The Cassiar Lion's Club Will Hold Its 2Nd Annual Carnival & G Iant

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Cassiar Lion's Club Will Hold Its 2Nd Annual Carnival & G Iant LION'S CARNIVAL ELECTRICAL DEPT. WINS TROHrY AGAIN The Cassiar Lion's Club will hold Alex Powell and members of his de­ its 2nd Annual Carnival & G iant partment met with Messrs. ,J.G.Berry, Raffle InTEe community centre""on C. Church and A.C. Caron at House April “3rd from 7 to 10 p.m. Proceeds 130 on Friday March 12th. The pur­ to the Cassiar Lion's ,Welfare Fund pose was the presentation by Mr. and to the Canadian Arthritis and Berry to Mr. Powell of the Safety Rheumatism Society. Trophy for the second consecutive year for the best safety record in Prizes include a ,308 Norma Magnum the inter-Departmental contest. Each Schultz & Larson Rifle with 4-power member of the crew was given recog­ bushnell scope; Kodak 8 MM "Electric nition by the award of a travel 8" Movie Camera; and an RCA V ictor alarm clock. AM/FM All-B and Transistor Radio. Fun for the whole family, come and enjoy yourself while helping others. Buy NOTICE a raffle ticket available from any Lion. Prizes on display la the Re­ Mr. Gordon Edmonds of Vancouver, on tail store. behalf of the Mining Association, is conducting a 4 -day refresher course on the principles of safety and the Don't forget that Saturday March 20th safety system as developed by Mr... is the St. Patrick's Tea sponsored Neil George of the Quebec Accident by the C.W.L. in the Church Hall at Prevention Mining Industry. 2:00 p.m. Home baking and mitts for sale. All Saint's W. A. will hold their In the Evening enjoy the St. Patrick's regular monthly meeting on Tuesday Dance at the Community Centre which March 30th in the church at 8;00 p.m will be organised, by the "Irish" boys. Dance starts at 9:30 p.m. The Daffodil Tea will be held on April 17th this year. THANK YOU VISITORS Through the medium of the Asbestos R. Jones ( National Film Board Sh eet, Joan Shelton sends this mess­ A. Ianzelo ( of age from Winnipeg. J. Parent ( Montreal "P e not sure of the number of people G. Edmonds - Mining Association who were responsible for my farewell and gift, so please forgive my ac­ V.B. Humphrey - Humphrey Construction knowledgement in such an Impersonal way. Thank you for a very happy and W. Alexander - Orenda Engines most appreciated evening. I have to admit X often miss Cassiar which is J. Richardson - Jeffrey Mfg. Co. only due to some very wonderful people I met. Good luck to you also B. Alexander - C.I.R. in any plans you m ay have." Ab Miles - C.I.R. Welcome to Miss Arlene Chappell who L„J. White - Fleck Eros. Joins the staff in the Time Office, replacing Myles Kehoe who goes to all of Vancouver Clinton after a holiday in Calgary. T. Harrison - Boy Scouts Association, Also welcome to Mr. & Mrs., D .G.Irwin Prince George and their six children who have taken up residence at 271 Hunt st» PERSONNEL CHANGES Farewell to Nancy Kmech who left on the week-end to return to her home Bob Kennealy assumes the duties of in Edmonton. Don Ritchat as Mine Foreman. The family will be moving to 212 Smith Recent visitors at the Orr residence Street next weak. and at the Kennealy's, were Doug and Eileen (orr) Babcock of Fort St, Don Hudgeon has been transferred John. from the Engineering Department to the Mine as Mine Shift Boss. The Flake family have been visiting in Fort St. John for a few days. The Ritchat's, Don and Peggy were The Brewer's, George and Pat will honoured at a farewell party on holiday in Vancouver and drive on Thursday evening, March 11th at down to southern California. House 130 attended by some 50 or more persons. On behalf of the gath­ The Didcott's, Ralph and Enid were ering, Trevor Horsley presented the in Vernon for a week enjoying the couple with a silver ice bucket as skiing during their leisure hours. a memento of their stay in Cassiar. During the absence of Dr. Didcott, wo were honoured to have Dr. W. J. The Kamlah's have now moved into Ian McCall back for the week. Ian their new home at 185 Zimmerman st. returned to Vancouver on Monday. Miss Lorna Wilson visited with Adolf Congratulations to Mr, & Mrs. Mike Unterberger, in Whitehorse on the Latka, whose baby girl arrived this week-end. morning March 16th., Linda Hazel, weighing 7 lbs, WELL BABY CLINIC - WED. MARCH 31st - 1 v30 p.m. to 4 p.m. in the Dental Bldg "THE WORLD OF THE BLIND" this gift and its responsibilities may be brought to ell of us, a visit I am sorry I have to begin to-day has been arranged from Mr. Alex Grant with a somber word picture. But I and Mr. Burt Johnson of the Canadian have to deal with a somber sublet National institute of the Blind. - the world of the blind - It may be compared to the world of la conjunction with the Company, the drug addict, In that, your local Lion's Club is actively sponsoring this visit. These two ENTRY IS EASY gentlemen, both blind themselves, ENDURANCE IS MISERY are devoting their lives toward the WITHDRAWAL IMPOSSIBLE EXCEPT THROUGH prevention of blindness and the pro­ DEATH. motion of good eyesight habits. They can tell you from first hand exper­ Now, like many other gifts,.we accept ience how important this is to you. the gift of sight without accepting much personal responsibility for its Here is the program; preservation or proper care. Date; March 30th We taka for granted the pleasure of Time; 7;30 p,m. watching fleecy clouds in blue skies place; Community Centre We do not think what it would be like to have to turn sightless eyes Mr. Grant will speak and two films upward. And if you were a bush pilot will be shown. Everyone is invited, you would be assessing weather - and adults and children. Keep this hour your safety - visually. When you sea free and come. a white wispy cloud with lacy edges, well, this means a thin light strata, M arch 3.1st a,m. quite safe. But a large cloud with bright coppery edges and overlaid A visit is arranged to the Cassiar with blue-black areas, this means Elementary school and again Mr. Grant violent turbulence, keep off. Rot will speak and a special film will many of us are pilots, however. More be shown for the children. likely you would Just be on holiday. It would be nice to place the chair Watch for posters and for any change for your girlfriend at dinner. if necessitated in the above pregram A Blind man is unable to do this., And again, plan to corns, we have not had this opportunity before and this Perhaps you might be married and with hour may keep some from joining your family on the street corner, waiting for the light to change be­ "THE WORLD OF THE BLIND" fore crossing. You cannot see this, of course, you must be guided by the C. Church, pressure of your wife's hand on your Safety Engineer arm. Suddenly, there's a squeal, of tires on the pavement - a child's cry of terror end a gasp of horror It was dark when she stopped at the from the crowd. It is your child that service station. "I want a quart of has darted out in front of the car, red oil." as children will. You could have Attendant; "Are you sure you want saved her - if you had been able to red oil?" see, "Certainly, my tail light lias gone out." But I am not really qualified to write of the world of the blind, for The quickest way to lose your shirt I have sight, so that the lesson of is to put. too mu oh on the cuff. MOVIES COMING TO THE THEATRE 17 A DISTANT TRUMPET Color Troy Donahue - Susan Pleohette 19 QUICK GUN Color Audie Murphy - Merry Anders 22 THE HAUNTING B & W Julie Harris -Russ Tamblyn 24 VIP'S Color Elizabeth Taylor - Richard Burton 26 FLAME OVER INDIA Color Lauren Bacall - Kenneth More 29 MY SIX LOVES Color Debbie Reynolds - Cliff Robertson 31 WHEELER DEALERS Color Lee Remick - James Garner 2 TRIBUTE TO A BAUMAN Color James Cagney - Stephen McNally 5 STRAIT JACKET B & W Joan Crawford - Diane Baker 7 THE YOUNG DOCTORS B & W Frederic March - Ina Balin 10 IRKA LA DOUCE Color Jack Lemmon - Shirley MacLaine CURLING CORKER Yours for a laugh Since the last issue, there has not It was one of Mother's busiest days, been very much curling due to very and when her small son came in with mild weather and lack of ice. his pants torn, she angrily yelled "You march right off to your room The Whitepass event got started on and take those pants off " March 8th with only six rinks enter­ Some time later she found the tern ed in the competition. Each rink pants lying on a chair and the boy played one game and other games nowhere in sight. The door to the scheduled during the week were can­ sellar was open, however, and she celled . with the colder weather, the sailed down loudly and sternly, "Are games have been resumed and comple- you running around down tnere with tion of the event should take place your pants off?" by week's and.
Recommended publications
  • 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]
  • December 2018
    LearnAboutMoviePosters.com December 2018 EWBANK’S AUCTIONS VINTAGE POSTER AUCTION DECEMBER 14 Ewbank's Auctions will present their Entertainment Memorabilia Auction on December 13 and Vintage Posters Auction on December 14. Star Wars and James Bond movie posters are just some of the highlights of this great auction featuring over 360 lots. See page 3. PART III ENDING TODAY - 12/13 PART IV ENDS 12/16 UPCOMING EVENTS/DEADLINES eMovieposter.com’s December Major Auction - Dec. 9-16 Part IV Dec. 13 Ewbank’s Entertainment & Memorabilia Auction Dec. 14 Ewbank’s Vintage Poster Auction Jan. 17, 2019 Aston’s Entertainment and Memorabilia Auction Feb. 28, 2019 Ewbank’s Entertainment & Memorabilia Auction Feb. 28, 2019 Ewbank’s Movie Props Auction March 1, 2019 Ewbank’s Vintage Poster Auction March 23, 2019 Heritage Auction LAMP’s LAMP POST Film Accessory Newsletter features industry news as well as product and services provided by Sponsors and Dealers of Learn About Movie Posters and the Movie Poster Data Base. To learn more about becoming a LAMP sponsor, click HERE! Add your name to our Newsletter Mailing List HERE! Visit the LAMP POST Archive to see early editions from 2001-PRESENT. The link can be found on the home page nav bar under “General” or click HERE. The LAMPPOST is a publication of LearnAboutMoviePosters.com Telephone: (504) 298-LAMP email: [email protected] Copyright 20178- Learn About Network L.L.C. 2 EWBANK’S AUCTIONS PRESENTS … ENTERTAINMENT & MEMORABILIA AUCTION - DECEMBER 13 & VINTAGE POSTER AUCTION - DECEMBER 14 Ewbank’s Auction will present their Entertainment & Memorabilia Auction on December 13 and their Vintage Poster Auction on December 14.
    [Show full text]
  • 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.
    [Show full text]
  • GSC Films: S-Z
    GSC Films: S-Z Saboteur 1942 Alfred Hitchcock 3.0 Robert Cummings, Patricia Lane as not so charismatic love interest, Otto Kruger as rather dull villain (although something of prefigure of James Mason’s very suave villain in ‘NNW’), Norman Lloyd who makes impression as rather melancholy saboteur, especially when he is hanging by his sleeve in Statue of Liberty sequence. One of lesser Hitchcock products, done on loan out from Selznick for Universal. Suffers from lackluster cast (Cummings does not have acting weight to make us care for his character or to make us believe that he is going to all that trouble to find the real saboteur), and an often inconsistent story line that provides opportunity for interesting set pieces – the circus freaks, the high society fund-raising dance; and of course the final famous Statue of Liberty sequence (vertigo impression with the two characters perched high on the finger of the statue, the suspense generated by the slow tearing of the sleeve seam, and the scary fall when the sleeve tears off – Lloyd rotating slowly and screaming as he recedes from Cummings’ view). Many scenes are obviously done on the cheap – anything with the trucks, the home of Kruger, riding a taxi through New York. Some of the scenes are very flat – the kindly blind hermit (riff on the hermit in ‘Frankenstein?’), Kruger’s affection for his grandchild around the swimming pool in his Highway 395 ranch home, the meeting with the bad guys in the Soda City scene next to Hoover Dam. The encounter with the circus freaks (Siamese twins who don’t get along, the bearded lady whose beard is in curlers, the militaristic midget who wants to turn the couple in, etc.) is amusing and piquant (perhaps the scene was written by Dorothy Parker?), but it doesn’t seem to relate to anything.
    [Show full text]
  • A Cool 36 Flagships North!
    who’ll make me look has been toiling in "The Sixth THE EVENING STAR someone B-7 reasonably attractive some- man,” wife Janet Leigh has Wethington, D. C. I «niU3CIHCIII» I’d like Tuetdoy, September 13, 1960 THE LYONS DEN one. say, Cary Grant.” been running a nursery school for 15 small children at their THE BUDGET: Senator Joe ¦¦NOW THRU SEPT. 17 MV By LEONARD LYONS O’Mahoney, who is retiring HOLLYWOOPefgH home and also working on the from office, has a clerk who’s charity premiere of "Spartacus" served with him for many By SHEILAH GRAHAM in which Tony has a role. In- da n h I the Kirk Douglas It Looked Too years. The clerk once told Wil- cidentally, TONIGHT dlelicj Easy liam O. Douglas, then with the film, ’’Day of the Gun,” with —¦—¦——- ON THE hidden pocket took broke on the 14th —JHH Rock Hudson, wont be shown NEW YORK.—The judge at and from a SEC: "I’m bills and until next spring—because a trial In New York, some years 27 folded *lOO paid and 29th of every month.” Kirk’s has PlayliouAe "Spartacus” prior- ago, urged a witness to speak the cashier. “This is a tough Douglas said he was broke on Difference of Opinion night I ity. and he has an Oscar in TERRACE “Mr. Savo. the town,” he said. “Last the 10th and 22d of every up: speak up. Paris. bills.” HOLLYWOOD (NANA). in And every star wants mind. So does Otto Preminger MINDY way we’ve all heard you do on was stuck up for 27 *1 month.
    [Show full text]
  • Peckßß Rair, FOR, ; Jn-Z»Absa«
    D-2 THE SUNDAY STAR THF LYONS DFW WmAmgtoa, D. Naremfcar 22, 795» C.. COMING ATTRACTIONS WerWi A Greatari . A. fl £ Helen Hayes Retire? STAGE IM /W ¦lggMl AM I Stage Hefti x -4- ARENA—“Clandestine on the Morning Line”; starting November tWShhj Never 24. Voluntarily NATIONAL—“The Pleasure oT His Company”; Cornelia LAST 8 TIMES PRIOR TO BROADWAY! a Otis Skinner, jjMKhb<»E Cyril Ritchard; starting December 7. • EVENINGS 8:30 MATS. WED. SAT. 2:30 By LEONARD LYONS lined with sable. Miss Gabor 2, BaU “A TO TALK ABOUT AND - erndlcAU says that her wedding gift SCREEN PLAY SEE, REMEMBER”—Coo, Poet NEW YORK —Helen Hayes to her husband was a Rolls- “JESSICA TANDY PLAYS WITH RADIANT VITALITY. AMBASSADOR^—"A he Summer Place”; with Mc- —Carmody, Soar was quoted in the press re- Royce car: “But hasnl Dorothy Guire knd Richard the Inside that Egan. “JOHN GIELGUD’S DIRECTION IS FIRST-RATE” cently said she seen of ear as having may CAPlTOL—“Beloved with Deborah yet," she added, “because I Infidel"; Kerr as —DomseOy, Na**a -- -/ never again appear in a play Sheilah Graham. -ißflH' iHb 1 keep using it.” But Bride- R»EO£«ICK BHISSON ITh* PIATWRICUTS’ CO * on Broadway. DUPONT—"Liber’; Olivia de Haviland. OW . Helen groom Brown has seen the KEllm’S—“Tlilrd Man on the $ Hayes retire? That’s like dar- chauffeur of the Rolls—on Mountain"; James Mac- ' Arthur. ing to that Hemingway pay day, that say is, because MacARTHUR—"The Brown Bridal Path”; Bill Travers. or Einstein or Shostakovich pays his salary.
    [Show full text]
  • 1960S CLASSIC MOVIES TRIVIA QUIZ II
    1960s CLASSIC MOVIES TRIVIA QUIZ II ( www.TriviaChamp.com ) 1> Which Disney animated movie was released in 1961? a. Robin Hood b. 101 Dalmatians c. Cinderella d. The Black Cauldron 2> Which movie, released in 1961, starred Gregory Peck, David Niven, Anthony Quinn and Anthony Quayle? a. The Guns of Navarone b. How the West was Won c. Moby Dick d. On the Beach 3> Whom did Peter Sellers play in the 1963 movie The Pink Panther? a. Sir Charles Lytton b. Aristotle Sarajos c. Insp. Jacques Clouseau d. George Lytton 4> Which movie made in 1969 starred Mary Tyler Moore and Elvis Presley? a. Girl Happy b. Change of Habit c. Viva Las Vegas d. Spinout 5> "Killin' generals could get to be a habit with me." A quote from which classic 1960's war film? a. The Dirty Dozen b. The Big Red One c. Delta Force d. Death Hunt 6> Whom does John Wayne play in the movie The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance? a. Tom Doniphon b. Taw Jackson c. Rooster Cogburn d. Dick Wallace 7> Who plays the role of Susan Slade in the 1960's movie Susan Slade? a. Mary Tyler Moore b. Connie Stevens c. Stella Stevens d. Anne Jackson 8> Whom does Troy Donahue play in the movie Come Spy with Me? a. Harry Hunter b. Pete Barker c. David Sloane d. Eddie Rankin 9> Which 1960's movie used the tagline, It's A Plot!... to make the world die laughing!!? a. The Russians Are Coming! The Russians Are Coming! b.
    [Show full text]
  • Liiimutmiiyiii.' Ylailihuli I "MYSTERY of TIGER BAY." 1 :35
    THE EVENING STAR 1. 2:50. 4:35, 6:25, 8:10 and rone”; 10:25, 1:05, 3:50, 6:30 Washington, D. C. 9:55 p.m. and 9:10 p.m. 1 Amusements WHERE E. MORRISON D-8 Wednesday, Sept. 6, 1961 Palace “The Pit and the Uptown— “Spartacus"; 1:45, PAPER CO. AND WHEN Pendulum”; 11:50 a.m., 1:30, 5 and 8:20 p.m. 1009 Penna. Ave. N.W. 3:10, 4:50, 6:30, 8:10 and 9:45 Warner “Fanny’’; 11:45 Home of Empace Products THE PASSING SHOW Current Theater Attractions pm. a.m., 2:20, 4:45, 7:10 and 9:35 and Times of Showing Playhouse “Guns of Nava- pan. rone”; 10:25 a.m., 1:05, 3:50, ; 6:30 and 9:10 p.m. Gen. Stage Your f® r Brig. McCarthy Plasa— “The Truth”: 12, 2:15, 11 National Theater— “The Mu- \ \ Stationary and j) j 4:35. 6:55 and 9:20 p.m. fIA ' Office Suppliei V sic Man 2 and 8:30 p.m. J Stanton "Stella”; 6 and I -j-r Come to f To Make Patton Film IIII.ML Screen 8:45 p.m. ST | E. Morrison 4 Town "La Dolce Vita”; Paper Company”* By JAY CARMODY Ambassador— "Claudelle Ing- UM-YUMFARFEL I - 1009 Penna. 11:30 am., 2:30, 5:30 and 8:30 Dram* Editor of The Star lish"; 1:40, 3:45, 5:50, 7:55 and PLUS Ave. N.W p.m. BIG CAST! The most cab drivers the who sound 9:55 p.m.
    [Show full text]
  • Completeandleft
    MEN WOMEN 1. TA Trace Adkins=American country music Tatyana Ali=American actress, singer=189,828=14 singer=75,397=34 Tracey Adams=American actress=51,363=69 Thomas Anders+Stooges=Singer, composer, Traci Adell=American, Model=27,406=138 producer=13,843=176 Tehmeena Afzal=American, Model Tom Araya=Bassist and Vocalist in (Adult/Glamour)=19,212=188 Slayer=12,284=192 Trini Alvarado=American, Actress=11,871=266 Tim Armstrong=American, Musician=10,617=220 Tori Amos=American singer=47,293=74 Troy Aikman=All-American college football player, Teresa Ann+Savoy=British, Actress=19,452=184 professional football player, quarterback, College Football Hall of Fame member=67,868=39 Taís Araújo=Brazilian actress=32,699=109 Travis Alexander=American, Victim=9,178=243 Tina Arena=Australian, Personality=30,067=126 Tim Allen=Voice-over artist, character actor, Tichina Arnold=American, Actress=59,349=60 comedian=7,902=263 Taylor Atelian=American actress=64,061=54 Trace Ayala+Pistols=American, Fashion Thayla Ayala=Actress=12,284=260 Designer=12,100=196 ……………… Twin Atlantic COMPLETEandLEFT Tina Arena TA,Taro Aso Tori Amos TA,Taylor Abrahamse Tiffany Alvord TA,Tim Allen Tonight Alive TA,Tom Arnold Tommy ,Aaron ,Golf ,Winner, 1973 Masters Tournament TA,Tori Amos Trace ,Adkins ,Country Musician ,Ladies Love Country Boys TA,Tracy Austin Theodor ,Adorno ,Philosopher ,Dialectic of Enlightenment TA,Troy Aikman Troy ,Aikman ,Football ,Cowboys all-time passing yards leader Todd ,Akin ,Politician ,Congressman, Missouri 2nd Tony ,Alamo ,Religion ,Tony Alamo Ministries
    [Show full text]
  • Lindsay Giggey 2008‐09 ARSC Research Award Submission Surf
    Lindsay Giggey 2008‐09 ARSC Research Award Submission Surf, Song, and Cricket Blake: Capturing the Emerging Teen Girl Market with Hawaiian Eye As America progressed from the post‐war era into the sixties, the idea of teenagers solidified itself within popular culture. Job opportunities during World War II drove young people into the workforce establishing independence from their families and created a new purchasing demographic. Post‐war America’s abundant prosperity increased leisure time and allowed more young people to enroll in high school. Mass high school enrollment created new social opportunities and further alienated parents from their teenagers. The population skyrocketed as a result of the baby boom, and as the 1960s began, almost half the American population was under twenty‐five years old.1 By this time, teenagers asserted themselves as independent consumers with time and money to indulge in music, movies, clothes, cars, and whatever else interested them. Further compounded by America’s fascination with youth (especially President Kennedy and his family), advertisers finally noticed the massive but previously untapped market with time and money at their disposal. Advertisers found that young people could easily be swayed to follow fads and continuously consume more goods. They guided gullible young people towards products to substitute for knowledge or reassurance they could not receive from their ignorant parents.2 By the late 1950s, television networks followed suit by developing programming more inclusive of young people. During its first two decades, ABC featured more teen Giggey 2 programming as a ploy to establish itself as a viable network in competition with CBS and NBC.
    [Show full text]
  • Andy Warhol in Black and White
    $QG\:DUKROLQ%ODFNDQG:KLWH $XWKRU V &KULVWRSKHU/\RQ 6RXUFH0R0$1R :LQWHU SS 3XEOLVKHGE\The Museum of Modern Art 6WDEOH85/http://www.jstor.org/stable/4381057 . $FFHVVHG Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. The Museum of Modern Art is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to MoMA. http://www.jstor.org i j i j * TheMuseumofModernArt A A A A A MembersQuarterly Z V lt Jg V | ... J .. > _,,;',,.,^1,,.. ,,,,, I- ANDY q IN BLACK I IAND WHITE W N e w Ma r X f e M S T O C K by Chnstopher Lyon 5tm, c honce | The entire front page of theNew YorkPost was ot showers. I , e | NEw YoRKs FRIDAY, NovEMBER 3, 1961 lo Ce t | | n w - , I devoted to Andy Warhol twlce: on June 4, I I Pages85 88 1 1968,thedayafterhisnear-fatalshooting,and _111 1 on February 23, 1987, the day after he died. This apotheosis in black and white was the re- _ _ _ _ | was also aparticularly apt formofrecognition | ward of an artist obsessed by celebrity. But it _.' _ _ _ _ I A A _ _ I of an artlst who found In tablold newspapers I _ _ _ _ _ __ I someofhisearllestandmosteffectivelmages.
    [Show full text]
  • Town and Country · Restaurant
    " , , ,. '" , , .' . • . , . , . " " Page Ten THE JEWISH POST Thursday, AuguSt 2, 1962 I', : - -. in Briel servers for the Ecumenical Cowell Board and Room Wanted World News Equal Rights ,like other ;rewish organizations." Young man, post graduate uni­ (Cont. from pagel) versity .student, wishes board and \I Berlin ' in Yiddish, Mr.' Blumel was in­ FINED FOR RIOT quiet private room in River Heights. Some 1,500 persons enrolled this summer in the first adult education formed, werc the writings of Ber- . Manchester (J'i'A) _ Thirty per- Phone 453-0086. courses in Jewish subjects arranged in Berlin since the rise of the Nazi Mrs. R. Goldstein, Miss Lynne gelson which appeared in January sons werefinEid varying sums from L regime, it was reported here this week. The participants, who included G ldste· M Lo 1 and .the· poems of Schwarzman. 2 pounds ($5.60) up in magistrate's Wanted W.E ,D'DING. 0 m, r. me Go dstein, Mr. T.hirty ~'-ousand ,copI'es of 'ea~h' w~re several nDn-Jews, attended lectures on Jewish history, art, culture and , d Mr Lll V court here as a result of arrests fol- Kosher Butcher wanted ·to take· Hebrew 'language. The winter term will feature courses in Jewish (COnt. from page 3) an s. S. Mamott, Dr.n. L. James, printed. An anthology of works by lowirig a riot during an open ~ over a business in a community of , religion and Israeli folk dances. The courses are intended to promote ;;;;:Lx:E~TilIT:@ii,;~-wTI~rn~:G,~rIiruRisriAY,~UJGU:S1~~li)6!~----~-:-"N;'-32 "Mr.
    [Show full text]