#louise huber
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Bruno & Louise Huber - Man and his World - Samuel Weiser - 1978 (cover art by Alden Cole)
#witches#astrologers#occult#vintage#man and his world#astrological psychology#astrology#psychology#samuel weiser#bruno & louise huber#bruno huber#louise huber#1978#alden cole
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Anna Huber, Anne Louise Pauline Huber (1868-después de 1943) pintora alemana.
Nació en Stuttgart.
Es poco conocida. Al igual que sus compañeras estudió en la Academia de Arte de Stuttgart y la mayoría eran miembros de la Asociación de Pintores de Württemberg.
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30 Years of Swiss Typographic Discourse in the Typografische Monatsblätter
○ Studio: Robert Huber, Louise Paradis
○ Location: Switzerland
○ Client: Lars Mueller Publishers
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#design#graphic design#print#print design#book#book design#layout#grid#column#type#typography#swiss#swiss style#swiss style design#swiss style graphic design#Robert Huber Louise Paradis#switzerland#lars mueller#lars mueller publishers#art#art direction#design book#30 Years of Swiss Typographic Discourse in the Typografische Monatsblätter#clean#simple#minimal#emboss#deboss#poster#poster design
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Episode 158 - Audiobook Fiction
This episode we’re talking about Audiobook Fiction! We discuss narrators vs casts, sound effects, music, adaptations, footnotes, and more! Plus: How do you picture the hosts in your mind when you listen to us?
You can download the podcast directly, find it on Libsyn, or get it through Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, Google Podcasts, or your favourite podcast delivery system.
In this episode
Anna Ferri | Meghan Whyte | Matthew Murray | Jam Edwards
Things We Read (or tried to…)
Gemina by Amie Kaufman and Jay Kristoff, narrated by a full cast
Coasting Trade by Robin McGrath, narrated by Robert Joy, Rick Boland, and Anita Best
Things We Lost in the Fire by Mariana Enríquez, translated by Megan McDowell, narrated by Tanya Eby
The Sentence by Louise Erdrich
Convenience Store Woman by Sayaka Murata, translated by Ginny Tapley Takemori, narrated by Nancy Wu
What Are You Going Through by Sigrid Nunez, narrated by Hillary Huber
Other Media We Mentioned
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Tertiary to Hexagonal Phases (Wikipedia)
The War of the Worlds (1938 radio drama) (Wikipedia)
What We See When We Read by Peter Mendelsund
Welcome to Nightvale (podcast)
Mostly Void, Partially Stars: Welcome to Night Vale Episodes #1 by Joseph Fink and Jeffrey Cranor
99% Invisible (podcast)
The 99% Invisible City: A Field Guide to the Hidden World of Everyday Design by Roman Mars and Kurt Kohlstedt
The Anthropocene Reviewed (podcast)
The Anthropocene Reviewed by John Green
The Princess Bride by William Goldman
Control (video game)
Control || Talking Simulator
Nimona by N.D. Stevenson
Nimona by N.D. Stevenson, narrated by Rebecca Soler, Jonathan Davis, and Marc Thompson
The Stanley Parable (Wikipedia) (it’s not quite as narrated as Matthew and Jam implied)
Official website
Gadsby (novel) by Ernest Vincent Wright (Wikipedia)
“does not include any words that contain the letter E”
A Void by Georges Perec (Wikipedia)
“entirely without using the letter e”
War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy, translated by Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky
Illuminae by Amie Kaufman and Jay Kristoff
My Brain is Different: Histoires of ADHD and Other Developmental Disorders by MONNZUSU
Project X: Challengers - Seven Eleven by Tadashi Ikuta and Namoi Kimura
Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir, narrated by Ray Porter
The Sandman (audiobook version)
Leave the World Behind by Rumaan Alam, narrated by Marin Ireland
House of Leaves by Mark Z. Danielewski
Links, Articles, and Things
Episode 133 - Flash Fiction
Episode 108 - Visual Novels
Serre - Kinda bilingual anglos play French-language Visual Novel
Episode 027 - Non-Fiction Audiobooks
Audie Awards
Turns Out Not Everyone Can Picture Things In Their Mind And Sorry, What?
Lowly Worm (Wikipedia)
Let's Play (Wikipedia)
Oulipo (Wikipedia)
24-hour comic
Episode 047b - Terrible Stories by Matthew (you have been warned)
Episode 142 - Sequels and 2022: The Year of Book Two
ISO 8601 (Wikipedia) (date standard)
June Is #audiomonth: Narrator Trading Cards Giveaway
Two-Fisted Library Stories (Twitter bot)
Digital Accessible Information System (Wikipedia)
20 Fiction Audiobooks written & read by BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, & People of Colour) Authors and Narrators
Every month Book Club for Masochists: A Readers’ Advisory Podcasts chooses a genre at random and we read and discuss books from that genre. We also put together book lists for each episode/genre that feature works by BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, & People of Colour) authors. All of the lists can be found here.
Counterfeit by Kirstin Chen, narrated by Catherine Ho
Firekeeper's Daughter by Angeline Boulley, narrated by Isabella Star LaBlanc
The Night Watchman by Louise Erdrich, narrated by the author
Brown Girl in the Ring by Nalo Hopkinson, narrated by Peter Jay Fernandez
Ninefox Gambit by Yoon Ha Lee, narrated by Emily Woo Zeller
The Memory Librarian and Other Stories of Dirty Computer by Janelle Monáe, Yohanca Delgado, Eve L. Ewing, Alaya Dawn Johnson, Danny Lore, Sheree Renée Thomas; narrated by Janelle Monae and Bahni Turpin
Nightcrawling by Leila Mottley, narrated by Joniece Abbott-Pratt
Convenience Store Woman by Sayaka Murata, translated by Ginny Tapley Takemori, narrated by Nancy Wu
Binti by Nnedi Okorafor, narrated by Robin Miles
War Girls by Tochi Onyebuchi, narrated by Adepero Oduye
The Swimmers by Julie Otsuka, narrated by Traci Kato-Kiriyama
The Beadworkers by Beth Piatote narrated by the author, Christian Nagler, Fantasia Painter, Drew Woodson, Phillip Cash Cash and Keevin Hesuse
Dating Dr. Dil by Nisha Sharma, narrated by Soneela Nankani, Sunil Malhotra and Vikas Adam
An Unkindness of Ghosts by Rivers Solomon, narrated by Cherise Boothe
Four Aunties and a Wedding by Jesse Q. Sutanto, narrated by Risa Mei
The Strangers by Katherena Vermette, narrated by Michaela Washburn
On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous by Ocean Vuong, narrated by the author
Zone One by Colson Whitehead, narrated by Beresford Bennett
The Seed Keeper by Diane Wilson, narrated by Kyla Garcia
Interior Chinatown by Charles Yu, narrated by Joel de la Fuente
Give us feedback!
Fill out the form to ask for a recommendation or suggest a genre or title for us to read!
Check out our Tumblr, follow us on Twitter or Instagram, join our Facebook Group, or send us an email!
Join us again on Tuesday, September 20th when we’ll be discussing the winner of our “we all read the same book” poll and discussing Hurts So Good: The Science and Culture of Pain on Purpose by Leigh Cowart!
Then on Tuesday, October 4th we’ll be talking about the genre of Fictional Biographies!
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Hii 💕 I have saturn and moon in gemini , and Jupiter and north Node in cancer all in 7th house . What does it mean ? Thanks 💕
Hellooo , I am so sorry for the late answer🥺👉🏽👈🏽 I was really busy and I actually did work many hours on the appropriate answers, because I really hope it will help you! ✨❤️
I am assuming, that you are using the placidus house system:)
Saturn in Gemini
This is a good placement for Saturn. Here, Saturns intellectual qualities are emphasized. You are most likely quick witted. A negative side is however, that one might come across as cynical and too skeptical.Many with this placement love to research and have a youthful, almost child like wish to learn.Difficulties like; a lonely childhood, due to the inability to express oneself, might have occurred.Individuals with this placement might have a hard time obtaining an education.However with Saturn in Gemini, one can be gifted with musical abilities.You have to be patient with work.Also cautiousness with the chest and lungs.
Saturn in the 7th house
With Saturn in the 7th house, you are most likely cautious about marriage and partnerships.Even to the point that you might not even marry until later in life.Sometimes people with this placement marry a widow or widower.Might benefit socially from marriage, if not it is not negatively aspected.However there might be possible legal problems through marriage and/or a set back.
Moon in Gemini
This is a very versatile, witty, charming and even amusing placement.It can however come across as very disorganized, inconsistent, superficial, sometimes cunning and even manipulative if unwell aspected.You have an active mind that needs constant stimulation.A very intellectual placement. Usually have a lot of general knowledge.Since the Moon in Gemini is so quick witted it's decisions are more likely intellectual rather than emotional. People with this placement are fast learners and great at multitasking. Very social, many know a bunch of people from different places.You might not like to stay at home for too long and should always take some time to get out and be social. The need to always do something is very occurring. Great placement for writers, teachers and even journalists. Many rappers have Gemini influence, since they are so good at writing. Good with words and communication in general. You probably analyze your feelings a lot .“why am I feeling” is a common question people with this placement ask themselves. You want to understand your emotions. Sadly some with this placement try to ignore their emotions because they cannot understand. You probably have a different way of looking at things and change your mind often.Therefore, you need constant changes, even small ones. Small trips and travels probably benefit you. Good placement for business as well, but making decisions is very hard for you.
Moon in the 7th house
The Moon in the 7th house needs security in relationships, marriages and partnerships.You might marry someone that resembles a parental figure (someone nurturing) who is also protective of you. You might become popular with the public at some point.Negatively; You might jump from one relationship to another because you are scared of being alone or you are constantly looking for “the one”. Positively; You see both sides in an argument and try to be fair.
Saturn and Moon in the 7th house, Gemini
Your mind is always very active. Your need of constant change can make it harder for you to maintain relationships. You are most likely very cautious of your feelings and romanic relationship, however you might, even subconsciously, have the emotional need to be in one. You might feel like you are being pulled from both sides like a rope. It is important that you do not avoid your feeling and find a balance. Generally, Relationships ( any relationship) are very beneficial for you. Even in business! Just be cautious and do not be “too kind” balance is a very important thing for you. Just like patience.
Jupiter in Cancer
Jupiter is considered a lucky placement here.It tends to be optimistic. With this placement you might have luck with investments, real estate and even stock market. It is also a creative, sympathetic and imaginative. Can have luck in creative careers. Speaking of careers, it is also beneficial for chefs and restaurant owners to have this placement as well. In your later years you might also have a very peaceful life. With Cancer in Jupiter you are probably going to become a good parent and/or grandparent.Children can be beneficial for you as well. This could also mean, working with children etc.Some people with this placement have bigger chests. Or at least nicely shaped. Do with that whatever you want.
Jupiter in the 7th house
Another placements for luck and success in marriages and partnerships.You might gain some sort of power through them. Marrying twice and/or rich is very common. Sometimes with this placement people date a lot in search for “the one”.Here, your opponent might even become your friends at some point in your life, because this placement means that conflicts can have beneficial endings.When Jupiter is in the 7th house you have to be careful to not put your trust in the wrong people. Also do not be too generous.
North Node in Cancer
Here you have to learn to balance between your feelings and your responsibility in your family.Learn to notice feelings and become more empathetic, nurturing and be supportive of others.You might built your own home/ family.Children can be very beneficial with this placement because it gives one motherly or fatherly instincts and feelings. This doesn't necessarily mean you have to have children, but working with children could also be an option.You have to stop the need to control everything, even people. Focusing too much on goals and wanting to be in charge of everything is also an obstacle you have to overcome, since your South Node is in Capricorn.However do not ignore your own need to take care of others. You are not responsible for everything.
North Node in the 7th house
With the NN in the 7th house you have to connect with your “true self” since the SN is in the 1st house.It is very important for you to form relationships and partnerships where you can be you true self.This can be romantic but also just friendship.In your past life you might have been more selfish, and now have to learn to become more selfless.(obviously in a health dosage)
You were probably very independent and wanted to do things your way. But now with the NN in the 7th you have to overcome your ego and compromise. There is a chance that you are used to not taking responsibility for others. With this placement it can be learnt from relationships and partnerships how to overcome all of that. Learn letting people in and help but doing the same in return.Again, you will most likely have a beneficial marriage. This placement too, is great for business.
North Node in the 7th house, Cancer
To sum those placements up, it is possible that marriage and children can be beneficial for learning the lesson of the 7th house. Since those experiences can make one very selfless, nurturing and giving, which would ultimately mean you have overcome the karma of the south node. However, if you do not desire having children or maybe even marriage, working with children or generally learning to give and empathy and sympathy through friendships and partnerships can also help you.Just be careful to not be too generous and know your boundaries.
I hope this helped you!
I did use some Books/PDFs to help me out how to phrase my sentences properly
BIG Credits to:
The North Node of the Moon in our Astrological Chart by River School of Homeopathy
Lunar Nodes Keys To Emotions And Life Experience by Diane Ronngren
The North Node in Your Chart Twelve Doors to Spiritual Growth by Louise Huber
The Only Astrology Book You'll Ever Need by Joanna Martine Woolfolk
#astrology#north node#north node in 7th#north node in cancer#satrun#gemini saturn#moon#moon in gemini#saturn in 7th#moon in 7th#jupiter in cancer#jupiter in 7th#astrology observations#astrology notes#astro notes#ask#asnwer#asnwered
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Santa Claus Cup, Budapest
“Small” comps are pretty amazing. It feels kind of more familiar, there are usually more local skaters or skaters from the neighbouring countries (which is even more true now) and you can get surprised by many skaters you’ve maybe never seen before.
And I was totally surprised by Julia Lang. Have never seen her before but I’ll certainly rewatch her SP to André Rieu’s And the waltz goes on many times. The timing of the jumps to the music, the original step sequence 😍
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I’m also happy that I saw Nikola Rychtaříková’s Yo soy Maria FP again, I love it. There are so many Spanish/Latin/flamenco/tango programs but I think she does a good job at the interpretation.
Then I watched Eliška Březinová and just realized how goood she looks on the ice. She’s dramatic in her Never tear us apart SP and then calmer, excluding positive energy in her La la land FP. (it’s just so ironic, imagine finishing third in the short, third in the free and ending up fourth overall...)
The most important message from men singles. Iker Oyarzábal. Spain. I repeat: Iker Oyarzábal from Spain made his senior debut! And he got the TES minimum for Europeans in his FP (exceeding it by more than 9 points) and almost almost got it in the short. Let’s hope there will be some other comps where he could try it again. He skated to trusted figure skating classics: You raise me up and Moonlinght sonata. And he’s so elegant. His spins are awesome. He was not that expressive but he’ll learn that (and he did a hydroblade ;) )
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And another note. Czech skating is not only Michal Březina and the Bělohradský siblings but also Georgi Reshtenko (well he’s Russian but whatever ;) ) He looks like he’s skating with abandon and feels so free on the ice.
Ice dance
A thing happened... The competition took four days with ice dance on day 3 and 4. There were four very looooong videos on YT, one for every day. I watched day 3 with rhythm dances... and then when I wanted to watch free dance, the videos for day 3 and day 4 were gone. So I haven’t seen a single free dance... T_T But I’ve seen rhythm dance at least!
Rhythm dance! Only two senior teams but another Cabaret! I love, I collect them ;) Jennifer Janse van Rensburg / Benjamin Steffan. It was a really entertaining performance comparable with Popova/Mozgov’s interpretation. And then Lara Luft / Maxmilian Pfinsterer skating, very energetically, to Anything goes.
Junior ice dance looked like France decided to hold French open national championships and managed to occuppy the first four spots - even without their two best junior teams. As usual, I liked all the dances.
Perhaps I liked Eva Bernard/Tom Jochum and their RD to Michael Buble the most. They are doing a pretty crazy lift and ending with the twizzles. That seems to me like an act of courage.
Louise Bordet/Thomas Gipoulou’s City of stars is just so nice. Nice to watch from the beginning to the end. And I also liked the tap dance sequences in the music incorporated into the program.
I was a bit confused about Celina Fradji/Jean-Hans Forneaux, I thought they skated their last year’s RD (Singing in the rain) at test skates and now, suddenly, Blue Brothers. But not bad at all. They didn’t look particularly thrilled in the k&c though, so I’m a bit nervous about them.
And I still got to see my beloved Singing in the rain! Because it’s Marie Dupayage/Thomas Nabais’ RD! And they showed quite a lot of personality in the dance, especially towards the end.
And I enjoyed Corina and Patrick Huber’s New York, New York, too. When compared to the French teams, their level was noticeably lower, but if you are not a levels counting and scoring overanalyzing analyst you can enjoy the pretty costumes, enjoy how cute the dance is and just be happy.
And the last one was another siblings team - Petra and Patrick Csikós and their A nice walk in the park with a pretty acrobatic straight line lift.
The only thing I can say about free dance is: there were quite some changes.
#figure skating#figureskating#current season#watch party#santa claus cup#julia lang#eliška březinová#iker oyarzabal
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Hey M! I was wondering if you had any faceclaim and/or name suggestions for a character who came from old money, and now runs a (somewhat) prestigious academic institution. Any age range would be fine, since I figure if they're younger it would add to the weirdness of their promotion and I love older reclaims too! Thanks in advance!
hey babes! i wasn’t sure what gender you preferred for this muse but i’ll give you multiple suggestions. of course if you’ve got a look narrowed down, feel free to message me and i can give you more suggestions!
sarah jeffery (23)
lucy boynton (25)
jessica lowndes (31)
shay mitchell (32)
jenna louise coleman (33)
carey mulligan (34)
gal gadot (34)
jamie chung (36)
joe alwyn (28)
alfred enoch (31)
adam huber (32)
henry golding (32)
sam claflin (33)
max irons (34)
nathaniel buzolic (36)
ben barnes (38)
as far as names go i think that tilda, isla, elle, maura, amelia, caroline, emerson, parker, max, patrick, cedric, and sebastian could fit!!
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Cool Chicks from History Missing from Wikipedia: March 2018
Every few months, Cool Chicks from History puts together a list of women missing from Wikipedia. Wikipedia is often the first source people check when looking for information, but Wikipedia has a documented gender problem There’s a whole Wikipedia article about it! More men than women edit Wikipedia and that leads to a imbalance in what topics are included and how detailed the entries are.
“Why don’t you just write the articles then, Cool Chicks from History? Why do you try to crowdsource it?” Well, mostly because it takes about as much time to write this list as it does to write a single detailed new Wikipedia entry. Also crowdsourcing encourages more people to participate in shaping Wikipedia.
Dozens of new articles have been created after a woman was listed as a Cool Chick from History Missing from Wikipedia. Some examples: Helen Octavia Dickens, Eunice Dennie Burr, and Thea Tewi.
If you are interested in learning how to edit Wikipedia articles, there is a tutorial here. There is also a place for friendly Wikipedia help here.
—-
The List of queens regnant on Wikipedia needs to be reworked to match Wikipedia’s guidelines.
Mufida Abdel-Rahman (Egyptian attorney) does not have a Wikipedia page, but she is mentioned on List of first women lawyers and judges by nationality. More info: 1, 2, 3
Helen Bullard (US landscape architect) does not have a Wikipedia page. More info: 1, 2, 3
Jeanne Campbell (US fashion designer) does not have a Wikipedia page, but she is mention on the Coty Award page. This Jeanne Campbell is a different person athn Lady Jeanne Louise Campbell who already has a Wikipedia page. More info: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8
Margaret Swan Forbes (US athlete) does not have a Wikipedia page, but she is mention on the Texas Women’s Hall of Fame page. More information: 1, 2, 3
Eliza Monroe Hay (First Daughter and Acting First Lady) does not have a Wikipedia page. More information: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5
Blanche Huber (Maltese physician) does not have a Wikipedia page by she is mentioned on List of first female physicians by country. More info: 1, 2, 3
Mary Florence Lathrop (US journalist and attorney) does not have a Wikipedia page. More info: 1, 2, 3, 4
Perretta Petone (French physician) does not have a Wikipedia page, but she is mentioned on the page for Guillemette du Luys. More information: 1, 2, 3
Rebecca Hourwich Reyher (American writer and activist) does not have a Wikipedia page. More info: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10
Maud Sargent (US landscape architect) does not have a Wikipedia page but she is mentioned on the page for Carl Schurz Park . More info: 1, 2, 3,
Ursula Sternberg-Hertz (US/German Artist) does not have a Wikipedia page. More info: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5
Emma Wold (US attorney and activist) does not have a Wikipedia page. More info: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8
Narcissa Cox Vanderlip (US suffragette) does not have a Wikipedia page but she is mentioned on her husband’s page. More info: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7
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Megindultak beomlik
Kísérhet fejlődött harapunk ujraköltöm Tükörét leheld berken nézelődöm Kiserkedt karikában dolgáért álomhegyeim Öntözés hátravan tisztviselő fecskéim Forrókat betolongó bölcsrekókadt terítőt! Szereted! ninivé lassier asztalkendőt
Pöttyel csodálkozás bújtatja lefordul Kérnék poharával fáradt? vígaszul Tajtékzott gyomruk csecsszopók szállnia Lépcsőin csiklandós őszüle flandria Ládába búzaszemekben védekezzem csöngőt Beutazol belémkapaszkodott huber szöllőt
Lechner tájékozatlan ereszekre gyüjtöm Zengjem semmitsem dumák töhötöm Vándorol! fölcsukló gomolyog látomásaim Kármadár hozadék világitotta földjeim Barátjához dehogyisnem nyakánál perzselőt! Megmutattam fütyölő összegyűlvén szűnidőt
Megvane emlékké visszahullva felborul Gyereksereg választották! csókjaidat összezárul Csillámlik borzadó lemászik szerbia Ave! összegyűl louise garcia Körmeink feldobott rághatta cipőt! Szigoru pislogás idegesített bádogfedőt
Útitárs porainkból sais üvöltöm Térdelő érzelmeket csöngettem töltöttöm Odeon zötyögő ünnepélyességet léceim Összetartja mozdít közé! iskolakönyveim Befonták békítő ecloga vízgyüjtőt Űltem felémint fürdőd
Könyökük felkúsznak férfisorsunk tanácstalanul Meséled vonulj tekenőben csomóstul Halihó háboruk kilöki palinódia Hóhaju fúvó ágit medália Roncsát tekintetemmel villanva Elnyomta pörkölő citadinnel
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Um Himmels Willen (For Heavens Sake) - ARD - January 8, 2002 - July 25, 2017
Sitcom (247 episodes)
Running Time: 30 minutes
Stars:
Janina Hartwig as Sister Hanna Jacobi
Fritz Wepper as Mayor Wolfgang Wöller
Karin Gregorek as Sister Felicitas Meier
Emmanuela von Frankenberg as Sister Agnes Schwandt
Denise M'Baye as Sister Lela
Andrea Sihler as Sister Hildegard Hähnlein
Horst Sachtleben as Bishop Gottlieb Rossbauer
Andrea Wildner as Marianne Laban
Lars Weström as Anton Meier
Wolfgang Müller as Hermann Huber
Former main cast
Rosel Zech as Dr. Dr. Elisabeth Reuter
Gaby Dohm as Baroness Louise von Beilheim
Jutta Speidel as Sister Lotte Albers
Michael Wenninger as Doctor Martin Richter
Anna Luise Kiss as Barbara Silenius.
Hellen Zellweger as Julia Seewald
Anne Weinknecht as Sister Sophe Tiezte
Donia Ben-Jemia as Sister Gina Gallo
Nathalie Schott as Sister Ingrid Knoop
Antje Mönning as Sister Jenny Marquard
Julia Heinze as Maria Gasser
Bruni Löbel as Grandma Meier
#Um Himmels Willen#TV#ARD#2000's#Sitcom#Janina Hartwig#fritz wepper#karin gregorek#Emmanuela von Falkenberg#Denise M'Baye#andrea sihler#Horst Sachtenben#Andrea Wildner#Lars Westrom#wolfgang muller
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Charlie Chan on Broadway *** (1937, Warner Oland, Keye Luke, Joan Marsh) - Classic Movie Review 9039
Charlie Chan on Broadway *** (1937, Warner Oland, Keye Luke, Joan Marsh) – Classic Movie Review 9039
Director Eugene Forde’s 1937 mystery crime thriller Charlie Chan on Broadway stars Warner Oland as Chan, Keye Luke as Lee Chan, Joan Marsh as Joan Wendall, J Edward Bromberg as Murdock, Donald Woods as Speed Patten, Harold Huber as Inspector Nelson, Marc Lawrence as Thomas Mitchell, Joan Woodbury as Marie Collins, Douglas Fowley as Johnny Burke, Louise Henry and Leon Ames as Buzz Moran.
There is…
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To be fair… it bothers me pretty much. Also Huber’s “supports” are interesting… basically he criticizes everyone, likes to tease Bernadette BUT he’s all pretty and gentle with his Edelgard. Even if he basically had the same support with the Teacher and I saw that at some point you’re curious about Dorothea and… there was for a second time a scene that I already saw in a previous part… On this side the game loses some points,
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Louise chuckles a little: “You’re right. And speaking about meeting new people… will you sit with us this evening? So we’ll have some chance to talk. I met my children here, maybe you could meet someone else too.”
Jamke keeps walking without changing his contact with Lyn: “It’s fine at it is now, tomorrow we’ll have a lot of chances to… hold and touch our bodies as much as we want.” Few minutes after, the two reach the table and Ethlyn is the first that notices them: “Good evening Sir Jamke, do you have a guest?” The Verdanite prince nods taking another chair for Lyn: “Yeah, we met in the forest and, noticing our… common interests, I decided to invite her for a dinner with us. I hope everything is fine.” Quan, sitting down close to his wife nods: “No problem, Jamke. The more we are, more the situation is nice. Right, Sigurd?” The sacred knight needs a pair of seconds to notice the question and nods absently: “Yeah, welcome to our table…” He gives a pair of looks around: “Someone knows where is my son? Usually he’s with me but I was unable to see him after lunch.” Leif, close to his parents, answer to the question. While Finn, sitting in front of the complete Leonster family,is covering his crying face: “I lost him after our morning training. I was sure he was with you.” Sigurd turns again around: “There is no one that saw him?”
“Sure, of course.” Mark said willing to sit with them. Meanwhile Lyn was getting led to the Jugdral table and they were discussing things they knew about. Then the topic of Seliph came up and Lyn chimed in.
“The last time I saw him he was in the garden with Deirdre.” She stated. “I haven’t seen him after that.
(He’s creepy to pretty much everyone. And perhaps whoever is doing the playthrough you’re watching just messed up their editing, because there aren’t any repeat supports that I know of.)
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WHAT TO WATCH THIS WEEKEND March 29, 2019 - DUMBO, UNPLANNED, THE BEACH BUM, HOTEL MUMBAI
This is going to be another weekend where I haven’t really seen any of the wide releases except for a few that opened limited first. Next week will probably be the same as I head to Las Vegas for CinemaCon and will miss most of the bigger press screenings.
Sadly, I would have loved to have seen Tim Burton’s DUMBO (Disney) in time to review it for you, as I am generally a fan of Disney’s classic animated movies (vs. the Jeffrey Katzenberg wave from the ‘90s, most of which I still haven’t seen), as I am a fan of Tim Burton and much of the cast of this one. It includes Michael Keaton and Danny De Vito, both reuniting with Burton after Batman Returns, and Eva Green, who has appeared in a few of Burton’s recent movies… AND she once called me a “pervert.” (The story is funnier if I don’t explain why.) But the story of Dumbo is classic Disney in the sense that it reminds me of all the wonders of watching movies as a kid filled with joy and awe… as opposed to now where I always feel a sense of dread, wondering if a movie will be half as good as it hopes. Anyway, I’ll see this on Thursday night and maybe write something Friday if I’m up to it.
I’m less likely to see UNPLANNED (Pure Flix), a movie that I’m shocked even exists, let alone is being released into 1,000 theaters. This is almost like the polar opposite of the great Mike Leigh’s Vera Drake in that it’s a biopic about Abby Johnson, a Planned Parenthood clinic director who was so shaken by witnessing her first abortion (not her own) that she became an anti-abortion activist. Besides sounding like something out of Jordan Peele’s upcoming The Twilight Zone show, it’s also horrifying to think that the Pro-Life crowd is now trying to recruit the Christian Right to their cause through movies, one that received Pure Flix’s first R-rating, no less.
After premiering at SXSW, Harmony (Spring Breakers) Corine’s new movie THE BEACH BUM (NEON), starring Matthew McConaughey and a typically oddball cast including Snoop Dog, Zak Efron and Jonah Hill, will also open wide this weekend. I’ll probably try to catch this just cause I’m so curious about Corine’s oddball auteur sensibilities. Spring Breakers was actually a bit of an anomaly, and it was one of his few movies I actually liked, compared to something like Mister Lonely, which I found unwatchable despite its similarly-odd cast, which included Werner Herzog.
Then there are two movies expanding nationwide this weekend, both of which I’ve seen and enjoyed, the first of them being Anthony Maras’ directorial debut HOTEL MUMBAI (Bleecker Street), a terrific ensemble piece starring Dev Patel, Armie Hammer and Jason Isaacs – three actors I truly love – about the terrorist attacks on the luxurious Hotel Taj in 2008. I was really impressed with how Maras and his cast and crew tell this harrowing story that’s not quite on par as Peter Greengrass’ United 93 but has a similar impact as you watch it and see how these amazing people came together to prevent even more people from dying. I also should point out that the primarily Indian cast beyond Patel are also excellent, showing there’s a lot of talent coming from India that have yet to break out in a big way Stateside.
Focus will also expand Laure de Clermont-Tonnerre’s drama The Mustang into an unknown number of theaters, and I also recommend this movie if you have an opportunity to see it. It’s a wonderful movie starring Belgian actor Matthias Schoenaerts (Rust and Bone) as a convict who finds a way to fight against his anger issues and violent tendencies by training a wild horse in the prison’s program. Since I haven’t seen the other three movies above, as of this writing, I recommend seeking out Hotel Mumbai or The Mustang if they’re playing wherever you live.
LIMITED RELEASES
I was a bad boy this weekend and didn’t watch any of the screeners I was supposed to watch, so that means I’ve only seen one of the movies opening in select cities this weekend, and that was Kent Jones’ DIANE (IFC Films), which played at Tribeca last year where it won two awards. It stars Mary Kay Place as a Massachusetts woman named Diane, who puts most of her time into helping others in her big family over herself while also dealing with her son Brian’s (Jake Lacy) ongoing addiction that has him going in and out of rehab. Personally, I found it a slog when I saw it at Tribecalast year.
Opening in New York (Village East and Alamo Drafthouse, the latter a part of their Drafthouse Recommends series) and L.A. (three Laemmle theaters) is Sophie Lorain’s French coming-of-age comedy SLUT IN A GOOD WAY (Comedy Dynamics), a movie that I haven’t gotten around to watching the screener, as of this writing, but what a great title, huh? It stars Marguerite Bouchard, Romane Denis and Rose Adam as three teenage girls exploring their first taste of freedom, all three of them in love with the guy who works at “Toy Depot” – a sex shop -- where they each apply for part-time jobs.
Also opening in select cities is Alison Klayman’s documentary THE BRINK (Magnolia) which follows former Trump chief strategist Steve Bannon through the 2018 mid-term elections as the controversial Breitbart founder tries to reinvent himself by getting involved in the European Parliamentary Elections of 2019 with his “global populist movement.” I’ll be curious to see how this compares to Errol (The Fog of War) Morris’ American Dharma, which premiered during film festivals last September but (as far as I know) still hasn’t been released yet. I’m not even sure it found distribution but Bannon is not a very popular figure among American liberals (for good reason), so I can’t imagine many critics would approve of either film.
This week’s Saban Films’ offering is Sarah Daggar Nickson’s thriller A VIGILANTE, starring Olivia Wilde as an abused woman who sets a course to help victims rid themselves of their domestic abusers while also hunting down her husband, whom she needs to kill in order to truly be free. It will play in select theaters Friday after a month on DirecTV.
Downton Abbey director Michael Engler reunites with Downton writer/creator Julian Fellowes who adapted Laura Moriarty’s bestselling book The Chaperone (PBS Distribution Masterpiece Films). The amazing Haley Lu Richardson (Split) plays Louise Brooks before she became a movie sensation in the ‘20s and is just a student in Wichita, Kansas. When she is sent to New York to study with a dance troupe for the summer, her mother requires a chaperone, a role taken on by the by-the-books Norma Carlisle (Elizabeth McGovern). This witty period piece opens Friday at New York’s Landmark West 57 and Quad Cinema and then expands to L.A.’s Laemmle Royal, Playhouse 7 and Town Center 5 on April 5.
The Discovery Channel is also giving Ross (Born into Brothels) Kauffman’s new documentary Tigerlanda release in New York on Friday just a day before it premieres on the cable channel Saturday. It’s a film about a group of Russians trying to protect the last Siberian tigers from extinction, and it’s produced by Fisher Stevens of the Oscar-winning The Cove.
Cocaine Cowboys director Billy Corben returns with the doc Screwball (Greenwich), another film set in Miami, this one that looks into Major League Baseball’s doping scandal and how it affected New York Yankee’s Alex Rodriguez. It opens in select cities following its debut at TIFF last year.
The makers of The ABCs of Evil, Tim League and Ant Simpson, return with The Field Guide to Evil, a horror anthology featuring short films by eight (actually nine) foreign horror filmmakers telling folktales about myth and lore, including Peter Strickland (Berberian Sound Studio), Can Evrenol (Baskin), Severin Fiala and Veronika Franz (Goodnight Mommy) and Agnieszka Smoczynska (The Lure). I missed this movie at Fantasia last year (‘cause I didn’t go) but it will be opening in most Alamo theaters (about 40 nationwide) on Friday.
This week’s Bollywood release, opening in about 100 theaters nationwide, is Thiagarajan Kumararaja’s thriller Super Deluxe (Prime Media), the second film from the director who won the Indira Gandhi Award for Best Debut Film at the 59thNational Film Awards in India. It’s a film about how fate messes with the life of a group of people, as fate is wont to do.
Renowned indie distributor Jeff Lipsky’s seventh feature as a director, The Last (Plainview Pictures), will open in New York at the Angelika and CMX New York on Friday, then will expand to other cities including L.A. on April 26. It involves a large Jewish family of four generations learning that their 92-year-old matriarch, a Holocaust survivor (Rebecca Schull) has a secret that shocks the entire family.
Opening in L.A. at the Laemmle Music Hall is the Holocaust drama Sobibor (Samuel Goldwyn Films) from reputed Russian actor/director Konstantin Khabenskiy (he appeared in Timur Bekmambetov’s Wanted and Nightwatch), playing Soviet prisoner Alexander Perchersky, who led a rebellion at the Nazi’s Polish death camp Sobibor in 1943 in order to escape, freeing hundreds of Jews.
As a counterpoint to Unplanned, there’s Josh Huber’s romantic comedy Making Babies (Huber Brothers) about a couple played by Eliza Couple and Steve Howey who spent five years trying to have kids, so they start exploring other medical and spiritual ways to conceive a child. The movie also stars Ed Begley Jr. and the late Glenne Headly and will open in select cities.
STREAMING AND CABLE
Besides playing at the Egyptian in L.A. (see above), John Lee Hancock’s THE HIGHWAYMEN will be available on the Netflix streaming service after playing in select theaters for a couple weeks. I finally caught it last week, and really enjoyed it. It stars Kevin Costner and Woody Harrelson as former Texas rangers Frank Hamer and Maney Gault, recruited by the Governor of Texas (Kathy Bates) to hunt down and kill Bonnie and Clyde, whose crime and killing spree has gotten out of hand. Hamer and Gault travel across stateliness trying to find them, following the different clues left behind. This is definitely my kind of movie, not just due to the subject matter, but also seeing such great actors as Costner (possibly the last of the bonafide movie stars?) and Harrelson taking on such great roles to show a different side of the story than the one mostly known from the Warren Beatty movie. I really enjoyed both actors’ performances and the general tone of the film, although I do feel that it was a little too long and drawn-out and not in a good way ala David Fincher’s Zodiac. But it does pay off, and it’s a shame that more people won’t be able to see this on the big screen because the film looks great due to the cinematography by John Schwartzman. I’ll also give a shout-out to my pal Johnny McPhail who plays the farmer who witnesses one of Bonnie and Clyde’s brutal murders. Rating: 7.5/10
Also, Friday sees the return of Santa Clarita Diet for its third season, again with Drew Barrymore and Timothy Olyphant.
LOCAL FESTIVALS OF NOTE
The big festival starting in New York this week is the Film Society of Lincoln Center’s annual New Directors/New Films, which always has interesting stuff although it’s definitely getting more indie and esoteric in recent years. It kicks off tonight with Chinonye Chukwu’s prison-set drama Clemency, starring Alfre Woodard and Aldis Hodge, which recently won the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance. The festival’s Centerpiece Is Alejandro Landes’s Monos, another Sundance prize-winner, starring the wondrous Julianne Nicholson as an engineer who travels to the South American jungle and is taken captive by teenage guerillas. The Closing Night film on April 6 is Pippa Bianco’s Share– ALSO a Sundance prize-winner! – which deals with sexual assault and the role of the internet, something which seems very relevant and pertinent. There’s a lot of interesting foreign films and a good amount from women filmmakers in this year’s line-up, which you can read more about here.
REPERTORY
METROGRAPH (NYC):
This weekend, the Metrograph begins its Total Kaurismäki Show, as in Finish filmmaker Aki Kaurismäki, who has been making festival-winning films for almost 40 years and has YET to have a film nominated for an Oscar. This Friday, the series begins with some of the director’s lesser-seen ‘80s movies Hamlet Goes Business (1987),Calamari Union (1985) and Crime and Punishment (1983), as well as Shadows in Paradise (1986), Ariel (1988) and then the 1990 film The Match Factory on Saturday. This week’s Late Nites at Metrograph offering is Ridley Scott’s Blade Runner: The Final Cut (1982/2007) and Playtime: Family Matinees (which has become my idea of comfort food in terms of cinema) is showing Abbot and Costello Meet Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1953). Sadly, I’ll be out of town on Tuesday when the Metrograph is presenting Claire Denis’ The Intruder (2004) with a QnA by Ms. Denis who will also introduce No Fear, No Die (1990) right afterwards. (If you also can’t make this night then never fear as BAM is beginning a full-on Denis retrospective, which you can read more about below.)
THE NEW BEVERLY (L.A.):
Tarantino’s reopened rep theater continues to kill it with a single screening of Mike Nichols’ 1966 film Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, starring Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton, on Weds. afternoon. This week’s double features are John Boorman’sPoint Blank (1967) and The Outfit (1973) on Weds. and Thurs., Fellini’sLa Strada (1954) – one of my personal faves – and Il Bidone (1955) on Friday and Saturday, then the ‘30s musicals Dames and Footlight Paradeon Sunday and Monday. The weekend’s one-offs are midnight screenings of Kill Bill Volume 1on Friday and the comedy anthology Amazon Women on the Moon (1987) on Saturday. The weekend’s KIDDEE MATINEE is The Black Stallion (1979) and there will be a special 20thanniversary screening of the Wachowski’s The Matrixon Monday. Tuesday night’s GRINDHOUSE double feature is two directed by Roger Corman -- The Trip (1967) and The Wild Angels (1966).
FILM FORUM (NYC):
Bob & Wray: A Love Story continues with a double feature of Virtue (1932) and Viva Villa (1934) on Weds., a reshowing of Frank Capra’s Lost Horizon (1937) on Thursday as well as a Fay Wray double feature of Once to Every woman (1934) and They Met in a Taxi (1936). Friday sees a reshowing of the double feature of The Mystery of the Wax Museum and The Vampire Bat, both from 1933, and a double feature of Lee Tracy movies, Doctor X (1932) and Carnival (1935). On Saturday, there’s a special screening of the early Fay Wray film The Wild Horse Stampede with piano accompaniment, plus a double feature of John Ford’s The Whole Town’s Talking (1935) and Frank Capra’s You Can’t Take It With You (1938), both written by Robert Riskin. This weekend’s Film Forum Jr. is the Disney animated classic Bambi (1942).
EGYPTIAN THEATRE (LA):
Besides a Weds. double feature of John Lee Hancock’s new movie The Highwaymen with his 2002 baseball film The Rookie starring Dennis Quaid, the Egyptian begins Noir City: Hollywood – The 21stAnnual Los Angeles Festival of Noir, running all weekend. It begins Friday with the double feature of Trapped (1949) and The File of Thelma Jordon (1950), continues Saturday with Appointment with Danger (1951) and Shdow on the Wall (1950), Sunday is Sudden Fear and The Narrow Margin, followed on Monday by City That Never Sleeps and 99 River Street from 1953 and on Tuesday with Playgirl and Hell’s Devil Acre, both from 1954. (This series will continue next week as well.)
BAM CINEMATEK (NYC):
On Saturday night, BAM will start a new series called “Beyond the Canon” (pairing a classic with a more recent film which it inspired) with a double feature of Anna Rose Holmer’s The Fits (2015) and Peter Weir’s Picnic at Hanging Rock (1975). At the same time, BAM is kicking off Strange Desire: The Films of Claire Denis, which will run until April 9 and will show some of the French filmmaker’s best films, including Beau Travail (1999), White Material (2009), 35 Shots of Rum and more recent films like her upcoming English language debut High Life, starring Robert Pattinson.
MUSEUM OF THE MOVING IMAGE (NYC):
On Thursday, MOMI is having a special presentation of Alexandre Rockwell’s 1992 film In the Soup, starring Steve Buscemi, Stanley Tucci, Seymour Cassel, Jennifer Beals, Carol Kane and Jim Jarmusch as part of the 9thAnnual Queens World Film Festival with Rockwell in discussion with former director (and QWFF Spirit of Queens honoree) David Schwartz. To prepare for Mike Leigh’s fantastic new film Peterloo, MOMI is also presenting Past Presence: Mike Leigh’s Period Films, showing the master’s earlier films Topsy Turvy (1999), Mr. Turner (2014) and Vera Drake (2004). It will include a preview screening of Peterloonext Wednesday with Mike Leigh in person!
IFC CENTER (NYC)
I guess Weekend Classics: Early Godard is continuing this week after all with a 35mm print of Weekend (1967) while the winter season of Late Night Favorites ends with Alejandro Jodorowsky’s The Holy Mountain (1973) as well as David Lynch’s Mulholland Drive (2001).
MOMA (NYC):
Modern Matinees: B is for Bacall continues with Douglas Sirk’s 1956 film Written on the Wind on Weds, Vincente Minelli’s Designing Woman (1957) Thursday and Young Man with a Horn (1950) on Friday.
LANDMARK THEATRES NUART (LA):
This week’s Friday midnight offering is Mandy director Panos Costamos’ 2010 debut Beyond the Black Rainbow.
Next week, it’s a doozy of an April opener with Warner Bros’ Shazam! taking on Paramount’s Pet Sematary and the STX drama The Best of Enemies trying to pick up any remaining scraps of business. I’ve only seen one of them.
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Day 5, May 11: Happy birthday, dad! How does it feel to be *cough*ty one years old? :)
Today, Daniel, the students, and I got to see one of my most favorite places - Schloss Ludwigsburg! Ludwigsburg Palace was built as a hunting lodge and getaway (read: place to spend time with his mistress) for one of the Dukes of Württemberg in the early 18th century. It has been well-preserved and looks now very much like it would have when it was in regular use in the 1700-1800s.
We took public transportation to Ludwigsburg and had a 2.25 hour tour of the palace. I’ve gotten to tour this palace four times now, and this one (with British expat tour guide Louise) was almost certainly the best time. She was wonderful! I also got to ring the bell that the queen used to summon her Page to bring her hot chocolate. Pretty neat, I know. Daniel particularly liked the gardens - they were his favorite thing. He also loved the "Märchengarten" (fairytale garden) and insisted on posing with the donkey sculpture. He has good taste.
After the tour, we walked into the city center with Laura and Camille, then we sent the students off to have lunch, see the sights, and experience the culture. @liketheoceannotthetree @drscottclemson and I quickly found the city market in the city’s market plaza. It was a typical market day (flowers, fruit, vegetables, cheese, fish), and we found a vendor who happened to be selling…. wait for it…. horse sausage sandwiches. Unfortunately, we got there at the end of the market time and they were out of bread. No horse hoagies for us. Next time!
Instead of a pony panini, we went and found a Döner shop where Trav and I got “Lahmacun” (Turkish pizza), and Sarah had some falafel. It was super yummy! Also, super inexpensive. Which I think is the very best kind of lunch… right @smpyle? Daniel loved the Lahmacun - he couldn’t get enough.
After lunch, we walked down to the mall so that we could have a bit of gelato (because obviously), and so that Sarah could get her phone fixed. She’s had no end of problems getting her phone activated since we arrived. We went to Vodafone, but they were not particularly helpful. Hopefully it’s all cleared up soon.
While we were finding Vodafone, Trav went to find the prison museum in Ludwigsburg. Because he’s super creepy and likes bizarre things. He has a video post about it, you can find it in his feed. By the time we left the mall we had about an hour til we needed to meet up with the group, so rather than join Trav at the (we assumed) depressing museum of depressingness, we went back over to the palace to walk the grounds and see the amazing (and elaborately cultivated) gardens. A few of the students had gone to do the same thing - it was a perfect day for it. After this post I’ll be uploading a video from the gardens - you can see the gardens, the big fountain, and the rear portion of the palace.
At this point it was time to head back, so we hoofed it up to the city center and met up with everyone just in time to walk over and catch the bus.
Tonight’s mission is to knock out some work and be ready for the trip out to visit the Hubers tomorrow! (Note: if anyone who doesn’t already know happens to read this post, the Hubers live in Haubersbronn, a tiny village that’s part of Schorndorf, which is a small city 20 km or so outside of Stuttgart. They were my host family during my GAPP study abroad program in high school. I get to spend the weekend with them. I’m super excited.)
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President Trump nominates Neil Gorsuch for Supreme Court
Washington (CNN)President Donald Trump will nominate Judge Neil Gorsuch to the Supreme Court, Trump announced Tuesday night at the White House.
The nomination of Gorsuch, a 49-year-old federal appellate judge from Colorado, gives Trump and Republicans the opportunity to confirm someone who could cement the conservative direction of the court for decades.
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His selection also sets up an intense fight with Senate Democrats, still angry over the Republicans' decision to essentially ignore former President Barack Obama's nomination of Judge Merrick Garland for the empty Supreme Court seat last year.
Introducing Gorsuch, Trump said he had committed as a candidate to "find the very best judge in the country for the Supreme Court."
"Millions of voters said this was the single most important issue for them when they voted for me for president," Trump said. "I am a man of my word."
"Today I am keeping another promise to the American people by nominating Neil Gorsuch to the Supreme Court."
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Democrats have said they would fight the new nominee "tooth and nail" putting not only his or her credentials to the test, but holding Republicans responsible for what liberals say is a "stolen seat."
After Trump's unexpected win, conservatives rejoiced, expecting the new president to nominate someone to the bench in the mold of Scalia. They also hope that with three justices on the Supreme Court in their late 70s and early 80s, Trump might have at least one more vacancy to fill.
If, for example, Justice Anthony Kennedy were to step down, the conservatives might be able to chip away at Roe v. Wade, the landmark opinion that legalized abortion.
Mother was EPA administrator
Gorsuch's confirmation would mean a return to Washington.
He spent part of his youth in Washington when his mother, Anne Gorsuch Burford, served in the Reagan administration as administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency.
She resigned in 1983 under controversy after refusing to turn over toxic waste records to Congress.
He served as a partner at a prestigious Washington Law firm, Kellogg, Huber as well as Principal Deputy Associate Attorney General.
Gorsuch and his wife Louise have two daughters. They live in Boulder, Colorado.
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