The Daily Egyptian, October 30, 1964
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For a Hero—The Silver Star Jury Tomorrow in the Cemetery Police Laboratory, in Trenton
Weather Dfctrilmtfc* 7 •jn, te«p#r*tu/» ». OrMr May wtt* Wchin the Mi. Clttr THEDAILY *and ood tonight with few in «s. 24,800 Tomorrow suitny and cool with 7 /ted Ban*; Area J high to the 50s. Wednesday fair •ad continued cool. NORTHERN MONMOUTH'S HOME NEWSPAPER DIAL 7414)010 dtli#. M«»|U» throo«h #rtd>r. l*ooa<l Cim Poiugt VOL. 87, NO. 81 Paid at AJdlifi andat AdijUooal Uallln( OUIcei. MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1964 7c PER COPY PAGE ONE Cemetery Case Goes Middletown Woman's Husband Killed in Viet Nam Before Grand Jury HOLMDEL — Mrs. Conrad A group of citizens found five Hess, South Laurel Ave., and human bones *- more than 100 Mrs. Marion Norton, Main St., years old in a mound of dirt both informed The Register that next to the excavation. The iden- they will appear before the Grand tification was made by the state For a Hero—The Silver Star Jury tomorrow in the cemetery police laboratory, in Trenton. case. Both Mrs. Hess and Mrs. Nor- WEST POINT, N. Y.—Mrs. Harriet L. Hines,- encouraged them to pursue their efforts in the At the decorations' ceremony here, another Both said they had received ton claim that they have fore- 186 Cherry Tree La., Middletown, N. J., has re- defense of their homeland." fallen hero, the late Capt. James P. Spruill, Suffern, mbpoenas to appear before the bears buried In the old ceme- jury. tery. ceived, with pride, though in grief, the Silver Star A Daily Register editorial April 28, noted N. Y., was honored with the Legion of Merit. -
MARCEL CADIEUX, the DEPARTMENT of EXTERNAL AFFAIRS, and CANADIAN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS: 1941-1970
MARCEL CADIEUX, the DEPARTMENT of EXTERNAL AFFAIRS, and CANADIAN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS: 1941-1970 by Brendan Kelly A thesis submitted in conformity with the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Department of History University of Toronto © Copyright by Brendan Kelly 2016 ii Marcel Cadieux, the Department of External Affairs, and Canadian International Relations: 1941-1970 Brendan Kelly Doctor of Philosophy Department of History University of Toronto 2016 Abstract Between 1941 and 1970, Marcel Cadieux (1915-1981) was one of the most important diplomats to serve in the Canadian Department of External Affairs (DEA). A lawyer by trade and Montreal working class by background, Cadieux held most of the important jobs in the department, from personnel officer to legal adviser to under-secretary. Influential as Cadieux’s career was in these years, it has never received a comprehensive treatment, despite the fact that his two most important predecessors as under-secretary, O.D. Skelton and Norman Robertson, have both been the subject of full-length studies. This omission is all the more glaring since an appraisal of Cadieux’s career from 1941 to 1970 sheds new light on the Canadian diplomatic profession, on the DEA, and on some of the defining issues in post-war Canadian international relations, particularly the Canada-Quebec-France triangle of the 1960s. A staunch federalist, Cadieux believed that French Canadians could and should find a place in Ottawa and in the wider world beyond Quebec. This thesis examines Cadieux’s career and argues that it was defined by three key themes: his anti-communism, his French-Canadian nationalism, and his belief in his work as both a diplomat and a civil servant. -
Court Proposes New Session to Handle Reapportioning
I^N ESD A Y, OCTTOT^ 18, 186^ iKitnrlrpBt^r lEttrabig ll^raUt ATtnc* Dally Not Press Rm Weather Fsr the Weak l!a«ed Faraoaat of V. S. WMither 24, U M ' fla g Karinaa from tosvn are About Town taking part in Operation Steal Oloadjr and oairier tenlgkt, law Pika In Spaht. Tliey are: Pfc. f r o m b ib s t o c r ib s h e e t s 14,065 4e-46; fair aad eaelar to m u m m , Douglas P. Johnson, aon of aC tka Audit Mgk ee-86. W m KuBitoi Pwiy, dwigh- Douglas A. Jcdinaon, 144 Birch tar oC Mr. «w l M n. JamM Pn^ St.; Lance Cpl. Robert M. a( Maneh0tter— A City of ViUagm Chorm ly, m HoOMar 8t^ !■ a mem- Smith, eon of Mr, and Mrs. celebrating bar o t the program commlttaa RuUedga J. Smith, 411 Bum- for an Open Houaa at Meriden ham St.; Cpl. John B. Fales, VOL. LXXXIV, NO. 25 tTWBNTY-BIGHT PA6BSF-TWO SECTIONS) MANCHESTE^^ CONN., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1964 (Ctoarifisd Advartiatag aU Faga 24) PRICE SEVEN CE^TS Haqdtal Sdiool of Ntiraing. son of Mr. and Mrs. Bbnmons . n ie event, acheduled for R. Falea, 1S8 N. Elm St.; Wednaaday, Nov. 4, front 12:46 Lance Cpl. James J. Antonio, B A B Y W EEK to S p.m., la open to high school son of Mr. and Mrs.i^James R. atpdents, their parcAta and Antonio, 147 Oloott St., and Events counsektra. Mlsa Perry la a atu- Lance Cpl. -
December 2016
Traditional Folk Song Circle goers to hear Potomac Accordion Ensemble December 10 December 2016 Inside this issue: From the President 2 Open Mics 3 Pics from Sunday Open Stage 4 Traditional Folk Song Circle 5 The Songs We Sing 6 Comfortable Concerts 7 Hill Chapel Concert 9 Gear of the Month 10 Pull up a Chair 12 Other Music Orgs of interest 13 Member Ads 14 Open Mic Photos 16 Board of Directors 18 F.A.M.E. Goals 18 Membership Renewal/App 18 Poster art courtesy of Todd C Walker Page 2 From the President I don’t know whose thought this is, but I read somewhere that “music is the wheels of a movement. I know that music made a tremendous difference in the anti- war movement of the 60s as well as the civil rights movement. Music is a powerful force that is often unrecognized. A song has a way of inspiring folks that nothing else comes even close to. We are in need of inspiring songs. One of the roles of a songwriter is not only to reflect on what is happening in the present but also to provide a vision of the future. What is your vision of the future? For some it is nihilistic bleakness – a very cynical response to our world. For others, it is filled with hope – we are somehow going to be able to figure out how we can live together and with all of creation. If you are a performer, I want to challenge you to get out of yourself and add songs that reflect your vision of the future to your repertoire. -
"WEIRD AL" YANKOVIC: POLKAS, PARODIES and the POWER of SATIRE by Chuck Miller Originally Published in Goldmine #514
"WEIRD AL" YANKOVIC: POLKAS, PARODIES AND THE POWER OF SATIRE By Chuck Miller Originally published in Goldmine #514 Al Yankovic strapped on his accordion, ready to perform. All he had to do was impress some talent directors, and he would be on The Gong Show, on stage with Chuck Barris and the Unknown Comic and Jaye P. Morgan and Gene Gene the Dancing Machine. "I was in college," said Yankovic, "and a friend and I drove down to LA for the day, and auditioned for The Gong Show. And we did a song called 'Mr. Frump in the Iron Lung.' And the audience seemed to enjoy it, but we never got called back. So we didn't make the cut for The Gong Show." But while the Unknown Co mic and Gene Gene the Dancing Machine are currently brain stumpers in 1970's trivia contests, the accordionist who failed the Gong Show taping became the biggest selling parodist and comedic recording artist of the past 30 years. His earliest parodies were recorded with an accordion in a men's room, but today, he and his band have replicated tracks so well one would think they borrowed the original master tape, wiped off the original vocalist, and superimposed Yankovic into the mix. And with MTV, MuchMusic, Dr. Demento and Radio Disney playing his songs right out of the box, Yankovic has reached a pinnacle of success and longevity most artists can only imagine. Alfred Yankovic was born in Lynwood, California on October 23, 1959. Seven years later, his parents bought him an accordion for his birthday. -
Seven Lessons of the Cuban Missile Crisis for the Karabakh Conflict
Seven Lessons of the Cuban Missile Crisis for the Karabakh Conflict Simon Saradzhyan and Artur Saradzhyan October 2012 SEVEN LESSONS OF THE CUBAN MISSILE CRISIS FOR THE KARABAKH CONFLICT SIMON SARADZHYAN AND ARTUR SARADZHYAN OCTOBER 2012 Discussion Paper #2012 – 14 Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs John F. Kennedy School of Government Harvard University 79 JFK Street Cambridge, MA 02138 Phone: (617) 495-1400 Email: [email protected] Website: http://www.belfercenter.org Copyright 2012 President and Fellows of Harvard College The authors of this report invite use of this information for educational purposes, requiring only that the reproduced material clearly cite the full source: Saradzhyan, Simon and Artur Saradzhyan. “Seven Lessons of the Cuban Missile Crisis for the Karabakh Conflict,” Discussion Paper 2012-14, Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, Harvard Kennedy School, October 2012. Statements and views expressed in this discussion paper are solely those of the authors and do not imply endorsement by Harvard University, the Harvard Kennedy School, or the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs. Cover: Armenian forces perform their final day of maneuvers in the self-proclaimed republic of Nagorno-Karabagh, Tuesday Aug. 10, 2004. (AP Photo / Photolur) Layout by Traci Farrell ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The authors would like to thank the following individuals for their insightful suggestions on ways to improve this paper (in alphabetical order): Nabi Abdullaev, Head of Foreign-Language News Service at RIA Novosti; Matthew Bunn, Associate Professor at Harvard Kennedy School; Kevin Ryan, Executive Director for Research at the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, Harvard Kennedy School; Emil Sanamyan, Washington Editor for The Armenian Reporter; and William Tobey, Senior Fellow at the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at Harvard Kennedy School. -
War Memory Under the Leonid Brezhnev Regime 1965-1974
1 No One is Forgotten, Nothing is Forgotten: War Memory Under the Leonid Brezhnev Regime 1965-1974 By Yevgeniy Zilberman Adviser: Professor David S. Foglesong An Honors Thesis Submitted To The History Department of Rutgers University School of Arts and Sciences New Brunswick, NJ April, 2012 2 Table of Contents Acknowledgements Pg. 3 Introduction Pg. 5 1964-1967: Building the Cult Pg. 18 a) Forming the Narrative: Building the Plot and Effacing the Details Pg. 21 b) Consecrating the War: Ritual, Monument and Speech Pg. 24 c) Iconography at Work: Soviet War Poster Pg. 34 d) Digitizing the War: On the Cinema Front Pg. 44 1968-1970: Fascism Revived and the Battle for Peace Pg. 53 a) This Changes Everything: Czechoslovakia and its Significance Pg. 55 b) Anti-Fascism: Revanchism and Fear Pg. 59 c) Reviving Peace: The Peace Cult Pg. 71 1970-1974: Realizing Peace Pg. 83 a) Rehabilitating Germany Pg. 85 b) Cinema: Germany and the Second World War on the Film Screen Pg. 88 c) Developing Ostpolitik: War memory and the Foundations for Peace Pg. 95 d) Embracing Peace Pg. 102 Conclusion: Believing the War Cult Pg. 108 Bibliography Pg. 112 3 Acknowledgements Perhaps as a testament to my naivety, when I embarked upon my journey toward writing an honors thesis, I envisioned a leisurely and idyllic trek toward my objective. Instead, I found myself on a road mired with multiple peaks and valleys. The obstacles and impediments were plentiful and my limitations were numerous. Looking back now upon the path I traveled, I realize that I could not have accomplished anything without the assistance of a choice collection of individuals. -
WDAM Radio Presents the Rest of the Story
WDAM Radio Presents The Rest Of The Story # Artist Title Chart Comments Position/Year 0000 Mr. Announcer & The “Introduction/Station WDAM Radio Singers Identification” 0001 Big Mama Thornton “Hound Dog” #1-R&B/1953 0001A Rufus Thomas "Bear Cat" #3-R&B/1953 0001A_ Charlie Gore & Louis “You Ain't Nothin' But A –/1953 Innes Female Hound Dog” 0001AA Romancers “House Cat” –/1955 0001B Elvis Presley “Hound Dog” #1/1956 0001BA Frank (Dual Trumpet) “New Hound Dog” –/1956 Motley & His Crew 0001C Homer & Jethro “Houn’ Dog (Take 2)” –/1956 0001D Pati Palin “Alley Cat” –/1956 0001E Cliff Johnson “Go ‘Way Hound Dog” –/1958 0002 Gary Lewis & The "Count Me In" #2/1965 Playboys 0002A Little Jonna Jaye "I'll Count You In" –/1965 0003 Joanie Sommers "One Boy" #54/1960 0003A Ritchie Dean "One Girl" –/1960 0004 Angels "My Boyfriend's Back" #1/1963 0004A Bobby Comstock & "Your Boyfriend's Back" #98/1963 The Counts 0004AA Denny Rendell “I’m Back Baby” –/1963 0004B Angels "The Guy With The Black Eye" –/1963 0004C Alice Donut "My Boyfriend's Back" –/1990 adult content 0005 Beatles [with Tony "My Bonnie" #26/1964 Sheridan] 0005A Bonnie Brooks "Bring Back My Beatles (To –/1964 Me)" 0006 Beach Boys "California Girls" #3/1965 0006A Cagle & Klender "Ocean City Girls" –/1985 0006B Thomas & Turpin "Marietta Girls" –/1985 0007 Mike Douglas "The Men In My Little Girl's #8/1965 Life" 0007A Fran Allison "The Girls In My Little Boy's –/1965 Life" 0007B Cousin Fescue "The Hoods In My Little Girl's –/1965 Life" 0008 Dawn "Tie A Yellow Ribbon Round #1/1973 the Ole Oak Tree" -
Of Coase and Comics, Or, the Comedy of Copyright
University of Pittsburgh School of Law Scholarship@PITT LAW Articles Faculty Publications 2009 Of Coase and Comics, or, The Comedy of Copyright Michael J. Madison University of Pittsburgh School of Law, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarship.law.pitt.edu/fac_articles Part of the Intellectual Property Law Commons, Internet Law Commons, Law and Economics Commons, Law and Society Commons, Political Economy Commons, Property Law and Real Estate Commons, Rule of Law Commons, Science and Technology Studies Commons, Social and Cultural Anthropology Commons, and the Theory, Knowledge and Science Commons Recommended Citation Michael J. Madison, Of Coase and Comics, or, The Comedy of Copyright, 95 Virginia Law Review In Brief 27 (2009). Available at: https://scholarship.law.pitt.edu/fac_articles/357 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Faculty Publications at Scholarship@PITT LAW. It has been accepted for inclusion in Articles by an authorized administrator of Scholarship@PITT LAW. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. VIRGINIA LAW REVIEW IN BRIEF VOLUME 95 APRIL 30, 2009 PAGES 27- 42 RESPONSE OF COASE AND COMICS, OR, THE COMEDY OF COPYRIGHT Michael J. Madison∗ INTRODUCTION RDER Without Law, Robert Ellickson’s seminal account of social O norms among Shasta County cattle ranchers,1 grew out of earlier research titled, in part, Of Coase and Cattle.2 The shift in the title was subtle, but significant. Ellickson started out to test Ronald Coase’s celebrated parable of the Rancher and the Farmer, the hypothetical that Coase used to develop the Coase Theorem,3 a major pillar of law and economics scholarship. -
Jews and Hollywood
From Shtetl to Stardom: Jews and Hollywood The Jewish Role in American Life An Annual Review of the Casden Institute for the Study of the Jewish Role in American Life From Shtetl to Stardom: Jews and Hollywood The Jewish Role in American Life An Annual Review of the Casden Institute for the Study of the Jewish Role in American Life Volume 14 Steven J. Ross, Editor Michael Renov and Vincent Brook, Guest Editors Lisa Ansell, Associate Editor Published by the Purdue University Press for the USC Casden Institute for the Study of the Jewish Role in American Life © 2017 University of Southern California Casden Institute for the Study of the Jewish Role in American Life. All rights reserved. Production Editor, Marilyn Lundberg Cover photo supplied by Thomas Wolf, www.foto.tw.de, as found on Wikimedia Commons. Front cover vector art supplied by aarows/iStock/Thinkstock. Cloth ISBN: 978-1-55753-763-8 ePDF ISBN: 978-1-61249-478-4 ePUB ISBN: 978-1-61249-479-1 KU ISBN: 978-1-55753-788-1 Published by Purdue University Press West Lafayette, Indiana www.thepress.purdue.edu [email protected] Printed in the United States of America. For subscription information, call 1-800-247-6553 Contents FOREWORD vii EDITORIAL INTRODUCTION ix Michael Renov and Vincent Brook, Guest Editors PART 1: HISTORIES CHAPTER 1 3 Vincent Brook Still an Empire of Their Own: How Jews Remain Atop a Reinvented Hollywood CHAPTER 2 23 Lawrence Baron and Joel Rosenberg, with a Coda by Vincent Brook The Ben Urwand Controversy: Exploring the Hollywood-Hitler Relationship PART 2: CASE STUDIES CHAPTER 3 49 Shaina Hammerman Dirty Jews: Amy Schumer and Other Vulgar Jewesses CHAPTER 4 73 Joshua Louis Moss “The Woman Thing and the Jew Thing”: Transsexuality, Transcomedy, and the Legacy of Subversive Jewishness in Transparent CHAPTER 5 99 Howard A. -
Gabinete Adjunto De Crisis KGB Guerra Fría
Gabinete Adjunto de Crisis KGB Guerra Fría 12 DE MARZO DE 1947 [email protected] Manual de Procedimientos COSMUN 2020 Manual de Procedimientos GAC Presidente: Gregorio Noreña Vice-Presidente: Ilana Garza 1. Página de portada 2. Cartas de la mesa 2.1. Carta del presidente 2.2. Carta del vice presidente 3. ¿Qué es un GAC? (Composición) 3.1. Gabinetes 3.2. Sala de crisis 3.3. Funcionamiento 4. Historia 4.1. Creación de la KGB 4.2. La KGB en el bloque socialista 4.3. Esctructura 5. La Guerra Fría 5.1. Introducción 5.2. Antecedentes históricos 5.3. Información general 5.4. Guerras subsidiarias 5.5. Final de la guerra 6. Situación Actual 6.1. (1947) 7. Cargos 7.1. Presidente del consejo de ministros de la Unión Soviética 2 7.2. Presidente del presidium del Soviet Supremo 7.3. Primer viceprimer ministro de la Unión Soviética (3) 7.4. Secretario general del partido comunista de la Unión Soviética 7.5. Director de la KGB 7.6. Ministro de relaciones exteriores de la Unión Soviética 7.7. Embajador de la Unión Soviética a los Estados Unidos 7.8. Representante permanente de la Unión Soviética ante las Naciones Unidas 7.9. Ministro de justicia de la Unión Soviética 8. Personajes importantes 8.1. Iósif Stalin 8.2. Nikita Jrushchov 8.3. Leonid Brézhnev 8.4. Nikolái Bulganin 8.5. Vasili Mitrojin 8.6. Albrecht Dittrich/Jack Barsky 8.7. Andrei Zhdanov 8.8. Mijail Gorbachov 8.9. Aleksei Kosyguin 8.10. Nikolai Podgorni 8.11. Konstantin Chernenko 8.12. -
Russian Politics and Society, Fourth Edition
Russian Politics and Society Having been fully revised and updated to reflect the considerable changes in Russia over the last decade, the fourth edition of this classic text builds on the strengths of the previous editions to provide a comprehensive and sophisticated analysis on Russian politics and society. In this edition, Richard Sakwa seeks to evaluate the evidence in a balanced and informed way, denying simplistic assumptions about the inevitable failure of the democratic exper- iment in Russia while avoiding facile generalisations on the inevitable triumph of global integration and democratisation. New to this edition: • Extended coverage of electoral laws, party development and regional politics • New chapter on the ‘phoney democracy’ period, 1991–3 • Historical evaluation of Yeltsin’s leadership • Full coverage of Putin’s presidency • Discussion of the development of civil society and the problems of democratic consolidation • Latest developments in the Chechnya conflict • More on foreign policy issues such as Russia’s relationship with NATO and the EU after enlargement, Russia’s relations with other post-Soviet states and the problem of competing ‘near abroads’ for Russia and the West • The re-introduction of the Russian constitution as an appendix • An updated select bibliography • More focus on the challenges facing Russia in the twenty-first century Written in an accessible and lively style, this book is packed with detailed information on the central debates and issues in Russia’s difficult transformation. This makes it the best available textbook on the subject and essential reading for all those concerned with the fate of Russia, and with the future of international society.