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         American History 1940s 50s & 60s:     more detail
  1. Looking Back Lane County: The 1940s, '50s, and '60s

81. Ginny, An All-American Sweetheart!  
GinnyAllamerican Sweetheart! hard plastic dolls through the 1930s and 1940s, forwhich unsuccessful, but, had they been successful, doll history might have
http://collectdolls.about.com/library/weekly/aa072299.htm
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GinnyAll-American Sweetheart! Hard-plastic, vintage Ginny dolls from the late 1940s through the 1950s were favorite dolls of little girls, and today, they are a hot, sought-after collectible. Although the doll lost her way in the late 1960s through the 1980s (much like Barbie!) today the dolls are again favored by little girls as well as collectors. The story of Ginny and the Vogue Doll Company has been well documented. Ginny was created by the founder of the Vogue Doll Company, Jennie H. Graves, from Sommerville, MA. The business was originally a "cottage industry" business run out of Mrs. Graves house. She sold a variety of bisque,composition and hard plastic dolls through the 1930s and 1940s, for which Ms. Graves designed most of the clothing, In 1948, she decided to create an 8" plastic play doll, and Ginny was born! One of the novel things about the new Ginny doll was that the clothing was available separately from the doll. The original Vogue dolls retailed for only $1.98, ready to dress in underwear and shoes, and outfits retailed from $1.00 to $2.98. Mrs. Graves designed most of the clothing, and the wonderful detailed outfitsincluding hats, purses, and snap-shoesadded immeasurably to the doll's popularity.

82. Welcome To Las Vegas
mile stretch has had a long and interesting history. a small building boom in thelate 1940s on the contacts with the Teamsters Union, the american mafia was
http://www.latimes.com/extras/lasvegas/history.html
Elvis Presley performed at the Las Vegas Hilton in the 1970s.
Photo courtesy of MGM

The Flamingo Hotel, the first casino on the Strip, was opened by Bugsy Siegel in 1946.
AP Photo
Benjamin "Bugsy" Siegel opened the Flamingo, one of Las Vegas' most elegant resorts of the 1940s and 1950s.
AP Photo History of the Strip
From mob bosses and forced buyouts to entertainment, fine dining and megaresorts, the Strip has a history unlike any other place in the world
By Kirsten Culbertson, Times Guide Writer
Since the first Las Vegas gaming license was issued in 1931, this three-mile stretch has had a long and interesting history. In fact, it was renamed five times before "the Strip" finally stuck. Other names included Las Vegas Boulevard South, Arrowhead Highway, Salt Lake Highway, Route 91, Los Angeles Highway and finally, Las Vegas Boulevard South—perhaps a foreshadow that in the years ahead, change would be the only constant in this city. The success of the El Rancho Vegas, the first hotel-casino on the Strip, triggered a small building boom in the late 1940s on the two-lane highway leading into Las Vegas from Los Angeles. Early hotels included the Last Frontier, Thunderbird and Club Bingo, but by far the most celebrated of the early resorts was the Flamingo Hotel, built by mobster Benjamin "Bugsy" Siegel, a member of the Meyer Lansky crime organization.

83. Fox Theatre Atlanta, Georgia (Music And Theater)
the Fox through many ups and downs bankruptcy in the Great Dep ression, a heydayas a premier movie theater in the 1940s, 50s, and 60s, gradual decline as the
http://www.ohwy.com/ga/f/ftetetaa.htm
Location: Atlanta Georgia Music and Theater Fox Theatre
Atlanta's Fox Theatre, originally the Yaarab Temple Shrine Mosque, was designed in the late 1920's as headquarters for the 5,000-member Shriner's organization. It was a beautifully outlandish, opulent, grandiose monument to the heady excesses of the pre-crash 1920's, a mosque-like structure complete with minarets, onion domes, and an interior decor which was even more lavish than its facade. The decades which followed brought the Fox through many ups and downs: bankruptcy in the Great Dep ression, a heyday as a premier movie theater in the 1940s, 50s, and 60s, gradual decline as the film culture moved towards smaller venues than the 4,000 seat Fox during the 70s; then a period of restoration and preservation under designation as a historic landmark, that continues through today. Find similar pages at Music and Theater Lowest Rates and Free candid reviews for Atlanta at Tripadvisor.com.
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84. Arthritis Foundation History
The 1940s. new broadened scope was the formation of the american Juvenile Arthritis Throughoutits 50year history, the Arthritis Foundation has experienced
http://www.arthritis.org/resources/aboutus/history.asp
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Arthritis Foundation History
The mission of the Arthritis Foundation is to improve lives through leadership in the prevention control and cure of arthritis and related diseases. Take some time and learn more about the Arthritis Foundation and how we help you and other people concerned about arthritis:
What Services Does the Arthritis Foundation Provide?
How is the Arthritis Foundation Organized?

What is the American Juvenile Arthritis Organization (AJAO)?

What is Arthritis and Rheumatism International (ARI)?
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What job openings does the Arthritis Foundation have?

What Services Does the Arthritis Foundation Provide? The Arthritis Foundation also provides a large number of community-based services nationwide to make life with arthritis easier, including:
  • Self-help courses Water and land-based exercise classes Support groups Home study groups Instructional videotapes Public forums A wide variety of free educational brochures and booklets The national, bimonthly consumer magazine

85. MapQuest: Features: Features
In the late 1940s, american car manufacturers switched their of the Museum of AutomobileHistory in Syracuse icon of the exuberant american '50s, especially its
http://www.mapquest.com/features/main.adp?page=lovedcars

86. UptownCity: Directory, Nostalgia, Vintage, 40s, 50s, 60s, 70, 80s, Movies, TV...
UptownCity Best all free entertainment on the Net, From Games MP3s Travel information chats online fun of all kinds )
http://www.uptowncity.com/direct/nostalg.htm
Search this Site Search Your all free online site for entertainment, information, music, mp3, games, travel, books, news, humor, free stuff, sports, flowers, gifts, autos, people, pets, videos, real estate, freeware, software, chat, reports, love, free greeting cards, food, romance, vacations, downloads, art, health, maps, free email, jobs, screensavers, comedy, weather, PC tech help, free buy, sell, swap. Always something new Search the Web Web Browser Home Artists Avenue Sports Center ... Lovers Lane UptownCity's Directory of Distinction Escape the Ordinary New hand-picked entries are made as we discover them. Be sure to bookmark this page and visit often! Nostalgia Definitive CD sets Luxurious bound books Comprehensive notes Great Composers Series
Select One Bach Beethoven Brahms Mozart Ravel Schubert Schumann Stravinsky 1940s Decade Published highlights.

87. Baby Boomers, Antibiotics, And Slews Of Slinkies | Feb 26, 1999
18th, celebrates the 1940s with another five minute the scope of 20th century americanhistory and culture find an entire department, american Studies, devoted
http://www.yaleherald.com/archive/xxvii/1999.02.26/opinion/p09stamps.html
Baby boomers, antibiotics, and slews of Slinkies
By Margaux Wexberg You have two days left to put your 33 cents in. As February comes to an end, so does balloting to determine which people, events, and trends will be honored by the U.S. Postal Service's Celebrate the Century in its 1980s series of commemorative stamps. Celebrate the Century is the Postal Service's attempt to weave the fabric of our nation's history and character into very small rectangles, with sticky stuff on the back. However, the USPS should not propose that they have achieved any notable historical or cultural feat. Celebrate the Century is not the "virtual field trip through the 20th century" that Postal Service press releases claim. It is, at best, a somewhat entertaining and mildly informative exercise in self-aggrandizing publicity and political correctness. Since the so-called "stamp and education" program began last February, sets of 15 images commemorating the 1900s, '10s, '20s, and '30s have made their way to a post office near you. The latest set, released Thurs., Feb. 18th, celebrates the 1940s with another five minute stop to see the sights before we pile back on the bus and head on to the '50s. According to Einar V. Dyhrkopp, chairman of the Postal Service Board of Governors, "The '40s were a decade which began with a World War and ended in victory and the beginning of prosperity." The series of stamps attempts to capture this ridiculously broad and abstract definition with titles such as "Abstract Expressionism," "Postwar Baby Boom," "Antibiotics Save Lives," "TV Entertains America," "Women Support War Effort," and "Slinky Craze Begins." It would seem that, in the eyes of the USPS, war plus babies plus TV equals 10 years' worth of American history. Oh, and throw a Slinky in there somewhere.

88. The History Of Gospel Music
The history of Gospel Music. those limits to become a profound force in Americanmusic and gospel voicesfrom the late 1920s through the 1940s, the gospel
http://afgen.com/gospel1.html
Click Here for Audio Sample
The History of Gospel Music
Though gospel music can be an extremely broad term, CCM
by Phil Petrie
From the smooth sounds of Sam Cooke to the dancing, acrobatic vocals of Kirk Franklin, gospel music does more than just sound sweetit literally moves its listeners. Whether it's swaying with the choirs or tappin' along with the quartets or simply raising hands to the rhythm of soul-stirring crooners, gospel is one genre of music that needs to be both seen and heard. Once narrowly defined as religious, gospel has transcended those limits to become a profound force in American music and popular culture. Fueled by major recording companies, it has leaped over its traditional religious walls and is now more than just church music. Last year's phenomenon of Kirk Franklin's Why We Sing (it went platinum) and the current success of William Becton's Be Encouraged (a mainstay on Billboard's gospel chart for 28 weeks and counting at press time) attest to gospel's growing popularity. According to materials received from Gospel Today magazine, within the last five years, seven major recording companies have created and staffed gospel divisions; independent gospel labels increased 50 percent, and total revenues for gospel music have nearly tripled in the past decade-from $180 million in 1980 to $500 million in 1990.

89. Berkeley, A City In History Chapter 7
last major population increase in the city's history. nearly 40 percent during the1940s, from about born immigrants and Californiaborn american citizens of
http://www.infopeople.org/bpl/system/Chapter7.html
Berkeley, A City in History
by Charles Wollenberg
Chapter 7
WORLD WAR II WATERSHED
Exodus
The war produced what, at least until now, was the last major population increase in the city's history. After experiencing virtually no growth in the 1930s, Berkeley's population grew by nearly 40 percent during the 1940s, from about 85,000 to 115,000. In the immediate aftermath of the attack on Pearl Harbor, however, thousands of people left the city, particularly young men and women departing to join the armed forces. And an additional 1400 or so people of Japanese descent, including Yoshiko Uchida and her family, left involuntarily to take up residence in government internment camps. President Roosevelt's Executive Order 9066, issued in February, 1942, authorized the military to relocate and intern all people of Japanese descent living in California, Oregon, Washington and a part of Arizona. The sole criterion for internment was ethnicity, not nationality, the relocation applying equally to Japanese-born immigrants and California-born American citizens of Japanese descent. At the end of April, 1942, the Uchidas and other Berkeley internees were relocated to Tanforan Race Track in San Mateo County where they were assigned "apartments" that formerly had been horse stalls. After about three months at Tanforan, most of the Berkeley internees were transported to a camp at Topaz, Utah, where many remained until the end of the war.
Military Establishment
While Japanese Americans were coping with internment, Berkeley was filling up with new residents. Some were armed forces personnel stationed at various military installations located around San Francisco Bay. In Berkeley the army established Camp Ashby, headquarters for a segregated unit of African American military policemen located near the west end of Ashby Avenue. The Navy built the Savo Island housing project for married personnel in South Berkeley. Both services established officers training programs at UC. The army took over the Bowles Hall dormitory and kept its personnel largely separate from the rest of the students. The navy, on the other hand, largely integrated its trainees into the general student body, allowing them to play on university athletic teams and even participate in student government. The navy program took over the International House and several fraternities to house its trainees. By 1944, more than 1000 navy personnel were studying at Cal.

90. Pottery G-M
3749, Homer Laughlin China 1940s 1950s, 200001PG 3101, Majolica European AmericanWares, Snyder, 2001 PG pgs, 550+ Color Photos, Dates, Sizes, history, Etc.
http://www.lwbooks.com/catalogs/pages/catalog3b.html

General Price Guides
Glassware Figurines Salt-Pepper ... Discounted Books TITLES IN RED ARE NEW TO OUR WEBSITE!
NP=NO PRICES PG=PRICE GUIDE PB-PAPERBACK HB-HARDBACK L-W number Description Retail Price 6 Or More Select Retail or Wholesale
Wholesale = 6 or more assorted titles. Gonder Ceramic Arts : A Comprehensive Guide, 2001PG, Boshears, PB-168 Pgs., 9x11", 540 Color Photos, Artware from Zanesville OH Whlsle $17.97 Retail $29.95 Whlsle $11.97 Retail $19.95 Haeger Potteries Through the Years, 2002 Prices , Dilley, HB-376 Pgs., Color Photos, History, Royal Haeger, Flowerware, Studio Haeger & other lines included, Also includes original catalog pages, Numbers, Marks, Dates, More! 8x11" Whlsle $23.97 Retail $39.95 Hall China, 2002PG , Snyder, HB-208 Pgs., 9x11", 600+ Color Photos, Includes: Autumn Leaf, Crocus, Silhouette, Etc., Marks, Index, More! Whlsle $17.97 Retail $29.95 Hall China, 3rd Edit., (Coll. Ency.), 2001PG , Whitmyer, HB-384 Pgs., 9x11", Color Photos, History, Features Autumn Leaf & Much More! Whlsle $17.97

91. Environmental History Timeline
Fireworks Splice HTML
http://www.runet.edu/~wkovarik/hist/hist.html

92. THE IRANIAN: History
Planning research on the language of Yazd's Zoroastrians (Dari) By Annahita Farudi Under the surface PalacePremier's negotiations with the British over oil By Hashem Hakimi The first moderate
http://www.iranian.com/history.html
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ARCHIVE PEOPLE
Saabeghye eskaan-e qabaayel-e Arab dar Khuzestan
Arab settlements in Khuzestan
By Amir-Hussain Khunji IRAN
Mossadegh nadaareem, Shaah tahiyeh meeshavad
Producing a Shah in the absence of a Mossadegh
By Ramin Kamran REBEL
The red rose
A biogrpahy of Khosrow Golesorkhi By Maziar Behrouz HISTORY 37 days A cautionary tale that must not be forgotten By Cyrus Kadivar OPINION Underground to isolation The Mojahedin Khalgh Organization By Aidin Fathalizadeh HISTORY No happy ending U.S. special negotiator in the oil nationalization affair looks back and into the future By Fariba Amini COVER Almost 72 photos: Mossadegh Compiled by Jalil Bozorgmehr HERITAGE The great land of the Sophy Persian influences By Abbas Milani TRIBES Yeyloq, Qishloq The lure of Grass and the cinematography of Shahsavan nomads By Fereydoun Safizadeh REVIEW Dast-e pashmaaloo-ee shaayad az gheyb A review of a book on Shaban "Bimokh" Jafari

93. Colby Magazine, Spring 2002 | Alumni | Class Notes: Sixties (60s)
Class Notes. in May 2001, when their daughter, Naomi, was awarded her Ph.D. in Americanhistory after 10
http://www.colby.edu/colby.mag/issues/spr02/alumni/60s.shtml

Colby to the Corps

College is tops per capita in numbers of graduates who join the Peace Corps.
Nijikai to Follow

What can alumni do in Tokyo? Try NESCAC bowling. Class Notes Early Years ALUMNI PROFILES
Peter Doran '58

A Public Priority Judi Garcia '63
Real People, Real Needs Bob Duchesne '75
Egging Him On Greg Ciottone '87
Drawn to Disaster Harry R. Wiley '51
Charles J. Hely '68
Mike Swift '85 Milestones
Profiles: Gardner Gray '64 Profiles: James Simon '64 CLASS CORRESPONDENT Jane Holden Huerta 2955 Whitehead Street Miami, FL 33133 classnews1960@alum.colby.edu Peter Shays is still with the publications department at Principia, a private educational institution in St. Louis. He and his wife of almost 35 years love the St. Louis area and expect to stay right where they are for many more years. . . . Kay and Ralph Nelson 's first grandchild, Daniel Ross Nelson, was born in June 2000. Daniel is already a youth registrant with the Sons of the American Revolution, in which Ralph serves as ambassador for overseas recruiting. Ralph has brought more than 20 members into the Sons of the American Revolution in the last three years and has been named a Minuteman, the highest award presented to a member by the SAR. (Go to the Delaware Society's color guard page to see a photo of him in uniform.) Ralph and Kay were happy to attend graduation at Emory University in May 2001, when their daughter, Naomi, was awarded her Ph.D. in American history after 10 years of effort, much of it scheduled around her full-time job as an archivist at Emory. . . . A quick update from George '58 and

94. Guestbook
Bokoshe Alumni The wonderful folks below have at least two thingsin common, they have all been a part of Bokoshe Public Schools
http://www.bokoshe.k12.ok.us/guestbook.htm
Bokoshe Alumni The wonderful folks below have at least two things in common, they have all been a part of Bokoshe Public Schools and have signed our Alumni Page.
Administrators, Teachers, and Support Staff
Past Students 1930 Graduates 1940 Graduates ... 2000 Graduates
Name of Alumni Graduation Date or Last Year Attended Bokoshe Email Address 2000 Links 2000 Links
Brad D. McClure deltaklan@yahoo.com Chad L. McClure N/A Scott Vincent the_stinger_9999@yahoo.com Casey Wegert wegert@okstate.edu 90's LINKS America in the 1990s Top 100 Books of the 90s Music of the 90s 90's LINKS Derrell Fisk Jr. tcb@usmo.com John Ogle Jr. johnogle@boydmetals.com Chris Cox chriscox@crosstel.net Laurie Hoffman hlaurie@okstate.edu Daniel Restine DRestine@nationalstandard.com Kris (Reece) Williams N/A Shelley (Tackett) Chapman ChapmanLttlbt@aol.com John Hartley shellyhartley@aol.com Alisha Vincent lishaleigh@yahoo.com Heath Cosgrove N/A Tammy Brooks tbrooksie1@hotmail.com Lena (Luman) Medlock lmedlock@abfs.com Lisa (Marsh) Sizemore tonlis@ipa.net Karen (Wegert) Sloan N/A Zack Bell Babe045@aol.com

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