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Canada is the northern-most country in North America and is surrounded by three oceans (Pacific to the west, Arctic to the north and Atlantic to the east). With ten provinces and three territories, Canada is the world’s second largest country by total area (Russia is by far the largest). Canada’s border with the United States [...]
Posted by Shell Harris on Tuesday, June 7, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Travel · Tagged Alaska, Alberta, alfred hitchcock, Banff, Banff National Park, Banff Springs Hotel, Barrack Hill, Basilica of Our Lady, Bay of Fundy, British Columbia, Cactus Club, canada, Canadian Pacific Railway, Canadian Pacific Railway Limited, Canadian Rockies, canoeing, Canton Tower, Centre Block, Centre of Gravity, Château Frontenac, Chateau Lake Louise, china, Christopher Reeve, CN Tower, Confederation Bridge, Côte d'Ivoire, Derby, Dubai, Edmonton, Edmonton Event Centre, Edward Island, Empire Ballroom, Fairmont Hotels and Resorts, Governor, Grace, Grand Hotel, Guangdong Province, Guangzhou, Hopewell Cape, Horseshoe Falls, hospitality_Recreation, I Confess, Ice Palace, ice skating, Italy, Jesus de Montreal, Lake Louise, Lawrence River, Le Chateau Frontenac, Louis de Baude, maid, Maid of the Mist, Marilyn Monroe, Moncton, Montreal, Mount Columbia, Mount Robson, New, New Brunswick, New Mexico, Niagara Falls, Niagara River, North America, Northumberland Strait, Ontario, Oratory’s dome, Ottawa, Ottawa River, Palace Casino, Parliament Hill, Peace Tower, photographed hotel, Prince Edward Island, Princess, Province of Rome, Provinces and territories of Canada, QC, Quebec, Quebec City, Rideau Canal, Rocky Mountains, rome, Russia, Saint Andre, Saint Peter’s Basilica, skiing, snowboarding, Supreme Court, Theodore Roosevelt, Toronto, United Arab Emirates, United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization, United States, West Edmonton Mall, winston churchill
As one of the most influential directors of all time, many of Alfred Hitchcock’s films have become permanent classics of the cinema. Psycho, Rear Window, Vertigo, North by Northwest, and The Birds are just some of his most popular titles. Audiences all over the world know his movies, but few people know just how many [...]
Posted by Shell Harris on Thursday, June 10, 2010 at 12:01 am
Filed under Movies · Tagged academy awards, aircraft factory worker, alfred hitchcock, Amsterdam, auteur, bad tempered bartender, Balestrero, Barry Kane, best directors, Blackmail, Bob Rusk, Boulder Dam, british films, California, cary grant, Charlotte Inwood, Christian Dior, Christian Dior S.A., cinematic devices, Detective, director of the suspense/thriller genre, director of thrillers, Entertainment_Culture, Erica Burgoyne, Eve Gill, ffolliot, ffollliiot, film, Foreign Correspondent, Frenzy, George Sanders, Grand Hotel, Greater London, Henry Fonda, Hitchcock, Hitchcockian, http://forgottenclassicsofyesteryear.blogspot.com/, I Confess, Jane Wyman, Joel McCrea, John Forsythe, Johnny Jones, Jonathan Cooper, Lifeboat, local police Chief Constable, London, Marlene Dietrich, Michael William Logan, mid-Atlantic, Mount Rushmore, Mystery films, Nathaniel Hood, Netherlands, New York, New York City, North by Northwest, North Holland, Northwest, Notorious, Paramount films, Patricia Martin, priest, Psycho, Rear Window, reluctant billboard model, reporter, Richard Blaney, Robert Tisdall, Romance films, Rope, Sam Marlowe, Scotland Yard, Scott Ffolliot, Shadow of a Doubt, Spellbound, Spy films, Statue of Liberty, Strangelove, Strangers on a Train, Taxi Driver, The Birds, The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog, The Netherlands, The Trouble with Harry, The Wrong Man, top ten Hitchcock, TopTenz.net, United Kingdom, United States, United States Navy, Van Meer, Vertigo, Young and Innocent