Qcltsi Iicknt Cathay"

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Qcltsi Iicknt Cathay Bates College SCARAB The aB tes Student Archives and Special Collections 4-20-1955 The aB tes Student - volume 81 number 21 - April 20, 1955 Bates College Follow this and additional works at: http://scarab.bates.edu/bates_student Recommended Citation Bates College, "The aB tes Student - volume 81 number 21 - April 20, 1955" (1955). The Bates Student. 1200. http://scarab.bates.edu/bates_student/1200 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Archives and Special Collections at SCARAB. It has been accepted for inclusion in The aB tes Student by an authorized administrator of SCARAB. For more information, please contact [email protected]. 1*5 7 "Better fifty Than a ye«r» of cycle of Europe QCltsi iicknt Cathay" Vol. LXXXI, No. 21 BATES COLLEGE, LEWISTON, MAINE, APRIL 20, 1955 By Subscription Attorney Discusses Courts, Cases In Cit Lab Session Bates Students Sail Addressing the Citizenship Lab- The third type includes cases in- >ratory last Thursday, Attorney volving disputes which originate in Vincent L. McKusick of Portland the highest court itself. For Summer Abroad discussed the membership, proce- Speaker Dispels Misconception dure and role of the U. S. Supreme "It is a popular misconception," Zerby Conducts Court. the speaker observed, "that the A trustee and graduate of Bates, Court hears all cases falling into Extensive Tour lie emphasized the "unique con- these three categories" He point- tinuity" which the Court possesses ed out that last year the Court Through Europe liy virtue of its life appointments. heard only 107 of 1.500 such cases. "Summer in Europe" is once Note* Three Types Of Cases "The Court has complete discre- more beckoning students to join Three types of cases may come tion," he added. Dr. and Mrs. Rayborn L. Zerby before the Supreme Court, Mc- Many believe the Court has be- on the continent. Kusick explained. Questions of come lazy in recent years. "This Fourteen American colleges will constitutional interpretation, first- is unjustified," the Harvard Law be represented in the group of ap- ly, may be referred to the highest graduate stated. Critics would do proximately 45 students who will tribunal by state courts. The most better to chastise the tribunal for tour Western Europe from July to noted of these would be the recent its choice of cases. September. segregation case. Decisions Receive Scrutiny Fourteen Bates Travelers Cases which involve federal Turning to the Court's role in Bates students traveling with ciuestions or in which there is a statesmanship, McKusick asserted this group include Margaret Bart- diversity of citizenship constitute that "there is no other group of lett, lone Birks, Judith Clark, the second type of Supreme Court nine men whose intellectual output Lloyd Condit, Nancy Glcnnon, cases. "The tidelands oil dispute is undergoes such close scrutiny as Richard Hathaway, Roger Lucas, an example," McKusick noted. the Supreme Court." Making plans for their summer abroad, Mrs. Rayborn L. Margaret Sharpe, Bernard Staples, Linnea Swanson, Barbara Uretsky, Because of the extreme impor- Zerby and prospective cosmopolitans scan articles for Selective Service Marilyn Webb, Helen Wilbur, tance of its cases, the Court is re- European points of interest. (Photo by Bryant) The Selective Service Qual- sponsible for moral leadership, the and Nancy Wilkes. ification Test will be given to- attorney added. Embarking from Quebec on morrow in Pettigrew. July 4, the voyagers will spend Dissension Weakens Practice nine or ten days crossing to All men who have applied to Three Professors Travel Although dissents are not had in Southampton on the S.S. Colum- take this test and have re- themselves, McKusick claimed, bia. ceived admission cards before "the Court has perhaps weakened the examination time should During Sabbatical Leaves Ship Offers Orientation its unity and prestige" by too report at 8:30 a. m., or imme- Three Bates professors, Lena semester. Her tentative plans in- much dissension. This ship, chartered by the diately following the comple- M. Walmsley, Brooks Quimby, clude visits to Italy and the Rivi- Council on Student Travel, pro- tion of a 7:40 class. Since Justices Black and Doug- and Raymond L. Kendall will be era. vides an intensive orientation pro- The examination will begin las entertain considerably more absent from campus for one semes- Walmsley Tours Europe gram on board including lectures at approximately 9 a. m. and liberal views than the other seven ter next year when they take their After a two or three-week stay on European political, economic, will last for exactly three members of the present court, sabbatical leaves. in Paris, the head of the women's social, and artistic backgrounds. hours. All men who take the they have acquired a reputation as Professor Walmsley will travel physical education department Language classes and travel coun- test will be excused from their chief dissenters. with a personal friend in the Medi- plans to tour Switzerland and seling round out the program. classes from 8:35 until 12:15. (Continued on page two) terranean area during the second Great Britain. The itinerary includes eight days She intends to observe various in Britain, four in Amsterdam, a sports and health programs in voyage down the Rhine from Chase Lecture Series Features high schools and colleges. If possi- Cologne to Wiesbaden, a week at ble, Professor Walmsley will visit (Continued on page three) the offices of the World Health Jess Smith In Piano Recital Organization in Geneva. Briwa, Drake Take Over Miller Receives PhD Jess Smith, well-known young mittee, mezzo in B flat minor, and the Helen H. Briwa and Paula R. For Dissertation On American pianist, will present a re- Smith's program includes the Rhapsody in G minor by Brahms. Drake will administer the women's cital in the Chapel Tuesday eve- Haydn's Sonato in B flat major. Following selections from the physical education department dur- Plato's Economics ning at 8 under the auspices He will also present the Cappric- Allegro and Allegro di Molto from ing the semester, while Miss Drake Recently James V. Miller, as- of the George Colby Chase Com- cio in F sharp minor, the Inter- Fantasia in C major by Schumann will assume the position of WAA sistant professor of religion, re- and Visions and Prophecies by adviser. ceived his Ph. D. from Boston Bloch. Smith will conclude the 1'rofcssor Quimby, who takes l'niversity. His thesis was a dis- Third In Chase Series program with the Ballade in A his leave next semester, plans to sertation entitled "An Inquiry flat major, the Nocturne in B flat travel through the middle-Atlantic into Plato's Treatment of Wealth." major, and the Scherzo in B flat and Southern states to observe Receives Degrees minor by Chopin. speech departments and programs Professor Miller received his At the College of l'uget Sound at the University of West Virgin- A.B. from Indiana Central Col- in Tacoma, Wash., he stud- ia, the l'niversity of Virginia, and lege in 1942, and his B.D. from ied under Prof. D. Robert Smith Pennsylvania State College. and was graduated as a music ma- the Bonebrakc Theological Semi- Quimby Edits .Forensic Book nary in 1945. jor. In the summer of 1950 he He also plans to edit the Golden Studied at the Los Angeles Con- He chose the topic of his thesis Book of Delta Sigma Rho, which because he thought critics grossly servatory under Mine. Kosiana commemorates the 50th anniver- Lhcvinna. misinterpreted Plato and his ideas. sary of that forensic organization. Plato has been accused of demon- Smith Continues Studies Around the first of January, Pro- strating totalitarian theories. Later at the Julliard School of fessor Quimby hopes to visit the Critics Fail Music in New York City, Smith speech departments of the met- Professor Miller believes that continued his work under Mine. ropolitan New York colleges. He the critics fail "because they do Lhevinna and Josef Raieff. Despite may coach the international debat- not consider the unity of his his recent concert appearances, he ing team before it sails for Eng- (Plato's) thinking, or because they still studies privately in New York land. dismiss his ethics, psychology, and under Muriel Kcrr and Alton Kendall Considers Travel Jones. social theory as peripheral." Professor Kendall is uncertain The' George Colby Chase lec- He stated that writing a thesis about his plans, but is considering "takes more endurance than geni- ture scries, in its attempt to pro- a trip through the South or South- vide top-flight intellectual pro- us. A Ph.D. doesn't make a person west during the second semester. a better teacher; it is a "way-post grams for the campus, has pre- He will work in secondary schools sented poet-historian Peter Viereck in the process of becoming educat- Jess Smith, former student of Prof. D. Robert Smith, pre- there. Dean Harry W. Rowe has ed." and the Indian dancers, the Lau- not yet announced plans for re- sents Tuesday night recital. (Photo by Bryant) bins, earlier in the year. The degree will be conferred on placing Kendall and Quimby. June 5. >st TWO THE BATES STUDENT, APRIL 20, 1955 Debaters Get High Ratings, Taylor Praises 'Bates Bobettes' B Elections, Gives M.I.T. Wins Tournament Council Advice Bates College entered the semi- In eight preliminary debates, finals in debate at the New Eng- Bates defeated Smith, Boston Uni- Speaking at the Stu-C recogni- land Forensic Tourny with the sec- versity, University of Connecticut, tion banquet last Thursday evening ond highest number of total judg- Albertus Magnus and Emerson. in Commons, Council President ing points. M.I.T.
Recommended publications
  • Black Soldiers in Liberal Hollywood
    Katherine Kinney Cold Wars: Black Soldiers in Liberal Hollywood n 1982 Louis Gossett, Jr was awarded the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his portrayal of Gunnery Sergeant Foley in An Officer and a Gentleman, becoming theI first African American actor to win an Oscar since Sidney Poitier. In 1989, Denzel Washington became the second to win, again in a supporting role, for Glory. It is perhaps more than coincidental that both award winning roles were soldiers. At once assimilationist and militant, the black soldier apparently escapes the Hollywood history Donald Bogle has named, “Coons, Toms, Bucks, and Mammies” or the more recent litany of cops and criminals. From the liberal consensus of WWII, to the ideological ruptures of Vietnam, and the reconstruction of the image of the military in the Reagan-Bush era, the black soldier has assumed an increasingly prominent role, ironically maintaining Hollywood’s liberal credentials and its preeminence in producing a national mythos. This largely static evolution can be traced from landmark films of WWII and post-War liberal Hollywood: Bataan (1943) and Home of the Brave (1949), through the career of actor James Edwards in the 1950’s, and to the more politically contested Vietnam War films of the 1980’s. Since WWII, the black soldier has held a crucial, but little noted, position in the battles over Hollywood representations of African American men.1 The soldier’s role is conspicuous in the way it places African American men explicitly within a nationalist and a nationaliz- ing context: U.S. history and Hollywood’s narrative of assimilation, the combat film.
    [Show full text]
  • Raoul Walsh to Attend Opening of Retrospective Tribute at Museum
    The Museum of Modern Art jl west 53 Street, New York, N.Y. 10019 Tel. 956-6100 Cable: Modernart NO. 34 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE RAOUL WALSH TO ATTEND OPENING OF RETROSPECTIVE TRIBUTE AT MUSEUM Raoul Walsh, 87-year-old film director whose career in motion pictures spanned more than five decades, will come to New York for the opening of a three-month retrospective of his films beginning Thursday, April 18, at The Museum of Modern Art. In a rare public appearance Mr. Walsh will attend the 8 pm screening of "Gentleman Jim," his 1942 film in which Errol Flynn portrays the boxing champion James J. Corbett. One of the giants of American filmdom, Walsh has worked in all genres — Westerns, gangster films, war pictures, adventure films, musicals — and with many of Hollywood's greatest stars — Victor McLaglen, Gloria Swanson, Douglas Fair­ banks, Mae West, James Cagney, Humphrey Bogart, Marlene Dietrich and Edward G. Robinson, to name just a few. It is ultimately as a director of action pictures that Walsh is best known and a growing body of critical opinion places him in the front rank with directors like Ford, Hawks, Curtiz and Wellman. Richard Schickel has called him "one of the best action directors...we've ever had" and British film critic Julian Fox has written: "Raoul Walsh, more than any other legendary figure from Hollywood's golden past, has truly lived up to the early cinema's reputation for 'action all the way'...." Walsh's penchant for action is not surprising considering he began his career more than 60 years ago as a stunt-rider in early "westerns" filmed in the New Jersey hills.
    [Show full text]
  • Hollywood Stars and Their Army Service from the Spanish American
    James E. Wise, Paul W. Wilderson. Stars in Khaki: Movie Actors in the Army and Air Services. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 2000. xi + 244 pp. $24.95, cloth, ISBN 978-1-55750-958-1. Reviewed by Charles C. Kolb Published on H-PCAACA (November, 2000) Hollywood Stars and their Army Service from In Stars in Blue we learned about Wayne the Spanish American War to Vietnam Morris, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Henry Fonda, This splendid book is the third and fnal vol‐ Humphrey Bogart, Paul Newman, Aldo Ray, ume in historian-biographer Wise's trilogy and it Ernest Borgnine, Robert Montgomery, Cesar makes a ftting companion to its two illustrious Romero, and dozens of other flm stars. With the predecessors. In 1997 Wise and his co-author Ann sequel, Stars in the Corps , we discovered the con‐ Rehill wrote Stars in Blue: Movie Actors in Ameri‐ tributions made by more than 30 motion picture ca's Sea Services in which flm actors who served stars including Sterling Hayden, Tyrone Power, in the U.S. Navy, Naval Reserve, Coast Guard, or Steve McQueen, Lee Marvin, Gene Hackman, Coast Guard Reserve from 1920 through the Kore‐ George C. Scott, Harvey Keitel, Brian Dennehy, an War are profiled. Wise and Rehill also au‐ Hugh O'Brien, Ed McMahon, and Dale Dye. As in thored Stars in the Corps: Movie Actors in the these two volumes, the emphasis in Stars in Khaki United States Marines (1999) which covers the is on World War II. Many of the men who served same period but emphasizes Marines in the Pacif‐ in the U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • God Loves Uganda | the Hooping Life | Tim’S Vermeer | the Address | Life According to Sam | the Story of the Jews Scene & He D
    July-August 2014 VOL. 29 THE VIDEO REVIEW MAGAZINE FOR LIBRARIES N O . 4 IN THIS ISSUE God Loves Uganda | The Hooping Life | Tim’s Vermeer | The Address | Life According to Sam | The Story of the Jews scene & he d LET BAKER & TAYLOR’S SCENE & HEARD TEAM HELP MAKE BUILDING AND MAINTAINING YOUR A/V COLLECTION EASIER WITH OUR PROFESSIONAL DIGITAL MEDIA PROCESSING (DMP) SERVICES! DMP off s a v iety of key benefi ts and feat es including: ■ Digitally reproduced original cover artwork ■ Personalized library contact information ■ Detailed content checklists and messaging ■ Circulation-tough polyvinyl CD and DVD cases ■ Single, double, multiple and locking security cases available ■ Large assortment of customized, embedded labels — genre, spine and more! To learn about DMP and other A/V products and services, contact your Sales Consultant today to discuss a custom-tailored solution for all your needs! 800-775-2600 x2050 [email protected] www.baker-taylor.com STAY CONNECTED: Spotlight Review God Loves Uganda streets, LGBT activists identified in newspa- HHH1/2 pers, and finally to a killing. Williams seems (2013) 83 min. DVD: to be everywhere with his camera (although $24.95. First Run he also makes assiduous use of archival and Publisher/Editor: Randy Pitman Features (avail. from other material): on buses with young Ameri- most distributors). Closed can ministers in Uganda, in parliamentary Associate Editor: Jazza Williams-Wood captioned. session, and at town hall-like meetings where Copy Editor: Kathleen L. Florio Stunning in its rev- gay pornography is shown (even to children) elations about the ways Editorial Assistant: Chris Pitman with the intent of fomenting intolerance.
    [Show full text]
  • Johnson County Unclaimed Funds As of 7/6/2018
    •Notice of Unclaimed Property •By Kathy Blackwell •Johnson County Treasurer • •This notice is provided in accordance with Section 76.201 of the Texas Property Code regarding •unclaimed funds. Unclaimed funds, referenced by the names on the following list, are in the custody of •Kathy Blackwell, Johnson County Treasurer. Only those names with property valued at $100.00 or less, are included in this list. •Any person possessing a legal or beneficial interest in the reported funds may contact the Johnson •County Treasurer's Office at 817-556-6340 to obtain information about the amount of the funds and the •procedure to make a claim to receive the funds. The unclaimed property is presumed abandoned and •subject to Chapter 76 of the "Texas Property Code." •All other claims for property valued over $100.00 should be made to the Texas Unclaimed Property Department in the State Comptrollers Office. •800-321-2274 •or online at •www.window.state.tx.us JOHNSON COUNTY UNCLAIMED FUNDS AS OF 7/6/2018 LAST NAME: FIRST NAME: ADDRESS City,State, ZIP AMOUNT: DATE ON LIST Abdelkhalez Jalael Sabri 216 Cr 805A Cleburne Tx 76031 $ 16.42 7/8/2019 Abney John T 229 Mountain Air Joshua, Tx 76058 $ 10.00 6/23/2017 Aboites-Baylon German 229 Mountain Aire Cleburne, Tx 76031 $ 26.00 6/23/2017 Aboulhosn Joe M Ii 2005 Irma St Tucson, Az 85712 $ 2.32 6/23/2017 Abrego Sylvester C 5800 Cr 1012 Joshua, Tx 76058 $ 2.27 6/23/2017 Abundis Rosa 3319 Nw Loraine Cleburne, Tx 76031 $ 6.82 6/23/2017 Abunijmeh Yousef A 1908 Fm 3048 Godley, Tx 76044 $ 37.00 6/23/2017 Acevedo Roel 1720 John West Rd 1108 Dallas Tx 75228 $ 0.16 6/23/2017 Acosta Allysan S 4208 Broken Arrow Rd Ft.
    [Show full text]
  • I|)I®Nul| Color
    Elvis Presley’s "G. I. Blues” are “cold bowl,” is a chilled Ger- THE STAR the three sets of boy twins who EVENING I man fruit soup. "It can be “work” in the baby-sitting Thursday, June 9, 1960 Amusements B-15 made with scenes. They get $2O a day for any fruit,” says ¦M HOLLYWOOD two DINING OUT Hans of the Old hours maximum toil. Their Lichtenstein Brook Farm, 7101 Brookville between men and women diners: mothers must be on the set at Europe, "but we use sour road. Chevy Chase. Md. Mr. Women are more all also a compfi- times, registered EMERSON BEAUCHAMP cherries, along with Burgundy By SHEILAH By Mills prefers steak or Men seldom GRAHAM nurse. prime i mentary. com- wine, pearl barley, and maca- ribs, and Mr. Oathings is par- ment. Producer Sam is Speigel roon sprinkled on top.” tial to steak. country-style Women like shrimp cocktails. k iM— ¦¦¦ for several hundred looking Men prefer clams. racing camels. Needs them for Come Avoid the Rush For the Record ... Vlhat Like Early, They Women are more likely to Innocent as a Babe»e his “Lawrence of Arabia” with The Two Arkansas Democrats, George Comert of the St. order varied dishes (roast beef, Marlon Brando. But someone Presidential Arms, 1320 served something else. Diners Mills and HOLLYWOOD, (NANA). —I we£ks That's Representatives Ga- Regis, 2218 Wisconsin avenue i chops, casseroles). Most men engagement.” a was telling me yesterday that G street N.W., is getting ready from out of town, he says, al- things, are frequent diners at N.W., observes these differences i order steak.
    [Show full text]
  • Robert C. Schmitt
    ROBERT C. SCHMITT Hawai'i in the Movies, 1898—1959, Part IV THIS RESEARCH NOTE further amends the lists of feature films made in or about Hawai'i previously published by the Hawaiian His- torical Society. In 1988, the Society issued a monograph describing 120 such motion pictures produced prior to statehood.1 Three years later an addendum listed twelve others, plus further details about three of the films previously cited.2 Three others were added in 1992.3 Here are twenty-six more that have come to the author's attention since then, plus new material on one noted earlier. 1933 Lucky Devils RKO Radio. 3 Feb. 1933; Hon., NA. Sound, b&w, 60, 64, or 70 min. Dir., Ralph Ince. With Bill Boyd, Dorothy Wilson, William Gargan. Adventure-drama about Hollywood stuntmen. Halfway through the picture, the hero marries and honeymoons in Hawai'i.4 !934 Song of the Islands Palmer Miller and Curtis Nagel for the Hawaii Tourist Bureau. 1934; Hon., NA. Sound, Vericolor (an early two-color process), 40 min. Robert C. Schmitt, an associate editor of the Journal and a frequent contributor to its pages, is a retired statistician for the Hawai'i State Department of Business, Economic Develop- ment and Tourism. The Hawaiian Journal of History, vol. 30 (1996) 211 2 12 THE HAWAIIAN JOURNAL OF HISTORY Dir., NA. With Pualani Mossman, Sam Kapu, Ray Kinney, Don Blanding. A travelogue about the Islands, made for the Hawaii Tourist Bureau. The same title was used in a 1942 Betty Grable musical. Four ten- minute travelogues, one each for the major islands, were produced by the same group and also released in 1934.
    [Show full text]
  • Once Upon a Time in Hollywood
    RICK DALTON—Once he had his own TV series, but now Rick’s a washed-up villain-of- theweek drowning his sorrows in whiskey sours. Will a phone call from Rome save his fate or seal it? CLIFF BOOTH—Rick’s stunt double, and the most infamous man on any movie set because he’s the only one there who might have gotten away with murder. SHARON TATE—She left Texas to chase a movie-star dream and found it. Sharon’s salad days are now spent on Cielo Drive, high in the Hollywood Hills. CHARLES MANSON—The ex-con’s got a bunch of zonked-out hippies thinking he’s their spiritual leader, but he’d trade it all to be a rock ’n’ roll star. HOLLYWOOD 1969— YOU SHOULDA BEEN THERE COLUMBIA PICTURES PRESENTS A FILM BY QUENTIN TARANTINO LEONARDO DICAPRIO BRAD PITT MARGOT ROBBIE IN ONCE UPON A TIME IN HOLLYWOOD MARGARET QUALLEY TIMOTHY OLYPHANT JULIA BUTTERS DAKOTA FANNING BRUCE DERN AND AL PACINO TECHNICOLOR ® PRODUCED BY DAVID HEYMAN SHANNON MCINTOSH QUENTIN TARANTINO WRITTEN AND DIRECTED BY QUENTIN TARANTINO Dedication This book is dedicated to My Wife DANIELLA and My Son LEO Thanks for creating a happy home from which to write in. ALSO To all the actor Old Timers who told me tremendous stories about Hollywood in this period. And it’s because of them that you hold this book in your hands now. Bruce Dern * David Carradine * Burt Reynolds Robert Blake * Michael Parks * Robert Forster and especially Kurt Russell Contents Cover Title Page Dedication Chapter One: “Call Me Marvin” Chapter Two: “I Am Curious (Cliff)” Chapter Three: Cielo Drive Chapter Four: Brandy,
    [Show full text]
  • Proquest Dissertations
    Love and Cinema- Cinephilia, Style, and the Films of Quentin Tarantino by Matthew Harris A (thesis) submitted to the Faculty of Graduate Studies and Research in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in Film Studies Carleton University OTTAWA, Ontario Tuesday, January 4 2011, Matthew Harris Library and Archives Bibliotheque et 1*1 Canada Archives Canada Published Heritage Direction du Branch Patrimoine de I'edition 395 Wellington Street 395, rue Wellington OttawaONK1A0N4 Ottawa ON K1A 0N4 Canada Canada Your file Votre reference ISBN: 978-0-494-79566-8 Our file Notre reference ISBN: 978-0-494-79566-8 NOTICE: AVIS: The author has granted a non­ L'auteur a accorde une licence non exclusive exclusive license allowing Library and permettant a la Bibliotheque et Archives Archives Canada to reproduce, Canada de reproduire, publier, archiver, publish, archive, preserve, conserve, sauvegarder, conserver, transmettre au public communicate to the public by par telecommunication ou par I'lnternet, preter, telecommunication or on the Internet, distribuer et vendre des theses partout dans le loan, distribute and sell theses monde, a des fins commerciales ou autres, sur worldwide, for commercial or non­ support microforme, papier, electronique et/ou commercial purposes, in microform, autres formats. paper, electronic and/or any other formats. The author retains copyright L'auteur conserve la propriete du droit d'auteur ownership and moral rights in this et des droits moraux qui protege cette these. Ni thesis. Neither the thesis nor la these ni des extraits substantiels de celle-ci substantial extracts from it may be ne doivent etre imprimes ou autrement printed or otherwise reproduced reproduits sans son autorisation.
    [Show full text]
  • Film Noir Database
    www.kingofthepeds.com © P.S. Marshall (2021) Film Noir Database This database has been created by author, P.S. Marshall, who has watched every single one of the movies below. The latest update of the database will be available on my website: www.kingofthepeds.com The following abbreviations are added after the titles and year of some movies: AFN – Alternative/Associated to/Noirish Film Noir BFN – British Film Noir COL – Film Noir in colour FFN – French Film Noir NN – Neo Noir PFN – Polish Film Noir www.kingofthepeds.com © P.S. Marshall (2021) TITLE DIRECTOR Actor 1 Actor 2 Actor 3 Actor 4 13 East Street (1952) AFN ROBERT S. BAKER Patrick Holt, Sandra Dorne Sonia Holm Robert Ayres 13 Rue Madeleine (1947) HENRY HATHAWAY James Cagney Annabella Richard Conte Frank Latimore 36 Hours (1953) BFN MONTGOMERY TULLY Dan Duryea Elsie Albiin Gudrun Ure Eric Pohlmann 5 Against the House (1955) PHIL KARLSON Guy Madison Kim Novak Brian Keith Alvy Moore 5 Steps to Danger (1957) HENRY S. KESLER Ruth Ronan Sterling Hayden Werner Kemperer Richard Gaines 711 Ocean Drive (1950) JOSEPH M. NEWMAN Edmond O'Brien Joanne Dru Otto Kruger Barry Kelley 99 River Street (1953) PHIL KARLSON John Payne Evelyn Keyes Brad Dexter Frank Faylen A Blueprint for Murder (1953) ANDREW L. STONE Joseph Cotten Jean Peters Gary Merrill Catherine McLeod A Bullet for Joey (1955) LEWIS ALLEN Edward G. Robinson George Raft Audrey Totter George Dolenz A Bullet is Waiting (1954) COL JOHN FARROW Rory Calhoun Jean Simmons Stephen McNally Brian Aherne A Cry in the Night (1956) FRANK TUTTLE Edmond O'Brien Brian Donlevy Natalie Wood Raymond Burr A Dangerous Profession (1949) TED TETZLAFF George Raft Ella Raines Pat O'Brien Bill Williams A Double Life (1947) GEORGE CUKOR Ronald Colman Edmond O'Brien Signe Hasso Shelley Winters A Kiss Before Dying (1956) COL GERD OSWALD Robert Wagner Jeffrey Hunter Virginia Leith Joanne Woodward A Lady Without Passport (1950) JOSEPH H.
    [Show full text]
  • Cinema Studies: the Key Concepts
    Cinema Studies: The Key Concepts This is the essential guide for anyone interested in film. Now in its second edition, the text has been completely revised and expanded to meet the needs of today’s students and film enthusiasts. Some 150 key genres, movements, theories and production terms are explained and analysed with depth and clarity. Entries include: • auteur theory • Black Cinema • British New Wave • feminist film theory • intertextuality • method acting • pornography • Third World Cinema • War films A bibliography of essential writings in cinema studies completes an authoritative yet accessible guide to what is at once a fascinating area of study and arguably the greatest art form of modern times. Susan Hayward is Professor of French Studies at the University of Exeter. She is the author of French National Cinema (Routledge, 1998) and Luc Besson (MUP, 1998). Also available from Routledge Key Guides Ancient History: Key Themes and Approaches Neville Morley Cinema Studies: The Key Concepts (Second edition) Susan Hayward Eastern Philosophy: Key Readings Oliver Leaman Fifty Eastern Thinkers Diané Collinson Fifty Contemporary Choreographers Edited by Martha Bremser Fifty Key Contemporary Thinkers John Lechte Fifty Key Jewish Thinkers Dan Cohn-Sherbok Fifty Key Thinkers on History Marnie Hughes-Warrington Fifty Key Thinkers in International Relations Martin Griffiths Fifty Major Philosophers Diané Collinson Key Concepts in Cultural Theory Andrew Edgar and Peter Sedgwick Key Concepts in Eastern Philosophy Oliver Leaman Key Concepts in
    [Show full text]
  • EN-Rttowicoiotcinemascope
    •• Washington, irm.r **•* e THE EVENING STAR. D. C. IaIIILL Op#n 1 P.M. ME. S-IM6 A-24 MONDAY, JANUARY *, IMS . EXTRA HOLIDAY MATINEES K-B ThOatl*OS TODAY nrj I II k THE PASSING SHOW 2 “ . || ]-| 7.. I'.“.l*.~mLlfr. mJmm* ¦|j f , | B :‘today *3 shows*: /E358l ' Mitchell Case Drama 5 S VIVIENLEIGH |p)!>fV]l . l I* Tfca niw .tw in j KENNETH MORE I enmiu rujEmno* ¦ InTITrSI Revived in Met Film / e S • Emiyn 1 By JAY CARMODY c —* There is a striking Washington flavor in “The Court-Martial : ; of Billy Mitchell.” which launches the newest of our years at the ISPIIQW Metropolitan and Ambassador Theaters. This is less a matter of mere landscape, of wnich the Na- deepest j •: K. ARTHUR S tional Capital provides much in the film, than of the con- ClClQlffil!® cerns of life here—justice, to name one; politics, the ways of Government and the behavior of KIRK Mr BILLY .0, office AM tor is •THE COURT-MARTIAL OP p*N,. men. MITCHELL, s Warner release produced S 6 FAMOUS IN ROOM I” NO CARO :by Sperling. directed by otto The surface stress of Milton Milton • ftf#rtaj him v#n,c# h, Preminger. with screenscript by Sperllne DOUGLAS S PHONE RESERVATIONS UPA Peit#aa</ |»»r t 9 Cn«*ts tegf.aafj | picture ‘ Sperling's is not laid and Emmett Lavery. musical score by “* Metropolitan ME. 8-4425 ani of story Dimitri Tiomkln At the ACCEPTED # J CARTOONS PRINCE FW CYNTHIA" MARTIN GASTON" I upon tnese. His • course. and Ambassador Theaters.
    [Show full text]