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ANTA Theater and the Proposed Designation of the Related Landmark Site (Item No
Landmarks Preservation Commission August 6, 1985; Designation List 182 l.P-1309 ANTA THFATER (originally Guild Theater, noN Virginia Theater), 243-259 West 52nd Street, Manhattan. Built 1924-25; architects, Crane & Franzheim. Landmark Site: Borough of Manhattan Tax Map Block 1024, Lot 7. On June 14 and 15, 1982, the Landmarks Preservation Commission held a public hearing on the proposed designation as a Landmark of the ANTA Theater and the proposed designation of the related Landmark Site (Item No. 5). The hearing was continued to October 19, 1982. Both hearings had been duly advertised in accordance with the provisions of law. Eighty-three witnesses spoke in favor of designation. Two witnesses spoke in opposition to designation. The owner, with his representatives, appeared at the hearing, and indicated that he had not formulated an opinion regarding designation. The Commission has received many letters and other expressions of support in favor of this designation. DESCRIPTION AND ANALYSIS The ANTA Theater survives today as one of the historic theaters that symbolize American theater for both New York and the nation. Built in the 1924-25, the ANTA was constructed for the Theater Guild as a subscription playhouse, named the Guild Theater. The fourrling Guild members, including actors, playwrights, designers, attorneys and bankers, formed the Theater Guild to present high quality plays which they believed would be artistically superior to the current offerings of the commercial Broadway houses. More than just an auditorium, however, the Guild Theater was designed to be a theater resource center, with classrooms, studios, and a library. The theater also included the rrost up-to-date staging technology. -
The Wild Wild West Episode Guide
The Wild Wild West Episode Guide Starring Robert Conrad and Ross Martin. Notable guest stars include Michael Dunn (Dr. Miguelito Loveless), Charles Aidman (Jeremy Pike), Richard Kiel (Voltaire, Dimas), Roy Engel (President U.S. Grant), Suzanne Pleshette, and many others. Season 1 1-1 17 Sep 65 The Night of the Inferno 1-2 24 Sep 65 The Night of the Deadly Bed 1-3 01 Oct 65 The Night the Wizard Shook the Earth 1-4 08 Oct 65 The Night of Sudden Death 1-5 15 Oct 65 The Night of the Casual Killer 1-6 22 Oct 65 The Night of a Thousand Eyes 1-7 29 Oct 65 The Night of the Glowing Corpse 1-8 05 Nov 65 The Night of the Dancing Death 1-9 12 Nov 65 The Night of the Double-Edged Knife 1-10 19 Nov 65 The Night That Terror Stalked the Town 1-11 26 Nov 65 The Night of the Red-Eyed Madmen 1-12 03 Dec 65 The Night of the Human Trigger 1-13 10 Dec 65 The Night of the Torture Chamber 1-14 17 Dec 65 The Night of the Howling Light 1-15 24 Dec 65 The Night of the Fatal Trap 1-16 07 Jan 66 The Night of the Steel Assassin 1-17 14 Jan 66 The Night the Dragon Screamed 1-18 21 Jan 66 The Night of the Flaming Ghost 1-19 28 Jan 66 The Night of the Grand Emir 1-20 18 Feb 66 The Night of the Whirring Death 1-21 25 Feb 66 The Night of the Puppeteer 1-22 04 Mar 66 The Night of the Bars of Hell 1-23 11 Mar 66 The Night of the Two-Legged Buffalo 1-24 25 Mar 66 The Night of the Druid's Blood 1-25 01 Apr 66 The Night of the Freebooters 1-26 08 Apr 66 The Night of the Burning Diamond 1-27 15 Apr 66 The Night of the Murderous Spring 1-28 22 Apr 66 The Night of the Sudden Plague -
Rebooting Roseanne: Feminist Voice Across Decades
Home > Vol 21, No 5 (2018) > Ford Rebooting Roseanne: Feminist Voice across Decades Jessica Ford In recent years, the US television landscape has been flooded with reboots, remakes, and revivals of “classic” nineties television series, such as Full/er House (1987-1995, 2016- present), Will & Grace (1998-2006, 2017-present), Roseanne (1988-1977, 2018), and Charmed (1998-2006, 2018-present). The term “reboot” is often used as a catchall for different kinds of revivals and remakes. “Remakes” are derivations or reimaginings of known properties with new characters, cast, and stories (Loock; Lavigne). “Revivals” bring back an existing property in the form of a continuation with the same cast and/or setting. “Revivals” and “remakes” both seek to capitalise on nostalgia for a specific notion of the past and access the (presumed) existing audience of the earlier series (Mittell; Rebecca Williams; Johnson). Reboots operate around two key pleasures. First, there is the pleasure of revisiting and/or reimagining characters that are “known” to audiences. Whether continuations or remakes, reboots are invested in the audience’s desire to see familiar characters. Second, there is the desire to “fix” and/or recuperate an earlier series. Some reboots, such as the Charmed remake attempt to recuperate the whiteness of the original series, whereas others such as Gilmore Girls: A Life in the Year (2017) set out to fix the ending of the original series by giving audiences a new “official” conclusion. The Roseanne reboot is invested in both these pleasures. It reunites the original cast for a short-lived, but impactful nine-episode tenth season. -
SALUTE to Graduates
VIRTUAL SALUTE TO Graduates THE CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK PRESIDENT’S MESSAGE Dear CCNY Graduates of the Class of 2021, There are moments in our history that impress an indelible mark upon us, when we are called to do extraordinary things under the press of an indescribable moment. Anyone graduating in the midst of the COVID19 pandemic will be marked by this extraordinary moment. But even among that national class graduating in 2021, you are different. We stand at the cusp of a national return from the isolation, peril and social dislocation of the pandemic. We will, all of us, be marked by these dangerous years, by what we have come through and endured, but no less, by how we Vince Boudreau rise and respond. At a time when the inequitable imprint of this scourge President underscores the other inequities in our society, the City College—and those who work, study and graduate here—stand apart. You graduate from an institution established to redress inequality, an institution that insists on each generation of graduates the responsibility of scanning the social and political landscape, and setting out to rectify that which seems unfair, unjust or inequitable. As an institution, we were made for this moment, a moment when the revival of so much that we hold dear requires the energy, insight and creativity of the whole people. As graduates of CCNY, you now shoulder the responsibility of advancing your vision of a strong and just society, as so many before you have done. You have struggled, sometimes mightily and against long odds, to reach this day, and we revel with you in the pride of your accomplishment. -
Commencement Friday, June 1, 2018
THE CITY COLLEGE OF NEW YORK COMMENCEMENT FRIDAY, JUNE 1, 2018 THE CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK Commencement Friday, June 1, 2018, 9:30 a.m. South Campus Great Lawn Presiding Vince Boudreau President, The City College of New York Academic Procession Interim Provost Tony Liss Taimoor Arif President, Undergraduate Student Government Cyrille Njikeng Executive Chair, Graduate Student Council Associate Dean Ardie Walser The Grove School of Engineering Ph.D Graduates Interim Dean Kevin Foster Colin Powell School for Civic and Global Leadership Faria Tasnim and Tyler Walls Dean Erec Koch The Division of Humanities and the Arts Sophie Ziner and Lucius Seo Dean Maurizio Trevisan The Sophie Davis Program in Biomedical Education in the CUNY School of Medicine Samantha Lau and Gabriella Schmuter Acting Dean V. Parameswaran Nair The Division of Science Lisa Lopez and Lucy Lopez Acting Dean Gordon Gebert The Bernard and Anne Spitzer School of Architecture Jun Nam and Gabriel Morales Director Hillary Brown Sustainability in the Urban Environment Michael Duffy, Evelyn Levine and Robin Perl Dean Mary Erina Driscoll The School of Education Massiel A. De León de la Serna and Samson Baker Dean Juan Carlos Mercado The Division of Interdisciplinary Studies at the Center for Worker Education Gabrielle Gallo and Jose Miranda Dean Gilda Barabino The Grove School of Engineering Vivakeanand “Vishal” Boodhan and Joseph Rettberg Academic Procession Faculty (continued) Reunion Classes 1978, 1968, 1958 and 1948 President’s Platform Party Deans and Vice Presidents of the College Student Government Leaders Valedictorian Salutatorian Honored Guests Interim Provost Tony Liss Chief Marshal Janet Steele President Vince Boudreau The Color Guard of the CUNY Army ROTC Program presents the National Colors The National Anthem Megumi Toyama BFA in Jazz Vocal Studies Greetings Fernando Ferrer The Board of Trustees The City University of New York Chancellor James B. -
Finding Aid to the Historymakers ® Video Oral History with Marla Gibbs
Finding Aid to The HistoryMakers ® Video Oral History with Marla Gibbs Overview of the Collection Repository: The HistoryMakers®1900 S. Michigan Avenue Chicago, Illinois 60616 [email protected] www.thehistorymakers.com Creator: Gibbs, Marla, 1931- Title: The HistoryMakers® Video Oral History Interview with Marla Gibbs, Dates: July 8, 2007 Bulk Dates: 2007 Physical 6 Betacame SP videocasettes (2:41:50). Description: Abstract: Actress Marla Gibbs (1931 - ) was best known for her role as "Florence" on The Jeffersons. She also starred in her own sitcom, 227. Gibbs was interviewed by The HistoryMakers® on July 8, 2007, in Los Angeles, California. This collection is comprised of the original video footage of the interview. Identification: A2007_199 Language: The interview and records are in English. Biographical Note by The HistoryMakers® Actress Marla Gibbs was born on June 14, 1931 to Douglas Bradley and Ophelia Kemp in Chicago, Illinois. After graduating from Wendell Phillips High School in 1949, Gibbs attended secretarial school and went to work at Service Bindery in Chicago. She then was hired, at Gotham Hotel in Detroit, Michigan, and later worked for Detroit Street Railways (DSR). Gibbs worked for United Airlines as a receptionist. After being transferred to Detroit and later Los Angeles, she took acting classes at the Mafundi Institute and the Watts Writers’ Workshop. In the early 1970s, Gibbs was cast in theatrical roles at the Zodiac Theater and small roles in “made for TV” movies. In 1973, Gibbs had a major supporting role in the 1973 movie Sweet Jesus, Preacher Man. Gibbs’ big break came in 1975 at the age of forty-four when she was hired for a bit part as a household domestic named “Florence” in the CBS show The Jeffersons, a spin-off of All In The Family. -
Adventuring with Books: a Booklist for Pre-K-Grade 6. the NCTE Booklist
DOCUMENT RESUME ED 311 453 CS 212 097 AUTHOR Jett-Simpson, Mary, Ed. TITLE Adventuring with Books: A Booklist for Pre-K-Grade 6. Ninth Edition. The NCTE Booklist Series. INSTITUTION National Council of Teachers of English, Urbana, Ill. REPORT NO ISBN-0-8141-0078-3 PUB DATE 89 NOTE 570p.; Prepared by the Committee on the Elementary School Booklist of the National Council of Teachers of English. For earlier edition, see ED 264 588. AVAILABLE FROMNational Council of Teachers of English, 1111 Kenyon Rd., Urbana, IL 61801 (Stock No. 00783-3020; $12.95 member, $16.50 nonmember). PUB TYPE Books (010) -- Reference Materials - Bibliographies (131) EDRS PRICE MF02/PC23 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS Annotated Bibliographies; Art; Athletics; Biographies; *Books; *Childress Literature; Elementary Education; Fantasy; Fiction; Nonfiction; Poetry; Preschool Education; *Reading Materials; Recreational Reading; Sciences; Social Studies IDENTIFIERS Historical Fiction; *Trade Books ABSTRACT Intended to provide teachers with a list of recently published books recommended for children, this annotated booklist cites titles of children's trade books selected for their literary and artistic quality. The annotations in the booklist include a critical statement about each book as well as a brief description of the content, and--where appropriate--information about quality and composition of illustrations. Some 1,800 titles are included in this publication; they were selected from approximately 8,000 children's books published in the United States between 1985 and 1989 and are divided into the following categories: (1) books for babies and toddlers, (2) basic concept books, (3) wordless picture books, (4) language and reading, (5) poetry. (6) classics, (7) traditional literature, (8) fantasy,(9) science fiction, (10) contemporary realistic fiction, (11) historical fiction, (12) biography, (13) social studies, (14) science and mathematics, (15) fine arts, (16) crafts and hobbies, (17) sports and games, and (18) holidays. -
Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1953-02-24
. , ·Revived Hawkeyes Take.3d S~raight Victory I ., , . ~ The Weather CIOIld, with ....ble raiD to4a,. c.atbUIN elo", a" ral. We.,..,. IIl11a tea" 5t: ..... II. al owan Bin 1I0000" $3; .... 1•. Est. 1868 - AP Leased Wire - Five Cents Iowa City, Iowa. Tuesday, Feb. 24 , 1953 - Vol. 97, No. lOS Fee Payments Due L d . L d US D I t ::;~~::.~~ ·0 ge ea s .. e ega es are scheduled to maIle tultiOD and of the ireuurer, UniversU, haiL " lee pa,ments tocIaf In Ute offlce I C- .. I 7t hUN A bI ~;~§E~ n rucla , ssem y u_eel Frida,. An a4d1iloD&l $1 USE ft ted _;:.u_~_r:_:'~_~._f~_ea_ch_d&_"O_f d_'. Psychiatrist Pakistan Radio Official Visits WSUI U. 01 Mi ssou ri, •• X"K Durkin Sees ' GoHlieb Takes. SUI To Debate To Let Reds IOWA FORWARD DEACON DA\'lS (16) start! a hook shot toward Success qn Miami Post Speak Out first I IS ~w~ U"~t.~!'~~~'~d'- the baskd Ohio State's Merrill Hatrleld (4) attempt. to bloek baters will apoear here today with UNITED NATIONS, N, Y. (,4')- I~ 10 (lrst hP.1r action 10 the field house 1\1onday night. T• H Ch onges A member of the SUI staff for two UI students to discuss the Presld~t Ellenhower's new team 17 yeal's, Dr. Jacques S. 'Gottlieh, topic "Resolved: Thllt Intercollegi- In the UN &ave Its plans a last- WASffiNGTON (JP) - Secretary assistant director of the PSycho- ate athletics should be deempha- minute ehec)!: Monday as leadIn!: of Labor Martin 1:'. -
20E6 List Format.Xlsx
AIR FORCE'S PERSONNEL CENTER 20E6 Technical Sergeant Worldwide Selects (*List excludes Intel, ISR, OSI AFSCs; see myPers) For Public Release Aug 24, 2020 NAME ABAD CRYSTAL DANIE ABAIR JUSTIN M ABASTAS RUEL LABOR ABBETT CHAD ROSS ABBEY CHARLES CURT ABBOTT ELIJAH VON ABEL JUSTIN MICHAE ABER SHERYL ALYSE ABNER CLIFFORD LEE ABOYME ARISTOTLE H ABRAHAM JASMINE TI ABRAHAMSEN LLOYD M ACEVEDO DAVID ROBE ACEVEDO SOSTRE JOS ACKERMAN MASON RAY ACOB KATE BLESSIE ACOPAN JOHNSON JR ACOSTA NELSON ACREE MATTHEW A ADADE EDWARD ANIM ADAMES ERICA BRIAN ADAMS AUSTIN WAYNE ADAMS BRANDON NEIL ADAMS CATHERINE AN ADAMS DOMINIQUE CO ADAMS HANNAH LEE ADAMS KRISTOPHER M ADAMS LARRY DARNEL ADAMS MARK DOUGLAS ADAMS MEGAN ROSE ADAMS TEAL TRAVIS ADAMS TRAVIS WYATT ADAMSON JASSON TYR ADAMSON JOEL DAVID ADDINGTON NATHANAE ADDIS SCOTT EUGENE ADDISON DONALD R I ADDY MICHELLE CHRI Page 1 of 166 AIR FORCE'S PERSONNEL CENTER ADKINS AUSTIN JAME ADKINS DUSTIN ZANE ADKINS MICHAEL ARR ADKINS NOBLE BEREA ADKINS SETH VON AGBAY ALLENJOHN CR AGGEN ELIAS CHARLE AGLUBAT JASON FERN AGOUN JAMAL AGRI HUSNI MUBARAK AGUILAR ANDRE J AGUILAR ANN GRACE AGUILAR FITTS ANTH AGUILAR MARVIN AGUILAR SABRINA IS AGUILERA ANNA KARE AGUILERA TORRES JE AGUINALDO JAYCOB K AGUIRRE JOSE LUIS AHLERS RANDY JOHN AHMAD JESSE D AHRENS COREY AUSTI AHRENT BRITTANY JO AIKENS GABRIEL MAR AITCHISON DANIELLE AKALANZE KELISSA A AKINS REX TREY AKINWALE FOLARIN AL DALAWI MOHAMED ALAPAG ZHARINA A ALARCON MYLENE TEO ALBANO THOMAS L ALBERT COTY DAVID ALBIA ELIGIUSAUREL ALBIAR ANDREI OMAR ALBINO CHARNELLE S ALBRITTON MICHAEL -
Complete Undergraduate Bulletin 2000-2002
BARUCH COLLEGE UNDERGRAD U ATE BULLETIN 2000/2002 UN D E R G RA D U ATE CAL E N DA R 2000—Fall Semester SCHEDULED DUE DATES LAST DAY TO: R=Thursday / S*=Sunday July 5 Apply for independent study for the Ju l y 10 M Registration for fall ’00 begins; fa l l te r m it ends August 30 September 20 Notify instructor about pass/fail grades August 31 R First day of classes for fall ’00 Resign without receiving a “W” grade Late registration begins; it ends No vember 2 Apply for graduation for the curren t September 6 te r m September 4 M Labor Day; College closed Apply for reinstatement for the subse- 29 F No classes scheduled quent term (undergrads who have been 30 S No classes scheduled pr eviously dismissed from the College) October 1 S* No classes scheduled Apply for re-exams and make-up exams 9 M Columbus Day; College closed fr om the previous semester 10 T Follow a Monday schedule File Junior Status Application Form No vember 22 W Follow a Friday schedule with the Registrar’s Offi c e 23 Ð 2 4 RÐF Thanksgiving recess; College File a request for waiver of Junior closed; classes res u m e Status req u i r ements with the Center November 25 for Advisement and Orientation December 13 W Last day of classes for fall ’00 File for change of degree objective for 14 R Reading day the next term 15 F Final examinations begin; they Apply for overload or other permi s s i o n end December 22 for the next term 23 S Winter recess begins; College Apply for re-admission for the next closed December 25 and 29 and te r m (see reinstatement deadline above) Ja -
PRESS Graphic Designer
© 2021 MARVEL CAST Natasha Romanoff /Black Widow . SCARLETT JOHANSSON Yelena Belova . .FLORENCE PUGH Melina . RACHEL WEISZ Alexei . .DAVID HARBOUR Dreykov . .RAY WINSTONE Young Natasha . .EVER ANDERSON MARVEL STUDIOS Young Yelena . .VIOLET MCGRAW presents Mason . O-T FAGBENLE Secretary Ross . .WILLIAM HURT Antonia/Taskmaster . OLGA KURYLENKO Young Antonia . RYAN KIERA ARMSTRONG Lerato . .LIANI SAMUEL Oksana . .MICHELLE LEE Scientist Morocco 1 . .LEWIS YOUNG Scientist Morocco 2 . CC SMIFF Ingrid . NANNA BLONDELL Widows . SIMONA ZIVKOVSKA ERIN JAMESON SHAINA WEST YOLANDA LYNES Directed by . .CATE SHORTLAND CLAUDIA HEINZ Screenplay by . ERIC PEARSON FATOU BAH Story by . JAC SCHAEFFER JADE MA and NED BENSON JADE XU Produced by . KEVIN FEIGE, p.g.a. LUCY JAYNE MURRAY Executive Producer . LOUIS D’ESPOSITO LUCY CORK Executive Producer . VICTORIA ALONSO ENIKO FULOP Executive Producer . BRAD WINDERBAUM LAUREN OKADIGBO Executive Producer . .NIGEL GOSTELOW AURELIA AGEL Executive Producer . SCARLETT JOHANSSON ZHANE SAMUELS Co-Producer . BRIAN CHAPEK SHAWARAH BATTLES Co-Producer . MITCH BELL TABBY BOND Based on the MADELEINE NICHOLLS MARVEL COMICS YASMIN RILEY Director of Photography . .GABRIEL BERISTAIN, ASC FIONA GRIFFITHS Production Designer . CHARLES WOOD GEORGIA CURTIS Edited by . LEIGH FOLSOM BOYD, ACE SVETLANA CONSTANTINE MATTHEW SCHMIDT IONE BUTLER Costume Designer . JANY TEMIME AUBREY CLELAND Visual Eff ects Supervisor . GEOFFREY BAUMANN Ross Lieutenant . KURT YUE Music by . LORNE BALFE Ohio Agent . DOUG ROBSON Music Supervisor . DAVE JORDAN Budapest Clerk . .ZOLTAN NAGY Casting by . SARAH HALLEY FINN, CSA Man In BMW . .MARCEL DORIAN Second Unit Director . DARRIN PRESCOTT Mechanic . .LIRAN NATHAN Unit Production Manager . SIOBHAN LYONS Mechanic’s Wife . JUDIT VARGA-SZATHMARY First Assistant Director/ Mechanic’s Child . .NOEL KRISZTIAN KOZAK Associate Producer . -
2013 Annual Report.Indd
1 TABLE OF CONTENTS 22012-13012-13 DDUKEUKE ATHLETICSATHLETICS DUKE ATHLETICS IN REVIEW 3-9 SPORT SUMMARIES 30-54 2012-13 Highlights ..........................3-6 Baseball ..............................................30 YYEAREAR IINN REVIEWREVIEW NCAA Championships ........................ 7 Men’s Basketball ................................31 ACC Championships ............................ 8 Women’s Basketball ..........................32 The Director’s Cup .............................. 9 Men’s Cross Country ........................ 33 Women’s Cross Country ...................34 DEPARTMENT SUMMARIES 10-24 Men’s Fencing ....................................35 Academic Success .........................10-11 Women’s Fencing ...............................36 Attendance .........................................12 Field Hockey ...................................... 37 Community Service ......................13-14 Football ...............................................38 Compliance ..........................................15 Men’s Golf ...........................................39 Development/Fundraising ............16-17 Women’s Golf .....................................40 External Relations ....................... 18-19 Men’s Lacrosse ............................41-42 Rec. and Physical Education............20 Women’s Lacrosse .............................43 Sports Medicine .................................21 Rowing ................................................44 Sports Performance..........................22 Men’s Soccer ......................................45