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Frame and left
Strachan stayed in Frame for about 18 months but left for a career in carpentry and a hobby of surfing in Phillip Island.
" King defended his project and maintained that future biographies on Frame would eventually fill in the gaps left by his own work.
Frame 4: The left electromagnet ( 4 ) is energized, rotating again by 3. 6 °.
Frame number markings for the 4 × 4 and 4 × 6 image formats are printed on the backing paper, while 4 × 3 cameras typically have two frame counter windows, exposing the left and right halves of the 4 × 6 frame.
After he left the company, he co-founded Frame Technology Corp. in 1986 to market the FrameMaker publishing software.
Jean Hill ( left ), Mary Moorman ( right ) as captured in Frame 298 of the Zapruder film, just less than one second before the fatal head shot.
Hall left his job in 1969 and founded his own production company, Stop Frame Productions.
Jean Hill ( left ) and Mary Moorman ( right ) as captured in Frame 298 of the Zapruder film, just less than one second before the fatal head shot
Craig Stevens ( actor ) | Craig Stevens as Peter Gunn ( left ) with guest stars Lari Laine and Lewis Charles in the 1959 episode " The Ugly Frame ".
Frame # 2348 Engine # XXE 2606 repainted with original WD # C5153148 left untouched, built on second contract 294 / 23 / S. 1649 issued 19 Nov 1942 with deliveries commencing Feb 1943.
Lowe allowed Gai to keep the Blue Frame, which he had seized during the battle, and left with only Red Frame and the Gold Frame arm.

Frame and New
* 1924 – Janet Frame, New Zealand author ( d. 2004 )
* 2004 – Janet Frame, New Zealand writer ( b. 1924 )
* New Zealand author and poet Janet Frame received a literary award in 1951 the day before a scheduled lobotomy was to take place, and it was never performed.
Frame from rediscovered ( May 2010, New Zealand ) copy of Maytime.
The Legislature and Executive of the Government of Dover, New York are invested in the Town Board, consisting of the Town Supervisor, currently the Honorable Ryan Courtien elected to a two-year term, and four Council members, currently the Honorable Christopher Galayda, the Honorable Catherine Frame, the Honorable Katie Palmer-House & the Honorable Richard Hawthorne, each elected to four-year terms.
New Geneva, Martin, Gallatin, Old Frame, Woodside, and Grays Landing are villages in the township.
Janet Frame ( 1924-2004 ), New Zealand author, lived for a short period in 1963-64 in a rented cottage in Braiseworth, near Eye, where she began her novel An Adaptable Man, inspired by the local area, with Eye being fictionalised as ' Murston '.
Janet Paterson Frame, ONZ, CBE ( 28 August 1924 – 29 January 2004 ) was a New Zealand author.
Characterised by scholar Simone Oettli as a writer who simultaneously sought fame and anonymity, Frame eschewed the dominant New Zealand literary realism of the post-war era, combining prose, poetry, and modernist elements with a magical realist style, garnering numerous local literary prizes despite mixed critical and public reception.
Janet Frame was born in Dunedin in the south-east of New Zealand's South Island as the third of five children of Scottish New Zealander parents.
Her father, George Frame, worked for the New Zealand railways, and her mother Lottie ( née Godfrey ), served as a housemaid to the family of writer Katherine Mansfield.
New Zealand's first female medical graduate, Dr Emily Hancock Siedeberg, delivered Frame at St. Helen's Hospital in 1924.
Frame spent her early childhood years in various small towns in New Zealand's South Island provinces of Otago and Southland, including Outram and Wyndham, before the family eventually settled in the coastal town of Oamaru ( recognisable as the " Waimaru " of her début novel and subsequent fiction ).
During the next eight years, Frame was repeatedly readmitted, usually voluntarily, to psychiatric hospitals in New Zealand.
In 1951, while Frame was still a patient at Seacliff Lunatic Asylum, New Zealand's Caxton Press published her first book, a collection of shorts titled The Lagoon and Other Stories.
Frame returned to New Zealand in 1963.
In the 1980s Frame authored three volumes of autobiography ( To the Is-land, An Angel at my Table and The Envoy from Mirror City ) which collectively traced the course of her life to her return to New Zealand in 1963.
In 2007, after Frame's death, The New Zealand Medical Journal published an article by a medical specialist who proposed that Frame may have registered on what is referred to as the autistic spectrum, a suggestion that was disputed by the author's literary executor.
Frame also held foreign membership of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, received honorary doctorates from two New Zealand universities, and achieved recognition as a cultural icon in her native country.
The front cover of prominent New Zealand historian Michael King | Michael King's award-winning biography on Frame, first published in 2000.
In 2000, the popular New Zealand historian Michael King published his authorised biography of Frame, Wrestling with the Angel.
Janet Frame died in Dunedin in January 2004, aged 79, from acute myeloid leukaemia, shortly after becoming one of the first recipients of the New Zealand " Icon " award.
Also in 2010, Gifted, a novel by New Zealand academic ( and former Frame biographer ) Patrick Evans, was published and subsequently shortlisted for the Commonwealth Writers ' Prize.

Frame and Zealand
" Three Poems by Janet Frame " in New Zealand Listener, 28 August – 3 September 2004 ( Posthumously published ) view online
* Patrick Evans ' essay " Dr. Clutha ’ s Book of the World: Janet Paterson Frame, 1924 – 2004 ," published in the Journal of New Zealand Literature, 2004
When Janet Frame was released in 1955 from eight years of voluntary incarceration in New Zealand psychiatric hospitals, Sargeson invited her to stay in an ex-army hut on his property.
** Janet Frame, New Zealand novelist, poet and short story writer ( born 1924 )
Further recognition followed with An Angel at My Table ( 1990 ), a biographical and psychological portrayal of the New Zealand poet Janet Frame.
She came to prominence playing author Janet Frame in the movie An Angel at My Table directed by Jane Campion, which gained her a Best Actress Award from the New Zealand Film and Television Awards.

Frame and late
It was during the late 1960's that the Alice / Steve / Rachel triangle became one of the hottest storylines on daytime, pairing her with George Reinholt as the charismatic Steve Frame, and setting her in a rivalry with " bad girl " Rachel Davis, played at the time by Robin Strasser and later by Victoria Wyndham.
The duo gradually regained critical favour with a trio of innovative albums in the late 1970s and early 1980s – L, Freeze Frame and Ismism ( released as Snack Attack in the United States ).

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