MMX CRINE IS KILLED Iff REPORTS RECEIVED on BRIDGE CONTRACTS AWARDED

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

MMX CRINE IS KILLED Iff REPORTS RECEIVED on BRIDGE CONTRACTS AWARDED VOLUME LV. MATAWAN, N. J., FRIDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 10, 1925. N U M B E R 52 NATIONAL FORD TRUCK WEEK, PL4NS MADE FOR BENEFIT MMX CRINE IS KILLED Iff REPORTS RECEIVED ON BRIDGE CONTRACTS AWARDED. Mounf-Borrett Co. to Havo Exhibition JERSEY CEN1RAIP.SL.C0. FOR PUBLIC HEALTH JOT of Ford Built Bodies. FALL INTO CONCRETE PIT, SOCIAL SERVICE DRIVE S. S. Thompson & Co., of Red Bank, The coming week has been desig­ ' Lowest Bidder. MAKING IMPROVEMENTS WILL BE AN ALL-DAY AFFAIR nated as National Ford Truck Week WAS ENGAGED IN PLACING ^ MATAWAN CONTRIBUTED 5320 Contract was awarded by the Board . ON SEPTEMBERS and Mount-Barrctt Company, local TANK AT LEAD CO.’S PLANT. , OF THE $4,000 RAISED. of Freeholders at their meeting in COMPANY HAS ALREADY SPENT authorized dealers, have arranged for -- 1 ^ . i ; . Freehold Wednesday for thc con­ THE SUM OF $1-250,000. Committee* Were Appointed ot Meet­ a complete showing of Ford built truck Had Been Contractor for Ten Year. Material Increase Both in Member.hip struction of she concrete arch bridges, ing Last Night to Cany on the bodies. and Had Successfully Handled Many and tho Amount of Monoy Received five on tlte Elton-Adelphia road and Power il Now Furm'ibed by Public” Event-Much Interest Shown. Difficult Job.. | Over Former Year., one on the Tenncnt-Gordon’s Corner Service Corporation But Sub-Sta­ Entrance of thc Ford Company into road to the S, S. Thompson ft Co., Inc.. tion* are Being'Duilt. Last nipht at the close of routine the manufacture of commercial bodies Marx Crine, who is better known j Yesterday Matawan was well re?- of Red Bank, at the bid price of $10,­ business of Matawan Public Health indicates a ncw and • important ad­ throughout tile countryside as Max presented at the report of the membcrl 928.70. This was the lowest of eight Complaints regarding the service Association, plans were completed for vancement in this division of motor Crine, met a sudden, death yesterday ■ ship drive for the Monmouth County bids submitted, about half the price given by the Jersey Central Power de an all-day benefit for tlie association transportation since it shows that Ford morning at 10 o'clock when hc fell: Organization for Social Service held asked by the highest bidder, Thomas I-ight Company have been frequent of to be held September 2. Mrs. Charles U bring into delivery and hauling ser­ from a height where hc was placing1 a at the summer home of Mrs. Horace Proctor of Long Branch, who asked late. The complaints were undoubt­ C. Schock, general chairman, appoint­ vices the'same low cost and high value steel tank into the concrete pit prc-lJ. Harding. In the party were Mrs. $22,123.40 for the saimc work. The edly warranted but being aware that ed from anions the directors of the as­ that has made the Ford passenger car pared to hold the tank. For the past' A. Hi Henderson, Mrs. Elivood Van second low hid was submitted hy Janies the company had a large- program of sociation heads of committees who thc most popular in the world. Thc ten years Mr. Crine had heen a house' Drackle. Mrs. VV, S. Robinson, Mrs, A. J, Ross of Matawan, who asked improvements underway, The Weekly plan to'm ate the benefit the largest Ford truck chassis has-long held the mover and undertaken ntany difficult Thomas Leary, Mrs. D. E. Van Wickle! $13,875.20. Louis J. Soiling ,of Red asked the company for facts concern­ aiVi iisieai ihe CGiiiiiiim.i j »iS? Cv'ii sifau, lend nmotnr licht rnmiiwrriril vehicles Ouifuiicis, Yesterday he was at work j airs. •Tunis K. Schenck, Mrs. William Bank hid $14,319.80. ing liiipiuvcments nlrcndy made and • L. H. Stcmlcr, treasurer nml chair­ and at present approximately 75 per­ with two of his men at the plant of the H. Stitplu'n and Miss J, Mnbcl Brown. Upon'rccoinnicnilation of Comity En­ to lie mndc nnd received tlie following man of thc finance committee, report­ cent of thc one-ton trucks in use arc National Lead Company, successors to1 Airs. Harding, chnirntan of the ntent- gineer Allen, the freeholders voted to information t . ed a balance cf $652.78 on hand. All Fords. * .Metallurgical and Chemical Company,Iterslilp drive, gave the report so far as accept two recently completed paved The Jersey Central Power & Light moneys promised to .the association The business man or farmer who is on tlte Lloyd lioad iu Matntvaii Town- j returns lmd .been made, ntany people roads from the contrnclors, the High- Company acquired control of the for­ have been paid in nml this money, it interested, in reducing hauling costs ship. Tlte steel tank had been placed! stating tlieir localities as reported Inn.ds-Stoiie Church road and tho Mat- mer Monmouth Lighting Company on is expected, will fulfiill tlie obligations will havo the opportunity this week of in position over a concrete pit nhout1 were ’Incomplete. Mrs. Harding re- atvan-Freacnti road. Mnrcli 28, 1925. Prior to tlmt time : until tlie close ol September when thc becoming fully acquainted with these fourteen feet deep and Mr. Critic was'ported $4,9(10 to dale. This Included Plans and specifications prepared by (lie present owners luttl financed ex­ . fiscal year ends, Tlie association lias Ford built truck bodies which, because adjusting u heavy ring to holt it in j mostly small sums from 000 renewal (lie county mutineer for llto rebuilding tensive Improvements commenced by ■ been greatly indebted to tlie Mon- of the economics of Ford quantity pro­ place when lie slipped backward and tncnihrrsliipH nud 1,100 new members,! rml enlargement of a stone sen wall the Monmouth Lighting Contpony, mpntli County Organization for So- duction, are olTcttd nt low prices. fell Into tlte pit. His skull was frnc- ’ This was a material increase both lo protect tlte county road nt Moip Tlte Jersey Central Power Rt Light' clal Service for the financial ni;l it lias Arrangements have been made hy turcd and he died immediately. At membership ntul the amount of iiton- j •Jcacli, were nlso voted approval Company also recently acquired the given during tin's, the initial year ol Mount-Barrctt Company to keep show work with him were Joseph Emmons J cya received over former years, Mat- t,1<! °f •l|c I-’°rti'(l win directed Consolidated Gas ft Electric Company Its work. It Is hoped through one rooms open every evening during the and Agusttu Meyer. Alt elforl 'wn»jnwiui stood high In the list reporting *" advertise fur bids, lit Low, Branch, llic Lakewood ft large enterprise to procure enough week so tlmt all may have an oppor­ made by them to catch hint in as lie $320 on hand. Others reported as I ^ rc Company, No. 2, of Writ l.ong Const Electric Cnmpany, the.Coast Gas capital to carry on tlie work for tlie tunity uf inspecting the trucks. As nn wns falling but without avail follows: Hvltimr $41), Deal $19, Eaton., I'rnucli, secured permission to rope olt Company nt Ilelmar nnd the Toms ensuing year independent from finan­ opening feature a truck parade, will Mr. Crine was born in Motgnnvillc Iptvn $57, Fair IIiiven $111), Freehold' 11 "( the enmity road there and River Electric Company, For the cial aid Irom tlie County Organization. he hold through thc business streets lor.ty-nhio years ago. As lie grew lo $335.75, Kennsburg $45, Keyport $„’,|Hi! bold n Diode ilance on condition tli.it fiscal year ending May .11), the com­ To this end a food sale will hc held Monday nfternoou beginning nt 2 manhood lie engaged in farming, I.lncroft $50, Little Silver $kl, Locust I approval of tbe West l.uug Branch pany lm« spent on these properties on the lawn of Mrs. Charles Schock’s o'clock. About ten years ago lie gnve up furni. $12(1, l.ong Ilrnae.lt $195, Middletown II1IU,;|' uml council Is secured, Ihe huge stmt of one nml onct|tinrlcr home nt I o'clock, just preceding n More important, however, Mount* ing und moved lo Matnwun Township [ $133, Monmouth flench $70, (Jenin ^'.''hoMcrs were In rreeipt of million dollani in rebuilding existing card party, nlso on her lawn, in the Unrrctt Company will he prepared to and did a large moving business. Many Grove $95, Ocranporl $55.25, Red flank 1111 Invitation from the Monmouth lines ami ImlMiug high tension Inins- evening a block dance will he held on rIvc demonstrations of nny of these tiers, none other would rontrarl for, $<>81, Knutson $1,07-1, Sea Bright $145,J ■County llctnrd of Agriculture and fhmic mission linen hu- llie iteltemieut of ex­ the new road, Tlie Monmouth Comity units and those interested are invited i lie handled with ease, | 50, Shrewsbury $171, Spring Lake Economics lo attend thrlr aimimrfnr- isting service conditions, A large pro­ Hoard of Chosen Freeholders Imve to enter their requests for the demon-1 He married Miss Maty Lawler who, | $230,511, Millstone Township. irS, Up. ,llcr*' pli'iilr, lo hr held tliln year on portion of this sum has heen spent In given permission to close off tlie road Mention an early ns possible, with two sons, William and Joseph K„ per Freehold Township $7H, Wall ,llt' Cleveland farm ut KntnntOwtl, ou tlie old Monmouth Lighting Company for thnt purpose. Lights will lie strung The Ford built body combinations both ol whom live home, survive him.. Township 12. " .Saturday, July It, territory, across thc highway nml a hand of for thc famous Ford one-ton truck lie Is nlso survived by two brothers,! Mrs, Lewis S.
Recommended publications
  • Papéis Normativos E Práticas Sociais
    Agnes Ayres (1898-194): Rodolfo Valentino e Agnes Ayres em “The Sheik” (1921) The Donovan Affair (1929) The Affairs of Anatol (1921) The Rubaiyat of a Scotch Highball Broken Hearted (1929) Cappy Ricks (1921) (1918) Bye, Bye, Buddy (1929) Too Much Speed (1921) Their Godson (1918) Into the Night (1928) The Love Special (1921) Sweets of the Sour (1918) The Lady of Victories (1928) Forbidden Fruit (1921) Coals for the Fire (1918) Eve's Love Letters (1927) The Furnace (1920) Their Anniversary Feast (1918) The Son of the Sheik (1926) Held by the Enemy (1920) A Four Cornered Triangle (1918) Morals for Men (1925) Go and Get It (1920) Seeking an Oversoul (1918) The Awful Truth (1925) The Inner Voice (1920) A Little Ouija Work (1918) Her Market Value (1925) A Modern Salome (1920) The Purple Dress (1918) Tomorrow's Love (1925) The Ghost of a Chance (1919) His Wife's Hero (1917) Worldly Goods (1924) Sacred Silence (1919) His Wife Got All the Credit (1917) The Story Without a Name (1924) The Gamblers (1919) He Had to Camouflage (1917) Detained (1924) In Honor's Web (1919) Paging Page Two (1917) The Guilty One (1924) The Buried Treasure (1919) A Family Flivver (1917) Bluff (1924) The Guardian of the Accolade (1919) The Renaissance at Charleroi (1917) When a Girl Loves (1924) A Stitch in Time (1919) The Bottom of the Well (1917) Don't Call It Love (1923) Shocks of Doom (1919) The Furnished Room (1917) The Ten Commandments (1923) The Girl Problem (1919) The Defeat of the City (1917) The Marriage Maker (1923) Transients in Arcadia (1918) Richard the Brazen (1917) Racing Hearts (1923) A Bird of Bagdad (1918) The Dazzling Miss Davison (1917) The Heart Raider (1923) Springtime à la Carte (1918) The Mirror (1917) A Daughter of Luxury (1922) Mammon and the Archer (1918) Hedda Gabler (1917) Clarence (1922) One Thousand Dollars (1918) The Debt (1917) Borderland (1922) The Girl and the Graft (1918) Mrs.
    [Show full text]
  • South Pacific
    THE MUSICO-DRAMATIC EVOLUTION OF RODGERS AND HAMMERSTEIN’S SOUTH PACIFIC DISSERTATION Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By James A. Lovensheimer, M.A. ***** The Ohio State University 2003 Dissertation Committee: Approved by Professor Arved Ashby, Adviser Professor Charles M. Atkinson ________________________ Adviser Professor Lois Rosow School of Music Graduate Program ABSTRACT Since its opening in 1949, Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Pulitzer Prize- winning musical South Pacific has been regarded as a masterpiece of the genre. Frequently revived, filmed for commercial release in 1958, and filmed again for television in 2000, it has reached audiences in the millions. It is based on selected stories from James A. Michener’s book, Tales of the South Pacific, also a Pulitzer Prize winner; the plots of these stories, and the musical, explore ethnic and cutural prejudice, a theme whose treatment underwent changes during the musical’s evolution. This study concerns the musico-dramatic evolution of South Pacific, a previously unexplored process revealing the collaborative interaction of two masters at the peak of their creative powers. It also demonstrates the authors’ gradual softening of the show’s social commentary. The structural changes, observable through sketches found in the papers of Rodgers and Hammerstein, show how the team developed their characterizations through musical styles, making changes that often indicate changes in characters’ psychological states; they also reveal changing approaches to the musicalization of the novel. Studying these changes provides intimate and, occasionally, unexpected insights into Rodgers and Hammerstein’s creative methods.
    [Show full text]
  • Cold War Playboys: Models of Masculinity in the Literature of Playboy
    Humanities & Communication - Daytona Beach College of Arts & Sciences 3-31-2011 Cold War Playboys: Models of Masculinity in the Literature of Playboy Taylor Joy Mitchell Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://commons.erau.edu/db-humanities Part of the Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Commons, and the Literature in English, North America Commons Scholarly Commons Citation Mitchell, T. J. (2011). Cold War Playboys: Models of Masculinity in the Literature of Playboy. , (). Retrieved from https://commons.erau.edu/db-humanities/17 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at Scholar Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Graduate Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of Scholar Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the College of Arts & Sciences at Scholarly Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Humanities & Communication - Daytona Beach by an authorized administrator of Scholarly Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. University of South Florida Scholar Commons Graduate Theses and Dissertations Graduate School 2011 Cold War Playboys: Models of Masculinity in the Literature of Playboy Taylor Joy Mitchell University of South Florida, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd Part of the American Literature Commons, and the Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Commons Scholar Commons Citation Mitchell, Taylor Joy, "Cold War Playboys: Models of Masculinity in the Literature of Playboy" (2011). Graduate Theses and Dissertations. http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/3249 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at Scholar Commons.
    [Show full text]
  • NPRC) VIP List, 2009
    Description of document: National Archives National Personnel Records Center (NPRC) VIP list, 2009 Requested date: December 2007 Released date: March 2008 Posted date: 04-January-2010 Source of document: National Personnel Records Center Military Personnel Records 9700 Page Avenue St. Louis, MO 63132-5100 Note: NPRC staff has compiled a list of prominent persons whose military records files they hold. They call this their VIP Listing. You can ask for a copy of any of these files simply by submitting a Freedom of Information Act request to the address above. The governmentattic.org web site (“the site”) is noncommercial and free to the public. The site and materials made available on the site, such as this file, are for reference only. The governmentattic.org web site and its principals have made every effort to make this information as complete and as accurate as possible, however, there may be mistakes and omissions, both typographical and in content. The governmentattic.org web site and its principals shall have neither liability nor responsibility to any person or entity with respect to any loss or damage caused, or alleged to have been caused, directly or indirectly, by the information provided on the governmentattic.org web site or in this file. The public records published on the site were obtained from government agencies using proper legal channels. Each document is identified as to the source. Any concerns about the contents of the site should be directed to the agency originating the document in question. GovernmentAttic.org is not responsible for the contents of documents published on the website.
    [Show full text]
  • IDENTITY and EMIGRATION in the WORKS of JULIA ALVAREZ, CRISTINA Garcia, ESMERALDA SANTIAGO and MARIA AMPARO ESCANDON MARTA VIZCA
    IDENTITY AND EMIGRATION IN THE WORKS OF JULIA ALVAREZ, CRISTINA GARCiA, ESMERALDA SANTIAGO AND MARIA AMPARO ESCANDON MARTA VIZCAYA ECHANO PHD THE UNIVERSITY OF YORK DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH AND RELATED LITERATURE JUNE 2004 TABLE OF CONTENTS Page Acknowledgments vi Abstract vii INTRODUCTION 1 PART I Auto/biography, Fiction and Social Concerns 22 CHAPTER 1 Life-Writing and Social Commitment 23 i Problematising Authorial Social 24 Commitment ii Different Possibilities of Life-Writing 30 iii Representing Individual and Collective 43 Identities CHAPTER 2 Questions of Genre 51 i Butterflies: Testimonial Novel And 53 Historiographic Metafiction ii Under the Shadow of Magical Realism: 64 Garcia and Escand6n PART II History, Culture and Immigration 74 CHAPTER 3 Garcia's DC and TAS: 'Is Mercy More 78 Important than Truth?' i Cultural Presences in Cuban 80 Identity ii National and Family Histories 82 iii Gender Struggles and Historical 85 (Re)Constructions iv Physical and Psychological Exiles 91 i DC: 'What Unknown Covenants 93 11 Led Ultimately to This Hour And This Solitude?' ii TAS: 'Everyone's Vision's Splintered' 97 v Garcia and the Cuban American 103 Novel CHAPTER 4 History in Alvarez's Auto/Biographical Fictions 107 i Revising Dominican History 109 i The Conquest 110 ii Trujillo's Era 112 iii After the Dictatorship 116 iv Relations With Cuba 118 vi U.S.-Dominican Relations and 120 Immigration vii "Was It for This, The Sacrifice of the 123 Butterflies?" ii Questions of Gender, Race, and Class 129 i Class Structures and Social Mobility 129 ii
    [Show full text]
  • The Courier-Gazette Saturday
    Issued Tuesday Saturday Thursday Saturday The Courier-Gazette Issue Established January, 1846. By Th. Courler-Gu.tt.„ 465 Main 8t„ Ent.r.d aa Saeand Claw Mail Mattar. Rockland, Maine, Saturday, May 9, 1925. THREE CENTS A COPY Volume 80.................Number 56. The Courier-Gazette SEAV1EW CEMETERY A PAGE FROM THE PLAINS EOWDOIN’S INSTITUTE THREE-TIM ES-A-WEEK Park Commissioner Ingra- Notable Literary Men and ham Urges Spring Clean- Herd of Texan Driven Throu8h Our City Streets (Happy Surprises. ALL THE HOME NEWS Women Taking Part In Subscription $3.00 per year payable ln ad­ ing Be Given It. To RodcvUlen-Mr. Carroll Has Plans. vance ; single copies three cents. Great Celebration. Advertising rates based upon circulation and very reasonable. A visit to Sea View Cemetery, [Special to The Courier-Gazette] NEWSPAPER HISTORY Rockland was treated Thursday af­ around apprehensively to see what Sunday, moved the writer again to pole they could climb, in a pinch. Bowdoin College's Institute of The Rockland Gazette was established ln appeal to those who own lots in that ternoon to an impromptu Wild West (Mother 1846. In 1874 the Courier was established What really happened was no more Modern Literature opened in Me- city of the dead, or have loved ones Show, when Oscar W. Carroll trans­ and consolidated with the Gazette ln 1882. exciting than what usually happens mortal Hall The Free Press was established ln 1855, and I buried there, to do what can be done Monday night when ferred a herd of 38 cattle from on a Maine farm when cows are 1 ln 1891 changed Its name to the Tribune.
    [Show full text]
  • The Omaha Community Playhouse Past Productions
    THE OMAHA COMMUNITY PLAYHOUSE PAST PRODUCTIONS 1925-26 1926-27 1927-28 The Enchanted Cottage Merton of the Movies The Potters You and I Anna Christie Secrets The Devil’s Disciple The Youngest The School for Scandal Mary the Third He Who Gets Slapped Beyond the Horizon Lilliom Lady Windermere’s Fan Seventeen The Romantic Age The Guardsman The Enemy Outward Bound R.U.R. Rip Van Winkle Captain Applejack March Hares You Never Can Tell The Swan Pygmalion 1928-29 1929-30 1930-31 Aren’t We All An Ideal Husband Cock Robin They Knew What They Wanted Ten Nights in a Bar Room Ned McCobb’s Daughter Fashion Sun-Up Behold This Dreamer Dear Brutus Escape The Criminal Code Torchbearers The Hairy Ape The Intimate Strangers Arms and the Man The Queen’s Husband Death Takes A Holiday Grumpy A Kiss for Cinderella Alice-Sit-By-the-Fire 1931-32 1932-33 1933-34 Berkeley Square The First Mrs.Fraser Both Your Houses Jealousy Elizabeth The Queen June Moon Once in a Lifetime The Devil Passes A Doll’s House What Every Woman Knows East of Suez Springtime for Henry Mister Antonio The Perfect Alibi Uncle Tom’s Cabin The Royal Family Brigham Young Counselor-at-Law The Last Mile Engaged Three Cornered Moon 1934-35 1935-36 1936-37 The Good Fairy Her Master’s Voice Libel! Dear Brutus Kind Lady The Senator’s Husband Inheritors The Return of Peter Grimm Winterset A Thing of Beauty Yellow Jack Personal Appearance Wet Paint The Far-Off Hills Pride and Prejudice One Sunday Afternoon As You Like It Night of January 16th Louder Please Macbeth (Shorter Form) Post Road 1937-38 1938-39 1939-40 Excursion Tonight at 8:30 Our Town Night Must Fall The Masque of Kings Candida High Tor George and Margaret The Roof Storm Over Patsy Street Scene Bachelor Born Stage Door Yes, My Darling Daughter The Petrified Forest Blind Alley Our American Cousin The Gondoliers 1940-41 1941-42 1942-43 Margin for Error The Male Animal Ladies in Retirement My Heart’s in the Highlands Brief Music The Women Happy Journey George Washington Slept Here Dark Tower Air Raid Green Grow the Lilacs Family Portrait Rarely Fatal Mr.
    [Show full text]
  • Male Monologues
    Men Men's Monologues As always...read the entire script before performing your monologue. Don't be a slacker! When you are ready to print, please highlight, copy, and paste into a document. If you just hit "print" every single monologue will print!!! From Published Scripts Humorous Actor's Nightmare Bebe Fenstermaker Beyond Therapy Born Yesterday Brighton Beach Bums Eat Your Heart Out Fools Drive Angry Fortinbras Hooters Jimmy Shine Nerd Odd Couple Rim of the World Say Goodnight, Gracie Warm up Guru Lone Star Greater Tuna Babes/Brides-Charlie Album Foreigner Rosencranz and Guildenstern Bedrooms Learning to Drive Elliot Loves Where Have Lightning Bugs This is How it Is Willie Wonka Goodbye People Bleacher Bums Coming Attractions Pygmalion Rumors God's Favorite #1 God's Favorite #2 Jakes Women Plaza Suite--Roy Producers Dr. Strangelove (film) You're a Good Man Charlie Brown Ferris Bueller's Day Off Saving Private Ryan (film) Dramatic 187 Biloxi Blues Cat on a hot Tin Roof Dylan Electric Roses Gingerbread Lady I Never Sang..Father Keely & Du Lost in Yonkers M Butterfly Rashoman Roosters Tangled up in Blue Waiting for Lefty Boy who ate Moon Lottery Where Have Lightning Bugs Glass Menagerie Death of a Salesman American Clock The Crucible Open Meeting Glass Menagerie All My Sons Whose Soldier Tracers--Dinky Dau Tracers--Baby San Me and Mom Usual Suspects Breakfast Club (film) Boy Meets World (TV) The Rock (film) Classic Pieces Cyrano de Bergerac Cyrano #2 Tartuffe---Orgon Tartuffe---Cleant Tartuffe---Tartuffe Merchant of Venice Clouds Hamlet Mandrake Oedipus Romeo & Juliet--Ben Romeo & Juliet--Ro White Devil Romeo & Juliet--Ty Much Ado About Nothing--Don Jon Julius Ceasar, Anthony The White Devil Stand Alone Monologues Ben Benjamin Dan David Dean Derrick Ernie Harrold It's a Dog's Life James Jerry Jim Les Martin Observations Rick Sam Soap Opera The Auditions I'm Not Dumb I Remember The Guest The Good German Girl Problems ST.
    [Show full text]
  • Web Paramount Historical Calendar 6-12-2016.Xlsx
    Paramount Historical Calendar Last Update 612-2016 Paramount Historical Calendar 1928 - Present Performance Genre Event Title Performance Performan Start Date ce End Date Instrumental - Group Selections from Faust 3/1/1928 3/7/1928 Movie Memories 3/1/1928 3/7/1928 Movie News of the Day 3/1/1928 3/7/1928 Instrumental - Group Organs We Have Played 3/1/1928 3/7/1928 Musical Play A Merry Widow Revue 3/1/1928 3/7/1928 Musical Play A Merry Widow Revue 3/1/1928 3/7/1928 Musical Play A Merry Widow Revue 3/1/1928 3/7/1928 Dance Accent & Jenesko 3/1/1928 3/7/1928 Dance Felicia Sorel Girls 3/1/1928 3/7/1928 Vocal - Group The Royal Quartette 3/1/1928 3/7/1928 Comedian Over the Laughter Hurdles 3/1/1928 3/7/1928 Vocal - Group The Merry Widow Ensemble 3/1/1928 3/7/1928 Movie Feel My Pulse 3/1/1928 3/7/1928 Instrumental - Individual Don & Ron at the grand organ 3/1/1928 3/7/1928 Movie The Big City 3/8/1928 3/14/1928 Instrumental - Individual Don & Ron at the grand organ 3/8/1928 3/14/1928 Variety Highlights 3/8/1928 3/14/1928 Comedian A Comedy Highlight 3/8/1928 3/14/1928 Vocal - Individual An Operatic Highllight 3/8/1928 3/14/1928 Variety Novelty (The Living Marionette) 3/8/1928 3/14/1928 Dance Syncopated 3/8/1928 3/14/1928 Dance Slow Motion 3/8/1928 3/14/1928 Dance Millitary Gun Drill 3/8/1928 3/14/1928 Comedian Traffic 3/8/1928 3/14/1928 Instrumental - Group novelty arrangement 3/8/1928 3/14/1928 Comedian Highlights 3/8/1928 3/14/1928 Movie West Point 3/15/1928 3/21/1928 Instrumental - Individual Don & Ron at the grand organ 3/15/1928 3/21/1928 Variety
    [Show full text]
  • Download 2010–2011 Catalogue of New Plays
    IInsidenside CCoverover SSpreadpread 11011.ai011.ai 77/27/2010/27/2010 112:00:152:00:15 PPMM Dramatists Play Service Recipient of the Obie Award for Commitment to the Publication of New Work proudly represents John Logan’s 440 Park Avenue South, New York, NY 10016 Tel. 212-683-8960 Fax 212-213-1539 [email protected] 2010 Tony Award® Winner OFFICERS Stephen Sultan, President William Craver, Vice President Mary Harden, Secretary C M Y BOARD OF DIRECTORS CM William Craver MY Peter Hagan Mary Harden CY Patrick Herold CMY Donald Margulies K Lynn Nottage Polly Pen John Patrick Shanley Stephen Sultan Representing the American theatre by publishing and licensing the works of new and established playwrights “A portrait of an angry and brilliant mind. Formed in 1936 by a number of prominent playwrights and theatre agents, Dramatists Play Service, Inc. Intense and exciting.” was created to foster opportunity and provide support for playwrights by publishing acting editions of their plays and handling the nonprofessional and professional leasing rights to these works. —The New York Times Catalogue of New Plays 2010–2011 © 2010 Dramatists Play Service, Inc. Dramatists Play Service, Inc. A Letter from the President Fall 2010 Dear Subscriber, This year we are pleased to add 59 new works to our Catalogue. Among them are John Logan’s superlative Tony Award–winning RED; Geoffrey Naufft’s Tony Award–nominated gem, NEXT FALL; Horton Foote’s three-part masterpiece, THE ORPHANS’ HOME CYCLE; Martin McDonagh’s first play set in America, A BEHANDING IN SPOKANE; and Tectonic Theater Project’s follow-up on the story of Matthew Shepard, THE LARAMIE PROJECT: TEN YEARS LATER.
    [Show full text]
  • Motion Picture Lobby Cards, 1913-1999
    http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt700021m7 No online items Motion Picture Lobby Cards, 1913-1999 Finding aid prepared by UCLA Library Special Collections Staff; machine-readable finding aid created by Caroline Cubé. UCLA Library Special Collections Room A1713, Charles E. Young Research Library Box 951575 Los Angeles, CA, 90095-1575 (310) 825-4988 [email protected] © 2004 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. Motion Picture Lobby Cards, PASC 65 1 1913-1999 Title: Motion picture lobby cards Collection number: PASC 65 Contributing Institution: UCLA Library Special Collections Language of Material: English Physical Description: 55.5 linear ft.(111 boxes) Date (inclusive): 1913-1999 Abstract: The collection consists of primarily of American motion picture lobby cards dating from 1913 to ca 1980s. Language of Materials: Materials are in English. Physical Location: Stored off-site at SRLF. Advance notice is required for access to the collection. Please contact the UCLA Library Special Collections Reference Desk for paging information. Restrictions on Access COLLECTION STORED OFF-SITE AT SRLF: Open for research. Advance notice required for access. Contact the UCLA Library Special Collections Reference Desk for paging information. Restrictions on Use and Reproduction Property rights to the physical object belong to the UC Regents. Literary rights, including copyright, are retained by the creators and their heirs. It is the responsibility of the researcher to determine who holds the copyright and pursue the copyright owner or his or her heir for permission to publish where The UC Regents do not hold the copyright. Preferred Citation [Identification of item], Motion Picture Lobby Cards (Collection PASC 65).
    [Show full text]
  • Identifying Classic Films by the TV Numbers Data of a Survey Spanning 2018-2020
    Identifying Classic Films by the TV Numbers Data of a Survey Spanning 2018-2020 Each entry below consists of the name of a film, the year of its release, an abbreviation of the network(s) that presented it, and the number of its overall presentations. Networks and their respective abbreviations are: American Movie Classics (AMC) Paramount Television Network (PARA) BBC America (BBCA) Showtime (SHOW) FREE (FREE) STARZ (STARZ) FX Movie Channel (FXM) SYFY (SYFY) Home Box Office (HBO) Turner Broadcasting System (TBS) IFC (IFC) THIS TV (THIS) MOVIES! TV Network (MOVIES) TNT (TNT) Ovation TV (OVA) Turner Classic Movies (TCM) 1989 150 Films 4,958 Presentations 33,1 Average A Deadly Silence (1989) MOVIES 1 A Dry White Season (1989) TCM 4 A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child (1989) SYFY 7 All Dogs Go to Heaven (1989) THIS 7 Always (1989) STARZ 69 American Ninja 3: Blood Hunt (1989) STARZ 2 An Innocent Man (1989) HBO 5 Back to the Future Part II (1989) MAX/STARZ/SHOW/SYFY 272 Batman (1989) SYFY/TNT/AMC/IFC 24 Best of the Best (1989) STARZ 16 Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure (1989) STARZ 140 Black Rain (1989) SHOW/MOVIES/MAX 85 Blind Fury (1989) THIS 15 1 [email protected] Born on the Fourth of July (1989) MAX/BBCA/OVA/STARZ/HBO 201 Breaking In (1989) THIS 5 Brewster’s Millions (1989) STARZ 2 Bridge to Silence (1989) THIS 9 Cabin Fever (1989) MAX 2 Casualties of War (1989) SHOW 3 Chances Are (1989) MOVIES 9 Chattahoochi (1989) THIS 9 Cheetah (1989) TCM 1 Cinema Paradise (1989) MAX 3 Coal Miner’s Daughter (1989) STARZ 1 Collision
    [Show full text]