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Reade and number
A limited number of theatrical release prints were distributed by Walter Reade and these copies could have been shelved if Romero and Image Ten had elected.
* November 19, 1990: The Samuel B. and David Rose Building opened ; houses the Walter Reade Theater, the Stanley H. Kaplan Penthouse, the Daniel and Joanna S. Rose Rehearsal Studio, the Clark Studio Theater, the School of American Ballet, and Juilliard School student residences, as well as office space for a number of the member organizations.
It contains Colonel Light Gardens Primary School, the Colonel Light Gardens RSL, a number of sporting clubs using the name Reade Park, and a multitude of historical parks and gardens.

Reade and novels
* The University of South Florida-Tampa Special Collections Department has an extensive collection of nearly 9, 000 dime novels, including Frank Tousey's the Frank Reade Library and the Frank Reade Weekly Magazine.
His harshest critic was Augustus Moore, who wrote " God help English literature when English people lay aside their Waverley novels, and the works of Defoe, Swift, Thackeray, Charlotte Bronte, George Eliot, and even Charles Reade for the penny dreadfuls of Mr Haggard "; adding, " The man who could write ' he spoke to She ' can have no ear at all ".
As Annseley biographer Ekirch says, " It is inconceivable that Stevenson, a voracious reader of legal history, was unfamiliar with the saga of James Annesley, which by the time of Kidnapped ’ s publication in 1886 had already influenced four other 19th-century novels, most famously Sir Walter Scott ’ s Guy Mannering ( 1815 ) and Charles Reade ’ s The Wandering Heir ( 1873 ).
Reade took to writing at an early age, composing two novels by the age of 25.

Reade and romance
Despite the best efforts of Halyard, his housekeeper Thelma, and Marine Colonel Reade, romance blossoms between the three girls and a trio of handsome leathernecks.

Reade and on
In mere 90 minutes this horror film ( pun intended ) casts serious aspersions on the integrity and social responsibility of its Pittsburgh-based makers, distributor Walter Reade, the film industry as a whole and who book picture, as well as raising doubts about the future of the regional cinema movement and about the moral health of film goers who cheerfully opt for this unrelieved orgy of sadism ..."
Night of the Living Dead entered the public domain because the original theatrical distributor, the Walter Reade Organization, neglected to place a copyright indication on the prints.
Reade began his literary career as a dramatist, and he chose to have " dramatist " stand first in the list of his occupations on his tombstone.
Reade was an amateur of the violin, and among his works is an essay on Cremona violins with the title, " A Lost Art Revived.
Reade fell out of fashion by the turn of the century —" it is unusual to meet anyone who has voluntarily read him ," wrote George Orwell in an essay on Reade — but during the 19th century Reade was one of England's most popular novelists.
and Lady In The Dark, is a play on the title of Reade ’ s book.
He had married on 18 January 1768 Mary, daughter of Sir John Reade, of Shipton Court, Oxfordshire ; they had five sons.
In New York City in 1846, Alexander Turney Stewart established the " Marble Palace " on the east-Broadway, between Chambers and Reade streets.
An English ballet adaptation of the same title, with choreography by David Bintley and music by Paul Reade, premiered on 13 February 1989 by Sadler's Wells Royal Ballet at Covent Garden, London.
Performance venues have included Ozawa Hall ( Tanglewood ), Alice Tully, Carnegie Hall Weill, Miller, Walter Reade and Merkin Concert Halls ; The Kitchen, Bang on a Can Festival and The Alternative Museum ( NYC ) the Purcell Room ( London ), The American Academy ( Rome ), the American Center ( Paris ), the WDR ( Cologne ), Cervantino Festival ( Mexico ), New Music Forum ( Mexico City ), Holland Festival ( Amsterdam ), Vienna, Madrid, Barcelona, Tokyo and Asahikawa ( Japan ); colleges and universities including Princeton, Harvard, Yale, Columbia, and Swarthmore ; The Walker Art Center ( Minneapolis ), and New Music America.
The office has existed since the foundation of the see from part of the Diocese of Manchester in 1926 under King George V. The current bishop is the Right Reverend Nicholas Reade, the 8th Bishop of Blackburn, who signs + Nicholas Blackburn, and who will retire on 31 October 2012.
In the sixteenth century the manor of Redbourn belonged to the Reade family: Sir Richard Reade, former Lord Chancellor of Ireland, on his death in 1575, left a bequest for the upkeep of the parish.
Dr. Frank Robertson Reade assumed the job of acting president in 1934 and on Dr.
On September 22, 2009, the band released their 10th album, 10 Neurotics, with the lineup of Rosenthal on acoustic guitar, programming and keyboards, Brian Viglione ( The Dresden Dolls ) on drums, percussion, bass and guitar, and vocalists Maroulis ( Spahn Ranch ), Laurie Reade ( ex-Attrition ) and Nicki Jaine on additional vocals.
He was a business genius, and by 1848 he had built a large marble-fronted store on Broadway between Chambers Street and Reade Street, which was devoted to the wholesale branch of his business, and the largest retail store in the world at that time.
The film is based on Deborah Curtis ' book Touching From A Distance about her late husband and the biography Torn Apart by Lindsay Reade ( Tony Wilson's ex-wife ) and Mick Middles.
Conversely, there were those, like the British explorer and geographer William Winwood Reade, who drew on the accounts of slave traders to argue that the effects of slavery were positive.
The Yamaha Music and Wellness Institute, with the support of Yamaha Artist Services, Inc., presented its Lifetime Achievement Award to Maestro Byron Janis, on May 30, 2012 at the Walter Reade Theater at Lincoln Center.
** Edwin Godwin Reade ( took his seat on 22 January 1864-Appointed to fill vacancy )

Reade and newspaper
Folksinger John Earls went to Bolivia and former Tribune ( Communist Party of Australia newspaper ) cartoonist Harry Reade went to join Fidel Castro's revolution in Cuba ( and returned in 1971 at the same time as Paddy McGuinness ).

Reade and which
In 1981, Columbia Pictures acquired 81 % of The Walter Reade Organization, which owned 11 theaters ; it purchased the remaining 19 % in 1985.
Among her most celebrated roles with Irving were Ophelia, Pauline in The Lady of Lyons by Edward George Bulwer-Lytton ( 1878 ), Portia ( 1879 ), Queen Henrietta Maria in William Gorman Wills's drama Charles I ( 1879 ), Desdemona in Othello ( 1881 ), Camma in Tennyson's short tragedy The Cup ( 1881 ), Beatrice in Much Ado About Nothing, another of her signature roles ( 1882 and often thereafter ), Juliet in Romeo and Juliet ( 1882 ), Jeanette in The Lyons Mail by Charles Reade ( 1883 ), the title part in Reade's romantic comedy Nance Oldfield ( 1883 ), Viola in Twelfth Night ( 1884 ), Margaret in the long-running adaptation of Faust by Wills ( 1885 ), the title role in Olivia ( 1885, which she had played earlier at the Court Theatre ), Lady Macbeth in Macbeth ( 1888, with incidental music by Arthur Sullivan ), Queen Katherine in Henry VIII ( 1892 ), Cordelia in King Lear ( 1892 ), Rosamund de Clifford in Becket by Alfred Tennyson ( 1893 ), Guinevere in King Arthur by J. Comyns Carr, with incidental music by Sullivan ( 1895 ), Imogen in Cymbeline ( 1896 ), the title character in Victorien Sardou and Émile Moreau's play Madame Sans-Gêne ( 1897 ) and Volumnia in Coriolanus ( 1901 ).
After managers declined the manuscript, Reade adapted the story, weaving it into a novel which was serialised in The London Journal and published in three volumes the same year.
Indeed, Mr. Reade wants no quality which is necessary to make a powerful story-teller, while he is distinguished from all mere story-tellers by the fact that he has some great social object to serve in nearly everything he undertakes to detail.
The Azor has now been launched in the USA at Duane Reade by Remington, which is known more in the market for their electric shaving products.
Along with nine others, including James Glaisher, John Drew, Edward Joseph Lowe, The Revd Joseph Bancroft Reade, and Samuel Charles Whitbread, Dr John Lee, an astronomer, of Hartwell House, near Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire founded in the library of his house the British Meteorological Society, which became the Royal Meteorological Society.
In " Perelandra ", Weston mentions his liking of the book of which Rhodes said " it made me who I am ”: Winwood Reade ’ s The Martyrdom of Man, which expounded the ideology of secular humanism.
In December 1984, a crucial Factory Records Management meeting was hastily arranged with all directors in which Reade was subsequently sacked and told to leave the offices immediately without the band.
The work was originally entitled The Veil of Isis, a title which remains on the heading of each page, but had to be renamed once Blavatsky discovered that this title had already been used for an 1861 Rosicrucian work by W. W. Reade.
In 2011 Reade released the book An Epic Swindle which made the Sunday Times Top Ten best-sellers list and reached Number One in Amazon's best-sellers chart.
Reade was also at the Royal Society on 14 March to hear Sir John Herschel ’ s seminal paper on photography in which Herschel proposed sodium hyposulfite as a fixer.
Other celebrated productions included Much Ado About Nothing, The Lady of Lyons by Edward George Bulwer-Lytton ( 1878 ), Romeo and Juliet, King Lear, The Lyons Mail by Charles Reade ( 1883 ), the immensely popular Faust by William Gorman Wills ( 1885, which even drew applications for reserved seats from foreigners ), Macbeth ( 1888, with incidental music by Sir Arthur Sullivan ), Henry VII ( 1892 ), Becket by Alfred Tennyson ( 1893 ), King Arthur by J. Comyns Carr, with incidental music by Sir Arthur Sullivan ( 1895 ), Cymbeline ( 1896 ) and Victorien Sardou and Émile Moreau's play Madame Sans-Gêne ( 1897 ).
Legend has it that King Seedwa set four gruelling tasks for Reade each day of his captivity, all of which Reade completed with aplomb.
He was buried in Ipsden churchyard, Oxfordshire, a stone's throw away from the family home, which is still to this day owned and inhabited by a member of the Reade family.

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