Motion Picture Classification Issued by the National Legion of Decency Tre Dame in Montreal in 1658
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The Broken Ideals of Love and Family in Film Noir
1 Murder, Mugs, Molls, Marriage: The Broken Ideals of Love and Family in Film Noir Noir is a conversation rather than a single genre or style, though it does have a history, a complex of overlapping styles and typical plots, and more central directors and films. It is also a conversation about its more common philosophies, socio-economic and sexual concerns, and more expansively its social imaginaries. MacIntyre's three rival versions suggest the different ways noir can be studied. Tradition's approach explains better the failure of the other two, as will as their more limited successes. Something like the Thomist understanding of people pursuing perceived (but faulty) goods better explains the neo- Marxist (or other power/conflict) model and the self-construction model. Each is dependent upon the materials of an earlier tradition to advance its claims/interpretations. [Styles-studio versus on location; expressionist versus classical three-point lighting; low-key versus high lighting; whites/blacks versus grays; depth versus flat; theatrical versus pseudo-documentary; variety of felt threat levels—investigative; detective, procedural, etc.; basic trust in ability to restore safety and order versus various pictures of unopposable corruption to a more systemic nihilism; melodramatic vs. colder, more distant; dialogue—more or less wordy, more or less contrived, more or less realistic; musical score—how much it guides and dictates emotions; presence or absence of humor, sentiment, romance, healthy family life; narrator, narratival flashback; motives for criminality and violence-- socio- economic (expressed by criminal with or without irony), moral corruption (greed, desire for power), psychological pathology; cinematography—classical vs. -
FOREST LAWN MEMORIAL PARK Hollywood Hills Orry George Kelly December 31, 1897 - February 27, 1964 Forest Lawn Memorial Park Hollywood Hills
Welcome to FOREST LAWN MEMORIAL PARK Hollywood Hills Orry George Kelly December 31, 1897 - February 27, 1964 Forest Lawn Memorial Park Hollywood Hills Order of Service Waltzing Matilda Played by the Forest Lawn Organist – Anthony Zediker Eulogy to be read by Jack. L. Warner Pall Bearers, To be Announced. Photo by Tony Duran Orry George Kelly December 31, 1897 - February 27, 1964 Forest Lawn Memorial Park Hollywood Hills Photo by Tony Duran Orry George Kelly December 31, 1897 - February 27, 1964 Forest Lawn Memorial Park Hollywood Hills Orry-Kelly Filmography 1963 Irma la Douce 1942 Always in My Heart (gowns) 1936 Isle of Fury (gowns) 1963 In the Cool of the Day 1942 Kings Row (gowns) 1936 Cain and Mabel (gowns) 1962 Gypsy (costumes designed by) 1942 Wild Bill Hickok Rides (gowns) 1936 Give Me Your Heart (gowns) 1962 The Chapman Report 1942 The Man Who Came to Dinner (gowns) 1936 Stage Struck (gowns) 1962 Five Finger Exercise 1941 The Maltese Falcon (gowns) 1936 China Clipper (gowns) (gowns: Miss Russell) 1941 The Little Foxes (costumes) 1936 Jailbreak (gowns) 1962 Sweet Bird of Youth (costumes by) 1941 The Bride Came C.O.D. (gowns) 1936 Satan Met a Lady (gowns) 1961 A Majority of One 1941 Throwing a Party (Short) 1936 Public Enemy’s Wife (gowns) 1959 Some Like It Hot 1941 Million Dollar Baby (gowns) 1936 The White Angel (gowns) 1958 Auntie Mame (costumes designed by) 1941 Affectionately Yours (gowns) 1936 Murder by an Aristocrat (gowns) 1958 Too Much, Too Soon (as Orry Kelly) 1941 The Great Lie (gowns) 1936 Hearts Divided (gowns) -
Guide to the Brooklyn Playbills and Programs Collection, BCMS.0041 Finding Aid Prepared by Lisa Deboer, Lisa Castrogiovanni
Guide to the Brooklyn Playbills and Programs Collection, BCMS.0041 Finding aid prepared by Lisa DeBoer, Lisa Castrogiovanni and Lisa Studier and revised by Diana Bowers-Smith. This finding aid was produced using the Archivists' Toolkit September 04, 2019 Brooklyn Public Library - Brooklyn Collection , 2006; revised 2008 and 2018. 10 Grand Army Plaza Brooklyn, NY, 11238 718.230.2762 [email protected] Guide to the Brooklyn Playbills and Programs Collection, BCMS.0041 Table of Contents Summary Information ................................................................................................................................. 7 Historical Note...............................................................................................................................................8 Scope and Contents....................................................................................................................................... 8 Arrangement...................................................................................................................................................9 Collection Highlights.....................................................................................................................................9 Administrative Information .......................................................................................................................10 Related Materials ..................................................................................................................................... -
The IOWAVE [Newspaper] WAVES on Campus
University of Northern Iowa UNI ScholarWorks The IOWAVE [newspaper] WAVES on Campus January 1943 The IOWAVE [newspaper], November 5, 1943 United States. Naval Reserve. Women's Reserve. Let us know how access to this document benefits ouy Copyright ©1943 IOWAVES Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.uni.edu/iowave_newspaper Part of the Military and Veterans Studies Commons Recommended Citation United States. Naval Reserve. Women's Reserve., "The IOWAVE [newspaper], November 5, 1943" (1943). The IOWAVE [newspaper]. 67. https://scholarworks.uni.edu/iowave_newspaper/67 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the WAVES on Campus at UNI ScholarWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in The IOWAVE [newspaper] by an authorized administrator of UNI ScholarWorks. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Tl-IE · IOWAVE VOLUME I No. 15 U. S. NAVAL TRAINING SCHOOL, CEDAR FALLS, IOWA 5 NOVE'MBER 1943 Chaplain Ill; Rev· Knoff Reserve Blue Shirts No Longer Prescribed World News Directs Sunday Service Uniform For ~nlisted Personnel At the historic -Mosc·ow confer Chaplain J . D. Kettelle, who ence attended by Secretary of underwent an operation .Tuesday, State Hull, Foreign Secretary An 2 November, is coming along fine Lt. (j;g.) Henderson is Bride Wh ite Cotton Replaces thony Eden, and Foreign. Commis according to all reports. The sioner Molotov, and their staffs, officers, ship's company and the Of Charles J. Hearst Dress 81.ue it was stated that closer cooper,a enllisted personnel all wish him a speedy recovery. Lt. (j. g .. ) Gladys Henderson, tion on the battlefronts and united New uniform regulations for the action in the peace to folJ.ow While Chaplain Kettelle is away, Public Relations Officer, and Char vic winter, received from Washington tory through eventual cre,ation of Reverend Gerald Knoff, Director les J. -
Indigenous Peoples' Innovation
indigenous peoples’ innovation Intellectual Property Pathways to Development indigenous peoples’ innovation Intellectual Property Pathways to Development Edited by Peter Drahos and Susy Frankel Published by ANU E Press The Australian National University Canberra ACT 0200, Australia Email: [email protected] This title is also available online at http://epress.anu.edu.au National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-Publication entry Title: Indigenous people’s innovation : intellectual property pathways to development / edited by Peter Drahos and Susy Frankel. ISBN: 9781921862779 (pbk.) 9781921862786 (ebook) Notes: Includes bibliographical references. Subjects: Ethnoscience. Traditional ecological knowledge. Intellectual property. Indigenous peoples--Legal status, laws, etc. Other Authors/Contributors: Drahos, Peter, 1955- Frankel, Susy. Dewey Number: 346.048 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher. Cover design and layout by ANU E Press Printed by Griffin Press This edition © 2012 ANU E Press Contents Acknowledgements . .vii List of Acronyms . ix List of Contributors . xiii Preface: Indigenous Innovation: New Dialogues, New Pathways . xv Antony Taubman Director, Intellectual Property Division World Trade Organization 1 . Indigenous Peoples’ Innovation and Intellectual Property: The Issues . 1 Peter Drahos and Susy Frankel 2 . Ancient but New: Developing Locally Driven Enterprises Based on Traditional Medicines in Kuuku I’yu Northern Kaanju Homelands, Cape York, Queensland, Australia . 29 David J. Claudie, Susan J. Semple, Nicholas M. Smith and Bradley S. Simpson 3 . ‘It would be good to know where our food goes’: Information Equals Power? . -
Ambler Theater ART HOUSE
A NONPROFIT Ambler Theater ART HOUSE Previews104A JUNE – SEPTEMBER 2018 Joan Crawford, Frederika Brown, and Norma Shearer in THE WOMEN THE and Norma Shearer in Frederika Brown, Crawford, Joan INCLUDES OUR MAIN ATTRACTIONS AND SPECIAL PROGRAMS A MBLERT HEATER.ORG 215 345 7855 Welcome to the nonprofit Ambler Theater The Ambler Theater is a nonprofit, tax-exempt 501(c)(3) organization. Policies ADMISSION Children under 6 – Children under age 6 will not be admitted to our films or programs unless specifically indicated. General ............................................................$11.25 Late Arrivals – The theater reserves the right to stop selling Members ...........................................................$6.75 tickets (and/or seating patrons) 10 minutes after a film has Seniors (62+) & Students ..................................$9.00 started. Matinees Outside Food and Drink – Patrons are not permitted to bring Mon, Tues, Thurs & Fri before 4:30 outside food and drink into the theater. Sat & Sun before 2:30 .....................................$9.00 Wed Early Matinee before 2:30 ........................$8.00 Accessibility & Hearing Assistance – The Ambler Theater has wheelchair-accessible auditoriums and restrooms, and is Affiliated Theater Members* .............................$6.75 equipped with hearing enhancement headsets and closed You must present your membership card to obtain membership discounts. caption devices. (Please inquire at the concession stand.) The above ticket prices are subject to change. Parking – Check our website for parking information. THANK YOU MEMBERS! Your membership is the foundation of the theater’s success. Without your membership support, we would not How can you support AMBLER THEATER exist. Thank you for being a member. Contact us with your feedback the Ambler Theater? MEMBER or questions at 215 348 1878 x115 or email us at Be a member. -
Zenker, Stephanie F., Ed. Books For
DOCUMENT RESUME ED 415 506 CS 216 144 AUTHOR Stover, Lois T., Ed.; Zenker, Stephanie F., Ed. TITLE Books for You: An Annotated Booklist for Senior High. Thirteenth Edition. NCTE Bibliography Series. INSTITUTION National Council of Teachers of English, Urbana, IL. ISBN ISBN-0-8141-0368-5 ISSN ISSN-1051-4740 PUB DATE 1997-00-00 NOTE 465p.; For the 1995 edition, see ED 384 916. Foreword by Chris Crutcher. AVAILABLE FROM National Council of Teachers of English, 1111 W. Kenyon Road, Urbana, IL 61801-1096 (Stock No. 03685: $16.95 members, $22.95 nonmembers). PUB TYPE Reference Materials Bibliographies (131) EDRS PRICE MF01/PC19 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS *Adolescent Literature; Adolescents; Annotated Bibliographies; *Fiction; High School Students; High Schools; *Independent Reading; *Nonfiction; *Reading Interests; *Reading Material Selection; Reading Motivation; Recreational Reading; Thematic Approach IDENTIFIERS Multicultural Materials; *Trade Books ABSTRACT Designed to help teachers, students, and parents identify engaging and insightful books for young adults, this book presents annotations of over 1,400 books published between 1994 and 1996. The book begins with a foreword by young adult author, Chris Crutcher, a former reluctant high school reader, that discusses what books have meant to him. Annotations in the book are grouped by subject into 40 thematic chapters, including "Adventure and Survival"; "Animals and Pets"; "Classics"; "Death and Dying"; "Fantasy"; "Horror"; "Human Rights"; "Poetry and Drama"; "Romance"; "Science Fiction"; "War"; and "Westerns and the Old West." Annotations in the book provide full bibliographic information, a concise summary, notations identifying world literature, multicultural, and easy reading title, and notations about any awards the book has won. -
Theater Playbills and Programs Collection, 1875-1972
Guide to the Brooklyn Theater Playbills and Programs Collection, 1875-1972 Brooklyn Public Library Grand Army Plaza Brooklyn, NY 11238 Contact: Brooklyn Collection Phone: 718.230.2762 Fax: 718.857.2245 Email: [email protected] www.brooklynpubliclibrary.org Processed by Lisa DeBoer, Lisa Castrogiovanni and Lisa Studier. Finding aid created in 2006. Revised and expanded in 2008. Copyright © 2006-2008 Brooklyn Public Library. All rights reserved. Descriptive Summary Creator: Various Title: Brooklyn Theater Playbills and Programs Collection Date Span: 1875-1972 Abstract: The Brooklyn Theater Playbills and Programs Collection consists of 800 playbills and programs for motion pictures, musical concerts, high school commencement exercises, lectures, photoplays, vaudeville, and burlesque, as well as the more traditional offerings such as plays and operas, all from Brooklyn theaters. Quantity: 2.25 linear feet Location: Brooklyn Collection Map Room, cabinet 11 Repository: Brooklyn Public Library – Brooklyn Collection Reference Code: BC0071 Scope and Content Note The 800 items in the Brooklyn Theater Playbills and Programs Collection, which occupies 2.25 cubic feet, easily refute the stereotypes of Brooklyn as provincial and insular. From the late 1880s until the 1940s, the period covered by the bulk of these materials, the performing arts thrived in Brooklyn and were available to residents right at their doorsteps. At one point, there were over 200 theaters in Brooklyn. Frequented by the rich, the middle class and the working poor, they enjoyed mass popularity. With materials from 115 different theaters, the collection spans almost a century, from 1875 to 1972. The highest concentration is in the years 1890 to 1909, with approximately 450 items. -
Lang, Fritz , 1890–1976, German-American Film Director, B
Lang, Fritz , 1890–1976, German-American film director, b. Vienna. His silent and early sound films, such as Metropolis (1926), are marked by brilliant expressionist technique. He gained worldwide acclaim with M (1933), a study of a child molester and murderer. After directing 15 films, Lang fled Nazi Germany (1933) to avoid collaborating with the government and settled in the United States. His 20 Hollywood films continued his exploration of criminality and the cruel fate that can overtake the unwary. His notable American works include Fury (1936), You Only Live Once (1937), Hangmen Also Die (1943), The Big Heat (1953), and Beyond a Reasonable Doubt (1956). Born in Vienna, Austria, Fritz Lang’s father managed a construction company. His mother, Pauline Schlesinger, was Jewish but converted to Catholicism when Lang was ten . After high school he enrolled briefly at the Technische Hochschule Wien, then started to train as a painter. From 1910 to 1914 he traveled in Europe and, he would later claim, also in Asia and North Africa. He studied painting in Paris in 1913-14. At the start of the First World War he returned to Vienna, enlisting in the army in January 1915. Severely injured in June 1916, he wrote some scenarios for films while convalescing. In early 1918 he was sent home shell-shocked and acted briefly in Viennese theater before accepting a job as a writer at Erich Pommer's production company in Berlin, Decla. In Berlin, Lang worked briefly as a writer and then as a director, at UFA and then for Nero-Film, owned by the American Seymour Nebenzahl. -
Fminped 1888 . •Published Every FRIDAY at MILLBURN
FmiNPED 1888 .■■•Published every FRIDAY at MILLBURN.N.J. FIVE CENTS £& Tuesday Is Jills Club Register To Votc Stork Earns Defense Test \sks Tax Out Residents who are not per N a tio n a l There will be an inspec Primary Day manently registered to vote tion of the local defense or in the November election, or The draft may be depleting ganization today by members Believe it or not folks next It has remained for the ex- Tuesday is Primary Day. Re usive Short Hills Club to drop who wish to register a Millbum of its young men and of the State Defense Coun change of address may do so WAACS and WAVES may be cil. A number of theoretical publican and Democratic voters first bomb on Town Hall will go to the Polls to approve id thereby set off a local Pearl at the Township Clerk’s Of taking some of its fairest wom incidents will be staged In fice any business day up to en but the stork is doing his various parts of the Town the candidacy of C. Milford Or- arbor. ben for the Assembly, Clarence The bomb Is a prayer for re- and including September 24. best to maintain the population ship. The local council ur Irr addition— to— regular -figure and insure upland com gently requests all residents A. Hill and Henry L. Junge for from local assessm<m£~un-~~ the Town Committee, Theodore hours, Clerk Widmayer will ing youths for future genera to cooperate fully with work a state enactment exempt- A. -
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Tips for Successful Wife Knows Every Man s Just a Boy at Heart By HELEN ROWLAND Everything is a game to him that makes him tell fish stories that makes him long for a night supper out of the Icb—- business, and lie about his golf score and woman's soothing touch on his box, never tries to control his 117HFN a girl marines she —love, war, politics, work. take his small son to the circus, forehead when he is defeated diet, gives him three cups of "takes a boy to raise.” as the his profession or his and enjoy the Mickey Mouse and feeling sorry for himself. coffee and two helpings of pie Ho me That is what 'makes and keeps The films. And the wife who makes him “because he likes it” and help*, saying goes. him the eternal juvenile. boy in every man. man I know an old gentleman of happiest is the one who under- him to find his shoes and tne» There is a It is the boy in every boy in and sym- flings around and the wife is makes him struggle into 70 who never misses a Mickey stands the him other things he rrtost'successful that pathizes with his boyishness; the house. Manicurist the one who knows best how the bleachers at the baseball Mouse picture. But his wife pre- the wife who lets him out "to appeal to the eternal, irre- parks, in fer# Tyrone Power or Clark Sbe is the wife who, figura- to and sit all afternoon play” and does not try to crab \ sponsible, headstrong juvenile broiling sun, yelling like a Gable. -
David L. Smith Collection Ca
Collection # P 0568 OM 0616 CT 2355–2368 DVD 0866–0868 DAVID L. SMITH COLLECTION CA. 1902–2014 Collection Information Biographical Sketch Scope and Content Note Series Contents Processed by Barbara Quigley and Courtney Rookard February 27, 2017 Manuscript and Visual Collections Department William Henry Smith Memorial Library Indiana Historical Society 450 West Ohio Street Indianapolis, IN 46202-3269 www.indianahistory.org COLLECTION INFORMATION VOLUME OF 6 boxes of photographs, 1 OVA graphics box, 1 OVB COLLECTION: photographs box, 4 flat-file folders of movie posters; 1 folder of negatives; 9 manuscript boxes; 7 oversize manuscript folders; 1 artifact; 14 cassette tapes; 3 CDs; 1 thumb drive; 18 books COLLECTION 1902–2014 DATES: PROVENANCE: Gift from David L. Smith, July 2015 RESTRICTIONS: Any materials listed as being in Cold Storage must be requested at least 4 hours in advance. COPYRIGHT: The Indiana Historical Society does not hold the copyright for the majority of the items in this collection. REPRODUCTION Permission to reproduce or publish material in this collection RIGHTS: must be obtained from the Indiana Historical Society. ALTERNATE FORMATS: RELATED HOLDINGS: ACCESSION 2015.0215, 2017.0023 NUMBER: NOTES: BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH David L. Smith is Professor Emeritus of Telecommunications at Ball State University in Muncie, Indiana, where he taught for twenty-three years. He is the author of Hoosiers in Hollywood (published by the Indiana Historical Society in 2006), Sitting Pretty: The Life and Times of Clifton Webb (University Press of Mississippi, 2011), and Indianapolis Television (Arcadia Publishing, 2012). He was the host of a series called When Movies Were Movies on WISH-TV in Indianapolis from 1971–1981, and served as program manager for the station for twenty years.