Word: lovejoy
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...Banks (HB); 21, Pruett (HB); 24, Poole (HB); 25, Buss (HB); 39, Jones (FB); 40, Morgan (HB); 42, Mathlas (FB); 50, Hopewell (C); 52, Coker (C); 55, Malloy (C); 60, Phillips (RG); 64, Beers (LG); 65, Golden (RG); 66, Buzzard (RG); 67, Hawkins (LG); 69, Johnson (RG); 70, Lovejoy (LT); 71, Shulman (LT); 73, Catlin (LT); 74, Tarasovic (LT); 75, Gallaway (RT); 77, Henderson (RT); 78, Koplow (LT); 80, Hansen (LE); 82, Campbell (RE); 84, Lemire (RE); 85, Scott (LE); 86, Schainman (LE); 87, Smith (LE); 88, Rene (RE); 89, Gilfillan...
...optimistic New Englanders who had just decided to found a metropolis on its west bank paid little attention to this awesome sylvan roadblock. They had a more important problem-picking a name for their dream city. Neither wasted a moment considering any local Indian words. Massachusetts-born Asa Lovejoy insistently cried: "Boston!" Maine-born Francis Pettygrove stubbornly cried: "Portland!" Finally they tossed a big, old-fashioned copper one-cent piece. Petty-grove and Portland...
...Charge at Feather River (Warner) is a stereoscopic horse opera that offers a new if not significant development in 3-D movies: at one point, a U.S. cavalry sergeant (Frank Lovejoy) spits right out of the screen at the audience, which happens to be in the line of fire also occupied by a rattlesnake. In addition to this effect, The Charge at Feather River has knives, arrows, tomahawks, spears, bullets, bodies and horses hurtling out from the screen. There is also a story about a gallant little band of cavalrymen who set out, shortly after the Civil War, to rescue...
...System (Warner) methodically goes through the steps of putting together a crime melodrama. But it has far too little action, is much too flabby and too gabby. The plot: a powerful newspaper publisher (Fay Roope) objects to his daughter (Joan Weldon) associating with Gambling Boss Frank Lovejoy. Things end fairly happily when Gangster Lovejoy, having come to the conclusion that "you can't run a clean sewer," spills all to a crime investigating committee and goes off to prison knowing that Joan will wait...
...suspense without using false theatrics. As co-scripted and directed by Actress Ida Lupino. The Hitchhiker is a knowing job, as harsh and unrelieved as the barren Mexican settings against which it is played. The three main characters are almost the entire cast. Edmond O'Brien and Frank Lovejoy suffer agonizingly as the captives, and William Talman is an effective murderer. Good make-up detail: Actor Talman's deformed right eyelid, like Killer Cook's, which enables him to sleep with one eye constantly, eerily open...