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Connotations 14-01
Volume 14, Issue 1 February/March ConNotations 2004 The Bi-Monthly Science Fiction, Fantasy & Convention Newszine of the Central Arizona Speculative Fiction Society April Kicks Off with Ursula K Le Featured Inside Guin, Timothy Zahn, Phoenix SF Tube Talk Special Features ComicCon and World Horror All the latest news about Ursala K LeGuin by Lee Whiteside Scienc Fiction TV shows and other April Events by Lee Whiteside By Lee Whiteside The Arizona Book Festival on Saturday, outreach/scifisymp.html and http:// April 3rd, will feature authors Ursula K. Le www.asu.edu/english/events/outreach/ 24 Frames Jinxed, Hexed, or Cursed: Guin, Alan Dean Foster, and Diana leguin.html All the latest Movie News How I Ruined Harlan Ellison’s Gabaldon on the main stage with CASFS The next day is the Seventh Annual by Lee Whiteside Return to Arizona, Part 2 bringing in Timothy Zahn and other local Arizona Book Festival being held from 10 By Shane Shellenbarger authors for autographing and a special am to 5 pm at the Carnegie Center at 1100 Pro Notes block of programming. LeGuin will also be W. Washingtion in central Phoenix. The Waldorf Conference: appearing at ASU on Friday, April 2nd. Featured authors at the book festival are News about locl genre authors and fans Microphones, scripts, and actors The ASU Department of English Ron Carlson, Nancy Farmer, Alan Dean By Shane Shellenbarger Outreach will be hosting two events on Foster, Diana Gabaldon, Ursula K. Le Musical Notes Friday, April 2nd with Ursula K. LeGuin. Guin, Tom McGuane, and U.S. Supreme In Memorium First will be a daylong Symposium on the Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor. -
K E N F a R M
KEN FAR MER (Partial Resume- Actor/Director) Ht: 6ft., Wt: 200 Eyes: Blue, Hair: Grey SELECTED FEATURE FILMS DIRECTOR ROCKABILLY BABY Writer/Director KEN FARMER FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS PETER BERG RED RIDGE Co-STAR DAMIAN SKINNER THE NEWTON BOYS RICK LINKLATER ROCKET MAN STUART GILLARD LAST OF THE WARRIORS (STAR, - Above Title) LLOYD SIMANDLE MANIAC WARRIORS (STAR) LLOYD SIMANDLE SILVERADO LAWRENCE KASDAN UNCOMMON VALOR TED KOTCHEFF SPLIT IMAGE TED KOTCHEFF EMPIRE OF ASH (STAR - Above Title) MICHAEL MAZO POWER PLAY AL FRAKES SELECT MOVIES OF THE WEEK AND EPISODIC TELEVISION (Star, Co-Star, Guest Star) “THE GOOD GUYS” FOX SANFORD BOOKSTAVER "TOO LEGIT TO QUIT" VH1 ARTIE MANDELBERG "THE PRESIDENT'S MAN" CBS MICHAEL PREECE "WALKER, TEXAS RANGER" CBS MICHAEL PREECE "LOGAN'S WAR" CBS MICHAEL PREECE "WALKER, TEXAS RANGER" CBS TONY MORDENTE "AUSTIN STORIES" MTV (STAR) GEORGE VERSHOOR "WALKER, TEXAS RANGER" CBS ALEX SINGER "WALKER, TEXAS RANGER" CBS TONY MORDENTE "WALKER, TEXAS RANGER" CBS MICHAEL PREECE "WALKER, TEXAS RANGER" CBS TONY MORDENTE "ANOTHER PAIR OF ACES" CBS (STAR) BILL BIXBY "AMERICA'S MOST WANTED" FOX (STAR) TOM SHELLY "HIGH MOUNTAIN RANGERS" CBS GEORGE FENNEDY "DALLAS" CBS LEONARD KATZMAN "GENERAL HOSPITAL" ABC (RECURRING) MARLENA LAIRD "DALLAS" CBS LEONARD KATZMAN "BENJI" CBS (STAR) JOE CAMP "DALLAS, WHO SHOT J.R.?" CBS LEONARD KATZMAN "BENJI" CBS (STAR) JOE CAMP "JAKE'S WAY" CBS RICHARD COLLA "BACKLOT" NICK (STAR) GARY PAUL "DALLAS" CBS MICHAEL PREECE "DALLAS" CBS LEONARD KATZMAN "SUPERIOR COURT" (2) NBC (STAR) HANK GRIMER SPECIAL ABILITIES EXPERT HORSEMAN: ALL SPORTS: COLLEGE ALL-AMERICAN, FOOTBALL: EXCELLENT SWIMMER: DIVING: SCUBA: WRESTLING: HAND-TO-HAND COMBAT: USMC: FAMILIAR WITH ALL TYPES OF FIREARMS: CAN FURNISH OWN FILM TRAINED HORSE: BACHELOR'S DEGREE - SPEECH & DRAMA : GOLF: AUTHOR OF "ACTING IS STORYTELLING ©" : ACTING COACH: STORYTELLING CONSULTANT: PRODUCER: DIRECTOR Web Site - www.kenfarmer-author.net THEATRICAL AND COMMERCIAL DVD & AUDIO TAPES AVAILABLE LINDA McALISTER TALENT - 972-938-2433. -
Arabs Threaten to Blow up Where
V" A > A O E FORTY WEDNESDAY, JU N E 10/ 1970 ilanrljpatifr Ettaninn il|fralii Most Manchester Stores Open Until 9 O ’clock About Town Average Daily Net Preee Ron On Sunday 14 people becanje Weiss To Pursue mamben of Omter Oon8:re- Q1 For The Week Ended gntlonal CSnirch. They are Mrs. K V ^ June 6, 1070 The Weather NelUe F, Allinaon, 114 Orcep Case Mt. Purchase Moatly fair, mild tosUght with ^I'ectors last night instructed Town 1 5 ,9 0 3 lows 60 to 60. Tomorrow partly Albert J. IMachene HI. 87 Sum- Kobeii; Weiss to meet with owners of Case sunny, humid; ohande o< thun- /} V-»V\ A mar St.; Peter Raymond Mo- ^loimtain and other interested agencies to decide wheth- lUancheoter— A City of Village Charm ■WnrtMwons fate In the day. High quln, 87 Foater St.; Mr. and er the town should apply for'a new federal oiien-spaces about 90. Mra. Kenneth R. Mnness, 262 grant to acquii"e the land. ------ — ------------ --- - VOL. LXXXIX, NO. 214 (TWENTY-FOUR PAGES—^TWO SECinONS) Kue Ridge Dr.; Mrs. Sara K. Last nights’ vote on a motion priority, the town’s share of the MANCHESTER. CONN., THURSDAY, JUNE 11, 1970 Robinson. 181A Downey Dr.; by Director William FitzGerald r„st was estimated at $128,000. h (ClMstfled Adverttslng on Boge St) PRICE TEN CENTS Mrs. Alice Scagel, 170 Charter who strongly supported the ac- The federal government also Oak St.; Mrs. Harriet C. Sliney, qulsition. came after the direc- requires that there be an ” lndl- 851 Summit St.; Mr. -
'Perfect Fit': Industrial Strategies, Textual Negotiations and Celebrity
‘Perfect Fit’: Industrial Strategies, Textual Negotiations and Celebrity Culture in Fashion Television Helen Warner Submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) University of East Anglia School of Film and Television Studies Submitted July 2010 ©This copy of the thesis has been supplied on condition that anyone who consults it is understood to recognise that its copyright rests with the author and that no quotation from the thesis, nor any information derived therefrom, may be published without the author's prior, written consent. Helen Warner P a g e | 2 ABSTRACT According to the head of the American Costume Designers‟ Guild, Deborah Nadoolman Landis, fashion is emphatically „not costume‟. However, if this is the case, how do we approach costume in a television show like Sex and the City (1998-2004), which we know (via press articles and various other extra-textual materials) to be comprised of designer clothes? Once onscreen, are the clothes in Sex and the City to be interpreted as „costume‟, rather than „fashion‟? To be sure, it is important to tease out precise definitions of key terms, but to position fashion as the antithesis of costume is reductive. Landis‟ claim is based on the assumption that the purpose of costume is to tell a story. She thereby neglects to acknowledge that the audience may read certain costumes as fashion - which exists in a framework of discourses that can be located beyond the text. This is particularly relevant with regard to contemporary US television which, according to press reports, has witnessed an emergence of „fashion programming‟ - fictional programming with a narrative focus on fashion. -
The Narrative Functions of Television Dreams by Cynthia A. Burkhead A
Dancing Dwarfs and Talking Fish: The Narrative Functions of Television Dreams By Cynthia A. Burkhead A Dissertation Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Ph.D. Department of English Middle Tennessee State University December, 2010 UMI Number: 3459290 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. UMT Dissertation Publishing UMI 3459290 Copyright 2011 by ProQuest LLC. All rights reserved. This edition of the work is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States Code. ProQuest LLC 789 East Eisenhower Parkway P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, Ml 48106-1346 DANCING DWARFS AND TALKING FISH: THE NARRATIVE FUNCTIONS OF TELEVISION DREAMS CYNTHIA BURKHEAD Approved: jr^QL^^lAo Qjrg/XA ^ Dr. David Lavery, Committee Chair c^&^^Ce~y Dr. Linda Badley, Reader A>& l-Lr 7i Dr./ Jill Hague, Rea J <7VM Dr. Tom Strawman, Chair, English Department Dr. Michael D. Allen, Dean, College of Graduate Studies DEDICATION First and foremost, I dedicate this work to my husband, John Burkhead, who lovingly carved for me the space and time that made this dissertation possible and then protected that space and time as fiercely as if it were his own. I dedicate this project also to my children, Joshua Scanlan, Daniel Scanlan, Stephen Burkhead, and Juliette Van Hoff, my son-in-law and daughter-in-law, and my grandchildren, Johnathan Burkhead and Olivia Van Hoff, who have all been so impressively patient during this process. -
Taliban at Crossroads
NATION MILITARY MUSIC Biden invites Russia, House panel Grammy-winning China to first global explores diversifying songwriter Starrah climate talks special operations gets turn to shine Page 6 Page 3 Page 12 Sweet 16 putting UCLA, Southern Cal in prime-time spotlight ›› Page 24 stripes.com Volume 79 Edition 243B ©SS 2021 CONTINGENCY EDITION SUNDAY,MARCH 28, 2021 Free to Deployed Areas Myanmar protests death toll tops 100 Associated Press YANGON, Myanmar — As Myanmar’s military celebrated the annual Armed Forces Day ho- liday with a parade Saturday in the country’s capital, soldiers and police elsewhere reportedly killed dozens of people as they sup- pressed protests in the deadliest bloodletting since last month’s coup. The online news site Myanmar Now reported late Saturday that the death toll had reached 114. A count issued by an independent researcher in Yangon who has been compiling near-real time death tolls put the total at 107, spread over more than two dozen cities and towns. Both numbers are higher than all estimates for the previous high on March 14, which ranged in counts from 74 to 90. Figures collected by the re- searcher, who asked not to be named for his security, have gen- LORENZO TUGNOLI/The Washington Post erally tallied with the counts is- Taliban fighters parade their weapons in Marawara district, Afghanistan, in July 2020. sued at the end of each day by the Taliban at crossroads SEE PROTESTS ON PAGE 10 With US withdrawal delay likely, and new peace deal on table, militant group faces decision on path to power BY SUSANNAH GEORGE “If we share power Accepting a place in a power-sharing government, as The Washington Post proposed by the United States, would bring the group DOHA, Qatar — For months, the Taliban has man- with the government one step closer to its ultimate goal of retaking full con- aged to both talk peace and wage war across Afghan- trol of the country and establishing an Islamic govern- istan. -
Science Fiction Films of the 1950S Bonnie Noonan Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College, [email protected]
Louisiana State University LSU Digital Commons LSU Doctoral Dissertations Graduate School 2003 "Science in skirts": representations of women in science in the "B" science fiction films of the 1950s Bonnie Noonan Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations Part of the English Language and Literature Commons Recommended Citation Noonan, Bonnie, ""Science in skirts": representations of women in science in the "B" science fiction films of the 1950s" (2003). LSU Doctoral Dissertations. 3653. https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations/3653 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at LSU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in LSU Doctoral Dissertations by an authorized graduate school editor of LSU Digital Commons. For more information, please [email protected]. “SCIENCE IN SKIRTS”: REPRESENTATIONS OF WOMEN IN SCIENCE IN THE “B” SCIENCE FICTION FILMS OF THE 1950S A Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of the Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in The Department of English By Bonnie Noonan B.G.S., University of New Orleans, 1984 M.A., University of New Orleans, 1991 May 2003 Copyright 2003 Bonnie Noonan All rights reserved ii This dissertation is “one small step” for my cousin Timm Madden iii Acknowledgements Thank you to my dissertation director Elsie Michie, who was as demanding as she was supportive. Thank you to my brilliant committee: Carl Freedman, John May, Gerilyn Tandberg, and Sharon Weltman. -
1. Richie Ashburn (April 11, 1962) 60
1. Richie Ashburn (April 11, 1962) 60. Joe Hicks (July 12, 1963) 117. Dick Rusteck (June 10, 1966) 2. Felix Mantilla 61. Grover Powell (July 13, 1963) 118. Bob Shaw (June 13, 1966) 3. Charlie Neal 62. Dick Smith (July 20, 1963) 119. Bob Friend (June 18, 1966) 4. Frank Thomas 63. Duke Carmel (July 30, 1963) 120. Dallas Green (July 23, 1966) 5. Gus Bell 64. Ed Bauta (August 11, 1963) 121. Ralph Terry (August 11, 1966) 6. Gil Hodges 65. Pumpsie Green (September 4, 1963) 122. Shaun Fitzmaurice (September 9, 1966) 7. Don Zimmer 66. Steve Dillon (September 5, 1963) 123. Nolan Ryan (September 11, 1966) 8. Hobie Landrith 67. Cleon Jones (September 14, 1963) --- 9. Roger Craig --- 124. Don Cardwell (April 11, 1967) 10. Ed Bouchee 68. Amado Samuel (April 14, 1964) 125. Don Bosch 11. Bob Moorhead 69. Hawk Taylor 126. Tommy Davis 12. Herb Moford 70. John Stephenson 127. Jerry Buchek 13. Clem Labine 71. Larry Elliot (April 15, 1964) 128. Tommie Reynolds 14. Jim Marshall 72. Jack Fisher (April 17, 1964) 129. Don Shaw 15. Joe Ginsberg (April 13, 1962) 73. George Altman 130. Tom Seaver (April 13, 1967) 16. Sherman Jones 74. Jerry Hinsley (April 18, 1964) 131. Chuck Estrada 17. Elio Chacon 75. Bill Wakefield 132. Larry Stahl 18. John DeMerit 76. Ron Locke (April 23, 1964) 133. Sandy Alomar 19. Ray Daviault 77. Charley Smith (April 24, 1964) 134. Ron Taylor 20. Bobby Smith 78. Roy McMillan (May 9, 1964) 135. Jerry Koosman (April 14, 1967) 21. Chris Cannizzaro (April 14, 1962) 79. -
The Use and Abuse of Global Telepoiesis: of Human and Non-Human Bondages Entangled in Media Mobilities
Keio Communication Review No.39, 2017 The Use and Abuse of Global Telepoiesis: Of Human and Non-Human Bondages Entangled in Media Mobilities OGAWA NISHIAKI Yoko* Introduction Collective memory is not an archive that is concealed or defiant to any access. Rather, collective memory is open to re-interpretation. Also, collective memory is displayed in various forms: names, folk tales, old films, TV programs and Japanese cinema on the big screen, which Japanese migrant women watch again but this time with local audiences in foreign cities. Media audience studies and other studies on diasporic media consumption (Morley, 1974, 1990; Collins et al., 1986; Liebes & Katz, 1990; Ang, 1991; Livingstone, 1998; Moores, 1993; Ogawa, 1992) have been endeavoring to examine readings of specific media texts in relation to audience so far. On the contrary, more detailed analysis of collective memory will be required to understand the global media mobilities we encounter in the past decades (Zelizer, 1993; Gillespie, 1995; Fortier, 2000). This paper will focus on recursivity by shifting the emphasis from meaning of the text itself to how collective memories in talks act as sites, namely time-spaces (Scannell, 1988, 1991; Gilroy et al., 2000). It is this type of media mobilities with which the Japanese women who live abroad try to locate themselves somewhere local amid the global upheavals they encounter (Ogawa, 1994, 1996; Urry, 2007; 1 Elliot & Urry, 2010) . With emphasis on Japanese women, who are unfamiliar with war memories but are destined to recursively cope with them, diasporic experiences in relation with media, history and self-identity will be highlighted (Dower, 1986; Goodman, 1990; Clair et al., 2016). -
Bombing for Justice: Urban Terrorism in New York City from the 1960S Through the 1980S
City University of New York (CUNY) CUNY Academic Works Publications and Research John Jay College of Criminal Justice 2014 Bombing for Justice: Urban Terrorism in New York City from the 1960s through the 1980s Jeffrey A. Kroessler John Jay College of Criminal Justice How does access to this work benefit ou?y Let us know! More information about this work at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu/jj_pubs/38 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] Bombing for Justice: Urban Terrorism in New York City from the 1960s through to the 1980s Jeffrey A. Kroessler John Jay College of Criminal Justice, City University of New York ew York is no stranger to explosives. In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the Black Hand, forerunners of the Mafia, planted bombs at stores and residences belonging to successful NItalians as a tactic in extortion schemes. To combat this evil, the New York Police Department (NYPD) founded the Italian Squad under Lieutenant Joseph Petrosino, who enthusiastically pursued those gangsters. Petrosino was assassinated in Palermo, Sicily, while investigating the criminal back- ground of mobsters active in New York. The Italian Squad was the gen- esis of today’s Bomb Squad. In the early decades of the twentieth century, anarchists and labor radicals planted bombs, the most devastating the 63 64 Criminal Justice and Law Enforcement noontime explosion on Wall Street in 1920. That crime was never solved.1 The city has also had its share of lunatics. -
Dec 11 Cover.Qxd 11/5/2020 2:39 PM Page 1 Allall Starstar Cardscards Volumevolume 2828 Issueissue #5#5
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Hijackers Release 137, Blow up Jet BENGHAZI
Food Price Increases Immediately Evident SEHSTOR1 V\i.\.2 The Weather FINAL Sunny today, high In the mid 80s. Clear tonight, low in upper 60s. Fair, little tem- EDITION perature change tomorrow. Monmouth County's Outstanding Home Newspaper 22 PAGES TEN CENTS VOL. 96. NO. 20 RED BANK-MIDDLETOW.N, NJ. TUESDAY, JULY 21,1973 IIIIIIMWIIIIIIIIMIIMMIIIIIMIIIIII limilllHlllllHllllH.il Illl UIIIHtlHHHHWa HIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIM IIIIIHIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII iiiimi uniii Hijackers Release 137, Blow Up Jet BENGHAZI. Libya (AP) - had the plane flown to Dam- loaded into small buses and herself up accidentally with a The hijackers of a Japanese ascus and, after three hours taken to the terminal. hand grenade in her dress jumbo jetliner blew up the there, ordered it on to Libya. 'Benghazi airport was closed soon after the takeoff from Boeing 747 today at the Ben- Exit Via Chute to civilian traffic after the Amsterdam. But the pilot of ghazi airport a few minutes Everybody aboard slid blast. the plane. Capt. Kenzi Ko- after they and their 137 hos- down the emergency chute af- While in Dubai, the hija- numa, told newsmen at Ben- tages slid down an emergency ter the plane came to a stop ckers identified themselves ghazi that there were three chute. The hijackers were ar- at Benghazi, on the Mediter- variously as Sons of the Occu- Arab men, one Japanese and rested. ranean coast. pied Territory, Mt. Carmel the woman. Passengers and crew mem- Members of the crew said Martyr Sada and the Japa- Mostly Japanese bers who had been held hos- no one was hurt during the nese Red Army but never Most of the passengers on tage since Friday had run evacuation, but blood was made clear whether they the plane were Japanese.