Extractions: Mixture of local newspaper, wire service, and other source photography for approximately 40,000 individual names on the world, national and local scene. Most files are stored off-site and require prior notification for access. PADDOCK, CHARLIE - Athlete PADGETT, DON - Baseball PADGETT, ERNIE - Baseball PADGETT, WILLIAM PADLO, MAYON PADWAY, MILTON PAGAN, JOSE - Baseball PAGE, GALE PAGE, LUCILLE PAGE, RICHARD MRS. PAGE, ROBERT AF AM PAGE, ROBERT Choral Director PAGE, ROBERT E. - Temple PAGE, ROBERT HOLMES JR. MRS. PAGE, ROBERT M. PAGE, ROBERT W. - Politics PAIGE, MAY PAIGE, PAT PAIGE, SATCHEL - Baseball PAINTER, ELEANOR PALAMIDA, FRANCIS PALEY, GOLDIE - Wife of Samuel PALEY, SAMUEL - Businessman PALFREY, SARAH (OV) PALIO, JOE PALMER, ARNOLD - Golf PALMER, CLARA PALMER, DAVID Baseball PALMER, JIM - Baseball PALMER, LOWELL - Baseball PALMER, WILFRED C. MRS. PALUMBO, FRANK PANGBORN, FRANKLIN PAPA, CHARLES J. PAPA, JOSEPH
December 30 Deaths In History December 30, 1998 johnny roventini, pitchman, Phillip Morris radio and TV ads,dies at 88 December 30, 1996 Jack Nance, actor (Meatballs 4, Whore, Voodoo), http://www.brainyhistory.com/daysdeath/death_december_30.html
Some Of This And Some Of That About Pennsylvania On April 17, 1933, johnny roventini made his first Call for Philip Morris onradio. On April 18, 1945, Admiral Yamamoto s plane was shot down by P38 s of http://www.fatznew.com/CelebrateErie/ThisandThat.htm
Extractions: SEARCH FOR Motion Pictures TV Shows Celebrities NAMED Attractions: Jo-Jo the Dog-Faced Boy Annie Jones Frank Lentini Johnny Eck Hop the Frog Boy Eli Bowen Charles Tripp Lucia Zarate General Tom Thumb Lavinia Warren Robert Earl Hughes Zip the Pinhead George Auger Julia Pastrana Helen Burke Lionel the Lion-Faced Man Grace Gilbert Lucia Zarate James W. Coffey Nikolai Kobelkoff General Mite John Merrick Commodore Nutt Count Primo Magri Robert Wadlow W. T. Sapp Bobby Kork Carrie Akers Belly Lou Williams Jolly Nell Terrel Myrtle Corbin Chang the Chinese Giant Pete Robinson Ella Ewing Isaac Sprague Matthew Buchinger Happy Jack Eckert Johnny Roventini The Dancing Dolls Laloo Baby Ruth Pontico Jack Earle Krao Unzie The Albino Prince Randian Carl Unthan Harry Williams Josephine Joseph Lady Olga Schlitzie Lya Graf Madame Fortune Cloflullia Tommy Jacobsen Mona Harris Harry V. Lewis Celesta Gever Jane Bunford Patrick Cotter Charlie Byrne Count Josef Boruwlaski Richard Gibson Home User Survey Forum Guestbook ... Contact Us
Caskets On Parade - Book Of The Dead: "Ro" - "Rt" diminutive bell boy johnny roventini noted for being a cigarette spokesman (since1933); Call for Philip Morrees born on 8-15-1910 in New York, New York http://www.msu.edu/~daggy/cop/bkofdead/obits-ro.htm
A Long History Of Tobacco 1933 BUSINESS Page boy johnny roventini is discovered in the New Yorker hoteland soon becomes the world s first living trademark, his distinctive voice http://www.herbs2stopsmoking.com/health/health27.htm
Extractions: A Long History of Tobacco IN THE BEGINNING . . . Huron Indian myth has it that in ancient times, when the land was barren and the people were starving, the Great Spirit sent forth a woman to save humanity. As she traveled over the world, everywhere her right hand touched the soil, there grew potatoes. And everywhere her left hand touched the soil, there grew corn. And when the world was rich and fertile, she sat down and rested. When she arose, there grew tobacco . . . TOBACCO TIMELINE - A Fascinating Journey The sacred origin of tobacco and the first pipe...... Introduction: The Chiapas Gift, or.......the Indians' Revenge?
H1910 1933 Apr 17, johnny roventini (d.1998 at 86), a Brooklynborn bellhop, first wenton radio during The Ferde Grofe Show to promote Philip Morris cigarettes http://www.eleggua.com/History/1933.html
About A Short History Abbeville Press johnny roventini Adele Simpson Charles Proteus Steinmetz Harriet Beecher StoweIgor Stravinsky Naim Suleymanoglu Mother Teresa Henri de ToulouseLautrec http://www.abbeville.com/Products/TOC/0789203332TOC.htm
Bookstore :: Shortdwarf.com Former Philip Morris ad star johnny roventini, height 3 11 Famous dressdesigner Adele Simpson, height 4 9 The great scientist Charles Proteus http://www.shortdwarf.com/new/booksdwarf.htm
History Net-The History Of Tobacco Part III (1900-1950) 1933 ADVERTISING Page boy johnny roventini is discovered in the New Yorkerhotel and soon becomes the world s first living trademark, his distinctive http://www.historian.org/bysubject/tobacco3.htm
Extractions: 1903-08: The August Harpers Weekly says, "A great many thoughtful and intelligent men who smoke don't know if it does them good or harm. They notice bad effects when they smoke too much. They know that having once acquired the habit, it bothers them . . . to have their allowance of tobacco cut off."
TV Eye johnny roventini PR. Like Harry Caray, roventini was oneof-kind, a midgetplayer who was best known for dressing like a bellhop with a Call for Phillip http://www.austinchronicle.com/issues/vol18/issue20/screens.TVeye.html
Extractions: by Margaret Moser "Nine Faces We'll Miss" certainly hit home. Last issue, I picked nine not-so-arbitrary television faces who passed on in 1998 but once again, readers rallied with their own suggestions, starting with Michael S. , who said... Okay, okay, maybe it was harder than I thought to figger out which one of your nine faces I didn't think belonged on the list, but how could you leave out everybody's favorite police chief of Hawaii Five-O Jack Lord Book her, Dan-o. Michael S. Jack Lord died almost a year ago of heart failure at age 77 after playing Steve McGarrett on Hawaii Five-O , TV's longest-running crime drama. I lived in Honolulu for a while and he seemed like kind of a buttwipe when I'd see him at various functions. My ex-husband once threw him out of his tattoo shop. Great PR for Hawaii, though. Sonny Bono
Full Cast And Crew For Stage Door Canteen (1943) johnny roventini . johnny, the Bellhop living tradmark for Phillip Morriscigarettes (uncredited). Mortimer Snerd . Himself (uncredited) http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0036384/fullcredits
Extractions: IMDbPro.com free trial Showing page 3 of 24 main details combined details full cast and crew company credits user comments external reviews newsgroup reviews user ratings recommendations plot summary plot keywords Amazon.com summary memorable quotes trivia goofs soundtrack listing crazy credits alternate versions movie connections ... technical specs laserdisc details DVD details literature listings news articles taglines trailers posters photo gallery on tv, schedule links showtimes official site miscellaneous photographs sound clip(s) video clip(s) Full Cast and Crew for
Extractions: The R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. was once the largest cigarette company in the United States with a powerhouse of best-selling brands: Winston, Salem and Camel. But times changed, and as the case against smoking became more pronounced in the 1960s, RJR failed to adapt to the marketplace. Its rivals would eventually rush past it, and RJR's efforts to catch up would have a profound impact on the company and the cigarette industry. No one in the U.S. tobacco industry had paid much attention to Philip Morris before. In a business where size did matter, the English import had never commanded enough market share to win anyone's respect. At the time it reissued Marlboro, Philip Morris was fifth among the six major U.S. tobacco companies. Its sales were plummeting, though, and it seemed forever destined to being a small fish swimming among predators. So with little to lose, Philip Morris executives bet the company's future on the Big Idea the total transformation of an obscure woman's cigarette into a rugged, macho man's smoke. In doing so, the company's chieftains showed that they were willing to throw away the rule book.
Copyright 2004 J. David Goldin Harry James, Jack Rourke (announcer), johnny roventini (commercial spokesman), johnnyMercer, Dinah Shore. 2947. Audio condition Excellent. Complete. 42802. http://radiogoldindex.com/cgi-local/p2.cgi?ProgramName=Call For Music
The Boats' Names. - Gerritsen Memories George, I believe johnny s last name was roventini. Strange, but my husband sboat was named Edith after his mother. He kept it at Mooney s Boatyard at the http://www.gerritsenmemories.com/ubb/Forum6/HTML/000008.html
Extractions: Registered: Mar 2000 posted 03-06-2002 08:21 AM I feel like Monte Python...."and now for something completely different." Last night I was speaking to someone about the boats at the Civic Club, and Tamaqua docks and for the life of me I couldn't remember many of the names. Falcon, Atlast....Mary......come on guys and ladies. Help! George R. Broadhead Registered: Dec 1999 posted 03-06-2002 10:44 AM Deja vu: Add to those, the name of one boat I remember because it was owned by "Johnny Call For Philip Morris". It was moored in the Creek in front of the Civic Club (now the Docksider for those who have been awayup the river or down). The boat was EVA R, and it was named for his wife. This is where I came in and met a wonderful lady by name of Helen Olson. She knew Johnny's surname, (Robetteli?). My father's sister and my great-aunt were named Edith, so way back in time my favorite boat in Gerritsen Beach was named EDITH. [This message has been edited by George R. Broadhead (edited 03-06-2002).]
Dylanfreak.djeaux.com Headline News - News & Opinion johnny roventini Highway 61 Revisited Tribute band Cisco Houston LucindaWilliams in Concert The Freeespieling Bob Dylan Clothesline Saga http://dylanfreak.djeaux.com/
Doll Antique Items DOLL PHILLIPMORRIS johnny roventini PLUSH DOLL ANTIQUE, $99.99. Antique RibbonArt Paper Doll/antique picture frame, $19.98 http://www.nemanshopping.com/doll-antique.html
Extractions: There are fewer and fewer varieties of programs to choose from. Even jazz and classical stations have been all but pushed off the far ends of the dial, leaving AM and FM radio to the talk and schlock-music programmers and to the relentless music/news/sports/weather/commute-casting that now passes for radio in America. The raging argument over whether radio is turning right wing is the wrong discussion to be having, a distraction from what really matters. Real radio, of the sort that once thrived in the United States and still survives in Great Britain, has been almost totally shut down on both commercial and public radio, with a very few highly visible and popular exceptions. Surely they are out there somewhere in the silent, unheard air, but with new names, just waiting for radio to tune them in. ©2003 by Gerald Nachman. The Nachman caricature is ©2000 by Jim Hummel. The cartoon radio is from IMSI's Master Clip Collection, 1895 Francisco Blvd. E., San Rafael, CA, 94901-5506, USA. The old-time radio personalities pictured are, clockwise from top left: "Johnny" Roventini for Philip Morris; Eve Arden of "Our Miss Brooks"; Charlie McCarthy; Jim and Marian Jordan of "Fibber McGee and Molly"; Fred Allen; Arthur Godfrey; Harold Peary of "The Great Gildersleeve"; Bob Elliot and Ray Goulding of "Bob and Ray."
IJBFC Chat afanofoldradio johnny roventini. Scott I m in California. I miss the MailPouch barns in the midwest. Poor wording on my part. Fan - That s it. http://www.jackbenny.org/biography/chats/chat_04-08-01.htm
Extractions: IJBFC Chat - August 1, 2004 [Sun Aug 01 16:02:52 GMT-08:00 2004] afanofoldradio: founder Reel Old-time Great (ev'rybody luv's 'em) Radioshows Club [Sun Aug 01 16:05:28 GMT-08:00 2004] Carmichael has no profile. > We used to have someone who went by the nick "Gas Man". > It's interesting to hear Jack saying "To hell with the past" and not being nostalgic about his radio days. > When did Marian Jordan die? I have the BBC "Who Wears the Trousers" show on her, but haven't had a chance to hear it yet. > Hmm. I recently saw them in "This Way Please" in 1937 and they looked like they were portraying the characters as older then. [Sun Aug 01 16:18:18 GMT-08:00 2004] Fibber_McGee has no profile. > There was an interesting plot device in "This Way" to have them doing all the voices. > That was the darndest thing...I was there with some members, and they said, "Hey Laura, walk in there." > So they said, "Walk out again." > I said, "But I know the password."
Those Were The Days, Today In History - April 17 1933 Backed by the On the Trail portion of the magnificent Grand CanyonSuite , johnny roventini, pillbox hat and all, uttered the words Call for http://www.440.com/twtd/archives/apr17.html
Extractions: 1629 - Horses were first imported into the colonies by the Massachusetts Bay Colony on this day. 1704 - John Campbell, known by many as Americas first news vendor, published what would eventually become the first successful American newspaper, the "Boston News-Letter". 1810 - Pineapple cheese was patented by Lewis M. Norton. Mr. Norton lived nowhere near pineapples. He was from Troy, PA. Pineapple cheese... Yummy! 1860 - New Yorkers learned of a new law. It required fire escapes to be provided for tenement houses. 1916 - The American Academy of Arts and Letters obtained its charter from Congress. 1933 - Backed by the "On the Trail" portion of the magnificent "Grand Canyon Suite", Johnny Roventini, pillbox hat and all, uttered the words Call for Philip Morris for the first time on radio. The famous phrase was said in perfect B flat pitch and tone to perfectly match the accompanying music. This Call for Philip Morris phrase became one of the most famous in all of advertising. Here are a few other classics from advertisings golden age to jog your brains memory cells: See the U.S.A. in your Chevrolet, Pepsi Cola hits the spot, 12 full ounces and thats a lot, When better cars are built, Buick will build them, Arent you glad you use Dial? Dont you wish everybody did? 1935 - People gathered around the radio to listen for the first time to what would become the ultimate horror show on NBC Radio. "Lights Out" remained on radio until 1946.