Retro: Eastern Illinois Sat, Nov 30, 1963
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Ben Alexander Seacrest Ford
Monday, December I, 1958 TORItANCI PUSS Seven for Sele 200 ^utem«bil«« fer Sale 200 ** ter Sele Ml Autemebllet fer Sale MO ^wfemeWlee fer tele 100 fer Sele 100 ^utomoblU. fer Sale 100 X**wnee>Hee fer Sele SOO Attention* NO MONEY USED CAR BUYERS All You Need Her* Is Your Good Credit BEN ALEXANDER Drives a Gas of Dragnet Fame Hog Up to 36 Months to Make These Small EZ Payments Cordially invites you to come in It's costing him plenty to own a long, fiord to pork' hord to » pay and INSPECT, COMPARE, and for gas-eating car. And he didn't impress one neighbor We Are either Only the service station owner was impressed! Cleaning House .1 CONVINCE yourself we are of fering the finest SELECTION of Pre Year End Sale Used Cars at COMPETITIVE PRICES in the South Bay. 1953 PLYMOUTH STATION WAGON, e «yl, overdrive, heater, tpotKgM, w.w. An original blue color. In beautiful running condition. Ideal eer lor that e*r pool* All Cars Guaranteed THIS MAN- FULL PRICE $595 BANK FINANCING No Money Down Available 1953 PONTIAC 4-DOOR SEDAN. Standard transmission, radio, neater, original paint Owns a Hunt RAMBLER and interior both like new. Light green color. This is a sharp Ben Alexander FULL PRICE $595 Seacrest Ford 730 South Pacific Coast Hwy REDONDO BEACH Cornar *f Knob HIM I Pacific Coast Hwy. 1952 DODGE CORONET 4-DOOR SEDAN. Syromatic, radio, heater. Light gray, 'm FR 4-3433 FR 4-3433 beautiful running condition. This is a buy at FULL PRICE $395 BOB KEEPER Alfa Rom«o Plymouth Fiat I year Guaranteed Used Cars. -
Case 1:99-Cv-02496-GK Document 6095 Filed 06/02/14 Page 1 of 27
Case 1:99-cv-02496-GK Document 6095 Filed 06/02/14 Page 1 of 27 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, ) ) Plaintiff, ) Civil Action No. 99-CV -2496 (GK) ) Next scheduled court appearance: and ) NONE ) TOBACCO-FREE KIDS ) ACTION FUND, et al. ) ) Plaintiff-Intervenors ) ) V. ) ) PHILIP MORRIS USA INC., et al., ) ) Defendants. ) I -Remand CONSENT ORDER IMPLEMENTING THE CORRECTIVE STATEMENTS REMEDY UNDER ORDER #1015 AND ORDER #34-REMAND Upon consideration of the Joint Motion for Consent Order Implementing the Corrective Statements Remedy under Order #1015 and Order #34-Remand (Dkt. No. 6021; filed 1/10/2014), and the entire record herei'n, it is hereby ORDERED that: The corrective statements remedy under Order #1015 (DN 5733, Aug. 17, 2006), published as United States v. Philip Morris USA Inc., 449 F. Supp. 2d 1, 938-41 (D.D.C. 2006), aff'd in part & vacated in part, 566 F.3d 1095 (D.C. Cir. 2009) (per curiam), cert. denied, 561 U.S._, 130 S. Ct. 3501 (2010), is hereby MODIFIED as set forth below: 1 Case 1:99-cv-02496-GK Document 6095 Filed 06/02/14 Page 2 of 27 I. Definitions A. "Above the Fold" means: 1. For websites other than mobile websites, the text that begins on the first screen of the home page for the web address, without scrolling, or 2. For mobile websites that do not use responsive design, the text that begins on the first screen in portrait orientation, without scrolling. B. "Benchmark timeslot" for a particular month means the timeslot that received the fewest average impressions (18-99+) among CBS, ABC, and NBC, Monday through Thursday, between 7:00p.m. -
Njunction with Rutgers Followed by a Reception at Port for Its 1972-73 Program Today's Index Jr., Chairman of the University Will Present the Westfield Armory
v 3D K Town Council THE WESTFIELD LEADER Meet* Tuetdmy TktUmUmgmUMiMtWU^yClraamaWmMynmmpmp^lmVmUmCommtf EIGHTY-THIRD YEAR—No. 4 Second Class Puatage Paid Published at WeiKfifM. N. J. , NEW JERSEY, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1972 Kvery Thursday 22 Pares—10 Cent* ToConduCtToWil Named Asks Action ^n, rT «r»i-«u »_ On Central 44 Teachers Join Staff s Ave. Light Canvas on Use Third Ward Councilman Librarian Charles A. Harris has in- As Schools Reopen Today Of Changes in the staff of the formed the Leader that he children's department of will strongly urge the today in to 54 years, with an average The 44 new teachers ware He will replace John F. Clark Park Westfield Memorial library Westfield Mayor and Town Westfield ' with a age of S.I years. They have selected from among ap- Holbrook who was advanced Responding *to a Clark on Sunday. have been announced by Council to take the professional staff of 513: of a cumulative total of 113 proximately 3,000 ap- to director of psrsorasl for Memorial Park Association The petition asks the Mis* Jeanne M. Desrosiers, necessary action to insure these, 44 staff members are years of teaching ex- plicants, John Holbrook, the school system at last appeal made at the August Towns Council to reject any director. Mrs. Helen Kelly, that the proposed new new to the public school perience. administrative assistant In month's meeting. meeting of the Town recommendation which who served as children's traffic light on Central Ave. system. Fifteen of the new chargeof personnel, stated. Other appointments and Council, Mayor Donn A. -
Broadcasting Jan 30
The Fifth Estate Broadcasting Jan 30 ;wzD w xoor>roc -a £ Gl3 I - m cn NJ rrr D r 4' N N ON OLD IN 101 MARK NOW...FOR SEPTEMBER 0 1984 LIONHEART TELEVISION INTERNATIONAL .5 ERIE S COMPANY EXTRAORDINARY 4 OFF-NETWORK PRODUCTIONS NOW AVAILABLE FOR SYNDICATION THE VOYAGE OF CHARLES DARWIN 7 ONE -HOURS about Darwin's incredible journey of adventure and discovery aboard the H.M.S. Beagle -to South America and the Galapagos Islands. THE LONG SEARCH 13 ONE -HOURS about the world's great religions - filmed on a 150,000 -mile global journey from the Protestant churches of Indianapolis to the Zen monasteries of Japan. Host: Ronald Eyre. CONNECTIONS 10 ONE -HOURS about how apparently unrelated events, people and situations have come together in the thousands of years of history to produce social and technological changes in today's complex world. Host: James Burke. THE SHOCK OF THE NEW 8 ONE -HOURS. A provocative view of 20th Century art-which takes up the story of the visual arts where Kenneth Clark's 'Civilisation' left off. Host/Writer /Presenter: Robert Hughes, Art Critic/Time Magazine. .yvri t bIONHEAR`i TELEVISION INTERNATIONAL 40 WEST 57 STREET NEW PORN, N.T. 10019. 1212) 541-7342 ATLANTA (404) 873.5101 ONE OF THE PUBLIC MEDIA INC. COMPANIES The Entertainment Industry is moving to the (The West Coast of Manhattan.) . There's a classic building in Manhat- in mid -Manhattan. l p G 1 tan that's just made for the special WEST COAST STUDIOS offers needs your business, if you are a of ° huge 40,000 square foot floors in large company in Entertainment, . -
A Guide for Educators to Support the Weekend Morning TV Series
A Guide for Educators to Support the Weekend Morning TV Series TO EDUCATORS AND PARENTS "The All New Captain Kangaroo"—A Guide for Educators is designed to help educators and parents locate the educational components of each episode. The Storybook Corner section (page 4) includes a list of storybook titles that Captain Kangaroo will read throughout the CAPTAIN KANGAROO season—all of which tie into the theme of each episode. The grid (pages 14-15) will allow the Presented by Saban Entertainment, CURRICULUM AREAS reader to view the theme, manner/civility Inc., in association with Reading Music, Art, Science, lesson, educational goal Is Fundamental® and The America Reading and Language Arts and learning objective, Reads Challenge AGE LEVELS as well as the focus of Ages 2-5 the Nature/Animal and & Storybook Corner he Captain is back! Captain Kangaroo, GRADE LEVELS segments, for each beloved icon of children's programming Pre-Kindergarten, episode. Tand television figure with whom millions Kindergarten of kids grew up, returns to usher a new gener * "The All New ation into a new millennium. EDUCATIONAL GOALS Captain Kangaroo" "The All New Captain Kangaroo" blends • To promote self-esteem, will trigger meaningful the best of the original show with new educa cooperative, pro-social classroom discussions tional goals and characters to create a fun, behavior and a positive "The All New Captain Kangaroo" or activities that are exciting and educational TV experience. attitude. airs weekly nationwide on Saturday sure to build and Veteran actor John McDonough, who has • To introduce the impor or Sunday morning. strengthen character. -
To View the Sankofa African Heritage Book List
A B C D E F COPY- TITLE AUTHORS ED PUBLISHER(S) COVER ANNOTATION 1 RIGHT African Origins of the Majors Yosef Ben jochannan 1970- All Western religions had 2 Western Religions Yosef Ben Jochannan Publishing 360pp Paper their beginnings in Africa The Encyclopedia of the 1999- African and African American 3 AFRICANA Kwame-Gates, editors Basic Civitas Books 2045pp Cloth Experience 2002- 4 Africans Americans David Boyle Barrons 127pp Cloth Coming to America Today, we live in a changed Al on America, The Right Reverend Kingsenton Publishing 2002- America, changed by people 5 Al Sharpton Karen Hunter Group 280pp Cloth who risk their own lives. 2009- What Should Black People Do 6 America I Am Legends Foreword : Tavis Smiley Smiley books 180pp Paper Now? Untold Tales of the First Pilgrims, Fighting Women, 2008- and Forgotten Founders who 7 America's Hidden History Kenneth C. Davis Smithsonian Books 265pp Cloth shaped a Nation Ancient Egypt, The Light of the 1990- A work of reclamation and 8 World,Vol 1-B and vol.2--A Gerald Massey ECA Associates 750pp Paper restitution in twelve volumes The teaching and prophetic wisdom of the Seven 1999- Hermetic laws of Ancient 9 Ancient Future Wayne B. Chandler Black Classic Press 246pp Paper Egypt 2009- The U.S. Commission on Civil 10 And Justice For All Mary Frances Berry Knopf Publishers 425pp Cloth Rights 1995- Everyday liife ritual and court 11 Art and Craft in Africa Laure Meyer Terrial Publishers, Montreal 208pp Paper art B.B. King and Dick 2005- Collection of treasures of 12 B.B.King- Treasures Waterman Bulfinch Press 160pp cloth B.B. -
In-School Mentoring Activity Manual
In-School Mentoring Activity Manual Introducing the Manual and the value of Play Welcome to the In-School Mentoring Program. We hope you are as excited as we are about participating in a program designed to help boost kids’ self-confidence. Sometimes mentors and mentees can get stumped for activities they can do together in one hour. This manual serves as a resource guide. Here you will find new activities, games and craft ideas. Also provided are tried and true hints and advice from current mentors in the field. General information on children’s stages of development is included. This background information may help you to chose a more accurate game to play with your mentee based on his/her skill level, or may remind you of the outside factors your mentee is dealing with at his/her age. Mentors often ask “How does play activity benefit mentees?” Here is a brief response on the value of play… “On the playground of life, game playing equips each of us with the “rules of the game.” As youngsters, games taught us how to work together, to accommodate, and to help one another. Through playful moments, children can act out real-life situations. In imagined contexts, they can learn how to solve problems, look for options, and resolve conflicts. By winning or losing at games, children experience the real world but in less harsh fashion. Children learn about their environment and how to relate to other children, as well as grown-ups. They learn about healthy competition and about trying to do their best. -
Midwest Digs out of Blizzard
..■:->'= V ' Inside today \ ''v ' \ • A rea................... 2B C om ics....... 9B Arts forum .. 2A Dear Abby .. 9B Books ........... 3B F ood........... IB CB Convac ... 3A Obituaries ... 6A Chttrn^ Churches , ... 5A Opinion....... 4A - w ’ . Classified .. 6-8B Sr. Citizens .. 3A Collectors___3B S ports......... 5-6B UARY iaik tt78~ VOL XCVH.lNo PRICE* WTEKN CENTS TV programs .'.................. ,. .Weekend Good Morning Have A Good Day Midwest digs out of blizzard United Press International dead and thousands stranded. through 15-foot drifts to reach an es out, as power outages left 150,000 Michigan Gov. William G. Milliken Ohio Gov. James A. Rhodes called timated 1,400 stranded motorists. homes without heat or electricity. Midwesterners began digging out rode to work in a camouflage-painted the storm the “greatest disaster in President Carter declared a state “Ohio is in trouble,” Rhodes said. Outside today Friday from the season’s first bliz armored personnel carrier. He called Ohio history." He helped direct 3,500 of emergency, freeing National He said it may be days before the zard — a vicious blast that left scores directly to the White House to ask Mostly clear, cold nights and partly National Guard troops struggling Guard personnel to help in digging state returns to near normal. sunny, chilly days through Sunday except President Carter for aid. for variable cloudiness and chance of Indiana was at a virtual standstill flurries in the western hills through Sun as drifts piled so high that an Amtrak day. High temperatures Saturday and train headed for Florida was stopped Sunday generally in the 20s. dead on the tracks. -
ASUI Board Chair Spends Unauthorized Funds Mike Mcnulty the Student Elections
lVews. ~ Sports ~ DIVERSIONS - UI graduate student German tandem defines :. receives outstanding running success for the 4'+r, ro. 'o '; student award. VIIndah. 9p c~ O~ See page 4. See page 11. r+ ~r ,t(;f)(l!ls .r<'r tltIjj THE UNIVERSITY DF IDAHQ Frida, Se tember 8, 1995 ASUI —Moscow, Idaho Volume 971V0. S Stop the smoke ASUI Board Chair spends unauthorized funds Mike McNulty the student elections. The money for comment. Staff comes primarily from student fees ASUI Senator Clint Cook, who which supports ASUI's near $1 mil- resigned from office last week, said t was a flagrant misuse of lion annual budget. he was at the dinner which was a the students'noney," ASUI ASUI Senator Christs Manis said "reward" for board members who put President Wilson said Sean "it's a shame" the student legislature in over 20 hours of unpaid work dur- about a chairperson's decision to is often slowed down by minor ing the spring election. He said spend an unauthorized amount of details. Shaltry was just appointed to her cash on an dinner last expensive "We'e just tired of knit-picking," position and was unfamiliar with cer- semester. said Manis. "It's hard to keep things tain procedures. Angie Shaltry, chairperson for the moving when we have to deal with "No one told her the rules," said Student Issues Board, was authorized this.'" things like Cook. "Angie thought the money was to buy dinner for board members after President Wilson said he found out available to be spent." the spring election with a UI depart- stu- about the dinner party after most Cook said everything was "straight- mental purchase order issued by vacation dents had left for summer ened out" and the situation has been ASUI Business Adviser Sandra Gray. -
Peltz Hopes July 30 Ennis-Rosado Match Will Pave The
PELTZ HOPES JULY 30 ENNIS- ROSADO MATCH WILL PAVE THE WAY FOR A RETURN TO THE GLORY DAYS OF PHILADELPHIA BOXING–WATCH FIGHT LIVE ON GOFIGHTLIVE.TV Click for full event info Philadelphia, PA–When Derek “Pooh” Ennis defends his USBA junior middleweight title against fellow-Philadelphian ‘King’ Gabriel Rosado on Friday evening, July 30, at the Arena in South Philadelphia, it will bring back memories of some of the local showdowns that once made Philadelphia one of the boxing capitals of the United States. The list of outstanding fights reads like a page out of Who’s Who in Philadelphia boxing history: Al Ettore vs. Gus Dorazio, Bob Montgomery vs. Wesley Mouzon, Charley Scott vs. Sugar Hart, George Benton vs. Joey Giardello, Gypsy Joe Harris vs. Kitten Hayward, Bennie Briscoe vs. Cyclone Hart…. You could go on and on. “The formula for success in Philadelphia always has been to match two local fighters against each other,” says Nigel Collins, editor of The Ring magazine. “There is nothing like it anywhere else.” Hall-of-Fame promoter J Russell Peltz, who is staging the Ennis-Rosado fight, agrees. “In 1961, when I was 14 years old, my dad took me to the old Arena at 46th & Market Street to see Harold Johnson defend his light-heavyweight title against Von Clay,” Peltz said. “Johnson was from Manayunk and Von Clay was from West Philadelphia. It was an unusually hot night in late April and the Arena was not air-conditioned and you couldn’t move in there it was so packed. It was sweltering. -
Ronald Davis Oral History Collection on the Performing Arts
Oral History Collection on the Performing Arts in America Southern Methodist University The Southern Methodist University Oral History Program was begun in 1972 and is part of the University’s DeGolyer Institute for American Studies. The goal is to gather primary source material for future writers and cultural historians on all branches of the performing arts- opera, ballet, the concert stage, theatre, films, radio, television, burlesque, vaudeville, popular music, jazz, the circus, and miscellaneous amateur and local productions. The Collection is particularly strong, however, in the areas of motion pictures and popular music and includes interviews with celebrated performers as well as a wide variety of behind-the-scenes personnel, several of whom are now deceased. Most interviews are biographical in nature although some are focused exclusively on a single topic of historical importance. The Program aims at balancing national developments with examples from local history. Interviews with members of the Dallas Little Theatre, therefore, serve to illustrate a nation-wide movement, while film exhibition across the country is exemplified by the Interstate Theater Circuit of Texas. The interviews have all been conducted by trained historians, who attempt to view artistic achievements against a broad social and cultural backdrop. Many of the persons interviewed, because of educational limitations or various extenuating circumstances, would never write down their experiences, and therefore valuable information on our nation’s cultural heritage would be lost if it were not for the S.M.U. Oral History Program. Interviewees are selected on the strength of (1) their contribution to the performing arts in America, (2) their unique position in a given art form, and (3) availability. -
Magilla Gorilla Episode Guide
Magilla gorilla episode guide Continue Magilla GorillaThe Magilla Gorilla Show characterFirst appearanceThe big gameSyov HannaJosef BarberaVoed Allan Melvin (1964-1994)Maurice Lamarche (Harvey Birdman, Attorney) Frank Welker (Scooby-Dao and Guess Who?) Jim Cummings (Jellystone!, 2020-present) In the Universe informationSpeciesWestern lowland gorillaGenderMale Magilla Magilla Gorilla is a fictional gorilla and star of the Magilla Gorilla Show Hannah-Barbera, which aired from 1964 to 1965. Also Brazilian boxer Adilson Rodriguez named himself Magilla after the cartoon. The description of the character Magill Gorilla (voiced by Allan Melvin) - anthropomorphic gorilla, who spends his time languishing in the window of the pet store Melvin Peebles, eating bananas and draining the finances of the businessman. Peebles (voiced by Howard Morris and then Dock Messik) significantly reduced the price of Magilla, but Magilla was invariably bought only for a short time, usually by some thieves who needed a gorilla to break into a bank or an advertising agency, looking for a mascot for their new product. Customers always end up returning Magilla, forcing Peebles to return their money. Magilla often finished episodes with his catchphrase We'll Try Again next week. Many of Hannah-Barbera's animal characters were dressed in human accessories; Magilla Gorilla wore a bow tie, suspender shorts and an unfinished derby hat. The only client really interested in getting trouble-prone Magigly was a little girl named Ogi (voiced by Gene Vander Phil and the uttering of Oh Gee!). During the theme of the cartoon song, We have a gorilla for sale, she asks, hopefully, how much is this gorilla in the window? (turn to the old standard, (How much) Is The Dog in the window?), but she's never been able to convince her parents to let her keep Magilla.