Board by Governor

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Board by Governor ii Vfv‘^ X^yt-x:' i'-\ Vovocaiiti, by 0 . SwHWeatber'IliirMu AT^fi^DAlLir Oim pLAti^ ■ '»^+,l.'V^,,- '. '.,;. -■ ■ Ba^ord. ' ■ • - • - (or tile *' •. " - ' •' ^ > Bfi*" :**•** aftenuHm;: efan^ ind 5:fi :owi. Stote^l4 jffightiy colder' tonight; ' Sunday Memben of tiie AnaitfBlveiKi partly doody. ; - 4<S7b , Oroolatioiis.''■ i ; mm • •r\-. ot .it^V.!;, ^'T^m ■ li-;" , \ V >• . '1, ..' SOUTH MANCHESTER, GONN., SAtURDA^, pCTOB^^ (FCHJRTEEN PAGES) PRICE THREE yOL. XLV., NO. 22. '• i I r ■'•1. PRACTISE B£ACK' MAGIC v • l. \ ■J ■ , BY, SACRiFICINO A , BOY iC'M I P«txna| Ji;diat Oot<. 25.— (AP>-rrt. A Tryjw ^ld ^Indian p o rt^ ' hew to have-b«en sacri­ BOARD f i c e ,in^cpnnTCtioii withr'pracl^e of l$ to ]| c In'Barp^, Sam- bblpur district. ^ : 'PoUce -Slate that the lad’s body BY GOVERNOR was found'in a •v^iin- th.e house o f ^ Jsdu Sonar! wbb raxithpritleS ■ V say^is a ^ d p le of the “wizard” of the 'viHage. -i - - -■ - ' Homer Cummings, Promi- THe police also; say; tHat : tHey Kei^entBefieves Congress H i^ ry Junta WHicH OrertHrew Luis Regime Begm to - A. *. - - • foxuld-m Sbnart^s ’Home a set of I instructions doaPerHiBg aidmal nent Democrat, Made i sacritices. ’ Several persons Have Neied'Not A c t As Existing S tr^ ten Ont Political Entanglements— To Call Spe- been arrested. CHairman; James T. Moran -5 -------- — --- i--- — ------- - Agencies Can Take Care cial Congress, Revi^ tHe Constitadon, and EstablisH and Judge WaHer Clarke o f Work. Half IncH of Snow Fell in Secret Ballot Plan— F o re ip Nations Notified THat Are tHe OtHer Members. .WasHii^^n, Oct 25.—(AP)— Norfolk and Winsted; CoM U {^ Wi^ Bloodless Affair and THat Its Purpose Was Existing agencies for tHe relief of tQiei^plbynaeHt are^ In tHe expressed . Rain ElsewH^e. to Unite AD Brazilians in One Family. Hartford, Oct. 25— (AP)—Gov. J opinion of President Hoover, suffi­ Sv-sWS 3. H. Trumbull today Has assigned! ___ I cient to meet present emergencies By Associated Press tHe task of investigating conditions or Rio De Janeiro, Oct 25.— (AP.)— witHout calling a special session of and Sergipe, and part of BaHia. He ^ at tHe state prison at 'WetHersfield THe revolutionary Jimta wHicH yes­ was expected Here by airplane to­ Congress.;;: Folks wHo,follow tHe fortunes of I to a special committee consisting of terday overtixrew tHe government of day from BaHia. R i M % It Mr. Hoover let tHis be known late tHe Yale bull dog on tHe gridiron ; Homer S. Cummings of Stamford, President A Prisoner yesterday in announcing tHat sug­ against tHe Mule of West Point tHis President WasHington Lnis today Dr., WasHington Luis today was a -t. , James T. Moran of New Haven and dent-^Was lo be Wammg gestion for an extraordinary Con­ afternoon, will be in two classes. set. about to reorganize tHe political prisoner in Fort Capobanca. After ! Judge Walter H. Qark of Hartford. gressional session met witH His dis­ One will probably sHiver in tHe , bowl structure and'restore peace tHrougH­ refusing for Hours to resign saying approval. He would be taken from Guanabra (‘ Official notice of tHeir appoint- and tHe otHer will sit comfortably out Brazil. , Snent to tHe committee was sent by At tHe same time tHe President palace only wHen He Had been bound Berlin, Oct. 25 — (AP) -— THe signed an order tHrougH wHicH it is close to a radio receiver. THe Junta, composed principally Hand and foot, Luis late yesterday ■ tHe governor to tHe tHree men last It seemed Quite likely tHat condi­ Hamburg-American steamer Baden estimated 200,000 family Heads mav of General Menna Barreto, General acQuiesced in tHe military Junta’s \ nigHt. THe governor Has reQuested tions . at tHe bowl would be windy secure employment in tHe postal Lelte (Jastro, General Tasso Frago- demands. i Mr. Cummings, prominent Demo- reported to its Home office today and dreary witHout rain. THe wet-' I crat and keynote speaker at tHe last tHat 18 persons aboard it were kill- service during tHe CHristmas rusH. so and Admiral Iraias NoronHa, THere is apparently little animos­ fiess overnigHt probably did no planned a meeting as soon as possi­ ity toward tHe deposed president I Democratic state convention to' ed or wounded yesterday. wHen a All-Cooperating. Harm to tHe field. It may Have made ' serve as cHairmsin. ’ sHell from Port CHaopacHsma Hit ble to form a Cabinet It is under­ wHo generally was regarded u Mr. Hoover also said Colonel it faster tHan it was a week ago. stood tHat. Octavio Manabeira, for­ i Yale Graduates ; tHe sHip as it was attempting to Honest in His con-victiOns, but sur­ lUo De Janeiro' Harbor for ArtHur Woods, imemployment re­ King Boris ot Bulgaria, rigHt, is 36 yews old and Is generally cred­ WeatHer Forcast eign minister of tHe late govem- rounded witH a military and official 1 THe tHree members of tHe com -; leave lief director, Had received most ited witH being one of tHe fpost intelligent and demoe£atto.'-m0nazsbs-'':in WeatHer foroJagtiQbaeryer Tart .of m «it -will be a member of tHe new family wHicH mkny in tHe nation i Snittee are all graduateS^of tHe Yale Buenos Aires. M ost o f i tHe MLsualties w ere s*dd gratifying evidence of cooperation Europil'- '’ It'is said tHat IBs marriage to Princess GlQvkrina, Ieft,l'lHird tHe New Haven bureau said over tHe m inistry. found obJectionable. THe military •law scHool; wHile Judge ClaJ-k and.. --------- e~ L i_v, JtmnicT?ants by state, and municipal officials as daugHter of tHe King and Queen of Italy, is a love matcH, altHougH Italy telepHone at 10 o’clock tHat it seem­ Mr. Moran are members of tHe State to Haw beem ^^^sH- im n^^ta. To Dissolve Congress iimta in its nigHt long meetings, de­ well as by industrial leaders and and Bulgaria will benefit politically from tHe union. ' ed unlikely rain would continue. At Also on tHe Jimta’s program are cided to Hold tHe deposed minister bf Board of Public Welfare. THe for- boimd' for Argentine. tHat time it was sprinkling a little. It was said tHat tHe BrJazilian welfare organizations tHrougHout Justice, Vi£inna Do Gastello and tHe j mer Has been Judge of tHe Probate Mr. Taix spread tHe ^m lngly good tHe dissolution of Congress, tHe call­ revolutionary autH'orities alleged tHe country. ing of a special Congress to re-vise deposed minister of war, General t Court in Hartford since 1921 and tHe He' estimated tHat bond ; Issues news by telepHone as tHe bureau is Sezefredo Dos Passos, prisoner but ; tetter W.S president of tHe SoutHern 1 “ *‘^**^: J S f tel laboring under tHe. Handicap of a tHe constitution, new regulations a g ^ e g a tiH g $450,00,0,00OuHrould be for military service, tHe establisH­ to set at liberty otHer members bf ,» « - Engird TelepHone Co., AM I “ H^S!£SSSS^ *• approved by tHe voters of numer­ broken press wHicH prevents issu­ tHe Cabinet all of wHom Had been I his election as cHairman of tHe sHip aecidentally. ment of a secret ballot, obligatory 1 , THe B^en carried a large number ous states and cities during tHe ance of detailed printed daily fore­ arrested. , board. cast bulletins. ' education and uniformity in taxes. of tHird: claiss passengers. , ’ - montH of November and tHis He Plans adso call for tHp eventual con­ Frestes Disappears I Appointment of tHe committee said would contribute toward alle­ A toucH of winter in tHe weatHer THe message from Rio De ’Janeiro vocation of a new Congress, com­ DispatcHes from Sao Paulo said Comes as a result of tHe reQuest said: “Efforts are being made by viating tHe situation. was seen in LitcHfield county wHere ; made to tHe governor by tHe prison In a Drenching Rain snow fell in some towns putting a posed of twelve representatives President-elect Julio Prestes, wHo tHe Brazilian goverpment to settle (Jolonel Woods is drawing up a re­ from eacH state. but for tHe revolution would Have I directors after cHarges Had been tHis regrettable incident anticabiy.” gional organization wHicH may in­ stop temporarily to bird Hunting. A I made by Rev. William H. SmitH, re- Half incH of wHiteness was on tHe It also is planned tHat in tHe succeeded Dr. WasHington Luis' on clude tHe appointment of tHree di­ Nov. 15, Had disappeared. THrte [ signed cHaplain at tHe prison, tHat NO DETAILS rectors to work vritH tHe states and ground in Norfolk and Winsted Had future only native-born Brazilians JyJrisoners in solitary confinement Princess Giovanna, of Italy, and King Boris, of snow sQua^ during tHe morning. sHall occupy public office. were rumors He Had fled tHe clty< Ham burg, Oct. 25— (A P ) ^ — TJie certain sections of tHe nation. to an airplane. Ad-vices received I Had been subJected to brutal treat- Hamburg-American. line tHis after­ THe mercury stood at 35. Foreign Recognition Fred C. Croxton of Columbus, Bulgaria are Wed WhUe Rain and Hail Pelt Here from HeadQuarters of tHe soutH­ I’ment. In reQuesting tHe investiga- noon issued a statement tHat, al­ OHio, wiEMS appointed tHe first of THe wet weatHer may Have re­ As a prelude to obtaining recogni­ moved all danger wHicH arises out ern revolutionary armies Quoted tHe Jtion tHe directors told tHe governor tHougH it Had sOTt “ cable .afJter cable tHese. He will be in cHarge of im­ Members of Royalty and Peasants in Front tion abroad tHe foreign ministry Has I tHey did so not in tHe spirit of de- of Hunting in tHe woods.
Recommended publications
  • Fosht SHT Shows and Programmes.Pdf 2021-07-15 01:58
    FoSHT FoSHT SHT Shows and Programmes Week beginning # F Title Notes 20 November 1929 Wake Up & Dream! 25 November 1929 Hold Everything 02 December 1929 Madame Plays Nap 09 December 1929 Pavlova 16 December 1926 Heat Wave 26 December 1929 Lilac Time 30 December 1929 Lilac Time 06 January 1930 The Co-Optimists 13 January 1930 Virtue for Sale 20 January 1930 Covent Garden Opera Company 27 January 1930 Love Lies 03 February 1930 His Show 10 February 1930 Sorry You've Been Troubled! 17 February 1930 Follow Through 24 February 1930 Canaries Sometimes Sing 03 March 1930 Symphony in Two Flats 10 March 1930 The Show's the Thing 17 March 1930 The School for Scandal 24 March 1930 Jew Suss 31 March 1930 F Mr Cinders 07 April 1930 The Man I Killed 14 April 1930 Mr Cinders 21 April 1930 Milestones 28 April 1930 The Lady of the Camellias 05 May 1930 Misalliance 12 May 1930 The Damask Rose 19 May 1930 Nine Till Six 26 May 1930 Blue Eyes 02 June 1930 The Apple Cart 09 June 1930 Darling, I Love You! 16 June 1930 Journey's End 23 June 1930 The Co-Optimists of 1930 30 June 1930 Down Our Street 07 July 1930 Othello 14 July 1930 The Middle Watch 21 July 1930 The Maid of the Mountains 28 July 1930 A Warm Corner 04 August 1930 Lady Windermere's Fan 11 August 1930 Royal Carl Rosa Opera Company 18 August 1930 Désiré 25 August 1930 The Red Dog 01 September 1930 The Command to Love 08 September 1930 The Cheat 15 September 1930 Pavlova 22 September 1930 Leave it to PSmith 29 September 1930 The Man in Possession 06 October 1930 Open Your Eyes 13 October 1930 D'Oyly
    [Show full text]
  • Turkey's Relations with Italy (1932-39)
    TURKEY’S RELATIONS WITH ITALY (1932-39): REALITIES AND PERCEPTIONS A THESIS SUBMITTED TO THE GRADUATE SCHOOL OF SOCIAL SCIENCES OF MIDDLE EAST TECHNICAL UNIVERSITY BY MEHMET DOĞAR IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF SCIENCE IN THE DEPARTMENT OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS JULY 2020 Approval of the Graduate School of Social Sciences Prof. Dr. Yaşar Kondakçı Director I certify that this thesis satisfies all the requirements as a thesis for the degree of Master of Science. Prof. Dr. Oktay Fırat Tanrısever Head of Department This is to certify that we have read this thesis and that in our opinion it is fully adequate, in scope and quality, as a thesis for the degree of Master of Science. Prof. Dr. Ebru Boyar Supervisor Examining Committee Members Prof. Dr. Hüseyin Bağcı (METU, IR) Prof. Dr. Ebru Boyar (METU, IR) Assist. Prof. Dr. Onur İşçi (Bilkent Uni., IR) I hereby declare that all information in this document has been obtained and presented in accordance with academic rules and ethical conduct. I also declare that, as required by these rules and conduct, I have fully cited and referenced all material and results that are not original to this work. Name, Last name : Mehmet Doğar Signature : iii ABSTRACT TURKEY’S RELATIONS WITH ITALY (1932-39): REALITIES AND PERCEPTIONS Doğar, Mehmet M.Sc., Department of International Relations Supervisor: Prof. Dr. Ebru Boyar July 2020, 233 pages This thesis examines Turkey’s relations with Italy between 1932 and 1939 through key historical events and analyses the role of Italy in Turkish foreign policy making.
    [Show full text]
  • Shail, Robert, British Film Directors
    BRITISH FILM DIRECTORS INTERNATIONAL FILM DIRECTOrs Series Editor: Robert Shail This series of reference guides covers the key film directors of a particular nation or continent. Each volume introduces the work of 100 contemporary and historically important figures, with entries arranged in alphabetical order as an A–Z. The Introduction to each volume sets out the existing context in relation to the study of the national cinema in question, and the place of the film director within the given production/cultural context. Each entry includes both a select bibliography and a complete filmography, and an index of film titles is provided for easy cross-referencing. BRITISH FILM DIRECTORS A CRITI Robert Shail British national cinema has produced an exceptional track record of innovative, ca creative and internationally recognised filmmakers, amongst them Alfred Hitchcock, Michael Powell and David Lean. This tradition continues today with L GUIDE the work of directors as diverse as Neil Jordan, Stephen Frears, Mike Leigh and Ken Loach. This concise, authoritative volume analyses critically the work of 100 British directors, from the innovators of the silent period to contemporary auteurs. An introduction places the individual entries in context and examines the role and status of the director within British film production. Balancing academic rigour ROBE with accessibility, British Film Directors provides an indispensable reference source for film students at all levels, as well as for the general cinema enthusiast. R Key Features T SHAIL • A complete list of each director’s British feature films • Suggested further reading on each filmmaker • A comprehensive career overview, including biographical information and an assessment of the director’s current critical standing Robert Shail is a Lecturer in Film Studies at the University of Wales Lampeter.
    [Show full text]
  • Hearst Corporation Los Angeles Examiner Photographs, Negatives and Clippings--Portrait Files (A-F) 7000.1A
    http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c84j0chj No online items Hearst Corporation Los Angeles Examiner photographs, negatives and clippings--portrait files (A-F) 7000.1a Finding aid prepared by Rebecca Hirsch. Data entry done by Nick Hazelton, Rachel Jordan, Siria Meza, Megan Sallabedra, and Vivian Yan The processing of this collection and the creation of this finding aid was funded by the generous support of the Council on Library and Information Resources. USC Libraries Special Collections Doheny Memorial Library 206 3550 Trousdale Parkway Los Angeles, California, 90089-0189 213-740-5900 [email protected] 2012 April 7000.1a 1 Title: Hearst Corporation Los Angeles Examiner photographs, negatives and clippings--portrait files (A-F) Collection number: 7000.1a Contributing Institution: USC Libraries Special Collections Language of Material: English Physical Description: 833.75 linear ft.1997 boxes Date (bulk): Bulk, 1930-1959 Date (inclusive): 1903-1961 Abstract: This finding aid is for letters A-F of portrait files of the Los Angeles Examiner photograph morgue. The finding aid for letters G-M is available at http://www.usc.edu/libraries/finding_aids/records/finding_aid.php?fa=7000.1b . The finding aid for letters N-Z is available at http://www.usc.edu/libraries/finding_aids/records/finding_aid.php?fa=7000.1c . creator: Hearst Corporation. Arrangement The photographic morgue of the Hearst newspaper the Los Angeles Examiner consists of the photographic print and negative files maintained by the newspaper from its inception in 1903 until its closing in 1962. It contains approximately 1.4 million prints and negatives. The collection is divided into multiple parts: 7000.1--Portrait files; 7000.2--Subject files; 7000.3--Oversize prints; 7000.4--Negatives.
    [Show full text]
  • Jillian Stile
    PSYCHOANALYTIC ENCOUNTER: CONFLICT AND CHANGE Speakers Cards SATURDAY, February, 08 09h00 - 13h30 14h30 - 19h00 Pag. 01 Pag. 31 Get to know who the speakers at the central panels and individual communications are and their papers! 1 INDIVIDUAL COMMUNICATIONS | 9h00-11h00 Taking place in four spaces: Grand Auditorium (GA) and rooms S1, S2 and S3. Spoken in English, except numbers 3 (Portuguese) and 21 (Spanish). 17. Adolescence and gender | Pag. 02 Fabio Vanni (Italy) - Some ethical and psychological issues about gender transition in adolescence Alessandro Taurino, Rita Gagliardi (Italy) - Adolescence and sexuality: new identity paradigms and self-representations Jillian Stile, Neil Altman (USA) - The alchemy of gender in psychotherapy with adolescents when all categories are up for grabs Jillian Stile, Neil Altman (USA) - Gender: Up for Grabs but not For Keeps MOD: Roberta Resega (Italy) 18. Psychoanalysis and Ecology: Ego-logic or Echo-logic? | Pag. 10 Lucio Gutierrez (Chile) - What do video gaming and videogame addictions teach us about contemporary patients? Matthias Ammann (Portugal) - A green dream Rebecca Versolato (Singapure) - Grief, Loss and Identify Crisis of Third Culture Kids and Global Families in Asia William Batista (Brazil) - Human becoming at machinic culture MOD: Ana-Lisa Vicente (Portugal) 19. The traumatic encounter with the unthinkable: resistance and regression on the psychoanalytic process | Pag. 15 Amparo Espinosa (Mexico) - Death is not on the divan Anelise Mondardo, Ana Marsillac (Brazil) - Traumatic insistence: reflections on the concept of negative in psychoanalysis Giovanna Tatti (Italy) - The analytical pair working together to cope with the unthinkable of the trauma of abuse: the painful process Rebecca Rossi, Mattia Ferro (Italy) - Being reborn facing death Terttu Mäkinen (Finland) - When and Now; Where and Here: The dissociation “rooms “, levels and space encounter trauma particles in body, in mind and in every day being MOD: Elsa Neto (Portugal) 20.
    [Show full text]
  • RR II CC OO LL OO RR EE Quindicinale D’Informazione Così Una Stagionecosì Una Lungo a Desi- Si Apre Nonni
    GUARDANDO AL FUTURO www.tricolore-italia.com E E R R O O L L Dossier O O C C I Quindicinale d’informazione I R R T T DOSSIER N.1 1 Settembre 2006 Le pagine dedicate da “Tricolore” alle Reg. Trib. Bergamo n. 25 del 28/09/04 LL.AA.RR. le Principesse Clotilde e Vittoria di Savoia STAMPA CLOTILDE COURAU Luciano Regolo medioevale, hanno lasciato diverse vestigia gne, per aver chiesto alle sue coetanee della loro grandeur passata, con tanto di ma- di regalarle i vestiti dismessi. Ma della nieri fiabeschi, nella regione di Landean, in infanzia senza comfort nel Benin e del Bretagna e nella campagna di Bordeaux, dove duro riadattarsi alla civiltà, non si è c'è il visitatissimo château Margaux segnalato mai lamentata. «Grazie a questo», è da tutte le guide. Catherine e Jean-Claude si solita ripetere, «oggi sono più forte, sposarono nel 1968 e Clotilde aveva appena tollerante, capace di passare da un due anni quando si trasferì in Africa, nel Be- mondo all'altro, senza aver paura degli nin, con la sorella Christine, appena nata e i sguardi altrui». genitori attratti dall'idea di una vita semplice, Da teenager, dopo le medie, Clotilde il più possibile libera, vicino alla natura e lon- aveva iniziato a frequentare la scuola tano dalle ipocrisie. Dell'Africa, Jean-Claude, per segretarie d'azienda, ma non la uno dei sette figli di un ingegnere e di una terminò. A sedici anni s'iscrisse a quel- dottoressa, Hélène Spach, chiamato in fami- la di recitazione, la rinomata Simon glia "Kouki", aveva sempre sentito parlare in Florent, animata dal sogno di diventare casa.
    [Show full text]
  • Portland Daily Press: August 18, 1900
    ES PORTLAND DAILY PRESS. EES JUNE 18i>2 VOL. 39. ^gTABLIBHED PORTLAND, MAINE, SATURDAY MORNING, AUGUST 18, 1900. VJ¥SKI PRICE THREE CENTS. Carnegie company. It Is to BOTH seeking buy rest and to prepare for the attack on the BURNED TO DEATH. nil the big blast furnace in plants the capital city in force, after waiting until L nlted {States. The Carnegie company the rear of the advancing hosts should, has contracted for 16,000,000 tons of Iron arrive at the front. Possibly, also, the ore annually, though will 6,000,000 amply delay was tho result of negotiations in- supply Its present plants. THE ALLIES ENTER PEKIN. augurated by the Chinese officials look- Gasolene The plan for is Stove Causes enlargement believed to to the of the ministers with be ing delivery the secret of the 11 za- company’* pita a Chinese or other escort. If negoti- Loss of Two tlon of $320,000,000. Lives. ations were attempted they must have failed as the TB00PS ORDERED OUT. army continued on its march and attacked the capital three days after reaching Tung Chow. The To Quell A*» Uprising of Negroes In officials here were aware of the fact that Fluid Set the hold of the boxers was in the Escaping Fire to Girl’s Georgia. The Were strong Besieged Foreigners Chinese city and for the allies to attempt Dress. to force their way through it into the Atlanta, Ga., August 17.—Gov.Candler Tartar City in which the legation com- has ordered out the Liberty Guards, a Relieved August 15- pounds are located, might mean a great company of the Georgia national to guard loss of life and possibly a defeat.
    [Show full text]
  • Club Victim's Hallucinations After Assault
    ATTACKER GAVE Q , Grants to go after ME DRUGS KISS’“election Club victim’s By MATTHEW QENEVER FUTURE generations of students face having to cope without any financial support from the government hallucinations whoever wins the general election. The high-powered Dealing Committee, backed by both Labour and the Conservative after assault party, is set to recommend the phasing out of the student By LAURA DAVIS grant as soon as next summer. Tony Blair has said he is A TERRIFIED clubber committed to scrapping the student grant system and collapsed alter a man grabbed replacing it with a series of loans to be paid back over a her for a french kiss and forced 20-year period. And a source on the committee admitted: two LSD tablets down her throat. “Nobody is defending the The student was celebrating the end of maintenance grant You have to find ways of cutting costs in term in Majestyk when the stranger the system.” seized her and pushed the drugs into her mouth with his tongue. Leeds North-West: During the next 12 hours she suffered turn to pages 16-17 horrific hallucinations, believing she was being Simon Cafftey, President of attacked by six foot spiders. LMUSU, sits on the A friend who stayed with the student, who does not committee as a member of the wish to be named, throughout the night and said she was governance and structure sub­ intent on hurting herself: “She kept banging her head group. He said: “Higher against the wall and it didn’t seem to hurt her.” education should be free in The victim confronted the manager of Majestyk two days principle, but the fact is that later, but said although he expressed concern, he was unable to the money just isn’t there at the help.
    [Show full text]
  • Tuesday, February 12, 2013 Women's Wear Daily $3.00
    WWD TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2013 Q WOMEN’S WEAR DAILY Q $3.00 Available at: 68 Greene Street - Soho | 5th Ave. at 54th Street NEW YORK WOMAN EVA MENDES WWD MILESTONES TO DO LINE FOR DENNIS BASSO AT 30. SECTION II NEW YORK & CO. PAGE 4 POP-UP STRATEGY Dior In Major Push Of Raf Simons’ Line By MILES SOCHA PARIS — Raf Simons’ fi rst collection for Dior is arriv- WWD ing at retail this month, accompanied by fanfare on a global scale. Dior is orchestrating a series of pop-up shops with TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2013 Q WOMEN’S WEAR DAILY Q $3.00 key wholesale partners in the coming weeks, trans- planting the decor and atmosphere of Simons’ ready- to-wear show in Paris last September to retailers in- cluding Joyce in Hong Kong, 10 Corso Como in Milan, Maxfi eld in Los Angeles, Isetan in Tokyo, My Boon in Seoul and I.T. in Beijing. “This is a new New Look,” declared Dior chief ex- ecutive Sidney Toledano, referring to the extravagant, fan-skirted silhouette that catapulted the French house to international fame in 1947 — and to Simons’ critically acclaimed reinterpretation of the founder’s legacy. Green Toledano cited a groundswell of excitement among buyers for Dior’s new artistic director of women’s haute couture, rtw and accessory collections, and a desire to animate Simons’ debut effort’s arrival in stores. “We had a lot of demand, and we didn’t want to be everywhere,” Toledano said in an interview. Spanning window displays, special furnishings, Light photo exhibitions and even a playlist of electronic music by French DJ Michel Gaubert, the installa- With a Forties heroine on her tions — some measuring several hundred square mind, Carolina Herrera sent out feet — are slated to last for up to three weeks.
    [Show full text]
  • Farmers Pledge Their Support to Hoover Plan
    ^ • "X ;.'^fp<T»‘' ■ft«V -*'• :,Ai' ^ "'!■' ' *' * ■ •''•*•• ■' *-• rt'- - V*,/ ^ ^ i ■-••.T'JV.'f THE WEATHER Forecast by U. S. Weather Bureau, 3VET PRESS RUN Hartford^ AVERAGE DAILY CIRCULATION for the Month of October, 1939 Conn. State Library—Cem#* Fair and colder tonight; Tuesday increasing cloudiness with rising 5 ,5 2 2 temperature. 9Iember« of the Andlt Bnrean of drculnttone PRICE THREE CENTS (Classifled Advertising on Page 12) SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN., MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1929. FOURTEEN PAGES VOL. XLIV., NO. 48. SIMPLE RITES “TIGER” TO REST IN TOMB | EYERDIVES ! High Court Upholds HE CHOSE FOUR YE AR S AGO| FARMERS PLEDGE 1 0 ,0 0 0 FEET ' State*s Auto Law MARK FUNERAL THEIR SUPPORT OFCLEMENCEAU TO HIS d e a th!Milford Woman Sued Own Husband Charging Reckless Driving—State Court Denies TO HOOVER PLAN 'Tather of Victory” Buried Famous Navy Pilot, Testing Her Relief and She Appeals. In Little Cemetery With­ Leaders Meet With Secre­ New Machine Unable to Washington, Nov. 25__(AP) — ^counsel -insufficient to support the BUSINESS NEWS ! The Supreme Court today sustained attack on the validity of the law, and refused to hear counsel on the out Pomp or Ceremony; tary Hyde and Appoint. other side, indicating that in its Draw Out of Headlong Judgment no constitutional question HELPSEXCHANGE vehicle owners for the inJury of had been presented. Very Few Present. Committee to Draw Up Plunge to Earth. guests being transported without the payment of fare. HISTORY OF CASE REPAMEACH Statement for President Mrs. Mae Silver was Injured In New Haven, Nov. 25 —(AP) — Mouchamps, Vendee, France, Nov.
    [Show full text]
  • Literariness.Org-Beatrix-Hesse-Auth
    Crime Files Series General Editor: Clive Bloom Since its invention in the nineteenth century, detective fi ction has never been more popular. In novels, short stories, fi lms, radio, television and now in computer games, private detectives and psychopaths, prim poisoners and overworked cops, tommy gun gangsters and cocaine criminals are the very stuff of modern imagination, and their creators one mainstay of popular consciousness. Crime Files is a ground- breaking series offering scholars, students and discerning readers a comprehensive set of guides to the world of crime and detective fi ction. Every aspect of crime writing, detective fi ction, gangster movie, true- crime exposé, police procedural and post- colonial investigation is explored through clear and informative texts offering comprehensive coverage and theoretical sophistication. Titles include: Maurizio Ascari A COUNTER- HISTORY OF CRIME FICTION Supernatural, Gothic, Sensational Pamela Bedore DIME NOVELS AND THE ROOTS OF AMERICAN DETECTIVE FICTION Hans Bertens and Theo D’haen CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN CRIME FICTION Anita Biressi CRIME, FEAR AND THE LAW IN TRUE CRIME STORIES Clare Clarke LATE VICTORIAN CRIME FICTION IN THE SHADOWS OF SHERLOCK Paul Cobley THE AMERICAN THRILLER Generic Innovation and Social Change in the 1970s Michael Cook DETECTIVE FICTION AND THE GHOST STORY The Haunted Text Michael Cook NARRATIVES OF ENCLOSURE IN DETECTIVE FICTION The Locked Room Mystery Barry Forshaw BRITISH CRIME FILM Subverting the Social Order Barry Forshaw DEATH IN A COLD CLIMATE A Guide to Scandinavian
    [Show full text]
  • Predia WALCOTT W Ill BE UEDT
    'I'l' .................. .'»i '■ ' ■ . ' h'* -' c . (NET PRESS Rim Tim WBAtRBR. AVERAGE DAILY CIRGULATIOX OF THE EVENING HERALD < % ■i; Pair Sunday paii^ for the month of Aagnst, 1026. nlondy. possibly showers, Some- what warmer. 4,836 j PRICE THREE CENTS 70L. XUV., NO. 287. Gluslflod AdTerttolng on Page 6 MANCHESTER, CONN., SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 4,1926. (TWELVE PAGES) ‘ . ' ! ‘ ’t? ‘ t' •. f1 ■- •■ P R E D ia WALCOTT W ill BE After Leriroot^s Seat WISCIBiNllAS Fightiiig for His life WIERDEST FIGHT UEDT. GOVERNOR NOMINEE ON n ^ H A N D S Trend Away from Both PLAN TO (U P Lenroot, Beset by La FoDette First Time in Years Oi^am- Brainard and Wadhams Crowd; RejeCts Aid of G. No Drive On Jackson LABOR’S WINGS zation Ih s Taken S it e in Noticeable— Walcott Pop­ 0 . P. R eg^ rS ; Battles In Selectmen Contest Primary Contest— Mainv ular Thronghout State as I N C y R H A I N Alone Because he Is a registered Re­ Seeks OffiCe tain Hohenthal Is 'N ot a fish and Game Head publican and has consistently voted Torys Working to Make Con­ Editor’s Note: WisConsin, home the G. O. P. tiCket,, no opposition of politiCal “progresslvlsm,” holds Republican— Hope to,G d While ,J. Edwin Brainard, and Governor John J. Blaine, old Senator I, L. Lenroot. WlsConsiii will be given Albert Jackson, can­ its Republican primary Sept. 7. A veteran, objeCt of La Follette as­ John H. Wadhams are canvassing trol of Parliaments by friend and ally of the senior La Co’ ^rful fight Is on, with the La didate for a sCat on the Board of ; State Convention delegates in an ef­ Follette and backed by youthful Follette forCes flghtlr,-’ to strength­ sault, who is making lone struggle Selectmen, by the RepublicaH Town Out ReCord Vote— Work fort to secure the RepubliCan nom­ Senator Bob as candidate for U.
    [Show full text]