#Howard K Smith
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
kwebtv · 5 months ago
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media
TV Guide - July 11 - 17, 1964
The Anchor Men
Walter Leland Cronkite Jr. (November 4, 1916 – July 17, 2009) was an American broadcast journalist who served as anchorman for the CBS Evening News for 19 years (1962–1981). During the 1960s and 1970s, he was often cited as "the most trusted man in America" after being so named in an opinion poll.  (Wikipedia)
Chester Robert "Chet" Huntley (December 10, 1911 – March 20, 1974) was an American television newscaster, best known for co-anchoring NBC's evening news program, The Huntley–Brinkley Report, for 14 years beginning in 1956. (Wikipedia)
David McClure Brinkley (July 10, 1920 – June 11, 2003) was an American newscaster for NBC and ABC in a career lasting from 1943 to 1997.  (Wikipedia)
Howard Kingsbury Smith (May 12, 1914 – February 15, 2002) was an American journalist, radio reporter, television anchorman, political commentator, and film actor.  (Wikipedia)
Edward Paddock Morgan (June 23, 1910 – January 27, 1993) was an American journalist and writer who reported for newspapers, radio, and television media services including ABC, CBS networks, and the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS). (Wikipedia)
10 notes · View notes
scenesandscreens · 4 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
I Saw The TV Glow (2024)
Director - Jane Schoenbrun, Cinematography - Eric K. Yue
"Soon, you won't remember anything. Your real name, your superpowers, you won't even remember that you're dying."
114 notes · View notes
oldshowbiz · 10 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
1961.
CBS forced newsman Howard K. Smith to resign after he criticized Alabama racists.
211 notes · View notes
thenewdemocratus · 1 year ago
Text
ABC News: 1968 Republican National Convention: William F. Buckley VS Gore Vidal
Source:The New Democrat  The ultimate debate, when it comes to wit, humor, and intelligence was between Gore Vidal and Bill Buckley. You don’t need a moderator in a debate like this and there really wasn’t one, with Howard Smith letting Vidal and Buckley basically just go at it because the two men could carry the conversation by themselves and knew where to go and what they wanted to say. They…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
adventuressclubamericas · 25 days ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Mary Alice Nelson was born in 1903 on Indian Island, Maine, part of the Penobscot Reservation. The oldest child of a tribal official and a prominent Penobscot artisan, Mary Alice began performing traditional Penobscot dances for tourists when she was 13. Before long, she was making her living dancing on the vaudeville circuit.
She left the limelight behind to study anthropology at the University of Pennsylvania. After only two years, though, the money ran out, so she returned to modeling and dancing, adopting the stage name Molly Spotted Elk. She was a success, causing a sensation everywhere she went, although catering to the attitudes of the day meant dancing in an abbreviated buckskin costume, (or less,) and acting out common stereotypes of Indigenous People. It was during this time that she started a second career as a writer.
It wasn’t long before Hollywood called. Spotted Elk was cast as Neewa, the female lead, in 1930s “The Silent Enemy.” One of Paramount’s last silent films, this groundbreaking production about pre-contact Ojibway life featured an all-Indigenous cast and set out to break stereotypes and myths. Sadly, it was a flop. Spotted Elk would appear in supporting roles in a couple more films, but never again had a lead role.
In 1931 Molly Spotted Elk began performing in France, where she found the audiences to be much more open to actual traditional dances than American audiences had been. She also found love with French journalist John Archambaud. The pair would marry, have a daughter they named Jean, and were by all accounts happy.
Until the war came.
Archambaud was an outspoken anti-Nazi, which made him a target. When Germany invaded, John was separated from Molly and their daughter. They never saw him again. Molly and Jean escaped over the Pyrenees to Portugal – mostly on foot. Jean would later recall, “We walked, we ran, we rode ambulances. A newsman picked us up once, and my mother always claimed it was Howard K. Smith. Adventure always followed her even in adversity.”
Spotted Elk returned to performing in New York, retiring from the stage in the early 1950s. She spent the rest of her life on Indian Island. Mary Alice Archambaud/Molly Spotted Elk died on February 21, 1977. Her writings have been collected into the book, “Katahdin: Wigwam’s Tales of the Abnaki Tribe”, published by the Maine Folklife Center.
15 notes · View notes
brehaaorgana · 1 year ago
Text
I'm devastated. They just announced that PAFA is closing their college (degree earning programs) after this academic year.
While they're continuing the museum, certificate programs, commitment to K-12 arts programs and continuing education classes —the college and graduate degrees are ending.
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts is the first and oldest art school in the United States. And the college is closing.
So so many famous artists attended or taught at PAFA!! All kinds of them too! Thomas Eakins. Mary Cassatt!!!!! Mike Berenstain (son of Stan and Jan, who took on illustrating the Berenstain Bears!). Apparently David Lynch? Don Martin! Howard Pyle!! Barkley L. Hendricks! James Metcalf, Henry O. Tanner, William Rush, Sarah Peale, Anna Peale, Jessie Willcox Smith, Maxfield Parrish, Henrietta Myers Miller (known professionally as Peter Miller). Thomas Cole. Robert Henri. Cecelia Beaux.
(it is also the first and oldest museum in the US, which thankfully isn't also being closed).
I wish the US funded the arts better. The college deserves to be saved as an iconic and immensely influential american institution, similar to the Smithsonian network of museums — with government funding. Hell, congress people should be FIGHTING to bail out PAFA, sustain it and treat it as a PAFA-Smithsonian arts institute funded by the government. Or SOMETHING. :(
It's going to close after reaching 220 years.
69 notes · View notes
brian-in-finance · 4 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Video 📹 from Instagram
Tumblr media
Image: Chris Smith / The Wrap
The 18 Buzziest Films for Sale at TIFF 2024
Mike Flanagan’s “Life of Chuck,” Angelina Jolie’s “Without Blood” and Ron Howard’s “Eden” are all looking for buyers in Toronto
While the Toronto International Film Festival won’t officially launch a sales market until 2026, this year kicks off on Thursday with multiple buzzy titles for sale starring the likes of Ben Stiller, Sydney Sweeney, Jude Law and Tom Hiddleston.
Hollywood descends upon the Canadian metropolis for starry world premieres and the unofficial start of awards season. But for years now TIFF has also been a place of serious business. Last year the Glen Powell rom-com “Hit Man” sold to Netflix for $20 million at the festival after a raucous screening.
“They’ve very much shaped this festival with a sales environment in mind,” Intrepid Pictures CEO Trevor Macy told TheWrap as he prepared to head to TIFF with the Hiddleston-fronted Stephen King adaptation “The Life of Chuck,” from writer/director Mike Flanagan. “It seems like buyers are showing up in force.”
And to prove his point, Sony Classics scooped up “Jane Austen Ruined My Life” on Tuesday ahead of the festival.
Over 270 films are on the market this year, and Macy said that the demand “for strong titles in this moment of the market is going to exceed the supply of what good distributors have made internally.” He pointed to the success of Neon’s “Longlegs” this summer — the Nicolas Cage horror film grossed over $100 million off a strong marketing campaign — as an indie that connected with moviegoers theatrically.
But Jay Cohen, a partner at Gersh who heads film financing and is selling titles at the festival, cautioned that studios may only be looking to buy must-have titles, not filling out their slates. “There are really interesting films going to TIFF, but distributors already have pretty full slates,” he told TheWrap. “So the market will be driven more by passion less than need.”
Which means that only top quality films with identifiable audiences will attract buyers. Still, one agent noted that many of the buzziest sales titles, while officially unsold, already have distribution deals that have not been announced.
Macy and Intrepid are aiming to utilize what TIFF brings to the table — specifically when it comes to audiences — to find the right distributor for “The Life of Chuck,” which is a detour for horror filmmaker Flanagan, best known for “The Haunting” series on Netflix and the “Shining” sequel film “Doctor Sleep.” The new film is more “Stand by Me” than “The Shining,” and buyers haven’t prescreened it at all, so they will be seeing it for the first time at its world premiere in Toronto.
“From the time we made this movie, our first choice was Toronto because of the audience,” Macy said of the decision to debut at TIFF. “Our movie is fun and life-affirming but kind of sophisticated, so you want the right audience for that.” He and Flanagan had success a decade ago with the indie horror film “Oculus,” which found a buyer in Toronto and grossed over $44 million against a budget of just $5 million. It jumpstarted Flanagan’s career.
Will “The Life of Chuck” have the same success? Here’s TheWrap’s rundown of that and 17 of the other buzziest sales titles playing at TIFF this year.
Nutcrackers • Eden • The Life of Chuck • The Deb • Without Blood • On Swift Horses • The Last Showgirl • K-Pops • Daniela Forever • All Of You • Ick • Relay • The Friend • The Last Republican • Vice Is Broke • From Ground Zero • The Assessment
Tumblr media
The Wrap
Remember to follow the link to read synopses of the 17 other films.
15 notes · View notes
todaysdocument · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Discharge Petition for H.R. 7152, the Civil Rights Act of 1964
Record Group 233: Records of the U.S. House of RepresentativesSeries: General Records
This item, H.R. 7152, the Civil Rights Act of 1964, faced strong opposition in the House Rules Committee. Howard Smith, Chairman of the committee, refused to schedule hearings for the bill. Emanuel Celler, Chairman of the Judiciary Committee, attempted to use this discharge petition to move the bill out of committee without holding hearings. The petition failed to gain the required majority of Congress (218 signatures), but forced Chairman Smith to schedule hearings.
88th CONGRESS. House of Representatives No. 5 Motion to Discharge a Committee from the Consideration of a RESOLUTION (State whether bill, joint resolution, or resolution) December 9, 1963 To the Clerk of the House of Representatives: Pursuant to Clause 4 of Rule XXVII (see rule on page 7), I EMANUEL CELLER (Name of Member), move to discharge to the Commitee on RULES (Committee) from the consideration of the RESOLUTION; H. Res. 574 entitled, a RESOLUTION PROVIDING FOR THE CONSIDERATION OF THE BILL (H. R. 7152) which was referred to said committee November 27, 1963 in support of which motion the undersigned Members of the House of Representatives affix their signatures, to wit: 1. Emanuel Celler 2. John J. Rooney 3. Seymour Halpern 4. James G Fulton 5. Thomas W Pelly 6. Robt N. C. Nix 7. Jeffery Cohelan 8. W A Barrett 9. William S. Mailiard 10. 11. Augustus F. Hawkins 12. Otis G. Pike 13. Benjamin S Rosenthal 14. Spark M Matsunaga 15. Frank M. Clark 16. William L Dawson 17. Melvin Price 18. John C. Kluczynski 19. Barratt O'Hara 20. George E. Shipley 21. Dan Rostenkowski 22. Ralph J. Rivers[page] 2 23. Everett G. Burkhalter 24. Robert L. Leggett 25. William L St Onge 26. Edward P. Boland 27. Winfield K. Denton 28. David J. Flood 29. 30. Lucian N. Nedzi 31. James Roosevelt 32. Henry C Reuss 33. Charles S. Joelson 34. Samuel N. Friedel 35. George M. Rhodes 36. William F. Ryan 37. Clarence D. Long 38. Charles C. Diggs Jr 39. Morris K. Udall 40. Wm J. Randall 41. 42. Donald M. Fraser 43. Joseph G. Minish 44. Edith Green 45. Neil Staebler 46. 47. Ralph R. Harding 48. Frank M. Karsten 49. 50. John H. Dent 51. John Brademas 52. John E. Moss 53. Jacob H. Gilbert 54. Leonor K. Sullivan 55. John F. Shelley 56. 57. Lionel Van Deerlin 58. Carlton R. Sickles 59. 60. Edward R. Finnegan 61. Julia Butler Hansen 62. Richard Bolling 63. Ken Heckler 64. Herman Toll 65. Ray J Madden 66. J Edward Roush 67. James A. Burke 68. Frank C. Osmers Jr 69. Adam Powell 70. 71. Fred Schwengel 72. Philip J. Philiben 73. Byron G. Rogers 74. John F. Baldwin 75. Joseph Karth 76. 77. Roland V. Libonati 78. John V. Lindsay 79. Stanley R. Tupper 80. Joseph M. McDade 81. Wm Broomfield 82. 83. 84. Robert J Corbett 85. 86. Craig Hosmer87. Robert N. Giaimo 88. Claude Pepper 89. William T Murphy 90. George H. Fallon 91. Hugh L. Carey 92. Robert T. Secrest 93. Harley O. Staggers 94. Thor C. Tollefson 95. Edward J. Patten 96. 97. Al Ullman 98. Bernard F. Grabowski 99. John A. Blatnik 100. 101. Florence P. Dwyer 102. Thomas L. ? 103. 104. Peter W. Rodino 105. Milton W. Glenn 106. Harlan Hagen 107. James A. Byrne 108. John M. Murphy 109. Henry B. Gonzalez 110. Arnold Olson 111. Harold D Donahue 112. Kenneth J. Gray 113. James C. Healey 114. Michael A Feighan 115. Thomas R. O'Neill 116. Alphonzo Bell 117. George M. Wallhauser 118. Richard S. Schweiker 119. 120. Albert Thomas 121. 122. Graham Purcell 123. Homer Thornberry 124. 125. Leo W. O'Brien 126. Thomas E. Morgan 127. Joseph M. Montoya 128. Leonard Farbstein 129. John S. Monagan 130. Brad Morse 131. Neil Smith 132. Harry R. Sheppard 133. Don Edwards 134. James G. O'Hara 135. 136. Fred B. Rooney 137. George E. Brown Jr. 138. 139. Edward R. Roybal 140. Harris. B McDowell jr. 141. Torbert H. McDonall 142. Edward A. Garmatz 143. Richard E. Lankford 144. Richard Fulton 145. Elizabeth Kee 146. James J. Delaney 147. Frank Thompson Jr 148. 149. Lester R. Johnson 150. Charles A. Buckley4 151. Richard T. Hanna 152. James Corman 153. Paul A Fino 154. Harold M. Ryan 155. Martha W. Griffiths 156. Adam E. Konski 157. Chas W. Wilson 158. Michael J. Kewan 160. Alex Brooks 161. Clark W. Thompson 162. John D. Gringell [?] 163. Thomas P. Gill 164. Edna F. Kelly 165. Eugene J. Keogh 166 John. B. Duncan 167. Elmer J. Dolland 168. Joe Caul 169. Arnold Olsen 170. Monte B. Fascell [?] 171. [not deciphered] 172. J. Dulek 173. Joe W. [undeciphered] 174. J. J. Pickle [Numbers 175 through 214 are blank]
39 notes · View notes
theic-manic · 13 days ago
Text
Me, still trying to adjust to Netjeru communication styles: *silently asks Anubis for confirmation that it's him I am sensing*
So out of the blue, I come across this: Hounds and Jackals
Now, I could just accept this confirmation but alas, I am a curious prick.
So upon googling "4000 year old board game" I come across
And
Now, looking at the dates of a few articles...
Me: "it's a bit interesting that a 4000 year old game happens to be unearthed every 4 years, based on a very cursory look at my search results..."
And remembering that when Egypt became a Hellenistic kingdom ruled by Greek pharaohs, Anubis was merged with the Greek god Hermes (whose sacred number is 4) , becoming Hermanubis...
"Right so every FOUR years, archaeologists find FOUR thousand year old board games, one of which is a 'race game', and going back to Hounds and Jackals
Assuming that the holes marked 'good' incur a gain, it would appear that the others, connected by lines, incur a loss. Now the moves themselves could easily have been denoted by the chance cast of knuckle-bones or dice....and if so we have before us a simple, but exciting, game of chance.
Egyptians likened the intricate voyage through the underworld to a game.
Which just screams Hermes and therefore... okay, hello there, Hermanubis."
So I read about Hermanubis.
"Yeah okay, this actually really aligns with my polytheistic evolution this year so well it's almost spooky".
Hermanubis is one of the figures depicted in the Rider-Waite-Smith tarot on the Wheel of Fortune card. Of this Paul Foster Case writes in The Tarot: A Key to the Wisdom of the Ages that “Hermanubis (Hermes-Anubis), jackal-headed Egyptian god, rises on the right side of the wheel, to represent the evolution of consciousness from lower to higher forms. His jackal’s head represents intellectuality.
Back the fuck up... so that's why I kept pulling the wheel of fortune card for MONTHS?
Right.
I now need to ponder all of this.
3 notes · View notes
hbowar-bracket · 11 months ago
Text
Albert Blithe 
Alex Penkala 
Alice 
Alton More 
Anna
Anthony 'Manimal' Jacks  
Antonio 'Poke' Espera  
Antonio Garcia 
Army Chaplain Teska  
Baba Karamanlis  
Bernard DeMarco   
Bill 'Hoosier' Smith  
Bill Leyden  
Billy Taylor  
Brad 'Iceman' Colbert  
Burton Christenson 
Capt. Andrew Haldane  
Carwood Lipton 
Charles (Chuck) Grant 
Charles Bean Cruikshank   
Charles K. Bailey  
Col. Robert Sink 
Cpt. Bryan Patterson  
Cpt. Craig 'Encino Man' Schwetje  
Cpt. Dave 'Captain America' McGraw  
Curtis Biddick  
Darrell (Shifty) Powers 
David Solomon  
David Webster 
Denver (Bull) Randleman 
Donald Hoobler 
Dr. Sledge  
Edward (Babe) Heffron 
Elmo 'Gunny' Haney  
Eric Kocher  
Eugene Jackson 
Eugene Roe 
Eugene Sledge   
Evan 'Q-Tip' Stafford  
Evan 'Scribe' Wright  
Everett Blakely   
Father John Maloney 
Floyd (Tab) Talbert 
Frank Murphy   
Frank Perconte 
Frederick (Moose) Heyliger 
Gabe Garza  
Gale 'Buck' Cleven  
George Luz 
Glenn Graham   
Gunnery Sgt. Mike 'Gunny' Wynn  
Gunnery Sgt. Ray 'Casey Kasem' Griego  
Hamm  
Harry Crosby  
Harry Welsh 
Helen  
Herbert Sobel 
Howard 'Hambone' Hamilton   
Jack Kidd  
James (Mo) Alley
James Chaffin  
James Douglass  
James Gibson   
James Miller 
Jason Lilley  
Jean Achten  
Jeffrey 'Dirty Earl' Carisalez  
John 'Bucky' Egan  
John Basilone  
John Christeson  
John D. Brady   
John Fredrick  
John Janovec 
John Julian 
John Martin 
Joseph 'Bubbles' Payne   
Joseph Liebgott 
Joseph Toye 
Josh Ray Person  
Katherine 'Tatty' Spaatz   
Ken Lemmons  
Lance Cpl. Harold James Trombley  
Larry Shawn 'Pappy' Patrick  
Leandro 'Shady B' Baptista  
Lena Basilone  
Lew 'Chuckler' Juergens  
Lewis Nixon 
Lt. Edward 'Hillbilly' Jones  
Lt. Henry Jones 
Lt. Nathaniel Fick  
Lt. Thomas Peacock 
Lynn (Buck) Compton 
Maj. 'Red' Bowman  
Maj. John Sixta  
Mama Karamanlis  
Manuel Rodriguez  
Mary Frank Sledge  
Meesh  
Merriell 'Snafu' Shelton  
Navy Hm2 Robert Timothy 'Doc' Bryan  
Neil 'Chick' Harding   
Norman Dike 
Old Man on Bicycle 
Patrick O'Keefe 
Phyllis  
R.V. Burgin   
Ralph (Doc) Spina 
Renee Lemaire 
Richard Winters 
Robert 'Rosie' Rosenthal   
Robert 'Stormy' Becker   
Robert (Popeye) Wynn 
Robert Leckie  
Rodolfo 'Rudy' Reyes  
Ronald Speirs 
Roy Claytor  
Roy Cobb 
Sammy   
Sgt. Mallard  
Sidney Phillips  
Stella Karamanlis
Teren 'T' Holsey  
Vera Keller  
Walt Hasser  
Walter (Smokey) Gordon
Warren (Skip) Muck 
Wayne (Skinny) Sisk 
Wilbur 'Runner' Conley  
William Guarnere 
William Hinton  
William J. DeBlasio  
William Quinn  
Winifred 'Pappy' Lewis  
16 notes · View notes
cosmosrebellion · 6 months ago
Note
Fantasy Recs:
The Book of Jhereg by Steven Brust (Dragaera) Black God's Kiss by C.L. Moore (Jirel of Joiry) Waylander by David Gemmell (Waylander) The Blacktongue Thief and Between Two Fires by Christopher Buehlman (Blacktongue) Assassin’s Apprentice by Robin Hobb (Realm of the Elderlings) The Blade Itself by Joe Abercrombie (The First Law) A Game of Thrones by George R.R. Martin (A Song of Ice and Fire) The Curse of Chalion by Lois McMaster Bujold (World of the Five Gods) The Dragonbone Chair by Tad Williams (Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn) Chronicles of the Black Company by Glen Cook (The Black Company) The Dragon’s Path by Daniel Abraham (The Dagger and the Coin) The Traitor Baru Cormorant by Seth Dickinson (The Masquerade) Johannes Cabal the Necromancer by Jonathan L. Howard (Johannes Cabal) The Folding Knife by K.J. Parker The Devourers by Indra Das Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell and Piranesi by Susanna Clarke A Country of Ghosts by Margaret Killjoy The Colour of Magic by Terry Pratchett (Discworld) City of Bones by Martha Wells The Alchemy of Stone by Ekaterina Sedia A Woman of the Sword by Anna Smith Spark Those Above by Daniel Polansky (The Empty Throne) The Spear Cuts Through Water by Simon Jimenez The Dragon Waiting by John M. Ford Books of Blood by Clive Barker Tigana by Guy Gavriel Kay The Chatelaine by Kate Heartfield The Etched City by K.J. Bishop The Saint of Bright Doors by Vajra Chandrasekera Gormenghast by Meryn Peake Viriconium by M. John Harrison Black Leopard, Red Wolf by Marlon James (The Dark Star)
Horror Recs:
North American Lake Monsters by Nathan Ballingrud The Marigold by Andrew F. Sullivan The Beautiful Thing That Awaits Us All by Laird Barron The Wingspan of Severed Hands by Joe Koch A Collapse of Horses by Brian Evenson The Immeasurable Corpse of Nature by Christopher Slatsky Negative Space by B.R. Yeager A Natural History of Hell by Jeffrey Ford We Have Always Lived In The Castle by Shirley Jackson Furnace by Livia Llewelyn Manhunt by Gretchen Felker-Martin The Salt Grows Heavy by Cassandra Khaw Tell Me I'm Worthless by Alison Rumfitt Queen of Teeth by Hailey Piper Leech by Hiron Ennes
Sci-Fi Recs:
An Unkindness of Ghosts by Rivers Solomon The Left Hand of Darkness by Ursula K. Le Guin Rosewater by Tade Thompson (Rosewater) Ammonite by Nicola Griffith Dawn by Octavia E. Butler (Xenogenesis) A Scanner Darkly by Philip K. Dick Annihilation by Jeff VanderMeer Dhalgren by Samuel R. Delany Bang Bang Bodhisattva by Aubrey Wood
AHHHHH!!! THANK YOU SO MUCH!!! All go on The List!! Can't wait to check all of them out!
6 notes · View notes
nem0c · 2 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Vietnam War - Galaxy Science Fiction Magazine, June 1968
Sourced from: http://natsmusic.net/articles_galaxy_magazine_viet_nam_war.htm
Transcript Below
We the undersigned believe the United States must remain in Vietnam to fulfill its responsibilities to the people of that country.
Karen K. Anderson, Poul Anderson, Harry Bates, Lloyd Biggle Jr., J. F. Bone, Leigh Brackett, Marion Zimmer Bradley, Mario Brand, R. Bretnor, Frederic Brown, Doris Pitkin Buck, William R. Burkett Jr., Elinor Busby, F. M. Busby, John W. Campbell, Louis Charbonneau, Hal Clement, Compton Crook, Hank Davis, L. Sprague de Camp, Charles V. de Vet, William B. Ellern, Richard H. Eney, T. R. Fehrenbach, R. C. FitzPatrick, Daniel F. Galouye, Raymond Z. Gallun, Robert M. Green Jr., Frances T. Hall, Edmond Hamilton, Robert A. Heinlein, Joe L. Hensley, Paul G. Herkart, Dean C. Ing, Jay Kay Klein, David A. Kyle, R. A. Lafferty, Robert J. Leman, C. C. MacApp, Robert Mason, D. M. Melton, Norman Metcalf, P. Schuyler Miller, Sam Moskowitz, John Myers Myers, Larry Niven, Alan Nourse, Stuart Palmer, Gerald W. Page, Rachel Cosgrove Payes, Lawrence A. Perkins, Jerry E. Pournelle, Joe Poyer, E. Hoffmann Price, George W. Price, Alva Rogers, Fred Saberhagen, George O. Smith, W. E. Sprague, G. Harry Stine (Lee Correy), Dwight V. Swain, Thomas Burnett Swann, Albert Teichner, Theodore L. Thomas, Rena M. Vale, Jack Vance, Harl Vincent, Don Walsh Jr., Robert Moore Williams, Jack Williamson, Rosco E. Wright, Karl Würf.
We oppose the participation of the United States in the war in Vietnam.
Forrest J. Ackerman, Isaac Asimov, Peter S. Beagle, Jerome Bixby, James Blish, Anthony Boucher, Lyle G. Boyd, Ray Bradbury, Jonathan Brand, Stuart J. Byrne, Terry Carr, Carroll J. Clem, Ed M. Clinton, Theodore R. Cogswell, Arthur Jean Cox, Allan Danzig, Jon DeCles, Miriam Allen deFord, Samuel R. Delany, Lester del Rey, Philip K. Dick, Thomas M. Disch, Sonya Dorman, Larry Eisenberg, Harlan Ellison, Carol Emshwiller, Philip José Farmer, David E. Fisher, Ron Goulart, Joseph Green, Jim Harmon, Harry Harrison, H. H. Hollis, J. Hunter Holly, James D. Houston, Edward Jesby, Leo P. Kelley, Daniel Keyes, Virginia Kidd, Damon Knight, Allen Lang, March Laumer, Ursula K. LeGuin, Fritz Leiber, Irwin Lewis, A. M. Lightner, Robert A. W. Lowndes, Katherine MacLean, Barry Malzberg, Robert E. Margroff, Anne Marple, Ardrey Marshall, Bruce McAllister, Judith Merril, Robert P. Mills, Howard L. Morris, Kris Neville, Alexei Panshin, Emil Petaja, J. R. Pierce, Arthur Porges, Mack Reynolds, Gene Roddenberry, Joanna Russ, James Sallis, William Sambrot, Hans Stefan Santesson, J. W. Schutz, Robin Scott, Larry T. Shaw, John Shepley, T. L. Sherred, Robert Silverberg, Henry Slesar, Jerry Sohl, Norman Spinrad, Margaret St. Clair, Jacob Transue, Thurlow Weed, Kate Wilhelm, Richard Wilson, Donald A. Wollheim.
21 notes · View notes
oldshowbiz · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
8 notes · View notes
thenewdemocratus · 2 years ago
Text
ABC News: 'The ABC Evening News, January 11, 1978'
Source:ABC News– anchor Frank Reynolds. Source:The New Democrat “ABC Evening News, January 11, 1978 with Harry Reasoner, Bawa, Frank Reynolds, Howard K Smith.” From Colortiniz I guess the one big story that I got out of this short clip of the ABC Evening News, newscast was the economic report. The economy looked like it was in somewhat decent shape in January, 1978. The economy was growing and…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
1stsummer · 1 year ago
Text
BOOKS
Tumblr media
WANT TO READ
Seaside (Ziggy Zezsyazeoviennazabrizkie)
The Midnight Library (Matt Haig)
Black Showman dan pembunuhan di Kota Tak Bernama (Keigo Higashino)
Di Tanah Lada (Ziggy Zezsyazeoviennazabrizkie)
Jakarta Sebelum Pagi (Ziggy Zezsyazeoviennazabrizkie)
White Wedding (Ziggy Zezsyazeoviennazabrizkie)
Kita Pergi Hari Ini (Ziggy Zezsyazeoviennazabrizkie)
Tiga Dalam Kayu (Ziggy Zezsyazeoviennazabrizkie)
Laut Bercerita (Leila S. Chudori)
The Poppy War (R.F. Kuang)
Befofe The Coffe Gets Cold (Toshikazu Kawaguchi)
Keajaiban Toko Kelontong Namiya (Keigo Higashino)
Dollagot : Toko Penjual Mimpi (Lee mi Ye)
The Turn Of The Screw (Henry James)
The Seven Husband of Evelyn Hugo (Taylor Jenkins Red)
Pasta Kacang Merah (Durian Sugekawa)
Six of Crows (Leigh Bardugo)
The Little Book of Sloth Philosophy (Jennifer McCartney)
Norwegian Wood (Haruki Murakami)
Resign (Almira Bastari)
Rumah Lebah (Ruwi Meita)
Gadis Kretek (Ratih Kumala)
Persuasion (Jane Austine)
The Alchemist (Paulo Coelho)
Pemetik Bintang (Venerdi Handoyo)
Atomic Habits (James Clear)
CURRENTLY READING
Babel (R. F. Kuang)
If You Could See The Sun (Ann Liang)
Six Crimson Cranes (Elizabet Lim)
The Song Of Achilles (Madeline Miller)
A Little Princess (Fances Hodsgon Burnett)
Restore Me (Tahereh Mafi)
Kapan Nanti (Ziggy Zezsyazeoviennazabrizkie)
You'd be Home Now (Kathleen Gasglow)
Girl Who Feel Beneath the Sea (Axie Oh)
A Good Girl Guide To Murder (Holly Jackson)
Crime And Punishment (Fyodor Dostoyevsky)
Days at the Morisaki Bookshop (Satoshi Yagisawa)
This Time Its Real (Ann Liang)
Sapiens (Yuval Noah Harari)
This is how You Lose The Time War by Amal el Mohtar and Max gladstone.
The Midnight Library by Matt Haig
FINISHED
Percy Jackson series (Rick Riordan)
Harry Potter series (J.K Rowling)
Normal People (Sally Rooney)
Auntumn In Paris (Ilana Tan)
Pride And Prejudice (Jane Asuten, Anna Quindlen)
A Brief History of Time (Stephen Hawking)
Dunia Sophie (Jostein Gaarder)
All The Light We Cannot See (Anthony Doerr)
The Star are Fire (Anita Shreve)
Mitologi Nordik (Neil Gaiman)
if He Had Been With Me (Laura Nowlin)
It Ends With Us (Collen Hoover)
Seperti Dendam Rindu Harus di Bayar Tuntas (Eka Kurniawan)
A Monster Cells (Patrick Ness)
Almond (Sohn Won Pyung)
Tarian Bumi (Oka Rusmini)
Perempuan yang Menangis Kepada Bulan Hitam (Dian Purnomo)
Progressnya Berapa Persen? (Soraya Nasution)
Simmer Down (Sarah Smith)
Semesta Cerita Kita (Ruth Pricilia Angelina)
Memor Marla (Safira Haspari)
Shatter Me Series (Tahereh Mafi)
Addicted To You (Krista Richie)
Mengapa Luka Tidak Memaafkan Pisau (M. aan Mansyur)
The Little Prince (Antoine de Saint Exupery)
The Picture of Dorian Gray (Oscar Wilde)
The Old Man Eating Alone (Howard Pearlstein)
Blink The Power of Thinking without Thinking (Malcolm Gladwell)
Reason To Stay Alive (Matt Haig)
Wonder (R. J. Palacio)
Open Water (Caleb Azumah Nelson)
Rumah Jadah (Royyan Julian)
We Should All Be Feminims (Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie)
The Devotion of Suspect X (Keigo Higashino)
Malice (Keigo Higashino)
Tumblr media
12 notes · View notes
rjalker · 10 months ago
Text
K you can now reblog. If you find places to read any stories without links as actual text for free, please let me know!
1933
January 1933 Under Arctic Ice by Harry Bates The Floating Island of Madness by Jason Kirby The Fifth-Dimension Tube by Murray Leinster
March 1933 Salvage in Space by Jack Williamson Lords of the Stratosphere by Arthur Josephus Burks The End of Time by Wallace West The Death-Traps of FX-31 by Sewell Peaslee Wright Wanderer of Infinity by Harl Vincent Invasion by Murray Leinster
October 1933 (PDF) The Orange God by Nat Schachner A Race Through Time by Donald Wandrei (PDF) Burroughs Passes by Kenneth James Anything Can Happen! by Peter Gordon From the Wells of the Brain by Paul Ernst Don MacKinder's Model by F. S. Howard-Burleigh The Coffin Ship by Desmond Winter Hall Fire Imps of Vesuvius by Nat Schachner Ping-Ting by Charlton Lawrence Edholm Where Four Roads Met by Gladys St. John-Loe Callahuaya's Curse by P. H. Fawcett
November 1933 (PDF) Beyond the Sphinxes' Cave by Murray Leinster The Lovely Ghost by Stuart Jackson Prisms of Space by Robert H. Leitfred In the Shadow of the Tii by D. W. Hall [as by Ainslee Jenkins] Dead Star Station by Jack Williamson The Man from Cincinnati by Holloway Horn Plane People by Wallace West My Lady of the Tunnel by Arthur J. Burks Telegraph Plateau by Harl Vincent
December 1933 (PDF) Land of the Lost by Charles Willard Diffin The Machine that Knew Too Much by A. T. Locke The Invading Blood Steam by Paul Starr The Purple Brain by Hal K Wells Ancestral Voices by Nat Scachner Last Sacrifice by J. Gibson Taylor Jr. Farewell to Earth by Donald Wandrei Terror Out of Time by Jack Williamson The Demon of the Flower by Clark Ashton Smith
3 notes · View notes