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#Samuel S. McClure
newyorkthegoldenage · 4 months
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On May 20, 1944, the American Academy of Arts & Letters and the National Institute of Arts & Letters honored four distinguished Americans: editor and publisher Samuel S. McClure (McClure's magazine), novelists Willa Cather and Theodore Dreiser, and actor, singer, and social activist Paul Robeson.
Photo: NY Times via Getty Images
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justbwaythings-blog · 5 years
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I *~finally ~* got all of my audios together 💀
If you’re interested in trading dm me your list!
Beetlejuice 9-22-19 (Audio)
Alex Brightman (Beetlejuice) Sophia Anne Caruso (Lydia) Adam Dannheisser (Charles) Rob McClure (Adam) Kerry Butler (Barbara) Leslie Kritzer (Delia/Miss Argentina) Kelvin Moon Loh (Otho) Dana Steingold (Girl Scout)
Notes: Rob’s last show!
Beetlejuice 9-25/26?-19 (Audio)
Alex Brightman (Beetlejuice) Dana Steingold (u/s Lydia) Adam Dannheisser (Charles) David Josefsberg (Adam) Kerry Butler (Barbara) Leslie Kritzer (Delia/Miss Argentina) Kelvin Moon Loh (Otho) Presley Ryan (u/s Girl Scout)
Beetlejuice 10-15-19 (Audio)
Will Blum (u/s Beetlejuice) Sophia Anne Caruso (Lydia) Adam Dannheisser (Charles) Rob McClure (Adam) Kerry Butler (Barbara) Leslie Kritzer (Delia/Miss Argentina) Kelvin Moon Loh (Otho) Dana Steingold (Girl Scout)
Beetlejuice Pre Broadway (Audio)
Alex Brightman (Beetlejuice) Sophia Anne Caruso (Lydia) Adam Dannheisser (Charles) Rob McClure (Adam) Kerry Butler (Barbara) Leslie Kritzer (Delia/Miss Argentina) Kelvin Moon Loh (Otho) Dana Steingold (Girl Scout)
Charlie and The Chocolate Factory 1st National Tour Philadelphia 11-15-18 (Audio)
Noah Weisberg (Willy Wonka) Collin Jeffery (Charlie Bucket) Daniel Quadrino (Mike TeeVee) Madeleine Doherty (Mrs TeeVee) Matt Wood (Augustus Gloop) Kathy Fitzgerald (Mrs Gloop) Brynn Williams (Violet Beauregarde) David Samuel (Mr Beauregarde) Jessica Cohen (Veruca Salt) Nathaniel Hackman (Mr Salt) Amanda Rose (Mrs Bucket) James Young (Grandpa Joe) Clyde Voce, Jennifer Jill Malenke, Claire Neumann, Joel Newsome
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V I D E O S
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Dear Evan Hansen | June 2018
Taylor Trensch (Evan Hansen), Alex Boniello (Connor Murphey), Sky Lakota-Lynch (Jared Kleinman), Laura Dreyfuss (Zoe Murphy), Jennifer Laura Thompson (Cynthia Murphy), Asa Somers (u/s Larry Murphy), Rachel Bay Jones (Heidi Hansen), Phoenix Best (Alana Beck)
Waitress | May 2018
Katherine McPhee (Jenna), Drew Gehling (Dr. Pomatter), Christopher Fitzgerald (Ogie), Caitlin Houlahan (Dawn), NaTasha Yvette Williams (Becky), Benny Allege, Steve Vinovich, Ben Thompson, Keri Rene Fuller, Matt DeAngelis, Tiffany Mann, Stephanie Torns, Victoria Collett, Katie Grober, Kayla Davion, Law Terrell Dunford
The Play That Goes Wrong | May 2018
Akron Watson, Mark Evans, Quinn Van Antwerp, Preston Truman Boyd, Harrison Unger, Amelia McClain, Alex Mandell, Ashley Bryant 
Charlie and The Chocolate Factory 1NT | 10/2/19
Noah Weisberg (Willy Wonka) Collin Jeffery (Charlie Bucket) Daniel Quadrino (Mike TeeVee) Madeleine Doherty (Mrs TeeVee) Matt Wood (Augustus Gloop) Kathy Fitzgerald (Mrs Gloop) Brynn Williams (Violet Beauregarde) David Samuel (Mr Beauregarde) Jessica Cohen (Veruca Salt) Nathaniel Hackman (Mr Salt) Amanda Rose (Mrs Bucket) James Young (Grandpa Joe)
The Phantom of The Opera | September 2018
Ben Crawford, Ali Ewoldt, Jay Armstrong Johnson, Raquel Suarez Groen, Laird Mackintosh, Craig Bennett, Maree Johnson, Ted Keegan (u/s), Polly Baird, Carrington Vilmont, Jason Forbach, Jim Weitzer (u/s), Kenneth Kantor, Richard Poole, Jeremy Stolle, Justin Peck, Kfir, Katharine Heaton, Chris Georgette, Patricia Phillips, Satomi Hofmann, Elizabeth Welch, Kelly Jeanne Grant, Janinah Burnett, Paul A. Schefer, Giselle O. Alvarez, Jessica Bishop, Ashlee Dupre, Jolina Javier, Carly Blake Sebouhian, Erica Wong, Joelle Gates
Newsies | August 23rd 2014
Corey Cott (Jack Kelly), Liana Hunt (Katherine), Ben Fankhauser (Davey), Andy Richardson (Crutchie), John Dossett (Joseph Pulitzer), Capathia Jenkins (Medda), Zachary Unger (Les)
Newsies | July 29th 2013
Jeremy Jordan (Jack Kelly), Ben Fankhauser (Davey Jacobs), Kara Lindsay (Katherine Plumber), Andrew Keenan-Bolger (Crutchie), John Dossett (Joseph Pulitzer), Capathia Jenkins (Medda Larkin), Matthew Schechter (Les Jacobs)
Spongebob Squarepants | 8/29/18
Ethan Slater (Spongebob Squarepants), Danny Skinner (Patrick Star), Christina Sajous (Sandy Cheeks), Gavin Lee (Squidward Tentacles), Brian Ray Norris (Eugene Krabs), Wesley Taylor (Sheldon Plankton), Jai'len Christine Li Josey (Pearl), Brandon Espinoza (Patchy the Pirate), Kelvin Moon Loh (Perch Perkins), Catherine Ricafort (Karen)
Beetlejuice | March 2018 (Previews)
Alex Brightman (Beetlejuice), Sophia Anne Caruso (Lydia), Kerry Butler (Barbara), Rob McClure (Adam), Adam Dannheisser (Charles), Leslie Kritzer (Delia), Jill Abramovitz (Maxine Dean/Juno), Kelvin Moon Loh (Otho), Danny Rutigliano (Maxie Dean), Dana Steingold (Girl Scout), Tessa Alves (Ensemble), Gilbert L. Bailey II (Ensemble), Johnny Brantley III (Ensemble), Ryan Breslin (Ensemble), Abe Goldfarb (Ensemble), Eric Anthony Johnson (Ensemble), Elliott Mattox (Ensemble), Mateo Melendez (Ensemble), Ramone Owens (Ensemble)
Beetlejuice | July 27th, 2019
Alex Brightman (Beetlejuice), Sophia Anne Caruso (Lydia Deetz), Kerry Butler (Barbara Maitland), Rob McClure (Adam Maitland), Leslie Kritzer (Delia Deetz), Adam Dannheisser (Charles Deetz), Kelvin Moon Loh (Otho), Jill Abramovitz (Maxine Dean/Juno), Danny Rutigliano (Maxie Dean), Dana Steingold (Girl Scout)
Hello Dolly! (Revival, Unknown Date)
Bette Midler (Dolly Gallagher Levi), David Hyde Pierce (Horace Vandergelder), Kate Baldwin (Irene Molloy), Christian Dante White (u/s Cornelius Hackl), Taylor Trensch (Barnaby Tucker), Beanie Feldstein (Minnie Faye), Will Burton (Ambrose Kemper), Melanie Moore (Ermengarde), Jennifer Simard (Ernestina)
Charlie and The Chocolate Factory | April 20th, 2017
Christian Borle (Willy Wonka), Ryan Foust (Charlie Bucket), John Rubinstein (Grandpa Joe), Emily Padgett (Mrs. Bucket), Ben Crawford (Mr. Salt), Kathy Fitzgerald (Mrs. Gloop), Alan H. Green (Mr. Beauregarde), Jackie Hoffman (Mrs. Teavee), Trista Dollison (Violet Beauregarde), F. Michael Haynie (Augustus Gloop), Emma Pfaeffle (Veruca Salt), Michael Wartella (Mike Teavee)
Please direct ALL inquires to [email protected]. Any messages sent to this tumblr WILL NOT be opened.
Wants, Ratios & Pricing are located at the bottom of the page and will be reblogged occasionally ⇩
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historyatnih · 5 years
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This cheerful group of people posing on the steps of the NIH administration building 80 years ago worked in the NIH Division of Chemistry.  They were getting ready to move from their labs at 25th and E Streets, NW in Washington, DC, to their new building on the current Bethesda campus in 1939.  Dr. Claude Hudson, in the middle of the front row, was a founder of carbohydrate chemistry and the Division director; many of his staff went on to greater glory, such as Floyd Daft, who became director of the National Institute of Arthritis and Metabolic Diseases.  The Division included four women Ph.D. chemists.  Learn more about their work on page 54 and 74 https://history.nih.gov/research/downloads/70acresofscience.pdf
Front row: Dr. W. Dayton MacLay, Dr. Ernest L. Jackson, Dr. Elias Elvove, Dr. Claude S. Hudson, Dr. Raymond M. Hann, Dr. Havelock F. Fraser, and Dr. Nelson K. Richtmyer. Middle row: Mr. Samuel Dove, Dr. Alice T. Merill, Dr. Allene Jeanes, Dr. Evelyn B. Tilden, Dr. Mildred Adams, Miss Edna M. Montgomery, Dr. Willard T. Haskins, and Mr. Harry W. Diehl. Back row: Mr. Richard Maggenti, Dr. William S. McClenaham, Dr. Frank J. McClure, Mr. Charles G. Remsburg, Mr. Thomas Collins, Dr. Floyd S. Daft, Mr. John T. Sipes, and Dr. Albert E. Knauf. 
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skivampire · 3 years
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TODAY'S BIRTHDAY
Frank Nelson Doubleday (1862)
Doubleday was an American publisher best known for founding the Doubleday & McClure Company. Doubleday was so fascinated with printing as a boy that he saved up and bought his own printing press, and he began working at famed publishing house Charles Scribner's Sons at age 14. In 1897, he formed his own company with Samuel S. McClure, publisher o McClure's Magazine, and their firm became a prominent publishing house.
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yrh72 · 3 years
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つづき ――――――00's―――――― ○Snatch (2000) /Guy Ritchie Brad Pitt ○American Psycho (2000) /Mary Harron Christian Bale ★Memento (2000) /Christopher Nolan Guy Pearce, Joe Pantoliano ○Frida (2002)/Julie Taymor Salma Hayek ○The Butterfly Effect (2004) /Eric Bress, J. Mackye Gruber Ashton Kutcher, Amy Smart ○THIS IS ENGLAND (2006) / Shane Meadows Thomas Turgoose, Joseph Gilgun, Vicky McClure ○FILTH AND WISDOM (2008) /Madonna Eugene Hutz, Vicky McClure ――――――10's―――――― ○Inception (2010) /Christopher Nolan Leonaldo DiCaprio, Marion Cottilard, Joseph Gordon Levitt ○ARGO (2012) /Ben Affleck Ben Affleck ○The Grandmaster (2013) /Wong Kar Wai Zhang Ziyi ○WILD TALES (2014) /Damian Szifron Erica Rivas ○Edge of Tomorrow (2014) /Doug Liman Tom Cruise, Emily Blunt ○Interstellar (2014) /Christopher Nolan Matthew MaConaughey, Anne Hathaway, Mackenzie Foy ○asphalte (2015) /Samuel Benchetrit Jules Benchetrit, Isabelle Huppert ○Mad Max: Fury Road (2015) /George Miller Charlize Theron, Tom Hardy ★Anthropoid (2016) /Sean Ellise Cillian Murphy, Jamie Dornan ★Riphagen: The Untouchable (2016) /Pieter Kuijpers Jeroen van Koningsbrugge ○DETROIT (2017) /Kathryn Bigelow Will Poulter, John Boyega ○Dunkirk (2017) /Christopher Nolan Fionn Whitehead, Aneurin Barnard, Barry Keoghan, Cillian Murphy, Tom Hardy ○BlacKkKlansman (2018) /Spike Lee John David Washington, Adam Driver ☆Paris Is Us (2019) /Elisabeth Vogler Noemie Schmidt ○Parasite (2019) /Bong Joon-Ho Park So-dam ★Miles Davis: Birth of cool (2019) /Stanley Nelson Miles Davis ――――――20's―――――― ○TENET (2020) /Christopher Nolan John David Washington, Robert Pattinson, Elizabeth Debicki https://www.instagram.com/p/COIkOqzsj9iXBK75gb4b6F24OJJNIbc5rYrFkM0/?igshid=vdzoscxu9xq0
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St Enoch Presbyterian Church W.W.1 war memorial and roll of honour. Duncairn, Belfast
All information is provided in good faith but, on occasions errors may occur. Should this be the case, if new information can be verified please supply it to the author and corrections will then be made.
Erected by this congregation in honour of those who Volunteered in the Great War 1914-1918
These all died.
Thomas Rainey AGNEW.  Stoker 1st Class SS/113435, Royal Navy on HMS Vangard. Born 1892 to Samuel and Dorothy Agnew, of 138, Spamount Street., Belfast.  Commemorated on the Chatham Naval Memorial, Kent.  
Robert BOYD.  Rifleman 582, 10th Royal Irish Rifles.  Born 1879 to Mrs. Jeannie Boyd of 17 India Street, Belfast.  Killed in action 1 July 1916 aged 37 years.  Commemorated on the Thiepval Memorial, Somme, France.
William Hatchell BOYD.  2nd Lieutenant, 9th Royal Dublin Fusiliers.  Born 1887 to the Rev. Samuel T. Boyd, B.A., and Mrs. Boyd, of Dublin.  Killed in action 9 September 1916 aged 29 years.  Commemorated on the Thiepval Memorial, Somme, France.
John BOYLAN.  Private 12558, 15th Royal Irish Rifles.  Born 1898 to John and Annie Boylan, of 166, Alexandra Park Avenue, Belfast later of 23 Annadale Street, Belfast.  Killed in action  1 July 1916 aged 20 years.   Commemorated on the Thiepval Memorial, Somme, France.
Hugh BROWN. 2nd Lieutenant, 6th attached 1st  Royal Irish Rifles.  Killed in action 31 July 1917.  Commemorated on the Menin Gate Memorial, Ypres, Belgium.
John Brown.  Royal Irish Rifles.  Unable to find the correct record for this person recorded with the CWGC
James CAMERON (Military Medal).  Sergeant 160496,  50th Canadian Infantry.  Born 1892 to James and Sarah Cameron, of 52, Brookhill Avenue, Antrim Road, Belfast, Ireland.  Formerly of Ballymena, Co. Antrim.  Died 5 June 1917 aged 25 years.  At rest in Barlin Communal Cemetery Extension, France.  
William CARLISLE.  Rifleman 11211, 1st Royal Irish Rifles.   Husband of Elizabeth Carlisle, of 14, Court Street, Belfast, Ireland.  Killed in action 23 October 1916, aged 24 years.  Commemorated on the Thiepval Memorial, Somme, France
John CARSON Rifleman 24/991 2.3rd  New Zealand Rifles.  Killed in action 15 October 1917.  At rest in Lijssenthoek Military Cemetery, Belgium.  
Jack CRICHTON  Lance Corporal, (Private) 642640, 4th Canadian Infantry.  Died of wounds 5 July 1917  Downview Avenue, Belfast.  At rest in La Targette Britisg Cemetery, Neuville-Sain- Vaast, France
William CLARKE.  Private 18818,  2nd Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers.  Only son of Robert And Agnes Clarke of  40 Christopher Street, Belfast.  Killed in action 3 July 1916 aged 22 years.  Commemorated on the Thiepval Memorial, Somme, France.  
James Wilson CORDNER. (Military Cross) Lieutenant 2nd Royal Irish Rifles. The Manse, Drumbo.  Killed in action 16 April 1918.  At rest in Minty Farm, Cemetery, Belgium.  He was onetime assistant minister at St. Enoch’s Presbyterian Church, Belfast and became a minister in the United Free Church in Lisburn.  London Gazette dated 3 August 1915. Royal  Irish Rifles. The undermentioned to be temporary Second Lieutenants James Cordner. Dated 7th June, 1915. Edinburgh Gazette dated 22 July 1918.  Military Cross Citation. T./Lt. James Wilson Cordner. Royal Irish Rifles. For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty while in charge of a wiring party. He wired 500 yards of newly captured trenches in daylight in full view of the enemy and under heavy fire. His coolness and determination were an inspiration to his men. At rest in Minty Farm Cemetery, Belgium.
Hampton CRAWFORD. Corporal, (Private) 25239, 9th Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers.  Son of Samuel and Mary Ann Crawford of 3 Trinity Street, Belfast.  Commemorated on the Thiepval Memorial, Somme, France.   CWGC have his rank as Private
David FERGUSON. 14599, 9th Royal Irish Rifles.  Killed in action at the battle of the Somme, 1 July 1916.  At rest in Serre Road Cemetery No 2, Somme, France.
Frederick George FRENCH.  Private 874792,  27th Canadians.  Son of Thomas and Anne Jane French of 26 Cumberland Street, Belfast.  Killed in action 10 April 1917 aged 31 years.  At rest in Nine Elms Military Cemetery, Thelus, France.
Stewart FULTON.  U S National Guards ?. Residing with his parents at 11 Rosewood Street, Belfast.  Killed in action.  (No further information available).
Frederick William GIRVAN. Captain, 8th Devonshire Regiment.  Son of Robert and Isabella Girvan of 115 Cavehill Road, Belfast.  Later of 24 Easton Gardens.  Killed in action 26 October 1917 aged 24 years.  Commemorated on the Tyne Cot memorial, Belgium.
R GRIBBEN. The CWGC have only two R Cribben’s (no varients)
Robert GRIBBEN.  Stoker 1879T, Royal Naval Reserve of HMS  Queen Mary. Son of William and Eliza Gribben, of Larne; husband of Maggie Gribben, of Larne, Co. Antrim.  Killed at sea 31 May 1916 aged 39 years.  Commemorated on the Portsmouth Naval Memorial, Hampshire.
or
Robert GRIBBEN.  Rifleman 23/1393, 1/3rd New Zealand Rifle Brigade.  Son of James Gribben, of The Race Course, Lower Broughshane, Ballymena, Co. Antrim.  Died 17 June 1917 aged 28 years.  At rest in Bailleul Communal Cemetery Extension, Nord France.
Archibald McMillan HANNA.  15th Royal Irish Rifles.  Residing at 27 Court Street, Belfast.  Killed in action 1 July 1916.  Commemorated on the Thiepval Memorial, Somme, France.
Charles HANNA.  Private 745394 2nd Canadian Infantry.  Son of William and Catherine Hannah.  Killed in action 6 November 1917.  At rest in Oosttaverne Wood Cemetery, Belgium.
Arthur HEENAN.  Private 8966,  1st Royal Irish Rifles. Son of John and Mary Jane of 8 Suir Street, Belfast.  Killed in action 9 May 1915 aged 26 years.  Commemorated on the Ploegsteert Memorial, Belgium.
John KELLY.  Lance Corporal, (Private) 10489 6th Royal Irish Rifles.  Residing at 278 Crumlin Road, Belfast.  Killed in action 10 August 1915.   Commemorated on the Helles Memorial, Turkey including Gallipoli.
William John LAVERTY.  Rifleman 949, 1st Garrison Battalion, Royal Irish Rifles.  Born at Drumagh, Omagh, County Tyrone, Ireland. Husband of Minnie Ann Laverty, of 36, Willow Bank Gardens, Antrim Rd., Belfast, Northern Ireland.  Died in India 10 November 1916 aged 47 years.  At rest in Cawnpore Cantonment New Cemetery, India.  
Thomas Edwin LOWRY.  Lance Corporal, 10/15177, 10th Royal Irish Rifles.  Husband of Minnie Lowry, of 33, Matlock Street, Belfast, Ireland.  Died 12 June 1918 aged 23 years. Laid to rest as Thomas Edward Lowry 15 June 1918  Plot P Grave 300 at the  Belfast City Cemetery.  His wife is also interred in the grave and she is named as Mary Ann.
James MURPHY.  Sergeant 5/12045, 5th Royal Irish Fusiliers.  Son of Mrs. Elizabeth Murphy, of 23, Jennymount Terrace, York Road, Belfast.  Later of 96 Henry Street, Belfast.  Killed in action 10 March 1918 aged 23 years.  At rest in Jerusalem War Cemetery, Palestine including Gaza.
Alfred McCLELLAND.  2nd Lieutenant, 5th Royal Irish Rifles. Son of James and Charlotte Miriam McClelland of 34 Shore Road, Duncairn, Belfast.  1911 his occupation was an office apprentice.  At the time of his death his parents were residing at 105 Cavehill Road, Belfast.   Died of wounds 13 October 1917 aged 24 years.  At rest in trois Arbres Cemetery, Steenerck, Nord France.  
Hugh Beggs McCLURE. Sapper 64264 150th Field Coy, Royal Engineers.  Born 17 February 1885 at Mead street, Larne to Thomas Beggs and Margaret Jane Gleghorn McClure, nee Meekin the residence of his parents. They later resided at 8 Newington Street, Belfast, Ireland   Husband of Maud, nee McClure of 63 Everton Street, Belfast. He was married on the 13 April 1911 at Magheramore Presbyterian Church, County Antrim.  His wife died at Maternity Hospital in Belfast 9 October 1915 of heart failure and septicaemia after child birth.  His son Lorrimer Drummond Mclure died aged 5 weeks at his grandparents Robert and Ellen McClure residence 197 Crumlin Road, Belfast on the 28 October 1915.   On the 11 February 1915 aged 29 years he joined the Royal Engineers and then was posted to the R.E. Depot, Chatham, civilian occupation painter.  On the 30 November 1915 he was posted to France.  He was killed in action 6 October 1916 aged 30 years. His effects went to his father in law Robert McClure, retired compositor.  At rest in Pond Farm Cemetery, Belgium.
Two of his brothers were also serving in the war.
James McClure, married, was serving as Sapper 89976, 145 Army Troops Coy, Royal Engineers Some notes from James’s army record. Born 19 October 1880 at Inver, Larne to Thomas and Margaret Jane Gleghorn McClure, nee McMeekin.  He enlisted at into the Royal Engineers at Larne and joined at Londonderry as Sapper 7156 on the 24 November 1900 aged 20 years, occupation painter.  He married Elizabeth Jane McClean at St Michael the Archangel, Aldershot, Surrey on the 23 April 1904. He was aged 24 years and stationed at Stanhope Lines, Aldershot.  His wife was aged 29 and she resided at Alexander Road, Aldershot.  At some time, his wife died and he remarried in 1913 to Tabitha Hunt.  On the 23 November 1912 he was discharged from the army on the termination of the 1st period of engagement.  No other records to show when he was called to the colours.  His birth certificate show he was registered as James.  When he remarried he used the name of Jams McMeekin McClure
Robert was Born 8 December 1890 to Thomas Beggs McClure and Margaret Jane Gleghorn McClure nee McMeekin of Back Road, Larne.  His father was a house painter.  Serving as Private 18229 12th Central Antrim Regiment, Royal Irish Rifles, Ulster Division at Masters Stores, Base Depot, Le Havre, France.  Both demobilized to Class Z Army Reserve Some notes from Robert’s army record. He joined up at Larne, County Antrim 15 September 1914 aged 24 years and 9 months, occupation, painter.  He was posted the same day to Clandeboye Estate Army Training Camp, near Bangor, County Down.  His parents Thomas Beggs and Margaret McClure of 8 Newington Street, Belfast were his next of kin.  He embarked to join the BEF in France 15 September 1914 and left 18 January 1919, having one period of leave.  On the 16 February 1919 he was demobilized at Dublin to his residence at 5 Newington Avenue, Belfast after serving 4 years and 155 days.  On the 24 October 1927 he wrote to the army requesting a character reference for employment purposes.  His residence at that time was 21 Frampton Street, Strandtown, Belfast, Northern Ireland
Robert Harper McELRATH.  Private 25459, 1st Royal Dublin Fusiliers.  Born 1886 to James and Mary McElrath, of "Mill Farm", County, Antrim.  Died 21 October 1918 aged 32 years.  At rest in Dadizeele New British Cemetery, Belgium.
William McGOOKIN.  Private 17806, 9th Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers.  Son of William and Rachel McGookin, of Black Hill, Cookstown, County Tyrone.  Killed in action 1 July 1916 aged 19 years.  Commemorated on the Thiepval Memorial, Somme, France.
James Bailie McQUOID.  Corporal 9681, 1st Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers.  Son of William and Elizabeth McQuoid, of 94, Chief Street, Belfast.  At rest in Shrapnel Valley Cemetery, Turkey including Gallipoli.
David NELSON.  Private 420210, 43rd Canadian Infantry.  Born in Belfast on the 30 July 1880 to Samuel and Annie McDowell Nelson of 32, Marsden Gardens, Cavehill Road, Belfast, Ireland, husband of Margaret who later re-married to Mr Kelly.  Commemorated on the Menin Gate Memorial, Ypres, Belfast.
Samuel PATTON. Private 3422, 2nd Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers.  Born in the Shankill area of Belfast. Killed in action 16 May 1915.  His grandmother Anne M was granted a war gratuity 17 September 1917, revised 1 October 1919.  Commemorated on the Le Touret Memorial, France.
William PATTON.  Private 17460 Durham Light Infantry.  Son of John Patton of 53 Cambrai Street, Belfast.  Killed in action 7 July 1917 aged 38 years.  At rest in Belgian Battery Corner Cemetery, Belgium.
Paul Gilchrist POLLOCK.  Lance Corporal 15780, 14th Royal Irish Rifles.  Son of John and Marion J.F. Pollock, of Duncairn, Antrim.  Killed in action on the first day of the Battle of the Somme, 1 July 1916 aged 20 years.  Commemorated on the Thiepval Memorial, France.
John Singleton Henry ROBINSON.  Captain, 13th attached to 12th  Welsh Regiment  Born in Newtown Ards, County Down, Ireland.  Killed in action 24 September 1918.  At rest in Marteville Communal Cemetery, Attilly, France
Joseph ROY.  Private 13457, 15th Royal Irish Rifles.  Son of John.  1901 residing with his father and siblings at 27 Christopher Street, Belfast.  1911 residing at the home of his married sister Mary and her husband George French ay 34 Ballycastle Street, Belfast. Died 25 June 1918.  His brother Robert and sister Mary French were both granted a war gratuity 13 September 1919.   At rest in Sarralbe Military Cemetery, Moselle France.
Thomas SILLARS.  Lance Corporal 17/1301, 8th Royal Irish Rifles.  Born 27 November 1888 to John and Anne Jane Sillars, nee Smith at 158 Argyle Street, Belfast.  Husband of Annie Victoria Sillars, nee Black of 3, Ballyclare Street, Belfast.  Died 2 July 1916.  His widow was granted a war gratuity 1 August 1917 revised 15 November 1919.  At rest in Grandcourt Road Cemetery, Grandcourt, Somme, France.    
Thomas Arnold STEAD.  Driver 785526, A Battery, 312th Brigade, Royal Field Artillery.  Son of Sidney and Edith Alice Stead, of 30, Jarrow Road, Sharrow, Sheffield.  Died 29 September 1918 aged 20 years.  At rest in Flesquieres Hill British Cemetery, Nord, France.
Robert James THOMPSON.  Rifleman 3408, 15th Royal Irish Rifles.  Son of James and Mary Ann of 35 Hanover Street, Belfast.  Killed in action 22 November 1917 aged 21 years.  Commemorated on the Cambrai Memorial, Louverval, Nord France.  
John Arthur TREW. Rifleman 689, 12th Royal Irish Rifles.  Born 17 April 1895 to Arthur and Annie Trew, nee Young  of 15, Clovelly Street, Belfast.  Died 25 July 1918 aged 23 years.   Commemorated on the Ploegsteert Memorial, Belgium.   Birth registered as John Trew, residing at 57 Willow Street, Belfast .
Frederick Ramsey WALKER. Military Cross.  2nd Lieutenant 2nd Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders. formerly Sergeant Major.  Husband of Josephine Margaret Walker, of 107, Donegall Street., Belfast. Awarded Medaille Militaire (France).  Fought in the Boer War 1899 -1902   Died in Scotland 6 January 1917.  At rest in Dalry Cemetery, Edinburgh, Scotland.
The following extract is credited to Dukie News Issue 8.  June 2017 Frederick was born in the military barracks in Tipperary on 27 July 1882. His father Tom was a staff sergeant in the 25th (the King’s Own Borderers) Regiment of Foot at the time and his mother was recorded as Mary Susanna (nee Lawson). He was orphaned sometime after between 1891 and 1893; and coming from a military background he was duly admitted to the Duke of York’s Royal Military School in Chelsea on 26 May 1893. On leaving the school on 8 August 1896 aged just 14 he joined the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders (Princess Louise’s).
https://doyrms.alumni-online.com/StaticFiles/DoyrmsITW_0000000957.pdf
Extract credited to the newspaper The Scotsman Lt Walker who was born in Tipperary in Ireland and joined the army as a boy soldier when he was 13 years old. He died suddenly at Dreghorn camp, in Colinton, Edinburgh, on 6 January, 1917, aged 34. When he died, The Evening Despatch of 10 January, 1917 reported that a large number of people accompanied the cortege from camp to the cemetery, preceded by pipe and brass bands of his battalion and followed by six hundred men from different battalions. There was a graveside service, and shots were fired.
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Montessori USA History Part 2- Clamoring for Educational Solutions
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Clamoring for Educational Solutions In part I we wrote: The genesis of the Montessori movement in the USA can be traced to five pertinent developments: Americans visiting Montessori schools in Rome (some training with her), the publication of Montessori’s books in the US, the first journalistic articles on the Montessori phenomenon appearing in the US, the support of famous individuals, and Montessori’s visits to and tours across the US.
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THE FIRST MONTESSORI ASSOCIATIONS IN THE US The growing interest in the Montessori method led to the formation of the Montessori Educational Association (MEA) in 1913. Many luminaries were involved with this association - Mabel Bell was the founding president, and Margaret Wilson (the president’s daughter) the founding secretary.  Dr Montessori recognized the association and worked closely with them. By the middle of the following year, the association had several hundred members. Its main objective was to disseminate Montessorian views and to assist with the development of Montessori schools and teacher training. They published a journal called the Bulletin. After the National Montessori Promotion Fund was established by Montessori herself, the MEA decided to dissolve in 1916.
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Margaret Wilson, Founding Secretary Of the Montessori Educational Association At the end of her second tour of the US, Montessori founded the National Montessori Promotion Fund, with herself as the chairperson and Helen Parkhurst as the resident chief administrator. Later, Parkhurst and Montessori had a fallout and the former left Montessorianism and promoted the Dalton plan, her child-centered initiative. McClure AND McClure's MAGAZINE PAVED THE WAY In the early 1900s, Montessori’s leading promoter in the United States was Samuel S. McClure, owner of the popular and stimulating McClure’s Magazine. It cannot be denied that he was in awe of the Montessori method and saw it as the future of education in the US with himself playing an instrumental role in that history. As a businessman, he also saw it as a new road to financial glory.  In the two years leading up to Montessori’s first visit to the US, “McClure’s Magazine ran a series of laudatory articles on Montessori and her method; for a time, the magazine featured a monthly section entitled the Montessori Department. Touting Montessori as an ‘educational wonder worker,’ McClure proclaimed that the development of the Montessori method marked ‘an epoch in the history of education and a turning point in the lives of all who take part in it.’ Ellen Yale Stevens, principal of the Brooklyn Heights Seminary, praised McClure’s efforts in bringing Montessori to an American audience: "For the first time, I believe, in the history of educational thought, a new movement has come to the front through the medium of a popular magazine instead of employing a scientific treatise by a specialist in education, which would naturally have limited appeal. The result of this is that the interest of the whole country has been aroused, not only in the work of Dr Montessori in Italy but in the present state of education in this country." (The Montessori Method, p.25 New York, 2004, Gerald Lee Gutek ) Due to business-related developments, he was forced to sell his magazine but remained an ardent supporter of the Montessori movement. Armed with the support of many key US Montessorians (and the support of the Montessori Educational Association), he travelled to Rome in 1913 and persuaded Montessori to visit the US on a speaking tour in a joint program with him. This led to a most remarkable event in the American Montessori annals. It was due to his ambitious financial expectations that an unbreachable rift occurred between him and the source of his admiration. By Mid-April 1914, the McClure era in the US Montessori movement had come to a sad end; however, he made a contribution that should not be forgotten. MONTESSORI’S 1913 AND 1915 US VISITS By the time of Montessori’s first visit in 1913, the US was home to over 100 Montessori schools (she stayed there for most of December). She received a very warm welcome and was feted by famous politicians and social thinkers; she was given a reception at the White House and gave talks across the US to huge crowds (including at the famous Carnegie Hall, where over 1000 people had to be turned away ). She returned to Rome after a very successful tour, which had generated renewed interest in all things Montessori. The success of this visit and the Montessori clamor in the US that had followed it prompted her to make another visit in 1915. This time she stayed for two years - her son, Mario, had accompanied her. This visit was sponsored by the National Education Association (NEA) the massive professional teachers association of the US. She visited the US a few times after that in her personal capacity, the last visit being in 1918.
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Carnegie Hall    A ROLLING WAVE  The five pertinent developments that established the Montessori movement in the US, were crowned by Montessori’s tours. Enthusiasm soared and the number of Montessori schools kept growing in leaps and bounds up to just before 1920. The period, 1910 -1920 is appropriately called the first wave of Montessorianism in the US by Gerald Lee Gutek (2004). LOOK OUT FOR PART 3 - THE EDUCATIONAL ESTABLISHMENT BITES BACK SOURCES: Montessori A Modern Approach, Paula Polk Lillard, 1972 Montessori Comes to America, Phyllis Povell, 2010 The Montessori Method, New York, 2004, Gerald Lee Gutek Free Resources: Fun & Interactive Montessori Quizzes Montessori Books & Lesson Plans Montessori Terminology Popular Post - Montessori in the Public Sector Read the full article
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teetumb-blog1 · 6 years
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LUXURY It's all fun and game until you meet my Irish temper shirt
The scientist Robert Boyle is considered the "father of chemistry", and Robert Mallet one of the "fathers of seismology". Famous Irish writers include Oscar Wilde, W. B. Yeats, Samuel Beckett, George Bernard Shaw, Bram Stoker, It's all fun and game until you meet my Irish temper shirt James Joyce, C.S. Lewis and Seamus Heaney. Notable Irish explorers include Brendan the Navigator, Sir Robert McClure, Sir Alexander Armstrong, Sir Ernest Shackleton and Tom Crean. By some accounts, the first European child born in North America had Irish descent on both sides. Many presidents of the United States have had some Irish ancestry.
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It's all fun and game until you meet my Irish temper shirt
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The population of Ireland is about 6.3 million, but it is estimated that 50 to 80 million people around the world have Irish forebears, making the Irish diaspora one of the largest of any nation. Historically, emigration from Irish has been the result of conflict, famine and economic issues.
See more our blog at  http://teebubble.strikingly.com/blog/official-it-s-all-fun-and-game-until-you-meet-my-irish-temper-shirt
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maxwellyjordan · 4 years
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Symposium: Religions’ wins are losses
This is the first entry in a SCOTUSblog symposium on the Roberts court and the religion clauses.
Leslie C. Griffin is the William S. Boyd professor of law at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. She is the author of Law and Religion: Cases and Materials. She wrote amicus briefs in support of the respondents in Little Sisters of the Poor v. Pennsylvania and Our Lady of Guadalupe School v. Morrissey-Berru, and she is writing an amicus brief in support of the respondent in Fulton v. City of Philadelphia.
The First Amendment has two religion clauses: establishment and free exercise. “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.” Religion won several cases during the Supreme Court’s 2019-20 term, and it could win more in the upcoming term.
That sounds like a great idea. But it is not.
Religion’s victories are bad for civil rights, especially for rights of women, LGBTQ individuals and people of color. As religion’s influence increases at the court, victories for civil rights decrease. The court’s recent cases confirm that some religious exemptions are incompatible with civil rights. Things could get even worse this coming term for civil rights, as religions appear to repeatedly trump civil rights — even those of religious people.
Public funding
In Espinoza v. Montana Department of Revenue, Chief Justice John Roberts changed the traditional establishment clause rule that government should not fund religion. He wrote that, once a state decides to subsidize private education, “it cannot disqualify some private schools solely because they are religious.” Espinoza was a 5-4 decision, with Roberts joined by Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh. Although Roberts did some damage to past establishment clause interpretations, Thomas and Gorsuch would end them completely, saying in a concurrence that the clause does not block the states’ choices about religion at all. With three more votes, your state could choose whatever religion it wants.
Why would anyone object to this? Because the majority lost the traditional ideal, defended by the dissenters and James Madison, that people should not be required to pay taxes to support other religions. In Espinoza, an amicus brief by rabbis supported Montana, explaining that “[a]ll religious schools in Montana are affiliated with Christian denominations,” and that invalidating Montana’s no-aid rule would fund schools that “incorporate in their teaching materials that are antithetical to Jewish beliefs and values.” Other Christians also briefed in favor of Montana. Nonetheless, Jews, other Christians and minority religions are now expected to pay for programs that teach religious ideals with which they disagree. They are especially worried that their tax dollars will now pay for schools that do not protect LGBTQ rights.
LGBTQ rights
LGBTQ rights will be before the court this coming term, in Fulton v. City of Philadelphia. Philadelphia runs an adoption program, and it noticed that some of its religious participants would not allow same-sex couples to adopt children. This violated Philadelphia’s nondiscrimination rules, and the city therefore ended its contract with the offending agencies. One of the agencies, Catholic Social Services, sued, arguing that it has a free exercise right to do business with the city while continuing to discriminate against same-sex couples, whose marriage rights are protected by the Constitution of the United States. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 3rd Circuit sided with Philadelphia, and the Supreme Court granted cert.
A win for the Catholic agency would be a terrible statement that the free exercise clause promotes the avoidance of the civil rights of LGBTQ Americans. Two of the court’s cases this past term demonstrated that the court also values religion over women’s rights.
Reproductive rights
In 2014, in Burwell v. Hobby Lobby Stores, another 5-4 decision, the court ruled that the Religious Freedom Restoration Act entitled closely held corporations to be exempt from a federal regulation requiring employers to cover certain contraceptives for their female employees. Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s dissent argued — correctly — that under the free exercise clause, everyone is supposed to obey the law, and that RFRA’s protection for religious freedom is not supposed to harm third parties, as it did in this case by limiting thousands of women’s contraceptive insurance.
The Trump administration expanded the exemption to include more religious and moral objections to contraception, and it also eliminated employers’ obligation to inform anyone of their decision to opt out of the mandate. This summer, the court, by a 7-2 vote in Little Sisters of the Poor v. Pennsylvania, upheld the new rules, which gave bigger exemptions to more employers and much less coverage to women. Ginsburg wrote another dissent, explaining that “[t]oday, for the first time, the Court casts totally aside countervailing rights and interests in its zeal to secure religious rights to the nth degree.”
Ginsburg has always promoted women’s rights. She and Justice Sonia Sotomayor alone understood how the expansion of religious rights hurts women by restricting their reproductive freedom. As legal scholar Maya Manian wrote last month, “Regulations restricting access to contraception and abortion disproportionately harm poor people and people of color.” Religious freedom often hurts civil rights.
Expansion of RFRA
Notice that Burwell and Little Sisters were decided under a statute, RFRA, that gives religious plaintiffs the right to sue the government for substantially burdening their religion — not under the free exercise clause, which requires everyone to obey the law. This fall, the court will hear another RFRA case, Tanzin v. Tanvir. Muhammad Tanvir, the plaintiff, was approached by FBI agents who asked him whether he could tell them anything about the Muslim community. When he said no, they put him on the national “No Fly List” and threatened deportation. Unable to keep his job as a trucker or to fly back to Pakistan to see his mother, Tanvir sued the FBI for monetary damages under RFRA. The court will decide if such damages are available.
What will happen if the court expands RFRA in this case? Civil rights would suffer more, enhancing people’s ability to say that requiring them to obey the antidiscrimination laws would violate their religious liberty. A smart amicus brief for neither side in the case makes the essential point that RFRA is unconstitutional. “RFRA’s invalidation of constitutional laws to the benefit solely of religious actors is a patent preference for believers, which violates long-settled and critically important principles under the First Amendment’s Establishment Clause,” the brief says. The worry is that the Supreme Court no longer recognizes the establishment clause and will give RFRA the victory instead of the establishment clause and civil rights.
Women lose to religion again
Another area of religious rights that the Supreme Court is expanding is the so-called “ministerial exception” doctrine, which itself is a court-made rule. In 1972, Billie McClure, a female ordained minister in the Salvation Army, sued her employer, arguing that she had received less pay and benefits than the male ministers. Even though Title VII of the Civil Rights Act does not contain a religious exemption for gender discrimination, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit dismissed the case, saying courts cannot interfere with employment decisions involving employees who qualify as “ministers.” Courts around the country have recognized this “ministerial exception,” which is an affirmative defense to any discrimination case, including race, national origin, gender, sexual orientation, age, disability and so forth. I think those cases could be decided on the facts, in the courts, with juries and judges deciding. Sometimes the plaintiffs would win, and sometimes they would lose. Instead, in the courts’ thinking, if your employer can label you a minister, you automatically lose.
The Supreme Court in 2012 unanimously approved the ministerial exception, in Hosanna-Tabor Evangelical Lutheran Church and School v. EEOC, saying it did not even matter if the employer had promised to obey the antidiscrimination laws yet disobeyed them. This past term, in Our Lady of Guadalupe School v. Morrissey-Berru, the court extended the exception to apply to one Catholic teacher and one maybe-Catholic-but-probably-not teacher at Catholic elementary schools. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit had correctly recognized these women as teachers, not ministers. As teachers, their lawsuits for disability-based discrimination and age discrimination could proceed. The Supreme Court reversed and decided they were ministers, even though neither had been ordained and neither had ever had any indication or personal belief she was a minister. Only Sotomayor, joined by Ginsburg, recognized that the court had just robbed “hundreds of thousands of employees” of any right to sue their employers for any violation of the antidiscrimination laws.
Religious schools are not subject to the antidiscrimination laws as long as they can call an employee a minister. Alito’s opinion for the court made it even easier for employers to win. Even women who cannot be ordained priests and were never called ministers become ministers the minute they get into court. As Sotomayor’s dissent pointed out, the ministerial exception now seems to apply to many more people than thousands of schoolteachers, including “countless coaches, camp counselors, nurses, social-service workers, in-house lawyers, media-relations personnel, and many others who work for religious institutions.”
Where we stand today
In one term, the court limited contraceptives access, expanded the number of school employees who could be called ministers and said those schools were entitled to government funding. Religious organizations now have broad exemptions from the country’s antidiscrimination laws, can refuse contraceptive insurance coverage as they choose and are entitled to government funding while they disobey the laws.
Those cases are victories for some religions. But they are losses for everyone else, including many of the members of those religious institutions.
The post Symposium: Religions’ wins are losses appeared first on SCOTUSblog.
from Law https://www.scotusblog.com/2020/08/symposium-religions-wins-are-losses/ via http://www.rssmix.com/
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soccerstl · 5 years
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A 1-0 win in the second group game at Nationals on July 24, 2019
Congratulations to all player’s who have been selected for the 2019-2020 Midwest Regional ODP Pool. The next event they may participate following the July ODP training camp, will be an Inter-Regional Event. Please see the 2019-2020 ODP Calendar and Events Page for more details. The invite process to secure a travel roster for these events has started. Rosters will be posted on the website when they are finalized. For more details, visit the Midwest Girls ODP page or the Midwest Boys ODP page. Midwest Regional ODP Player List
The players named to the list are now eligible to participate in these future events. I’ve got the girls and boys list of Missouri players below. If you’re a local Illinois player, or you have updates, let me know and I’ll add you to this list that also goes into my database for tracking players. Contact Ole
EVENTS Nov 22-28: US Youth Soccer ODP Girls Thanksgiving Interregional (02/03, 04, 05, 06) Dec 17-21: US Youth Soccer ODP Boys IMG (02, 03, 04,05, 06) Jan 23-28: East, Midwest, South West Boys & Girls NTC
Invitations for the Thanksgiving Interregionals have begun to go out as the tweet below shows. Let me know if you’ve been invited!
https://twitter.com/CentralILUnited/status/1157272282835894273?s=20
These players come from the ODP tryout and training efforts during 2018-2019 and concluded in July in Michigan where Regional Camps were held. New Missouri ODP tryouts are scheduled for October 12th and 13th and November 16th and 17th in Boonville. To learn more and to register, visit Missouri Youth Soccer ODP. There is a $250 registration fee to participate in ODP. This will include pre-season tryout sessions, tryouts and tryout shirts.
There are also ODP OPEN TRAINING SESSIONS coming throughout the state for players interested in learning more and meeting the coaches. It requires registration at the link above but there is no cost.
Kansas City- Sunday, August 11- Fort Osage High School St. Louis- Monday, August 12- Wednesday, August 14 (evenings, times TBA) Cape Girardeau- Saturday, August 17- Shawnee Sports Complex Springfield- Sunday, August 18- Cooper Youth Sports Complex
[table] GIRLS ODP Last,First,CY,Club,High School, Boushelle,Lilly,2003,,Howell Vikings, Enderle,Chaise,2002-2003,,, Kennedy,Aeryn,2002,Sporting Springfield,Camdenton Lakers, Newman,Natalie,2002-2003,,, Conroy,Quinn,2004,Sporting STL Red Devils,, Fitzler,Kathryn,2004,,, Germano,Kate,2004,Sporting STL Red Devils,Pattonville, Gianino,Emma,2004,Sporting STL Red Devils,, Hoffman,Abigail,2004,Sporting STL Red Devils,, Liguore,Julia,2004,Sporting STL Red Devils,, Mahadev,Priyanka,2004,St Louis Hawks,St. Dominic Crusaders, McMaster,Abigail,2004,,, Braun,Haylee,2005,,, Cattoor,Brooke,2005,Lou Fusz Geerling,Ft. Zumwalt South Bulldogs, Goodyear,Audrey,2005,Lou Fusz Geerling,Parkway South Patriots, Hollingsworth,Jordan,2005,,, Knox,Lauren,2005,,, Martin,Amelia ‘Mia’,2005,Lou Fusz Geerling,St. Joseph Angels, Mcpherson,Kaleigh,2005,Sporting STL,, Auten,Reid,2006,,, Brasser,Emily,2006,,, Fiala,Ellie,2006,,, Huber,Anna,2006,,, Nelson,Victoria,2006,,, Povinelli,Adriana,2006,,, Povinelli,Caterina,2006,,, Relihan,Ava,2006,,, Rozycki,Addyson,2006,,, Smith,Kinsley,2006,,, Woelk,Emily,2006,,, [/table]
I featured Brooke Cattoor in the story image and here are two of her teammates on Lou Fusz 2005 Geerling squad that were National Finalists this year. Brooke, who ran the midfield, was also named the Golden Ball winner (best player in the age group) while her teammate Audrey Goodyear was a Best XI winner and the central defender for the team. The Sporting STL Red Devils, with five players, were one of eight teams who qualified for the National tournament in their 2004 age group, falling to the eventual champions SC Wave in their final group game.
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Audrey Goodyear with the captains armband in the 2-0 win on goals by Megan Rogan and Jessica Dodd on July 27, 2019
Mia Martin in the 2-0 win on goals by Megan Rogan and Jessica Dodd on July 27, 2019
[table] BOYS ODP Last,First,CY,Club,High School, Jordan,Ferrao,2002,,, Lex,Rocha,2002,,, Brian,Vidal,2002,,, Nicholas,Wolfmeier,2002,,, Connor,Brummett,2003,,, Brooks,Davidson,2003,,, Samuel,McClure,2003,,, Randle,Smith,2003,,, Cole,Stewart,2003,,, Jake,Tiffany,2003,,, Josh,Tiffany,2003,,, Andrei,Balanean,2004,,, Aaron,Cordova,2004,,, Landon,Hartsell,2004,,, Biaya,Kayembe,2004,,, George,Morrow,2004,,, Mitchell,Ottinger,2004,,, Britton,Purewal,2004,,, Kaden,Smith,2004,,, Sean,Stenger,2004,,, Anthony,Yan,2004,,, Cayden,Andersen,2005,,, Matthew,Baldus,2005,,, Caidan,Brophy,2005,,, Harrison,Engel,2005,,, Connor,Kaplan,2005,,, Paul,Kaufmann,2005,,, Brady,Lombardo,2005,,, Connor,Lovell,2005,,, Nolan,McGuire,2005,,, Nikhil,Morgan,2005,,, Braden,Rolf,2005,,, Tyler,Sargent,2005,,, Nolan,Schulte,2005,,, Timmy,Walshauser,2005,,, Tommy,Wortham,2005,,, Zackary,Adams,2006,,, Gabe,Hafner,2006,,, Landin,Hoyle,2006,,, Christopher,Lai,2006,,, Sam,Leonard,2006,,, Alexander,Newman,2006,,, Blas,Urbano,2006,,, Mason,Willier,2006,,, [/table]
https://twitter.com/LouFuszSoccer/status/1155492314921472000?s=20
https://twitter.com/LouFuszSoccer/status/1155493060593311745?s=20
Missouri’s Midwest Regional ODP Player List Congratulations to all player's who have been selected for the 2019-2020 Midwest Regional ODP Pool. The next event they may participate following the July ODP training camp, will be an Inter-Regional Event.
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A U D I O S
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Beetlejuice 9/22/19
Alex Brightman (Beetlejuice) Sophia Anne Caruso (Lydia) Adam Dannheisser (Charles) Rob McClure (Adam) Kerry Butler (Barbara) Leslie Kritzer (Delia/Miss Argentina) Kelvin Moon Loh (Otho) Dana Steingold (Girl Scout)
Notes: Rob’s last show!
Beetlejuice 9/26/19
Alex Brightman (Beetlejuice) Dana Steingold (u/s Lydia) Adam Dannheisser (Charles) David Josefsberg (Adam) Kerry Butler (Barbara) Leslie Kritzer (Delia/Miss Argentina) Kelvin Moon Loh (Otho) Presley Ryan (u/s Girl Scout)
Beetlejuice 10/15/19
Will Blum (u/s Beetlejuice) Sophia Anne Caruso (Lydia) Adam Dannheisser (Charles) Rob McClure (Adam) Kerry Butler (Barbara) Leslie Kritzer (Delia/Miss Argentina) Kelvin Moon Loh (Otho) Dana Steingold (Girl Scout)
Beetlejuice 9/28/19
Alex Brightman (Beetlejuice) Presley Ryan (u/s Lydia) Adam Dannheisser (Charles) David Josefsberg (Adam) Kerry Butler (Barbara) Leslie Kritzer (Delia/Miss Argentina) Kelvin Moon Loh (Otho) Dana Steingold (Girl Scout)
Beetlejuice Pre Broadway
Alex Brightman (Beetlejuice) Sophia Anne Caruso (Lydia) Adam Dannheisser (Charles) Rob McClure (Adam) Kerry Butler (Barbara) Leslie Kritzer (Delia/Miss Argentina) Kelvin Moon Loh (Otho) Dana Steingold (Girl Scout)
Charlie and The Chocolate Factory 1st National Tour Philadelphia 11/15/18
Noah Weisberg (Willy Wonka) Collin Jeffery (Charlie Bucket) Daniel Quadrino (Mike TeeVee) Madeleine Doherty (Mrs TeeVee) Matt Wood (Augustus Gloop) Kathy Fitzgerald (Mrs Gloop) Brynn Williams (Violet Beauregarde) David Samuel (Mr Beauregarde) Jessica Cohen (Veruca Salt) Nathaniel Hackman (Mr Salt) Amanda Rose (Mrs Bucket) James Young (Grandpa Joe) Clyde Voce, Jennifer Jill Malenke, Claire Neumann, Joel Newsome
Mean Girls 1st National Tour
Philadelphia 11/26/19
Danielle Wade (Cady Haron), Mariah Rose Faith (Regina George), Megan Masako Haley (Gretchen Wieners), Jonalyn Saxer (Karen Smith), Mary Kate Morrissey (Janis Sarkisian), Eric Huffman (Damian Hubbard), Gaelen Gilliland (Mrs. Haron/Ms. Norbury/Mrs. George), Adante Carter (Aaron Samuels), David Wright Jr (U/S Kevin Gnapoor), Lawrence E. Street (Mr. Duvall), Deshawn Bowens (Ensemble), Will Branner (Ensemble), Morgan Ashley Bryant (Ensemble), Sarah Crane (Ensemble), Mary Beth Donahoe (Ensemble), Niani Feelings (Ensemble), Sky Flaherty (Ensemble), Fernell Hogan II (Ensemble), Asia Marie Kreitz (Ensemble), Olivia Renteria (Ensemble), Sydney Mei Ruf-Wong (Ensemble), Kaitlyn Louise Smith (Ensemble), Blake Zelesnikar (Ensemble)
The Spongebob Musical 1st National Tour
Philadelphia 12/7/19
Lorenzo Pugliese (Spongebob Squarepants), Beau Bradshaw (Patrick Star), Cody Cooley (Squidward Tentacles), Daria Pilar Redus (Sandy Cheeks), Zach Kononov (Mr. Krabs), Tristan Mcintyre (Plankton), Natalie L. Chapman (Mrs. Puff), Meami Maszewski (Pearl), Caitlin Ort (Karen Plankton), Morgan Blanchard (Patchy the Pirate), Helen Regula (Mayor), Richie Dupkin (Perch Perkins)
Please direct ALL inquires to [email protected]. Any messages sent to this tumblr WILL NOT be opened.
Wants, Ratios & Pricing are located at the bottom of the page and will be reblogged occasionally ⇩
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newyorktheater · 5 years
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The ten shows opening on Broadway in April include six plays and four musicals. Several are familiar titles presented in unfamiliar ways: Glenda Jackson as King Lear; an avant-garde, diverse Oklahoma; two much-anticipated movie adaptations — Tootsie and Beetlejuice. But the show that garnered the most votes in a Broadway Spring poll  is Hadestown, which marks the Broadway debut of Anaïs Mitchell, who created it first as a concept album by Anais Mitchell and took fire Off-Broadway. Another artist making his Broadway debut is downtown darling and MacArthur “Genius” Taylor Mac, who has written Gary, a startling comedy billed as a sequel to Shakespeare’s bloodiest tragedy.
Star power is lighting up the Great White Way: Broadway favorites like Nathan Lane, John Lithgow and Laurie Metcalf, screen stars Annette Bening and Adam Driver, British theater royalty like Glenda Jackson and Jonny Lee Miller. And let’s not forget the playwrights, directors and composers, some of whom are better known than any performer. Like Shakespeare.
Glenda Jackson, King Lear
John Douglas Thompson
Annette Benning, All My Sons
Pedro Pascal, King Lear
Rebecca Naomi Jones, Oklahoma
Alex Brightman, Beetlejuice
Director Alex Timbers
Andre De Shields, Hadestown
Playwright Arthur Miller
Benjamin Walker, All My Sons
Eva Noblezada, Hadestown
Composer David Yazbek, Tootsie
Bertie Carvel, Ink
Director George C. Wolf
John Lithgow, Hillary and Clinton
Jonny Lee Miller, Ink
Julie Halston, Tootsie
Julie White, Gary
Kelvin Moon Loh, Beetlejuice
Nathan Lane, Gary
Keri Russell, Burn This
Kristine Nielsen, GAry
Rob McClure, Beetlejuice
Lilli Cooper, Tootsie
Patrick Page, Hadestown
Reeve Carney, Hadestown
Santino Fontana, Tootsie
Laurie Metcalf, Hillary and Clinton
Adam Driver, Burn This
Ruth Wilson, King Lear
Sophia Anne Caruso, Beetlejuice
Playwright Taylor Mac
Tracy Letts, All My Sons
Anais Mitchell, songwriter, book writer
William Shakespeare
But even in a month when so many shows crowd the calendar to open by the deadline for Tony Awards eligibility, there is exciting theater opening outside Broadway as well — some of it way outside. Ars Nova launches its new programming at Greenwich House Theater with a new devised work by the Mad Ones.  Ivo van Hove directs an opera at BAM. There is innovative immersive theater in a downtown park (for free!) and in a Chelsea brownstone.
Below is a selective list of Broadway, Off-Broadway, and other New York theater offerings opening in March, 2019, organized chronologically by opening date, with each title linked to a relevant website. Color key of theaters: Broadway: Red. Off Broadway: Black, Blue, or Purple. Off Off Broadway: Green. Theater festival: Orange. Puppetry: Brown. Immersive: Magenta.
To look at the Spring season as a whole, check out my Off Broadway Spring 2019 preview guide and my Broadway 2018-2019 season guide
April 1
Oasis (Third Rail Projects at Winter Garden)
For ten minutes twice a day, five performers unexpectedly find themselves swept into a mirage, unite and create their own sanctuary.  After a two-week series of these daily lunchtime vignettes at Winter Garden at Brookfield Place (near the World Trade Center site), the full-length, culminating performance will take place in the evening on Friday, April 12. These performances are free. (This is not an April Fool’s Day joke)
  April 2
Do You Feel Anger? (Vineyard)
In this play by Mara Nelson-Greenberg , Sophia is hired as an empathy coach at a debt collection agency
April 3
The Cradle Will Rock (CSC)
new production of Marc Blitzstein’s 1937 play in music, which is most famous for having been shut down by the authorities before opening night. In Steeltown, USA, laborer Larry Foreman struggles to unionize fellow steel workers against mounting attacks from a greedy industrialist
April 4
King Lear
Cort Closing: Jul 07, 2019 Author: William Shakespeare Director: Sam Gold Cast: Glenda Jackson, Jayne Houdyshell, Elizabeth Marvel, Aisling O’Sullivan,John Douglas Thompson, Ruth Wilson, Sean Carvajal, Russell Harvard, Matthew Maher
April 5
Diary of One Who Disappeared (BAM)
In 1917, Czech composer Leoš Janáček became obsessed with a married woman 40 years his junior. In the throes of despair, he penned more than 700 love letters and a haunting 22-part song cycle called Diary of One Who Disappeared, about a village boy who falls in love with a Romany girl. Director Ivo van Hove, in collaboration with Flemish opera company Muziektheater Transparant, brings his trademark physicality and stripped-down aesthetic to bear on Janáček’s opera.
April 7
the St. Ann’s Warehouse production
Oklahoma!
Circle in the Square Closing: Sep 01, 2019 Authors: Book and lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II; Music by Richard Rodgers Director: Daniel Fish Cast:
The sixth revival of the groundbreaking Rodgers and Hammerstein musical  about love and conflict in the territory just after the turn of the century. This one one the hip production transferring from St. Ann’s Warehouse in Brooklyn, where the golden haze is a bit dark and the corn not as high. (My review of the show at St. Ann’s)
  April 8
Mrs. Murray’s Menagerie (Ars Nova at Greenwich House)
The latest devised theater piece by the Mad Ones: The creators of a 1970s children’s television program have commissioned a focus group to probe the parents of the show’s target audience. Over stale coffee and donuts, a group of strangers navigates the murky waters of American belief and perception.
  April 15
17 Border Crossings (NYTW)
With a chair, table, and bar of lights,  Thaddeus Phillips conjures barricaded Venezuelan bridges, a rusty Croatian ferry, perilous international flights,  etc. — all based on his actual adventures.
April 16
Burn This
Hudson Theater Author: Lanford Wilson Director: Michael Mayer Cast: Adam Driver, Keri Russell, Brandon Uranowitz A revival of Wilson’s 1987 play about four New Yorkers who are brought together after the accidental death of their friend, a young dancer.
Socrates (Public)
A new drama about the Greek philosopher written by Tim Blake Nelson and directed by Doug Hughes. Michael Stuhlbarg portrays Socrates.
April 17
the National Theatre production
  Hadestown
Walter Kerr
Author: Anais Mitchell Director: Rachel Chavkin Cast: Singer-songwriter Anaïs Mitchell’s musical, widely acclaimed at New York Theatre Workshop (my review), follows two intertwining love stories — that of young dreamers Orpheus and Eurydice, and that of king Hades and his wife Persephone — as it invites audiences on an epic journey to the underworld and back.
April 18
Hillary and Clinton
John Golden Theater Author: Lucas Hnath Director:Joe Mantello Cast: Laurie Metcalf, John Lithgow. Behind closed doors in the state of New Hampshire during the early days of 2008, a former first lady named Hillary (Metcalf) is in a desperate bid to save her troubled campaign for President of the United States. Her husband, Bill (Lithgow), sees things one way; her campaign manager, Mark, sees things another
    April 21
  Gary: A Sequel to Titus Andronicus
Booth Writer: Taylor Mac Director: George C. Wolfe Cast: Nathan Lane, Kristine Nielsen, Julie White Marking the Broadway debut of acclaimed theater artist Taylor Mac (A 24-Decade History of Popular Music, Hir.), “Gary” is set just after the blood-soaked conclusion of William Shakespeare’s first tragedy, Titus Andronicus. Civil war has ended and the country is in the hands of madmen. Casualties are everywhere;  Lane and Nielsen portray servants charged with cleaning up the corpses
April 22
All My Sons
Roundabout’s American Airlines Theater Author: Arthur Miller Director: Jack O’Brian Cast: Annette Bening, Tracy Letts A revival of Miller’s first hit. In the aftermath of WWII, the Keller family struggles to stay intact and to fight for their future when a long-hidden secret threatens to emerge, forcing them to reckon with greed and post-war disenchantment.
  The Pain of My Belligerence (Playwrights Horizons)
Halley Feiffer’s play about an eight year relationship between journalist Cat and devilishly charming Guy, which charts a rapidly changing America.
April 23
  Tootsie
Marquis Theater Music and lyrics: David Yazbek Director: Scott Ellis Cast: Santino Fontana, John Behlman, Julie Halston, Lilli Cooper A musical adaptation of the 1982 film about an out-of-work actor who assumes the role of a woman on a soap opera, and pretends to be a female actress.
April 24
Ink
MTC’s Samuel Friedman Writer: James Graham Director: Rupert Goold The rise of a brash, young Rupert Murdoch and the U.K.’s most influential newspaper starring Bertie Carvel (Matilda) as Murdoch and Jonny Lee Miller as his rogue editor.
  April 25
Beetlejuice
Winter Garden Theater Book by Scott Brown and Anthony King Music and lyrics by Eddie Perfect Director: Alex Timbers
Based on the Tim Burton movie, which ells the story of Lydia Deetz, a teenager obsessed with the whole “being dead thing.” Lucky for Lydia, her new house is haunted by a recently deceased couple and a degenerate demon who happens to have a thing for stripes.
Paul Swan is Dead and Gone (Civilians)
In a Chelsea brownstone, playwright Claire Kiechel resurrects the famous salons held by her great-great uncle Paul Swan, a dancer who was once billed as the most beautiful man in the world. She reimagines his salon as an “electrically charged theatrical space where the forces of life, death and art do battle.”
April 30
The Plough and the Stars (Irish Rep)
The final play of the Rep’s O’Casey Cycle, plays written by Irish playwright Sean O’Casey in the 1920s. “Pretty young newlywed Nora Clitheroe is the talk of her tenement as she tirelessly works to lift her family out of their impoverished circumstances. She tries to keep her husband Jack from the revolutionary fervor sweeping through Dublin. But Jack becomes a Commandant in the Irish Citizen Army, and when the Easter Rising of 1916 begins, he leaves a pregnant Nora to help lead the fight…”
  April 2019 New York Theater Openings The ten shows opening on Broadway in April include six plays and four musicals. Several are familiar titles presented in unfamiliar ways: Glenda Jackson as King Lear; an avant-garde, diverse Oklahoma; two much-anticipated movie adaptations -- Tootsie and Beetlejuice.
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pangeanews · 6 years
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100 anni vissuti poeticamente. L’infinito Lawrence Ferlinghetti sogna ancora la rivoluzione: “ci vuole una generazione che non glorifichi il capitalismo, che non sia intrappolata nell’io, io, io”
Certo, uno può preferire altro. Potrebbe domandarsi, ad esempio, perché non pubblichino con la stessa microscopica attenzione John Ashbery, perché non esistano più in circolazione libri decisivi come Paterson di William Carlos Williams. Ma questo, ora, francamente, non c’entra. Perché quando un poeta arriva a 100 anni non puoi non preventivare l’intervento del divino – e il divino (che abbia faccia di clown, corpo di Buddha o occhi di falco) va semplicemente accolto.
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Lawrence Ferlinghetti compie 100 anni e si festeggia con un libro, Little Boy, che ricama sul torso della giovinezza – la giovinezza, in effetti, non ha affinità con la cronologia. Ferlinghetti è lo spioncino attraverso cui ammiriamo la letteratura del Novecento, è l’ultimo legame che ci resta – nasce il 24 marzo del 1919 – con un’era titanica: LF è più prossimo a Kafka che a Camilleri, sta al fianco di Thomas S. Eliot, solletica l’ugola di Dylan Thomas.
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“Nessun vivente come Ferlinghetti porta impressa nella mente la storia, l’esperienza personale, la statura degli scrittori del XX secolo. ‘Erano tutti folli poeti sbrindellati che vagabondavano insieme dormendo sotto i ponti del mondo’, scrive, ‘ho incontrato tutti i grandi poeti e gli scrittori e i grandi agitatori di coscienza’. Allen Ginsberg, Dylan Thomas, Samuel Beckett, William S. Burroughs e molti altri balzano dalle pagine del suo libro che quando parla di Don Chisciotte mi ci è voluto un momento per rendermi conto che non conoscesse pure il cavaliere solitario…”, scrive Ron Charles sul Washington Post, ragionando intorno a Little Boy.
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Fa 100 anni e parla del sé ragazzino; compie 100 anni e all’improvvido intervistatore del Guardian fa: “spero ancora nella rivoluzione, ma gli Stati Uniti non sono ancora pronti”. E poi, scansando il flirt con la fama – la fondazione di City Lights, a San Francisco, covo di idee e di beat e di libri, era il 1953, definito così: “eravamo giovani e folli; e non avevamo soldi” – Ferlinghetti piglia in contromano il giornalista. Soddisfatto della sua vita?, fa l’incauto. “Non userei mai una parola simile”, risponde il poeta. “Felice sarebbe meglio. Tranne quando cerchi di definire la felicità, allora sono guai”. Poi torna, centenario, alla rivoluzione. “Ci vorrebbe una nuova generazione non dedita a glorificare il sistema capitalista. Una generazione che non sia intrappolata nell’io, io, io”.
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Ferlinghetti non è tanto importante come poeta – se vi va, tra le tante cose: Sur ha appena tradotto Scoppi urla risate, Mondadori i Greatest poems, minimum fax l’opera poetica più nota, anno di grazia 1958, A Coney Island of the Mind – è importante perché rappresenta la poesia. Un secolo di poesia. La commozione sta nel fatto che – qui, almeno – si avverte l’odore della fine e non dell’infinito a cui la poesia rimanda.
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Tutti lo vogliono intervistare, ora. Come se la resistenza fosse una caratteristica della poesia. Si dice, di solito, che i poeti muoiono giovani, in realtà non invecchiano mai, sono eterni fanciulli. L’incredulità sta qui: 100 anni, per un poeta, sono sette, settanta, settecento vite.
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“Vidi Simone de Beauvoir e Sartre, a Parigi, in Saint-Germain. Ero uno studente – non mi sentivo di coinvolgere il signor Sartre in una conversazione letteraria”, dice LF nella lunga intervista alla Paris Review. A Parigi, dopo la Seconda guerra – LF è lì durante lo sbarco in Normandia, figlio di un bresciano, Carlo Ferlinghetti, cascato in Usa nel 1894, morto pochi mesi prima della nascita del poeta – Ferlinghetti si scopre poeta. Legge Cendrars – “avevo un libro sul suo viaggio sulla Transiberiana… pensavo di mettermi in viaggio con lui” – scrive “sotto l’influsso di Thomas S. Eliot e di Ezra Pound”, traduce Prévert. “Lo tradussi. Era semplice. Mi piaceva. Per molti anni City Lights fu il suo solo editore negli Stati Uniti”.
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Fernanda Pivano – che è morta dieci anni fa – traduce Ferlinghetti nel volume Poesia degli ultimi americani (Feltrinelli, 1964). Introducendo Scene italiane (1995) è lei a scorgere i legami tra Ferlinghetti e Prévert. “Il Prevert d’America. Il fondatore della prima libreria di soli tascabili. Il primo editore di poesia per soli volumi tascabili. L’editore di Allen Ginsberg e del suo clamoroso Howl. Il primo a distribuire i bottoni della campagna antinucleare esposti in una cesta vicino alla porta della libreria. Attivista del Fair Play for Cuba Committee. Anarchicopacifista. Da dove ha cominciato questo poeta, ora popolarissimo per la sua poesia e per le sue scelte di vita? Importanti invece mi sembrano tre fatti chiave della sua vita: il suo arruolamento nella Marina dove rimase fino alla fine della Seconda Guerra Mondiale partecipando allo sbarco in Normandia, la frequentazione del Greenwich Village dove conobbe dei radicali pacifisti che lo attirarono nella ideologia di sinistra e la scoperta della poesia di Jacques Prevert, che il poeta lesse la prima volta su una tovaglia di carta a St. Brieuc nel 1944, come ha raccontato nell’introduzione a Paroles, la raccolta da lui tradotta e pubblicata nel 1954”.
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La storia di Ferlinghetti si lega indelebilmente – nonostante la sua autonomia – ai beat con la pubblicazione di Howl, il poema-manifesto di Allen Ginsberg. Edito nel 1956 dalla City Lights, portò alla confisca del volume da parte delle autorità dell’ordine ordinario e all’arresto dell’editore, LF. Così racconta la Pivano: “Tra la pubblicazione del primo e del secondo libro di Ferlinghetti accadde un fatto che lasciò una grossa impronta nella storia letteraria d’America: alludo alla pubblicazione dello Howl (Urlo) di Allen Ginsberg che uscì nell’ottobre 1956 come quarto volume della Pocket Series di Ferlinghetti. Ferlinghetti aveva sentito leggere la poesia dall’autore alla Gallery Six durante il reading ormai famoso del 5 ottobre 1955, organizzato da Ginsberg in favore del pittore Wally Hedrick e presentato da Rexroth, nel quale lessero Gary Snyder, Philip Lamantia; Michael McClure, Philip Whalen e Lew Welch mentre Kerouac si aggirava nella sala gremita di settantacinque persone offrendo vino al pubblico (più tardi descrisse la serata in The Dharma Bums (Vagabondi del Dharma), dicendo: “Seguii i poeti al reading della Gallery Six quella sera, che fu la sera della nascita della Rinascita poetica di san Francisco. C’erano tutti. Fu una notte pazza… Tutti urlavano Go!  Go! Go! come in una jam session e Rexroth si asciugava le lacrime dalla felicità”). Quella sera Ferlinghetti mandò a Ginsberg un telegramma ricalcando quello che Ralph Waldo Emerson aveva mandato a Walt Whitman quando aveva ricevuto una copia dell’edizione 1855 di Leaves of Grass: “Ti saluto all’inizio di una grande carriera”. Ferlinghetti aggiunse: “Quando mi dai il manoscritto?”. Il libro uscì con una prefazione di William Carlos Williams e venne confiscato dal capo della dogana provocando l’arresto di Shig Murao che lo vendeva e di Ferlinghetti che l’aveva pubblicato: l’editore raccontò questa storia sulla Evergreen Review. Il processo che seguì l’arresto di Ferlinghetti e di Murao, mentre Ginsberg era in Marocco, mostrò una della più grosse prese di posizione letteraria di tutti i tempi d’America: in difesa di Ginsberg vennero a testimoniare fra gli altri Kenneth Rexroth e Mark Schorer e da tutta l’America arrivarono dichiarazioni di solidarietà, di Kenneth Patchen, James Laughlin, Barney Rossett, Thomas Parkinson, Robert Duncan e così via. Alla fine del processo circolavano diecimila copie di Howl e il libro e il suo editore erano diventati un caso nazionale: Ginsberg considerò sempre questo processo il suo più bel premio letterario”.
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Dunque, si può vivere, indomiti, da poeti lungo il profilo di un secolo.
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Il mondo è un bellissimo posto per nascere se non vi scoccia che la felicità non sia sempre questo gran divertimento se non vi scoccia un pizzico d’inferno ogni tanto proprio quando tutto va alla grande visto che anche in cielo non cantano da mattina a sera
Lawrence Ferlinghetti
    L'articolo 100 anni vissuti poeticamente. L’infinito Lawrence Ferlinghetti sogna ancora la rivoluzione: “ci vuole una generazione che non glorifichi il capitalismo, che non sia intrappolata nell’io, io, io” proviene da Pangea.
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cancersfakianakis1 · 6 years
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A model-based approach to predict short-term toxicity benefits with proton therapy for oropharyngeal cancer
Publication date: Available online 6 January 2019
Source: International Journal of Radiation Oncology*Biology*Physics
Author(s): Jean-Claude M. Rwigema, Johannes A. Langendijk, Hans Paul van der Laan, John N. Lukens, Samuel D. Swisher-McClure, Alexander Lin
Abstract
Purpose
The aim of this study was to generate normal tissue complication probability (NTCP) models in patients treated with either proton beam therapy (PBT) or intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) for oropharynx cancer, and to use a model-based approach to investigate the added value of PBT in preventing treatment complications.
Methods
For patients with advanced-stage oropharynx cancer, treated with curative intent (PBT, n=30; IMRT, n=175), NTCP models were developed using multivariable logistic regression analysis with backward selection. For PBT-treated patients, an equivalent IMRT plan was generated, to serve as a reference to determine the benefit of PBT in terms of NTCP. The models were then applied to the PBT treated patients to compare predicted and observed clinical outcomes (calibration-in-the large). Five binary endpoints were analyzed at 6-months post-treatment: dysphagia ≥ grade 2, dysphagia ≥ grade 3, xerostomia ≥ grade 2, salivary duct inflammation ≥ grade 2, and feeding tube dependence. Corresponding toxicity grading was based on CTCAEv4. Paired t-tests and Wilcoxon rank tests were used to compare mean NTCP results for endpoints between PBT and IMRT.
Results
NTCP models developed based on outcomes from all patients were applied to those receiving PBT. NTCP-values were calculated for the equivalent IMRT plans for all PBT treated patients, revealing significantly higher NTCP-values with IMRT. PBT was associated with statistically significant reductions in the mean NTCP values for each endpoint at 6-months post treatment, with the largest absolute differences in rates of > grade 2 dysphagia and > grade 2 xerostomia.
Conclusion
NTCP models predict significant improvements in the probability of short-term, treatment-related toxicity with PBT compared to IMRT for oropharyngeal cancer. This study demonstrated an NTCP model-based approach to compare predicted patient outcomes when randomized data are not available.
http://bit.ly/2CSRZri
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georgiapioneers · 7 years
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Ashe Co. NC Genealogies and Histories #northcarolinapioneers
Ashe County Genealogy Resources: Wills and Estates 1801 to 1903
Ashe County was created 18 November 1799 from Wilkes County. The area that became Ashe County was part of Anson County, Rowan County, Surry County, and Wilkes County. Both Alleghany and Watauga Counties were formed out of Ashe County. The county seat is Jefferson, North Carolina. The Ashe County Courthouse in Jefferson was destroyed by fire in 1865, however, the surviving records are contained here. The Will Books reflect inconsistent years, suggesting that there are gaps due to the loss of records in the fire. Indexes to Probate Records
Book A, 1801 to 1857
Book B, 1828 to 1838
Book C, 1837 to 1941
Book D, 1853 to 1871
Book E, 1873 to 1903
Images of Wills and Estates, Volume A, 1801 to 1857Testators: Adams, John | Alexander, J. W. | Baker, John | Bass, Edward Beal, James | Blackburn, Elizabeth | Blevins, Wells | Brown, James | Brown, William | Burket, Christian | Chambers, Henry | Clampett, George | Clawson, Asa | Cook, Adam | Cook, Michael | Cauncill, Jordan | Debord, Benjamin | Edward, Jane | Eggers, Landrine | Estef, Shadrach | Evans, Barnabas | Farthings, William | Fredway, Robert | Galloway, Elijah | Gambell, Martin | Goodman, Peter | Green, John | Isaacs, James | Jackson, James | Johnson, Jesse | Kenly, Jesse | Landrick, William | Lyall, James | Maxwell, James | Mikel, Daniel | Milanes, William | Mullins, William | Osborn, Mary | Phillips, Mary | Phipps, Samuel | Plummer, Joseph | Powers, M. | Pugh, Julius | Reeces, John | Reeves, Jesse | Ross, Reuben | Sheavers, Robert | Shull, Mary | Shull, Simon | Songs, Samuel | Sturgitt, Francis | Taylor, William | Wagg, John |Walbrooks, Larkin |Whitaker, Peter |Whittington, John |Williams, John |Williams, Lewis | Willis, Leonard |Wyatt, Zebodee Images of Wills and Estates, Volume B, 1828 to 1838Testators: Atkins, John |Brown, John |Brown, Joseph |Brown, Polly | Brown, Thomas | Bryan, Morgan | Callaway, Thomas | Davis, Stanley | Edwards, David | Greer, Aquilla | Hardin, Henry | Hardin, William |Hill, William |Landrith, Nathaniel Latham, Alexander | Mast, David |Moseley, Samuel |Parks, Ambrose | Perry, Robert | Phipps, George | Phillips, Nathan | Ray, James | Stamper, Jonathan | Watters, William | Woodruff, John Images of Wills and Estates, Volume C, 1837 to 1941Testators: Austin, G. B. | Barker, Ambrose | Bean, Jacob | Blevins, Roby | Burgess, Wiley | Calhoun, W. R. | Callaway, J. | Campbell, Mary | Colsand, J. W. | Dalinger, M. | Davis, J. M. | Dolinger, T. L. | Duwall, James | Ellen, W. |Francis, Henry |Gentry, Levi | Grayson, William |Gurley, Thomas |Hall, J. C. |Hardin, R. W. | Hausk, W. H. |Hinley, Lee |Hodgeon, Henry |Houck, Lowery | Jones, B. W. |Jones, Wade |McGuire, H. |McNeil, L. |McMillan, John |Miller, Elizabeth | Miller, H. M. | Miller, J. B. | Monty, John | Osborne, Harris | Parsons, J. | Perkins, G. H. | Phillips, C. W.| Phillips, Nathan | Plummer, J. B. | Pope, J. W. | Prince, R. | Ray, John | Roberts, W. | Roland, J. | Sheets, S. W. Wellborne, William | Weaver, J. R. | Werth, W. H. | Wieseberger, R. | Williams, H. | Williams, Susannah Williamson, Walter Images of Wills and Estates, Volume D, 1853 to 1871Testators: Anderson, Richard | Baker, William | Baldwin, Jacob | Bower, Absalom | Brooks, Thomas | Burket, Christian | Debords, Benjamin | Dickson, Daniel | Dickson, Moses | Doughten, Clarke | Faws, John | Fender, John | Halaway, Daniel | Hardin, Henry | Hill, David | Jenning, William | Johnson, Samuel | Johnson, William Jones, Daniel | Jones, John | Kounce, George | Krawse, John | Landricks, Stephen | Lewis, A. J. | May, John | May, Nancy | Maxwell, Sidney | McMillan, John | Miller, Jonathan | Mullis, James | Oliver, Mary | Perkins, Allen | Perkins, Luther | Perkins, William | Phipps, Samuel | Poe, Jain | Poe, Jaine | Richardson, Elisha | Saunders, Richard | Smith, B. | Smith, Hugh | Smith, James | Turner, Andrew | Wills, David Images of Wills and Estates, Volume E, 1873 to 1903Testators: Allen, John | Ashley, Martha | Ashley, William | Austin, Anderson | Baives, George | Baldwin, William M. | Ballou, N. B. | Ballou, Sarah | Ballou, Susan | Bare, Henry | Barl, Elias Blackburn, Hamilton B. | Blackshear, Hamilton B. | Blevins, Daniel | Blevins, Jackson | Blevins, Jacob | Blevins, John | Blevins, Wells | Bower, George | Boyden, Nathaniel | Brooks, Polly | Brooks, Sentleger | Brown, William | Burgess, Hugh L. | Burgess, Sanders | Burkett, Catherine | Calaway, Thomas | Caloway, Thomas S. | Carson, John | Castle, Nancy | Childers, Hiram | Church, John | Church, Wiley | Conson, John M. | Cook, Charles W. | Cox, Cora | Cox, William | Davis, America | Davis, American | Davis, Daniel | Davis, John | DeBoard, Benjamin | Dewey, Sarah | Dickson, David | Duvall, Thomas | Ellen, Jacob | Elliott, Wilburn | Foster, N. A. | Francis, Mahala | Gambill, James | Garvey, James | Gentry, John | Grimes, Wesley | Goodman, Isaac | Goodman, Jacob | Goodman, Joab | Goodman, William H. | Govert, Frederick | Graham, Jiles | Graybeal, Calvin | Graybeal, Doriel | Graybeal, Eli | Graybeal, Jacob | Graybeal, John | Graybeal, Joseph | Green, John F. | Griffith, John | Griffith, S. | Hagarman, John | Hall, M. Etta | Hamilton, George H. | Hardin, Mark | Hardin, Mary Ann | Hardin, R. T. | Harkins, Johnston | Harvell, Daniel | Hash, James | Hawthorn, Andrew | Howell, George Sr. | Hurley, Harvey C. | Hudler, Joseph | Hurley, James F. | Jacks, Richard | Johnson, Aaron | Johnson, Campbell | Johnson, J. C. | Jones, John | Ketchum, G. W. |King, Joseph | Kitchinson, A. | Koons, Jacob | Lang, Andrew M. | Latham, Silas | Lewallers, Catherine | Lewis, Nancy C. | Little, Isaac | Long, Isaiah | Martin, John W. | Martin, William M. | Mash, James | Mash, William | McClure, Elizar | McGuire, Robert | McMillan, Andrew | McMillan, Iridell Miller, Daniel | Miller, Eli | Miller, James | Miller, Nancy | Miller, William | Moore, W. G. | Neal, John | Neal, Joseph | Neal, Quincy | Oliver, James | Osborne, Alfred | Osborne, Clemons | Osborne, Enoch | Osborne, J. A. | Osborne, Stephen | Parsons, Catharine | Patrick, Jerrymire | Penington, Stephen | Perkins, W. E. | Phillips, Nancy | Phillips, William | Phipp, Greenbury | Phipps, William C. | Pierce, R. K. | Plummer, Nancy | Plummer, Samuel | Poe, John | Poe, Martha | Pope, Elijah | Pope, Elijah (1881) | Price, William | Ray, Jesse | Reedy, Rebecca | Reeves, George W. | Reeves, Rebecca | Reves, John | Reynolds, Terrissa | Richardson, John | Roan, Jonathan | Roark, Joshua | Roland, David | Rominger, Isabella | Rotan, Larkin | Scott, James | Senters, N. M. | Shepherd, J. W. | Shepard, Levi | Shepherd, Melvin | Smith, James | Smith, Tobias | Stamper, John | Stephens, Gardner | Stuart, Newel | Stump, Christopher C. | Tatum, Joseph | Taylor, Charles | Taylor, Hellen | Taylor, Mary | Taylor, William | Tegue, Moses | Testerman, Peter | Thomas, W. T. | Thompson, Alexander | Thompson, Wesley | Turner, Standiford | Turner, William | Vany, John H. | Wagoner, Henry | Warren, Peter M. | Wayman, Thomas | Waters, William | Waugh, James P. | Waugh, James P. (1891) | Weaver, B. M. | Weaver, Gideon | Welch, James | Weymer, Henry | Williams, Nancy | Worth, David | Wyatt, John | Wyatt, William | Yates, E. C. | Yates, Squire Allen  Find your Ancestors Records on North Carolina Pioneers SUBSCRIBE HERE
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