One-Hit Wonders TV LISTINGS
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Pr-Dvd-Holdings-As-Of-September-18
CALL # LOCATION TITLE AUTHOR BINGE BOX COMEDIES prmnd Comedies binge box (includes Airplane! --Ferris Bueller's Day Off --The First Wives Club --Happy Gilmore)[videorecording] / Princeton Public Library. BINGE BOX CONCERTS AND MUSICIANSprmnd Concerts and musicians binge box (Includes Brad Paisley: Life Amplified Live Tour, Live from WV --Close to You: Remembering the Carpenters --John Sebastian Presents Folk Rewind: My Music --Roy Orbison and Friends: Black and White Night)[videorecording] / Princeton Public Library. BINGE BOX MUSICALS prmnd Musicals binge box (includes Mamma Mia! --Moulin Rouge --Rodgers and Hammerstein's Cinderella [DVD] --West Side Story) [videorecording] / Princeton Public Library. BINGE BOX ROMANTIC COMEDIESprmnd Romantic comedies binge box (includes Hitch --P.S. I Love You --The Wedding Date --While You Were Sleeping)[videorecording] / Princeton Public Library. DVD 001.942 ALI DISC 1-3 prmdv Aliens, abductions & extraordinary sightings [videorecording]. DVD 001.942 BES prmdv Best of ancient aliens [videorecording] / A&E Television Networks History executive producer, Kevin Burns. DVD 004.09 CRE prmdv The creation of the computer [videorecording] / executive producer, Bob Jaffe written and produced by Donald Sellers created by Bruce Nash History channel executive producers, Charlie Maday, Gerald W. Abrams Jaffe Productions Hearst Entertainment Television in association with the History Channel. DVD 133.3 UNE DISC 1-2 prmdv The unexplained [videorecording] / produced by Towers Productions, Inc. for A&E Network executive producer, Michael Cascio. DVD 158.2 WEL prmdv We'll meet again [videorecording] / producers, Simon Harries [and three others] director, Ashok Prasad [and five others]. DVD 158.2 WEL prmdv We'll meet again. Season 2 [videorecording] / director, Luc Tremoulet producer, Page Shepherd. -
1 Production Design / Art Direction
[email protected] - 0422 096 761 PRODUCTION DESIGN / ART DIRECTION WORKED ON THE FOLLOWING PROJECTS:- 2012 Robot I “Enjoy More” Samsung TVC Production Designer 2012 Foxtel “Journey Begins” TVC Production Designer 2012 Motion Picture Co “Mitsubishi Fridge” TVC Production Designer 2012 Foxtel / WTFN “The People Speak” TV Show Production Designer 2012 Channel 10 / WTFN “The Living Room” TV Show Production Designer 2012 The DMC Initiative “Westfield Premium” TVC Production Designer 2011 Foxtel Creative “Christmas Promo” TVC Production Designer 2011 Bazmark III “The Great Gatsby” Feature Film Draftsperson 2011 Jungleboys “Moonpark” Only The Sea Slugs - Film Clip Production Designer 2011 “Wasted” PopUp Restaurant - Event Designer 2011 Foxtel – Area 51 “Australian Drama” – TVC Production Designer 2011 Beyond Productions “Behind Mansion Walls” - TV Series Production Designer 2011 SeeSaw Films Art Direction of Style Book “Monkey” Commissioned by: Emile Sherman – Producers Guild of America Award Winner & Academy Award Nominee 2010 Corsan Films – “Singularity” Design Assistant Director: Roland Joffe Academy Award Winner - Production Designer: Luciana Arrighi 2010 Universal Studios - Art Direction of Style Book “Dracula Year Zero” Director: Alex Proyas / Production Designer: Roger Ford 2010 Plasma . Tactic Creative Services – Audio Post House Interior Designer 2010 Fox Searchlight Art Direction of Style Book “The Book Thief” 2010 Starchild Productions / Sony “Lying” Amy Meredith Film Clip Production Designer 2009 Walden Media & Fox Searchlight Set -
1 Dead, 1 Hurt in 2 A.M. Crash Driver Injured, Passenger Killed When Pickup Flips on US 441 Early Saturday
A3 SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2018 | YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER SINCE 1874 | $2 Lake City Reporter LAKECITYREPORTER.COM SUNDAY + PLUS >> Friday Bustling The odd morning Black story of rollover Deborah Friday Pittman bargains 1C Opinion/4A Big plans for mill 2A See 2A 1 dead, 1 hurt in 2 a.m. crash Driver injured, passenger killed when pickup flips on US 441 early Saturday. From staff reports Renovation site a A Lake City man died treasure trove of Saturday morning after a pick- Lake City history. up truck he was traveling in flipped over on US Highway 441, according to a Florida By CARL MCKINNEY Highway Patrol press release. [email protected] Dead is Andrew Powell III, Glass shards form a sheet on the the release said. ground as Benny Smollack sifts At about 1:57 a.m. Saturday, a through what the crew unearthed 2008 Ford F-350 pickup driven in the past couple weeks. by John Ray Beasley, 29, of Lake A miracle cure purchased at the City, was traveling north on 441, MORE drug store that approaching the intersection INSIDE used to be down the n of County Road 240, when it Blanche street, old soda bot- left roadway onto the shoulder, renovation update, 1D. tles from back when striking multiple objects, includ- Lake City still had a ing a culvert, which caused the Coca-Cola plant — there’s no tell- truck to overturn and land on ing what other secrets lie below the its roof. Blanche Hotel. Beasley suffered serious “What is that?” Smollack says, injuries and is being treated picking up a rectangular piece of at Shands UF Health at the debris. -
2014Autumn.Pdf
Autumn 2014 VOLUME 8, NUMBER 4 FROM OUR COLLECTIONS 2 The Kansas Historical Society comprises five divisions and many different Model T of the Skies programs that serve the people of Kansas. This issue highlights a program in the Kansas Museum of History. 6 Beehives and Dog Ears: Special Exhibits Gallery Football Helmets in Kansas Tells Kansas Stories 10 Devoted to the Free-State Cause he Kansas Museum of History, which opened in west TTopeka in 1984, was designed with two galleries to tell the story of Kansas. The main gallery features ongoing Departments exhibits from the earliest times to recent past. The special exhibits gallery offers a way to tell in-depth stories about Featured Program ...........1 specific topics from the past and to highlight Museum Save Our History ...........4 collections not already on display. Through the years, the Real People. Real Stories. .....8 award-winning Museum has presented a range of popular Witness to History...........9 special topics from cowboy boots to quilts. Calendar .................13 The special exhibit, The Great Soldier State: Kansas and the Civil War, commemorates the 150th anniversary of the war and the legacy of the soldiers who later settled in Kansas. The exhibit also highlights the Museum’s extraordinary collection of Civil War flags, including those of African American units, as well as personal objects from the war. John Conover and John Martin both served with the Eighth Kansas Volunteer Infantry. Both men arrived in Kansas in 1857—Conover, age 21, to Leavenworth and 18-year-old Martin to Atchison. Conover On the cover: George Washington became a salesman for a Carver, featured in Real People. -
The Dead Devils of Cockle Creek by Kathryn Marquet
A COMEDY WITH THE SAFETY OFF LA BOITE AND PLAYLAB PRESENT THE DEAD DEVILS OF COCKLE CREEK BY KATHRYN MARQUET PROGRAM Image by Dylan Evans PROGRAMLA BOITE THE DEAD DEVILS OF COCKLE CREEK LA BOITE THEATRE COMPANY 1 THEATRE COMPANY La Boite Theatre Company is supported by the La Boite Theatre Company is assisted by the Australian Government Queensland Government through Arts Queensland through the Australia Council, its funding and advisory body PRESENTED BY LA BOITE THEATRE COMPANY AND PLAYLAB 10 FEBRUARY – 03 MARCH 2018 AT THE ROUNDHOUSE THEATRE ACKNOWLEDGEMENT OF COUNTRY AT LA BOITE WE ACKNOWLEDGE THE COUNTRY ON WHICH WE WORK, AND THE CAST TRADITIONAL CUSTODIANS OF THIS LAND - THE TURRBAL AND JAGERA PEOPLE. WE GIVE OUR RESPECTS TO THEIR ELDERS PAST, PRESENT, AND EMERGING. MICKEY O’TOOLE ........................................................... JOHN BATCHELOR HARRIS ROBB .................................................................. JULIAN CURTIS WE HONOUR THE ABORIGINAL AND TORRES STRAIT ISLANDER PEOPLE, THE FIRST DESTINEE LEE .............................................................KIMIE TSUKAKOSHI AUSTRALIANS, WHOSE LANDS, WINDS AND WATERS WE ALL NOW SHARE, AND GEORGE TEMPLETON .............................................................EMILY WEIR THEIR ANCIENT AND ENDURING CULTURES. THIS COUNTRY WAS THE HOME OF STORY-TELLING LONG BEFORE LA BOITE EXISTED, AND WE ARE PRIVILEGED AND CREATIVES GRATEFUL TO SHARE OUR STORIES HERE TODAY. WRITER .................................................................... KATHRYN MARQUET -
The Other Side of the Monument: Memory, Preservation, and the Battles of Franklin and Nashville
THE OTHER SIDE OF THE MONUMENT: MEMORY, PRESERVATION, AND THE BATTLES OF FRANKLIN AND NASHVILLE by JOE R. BAILEY B.S., Austin Peay State University, 2006 M.A., Austin Peay State University, 2008 AN ABSTRACT OF A DISSERTATION submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Department of History College of Arts and Sciences KANSAS STATE UNIVERSITY Manhattan, Kansas 2015 Abstract The thriving areas of development around the cities of Franklin and Nashville in Tennessee bear little evidence of the large battles that took place there during November and December, 1864. Pointing to modern development to explain the failed preservation of those battlefields, however, radically oversimplifies how those battlefields became relatively obscure. Instead, the major factor contributing to the lack of preservation of the Franklin and Nashville battlefields was a fractured collective memory of the two events; there was no unified narrative of the battles. For an extended period after the war, there was little effort to remember the Tennessee Campaign. Local citizens and veterans of the battles simply wanted to forget the horrific battles that haunted their memories. Furthermore, the United States government was not interested in saving the battlefields at Franklin and Nashville. Federal authorities, including the War Department and Congress, had grown tired of funding battlefields as national parks and could not be convinced that the two battlefields were worthy of preservation. Moreover, Southerners and Northerners remembered Franklin and Nashville in different ways, and historians mainly stressed Eastern Theater battles, failing to assign much significance to Franklin and Nashville. Throughout the 20th century, infrastructure development encroached on the battlefields and they continued to fade from public memory. -
The BG News December 4, 1998
Bowling Green State University ScholarWorks@BGSU BG News (Student Newspaper) University Publications 12-4-1998 The BG News December 4, 1998 Bowling Green State University Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news Recommended Citation Bowling Green State University, "The BG News December 4, 1998" (1998). BG News (Student Newspaper). 6417. https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news/6417 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License. This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the University Publications at ScholarWorks@BGSU. It has been accepted for inclusion in BG News (Student Newspaper) by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@BGSU. FRIDAY,The Dec. 4, 1998 A dailyBG Independent student News press Volume 85* No. 63 Speaker: HIGH: 57 ^k LOW: 50 'Sex is not an , emergency □ The safe sex discussion sponsored by Womyn for Womyn adressed many topics ■ The men's basketball of concern for women. team heads to Eastern Michigan Saturday. By mENE SHARON SCOTT The BG News Birth control methods, tools for safer sex and other issues ■ The women's were addressed at a "Safe Sex" basketball team is ready roundtable Thursday. The dis- for the Cougar BG News Photo/JASON SUGGS cussion was sponsored by Womyn for Womyn. shoot-out. People at Mark's Pub enjoy a drink Thursday. Below, John Tuylka, a senior psychology major takes a shot. Leah McGary, a certified fam- ily nurse practitioner from the Center for Choice, led the discus- Bars claim responsibility sion. ■ The men's swimming McGray emphasized the and diving teams are importance of using a birth con- BATTLE to curb binge drinking trol method. -
The Star-Spangled Banner Project: Save Our History[TM]. Teacher's Manual, Grades K-8
DOCUMENT RESUME ED 450 018 SO 032 384 AUTHOR O'Connell, Libby, Ed. TITLE The Star-Spangled Banner Project: Save Our History[TM]. Teacher's Manual, Grades K-8. PUB DATE 1998-00-00 NOTE 62p.; This teacher's manual was produced in cooperationwith the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of American History. AVAILABLE FROM A&E Television Networks, Attn: CommunityMarketing, 235 East 45th Street, New York, NY 10017; Tel: 877-87LEARN (toll free); Fax: 212-551-1540; E-mail: ([email protected]); Web site: http://www.historychannel.com/classroom/index.html. PUB TYPE Guides Classroom Teacher (052) EDRS PRICE MF01/PC03 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS Curriculum Enrichment; Elementary Education; *Heritage Education; *Interdisciplinary Approach; Middle Schools; Social Studies; Teaching Guides; *United States History IDENTIFIERS National History Standards; Smithsonian Institution; *Star Spangled Banner; War of 1812 ABSTRACT The Star-Spangled Banner is the original flag that flew over Fort McHenry in Baltimore (Maryland) during its attackby the British during the War of 1812. It inspired Francis Scott Key, a lawyerbeing held on board a British ship in Baltimore Harbor, towrite a poem that later became the words to the national anthem. Since 1907, the Star-Spangled Bannerhas been part of the collection at the Smithsonian Institutionand has hung as the centerpiece of the National Museum of American History inWashington for over 30 years. Now the flag is being examined, cleaned,repaired, and preserved for future generations. This teacher's manual about the flag'shistory features an interdisciplinary project that focuses on history,music, language arts, and science. Following an introduction, themanual is divided into grade-level sections: Section One: Grades K-2; Section Two:Grades 3-5; and Section Three: Grades 6-8. -
To View a Downloadable PDF of Alex
ZAMMY SENSIBILITIES AN INTERVIEW WITH ALEX ZAMM ALEX ZAMM? THE NAME GIVES you a Alex Zamm is the director of the latest he will ever sit down. In fact it seemed hint. Could there be some kind of fantastic comedy direct to DVD/video uncomfortable for him to be still for this connection? ‘Kapow’, ‘ Boom’. feature (IG2), which interview but like everything he does, Yes … there was a ‘Zamm’ in there some- was made by Disney in Brisbane and Alex has a commitment, clarity and care where. Is Zamm his real name? It turns is due for worldwide release 11 March, that personifi es the idea of inspiring out it is and as a kid, Alex loved seeing his 2003, starring French Stewart1 as the leadership together with the rare com- name fl ashing on the screen—maybe a inimitable Gadget.2 bination of skills and talent that makes childhood incentive to see it up there one for a great comedy director. And it all day for real. Like his name, Zamm brings a level of started with his impassioned search for energy, dedication and love to his writ- what makes comedy and stories work. PRU DONOVAN ing and directing that is truly exhila- rating. He reminds you a little of the RoadRunner. When he’s moving he’s almost invisible, and when he stops, he talks very fast and just long enough Mad to ensure you have the information you need before he’s off again to re-write a scene, or rush to a mix or start a new script in the ad break, and this after two years of complete dedication and ! " immersion in the incredibly complicated visual effects movie IG2. -
What Killed Australian Cinema & Why Is the Bloody Corpse Still Moving?
What Killed Australian Cinema & Why is the Bloody Corpse Still Moving? A Thesis Submitted By Jacob Zvi for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the Faculty of Health, Arts & Design, Swinburne University of Technology, Melbourne © Jacob Zvi 2019 Swinburne University of Technology All rights reserved. This thesis may not be reproduced in whole or in part, by photocopy or other means, without the permission of the author. II Abstract In 2004, annual Australian viewership of Australian cinema, regularly averaging below 5%, reached an all-time low of 1.3%. Considering Australia ranks among the top nations in both screens and cinema attendance per capita, and that Australians’ biggest cultural consumption is screen products and multi-media equipment, suggests that Australians love cinema, but refrain from watching their own. Why? During its golden period, 1970-1988, Australian cinema was operating under combined private and government investment, and responsible for critical and commercial successes. However, over the past thirty years, 1988-2018, due to the detrimental role of government film agencies played in binding Australian cinema to government funding, Australian films are perceived as under-developed, low budget, and depressing. Out of hundreds of films produced, and investment of billions of dollars, only a dozen managed to recoup their budget. The thesis demonstrates how ‘Australian national cinema’ discourse helped funding bodies consolidate their power. Australian filmmaking is defined by three ongoing and unresolved frictions: one external and two internal. Friction I debates Australian cinema vs. Australian audience, rejecting Australian cinema’s output, resulting in Frictions II and III, which respectively debate two industry questions: what content is produced? arthouse vs. -
A Celebration of Black History Month
www.EDUCATIONUPDATE.com AwardAward Volume X, No. 6 • New York City • FEBRUARY 2005 Winner FOR PARENTS, EDUCATORS & STUDENTS A CELEBRATION OF BLACK HISTORY MONTH NELSON MANDELA U.S. POSTAGE PAID U.S. POSTAGE VOORHEES, NJ Permit No.500 PRSRT STD. PRSRT Special Education 3rd in a 4 part series • Pages 25 - 27 2 SPOTLIGHT ON SCHOOLS ■ EDUCATIONT:10.25 in UPDATE ■ FEBRUARY 2005 ������������������� ������������������� ����������������������� ������������������� ����������������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ ����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������������������ ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ ��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� ��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� -
United in Victory Toledo-Winlock Soccer Team Survives Dameon Pesanti / [email protected] Opponents of Oil Trains Show Support for a Speaker Tuesday
It Must Be Tigers Bounce Back Spring; The Centralia Holds Off W.F. West 9-6 in Rivalry Finale / Sports Weeds are Here / Life $1 Midweek Edition Thursday, May 1, 2014 Reaching 110,000 Readers in Print and Online — www.chronline.com United in Victory Toledo-Winlock Soccer Team Survives Dameon Pesanti / [email protected] Opponents of oil trains show support for a speaker Tuesday. Oil Train Opponents Dominate Centralia Meeting ONE-SIDED: Residents Fear Derailments, Explosions, Traffic Delays By Dameon Pesanti [email protected] More than 150 people came to Pete Caster / [email protected] the Centralia High School audito- Toledo-Winlock United goalkeeper Elias delCampo celebrates after leaving the Winlock School District meeting where the school board voted to strike down the rium Tuesday night to voice their motion to dissolve the combination soccer team on Wednesday evening. concerns against two new oil transfer centers slated to be built in Grays Harbor. CELEBRATION: Winlock School Board The meeting was meant to be Votes 3-2 to Keep Toledo/Winlock a platform for public comments and concerns related to the two Combined Boys Soccer Program projects, but the message from attendees was clear and unified By Christopher Brewer — study as many impacts as pos- [email protected] sible, but don’t let the trains come WINLOCK — United they have played for nearly through Western Washington. two decades, and United they will remain for the Nearly every speaker ex- foreseeable future. pressed concerns about the Toledo and Winlock’s combined boys’ soccer increase in global warming, program has survived the chopping block, as the potential derailments, the unpre- Winlock School Board voted 3-2 against dissolving paredness of municipalities in the the team at a special board meeting Wednesday eve- face of explosions and the poten- ning.