Newspapers & Scrapbooks University of Ulster Trans-Gender Archive

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Newspapers & Scrapbooks University of Ulster Trans-Gender Archive Newspapers & Scrapbooks University of Ulster Trans-Gender Archive Accession # 2014-020 Contents: Newspapers Scrapbook Newspapers - Inventory Box 4 File Title 4.4 Anderson, Adèle Date range: 1985 – 1987 The Stage and Television Today, Daily Mail, Gay Times, Mirror, Isle of Wight Weekly Post. 4.4 Ashley, April Date range: 1962, 1969 – 1970, 1980, 1982. - Correspondence. 1985. Newspapers represented: News of the World (5), Daily Mirror (3), Sunday Mirror (3), The Sun (3), Gay News (2), Evening News, Daily Telegraph, Western Mail, Observer, The People, Sunday Pictorial. 4.4 Chris and Cathy Brown Date range: 1980 – 1981 News of the World (2), Over 21, Birmingham Post, excerpts from a translation from a French magazine article. 4.4 Carlos, Wendy Date range: 1979 – 1982. Evening Standard, The Sun, Playboy. 4.5 Cossey, Caroline / Tula Date range: 1981 – 1982, 1990 – 1991. Updated: February 18, 2016 The Guardian (5), The Sun (3), Daily Mirror (3), Western Morning News (2), News of the World (2), The Sport (2), The Times (2), Daily Mail (2), Mirror Woman (2), Time Out (2), The Mail on Sunday, City Limits, 19, Oui, The People, Observer, Daily Star, Entertainment World, Belfast Telegraph, The Independent, The Daily Telegraph, Sunday Independent, Ulster Newsletter, Evening Standard, Sunday Times Magazine, Amateur Photographer. 4.6 Cousins, Judy Date range: 1981 - 1987 - Correspondence. 1985. Newspapers represented: The People (2), Times, Titbits, Maidenhead Advertiser. 4.6 Daniels, Lynn Date range: 1984 AZ (German newspaper). 4.6 Grant, Julia Date range: 1979 – 1980 Daily Mail (5), Gay News (3), Sun (3), Listener (2), Punch (2), Times (2), Time Out (2), Observer (2), Daily Express (2), Telegraph (2), Radio Times (2), Daily Mirror, News of the World, Guardian, Woman’s Own, News of the World, London Evening News, Sparerib 4.6 Greaves, Gloria Date range: 1982 The Sun (4), Daily Mail, Guardian. 4.7 Phaedra Kelly Date range: 1982 – 1987 - Transcript Vol. 1 no. 8. [n.d.]. - “Transsexual Options.” Phaedra Kelly. Forum. Vol. 17 no 8. pp. 43 – 46. - “Bits and Bobs.” Donna of Upminster. Shaft Newsletter. Vol. 2 no. 5. 1984. p. 9. - “Talking Shop.” Phaedra Kelly. Shaft Newsletter. Vol 2. no. 13. 1986. pp 22 – 23. - “Think of It.” Phaedra Kelly. Transcript. [n.d.]. pp. 17 – 19. - “A Wife Writes – Again … Yes!… The Same One.” Courtesy of the Phoenix Society. Tempo. No. 2. ca. 1986. - “A Gender Transient Writes Back.” Phaedra Kelly. Tempo. No. 3. [n.d.]. pp 24 – 27. - “Last Minority.” Phaedra Kelly. Beaumont Bulletin. Vol. 16 no. 6. pp 43 – 46. - “Absolute Beginner.” Phaedra Kelly. Tweenie Mag. Trans Essex group. pp 16 – 18. - “Lifestyle - You Only Live Twice.” Bruce Laker / Phaedra Kelly. Tweenie Mag. [n.d.]. Updated: February 18, 2016 - “Letter to the Editor.” Phaedra Kelly. Tempo. No. 4. [n.d.]. p. 28. - “When Boys are Boy / Girl.” Phaedra Kelly. Tempo. No. 5. [n.d.]. pp 10 – 11. - “Snake’s Alive.” Phaedie. Tweenie Mag. p. 6. - [Untitled]. Phaedra. Transcript. Vol. 1 No. 8. [n.d.]. - Tranz. No. 16. 1978. p. 45. - “Lovely Jacquie El.” Jacquie El. Tranz. No. 19. 1978. pp. 9 – 11. - Tranz. No. 32. 1979. p. 5. - Tranz. No. 27. [n.d.]. - [Untitled]. Phaedra Kelly. Transcript. Vol. 1 no. 9. [n.d.]. - [Untitled]. Phaedra. Glad Rag. No. 24. 1985. pp. 28 – 29. - [Letter to C. Press, Newport]. [n.d.]. - Correspondence 1987. Postcard from son, letters from friends. - Photocopy of Private Magazine. - Photocopy of two Wayne County & The Electric Chairs posters. - Photocopies of articles about Nikko. [n.d.]. - Photocopies of advertisements for “Trisha”. - Letter from Judy Cousins 1983. - Letters from Christine Lane, 1986 – 1987. Newspapers represented: Isle of Wight Weekly Post (9), Isle of Wight County Press (8), Southern Evening Echo (5), Island Echo (3), The News (3), Sunday Tasmanian (2), Sunday Mirror (2), The News – Isle of Wight, Daily Mirror, Sunday Mirror, Daily Star, Evening Echo, Glasgow Herald, Daily Express, Weekly World News, Daily Telegraph, Evening Argus, Portsmouth News, The People, HIM, Fiesta. 4.8 de Lambray, Vikki & Spycatcher Date range: ca. 1984 – 1987 Birmingham Post, Sunday Mirror, The Guardian, Daily Mail, The Star, Daily Express, Daily Mirror, The People, Telegraph, Sport, The Stage and Television Today. 4.8 Stephanie Anne Lloyd Date range: 1984 – 1987 - Correspondence from Transformation Ltd. 1987. Newspapers represented: Daily Mirror (5), Daily Mail (3), Sunday Sport (2), Manchester Evening News (2), Stockport Times (2), Sunday Telegraph (2), News of the World (2), Sunday Mirror (2), The Sun (2), Evening Chronicle (2), Bolton Evening News, Newsletter, Mayfair, The People, The Star, You Magazine, The Independent, The Sport, Sunday People, Woman’s Own, Glad Rag. No. 18. [n.d.]. Pp. 1 – 4. 4.8 Morris, Jan Date range: 1982 – 1984 Vanity Fair, Radio Times Updated: February 18, 2016 4.9 Presto, Fay Date range: 1984 – 1989 Sunday Mirror (2), Stage and Television Today (2), Daily Express, LAN, Guardian, Observer. 4.9 Rees, Mark Date range: 1986 - Correspondence from Mark Rees on the reverse of photocopied articles. Newspapers represented: Western Mail, Guardian, Kent & Sussex Courier, Brighton Evening Argus, Marie Claire, Woman’s Own, Guardian, Daily Telegraph, Woman. 4.9 Richards, Renée Date range: 1976 – 1987 Daily Mail (6), Daily Express (4), Daily Mail (3), Times (3) Daily Mirror, observer, News of the World, Woman, Woman’s Own. 4.9 Stamp, Tracey Date range: 1981 – 1984 Times (5), Daily Mail (3), Guardian (3), Telegraph (2), The Sun, News of the World. Folders 4.10 – 5.1 were complied by Ekins in black binders. They are preserved as a separate series of dates from the loose materials and other folders for the sake of preserving Ekins’ selection, if there was any. This is why many dates appear twice. The newspapers that published each article in this gathering are counted, in approximation. Newspaper titles are totalled with a number in brackets following the title. Titles without a number appear only once. 4.10 1949 – 1959 News of the World (30), Sunday Pictorial (14), The Daily Mirror (7), Reveille for the Weekend (4), Sunday Dispatch (2), Weekend Mail (2), Daily Express, Weekend Mail. 4.11 1960 – 1969 News of the World (8), The People (6), Observer (5), East London Advertiser (2), Times, National Police Gazette, Daily Herald. 4.12 1970 – 1979 Sunday Mirror (8), Daily Mirror (7), News of the World (6), The People (6), Sunday People (5), Reveille (2), Woman’s Guardian, Sunday News, Tidbits, Woman’s world, SHE, Argus, Evening Argus, Evening Post, Guardian, Woman’s Own, The New York Times, Church Times, Observer, Evening Standard, The Sun, Sunday Mail, Gay News, Over 21 Mag, Daily Mail, Nursing Mirror, Nation Updated: February 18, 2016 Review. 4.13 1980 – 1982 News of the World (7), Observer (6), The Sun (5), Evening Mail Birmingham (4), The Sun (4), Sunday Mirror (4), Guardian (3), Daily Mirror (2), Sunday People (2), Sunday Independent (2), Daily Telegraph (2), Ms. London (2), Daily Mail (2), Leister Mercury (2), Daily Express (2), The People (2), Evening News, Daily Mail, Daily Star, Liverpool Echo, Sunday Times, Gay News, Daily Star, Birmingham Evening Mail, Cosmopolitan, Woman’s World, Daily Record, Psychology News, Guardian Women, Radio Times, Men Only, Daily Telegraph, Sunday Times, Daily Star, Titbits, New Society. 4.14 1983 – 1984 - Correspondence concerning “Claire Raynor’s Casebook”. 1984. Newspapers represented: Sunday Mirror (8), The Sun (6), Daily Mail (4), Guardian (3), Woman (2), Sunday World (2), Sunday Times Magazine (2), News of the World (2), Belfast Telegraph, Daily Express, Community Care, Film Review, National Student, Titbits, Sunday Express, New Society, Wordsworth Advertiser, Daily Telegraph, Daily Star, Daily Mirror, The News, Woman’s Own, Observer, Time Out, Panorama, Reading Evening Post, Guardian Women, Northampton Chronicle and Echo, Listener, New York Times, Family Circle, Cosmopolitan. 4.15 1985 The Sun (6), Daily Mail (3), Sunday Times (2), The Times, Woman’s Journal, Gay News, Birmingham Mail, Sunday World, Staffordshire Evening Sentinel, British Weekly, Family Radio & TV, Pensions, Gay Scotland, Evening Standard, The Standard, Evening News, Daily Record, Daily Mirror, Guardian, Sunday Express, You, Mensa Magazine, Observer, Daily Express. 4.16 1986 – 1987 Guardian (7), The Sun (6), Daily Mirror (6), Daily Mail (6), The People (6), Sunday Sport (6), Star (5), Daily Express (5), Observer (5), News of the World (4), Sunday Mirror (3), Sunday Mirror (3), The Mail on Sunday (3), Weekend People (2), SHE (2), Daily Telegraph (2), Worthing Gazette & Herald, The Listener, Sunday People, Weekend People, Woman’s Own, London Standard, Sunday World, Gay Times, Surrey Comet, The Mail on Sunday, Hackney Gazette, Time Out, Belfast Telegraph, Kent and Sussex Courier, Radio Times. 4.16 [Untitled ca. 1987] Daily Telegraph, El País, Sunday Times Magazine, Sunday Mirror, Unity Hall. Box 5 File Title Updated: February 18, 2016 5.1 1989 - Correspondence. 1989 Newspapers represented: News of the World (11), The Sport (11), The People (10), Daily Mail (8), Sunday Mirror (8), The Times (7), The Sun (6), The Guardian (5), Daily Mirror (5), Daily Telegraph (4), Daily Record (4), The Independent (3), Observer (3), Daily Express (3), Boston Globe (3), Boston Herald (3), The Independent (3), Sunday World (2), Sunday Express (2), Star (2), Academic Book Collection (2), Sunday Sport (2), Mail on Sunday (2), Evening Standard, Evening Press, Evening Post, Seahorse Newsletter, Bella, Independent Magazine, Theatre, Weekly World News,
Recommended publications
  • Mythological Intertextuality in Nineteenth Century Ballet Repertory
    Skidmore College Creative Matter MALS Final Projects, 1995-2019 MALS 5-20-2006 Mythological Intertextuality in Nineteenth Century Ballet Repertory Liane Fisher Skidmore College Follow this and additional works at: https://creativematter.skidmore.edu/mals_stu_schol Part of the Dance Commons, and the History of Art, Architecture, and Archaeology Commons Recommended Citation Fisher, Liane, "Mythological Intertextuality in Nineteenth Century Ballet Repertory" (2006). MALS Final Projects, 1995-2019. 41. https://creativematter.skidmore.edu/mals_stu_schol/41 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the MALS at Creative Matter. It has been accepted for inclusion in MALS Final Projects, 1995-2019 by an authorized administrator of Creative Matter. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Mythological Intertextuality in Nineteenth Century Ballet Repertory Master of Arts in Liberal Studies Thesis Skidmore College Liane Fisher March 2006 Advisor: Isabel Brown Reader: Marc Andre Wiesmann Table of Contents Abstract .............................. ... .... .......................................... .......... ............................ ...................... 1 Chapter 1 : Introduction .. .................................................... ........... ..... ............ ..... ......... ............. 2 My thologyand Ballet ... ....... ... ........... ................... ....... ................... ....... ...... .................. 7 The Labyrinth My thologies .. ......................... .... ................. ..........................................
    [Show full text]
  • Proposed Acquisition
    Proposed Acquisition February 9, 2018 THIS ANNOUNCEMENT AND THE INFORMATION CONTAINED HEREIN IS NOT FOR RELEASE, PUBLICATION OR DISTRIBUTION, IN WHOLE OR IN PART, DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY, IN OR INTO ANY JURISDICTION IN WHICH RELEASE, PUBLICATION OR DISTRIBUTION WOULD BE UNLAWFUL. PLEASE SEE THE IMPORTANT NOTICE AT THE END OF THIS ANNOUNCEMENT. 9 February 2018 Trinity Mirror plc Proposed acquisition of Northern & Shell's publishing assets Trinity Mirror plc ("Trinity Mirror" or the "Company") is pleased to announce the proposed acquisition of Northern & Shell's publishing assets for a total purchase price of £126.7 million. These comprise Northern & Shell Network Limited ("NSNL"), a subsidiary of Northern & Shell Media Group Limited containing the publishing assets of Northern & Shell and its subsidiaries, International Distribution 2018 Limited and a 50% equity interest in Independent Star Limited (the "Acquisition"). The purchase consideration of £126.7 million will be satisfied by the payment to the Northern & Shell Media Group Limited (the "Seller") of, in aggregate, an initial cash consideration of £47.7 million; deferred cash consideration of £59.0 million payable over 2020 - 2023; and the balance of £20.0 million by the issue to the Seller of 25,826,746 new ordinary shares of 10p each ("Consideration Shares"). Trinity Mirror will also make a one-off cash payment of £41.2 million to the Northern & Shell Pension Schemes and a recovery plan through to 2027 has been agreed with total payments of £29.2 million. Strong strategic rationale
    [Show full text]
  • Palestine News 2009 Spring
    spring09 palestine NEWS 1 £1.50 / €2.00 ISSN 1477-5808 Spring 2009 INSIDE: War crimes Paul Adrian Raymond page 4 Elections and peace George Joffe page 10 The Lancet on Palestine Victoria Brittain page 16 The world unites Viva Palestina! Gill Swain for Palestine page 16 Palestine Solidarity Campaign Box BM PSA London WC1N 3XX tel 020 7700 6192 email [email protected] web www.palestinecampaign.org 2 palestine NEWS spring09 Contents 3 Did they die in vain? What will be the legacy of the 1400 killed in Gaza? asks Gill Swain 4 War crimes — the charge sheet Paul Adrian Raymond catalogues the evidence for the charge of war crimes 6 Wanted: the political and military leadership of Israel International efforts to investigate war crimes and bring perpetrators to justice 7 IDF soldiers speak out Soldiers returning from Gaza confess what they did — and buy the T-shirts 8 Israel’s real heroes Military refuseniks who would not serve in Gaza 9 Arming Israel — the UK’s role Megan Clay-Jones investigates the UK firms involved in the arms trade with Israel Cover photo montage: Protest marches from around the world 10 Elections and peace ISSN 1477 - 5808 George Joffe examines the outcome of elections in the US and Israel and what they mean for peace 12 Violent suppression of peaceful protests Many injured, arrested as Israel steals more Palestinian land Also in this issue... The 10th Palestine Film Festival 13 ‘They call me number 59’ page 30 Ethnic cleansing in Jerusalem 14 Continuing siege compounds the suffering Gill Swain looks at the ongoing
    [Show full text]
  • Reach PLC Summary Response to the Digital Markets Taskforce Call for Evidence
    Reach PLC summary response to the Digital Markets Taskforce call for evidence Introduction Reach PLC is the largest national and regional news publisher in the UK, with influential and iconic brands such as the Daily Mirror, Daily Express, Sunday People, Daily Record, Daily Star, OK! and market leading regional titles including the Manchester Evening News, Liverpool Echo, Birmingham Mail and Bristol Post. Our network of over 70 websites provides 24/7 coverage of news, sport and showbiz stories, with over one billion views every month. Last year we sold 620 million newspapers, and we over 41 million people every month visit our websites – more than any other newspaper publisher in the UK. Changes to the Reach business Earlier this month we announced changes to the structure of our organisation to protect our news titles. This included plans to reduce our workforce from its current level of 4,700 by around 550 roles, gearing our cost base to the new market conditions resulting from the pandemic. These plans are still in consultation but are likely to result in the loss of over 300 journalist roles within the Reach business across national, regional and local titles. Reach accepts that consumers will continue to shift to its digital products, and digital growth is central to our future strategy. However, our ability to monetise our leading audience is significantly impacted by the domination of the advertising market by the leading tech platforms. Moreover, as a publisher of scale with a presence across national, regional and local markets, we have an ability to adapt and achieve efficiencies in the new market conditions that smaller local publishers do not.
    [Show full text]
  • Scottsih Newspapers Have a Long Hisotry Fof Involvement With
    68th IFLA Council and General Conference August 18-24, 2002 Code Number: 051-127-E Division Number: V Professional Group: Newspapers RT Joint Meeting with: - Meeting Number: 127 Simultaneous Interpretation: - Scottish Newspapers and Scottish National Identity in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries I.G.C. Hutchison University of Stirling Stirling, UK Abstract: Scotland is distinctive within the United Kingdom newspaper industry both because more people read papers and also because Scots overwhelmingly prefer to read home-produced organs. The London ‘national’ press titles have never managed to penetrate and dominate in Scotland to the preponderant extent that they have achieved in provincial England and Wales. This is true both of the market for daily and for Sunday papers. There is also a flourishing Scottish local weekly sector, with proportionately more titles than in England and a very healthy circulation total. Some of the reasons for this difference may be ascribed to the higher levels of education obtaining in Scotland. But the more influential factor is that Scotland has retained distinctive institutions, despite being part of Great Britain for almost exactly three hundred years. The state church, the education system and the law have not been assimilated to any significant amount with their counterparts south of the border. In the nineteenth century in particular, religious disputes in Scotland generated a huge amount of interest. Sport in Scotlaand, too, is emphatically not the same as in England, whether in terms of organisation or in relative popularity. Additionally, the menu of major political issues in Scotland often has been and is quite divergent from England – for instance, the land question and self-government.
    [Show full text]
  • The Winners and Runners Up
    THE WINNERS AND RUNNERS UP YOUNG JOURNALIST OF THE YEAR WINNER/RUNNER UP Gurpeet Narwan The Times WINNER Sarah Vesty Daily Record/Glasgow Live RUNNER UP Christina O'Neill Daily Record James Delaney Edinburgh Evening News Colan Lamont The Scottish Sun WEEKLY NEWSPAPER OF THE YEAR SPONSORED BY DIAGEO WINNER/RUNNER UP East Lothian Courier WINNER Irvine Herald RUNNER UP Aidrie and Coatrbidge Advertiser Ayrshire Post Inverness Courier Oban Times ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT JOURNALIST OF THE YEAR WINNER/RUNNER UP Peter Ross The Herald WINNER Teddy Jamieson The Herald/Sunday Herald RUNNER UP Paul English Freelance Anna Burnside Daily Record Mike Wade The Times INTERVIEWER OF THE YEAR WINNER/RUNNER UP Kenny Farquharson The Times WINNER Vicky Allan Sunday Herald RUNNER UP Janet Christie Scotsman/Scotland on Sunday Susan Swarbrick The Herald Kirsten Johnson Scottish Mail on Sunday POLITICAL JOURNALIST OF THE YEAR WINNER/RUNNER UP David Clegg Daily Record WINNER Chris Musson The Scottish Sun RUNNER UP Adele Merson Evening Express Michael Blackley Scottish Daily Mail Torcuil Crichton Daily Record Tom Gordon The Herald COLUMNIST OF THE YEAR WINNER/RUNNER UP Kenny Farquharson The Times (Politics) WINNER Dani Garavelli Scotland on Sunday RUNNER UP David Walsh The Scotsman John Macleod Scottish Daily Mail Stephen Daisley Scottish Daily Mail SPORTS COLUMNIST OF THE YEAR WINNER/RUNNER UP Gary Keown Scottish Mail on Sunday WINNER Keith Jackson Daily Record RUNNER UP Alasdair Reid The Times Gordon Waddell Sunday Mail Bill Leckie The Scottish Sun 1 THE WINNERS AND
    [Show full text]
  • Sheet1 Page 1 Express & Star (West Midlands) 113,174 Manchester Evening News 90,973 Liverpool Echo 85,463 Aberdeen
    Sheet1 Express & Star (West Midlands) 113,174 Manchester Evening News 90,973 Liverpool Echo 85,463 Aberdeen - Press & Journal 71,044 Dundee Courier & Advertiser 61,981 Norwich - Eastern Daily Press 59,490 Belfast Telegraph 59,319 Shropshire Star 55,606 Newcastle-Upon-Tyne Evening Chronicle 52,486 Glasgow - Evening Times 52,400 Leicester Mercury 51,150 The Sentinel 50,792 Aberdeen - Evening Express 47,849 Birmingham Mail 47,217 Irish News - Morning 43,647 Hull Daily Mail 43,523 Portsmouth - News & Sports Mail 41,442 Darlington - The Northern Echo 41,181 Teesside - Evening Gazette 40,546 South Wales Evening Post 40,149 Edinburgh - Evening News 39,947 Leeds - Yorkshire Post 39,698 Bristol Evening Post 38,344 Sheffield Star & Green 'Un 37,255 Leeds - Yorkshire Evening Post 36,512 Nottingham Post 35,361 Coventry Telegraph 34,359 Sunderland Echo & Football Echo 32,771 Cardiff - South Wales Echo - Evening 32,754 Derby Telegraph 32,356 Southampton - Southern Daily Echo 31,964 Daily Post (Wales) 31,802 Plymouth - Western Morning News 31,058 Southend - Basildon - Castle Point - Echo 30,108 Ipswich - East Anglian Daily Times 29,932 Plymouth - The Herald 29,709 Bristol - Western Daily Press 28,322 Wales - The Western Mail - Morning 26,931 Bournemouth - The Daily Echo 26,818 Bradford - Telegraph & Argus 26,766 Newcastle-Upon-Tyne Journal 26,280 York - The Press 25,989 Grimsby Telegraph 25,974 The Argus Brighton 24,949 Dundee Evening Telegraph 23,631 Ulster - News Letter 23,492 South Wales Argus - Evening 23,332 Lancashire Telegraph - Blackburn 23,260
    [Show full text]
  • Pressreader Newspaper Titles
    PRESSREADER: UK & Irish newspaper titles www.edinburgh.gov.uk/pressreader NATIONAL NEWSPAPERS SCOTTISH NEWSPAPERS ENGLISH NEWSPAPERS inc… Daily Express (& Sunday Express) Airdrie & Coatbridge Advertiser Accrington Observer Daily Mail (& Mail on Sunday) Argyllshire Advertiser Aldershot News and Mail Daily Mirror (& Sunday Mirror) Ayrshire Post Birmingham Mail Daily Star (& Daily Star on Sunday) Blairgowrie Advertiser Bath Chronicles Daily Telegraph (& Sunday Telegraph) Campbelltown Courier Blackpool Gazette First News Dumfries & Galloway Standard Bristol Post iNewspaper East Kilbride News Crewe Chronicle Jewish Chronicle Edinburgh Evening News Evening Express Mann Jitt Weekly Galloway News Evening Telegraph Sunday Mail Hamilton Advertiser Evening Times Online Sunday People Paisley Daily Express Gloucestershire Echo Sunday Sun Perthshire Advertiser Halifax Courier The Guardian Rutherglen Reformer Huddersfield Daily Examiner The Independent (& Ind. on Sunday) Scotland on Sunday Kent Messenger Maidstone The Metro Scottish Daily Mail Kentish Express Ashford & District The Observer Scottish Daily Record Kentish Gazette Canterbury & Dist. IRISH & WELSH NEWSPAPERS inc.. Scottish Mail on Sunday Lancashire Evening Post London Bangor Mail Stirling Observer Liverpool Echo Belfast Telegraph Strathearn Herald Evening Standard Caernarfon Herald The Arran Banner Macclesfield Express Drogheda Independent The Courier & Advertiser (Angus & Mearns; Dundee; Northants Evening Telegraph Enniscorthy Guardian Perthshire; Fife editions) Ormskirk Advertiser Fingal
    [Show full text]
  • Raid on the School, Saturday 27 September 1975
    14 RAID ON THE SCHOOL, SATURDAY 27 SEPTEMBER 1975 This Saturday started more or less like any other. I started work in the printshop at about 07.00 hours. Healy was at the Partys Education Centre in Derbyshire so I was able to set my target to finish late afternoon. I went back to my flat, had a bath, and settled down for a couple of hours sleep. This sort of day was fantastic. At about 18.00 hours I started my weekly tour round Fleet Street to collect the Sunday papers as soon as the presses started running. This meant that we would get a look at the Sunday papers several hours before they reached the streets. This was one of those rare weekends when there was no pressure to rush back to Healys flat; I was simply to leave the papers at the front office where a member of our Editorial Board would pick them up, scrutinise them and prepare for the Sunday morning Editorial Board meeting. The great god Linotype was on my side that night. All the Sunday papers got off to a flyer so I was back in the front office by 19.30 hours. I sorted one of each for the editorial staff and put the rest on a pile for me to take into the Plough pub in Clapham where I would sell them to the eagerly waiting punters (I had to finance a few pints and an Indian take-away somehow) and watch the Saturday night special football with Paul Jennings. Before going to the pub I decided to flip through the papers myself.
    [Show full text]
  • Mitchell Brothers – Vaudeville and Western
    Vaudeville and the Last Encore By Marlene Mitchell February, 1992 William Mitchell, his wife Pearl Mitchell, and John Mitchell 1 Vaudeville and the Last Encore By Marlene Mitchell February, 1992 Vaudeville was a favorite pastime for individuals seeking clean entertainment during the early part of the 20th century. The era of vaudeville was relatively short because of the creation of new technology. Vaudeville began around 1881 and began to fade in the early 1930s.1 The term vaudeville originated in France.2 It is thought that the term vaudeville was from “Old French vaudevire, short for chanson du Vaux de Vire, which meant popular satirical songs that were composed and presented during the 15th century in the valleys or vaux near the French town of Vire in the province of Normandy.”3 How did vaudeville begin? What was vaude- ville’s purpose and what caused its eventual collapse? This paper addresses the phenomenon of vaudeville — its rise, its stable but short lifetime, and its demise. Vaudeville was an outgrowth of the Industrial Revolution, which provided jobs for peo- ple and put money in their pockets.4 Because of increased incomes, individuals began to desire and seek clean, family entertainment.5 This desire was first satisfied by Tony Pastor, who is known as the “father of vaudeville.”6 In 1881 Pastor opened “Tony Pastor’s New Fourteenth Street Theatre” and began offering what he called variety entertainment.7 Later B. F. Keith, who is called the “founder of vaudeville,” opened a theater in Boston and expanded on Pastor’s original variety concept.8 Keith was the first to use the term “vaudeville” when he opened his theater in Boston in 1894.9 Keith later joined with E.
    [Show full text]
  • Print Journalism: a Critical Introduction
    Print Journalism A critical introduction Print Journalism: A critical introduction provides a unique and thorough insight into the skills required to work within the newspaper, magazine and online journalism industries. Among the many highlighted are: sourcing the news interviewing sub-editing feature writing and editing reviewing designing pages pitching features In addition, separate chapters focus on ethics, reporting courts, covering politics and copyright whilst others look at the history of newspapers and magazines, the structure of the UK print industry (including its financial organisation) and the development of journalism education in the UK, helping to place the coverage of skills within a broader, critical context. All contributors are experienced practising journalists as well as journalism educators from a broad range of UK universities. Contributors: Rod Allen, Peter Cole, Martin Conboy, Chris Frost, Tony Harcup, Tim Holmes, Susan Jones, Richard Keeble, Sarah Niblock, Richard Orange, Iain Stevenson, Neil Thurman, Jane Taylor and Sharon Wheeler. Richard Keeble is Professor of Journalism at Lincoln University and former director of undergraduate studies in the Journalism Department at City University, London. He is the author of Ethics for Journalists (2001) and The Newspapers Handbook, now in its fourth edition (2005). Print Journalism A critical introduction Edited by Richard Keeble First published 2005 by Routledge 2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon, OX9 4RN Simultaneously published in the USA and Canada by Routledge 270 Madison Ave, New York, NY 10016 Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group This edition published in the Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2005. “To purchase your own copy of this or any of Taylor & Francis or Routledge’s collection of thousands of eBooks please go to www.eBookstore.tandf.co.uk.” Selection and editorial matter © 2005 Richard Keeble; individual chapters © 2005 the contributors All rights reserved.
    [Show full text]
  • An Analysis of the American Outdoor Sport Facility: Developing an Ideal Type on the Evolution of Professional Baseball and Football Structures
    AN ANALYSIS OF THE AMERICAN OUTDOOR SPORT FACILITY: DEVELOPING AN IDEAL TYPE ON THE EVOLUTION OF PROFESSIONAL BASEBALL AND FOOTBALL STRUCTURES DISSERTATION Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By Chad S. Seifried, B.S., M.Ed. * * * * * The Ohio State University 2005 Dissertation Committee: Approved by Professor Donna Pastore, Advisor Professor Melvin Adelman _________________________________ Professor Janet Fink Advisor College of Education Copyright by Chad Seifried 2005 ABSTRACT The purpose of this study is to analyze the physical layout of the American baseball and football professional sport facility from 1850 to present and design an ideal-type appropriate for its evolution. Specifically, this study attempts to establish a logical expansion and adaptation of Bale’s Four-Stage Ideal-type on the Evolution of the Modern English Soccer Stadium appropriate for the history of professional baseball and football and that predicts future changes in American sport facilities. In essence, it is the author’s intention to provide a more coherent and comprehensive account of the evolving professional baseball and football sport facility and where it appears to be headed. This investigation concludes eight stages exist concerning the evolution of the professional baseball and football sport facility. Stages one through four primarily appeared before the beginning of the 20th century and existed as temporary structures which were small and cheaply built. Stages five and six materialize as the first permanent professional baseball and football facilities. Stage seven surfaces as a multi-purpose facility which attempted to accommodate both professional football and baseball equally.
    [Show full text]