|
Showing 1 - 9 of
9 matches in All Departments
In July 1965, an Artesian Turquoise Chevrolet Biscayne rolled off a
General Motors assembly line destined for a dealership in Utica,
New York, where it caught the eye and the imagination of the
author. When he and his father purchased it on August 11, little
did James Ward know that this car would become a member of the
family, playing a role in his honeymoon, years of graduate school,
the birth of his daughter and her first driving lesson, among
countless other memories. Four decades - and a lot of history -
later, the author still owns and drives this rolling historical
artifact dubbed Phoebe. Using the family car as a narrative thread,
this first-person account explores American history over the last
forty years as experienced by the author. From Lyndon Johnson to
George W. Bush, from the automotive industry to fast food
franchises, it chronicles American life since the mid - 1960s. In
his faithful Phoebe, the author witnessed a KKK cross burning, took
part in a civil rights march, passed through the eye of a major
hurricane and drove across the back roads of twenty-first century
America, he and the car aging together. Photographs accompany this
unique memoir.
Wilbur H. "Ping" Ferry (1910-1995) was a self-styled "town crank,"
an influential and iconoclastic figure who seemingly knew everyone
worth knowing in the mid-twentieth century.
Businessman, thinker, activist, government advisor, and
philanthropist, Ping's career was as varied as his pronouncements.
He taught John F. Kennedy at Choate, advised Eddie Rickenbacker at
Eastern Airlines, worked a craps table in Havana, reported for
several New Hampshire newspapers, and handled public relations for
Sidney Hillman and his CIO/PAC. After World War II, he joined a
public relations firm where he worked closely with Henry Ford II
and John D. Rockefeller. He helped Ford establish his foundation,
and with Robert Hutchins set up the Fund for the Republic, which
later became the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions in
Santa Barbara, California.
From his post as Vice President of the Center, Ping harangued the
nation about the evils of technology, environmental degradation,
racial inequality, educational deficiencies, and the threat of
nuclear war. He gained national fame when he attacked America's
last and most sacred cow, J. Edgar Hoover ("our official
spy-swatter . . . in these persistent reports about espionage and
sabotage, is he delicately telling us that he isn't up to the job,
that Red spies are running loose despite his best efforts?"). He
also publicly resigned from the Democratic Party in protest against
President Lyndon Johnson's Vietnam policy, and promoted televised
executions as the best way of combating capital punishment. Ping
gave away millions of dollars to minorities and those who suffered
from government's intolerance. He fought for world-wide disarmament
by supporting with friendship and money such luminaries as E. P.
Thompson, the great English social historian and founder of
European Nuclear Disarmament.
The book also reveals that Ping had a quieter, softer side. He
treasured his friends, who were to be found across the globe,
played the piano, formed a close relationship with the Trappist
monk Thomas Merton, and assisted many struggling artists. He
attracted followers who admired his independence and
forthrightness, people who wished to be more like him. In Victor
Navasky's words, Ping's ultimate importance was "the impossible
example he set for the rest of us."
In late 1910, three American adventurers set off on a remarkable
around-the-world journey by automobile. Sponsored by the Hupp Motor
Car Corporation, the trip was intended to publicize the durability
of the Hupmobile and help stimulate export sales. The car was first
driven from Detroit to San Francisco-a very difficult journey in
its own right in 1910. From San Francisco, the car and its drivers
took a steamship to Hawaii, and from there to Fiji, Australia, New
Zealand, and Tasmania, unloading and touring at each port of call.
The men and their machine spent the next five weeks attempting to
drive through the Philippines, and then pushed on to Japan and
China, where they managed to stay one step ahead of the Chinese
revolution. They then drove across India, and from there, sailed to
Egypt, brining the first automobile ever to be seen in that
country. Next, the Hupmobilists sailed to Italy. In Rome, the
adventurers met Pope Pius X, and then drove north to Germany and
France. They crossed the English Channel to Folkstone, toured
England, and then ferried from Liverpool to Ireland. They returned
to New York in time for the 1912 auto show. In the end, the
Hupmobile was driven 41,000 miles and transported by steamship
another 28,000. A new world was dawning, both for transportation
and for American business enterprise.
From Percy Harris, and his failed attempts at escapology and
hypnotism, to Jimmy Jumper's search for love, the Stubbleton and
District Magic Circle boasts some of the least employable magicians
you could ever hope to meet. Then, of course, there's Jeanie
Potter, whose quest for the perfect card trick threatens to tear
the club apart. Rodney Ramsgate is certifiably insane, while young
Norman Stagg couldn't magic himself out of a paper bag. Settle down
with a cup of tea and your favourite biscuit, and enjoy the trials
and tribulations of the motley crew who make up the Stubbleton and
District Magic Circle. You'll never look at magicians in the same
light again!
|
Ani (Paperback)
James A. Ward
|
R318
Discovery Miles 3 180
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
New, updated edition (2014.) This is a fundamental work in Orthodox
Christian literature. Those who are familiar with the service of
Matins, still served in all Eastern Orthodox churches and also in
many Roman Catholic monasteries, will recognize the Canon as a
central part of that service. This new English edition of St.
Andrew's seventh century masterpiece, the Great Canon, may be read
as part of a layman's personal Lenten prayers, or as a service book
for Priest, Deacon and Reader. Every Christian will benefit from
reading this book
Nimrod J. Bell worked as a conductor for several southern
railroads in their formative period, from 1857 to 1894. After his
career was cut short by an accident, he wrote his memoirs detailing
his first glimpses of some of the earliest trains in the South and
his thirty-eight years as a conductor. Published in Atlanta in
1896, his book offers a firsthand account of working conditions on
the railroads, operational procedures, wartime railroading, and
passenger travel during Reconstruction.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
|