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#dorothy e hayes
sheltiechicago · 1 year
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Power to the people: the branding of the Black Panther party
Injustice Anywhere Is a Threat to Justice Everywhere, 1970 Illustrator: Floyd Sowell Designer: Dorothy E. Hayes
This brutal image highlights the gross mistreatment Bobby Seale suffered during the trial of the Chicago Eight in 1970. It is supported by the final line from Martin Luther King Jr’s Letter from a Birmingham Jail
Photograph: The Merrill C Berman Collection
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newyorkthegoldenage · 11 months
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A grinning Dwight Eisenhower hears members of National Arts and Sports Committee for the Eisenhower-Nixon Republican ticket sing an "I Like Ike" song for him at the Waldorf Astoria before the general appeared at the annual Alfred E. Smith Memorial Dinner, October 16, 1952.
From left to right back of piano, are: Gene Tunney; Eddie Eagan, Robert Montgomery, Happy Felton (partially hidden), Gen. Eisenhower, Dorothy Fields, Bob Christenberry (partially hidden), Bill Gaxton, and New Hampshire Gov. Sherman Adams. Seated at the piano are Irving Berlin and Helen Hayes.
Photo: Matty Zimmerman for the AP
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detroitlib · 2 years
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View of soprano Carlotta Franzell purchasing record albums to donate to the E. Azalia Hackley Collection at the Detroit Public Library. Franzell holds a recording of "Porgy and Bess." Stamped on back: "Photo by Ben Greenhaus, 475 Broadway, Times Bldg., New York 18, N.Y." Clipping on back: "Miss Franzel [sic] is shown buying the records to present to the E. Tzalia Hachley [sic] Memorial Collection in the Detroit Public Library. The records received a few days ago include two albums of Marion [sic] Anderson, two by Roland Hayes, three by Paul Robeson, one by Dorothy Maynor as well as several single recordings by Negro artists." Handwritten on clipping: "3/1/45." Handwritten on back: "Carlotta Franzel."
E. Azalia Hackley Collection of African Americans in the Performing Arts, Detroit Public Library
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embossross · 9 months
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2023 in books: fiction edition
literary fiction published 2013-2023 (based on English translation)
The Employees by Olga Ravn (⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Detransition Baby by Torrey Peters (⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐)
When We Cease to Understand the World by Benjamín Labatut (⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐)
There’s No Such Thing As an Easy Job by Kikuko Tsumura (⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Human Acts by Han Kang (⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Bunny by Mona Awad (⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Frankissstein by Jeanette Winterson (⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐)
All Your Children Scattered by Beata Umubyeyi Mairesse (⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Mister N by Najwa Barakat (⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Fever Dream by Samanta Schweblin (⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Gideon the Ninth by Tamsyn Muir (⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Brickmakers by Selva Almada (⭐⭐⭐⭐)
True Biz by Sara Nović (⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Abyss by Pilar Quintana (⭐⭐⭐⭐)
The Meursault Investigation by Kamel Daoud (⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Frankenstein in Baghdad by Ahmed Saadawi (⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Spring Garden by Tomoka Shibasaki (⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Rombo by Esther Kinsky (⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Concerning My Daughter by Kim Hye-Jin (⭐⭐⭐⭐)
The House of Rust by Khadija Abdalla Bajaber (⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Men without Women by Haruki Murakami (⭐⭐⭐)
The Sky Above the Roof by Natacha Appanah (⭐⭐⭐)
Sweet Bean Paste by Durian Sukegawa (⭐⭐⭐)
Luster by Raven Leilani (⭐⭐⭐)
Solo Dance by Li Kotomi (⭐⭐⭐)
Untold Night and Day by Bae Suah (⭐⭐⭐)
The Shadow King by Maaza Mengiste (⭐⭐⭐)
The Deep by Rivers Solomon (⭐⭐⭐)
Afterlives by Abdurazak Gurnah (⭐⭐⭐)
Wreck the Halls by Tessa Bailey
Indelicacy by Amina Cain (⭐⭐⭐)
Out of Love by Hazel Hayes (⭐⭐⭐)
Freshwater by Akwaeke Emezi (⭐⭐⭐)
The Reactive by Masande Ntshanga (⭐⭐⭐)
The Houseguest: And Other Stories by Amparo Dávila (⭐⭐)
The Glutton by A.K. Blakemore (⭐⭐)
Homebodies by Tembe Denton-Hurst (⭐⭐)
Nervous System by Lina Meruane (⭐⭐)
Owlish by Dorothy Tse (⭐⭐)
The President and the Frog by Carolina de Robertis (⭐⭐)
The Magic of Discovery by Britt Andrews (⭐)
literary fiction published 1971-2012
House of Leaves by Mark Z. Danielewski (⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐)
The Vampire Lestat by Anne Rice (⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Corregidora by Gayl Jones (⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Signs Preceding the End of the World by Yuri Herrera (⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Changes: A Love Story by Ama Ata Aidoo (⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Open City by Teju Cole (⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐)
The Lover by Marguerite Duras (⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Mild Vertigo by Mieko Kanai (⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Abandon by Sangeeta Bandyopadhyay (⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Toddler Hunting and Other Stories by Taeko Kōno (⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Parable of the Sower by Octavia E. Butler (⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Elena Knows by Claudia Piñeiro (⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Ceremony by Leslie Marmon Silko (⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Perestroika by Tony Kushner *a play (⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Strange Weather in Tokyo by Hiromi Kawakami (⭐⭐⭐⭐)
By Night in Chile by Roberto Bolaño (⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Drive Your Plow over the Bones of the Dead by Olga Tokarczuk (⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Three Strong Women by Marie NDiaye (⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Kingdom Cons by Yuri Herrera (⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Paradise Rot by Jenny Hval (⭐⭐⭐⭐)
The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy (⭐⭐⭐⭐)
A Mountain to the North, A Lake to the South, Paths to the West, a River to the East by Laszlo Krasznahorkai (⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Interview with the Vampire by Anne Rice (⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Queen Pokou by Véronique Tadjo (⭐⭐⭐)
The Private Lives of Trees by Alejandro Zambra (⭐⭐⭐)
The Hour of the Star by Clarice Lispector (⭐⭐⭐)
Sweet Days of Discipline by Fleur Jaeggy (⭐⭐⭐)
Mr. Potter by Jamaica Kincaid (⭐⭐⭐)
Bluebeard’s First Wife by Ha Seong-nan (⭐⭐⭐)
The Body Artist by Don DeLillo (⭐⭐⭐)
Glaciers by Alexis M. Smith (⭐⭐⭐)
Curtain by Agatha Christie (⭐⭐⭐)
The Iliac Crest by Cristina Rivera Garza (⭐⭐⭐)
My Name Is Red by Orhan Pamuk (⭐⭐⭐)
The Dovekeepers by Alice Hoffman (⭐⭐⭐)
Like Water for Chocolate by Laura Esquivel (⭐⭐⭐)
Rashomon and Seventeen Other Stories by Ryūnosuke Akutagawa (⭐⭐)
Coraline by Neil Gaiman (⭐⭐)
The End of the Moment We Had by Toshiki Okada (⭐⭐)
The Optimist’s Daughter by Eudora Welty (⭐)
literary fiction published start of time-1970
Catch-22 by Joseph Heller (⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐)
🔁 The Stranger by Albert Camus (⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐)
The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter by Carson McCullers (⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐)
🔁 One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel García Márquez (⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐)
The Posthumous Memoirs of Brás Cubas by Machado de Assis (⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Empty Wardrobes by Maria Judite de Carvalho (⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Stoner by John Williams (⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐)
The Chandelier by Clarice Lispector (⭐⭐⭐⭐)
An Apprenticeship, or the Book of Pleasures by Clarice Lispector (⭐⭐⭐⭐)
The Woman in the Dunes by Kōbō Abe (⭐⭐⭐⭐)
As I Lay Dying by William Faulkner (⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Nightwood by Djuna Barnes (⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Dracula by Bram Stoker (⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Chess Story by Stefan Zweig (⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Aura by Carlos Fuentes (⭐⭐⭐⭐)
Fathers and Sons by Ivan Turgenev (⭐⭐⭐)
All Passion Spent by Vita Sackville-West (⭐⭐⭐)
The Hole by José Revueltas (⭐⭐⭐)
Baron Bagge by Alexander Lernet-Holenia (⭐⭐⭐)
Carmilla by J. Sheridan Le Fanu (⭐⭐)
Barabbas by Pär Lagerkvist (⭐)
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kwebtv · 2 months
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Series Premiere
Ben Casey - To the Pure - ABC - October 2, 1961
Medical Drama
Running Time: 60 minutes
Written By James E. Moser
Produced by James E. Moser
Directed by Fielder Cook
Stars:
Vince Edwards as Dr. Ben Casey
Sam Jaffe As Dr. David Zorba
Harry Landers as Dr. Ted Hoffman
Bettye Ackerman as Dr. Maggie Graham
Jeanne Bates as Nurse Wills
Aki Aleong as Nobby (Dr. George Nobura)
Bart Heyman as Dr. Paul Cain
Rafael Lopez as Pete Salazar
Angela Clarke as Mrs. Salazar
Maurice Manson as Dr. Harold Jensen
Adrienne Hayes as Dorothy Wilmer
Ann Morrison as Mrs. Wilmer
Francis DeSales as Dr. Donnelly
Stuart Nisbet as Dr. Taylor
Wilton Graff as Doctor
Susan Davis as Secretary
Nelson Olmsted as Lawyer
Maudie Prickett as Miss Walker
Adrienne Marden as Nurse
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lboogie1906 · 5 months
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Douglas Turner Ward May 5, 1930 - February 20, 2021) an actor, director, and playwright, was considered a legend in African American theatre. He co-founded the Negro Ensemble Company. NEC has spawned over 200 productions. It has been the incubator of opportunity for such talents as Denzel Washington, Phylicia Rashad, Samuel L. Jackson, Angela Bassett, Giancarlo Esposito, Laurence Fishburne, Esther Rolle, Cleavon Little, Frances Foster, Sherman Helmsley, David Alan Grier, and Lynn Whitfield. Playwrights such as Paul Carter Harrison, Charles Fuller, Judy Ann Mason, Joseph A. Walker, Philip Hayes Dean, J. E. Franklin, Endesha Mae Holland, and Aisah Rahman found the NEC to be a nurturing environment for the production of their plays.
He was born in Burnside, Louisiana to Roosevelt and Dorothy (Short) Ward. His early education was at Wilberforce University and the University of Michigan. He was a journalist. He began studying acting at the Actor’s Workshop, He debuted in The Iceman Cometh. He understudied Sidney Poitier in A Raisin in the Sun. He began writing plays. His first two efforts, Day of Absence and Happy Ending were very successful.
He discussed the lack of opportunity for Black actors and Black theatre. This led to an invitation from the New York Times to write an op-ed piece on the state of Black theatre.
The Ford Foundation read the article and invited him and his associates, actor Robert Hooks and theatre manager Gerald S. Krone, to meet. The Ford Foundation funded $434K to what became the NEC.
From its first production, Song of the Lusitanian Bogey, NEC became the envy of the theatrical world. Ford ceased funding the theatre. He continued to lead the company for many years but he relinquished the artistic directorship of NEC in the late 1990s.
He married Diana Powell (1966). They had two children. #africanhistory365 #africanexcellence
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outoftowninac · 3 years
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ONCE IN A LIFETIME
1930
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In 1929 Moss Hart accepts a job as social director in the Catskills and stages plays at the YMHA in Newark. Eventually. he takes the advice of his agent and writes a comedy, Once in a Lifetime, which deals with the early days of Hollywood films. Sam Harris agrees to produce it if George S. Kaufman will collaborate on the script and also direct. Kaufman consents, but the Atlantic City opening is a failure, and he considers quitting. It finally opens to rave reviews in New York City in September 1930, thus beginning the long-lasting Kaufman-Hart collaboration.
The cast included:
Playwright GEORGE S. KAUFMAN, in a rare acting role 
HUGH O'CONNELL, 
JEAN DIXON, 
GRANT MILLS, 
OSCAR POLK, 
BLANCHE RING (replaced out-of-town by SPRING BYINGTON), 
SALLY PHIPPS, 
CLARA WARING, 
OTIS SCHAEFER, 
JANET CURRIE, 
MARIE FERGUSON, 
CHARLES MACK, 
EUGENIE FRONTAI, 
DOROTHY TALBOT, 
EDWARD LOUD, 
PAYSON CRANE, 
FRANCES E. BRANDT, 
MARC LOEBELL, 
CHARLES HALTON, 
LEONA MARICLE, 
LOUIS CRUGER, 
WILLIAM McFADDEN, 
STANLEY FITZPATRICK, 
EDWIN MILLS, 
KEMPTON RACE, 
GEORGE CASSELBURY, 
BURTON MALLORY, 
WALTER DREHER, JACK WILLIAMS, 
JOHN O. HEWITT, 
JANE BUCHANAN, 
HAROLD GRAU, 
VIRGINIA HAWKINS, 
IRVING MORROW, 
GRANVILLE BATES, 
FRANCES THRESS, 
KATHRYN WYLIE (replaced out-of-town by GEORGIA MacKINNON),
ROBERT RYDER, 
MANNART KIPPEN (role eliminated out-of-town), 
JENNIE FULD (role eliminated out-of-town) 
ROBERT B. SINCLAIR (role eliminated out-of-town)
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The Atlantic City premiere was staged at Nixon’s Apollo Theatre in May 1930. Helen Hayes performed there in Clarence and The Golden Age in 1919. The theatre was also used as a dance hall in the 1920s. The front door was located on South New York Avenue but the side was along the world-famous Boardwalk. It was eventually converted to a cinema and was demolished in the 1970’s.
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In 1959, Moss Hart wrote an autobiographical book titled “Act One” which chronicled his out-of-town troubles with Once in a Lifetime.  The book was filmed in 1963 and staged in 2014. Hart wrote:
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"I never want to go any place where I can't get back to Broadway and 44th by midnight." ~ George S. Kaufman
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~ from “Moss Hart: A Prince of the Theatre” by Jared Brown
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The play then did a short stint at the Brighton Theatre in Brooklyn, a vaudeville house gone legit for the summer. 
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After doctoring, the play continued it’s out-of-town tryouts in Philadelphia at the Lyric Theatre before tackling the Big Apple. 
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Once in a Lifetime opened on Broadway at the Music Box Theatre on September 24, 1930 and ran for 305 performances. George Kaufman announced at the opening night curtain call that "80% of this show is Moss Hart."
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It was filmed in 1932, by Universal starring Jack Oakie, Sidney Fox, Louise Fazenda, Aline MacMahon, and Zasu Pitts.
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The show's immense size kept it from being revived for many years (20 men,19 women, plus extras; 5 sets), until the Royal Shakespeare Company produced a smash revival in 1977. A 1978 Broadway revival at Circle in the Square restored the show's reputation in the States and many repertory theaters have produced it since. In the winter of 2005, London's National Theatre produced a first-class revival.
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Ernest Cossart.
Filmografía
Cine
1916: The Pursuing Vengeance, de Martin Sabine.
1935: The Scoundrel, de Ben Hecht y Charles MacArthur.
1936: El gran Ziegfeld, de Robert Z. Leonard.
1936: Three Smarts Girls, de Henry Koster.
1936: Murder with Pictures, de Charles Barton.
1937: Angel, de Ernst Lubitsch.
1937: Champagne valse, de A. Edward Sutherland.
1939: Zaza, de George Cukor.
1939: Tower of London, de Rowland V. Lee.
1939: Three Smart Girls Grow Up, de Henry Koster.
1939: The Light that Failed, de William A. Wellman
1939: Lady of the Tropics, de Jack Conway.
1940: Kitty Foyle, de Sam Wood.
1940: Tom Brown's School Days, de Robert Stevenson.
1941: Skylark, de Mark Sandrich.
1942: Kings Row, de Sam Wood.
1945: Love Letters, de William Dieterle.
1945: Tonight and every Night, de Victor Saville.
1946: Cluny Brown, de Ernst Lubitsch.
1946: The Jolson Story, de Alfred E. Green
1947: Love from a Stranger, de Richard Whorf.
1949: John Loves Mary, de David Butler.
Teatro (Broadway)
1908: The Girls of Gottenberg, música de Ivan Caryll y Lionel Monckton, letras de Adrian Ross y Basil Hood.
1910: Mrs. Dot, de William Somerset Maugham, con Billie Burke.
1910: Love among the Lions, de Winchell Smith a partir de F. Anstey, con Ivan F. Simpson
1911: The Zebra, de Paul M. Potter a partir de Marcel Nancey y Paul Armont.
1912: The Typhoon, de Emil Nyitray y Byron Ongley a partir de Menyhert Lengyel.
1914: Marrying Money, de Washington Pezey y Bertram Marbugh.
1915: Androcles and the Lion, de George Bernard Shaw.
1915: The Man who married a Dumb Wife, de Anatole France, con Isabel Jeans.
1915: El sueño de una noche de verano, de William Shakespeare, con Isabel Jeans.
1915: The Doctor's Dilemma, de George Bernard Shaw.
1915: Sherman was right, de Frank Mandel.
1920-1921: The Skin Game, de John Galsworthy.
1921: The Title, de Arnold Bennett, interpretada y dirigida por Lumsden Hare.
1922: HE Who gets slapped, de Leónidas Andreiev, adaptada por Gregory Zilboorg, con Richard Bennett, Margalo Gillmore, Edgar Stehli, Henry Travers y Helen Westley.
1922: From Morn to Midnight, de Georg Kaiser, adaptada por Ashley Dukes, con Allyn Joslyn, Edgar Stehli, Henry Travers y Helen Westley.
1922-1923: Seis personajes en busca de autor, de Luigi Pirandello, adaptada por Edward Storer, con Florence Eldridge.
1923: The Love Habit, adaptación de Gladys Unger a partir de Pour avoir Adrienne, de Louis Verneuil, con Florence Eldridge.
1923: Casanova, de Lorenzo De Azertis, adaptada por Sidney Howard.
1923-1924: Santa Juana, de George Bernard Shaw, con Henry Travers.
1924: Seis personajes en busca de autor.
1924: The Steam Roller, de Laurence Eyre.
1924-1925: Cándida, de George Bernard Shaw, con Pedro de Cordoba.
1925-1926: Arms and the Man, de George Bernard Shaw, con Pedro de Cordoba y Henry Travers.
1926: The Chief Thing, de Nikolaï Evreinov, adaptada por Leo Randole y Herman Bernstein, con Romney Brent, Edward G. Robinson, Lee Strasberg, Henry Travers y Helen Westley.
1926-1927: Loose Ankles, de Sam Janney.
1926-1927: What never dies, de Alexander Engel, adaptada por Ernest Boyd.
1927-1928: The Doctor's Dilemma, de George Bernard Shaw, con Margalo Gillmore, Alfred Lunt, Henry Travers y Helen Westley.
1928: Marco Millions, de Eugene O'Neill, escenografía de Rouben Mamoulian, con Robert Barrat, Albert Dekker, Margalo Gillmore, Alfred Lunt, Vincent Sherman y Henry Travers.
1928: Volpone, de Ben Jonson, adaptada por Ruth Langner, con Albert Dekker, Margalo Gillmore, Alfred Lunt, Vincent Sherman, Henry Travers y Helen Westley.
1928-1929: Caprice, de Philip Moeller, con Douglass Montgomery.
1929: Becky Sharp, de Langdon Mitchell, a partir de La feria de las vanidades, de William Makepeace Thackeray, con Etienne Girardot, Arthur Hohl, Basil Sydney y Leonard Willey.
1930: The Apple Cart, de George Bernard Shaw, con Violet Kemble-Cooper, Tom Powers, Claude Rains y Helen Westley.
1930: Milestones, de Arnold Bennett y Edward Knoblauch, con Beulah Bondi y Selena Royle.
1931: Getting Married, de George Bernard Shaw, con Romney Brent, Dorothy Gish, Henry Travers y Helen Westley.
1931: The Way of the World, de William Congreve, con Walter Hampden, Gene Lockhart, Kathleen Lockhart, Selena Royle y Cora Witherspoon.
1931: The Roof, de John Galsworthy, con Henry Hull y Selena Royle.
1932: The Devil passes, de Benn W. Levy, con Eric Blore, Arthur Byron, Mary Nash y Basil Rathbone.
1932: Too true to be good, de George Bernard Shaw, escenografía de Leslie Banks, con Leo G. Carroll y Claude Rains.
1933: The Mask and the Face, de W. Somerset Maugham, con Leo G. Carroll y Humphrey Bogart
1933-1934: Mary of Scotland, de Maxwell Anderson, con Helen Hayes, Edgar Barrier, George Coulouris, Philip Merivale, Moroni Olsen y Leonard Willey.
1935: Accent on Youth, de Benn W. Levy
1937: Madame Bovary, de Benn W. Levy, a partir de Gustave Flaubert, con Eric Portman y O. Z. Whitehead.
1945: Devils Galore, de Eugene Vale.
1948: The Play's the Thing, de Ferenc Molnár, adaptada por P. G. Wodehouse, con Louis Calhern, Francis Compton y Faye Emerson.
1949: The Ivy Green, de Mervyn Nelson, con Hurd Hatfield.
Créditos: Tomado de Wikipedia
https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ernest_Cossart
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bdscuatui · 4 years
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Miller, 80.000 đô la.AURORA / EAST AURORA • 4150 Martingale Ct # 26, Mona Livingston đến Maureen Ann Martin; Ronald George Martin, $ 490.000. • 226 Walnut St., Ruth E. Musty cho Barbara L. Ronan; Michael E. Ronan, $ 185,000. • Trung tâm 648 St., Henrietta Smith; Henrietta F. Smith đến Tod Douglas Smith, $ 132,000.BLASDELL • 3879 South Park Ave., Florence D. Pinkoske; William L. Pinkoske đến WNY Management Group LLC, $ 115.000.BOoston • 6405 Hillcroft Drive, John C. Tomani; Rosemary F. Tomani đến Therese M. Muscato, 430.000 đô la.BUFFALO • 11 Summer St., Main-Summer Corp đến Gold Wynn Buffalo LLC, 1.300.000 đô la. • 509 Virginia St., Geoffrey P. White đến Frederick Mertz, 515.000 đô la. , Kathleen T. Schwinger đến 1597 Elmwood Buffalo LLC, $ 465.000. • 13 St Johns Place, 829 Bird Ave. LLC đến Edward M. Bartel; Rebecca L. Bartel, 425.000 đô la. • 527 Richmond Ave., Lanzer Holdings LLC đến Kristen Tservranckx, 410.250 đô la. • 433 Prospect Ave., Alexanders 46 Inc; Greg Phillies Enterprises LLC đến Alice M. Damato; Donald R. Damato, 350.000 đô la. • 64 Rand Ave., Bruce Omahen; Rebecca Omahen đến Ansh Gupta; Kayla Kathleen Gupta, 242.050 đô la. • 45 Shoreham Parkway, Atml Trading Inc đến Auwid Adnan M Al, 225.000 đô la. • 342 Amherst St., M & j Limited Partnership to Safe Link Transport Inc, 220.000 đô la. • 22 Putnam South, Darryl Heusinger; Eric Heusinger; Bart Semira đến Jenna L. Darron, $ 217.500. • Biệt thự 391, John Majewski III cho Andrew Binder, $ 210.000. • 277 Woodside, Hook & Lad Development LLC đến Kathryn M. Marzeski, $ 180.000. • 733 St Lawrence Ave., Jason P. Kilonsky; Jennifer L. Scibetta cho Jessica L. Shchurowsky; Stephen M. Shchurowsky, $ 176,900. • 173 West Tupper St., Ronald Scott đến Alisha Kandola, $ 175,440. • 706 Tonawanda St., Ahmed Alkaifi đến Best Home WNY Inc, $ 160.000. • 65 Baynes, Tany Haynes cho Anne H. Showers; Jesse J. Showers, 150.500 đô la. • 176 Crystal, Hook & Lad Development LLC đến Jessica Ruth Kohl, 132.000 đô la. • 33 Mt Vernon Ave., Richard F. Mazella; Suzana Mazella đến Jordan Khoury, 130.000 đô la. • 409 South Ogden St., Steven Melock; Charles C. Siwy; Kinda Siwy đến Jenelle Dixon; Bernardo Ortiz, 128.900 đô la. • 99 Metcalfe St., Kevin Dawidowicz đến Gabriel L. Malcolm, 125.000 đô la. • 50 Aldrich, Ra & bt LLC đến Timothy I. Mulotta, 125.000 đô la. • 72 Kamper Ave., Sean P. Conrad đến Bruce B. Omahen ; Rebecca L. Omahen, 120.000 đô la. • 193 Lisbon Ave., Booboo 55 Corp đến Jon R. Nelson, 117.000 đô la. • 98 Unger Ave., William C. Londo II cho Jennifer K. Lowry; Timothy O. Overdorf, 95.000 đô la. • 17 Condon Ave., Condon 17 LLC đến Mahdi Enad, 95.000 đô la. • 217 Schiller, Alpha One Realty LLC đến Nieisha S. Beauford, 95.000 đô la. • 127 Downing St., Homedog LLC đến Stacey T. Whalen, 90.240 đô la. • 99 Riverview Place, Rosalie S. Bosch đến Gustavs S. Rhodes; Teresa A. Rhodes, 85.000 đô la. • 462 Plymouth, Thomas J. Raftery đến Imran Hassan, 85.000 đô la. • 145 Evelyn, Stanley C. Owcarz; Stanley Charles Owcarz; Stanley Owcarz đến Nai Chan Rot, 80.000 đô la. • 105 Manhattan Ave., Teena Jackson; Teena Jones đến Sabnam Akther, 75.000 đô la. • 65 Forman, Begum Sufia đến Imran Khalique, 75.000 đô la. • 67 Bird Ave., James Mackinnon tới Corey Rae Hunter, 71.250 đô la. • 895 Prospect Ave., Mary K. Sullivan tới Susan. . • 488 Winspear Ave., Lou Lou Lao đến Buffalo Sunrise Dream USA Inc, 64.000 USD. • 230 Hagen St., Jamal Hossain đến Mst Merina Khatun; Md Kutub Uddin, 60.000 đô la. • 27 Theodore, Cindy D. Clarke đến Mohammad N. Zaman, 60.000 đô la. • 25 Mayer Ave., Black Rock Properties LLC đến Buffalo Revival LLC, 57.500 đô la. • 109 Progressive Ave., Mirza Iqbal Rahman Shs; Chữ ký quản lý vốn dba, 55.000 đô la. • 96 Bush St., Mirza Iqbal Rahman cho tài sản Shs; Chữ ký quản lý vốn dba, 55.000 đô la. • 11 Ivy St., Dream Home Realty của Buffalo Inc đến Majed Miah, 50.000 đô la. • 16 Gatchell St., Ugr Cap LLC đến Afrin Akter; Md Main Uddin, 47.000 đô la. • 55 A, Sit Ma Ma Re đến Faw Lan, 45.000 đô la. • 18 Klaus St., Edward Green đến Pamela N. Stoddard; Ronald F. Stoddard Sr., 45.000 đô la. • 582 William, Mohmed Altashi đến Mothana Anwar S H, 45.000 đô la. • 12 Manhart St., Ernestine Price; Ernestine Marguerite Giá cho Mohammed S. Mia, 41.000 đô la. • 275 Davidson, Patricia Ann Thomas đến 275 Davidson LLC, 40.000 đô la. • 1501 Genesee St., Jhura Corp; Jhura Inc đến Mafiz ký kết Inc, 40.000 đô la. • 393 Northampton, Mohammed Ashak đến Kamrul Hassan Bhuiyan, 39.000 đô la. • 56 Wick St., Kevin Clark đến Md Jahangir Alam, 37.100 đô la. • 2166 Bailey Ave. Cứu Grace Min Ministry Inc cho Sadaf Hina Jawed; Muhammad Arslan Yousaf, 36.000 đô la. • 225 Hagen St., Lindenhurst Gas Corp đến Rozina Akhter; Jamal Hossain, 35.000 đô la. • 354 Florida, Michael A. Seaman; Thành phố Buffalo cho người nổi tiếng bất động sản Hoa Kỳ Inc, 34.000 đô la. • 87 Alma, Thành phố trâu đến Nilufa Yeasmin Mosammat, 33.000 đô la. • 94 Krettner St., Timothy James Andulchat; Mary L. Coston đến Esb Group LLC, $ 32,800. • 58 Maryland St., Geoff Wade; Geoffrey lội đến Bonkuka Fnu Kwayo Ithe, 30.000 đô la. • 128 Carl, Michael A. Seaman; Thành phố Buffalo đến Amirul Hồi giáo, 27.000 đô la. • 43 B, Elora Saied đến Aklima Karim Khan, 21.000 đô la. Ngân hàng Hoa Kỳ NA Tr đến Hzmy LLC, $ 17,622.CHEEKTOWAGA • 68 Ad Windwood Court, Windwood Place LLC đến 3095 Harlem Road Inc, $ 425.000. • 121 Groell Ave., Zabihollah Khaiber đến Mushtaq A. Mohamed, $ 275.000. Dorothy A. Coyle; Ronald J. Coyle đến 3200 Genesee St. LLC, 220.000 đô la. • 51 Goering Ave., Standard Property Management LLC đến Cyprian L. Mbeke; Kai E. Mbeke, 210.000 đô la. • 35 Crandon, Ralph Tweetsey đến Shahin Ahmed; Nele Begum, $ 167.500. • 116 Yvonne Ave., James E. Kolhoff; Marcella J. Kolhoff cho Humayyah Lee Hayward, 165.000 đô la. • 503 Walton Drive, Briana L. Niland cho Richard A. Hall Jr., 162.500 đô la. • 461 Darwin Drive, Janice Tucker cho Joseph L. Coleman IV, 149.000 đô la. • 99 Lou Ann Lái xe, Syte LLC đến Jenna Willis, 146.900 đô la. • 148 Đường Briarcliff, Jeremy B. Hoover đến Nathaniel B. Niver, 145.000 đô la. • 50 Wells Ave., Susan Casucci; Susan B. Casucci đến Sabrina N. Casucci, 145.000 đô la. • 195 Mcnaughton Ave., Michael P. Wendel đến Laurie A. Yaeger, 140.000 đô la. • 307 Parker St., Malwina Lubonski đến Daniel R. Bunch Jr., 125.000 đô la. • 20 Lái xe Parkedge, Brian D. Richards; Renee C. Richards đến Willie Frank Cickyham; Lucy Shannon, 100.000 đô la. • 142 Elmwood Ave., David J. Bartochowski; Bartochowski Irene M tháng 12; Norbert L. Bartochowski cho David Anderson; Melissa Anderson, 90.100 đô la. • 114 Glidden St., Helen A. Piatkowski; Jeanette Ruperti; Chester J. Wrobel; Thomas J. Wrobel đến Hdh Realty Inc, 90.000 đô la. • 107 Olanta St., Guinevere C. Horst; Thomas E. Horst đến James Haley III, 66.000 đô la. • 94 Woodell Ave., Sandra A. Piatek đến Amanda L. Fliss; Virginia Szalczewski, $ 52.500. • 18 Helenbrook Lane, Suzanne M. Kowal; Barbara M. Stanton đến William A. Scholz, 50.000 đô la. • 1591 East Delavan Ave., Douglas J. Stone; Nancy A. Stone đến Ks State Inc, 36.000 đô la. • 19 Vera Ave., Darlene R. Dudzic; Vincent Lotempio đến Cơ quan thế chấp của tiểu bang New York, $ 33,174. • 114 Glidden St., Schlant Mark J Bkr Tr; Wrobel Thomas J Bkr Tr đến Hdh Realty Inc, 30.000 đô la. • 1272 & 1280 Walden Ave., Scott A. Bylewski; Quận Erie đến 1280 Walden LLC, 17.000 đô la. • Đất trống 3048 William St., James Roberts đến Raas Lending Corp, 15.000 đô la. • 89 Henry St., James Hill đến Kevin Wiess, 15.000 đô la. LỚN • 5354 Briannas Nook, Forbes Homes Inc tới Jeffrey M. Meissner, 492.215 đô la. • 5733 Waterford Lane, Essex Ngôi nhà của WNY Inc cho Kevin D. Callahan; Mary J. Callahan, 450.145 đô la. • 9409 Bonnie Fay Drive, Edward M. Bartel; Rebecca L. Bartel đến Karalyn A. Freitag; Peter J. Freitag, 440.000 đô la. • 9640 Cao St., Ashley S. Tibbetts; Evan R. Tibbetts đến Emily A. Adolf; Kurt C. Adolf, $ 390,000. • 8061 Clarherst Drive, Walter J Floss Jr Tin tưởng có thể hủy bỏ 081806 Tr cho Jonathan D. Schierer; Shirley Schierer, 350.000 đô la. • 6125 Đường Goodrich, Barbara Schmid đến Konrad H. Diehl, 205.000 đô la. • 8885 Tòa án Williams, Karin M. Ryan; Robert J. Ryan đến Mcw Const Inc, 155.000 đô la. • 5861 1c Goodrich Road, Thaddeus Reszel; Thaddeus F. Reszel Jr. đến John E. Thur; Susanne K. Thur, 140.000 đô la. • 8928 Willyoungs Nhìn ra, Cimato Enterprises Inc đến Marrano / marc Equity Corporation, 130.000 đô la. • 8783 Stahley Road, Keepsake Homes Inc cho Rosado Manuel E Garcia; Torres Johanne I Batiz, 85.000 USD. • Vùng đất trống Sheridan Drive, Christopher D. Carollo; Richard C. Reinhold đến Ehsan Afshani; Victoria Skurski, 60.000 đô la. • 8150 Hampalinger Road, Betty Lou Fiegl đến Christopher Lavocat; Meredith Lavocat, 50.000 đô la Mỹ. 7751 Đường Ailen, Lawrence J. Calleri; Paula J. Calleri cho Jennifer R. Hoffman; Todd Hoffman, 285.000 đô la Mỹ. 2274 Orchard Place, Irvine J. Gaffney; Richard C. Gaffney to Jammy Noyes, $ 118,000.CONCORD • 9206 Middle Road, Deborah A. Bruno đến Ryan A. Bruno, 155.000.ELMA • 140 Jackman Lane, Charles Agnello; Debra Agnello to Dane D. Đếm; Renee L. Koppenhaver, $ 580,000. • 2751 Bowen Road, David A Ross & diane M Ross Renovation31 LLC đến Joyce M. Chlebek; Mark P. Chlebek, 394.000 đô la. • 6 Hidden Valley Drive, Costa Family Trust 112211 Tr cho Jason Brostko; Julie Brostko, $ 287.500. • 91 Đường Hickory Hill, Michael C. Walczak; Sharon S. Walczak đến Nicole K. Sobol; Spencer L. Sobol, 285.000 đô la. TIẾNG VIỆT • 6694 Prescott Drive, David W. Bates; Paula M. Bates; Bethany Rubin đến Bank of America NA, $ 150,862. • 9729 Versailles Road, Catherine J. Piall đến Darlene M. Ignasiak, $ 101,017. • 8191 Erie Road, Jean Guenot tới Duncan Tyler Jewitt, $ 80.000.FARNHAM • 580 Thương mại St. Orlando; Nicholas J. Orlando; Paul C. Orlando đến Devon Richards, 82.000 USD. ĐẢO ĐẢO • 301 Thuộc địa, Neil F. Hoffman; Heidi C. Martin đến Breanne Rhoads; Kyle M. Rhoads, $ 189.000. • 153 Riverdale Drive, Scott M. Green đến Michele L. Wanko, $ 163.000 .AMAM • 5566 Camp Road, Dc Sw Cleburne LLC đến Micropropericat One LLC, $ 1,011,050. • 2296 Agassiz Drive, Marrano / marc Tập đoàn đến Jason C. Walsh, $ 344,612. • 53 Nice Ave., Ruth S. Wood cho Eric M. Herman; Laura Herman, $ 245,000. • 6671 Đường Burke, George H. Yoviene đến Maryann Miller; Thomas D. Miller, 220.000 đô la. • 4330-berkley Pl & 14075, Mark Leas; Nancy Vitale Leas to Mark C Leas 2015 Revocable Trust Tr, $ 40,000. LACKAWANNA • 95 South Shore, Kyle Wheeler đến Maureen T. Sweeney, 202.500 đô la. • 87 Shamokin Drive, Salvatore A. Monaco đến Debra J. Pytlak; Richard J. Pytlak, 150.000 đô la. • 50 knowlton Ave., Brett J. Gage đến Megan L. Sobocinski; Timothy M. Wilton, 146.810 đô la. • 37 Vincent Ave., Ethan W. Collins; Kenneth Gutschall cho Rmac Trust Series 2016-Ctt Tr; Ngân hàng Hoa Kỳ NA Tr, $ 117,458.LANCASTER • 6291 Broadway, Cheryl A. Derkovitz; Peter A. Derkovitz đến Kim Obllin Bucci; Rudolf D. Bucci, $ 635,000. • 105 Avian Way, Marrano / marc Equity Corporation cho Jamie L. Fletcher; Jonathan R. Fletcher, $ 420,908. • 19 Cây thông, Linda E. Stephens; Richard A. Stephens đến Ari H. Almqvist; Domenika C. Bryant, 360.000 USD. • 26 ngõ Logan, Ann Marie Pickard; James N. Pickard đến Beverly Skorupa; Robert Skorupa, 343.000 đô la. • 25 Willow Ridge, Vera Dziadyk; Zenart J. Dziadyk đến Jeannine Haak; Scott Haak, $ 295.000. • 47 Tín hiệu ổ đĩa, Robin M. Dickman; Scott J. Dickman; Scott Dickman; Robin M. Greene; Robin Greene; Michael J. Herberger đến Fannie Mae, $ 211,712. • 30 Hess Place, Thomas P Schuster Ira Ben; Công ty ủy thác cổ phần đối với Elizabeth Kreppel; Joseph R. Kreppel, $ 208,000. • 76 Robert Drive, Jeannine A. Haak; Scott M. Haak đến Nina N. Mohsini, 198.000 đô la. • 2a St Anthony St., William Severyn đến Ambitious Enterprises Inc, 35.000 đô la. • 2b St Anthony St., William Severyn đến Ambitious Enterprises Inc, 35.000 đô la.MARILLA • 11518 Jamison Road, Justin Enterprises của Marilla Inc đến C & c Snyder Properties LLC, 350.000 đô la. XEM LẠI • Đường đất trống, Đường sân khấu, Candy L. Zackey; Thomas S. Zackey cho John E. Thur; Susanne K. Thur, 130.000 đô la. BỘ SƯU TẬP • 10637 Elm St., Danielle C. Diltz đến Kristen Thomas, $ 118,450.ORCHARD PARK • 124 Breezewood Drive, Michael J. Sullivan Jr. đến Chandler Reid Ferguson, $ 420.000. Edward M. Kruk; Sharon Kruk đến Kelly D. Pomana, 200.000 USD. • 29 Burbank Drive, Delphine A. Rollek; Delphine Ann Rollek đến Thomas Anthony Rollek; Wendy Sue Rollek, 180.000 đô la. • 5661 Scherff, David F. Allan; Diane M. Finger; John Finger cho Bobbi Jo Clark, 150.500 đô la. • 3904 Đường Abbott, Danie E. Brick; Debbie Mcdonell; Deborah M. Mcdonell; Deborah Mcdonell; Joseph D. Mcdonell; Joseph Mcdonell đến Ngân hàng M & t, $ 77,732.SARDINIA • Đường Olean, Mark I LLC đến Mark A. Kless, $ 76,560.CITY OF TONAWANDA • 60 Broad St., D Avid Commercial Properties LLC đến Veg Properties LLC, $ 210.000. • 739 Fletcher St. , Maryann S. Miller; Thomas D. Miller đến Salvatore Niro; Samantha Niro, 152.000 đô la. • 145 Syracuse St., Richard George Sửa sang Bradley N. Sciandra; Raelyn A. Sciandra, 130.000 đô la. • 43 Schuler Ave., Justina Heerdt; Richard Heerdt đến Paige Gore; Luke William Koren, 125.000 đô la.TONAWANDA • 1840 Military Road, Borowski Enterprises LLC đến Classic Lanes Realty LLC, 950.000 đô la. • 167 Irving Terrace, Karolynne M. Walters đến Ye Wu, 214.900 đô la. • 80 Marquette Ave., Ryann Hartmayer cho Kathryn R. Eskew; Ron W. Eskew, 180.000 đô la. • 19-25 Hale Court, V & f Property Management LLC đến G & w Capital Real Real LLC, 165.000 đô la. • 45 Fairlane Ave., Willard A. Sanscrainte Sr. đến Dawn L. Patton; Jonathan Patton, 155.000 đô la. • 111 Westfall, James V. Bartkowski; Thomas V. Bartkowski; Patricia M. Grundtisch; Kathryn M. Ryan đến John H. Callowhill, 134.000 đô la. • 48 Warburton Place, Joseph E. Barry đến Matthew R. Braun, 125.600 đô la. • 463 Harrison Ave., Flower City Properties LLC đến Samantha Williams, 112.000 đô la. • 306 Abbington Ave. , Mark S. Aquino; Ethel Rakowski cho Paul J. Tagliarino, 110.600 đô la. • 471 Delkn Ave., Bertha Tejada đến Roy F. Thurston; Sherry L. Thurston, 101.000 đô la. CÁCH • Đất trống Hunters Creek Road, Mary Munn; Richard Munn đến 606 Oakwood LLC, 84.500 đô la. • 6234 Đường Vermont Hill, Norman R. Daruszka Jr. đến Lsf9 Master Sự tham gia của Master Tr; Ngân hàng Hoa Kỳ NA Tr, 79,733 đô la. SENECA TỐT NHẤT • 69 Tracy Lynn Lane, David J. Nagy; Rosanne M. Nagy đến Kelly A. Gorczyca; Matthew C. Gorczyca, 250.000 đô la. • 273 Garry Drive, Lsf9 Master Trion Trust Tr; Ngân hàng Hoa Kỳ NA Tr đến Tracy tháng 5, $ 200.000. • 33 Arrowhead Drive, Jennifer R. Hoffman; Todd D. Hoffman đến Ronnie Hartman, $ 193,300. • 77 Barnett Drive, Gerald M. Kane; John P. Kane; Joseph M. Kane; Karen E. Kane; Mary C. Kane; Michael F. Kane; Paul A. Kane; Peter T. Kane; Maureen A. Orayfig; Sheila P. Pierce cho Joseph M. Kane; Michelle Kane, 180.000 đô la. • 120 Burch Ave., Liebner Kinda; Mary K. Schwartzmeyer; Thomas J. Schwartzmeyer gửi Ngân hàng Hoa Kỳ NA, $ 172,986. • 51 Greymont Ave., Steven Melock; Charles C. Siwy đến La bàn mạo hiểm của WNY LLC, 120.000 đô la. • 57 Elmsford Drive, Victor Paul Olejniczak đến My Place của WNY LLC, 118.500 đô la. • 4099 Seneca St., Bank of America NA đến Tamsitu Holdings LLC, $ 7.980. [ad_2] Nguồn
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westanddumbasses · 4 years
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fanTRules: When you’ve been tagged you need to name a song you love with every letter of the alphabet.  When you get tagged though, make your own post, so that way there isn’t a gigantically long post with all of our alphabets please!
Tagged by my sister ;)  I like a lot of weird music xDDD
A: All I Want for Christmas is You by: Mariah Carey 
B: Bury a Friend by: Billie Eilish
C: Circle of Life from: the Lion King
D: Don’t by: Ed Sheeran
E: Everybody’s Got Somebody but Me by: Hunter Hayes
F: Fake Your Death by: My Chemical Romance
G: Give Me Love by: Ed Sheeran
H: Heathens by: 21 Pilots
I: I Lived by: One Republic
J: Jamie All Over by: Mayday Parade
K: Kill Me by: The Pretty Reckless
L: Let Her Go by: The Passenger
M: Me and Mrs. Jones by: Michael Buble
N: Need Me by: Eminem (feat. P!nk)
O: Oh Well, Oh Well by: Mayday Parade
P: Possibility by: Lykke Li
Q: Sorry I don’t have one 
R: Raise Hell by: Dorothy
S: Somewhere Only We Know by: Keane
T: That’s What I Like by: Bruno Mars
U: Up All Night by: One Direction
V: Whoops, nothing again.
W: Want Some More by: Nicki Minaj
X: Nope
Y: You Raise Me Up by: Josh Groban
Z: Zero to Hero from: Hercules 
Tagging: @dochollidayed @angel-e-v-a @scamp-00 @fierydeans @deancasapplepie 
I am fairly new to Tumblr.  Hello!
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pghbabesonbikes · 5 years
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Frigid Bitch 2019 Results
Frigid Bitch - back for year 6!
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Continuing tradition as probably the biggest ladies/non-binary bike race in the universe with over 100 riders, this year’s Frigid Bitch expanded with first-time-ever-offered pre-registration and MORE PODIUMS. Held at Threadbare Cider in Spring Garden, at 10am on Saturday, February 16th, 2019, racers started flooding in to stock up on gear, check out the competition, and pick up their maps & manifests.
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As always, there is a one hour window for racers to frantically plan their routes, forge alliances, and make friends. A few local ladies’ racing teams showed up in force, and some veteran Frigid Bitch ride-or-die gangs side-eyed up their matching kits and focused efficiency with determined fuck-it, let’s-do-this attitudes. New racers met riding partners on-site, and a handful of volunteers showed up to take in the crowd before heading out to their no-longer-secret positions.
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A quarter to go-time, everyone was hustled outside to unlock their steeds and gear up for the start line.
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THE CHECKPOINTS
Grandview Overlook Every year, for the out-of-towners, suburb queens, commuters who never stray from the beaten track - there’s always one checkpoint that everybody knows how to get to. Not that we’d make it easy! Pittsburgh’s famous overlook is a slag up Mt Washington, and with the main thru way closed, racers had to either bump it up via shattered sidewalks, or find away around. Volunteers were ready with a toast at the top!
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Fineview Overlook In a city of hills and bridges you’re gonna have a lot of overlooks … Grandview’s much lesser known cousin on the Northside had racers figuring out how to find their way above the ballfield. Anyone who actually followed the map to this checkpoint found themselves climbing one of the toughest Dirty Dozen Hills….oh, did we do that? Whoops!
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Herr’s Island Keep following the map in the other direction, and it’d take you down Rialto St (another Dirty Dozen Hill! Who drew this?!) and across the 30th St Bridge to Herr’s Island, haven of local crew teams and isolated Pgh elite. Everyone knows it’s there; most cyclists have zero reason to ever trek over. On the far end of the island, through some woods & down some steps to a gravel lot in a crumbling wall, volunteers were waiting with a camp fire to check off numbers of the racers who hiked-a-bike or threw down and hustled on foot.
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5 Points Speaking of hike-a-biking, the furthest checkpoint from the start was tucked away in Pgh’s mountain biking mecca, Frick Park. There’s only one spot in the woods where 5 trails spike together in a star formations, colloquially known as…. FIVE POINTS!!! Entering the trail from Beechwood Blvd in Squirrel Hill, anyone who made it this far had to off-road their ride down dirt paths and over exposed roots. But hey, there was hot chocolate at the bottom! 
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Murray Hill Not far from 5 points, Murray Hill Ave gave everyone the opportunity to experience off- roading on a one of the most quintessential Pgh urban this-is-actually-still-a-road terrains (second only to massive potholes): brutally steep cobbles!
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Iron Eden Metal Works Oh, but there were potholes. Snaking the back way up & down bombed-out Sassafras St, nestled in the shadows of the Bloomfield Bridge, lies a two-tiered & strange-looking structure. ~By night!~ a times-past underground venue in the woods, ~by day!~ a rustbelt relic: Iron Eden!
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Bonus checkpoint feature:  ~ * g l a m o u r   s h o t s * ~
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The Hot Metal Bridge It’s a classic. Need we say more?  
The Boob Mausoleum Probably the most infamous tomb in the Allegheny Cemetery, the WHITE mausoleum features a bafflingly intense commitment to full-blown Egyptian theme&decor. Stationed just outside the crypt’s brass-cast pillar-flanked doors, 2 ~prominent~ sphinxes stand guard over the venerable (?) White family portal. Stationed just outside the sphinxes….Frigid Bitch BEACH PARTY!!
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Mohawk St Finally, last in line but top of the list as far as checkpoint shenanigans go; bomb down Fifth Ave from Pitt campus and right before you hit the Birmingham Bridge, there’s a set of city steps that ascend into the woods of West Oakland. They spit out at Landslide Community Farms and a pink jersey barrier where volunteers waited with a camp fire* and a case of PBR. They’d set up a beer chute along the top of the stairs and stood in suspense while racers ran up the steps, not taking the bait. Finally, the vet bitch gang of Alex K, Katherine J and Frankie M threw their bikes over their shoulders, rushed the chute, grabbed a beer, cracked it with their teeth and chugged on the way up.
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*if you missed the campfire, it’s because the fire dept showed up to put it out. See? Shenanigans!
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Once the clock struck 2, everyone had 1 hour to race back to Threadbare. Bikes were slammed into the temp parking, road shoes clacked across the parking lot, the doors were thrown over and spoke card numbers hollered at the waiting table-side officials.
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P A R T Y   T I M E
Pizza was eaten, cider was drunk, war stories were exchanged! Multi-year Bitch Queen Elise R regaled audiences with a story that started as a complaint that she couldn’t run any red lights on the North Side because there were too many cops around, then perked up with details about bombing down towards an intersection from Mohawk, where a white SUV veered into the corner of the intersection, blocking traffic for Elise & her crew to blast their way through, waved them past and yelled “YEAH FRIGID BITCH!!!”
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Podiums
For the first time, the Frigid Bitch podium split into multiple categories. Singlespeed, Mountain Bike, Masters, and Out-Of-Town were added in addition to the all-encompassing Women & Nonbinary Open Field. Check back next year; more are comin!
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Fixed/Singlespeed 1. Alexandra Korshin 2. Rachel Thompson
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Masters 1. Louanna Bailey 2. Frankie Montenegro 3. Kelly Haderly 4. Monica VanDieran 5. Jen Damon 6. Suz Falvey
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7. Christa Ross 8. Stacie Truszkowski 9. Barbara Jensen 10. Sarah Crawford 11. Simone Riddle 12. Suzanne Kinsky 13. Athena Marsh 14. Cynthia Billisits 15. Suzie Silver 16. Heather Mccracken 17. Jolynn Gibson 18. Kelli Jones 19. Dorothy Voelker
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Mountain Bike 1. Suz Falvey 2. Vincent Zeng 3. Nikki Turner
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Out Of Town 1. Jane Hodge 2. Caitlin Woodson 3. Sara Khalil Open Field Results! 1. Elise Rowe #10 2. Shaena Ulissi #18 3. Caryn Willis #73 4. Anna Bieberdorf #114 5. Katie Webber-Plank #93 6. Julie Grove #91
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7. Louanna Baily #15 8. Lydia Yoder #50 9. Lindsay Dill #28 10. Alyssa Crawford #62
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11. Jessie Appleman #87 12. Ania Jaroszewicz #6 13. Amy Wincek #111 14. Emily Palmer #54 15. LaurynStalter #79 16. Mary-Wren Ritchie #86 17. Alexandra Korshin #69 18. Frankie Montenegro #44 19. Katharine Jordan #78 20. Lan Tran #89 21. Naomi Anderson #107 22. Alexandria Shewczyk #29 23. Jaime Martina #26
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24. Megan Andrews #43 25. Cansu Ozen #39 26. Sara Horsey #75 27. Shequaya Bailey #7 28. Kelly Haderly #84 29. Megan Sybeldon #46 30. Allison Glick #104 31. Acadia Klain #37 32. Robyn Brewer #34 33. Anna Barensfeld #52 34. Kelsey Kradel #83 35. Monica VanDieren #4
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36. Jen Damon #80 37. Suz Falvey #88 38. Christa Ross #82 39. StacieTruszkowski #102 40. Greta Daniels #60 41. Elizabeth Salesky #33 42. Barbara Jensen #41 43. Sara Madden #92 44. Vanessa Jameson #110 45. Jane Hodge #112 46. Sarah Crawford #90 47. Rachel Dingfelder #59
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48. Mary Kate Minnick #27 49. Caitlin Woodson #13 50. Simone Riddle #64 51. Sara Khalil #94 52. Suzanne Kinsky #71 53. Taylor Wescott #35 54. Kathleen Blackburn #49 55. Athena Marsh #57 56. Riesa Lirette #14 57. Vincent Zeng #32 58. Anna Faber #47 59. Erin Potts #51 60. Molly Orzechowski #666 61. Jenna DeVivo #23 62. Laura Watson #99 63. Ngani Ndimbie #108 64. Rachel Thompson #113 65. Alexandra Falk #81 66. Cynthia Billisits #48
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67. Sarah Martin #97 68. Laura Everhart #53 69. Bonnie Weibel #61 70. Mary Jackson #65 71. Leah Nicolich #103 72. Charlie Eddington #106 73. Catherine Armbruster #42 74. Paula Zamora #16 75. Ramona Stanley #38 76. Morgan Sulik #21 77. Anusha Simha #119 78. Yvette Aban #58 79. Hwa Han #63 80. Sarah Scherk #101 81. Hayes Indigo #1
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82. Milo Spiders #100 83. Jenna Geiman #22 84. Hannah Berg #31 85. Suzie Silver #56 86. Julie Mallis #36 87. Morgan Tunstall #30 88. Heather McCracken #45 89. Shannon Frishkorn #115 90. Jamie Parke #66 91. Kate Bechak #105 92. Jaclyn Sternick #74 93. Jolynn Gibson #40 94. Maureen Duncan #9 95. Kelli Jones #12 96. Sarah Pearman #96 97. Lauren McKenna #17 98. Jennifer Ross #20 99. Kimberly Garrett #98 100. Chen Li #55 101. Rachel Shockey #25 102. NickyTurner #95 103. HEather McClain #109 104. Emily Voelker #24 105. Nicole Toney #68 106. Jenny Bender #67 107. Shelby Schmidt #72 108. Dorothy Voelker #19 109. Elizabeth LeDonne #77
Prizes
Were there enough prizes to go around? Were people bugging the f out over how awesome they were? We’ll let these photos speak for themselves.
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The Best Part
The Frigid Bitch has always been a race to promote empowerment in the cycling community, to show that underrepresented groups of people can kick just as much ass as the status quo, and to support organizations that in turn provide for  others in need. To that end, funds raised via registration fees and anonymous pledges have always been given to the Greater Pittsburgh Women’s Center & Shelter. Over the past year, another organization has provided immeasurable support for the founders of the Frigid Bitch in their hour of need. This year’s race raised $730 for the Women’s Shelter and $400 for the Women’s Law Project. It couldn’t be done without the support of our racers & our community.
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THANK YOU for another great year! To all of our sponsors, who are solely responsible for the joy fest you just witnessed above! To all my lovely volunteers, without whom this race would never get off the ground, and who pull out all the stops to make this the funnest goddamn alleycat in the whole universe. Thank you to my photographers, without you no one would ever know how fucking awesome this event is! Thank you to my little brother, who always finds the time to churn out another amazing race flyer! THANK YOU TO MY TEAM OF LADIES who helped me throw this race! Without you, Frigid Bitch #5 would have been the last of its kind! Thank you Di-ay, Elise #1 & Elise #2, Kat, Mattie, & Kaylin! Thank you Pittsburgh for being the only city I’d ever wish to be from! I’LL BE BACK!
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SEE YOU NEXT YEAR!
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patriotsnet · 3 years
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Which Presidents Were Democrats And Republicans
New Post has been published on https://www.patriotsnet.com/which-presidents-were-democrats-and-republicans/
Which Presidents Were Democrats And Republicans
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: Lyndon B Johnson Vs Barry Goldwater
The Democrats nominated Lyndon B. Johnson who had succeeded to the presidency upon the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. Johnson, the first president from the South since Andrew Johnson, had been Democratic leader of the Senate. Senator Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota, a longtime liberal, was nominated as Johnsons running mate. The Republicans chose Senator Barry Goldwater of for president and Congressman William E. Miller of New York for vice president.
In the campaign, conducted in the midst of the escalating Vietnam War, Goldwater, an ultraconservative, called for the bombing of North Vietnam and implied that the Social Security system should be dismantled. President Johnson campaigned on a platform of social reform that would incorporate Kennedys New Frontier proposals. Despite the countrys deepening involvement in Vietnam, the president also campaigned as the candidate of peace against the militaristic Goldwater.
Johnson won a decisive victory, polling 43,128,958 popular votes to 27,176,873 for Goldwater. In the Electoral College, he received 486 votes to Goldwaters 52.
The List Of American Presidents Who Came Before Donald Trump And Joe Biden
Donald Trump was elected as the 45th President of the United States in 2016. Four years later, Mr Trump lost the race to Democrat Joe Biden and become the tenth one-term president in US history.
On November 7, after a closely run contest, the former vice-president became the 46th president of the United States, finally claiming the presidency 32 years after his first run in 1988. 
With Joe Biden now sworn in as the 46th US President, we look back at the 44 men before Mr Trump who have taken the presidential oath and the major events that marked their presidencies.
: Andrew Jackson Vs John Quincy Adams
Andrew Jackson won the presidency in 1828 by a landslide, receiving a record 647,292 popular votes to 507,730 for the incumbent John Quincy Adams. John C. Calhoun won the vice presidency with 171 electoral votes to 83 for Richard Rush and seven for William Smith.
The emergence of two parties promoted popular interest in the election. Jacksons party, sometimes called the Democratic-Republicans or simply Democrats, developed the first sophisticated national network of party organizations. Local party groups sponsored parades, barbecues, tree plantings and other popular events designed to promote Jackson and the local slate. The National-Republicans, the party of Adams and Henry Clay, lacked the local organizations of the Democrats, but they did have a clear platform: high tariffs, federal funding of roads, canals and other internal improvements, aid to domestic manufactures and development of cultural institutions.
The 1828 election campaign was one of the dirtiest in Americas history. Both parties spread false and exaggerated rumors about the opposition. Jackson men charged that Adams obtained the presidency in 1824 through a corrupt bargain with Clay. And they painted the incumbent president as a decadent aristocrat who had procured prostitutes for the czar while serving as U.S. minister to Russia and spent taxpayer money on gambling equipment for the White House .
List Of Republican Us Presidents
Abraham Lincoln
Ulysses S. Grant
Rutherford B. Hayes
James Garfield
Chester A. Arthur
Benjamin Harrison
William McKinley
Theodore Roosevelt
William H. Taft
Warren G. Harding
Calvin Coolidge
Herbert C. Hoover
Dwight D. Eisenhower
Richard M. Nixon
Gerald R. Ford
Ronald W. Reagan
George H. W. Bush
George W. Bush
Donald Trump
The Issue Of Slavery: Enter Abraham Lincoln
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In the mid-nineteenth century, slavery was a widely discussed political issue. The Democratic Partys internal views on this matter differed greatly. Southern Democrats wished for slavery to be expanded and reach into Western parts of the country. Northern Democrats, on the other hand, argued that this issue should be settled on a local level and through popular referendum. Such Democratic infighting eventually led to Abraham Lincoln, who belonged to the Republican Party, winning the presidential election of 1860. This new Republican Party had recently been formed by a group of Whigs, Democrats and other politicians who had broken free from their respective parties in order to form a party based on an anti-slavery platform.
Republicans Vs Democrats In Launching Wars: We Have The Numbers
If one were to compare the US political system to a dystopian society divided into distinct factions based on how many wars they have started, an interesting outcome rebuking conventional perceptions would have been observed.
It is not aboutthe strong ondefense, hawkish Republicans juxtaposed withpeace-loving dovish Democrats anymore. Looking back atthe past118 years, there have been some ‘divergents’ warmongering Democrats and amicable Republicans. However, more interestingly and surprising forthe conventional-minded the number ofthe XX century Democratic presidents who kept fromstarting wars is actually zero.
According tothe research conducted bySputnik, sincethe turn ofthe 20th century outof 8 US presidents none have managed tostay away frominitiating military aggression.
In turn, outof 12 Republican leaders, two Warren Harding and Gerald Ford have deviated fromthe generally accepted party reputation.
Since 1900, 35 conflicts have been launched byRepublican administrations compared to23 byDemocrats, with10 GOP presidents launching one or more conflicts, compared to8 Democrats.
Values and Wars
Rooted inAmerican conservatism, the US Republican party commonly referred toas the GOP has always viewed strong national defense asone ofits core principles.
“Democrats believe that cooperation is better thanconflict,” the party’s online platform says.
So who started them, and who ended them?
Calvin Coolidge Republican Candidate For Vice
Calvin Coolidge, three-quarter length portrait, seated, facing right
Governor Calvin Coolidge of Massachusetts first achieved national prominence during the Boston police strike of 1919, when he sent a telegram to Samuel Gompers, President of the American Federation of Labor, saying: “There is no right to strike against the public safety by anyone, anywhere, any time.”
Coolidge was a reserved, uncommunicative New Englander; writer and wit Dorothy Parker once remarked he looked as though he had been “weaned on a pickle.” Even so, his obvious integrity and the simple American values he espoused soon made “Silent Cal” a popular figure. He succeeded to the presidency upon Harding’s death in 1923, and was elected to the White House in his own right in 1924.
Brief Audio Selection:Law and Order. Calvin Coolidge .
: Richard M Nixon Vs George Mcgovern
In 1972 the Republicans nominated President Richard M. Nixon and Vice President Spiro Agnew. The Democrats, still split over the war in Vietnam, chose a presidential candidate of liberal persuasion, Senator George McGovern of South Dakota. Senator Thomas F. Eagleton of Missouri was the vice-presidential choice, but after it was revealed that he had once received electric shock and other psychiatric treatments, he resigned from the ticket. McGovern named Sargent Shriver, director of the Peace Corps, as his replacement.
The campaign focused on the prospect of peace in Vietnam and an upsurge in the economy. Unemployment had leveled off and the inflation rate was declining. Two weeks before the November election, Secretary of State Henry Kissinger predicted inaccurately that the war in Vietnam would soon be over. During the campaign, a break-in occurred at Democratic National Headquarters in the complex in Washington, D.C., but it had little impact until after the election.
The campaign ended in one of the greatest landslides in the nations history. Nixons popular vote was 47,169,911 to McGoverns 29,170,383, and the Republican victory in the Electoral College was even more lopsided at 520 to 17. Only Massachusetts gave its votes to McGovern.
Acting President Of The United States
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An acting president of the United States is an individual who legitimately exercises the powers and duties of the president of the United States even though that person does not hold the office in their own right. There is an established presidential line of succession in which officials of the United States federal government may be called upon to take on presidential responsibilities if the president becomes , dies, resigns, is removed from office during their four-year term of office; or if a has not been chosen before Inauguration Day or has failed to qualify by that date.
If the president dies, resigns, or is removed from office, the vice president automatically becomes president. Likewise, were a president-elect to die during the transition period, or decline to serve, the vice president-elect would become president on Inauguration Day. A vice president can also become the acting president if the president becomes incapacitated. However, should the presidency and vice presidency both become vacant, the statutory successor called upon would not become president, but would only be acting as president. To date, two vice presidentsGeorge H. W. Bush and Dick Cheney have served as acting president. No one lower in the presidential line of succession has so acted.
The Big List Of Alleged Malefactors
Each person identified as indicted, from 56 years of Executive branch investigations, is listed in Figure 4. Figure 5 provides the numbers, thus far, for the Trump administration. Two years into his term, President Trump has already proved greater than all but one of the previous 10 Presidents in number of indictments the Administration has scored. Congratulations Mr. Trump, you are the Greatest! Of course, the information in Figure 5 that is accurate in the morning may be out of date by the afternoon.
The Final Reports of the 28 Special Prosecution, Special Prosecutor, and Independent Counsel investigations between 1973 and 1999 are the go-to source for who was indicted for what. Before an investigation closes down it will be clear if the indictment itself survives legal challenge; cases will go to trial; there will be decisions. But the independent investigation may well close down before appeals are heard and decided. Therefore, the final reports are not, in some cases, the last word on total convictions and jail time. That still required further research of court records, news stories, and obituaries.
It is not necessary to read the many hundreds of pages of most of these documents for the raw numbers. There are, though, many engrossing distractions in the tales of greed for power or money, ambition, obstruction, arrogance, loyalty, ideological zealotry, duplicity, error and incompetence the reports lay out in generally careful legal language.
Interesting Insights Into Presidents And Gas Prices
To answer that question we took a look at every presidential term since vehicles became mainstream. Then to make a completely fair assessment, we took note of the actual price paid for a gallon of gas at the time and what the price would be if it was adjusted for 2020 inflation. Each gas price listed is an average for the length of that presidents term.
Weve also taken note of any major world events that might have affected the price of oil during that presidents term. Because all it takes is a large hurricane or signs of a recession to throw the numbers way off from the average.
The infograph here provides an overview of how gas prices have fluctuated from one President to the next. A few interesting insights include:
The very clear takeaway is that which party wins the presidency has less of an impact on gasoline prices than supply and demand. That usually isnt dictated by who is president but rather world events that either negatively/positively affect the supply chain or increase/decrease demand for gasoline.
Want some tips on how to save gas? Check out our post here to learn more!
*This article was updated on 7/21/2021.
: John Adams Vs Thomas Jefferson
The 1796 election, which took place against a background of increasingly harsh partisanship between Federalists and Republicans, was the first contested presidential race.
The Republicans called for more democratic practices and accused the Federalists of monarchism. The Federalists branded the Republicans Jacobins after Maximilien Robespierres faction in France. The Republicans opposed John Jays recently negotiated accommodationist treaty with Great Britain, whereas the Federalists believed its terms represented the only way to avoid a potentially ruinous war with Britain. Republicans favored a decentralized agrarian republic; Federalists called for the development of commerce and industry.
State legislatures still chose electors in most states, and there was no separate vote for vice president. Each elector cast two votes for president, with the runner-up becoming vice president.
The Federalists nominated Vice President John Adams and tried to attract southern support by running Thomas Pinckney of South Carolina for the second post. Thomas Jefferson was the Republican standard-bearer, with Aaron Burr as his running mate. Alexander Hamilton, always intriguing against Adams, tried to throw some votes to Jefferson in order to elect Pinckney president. Instead, Adams won with 71 votes; Jefferson became vice president, with 68; Pinckney came in third with 59; Burr received only 30 and 48 votes went to various other candidates.
Republicans From Reagan To Trump
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After running on a platform based on reducing the size of the federal government, Reagan increased military spending, spearheaded huge tax cuts and championed the free market with policies that became known as Reaganomics.
In foreign policy, the United States also emerged the victor in its long-running Cold War with the Soviet Union. But as the economy began to show signs of weakness, the growing national debt helped foster popular dissatisfaction with Reagans successor, George H.W. Bush.
The GOP recaptured the White House in 2000, with the highly contested victory of Bushs son, George W. Bush, over Democratic contender Al Gore. Though initially popular, particularly after the 9/11 terrorist attacks, the Bush administration lost support thanks to growing opposition to the war in Iraq and the faltering economy during the Great Recession.
After Democrat Barack Obama became the first African American to be elected U.S. president in 2008, the rise of the populist Tea Party movement harnessed opposition to Obamas economic and social reform policies to help Republicans gain a large majority in Congress by 2014.
: Franklin Pierce Vs Winfield Scott Vs John Pitale
The 1852 election rang a death knell for the Whig Party. Both parties split over their nominee and the issue of slavery. After forty-nine ballots of jockeying among Senator Lewis Cass of Michigan, former secretary of state James Buchanan of Pennsylvania and Senator Stephen A. Douglas of , the Democrats nominated a compromise choice, Franklin Pierce of New Hampshire, a former congressman and senator, with Senator William R. King of as his running mate. The Whigs rejected Millard Fillmore, who had become president when Taylor died in 1850, and Secretary of State Daniel Webster and instead nominated Gen. Winfield Scott of Virginia, with Senator William A. Graham of New Jersey for vice president. When Scott endorsed the party platform, which approved of the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850, Free-Soil Whigs bolted. They nominated Senator John P. Hale of New Hampshire for president and former congressman George Washington Julian of Indiana for vice president. Southern Whigs were suspicious of Scott, whom they saw as a tool of antislavery senator William H. Seward of New York.
Democratic unity, Whig disunity and Scotts political ineptitude combined to elect Pierce. Young Hickory of the Granite Hills outpolled Old Fuss and Feathers in the electoral college, 254 to 42, and in the popular vote, 1,601,474 to 1,386,578.
American Presidents: Life Portraits
American Presidents: Life Portraits is a series produced by in 1999. Each episode was aired live, and was a two- to three-hour look at the life and times of one particular president of the United States. Episodes were broadcast from locations of importance to the profiled president, featured interviews with historians and other experts, and incorporated calls from viewers. The series served as a commemoration of C-SPAN’s 20th anniversary.
The first program aired on March 15, 1999, and profiled George Washington. Subsequent programs featured each president in succession, concluding with Bill Clinton on December 20, 1999.
: William Howard Taft Vs William Jennings Bryan
After Theodore Roosevelt declined to run for reelection in 1908, the Republican convention nominated Secretary of War William Howard Taft for president and Representative James Schoolcraft Sherman of New York as his running mate. The Democrats chose William Jennings Bryan for president for the third time; his running mate was John Kern of Indiana.
The predominant campaign issue was Roosevelt. His record as a reformer countered Bryans reformist reputation, and Taft promised to carry on Roosevelts policies. Business leaders campaigned for Taft.
In the election, Taft received 7,679,006 popular votes to Bryans 6,409,106. Tafts margin in the Electoral College was 321 to 162.
Corinne Roosevelt Robinson Prominent Republican Sister Of Theodore Roosevelt
Famous G.O.P women arrive
Corinne Roosevelt Robinson was a frequent participant in charities and politics. Active in both the Red Cross and the Salvation Army, she was also a member of the executive committee for the Republican National Committee, and the Republican New York State Committee.
A well-known Republican in New York, Corinne Robinson’s importance grew because the presidential campaign of 1920 marked the first election in which women could vote. Anxious to attract women’s votes, both the Republican and Democratic parties sought significant women to speak in support of their candidates. In the speech she recorded for the Nation’s Forum, Robinson speaks of her support for the Republican candidates because they are “one hundred percent American.”
Audio Selection:Safeguard America! Corinne Roosevelt Robinson .
: Martin Van Buren Vs Daniel Webster Vs Hugh White
The election of 1836 was largely a referendum on Andrew Jackson, but it also helped shape what is known as the second party system. The Democrats nominated Vice President Martin Van Buren to lead the ticket. His running mate, Col. Richard M. Johnson, claimed to have killed Indian chief .
Disdaining the organized politics of the Democrats, the new Whig Party ran three candidates, each strong in a different region: Hugh White of Tennessee, Senator Daniel Webster of Massachusetts and Gen. William Henry Harrison of . Besides endorsing internal improvements and a national bank, the Whigs tried to tie Democrats to abolitionism and sectional tension, and attacked Jackson for acts of aggression and usurpation of power. Democrats depended on Jacksons popularity, trying to maintain his coalition.
Van Buren won the election with 764,198 popular votes, only 50.9 percent of the total, and 170 electoral votes. Harrison led the Whigs with 73 electoral votes, White receiving 26 and Webster 14. Willie P. Mangum of South Carolina received his states 11 electoral votes. Johnson, who failed to win an electoral majority, was elected vice president by the Democratic Senate.
: Abraham Lincoln Vs George B Mcclellan
The contest in the midst of the Civil War pitted President Abraham Lincoln against Democrat George B. McClellan, the general who had commanded the Army of the Potomac until his indecision and delays caused Lincoln to remove him. The vice-presidential candidates were Andrew Johnson, Tennessees military governor who had refused to acknowledge his states secession, and Representative George Pendleton of . At first, Radical Republicans, fearing defeat, talked of ousting Lincoln in favor of the more ardently antislavery secretary of the treasury Salmon P. Chase, or Generals John C. Frémont or Benjamin F. Butler. But in the end they fell in behind the president.
The Republicans attracted Democratic support by running as the Union party and putting Johnson, a pro-war Democrat, on the ticket. McClellan repudiated the Democratic platforms call for peace, but he attacked Lincolns handling of the war.
Lincoln won in a landslide, owing partly to a policy of letting soldiers go home to vote. But the military successes of Generals Ulysses S. Grant in Virginia and William T. Sherman in the Deep South were probably more important. He received 2,206,938 votes to McClellans 1,803,787. The electoral vote was 212 to 21. Democrats did better in state elections.
Emergence Of New Conservatism
The relief programs included in FDRs New Deal earned overwhelming popular approval, launching an era of Democratic dominance that would last for most of the next 60 years. Between 1932 and 1980, Republicans won only four presidential elections and had a Congressional majority for only four years.
Though the centrist Republican Dwight D. Eisenhower, who was president from 1953 to 1961, actively supported equal rights for women and African Americans, a conservative resurgence led to Barry Goldwaters nomination as president in 1964, continued with Richard Nixons ill-fated presidency and reached its culmination with the election of Ronald Reagan in 1980.
The South saw a major political sea change starting after World War II, as many white Southerners began migrating to the GOP due to their opposition to big government, expanded labor unions and Democratic support for civil rights, as well as conservative Christians opposition to abortion and other culture war issues.
Meanwhile, many black voters, who had remained loyal to the Republican Party since the Civil War, began voting Democratic after the Depression and the New Deal.
: George W Bush Vs John Kerry
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Total voter turnout for the 2004 presidential election numbered at about 120 million, an impressive 15 million increase from the 2000 vote.
After the bitterly contested election of 2000, many were poised for a similar election battle in 2004. Although there were reported irregularities in Ohio, a recount confirmed the original vote counts with nominal differences that did not affect the final outcome.
Former Vermont governor Howard Dean was the expected Democratic candidate but lost support during the primaries. There was speculation that he sealed his fate when he let out a deep, guttural yell in front of a rally of supporters, which became known as the I Have a Scream speech, because it was delivered on Martin Luther King Day.
Popular Vote: 60,693,281 to 57,355,978 . Electoral College: 286 to 251
: Franklin D Roosevelt Vs Alfred M Landon
In 1936 the Democratic Party nominated President Franklin D. Roosevelt and Vice President John Nance Garner. The Republican Party, strongly opposed to the New Deal and big government, chose Governor Alfred M. Landon of Kansas and Fred Knox of Illinois.
The 1936 presidential campaign focused on class to an unusual extent for American politics. Conservative Democrats such as Alfred E. Smith supported Landon. Eighty percent of newspapers endorsed the Republicans, accusing Roosevelt of imposing a centralized economy. Most businesspeople charged the New Deal with trying to destroy American individualism and threatening the nations liberty. But Roosevelt appealed to a coalition of western and southern farmers, industrial workers, urban ethnic voters, and reform-minded intellectuals. African-American voters, historically Republican, switched to FDR in record numbers.
In a referendum on the emerging welfare state, the Democratic Party won in a landslide27,751,612 popular votes for FDR to only 16,681,913 for Landon. The Republicans carried two statesMaine and Vermontwith eight electoral votes; Roosevelt received the remaining 523. The unprecedented success of FDR in 1936 marked the beginning of a long period of Democratic Party dominance.
: Jimmy Carter Vs Gerald Ford
In 1976 the Democratic Party nominated former governor Jimmy Carter of Georgia for president and Senator Walter Mondale of Minnesota for vice president. The Republicans chose President Gerald Ford and Senator Robert Dole of Kansas. Richard M. Nixon had appointed Ford, a congressman from Michigan, as vice president to replace Spiro Agnew, who had resigned amid charges of corruption. Ford became president when Nixon resigned after the House Judiciary Committee voted three articles of because of his involvement in an attempted cover-up of the politically inspired Watergate break-in.
In the campaign, Carter ran as an outsider, independent of Washington, which was now in disrepute. Ford tried to justify his pardoning Nixon for any crimes he might have committed during the cover-up, as well as to overcome the disgrace many thought the Republicans had brought to the presidency.
Carter and Mondale won a narrow victory, 40,828,587 popular votes to 39,147,613 and 297 electoral votes to 241. The Democratic victory ended eight years of divided government; the party now controlled both the White House and Congress.
President Of The United States
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The president of the United States has been chief of the executive branch of the United States of America since 1789.
Various other countries that are or were known as the United States have or had a presidential system:
President of the United StatesIf an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article.Add links
This page was last edited on 2 January 2021, at 00:59 .
Text is available under the ;additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.
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statetalks · 3 years
Text
Which Presidents Were Democrats And Republicans
: Lyndon B Johnson Vs Barry Goldwater
youtube
The Democrats nominated Lyndon B. Johnson who had succeeded to the presidency upon the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. Johnson, the first president from the South since Andrew Johnson, had been Democratic leader of the Senate. Senator Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota, a longtime liberal, was nominated as Johnsons running mate. The Republicans chose Senator Barry Goldwater of for president and Congressman William E. Miller of New York for vice president.
In the campaign, conducted in the midst of the escalating Vietnam War, Goldwater, an ultraconservative, called for the bombing of North Vietnam and implied that the Social Security system should be dismantled. President Johnson campaigned on a platform of social reform that would incorporate Kennedys New Frontier proposals. Despite the countrys deepening involvement in Vietnam, the president also campaigned as the candidate of peace against the militaristic Goldwater.
Johnson won a decisive victory, polling 43,128,958 popular votes to 27,176,873 for Goldwater. In the Electoral College, he received 486 votes to Goldwaters 52.
The List Of American Presidents Who Came Before Donald Trump And Joe Biden
Donald Trump was elected as the 45th President of the United States in 2016. Four years later, Mr Trump lost the race to Democrat Joe Biden and become the tenth one-term president in US history.
On November 7, after a closely run contest, the former vice-president became the 46th president of the United States, finally claiming the presidency 32 years after his first run in 1988. 
With Joe Biden now sworn in as the 46th US President, we look back at the 44 men before Mr Trump who have taken the presidential oath and the major events that marked their presidencies.
: Andrew Jackson Vs John Quincy Adams
Andrew Jackson won the presidency in 1828 by a landslide, receiving a record 647,292 popular votes to 507,730 for the incumbent John Quincy Adams. John C. Calhoun won the vice presidency with 171 electoral votes to 83 for Richard Rush and seven for William Smith.
The emergence of two parties promoted popular interest in the election. Jacksons party, sometimes called the Democratic-Republicans or simply Democrats, developed the first sophisticated national network of party organizations. Local party groups sponsored parades, barbecues, tree plantings and other popular events designed to promote Jackson and the local slate. The National-Republicans, the party of Adams and Henry Clay, lacked the local organizations of the Democrats, but they did have a clear platform: high tariffs, federal funding of roads, canals and other internal improvements, aid to domestic manufactures and development of cultural institutions.
The 1828 election campaign was one of the dirtiest in Americas history. Both parties spread false and exaggerated rumors about the opposition. Jackson men charged that Adams obtained the presidency in 1824 through a corrupt bargain with Clay. And they painted the incumbent president as a decadent aristocrat who had procured prostitutes for the czar while serving as U.S. minister to Russia and spent taxpayer money on gambling equipment for the White House .
List Of Republican Us Presidents
Abraham Lincoln Ulysses S. Grant Rutherford B. Hayes James Garfield Chester A. Arthur Benjamin Harrison William McKinley Theodore Roosevelt William H. Taft Warren G. Harding Calvin Coolidge Herbert C. Hoover Dwight D. Eisenhower Richard M. Nixon Gerald R. Ford Ronald W. Reagan George H. W. Bush George W. Bush Donald Trump
The Issue Of Slavery: Enter Abraham Lincoln
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In the mid-nineteenth century, slavery was a widely discussed political issue. The Democratic Partys internal views on this matter differed greatly. Southern Democrats wished for slavery to be expanded and reach into Western parts of the country. Northern Democrats, on the other hand, argued that this issue should be settled on a local level and through popular referendum. Such Democratic infighting eventually led to Abraham Lincoln, who belonged to the Republican Party, winning the presidential election of 1860. This new Republican Party had recently been formed by a group of Whigs, Democrats and other politicians who had broken free from their respective parties in order to form a party based on an anti-slavery platform.
Republicans Vs Democrats In Launching Wars: We Have The Numbers
If one were to compare the US political system to a dystopian society divided into distinct factions based on how many wars they have started, an interesting outcome rebuking conventional perceptions would have been observed.
It is not aboutthe strong ondefense, hawkish Republicans juxtaposed withpeace-loving dovish Democrats anymore. Looking back atthe past118 years, there have been some ‘divergents’ warmongering Democrats and amicable Republicans. However, more interestingly and surprising forthe conventional-minded the number ofthe XX century Democratic presidents who kept fromstarting wars is actually zero.
According tothe research conducted bySputnik, sincethe turn ofthe 20th century outof 8 US presidents none have managed tostay away frominitiating military aggression.
In turn, outof 12 Republican leaders, two Warren Harding and Gerald Ford have deviated fromthe generally accepted party reputation.
Since 1900, 35 conflicts have been launched byRepublican administrations compared to23 byDemocrats, with10 GOP presidents launching one or more conflicts, compared to8 Democrats.
Values and Wars
Rooted inAmerican conservatism, the US Republican party commonly referred toas the GOP has always viewed strong national defense asone ofits core principles.
“Democrats believe that cooperation is better thanconflict,” the party’s online platform says.
So who started them, and who ended them?
Calvin Coolidge Republican Candidate For Vice
Calvin Coolidge, three-quarter length portrait, seated, facing right
Governor Calvin Coolidge of Massachusetts first achieved national prominence during the Boston police strike of 1919, when he sent a telegram to Samuel Gompers, President of the American Federation of Labor, saying: “There is no right to strike against the public safety by anyone, anywhere, any time.”
Coolidge was a reserved, uncommunicative New Englander; writer and wit Dorothy Parker once remarked he looked as though he had been “weaned on a pickle.” Even so, his obvious integrity and the simple American values he espoused soon made “Silent Cal” a popular figure. He succeeded to the presidency upon Harding’s death in 1923, and was elected to the White House in his own right in 1924.
Brief Audio Selection:Law and Order. Calvin Coolidge .
: Richard M Nixon Vs George Mcgovern
In 1972 the Republicans nominated President Richard M. Nixon and Vice President Spiro Agnew. The Democrats, still split over the war in Vietnam, chose a presidential candidate of liberal persuasion, Senator George McGovern of South Dakota. Senator Thomas F. Eagleton of Missouri was the vice-presidential choice, but after it was revealed that he had once received electric shock and other psychiatric treatments, he resigned from the ticket. McGovern named Sargent Shriver, director of the Peace Corps, as his replacement.
The campaign focused on the prospect of peace in Vietnam and an upsurge in the economy. Unemployment had leveled off and the inflation rate was declining. Two weeks before the November election, Secretary of State Henry Kissinger predicted inaccurately that the war in Vietnam would soon be over. During the campaign, a break-in occurred at Democratic National Headquarters in the complex in Washington, D.C., but it had little impact until after the election.
The campaign ended in one of the greatest landslides in the nations history. Nixons popular vote was 47,169,911 to McGoverns 29,170,383, and the Republican victory in the Electoral College was even more lopsided at 520 to 17. Only Massachusetts gave its votes to McGovern.
Acting President Of The United States
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An acting president of the United States is an individual who legitimately exercises the powers and duties of the president of the United States even though that person does not hold the office in their own right. There is an established presidential line of succession in which officials of the United States federal government may be called upon to take on presidential responsibilities if the president becomes , dies, resigns, is removed from office during their four-year term of office; or if a has not been chosen before Inauguration Day or has failed to qualify by that date.
If the president dies, resigns, or is removed from office, the vice president automatically becomes president. Likewise, were a president-elect to die during the transition period, or decline to serve, the vice president-elect would become president on Inauguration Day. A vice president can also become the acting president if the president becomes incapacitated. However, should the presidency and vice presidency both become vacant, the statutory successor called upon would not become president, but would only be acting as president. To date, two vice presidentsGeorge H. W. Bush and Dick Cheney have served as acting president. No one lower in the presidential line of succession has so acted.
The Big List Of Alleged Malefactors
Each person identified as indicted, from 56 years of Executive branch investigations, is listed in Figure 4. Figure 5 provides the numbers, thus far, for the Trump administration. Two years into his term, President Trump has already proved greater than all but one of the previous 10 Presidents in number of indictments the Administration has scored. Congratulations Mr. Trump, you are the Greatest! Of course, the information in Figure 5 that is accurate in the morning may be out of date by the afternoon.
The Final Reports of the 28 Special Prosecution, Special Prosecutor, and Independent Counsel investigations between 1973 and 1999 are the go-to source for who was indicted for what. Before an investigation closes down it will be clear if the indictment itself survives legal challenge; cases will go to trial; there will be decisions. But the independent investigation may well close down before appeals are heard and decided. Therefore, the final reports are not, in some cases, the last word on total convictions and jail time. That still required further research of court records, news stories, and obituaries.
It is not necessary to read the many hundreds of pages of most of these documents for the raw numbers. There are, though, many engrossing distractions in the tales of greed for power or money, ambition, obstruction, arrogance, loyalty, ideological zealotry, duplicity, error and incompetence the reports lay out in generally careful legal language.
Interesting Insights Into Presidents And Gas Prices
To answer that question we took a look at every presidential term since vehicles became mainstream. Then to make a completely fair assessment, we took note of the actual price paid for a gallon of gas at the time and what the price would be if it was adjusted for 2020 inflation. Each gas price listed is an average for the length of that presidents term.
Weve also taken note of any major world events that might have affected the price of oil during that presidents term. Because all it takes is a large hurricane or signs of a recession to throw the numbers way off from the average.
The infograph here provides an overview of how gas prices have fluctuated from one President to the next. A few interesting insights include:
The very clear takeaway is that which party wins the presidency has less of an impact on gasoline prices than supply and demand. That usually isnt dictated by who is president but rather world events that either negatively/positively affect the supply chain or increase/decrease demand for gasoline.
Want some tips on how to save gas? Check out our post here to learn more!
*This article was updated on 7/21/2021.
: John Adams Vs Thomas Jefferson
The 1796 election, which took place against a background of increasingly harsh partisanship between Federalists and Republicans, was the first contested presidential race.
The Republicans called for more democratic practices and accused the Federalists of monarchism. The Federalists branded the Republicans Jacobins after Maximilien Robespierres faction in France. The Republicans opposed John Jays recently negotiated accommodationist treaty with Great Britain, whereas the Federalists believed its terms represented the only way to avoid a potentially ruinous war with Britain. Republicans favored a decentralized agrarian republic; Federalists called for the development of commerce and industry.
State legislatures still chose electors in most states, and there was no separate vote for vice president. Each elector cast two votes for president, with the runner-up becoming vice president.
The Federalists nominated Vice President John Adams and tried to attract southern support by running Thomas Pinckney of South Carolina for the second post. Thomas Jefferson was the Republican standard-bearer, with Aaron Burr as his running mate. Alexander Hamilton, always intriguing against Adams, tried to throw some votes to Jefferson in order to elect Pinckney president. Instead, Adams won with 71 votes; Jefferson became vice president, with 68; Pinckney came in third with 59; Burr received only 30 and 48 votes went to various other candidates.
Republicans From Reagan To Trump
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After running on a platform based on reducing the size of the federal government, Reagan increased military spending, spearheaded huge tax cuts and championed the free market with policies that became known as Reaganomics.
In foreign policy, the United States also emerged the victor in its long-running Cold War with the Soviet Union. But as the economy began to show signs of weakness, the growing national debt helped foster popular dissatisfaction with Reagans successor, George H.W. Bush.
The GOP recaptured the White House in 2000, with the highly contested victory of Bushs son, George W. Bush, over Democratic contender Al Gore. Though initially popular, particularly after the 9/11 terrorist attacks, the Bush administration lost support thanks to growing opposition to the war in Iraq and the faltering economy during the Great Recession.
After Democrat Barack Obama became the first African American to be elected U.S. president in 2008, the rise of the populist Tea Party movement harnessed opposition to Obamas economic and social reform policies to help Republicans gain a large majority in Congress by 2014.
: Franklin Pierce Vs Winfield Scott Vs John Pitale
The 1852 election rang a death knell for the Whig Party. Both parties split over their nominee and the issue of slavery. After forty-nine ballots of jockeying among Senator Lewis Cass of Michigan, former secretary of state James Buchanan of Pennsylvania and Senator Stephen A. Douglas of , the Democrats nominated a compromise choice, Franklin Pierce of New Hampshire, a former congressman and senator, with Senator William R. King of as his running mate. The Whigs rejected Millard Fillmore, who had become president when Taylor died in 1850, and Secretary of State Daniel Webster and instead nominated Gen. Winfield Scott of Virginia, with Senator William A. Graham of New Jersey for vice president. When Scott endorsed the party platform, which approved of the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850, Free-Soil Whigs bolted. They nominated Senator John P. Hale of New Hampshire for president and former congressman George Washington Julian of Indiana for vice president. Southern Whigs were suspicious of Scott, whom they saw as a tool of antislavery senator William H. Seward of New York.
Democratic unity, Whig disunity and Scotts political ineptitude combined to elect Pierce. Young Hickory of the Granite Hills outpolled Old Fuss and Feathers in the electoral college, 254 to 42, and in the popular vote, 1,601,474 to 1,386,578.
American Presidents: Life Portraits
American Presidents: Life Portraits is a series produced by in 1999. Each episode was aired live, and was a two- to three-hour look at the life and times of one particular president of the United States. Episodes were broadcast from locations of importance to the profiled president, featured interviews with historians and other experts, and incorporated calls from viewers. The series served as a commemoration of C-SPAN’s 20th anniversary.
The first program aired on March 15, 1999, and profiled George Washington. Subsequent programs featured each president in succession, concluding with Bill Clinton on December 20, 1999.
: William Howard Taft Vs William Jennings Bryan
After Theodore Roosevelt declined to run for reelection in 1908, the Republican convention nominated Secretary of War William Howard Taft for president and Representative James Schoolcraft Sherman of New York as his running mate. The Democrats chose William Jennings Bryan for president for the third time; his running mate was John Kern of Indiana.
The predominant campaign issue was Roosevelt. His record as a reformer countered Bryans reformist reputation, and Taft promised to carry on Roosevelts policies. Business leaders campaigned for Taft.
In the election, Taft received 7,679,006 popular votes to Bryans 6,409,106. Tafts margin in the Electoral College was 321 to 162.
Corinne Roosevelt Robinson Prominent Republican Sister Of Theodore Roosevelt
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Corinne Roosevelt Robinson was a frequent participant in charities and politics. Active in both the Red Cross and the Salvation Army, she was also a member of the executive committee for the Republican National Committee, and the Republican New York State Committee.
A well-known Republican in New York, Corinne Robinson’s importance grew because the presidential campaign of 1920 marked the first election in which women could vote. Anxious to attract women’s votes, both the Republican and Democratic parties sought significant women to speak in support of their candidates. In the speech she recorded for the Nation’s Forum, Robinson speaks of her support for the Republican candidates because they are “one hundred percent American.”
Audio Selection:Safeguard America! Corinne Roosevelt Robinson .
: Martin Van Buren Vs Daniel Webster Vs Hugh White
The election of 1836 was largely a referendum on Andrew Jackson, but it also helped shape what is known as the second party system. The Democrats nominated Vice President Martin Van Buren to lead the ticket. His running mate, Col. Richard M. Johnson, claimed to have killed Indian chief .
Disdaining the organized politics of the Democrats, the new Whig Party ran three candidates, each strong in a different region: Hugh White of Tennessee, Senator Daniel Webster of Massachusetts and Gen. William Henry Harrison of . Besides endorsing internal improvements and a national bank, the Whigs tried to tie Democrats to abolitionism and sectional tension, and attacked Jackson for acts of aggression and usurpation of power. Democrats depended on Jacksons popularity, trying to maintain his coalition.
Van Buren won the election with 764,198 popular votes, only 50.9 percent of the total, and 170 electoral votes. Harrison led the Whigs with 73 electoral votes, White receiving 26 and Webster 14. Willie P. Mangum of South Carolina received his states 11 electoral votes. Johnson, who failed to win an electoral majority, was elected vice president by the Democratic Senate.
: Abraham Lincoln Vs George B Mcclellan
The contest in the midst of the Civil War pitted President Abraham Lincoln against Democrat George B. McClellan, the general who had commanded the Army of the Potomac until his indecision and delays caused Lincoln to remove him. The vice-presidential candidates were Andrew Johnson, Tennessees military governor who had refused to acknowledge his states secession, and Representative George Pendleton of . At first, Radical Republicans, fearing defeat, talked of ousting Lincoln in favor of the more ardently antislavery secretary of the treasury Salmon P. Chase, or Generals John C. Frémont or Benjamin F. Butler. But in the end they fell in behind the president.
The Republicans attracted Democratic support by running as the Union party and putting Johnson, a pro-war Democrat, on the ticket. McClellan repudiated the Democratic platforms call for peace, but he attacked Lincolns handling of the war.
Lincoln won in a landslide, owing partly to a policy of letting soldiers go home to vote. But the military successes of Generals Ulysses S. Grant in Virginia and William T. Sherman in the Deep South were probably more important. He received 2,206,938 votes to McClellans 1,803,787. The electoral vote was 212 to 21. Democrats did better in state elections.
Emergence Of New Conservatism
The relief programs included in FDRs New Deal earned overwhelming popular approval, launching an era of Democratic dominance that would last for most of the next 60 years. Between 1932 and 1980, Republicans won only four presidential elections and had a Congressional majority for only four years.
Though the centrist Republican Dwight D. Eisenhower, who was president from 1953 to 1961, actively supported equal rights for women and African Americans, a conservative resurgence led to Barry Goldwaters nomination as president in 1964, continued with Richard Nixons ill-fated presidency and reached its culmination with the election of Ronald Reagan in 1980.
The South saw a major political sea change starting after World War II, as many white Southerners began migrating to the GOP due to their opposition to big government, expanded labor unions and Democratic support for civil rights, as well as conservative Christians opposition to abortion and other culture war issues.
Meanwhile, many black voters, who had remained loyal to the Republican Party since the Civil War, began voting Democratic after the Depression and the New Deal.
: George W Bush Vs John Kerry
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Total voter turnout for the 2004 presidential election numbered at about 120 million, an impressive 15 million increase from the 2000 vote.
After the bitterly contested election of 2000, many were poised for a similar election battle in 2004. Although there were reported irregularities in Ohio, a recount confirmed the original vote counts with nominal differences that did not affect the final outcome.
Former Vermont governor Howard Dean was the expected Democratic candidate but lost support during the primaries. There was speculation that he sealed his fate when he let out a deep, guttural yell in front of a rally of supporters, which became known as the I Have a Scream speech, because it was delivered on Martin Luther King Day.
Popular Vote: 60,693,281 to 57,355,978 . Electoral College: 286 to 251
: Franklin D Roosevelt Vs Alfred M Landon
In 1936 the Democratic Party nominated President Franklin D. Roosevelt and Vice President John Nance Garner. The Republican Party, strongly opposed to the New Deal and big government, chose Governor Alfred M. Landon of Kansas and Fred Knox of Illinois.
The 1936 presidential campaign focused on class to an unusual extent for American politics. Conservative Democrats such as Alfred E. Smith supported Landon. Eighty percent of newspapers endorsed the Republicans, accusing Roosevelt of imposing a centralized economy. Most businesspeople charged the New Deal with trying to destroy American individualism and threatening the nations liberty. But Roosevelt appealed to a coalition of western and southern farmers, industrial workers, urban ethnic voters, and reform-minded intellectuals. African-American voters, historically Republican, switched to FDR in record numbers.
In a referendum on the emerging welfare state, the Democratic Party won in a landslide27,751,612 popular votes for FDR to only 16,681,913 for Landon. The Republicans carried two statesMaine and Vermontwith eight electoral votes; Roosevelt received the remaining 523. The unprecedented success of FDR in 1936 marked the beginning of a long period of Democratic Party dominance.
: Jimmy Carter Vs Gerald Ford
In 1976 the Democratic Party nominated former governor Jimmy Carter of Georgia for president and Senator Walter Mondale of Minnesota for vice president. The Republicans chose President Gerald Ford and Senator Robert Dole of Kansas. Richard M. Nixon had appointed Ford, a congressman from Michigan, as vice president to replace Spiro Agnew, who had resigned amid charges of corruption. Ford became president when Nixon resigned after the House Judiciary Committee voted three articles of because of his involvement in an attempted cover-up of the politically inspired Watergate break-in.
In the campaign, Carter ran as an outsider, independent of Washington, which was now in disrepute. Ford tried to justify his pardoning Nixon for any crimes he might have committed during the cover-up, as well as to overcome the disgrace many thought the Republicans had brought to the presidency.
Carter and Mondale won a narrow victory, 40,828,587 popular votes to 39,147,613 and 297 electoral votes to 241. The Democratic victory ended eight years of divided government; the party now controlled both the White House and Congress.
President Of The United States
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The president of the United States has been chief of the executive branch of the United States of America since 1789.
Various other countries that are or were known as the United States have or had a presidential system:
President of the United StatesIf an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article.Add links
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architectnews · 3 years
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Wadham College Buildings, University of Oxford
University of Oxford Departments of Experimental Psychology and Biology Building, English Architecture
Wadham College Buildings at the University of Oxford
14 Apr 2021
Wadham College Buildings
Architects: AL_A
Location: Oxford, England, UK
Major New Buildings For Wadham College
Two new buildings, the William Doo Undergraduate Centre and the Dr Lee Shau Kee Building, designed by architects AL_A at the centre of Wadham College’s historic Oxford site will be inaugurated this month.
The new buildings will create a state-of-the art Undergraduate Centre on the Wadham site, as well as an Access Centre to accommodate the increasing number of visiting school students attending access and outreach events such as summer schools and aspiration days. The Undergraduate Centre is a recognition of the huge importance of social spaces in today’s universities. The centre combines a junior common room, café and bar and beautiful daylit work areas.
The Access Centre is an ambitious investment in the future. The building that prospective students will call home for three or four days at a time is designed to encourage pupils from all backgrounds to aspire to an Oxford education. On the ground floor is a suite of light-filled seminar rooms and a music room while the top floors contain student accommodation.
The development, built by Oxford based builders Beard, is part of Wadham’s Access to Excellence programme where students are supported at every step of their educational journey, from the moment they consider applying to University, through their time at Oxford and on into their careers.
Amanda Levete, Principal, AL_A, said: “These two buildings are designed to radiate openness. Modest in scale, but high in aspiration, they express the liberal and egalitarian values of the College and create a sense of belonging for students and staff. Reflecting changes in the way students work and socialise, they are open and transparent, and use the life of the College to animate the buildings.”
Warden of Wadham College, Ken Macdonald QC, commented: “These wonderful new buildings make real our twin desires: to reflect the beauty of our ancient site and to symbolise our College’s determination to engage with confidence in the promise of the modern world.
The William Doo Undergraduate Centre and Dr Lee Shau Kee Building now stand as graceful and pure marks of our continuing belief in the harmony that exists between learning and beauty, which our quadrangles, lawns and gardens express so well, and which AL_A have captured with such skill and sensitivity.”
Founded in 1610 by Nicholas and Dorothy Wadham, the College now comprises up to 250 graduate students and some 450 undergraduates. Wadham’s architectural heritage spans a variety of building styles from the classical Oxford Gothic of the original buildings to the new development by AL_A inaugurated in 2021.
AL_A AL_A is the award-winning architecture studio founded in 2009 by the RIBA Stirling Prize-winning architect Amanda Levete CBE with Directors Ho-Yin Ng, Alice Dietsch and Maximiliano Arrocet.
Collaborating with ambitious and visionary clients, they develop designs that are conceptualised not just as buildings, but as urban propositions – projects that express the identity of an institution, a city or even a nation.
Recently completed projects include a new centre for the cancer care charity Maggie’s within the grounds of University College Hospital in Southampton, opening in 2021; in 2017 they completed the Victoria & Albert Museum Exhibition Road Quarter London, the V&A’s largest building project in over 100 years, and Central Embassy – their largest project to date – a 140,000m2 luxury shopping mall and hotel in Bangkok on the former grounds of the British Embassy; in 2016 they celebrated the opening of MAAT, the Museum of Art, Architecture and Technology in Lisbon, commissioned by EDP, one of the world’s foremost energy companies, and completed a 13-hectare media campus and 37,700m2 headquarters building for Sky in London.
Ongoing commissions include the expansion and redevelopment of Paisley Museum in Scotland; the reimagining of the D’Ieteren HQ in Brussels into a mixed-use piece of city; and the design of the first prototype magnetised target fusion facility in the world for the Canadian clean energy firm General
Wadham College Buildings at University of Oxford, England – Building Information
Architect: AL_A Structure & M&E Engineer: Arup Lighting, Fire, Acoustics, Security, DDA: Arup Project Manager: Bidwells Quantity Surveyor: Gleeds Planning Consultant: Turnberry CDM Adviser: Ridge Façade Engineer / Contractor: Eckersley O’Callaghan / Colorminium Construction: Beard Construction Landscape Designer: Churchman Thornhill Finch
Photography: Hufton+Crow
Wadham College Buildings, University of Oxford images / information received 140421
Location: University of Oxford, England, UK
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Investcorp Building – Middle East Centre at St Antony’s College Design: Zaha Hadid Architects photo © Luke Hayes Investcorp Building Saint Antony’s College
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St Catherine’s College Building, Manor Road Architects: Purcell image courtesy of architecture office St. Catherine’s College in Oxford
St Clare’s College Oxford Design: Hodder + Partners Architects photo : Peter Cook St Clare’s College Oxford Building
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Woodbury Lions Club hosting American Red Cross blood drives
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Blood Drives in Cannon County for over 60 years.
It has been said that the Lions Club drives are the best in the Tennessee Valley Region Blood Services area, which includes all of Tennessee, parts of Kentucky, and Alabama.
The extra effort put forth by the Lions Club has little to do with it. The Woodbury Lions Club has a committee of members that work together to help insure that everything runs smoothly, along with community volunteers who like to help out.
Some of the volunteers have more experience working with blood drives that the actual Red Cross staff who go out daily working with blood drives within the area.
Committee chairmen’s Patsy and Carl Hirlston and Bobby Bogard with committee members Ken and Artie Jean McIntyre, Lois Larimer, Clyde Thomas, Nolan Northcutt, Robert Jennings, Charlie Brown, Clyde and Kitty Bush, Chris Brushaber, Danny Miller, Cliff Swoape, Andy Jacobs, Doug Combs, and Gina Mitchell, all work together along with community volunteers of Bessie Miller, Orval and Esther Gray, Juanita Burks, Cathey Parker, Betty Harder, Shirley Borren, Jane Jennings, Grace Young, Nile Young, Della Young, Robert Young, Kay Campbell, Carol Davenport, Bobbie Henline, Jim Henline, Betty Paschal, Ann Todd, Mary Sue Vinson, and Mary Nelle Hillis too create a professional staff that assist members of the American Red Cross staff.
The Lions Club assigns a task of greeting donors and signing them in, handing out water and assigning donors with a number.
Copies of the Cannon Courier are provided for donors to read before or after their donation.
Red Cross provides snacks and the Woodbury Lions Club has additional snacks such as: a one-of-a-kind trail mix, peanut butter and crackers, baloney and crackers, and cheese and crackers.
A staff works in the canteen area who assist the donors after they have donated by getting them a drink of juice, water, soda, or coffee and then sitting with them and talking. They also watch the donor to see if the donors face color changes or if their arm starts bleeding from where the donor had given blood.
Woodbury Club also keeps records of each donation and awards donors with pins and Certificates when completing gallon donations. Along with taking pictures of donors receiving awards and being pinned with a gallon donation pin, plus having members of the Lions Club calling and reminding donors of upcoming blood drives also adds a little bit more to why Cannon County Blood Drives are better and produces more regular donors than other areas which has a larger population.
Woodbury Lions Club host six blood drives a year, always the third Thursday in January, March, May, July, September, and November. Each blood drive is noon until six pm except May’s drive, which runs from 9 am until 6 pm. May’s blood drive is a donor appreciation drive, and most of the businesses in Cannon County donate door prizes.
In the last five to six years, each donor was able to win three of four items because of the generosity of the businesses and their support of the Lions Club and wanting to reward the true everyday heroes of Cannon County, those who give of themselves to help save the lives of others. In most cases, they are saving the lives of people who they do not know.
On May 20th, 2010 the following businesses provided door prizes for the heroes of Cannon County: A Touch of Home Flower’s & Gifts, Arts Center of Cannon County, Auto Zone, Birdsong Adhesives, Boyd’s Garage, Briar Rose Flowers and Gifts, Bromley/Jennings Automotive, Cannon County Chiropractic, Cannon Market, Captain D’s, CareAll, Cell Plus, Coco Tan & Spa, Chilangoes Mexican Restaurant, Curves, Cutting Edge Hair Salon, D J’s Pizza and Steakhouse, Family Dentistry Deason & Bucher, Farm Bureau Insurance, First National Bank, Flower Occasions, Gina’s Boutique, Hardee’s, Hayes Bros Auto Care, Hibdon’s Body Shop, Higgins Car Wash, J P’s Fine Swine Bar-B-Que, Jennings Jewelers, Joe’s Place, Legendary Cuts, Lightwriters Photography, Lions Pizza Den, The Millennium Hair Salon, Moonlite Drive-In, NAPA, The Old Feed Store, One Stop Market, Parsley’s Market & Deli, Paul Reed’s Furniture, Paul’s Auto Service, Piggly Wiggly, Potter’s Ace Hardware, Quick Shop Market, Reed’s Building Supply, Regions Bank, Roger Hindman Body Shop, Scavenger Hunt Flea Market, Scavenger Hunt Trading Post, The Scoreboard, Shirt Shack, Shotgun County Pawn & Gun, Smitty Tire Shop, Stewart’s Printing, Stone Gait Tack and Feed, Subway, West End Tobacco Store, Woodbury Auto Express, Woodbury Insurance Agency, and Woodbury Lawn & Garden. Every donor and volunteer received a promotional ink pen from DTC, a pillbox from Middle Tennessee Electric Membership Cooperation, Chap Stick from FirstBank, a value meal card from Sonic, and a 3 pound bag of stone ground corn meal from The Readyville Mill.
The Red Cross also provided promotional items and the Woodbury Lions Club provided $10 gift certificates and a grand prize of $100 gift card.
It is very hard to find another community that has so many businesses that support a civic club as much as the ones in Cannon County.
Most all the businesses give support to the Woodbury Lions Club for sponsorship of the Lions Club Horse Show, White Cane donations, and door prizes for the donor appreciation Blood Drive. Without support from the local businesses, the Woodbury Lions Club would not be able to do as much as it does within the community, state, country, and world. Local businesses are one of the leading reasons why Cannon County Blood Drives are so much better that anywhere else in the state.
Another reason and probably the number one reason the blood drives are the best anywhere is the volume of regular donors in Cannon County. In any community only a certain per cent are eligible to donate and of that per cent only about 3 to 5 percent actually donates, but the donors in Cannon County has a much higher percent.
This is not due to the Lions Club and its part, nor the businesses and its part, but it is the individual donor and the way of life in Cannon County, the way most have been raised to want to help others in need in any way they can.
The mentality of the average person in Cannon County is to serve in any way they can. This mentality is one of the reasons Woodbury Lions Club is one of the largest clubs in the state.
It is why the businesses give as much as they do, and why so many volunteers do jobs within the county for little or no pay. The parents, schools and churches within the community teach the children from an early age of the importance of giving back to the community in which they live and the lesson that it is more blessed to give than to receive.
This is why Cannon County has had over 360 donors in the past 2-½ years. Woodbury Lions Club and the American Red Cross both use fiscal years that begin on 1 July and end 30 June.
The following is a list of local heroes who gave during the 2009-2010 fiscal year. Those donating Double Red Blood Cells count as two donations, the max number of times any one can give in a fiscal year in whole blood or double red cells is 6. The number that follows a persons name is the amount of pints given as of 30 June 2010.
One-time donors: Stephanie D. Alford 5, Annie L. Barton 60, Peggy S. Baxter 30, Timothy L. Bell 11, Stephen E. Blonder 10, Brenda Bogard 23, Candace Jones Bond 1, Charles H. Bowman 20, Tami M. Bragg 12, Billy D. Brinkley 3, Charles E. Brown 33, Joe R. Bryson 23, William H. Bryson 33, Stephen A. Burnett 3, Clyde W. Bush 14, Charmaine D. Cawthorn 1, Patrick A. Cecil 1, Manuel Chapa Jr. 15, Karen J. Chumbley 11, Barbara Daingerfield 44, Mary Carole Davenport 42, Paul W. Denninger 7, Bonita O. Doxey 30, Frances Edwards 1, Clint A. Fann 5, Angela M. Ford 11, Mary Frances Foster 9, Autumn M. Fly Franks 1, Tonya Gannon 4, Leslie Joe Giley 28, Nora Lee Gilliam 10, Eric M. Good 4, Donna B. Gunter 4, Marilyn E. Hale 7, Sharon L. Hay 14, Carolyn E. Barton Hemby 7, Barry D. Hibdon 33, Erin T. Higdon 5, Sharon Duggin Hindman 25, Melisa L. Hobbs 17, Shannon D. Jett 9, Fairy L. Johnson 2, Lori J. Malay 7, Perry M. Markum 5, Vicky L. Melton 34, Brittany L. Mingle 7, Angela P. Moore 18, Danielle Nicole Mosley 12, Talma S. Mosley 8, Lauren M. Nicolay 2, Rita G. Nokes 7, Misty G. Orr 1, Brittne H. Parker 4, Joseph A. Patterson 11, Brenda Faye Phillips 15, Jo Ann Pirtle 1, Joy Pope 3, Janice O. Purvis 28, Walter E. Reifschneider 19, Shantika M. Reiter 2, Phyllis S. Robinson 47, Marianne Teresa Sadler 15, Amber M. Scott 1, Kelly Edward Sissom 30, Valerie D. Smith 4, Wayne P. Smithson 26, Olivia D. Snyder 1, Teresa S. Stoetzel 6, Crystal B. Street 4, Eddie N. Taylor 41, Jamie A. Trail 2, J. D. Underhill II 2, Falischa Urban 1, Jennifer Vallieres 2, Sean N. Vance 3, Amanda J. Winfrey 1, Dorothy D. Winnett 13, Tracey L. Winters 9, and Alan D. Wollard 8.
Two time donors: Misty D. Bain 14, Teresa D. Bain 19, Ronald F. Born 6, Christopher B. Brandon 2, David L. Brown 3, Lacey N. Buchanan 9, Charles Ronny Burks 34, Jennifer M. Coppinger 16, James Morgan Cummings 90, Franklin Daniel 12, Edgar E. Davenport 6, Rebecca M. Davenport 68, Andrew L. Duggin 5, Joyce Frazier 2, Kenneth P. Garrett 11, Andrea K. George 4, Rodney Lee Gilliam 17, Kay F. Goff 69, Cory S. Hollandsworth 14, Christopher J. Hollenbeck 5, Pamela F. Hoskins 43, Christopher Johnson 5, Robert D. Jones 27, Thomas D. Mason 56, Tammy W. Mathis 14, Shelby J. Merriman 60, Brandon S. Mims 8, Dean More 6, Jennifer R. Mosley 5, Travis C. Prater 9, Michael T. Reed 3, Xavier P. Romero 18, Melody R. Rutledge 9, John W. Sanborn 56, Roger J. Smith 14, Darrell G. Snyder 26, McKenzie Solomon 5, Candice B. Stoetzel 13, Nancy L. Studd 9, Jessica L. Sullivan 3, Brandee S. Summers 5, Garry L. Underhill 12, James E. Weller 3, and Nile Young 45.
Three time donors: Richard D. Burks Sr. 83, Joshua W. Demembreum 4, Jeffery D. Denny 11, Russell D. Fann 33, Jo Ann Francis 54, Randy A. Gerdes 47, James W. Henline 44, Patsy Miller Hirlston 43, Debbie Renee Israel 12, Jennifer M. Johnson 8, Melanie G. Lyon 4, Ann D. McBride 53, Calvin F. Orwig 39, Alan W. Paschal 17, Jan Powell 34, Kenny Denard Sanders 5, Brittany A. Stluka 6, David L. Stone 7, Nellie F. Stone 5, Melissa L. Talley 3, Annette A. Tidwell 3, Billy R. Tidwell Jr. 5, Charie Ann Urban 4, Micki M. Vinson 74, Jack B. West 16, Michael L. Witty 41, and David W. Zabriskie 3. Four time donors: Jimmy Alexander 39, Cynthia D. Betts 39, Carmella K. Burton 13, Mary E. Duncan 42, Jana M. Gannon 62, Joan Hayes 14, Kayla E. Hindman 14, Joseph E. Hurst 16, James L. Logan 48, Gina A. Mitchell 38, Valerie L. Morton 4, Tracy A. Parker 39, Rebekah L. Parton 19, Karin P. Petty 40, James F. Sabia 44, Billy K. Tenpenny 33, Juan S. Urban 4, Travis M. Urban 5, April D. Vance 12, and Millisa A. White 17.
Five time donors: Guy Alexander Jr. 41, Jeff R. Campbell 8, Gabriel S. Cantrell 9, Rita F. Cook 12, Randal L. Curtis 52, James P. Davenport 12, Andrew B. Dimartino Sr. 84, Cheryl K. Franklin 44, Timothy H. Grandey 50, Esther E. Gray 39, Orval L. Gray 55, Herbert C. Haley 64, John Arthur Haugh 9, Roger G. Hindman 28, Sandy K. Hollandsworth 77, Timothy A. Minerd 15, Charlie Luther Mooneyham 48, Steve R. Perkerson 67, James Powers 38, and Leland J. Schwamberger 19.
Six time donors: Christopher E. Brushaber 6, Allen Wade Duggin 29, Rainey Hunt 48, Charles W. Jennings 18, Stephen R. Moss 20, Teddy L. Powers 77, Steve A. Smith 140, and Howard W. Witty 163.
The Woodbury Lions Club has received several awards of appreciation from the American Red Cross for their support of the Community Blood Program, and there is a lot of speculation as to why a small community does so well on the blood drives.
A lot of the credit is given to the Lions Club for putting out an extra effort.
Some credit is given for having good media coverage with the Cannon Courier, the Cannon Wire, and WBRY radio. Some credit is given for the support given by the businesses in Cannon County.
Any community can have a civic organization that puts forth the extra effort, and have good media and local businesses supporting them, but they don’t have the attitude and dedication of serving others that is instilled into Cannon Countians from birth until death.
The Woodbury Lions Club expresses heartfelt gratitude to all the media, businesses, and donors for exceeding the yearly goals set forth by the Red Cross based on past history.
It is so great to live among so many heroes. Likes: 7 Viewed:
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