which he Is charaad j hood. Mr. Walker took summer board* fully lest x-ou make the mistake of well-known faimerf There were also Mrs. Gihbs Is also survived by hsr Hon. Jason Woodman of Paw Paw htelth failed and for a time she was and will stand trial. Tuesday and {era. amona whom at one time waa the votina f'*r a candidate who may not a number of woiii<n In th< oudb nee. a«ed father who for a Ion* time has^^^^ |„|,„dues,i. The subject he in the West. Keturnina to Mlchlasc Wednesday the «*ourt was occupied i uuthor. Elliot Plower. who wrote "De- stand for the reforms for which you K\ervihiiia wn^ as lU- orous and or resided with hla daughter. «Rd one -phe Farmer and Hia but little lmpro\-ed she was then tsk wHh the Peter fasper matter, and at | iichlful Dodd." a pen picture of Mr. have been oontendina." derlv a- It «-ould well Schinil fom- brother. I>. H. (tallsbur), of ItNSkecon |„ i»penlna his suhje«'t he said en to Hattie t'reek where she aalne«l iii,. time of adjournment last evenina tValker. a book that has been read Ho spoke Geora* B. Horton, for !• mlseloner TowneemI .i« ted as leferee wrho came to Ht. Johns a numAx-r of most valuable cittxen of .Lmertoa rapldl). While In that city she he*|in, <-aae had come to the defense, and | great Interest by former friends i y^,rs master of the state aranae. ad »nd l»oth I onti-rtJinit* ••\pree»ed them- da>s liefore his sUtvr died. > today Is the farmer. This fanner hae ennie possessed of the deolre to be a | pt^>bablv be ch»ae«l Priday. | anil acquaintanc-es. | dreasina 500 deleaatee and several aelv<s as satisfied writh the doolelons Puncral services were heM at the ar>at amliltinn. macine the farmer nur>w and when atrona enonah to be* ] x motion has been made In the yir. Walker waa reaent of the unl- hundred others In rhe opera house at the attention h<-« orded then) home Tuesday aflernuon. Dr. G. D. j •:> >ean. aao. The Rlrt whon) aln sent Into trainina In a hospital ; iiwker murder matter to have the case i vemlty for elaht years, from 1S7« to Traverse f^ty. at the annual meetln® Krnesi Penb> of .*4hrphi-rd and T«im hai*r of the .Methodist church he hae taken f«rr hi* helpmate Is his ' In .Vnn .\rhor. j set over until the next term of court, j ixm, and was at one time a member of MIchlaan Htate Grmanee. Tuesday T>mvis of .Milwaukee Wire the contes ­ ficlatlna Kurlat was made In ••♦liial anti alM»\e all a *o«»i| cook. | Ml o. i.*b< r 1*07. she went to Hel* j ii^.-ause of th< absence the »tate | stale leclalature. He has bean , night. tants .mil no l*etter s|ii-ciinens of John's »•♦ tnetery. Ttiere Is a son in this hom*-. The fa* | v hie re where *h. studied for six ' of an Important witness The request | g^yen much credit for the xrowth and There were comments afterwapda prh>slia’ manhood can Iw found an)- Iher has xreat ambltl«»ns for Ilia aon. j months to c«nnp't*ie the couree, and will doiihiless t*e xranted. | i*reaent hlRh standard of the enrin* | connectlnx what he said with Henator whi n—and they demunsti'aie what a Me vilshee him to be a model man «fler her araduatb.n she was alven --------------------------— I eerinx department of the university.
Recommended publications
  • Writing & Journalism
    140 Writing & Journalism Enroll at uclaextension.edu or call (800) 825-9971 Reg# 375735 Fee: $399 Writers’ Program No refund after 10 Nov. WRITING & ❖ Remote Instruction 6 mtgs Tuesday, 7-10pm, Oct. 27-Dec. 1 Creative Writing Enrollment limited to 15 students. c For help in choosing a course or determining if a Rachel Kann, MFA, author of the collection 10 for course fulfills certificate requirements, contact the Everything. Ms. Kann is an award-winning poet whose Writers’ Program at (310) 825-9415. work has appeared in various anthologies, including JOURNALISM Word Warriors: 35 Women Leaders in the Spoken Word Revolution. She is the recipient of the UCLA Extension Basics of Writing Outstanding Instructor Award for Creative Writing. These basic creative writing courses are for WRITING X 403 students with no prior writing experience. Finding Your Story Instruction is exercise-driven; the process of 2.0 units workshopping—in which students are asked to The scariest part of writing is staring at that blank page! share and offer feedback on each other’s work This workshop is for anyone who has wanted to write but with guidance from the instructor—is introduced. doesn’t know where to start or for writers who feel stuck Please call an advisor at (310) 825-9415 to deter- and need a new form or jumping off point for unique mine which course will best help you reach your story ideas. The course provides a safe, playful atmo- writing goals. sphere to experiment with different resources for stories, such as life experiences, news articles, interviews, his- WRITING X 400 tory, and mythology.
    [Show full text]
  • Kathryn Tucker Windham
    IRST RAFT FTHE JOURNAL OF THE ALABAMA WRITERS’ FORUMD VOL. 5, NO. 3 FALL 1998 Kathryn Tucker Windham: Also in this issue: MORE PLAYWRITING Page 6 Telling Stories of the South OPEN THE DOOR: Page 1 WORKS BY YOUNG WRITERS Page 9 AWF-AUM WRITERS’ AND ASSOCIATES’ COLLOQUIUM, ALABAMA VOICES, AND MORE! ROM THE XECUTIVE IRECTOR ALABAMA F E D WRITERS’ ctober 17, 1998, was a watershed day for poetry in Alabama. FORUM At the same time that the Alabama State Poetry Society was 1998-99 Board of Directors Ocelebrating its 30th anniversary with a daylong PoetryFest in President Birmingham–bringing together over 200 members and others to revel Brent Davis (Tuscaloosa) in the Word of poetry–Robert Pinsky, our U.S. Poet Laureate, was vis- Immediate Past President iting Montgomery to fulfill a dream of his own. Norman McMillan (Montevallo) Pinsky visited Montgomery to introduce a staged selection of his Vice-President translation of Dante’s “The Inferno” at the historic Dexter Avenue King Rawlins McKinney (Birmingham) Memorial Baptist Church, just one block from the state capitol. Secretary Jonathan Levi’s production, which features four actors and a violinist, Jay Lamar will travel to Miami, Kansas City, Seattle, Boston and back to New (Auburn) York (where it originated at the 92nd Street Y through the auspices of Treasurer Doug Lindley the Unterberg Poetry Center). Montgomery was the only deep South (Montgomery) stop for “The Inferno.” In the Winter First Draft, we will review the Co-Treasurer production at length. Edward M. George (Montgomery) Regrettably, these events (PoetryFest and “The Inferno” produc- Writers’ Representative Ruth Beaumont Cook tion) conflicted.
    [Show full text]
  • FICTION EDITOR [email protected]
    TL Publishing Group LLC PO BOX 151073 TAMPA, FL 33684 ALICE SAUNDERS EDITOR [email protected] AISHA MCFADDEN EDITOR [email protected] REBECCA WRIGHT EDITOR [email protected] ANNE MARIE BISE POETRY EDITOR [email protected] HEDWIKA COX FICTION EDITOR [email protected] TIFFANI BARNER MARKETING & NETWORKING SPECIALIST [email protected] AMANDA GAYLE OLIVER CONTENT WRITER [email protected] Official Website: http://www.torridliterature.com | http://tlpublishing.org Facebook Pages: http://www.facebook.com/torridliteraturejournal http://www.facebook.com/tlpublishing http://www.facebook.com/tlopenmic http://www.facebook.com/gatewayliterature Twitter: @TorridLit | @TLPubGroup Blog: http://torridliterature.wordpress.com To Submit: http://torridliterature.submittable.com/submit Torrid Literature Journal - Volume XV Untamed Creative Voices Copyright © 2015 by TL Publishing Group LLC All rights belong to the respective authors listed herein. All rights reserved. ISBN-13: 978-0692482636 ISBN-10: 0692482636 Customer Service Information: The Torrid Literature Journal is a literary publication published quarterly by TL Publishing Group LLC. To have copies of the Torrid Literature Journal placed in your store or library, please contact Alice Saunders. Advertising Space: To purchase advertising space in the Torrid Literature Journal, please contact Tiffani Barner at [email protected]. A list of advertis- ing rates is available upon request. Disclaimer: Any views or opinions presented or expressed in the Torrid Literature Journal are solely those of the author and do not represent those of TL Publishing Group LLC, its owners, directors, or editors. Rates and prices are subject to change without notice. For current subscription rates, please send an email to tljour- [email protected].
    [Show full text]
  • Amanda Nash Went Right to the Source: the Author
    The Women’s Review of Books Vol. XXI, No. 2 November 2003 74035 $4.00 In This Issue Even in the case of an artist like Louise Bourgeois, who has written extensively about the origins of her artworks in her life experience, the relationship between memory and art is never transparent or straight- forward, says reviewer Patricia G. Berman. Cover story D In The Fifth Book of Peace, her “nonfiction-fiction-nonfiction sandwich,” Maxine Hong Kingston experiments with new narrative forms, forgoing the excitement of conflict in an attempt to encom- pass the experience of peace and community. p. 5 Louise Bourgeois in her Brooklyn studio in 1993, with To find out what makes 3, Julie Shredder (1983) and Spider (then in progress). From Hilden’s novel of sexual obsession Runaway Girl: The Artist Louise Bourgeois and experimentation, so haunting, reviewer Amanda Nash went right to the source: The author. Art and autobiography Interview, p. 11 by Patricia G. Berman Could Hillary Rodham Clinton Three books examine the career of artist Louise Bourgeois became America’s first woman presi- dent? Judith Nies reads the senator’s n Christmas day 2003, the artist like environment suggestive of pulsating memoir Living History—along with Louise Bourgeois will turn 92. Her viscera, and I Do, I Undo, I Redo (2000), the other new books that examine O vitality, wit, and ability to fuse titanically scaled steel towers that initiated excess with elegance continue to rival the the Turbine Hall of the Tate Modern in women’s political leadership in this works of artists one-third her age.
    [Show full text]
  • Land Use and Economic Development Analysis October 2011
    North Corridor Commuter Rail Project Land Use and Economic Development Analysis October 2011 Charlotte Area Transit System 600 East Fourth Street, Charlotte, NC 28202 Charlotte Area Transit System North Corridor Commuter Rail Project LYNX RED LINE Charlotte Area Transit System North Corridor Commuter Rail Project LYNX RED LINE Land Use and Economic Development Analysis This report is prepared by the Charlotte Area Transit System and Planning Staffs of the City of Charlotte and the Towns of Cornelius, Davidson, Huntersville and Mooresville. The information is structured according to guidelines of the Federal Transit New Starts Program, in the event the North Corridor Com- muter Rail Project becomes eligible for competition in that program. October 2011 Contents Section I: Existing Land Use ........................................................................................................... 1 Existing Station Area Development ............................................................................................ 1 1. Corridor and Station Area Population, Housing Units and Employment .......................... 1 Table I-1: Population Growth of Municipalities Represented in North Corridor ........... 3 Table I-2: Station Area Summary Data ............................................................................ 3 2. Listing and Description of High Trip Generators .............................................................. 4 3. Other Major Trip Generators in Station Areas ..................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Fall Course Listing Here
    FALL QUARTER 2021 COURSE OFFERINGS September 20–December 12 1 Visit the UCLA Extension’s UCLA Extension Course Delivery Website Options For additional course and certificate information, visit m Online uclaextension.edu. Course content is delivered through an online learning platform where you can engage with your instructor and classmates. There are no C Search required live meetings, but assignments are due regularly. Use the entire course number, title, Reg#, or keyword from the course listing to search for individual courses. Refer to the next column for g Hybrid Course a sample course number (A) and Reg# (D). Certificates and Courses are taught online and feature a blend of regularly scheduled Specializations can also be searched by title or keyword. class meetings held in real-time via Zoom and additional course con- tent that can be accessed any time through an online learning C Browse platform. Choose “Courses” from the main menu to browse all offerings. A Remote Instruction C View Schedule & Location Courses are taught online in real-time with regularly scheduled class From your selected course page, click “View Course Options” to see meetings held via Zoom. Course materials can be accessed any time offered sections and date, time, and location information. Click “See through an online learning platform. Details” for additional information about the course offering. Note: For additional information visit When Online, Remote Instruction, and/or Hybrid sections are available, uclaextension.edu/student-resources. click the individual tabs for the schedule and instructor information. v Classroom C Enroll Online Courses are taught in-person with regularly scheduled class meetings.
    [Show full text]
  • The Future of Alaska
    RESOURCES FOR THE FUTURE LIBRARY COLLECTION RESOURCES FOR THE FUTURE LIBRARY COLLECTION POLICY AND GOVERNANCE POLICY AND GOVERNANCE Economic Consequences of Statehood The Future of Alaska The Future of Alaska Economic Consequences of Statehood George W. Rogers Downloaded by [University of Defence] at 21:18 09 May 2016 )3". RFF Press strives to minimize its impact on the environment George W. Rogers Content Type: Black & White Paper Type: White Page Count: 346 File type: Internal Policy and Governance Vol 10.qxd 9/17/2010 2:29 PM Page i RESOURCES FOR THE FUTURE LIBRARY COLLECTION POLICY AND GOVERNANCE Volume 10 The Future of Alaska Economic Consequences of Statehood Downloaded by [University of Defence] at 21:18 09 May 2016 Policy and Governance Vol 10.qxd 9/17/2010 2:29 PM Page ii Full list of titles in the set POLICY AND GOVERNANCE Volume 1: NEPA in the Courts Volume 2: Representative Government and Environmental Management Volume 3: The Governance of Common Property Resources Volume 4: A Policy Approach to Political Representation Volume 5: Science & Resources Volume 6: Air Pollution and Human Health Volume 7: The Invisible Resource Volume 8: Rules in the Making Volume 9: Regional Conflict and National Policy Volume 10: The Future of Alaska Volume 11: Collective Decision Making Volume 12: Steel Production Volume 13: Enforcing Pollution Control Laws Volume 14: Compliance & Public Authority Downloaded by [University of Defence] at 21:18 09 May 2016 The Future of Alaska Economic Consequences of Statehood George W. Rogers Downloaded by [University of Defence] at 21:18 09 May 2016 ~RFFPRESS - RESOURCES FOR THE FUTURE New York • London First published in 1962 by The johns Hopkins University Press for Resources for the Future This edition first published in 2011 by RFF Press, an imprint of Earthscan First edition ©The johns Hopkins University Press 1962 This edition © Earthscan 1962, 2011 All rights reserved.
    [Show full text]
  • Project Blue Lynx an Innovative Approach to Mentoring and Networking Maj
    TRANSFORMATION Project Blue Lynx An Innovative Approach to Mentoring and Networking Maj. Dan Ward, USAF n February 2005, shortly after pinning on Major, I began conducting a some- what low-profile experiment called Project Blue Lynx I(PBL). The name is a play on words that refers to the "blue links" in a Web document. The objective was to foster the de- velopment of a networked cadre of innovative thought leaders. In this article, I’m throwing back the curtain and presenting the PBL methodology and some of the initial results in the hopes that others around the DoD may launch similar efforts. An Aptitude for Attitude The first step was to recruit the PBL members, so I spent several months getting to know the company-grade officers in things better. We were going to question hidden institu- my part of the Air Force Research Lab. I wasn’t looking tional assumptions, and we were going to challenge the for aptitude in the traditional sense; everyone around here status quo. We were going to explore some unusual, po- is tremendously smart, so intelligence is not exactly a tentially revolutionary ideas. In short, we were going to useful discriminator. Rather, I was seeking a particular at- try to change the world for the better. Everyone said yes. titude. To be specific, I was looking for something that was equal parts optimism, adventure-seeking, dissatis- “There Will Be Homework …” faction with the status quo, and open mindedness. I was Our hallway discussions were followed by a detailed e- more interested in personal chemistry than professional mail that explained the group’s operating principles (shown credentials, and in the end I selected eight people: four in the sidebar on the next page) and gave them their first lieutenants and four captains.
    [Show full text]
  • CFA's Distinguished Merit Cats
    CFA’s Distinguished Merit Cats Through Season-End 2007-2008 Distinguished Merit Cats with Largest Number of Qualifying Offspring by Breed/Division Data in the following chart reflects information on cats in CFA’s computer records at the time the chart was compiled. BREED MALE NQO FEMALE NQO ABYSSINIAN GC, NW Cinnaʼs Jack Daniels of Chantebise, DM 53 CH Wil-o-glenʼs Gold Card of Clarion, DM 14 GC Purssynian Jambe Finete, DM 53 AMERICAN BOBTAIL LONGHAIR _____________________ L Beeʼs Calamity Jane of NuDawnz, DM 6 AMERICAN BOBTAIL SHORTHAIR _____________________ _____________________ AMERICAN CURL LONGHAIR Daywarhim Apocurlypse Meow, DM 19 GC DBCats Blue Rose, DM 11 GC, BW, RW Procurlharem Lauren Bacurll, DM 11 AMERICAN CURL SHORTHAIR _____________________ GC, BW DBCats Flutterbye Rose, DM 6 AMERICAN SHORTHAIR GC, NW Placerʼs Purrfect Salute, DM 38 GC Saroukʼs Sundi of Placer, DM 24 AMERICAN WIREHAIR GC, RW Briar-Marʼs Goldeneye, DM 16 Brillocatz Tequila Sunwire, DM 9 BALINESE GC Balikʼs Bolshoi of Purrmatix, DM 17 CH Edelweiss Arwen Evenstar of Pavir, DM 6 GC Purrmatix Dream Come True In Blue, DM 6 CH Rangkesariʼs Tabia of Balik, DM 6 CH Staccatoʼs Diva, DM 6 BIRMAN GC, RW Pleasantview McPorkchop, DM 33 Windflower Merriann of Pleasantview, DM 11 BOMBAY GC, RW Caricatureʼs Isaac Hayes, DM 23 GC, RW Caricatureʼs Sonya Sanchez, DM 10 GC Timariʼs Black Mugsey, DM 10 BRITISH SHORTHAIR GC Brynbuboo Georgypeorgy of Earendil, DM 32 CH Castlkatz Sarah Burnheart, DM 11 BURMESE - DILUTE GC, NW Kawpawʼs Dom Bearignon, DM 17 GC, GP, BW, RW Nakodoʼs Halle
    [Show full text]
  • CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING 643-2711 Downtown Access Vote
    1< — M A N C H E S TE R H E R A L D , Tuesday, Sept. 16, 1966 MANCHESTER SPORTS CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING 64 3-27 11 Zinsser, Meotti MHS hooters Gaiio parties HnirCAM .nM ^LmrfW rtttH have a non-debate get first win are adventure HELf WMTEB IC Lf WANTED ... pag* 4 ...page 9 page 13 Sondwtch makers needed, Moture Soles person for hours 7-2 storting at $4.25 children's specialty shop, per hour M6-M54 or 131 ot Mori Mods, 757 Main Sonrlco Drive. Street Downtown Mon­ chester. Apply In person. dbf^. Seasonal part time driver 647-fMA needed mornings to de­ Child Care before school, liver coses of cider to otter? Good pov, 6:30om small stores ond restou- to 8:30am. Retired person CWQVIQvW ffr IfTv WCVimnr ronts In Ct. Our truck or welcome. Coll 60-1691. yours. Apply Old Cider dfsfrtef, SdtMf. liaitrliPBtpr) Manchester — A City ot Village Charm HpralJi Mill, 1287 Moln Street Rte Commerclol Checking OWTfV wVfCOrrlVT I 17 Glastonbury 633-4880. Clerk, doto processing center. Apply Sovlngs Bonk of Monchester 923 Moln Street Manchester 25 Cents 643-1787. EO E Quotfty Cdr# a M m 9g IfUOMilll Post Food cook needed ot pre-sche«f«r m moM. Hortford Rd Oolry Queen, Nurses Aides - Immediate r-«. weekends. Experienced. opening for certified Will pay up to $6.00 hourly. nurses aides, who can t m , Teacher Apply In person ot Hort­ work 7om-3pm weekends, S ford Rood Dairy Queen. or 3pm-11pm full time. Downtown Excellent opportunity. Key Punch For additional Informa­ Carpgfrfrr: N aaoffiafdH Operator.
    [Show full text]
  • Supreme Court of the United States, Wash- Ington, D
    Cite as: ____ U. S. ____ (1999) 1 Opinion of the Court NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the preliminary print of the United States Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Wash- ington, D. C. 20543, of any typographical or other formal errors, in order that corrections may be made before the preliminary print goes to press. SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES _________________ No. 98–5864 _________________ TOMMY DAVID STRICKLER, PETITIONER v. FRED W. GREENE, WARDEN ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT [June 17, 1999] JUSTICE STEVENS delivered the opinion of the Court. The District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia granted petitioner’s application for a writ of habeas corpus and vacated his capital murder conviction and death sentence on the grounds that the Commonwealth had failed to disclose important exculpatory evidence and that petitioner had not, in consequence, received a fair trial. The Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit reversed because petitioner had not raised his constitutional claim at his trial or in state collateral proceedings. In addition, the Fourth Circuit concluded that petitioner’s claim was, “in any event, without merit.” App. 418, n. 8.1 Finding the legal question presented by this case considerably more difficult than the Fourth Circuit, we granted certio- rari, 525 U. S. ___ (1998), to consider (1) whether the State violated Brady v. Maryland, 373 U. S. 83 (1963), and its progeny; (2) whether there was an acceptable “cause” for —————— 1 The opinion of the Court of Appeals is unreported.
    [Show full text]
  • Jo Ann Citron Equality Practice: Civil Unions and the Future of Gay Rights 7 POETRY EDITOR: Robin Becker by William N
    The Women’s Review of Books Vol. XX, No. 4 January 2003 74035 $4.00 In This Issue As the expatriate British wife of a Sudanese guerrilla leader, Emma McCune desperately wanted to be “a bridge between black and white”: Sondra Hale reviews Emma’s War, Deborah Scroggins’ story of an unlike- ly figure caught up in a perennial war that few Westerners care about, p. 9. “Naomi Klein’s forte is in-the- trenches journalism,” writes Kerryn Higgs in a reading of Fences and Windows, the successor to Klein’s best- selling No Logo,p.5. Drinking, like other kinds of con- sumption, has a gendered history of its own: Mariana Valverde reads Love on the Rocks, Lori Rotskoff ’s perceptive account of the invention of alcoholism Emma McCune and her husband Riek Machar with in the twentieth century, p. 19. their bodyguards. From Emma's War. “Through the themes of time, per- sonality, bodily transformation, all three poets address the narrative content of their lives, and use language to inscribe The second time around heaven on earth,” writes Judith Harris by Heather Love in a review of new poetry by Betty Adcock, Ellen Bryant Voigt and Hilda This Bridge We Call Home: Radical Visions for Transformation Raz, p. 17. edited by Gloria E. Anzaldúa and AnaLouise Keating. New York: Routledge, 2002, 624 pp., $24.95 paper. The constraints and stereotypes of 1950s femininity seem quaint and amusing to younger women, but they n 1981, Gloria Anzaldúa and Cherríe real urgency. It is a sign of its continuing were all too real for those who rebelled Moraga published This Bridge Called My importance that AnaLouise Keating and against them: Emily Toth looks at the I Back: Writings by Radical Women of Color,a Anzaldúa have published a new anthology, generation gap that opens up in Lynn book that changed the practice and politics This Bridge We Call Home: Radical Visions for Peril’s Pink Think: Becoming a Woman in of feminism in the United States.
    [Show full text]