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Posted on 2/13/21 at 1:59 am to Kafka
Peter Max poster for National Library Week (1969)


Posted on 2/13/21 at 3:22 am to Kafka
Ice hockey at the Lincoln Memorial
January 1922

January 1922

Posted on 2/13/21 at 4:05 am to Kafka
The Pussycar Automodule, c. 1969
The designer, needless to say, was French

The designer, needless to say, was French

Posted on 2/13/21 at 4:31 am to Kafka
Chicago Airport phone calls, 1966


Posted on 2/13/21 at 5:34 am to Kafka
Two Hungarian revolutionaries walk past the bodies of Soviet secret policemen killed during the Hungarian Revolution, 1956


Posted on 2/13/21 at 7:50 pm to kywildcatfanone
1968 ad for Chef Boy Ar Dee pizza (with Car 54 Where Are You star Joe E. Ross). These mixes were the first pizzas many Americans ate. By the ‘80s they were supplanted by frozen pizza for home cooking, but you can still get them at many groceries.


Posted on 2/13/21 at 7:58 pm to Kafka
Natalie Wood shares a giant chocolate bar with a friend at an ice cream shop in 1955 for National Chocolate Covered Anything Day


Posted on 2/13/21 at 11:47 pm to Kafka
quote:
Saved from the Titanic is a 1912 American silent motion picture short starring Dorothy Gibson, an American film actress who survived the sinking of the RMS Titanic on April 15, 1912. Premiering in the United States just 29 days after the event, it is the earliest dramatization of the tragedy.
Gibson had been one of 28 people aboard the first lifeboat to be launched from Titanic and was rescued about five and a half hours after leaving the ship. On returning to New York City, she co-wrote the script and played a fictionalized version of herself. The plot involves her recounting the story of the disaster to her fictional parents and fiancé, with the footage interspersed with stock footage of icebergs, Titanic's sister ship Olympic and the ship's captain, Edward Smith. To add to the film's authenticity, Gibson wore the same clothes as on the night of the disaster. The filming took place in a Fort Lee, New Jersey studio and aboard a derelict ship in New York Harbor.
The film was released internationally and attracted large audiences and positive reviews, though some criticized it for commercializing the tragedy so soon after the event. It is now regarded as a lost film, as the last known prints were destroyed in the Éclair studio fire in March 1914. Only a few printed stills and promotional photos are known to survive. It is Gibson's final film, as she reportedly suffered a mental breakdown after completing it
In this publicity photograph, Gibson is attired in the actual clothes she was wearing during the disaster.

Posted on 2/14/21 at 1:20 am to Kafka
Valentines cover of Tammy Howl magazine, published by Gulf Park College for Women in Long Beach, MS (February 14, 1944)
GPCFW closed in 1971. Its campus is now USM-Gulf Park.
GPCFW closed in 1971. Its campus is now USM-Gulf Park.
Posted on 2/14/21 at 3:56 am to Kafka
Keep the pics coming . Love looking at what life was like back in the day 
Posted on 2/14/21 at 4:00 am to Kafka
quote:
Natalie Wood
Top 100 in the marriage material category
Posted on 2/14/21 at 4:02 am to Kafka
Strange synchronicities with deltaland's thread...
Red Wing
Red Wing
Posted on 2/14/21 at 7:42 am to IceTiger
1935 NYC. Kids playing leapfrog
/https://www.theactivetimes.com/sites/default/files/slideshows/109905/115208/13.jpg)
Posted on 2/14/21 at 9:20 pm to FLObserver
Motion Picture, November 1931


Posted on 2/15/21 at 11:48 am to Kafka
Working on the Golden Gate Bridge 1935
/https://www.theactivetimes.com/sites/default/files/slideshows/109905/115208/14.jpg)
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