#Norman McDougall
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lindaseccaspina · 11 months ago
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The Laird of Glen Isle Rescued by Boy Scouts and Cubs
Bridge across the Mississippi River to Glen Isle- Public Archives- Carleton Place and Beckwith Heritage Museum 1949 Sad, sad, sad was the plight of Norman McDougall, the Laird of Glen Isle over the New Year’s holiday. Literally cut off by Friday’s storm, he was prevented from getting his usual supply of provisions. While all his friends were holding parties, his only companion was his dog. But…
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themerelypersonal · 1 month ago
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Books I’ve consumed so far in 2024:
The Order of Time by Carlo Rovelli
I Contain Multitudes: The Microbes Within Us and a Grander View of Life by Ed Yong
Something Deeply Hidden by Sean Carroll
How to Read Nature: An Expert’s Guide to Discovering the Outdoors You Never Noticed by Qarie Marshall
Helgoland: Making Sense of the Quantum Revolution by Carlo Rovelli
The World According to Physics by Jim Al-Khalili
How Not To Kill Yourself: A Portrait of the Suicidal Mind by Clancy Martin
How Far the Light Reaches: A Life in Ten Sea Creatures by Sabrina Imbler
A Series of Fortunate Events: Chance and the Making of the Planet by Sean B. Carroll
Listen: On Music, Sound and Us by Michel Faber
The Art of Communicating by Thich Nhat Hanh
I am a Strange Loop by Douglas R. Hofstadter
Transgender Warriors: Making History from Joan of Arc to Dennis Rodman by Leslie Feinberg
Spectrums: Autistic Transgender People in Their Own Words by Maxfield Sparrow
All the Flowers Kneeling by Paul Tran
Supporting Transgender Autistic Youth and Adults by Finn V. Gratton, LMFT, LPCC
Nisa by Marjorie Shostak
Determined: A Science of Life Without Free Will by Robert M. Sapolsky
21 Lessons for the 21st History by Yuval Harrari
The Book Of Secrets by Deepak Chopra
The Joy of Science by Jim Al-Khalili
The Rock Warriors Way by Arno IIgner
The Pursuit of Endurance by Jennifer Pharr Davis
Quantum Mechanics, Technology, Consciousness and the Multiverse by Martin Ettington
Born to Run by Christopher McDougall
Connecting with the Autism Spectrum by Casey “Remrov” Vormer
Light Falls: Space, Time, and an Obsession with Einstein by Brian Greene
A Walk In the Woods by Bill Bryson
10 Days in Physics that Shook the World by Brian Clegg
On Being a Therapist by Jeffrey Kottler
Atlas of the Heart: Mapping Meaningful Connection and the language of the human experience by Brene Brown
What do you really want? By Cayla Craft
The Peaceful Warrior by Dan Millman
How to Write an Autobiographical Novel by Alexander Chee
Chemistry for Breakfast by Dr. Mai Thi Nguyen-Kim
The Creative Act: A Way of Being by Rick Rubin
A Molecule Away from Madness by Sara Manning Peskin
Quantum Wonder: How the Tiny Drives Our Immense Reality by Carl AL-Khalili
Building a Life Worth Living by Marsha Linehan
How to Know a Person: The Art of Seeing Others Deeply by David Brooks
Speed Reading by Kam Knight
Being You: A New Science of Consciousness by Anil Seth
You Are Not an Imposter by Coline Monsarrat
You are the Placebo by Dr. Joe Dispenza
Welcome to the O.C.: The Oral History by Alan Sepinwall
Heartbreak: A Personal and Scientific Journey by Florence Williams
DBT Made Simple: A Step-by-Step Guide to Dialectical Behavior Therapy by Sheri Van Dijk MSW
Move on Motherf*cker: Live, Laugh, and Let Sh*t Go by Jodie Eckleberry-Hunt, Emma Bryne PhD
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy: Real and proven strategies for managing anxiety by Charlie Norman
CBT Workbook: 7 Strategies to Overcome Anxiety, Depression, Anger, Panic, Worry, Intrusive Thoughts by Mind Change Academy
Dialectical Behavior Therapy: A comprehensive guide to DBT and using Behavior Therapy to Manage Borderline Personality Disorder by Christopher Rance
Somatic Psychotherapy: A Comprehensive Guide to Theoretical and Practical Considerations by Hale Boyd
Dialectical Behavior Therapy: Regulate Emotions, Panic, Anger. Guide for BPD by Dustin Drig
How Confidence Works: The new science of self belief by Ian Robertson
Fear: Essential Wisdom for Getting Through the Storm by Thich Nhat Hanh
The God Equation by Michio Kaku
Dialectical Behavior Therapy by Cindy Crosby
Brief Answers to the Big Questions by Stephen Hawking
Quantum: A Guide for the Perplexed by Jim Al-Khalili
Zen and the Art of Saving the Planet by Thich Nhat Hanh
Einstein in Time and Space: A Life in 99 Particles by Samuel Graydon
Reality is Not What It Seems by Carlo Rovelli
Resurrecting the Body, Reinventing the Soul by Deepak Chopra
A Brief History of Intelligence by Max Bennett
What the Future Looks like by Jim Al-Khalil
Retirement 101: From 401(k) Plans to Social Security Benefits to Asset Management by Michele Cagan
Still the Mind by Alan Watts
Anchor System Thinking by A.I. Shoukry
Finance Basics by Harvard Business Review
The Power of Now by Eckhart Tolle
A Brief History of Earth by Andrew Knoll
The Physics Book by DK
Investing for Beginners by David Cohne
The 48 Laws of Power by Robert Greene
Drink? The New Science of Alcohol and your Health by Professor David Nutt
Unique: The New Science of Human Individuality by David Linden
Psychedelics by Professor David Nutt
What do you need? By Lauren Wesley Wilson
Can’t Hurt Me by David Goggins
Endure by Cameron Hanes
Being Peace by Thich Nhat Hanh
Die with Zero: Getting all you can with your money and your life by Bill Perkins
How Humans Evolved by Robert Boyd and Joan Silk
No Bad Parts by Richard C. Schwartz,PHD
The Matter of Everything: How Curiosity, Physics, and Improbable Experiments Changed the World by Suzie Sheehy
The Radium Girls by Kate Moore
Bumpin: A Modern Guide to Pregnancy by Leslie Schrock
Choose Strong by Sally McRae
Outgrowing God by Richard Dawkins
Can We Talk about Israel? By Daniel Sokatch
Black Holes and Baby Universes and Other Essays by Stephen Hawking
Hal Koerner’s Field Guide to Ultra Running by Hal Koerner
The Science and Art of Running by Cooper Barton
Eat and Run: My Unlikely Journey to Ultramarathon Greatness by Scott Jurek
North: Finding my Way While Running the Appalachian Trail by Scott Jurek & Jenny Jurek
7 Habits of Highly Effective People by Stephen Covey
Securities Industries Essentials by Kaplan
Above the Clouds by Kilian Jornet
What is Life? by Paul Nurse
What I Know For Sure by Oprah Winfrey
A New Earth by Eckhart Tolle
Mastering Logical Fallacies by Michael Withey
This is why you Dream by Rahul Jandial,MD,PHD
The Tao of Running by Gary Dudney
Astrophysics for People in a Hurry by Neil DeGrasse Tyson
The Magic of Reality by Richard Dawkins
Parallel Worlds: A Journey through Creation, Higher Dimensions and the Future of the Cosmos by Michio Kaku
Dance of the Photons by Anton Zelinger
Quantum Body by Deepak Chopra
The Heart of Understanding by Thich Nhat Hanh
Annuity 360 Learn All You Need to Know About Annuities by Ford Strokes
Quantum Entanglement by Jed Brody
Relationships by Ram Dass
The Way of Zen by Alan Watts
Ultimate Confidence by Ralf Aabot
101 Essays that will Change the Way You Think by Brianna Wiest
The Science of Happiness by Brendan Kelly
Fighting for our Friendships by Danielle Bayard Jackson
One Day My Soul Just Opened Up by Iyanla Vanzant
K2: Life and Death on the World’s Most Dangerous Mountain by Ed Viesturs and David Roberts
Know that I Am by Eckhart Tolle
Girls Like Us by Sheila Weller
Love Sense: The Revolutionary New Science of Romantic Relationships by Dr. Sue Johnson
Girls that Invest by Simran Kaur
Slow Productivity by Cal Newport
Greenlights by Matthew McConaughey
Stillness Speaks by Eckhart Tolle
Retroactive Jealousy by Vincenzo Venezia
Right Thing, Right Now by Ryan Holiday
The Best American Essays 2022 by Alexander Chee & Robert Atwan
Talking to Strangers by Malcolm Gladwell
Insecure in love by Leslie Becker-Phelps PHD
Codependent No More by Melody Beattie
Be Here Now by Ram Dass
Reality, Art, and Illusion by Alan Watts
Thinking Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman
List of Books I Consumed in 2023:
The Last climb by David Breashears, Audrey Selkeld, and Audry Salkend
What is Life by Schrodinger
A Brief History of Time by Stephen Hawking
Beyond Feeling: A Guide to Critical Thinking by Vincent Ryan Ruggiero
Furniture by Kevin Sheetz
A Short History of Nearly Everything by Bill Bryson
Relativity by Albert Einstein
Tao Te Ching by Lao Tzu
An Immense World by Ed Yong
Quantum Supremacy by Michio Kaku
White Holes by Carlo Rovelli
A Separate Reality by Carlos Castaneda
Outlive by Peter Attia
Until the End of Time by Brian Greene
Tribe by Sebastian Junger
Ghosts of Everest by Jochen Hemmleb
Attached by Amir Levine and Rachel Heller
Mind and Matter by Schrodinger
Wired for Love by Stan Tatkin
Grit by Angela Duckworth
The Subtle Art of Not Giving a fuck by Mark Manson
Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka
The Ethical Slut by Janet Hardy and Dossie Easton
Meditations by Marcus Aurelius
The Power of Myth by Joseph Campbell
The Fabric of the Cosmos by Brian Greene
The Body Keeps the Score by Bessel Van Der Kolk
Committed by Elizabeth Gilbert
Homo Deus Summary a Brief History of Tomorrow by Yuval Harari
Alone on the Wall by Alex Honnold
Why we Believe in God (s): A Concise Guide to the Science of Faith by J. Anderson Thomson
Physics and Philosophy: The Revolution of Modern Science by Werner Heisenberg
The Tao of Physics by Fritjof Chopra
Sacred Woman by Queen Afja
Everest: The West Ridge by Thomas Hornbein
Tracks by Robyn Davidson
The Ink Dark Moon by Ono no Komachi and Izumi Shikoku
Einstein by Walter Isaacson
Learned Optimism by Martin Seligman
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wankerwatch · 2 months ago
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Commons Vote
On: Passenger Railway Services Bill (Public Ownership) Bill: Committee: Amendment 14
Ayes: 111 (95.5% Con, 4.5% DUP) Noes: 362 (97.0% Lab, 2.5% Ind, 0.6% SDLP) Absent: ~177
Day's business papers: 2024-9-3
Likely Referenced Bill: Passenger Railway Services (Public Ownership) Bill
Description: A Bill to make provision for passenger railway services to be provided by public sector companies instead of by means of franchises.
Originating house: Commons Current house: Commons Bill Stage: 3rd reading
Individual Votes:
Ayes
Conservative (106 votes)
Alan Mak Alberto Costa Alex Burghart Alicia Kearns Alison Griffiths Andrew Bowie Andrew Murrison Andrew Rosindell Andrew Snowden Aphra Brandreth Ashley Fox Ben Obese-Jecty Ben Spencer Bernard Jenkin Blake Stephenson Bob Blackman Bradley Thomas Caroline Dinenage Caroline Johnson Charlie Dewhirst Chris Philp Claire Coutinho Damian Hinds Danny Kruger David Davis David Mundell David Reed David Simmonds Desmond Swayne Edward Argar Edward Leigh Gagan Mohindra Gareth Bacon Gareth Davies Gavin Williamson Geoffrey Cox George Freeman Greg Smith Gregory Stafford Harriet Cross Harriett Baldwin Helen Whately Iain Duncan Smith Jack Rankin James Cartlidge James Cleverly James Wild Jeremy Hunt Jeremy Wright Jerome Mayhew Jesse Norman Joe Robertson John Cooper John Glen John Hayes John Lamont John Whittingdale Joy Morrissey Julia Lopez Julian Lewis Karen Bradley Katie Lam Kemi Badenoch Kevin Hollinrake Kieran Mullan Kit Malthouse Laura Trott Lewis Cocking Lincoln Jopp Louie French Mark Francois Mark Garnier Mark Pritchard Martin Vickers Matt Vickers Mel Stride Mike Wood Mims Davies Neil Hudson Neil O'Brien Neil Shastri-Hurst Nick Timothy Nigel Huddleston Oliver Dowden Patrick Spencer Peter Bedford Peter Fortune Priti Patel Rebecca Harris Rebecca Paul Rebecca Smith Richard Fuller Richard Holden Robbie Moore Robert Jenrick Saqib Bhatti Sarah Bool Shivani Raja Simon Hoare Steve Barclay Stuart Anderson Stuart Andrew Suella Braverman Tom Tugendhat Victoria Atkins Wendy Morton
Democratic Unionist Party (5 votes)
Carla Lockhart Gavin Robinson Gregory Campbell Jim Shannon Sammy Wilson
Noes
Labour (351 votes)
Abena Oppong-Asare Abtisam Mohamed Adam Jogee Adam Thompson Afzal Khan Al Carns Alan Campbell Alan Gemmell Alan Strickland Alex Baker Alex Ballinger Alex Barros-Curtis Alex Davies-Jones Alex Mayer Alex McIntyre Alex Norris Alex Sobel Alice Macdonald Alison Hume Alison McGovern Alistair Strathern Allison Gardner Amanda Hack Amanda Martin Andrew Cooper Andrew Gwynne Andrew Lewin Andrew Pakes Andrew Ranger Andrew Western Andy MacNae Andy McDonald Andy Slaughter Angela Eagle Anna Dixon Anna Gelderd Anna McMorrin Anna Turley Anneliese Dodds Anneliese Midgley Antonia Bance Ashley Dalton Baggy Shanker Bambos Charalambous Barry Gardiner Bayo Alaba Beccy Cooper Becky Gittins Ben Coleman Ben Goldsborough Bill Esterson Blair McDougall Brian Leishman Callum Anderson Calvin Bailey Carolyn Harris Cat Smith Catherine Atkinson Catherine Fookes Catherine McKinnell Catherine West Charlotte Nichols Chi Onwurah Chris Bloore Chris Curtis Chris Elmore Chris Evans Chris Hinchliff Chris Kane Chris McDonald Chris Murray Chris Vince Chris Ward Chris Webb Christian Wakeford Claire Hazelgrove Claire Hughes Clive Betts Clive Efford Clive Lewis Connor Naismith Connor Rand Damien Egan Dan Aldridge Dan Carden Dan Jarvis Dan Norris Dan Tomlinson Daniel Francis Danny Beales Darren Paffey Dave Robertson David Burton-Sampson David Pinto-Duschinsky David Smith David Taylor Dawn Butler Debbie Abrahams Deirdre Costigan Derek Twigg Diana Johnson Douglas Alexander Douglas McAllister Elaine Stewart Ellie Reeves Elsie Blundell Emily Darlington Emily Thornberry Emma Foody Emma Lewell-Buck Euan Stainbank Fabian Hamilton Fleur Anderson Florence Eshalomi Frank McNally Gareth Snell Gareth Thomas Gen Kitchen Gerald Jones Gill Furniss Gill German Gordon McKee Graeme Downie Graham Stringer Grahame Morris Gregor Poynton Gurinder Singh Josan Harpreet Uppal Heidi Alexander Helen Hayes Helena Dollimore Henry Tufnell Ian Lavery Ian Murray Imogen Walker Irene Campbell Jack Abbott Jacob Collier Jade Botterill Jake Richards James Asser James Frith James Naish Janet Daby Jayne Kirkham Jeevun Sandher Jeff Smith Jen Craft Jenny Riddell-Carpenter Jess Asato Jess Phillips Jessica Morden Jessica Toale Jim Dickson Jim McMahon Jo Platt Jo Stevens Jo White Joani Reid Jodie Gosling Joe Morris Joe Powell Johanna Baxter John Grady John Healey John Slinger John Whitby Jon Pearce Jon Trickett Jonathan Brash Jonathan Davies Jonathan Hinder Josh Dean Josh Fenton-Glynn Josh MacAlister Josh Newbury Julia Buckley Julie Minns Juliet Campbell Justin Madders Karin Smyth Karl Turner Kate Osamor Kate Osborne Katie White Katrina Murray Keir Mather Kerry McCarthy Kevin Bonavia Kim Johnson Kim Leadbeater Kirith Entwistle Kirsteen Sullivan Kirsty McNeill Laura Kyrke-Smith Lauren Edwards Lauren Sullivan Laurence Turner Lee Barron Lee Pitcher Leigh Ingham Lewis Atkinson Liam Byrne Liam Conlon Lilian Greenwood Lillian Jones Linsey Farnsworth Liz Kendall Liz Twist Lizzi Collinge Lloyd Hatton Lola McEvoy Louise Haigh Louise Jones Lucy Powell Lucy Rigby Luke Akehurst Luke Charters Luke Murphy Luke Myer Margaret Mullane Marie Tidball Mark Ferguson Mark Hendrick Mark Sewards Mark Tami Markus Campbell-Savours Marsha De Cordova Martin Rhodes Mary Glindon Mary Kelly Foy Matt Bishop Matt Rodda Matt Turmaine Matt Western Matthew Patrick Matthew Pennycook Maureen Burke Meg Hillier Melanie Onn Melanie Ward Miatta Fahnbulleh Michael Payne Michael Shanks Michael Wheeler Michelle Scrogham Michelle Welsh Mike Amesbury Mike Kane Mike Reader Mike Tapp Mohammad Yasin Nadia Whittome Natalie Fleet Natasha Irons Naushabah Khan Navendu Mishra Neil Coyle Neil Duncan-Jordan Nesil Caliskan Nia Griffith Nicholas Dakin Nick Smith Nick Thomas-Symonds Noah Law Oliver Ryan Olivia Bailey Olivia Blake Pam Cox Pamela Nash Pat McFadden Patricia Ferguson Patrick Hurley Paul Davies Paul Foster Paul Waugh Paula Barker Paulette Hamilton Perran Moon Peter Dowd Peter Kyle Peter Lamb Peter Swallow Phil Brickell Polly Billington Preet Kaur Gill Rachael Maskell Rachel Blake Rachel Hopkins Rachel Taylor Richard Baker Richard Quigley Rosie Duffield
Rupa Huq Ruth Cadbury Ruth Jones Sadik Al-Hassan Sally Jameson Sam Carling Sam Rushworth Samantha Dixon Samantha Niblett Sarah Champion Sarah Coombes Sarah Edwards Sarah Hall Sarah Jones Sarah Owen Sarah Sackman Satvir Kaur Scott Arthur Sean Woodcock Seema Malhotra Sharon Hodgson Shaun Davies Simon Lightwood Simon Opher Siobhain McDonagh Sojan Joseph Sonia Kumar Stella Creasy Stephanie Peacock Stephen Kinnock Stephen Timms Steve Race Steve Witherden Steve Yemm Sureena Brackenridge Tahir Ali Taiwo Owatemi Tanmanjeet Singh Dhesi Tim Roca Toby Perkins Tom Collins Tom Hayes Tom Rutland Tonia Antoniazzi Tony Vaughan Torcuil Crichton Torsten Bell Tracy Gilbert Tristan Osborne Uma Kumaran Valerie Vaz Vicky Foxcroft Warinder Juss Wes Streeting Will Stone Yasmin Qureshi Yuan Yang Zubir Ahmed
Independent (9 votes)
Apsana Begum Ayoub Khan Imran Hussain Jeremy Corbyn John McDonnell Rebecca Long Bailey Richard Burgon Shockat Adam Zarah Sultana
Social Democratic & Labour Party (2 votes)
Claire Hanna Colum Eastwood
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elcinelateleymickyandonie · 4 years ago
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Isobel Elsom.
Filmografía
Teatro
1917-1918 : The Freaks, de Arthur Wing Pinero, con C.V. France y Leslie Howard (Londres)
1920-1921 : Up in Mabel's Room, de Wilson Collison (Londres)
1922-1923 : Sweet Lavender, de Arthur Wing Pinero (Londres)
1923-1924 : The Green Goddess, de William Archer, con George Arliss, Ivan F. Simpson (Londres)
1926 : The Ghost Train, de Arnold Ridley, con Eric Blore, Claudette Colbert
1927 : The Mulberry Bush, de Edward Knoblauch, con Claudette Colbert
1927 : People don't do such Things, de Lyon Mearson y Edgard M. Schoenberg, con Stanley Logan
1928 : The Silver Box, de John Galsworthy, con Mary Forbes
1928 : The Behavior of Mrs. Crane, de Harry Segall, con Walter Connolly y Charles Trowbridge
1928 : The Outsider, de Dorothy Brandon
1938-1939 : American Landscape, de Elmer Rice, con Charles Dingle y Charles Waldron
1940 : Ladies in Retirement, de Reginald Denham y Edward Percy, con Flora Robson
1942 : The Flowers of Virtue, de Marc Connelly, con Frank Craven, Thomas Gomez y Vladimir Sokoloff
1944-1945 : Hand in Glove, de Charles K. Freeman y Gerald Savory, dirección de James Whale
1950 : The Innocents, de William Archibald, con música de Alex North
1950 : The Curious Savage, de John Patrick, con Lillian Gish
1951 : Romeo y Julieta, de William Shakespeare, con Olivia de Havilland y Jack Hawkins
1952 : The Climate of Eden, de Moss Hart
1954m : The Burning Glass, de Charles Langbridge Morgan, con Cedric Hardwicke y Walter Matthau
1957 : Hide and Seek, de Roger McDougall y Stanley Mann, con Barry Morse y Basil Rathbone
1957 : The First Gentleman, de Norman Ginsbury, con Walter Slezak.
Cine
1915 : A Prehistoric Love Story, de Leedham Bantock (corto)
1916 : Milestones, de Thomas Bentley
1918 : The Man who won, de Rex Wilson
1918 : The Way of an Eagle, de G.B. Samuelson
1918 : The Elder Miss Blossom, de Percy Nash
1919 : Hope, de Rex Wilson
1919 : Quinneys, de Maurice Elvey y Herbert Brenon
1920 : Aunt Rachel, de Albert Ward
1921 : For her Father's Sake, de Alexander Butler
1922 : A Debt of Honour, de Maurice Elvey
1922 : The Game of Life, de G.B. Samuelson
1923 : The Harbour Lights, de Tom Terriss
1923 : The Wandering Jew, de Maurice Elvey.
1924 : Who is the Man ?, de Walter Summers
1924 : The Love Story of Aliette Brunton, de Maurice Elvey
1925 : The Last Witness, de Fred Paul
1925 : Le Réveil, de Jacques de Baroncelli
1926 : The Tower of London, de Maurice Elvey
1927 : Tragödie einer Ehe, de Maurice Elvey
1927 : Dance Magic, de Victor Halperin
1931 : The Other Woman, de G.B. Samuelson
1932 : The Crooked Lady, de Leslie S. Hiscott
1933 : The Thirteenth Candle, de John Daumery
1934 : The Primrose Path, de Reginald Denham
1941 : Ladies in Retirement (El misterio de Fiske Manor), de Charles Vidor
1942 : Eagle Squadron, de Arthur Lubin
1942 : Laugh your Blues away, de Charles Barton
1942 : Seven Sweethearts, de Frank Borzage
1942 : You were never Lovelier (Bailando nace el amor), de William A. Seiter
1943 : Forever and a Day (Siempre y un día), de Edmund Goulding y Cedric Hardwicke
1944 : Between two Worlds (Entre dos mundos), de Edward A. Blatt
1944 : Casanova Brown, de Sam Wood
1945 : The Unseen (Misterio en la noche), de Lewis Allen
1946 : Two Sisters from Boston, de Henry Koster
1946 : Of Human Bondage, de Edmund Goulding
1947 : Addio Mimi !, de Carmine Gallone
1947 : The Two Mrs. Carrolls (Las dos señoras Carroll), de Peter Godfrey
1947 : Monsieur Verdoux, de Charlie Chaplin
1947 : El fantasma y la señora Muir, de Joseph L. Mankiewicz
1947 : Ivy, de Sam Wood
1947 : Escape Me Never, de Peter Godfrey y LeRoy Prinz
1947 : The Paradine Case, de Alfred Hitchcock
1948 : Smart Woman, de Edward E. Blatt
1949 : The Secret Garden, de Fred M. Wilcox
1954 : Desirée, de Henry Koster
1954 : Deep in my Heart, de Stanley Donen
1955 : The King's Thief, de Robert Z. Leonard
1955 : La colina del adiós, de Henry King
1956 : Over-exposed, de Lewis Seiler
1956 : 23 Paces to Baker Street (A 23 pasos de Baker Street), de Henry Hathaway
1956 : El loco del pelo rojo, de Vincente Minnelli
1957 : The Guns of Fort Petticoat, de George Marshall
1958 : Rock-a-bye Baby (Yo soy el padre y la madre), de Frank Tashlin
1959 : The Young Philadelphians (La ciudad frente a mi), de Vincent Sherman
1959 : The Miracle (Promesa rota), de Irving Rapper
1960 : The Bellboy, de Jerry Lewis
1961 : The Errand Boy.
1961 : The Second Time Around (Sola ante el peligro), de Vincent Sherman
1963 : Who's minding the Store ? (Lío en los grandes almacenes), de Frank Tashlin
1964 : My Fair Lady, de George Cukor
1964 : The Pleasure Seekers, de Jean Negulesco.
Créditos: Tomado de Wikipedia
https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isobel_Elsom
#HONDURASQUEDATEENCASA
#ELCINELATELEYMICKYANDONIE
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writersrandomramblings · 6 years ago
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Norman McDougall - Licence guns and regulate them like we do cars and trucks. Require  owners to pass a test demonstrating their ability to use a  firearm safely. Require all firearms to be licenced with regular renewals of the licence - preferably annually or biennially, just as we do vehicles. Require insurance on each firearm to cover public liability for injury and death caused by careless or reckless use, as we do with vehicles. Allow collectors to keep firearms in private collections, but require registration and insurance for public carrying or use. Finally, levy strict fines or bring criminal charges for careless or dangerous use of a firearm, just as we do with vehicles. In extreme cases, restrict or cancel the user licence and/or confiscate the firearm. We accept and encourage all these rules, regulations, and penalties for vehicles and drivers, and we have the infrastructure to enforce them. Why can we not accept the same processes for firearm?
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if-you-fan-a-fire · 3 years ago
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“Downtown Restaurateur Slain By Enraged Ex-Employee,” Windsor Star. October 24, 1941. Page 3. --- Chinese Gives Self Up After Detroiter Is Shot ==== MURDER IN LUNCHROOM AT NOON HOUR IS WITNESSED BY NORMAN EANSOR --- By Norman Hull NATHAN VECSLER, 63, of Detroit, was murdered by an enraged ex-employe as he sat in the lunchroom of a downtown department store during the noon-time rush today. 
Jay Shan Suey, 22, Windsor Chinese, is held by police as the man who fired the fatal shot into Vecsler's back. 
Vecsler died in Hotel Dieu a few minutes after he was shot while sitting in the employes' lunchroom in Consumers Warehouse, McDougall and Pitt streets.
Suey, reported to have been released last June from the Ontario Mental Hospital, London, Ont., gave himself up at the police station. 
Police took a .32 calibre revolver away from him as he attempted to turn it on himself in the station. 
OTHERS MENACED Several other employes and Norman D. Eansor, former city controller, were menaced by Suey as he fled, waving the smoking revolver, after shooting Vecsler, police were told. 
Suey was formerly employed as a chef by Vecsler, who was in charge of the Consumers employes' lunchroom. 
The Chinese was discharged by his victim last winter because he refused to get a board of health restaurant employes' licence, other employes stated. 
Mr. Eansor was sitting talking to Vecsler at the time of the shooting. 
The two men were sitting close together on lunch counter stools and the fatal shot narrowly missed striking Mr. Eansor.
FIRED BUT ONE SHOT The Chinese only fired the one shot, but he menaced other employes as he fled from the lunchroom, witnesses said. He is believed to have gone direct to police headquarters. 
SAID HYSTERICAL Suey was hysterical when he entered the police station with the gun in his hand. "I killed him and now I'm going to kill myself," he is reported to have shouted. He had placed the revolver on a desk and was about to pick it up when overpowered by Arnold Giles, police switchboard operator. 
Examination of the revolver revealed it contained one empty and four good shells. News of the murder spread rapidly through downtown Windsor and a large crowd quickly assembled at the scene. 
Other employes confronted by the Chinese during his brief but sensational visit to the lunchroom were nervously recalling how they scattered when faced by the enraged man. 
MR. EANSOR'S VERSION The most accurate eye-witness account of the shooting was that given by Mr. Eansor, who so narrowly missed a fate similar to Vecsler's. 
"We were sitting at the counter, so close that our shoulders were rubbing.' Mr. Eansor recounted. "We were busy talking and did not notice anyone enter the lunchroom. Suddenly there was a report and both Vecsler and I looked up. He didn't know he had been shot. 
"I saw some smoke and first thought a firecracker had gone off. Then we saw a man running down the side of the counter and saw him point the gun at a waitress. 
"Vecsler looked at me and told me to call the police. I ran looking for a phone in the store and finally dashed across the street to my office where I phoned the police," Mr. Eansor continued. 
Other employes in the lunchroom related that Vecsler collapsed in his seat just as Mr. Eansor left to phone. He was rushed to the hospital and died upon admittance to the operating room. GIRL IN DANGER One of the employes menaced by the gunman as he fled from the lunchroom was Miss Ida Carlesso, 878 Howard avenue, a waitress. 
"I saw a man enter the lunchroom through the kitchen and . walk beside the counter past Mr. ecsler and Mr. Eansor," related Miss Carlesso. "They did not notice him enter as their backs were to him." 
"I didn't pay any further attention to him until I heard the shot. As he ran past me out of the lunchroom he pointed the gun at me. I was so frightened, I couldn't tell you what I did then," she added. 
Police records show that Suey, whose National Registration card gave his address as 132 Windsor avenue, was released from the Ontario Hospital last June. 
The Chinese is known to have been bitter about his discharge from the lunchroom and to have threatened revenge on Vecsler, the man who fired him. 
Following his discharge from the mental hospital, he was placed under the custody of a London Chinese. 
Detectives attempted to question Suey after he gave himself up but he was too hysterical. All he could say was that he wanted to take his own life. 
The shot, fired from close range, is believed to have penetrated Vecsler's lung. 
He was bleeding freely when carried from the lunchroom. 
Suey is believed to have dashed direct from the scene of the murder to the police station. He arrived there only a few seconds after receipt of Mr. Eansor 's call. 
The Chinese was waving the still warm death gun as he ran up the police station steps. He scattered citizens, just coming out of police court, as he waved the weapon.
Photo caption: MR.. NATHAN VECSLER, 63, of Detroit, was murdered while sitting at the employes' lunch counter in Consumers Warehouse, McDougall and Pitt streets, during the noon rush-hour, today. Jay Shan Suey, 22, Windsor Chinese, and ex-employe of the dead man, is held by police as the man who fired the fatal shot. Suey is shown above at the upper left and Mr. Vecsler at the upper right. Mr. Norman D. Eansor, former city controller, was sitting talking with Mr. Vecsler when the latter was shot. At the upper centre, Mr. Eansor, at the right, is giving Detective John Mahoney details of the shooting. The detective is sitting in the seat occupied by Mr. Vecsler when he was shot. Miss Ida Carlesso, waitress threatened by Suey as he fled, is also shown. Suey gave himself up at police headquarters and is shown in the lower view with Inspector W. H. Brumpton
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badmovieihave · 7 years ago
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Bad movie I have Dead Again in Tombstone 2017
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winsonsaw2003 · 4 years ago
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Looking For Descendants Of Major James Jackson (1810-1879) Madras
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Major James Jackson in black coat
Major James Jackson(1810-1879) was acting Resident Councillor of Malacca,Malaysia in 1858.Son of Major-Gen.George Jackson & Mary Greir Lee..He was acting Resident Councillor of Malacca,Malaysia in 1858. He served in the 14th Regiment Madras Native Infantry and retired at the end of 1861.He married 1stly to Mary Travers,2ndly to Ellen and 3rdly to Ellen Weldon.Later he was promoted to Lieutenant-Colonel.His issue - > > > ai)Mary Greir Jackson(1843-1879)married 1stly Charles Evan MacDougall and 2ndly James Walker Bernard.Their issue:- > > bi)Winifred Mary Alice McDougall married Stephen Prescott White D'Alte Sellon.Their issue:- > > ci)Stephanie May Sellon(1885-1931)married Adolphus Reginald Zouch Porter.Their issue:- > > di)Barbara Stephanie Porter(1911-2002). > > dii)Reginald Nevill da Costa Porter(1916-?) married Lindsay Diana Molesworth.His issue:- > > ei)Valerie Lindsay Porter(1942-?). > > eii)Jeremy Nevill Porter(1948-?). > > diii)Rosemary Claire Porter(1921-?)married Hugh Geoffrey Herbert Waters. > > div)Maria T Porter. > > cii)Cicely Sellon(1886-1938)married William A.B.Morton. > > bii)Rita McDougall(1868-?) > > aii)Brice Jackson(1844). > > aiii)George Francis Travers- Jackson(1845-1900)married Janet Sarah Graham.His issue:- > > bi)Ellen Winifred Mary Travers-Jackson(1873-?)married Henry Evelyn Hemmens.Their issue:- > > ci)Florence Hemmens(1893-?). > > cii)Cyril Travers Hemmens(1895-1975)married May Atkinson.His issue:- > > di)Elizabeth Travers Hemmens(1924-?) married James Hay Buglass.Their issue:- > > ei)Cyril Travers Buglass. > > dii)Lyn Hemmens. > > diii)Walter Ronald Hemmens > > div)Nancy Hemmens married ? Deane. > > ciii)Robert Hemmens(1901-?). > > > bii)Emily Francis Travers- Jackson(?-1951)married Charles Alexander Cameron.Their issue:- > > ci)Enid Rita Aveling Cameron(1893-1974)married 1stly Harry Norman Venn and 2ndly George Burns Dunlop.Their issue:- > > di)Robert Dorien Venn(1914-1991) married ?.His issue:- > > ei)Christopher Venn born in 1942. > > cii)Charles Graham Cameron(1897-1974)married 1st Frances Bomford 2ndly Nesta Beatrice Edwards.His issue:- > > di)Rita Stratford Petrona Cameron(1917-?). > > dii)Bruce Duncan Graham Cameron(1926-1998)married Margaret Anne Crowley.His issue:- > > ei)Gordon Murray Graham Cameron(1958-?). > > diii)Malcolm Gordon Graham Cameron(1931-2010)married 1st Jean Caroline Harris , 2ndly Althea Mary Braithwaite & 3rdly Helen Herbert.His issue:- > > ei)Duncan Charles Graham Cameron(1968-?). > > div)Stuart Neil Graham Cameron married 1stly Susan W Whittome & 2ndly Sioned Eleri Williams.His issue:- > > ei)Alexander Noel Graham Cameron(1968-?). > > ciii)Donald Kenneth Cameron(1897-1967). > > biii)Rebecca Jane Josephine Travers-Jackson(1881-1957) married Robert Alexander Duthie. > > biv)George Francis Travers-Jackson(1880-1964)married Alice Marian Blomley Shackleton.His issue:- > > ci)George Ralph Travers-Jackson(1906-1983). > > cii)Harold Travers-Jackson married Nancy ?.His issue:- > > di)David George Travers-Jackson married Philippa Baxter.His issue:- > > ei)Samantha Ruth Travers Jackson married Steve Wade. > > dii)Patricia Travers-Jackson married ? Berry. > > ciii)Janet Mary Travers-Jackson(1901-?) married ? Pryor. > > civ)Robert Lee Travers-Jackson(?-1938). > > cv)Valerie Mary Travers-Jackson married Philip Jourdan. > > bv)Brice Wakeford Lee Travers-Jackson(1882-1953)married Evelyn Turpin Logie.His issue:- > > ci)Edna Noel Travers-Jackson(1908-?) married William Alfred Russell. > > cii)Muriel Frances Travers-Jackson(?-1937)married George Cameron Beaton.Their issue:- > > di)Kenneth Cameron Beaton(?-1985). > > aiv)Ellen Jackson(1834-1836). > > av) Brice Lee Jackson(1864-1941)married to Louisa Mary King of The Rectory, Belmullet,Mayo,Ireland and Exeter.Their issue - > > bi)James Lee Jackson(1897-?) married to Rosamond Tudor Slade. His issue:- ci)Owen Blakeney Jackson(1924-2011) married 1stly, Jeanne Harkey Wood,2ndly, Helen M Welke & 3rdly,Carol Ann Hidy. His issue:- di) Janine Helen Jackson married 1stly, ? Schell, 2ndly, Alfred Edward Streit, & 3rdly,Coffman. Their issue:- ei) Christopher Lee Schell eii) Wendy Streit. cii) Sonia Louise Jackson(1933-2016) married 1stly, Donald Woolsey Middleton & 2ndly, James T McManus. > > bii)Valentine Brice Jephson Jackson(1906-1976) married to Ethne Lucia O'Brien. > > > avi) Aileen Jackson(1865-1913). > > A portrait of Colonel Sir James Jackson,Major George Lee, and Major General Brice Wakeford Lee. > > My email - [email protected]
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readbykena-blog · 7 years ago
Text
13 years - 305 books
I am an avid reader and friends frequently ask me what I am reading. Here I will try and post a brief review of each book I read. To begin with here is a list of books I have read over the last 13 years. Feel free to ask me any questions.
2017: (22)
-Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy
-Island of the Blue Dolphins by Scott O'Dell
-Corporate Communication, Theory & Practice by Joep Cornelissen
-Mariette in Ecstasy by Ron Hansen
-Where'd You Go Bernadette by Maria Semple
-A Long Walk to Water by Linda Sue Park
-Hillbilly Elegy by J.D. Vance
-Theorizing Crisis Communication by Timothy Sallow and Matthew Seeger
-Infamous Scribblers: The Founding Fathers and the Rowdy Beginnings of American Journalism by Eric Burns
-The Global Public Relations Handbook by Krishnamurthy Sriramesh and Dejan Vercic
-The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood
-When My Name was Keoko by Linda Sue Park
-The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat and Other Clinical Tales by Oliver Sacks
- Introducing Communication Research by Donald Treadwell
- We are never meeting in real life by Samantha Irby
- Ethics in Public Relations by Kathy Fitzpatrick and Carolyn Bronstein
- The Gene: An Intimate History by Siddhartha Mukherjee
- Freedom by Jonathan Franzen
- Origin by Dan Brown
- What Happened by Hillary Rodham Clinton
- Social Media Communication by Jeremy Harris Lipshultz
- A Long Walk to Freedom by Nelson Mandela
2016: (20)
-A Renegade History of the United States by Thaddeus Russell
-Being Mortal by Atul Gawande
-The Underground Abductor by Nathan Hale
-Breakfast at Tiffany's by Truman Capote
-The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros
-The Other Wes Moore by Wes Moore
-The Speechwriter by Barton Swaim
- In Cold Blood by Truman Capote
-The Aviator's Wife by Melanie Benjamin
-The Nightingale by Kristin Hannah
-But What If We're Wrong by Chuck Klosterman
-Americanah by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
-Brewster by Mark Slouka
-Rosemary The Hidden Kennedy Daughter by Kate Clifford Larson
-The Light Between Oceans by M.L. Stedman
-The Diary of a Nobody by George and Weedon Grossmith
-Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
-The Reluctant Fundamentalist by Mohsin Hamid
-The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho
-A Man Called Ove by Frederick Backman 
2015: (29)
-All The Truth Is Out by Matt Bai
-Double Down by Mark Halperin and John Heilemann
-The Lowland by Jhumpa Lahiri
-Dad is Fat by Jim Gaffigan
-Yes Please by Amy Poehler
-A Lesson Before Dying by Ernest J. Gaines
-All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr
-The Girls of Atomic City by Denise Kiernan
-The Old Man and the Sea by Ernest Hemingway
-To Have and Have Not by Ernest Hemingway
-In Our Time by Ernest Hemingway
-A Country Doctor by Franz Kafka
-The Garden of Eden by Ernest Hemingway
-Persuading Scientists by Hamid Ghanadan
-The Splendid Things We Planned by Blake Bailey
-Modern Romance by Aziz Ansari
-A Heartbreaking Word of Staggering Genius by David Eggers
-Polio, An American Story by David Oshinsky 
-The Naked and the Dead by Norman Mailer
-Go Set A Watchman by Harper Lee
-One Summer America, 1927 by Bill Bryson
-Brain on Fire by Susannah Catalan
-The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini
-The Making of Modern Medicine by Michael Bliss
-People I Want to Punch in the Throat by Jen Mann
-Internal Medicine by Terrence Holt
-The Namesake by Jhumpa Lahiri
-The Five Dysfunctions of a Team by Patrick Lencioni
-The Invention of Wings by Sue Monk Kidd
2014: (10)
-David and Goliath by Malcolm Gladwell
-Why Grizzly Bears Should Wear Underpants by The Oatmeal
-Under the Banner of Heaven by Jon Krakauer
-Wild by Sheryl Strayed
-Stiff by Mary Roach
-An Abundance of Katherines by John Green
-Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi
-Dataclysm by Christian Rudder
-Mountains Beyond Mountains by Tracey Kidder
-Columbine by Dave Cullen
2013: (13)
-The Next Best Thing by Jennifer Weiner
-The Path Between The Seas by David McCullough
-Let's Explore Diabetes with Owls by David Sedaris
-I Wear the Black Hat by Chuck Klosterman
-Dreams from My Father by Barack Obama
-A Hologram For The King by Dave Eggers
-Inferno by Dan Brown
-The Orphan Master's Son by Adam Johnson
-Heads in Beds by Jacob Tomsky
-Monkey Mind by Daniel Smith
-The Brief Wondrous Live of Oscar Wao by Junot Diaz
-Truth in Advertising by John Kenny
-The Cell Game by Alex Prud'Homme
2012: (16)
-Walden by Henry David Thoreau
-Civil Disobedience by Henry David Thoreau
-The Visible Man by Chuck Klosterman
-Overtreated By Shannon Brownlee
-Listen To Your Heart by Fern Michaels (TERRIBLE BOOK!)
-The Ten, Make That Nine Habits of Very Organized People. Make That Ten, by Steve Martin
-The Pleasure of My Company by Steve Martin
-Baby Proof by Emily Giffen
-Natural Experiments of History by Jared Diamond
-The Art of Racing in the Rain by Garth Stein
-The New Jim Crow by Michelle Alexander
-Major Pettigrew's Last Stand by Helen Simonson
-Secrets of The Baby Whisperer by Tracy Hogg
-A Walk in the Woods by Bill Bryson
-The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky
-Flight Behavior by Barbara Kingsolver
2011: (20)
-Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson
-I Feel Bad About My Neck by Nora Ephron
-Tinkers by Paul Harding
-How to Win Friends and Influence People by Dale Carnegie
-What the Dog Saw by Malcolm Gladwell
-The Jungle by Upton Sinclair
-The Emperor of All Maladies by Siddhartha Mukherjee
-An Object of Beauty by Steve Martin
-Tea Time For the Traditionally Built by Alexander McCall Smith
-Bossypants by Tina Fey
-The Pearl by John Steinbeck
-Summer Sisters by Judy Blume
-Crucial Conversations by Kerry Patterson, Joseph Grenny, Ron McMillian and Al Switzler
-Beautiful Boy by David Sheff
-The Paris Wife by Paula McLain
-Of Thee I Zing by Laura Ingraham
-A Dog's Purpose by W. Bruce Cameron
-Rules of Civility by Amor Towles
-The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot
-Trust Me I'm Dr. Ozzy by Ozzy Osbourne
2010: (26)
- History's Worst Decisions and the people who made them by Stephen Weir
- Junky by William S. Burroughs
- One Fifth Avenue by Candace Bushnell
- Killing Yourself to Live by Chuck Klosterman
- Food Rules by Michael Pollan
- Noah's Compass by Anne Tyler
- Breathing Lessons by Anne Tyler
- Drive by Daniel Pink
-The Help by Kathryn Stockett
-The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo by Stieg Larsson
-US Americans Talk About Love Edited by John Bowe
-For You Mom, Finally by Ruth Reichl
-The Financial Lives of the Poets by Jess Walter
-Cowboys Are My Weakness by Pam Houston
-The Girl Who Played With Fire by Stieg Larsson
-Barrel Fever by David Sedaris
-You Are Not a Stranger Here by Adam Haslett
-Travels with Charley by John Steinbeck
-The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde
-The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest by Stieg Larsson
-I'm a Stranger Here Myself by Bill Bryson
-The Heretic's Daughter by Kathleen Kent
-Squirrel Seeks Chipmunk by David Sedaris and Ian Falconer
-Tropic of Cancer by Henry Miller
-A Girl Named Zippy by Haven Kimmel
2009: (22)
• Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell
• Remember Me? By Sophie Kinsella
• A Long Way Gone, memoirs of a boy soldier by Ishmael Beah
• Wishful Drinking by Carrie Fisher
• Slummy Mummy by Fiona Neill
• Born on a Blue Day by Daniel Tammet
• Crawfish Mountain by Ken Wells
• My Horizontal Life by Chelsea Handler
• Disgrace by J.M. Coetzee
• A Fraction of the Whole by Steve Toltz
• Siddhartha by Hermann Hesse
• Mistakes Were Made, by Carol Tavris and Elliot Aronson
• Gertrude by Herman Hesse
• The Sportswriter by Richard Ford
- Born to Run by Christopher McDougall
- The Almost Moon by Alice Sebold
- Brideshead Revisited by Evelyn Waugh
- When You are Engulfed in Flames by David Sedaris
- Holidays on Ice by David Sedaris
- Bright-Sided by Barbara Ehrenreich
-The Lost Symbol by Dan Brown
-Super Freakonomics by Levitt and Dubner
2008: (21)
• The Audacity of Hope by Barack Obama
• Inside the Minds, The Art of Public Relations by CEOs
• Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston
• Savage Inequalities by Jonathan Kozol
• The Pig Did It by Joseph Caldwell
• The Known World by Edward P. Jones
• Dark Roots by Cate Kennedy
• East of Eden by John Steinbeck
• Valley of the Dolls by Jacqueline Susan
• Wired by Bob Woodward
• One Pill Makes You Smaller by Lisa Dierbeck
• A Thousand Acres by Jane Smiley
• Secrets of the Baby Whisperer by Tracy Hogg
• Pound for Pound by F.X. Toole
• All the Way Home by David Giffels
• Bonk by Mary Roach
• In Patagonia by Bruce Chatwin
• Then We Came To The End by Joshua Ferris
• The Sea by John Banville
• Downtown Owl by Chuck Klosterman
• Female Chauvinist Pigs, Women and the Rise of Raunch Culture by Ariel Levy
2007: (28)
• Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
• 1984 by George Orwell
• What Ifs? Of American History edited by Robert Cowley
• The Executioner’s Song by Norman Mailer
• Rabbit, run by John Updike
• Life of Pi by Yann Martel
• The Armies of the Night by Norman Mailer
• Pigtopia by Kitty Fitzgerald
• FiSH by Stephen Lundin, Harry Paul and John Christensen
• The Witness for the Prosecution and Other Stories by Agatha Christie
• 1776 by David McCullough
• Summer at Tiffany by Marjorie Hart
• Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides
• Absurdistan by Gary Shteyngart
• Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen
• Fall on Your Knees by Ann-Marie MacDonald
• Prodigal Summer by Barbara Kingsolver
• Babbitt by Sinclair Lewis
• The Memory Keeper’s Daughter by Kim Edwards
• Men at Arms by Evelyn Waugh
• A Dog Year by Jon Katz
• 1491 New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus by Charles Mann
• IV by Chuck Klosterman
• Devil in the Details by Jennifer Traig
• The No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency by Alexander McCall Smith
• The Worst Hard Time by Timothy Egan
• Born Standing Up by Steve Martin
• No Country for Old Men by Cormac McCarthy
2006: (27)
• Collapse, How societies choose to fail or succeed by Jared Diamond
• The World is Flat by Thomas Friedman
• Freakonomics by Levitt & Dubner
• Harry and Ike by Steve Neal
• State of Denial by Bob Woodward
• Crossroads in American History by James McPherson & Alan Brinkley
• The Lexus & The Olive Tree by Thomas Friedman
• The Lessons of History by Will & Ariel Durant
• Strategery by Bill Sammon
• Still Life With Woodpecker by Tom Robbins
• Japanese Canadian Redress, The Toronto Story
• The Untold Story of the Yom Kippur War by Howard Blum
• The Sheltering Sky by Paul Bowles
• Cat Among the Pigeons by Agatha Christie
• Red Weather by Pauls Toutonghi
• Wifey by Judy Blume
• Frantic Transmissions to and from LA by Kate Braverman
• Running with Scissors by Augusten Burroughs
• Tender is the Night by F. Scott Fitzgerald
• A Handful of Dust by Evelyn Waugh
• The Shipping News by Annie Proulx
• The Curious Incident of the dog in the Night-time by Mark Hadden
• A Million Little Pieces by James Frey
• Marley & Me by John Grogan
• The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd
• Lipstick Jungle by Candace Bushnell
• Boni y Tigre by Kathrin Sander
2005: (51)
• Guns, Germs, And Steel by Jared Diamond
• The Tipping Point by Malcolm Gladwell
• Blink by Malcolm Gladwell
• Sex, Drugs, And Cocoa Puffs by Chuck Klosterman
• The Beauty Myth by Naomi Wolf
• A Room of One's Own by Virginia Woolf
• Mary Magdalene by Lynn Picknett
• Hell's Angels by Hunter S. Thompson
• The Electric Kool Aid Acid Test by Tom Wolfe
• Bob Dylan Chronicles Volumn 1 by Bob Dylan
• Smashed by Koren Zailckas
• Culture Shock Costa Rica by Claire Wallerstein
• The Know-It-All by A.J. Jacobs
• Dress Your Family in Corduroy & Denim by David Sedaris
• Naked Pictures of Famous People by Jon Stewart
• All the President's Men by Bernstein & Woodward
• The Final Days by Bob Woodward & Carl Bernstein
• The Secret Man by Bob Woodward
• Shadow (5 Pres. & the Legacy of Watergate by Bob Woodward
• All Politics is Local, by Tip O'Neill
• What's the Matter With Kansas? (How Conservatives Won the Heart of America) by Thomas Frank
• Don't think of an Elephant by George Lakoff
• Confessions of a Political Junkie by Hunter S. Thompson
• America The Book by Jon Stuart
• One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest by Ken Kesey
• The Maltese Falcon by Dashiell Hammett
• Tortilla Flat by John Steinbeck
• Cannery Row by John Steinbeck
• Brave New World by Aldous Huxley
• The Call of the Wild and White Fang by Jack London
• Animal Farm by Goerge Orwell
• Breakfast of Champions by Kurt Vonnecut
• The Stranger by Albert Camus
• Empire Falls by Richard Russo
• The Great Fire by Shirly Hazzard
• A Patchwork Planet by Anne Tyler
• The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison
• Skirt and the Fiddle by Tristian Egolf
• Drive Like Hell by Dallas Hudgens
• The Da Vinci Code by Dan Brown
• Angels & Demons by Dan Brown
• Deception Point by Dan Brown
• Digital Fortress by Dan Brown
• The Ship of Brides by Jojo Moyers
• Angry Housewives by Lorna Landvik
• The Celestine Prophecy by James Redfield
• Loving Che by Ana Menendez
• Wolves in Chic Clothing by Carrie Karasyov & Jill Kargman
• Citizen Girl by Emma McLaughlin & Nicola Kraus
• And Sister by Sophie Kinsella
• Trading Up by Candace Bushnell
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vampireadamooc · 7 years ago
Link
Friendly reminder that the FBI Files are publicly available - updated weekly as FOIA Requests are processed.
Direct Links to A-P (August 4th 2017)
The Vault Index
The FBI has converted many FOIA documents to an electronic format (PDF), and they may be viewed below. In the case of voluminous pages, only summaries or excerpts from the documents are online. Subjects are sorted alphabetically by first name. You can also use your browser's find feature to locate subjects on the page.
Al Capone Animal Mutilation Ali Hasan Al-Majid Al-Tikriti (Chemical Ali) Albert Anastasia ACLU Aristotle Onassis American Friends Service Committee Aryan Nation Anna Nicole Smith Anthony Blunt Alfred Kinsey Abner Zwillman Albert Einstein Anthony Spilotro ABSCAM Arthur Flegenheimer (Dutch Schultz) Alcatraz Escape Alcoholics Anonymous Al Gore, Sr. Amerithrax Anwar Nasser Aulaqi Amelia Boynton Abbie Hoffman Adolf Hitler Asian American Political Alliance Amelia Mary Earhart Andrew Phillip Cunanan Anthony Salerno All American Anti Imperialist League American Nazi Party Arthur Rudolph Aryan Brotherhood Atlanta Child Murders Aryan Circle Almighty Latin Kings Abe Fortas Arthur R. "Doc" Barker Arnold Palmer Armando Florez Ibarra Alvin Francis Karpis Attempted Assassination of President Ronald Reagan Alger Hiss Ariel Sharon Art Modell
Black September Bertolt Brecht Billy Carter Bishop Fulton Sheen Bonus March Barker-Karpis Gang Summary Bloods and Crips Gang Bonnie and Clyde Black Dahlia (Elizabeth Short) Basque Intelligence Service Bugsy Siegel Bayard Rustin Benjamin Hooks Benjamin Crowninshield Bradlee Black Guerilla Family Black Mafia Family Bernard Baruch Black Panther Party BOMBROB Betty Shabazz Bureau Aviation Regulations Policy Directive and Policy Guide Bernard Julius Otto Kuehn Bettie Page Billy Martin Barker/Karpis Gang
Caryl Chessman Cardinal Francis Spellman Cambridge Five Spy Ring Carmine John Persico, Jr. Custodial Detention Clyde A. Tolson Clark Gable Charles Manson Council on Foreign Relations Charles Lindbergh Clarence Smith (aka 13x) Clarence Darrow Carl Sagan Carmine Galante Conference Cost Reporting and Approvals to Use Nonfederal Facilities Policy Directive 0927D Charlie Chaplin Casey Kasem Cartha DeLoach Christopher (Biggie Smalls) Wallace Charles "Chuck" Wendell Colson Contract for Assistance Regarding Syed Farooks iPhone Charlie Wilson Courtney Allen Evans Claudia Johnson Carlo Gambino Christic Institute Cesar Chavez Clergy and Laity Concerned about Vietnam Charles Rebozo Charles Kettering Claudia Jones Christian Identity Movement Carl Sandburg Charles (Sonny) Liston Columbine High School Criminal Profiling Coretta Scott King Charles Arthur (Pretty Boy) Floyd Custodial Detention Headquarters Carlos Fuentes COINTELPRO Custodial Detention Security Index
Danny Kaye David Koresh Daily Worker Dinah Shore Dorothy Dandridge Duquesne Spy Ring Director Comey Letter to Congress Dated October 28, 2016 Diversity and Inclusion Program Policy Guide Policy Directive 0842D Daniel David "Dan" Rostenkowski Daniel Inouye Daniel Schorr Demonstrations against Lyndon B. Johnson Desi Arnaz Diana, Princess of Wales D. Milton Ladd Dr. Samuel Sheppard Dwight David "Ike" Eisenhower Director Comey Letter to Congress Dated November 6, 2016 David Hahn Debbie Reynolds David Howell Petraeus Daniel Patrick Moynihan D. B. Cooper
Erich Fromm Emmett Till E. B. (William) Dubois Extra-Sensory Perception Eliot Ness Electronic Recordkeeping Certification Policy Guide 0800PG Edward Irving "Ed" Koch Elizabeth Taylor Everette Hunt Edward Abbey Elizabeth Arden Edward Kennedy (Duke) Ellington Elvis Presley Eugene McCarthy Eddie Cantor Eleanor Roosevelt Evelyn Frechette Eric Wright (Eazy-E, EZ E) El Rukns Elijah Muhammad Ernest Hemingway Eugene “Gene” Curran Kelly Explanation of Exemptions
FBI Miami Shooting, April 11, 1986 Frances Perkins Fred Hampton Frank Capone FBI History Francis Gary Powers Frank Sinatra FBI Technical Surveillance Countermeasures Classification Guide Fred W. Phelps, Sr FBI Ethics and Integrity Program Policy Directive Policy Guide FBI Student Programs Policy Guide 0805 PG Fannie Lou Hammer Frank Rosenthal FBI Domestic Investigations and Operations Guide (DIOG) FBI Undercover Operations FBI Terrorist Photo Album Five Percenters Frank Wortman FBI Use of Global Positioning System (GPS) Tracking Frank Malina FDPS FBI Sign Language Interpreting and Reading Program 0889D FBI Seal Name Initials and Special Agent Gold Badge 0625D FOIA DISCLAIMER Fidel Castro Freedom Riders FBI Assistance Provided to Local Law Enforcement During the Black Lives Matter Movement FBI Recreational Association(s) 0465D FOIA Requests Containing the Word Trump Fritz Julius Kuhn Fred G. Randaccio Fred C. Trump
George (Bugs) Moran Greenlease Kidnapping George (Machine Gun) Kelly Groucho Marx Guy Hottel Gov. Edmund Gerald (Pat) Brown, Sr. Gene Siskel German American Federation/Bund Geraldine Ferraro Gangster Disciples Grace Kelly Greenpeace George Jackson Brigade Guantanamo (GTMO) George Burns George Lester Jackson General Douglas MacArthur General Telecommunications Policy 0862D George S. Patton, Jr. Gay Activist Alliance Ghost Stories: Russian Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) Illegals Gamergate Gregory Scarpa, Sr George Orson Welles George Steinbrenner
Hugo Black Henry Louis (H.L.) Mencken Henry A Wallace Herbert Khaury (Tiny Tim) Highlander Folk School Hanns Eisler Henry Miller Howard Zinn Huey Percy Newton HEARNAP Honoraria Policy 0867D Herman Barker Harold Glasser Hubert H. Humphrey Helen Keller Harland David "Colonel" Sanders Hindenburg Harry S. Truman Hillary R. Clinton Howard Robard Hughes, Jr
Interpol Irgun Zvai Leumi Irving Berlin Impersonation of Bhumibol Adulyadej Imperial Gangsters I Was a Communist for the FBI (Motion Picture) Irwin Allen Ginsberg Ian Fleming Irving Resnick
Jack Soble Jefferson Airplane Jack Benny Jack the Ripper Jesse James James Cagney John F. Kennedy Jr. John Murtha Joseph Aiuppa Jonestown (RYMUR) Summary Joseph Lash John Ehrlichman John L. Lewis John (Jake the Barber) Factor Joseph P. (Joe) Kennedy, Sr. John Steinbeck John Arthur (Jack) Johnson Janis Joplin Jimmy Hoffa Jessica Mitford Jeffrey Lionel Dahmer Jack Anderson John Wilkes Booth Joe Paterno Jay David Whittaker Chambers John Joseph Gotti, Jr James Marshall "Jimi" Hendrix James Baldwin Joseph Losey John Siegenthaler Jeannette Rankin Jack Roosevelt Robinson Judith Coplon James Joseph Brown John Wayne (Marion Robert Morrison) Jerry Garcia Jane Addams John Chancellor John Wayne Gacy Jack Roosevelt (Jackie) Robinson John D. Rockefeller, III John Dillinger John (Handsome Johnny) Roselli John Profumo (Bowtie) J. Edgar Hoover Julius and Ethel Rosenberg J. Edgar Hoover Appointment and Phone Logs Jesse Helms Jonestown J. Edgar Hoover Official and Confidential (O&C) Files Joe Louis Joan Alexandra Rivers Jack Dempsey John Denver James Farmer James McDougal John Updike Jerry Heller Josephine Baker Joseph Paul "Joe" DiMaggio John Winston Lennon
Kent State Katherine Oppenheimer Kent State Shooting Ken Eto Kansas City Massacre Kiss
Lady Bird Johnson Louis Allen Leander Perez, Sr. Legal Handbook for FBI Special Agents Louis (Lepke) Buchalter Liberace Lyndon B. Johnson Laboratory Reference Firearms Collection Policy LD0020D Louie Louie (The Song) Louis Francis Costello Lucia Stepp Lewis F. Powell, Jr. Lillie Belle Allen League of Women Voters Lillian (Lily) Hellman Lester Joseph Gillis (Baby Face Nelson) Lenny Bruce Lucille Ball Luis Buñuel Louis Terkel Langston Hughes Leonid Ilyich Brezhnev Leon Trotsky Leonard Bernstein Lloyd William Barker
Marilyn Monroe Motion Picture Copyright Infringement Mississippi Burning (MIBURN) Case Michael (Mike) Royko Martin Luther King, Jr. Melvin Purvis Malcolm X Muriel Rukeyser Marilyn Sheppard Madalyn Murray OHair Mack Charles Parker Mexican Mafia Mafia Monograph Morris and Lona Cohen Medgar Evers Moorish Science Temple of America Mary Jo Kopechne (Chappaquiddick) Majestic 12 Marian Anderson Michael Jackson Machine Gun Kelly Murray Humphreys Michael Hastings Michael Whitney Straight Melvin Belli Marvin Gaye Marlene Dietrich Malcolm Little (Malcolm X) Meir Kahane Mario Savio Mohammed Khalifa MAOP Margaret H. Thatcher Myron Leon "Mike" Wallace Miami Boys Mario M. Cuomo Muammar Qadhafi Mattachine Society Meyer Lansky Mickey Mantle MIOG Mark Felt Martin Dies, Jr. Muhammad Ali Marcus Garvey
Nikola Tesla Norman Mailer Neil Armstrong National Rifle Association (NRA) New Alliance Party Nuestra Familia National Security Letters (NSL) National States Rights Party NAACP National Investigations Committee on Aerial Phenomena (NICAP) National Organization for Women (NOW) Nation of Islam Nelson Mandela National Gang Threat Assessment Next Generation Identification Monthly Fact Sheets Non-Retaliation for Reporting Compliance Risks Naming and Commemorating FBI Buildings and Spaces 0910D
Osage Indian Murders Owen Lattimore OKBOMB Original Knights of the KKK
Pearl Buck People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) President Richard Nixon's FBI Application Purple Gang (aka Sugar House Gang) Project Blue Book (UFO) Philip Ochs Protests in Baltimore, Maryland, 2015 Pablo Escobar Patriot Act Paul Harvey Paul Robeson, Sr. Pulse Nightclub Shooting Personal Services Contracts Policy Directive 0957D Percy Sutton Pentagon Spy Case Policy: Custodial Interrogation for Public Safety Policy Directive 0481D Physical Fitness Program Policy Directive and Policy Guide 0676PG
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wankerwatch · 9 days ago
Text
Commons Vote
On: Great British Energy Bill Report Stage: Amendment 8
Ayes: 115 (89.5% Con, 4.4% DUP, 4.4% RUK, 0.9% Ind, 0.9% UUP) Noes: 361 (96.4% Lab, 2.8% Ind, 0.8% Green) Absent: ~174
Day's business papers: 2024-10-29
Likely Referenced Bill: Great British Energy Bill
Description: A Bill to make provision about Great British Energy.
Originating house: Commons Current house: Commons Bill Stage: 3rd reading
Individual Votes:
Ayes
Conservative (102 votes)
Alan Mak Alberto Costa Alec Shelbrooke Alex Burghart Alison Griffiths Andrew Bowie Andrew Griffith Andrew Mitchell Andrew Murrison Andrew Rosindell Andrew Snowden Aphra Brandreth Ashley Fox Ben Obese-Jecty Ben Spencer Bernard Jenkin Blake Stephenson Bob Blackman Bradley Thomas Caroline Dinenage Charlie Dewhirst Chris Philp Christopher Chope Claire Coutinho Damian Hinds Danny Kruger David Mundell David Reed David Simmonds Desmond Swayne Edward Argar Edward Leigh Gagan Mohindra Gareth Bacon Gareth Davies Geoffrey Clifton-Brown Geoffrey Cox George Freeman Graham Stuart Greg Smith Gregory Stafford Harriet Cross Helen Grant Helen Whately Iain Duncan Smith Jack Rankin James Cartlidge James Cleverly James Wild Jeremy Hunt Jeremy Wright Jesse Norman Joe Robertson John Cooper John Glen John Hayes John Lamont John Whittingdale Julia Lopez Julian Lewis Julian Smith Karen Bradley Katie Lam Kieran Mullan Kit Malthouse Laura Trott Lewis Cocking Lincoln Jopp Louie French Luke Evans Mark Francois Mark Garnier Martin Vickers Matt Vickers Mel Stride Mike Wood Mims Davies Neil Hudson Neil O'Brien Neil Shastri-Hurst Nick Timothy Nigel Huddleston Patrick Spencer Paul Holmes Peter Bedford Peter Fortune Rebecca Harris Rebecca Paul Rebecca Smith Richard Fuller Richard Holden Robbie Moore Saqib Bhatti Sarah Bool Shivani Raja Simon Hoare Steve Barclay Stuart Anderson Stuart Andrew Suella Braverman Victoria Atkins Wendy Morton
Democratic Unionist Party (5 votes)
Carla Lockhart Gavin Robinson Gregory Campbell Jim Shannon Sammy Wilson
Reform UK (5 votes)
James McMurdock Lee Anderson Nigel Farage Richard Tice Rupert Lowe
Independent (1 vote)
Alex Easton
Ulster Unionist Party (1 vote)
Robin Swann
Noes
Labour (345 votes)
Abena Oppong-Asare Abtisam Mohamed Adam Jogee Adam Thompson Afzal Khan Alan Campbell Alan Gemmell Alan Strickland Alex Baker Alex Ballinger Alex Barros-Curtis Alex Davies-Jones Alex Mayer Alex McIntyre Alex Norris Alex Sobel Alice Macdonald Alison Hume Alison McGovern Alison Taylor Alistair Strathern Allison Gardner Amanda Hack Amanda Martin Andrew Cooper Andrew Lewin Andrew Pakes Andrew Ranger Andrew Western Andy MacNae Andy McDonald Andy Slaughter Angela Eagle Anna Dixon Anna McMorrin Anna Turley Anneliese Midgley Antonia Bance Ashley Dalton Baggy Shanker Bambos Charalambous Beccy Cooper Becky Gittins Bell Ribeiro-Addy Ben Coleman Ben Goldsborough Bill Esterson Blair McDougall Brian Leishman Callum Anderson Calvin Bailey Carolyn Harris Cat Eccles Catherine Atkinson Catherine Fookes Charlotte Nichols Chi Onwurah Chris Bloore Chris Curtis Chris Elmore Chris Evans Chris Hinchliff Chris Kane Chris McDonald Chris Murray Chris Vince Chris Ward Chris Webb Christian Wakeford Claire Hazelgrove Claire Hughes Clive Betts Clive Efford Clive Lewis Connor Naismith Connor Rand Damien Egan Dan Aldridge Dan Carden Dan Jarvis Dan Norris Daniel Francis Daniel Zeichner Danny Beales Darren Paffey Dave Robertson David Baines David Burton-Sampson David Pinto-Duschinsky David Smith David Taylor David Williams Debbie Abrahams Deirdre Costigan Derek Twigg Diana Johnson Douglas McAllister Ed Miliband Elaine Stewart Ellie Reeves Elsie Blundell Emily Darlington Emily Thornberry Emma Foody Emma Hardy Emma Lewell-Buck Euan Stainbank Fabian Hamilton Florence Eshalomi Frank McNally Fred Thomas Gareth Snell Gareth Thomas Gen Kitchen Georgia Gould Gerald Jones Gill Furniss Gordon McKee Graeme Downie Graham Stringer Grahame Morris Gregor Poynton Gurinder Singh Josan Hamish Falconer Harpreet Uppal Heidi Alexander Helen Hayes Helena Dollimore Henry Tufnell Hilary Benn Ian Lavery Ian Murray Imogen Walker Irene Campbell Jack Abbott Jacob Collier Jade Botterill Jake Richards James Asser James Frith James Naish Janet Daby Jas Athwal Jayne Kirkham Jeevun Sandher Jeff Smith Jen Craft Jenny Riddell-Carpenter Jess Phillips Jessica Morden Jessica Toale Jim Dickson Jim McMahon Jo Platt Jo Stevens Jo White Joani Reid Jodie Gosling Joe Morris Joe Powell Johanna Baxter John Grady John Slinger John Whitby Jon Pearce Jon Trickett Jonathan Brash Jonathan Davies Jonathan Hinder Jonathan Reynolds Josh Dean Josh Fenton-Glynn Josh MacAlister Josh Newbury Josh Simons Julia Buckley Julie Minns Juliet Campbell Justin Madders Kanishka Narayan Karin Smyth Kate Osamor Kate Osborne Katie White Katrina Murray Kerry McCarthy Kevin Bonavia Kevin McKenna Kim Johnson Kim Leadbeater Kirith Entwistle Kirsteen Sullivan Kirsty McNeill Laura Kyrke-Smith Lauren Edwards Lauren Sullivan Laurence Turner Lee Barron Lee Pitcher Leigh Ingham Lewis Atkinson Liam Byrne Liam Conlon Lilian Greenwood Lillian Jones Linsey Farnsworth Lisa Nandy Liz Kendall Liz Twist Lizzi Collinge Lloyd Hatton Lola McEvoy Lorraine Beavers Louise Haigh Louise Jones Lucy Powell Lucy Rigby Luke Akehurst Luke Charters Luke Murphy Luke Myer Margaret Mullane Maria Eagle Marie Rimmer Marie Tidball Mark Ferguson Mark Hendrick Mark Sewards Mark Tami Markus Campbell-Savours Marsha De Cordova Martin McCluskey Martin Rhodes Mary Glindon Mary Kelly Foy Matt Bishop Matt Rodda Matt Turmaine Matthew Patrick Matthew Pennycook Maureen Burke Maya Ellis Meg Hillier Melanie Onn Miatta Fahnbulleh Michael Payne Michael Shanks Michael Wheeler Michelle Scrogham Michelle Welsh Mike Kane Mike Reader Mike Tapp Natalie Fleet Natasha Irons Naushabah Khan Navendu Mishra Naz Shah Neil Duncan-Jordan Nesil Caliskan Nia Griffith Nicholas Dakin Noah Law Oliver Ryan Pam Cox Pamela Nash Pat McFadden Patricia Ferguson Patrick Hurley Paul Davies Paul Foster Paul Waugh Paula Barker Paulette Hamilton Perran Moon Peter Kyle Peter Lamb Peter Prinsley Peter Swallow Phil Brickell Polly Billington Preet Kaur Gill Rachael Maskell Rachel Blake Rachel Hopkins Rachel Taylor Richard Baker Richard Quigley Rosie Wrighting Rushanara Ali Ruth Cadbury Ruth Jones Sally Jameson
Sam Carling Sam Rushworth Samantha Dixon Samantha Niblett Sarah Champion Sarah Coombes Sarah Hall Sarah Owen Sarah Sackman Sarah Smith Satvir Kaur Scott Arthur Sean Woodcock Seema Malhotra Sharon Hodgson Simon Lightwood Siobhain McDonagh Sojan Joseph Sonia Kumar Stella Creasy Stephanie Peacock Stephen Kinnock Stephen Morgan Stephen Timms Steve Race Steve Witherden Steve Yemm Sureena Brackenridge Tahir Ali Taiwo Owatemi Tanmanjeet Singh Dhesi Terry Jermy Tim Roca Toby Perkins Tom Collins Tom Hayes Tom Rutland Tonia Antoniazzi Tony Vaughan Torcuil Crichton Torsten Bell Tracy Gilbert Tristan Osborne Uma Kumaran Valerie Vaz Vicky Foxcroft Warinder Juss Will Stone Yasmin Qureshi Yuan Yang Yvette Cooper Zubir Ahmed
Independent (10 votes)
Apsana Begum Ayoub Khan Ian Byrne Iqbal Mohamed John McDonnell Rebecca Long Bailey Richard Burgon Rosie Duffield Shockat Adam Zarah Sultana
Green Party (3 votes)
Carla Denyer Ellie Chowns Siân Berry
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elcinelateleymickyandonie · 3 years ago
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ISOBEL ELSOM.
Filmography
Theater
1917-1918 : The Freaks, by Arthur Wing Pinero, with C.V. France and Leslie Howard (London)
1920-1921 : Up in Mabel's Room, by Wilson Collison (London)
1922-1923 : Sweet Lavender, by Arthur Wing Pinero (London)
1923-1924 : The Green Goddess, by William Archer, with George Arliss, Ivan F. Simpson (London)
1926: The Ghost Train, by Arnold Ridley, with Eric Blore, Claudette Colbert
1927: The Mulberry Bush, by Edward Knoblauch, with Claudette Colbert
1927 : People don't do such Things, by Lyon Mearson and Edgard M. Schoenberg, with Stanley Logan
1928: The Silver Box, by John Galsworthy, with Mary Forbes
1928: Harry Segall's The Behavior of Mrs. Crane with Walter Connolly and Charles Trowbridge
1928: The Outsider, by Dorothy Brandon
1938-1939 : American Landscape, by Elmer Rice, with Charles Dingle and Charles Waldron
1940: Ladies in Retirement, by Reginald Denham and Edward Percy, with Flora Robson
1942: The Flowers of Virtue, by Marc Connelly, with Frank Craven, Thomas Gomez and Vladimir Sokoloff
1944-1945 : Hand in Glove, by Charles K. Freeman and Gerald Savory, directed by James Whale
1950: The Innocents, by William Archibald, with music by Alex North
1950: The Curious Savage, by John Patrick, with Lillian Gish
1951: Romeo and Juliet, by William Shakespeare, with Olivia de Havilland and Jack Hawkins
1952: The Climate of Eden, by Moss Hart
1954m : The Burning Glass, by Charles Langbridge Morgan, with Cedric Hardwicke and Walter Matthau
1957: Hide and Seek, by Roger McDougall and Stanley Mann, with Barry Morse and Basil Rathbone
1957: The First Gentleman, by Norman Ginsbury, with Walter Slezak.
Movies
1915: A Prehistoric Love Story, by Leedham Bantock (short)
1916: Milestones, by Thomas Bentley
1918: The Man Who Won, by Rex Wilson
1918 : The Way of an Eagle, by G.B. Samuelson
1918: The Elder Miss Blossom, by Percy Nash
1919: Hope, by Rex Wilson
1919: Quinneys, by Maurice Elvey and Herbert Brenon
1920: Aunt Rachel, by Albert Ward
1921: For her Father's Sake, by Alexander Butler
1922: A Debt of Honour, by Maurice Elvey
1922 : The Game of Life, by G.B. Samuelson
1923: The Harbor Lights, by Tom Terriss
1923: The Wandering Jew, by Maurice Elvey.
1 note · View note
qiplacidl · 6 years ago
Text
Conservative columnist: How many more hush-money payoffs are out there? | Opinion
Conservative columnist: How many more hush-money payoffs are out there? | Opinion: What did Trump know about the National Enquirer payment? Watch video
By Jennifer Rubin
The Washington Post reported: “Two months before the 2016 election, longtime Donald Trump attorney Michael Cohen secretly taped a conversation with the then-GOP presidential nominee about whether to purchase the rights to Playboy centerfold Karen McDougal’s account of her alleged extramarital affair with Trump, according to three people familiar with the conversation. “The recording, which Cohen made surreptitiously in Trump Tower in early September 2016, was seized by federal agents who are investigating Cohen for potential bank and election-law crimes, according to multiple people familiar with the probe. “Trump and Cohen’s discussion came a month after AMI, the parent company of the National Enquirer, bought the rights to McDougal’s story for $150,000, then shelved it.”
There is much we do not know about this incident: Did AMI eventually make a payment at Trump’s behest? Did Trump reimburse AMI? Did anyone associated with AMI disclose the donation as a campaign-related expense?
While less politically compelling than the president’s actions as an overt, pro-Russian turncoat, the revelation has grave legal implications for the president. “Since the federal search warrants were first served on Michael Cohen, it has been likely that he and his most famous client, the president, were in trouble,” says former White House ethics counsel Norman Eisen. “The passage of time has only made that clearer, with these tapes the latest evidence.”
He adds, “Despite current presidential fixer Rudy Giuliani, Cohen’s latest successor, saying that the tapes are good for the president, it is hard to see an upside to secretly taped recordings about payments to a former mistress during the heat of a presidential campaign, and other sources are already contradicting Giuliani’s spin.”
Eisen explains, “Among other things, this news raises the question whether the president was involved in facilitating what may have been an illegal campaign contribution. Another even more troubling question is raised as well: What other tapes or additional evidence from Cohen’s files of possible Trump wrongdoing is now in prosecutors’ hands? A presidency may hang in the balance of the answer to that query.”
Put differently, as Common Cause’s Paul S. Ryan told me via email, “If the earlier reporting that AMI consulted with Cohen (an ‘agent��� of candidate Trump) before making the payment to McDougal is correct, then AMI’s payment to McDougal was a political expenditure ‘coordinated’ with Trump.” He continued, “Coordinated expenditures are treated as in-kind contributions under campaign finance law and corporations are prohibited from contributing to federal candidates, so AMI’s payment to McDougal [would be] an illegal corporate contribution to Trump.” Indeed, this was the basis for complaints that Common Cause filed earlier this year with the Justice Department and the Federal Election Commission.
An experienced prosecutor notes how peculiar was Giuliani’s reaction to the tapes. The Post reported: “‘Nothing in that conversation suggests that he had any knowledge of (the AMI payment) in advance,’ Giuliani said. ‘In the big scheme of things, it’s powerful exculpatory evidence.’ “However, the recording shows that Trump – whose spokeswoman denied he had any knowledge of the AMI deal with McDougal when it became public days before the election – in fact knew of her claims and efforts to keep her quiet at least two months earlier.”
Former federal prosecutor Joyce White Vance tells me, “The only people who really need exculpatory evidence are defendants in criminal cases. It’s remarkable that that is where Giuliani’s thoughts turn first when he’s discussing a taped phone call involving his client.”
For Trump’s apologists, the revelation creates a new wave of angst. (The Los Angeles Times reported, “‘We all knew there were going to be a lot of women cropping up with allegations and that it was Michael’s job to take care of it,’ said an associate of Cohen’s, speaking on condition of anonymity.”)
If there are a flock of women – those whose names have already surfaced in association with Trump or others we have yet to hear about – who received similar payments, it will be hard to avoid the conclusion that there was a conspiracy to avoid reporting embarrassing and possibly illegal campaign donations. While Trump’s evangelical lackeys gave him a “mulligan” on his payoff to Stormy Daniels, it’s not clear a wider audience will countenance a president who got through a campaign by secretly paying off gobs of women, especially if any of those women claimed to have been the victims of non-consensual sexual conduct.
There are many reasons (e.g., knowledge of Trump’s finances, awareness of Trump’s Russia connections) Trump has been freaked out by the search of Cohen’s office, hotel and home. Cohen is no John Dean, but in the end he may prove more problematic for Trump than Dean was to
Jennifer Rubin writes the Right Turn blog for The Washington Post, offering reported opinion from a center-right perspective.
Bookmark NJ.com/Opinion. Follow on Twitter @NJ_Opinion and find NJ.com Opinion on Facebook.
#news
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What did Trump know about the National Enquirer payment?
    copyright © 2018
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            from Conservative columnist: How many more hush-money payoffs are out there? | Opinion via Conservative columnist: How many more hush-money payoffs are out there? | Opinion April 19, 2019 at 10:14PM Copyright © April 19, 2019 at 10:14PM
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cucircula · 6 years ago
Text
Conservative columnist: How many more hush-money payoffs are out there? | Opinion
Conservative columnist: How many more hush-money payoffs are out there? | Opinion: What did Trump know about the National Enquirer payment? Watch video
By Jennifer Rubin
The Washington Post reported: “Two months before the 2016 election, longtime Donald Trump attorney Michael Cohen secretly taped a conversation with the then-GOP presidential nominee about whether to purchase the rights to Playboy centerfold Karen McDougal’s account of her alleged extramarital affair with Trump, according to three people familiar with the conversation. “The recording, which Cohen made surreptitiously in Trump Tower in early September 2016, was seized by federal agents who are investigating Cohen for potential bank and election-law crimes, according to multiple people familiar with the probe. “Trump and Cohen’s discussion came a month after AMI, the parent company of the National Enquirer, bought the rights to McDougal’s story for $150,000, then shelved it.”
There is much we do not know about this incident: Did AMI eventually make a payment at Trump’s behest? Did Trump reimburse AMI? Did anyone associated with AMI disclose the donation as a campaign-related expense?
While less politically compelling than the president’s actions as an overt, pro-Russian turncoat, the revelation has grave legal implications for the president. “Since the federal search warrants were first served on Michael Cohen, it has been likely that he and his most famous client, the president, were in trouble,” says former White House ethics counsel Norman Eisen. “The passage of time has only made that clearer, with these tapes the latest evidence.”
He adds, “Despite current presidential fixer Rudy Giuliani, Cohen’s latest successor, saying that the tapes are good for the president, it is hard to see an upside to secretly taped recordings about payments to a former mistress during the heat of a presidential campaign, and other sources are already contradicting Giuliani’s spin.”
Eisen explains, “Among other things, this news raises the question whether the president was involved in facilitating what may have been an illegal campaign contribution. Another even more troubling question is raised as well: What other tapes or additional evidence from Cohen’s files of possible Trump wrongdoing is now in prosecutors’ hands? A presidency may hang in the balance of the answer to that query.”
Put differently, as Common Cause’s Paul S. Ryan told me via email, “If the earlier reporting that AMI consulted with Cohen (an ‘agent’ of candidate Trump) before making the payment to McDougal is correct, then AMI’s payment to McDougal was a political expenditure ‘coordinated’ with Trump.” He continued, “Coordinated expenditures are treated as in-kind contributions under campaign finance law and corporations are prohibited from contributing to federal candidates, so AMI’s payment to McDougal [would be] an illegal corporate contribution to Trump.” Indeed, this was the basis for complaints that Common Cause filed earlier this year with the Justice Department and the Federal Election Commission.
An experienced prosecutor notes how peculiar was Giuliani’s reaction to the tapes. The Post reported: “‘Nothing in that conversation suggests that he had any knowledge of (the AMI payment) in advance,’ Giuliani said. ‘In the big scheme of things, it’s powerful exculpatory evidence.’ “However, the recording shows that Trump – whose spokeswoman denied he had any knowledge of the AMI deal with McDougal when it became public days before the election – in fact knew of her claims and efforts to keep her quiet at least two months earlier.”
Former federal prosecutor Joyce White Vance tells me, “The only people who really need exculpatory evidence are defendants in criminal cases. It’s remarkable that that is where Giuliani’s thoughts turn first when he’s discussing a taped phone call involving his client.”
For Trump’s apologists, the revelation creates a new wave of angst. (The Los Angeles Times reported, “‘We all knew there were going to be a lot of women cropping up with allegations and that it was Michael’s job to take care of it,’ said an associate of Cohen’s, speaking on condition of anonymity.”)
If there are a flock of women – those whose names have already surfaced in association with Trump or others we have yet to hear about – who received similar payments, it will be hard to avoid the conclusion that there was a conspiracy to avoid reporting embarrassing and possibly illegal campaign donations. While Trump’s evangelical lackeys gave him a “mulligan” on his payoff to Stormy Daniels, it’s not clear a wider audience will countenance a president who got through a campaign by secretly paying off gobs of women, especially if any of those women claimed to have been the victims of non-consensual sexual conduct.
There are many reasons (e.g., knowledge of Trump’s finances, awareness of Trump’s Russia connections) Trump has been freaked out by the search of Cohen’s office, hotel and home. Cohen is no John Dean, but in the end he may prove more problematic for Trump than Dean was to
Jennifer Rubin writes the Right Turn blog for The Washington Post, offering reported opinion from a center-right perspective.
Bookmark NJ.com/Opinion. Follow on Twitter @NJ_Opinion and find NJ.com Opinion on Facebook.
#news
What did Trump know about the National Enquirer payment?
    copyright © 2018
youtube
youtube
          from Conservative columnist: How many more hush-money payoffs are out there? | Opinion via Conservative columnist: How many more hush-money payoffs are out there? | Opinion April 08, 2019 at 04:18AM Copyright © April 08, 2019 at 04:18AM
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youngwerewolfgarden · 6 years ago
Text
Conservative columnist: How many more hush-money payoffs are out there? | Opinion
Conservative columnist: How many more hush-money payoffs are out there? | Opinion: What did Trump know about the National Enquirer payment? Watch video
By Jennifer Rubin
The Washington Post reported: “Two months before the 2016 election, longtime Donald Trump attorney Michael Cohen secretly taped a conversation with the then-GOP presidential nominee about whether to purchase the rights to Playboy centerfold Karen McDougal’s account of her alleged extramarital affair with Trump, according to three people familiar with the conversation. “The recording, which Cohen made surreptitiously in Trump Tower in early September 2016, was seized by federal agents who are investigating Cohen for potential bank and election-law crimes, according to multiple people familiar with the probe. “Trump and Cohen’s discussion came a month after AMI, the parent company of the National Enquirer, bought the rights to McDougal’s story for $150,000, then shelved it.”
There is much we do not know about this incident: Did AMI eventually make a payment at Trump’s behest? Did Trump reimburse AMI? Did anyone associated with AMI disclose the donation as a campaign-related expense?
While less politically compelling than the president’s actions as an overt, pro-Russian turncoat, the revelation has grave legal implications for the president. “Since the federal search warrants were first served on Michael Cohen, it has been likely that he and his most famous client, the president, were in trouble,” says former White House ethics counsel Norman Eisen. “The passage of time has only made that clearer, with these tapes the latest evidence.”
He adds, “Despite current presidential fixer Rudy Giuliani, Cohen’s latest successor, saying that the tapes are good for the president, it is hard to see an upside to secretly taped recordings about payments to a former mistress during the heat of a presidential campaign, and other sources are already contradicting Giuliani’s spin.”
Eisen explains, “Among other things, this news raises the question whether the president was involved in facilitating what may have been an illegal campaign contribution. Another even more troubling question is raised as well: What other tapes or additional evidence from Cohen’s files of possible Trump wrongdoing is now in prosecutors’ hands? A presidency may hang in the balance of the answer to that query.”
Put differently, as Common Cause’s Paul S. Ryan told me via email, “If the earlier reporting that AMI consulted with Cohen (an ‘agent’ of candidate Trump) before making the payment to McDougal is correct, then AMI’s payment to McDougal was a political expenditure ‘coordinated’ with Trump.” He continued, “Coordinated expenditures are treated as in-kind contributions under campaign finance law and corporations are prohibited from contributing to federal candidates, so AMI’s payment to McDougal [would be] an illegal corporate contribution to Trump.” Indeed, this was the basis for complaints that Common Cause filed earlier this year with the Justice Department and the Federal Election Commission.
An experienced prosecutor notes how peculiar was Giuliani’s reaction to the tapes. The Post reported: “‘Nothing in that conversation suggests that he had any knowledge of (the AMI payment) in advance,’ Giuliani said. ‘In the big scheme of things, it’s powerful exculpatory evidence.’ “However, the recording shows that Trump – whose spokeswoman denied he had any knowledge of the AMI deal with McDougal when it became public days before the election – in fact knew of her claims and efforts to keep her quiet at least two months earlier.”
Former federal prosecutor Joyce White Vance tells me, “The only people who really need exculpatory evidence are defendants in criminal cases. It’s remarkable that that is where Giuliani’s thoughts turn first when he’s discussing a taped phone call involving his client.”
For Trump’s apologists, the revelation creates a new wave of angst. (The Los Angeles Times reported, “‘We all knew there were going to be a lot of women cropping up with allegations and that it was Michael’s job to take care of it,’ said an associate of Cohen’s, speaking on condition of anonymity.”)
If there are a flock of women – those whose names have already surfaced in association with Trump or others we have yet to hear about – who received similar payments, it will be hard to avoid the conclusion that there was a conspiracy to avoid reporting embarrassing and possibly illegal campaign donations. While Trump’s evangelical lackeys gave him a “mulligan” on his payoff to Stormy Daniels, it’s not clear a wider audience will countenance a president who got through a campaign by secretly paying off gobs of women, especially if any of those women claimed to have been the victims of non-consensual sexual conduct.
There are many reasons (e.g., knowledge of Trump’s finances, awareness of Trump’s Russia connections) Trump has been freaked out by the search of Cohen’s office, hotel and home. Cohen is no John Dean, but in the end he may prove more problematic for Trump than Dean was to
Jennifer Rubin writes the Right Turn blog for The Washington Post, offering reported opinion from a center-right perspective.
Bookmark NJ.com/Opinion. Follow on Twitter @NJ_Opinion and find NJ.com Opinion on Facebook.
#news
Tumblr media
What did Trump know about the National Enquirer payment?
copyright © 2016
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        from Conservative columnist: How many more hush-money payoffs are out there? | Opinion via Conservative columnist: How many more hush-money payoffs are out there? | Opinion March 11, 2019 at 02:36PM Copyright © March 11, 2019 at 02:36PM
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nebacktra · 6 years ago
Text
Conservative columnist: How many more hush-money payoffs are out there? | Opinion
Conservative columnist: How many more hush-money payoffs are out there? | Opinion: What did Trump know about the National Enquirer payment? Watch video
By Jennifer Rubin
The Washington Post reported: “Two months before the 2016 election, longtime Donald Trump attorney Michael Cohen secretly taped a conversation with the then-GOP presidential nominee about whether to purchase the rights to Playboy centerfold Karen McDougal’s account of her alleged extramarital affair with Trump, according to three people familiar with the conversation. “The recording, which Cohen made surreptitiously in Trump Tower in early September 2016, was seized by federal agents who are investigating Cohen for potential bank and election-law crimes, according to multiple people familiar with the probe. “Trump and Cohen’s discussion came a month after AMI, the parent company of the National Enquirer, bought the rights to McDougal’s story for $150,000, then shelved it.”
There is much we do not know about this incident: Did AMI eventually make a payment at Trump’s behest? Did Trump reimburse AMI? Did anyone associated with AMI disclose the donation as a campaign-related expense?
While less politically compelling than the president’s actions as an overt, pro-Russian turncoat, the revelation has grave legal implications for the president. “Since the federal search warrants were first served on Michael Cohen, it has been likely that he and his most famous client, the president, were in trouble,” says former White House ethics counsel Norman Eisen. “The passage of time has only made that clearer, with these tapes the latest evidence.”
He adds, “Despite current presidential fixer Rudy Giuliani, Cohen’s latest successor, saying that the tapes are good for the president, it is hard to see an upside to secretly taped recordings about payments to a former mistress during the heat of a presidential campaign, and other sources are already contradicting Giuliani’s spin.”
Eisen explains, “Among other things, this news raises the question whether the president was involved in facilitating what may have been an illegal campaign contribution. Another even more troubling question is raised as well: What other tapes or additional evidence from Cohen’s files of possible Trump wrongdoing is now in prosecutors’ hands? A presidency may hang in the balance of the answer to that query.”
Put differently, as Common Cause’s Paul S. Ryan told me via email, “If the earlier reporting that AMI consulted with Cohen (an ‘agent’ of candidate Trump) before making the payment to McDougal is correct, then AMI’s payment to McDougal was a political expenditure ‘coordinated’ with Trump.” He continued, “Coordinated expenditures are treated as in-kind contributions under campaign finance law and corporations are prohibited from contributing to federal candidates, so AMI’s payment to McDougal [would be] an illegal corporate contribution to Trump.” Indeed, this was the basis for complaints that Common Cause filed earlier this year with the Justice Department and the Federal Election Commission.
An experienced prosecutor notes how peculiar was Giuliani’s reaction to the tapes. The Post reported: “‘Nothing in that conversation suggests that he had any knowledge of (the AMI payment) in advance,’ Giuliani said. ‘In the big scheme of things, it’s powerful exculpatory evidence.’ “However, the recording shows that Trump – whose spokeswoman denied he had any knowledge of the AMI deal with McDougal when it became public days before the election – in fact knew of her claims and efforts to keep her quiet at least two months earlier.”
Former federal prosecutor Joyce White Vance tells me, “The only people who really need exculpatory evidence are defendants in criminal cases. It’s remarkable that that is where Giuliani’s thoughts turn first when he’s discussing a taped phone call involving his client.”
For Trump’s apologists, the revelation creates a new wave of angst. (The Los Angeles Times reported, “‘We all knew there were going to be a lot of women cropping up with allegations and that it was Michael’s job to take care of it,’ said an associate of Cohen’s, speaking on condition of anonymity.”)
If there are a flock of women – those whose names have already surfaced in association with Trump or others we have yet to hear about – who received similar payments, it will be hard to avoid the conclusion that there was a conspiracy to avoid reporting embarrassing and possibly illegal campaign donations. While Trump’s evangelical lackeys gave him a “mulligan” on his payoff to Stormy Daniels, it’s not clear a wider audience will countenance a president who got through a campaign by secretly paying off gobs of women, especially if any of those women claimed to have been the victims of non-consensual sexual conduct.
There are many reasons (e.g., knowledge of Trump’s finances, awareness of Trump’s Russia connections) Trump has been freaked out by the search of Cohen’s office, hotel and home. Cohen is no John Dean, but in the end he may prove more problematic for Trump than Dean was to
Jennifer Rubin writes the Right Turn blog for The Washington Post, offering reported opinion from a center-right perspective.
Bookmark NJ.com/Opinion. Follow on Twitter @NJ_Opinion and find NJ.com Opinion on Facebook.
#news
Tumblr media
What did Trump know about the National Enquirer payment?
copyright © 2016
youtube
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        from Conservative columnist: How many more hush-money payoffs are out there? | Opinion via Conservative columnist: How many more hush-money payoffs are out there? | Opinion January 31, 2019 at 08:06PM Copyright © January 31, 2019 at 08:06PM
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