Tumgik
#Hanna & Parsons
star-reyes · 9 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
X-Force #70-81 "The Road Trip arc"
"X-Force Fun Fact: While many superhero groups are funded by the government or wealthy patrons, the members of X-Force refuse to sell out. Consequently, they're broke."
Writer: John Francis Moore, Joseph Harris
Pencils: Adam Pollina, Andy Smith, Mike S. Miller
Inks: Mark Morales, Team X, Hanna & Parsons, Rob Still
Letters: Richard Starkings/Comicraft, Emerson Miranda, Kolja Fuchs
Colors: Marie Javins, John Kalisz, Gloria Vasquez, Steve Buccellato, Guillermo Zubiaga
20 notes · View notes
tornrose24 · 8 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
This is probably going to be the last update to this AU for a month or so since I will need a break from it to work on other stuff (with maybe an exception for a Halloween related drawing).
Also, I think since I never named them yet, Suzie's friend is named 'Jules.'
Lily, Suzie, Nate, Jules, and all the puppeteers are mine.
Oh, and since I wasn't able to, here's more info on the pupeteers:
-George Donovan–a comedian and voice actor. Known for doing a few comedic guest roles on TV shows in the 50’s and 60’s. Was known to have two sons. Was supposed to do a few voice roles for Hanna-Barbera in addition to working for Playfellow Workshop. Was known to be allergic to chocolate.
-Elizabeth Callister– an LA stage actress known for doing voice roles in a few cartoons. Daughter of a well-known producer, which allowed her to enter the ranks of the entertainment industry. Said to be ‘spoiled sweet’ and was hoping to entertain children. Was said to show small signs of what might have been ADHD.
–Stanley Hersh– a stage actor from New York. Son of Jewish-Polish immigrants who came to America in the early 1930s. Was said to continue his family’s store if he wouldn’t be able to make it into show business. It is believed Welcome Home would have been his biggest break prior to his disappearance.
–Zelda duPont– a singer and stage actress. Was involved with a few civil rights movements under a different name along the East coast. It is presumed that she was hired as a puppeteer because ‘no one is supposed to see who is playing them.’
-Louise Sherman–a well-known trans actress from the 60’s, yet was better known in the LGBTQ community as opposed to a wider audience. Supposedly a friend of Welcome Home’s creator. Spent a few years abroad in England and had been involved with a few Shakespeare plays.
-Travis McCoy–an actor from Texas. Had starred in a few Westerns and Romantic-Comedy projects. Was said to be very popular with his female fans due to his charm and good looks, but was never seen dating anyone up until his disappearance.
-Bertrand Parsons–a New England and New York stage actor also known for doing voice roles. Was also well-known in the LGBTQ community, yet this was kept silent from the main public for many decades. It is believed by some that his name is in fact a stage name.
–Walter Jones–Little is known about him, but he was a puppeteer for a few shows. Was said to be good friends with Welcome Home’s creator (and some suspected that the two might have been more than friends). It is believed Welcome Home would have been his big break given that he was to voice the main star of the show. He was given a draft card just before the show aired, and it is believed that he–like many other young men–escaped to Canada to avoid the draft.
85 notes · View notes
figureskatingfanblog · 10 months
Text
2023/24 International Selection Pool
The International Selection Pool (ISP) includes junior- and senior-level athletes and teams who meet criteria approved by the U.S. Figure Skating International Committee. These athletes and teams are eligible to be considered for assignment to international competitions.    
List as of 8/13/2023
Men
William Annis
Lucas Broussard
Nicholas Brooks
Jason Brown
Lorenzo Elano
Goku Endo
Aleksandr Fegan
Kirk Haugeto
Jonathan Hildebrandt
Tomoki Hiwatashi
Liam Kapeikis
Lucius Kazanecki
Joseph Klein
Kai Kovar
Alexander Liu
Zachary LoPinto
Jimmy Ma
Ilia Malinin
Daniel Martynov
Samuel Mindra
Antonio Monaco
Daniil Murzin
Maxim Naumov
Nhat-Viet Nguyen
Yaroslav Paniot
Camden Pulkinen
Jacob Sanchez
Taira Shinohara
Beck Strommer
Andrew Torgashev
Michael Xie
Robert Yampolsky
Maxim Zharkov
Women
Starr Andrews
Sonia Baram
Mia Barghout
Juliana Barshay
Alena Budko
Annika Chao
Elsa Cheng
Ela Cui
Ting Cui
Sarah Everhardt
Alexa Gasparotto
Lilah Gibson
Amber Glenn
Gracie Gold
Hanna Harrell
Jill Heiner
Hannah Herrera
Sonja Hilmer
Logan Higase-Chen
Athena Huang
Jiaying Ellyse Johnson
Jessica Jurka
Mia Kalin
Ella Kim
Teryn Kim
Katie Krafchik
Josephine Lee
Michelle Lee
Soho Lee
Isabeau Levito
Elyce Lin-Gracey
Hannah Lofton
Cleo Park
Nicole Park
Maryn Pierce
Clare Seo
Katie Shen
Audrey Shin
Phoebe Stubblefield
Bradie Tennell
Lindsay Thorngren
Lindsay Wang
Wren Warne-Jacobsen
Sherry Zhang
Adele Zheng
Ava Ziegler
Pairs
Emily Chan and Spencer Howe
Olivia Flores and Luke Wang
Ellie Kam and Danny O'Shea
Chelsea Liu and Balazs Nagy
Isabelle Martins and Ryan Bedard
Maria Mokhova and Ivan Mokhov
Valentina Plazas and Maximiliano Fernandez
Anastasiia Smirnova and Danil Siianytsia
Naomi Williams and Lachlan Lewer
Adele Zheng and Andy Deng
Ice Dance
Kristina Bland and Matthew Sperry
Emily Bratti and Ian Somerville
Oona Brown and Gage Brown
Helena Carhart and Volodymyr Horovyi
Christina Carreira and Anthony Ponomarenko
Madison Chock and Evan Bates
Amy Cui and Kenny Ekchert
Julia Epps and Blake Gilman
Isabella Flores and Ivan Desyatov
Caroline Green and Michael Parsons
Jenna Hauer and Benjamin Starr
Kaitlin Hawayek and Jean-Luc Baker
Olivia Ilin and Dylan Cain
Raffaella Koncius and Alexey Shchepetov
Anya Lavrova and Jonathan Rogers
Angela Ling and Caleb Wein
Lorraine McNamara and Anton Spiridonov
Caroline Mullen and Brendan Mullen
Leah Neset and Artem Markelov
Eva Pate and Logan Bye
Elliana Peal and Ethan Peal
Yahli Pedersen and Jeffrey Chen
Katarina Wolfkostin and Dmitry Tsarevski
Emilea Zingas and Vadym Kolesnik
13 notes · View notes
chrisodonline · 1 year
Text
Ol’ dude admits he knew about the reports from the wife but required more evidence. Dude. DUDE. DUDE.
And then when Sallen look at each other like, “This guy.” And totally made sure he saw them make that look. They don’t play. They will judge you, and you will know it. 
And now Shyla is back in Ops and calls Callen and Sam up. And Kilbride has had enough of Ops because he is gone.
Oh, no, wait, now he’s back. And wondering how the headache is. And Shyla’s like, “Yeah, IDK, might need a drink.” 
Wow, they got there fast. The time in this episode is...wonky.
Deeks is going to get her to a safe place.
Kilbride: “I don’t think I need to tell you how bad this could be.”
Sam: “But let’s do it anyway...for the audience.”
Kilbride: *says how bad it is* *makes a veiled threat to burn the city down -- wait, what?*
Callen: “Talk about avoidance.” lkajdf;lkdj
He is getting some GREAT lines in this ep. I’m glad they remembered he’s the Sassmaster. Sometimes they remember he’s the team leader, but only when Sam isn’t there.
I genuinely thought Parsons was a lady when I first saw the pixels. I will not lie.
Haha, sneak attack from Sam Hanna. Callen LOVES to tackle. (He used to be very touch-starved, but now it’s old habit.)
Rountree makes it just in time to stop the suspect. And just in time to have to dodge an explosion. At this point if Rountree is around, just assume he’s going to be in danger of getting exploded.
7 notes · View notes
uchicagomagazine · 4 months
Text
Tumblr media
This 1916 gathering of staff members at Yerkes Observatory in Williams Bay, WI, includes three UChicago alumnae. Though their contributions are often eclipsed, women were at the heart of astronomy and astrophysics advancements at Yerkes Observatory in the early 20th century. An exhibition of materials from the Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center, Capturing the Stars: The Untold History of Women at Yerkes Observatory, highlights their voices and research.
Back row from left: Helen N. Davis, Max Petersen, Clifford Crump, and Frances Allen. Front row from left: Evelyn (Wickham) Hale, SM 1917; Harriet (Parsons) Hall, SM 1916, PhD’21; Anne S. Young; Alice Hall Farnsworth, PhD 1920; and Inez Wendell.
UChicago Photographic Archive, apf6-00399, Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center, University of Chicago Library
1 note · View note
brookstonalmanac · 8 months
Text
Birthdays 9.4
Beer Birthdays
Samuel Simon Loeb (1862)
William Hamm, Jr. (1893)
Ken Weaver (1983)
Five Favorite Birthdays
Anton Bruckner; Austrian composer (1824)
Whitney Cummings; comedian (1982)
Candy Loving; Playboy playmate 1/79 (1956)
Darius Milhaud; French composer (1892)
Ione Skye; English-American actress (1971)
Famous Birthdays
Joan Aiken; English author (1924)
Al-Biruni; Persian physician and polymath (973)
Carl Heinrich Biber; Austrian composer (1681)
Janet Biehl; philosopher (1953)
Daniel Burnham; architect (1846)
Martin Chambers; English drummer and singer (1951)
Craig Claiborne; journalist, author (1920)
Darryl Cotton; Australian singer-songwriter and guitarist (1949)
Francois Rene de Chateaubriand; French writer (1776)
Max Delbrück; German-American biophysicist (1906)
Edward Dmytryk; film director (1908)
Gary Duncan; rock guitarist (1946)
Danny Gatton; guitarist (1945)
Mitzi Gaynor; actor, dancer (1931)
Clive Granger, Welsh-American economist (1934)
George William Gray, British chemist, creator of liquid crystals (1926)
Max Greenfield; actor (1980)
Kevin Harrington; Australian actor (1959)
Paul Harvey; radio journalist (1918)
Jacqueline Hewitt; astrophysicist and astronomer (1958)
Syd Hoff; author and illustrator (1912)
Constantijn Huygens; Dutch poet and composer (1596)
Beyoncé Knowles; pop singer (1981)
Lewis Howard Latimer; inventor (1848)
Alexander Liberman, Russian-American artist (1912)
Dave Liebman; saxophonist (1946)
Donald McKay; shipbuilder (1810)
Kyle Mooney; comedian (1984)
Albert Joseph Moore; English artist (1841)
Stanford Moore; biochemist (1913)
Howard Morris; comedian (1919)
Gene Parsons; singer-songwriter, guitarist, and banjo player (1944)
George Percy; English explorer (1580)
Mike Piazza; New York Mets C (1968)
Drew Pinsky; radio and television host (1958)
Mary Renault; English writer (1905)
Oskar Schlemmer; German artist (1888)
Hanna Schwamborn; German actress (1992)
Jan Švankmajer; Czech filmmaker (1934)
Kim Thayil; guitarist and songwriter (1960)
Tom Watson; golfer (1949)
Damon Wayans; actor, comedian (1960)
Dallas Willard; philosopher (1935)
Gerald Wilson; trumpet player (1918)
Richard Wright; writer (1908)
Shinya Yamanaka; Japanese biologist (1962)
Dick York; actor (1928)
Bobby Jarzombek; drummer (1963)
0 notes
biboocat · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
I was really impressed by Gone to Earth by Mary Webb, copyright 1917. Hazel Woodus is vivacious, innocent, nearly feral teenage girl who lives with her uninterested father in a rustic hovel. In her near isolation, free from religious indoctrination, she has developed a free spirit and a passionate love of nature that is imbued with pagan overtones. Her love of nature compels her to rescue trapped, terrified animals. The descriptions of nature, presumably derived from the author’s rural Shropshire, are lovely. I wonder if the author’s paeans to nature might be a response to the horror of WWI that was raging at the time. Hazel is adoringly honest but uncouth, and lacking a social filter, she often gets into trouble; these scenes are often uncomfortable for those around her, but the reader will find them amusing. Her innocent and unsophisticated nature belie the profundity and beauty of her observations. Other memorable characters include: Abel Woodus, her father, Parson Edward Marston and his mother, Mrs. Marston, and Jack Reddin, the local squire. I won’t say anything specific about them, but a colossal struggle develops between good and evil, love and lust, civilized man and his primal nature. I don’t know Mary Webb’s views on religion, but Hazel frequently expresses her non-belief of the Christian God, and another character comes to his apostasy. Hazel’s greatest fear is the Black Huntsman and his deadly pack of hounds, a local legend that she believes is real. On the other hand, she is naively unaware of how men can endanger what she holds most dear - her freedom. I highly recommend this novel.
Memorable passages:
Oh! Only like in the Bible, said Hazel disappointedly. I thought you meant summat real. 😁
And so wailing she voiced the deep lament, old as the moan of forests and falling water, that goes up through the centuries to the aloof and silent sky, and remains, as ever, unassuaged.
Edward: Nothing bad can come to you when you are in God’s keeping.
Hazel: There canna be many folks in His keeping, then. 😂
Mrs. Marston: animals have no souls.
Hazel: Yes, they have, then! If they hanna, you hanna!
It is strange our generation after generation spend their fleeting years in this fetish worship, never daring to make life beautiful by the daily use of lovely things, but for ever being busy about them.
A grandmother has all the pleasures of a mother and none of the pains.
What is it my dear?
That there picture! Theym hurting Him so cruel. And him fast and all.
Oh! said Mrs. Marston wonderingly, that’s nothing to get vexed about. Why, don’t you know that’s Jesus Christ dying for us?
No. What for should he? There shall be none die along of me, much less be tormented.
Needs be that one Man die for the people, quoted Mrs. Marston easily. Only through blood can sin be washed white.
Blood makes things raddled, not white; and if so be any’s got to die, I’ll die for myself.Continues page 105.
Hazel’s not a Christian! She spoke in a sepulchral whisper, and looked at him afterwards as if to say, they are now, I have surprised you!
And how do you make that out, mother? Edward found in his heart this fact, that it made no difference to his love whether Hazel were Christian or not; this troubled him.
I should pray Hazel.
What good’d that do?
God answers prayers.
That he dunna!
And when I’ve heard things screaming and crying to be loosed, and them in traps, and never a one coming to’em but me, it’s come o’er to me to wo’ner who’d loose me out if I was in a trap.
God would.
I dunna think so. He ne’er lets the others out.
What for dunnot He, my soul? What for dun He give’em mouths so they’s can holla, and not listen at’em?
The higher the nature, the more its greatness is taken for granted.
Exchanged between Hazel and Edward:
I’m afraid you are too superstitious, Edward said, and returned to his remarks on ejaculatory prayer (preparing a sermon). Some people would have found it hard to decide which was the more superstitious, the more pathetic.
Life is a taciturn mother, and teaches not so much by instruction as by blows.
Death is a dark dream, but it is not a nightmare. It is mankind’s lack of pity, mankind’s fatal propensity for torture, that is the nightmare. When a man or woman, confronted by helpless terror, is without the impulse to save, the world becomes hell.
That he had offended against the views of his Church did not worry him. For, like many Churchmen, he had the happy gift of keeping profession and practice, dogma and deeds, in airtight compartments.
I have become an unbeliever, Edward said, not because I am unworthy of your God, because He is unworthy of me.
A note on this edition: It is a re-issue by E.P. Dutton & Co. with an introduction by John Buchan in 1929 following the third printing in 1928 (copyright 1917). But interestingly it appears to have been privately re-bound in leather. In fact, the initials C V Y with a flower are embossed on the front cover. The book binder obviously took great care in creating this beautiful book, and the story must have been treasured for the owner to have gone to the trouble and expense in getting it re-bound.
1 note · View note
alexlacquemanne · 2 years
Text
Juillet MMXXII
Films
Elvis (2022) de Baz Luhrmann avec Austin Butler, Chaydon Jay, Tom Hanks, Helen Thomson, Richard Roxburgh, Olivia DeJonge et Luke Bracey
Some Came Running (1958) de Vincente Minnelli avec Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Shirley MacLaine, Martha Hyer et Arthur Kennedy
Compartiment tueurs (1965) de Costa-Gavras avec Yves Montand, Jacques Perrin, Catherine Allégret, Pierre Mondy, Jean-Louis Trintignant, Simone Signoret et Charles Denner
Astérix : Le Domaine des dieux (2014) d'Alexandre Astier et Louis Clichy avec Roger Carel, Guillaume Briat, Lorànt Deutsch, Laurent Lafitte, Alexandre Astier et Alain Chabat
Les Figures de l'ombre (Hidden Figures) (2016) de Theodore Melfi avec Taraji P. Henson, Octavia Spencer, Janelle Monáe, Kevin Costner, Kirsten Dunst et Jim Parsons
L'Africain (1983) de Philippe de Broca avec Catherine Deneuve, Philippe Noiret, Jean-François Balmer, Jacques François et Jean Benguigui
Thor: Love and Thunder (2022) de Taika Waititi avec Chris Hemsworth, Tristan Hemsworth, Christian Bale, Natalie Portman, Tessa Thompson et Taika Waititi
Au bout du conte (2013) de Agnès Jaoui avec Agnès Jaoui, Jean-Pierre Bacri, Arthur Dupont, Agathe Bonitzer, Benjamin Biolay et Nina Meurisse
Le Fantôme du Bengale (The Phantom) (1996) de Simon Wincer avec Billy Zane, Kristy Swanson, Treat Williams, James Remar, Catherine Zeta-Jones et Patrick McGoohan
Les Dalton en cavale (1983) de Morris, William Hanna, Joseph Barbera et Ray Patterson avec Jacques Thébault, Roger Carel, Pierre Trabaud, Jacques Balutin et Pierre Tornade
Tous à l'Ouest (2007) d'Olivier Jean-Marie avec Lambert Wilson, Clovis Cornillac, Alexis Tomassian, Christophe Lemoine, Bernard Alane et François Morel
Les Amants du Capricorne (Under Capricorn) (1949) d'Alfred Hitchcock avec Ingrid Bergman, Joseph Cotten, Michael Wilding et Margaret Leighton
ARCA (2022) de Germain et Robin Aguesse avec Gilles Graveleau, Clémence Verniau, Gilles Arbona et Emmanuel Rausenberger
Astérix chez les Bretons (1986) de Pino Van Lamsweerde avec Roger Carel, Pierre Tornade, Graham Bushnell, Serge Sauvion : Jules César et Pierre Mondy
La Chatte sur un toit brûlant (Cat on a Hot Tin Roof) (1958) de Richard Brooks avec Elizabeth Taylor, Paul Newman, Burl Ives et Judith Anderson
Le Seigneur des anneaux (J. R. R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings) (1978) de Ralph Bakshi avec Michel Caccia, Jean Davy, Serge Lhorca, Bernard Dhéran et Georges Poujouly
Signé Furax (1981) de Marc Simenon avec Bernard Haller, Roger Carel, Jean-Pierre Darras, Michel Galabru, Paul Préboist, Jean Le Poulain et Michel Constantin
Séries
Le Coffre à Catch
#79 : CM Punk, MVP du catch ? J'CROIS PAS NAN ! - #80 : Bonne Année de Catch + Balls a disparu = ECW - #81 : Grosse Ambiance, C'est la Maladie, On a l'intro ! - #82 : Kofi Kingston : les Débuts Historiques !
Affaires sensibles
29 septembre 1957, l’accident nucléaire de Maïak ou le silence atomique soviétique - 10 juillet 1976 : La catastrophe de Seveso - 11 Septembre, l'avant (1) - Le 11 septembre 2001, le jour qui a changé le monde (2) - 9/11, l'après : la guerre contre la terreur (3)
Columbo Saison 13
Une étrange association
Commissaire Dupin
Les secrets de Brocéliande
The Grand Tour Saison 4, 3
The Grand Tour présente… Seamen - Spéciale Colombie : Première partie - Spéciale Colombie : Deuxième partie
The Rookie Saison 4
La vie et la mort - Cinq minutes - Dans la ligne de feu - Chaud bouillant
Spectacles
Jazz à Ramatuelle : Hugh Coltman (2018)
Henry Mancini and Friends (1980)
Livres
Les dents de la mer de Peter Benchley
Fairy Tail : Tome 1 de Hiro Mashima
Elfes, Tome 1 : Le Crystal des Elfes bleus de Jean-Luc Istin, Kyko Duarte et Saito
Kaamelott, Tome 6 : Le Duel des Mages d'Alexandre Astier, Benoit Bekaert et Steven Dupré
Astérix, Tome 16 : Astérix chez les Helvètes de René Goscinny et Albert Uderzo
Lucky Luke, Tome 24 : La Fiancée de Lucky Luke de Morris et Guy Vidal
La cage aux souvenirs de Pierre Mondy
Les aventures de Tintin, Tome 8 : Le Sceptre d'Ottokar d'Hergé
1 note · View note
alwaysfirst · 2 years
Text
Screen and stage veteran Jered Barclay passes away at 91
Tumblr media
Jul 28, 2022 20:15 IST Washington , July 28 (Always First): Seasoned stage and film actor Jered Barclay, who appeared in vaudeville and provided voiceovers for the animated television series Smurfs and Transformers, has passed away at the age of 91. According to the Hollywood Reporter, Barclay died Saturday in North Hollywood from MDS Leukemia, actress Myra Turley, his longtime friend with whom he performed in the two-person play A Tantalizing, directed by Harvey Perr, announced. Barclay began his nine-decade career in 1934 at the age of three, appearing in vaudeville with Judy Garland, Shirley Temple, and Sammy Davis Jr. He was also a director, photojournalist, and acting coach. At age 6, he started acting on the radio. At age 12, he travelled with the Clyde Beatty Circus, and at age 14, he made his theatrical debut. The Seattle native moved to Los Angeles after receiving a B.A. in drama from the University of Washington. He appeared in three episodes of Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Otto Preminger's The Man with the Golden Arm (1955) and Lillian Hellman's The Children's Hour (1961), as well as Roger Corman's 1958 sci-fi fantasy film War of the Satellites, in which he played John Compo. In movies like Rawhide, Bonanza, Cheyenne, Bronco, The Dakotas, Lawman, Colt.45, and Gunslinger, he played Jerry Barclay. Then, in 1962, he relocated to New York to take the stage in two plays by Edward Albee, Jerry in Eddie Parone's Zoo Story and a young man in Alan Schneider's The American Dream. Alongside James Earl Jones and Estelle Parsons, Barclay played Meff in James Saunders' Next Time I'll Sing to You in 1963. On Broadway, he also played Deuperret in Peter Weiss' Marat Sade and Ludwig Max von Kupfer in John Osborne's A Patriot for Me. Barclay provided voiceovers for several animated series produced by Hanna-Barbera, including Foofur, The Little Rascals, Challenge of the GoBots, The Dukes, The Kwicky Koala Show, and The Smurfs. In The Transformers, he furthermore portrayed Cerebros. Rue McClanahan, Dixie Carter, Johnny Depp, Liza Minnelli, Lily Tomlin, Patrick Swayze, and Josh Brolin were among the actors who studied acting under Barclay beginning in the 1980s. He started working as a travel photojournalist in 1993, covering all seven continents and 108 nations for 27 publications. (Always First) Read the full article
0 notes
juneshirata · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
this one goes to my fellow wlw...
1K notes · View notes
prettygaychoices · 5 years
Text
some of my fav lis ♡
42 notes · View notes
baneofnecks · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
From Wonder Woman Vol. 5 #31 (2017) written by James Robinson , penciled by Carlo Pagulayan, inked by Sean Parsons, Jason Paz, Scott Hanna, coloured by Romulo Fajardo, Jr., lettered by Saida Temofonte
12 notes · View notes
Text
2022 - 2023 Team USA International Selection Pool
The International Selection Pool (ISP) includes junior- and senior-level athletes and teams who meet criteria approved by the U.S. Figure Skating International Committee. These athletes and teams are eligible to be considered for assignment to international competitions.  
List as of 7/1/2022
Men
William Annis
Lucas Broussard
Jason Brown
Nathan Chen*
Goku Endo
Kirk Haugeto
Jonathan Hildebrandt
Tomoki Hiwatashi
Liam Kapekis
Lucius Kazanecki
Joseph Klein
Kai Kovar
Lake Liao
Jimmy Ma
Ilia Malinin
Samuel Mindra
Antonio Monaco
Maxim Naumov
Nhat-Viet Nguyen
Matthew Nielsen
Yaroslav Paniot
Camden Pulkinen
Jacob Sanchez
Taira Shinohara
Eric Sjoberg
Beck Strommer
Dinh Tran
Michael Xie
Robert Yampolsky
Maxim Zharkov
Vincent Zhou*
Women
Starr Andrews
Sonia Baram
Mia Barghout
Mariah Bell
Gwen Bloesch
Alena Budko
Karen Chen
Elsa Cheng
Hazel Collier
Sarah Everhardt
Amber Glenn
Gracie Gold
Giselle Graves
Hanna Harrell
Finley Hawk
Jill Heiner
Hannah Harrera
Tia Hilbelink
Rena Ikenishi
Gabriella Izzo
Mia Kalin
Ellie Kam
Katie Krafchik
Josephine Lee
Isabeau Levito
Elyce Lin-Gracey
Hannah Lofton
Maryn Pierce
Abigail Ross
Paige Rydberg
Clare Seo
Katie Shen
Audrey Shin
Phoebe Stubbenfield
Bradie Tennell
Linsday Thorngren
Kate Wang
Wren Waren-Jacobson
Sherry Zhang
Adele Zheng
Ava Ziegler
Pairs
Sonia Baram / Daniel Tioumentsev
Ashley Cain-Gribble / Timothy LeDuc~
Emily Chan / Spencer Howe
Alexa Knierim / Brandon Frazier
Katie McBeath / Nathan Bartholomay
Anastasiia Smirnova / Danil Siiantsyia
Cayla Smith / Andy Deng
Ice Dance
Emily Bratti / Ian Somerville
Oona Brown / Gage Brown
Helene Carhart / Volodmyr Horovyi
Christina Carreira / Anthony Ponomarenko
Molly Cesanek / Yehor Yehorov
Madison Chock / Evan Bates
Caroline Green / Michael Parsons
Jenna Hauer / Benjamin Starr
Kaitlin Hawayek / Jean-luc Baker
Angela Ling / Caleb Wein
Lorraine McNamara / Anton Spirdonov
Caroline Mullen / Brendan Mullen
Leah Neset / Artem Markelov
Eva Pate / Logan Bye
Elliana Peal / Ethan Peal
Vanessa Pham / Jonathan Rogers
Katarina Wolfkostin / Jeffrey Chen
* - indicates the skater has indicated they will not compete next season
~ - indicates the team has retired
7 notes · View notes
dccomicsnews · 5 years
Text
Review: Supergirl #26
[Editor’s Note: This review may contain spoilers]
Writer: Marc Andreyko
Pencils: Kevin Macguire
Inks: Sean Parsons, Scott Hanna, Wade von Grawbadger
Colors: Fco Plascencia, Chris Sotomayor
Letters: Tom Napolitano
  Summary
We find Supergirl after her capture. She seems well, though the subject of twisted experiments at the hands of a familiar individual. With the help of allies she knows, but…
View On WordPress
2 notes · View notes
browsethestacks · 6 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Exit Stage Left: The Snagglepuss Chronicles #06 (2018)
Cover + 3 Page Preview
“His life and career are in ashes, but Snagglepuss still has one card to play. Don’t miss the unforgettable conclusion to EXIT STAGE LEFT!”
Script: Mark Russell Pencils: Mike Feehan Inks: Sean Parsons Cover: Ben Caldwell
57 notes · View notes
brookstonalmanac · 2 years
Text
Birthdays 9.4
Beer Birthdays
Samuel Simon Loeb (1862)
William Hamm, Jr. (1893)
Ken Weaver (1983)
Five Favorite Birthdays
Anton Bruckner; Austrian composer (1824)
Whitney Cummings; comedian (1982)
Candy Loving; Playboy playmate 1/79 (1956)
Darius Milhaud; French composer (1892)
Ione Skye; English-American actress (1971)
Famous Birthdays
Joan Aiken; English author (1924)
Al-Biruni; Persian physician and polymath (973)
Carl Heinrich Biber; Austrian composer (1681)
Janet Biehl; philosopher (1953)
Daniel Burnham; architect (1846)
Martin Chambers; English drummer and singer (1951)
Craig Claiborne; journalist, author (1920)
Darryl Cotton; Australian singer-songwriter and guitarist (1949)
Francois Rene de Chateaubriand; French writer (1776)
Max Delbrück; German-American biophysicist (1906)
Edward Dmytryk; film director (1908)
Gary Duncan; rock guitarist (1946)
Danny Gatton; guitarist (1945)
Mitzi Gaynor; actor, dancer (1931)
Clive Granger, Welsh-American economist (1934)
George William Gray, British chemist, creator of liquid crystals (1926)
Max Greenfield; actor (1980)
Kevin Harrington; Australian actor (1959)
Paul Harvey; radio journalist (1918)
Jacqueline Hewitt; astrophysicist and astronomer (1958)
Syd Hoff; author and illustrator (1912)
Constantijn Huygens; Dutch poet and composer (1596)
Beyoncé Knowles; pop singer (1981)
Lewis Howard Latimer; inventor (1848)
Alexander Liberman, Russian-American artist (1912)
Dave Liebman; saxophonist (1946)
Donald McKay; shipbuilder (1810)
Kyle Mooney; comedian (1984)
Albert Joseph Moore; English artist (1841)
Stanford Moore; biochemist (1913)
Howard Morris; comedian (1919)
Gene Parsons; singer-songwriter, guitarist, and banjo player (1944)
George Percy; English explorer (1580)
Mike Piazza; New York Mets C (1968)
Drew Pinsky; radio and television host (1958)
Mary Renault; English writer (1905)
Oskar Schlemmer; German artist (1888)
Hanna Schwamborn; German actress (1992)
Jan Švankmajer; Czech filmmaker (1934)
Kim Thayil; guitarist and songwriter (1960)
Tom Watson; golfer (1949)
Damon Wayans; actor, comedian (1960)
Dallas Willard; philosopher (1935)
Gerald Wilson; trumpet player (1918)
Richard Wright; writer (1908)
Shinya Yamanaka; Japanese biologist (1962)
Dick York; actor (1928)
Bobby Jarzombek; drummer (1963)
0 notes