#leo vaughan
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milliondollarbaby87 · 9 months ago
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The Beautiful Game (2024) Review
The story of Vinny and how joining the England team for the Homeless World Cup would challenge him as a person and really highlight the power of football for people around the world. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Continue reading The Beautiful Game (2024) Review
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batgovernor · 2 months ago
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The Two-State Dissolution: Yankevich, Kenny, Helweg-Larsen, Foster, Vaughan, Jackson, Galef, Bales, Burch
Leo Yankevich: ‘The Terrorist’ Only six, she stands before a tank, looking at its armour, while inside soldiers heed orders from a higher rank. There isn’t any place for her to hide, no door to head for, no abandoned car to slide beneath. Pure terror rules her land. When finally crushed, she rises past the star of David, with a stone clutched in her hand. Janet Kenny: ‘Didn’t They Know?’(In…
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gabriestat · 3 months ago
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Thérèse of Lisieux dressed up as Joan of Arc. the only photograph of a canonized saint cosplaying as another saint. (c. 1897)
Apparently, a man named Leo Taxil [a prominent anti-Catholic voice at the time] published a number of autobiographies featuring Freemason conversions to Catholicism. The most popular was an autobiography of "Diana Vaughan," whose conversion she said was influenced by Joan of Arc. Diana’s story was wildly popular and made it inside the [convent's] walls. Thérèse loved her story and sent Diana this photo of her playing Joan of Arc.In April of 1897, Leo Taxil called a press conference and revealed to the crowd of 400 people that he was Diana Vaughan. The entire thing was a ruse to demonstrate the gullibility of French Catholics. His prop that evening? A giant projected picture of this photograph of Thérèse, a symbol of the naive religious person. It was a terrible humiliation for Thérèse. She tore up the letter she had received from “Diana.” (x)
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faeannabelle · 1 month ago
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𐔌  .  introduction  !  ౨ৎ
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┊name : annabelle
┊age / grade : sixteen — year eleven
┊birthday : sixteenth of december 🎉
┊height : 5'5"
┊status : 🤭
┊zodiac : sagittarius sun, leo moon, cancer rising
┊sexuality : bisexual
┊music : lana del rey, ella fitzgerald, laufey, frank sinatra, chet baker, nat king cole, louis armstrong, sarah vaughan, elvis, dean martin, ritchie valens, billie holiday, betty carter
┊books : lolita, the strange case of dr jekyll and mr hyde, little women, les miserables, frankenstein - or, the modern prometheus, wuthering heights, the vampyre, dracula, the phantom of the opera, hunchback of notre dame, fantastic mr fox, the chronicals of narnia
┊games : stardew valley, animal crossing
me:
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thisisyourdriverspeaking · 6 months ago
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It's the most iconic race in the world so it's deserved it's own post & playlist. I give you the all the drivers in the 2024 24 Hours of Le Mans racing tunes. Enjoy (even though this post is a little late). 😊
John Hartshorne (18th April 1957) - Malcolm Vaughan - The World Is Mine
Thomas Flohr (17th March 1960) - Bert Weedon - Big Beat Boogie
Claudio Schiavoni (14th November 1960) - Brenda Lee - I Want To Be Wanted
Satoshi Hoshino (7th April 1961) - Nat 'King' Cole - The World In My Arms
Johnny Laursen (16th February 1964) - Cliff Richard - Don't Talk To Him
George Kurtz (5th May 1965) - Pretty Things - Honey I Need
Hiroshi Koizumi (25th May 1969) - Marvin Gaye - I Heard It Through The Grapevine
Takeshi Kimura (22nd October 1970) - Tom Jones - I (Who Have Nothing)
Ben Keating (18th August 1971) - Gilbert O'Sullivan - We Will
John Falb (13th December 1971) - The Who - Let's See Action
Alexander Mattschull (2nd March 1972) - The Partridge Family - It's One Of Those Nights
Michael Wainwright (25th July 1973) - Stevie Wonder - You Are The Sunshine Of My Life
Rodrigo Sales (2nd November 1973) - Rod Stewart - Oh No Not My Baby
Ian James (22nd July 1974) - Main Ingredient - Just Don't Want To Be Lonely
Naveen Rao (21st May 1975) - Billy Swan - Don't Be Cruel
Giacomo Petrobelli (7th November 1975) - George Harrison - You
Hiroshi Hamaguchi (1st October 1976) - Smokey Robinson & The Miracles - Tears Of A Clown
Francois Perrodo (14th February 1977) - Fleetwood Mac - Go Your Own Way
Valentino Rossi (16th February 1979) - The Pretenders - Stop Your Sobbing
Sebastien Bourdais (28th February 1979) - Elvis Costello & The Attractions - Oliver's Army
Brendan Iribe (12th August 1979) - David Bowie - DJ
David Heinemeier Hansson (15th October 1979) - Secret Affair - Time For Action
Jenson Button (19th January 1980) - Rupert Holmes - Escape (The Pina Colada Song)
Scott Dixon (22nd July 1980) - Leo Sayer - More Than I Can Say
Ryan Hardwick (3rd October 1980) - Gladys Knight & The Pips - Taste Of Bitter Love
Frederic Makowiecki (22nd November 1980) - David Bowie - Fashion
Ahmad Al Harthy (31st August 1981) - Central Line - Walking Into Sunshine
Patrick Pilet (8th October 1981) - Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark - Souvenir
Andre Lotterer (19th November 1981) - The Four Tops - When She Was My Girl
Loic Duval (12th June 1982) - Danger Danger - Comin' Home
Jose Maria Lopez (26th April 1983) - Eurthymics - Love Is A Stranger
P.J Hyett (10th August 1983) - Shakin' Stevens - It's Late
Augusto Farfus (3rd September 1983) - Paul Young - Wherever I Lay My Hat (That's My Home)
Francois Heriau (25th October 1983) - Hot Streak - Body Work
Neel Jani (8th December 1983) - Robert Plant - In The Mood
Richard Lietz (17th December 1983) - Ann Breen - Pal Of My Cradle Days
Alessandro Pier Guidi (18th December 1983) - Black Lace - Superman
Oliver Jarvis (9th January 1984) - Lionel Richie - Running With The Night
James Cottingham (21st January 1984) - Pat Benatar - Love Is A Battlefield
Daniel Serra (24th February 1984) - Bourgie Bourgie - Breaking Point
Franck Perara (21st March 1984) - World Famous Supreme Team - Hey DJ
Nicolas Lapierre (2nd April 1984) - Rockwell - Somebody's Watching Me
Arnold Robin (7th October 1984) - Orange Juice - Lean Period
Matteo Cressoni (28th October 1984) - Tracey Ullman - Helpless
Nick Tandy (5th November 1984) - Paul McCartney - No More Lonely Nights
Robert Kubica (7th December 1984) - Meat Loaf - Nowhere Fast
Ben Hanley (22nd January 1985) - Bronski Beat - It Ain't Necessarily So
Filipe Albuquerque (13th June 1985) - Bruce Springsteen - Born In The USA
Salih Yoluc (22nd August 1985) - Maria Vidal - Body Rock
Renger Van Der Zande (16th February 1986) - The Damned - Eloise
Rahel Frey (23rd February 1986) - Madonna - Dress You Up
Maxime Martin (20th March 1986) - Dee C Lee - Come Hell Or Waters High
Paul Di Resta (16th April 1986) - Simple Minds - Sanctify Yourself
Romain Grosjean (17th April 1986) - Jim Diamond - Hi Ho Silver
Mathias Beche (28th June 1986) - Madonna - Live To Tell
Davide Rigon (26th August 1986) - Pam Hall - Dear Boopsie
Kamui Kobayashi (13th September 1986) - Modern Talking - Brother Louie
Rene Rast (26th October 1986) - Marti Webb & The Simon May Orchestra - Always There
Edoardo Mortara (12th January 1987) - Mick Karn - Buoy
Francesco Castellacci (4th April 1987) - Lionel Richie - Se La
Alex Malykhin (17th August 1987) - Total Contrast - Jody
Tom Van Rompuy (8th September 1987) - Marshall Hain - Dancin' In The City
Darren Leung (25th September 1987) - ABC - The Night You Murdered Love
Jean-Karl Vernay (31st October 1987) - Rick Astley - Whenever You Need Somebody
Nicky Catsburg (15th February 1988) - The Cure - Hot Hot Hot
Paul Lafarque (8th July 1988) - Natalie Cole - Everlasting
Daniel Mancinelli (23rd July 1988) - Maxi Priest - Wild World
Colin Braun (22nd September 1988) - The Beatmasters & PP Arnold - Burn It Up
Kevin Estre (28th October 1988) - Bobby McFerrin - Don't Worry By Happy
Sebastien Buemi (31st October 1988) - Robert Palmer - She Makes My Day
Miguel Molina (17th February 1989) - Big Country - Peace In Our Time
Sarah Bovy (15th May 1989) - Royal House ft Ian Star - A Better Way
Christopher Mies (24th May 1989) - Swing Out Sister - You On My Mind
James Calado (13th June 1989) - Robert Palmer - Change His Ways
Matt Bell (5th November 1989) - Erasure - Drama!
Marco Wittmann (24th November 1989) - D Mob Introducing Cathy Dennis - C'mon And Get My Love
Brendon Hartley (10th November 1989) - Phil Collins - Another Day In Paradise
Mirko Bortolotti (10th January 1990) - Inner City - Whatcha Gonna Do With My Lovin'
Andrea Caldarelli (14th February 1990) - The Beloved - Hello
Stephane Richelmi (17th March 1990) - David A Stewart ft Candy Dulfer - Lily Was Here
Ollie Millroy (21st April 1990) - Lloyd Cole - Don't Look Back
Jean-Eric Vergne (25th April 1990) - MC Duke - The Final Conflict
Earl Bamber (9th July 1990) - Luciano Pavarotti - Nessun Dorma
Michael Christensen (28th August 1990) - DNA ft Suzanne Vega - Tom's Diner
Marco Sorensen (6th September 1990) - Happy Mondays - Step On
Matthias Kaiser (22nd January 1991) - Alexander O'Neal - All True Man
Jack Hawksworth (28th February 1991) - Patsy Cline - I Fall To Pieces
Ryan Cullen (26th March 1991) - The Bee Gees - Secret Love
Ben Barker (23rd April 1991) - Inspiral Carpets - Caravan
Daniel Juncadella (7th May 1991) - Pet Shop Boys - Where The Streets Have No Name
Laurens Vanthoor (8th May 1991) - Vic Reeves & The Roman Numerals - Born Free
Jordan Taylor (10th May 1991) - K-Klass - Rhythm Is A Mystery
Will Stevens (28th June 1991) - Divinyls - I Touch Myself
Klaus Bachler (27th July 1991) - Amy Grant - Baby Baby
Robin Frijns (7th August 1991) - Voice Of The Beehive - Monsters And Angels
Jakub Smiechowski (11th October 1991) - Gloria Estefan - Live For Loving You
Paul-Loup Chatin (19th October 1991) - Oleta Adams - Don't Let The Sun Go Down On Me
Harry Tincknell (29th October 1991) - Public Enemy - Can't Truss It
Nicolas Costa (14th November 1991) - Love And Money - Winter
Rene Binder (1st January 1992) - James - Sound
Nico Muller (25th February 1992) - Texas - Alone With You
Stoffel Vandoorne (26th March 1992) - The Charlatans - Weirdo
Zacharie Robichon (31st May 1992) - Michael Jackson - In The Closet
Norman Nato (8th July 1992) - KWS - Please Don't Go
Felipe Nasr (21st August 1992) - Luther Vandross & Janet Jackson - The Best Things In Life Are Free
Alex Lynn (17th September 1993) - Pet Shop Boys - Go West
Pipo Derani (12th October 1993) - Salt-N-Pepa - Shoop
Antonio Giovinazzi (14th December 1993) - Brian May - Last Horizon
Michelle Gatting (31st December 1993) - Belinda Carlisle - Lay Down Your Arms
Alex Riberas (27th January 1994) - Peabo Bryson & Regina Belle - A Whole New World
Ryo Hirakawa (7th March 1994) - Morrissey - The More You Ignore Me, The Closer I Get
Giorgio Roda (18th March 1994) - Urban Cookie Collective - Sail Away
Daniil Kvyat (26th April 1994) - Roxette - Sleeping In My Car
Mathieu Jaminet (24th October 1994) - Take That - Sure
Matthieu Vaxiviere (3rd December 1994) - Sophie B Hawkins - Don't Don't Tell Me No
Raffaele Marciello (17th December 1994) - PJ & Duncan - Eternal Love
Mikkel Jensen (31st December 1994) - Pearl Jam - Spin The Black Circle
Nyck De Vries (6th February 1995) - M People - Open Your Heart
Matt Campbell (17th February 1995) - MN8 - I've Got A Little Something For You
Alessio Rovera (22nd June 1995) - Pizzaman - Sex On The Streets
Charlie Eastwood (11th August 1995) - Oasis - Some Might Say
Jack Aitken (23rd September 1995) - Vanessa Williams - Colours Of The Wind
Dennis Olsen (14th April 1996) - Oasis - Supersonic
Antonio Fuoco (20th May 1996) - Kavana - Crazy Chance
Matteo Cairoli (1st June 1996) - Gloria Estefan - Reach
Kelvin Van Der Linde (20th June 1996) - Blur - Charmless Man
James Allen (4th July 1996) - Gina G - Ooh Aah.. Just A Little Bit
Larry Ten Voorde (2nd November 1996) - Los Del Rio - Macarena
Sean Gelael (1st November 1996) - Huff & Puff - Help Me Make It
Ben Barnicoat (20th December 1996) - Phil Collins - Dance Into The Light
Mikkel O.Pedersen (26th January 1997) - The Prodigy - Poison
Nicklas Nielsen (6th February 1997) - Kavana - I Can Make You Feel Good
Ben Tuck (3rd March 1997) - Space - Dark Clouds
Alex Palou (1st April 1997) - Spice Girls - Who Do You Think You Are
Louis Deletraz (22nd April 1997) - Michelle Gayle - Sensational
Ferdinand Habsburg (20th June 1997) - Sneaker Pimps - Six Underground
Laurents Horr (11th September 1997) - Refugee Allstars & Lauryn Hill - The Sweetest Thing
Frederik Schandorff (26th December 1997) - Course - Best Love
Dries Vanthoor (20th April 1998) - Ultra - Say You Do
Erwan Bastard (9th June 1998) - Solid Harmonie - I Want You To Want Me
Job Van Uitert (10th October 1998) - Ultra - The Right Time
Callum Ilott (11th November 1998) - Culture Club - I Just Wanna Be Loved
Mick Schumacher (22nd March 1999) - Men Of Vizion - Do You Feel Me? (Freak You)
Marino Sato (12th May 1999) - Melky Sedeck - Raw
Sheldon Van Der Linde (13th May 1999) - Busta Rhymes ft Janet Jackson - What's It Gonna Be?
Fabio Scherer (13th June 1999) - Bjork - All Is Full Of Love
Riccardo Pera (4th July 1999) - Salt Tank - Dimension
Julien Andlauer (5th July 1999) - Luscious Jackson - Ladyfingers
Phil Hanson (5th July 1999) - Tina Cousins - Forever
Ritomo Miyata (10th August 1999) - Lolly - Viva La Radio
Robert Shwartzman (16th September 1999) - Paul Johnson - Get Get Down
Bent Viscaal (18th September 1999) - Supergrass - Moving
Rui Andrade (23rd September 1999) - Lauryn Hill - Everything Is Everything
Gregoire Saucy (26th December 1999) - Holly Johnson - The Power Of Love
Scott Huffaker (28th December 1999) - Leann Rimes - Crazy
Felipe Drugovich (23rd May 2000) - Mel C & Lisa 'Left Eye' Lopes - Never Be The Same Again
Timur Boguslavskiy (30th April 2000) - Andreas Johnson - Glorious
Yifei Ye (16th June 2000) - Peter Lazonby - Sacred Cycles
Sebastian Baud (6th July 2000) - Morgan - Flying High
Oliver Rasmussen (6th November 2000) - Texas - In Demand
Nicolas Varrone (6th November 2000) - Darude - Feel The Beat
Jean-Baptiste Simmenauer (19th November 2000) - Robbie Williams & Kylie Minogue - Kids
Clement Novalak (23rd December 2000) - Kandi - Don't Think I'm Not
Alex Quinn (29th December 2000) - Britney Spears - Stronger
Simon Mann (10th February 2001) - ATB ft York - The Fields Of Love
Roman De Angelis (15th February 2001) - Ash - Shining Light
Charles Milesi (4th March 2001) - Spooks - Things I've Seen
Joel Sturm (28th November 2001) - Dido - Hunter
Frederik Vesti (13th January 2002) - Westlife - Queen Of My Heart
Olli Caldwell (11th June 2002) - Sugababes - Freak Like Me
Bijoy Garg (15th July 2002) - The Prodigy - Baby's Got A Temper
Antonio Serravalle (18th September 2002) - Nore - Nothin'
Reshad De Gerus (1st July 2003) - Flaming Lips - Fight Test
Malthe Jakobsen (29th October 2003) - Sheryl Crow - The First Cut Is The Deepest
Carl Bennett (2nd September 2004) - Stonebridge ft Therese - Put Em High
Esteban Masson (18th September 2004) - Easyworld - How Did It Ever Come To This
Nico Pino (21st September 2004) - Kylie Minogue - Slow
Kyffin Simpson (9th October 2004) - The 411 - Dumb
Nolan Siegel (8th November 2004) - Kaiser Chiefs - I Predict A Riot
Lorenzo Fluxa (23rd November 2004) - Daniel Bedingfield - Nothing Hurts Like Love
Jonas Ried (18th December 2004) - Natasha Bedingfield - Unwritten
Vladislav Lomko (27th December 2004) - Electric Six - Radio Gaga
Morris Schuring (20th February 2005) - Keane - Bedshaped
Maceo Capietto (12th January 2006) - James Blunt - Goodbye My Lover
Conrad Laursen (11th May 2006) - Beyonce ft Slim Thug - Check On It
And here is the link to the playlist 😊
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eahostudiogallery · 6 months ago
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Bodyparts
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Antony Gormley - Aperture XVII
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Ah Xian
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Adam Parker Smith - Shibari Heart
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William Catling - Gently and Slowly Rising
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Frieke Janssens
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Jamie Perry - Sage II
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museum decents
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Kari Cavén
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Kazand - Let me be (please)
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Kiki Smith - Ribs, 1987
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Katsushika Hokusai - Skull and a Ribcage
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Leo Cailard
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Marc Quinn — Emotional Detox- The Seven Deadly Sins I
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Michelangelo Pistoletto - The Ears of Jasper Johns
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René Magritte - The Memory, 1945
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Alexandra Duprez - Silence Project
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Snail Scott
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Joshua Cummings w/Greg Vaughan
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posttexasstressdisorder · 18 days ago
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Wednesday, 12-04-24, 7pm Pacific
'Evenin', everyone...Mr. Baggins here with a set to soothe your achin' nerves and help ease us all into a good night. Let's start the evening off with a little Beethoven, the next Symphony in our survey of the nine Beethoven left us is the Symphony No. 4 in B-flat, Op. 60. Lenny leads the Vienna in a live performance from November 1978.
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Let's listen now to Saint-Saens Symphony No. 3 in a classic recording by Charles Munch and The Boston, spectacularly captured in RCA Living Stereo. Our Organist is Berj Zamkochian, and Pianists Bernard Zighera and Leo Litwin. Recorded April 6, 1959. This is a decidedly different reading from the Ormandy/Murray recording we heard in a past evening's program.
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Now let's have another of Chopin's Scherzos by Horowitz. Here is the Scherzo No. 3 in C-sharp minor, Op. 39, recorded in 1957. Another one of those "historic reference recordings" for a reason!
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Let's hear one of the young Felix Mendelssohn's early String Symphonies. We hear his String Symphony No. 2 in D Major, performed by the Northern Chamber Orchestra, conducted by Nicholas Ward.
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Now let's hear a different reading of Mahler's 4th Symphony. This time Fritz and The Band do the honors, with soprano Lisa Della Casa. Recorded December 6 and 8th, 1958.
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And we turn now to another historic recording by the phenomenal Ferruccio Busoni, From the LP International Piano Archives, IPA 104, 1976 Rec. February 27, 1922, London studios of British Columbia. We hear Bach: Prelude & Fugue in C major, WTC, Book, Bach-Busoni: Organ Prelude "Rejoice, Beloved Christians", Beethoven-Busoni: Ecossaises, Chopin: Prelude in A major, Op. 28 No. 7, Etude in G-flat major, Op. 10 No. 5, Chopin: Etude in E minor, Op. 25 No. 5, Chopin: Etude in G-flat major, Op. 10 No. 5 (alternate version), Chopin: Nocturne in F-sharp major, Op. 15 No. 2, and Liszt: Hungarian Rhapsody No. 13 (abbreviated). Again, these are 102+ year old ACOUSTIC recordings!
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Next we hear the Symphony No. 53 in D Major, "L'Imperiale", Neville Marriner and The Academy do the honors.
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We turn now to the music of Vaughan Williams played by Marriner and The Academy; we hear his Partita for Double String Orchestra.
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Now we hear Fritz and The Vienna in Richard Strauss' "Til Eulenspiegel's Merry Pranks". Recorded on Decca in 1957!
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That's all the time we have for this evening's program. I do hope you have enjoyed the selections and possibly heard something new to your ear. This is Mr. Baggins, signing off for now, I'll return at 8am Pacific with our Morning Coffee Music.
Until then, dream sweet dreams, babies, dream sweet dreams.
Baggins out.
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collecting-stories · 1 year ago
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Misc. Masterlist pt. II
This Masterlist is for fandoms that I've only written a handful of fics for.
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Chase Graves  Trust Issues | Zombie Killer
Lowell Tracey  Flirt
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Carmen Berzatto Blueberry BBQ | Strawberry Gazpacho | Peaches & Cream
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Sonny Carisi 2am | Feels
Series
Not in Chronological Order - sonny x reader
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Logan Echolls  Alternaprom
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Garcia Flynn Puzzles
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Tom Davidson Question…? | Cowboy Like Me
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Tyler Townsend Home Game
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Leo West Mykonos
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Fezco Fire Starter pt. 2 | Party Dress | Ride | Birthday
Camera Roll Series
Fezco | Lexi Howard | Cassie Howard | Rue Bennett | Kat Hernandez | Maddy Perez | Jules Vaughan
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Teen Wolf
Isaac Lahey Haunted House
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dear-indies · 3 months ago
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hi!! can u suggest me some fc's for father and brother of Lauren Tsai? And for Ju Jingyi too. Please!!
Father:
Hugo Weaving (1960) - has spoken up for Palestine!
Michael Stipe (1960) - has spoken up for Palestine!
Jackson Lou / Lou Xue Xian (1962) Taiwanese.
Kuo Tzu Chien (1964) Taiwanese.
Paco Tous (1964) - has spoken up for Palestine!
Leon Dai (1966) Taiwanese.
John Cusack (1966) - has spoken up for Palestine!
Richie Jen (1966) Taiwanese.
Wang Tzu Chiang (1967) Taiwanese.
Vincent Chiao (1967) Taiwanese.
Chu Chung Heng (1967) Taiwanese.
Yu An-shun (1967) Taiwanese.
Tsai Yueh Hsun (1968) Taiwanese.
Wu Bai (1968) Taiwanese.
Victor Huang (1971) Taiwanese.
Jacko Chiang (1972) Taiwanese.
Roger Fan (1972) Taiwanese.
Welly Yang (1973) Taiwanese.
Matthew Cooke (1973) - has spoken up for Palestine!
Brother:
Rhydian Vaughan (1988) Taiwanese / White.
Kamaal Williams (1989) Taiwanese / White - has spoken up for Palestine!
Bie Thassapak Hsu (1991) Taiwanese / Thai - half sibling!
Giullian Yao Gioiello (1992) Taiwanese / White.
YU / Yu Teng Yang (1995) Taiwanese / Japanese - half sibling!
Anson Chen (1996) Taiwanese / Vietnamese - half sibling!
Sub Urban / Daniel Virgil Maisonneuve (1999) Taiwanese / White.
Patrick Brasca (1999) Taiwanese / White.
And for Ju Jingyi:
Father:
Chen Daoming (1955) Chinese.
Ni Dahong (1960) Chinese.
Hua Liu (1961) Chinese.
Jiang Wen (1963) Chinese.
Bai Fan (1962) Chinese.
Feng Yuanzheng (1962) Chinese.
Liang Guanhua (1964) Chinese.
Hou Yong (1967) Chinese.
Evergreen Mak Cheung-ching (1968) Chinese.
Dong Yong (1968) Chinese.
Hu Jun (1968) Chinese.
Huang Zhizhong (1969) Chinese.
Liu Xiao Ling Tong (1959) Chinese.
Brother:
Jiang Chao (1991) Chinese.
Qin Junjie (1991) Chinese.
Merxat Yalkun (1991) Chinese.
Li Xian (1991) Chinese.
Gong Jun (1992) Chinese.
Sheng Yilun (1992) Chinese.
Huang Jingyu (1992) Chinese.
Elvis Han (1992) Chinese.
Ryan Cheng (1993) Chinese.
Hu Yitian (1993) Chinese.
Bai Jingting (1993) Chinese.
Chen Ruoxuan (1994) Chinese.
Li Wenhan (1994) Chinese.
Deng Wei (1995) Chinese.
Ding Yuxi (1995) Chinese.
Leo Sheng (1996) Chinese - is a trans man - has spoken up for Palestine!
Li Yunrui (1996) Chinese.
Chen Xingxu (1996) Chinese.
Bi Wen (1997) Chinese.
Guo Junchen (1997) Chinese.
If this has helped you in any way please consider donating to a Palestinian fund me and/or please consider reblogging content about Palestine if you haven't already!
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antoine-roquentin · 2 years ago
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This series is shaping up to be about covert attempts by institutional power structures to undermine the health and safety of the international working class. The previous part, Part 4, is here. You can find a cool easter egg by seeing who the magazine in the bottom right image was delivered to.
The above is a dossier compiled by a right wing business intelligence group and purchased by the CIA not long after the events I’m about to share occurred. It is hosted on the CIA’s website for declassified files, the Reading Room. It was prepared by Fulton Lewis III, an outspoken supporter of the Rhodesian government and the son of a Hearst-sponsored anti-communist radio broadcaster, sort of the Tucker Carlson of the 40s and 50s. We don’t have the CIA’s own assessments because those are still classified.
When we last left the crew of the spaceship Ramparts, they were dealing with infiltration, incompetence, hedonism, an inability to secure funding, and the heady addiction of fame. Things were about to get worse as their own interpersonal disputes had come to the fore. Keating had seen his power at the magazine get whittled away as incentives in the form of shares for other backers became necessary. At the time, Hinckle counted among his friends Howard Gossage, an advertising whiz kid who helped popularize Marshall McLuhan and did the Sierra Club's first campaign. He frequently went to Gossage for advice. The two came up with a plan to push Keating into the 1966 Democratic primaries for the 11th district of California (later held by Leo Ryan, a CIA critic killed at Jonestown, and now held by Nancy Pelosi) as a way of reducing his influence on the day to day operations of Ramparts. In the midst of a meeting, they had two staff members slip away and come back with signs that said "Keating for Congress" and "Keating the people's choice".
By the start of 1966, however, the election bug had spread through the offices, both because it allowed Ramparts to make the news it reported on as salacious as possible, and because the Democratic Party had largely denied ballot access to anybody who was anti-Vietnam War. Bob Scheer, the foreign editor, ran in Oakland, and Stanley Sheinbaum, the Michigan State University professor who'd exposed the CIA's role on campus, ran in Santa Barbara. All gained 40-45% of the vote, mainly by cohering those opposed to the war. One thing in particular all three did was bring together the black vote (for instance, Julian Bond, mentioned previously in the series, campaigned for Scheer). Their campaigns were run by a coterie of Ramparts staffers, namely CPUSA member Carl Bloice as well as Berekeley lecturer Peter Collier, and were endorsed by a combination of black and Hollywood luminaries, for instance Dick Gregory, the civil rights activist and stand-up comedian, and Robert Vaughan, Napoleon Solo on the Man from Uncle and both a murderer and a victim on Columbo (see him argue about Vietnam on Firing Line with William Buckley here). Some of the opposition research on the three came directly from CIA files and was given to the establishment candidates by LBJ's press secretary Bill Moyers.
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With the elections lost, Ramparts needed a new spin on things to bring back all the anti-electoral politics radicals. Fortunately, in nearby Oakland, a new group had just been founded called the Black Panther Party. Huey Newton and Bobby Seale like to portray their group as their own innovation, two upwardly mobile college kids shooting the shit late at night. The group they'd been part of prior to the BPP, the Maoist Revolutionary Action Movement, described them as "adventurists" for their desire to put theory to practice and finally organize in the community instead of just talking about it. Whatever the case, Newton learned from Robert Williams' Negroes with Guns that California law, influenced by white supremacist vigilanteism, allowed anyone to openly carry a weapon even in the presence of police. He went to Chinatown, bought copies of Mao's Little Red Book for cents, and sold them for dollars in Oakland as part of a course in organized self-defence, then used the money to buy shotguns and M-16s for use by graduates of the course. By February 1967, Ramparts staff writer Eldridge Cleaver had made contact at a speaking event for Malcolm X's widow Betty Shabazz, where the Black Panther Party founders and their cohort were the only ones armed. Cleaver invited them to the Ramparts offices for a sit down.
Remember the bit from the last part about Shabazz' bodyguards? That was Seale, Newton, and Co. Their arrival caused  Hinckle's police buddies to get worried, and they put out an APB and surrounded the building, much to Newton's consternation. Hinckle suggested they go out for a drink, but nobody was buying it. Newton stared down a cop, who undid his holster. Seale put his hand on Newton, who told him off. "Don't hold my hand, brother." Seale released it, because that was his shooting hand. Newton taunted the officer. "You got an itchy trigger finger?... OK, you big, fat, racist pig, draw your gun!" All the Ramparts' staffers who'd come to watch as well as the officers' backup got the hell out of Dodge. Eventually, even the officer backed down. It was the first time the BPP had ever gotten the police to back down. It brought admiration from the entire Ramparts staff, who soon made the magazine the semi-official outlet of the BPP. And it brought Cleaver into their fold. They appointed him spokesman/Minister of Information within weeks. The following is the only news footage from that day shot after the incident, the rest having been lost, with Scheer in the background at one point:
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And that wasn't even the most shocking thing going on at Ramparts. This series has previously mentioned the National Student Association as a bunch of debate nerds who essentially trained to have public speaking and organizing on their resume for future employers. The thing about the NSA was, it was a CIA front, and generally suspected as such. In 1947, there was an implosion of student politics' international facing groups. Those who had seen the Soviets fight in the Second World War generally accepted their claims to want world peace on their face, while the groups aligned with the Catholic Church teamed up with disparate right wing WASPs and Jews to fight back. The CIA had taken these students (to note, these were largely men in their late 20s or early 30s, grad rather than undergrad) under their wing and organized them into a front group that could report back on invitational events held in Eastern Europe. In turn, the top echelons of the NSA had to be sworn into legal secrecy as a prerequisite of participation, with the reward being entry into the old boys network of politicians and bureaucrats which virtually guaranteed a job.  
The CIA fucked up. In 1965, the elected president of the NSA was Philip Sherburne. He was sworn into secrecy on the source of funding for their new HQ and general operations, as was normal for the group. But he disliked that they had only one source of funding, and he wanted the NSA to be independent. At the time, the grassroots in the organization who followed international politics and hewed to the left had managed to get some of their membership into power, but they had felt straitjacketed by the CIA's complete control of NSA finances. Many wanted to join in on the anti-war marches. Sherburne and others, spurred on by abrogation of Juan Bosch's regime in the Dominican Republic and the electoral fraud that brought the American-backed opposition to power, worked to find alternative sources of funding. They sent one an NSA man as part of the operation, but he got cold feet and worked with Sherburne to expose it. In response, the CIA had a number of top NSA men declared eligible for the draft in Vietnam. Bureaucratic fights ensued, involving the lives of students in America, Spain, Vietnam, and elsewhere. Finally, Sherburne went above the CIA's head to vice president Hubert Humprhey. In response, the CIA went and cut all of Sherburne's independent lines of funding. Unbenkownst to them, Sherburne had made a relatively radical student named Michael Wood his outside line to donors. He'd told Wood not to approach certain groups because they were backed by "certain government agencies". Wood had surmised that this meant the CIA and gone and picked up the only book out on the Agency: The Invisible Government, by David Wise and Thomas Ross. When he saw that the NSA's funding for 1966 had the same donor groups backed by the CIA, he realized Sherburne had lost and stole the files.
Twice the New York Times had published articles critical of the CIA in some form. In 1965, Texas congressman Wright Patman, initially elected on his support of the Bonus Army and ever a thorn in the establishment's side, had investigated 8 charitable foundations and found them to be CIA cutouts. The NYT had written an article on this as well as replies from the funded orgs (Encounter Magazine and the Congress for Cultural Freedom). In 1966, spurred by Ramparts' articles on MSU, NYT reporter Tom Wicker wrote of the allegations and added details of other botched operations around the world he'd heard from sources over the years. This brought the ire of the agency. In 1961, in response to details of the Bay of Pigs invasion being published in The Nation before it occurred, President Kennedy told his aides to bother him when details showed up in the New York Times because it otherwise did not matter. The CIA had actually worked hard to kill the very same story before the NYT could publish it so by the time the invasion failed, Kennedy apparently exclaimed that he wished more details had been published in the NYT so that the invasion would have been stopped. CIA agent Cord Meyer made the postscript of Part 3 of this series as the handler of much of the CIA's work through cutouts and allied groups like AFL-CIO, especially in in regards to  the effort to influence the media known as Operation Mockingbird. Meyer and his wife, Mary Pinchot, were next door neighbours to the Kennedy's before JFK became president. Pinchot divorced Meyer after their child was killed in a car accident in 1957. She moved in with her brother-in-law, Ben Bradlee, later of Pentagon Papers and Watergate fame and played by Tom Hanks in the Steven Spielberg film The Post. In 1961, James Jesus Angleton, head of counterintelligence at the CIA, tapped her phone and discovered she was in a sexual relationship with JFK, including visits at the White House. When Pinchot was murdered in October 1964 in what was termed a robbery (a black man was arrested but acquitted), a friend of the family heard (he said) about the murder on the radio and phoned Bradlee first and Meyer second. Bradlee went to go find her diary and found Angleton sitting in her house (his garage) reading it. They later destroyed it. After that, Meyer became an alcoholic and compiled an enemies list of the CIA that included the Vice President. He was already fearful of a leak and told his subordinates to go after NSA staff but did not determine who Sherburne had told until his wiretaps of Ramparts phone lines informed him.
Ramparts, of course, knew that they had been tapped and kept phone calls brief. Scheer phoned Judith Coburn of the Village Voice and asked for her discretion. Wanting to break into a field dominated by men, Coburn felt like she was being called by a rock star, but nonetheless found it absurd that Scheer believed his calls to be tapped. She knew the CIA to be involved in assassinations like Lumumba's and thought their dealings with a minor org like the NSA were absurd. Ultimately, she helped by confronting a number of figures on their work. Eventually, a young WASP Harvard undergraduate who was on retainer from Ramparts named Michael Ansara got the call. His blog about it is excellent reading, located here. I quote:
One evening in the cold months of early 1967, my phone rang. A strange voice, obviously from New York asked, “Is this Michael Ansara?”
“Yes.”
“This is Sol Stern from Ramparts. Bob Scheer says you are our man in Boston.”
“Well . . . OK.”
“Listen I need you to do some work for us right away. I cannot tell you what it is about. I am calling you from a phone booth. Will you do it?”
“Well, what kind of work and are you willing to pay me for it?”
“It is research into two Boston based foundations. We will pay you $500.” 500 dollars was a lot of money. I had no idea how to research foundations, but I thought, what the hell. I could really use the money.
“Sure. What exactly do you want me to do?”
“I can’t tell you anything more than to find everything you can on the Sidney & Esther Rabb Foundation and Independence Foundation. They are based in Boston. I will call you in several days. You cannot call me. You cannot tell anyone what you are doing. You cannot mention the name Ramparts. Can I count on you?”
“I guess so. Sure. Yes.”
Ansara knew a much older man, an economist and lawyer who had sway in the Democratic Party named George Sommaripa. Sommaripa suggested Ansara go to a guy he knew at the IRS. Ansara did, and was told that under no circumstances could he have access to the files on two CIA cutout foundations. Chastened, Ansara complained to Sommaripa, who'd gotten the IRS clerk his job. A few days later, Ansara went back. The IRS clerk told him he could have any box he wanted, provided he did not go past the 990 form on the cover. He went past for the first two foundations and found that money came from an anonymous donor and in equal amounts went right out to the NSA. Ultimately, he pulled the files for 110 foundations, every single known group that the CIA used. He would look at the incorporation files for the foundations, see a lawyers' name, and look him up. Every time, the lawyer was an OSS operative during WW2, the predecessor org of the CIA. One of the lawyers had founded a firm with Sommaripa, a man named David Bird. Ansara confronted Bird, and Bird did not even stop to hang up on Ansara before phoning a contact at the CIA.
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Left to right: Hinckle, Stern, Scheer.
A major corroboration of the story came from three students in New York who were disgusted by American foreign policy in Latin America. One in particular, Fred Goff, had been sent to the Dominican Republic with Allard Lowenstein (part 3) to observe the election of the pro-American candidate over the anti-American one. Goff had discovered that a man that Lowenstein had said he trusted on the country was actually a CIA agent, Sacha Volman. Another, Michael Locker, had done a paper about the CIA based on the NYT articles. Together, they walked in the doors of the AFL-CIO's American Institute for Free Labor Development and asked directly about the CIA, prompting a crashing sound and the institute's director, Thomas Kahn, planner of the 1963 March on Washington and the long-term romantic partner of Bayard Rustin, to scream at them.
The problem was when it came time to do the story. Sometimes, the researchers were paid by Ramparts. Other times, they received cheques from the Interchurch Center, a strange agency that serves as a front for charitable giving from the Episcopal, Lutheran, Presbyterian, Reformed, Methodist, and United Churches in America. James Forman, mentioned in previous parts, once led a picket in favour of reparations from them. Ramparts staff demanded they talk to them by picking up pay phones that would ring at designated times, a dismal failure. Other times, Hinckle, Scheer, and Sol Stern would fly in, book rooms at the Algonquin, and order massive amounts of takeout and booze. 15 to 20 people would be in a hotel room trying to negotiate who would be writing the story by continent, or by year, or by foundation. At one point, Coburn broke into the NSA HQ and unwittingly stole the original deed to their land, where it remained undiscovered in Ramparts' files till the 2010s.
On New Year's Eve, 1966, Lowenstein was hanging out with the new members of the NSA leadership when he informed them that Ramparts was writing about their relationship with the CIA. "The usual sloppy Ramparts piece, lots of flash, little substance," he said. The CIA had known since at least Thanksgiving. A lower level NSA official who'd just been sworn in went to meet with Hinckle and Scheer. The duo, while nonchalantly throwing darts, offered the Ramparts donor list as an incentive to tell all, but he refused. Sherburne attempted to find counsel in a lawyer who'd once opposed the CIA's new Langley HQ on NIMBY grounds. Meyer had threatened the lawyer's brother, working in Bogota with USAID, but the lawyer persisted. Undaunted, Meyer got word to Douglass Cater, the first president of the NSA and now an advisor to LBJ. LBJ bumped it to Lowenstein and the CIA to develop a response, which was to hold a press conference with an article in Henry Luce's (the man, not the monkey) Time Magazine that this was all well known since the 1965 congressional hearings, that the money was not that impressive, that the Soviets had done much more, etc.
This could have killed Ramparts. The IRS was already looking for any sign of foreign influence as an excuse to shut down the magazine. It needed some sort of relationship with the establishment press in a way that would let it gain influence without keeping it from the areas it wanted to report on. At the very same time, both Time and the NYT were reporting on the survival of Ramparts: Keating had attempted a coup and lost a board vote 13-1, with Mitford and other backers providing anonymous quotes that while they disliked the "Animal Farm-ish" nature of the issue, they needed Ramparts to stave off a fascist dictatorship in America. Hinckle followed by setting up an astounding agreement with the New York Times and Washington Post: they would get full access to Ramparts' files on the CIA right now, before the White House could set up a press conference, in exchange for letting them run full page ads for days for their next issue.
The day the Times went to press, February 13, 1963, was termed by former CIA director Richard Helms in his memoirs as "one of my darkest days". The press pushed, smelling blood. President Johnson ordered a suspension and review of CIA funding for outside orgs. The CIA initially tried to find a way to blame a dead president, Truman, but realized that its own documentation on the program, written by Cord Meyer, claimed that then-director Allen Dulles did not have any responsibility to inform the president of what he had ordered. Switching tactics, they turned on their press weapon, known as the Mighty Wurlitzer, and claimed that the CIA would have been remiss to not conduct these operations. "I'm glad the CIA is immoral" was the headline of an article by Meyer's boss, Thomas Braden. He described $250 million a year the CIA believed to be spent by the Soviet Union on cultural subversion, to which a mere handful of dollars from the CIA could not compare. No evidence for the accusations was provided, of course. Finally, Helms pulled in a favour from Robert Kennedy and had him testify to the press that his brother had authorized the funding, carried over from the days of Eisenhower. 12 former NSA presidents (including Lowenstein) came out and said the relationship was above board. All had worked for the CIA at least once after they'd left the NSA, but that was not revealed in their letter.
The strategy was a half-success. All the foundations funded by the CIA fell apart and students around the world became suspicious of CIA infiltration. Much of what Ramparts found was investigated by Congress repeatedly over the next decade, culminating in the reforms that came out of the Church Committee, which Helms claimed in his memoirs was sparked by Ramparts and Watergate. Certainly press readership was high, and many stories were published in the NYT and WaPo confirming and furthering the work done. At the same time, the CIA escaped with only a few new rules on its behaviour. President Johnson was a paranoic and was more concerned about using the CIA as a tool against his domestic enemies. He authorized a much larger role for MHCHAOS in punishing his enemies (remember the cryptonyms? MH was the most illegal, as it meant the USA). Many of those fingered were considered liberals in good standing and were part of the labour movement, particularly AFL-CIO higher-ups. They fell in line with the rhetoric about communist subversion because they knew they'd be the ones punished if things went further.
Interestingly, a few months later, the NSA held a vote on integrating an anti-Vietnam War and anti-draft stance into its platform. Traditionally, the CIA had worked from the shadows to suppress these votes. This time, Allard Lowenstein whipped in favour of the anti- stance and it won. Lowenstein soon became a fixture in the anti-LBJ movement, leading the call to bring Eugene McCarthy and Robert Kennedy into the Democratic presidential primaries. To a large extent, the organizations that were closed to the CIA had been products of decades-old relationships and worked in ways that nobody had bothered to improve. Within the CIA, a tension had always existed between bureaucrats with their own fiefdoms and up and comers with new ways of doing things. To a large extent, this scandal simply pushed the former out and made room for the latter, who would not do things like create financial records with the exact same dollar amounts going in and out, or act so bluntly when it came to manipulating staff. While the CIA may have suffered a little in the short term, it was an act of "creative destruction" that improved how the CIA did business. For Ramparts, on the other hand, things were going to get much worse now that they had drawn the ire of the intelligence community. While the magazine reached its peak distribution of 250,000 copies a month, it still did not bring in enough money to cover its expenses, and it was about to be faced with a much larger funding crisis: the Six Day War.
AFTER ALLEN DULLES RETIRED, the director bragged about the NSA operation. “We got everything we wanted. I think what we did was worth every penny. If we turned back the communists and made them milder and easier to live with, it was because we stopped them in certain areas, and the student area was one of them.”... Edward Garvey, who also worked at CIA headquarters, puts it more dramatically: “My God, did we finger people for the Shah?”... Stephen Robbins, despite his limited CIA involvement during his year as president, echoes Garvey’s concern: “It’s South Africa that keeps me up at night.”
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movies-to-add-to-your-tbw · 9 months ago
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Title: Becoming Jane
Rating: PG
Director: Julian Jarrold
Cast: Anne Hathaway, James McAvoy, Julie Walters, James Cromwell, Maggie Smith, Joe Anderson, Lucy Cohu, Laurence Fox, Ian Richardson, Anna Maxwell Martin, Leo Bill, Jessica Ashworth, Michael James Ford, Tom Vaughan-Lawlor, Chris McHallem
Release year: 2007
Genres: drama, romance
Blurb: A pre-fame Jane Austen enters a romance with a young Irishman.
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giallofever2 · 9 months ago
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Rappresaglia 1973
Also Known As (AKA)
Argentina Masacre en Roma
Brazil (DVD title) Massacre em Roma
Brazil O Carrasco de Roma
Bulgaria (Bulgarian title)
Крьвопролитие в Рим
Denmark Massakren i Rom
Finland (Swedish title) Den stora massakern
Finland (TV title) Kostotoimi
Finland (video box title) Suuri joukkoteurastus
France Représailles
Greece (transliterated) Antipoina
Greece (reissue title) Sagi sti Romi
Greece (video title) | sfagi
Hungary Megtorlás
Ireland (English title) Massacre in
Rome
Mexico (complete title) Masacre en
Roma
Norway Massakren i Rom
Poland Masakra w Rzymie
Portugal Massacre em Roma
Romania Masacru la Roma
Soviet Union (Russian title)
Репрессалии
Spain Muerte en Roma
Sweden Den stora massakern
UK Massacre in Rome
USA Massacre in Rome
West Germany Tödlicher Irrtum
West Germany Das Massaker - Der Fall
Kappler
Release Dates
Italy 4 October 1973
USA 24 October 1973
Denmark 19 August 1974
Sweden 23 March 1975
UK July 1975
Norway 14 July 1975
Finland 12 December 1975
France 22 June 1976
West Germany 10 June 1977
Sweden 30 March 2004 (DVD premiere)
Filming Dates 13 November 1972
Regista: George Pan Cosmatos
Music by Maestro Ennio Morricone
Bruno Nicolai ... conductor
Produttore: Carlo Ponti
technical specifications
Runtime 1 hr 50 min (110 min)
Interpreti e personaggi
Marcello Mastroianni: padre Antonelli
Richard Burton: Herbert Kappler
Renzo Montagnani: Questore Pietro
Caruso
John Steiner: Eugen Dollmann
Delia Boccardo: Elena
Duilio Del Prete: partigiano
Giancarlo Prete: Paolo
Peter Vaughan: Albert Kesselring
Renzo Palmer: Giorgio
Leo McKern: Kurt Mälzer
Guidarino Guidi: Guido Buffarini Guidi
Robert H. Harris: padre Pfeiffer
Douglas Hare: giovane soldato tedesco
Jacques Herli: Giovanni
Massimo Sarchielli: primo partigiano
alla finestra
Anthony Steel: maggiore Domizlaf Brook Williane: capitane Erich Priebke
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primal-slayer · 11 months ago
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Throwback: Greg Vaughn 1999 interview
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E! ONLINE...DISH WITH WANDA....
This week, Charmed's Greg Vaughan chatted away about Friday food fights, Keri Russell's locks and a witchy threesome. Plus, Wanda spilled it about porno on Freaks and Geeks and a female werewolf on Buffy.
Hi, everyone. Greg is here. From Maliha: Greg, how did they find you for Charmed? --Must've been a long search, but they found me! I auditioned twice, and they finally gave it to me. From smartiepants: Lots of people talk about the crazy things in an Aaron Spelling contract--like you can't cut your hair. Do you have anything like that in your contract? --It's not in my contract, but Aaron likes to keep his boys looking the same. We can't make any drastic changes without consulting him. * * * From milo: Any chance for Andy to return to the show? Loved him! --I know. I hear that quite often. But he's not coming back, from what I understand.
From athletic_girl88: Did you watch Charmed before you were on it? Don't lie! --Nope. But I do now. * * * From lulu: Can you give us some upcoming scoop on Charmed? --I'm sure everybody's wanting Leo and Piper to get together, but they're gone. Then in comes neighbor Dan. He's a mortal. * * * From marilu: What's up with the little girl you are the guardian of? --Actually, she has been let go from the show. But she was really sweet, and we got along really well. From paceynjoey: So, what purpose does your character serve on Charmed? What's he here to stir up? --I don't think he's here to stir up anything. I think he's there to add a little spice to what 's going on with the girls. They're trying to maintain the witchcraft while bringing in a little romance between me and Piper. * * * From kimberley_21: Greg, any chance of your character hooking up with Phoebe? --You know, we were all trying to work out a threesome, but Piper wanted a boyfriend, so that's where things are brewing. From charmedgirl: Could you describe a typical day on the set of Charmed? --A typical day is everybody being laid back and just having fun. The girls are joking around, and the guys are loving the attention they're getting from the girls. I mean, you have those sex symbols walking around all day. There's a lot of fun, cutting up and horseplay. Lately, I've been working for four hours a day, so it has been great. I'm in and out really quickly, but that should change because things are about to get really intense with Dan and Piper. From pixiepiper: So, will we see you do karaoke at Piper's club anytime soon? --Uh, I don't think so. If I have anything to do with it, NO! * * * From templaralt: In the upcoming Episode 10, "Heartbreak City," will you have a big role, and will Cupid put you and Piper together as a couple? --That could be. It's a waiting game right now. I get a new script each week. In the beginning of the season, I think they were waiting to build the relationship and let people give my character a chance. We look forward to some other new additions to the show. From stjore: Any spoilers for a Halloween episode? --Being a witch show, you'd think we'd do a Halloween show, but there isn't one. There is a St. Patrick's episode. We don't know what the deal is, but maybe they'll hook him up with a leprechaun!! From monique1017: Do you think they'll pull an "Andy" on you ? I hope not! --You know what, I hope not. I hope that I'll be on for a while. But if I have to leave tomorrow, I just want to go down in style. I'm very grateful to be part of a successful show. If anyone knew the girls as I know them, they'd feel very blessed. https://groups.google.com/g/alt.gossip.celebrities/c/-P_GQyf7MW0?pli=1
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brookstonalmanac · 3 months ago
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Birthdays 10.3
Beer Birthdays
John Gorrie (1803)
John Gund (1830)
Fred Horix (1843)
F.D. Radeke (1843)
Alois Alexander Assman (1856)
Sean Lewis (1984)
Five Favorite Birthdays
Harvey Kurtzman; cartoonist, Mad magazine founder (1924)
Clive Owen; actor (1964)
Greg Proops; comedian (1959)
Stevie Ray Vaughan; rock guitarist (1954)
Gore Vidal; writer (1925)
Famous Birthdays
Louis Aragon; French writer (1897)
P. P. Arnold; soul singer (1946)
Dr. Atl; Mexican painter (1875)
John Perry Barlow; poet & songwriter (1947)
Giovanni Battista Beccaria; Italian physicist (1716)
Gertrude Berg; actress & screenwriter (1899)
Pierre Bonnard; French artist (1867)
Benjamin Boretz; composer & theorist (1934)
Wade Boteler; actor & screenwriter (1888)
James M. Buchanan; economist (1919)
Lindsay Buckingham; rock guitarist (1949)
Johnny Burke; songwriter (1908)
Neve Campbell; actor (1973)
Natalie Savage Carlson; author (1906)
Chubby Checker; pop singer (1941)
Eddie Cochran; rock singer (1938)
Chris Collingwood; English-American singer-songwriter (1967)
Giovanni Comisso; Italian author and poet (1895)
Antoine Dauvergne; French violinist & composer (1713)
Pierre Deligne; Belgian mathematician (1944)
Gerardo Diego; Spanish poet (1896)
Jean Grémillon; French director, composer & screenwriter (1901)
Fulke Greville, 1st Baron Brook; English poet (1554)
Eirik Hegdal; Norwegian saxophonist & composer (1973)
James Herriot; English writer (1916)
Roy Horn; illusionist, with Siegfried (1944)
A.Y. Jackson; Canadian artist (1882)
Allan Kardec; French author (1804)
Jessica Parker Kennedy; Canadian actress (1984)
Pyotr Kozlov; Russian archaeologist & explorer (1863)
Ronnie Laws; jazz, R&B, & funk saxophone player (1950)
Tommy Lee; rock drummer (1962)
Henry Lerolle; French painter (1848)
Rob Liefeld; author and illustrator (1967)
Gustave Loiseau; French painter (1865)
G. Love; singer-songwriter & guitarist (1972)
Leo McCarey; film director (1898)
Keb' Mo'; blues singer, songwriter (1951)
Janel Moloney; actress (1969)
Alan O'Day; singer-songwriter (2940)
Emily Post; etiquette columnist (1872)
Steve Reich; modern composer (1936)
Kevin Richardson; singer-songwriter & actor (1971)
Aleksandr Rogozhkin; Russian director & screenwriter (1949)
John Ross; Cherokee nation chief (1790)
Josephine Sabel; singer & comedian (1866)
Sebastian Anton Scherer; German organist & composer (1631)
Seann William Scott; actor (1976)
Al Sharpton; politician, civil rights activist (1954)
Jake Shears; singer-songwriter (1978)
Laurie Simmons; photographer & director (1949)
Ashlee Simpson; singer-songwriter & actress (1984)
Shannyn Sossamon; actress (1978)
Gwen Stefani; rock singer (1969)
C. J. Stroud; football player (2001)
Tessa Thompson; actress (1983)
Sophie Treadwell; playwright & journalist (1885)
Johann Uz; German poet & judge (1720)
Buket Uzuner; Turkish author (1955)
Carl von Ossietzky; German journalist & activist (1889)
Jack Wagner; actor and singer (1959)
Dave Winfield; San Diego Padres OF (1951)
Thomas Wolfe; writer (1900)
Allen Woody; bass player & songwriter (1955)
Sergei Yesenin; Russian poet (1895)
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goalhofer · 3 months ago
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2024 olympics New Zealand roster
Athletics
James Preston (Wellington)
Sam Tanner (Papamoa)
Georgie Beamish (Hastings)
Hamish Kerr (Dunedin)
Ethan Olivier (Vereeniging, South Africa)
Jack Gill (Auckland)
Tom Walsh (Timaru)
Connor Bell (Auckland)
Zoe Hobbs (New Plymouth)
Maia Ramsden (Addis Ababa, Ethiopia)
Camille French (Hamilton)
Imogen Ayris (Auckland)
Eliza McCartney (Auckland)
Olivia McTaggart (Auckland)
Maddison-Lee Wesche (Auckland)
Tori Peeters (Cambridge)
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1 note · View note
5brightplanets · 3 months ago
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It seems to resound with echoes of another darker, more charming, more splendid, more happening world than the real one. But, on close-fixed contact, it is wickedly difficult to discriminate the many conjured up “real” worlds from the genuine one.
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The Light Edit Series. Tolkien, Twain and Lawrence work around an English language and standard usage rooted in the 1800’s to come to grips with it. 100% made from St. Mawr by D.H. Lawrence, circa 1925. Found in a Vintage Books edition containing both St. Mawr and The Man Who Died by D.H. Lawrence; published in the USA sometime after 1953 in a Caledonia typeface with a cover design by Leo Lionni. The viewable and listenable link is posted by World of Jazz; https://youtu.be/HrT2i8xFKjM?si=XxlC2QsLXdvODvHL is a seemingly one-time-use, hypochangeable link to Sarah Vaughan- I ve Got the World on a String- 12 July 1981 - World of Jazz. Grateful awareness of the many artists, musicians, and technicians who present these sights and sounds. Words by Ted Koehler and Music by Harold Arlen. -Jivananda (Jim)
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