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Boston and Strangler
* 1967 – Albert DeSalvo, the " Boston Strangler ," is convicted of numerous crimes and is sentenced to life imprisonment.
They include " Indiscreet ( 1958 ), John Frankenheimer's Grand Prix ( 1966 ), Richard Fleischer's The Boston Strangler ( 1968 ), Norman Jewison's The Thomas Crown Affair ( 1968 ), Airport ( 1970 ), Woodstock ( 1970 ), Carrie ( 1976 ) and More American Graffiti ( 1979 ).
The extensive use of split-screen as part of the narrative structure of a film, as in The Boston Strangler.
* The Boston Strangler ( 1968 )
** Albert DeSalvo ( The Boston Strangler ) is convicted of numerous crimes and sentenced to life in prison.
He formerly had been the long term doctor for Eugene O ' Neill and evaluated the confessed Boston Strangler, Albert DeSalvo, a case defended in 1967 by Bailey.
His most significant serious part came in 1968 when he starred in the true-life drama The Boston Strangler, which some consider his " last major film role.
Curtis ' comedies include Some Like It Hot ( 1959 ), Sex and the Single Girl ( 1964 ) and The Great Race ( 1965 ), and his dramas included playing the slave Antoninus in Stanley Kubrick's Spartacus ( 1960 ) co-starring Kirk Douglas and Laurence Olivier, The Outsider ( 1961 ), the true story of WW II veteran Ira Hayes, and The Boston Strangler ( 1968 ), in which he played the self-confessed murderer of the film's title, Albert DeSalvo.
* Albert DeSalvo, the Boston Strangler
He was dubbed " The Boston Strangler " by Boston, Massachusetts sportswriters during the 76ers ' and Celtics ' rivalry in the early 1980s because of his ability to single-handedly dominate games against the Celtics, including Game 7 of the 1982 Eastern Conference Finals when he scored 34 points in the game.
Albert Henry DeSalvo ( September 3, 1931 – November 25, 1973 ) was a criminal in Boston, Massachusetts, who confessed to being the " Boston Strangler ", the murderer of thirteen women in the Boston area.
Between June 14, 1962, and January 4, 1964, 13 single women between the ages of 19 and 85 were murdered in the Boston area ; they were eventually tied to the Boston Strangler.
Gainsborough Street site of the first murder attributed to The Boston Strangler
Only after he was charged with rape did he give a detailed confession of his activities as the Boston Strangler under hypnosis induced by William Joseph Bryan and sessions not induced by hypnosis with Assistant Attorney General John Bottomly.
Lingering doubts remain as to whether DeSalvo was indeed the Boston Strangler.
Another author, former FBI profiler Robert Ressler, said " You're putting together so many different patterns the Boston Strangler murders that it's inconceivable behaviorally that all these could fit one individual.
The results of a 2001 forensic investigation has cast doubts over whether DeSalvo was the Boston Strangler.
Nassar was sentenced to life in prison in that case, but through his friendship with a Unitarian minister he was paroled in early 1961, less than a year before the Boston Strangler murders were believed to have begun.
* DeSalvo was the subject of the 1968 Hollywood film The Boston Strangler, starring Tony Curtis as DeSalvo, and Henry Fonda and George Kennedy as the homicide detectives who apprehend him.
* Japanese serial killer-themed doom metal band Church of Misery have released a 12 " vinyl record titled " Boston Strangler " in 2002.
The Boston Strangler.

Boston and became
After the months in Europe, she returned to Boston and became active in church and community life.
* In 1870 the small City of Ragusa ( Dubrovnik ) became the first small Lifeboat to cross the Atlantic from Cork to Boston with two men crew, John Charles Buckley and Nikola Primorac ( di Costa ), only.
Following the formation of baseball's first professional organization, the National Association of Professional Baseball Players, which became known as the National Association, the Association, or NA, in 1871, Spalding joined the Boston Red Stockings ( precursor club to the modern Atlanta Braves ) and was highly successful ; winning 206 games ( and losing only 53 ) as a pitcher and batting. 323 as a hitter.
Nevertheless, the Knickerbocker Rules were rapidly adopted by teams in the New York area and their version of baseball became known as the " New York Game " ( as opposed to the " Massachusetts Game ", played by clubs in the Boston area ).
The now all professional Chicago White Stockings, financed by businessman William Hulbert, became a charter member of the league along with the Red Stockings, who had dissolved and moved to Boston.
After Davy Force signed with Chicago, and then breached his contract to play in Boston, Hulbert became discouraged by the " contract jumping " as well as the overall disorganization of the N. A., and thus spearheaded the movement to form a stronger organization.
In 1920 the Advertiser was merged with The Boston Record, initially the combined newspaper was called the Boston Advertiser however when the combined newspaper became an illustrated tabloid in 1921 it was renamed The Boston American.
Ruth retired in 1935 after a short stint with the Boston Braves, and the following year, he became one of the first five players to be elected into the National Baseball Hall of Fame.
The groundwork for the modern bikini began to be laid in 1907, when Australian swimmer and performer Annette Kellerman was arrested on a Boston beach for wearing a form-fitting one-piece swimsuit, which became an accepted beach attire for women by 1910.
When the Boston Braves relocated to Milwaukee in 1953, Selig switched alligences, and eventually became the team's largest public stockholder.
Adams convinced Gerry to reenter politics after the Boston Port Act closed that city's port, and Marblehead became a port to which relief supplies could be delivered.
In Boston, the revelry took on anti-authoritarian overtones, and often became so dangerous that many would not venture out of their homes.
Nevertheless, it was not until the mid-19th century that celebrating Christmas became fashionable in the Boston region.
His ministry there became embroiled in controversy when Timothy Dalton was sent to the town as " teaching assistant " by the Boston church after New Hampshire was absorbed by Massachusetts in 1641.
This new configuration became very popular in the Boston area, and by the fall of 1971, enthusiastic word-of-mouth led to the Modern Lovers ' first exposure to a major label when Stuart Love of Warner Bros. Records contacted them and organized the band's first multi-track session at Intermedia Studio in Boston.
Bobby Valentine, ( currently the Boston Red Sox manager ) who would eventually become the Rangers ' longest-serving manager at 1, 186 games, became steward over an influx of splendid talent in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
The property became a yard for the Boston Elevated Railway ( predecessor to the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority ), and is currently the site of a city-owned baseball field.
When Pumpsie Green became the first black player on the Boston Red Sox in 1959 — the last major league team to integrate its team — Williams openly welcomed Green.
The issue of Parliament's authority in the colonies became a crisis after Parliament passed the Coercive Acts in 1774 to punish the Province of Massachusetts for the Boston Tea Party of 1773.
In 1800, Joseph Stevens Buckminster became minister of the Brattle Street Church in Boston, where his brilliant sermons, literary activities, and academic attention to the German " New Criticism " helped shape the subsequent growth of Unitarianism in New England.
Buckminster's close associate William Ellery Channing ( 1780 – 1842 ) was settled over the Federal Street Church in Boston, 1803 ; and in a few years he became the leader of the Unitarian movement.
In 1970 the Boston Women's Health Collective published Women and Their Bodies ( which became far better known a year later under its subsequent title Our Bodies, Ourselves ).

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