Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Patterson-Gimlin film" ¶ 16
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Titmus and prints
After not being taken seriously about what he was seeing, Crew brought in his friend, Bob Titmus, to cast the prints in plaster.

Titmus and could
In 1945 Barrington left school aged 14 and took up work as a motor mechanic in Reading, Fred Titmus saying " he could drive anything from a tank to a scooter ".

Titmus and on
In his second autobiography, Fred Titmus, a senior county colleague, poured scorn on Brearley's reputed man-management skills.
In the Second Test at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, Fred Titmus bowled outside leg stump with five men on the on side, but Booth completed consecutive centuries with 103 in the second innings.
An example of such tests would be the Titmus Fly Stereotest, where a picture of a fly is displayed with disparities on the edges.
A right-arm off-break bowler, using a very short run, Allen came close to developing into an all-rounder on the level of Fred Titmus.

Titmus and .
* 1932 – Fred Titmus, English cricketer ( d. 2011 )
Taxidermist and outdoorsman Robert Titmus went to the site with his brother-in-law nine days later.
Australia came back to win the Third Test at Sydney, where Dexter had preferred to keep his fast bowling attack from the Second Test even when Fred Trueman volunteered to stand down in favour of a second spinner to Fred Titmus.
In the end the unsupported Titmus took 7 / 79 in the first innings and Australia won by 8 wickets, E. W.
The forest contains Tilgate Nature Reserve and Wild Breeds Centre, 3 recreational lakes ( Campbells Lake, Silt Lake and Titmus Lake ), park areas, Tilgate Golf Course, and several small commercial buildings known as ' huts ' which are used by small sports and hobby clubs and businesses.
The team was managed by the genial Geoffrey Howard, the Secretary of Lancashiure and captained by Donald Carr, the captain of Derbyshire and included Fred Titmus, Brian Close, Tony Lock, Jim Parks and Peter Richardson.
Here bright cricket failed them as only Barrington with 102 and Fred Titmus with 53 showed any staying power.
Bigfoot researcher John Green and Bob Titmus visited Klemtu to investigate the sightings.
In 1967 / 68 he was unexpectedly recalled by England because of an injury to Fred Titmus, and played in the last two Tests against West Indies.
Unable to take advantage, they collapsed at the hands of Fred Trueman and Fred Titmus for 159 in their second innings, out of which Reid hit exactly 100 before stumbling from the field in pallid enervation.
He also took two wickets, one in each of the Third and Fifth Tests, removing Fred Titmus and Dexter respectively.
In 1964 he famously refused to run out Fred Titmus when he was knocked over by an Australian fielder in the 1964 Ashes series, but sportingly let him return to the crease.
Grout then snapped up Fred Titmus off Doug Walters to give him five catches in an innings.
Frederick John Titmus MBE ( 24 November 1932 – 23 March 2011 ) was an English cricketer, whose first-class career spanned five decades.
Outside of cricket, Titmus was also an able footballer ; at one stage he was contracted to Watford as a professional, having earlier played for Chelsea as a junior.
Titmus was in his school's first XI by the age of thirteen, and when sixteen he wrote to Lord's, the ground being very close to his home, to ask for a trial.
Also relatively common is the Titmus Fly Stereotest, a greatly enlarged stereoscopic image of a fly used by optometrists and ophthalmologists to determine if patients, especially young children, have normal stereoscopic vision.
He was a decent bat, his Test average was higher than the all rounders Fred Titmus and Ray Illingworth-and in the 1963 Lord's Test against the West Indies, he notably played out the final two balls of Wes Hall's last over for a draw.

made and casts
Carnegie was so proud of " Dippi " that he had casts made of the bones and plaster replicas of the whole skeleton donated to several museums in Europe and South America.
Bronze casts made in 1990 from plaster death mask and plaster cards of his hands clearly show a normal right hand and a withered left hand.
" They returned to the initial site, measured the creature's stride, made two plaster casts ( of the best-quality right and left prints ), and covered the other prints to protect them.
That work appeared in the Transactions of the Connecticut Academy, which had few readers capable of understanding Gibbs's work, but he shared reprints with his correspondents in Europe and received a particularly favorable response from James Clerk Maxwell, at the University of Cambridge, who made three plaster casts illustrating Gibbs's construct with his own hands and mailed one to Gibbs ( see Maxwell's thermodynamic surface ).
Australian commercial television channels made their own versions of popular British comedies during the 1970s often using members of the original casts.
In 1923 German archaeologist Ernst Herzfeld made casts of the cuneiform inscriptions on Darius's tomb.
Repertory theatre with mostly changing casts and longer running plays, perhaps better classed as " provincial " or " non-profit " theatre, has made a big come-back, in cities such as Little Rock, AR, Washington, DC, Minneapolis, Indianapolis, Milwaukee, Cincinnati, Chicago, Los Angeles, New York, Houston, Boston, San Francisco, San Diego, Buffalo, and Seattle.
He made the first plaster casts of shoe impressions.
Cú Chulainn casts Gae Bulg, his invincible spear made of sea monster's bones, fatally wounding Connla.
He then made nets from forest plants and casts them in the sea so that the children of Tangaroa soon lie in heaps on the shore.
As an aid to the study of anatomy, plaster casts were made from dissections, duplicates of which were furnished to students.
The casts were generally made up of familiar character actors.
Because the casts made of the horns were lost, it is uncertain whether the horns were simply curved or whether they had a winding, helix-like curvature like a natural ox-horn.
Fröbe made several appearances in all-star casts in the 1960s, including the films The Longest Day, Is Paris Burning ?, Monte Carlo or Bust, and Those Magnificent Men in their Flying Machines.
Mahon had previously produced nudie films ; however, those films were made in New York, while Oz was made in Florida, and neither Caroline Berner ( as Jinjur ) nor the rest of her army were drawn from his former casts.
The show was revived for a season in 1988, using old scripts reshot with new casts when a writers ' strike made new material inaccessible.
At the beginning of the 1950s Broccoli moved once more, this time to London, where the British government provided subsidies to film productions made in the UK with British casts and crews.
It is believed that the upper parts of their faces were made from great wooden masks or casts.
I then had plaster casts made.
Dr Brain made cadaveric plaster casts of the space around and behind the glottis, a space adapted to the acceptance of foreign bodies in the form of food, therefore likely to tolerate an inflated cuff.
Sphinx manufactures all pistols in Switzerland, slides are made from solid billet steel, frames from casts, forgings or also from billet, and fits each pistol with high quality barrels.
The original trackway was remolded and new casts were made.
Like many other artists of the day, he studied antiquities, and made numerous plaster casts and marble copies of classic works – many of these later formed the collection of Charles Lennox, 3rd Duke of Richmond at

0.204 seconds.