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#Charles G McGraw
profmorbius · 4 months
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Posted a review of Star Trek: Voyager #7: Ghost of a Chance by Mark A. Garland and Charles G. McGraw on my blog. Read it here.
tl;dr – Decent
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jujasecijava · 2 years
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  MANAGERIAL ACCOUNTING 4TH EDITION PDF >> DOWNLOAD
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<br> </p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>(PDF version) - Management Accounting 4th Edition by Leslie G. Eldenburg Description Type: E-Textbook This is a digital products PDF NO ONLINE ACCESS(eBook pdf) Management Accounting 4th Edition by Leslie G. Eldenburg Description Type: E-Textbook This is a digital products (PDF/Epub) NO ONLINE ACCESS
Citation preview. Ebook for Managerial Accounting 4th Edition By Stacey Whitecotton and Robert Libby and Fred Phillips ISBN10: 1259964957 ISBN13: 9781259964954
eBook details Author: Stacey Whitecotton, Robert Libby, Fred Philips File Size: 52 MB Format: PDF Length: 672 pages Publisher: McGraw-Hill; 4th edition
Apr 12, 2022 - Managerial Accounting 4th Edition by Charles E. Davis Description Type: E-Textbook This is a digital products (PDF/Epub) NO ONLINE ACCESS
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sidewalkstamps · 2 years
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Withers & Crites Contractors (Photo taken by Hannah Scherner on Figueroa Terrace in April of 2022).
Withers & Crites were located in the Wilcox Building on the southeast corner of Spring St. and Second St. in downtown Los Angeles. This picture shows the building in 1905 - it was completed in 1896. The building is kinda still there but it’s ugly. After the 1971 Sylmar earthquake, all but the ground floor was demolished.
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In 1907, the residents of Bunker Hill were outraged! It’s unclear if they blamed Withers & Crites or just the city government, and I feel like maybe I agree with the residents about their general complaint that their clay was removed and replaced with dirt which will make their streets less stable maybe? But then there is a complaint about Withers & Crites doing this instead of a chain gang and that’s where they lose me (“Make Bricks of Street Surface,” Los Angeles Herald, Volume 34, Number 202, April 21, 1907).
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As per usual, Withers & Crites were sometimes low bidders (such as “for improving Holmes Ave. between Fifty-first and Fifty-sixth” and Stephenson Avenue between Alameda & 3rd) and sometimes they were outbid (such as for “improving Third from Figueroa to Boylston St.” and “Fifty-first St. from Long Beach Ave. to the east line of Furlong Home tract”) [pg. 22, “Southwest Engineering News: Streets and Roads,” Southwest Contractor and Manufacturer, Volume 5, 1910].
It’s been a while since I’ve had a contractor that you can find mentioned in Charles Fleming’s Secret Stairs: A Walking Guide to the Historic Staircases of Los Angeles (Santa Monica Press, 2010), but Withers & Crites are mentioned as part of Walk #15: Avalon-Baxter Loop. Fleming describes a staircase from Valentine Street to West Curran Street in Echo Park that “is one of the city’s best maintained staircases ... with delightful cottages on both sides” and adds “the contractor’s stamp reads ‘Withers and Crites,’ and the inspector’s stamp reads ‘G. Cake’--all of which sound like inventions of the Marx Brothers of the Three Stooges.”
They also did work in other California cities, like Santa Ana (”Contract awarded Withers & Crites... for 9 miles, Sec. 1, Anaheim-Olive, Chapman avenue and Olinda road by Orange County Commissioners.”) [Contractor, Volume 18, McGraw Publishing Company, 1913]. I also found this listing that says their work was to be in San Francisco, but the content of it is obviously in Santa Ana again (Municipal Journal and Public Works, Volume 35; Municipal Journal and Engineer, Incorporated; 1913).
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oldschoolfrp · 2 years
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“Wraith’s Wrath,” “Death from the Swamp,” “Death from the Marsh” -- Larry Elmore has given this 1993 painting several different titles.  It appeared on the cover of the 1994 novel “Demon Blade” by Mark A Garland and Charles G McGraw, and was card #22 “Demon Blade” in the Elmore Colossal Cards set.
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missfilmnoir · 5 years
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It’s Noirvember!
Gifs from: In a Lonely Place Double Indemnity Sunset Boulevard The Narrow Margin 99 River Street
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todaysdocument · 2 years
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Treaty Between the United States and the Sauk and Fox Indians of the Mississippi Signed at Washington, DC (p. 1 and signature page), 2/18/1867
File Unit: Ratified Indian Treaty 359: Sauk and Fox of the Mississippi - Washington, DC, February 18, 1867, 1789 - 1869
Series: Indian Treaties, 1789 - 1869
Record Group 11: General Records of the United States Government, 1778 - 2006
Transcription:
[Ribbon present to bind the document together]
[C and 13c written in pencil in the upper right hand corner]
[6W P[illegible word] written in the left hand margin of the text]
Articles of Agreement, made and
concluded this Eighteenth day of February
one thousand eight hundred and
sixty-seven, between the United States,
represented by Lewis V. Bogy, Commission-
er [Commissioner] of Indian Affairs, William H. Watson
Special Commissioner, Thomas Murphy, Sup-
erintendent [Superintendent] of Indian Affairs for Kansas,
and Henry W. Martin, U.S. Indian
Agent, duly authorized and the Tribes
of Sacs and Foxes of the Mississippi,
represented by Keokuk, Che-kus-kuk,
He-quaw-ho-ko, Mut-tut-tah, and Man-ah-to-wah [line break]
Chief of said Tribe
Article I. [underlined in red]  The Sacs and Foxes of the Mississippi
cede to the Government of the United States,
all the lands with the improvements
thereon contained in their unsold portion
of their diminished reserve defined in
the first article of their Treaty, ratified
July 9. 1860 (the said tract containing
about 86,400 acres, and being more par-
ticularly [particularly] described by the survey and
plate on fill in the Department of the
Interior) except as reserved in previous
treaties, or in this treaty.
[#359 written in pencil in the lower right hand corner]
[page 2]
['20C' written in pencil in the upper right hank corner]
set their hands and seals the
day and year first above men-
toned [mentioned].
In the presence of
Antoine his x mark Gokey                   Lewis V. Bogy. [Paper Mark]
U.S. Interpreter                                            Commissioner of Indian Affairs
Charles E. Mix.                                          W. H. Watson
Thos. E. McGraw                                              Special Commissioner [Paper Mark]
Wm. Whistler                                            Thos Murphy [Paper Mark]
C.N. Norris                                              Superintendent of Indian Affairs [Paper Mark]
Vital Perrot
G. P. Beauvais                                       Henry W Martin [Paper Mark]
H.W. Farnsworth                                           U.S. Indian Agent [Paper Mark]
                                                                    Keo Kuk his x mark [Paper Mark]
                                                                   Che Kus Kuk his x mark [Paper Mark]
                                                                   He-quaw-ho-ko his x mark [Paper Mark]
                                                                   Mut-tut-tah his x mark [Paper Mark]
                                                                  Mau-ah-to-wah his x mark [Paper Mark]
['Over' written in pencil in middle of the document page -at the bottom edge]
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holly-poly · 2 years
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Initial Pinch Hits
There are five initial pinch hits this year, and all of them have been sent out. Please see below for general details. More specific information can be found by clicking the links.
Pinch Hit #1 - https://groups.google.com/u/5/g/holly-poly-pinchhits/c/eZdLlc6pAiE Acts of Caine - Matthew Stover Caine/Ma'elkoth/Pallas Ril Fanart, Fanfiction American Assassin (2017) Annika/Mitch Rapp/Victor Fanart, Fanfiction, Fanvid Dracula - Bram Stoker (Novel 1897) Jonathan Harker/Mina Harker/Lucy Westenra (Stoker) Fanart, Fanfiction The Dresden Files - Jim Butcher Molly Carpenter/Thomas Raith/Justine, Harry Dresden/Karrin Murphy/Susan Rodriguez Fanart, Fanfiction The Hexslinger Series - Gemma Files Yancey Kloves/Ed Morrow/Chess Pargeter Fanart, Fanfiction Killer7 Coyote Smith/Dan Smith/Garcian Smith/Kaede Smith/Kevin Smith/MASK de Smith Fanart, Fanfiction Showdown in Little Tokyo (1991) Chris Kenner/Johnny Murata/Minako Okeya Fanart, Fanfiction Victor the Assassin - Tom Wood Janice Muir/Raven/Victor Fanfiction Pinch Hit #2 - https://groups.google.com/u/5/g/holly-poly-pinchhits/c/tgI2GAvM2cM Black Sails   Captain Flint | James McGraw/Thomas Hamilton/John Silver (Black Sails), Captain Flint | James McGraw/Thomas Hamilton/Charles Vane (Black Sails), Captain Flint | James McGraw/Thomas Hamilton/Madi/John Silver (Black Sails) Fanfiction Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969)   Harry Longabaugh | Sundance Kid/Robert Parker | Butch Cassidy/Etta Place (BCatSK 1969) Fanfiction Marvel Cinematic Universe   James "Bucky" Barnes/Steve Rogers/Sam Wilson (MCU) Fanfiction Pirates of the Caribbean (Movies)   Jack Sparrow/Elizabeth Swann/Will Turner Fanfiction Pinch Hit #3 - https://groups.google.com/u/5/g/holly-poly-pinchhits/c/x8kretpK5rA Cosmic Era Gundam   Dearka Elsman/Shiho Hahnenfuss/Yzak Joule, Cagalli Yula Athha/Canard Pars/Kira Yamato (CE Gundam) Fanfiction The de Burghs - Deborah Simmons   Nicholas de Burgh/Emery Montbard/Gerard Montbard Fanfiction Emperors SaGa   Cat/Emerald/Rocbouquet/Silver Emperor Fanfiction Fire Emblem Heroes   Ares/Felix Hugo Fraldarius/Sylvain Jose Gautier (FEH) Fanfiction King of Bones - Erin A. Bisson (Novel)   Vitry Girar/Ghostmoon Keshan/Miri Harfeshi Fanfiction Romancing SaGa Re;univerSe (Video Game)   Noel/Rocbouquet/Wagnas Fanfiction Pinch Hit #4 - https://groups.google.com/u/5/g/holly-poly-pinchhits/c/_4FNq0AvRO4 Castlevania (Cartoon)   Alucard | Adrian Tepes | Arikado Genya/Trevor Belmont/Sypha Belnades, Alucard | Adrian Tepes | Arikado Genya/Trevor Belmont/Sypha Belnades/Greta Fanfiction The Eagle of the Ninth - Rosemary Sutcliff   Marcus Flavius Aquila/Cottia/Esca Mac Cunoval Fanfiction Hades (Video Game 2018)   Hades/Nyx/Persephone (Hades Video Game) Fanfiction The Locked Tomb Series | Gideon the Ninth Series - Tamsyn Muir   John Gaius/OG Lyctors, Augustine the First/John Gaius | Necrolord Prime/Mercymorn the First Fanfiction Pinch Hit #5 - https://groups.google.com/u/5/g/holly-poly-pinchhits/c/SenxRafzHwc The Elementalists (Visual Novel)   Aster D'Yew/Female Main Character (The Elementalists)/Shreya Mistry Fanfiction, Podfic Ever After Academy (Visual Novel)   Nora Le Fay/Lavinia Le Guin/Female Main Character (Ever After Academy) Fanfiction, Podfic Havenfall is for Lovers (Visual Novel)   Mackenzie Hunt/Main Character/Annabelle Sheppard (Havenfall is for Lovers) Fanfiction, Podfic Havenfall is for Lovers (Visual Novel)   Vanessa Helsing/Mackenzie Hunt/Main Character (Havenfall is for Lovers) Fanfiction, Podfic Love & Legends (Visual Novel)   Altea Bellrose/Solaire Lightwing/Main Character (Love & Legends) Fanfiction, Podfic Love & Legends (Visual Novel)   Iraia Idreis/Altea Bellerose/Main Character (Love & Legends) Fanfiction, Podfic If you're interested in claiming any of these pinch hits, send an e-mail to [email protected] with your AO3 name or send a private message here on Tumblr.
Collection: https://ao3.org/collections/holly_poly_2021 Tag Set: https://archiveofourown.org/tag_sets/7906 Tumblr: https://holly-poly.tumblr.com/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/holly_poly_ex
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russianwave · 4 years
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Learning Russian Textbook Masterlist
Just a note that I have obviously not read all of these textbooks, so I can’t recommend particular ones off of this list and some you may find unsuitable. This is just a free list of textbooks that deal with learning Russian. Check the book descriptions as some have links to audio files.
I have put these under a read more so that the long list doesn’t annoy people. Just click to see through to the full list. It is assorted by year of publication. This range covers from absolute beginners right through to advanced/fluent learners of Russian. 
A new, practical, and easy method of learning the Russian language [1867] 
A Graduated Russian Reader (1891)
Hossfield's new practical method for learning the Russian language [1908]
Key to Hossfeld's new practical method for learning the Russian language
Russian Roots and Compounds (1911)
First Russian Book by Nevill Forbes [1915]
Russian Grammar by Nevill Forbes [1916]
Second Russian book; a practical manual of Russian verbs by Nevill Forbes [1916]
A First Russian Reader from Tolstoy (1917)
Russian grammar for class and reference use; a progressive method of learning Russian [1919]
Russian conversation-grammar (1922)
New English Russian And Russian English Dictionary (1930)
Anna H.Semeonoff - A First Russian Reader - Е. Р. Dutton & Сo. (1936)
Russian by V.N.Wagner (1938)
Teach Yourself Russian (1943)
Colloquial Russian (1944)
Exercises in Russian Syntax with Explanatory Notes (1945)
Elementary Russian Reader (1947)
Lila Pargment - Modern Russian reader for intermediate classes - Pitman (1953)
N.F.Potapova - Russian Elementary Course. Book II -Foreign Language Publishing House (1955)
Lila Pargment - Beginner’s Russian reader - Pitman (1957)
George Z. Patrick - Elementary Russian Reader - Pitman (1959)
Learning Russian [1960]
N.F.Potapova - Russian Elementary Course. Book I - К.Р.Schick (1960)
Dennis Ward - Keep up your Russian, an easy anthology with grammar commentary - BBC (1963)
Clayton L. Dawson, Assya Humesky - Modern Russian I - Harcourt, Barce & World (1964)
Clayton L. Dawson, Assya Humesky - Modern Russian II - Harcourt, Barce & World (1965)
Charles E. Townsend - Russian Word-Formation - McGraw-Hill (1968)
Charles E. Gribble - Russian Root List - Slavica PuЫishers (1981)
DTIC ADA117717: Text and Workbook in Advanced Russian Grammar and Syntax (1982)
S Khavronina - Russian As We Speak It - Progress Publishers (1989)
Colloquial Russian The Complete Course For Beginners [1993]
Ann Rolbin - First reader in Russian. Everyday life experiences of young Russian people - National Textbook Company (1996)
The new Penguin Russian course by Nicolas g brown [1999] (this is one I am actually using right now and highly recommend)
И.К.Гапочка - Я читаю по-русски. I read Russian - Русский язык (1999)
Colloquial Russian 2 [2000]
Joseph Mozur - An Advanced Russian Tabloid Reader - Slavica (2000)
Intermediate Russian: A Grammar and Workbook [2001]
Living Russian - Intermediate Grammar [2009]
Terence Wade - Using Russian. Vocabulary - Cambridge (2009)
E.Andrews - Russian Verbal Prefixes A Practical Grammar - Русский язык (2009)
Terence Wade - A Comprehensive Russian Grammar. Book - Wiley-Blackwell (2011)
Russian Verbs of Motion [2013]
Archive.org also has a zip folder of 99 or so books (with the ability to view the pdfs individually online too). Not listing all the book names, some of them are repeats of above and others are for learning Russian from a language other than English. It is possible to download the books individually but it’ll only let me post a link to the folder as a whole; https://archive.org/details/RussianLanguage/mode/2up
Here’s also a link to over 60,000 books of varying difficulty that are written in Russian with the intention being for something other than learning Russian (e.g. a history book written in Russian) : https://archive.org/details/booksbylanguage_russian
Here is also a collection of 4,000+ magazines written in Russian: https://archive.org/details/magazines_russian
If you have an issue with any of the links, then please send me a message and I’ll sort it out. If you have any recommendations let me know and I’ll add it in!
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kwebtv · 3 years
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Character Actor
Horacio Paul Picerni (December 1, 1922 – January 12, 2011) Actor in film and television, perhaps best known today in the role of Federal Agent Lee Hobson, second-in-command to Robert Stack's Eliot Ness, in the ABC hit television series, The Untouchables.
After Italian organizations began to complain about the use of Italian gangsters on ABC's, The Untouchables, starring Robert Stack as G-man Eliot Ness, Picerni joined the cast in 1960 as Ness's number-one aide, Lee Hobson, a role that he played for the duration of the series. (He was also seen in the program's pilot, playing Tony Liguri.) He also portrayed Ed Miller on O'Hara, U.S. Treasury (1971-1972) and was featured as Dan Garrett on The Young Marrieds (1964–66)
In 1954, Picerni was cast as the outlaw Rube Burrow in the syndicated western television series Stories of the Century, starring and narrated by Jim Davis. That same year, he had a role in the pilot episode for the 1957-58 NBC detective series, Meet McGraw.
Picerni appeared in two episodes, "Gun Hand" and "Badge to Kill" of the syndicated western series 26 Men (1957–59). He also appeared in the episode "Gypsy Boy" of Tales of the Texas Rangers. In 1957, he played a deserter in an episode of the syndicated Boots and Saddles.
Between 1957-60, Picerni was cast three times in different roles, the last as Duke Blaine, on the ABC/Warner Brothers western series, Colt .45, starring Wayde Preston.
In 1958, Picerni played a milkman on the ABC sitcom, The Donna Reed Show. He also portrayed a police detective in the episode "The Quemoy Story" of Behind Closed Doors.
Picerni made three guest appearances on Perry Mason during its nine-year run on CBS. In 1958 he played Charles Gallagher in "The Case of the One-Eyed Witness", and defendant Army Sgt. Joseph Dexter in "The Case of the Sardonic Sergeant". In 1963, he played murderer Walter Jefferies in "The Case of the Bouncing Boomerang". In 1964, he appeared in The Fugitive, in the episode "Search in a Windy City".
In 1967, Paul appeared with his daughter Gina Picerni in the episode "The Chameleon" of  My Three Sons.  (Wikipedia)
IMDb Listing
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allwaswell16 · 5 years
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{Recently Read Larry Fics}
August 2019
These are all fics I read and enjoyed in August. You can find my other fic recs here! There are 13 recs here in all and are in order by word count. Please let the writers know if you liked them by leaving kudos and comments! Happy reading!
~~~*~~~
Fanfictional Podcast: You can listen to my new podcast here and listen to me talk about the fics from this rec list! A link to a post for the podcast can be found here.
~~*~~
💛 Tired, Tired Sea, @mediawhorefics​ (M, 113k, famous/not famous au, popstar Harry, B&B owner Louis, Scotland, recovering addict Harry, isolation, loneliness, hurt/comfort, pining, slow burn, go into this fic ready to sink into it slowly and let it wash over you, it’s soft and beautiful and romantic)
💛 some things fade (some never do), @so-why-let-your-voice-be-tamed (T, 25k, magic au, fantasy, magical tattoos, exes to lovers, getting back together, pining, angst with a happy ending, long distance relationship, tattoo removal, such an amazing concept and hurt so good)
💛 The Aurora Zone, @mizzhydes​ (E, 19k, hate to love au, Larry Abroad: Hotel Kakslauttanen, Finland, accidental roommates, bed sharing, Northern Lights, smut, the setting was definitely an important part of this fic which I really enjoyed!)
💛 Everywhere and Nowhere, @2tiedships2​ (M, 16k, a/b/o, alpha Harry, omega Louis, secret admirer au, courting, scenting, pining, heat, this fic was so wonderful and I loved the interesting take on courting as well as the friendships)
💛 No Bunny But You, @crinkle-eyed-boo (E, 13k, strangers to lovers, bartender Harry, artist Louis, punk Louis, flirting, humor, semi-public sex, d/s undertones, hilarious and hot!)
💛 You Tilted My Hand, @taggiecb​ (G, 12k, Larry Abroad: Canada, Anne of Green Gables inspired, hate to love, artist/photographer Harry, writer Louis, newspapers, co-workers, small town, Avonlea, Prince Edward Island, miscommunication, insecurity, this fic captures the charm of the original and is so lovely)
💛 Like a Walk in the Park, @helloamhere​ (T, 11k, friends to lovers au, San Francisco, pining, video game designer Louis, disaster gay Louis, mild injury, humor, this was so funny and had great pining)
💛 The Charles Compass Trilogy, @sadaveniren (E, 8k, famous/not famous, famous Louis, writer Louis, handyman Harry, beach house, fluff, humor, smut, loved oblivious Louis!)
💛 beat the darkness, @turnyourankle​ (T, 7k, Larry Abroad: Egypt, a/b/o, alpha Louis, omega Harry, soldier Louis, nurse Harry, historical au, WWI, lovely with such an interesting mood set for this, loved the ending and hoping for more of this in a possible sequel!)
💛 Flatpack Nation, @londonfoginacup​ (G, 5k, Larry Abroad: IKEA, fantasy au, Ireland, fae, curses, fae magic, an amazingly built world and story, absolutely delightful)
💛 The Cowboy In Us All, @taggiecb​ (G, 3k, famous/famous au, country singer Louis, country singer Harry, based on two Tim McGraw & Faith Hill songs, break up, hurt/comfort, angst with a happy ending, beautifully heart wrenching) 
💛 Moon Dances Over, @londonfoginacup (G, 2k, merpeople, a/b/o, omega Louis, alpha Harry, Wordplay prompt: zebra, mating ceremony, a lovely fic with an amazing world built in so few words, amazing)
💛 I’m Not Finished (’Cause You’re Not By My Side), @stylesbandshirts (G, 1k, New Year’s Eve, friends to lovers, kissing, fluff, loved the little twist!)
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ao3feed-silverflint · 4 years
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Crack Sails
read it on the AO3 at https://ift.tt/38SMIgG
by WTF_Black_Sails_Love_Without_Shame_2020
Words: 0, Chapters: 1/1, Language: Русский
Series: Part 9 of Визуал G - PG-13
Fandoms: Black Sails
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Categories: Multi
Characters: John Silver, Captain Flint | James McGraw, Eleanor Guthrie, Charles Vane, Billy Bones, Randall (Black Sails), Blackbeard | Edward Teach, "Calico" Jack Rackham, Ben Gunn, Thomas Hamilton, Dufresne (Black Sails)
Relationships: Captain Flint | James McGraw/Thomas Hamilton, Eleanor Guthrie/Charles Vane, Blackbeard | Edward Teach/Charles Vane, Billy Bones/Ben Gunn, Billy Bones/Captain Flint | James McGraw, Captain Flint | James McGraw/Eleanor Guthrie, Captain Flint | James McGraw/John Silver, Miranda Barlow/Captain Flint | James McGraw
Additional Tags: Fanvids
read it on the AO3 at https://ift.tt/38SMIgG
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didanawisgi · 4 years
Link
Abstract
This chapter addresses certain features of Native American healing practices that have relevance to the treatment of traumatic stress syndromes and other mental states of distress. The major focus will be on American Indian healing practices used for survivors. To those unfamiliar with the ways of American Indian shamans, these practices may seem strange and initially somewhat foreign or even threatening. However, for those willing to learn and be open to experience, there is psychic encounter in ritual that some would term metaphysical or perhaps supernatural. To Native Americans, they are both religious and sacred.
References
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Barter, E. R., & Barter, J. T. (1974). Urban Indians and mental health problems. Psychiatric Annals, 4(11), 37–43.Google Scholar
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Bergman, R. L. (1974). The peyote religion and healing. In R. H. Cox (Ed.), Religion and psychotherapy (pp. 296–306). Springfield, II: Charles C Thomas.Google Scholar
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filmnoirfoundation · 6 years
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NOIR CITY DC continues tonight at the AFI Silver Theatre and Cultural Center with a double bill of THIS GUN FOR HIRE & THE THREAT (7:30). http://bit.ly/NoirCityDC2018
THIS GUN FOR HIRE (1942) One of the seminal films in Hollywood's noir movement, this taut thriller made stars of Alan Ladd and Veronica Lake, who'd become Paramount's biggest box-office duo of the '40s. Ladd plays lone-wolf assassin Philip Raven, who enlists Lake's aid in freeing himself from a frame-up by a secret cadre of "fifth columnists." John Seitz' camerawork presages the shadowy dread he'd bring to sunny Los Angeles in DOUBLE INDEMNITY. Co-starring Robert Preston, Laird Cregar and Lake's amazing costumes, courtesy of Edith Head. A must-see! DIR Frank Tuttle; SCR Albert Maltz, W. R. Burnett, from the novel by Graham Greene; PROD Buddy G. DeSylva. U.S., 1942, b&w, 81 min. NOT RATED
Followed by: THE THREAT (1949) Charles McGraw, the toughest man in noir, runs wild as vengeful ex-con Red Kluger, who breaks out of prison to kidnap and torture everyone who's ever done him wrong. A brutal, violent thriller inventively directed by Felix Feist. Featuring Virginia Grey and Michael O'Shea. DIR Felix E. Feist; SCR Dick Irving Hyland; SCR/PROD Hugh King. U.S., 1949, b&w, 66 min. NOT RATED
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seedofmemoryblog · 6 years
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T-MEN (1947) 
Starring Dennis O’Keefe, Charles McGraw, Alfred Ryder, June Lockhart; dir: Anthony Mann
 The ‘T’ stands for ‘Treasury’, whose agents (aligned with the Secret Service) resonate with G-Men in this quasi-documentary style account of an actual counterfeiting investigation, ‘The Shanghai Paper Case’.
Mann’s T-Men is a surprisingly un-prole thriller for such an extremely dark gangster noir.  Its environments linger in managers' offices, luxury pads and specialist labs, giving it more the air of a chiaroscuro corporate struggle (albeit a violent one) than a back alley gang war.  This impression is strengthened by cinematographer John Alton’s predilection here for shots of long corridors, suggesting flows of institutional power.  They reinforce its odd mix of rarefied air and extreme darkness. 
Nevertheless this is a truly underworld excursion.   With its dark aesthetic we feel totally submerged, almost underwater, and certainly cut off from any elements of ‘known’ life.  Hence the impact on the viewer of the movie's riff of identity transference and shifting personas as the agents go undercover.  Because it is so all-consuming we respond almost as viscerally as its protagonists do, making the shocks that come – and their psychological violence – felt, rather than merely seen.
T-Men is renowned for this subtext of Janus-like duality, attracting noir cred for suggestions of cops internally crossing the line, and vicarious evil becoming a bit too natural.  Certainly Dennis O’Keefe takes to the more superficial aspects of his deep cover role as a hood with relish - flipping cards, dressing crassly, etc. But undue emphasis on this dualism diminishes the artistry of the filmmakers here – we don’t want O’Keefe mugging for the camera to remind us he’s really a good guy like it’s some Burt Reynolds movie.  Its toughness is part of its quality and the film has a deserved reputation for being unusually objective, rather than romanticising the participants in crime.  This is reflected in 21st century audiences’ sombre, respectful viewing of it. 
Something else that’s unusual is remarked upon by the film’s voiceover - the gang’s unusually clandestine and highly organized nature.  This has led to retrospective interpretations seeing T-Men as a paradigm of espionage movies.  Such a McCarthyist reading (as in Carlos Clarens’ Crime Movies) sees the counterfeiters – who after all are in foreign cells of anti-Uncle Sam activity – as just stand-ins for the Commies.
Certainly John Alton’s uber-dark cinematography does carry the suggestion of a shadow hanging over the country.  But such an interpretation only works in the head, not the gut.  In essence the film plays like a straight, unvarnished thriller.  These guys aren’t fifth columnists, they’re hoods!  It’s true that T-Men is overly encrusted with kitsch newsreel-style propaganda (the voiceover, ‘public service announcement’ introduction, etc) but it comes across as if the Hollywood/Washington nexus was still fighting the last war, not the next one.  This does allow for an interesting reflection on how addicted America became in the 40s to its war footing (a state of affairs which would become institutionalized in the military-industrial complex to come). 
For all this seriousness there’s inadvertent humor too, particularly in the bathhouse investigation: “Have you ever spent ten days in steam baths looking for a man?” asks O’Keefe after tracking down bit player ‘The Schemer’.  Bill Collins was more coy:  “One could also question the true nature of the relationship between The Schemer and his murderer…”, suggests Bill in his Golden Years of Hollywood anthology. 
As Images Journal points out, longtime Mann collaborator Alton loved steam, fog and smoke and T-Men’s murder-by-steam scene has spawned countless imitators.  It was restaged (so closely as to be homage - intentionally or not) by Paul Schrader (who wrote about T-Men in Notes On Film Noir) in his Blue Collar (1978) with Yaphet Kotto going down in the Dodge Main paint room, a particularly grisly death.  But the Mann/Alton noirs are no strangers to grisly violence either, with an ear assault here that makes one wince in memory of the hearing-aid torture in the Alton/Lewis The Big Combo.   
The team of Mann and Alton is arguably the greatest collaboration in noir, as evinced by Raw Deal, T-Men, Border Incident and He Walked By Night (Mann uncredited).  Suggestions of a noir repertory arise from the other elements common to T-Men and Raw Deal: Dennis O’Keefe and music from ‘B’ legend Paul Sawtell.  It adds up to T-Men being an intriguing film whose impact lingers well after the viewing experience.
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mrsrcbinscn · 3 years
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Franny’s Top 10 Mainstream Country Songs of 2020
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tl;dr: A selection of script excerpts from a video on Franny’s YouTube channel called “My 10 Favorite Hit Country Songs of 2020″. This isn’t everything she had to say about those songs ofc, just excerpts. I ain’t writing all her thoughts lmao
tw: mentions but no detailed discussion of death and abortion
INTRO: Susadei*, hello, and welcome to my channel, where I, Franny Sor Robinson, share my opinions about music on the internet.”
*susadei is the informal way to say hello in Khmer, Franny’s first language
TOPIC INTRODUCTION: It is almost Christmas, which means! It’s time to start my end of the year roundup. I made videos every December talkin’ about my top 10 favorite...fill-in-the-blank. This year, we’re going to start with my Top 10 Hit Country Songs of 2020. And before you start typin’ [cuts to Franny wearing Cornelius’ glasses and one of Laszlo pretentious artist scarves, black and white] “Ew! I came here to find of hipster shit!” [cuts to Franny wearing one of Petunia’s jackets, black and white] “Where’s the BANJOS!?” [color restored] that’s the one I’m recording next so hold on.
As always, this list is in no particular order, because I believe that music isn’t something you rank on a linear bad, worse, worst, good, better, greatest scale. 
RULES: Now, the rules!
The song can’t be one I had a part in “So if I co-wrote it, if it’s my song, or I featured on the track, it’s out.”
No carry-overs “If I mentioned it in my 2019 list, it can’t be on this list.”
Spread the love
“Only one artist repeat is allowed, I get one double dip but other than that, it has to be a new artist.”
Beyond those rules, that’s really it. So without further ado, let’s get into it.
 10. Love You Like I Used To by Russell Dickerson
 Number ten on the list is one that, actually, surprised me. To me, Russell Dickerson is...well. I’m all about positivity on this channel, talkin’ about other artists. But. He’s solidly part of mainstream Nashville, y’all know my thoughts on the Nashville music industry. 
 It’s still -- I mean, it's a mainstream country song and was always meant to be, so it still follows the formula but it’s creative. It presents like a breakup song at first but right before the first chorus, you find it’s actually a love song. The first verse starts with
‘I've always loved you, oh, but something's changed’ but in the chorus you get [and she plays it on her piano, that her camera and microphone are set on and sings it] ‘I don't love you like I used to, this gets better every time you kiss me like this, it's stronger the longer I'm with you-’ and I think that’s a creative thing to do with a song.
 Like I’ve said before, I don’t hate every single pop country song, and I think there is value in and a place for, pop country. What I do hate is the vapid, formulaic trash that Nashville keeps pushing. So when a song like this that has the made-for-Nashville-radio arrangement but actually does somethin’ creative lyrically, I see it for what it is. And it’s good. It’s good.
 9. One Night Standards by Ashley McBryde
 I’ve actually had the pleasure of co-writin’ a song with Ashley before, so seeing how well this song’s done this year-- how well she’s done this year -- it’s been great. 
 This song’s about a woman laying down the ground rules for a one night stand and I love. this. song.
 A lot of people find this song sad, but I don’t think there’s anything sad at all about a woman owning her sexuality. I think this one line, ‘can’t you just use me like I’m using you’ makes people think it’s a sad song. Maybe it is! But like...I had casual sex all the time in college. I was absolutely using my one night stands for some meaningless, easy sex, and I knew they were using me for sex, and it was fine.
 It’s fine, that’s what a one night stand is. And to me, it sounds like she’s just here for some sex, and the guy’s like, trying to have conversation and do things “right” like offer his phone number, and she’s like, in the words of the great philosopher, Ke$ha, ‘just show me where your dick’s at.’ And I appreciate that.
 8. I Called Mama by Tim McGraw
 It might be because I’m seven months pregnant, and my son is starting university next fall, and my mother lives on the other side of the Atlantic Ocean, but this song has started to make me cry so I can’t really, like, listen to it very often. But I think it is one of the most beautiful, honest songs on country radio this year. It’s a gentle ballad about not putting things off until it's too late, that starts off with a friend calling the narrator to tell him about the death of a friend, which leads to a phone call home to the narrator's mother.
 This song makes me think about myself, and my mother, and one day when my son is living on his own, my son and old lady me.
 The part in the second verse, ‘I can always hear her smile when I call, I just called to tell you that I loved you, I was missin' you and dad, and home, that's all’ -- I cry 1 out of 3 times. Probably. I miss my parents a lot. And I hope my son will miss me and call just to say he loves me and his father when he’s all grown up. The song makes me think about my family and my place in it.
7. Starting Over by Chris Stapleton
 This is another one that I feel on a personal level. It’s this positive ballad featuring his wife, Morgane, talking about how much they love each other and their desire to go through life’s bullshit together. And it just makes me think about my husband, and how much I love him.
 It’s another one I can’t listen to often, I get all misty-eyed. I can’t listen to love songs even when I’m not pregnant, I just call my husband like “I love you” “are you crying” “No!”
6. What If I Never Get Over You by Lady A
 This was one of my honorable mentions of 2019 so it doesn’t count, it’s allowed. Charles Kelley and Hilary Scott’s voices together are just - ugh, god, they’re chef’s kiss, perfect. And I...think this song is just about as good as Need You Now as far as their longing, breakup songs.
 I like how there isn’t a big beat-you-over-the-head climax moment because this song does not need one, it wouldn’t be right. Like, there is one but it’s not like ‘BAM’ there’s the climax! It’s very natural. It was a return to the rich, smooth sound of the band’s earlier hits and that’s the Lady A stuff I really loved. Even their fun stuff like Lookin’ For A Good Time and Love Don’t Live Here, from the earlier days, I prefer those to the overproduced kind of….made-for-radio stuff that snuck its way into their catalog over the years. Sonically, it seems like they’re returned to what makes them great together and I’m happy to see it.
 5. Bluebird by Miranda Lambert
 At number five on the list is Bluebird by Miranda Lambert. This whole album was on my best albums of 2019 list, and I am thrilled that Bluebird became a single. Miranda is a modern day legend in country music and this album especially just keeps proving it.
 Musically, lyrically, everything about this song works. The twists she makes on common metaphors in the English language like ‘when life gives you lemons’ instead of making lemonade she mixes them in her drink, they’re clever. I adore Miranda, it ain’t a secret, I’ve said as much to her gorgeous, gorgeous face, and it’s great seeing the songs from this album, including Bluebird, get the love it deserves.
 4. One Beer by HARDY and Lauren Alaina
 One Beer is a song about a teenage pregnancy, which. We all know my experience with that, but if you don’t, click here [points off to the side, and a card pops up that will link you to a video titled I Got Pregnant When I Was 14 #shoutyourabortion #endthestigma]. It kind of reminds me of Kenny Chesney’s There Goes My Life from...2000...2004? Is it? Wow, I’m old.
 Lauren Alaina’s voice is flawless, as always, and HARDY’s word play strikes once again. For my followers that didn’t grow up with English as their first language -- is this a thing in other countries, or is this an American thing? My UK, New Zealand, et cetera followers, comment down below if kids did this where you’re from too.
 Anyway, if a boy and a girl were so much as friends in like, first grade kids would tease you with this specific rhyme like, Joey and Sarah sittin’ in a tree, K-I-S-S-I-N-G first comes love, then comes marriage, then comes a baby in a baby carriage --- and in the song, HARDY plays on that with ‘A boy and a girl and a three on the tree, K-I-S-S-I-N-G, first comes lust then a shotgun marriage, six months later comes a baby in a carriage’ and just love that kind of clever wordplay shit.
 3. I Wish Grandpas Never Died by Riley Green
 I first heard this song when I was in The States, driving around with Dan[iel Maitland] and it was on the radio, I thought it was some breakup song. But then the last line of the chorus hit me ‘I Wish Grandpas Never Died’ and I just start bawling and Daniel’s like ‘don’t get your tears on my new car seats!’
 Love you too, Dan.
It’s a beautiful song. Sad, but you can also tell he really loved his grandfathers, who’ve both passed away. He’s written several songs inspired by one or both of them. It’s a good song, good writing, I like how lowkey it is musically. And it’s honest songwriting that I wish country radio still had more of.
 2. Gaslighter by The Chicks
 After over a decade away from the music scene, my queen are BACK! Gaslighter was an amazing return and the rest of their album did not disappoint. Now, I don’t think the album was purely a country album, which I talked about in my full album review you can find here [points to the side, where a card pops up linking you to the video], but it is an album that I thoroughly enjoyed that included country songs. They experimented with this album, I love to see it. Let artists experiment without shaming them 2020! Anyway, the album does have lots of country songs and Gaslighter is one of them.
 Natalie Maines’ vocals are, as always, everything one would hope they’d be. They all looked great in the music video. It was a great middle finger to Natalie’s ex-husband, Adrian Pasdar. God, I bet it was fun to write.
 I love writing songs about Dan’s divorces with him since I don’t have one to write about. Keep getting divorces Dan, endless content. [cuts to a video of Daniel Maitland acting like she said that in person to him and he goes ‘rude.’]
 Stream The Chicks. Natalie, Martie, and Emily could stab me and I’d apologize to them, but the thing is, they never would. They’re too nice. They’re so nice. Collaborate with me again please, please, I love you. [mouths call me]
 1. Die From A Broken Heart by Maddie & Tae
 This song was another one of my honorable mentions in 2019, and I’m kicking myself for never properly talking about it until now. I’ve loved Maddie & Tae since Girl In A Country Song and Die From A Broken Heart is just -- god, it sounds so familiar.
 Like, it sounds like I did talking to my mother about getting my heart broken when I was younger. It’s honest, vulnerable songwriting that I can’t get enough of. 
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utexaspress · 3 years
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Our forthcoming books for Spring | Summer 2021!
See our full catalog PDF → https://bit.ly/UTPS21 
Browse on www.utexaspress.com 
Or flip through on ISSUU → https://issuu.com/utexaspress/docs/ss2020 
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From a Taller Tower The Rise of the American Mass Shooter By Seamus McGraw April 2021 | Pre-order → https://bit.ly/TallerTower
A Single Star and Bloody Knuckles A History of Politics and Race in Texas By Bill Minutaglio May 2021 | Pre-order → https://bit.ly/SingleStarBloodyKnuckles
Seeing Sideways A Memoir of Music and Motherhood By Kristin Hersh May 2021 | Pre-order → https://bit.ly/SeeingSideways
A Singing Army Zilphia Horton and the Highlander Folk School By Kim Ruehl March 2021 | Pre-order → https://bit.ly/SingingArmy
Far From Respectable Dave Hickey and His Art By Daniel Oppenheimer June 2021 | Pre-order → https://bit.ly/FarFromRespectable
Why Solange Matters By Stephanie Phillips April 2021 | Pre-order → https://bit.ly/SolangeMatters
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Why Bushwick Bill Matters By Charles L. Hughes June 2021 | Pre-order → https://bit.ly/BushwickBillMatters
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Why Labelle Matters By Adele Bertei March 2021 | Pre-order → https://bit.ly/LabelleMatters
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Why Marianne Faithfull Matters By Tanya Pearson July 2021 | Pre-order → https://bit.ly/MarianneFaithfullMatters
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Razabilly Transforming Sights, Sounds, and History in the Los Angeles Latina/o Rockabilly Scene By Nicholas F. Centino July 2021 | Pre-order → https://bit.ly/RazabillyBook
The Politics of Patronage Lawyers, Philanthropy, and the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund By Benjamin Márquez July 2021 | Pre-order → https://bit.ly/PolitcsOfPatronage
Reverberations of Racial Violence Critical Reflections on the History of the Border By Sonia Hernández and John Morán González June 2021 | Pre-order → https://bit.ly/ReverberationsRacialVi...
Grandmothers on Guard Gender, Aging, and the Minutemen at the U.S.-Mexico Border By Jennifer L. Johnson May 2021 | Pre-order → https://bit.ly/GrandmothersOnGuard
Violence in the Hill Country The Texas Frontier in the Civil War Era By Nicholas Keefauver Roland February 2021 | Pre-order → https://bit.ly/ViolenceInTheHillCountry
Lone Star Vistas Travel Writing on Texas, 1821-1861 By Astrid Haas March 2021 | Pre-order → https://bit.ly/LoneStarVistas
The Myth of the Amateur A History of College Athletic Scholarships By Ronald A. Smith May 2021 | Pre-order → https://bit.ly/MythOfTheAmateur
Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban By Patrick Keating May 2021 | Pre-order → https://bit.ly/AzkabanBook
Tragedy Plus Time National Trauma and Television Comedy By Philip Scepanski April 2021 | Pre-order → https://bit.ly/TragedyPlusTime
American Twilight The Cinema of Tobe Hooper By Kristopher Woofter and Will Dodson June 2021 | Pre-order → https://bit.ly/AmericanTwilight
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Below the Stars How the Labor of Working Actors and Extras Shapes Media Production | By Kate Fortmueller July 2021 | Pre-order → https://bit.ly/BelowTheStars
Building Antebellum New Orleans Free People of Color and Their Influence By Tara A. Dudley August 2021 | Pre-order → https://bit.ly/AntebellumNO
Monsters and Monarchs Serial Killers in Classical Myth and History By Debbie Felton July 2021 | Pre-order → https://bit.ly/MonstersAndMonarchs
Arrian the Historian Writing the Greek Past in the Roman Empire By Daniel W. Leon April 2021 | Pre-order → https://bit.ly/ArrianTheHistorian
Poggio Civitate (Murlo) By Anthony Tuck June 2021 | Pre-order → https://bit.ly/PoggioCivitate
The Ancient Greek Roots of Human Rights By Rachel Hall Sternberg July 2021 | Pre-order → https://bit.ly/AncientHumanRights
Playing with Things Engaging the Moche Sex Pots By Mary Weismantel August 2021 | Pre-order → https://bit.ly/SexPots
Surviving Mexico Resistance and Resilience among Journalists in the Twenty-first Century By González de Bustamante Celeste and Jeannine E. Relly July 2021 | Pre-order → https://bit.ly/SurvivingMexico
Electrifying Mexico Technology and the Transformation of a Modern City By Diana Montaño August 2021 | Pre-order → https://bit.ly/ElectrifyingMexico
Roots of Resistance A Story of Gender, Race, and Labor on the North Coast of Honduras By Suyapa G. Portillo Villeda March 2021 | Pre-order → https://bit.ly/RootsResistance
Vital Voids Cavities and Holes in Mesoamerican Material Culture By Andrew Finegold May 2021 | Pre-order → https://bit.ly/VitalVoids
Egypt’s Football Revolution Emotion, Masculinity, and Uneasy Politics By Carl Rommel July 2021 | Pre-order → https://bit.ly/EgyptFootballRevolution
It Can Be This Way Always Images from the Kerrville Folk Festival By David Johnson; essay by Jason Mellard; foreword by Mary Muse March 2021 | Pre-order → https://bit.ly/ItCanBeLikeThisAlways
The Republican Party of Texas A Political History By Wayne Thorburn June 2021 | Pre-order → https://bit.ly/RepublicanPartyTX
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