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1946 and Talbot
On July 2, 1946, Pope and Talbot Lumber Company purchased timberland near Oakridge.
Others such as The Bayeux Tapestry by Eric Maclagan ( 1943 ), Ur: The First Phases by Leonard Woolley ( 1946 ) or Russian Icons ( 1947 ) by David Talbot Rice were distillations by experts of their own pioneering works.
Production of Sunbeam Talbot automobiles ceased during World War II and resumed again in 1946, and the Talbot name was dropped in 1955.
A 4483 cc six-cylinder in-line engine was developed for the Talbot Lago Record ( 1946 – 1952 ) and for the Talbot Grand Sport 26CV ( 1947 – 1954 ).
In 1946 at the age of 20 he left Port Talbot to become a full-time official at ASSET's ( the Association of Supervisory Staff, Executives and Technicians ) Birmingham office, where he was appointed assistant divisional secretary.

1946 and Jennings
As they were called by each other in 1946, they were Kay McNulty, Betty Jennings, Betty Snyder, Marlyn Wescoff, Fran Bilas and Ruth Lichterman.
" From 1946 until 1981, the Vezina Trophy had been awarded under that definition, but it was later changed and replaced by the Jennings Trophy.
Prior to USIP's creation in 1984, there was a campaign to create a “ Department of Peace ” by Sen. Jennings Randolph in 1946.
* 1946: Senator Jennings Randolph ( D-West Virginia ) re-introduced a bill to create a United States Department of Peace.
* Jennings B. Sanders ( 1943 – 1946 )
* William Nicholson Jennings ( 1860 – 1946 ), photographer in Philadelphia
* 1934 – 1946: Muriel Jennings
* William Nicholson Jennings ( 1860 – 1946 ), American photographer
William Nicholson Jennings ( 1860 – 1946 ) was a photographer active in Philadelphia from the 1890s.

1946 and Sally
* Sally Kern ( born 1946 ), Oklahoma state legislator
* 1946Sally Field, American actress
Sally Margaret Field ( born November 6, 1946 ) is an American actress, singer, producer, director, and screenwriter.
* Great Expectations ( 1946 ): " Sally Brown "
In 1946, Class A consisted of the Eastern League and the original South Atlantic or " Sally " League, and it would soon include the Western League ( 1947 – 1958 ), the Central League ( 1948 – 1951 ), and the Western International League ( 1952 – 1954 ), which would become the Class B Northwest League in 1955.
* Sally Field ( born 1946 ), American actress
Sally Jane Priesand was born June 27, 1946, in Cleveland, Ohio into a Jewish family.
They had a son, Haven Clark Roosevelt, and three daughters, Anne Sturgis " Nina " Roosevelt ( b. 1942 ), Sara Delano " Sally " Roosevelt ( 1946 – 1960 ) and Joan Lindsay Roosevelt ( 1952 – 1997 ).
* Sally Priesand ( born 1946 ), America's first female rabbi.

1946 and Benson
* The Jolson Story ( 1946 ) as Julie Benson ( a character based on Jolson's wife, Ruby Keeler )
Benson, founding president ( 1946 – 1969 )
After 1946, Chapman shared a house with the steward of West Hill Golf Club, Bernard Benson, and his health continued to deteriorate.
At the end of the War Humphrey joined the Air Staff at Headquarters British Air Forces South East Asia before transferring to the Air Staff at Headquarters No. 106 Group at RAF Benson, where he learnt the art of photographic reconnaissance, in August 1946.

1946 and adapted
The classic film noirs The Maltese Falcon and The Glass Key ( 1942 ) were based on novels by Hammett ; Cain's novels provided the basis for Double Indemnity ( 1944 ), Mildred Pierce ( 1945 ), The Postman Always Rings Twice ( 1946 ), and Slightly Scarlet ( 1956 ; adapted from Love's Lovely Counterfeit ).
Not only were Chandler's novels turned into major noirs — Murder, My Sweet ( 1944 ; adapted from Farewell, My Lovely ), The Big Sleep ( 1946 ), and Lady in the Lake ( 1947 )— he was an important screenwriter in the genre as well, producing the scripts for Double Indemnity, The Blue Dahlia ( 1946 ), and Strangers on a Train ( 1951 ).
The subject also enjoyed a revival in the mid twentieth century ; André Obey's 1931 play Le Viol de Lucrèce was adapted into a 1946 opera by Benjamin Britten.
He is credited as developing the processes for combining live action and animation used in Song of the South ( 1946 ), as well as the xerographic process adapted for cel animation.
* The Harvey Girls, a 1946 musical film adapted from the Samuel Hopkins Adams novel
Ruggles of Red Gap was adapted as a radio play on the July 10, 1939 episode of Lux Radio Theater, the December 17, 1945 episode of The Screen Guild Theater and the June 8, 1946 episode of Academy Award Theater, all with Charles Laughton and Charlie Ruggles reprising their film parts.
The work has been adapted twice into film, once in 1946 and again in 1978.
Jenny Seagrove and Nigel Havers rehearsingBrief Encounter was adapted as a radio play on the 20 November 1946 episode of Academy Award Theater, starring Greer Garson.
It was adapted again on the October 2, 1946 episode of Academy Award Theater, again starring William Powell.
Hold Back the Dawn was adapted as a radio play on the November 10, 1941 episode of Lux Radio Theater with Charles Boyer, Paulette Goddard and Susan Hayward, again on the February 8, 1943 episode of The Screen Guild Theater with Charles Boyer and Susan Hayward, the July 31, 1946 episode of Academy Award Theater starring Olivia de Havilland and Jean Pierre Aumont, the May 31, 1948 episode of Screen Guild Theater with Charles Boyer and Ida Lupino, the May 14, 1949 episode of Screen Director's Playhouse with Boyer and Vanessa Brown, the May 4, 1950 episode of Screen Guild Theater with de Havilland and Boyer and the June 15, 1952 Screen Guild Theater with Barbara Stanwyck and Jean Pierre Aumont.
Bachelor Mother was adapted as a radio play on several occasions, including five broadcasts of The Screen Guild Theater: the first starred Laraine Day, Henry Fonda and Charles Coburn ( February 1, 1942 ); the second starred Ann Sothern and Fred MacMurray ( November 23, 1942 ); the third starred Ginger Rogers, Francis X. Bushman and David Niven ( May 6, 1946 ); the fourth starred Lucille Ball, Joseph Cotten and Charles Coburn ( April 28, 1949 ); the fifth starred Ann Sothern and Robert Stack ( April 20, 1952 ).
The book was twice adapted into film, first in 1946 starring Tyrone Power and Gene Tierney, and Herbert Marshall as Maugham, and then a 1984 adaptation starring Bill Murray.
The movie was adapted by Vera Caspary and Joseph L. Mankiewicz from the 1946 novel Letter to Five Wives by John Klempner.
The string of notable successes continued as Princess Charlotte in The First Gentleman ( Savoy, 1945 ) opposite Robert Morley as the Prince Regent, Pegeen in Playboy of the Western World ( Bristol Old Vic, 1946 ) and Tess of the d ' Urbervilles ( Bristol Old Vic, 1946, transferring to the Piccadilly Theatre in the West End in 1947 ), which was adapted for the stage by her husband.
The play was adapted into a radio play in April 1946 on Molle Mystery Theater featuring Ian Martin and Virginia Field.
In his film career, he played the grandfather in The Red Pony ( 1949 ), adapted from the novel by John Steinbeck and starring Robert Mitchum, and the spy boss of Cary Grant in the Alfred Hitchcock suspense classic Notorious ( 1946 ).
* Monsieur Beaucaire 1900 ; later adapted as a play, an operetta and two films: 1924 and 1946
But Not Goodbye, Seaton's 1944 Broadway debut as a playwright, closed after only 23 performances, although it later was adapted for the 1946 film The Cockeyed Miracle by Karen DeWolf.
In 1946, the story was adapted by Classic Comics ( issue 29 ) to comic book format.
The civil rights anthem " We Shall Overcome " was adapted ( from a gospel song ) by Highlander music director, Zilphia Horton, wife of Myles Horton, from the singing of striking tobacco factory workers in South Carolina in 1946, and shortly afterward was published by folksinger Pete Seeger in the People's Songs bulletin.
* Jean Anouilh adapted the Medea story in his French drama Médée in 1946
The series revolves around two Los Angeles private detectives, both former government secret agents: Efrem Zimbalist, Jr. played Stuart (" Stu ") Bailey, a character Huggins had originated in his 1946 novel The Double Take ( which he later adapted into the 1948 movie I Love Trouble, starring Franchot Tone in the role ).

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