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The man who created the boldest hard boiled fiction, Dashiell
Hammett, wrote The Thin Man in 1933 and launched the fun-loving,
booze-swilling, mystery-solving couple Nick and Nora Charles into
American culture. MGM sold millions of movie tickets casting
William Powell and Myrna Loy as this classiest of romantic couples.
Over 14 years and six films, these stars navigated the grave
periods of history: the Great Depression, World War II, and the
Cold War. The novel and films live on as gems of a unique gritty
sophistication. This complete history of The Thin Man series covers
the brightest stars, tastiest scandals, headlines and conflicts
behind these classic films. With a cast of hundreds, we see
Hammett, his lover Lillian Hellman, and their friend Dorothy Parker
fight alcoholism, sexual convention and Senator Joe McCarthy in
culture wars of eerie contemporaneity.
Nominated for Pulitzer, Tony and Obie awards, among others, Lee
Blessing has shaped American theater over the last 40 years.
Tackling subjects like child abuse, racism, sexism and war, as well
as baseball, love and religion, Blessing has dedicated himself to
investigating and dramatizing both the triumphs and evils of
contemporary society. This book examines for the first time all 45
of his plays, along with one of his unpublished scripts, providing
a definitive text on a playwright whose thought-provoking work has
been performed around the world.
Where intervention programs such as D.A.R.E. and "Scared Straight"
have failed to adequately address the problems of at-risk
teenagers, inexpensive and easily-implemented after school theatre
programs may offer promising new possibilities. This book suggests
that low-cost, non-coercive theatre programs can demonstrably lower
the incidence of youth violence, drug use, teen pregnancy, truancy,
and gang membership. The author considers the problems facing
today's teenagers, discusses the history of using theatre for
social change in the United States and Britain, and takes an
in-depth look at three U.S. theatre programs. An appendix provides
an alphabetical directory of 106 after school theatre programs in
the U.S., including contact information and a brief description of
each program.
Tells the fist person story of Verne Lyon, an Iowa farm boy away at
college who is inducted into the CIA to spy on his professors and
fellow student as part of MHCHAOS, the then largest domestic
surveillance program in American history. Framed by his handlers
for an airport bombing the young Lyon is dispatched to Cuba to
subvert the Castro regime and, when he balks at increasingly
nefarious dirty tricks and tries to quit, the CIA kidnaps him
twice, finally returning him to American soil and Leavenworth
Penitentiary. Today a free man, Lyon details his journey through
CIA lies and deceit both to make amends and to reveal the secret
workings of government all around us.
Former CIA Personnel Director F.W.M. Janney once wrote, "It is
absolutely essential that the Agency have available to it the
greatest single source of expertise: the American academic
community." To this end, the Central Intelligence Agency has poured
tens of millions of dollars into universities to influence research
and enlist students and faculty members into its ranks. This
collection of nine essays in diverse academic fields explores the
pernicious penetration of intelligence services into U.S. campus
life to exploit academic study, recruit students, skew
publications, influence professional advancement, misinform the
public, and spy on professors. With its exhaustive list of CIA
misdeeds and myriad suggestions for combatting the subversion of
academic independence, this work provides a wake-up call for
students and faculty across the country.
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