Saturday Oct 17 | KLEX TV
Taylor County Woman Indicted In Husband's Murder
His sister, Kathy Moberly, says Geneva told her Randolph had killed himself at their home in Campbellsville.
I liked ABILENE TOWN from the minute the evocative opening credits began rolling.
Summer-long Belcourt Western series is more than an OK corral
Starting Saturday, on the lawless streets of Hillsboro Village, The Belcourt will devote its entire summer of weekend repertory programming to the movies' monument to manifest destiny, the Western.
Free Wagon Wheels Candlewicking Pattern
One of the joys of my life has been meeting Mr. Pat. He is my soon to be father-in-law. At 93, he is still amazingly spry and quick-witted. He has two loves in his life - the Western Channel and Atlanta Braves Baseball.
Approaching the Allegro Bar in the Hotel Taschenbergpalais in Dresden, Germany, the first thing one notices is the blue neon script above the doorway spelling out the bar's name; then, inside, one's gaze is drawn by a big green neon cactus on the far wall.
Wanted: A look at people being sought by local police as of May 4, 2009
Police ask that anyone with information about these people call Silent Observer at 343-2100 or go to the Web site www.kalamazoosilentobserver.com . Randolph Scott Diabo Jr.
Mr. Beaks Has Big Warner Archive News! Find Out Which '70s Cult...
Before I get into my write-ups for two of the Warner Archive's most noteworthy April titles, a couple of things: 1) We've got five copies each of Ray Enright's THE RETURN OF THE BAD MEN and George Sidney's THOUSANDS CHEER to give away.
AICN Exclusive! Mr. Beaks Announces The April Releases From The Warner Bros. Archive
Last month, a cheer went up amongst cinephiles when Warner Bros. unveiled The Warner Archive Collection , through which the studio intends to release long out-of-print titles from its 6,800-film library.
Is this why they called them the Dirty Thirties?
When the Great Depression struck in 1929, Hollywood was in a quandary. It had promised lobby groups that it would regulate such story elements as adultery, nudity and crime, but to draw Depression audiences into the theatres it felt the need for lurid material: scenes of scantily clad chorus girls, tales that glorified gangsters, melodramas about ...
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