Masked Bandit Slam 93 Waranoke Rd.; Mra

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Masked Bandit Slam 93 Waranoke Rd.; Mra 1 - ■ ”* FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 19W ■ .Hlfi WMthfiT. fc- PAi^E *TWENTf jianrlffat^ r lEvralttg If^raUi Avfingw Dfiflp N ft PrtM Rob r*raeastot.U.'to.W«fi(lii>J9Mi] ^ For to* Woek Baled OcL 6, lii* C9saiy'tepigw; tosao*' *t *e a ^ '' ■M ■'-iy man, will present program pleas terad sto'wira>.'tolW. Le^ 'a M % ’ TM SiaUcbood ot Members of the Polish American ton PTA for tiM,year. RefrtaiBWits wiU bo Sholom will iqKjnsor a u b wlU meet Sunday at 1 p.m. at serired by Mrs. Peul-Whits and Imt 13,235 utTown themum Ball at the ----------------- the clubhouse, 106 Clinton SL diennmittes. warm. High mot 18. \ < ballroom In Hartford tomorrow at Sets Open House Msrab(w St tow A |A t Rev. Robert ShUnbde,' p u - 9.p.m. Emmett J. Leahy, president of a Bnnaa of Ofaton^^ MmiduMisr^A CU^of 'VUlagsChmm tbe TWoottvlUe Oongwia- management consultant Arm in oshington .School PTA will Caiurch. wUl be in cherne The EdlUi Cowles Strickland New York aty, wUI be guest hold its annual open bouse Tues­ ATLANZIO. (Olasalfled Adverttshig so Pago 9> ICE FIVE C E N T ! io br6«4c**ta over WINF Ofeup of the Women’s Fellowship speaker at a technical session of day beginning at 7 p.m., with a ♦ ♦ t ♦ (TWELVE PAGES--TV' SECTION) MANCHESTER, CpNN., SATURDAY, OCTOBER 15, IWO at <:S0 p.nu and daily at Second Congregational Church the Hartford Chapter of the Na­ registration ot new iffembers and FURNACE OIL VOL. L X X X , N a 18 !k at 7:16 pjn. Hie broad- will apcnsor a harvest supper at tional Association of Cost Account­ tour of the ochool building. Antonmtle DoBvory are n>onaored by the Man- the church Oct. 21 at 6 p.m. Re- ants Tuesday at 6 p.m. at .the . Pareiita may visit the class­ L T. WOOD CO. chM< MlniaterJal Aaan. aervationa ttMf be made with Mrs. Indian Hill Country Club In New­ rooms « children in Grades 1, 3 Phone MI 9-1129 into a Recession? Samuel. Pierson, 37 Arvine PI., or ington. and 6 apd morning’ kindergarten I StaieNews Women o*.St Mary’s Episcopal Mrs. Samuel Hendeiaon, 206 Wood­ from 7:15\to 7:30 p.m., and O^des Church will hold_a rummage eale 2, 4 and G, and afternoon kinder­ 2 Divers land St. -The Anderson Shea Auxillaty, next Thursday at 0:30 aim. in Neill VFW, will sponsor a card party garten from 7:36 to 7:60 p.m. Pro- hall at the church. For piokup of V* S t Mary's Episcopal Guild w ilf tonight at 7:30 at the VFW Home. grapu will be presented in the un articles, call Mrs. Ludwig Hansen, classrooms. Masked Bandit Slam 93 Waranoke Rd.; Mra. Emma sponsor a military wjilst tn Neiil The business ..in eeting will start O d N 't hall at the church Monday at 8 Sunset Rebekah Lodge will, meet S tffl.p io ty o f Wear left la Brown. 60 Spruce St., and Mrs, Monday a t,8 p.m. at Odd Fellows, 'iri 8 o’clock iff the school cafe- Wffllam Bryce, 173 Irving St. p.m. Refreshments will be served. sheba when b m glrt here for | hall. Mrs. John McAllister, vice t e ^ . Mrs. Joseph SWAnsspn, presi­ expert repislrlag. FBI Arrests grand', will officiate a t' an obliga­ dent. and members of the PTA The little Flower of Jesus A penny auction will be held by exeimtive committee, will Join in' Open Mondays AU Day tion ceremony. Mrs. Edith Smith ^osed Wednesday Mothers Circle will meet at the the Ladies of St. James on Mon­ welcc^lng the teachers and paf- h o u irsn d hots has Ti^surer of day at 8 p.m: at S t James’ School and her'. committee will- be in . Afternooaa home of Mrs. James Coughlin, 40 •epts. \ - By STEBUNG F. GREEN *ment, was little help to too read- hail. charge of refreshments. •OYS* CreditUnion Clyde Rd., tonight at 8 o’clock. 'Walterv Roth, prin^pal, will in­ Portland, Oct. 16 <IP)— The tvS itogton . Oct. 15 (AT - The e n of the economic omens. Mrs. Edward Moriarty will be co- Heads D ot I troduce the sU ^, inriuding live SA M YULYES Yesterday’s Commerce Depart­ MUS Jane Hald, daughter of Mr. CORDUROY V. bodies pf two youpg skin flUDStion v^iDthRr th* iiKtion li X hostess. North Methodlat Church WSCS Mrs. Joseph Tonskl, 596 Tblland new members of the fatuUy. They ’ "SHOE REPAIRING moving inti a business recession ment report on total personal in­ Hartford, Oct. 1' -A and- Mrs. Charles Hald, 273 Hilli­ are Frederick Fredette, Mrs. Alvin ..SLACKS.. will sponsor a rummage sale ard St., recently was installed as a Tpke., was reeletced regent of St. op THE BBnnBR RIND” divers have been given up by sharpened today following an­ come showed it virtually un­ Arthur Gisselbrecht, 41 Polish National Alliance, Group Albright, Mra\, Horace ,\Bcriiton, Wednesday, beginning at 9;30 member of the Connecticut State m rgaret’s .CSrcIe, Daughters of 39 OAK STREET a water-fill«i quarry, ending a nouncement that' the' output ■ of changed in .September from.,Au­ No. 1988, will meet tomorrow at Mrs. Michael G^telll, ahd Mrs. rington Republican t o a.m. at the churchy Luther League executive commit­ Isabella, at a recent meeting at Same Side as WatUna V» t o KM! 12-day searcb.x mines, mills and. utilities dipped to gust; wages' and salaries had 7 pm, at 77 North St. Gordon Lunsford.\ dropped but this was slightly more chaiinnan, faces trial P olice Say tee. She was appointed as missions KofC home. Roy Johnson, ^gram chair­ The father of Robert ()uinn, 20, a 1960 low in September. The Rev. and Mrs. C. Henrv sedretsry. Miss Hald is a sopho­ Mrs. MUdred Lynch of Water- The Federal Reserve Board re­ than offset by a rise In unemploy­ c larges, he made false entries Anderson; 167 Pitkin St., will S to 12.- wathabla New Haven, one of the victlnia, was more at Manchester High School, bury, state regent, will install new preient yesterday as his lo|^8 ported that its Index o f industrial ment pay, veterans’ benefits and l otaling $40,000 in the books again observe open house at the T officers at A<buffet supper and cere­ hockmayar solid body was brought up in a wlio production moved dIown in Sep­ other social insurance payments. ' a efedit union. yictim N ot YYHITH FOR parsoilage Sunday 'from 3 to 7 mony Oct. 26 at 7 p.m. at the KofC basket from a vertical abaft north tember to 107’per cent of the 1957 The Federal Reserve Board re­ p.m. for members of the congre­ The Young People’s Society of coTor corduroy ivy The Federal Bureau of Investiga­ Home.' • avringe, a drop of, four points port yesterday drew no conclu­ gation ..-bf Emanuel Lutheran Zion Evangelical Lutheran Church of the main quirry. \ • tion, which arrested Gisselbrecht will attend the Hartford Zone fall Others' reeletced were Mrs; Ed­ laogua sfyla, 3.99. The other victim waa David frornxJanuary’s peak of 111 per sions. It began: yesterday, said he waa treasurer of Church^ They will be assisted by Start Your )Cmas Ceramics Now! “ Industrial production declined KENNEDY M ^ N G rally of the Walther League at St. ward Cavagharo, vice regent; Mrs. wovan chock cordu­ Church. 17, Branford. cent. Ih August, the hoard further toe Employes Credit Union at toe I d e n tifie d Mr. and Mrs. Durward Miller, Mr. James Lemon, ffnanclal secretary; ■ The boys were reported missing further In September, while con­ Torrington Division of the Ana­ and Mrs. C. Gerard DlManno, Mr. Mathew’s Lutheran Church, New disclosed, toe index sagged two OHlzeiis For Kennedy Mrs. Harry Magnuson, treasui'er; roy in anolish bait- by a companion with whom th ^ points instead Of one- as previously struction activity increased. Total conda’ American Brass' Co. Headquarters and Mrs. William U Luettgens, Britain, Sunday, beginning at 2 employment and personal income Stamford, Oct. 15 (ffV -A p.m. Mrs. Albert Sobleic, recording sec­ loss modal 5.99 bad gone akin diving Oct. 2. estimated. Gisselbrecht’a arrest was or­ 991 Main Street Mr. and Mrs. Harold McIntosh. CAMDOT CERAMICS STUDIO chdnged little and sales at retail dered by U.S. Attorney Harjy W. masked intruder was sluit Mr. and Mrs. Ernest W. Johnson, retary; Mrs. Wilfred Letnlrc, T h e bodies were found on a rock A possibility o f further decline Information MI S-018I chancellor; Mrs. Joseph Lovett, RT. 80, VERNON, OONN./NEAB VERNON CIRCLE otiva. charcoal, ledge, about 1000 feet below grand in October was siiggested by the stores declined. Bank credits, both Hultgren Jr. after an audit of .toe dead early today when he de­ Tenigllt—October 14, 1960 and Mr. and Mrs. Hugo Pearson. ^ The Ladies’ Aid of Zion' Evan­ loaiu and Investments, ipereaaed gelica l Lutheran Church will at­ monitor: Mra. Bose Schwoerer, cadot sizes, surface. Qne of the youths was fact that steel mill operations, an credit uniem’a books. He waa ar­ manded money at knife-point 7t80 P.M. o n d a y raigned before U.S. Commissioner tend the Upper Connecticut Val­ custodian; and Mrs, Jules Fllllere, OPEN M , TUE»AY, WEDNESDAY. clutching a 2-cell underwater light. economic bellwether, have failed substantially.” in the home of a New York Arlene Connor, Chairman Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Adams 4.99 to 5.99 State Police Captain Robert George C.
Recommended publications
  • Torrance Press
    Page A-4 THE PRESS Sunday, January 7, TELEVISION LOG FOR THE WEEK SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY JANUARY 7 JANUARY 8 JANUARY 9 , JANUARY 12 JANUARY 13 12:00 ( 7) 770 on TV 12:00 ( 2) Burns and Alien 12.0012:00 ( 2) Burns and Alien ( 4) Jan Murray (C) 12:00 ( 2) Burns and Alien 2:00 ( 2) Sky King . ( 9) Movie 1 4) Jan Murray (C) ( 4) Jan Murray (11) Movie ( 7) Camouflage ( 5) Cartoons ( 4) NBA Basketball ( 5) Cartoons ( 5) Cartoons ( 7) The Texans (13) Oral Roberts 7) Camouflage ( 7) Camouflage ( 9) Hi Noon / 9) Hi Noon ( 9) Movie 12:30 ( 2) Washington (11) Sheriff John (11) Sheriff John (11) Movie (11)( Sheriff John (13) Midday Report Conversation ((13) Midday Re. ort 12:30 ( 2) My Friend Flicki ( 5) C>mmerciaJ Feature 12:30 ( 2) As World Turns 12:30 < 2) As World Turns ( 5) Movie ( 7) All-Star Football ( 4) Loretta Young 12:30 ( 2) As World Turns ( 4) Loretta Young ( 7) Movies (13) Bible News ( 5) Continental * 4) Loretta Young ( 5) Continental (13) Robin Hood ( 7) Make a Face 5) Continental ( 7) Take a Face 1:00 (2) Look and Listen 1:00 (2) Movie < 7) Make a Face (13) Christmas in Many "The Ambassador'* 1:00 ( 2) Password (13) Assignment (11) Movie Daughter" Olivia a* Hav ( Lands Illand ( 4) Dr. Malone Education (13) Bowling ( 5) News-Movie 1:00 (2) Password 1:30 ( 2) Robert Trout News ( 5) Movie "1 Was An Adventuress' 1:00 ( 2) Password < 4) Young Dr. Malone "They Came To Slow Up iorlna 4) Young Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • Glorious Technicolor: from George Eastman House and Beyond Screening Schedule June 5–August 5, 2015 Friday, June 5 4:30 the G
    Glorious Technicolor: From George Eastman House and Beyond Screening Schedule June 5–August 5, 2015 Friday, June 5 4:30 The Garden of Allah. 1936. USA. Directed by Richard Boleslawski. Screenplay by W.P. Lipscomb, Lynn Riggs, based on the novel by Robert Hichens. With Marlene Dietrich, Charles Boyer, Basil Rathbone, Joseph Schildkraut. 35mm restoration by The Museum of Modern Art, with support from the Celeste Bartos Fund for Film Preservation; courtesy The Walt Disney Studios. 75 min. La Cucaracha. 1934. Directed by Lloyd Corrigan. With Steffi Duna, Don Alvarado, Paul Porcasi, Eduardo Durant’s Rhumba Band. Courtesy George Eastman House (35mm dye-transfer print on June 5); and UCLA Film & Television Archive (restored 35mm print on July 21). 20 min. [John Barrymore Technicolor Test for Hamlet]. 1933. USA. Pioneer Pictures. 35mm print from The Museum of Modern Art. 5 min. 7:00 The Wizard of Oz. 1939. USA. Directed by Victor Fleming. Screenplay by Noel Langley, Florence Ryerson, Edgar Allan Woolf, based on the book by L. Frank Baum. Music by Harold Arlen, E.Y. Harburg. With Judy Garland, Frank Morgan, Ray Bolger, Bert Lahr, Ray Bolger, Margaret Hamilton, Billie Burke. 35mm print from George Eastman House; courtesy Warner Bros. 102 min. Saturday, June 6 2:30 THE DAWN OF TECHNICOLOR: THE SILENT ERA *Special Guest Appearances: James Layton and David Pierce, authors of The Dawn of Technicolor, 1915-1935 (George Eastman House, 2015). James Layton and David Pierce illustrate Technicolor’s origins during the silent film era. Before Technicolor achieved success in the 1930s, the company had to overcome countless technical challenges and persuade cost-conscious producers that color was worth the extra effort and expense.
    [Show full text]
  • 2016 Film Writings by Roderick Heath @ Ferdy on Films
    2016 Film Writings by Roderick Heath @ Ferdy On Films © Text by Roderick Heath. All rights reserved. Contents: Page Man in the Wilderness (1971) / The Revenant (2015) 2 Titanic (1997) 12 Blowup (1966) 24 The Big Trail (1930) 36 The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975) 49 Dead Presidents (1995) 60 Knight of Cups (2015) 68 Yellow Submarine (1968) 77 Point Blank (1967) 88 Think Fast, Mr. Moto / Thank You, Mr. Moto (1937) 98 Push (2009) 112 Hercules in the Centre of the Earth (Ercole al Centro della Terra, 1961) 122 Airport (1970) / Airport 1975 (1974) / Airport ’77 (1977) / The Concorde… Airport ’79 (1979) 130 High-Rise (2015) 143 Jurassic Park (1993) 153 The Time Machine (1960) 163 Zardoz (1974) 174 The War of the Worlds (1953) 184 A Trip to the Moon (Voyage dans la lune, 1902) 201 2046 (2004) 216 Bride of Frankenstein (1935) 226 Alien (1979) 241 Solaris (Solyaris, 1972) 252 Metropolis (1926) 263 Fährmann Maria (1936) / Strangler of the Swamp (1946) 281 Viy (1967) 296 Night of the Living Dead (1968) 306 Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them (2016) 320 Neruda / Jackie (2016) 328 Rogue One (2016) 339 Man in the Wilderness (1971) / The Revenant (2015) Directors: Richard C. Sarafian / Alejandro Gonzalez Iñárritu By Roderick Heath The story of Hugh Glass contains the essence of American frontier mythology—the cruelty of nature met with the indomitable grit and resolve of the frontiersman. It‘s the sort of story breathlessly reported in pulp novellas and pseudohistories, and more recently, of course, movies. Glass, born in Pennsylvania in 1780, found his place in legend as a member of a fur-trading expedition led by General William Henry Ashley, setting out in 1822 with a force of about a hundred men, including other figures that would become vital in pioneering annals, like Jim Bridger, Jedediah Smith, and John Fitzgerald.
    [Show full text]
  • September 2016
    ZEUGHAUSKINO PROGRAMM Zeughauskino Deutsches Historisches Museum Unter den Linden 2 Juli – September 10117 Berlin T +49 30 20304-421 (Büro) 2016 T +49 30 20304-770 (Kinokasse) F +49 30 20304-424 → Douglas Sirk [email protected] → Tausend Takte Übermut www.zeughauskino.de → Slowakische Neue Welle INHALT VORWORT 1 Höhepunkte 2 Von Detlef Sierck zu Douglas Sirk Filmreihen Written on the Wind All I Desire Die Filme von Douglas Sirk 4 Aus dem Fernseharchiv 40 Berlin.Dokument 44 DEFA-Sportfilm 48 FilmDokument 52 Lachende Erben: Tausend Takte Übermut 54 Slowakische Neue Welle 60 Seit seiner Eröffnung im Jahr 1992 interessiert sich das Zeughauskino für das deutsche Exilkino. Neben kleinere Reihen, die ausgewählte S wie Sonderprogramm 68 Filme deutscher Emigranten vorstellten, sind im Laufe der Jahre um- fangreiche Retrospektiven getreten: mehrmonatige Programme, Wiederentdeckt 72 die es gestatteten, Gesamtwerke in ihren vielfältigen Schichtungen und Wendungen wahrzunehmen. Die Œuvres von Max und Marcel Aktuelle Ausstellungen Ophüls, von Fritz Lang und Robert Siodmak wurden auf diese Weise vorgestellt. Am 8. Juli startet mit einer Douglas-Sirk-Retrospektive Sonderausstellungen im Deutschen Historischen Museum 77 eine weitere Filmreihe in dieser Programmtradition. Douglas Sirk gehört zu den zentralen Filmregisseuren der Nachkriegs- Kalender zeit. Unter den deutschen Filmschaffenden, die in den Jahren vor dem Zweiten Weltkrieg in die USA auswanderten, nimmt er eine Son- Alle Termine im Überblick 78 derstellung ein, denn die Filmkarriere des gebürtigen Hamburgers begann erst im „Dritten Reich“, nachdem er 1934 – unter seinem Geburtsnamen Detlef Sierck – einen Vertrag bei der Ufa unterschrie- Filmwerkstatt ben hatte. Ein Großteil seines Werks entstand jedoch in den 1940er Angebote für Schulklassen 84 und 1950er Jahren im amerikanischen Exil.
    [Show full text]
  • Films and Videos on Tibet
    FILMS AND VIDEOS ON TIBET Last updated: 15 July 2012 This list is maintained by A. Tom Grunfeld ( [email protected] ). It was begun many years ago (in the early 1990s?) by Sonam Dargyay and others have contributed since. I welcome - and encourage - any contributions of ideas, suggestions for changes, corrections and, of course, additions. All the information I have available to me is on this list so please do not ask if I have any additional information because I don't. I have seen only a few of the films on this list and, therefore, cannot vouch for everything that is said about them. Whenever possible I have listed the source of the information. I will update this list as I receive additional information so checking it periodically would be prudent. This list has no copyright; I gladly share it with whomever wants to use it. I would appreciate, however, an acknowledgment when the list, or any part, of it is used. The following represents a resource list of films and videos on Tibet. For more information about acquiring these films, contact the distributors directly. Office of Tibet, 241 E. 32nd Street, New York, NY 10016 (212-213-5010) Wisdom Films (Wisdom Publications no longer sells these films. If anyone knows the address of the company that now sells these films, or how to get in touch with them, I would appreciate it if you could let me know. Many, but not all, of their films are sold by Meridian Trust.) Meridian Trust, 330 Harrow Road, London W9 2HP (01-289-5443)http://www.meridian-trust/.org Mystic Fire Videos, P.O.
    [Show full text]
  • SHSU Video Archive Basic Inventory List Department of Library Science
    SHSU Video Archive Basic Inventory List Department of Library Science A & E: The Songmakers Collection, Volume One – Hitmakers: The Teens Who Stole Pop Music. c2001. A & E: The Songmakers Collection, Volume One – Dionne Warwick: Don’t Make Me Over. c2001. A & E: The Songmakers Collection, Volume Two – Bobby Darin. c2001. A & E: The Songmakers Collection, Volume Two – [1] Leiber & Stoller; [2] Burt Bacharach. c2001. A & E Top 10. Show #109 – Fads, with commercial blacks. Broadcast 11/18/99. (Weller Grossman Productions) A & E, USA, Channel 13-Houston Segments. Sally Cruikshank cartoon, Jukeboxes, Popular Culture Collection – Jesse Jones Library Abbott & Costello In Hollywood. c1945. ABC News Nightline: John Lennon Murdered; Tuesday, December 9, 1980. (MPI Home Video) ABC News Nightline: Porn Rock; September 14, 1985. Interview with Frank Zappa and Donny Osmond. Abe Lincoln In Illinois. 1939. Raymond Massey, Gene Lockhart, Ruth Gordon. John Ford, director. (Nostalgia Merchant) The Abominable Dr. Phibes. 1971. Vincent Price, Joseph Cotton. Above The Rim. 1994. Duane Martin, Tupac Shakur, Leon. (New Line) Abraham Lincoln. 1930. Walter Huston, Una Merkel. D.W. Griffith, director. (KVC Entertaiment) Absolute Power. 1996. Clint Eastwood, Gene Hackman, Laura Linney. (Castle Rock Entertainment) The Abyss, Part 1 [Wide Screen Edition]. 1989. Ed Harris. (20th Century Fox) The Abyss, Part 2 [Wide Screen Edition]. 1989. Ed Harris. (20th Century Fox) The Abyss. 1989. (20th Century Fox) Includes: [1] documentary; [2] scripts. The Abyss. 1989. (20th Century Fox) Includes: scripts; special materials. The Abyss. 1989. (20th Century Fox) Includes: special features – I. The Abyss. 1989. (20th Century Fox) Includes: special features – II. Academy Award Winners: Animated Short Films.
    [Show full text]
  • Mccarthyism and the Id: "Forbidden Planet" (1956) As a Veiled Criticism of Mccarthyism in 1950S America
    City University of New York (CUNY) CUNY Academic Works All Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects 6-2016 McCarthyism and the Id: "Forbidden Planet" (1956) as a Veiled Criticism of McCarthyism in 1950s America William Lorenzo Graduate Center, City University of New York How does access to this work benefit ou?y Let us know! More information about this work at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu/gc_etds/1358 Discover additional works at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu This work is made publicly available by the City University of New York (CUNY). Contact: [email protected] McCarthyism and the Id: Forbidden Planet as a Veiled Criticism of McCarthyism in 1950s America by William Lorenzo A Master’s thesis submitted to the Graduate Faculty in Liberal Studies in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts, The City University of New York 2016 © 2016 WILLIAM LORENZO All Rights Reserved ii McCarthyism and the Id: Forbidden Planet as a Veiled Criticism of McCarthyism in 1950s America by William Lorenzo This manuscript has been read and accepted for the Graduate Faculty in Liberal Studies in satisfaction of the thesis requirement for the degree of Master of Arts. ____________________ ________________________________________________ Date Robert Singer Thesis Advisor ____________________ ________________________________________________ Date Matthew K. Gold Executive Officer THE CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK iii Abstract McCarthyism and the Id: Forbidden Planet as a Veiled Criticism of McCarthyism in 1950s America by William Lorenzo Advisor: Robert Singer Many American science fiction films of the 1950s served as political allegories commenting on the post-war fears of the nation.
    [Show full text]
  • CSUSB Scholarworks May 12 1967
    California State University, San Bernardino CSUSB ScholarWorks Friday Bulletin Arthur E. Nelson University Archives 5-12-1967 May 12 1967 Friday Bulletin Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.lib.csusb.edu/fridaybulletin Recommended Citation Friday Bulletin, "May 12 1967" (1967). Friday Bulletin. 53. https://scholarworks.lib.csusb.edu/fridaybulletin/53 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Arthur E. Nelson University Archives at CSUSB ScholarWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in Friday Bulletin by an authorized administrator of CSUSB ScholarWorks. For more information, please contact [email protected]. CALIFORNIA STATE COLLEOE AT SAN BERNARDINO May 12, 1967 The BULLETIN CONTRACT SIGNED FOR GYMNASIUM After many delays, including the withdrawal of the first "low bid," a contract in the amount of $1,115,000 has been awarcjed to Coast State Build- jers of Long Beach for the Gymnasium and Swimming Pool for our campuso ADMINISTRATIVE CHANGES President Pfau has announced with regret the resignation of Dr, Peter Marcy from his administrative duties» This includes the position of Direc­ tor of Summer Session as well as Associate Dean for Academic Administration. \ln speaking of his decision. Dr. Maroy said, "I am extremely happy to have (had the opportunity to find out whether I might like administrative work. 'After a year's performance as Associate Dean of Academic Administration, I have decided that I much prefer the classroom and research. I would like to add, however, my personal thanks to everyone who has helped me during this year. " President Pfau has also announced that Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • Reflections-24
    Reflections The Magazine of the C S FORESTER SOCIETY ISSN 2042-1389 Number 24 – March 2013 http://csforester.eu AGM + Book-of-the-Year: The Ship (articles by John Roberts and Arnold Romberg), The Paid Piper (Lawrie Brewer), Hornblower in the Baltic (Rolf Ahlström) and two more Hornblower movie stars PRELIMINARY PROGRAMME: • Welcome buffet dinner on Friday evening • Guided tour of the Château with re-enactments and reading from Flying Colours • Panoramic view and walk along the river Loire, to include part of Captain Hornblower, Lieutenant Bush and Coxswain Brown’s escape route • Formal matters of AGM (activities, publications, finance, membership, election of officers) on Saturday morning • Presentation and discussions of historical and geographical aspects in Flying Colours and Lord Hornblower • Movie fragments of the full escape route of Hornblower, Bush and Brown • Presentation based on our Book of The Year, ‘The Ship’ • Society plan, and future activities • Our traditional (French Style?) Castle Pie dinner on Saturday evening • City walk in Nevers. From the bridge, imagine a flooding river on a cold night, trying to escape with the wind shrieking overhead. God help sailors on a night like this….. More details and hotel info on http://csforester.eu Next column is from Navy News March 2011, p.35 introducing this year’s Book of the Year The Ship (thank you Mike Bee of HMS PENELOPE Association) March 2013 Reflections 24 2 The Context of The Ship The Second Battle of Sirte (21st – 23rd March 1942) John Roberts I am well aware of the Gulf of Sirte. Very early on the assumed it would be a swashbuckling adventure of the morning of Wednesday 19th of August 1981 my thoughts modern Royal Navy after the style of Hornblower.
    [Show full text]
  • Collection of Scripts and Production Material for the Television Series NBC Matinee Theater
    http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt4v19q4jz No online items Finding Aid of the Collection of Scripts and Production Material for the Television Series NBC Matinee Theater Processed by Manuscripts Division staff © 2004 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. 1038 1 Finding Aid of the Collection of Scripts and Production Material for the Television Series NBC Matinee Theater UCLA Library, Department of Special Collections Manuscripts Division Los Angeles, CA Processed by: Manuscripts Division staff Encoded by: ByteManagers using OAC finding aid conversion service specifications Edited by: Josh Fiala, July 2004 © 2003 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. Descriptive Summary Title: Collection of Scripts and Production Material for the Television Series NBC Matinee Theater, Date (inclusive): 1955-1958 Collection number: 1038 Extent: 20 boxes (10 linear ft.) Repository: University of California, Los Angeles. Library. Department of Special Collections. Los Angeles, California 90095-1575 Abstract: Matinee theater (October 1955-June 1958) was hosted by John Conte. The series featured some 7,000 actors in approximately 650 productions and was produced by Albert McCleery. The collection consists of scripts and production material for numerous episodes of the series NBC Matinee Theater. Physical location: Stored off-site at SRLF. Advance notice is required for access to the collection. Please contact the UCLA Library, Department of Special Collections Reference Desk for paging information. Language: English. Restrictions on Access COLLECTION STORED OFF-SITE AT SRLF: Advance notice required for access. Restrictions on Use and Reproduction Property rights to the physical object belong to the UCLA Library, Department of Special Collections.
    [Show full text]
  • Stinson Movies
    Stinson Model 108 Voyager Movie and Television Credits By Larry Westin - August 26, 1996 Rev 29 - 12/04/14 - Page 1 of 9 The Stinson model 108 airplane has appeared in the following movies I know about. Note list now includes some movies and television shows with other type light Stinson airplanes such as the L-5 Sentinel. *************************************************************************************************** Possible use of N4111C in the movies? Tony Roca provides this information. Any help you can provide is very much appreciated. Hi Larry, I own 108-3 N4111C, serial number 108-5111. I was looking at the movie lists on your site and wanted to add the following: 4111C was owned by Frank Tallman of Talmanz aviation and by Daryl Zanuck of 20th Century Fox for a brief time in 1964. The FAA records show this. I also have all the old paperwork with 337’s showing drawings of how a motion picture camera (yes, the old two reel type) was mounted on the nose of the aircraft and from the way the drawings look to me, it may have been pointing into the cockpit. Anyway, I have been trying to find out how it was used for some time and the answer may be in the old Fox archives now in the Motion Picture History Archives in LA, as Fox had a big fire some years ago and the current Fox didn’t keep any of the old records, but gave them all to the archives. More questions than answers, but she was definitely going to be fitted for some filming at one time and was owned by the right guys to do so! If you ever get any hints of what 4111C may have been doing in ’64, please let me know.
    [Show full text]
  • Leslie Sheldon
    Page 67 ‘The Great Disillusionment’: H.G. Wells, Mankind, and Aliens in American Invasion Horror Films of the 1950s Leslie Sheldon H.G. Well’s 1898 novel The War of The Worlds (published initially in 1897 as a series of installments in Pearson’s Magazine ) establishes many of the key thematic conventions and entertaining plot details evinced in ‘alien invasion horror’ cinema of the two subsequent centuries, most especially in American science fiction films of the 1950s. Aliens as vampires from a dying planet, as violent parasites, as rampaging machines, as brains­without­hearts using high­tech heat rays on their human victims, originated in Wells’ seminal work; the deeper levels of social criticism found in the novel also making their way into such films. Though it is doubtless true that mid­century Hollywood alien invasion films frequently reflected Cold War paranoia towards either ‘Red Scare’ fears of Soviet invasion on the one hand, or of McCarthy­era “creeping conformity” (1) on the other, these films (and even some of those of today) are also culturally centered within the original literary mythopoeia of Wells’ milestone science fiction ‘blueprint’. As the Hollywood producer George Pal noted of the 50s, “ War of the Worlds had become especially timely”. (2) For the purposes of this discussion, it is accepted that films such as The Thing from Another World (Dir: Christian Nyby, 1951), The Day the Earth Stood Still (Dir: Robert Wise, 1951), This Island Earth (Dir: Joseph M. Newman, 1955), Invasion of the Body Snatchers (Dir: Don Siegel, 1956), The Monolith Monsters (Dir: John Sherwood, 1957), to cite some of the examples considered, are not auteurist artifacts.
    [Show full text]