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...Producer Felix Jackson, faced with the difficult job of making the Orwellian future believable ("without putting on a space-cadet kind of show"), hired British Playwright William P. Templeton to do the adaptation. Jackson also decided, with Director Paul Nickell, that the shape of the superstate could be suggested, rather than spelled out, by lighting tricks and simple, abstract sets...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Radio: Hour of Gloom | 10/5/1953 | See Source »

Varsity Football--Minor Football H--Robert A. Albert, James P. Anthony, Anthony A. Caimi, Thomas Campbell, George B. Clark, Herbert F. Collins, Otis K. Dewan, Richard J. Koch, Jr., George L. MacDonald Jr., Jerry R. Marsh, Paul J. Murphy, Robert E. Richter, Irvin W. Templeton, Roger H. Vaglia, Frank H. White...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Grid, Track, Soccer Squads Get Fall Awards from HAA | 1/6/1953 | See Source »

...Herbert Grossman, Boylston A. Hinds, Richard M. Hoffman, Frederick S. Horween, Peter W. Kenney, Richard J. Koch, John B. Lynch, Jr., George L. MacDonald, Jr., William T. Maloney, Robert N. Margolis, Leon F. Markoff, Jerry R. Marsh, Stannard B. Pfahl Jr., Robert E. Richter, David M. Silverman, Irvin W. Templeton, Roger H. Vaglia, Marinus G. K. Van Gessel, Erwin F. Vonderlage Jr., Frank H. White, Robert H. Zuege, Marcus Schoenfeld...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Grid, Track, Soccer Squads Get Fall Awards from HAA | 1/6/1953 | See Source »

...impressed by these magic signs that he spares Wilbur, who lives fattily ever after. Author White (who lives on his own Maine farm) also does a fine job on farmyard life as seen through the eyes of geese and sheep, and reaches his peak with a scurrilous rat named Templeton who, like Satan in Paradise Lost, pretty nearly steals the show...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Children's Hour | 12/8/1952 | See Source »

...George Templeton Strong, a New York boy of 15, began a diary. In its first few years the diary recorded a gleeful account of student pranks at Columbia, a burlesque of its president's sermon on "The Moral Turpitude of Snow-Balling," a solemn discovery that Shelley's poetry was "rather humbuggical." By the time of Strong's death in 1875, the diary, with a massive total of 4.500,000 words, had become a solid record of 19th century life, a treasure house of Americana...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: An American Record | 9/15/1952 | See Source »

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