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New Guild Invite Interface!

The Guild Gala is held every year in order to recognize legal workers, lawyers, and legal students for the amazing work they have accomplished and to raise money to sustain our Chapter’s work. Photo by:

Josh Raisler Cohn

From a photo collection of pictures from the LSTC guilds spring meeting which took place on April 1, 1995.

Speechwriters Guild 2011

Stowe Theatre Guild's summer 2014 production of "The Secret Garden" is performed at Town Hall Theatre at 8 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday from Aug. 13-30. For tickets and more information, visit www.stowetheatre.com. *****mandatory credit: Stowe Theatre Guild/Adam Silverman*****

This is the 2nd of 3 bags I'm making this spring. Last night I donated this one to my guild for the silent auction in May.

 

This is my silent auction donation for our guild's Quilt Show this May. I chose more neutral colors for this bag with the thought it would appeal to more people. The front has an open pocket with a zippered pocket in it for security. I used a base of 1/8" plexiglass in this one to allow it to be sturdy enough to carry a small travel sewing machine. I still need to make the matching luggage tag for it.

 

The pattern I used can be found at byannie.com. Or on Craftsy, the pattern is called the Ultimate Travel Bag. I recommend the Craftsy class, especially if you've not made a bag before. I found it extremely helpful with step by step directions. If you buy the video class, the pattern is included with it and can be printed off on your home printer.

 

I like this pattern for several reasons. It's compliant with the airline size requirements for a carry on bag. It's large enough for my traveling hand sewing project, a magazine, my Kindle and other items I like to carry with me on a trip. Even with all the other things I carry to keep with me, I can still fit my purse in it, so I only have to deal with carrying the one bag through the airport. It has a strap on the back to hold it securely to a rolling suitcase, and the zippered pocket on the front is great for holding my passport, boarding pass, and cash while I'm in the airport.

 

I am not paid by either Byannie or Craftsy, I'm just a satisfied customer.

Guild houses along the Graslei in Ghent's old city centre.

GW2 Ultra Settings & SweetFX.

Standing on the corner of Church Street and Chapel Lane, the Guild Chapel is one of Stratford-upon-Avon’s most iconic and important historic buildings.

 

Its rich history dates back to the 13th Century when it was built by the Guild of the Holy Cross, a prominent social and religious organisation. As the Guild grew and prospered, so did its chapel, becoming central to medieval life in Stratford-upon-Avon.

 

Today, almost half a millennia later, the Chapel’s rare and special wall paintings offer a unique glimpse back to that medieval past. What’s been (and continues to be) uncovered is one of the rarest series of medieval wall paintings in Europe.

 

These deathly depictions of the afterlife were banned following the English Reformation – a royal order acted on here in Stratford by John Shakespeare, father of the playwright. But rather than being destroyed, the paintings were instead covered with layers of limewash, waiting for centuries to be re-discovered…

1. The Lollipop Guild, 2. Kitten in Shirt

 

The resemblance is uncanny! Poor kitten. Hee hee!

GW2 Ultra Settings & SweetFX.

The Postcard

 

A postcard that was published by Alexander D. Henderson of 90, High Street, Maybole, South Ayrshire, Scotland. The card was posted in Prestwick, Ayrshire using a 2d. stamp on Monday the 21st. August 1944. It was sent to:

 

Miss Heather Pope,

57, East Avenue,

Bournemouth,

Hants.

 

The message on the divided back of the card was as follows:

 

"21st. Aug. '44.

Lovely to be north again -

the air is so bracing.

Had my first battle for a

year y'day and played 12

holes of golf.

I'm feeling a lot better

than when I woke up.

With love,

David."

 

The Battle of the Falaise Pocket

 

So what else happened on the day that David posted the card?

 

Well, on the 21st. August 1944, the Battle of the Falaise Pocket ended in an Allied victory.

 

A Sinking in the English Channel

 

Also on that day, the Canadian corvette Alberni was torpedoed and sunk in the English Channel by German submarine U-480.

 

The Scuttling of a U-Boat

 

Also on the 21st. August 1944, German submarine U-230 ran aground at Toulon and was scuttled.

 

A Canterbury Tale

 

Also on that day, the British comedy-drama film A Canterbury Tale starring Eric Portman, Sheila Sim and Dennis Price premiered in the United Kingdom.

 

Eric Portman

 

Eric Harold Portman, who was born on the 13th. July 1901, was an English stage and film actor. He is probably best remembered for his roles in three films for Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger during the 1940's.

 

-- Eric Portman - The Early Years

 

Born in Halifax, in the West Riding of Yorkshire, Portman was the second son of Matthew Portman (1868–1939), a wool merchant, and his wife, Alice, née Harrison (1870–1918). His birth was registered with the middle name of Harold, but he later adopted his mother's maiden name as his middle name.

 

Eric was educated at Rishworth School in Yorkshire and, in 1922, started work as a salesman in the menswear department at the Marshall & Snelgrove department store in Leeds.

 

-- Eric Portman's Acting Career

 

While working in Leeds Eric performed with the amateur Halifax Light Opera Society.

 

He made his professional stage debut in 1924 with Henry Baynton's company. In 1924, when Robert Courtneidge's Shakespearian company arrived in Halifax, Portman joined the company as a 'passenger,' and appeared in their production of Richard II at the Victoria Hall, Sunderland. This led to Courtneidge giving him a contract.

 

Portman made his West End debut at the Savoy Theatre in September 1924, as Antipholous of Syracuse in The Comedy of Errors.

 

He was engaged by Lilian Baylis for the Old Vic Company. In 1928, Portman played Romeo at the rebuilt Old Vic. He became a successful theatre actor. In 1933, Portman was in Diplomacy at the Prince's Theatre with Gerald du Maurier and Basil Rathbone.

 

In the 1930's, Eric began appearing in films, starting with an uncredited bit in The Girl from Maxim's (1933) directed by Alexander Korda. In 1935, he appeared in four films, including Maria Marten, or The Murder in the Red Barn with Tod Slaughter.

 

He also made Hyde Park Corner with Gordon Harker and directed by Sinclair Hill; Old Roses and Abdul the Damned.

 

In 1936 Portman had a stage hit playing Lord Byron in Bitter Harvest. After Hearts of Humanity (1936), he played Giuliano de' Medici in Hill's The Cardinal (1936).

 

Portman made another film with Tod Slaughter, The Crimes of Stephen Hawke (1936), and was in Moonlight Sonata (1937).

 

Eric went to the US and played in Madame Bovary on Broadway for the Theatre Guild of America. He also had a small role in The Prince and the Pauper (1937), but disliked Hollywood, and did not stay long.

 

He was back on Broadway in I Have Been Here Before by J. B. Priestley. Portman's last London stage show was Jeannie.

 

In the semi-autobiographical play Dinner with Ribbentrop by screenwriter Norman Hudis, a former personal assistant to Portman, Hudis relates a claim made often by Portman that in 1937, before the start of the Second World War, he had had dinner in London with Joachim von Ribbentrop (then the German Ambassador to Britain).

 

Portman claimed that Ribbentrop had told him that:

 

"When Germany wins the war, you will

be installed as the greatest English star

in the New Europe at a purpose-built

film studio in Berlin."

 

In 1941 he had his first important film role playing Lieutenant Hirth, a Nazi on the run, in Powell and Pressburger's 49th. Parallel, which was a big hit in the US and Great Britain. Portman was established as a star, and signed a long-term contract with Gainsborough Pictures.

 

Portman was in Powell and Pressburger's follow up, One of Our Aircraft Is Missing (1942), which reworked the story of The 49th. Parallel to be about Allied pilots in occupied Holland.

 

Eric played a Belgian resistance leader in Uncensored (1942) from director Anthony Asquith, and a German pilot in Squadron Leader X (1943) with director Lance Comfort.

 

Portman was a sailor in Asquith's We Dive at Dawn (1943) and a factory supervisor in Millions Like Us (1943) from Launder and Gilliat.

 

He was in another war story in Comfort's Escape to Danger (1943), then was back with Powell and Pressburger for A Canterbury Tale (1944). Portman had the lead in Great Day (1945) with Flora Robson and in the expensive colonial epic Men of Two Worlds (1946).

 

In 1945, exhibitors voted him the 10th. most popular star at the British box office. He maintained that ranking the following year.

 

Eric made some thrillers – Wanted for Murder (1947), Dear Murderer (1947), and The Mark of Cain (1947). He was a hangman in Daybreak (1948), then made Corridor of Mirrors (1948) and The Blind Goddess (1948).

 

He made two films for the new producing team of Maxwell Setton and Aubrey Baring, The Spider and the Fly (1949) and Cairo Road (1950).

 

Portman was one of many names in The Magic Box (1951) before making an Ealing comedy, His Excellency (1952), playing a trade unionist who becomes Governor of a British colony.

 

For Baring and Setton, he made South of Algiers (1953) then had a big hit on stage in Terence Rattigan's Separate Tables and on film in The Colditz Story (1955).

 

Portman had a supporting part in The Deep Blue Sea (1955) and Child in the House (1956). He had the lead in The Good Companions (1957).

 

He played the bogus Major in Terence Rattigan's play Separate Tables in 1956–57 on Broadway. For this performance, he was nominated for a Tony Award (Best Actor (Dramatic)). In 1958 he appeared on Broadway in a short-lived production of Jane Eyre as Rochester.

 

Portman had better luck the following year in a production of Eugene O'Neill's A Touch of the Poet, which had a long run. In contrast, Flowering Cherry by Robert Bolt, with Portman in the title role, only lasted five performances on Broadway.

 

Later film roles included in The Naked Edge (1961), Freud: The Secret Passion (1962), West 11 (1963), The Man Who Finally Died (1963), The Bedford Incident (1965), and The Spy with a Cold Nose (1966).

 

In 1962 Portman was in a stage adaptation of A Passage to India that ran for 109 performances on Broadway.

 

Near the end of his life Eric played character roles, including Number Two in the TV series The Prisoner, appearing in the episode "Free For All" (1967), as well as films including The Whisperers (1967) and Deadfall (1968), both for director Bryan Forbes. His final film was Assignment to Kill (1968).

 

-- Eric Portman's Personal Life

 

In the early 1920's Portman was an amateur in Halifax Light Opera. While there he was romantically involved with Eliza Jane Thornton, his leading lady.

 

After appearing in The Silver Box together, they both went to London to work professionally, though eventually Thornton returned to Halifax.

 

Decades after Portman's death in 1969, it was suggested that he was homosexual, and that assistant director Knox Laing (1913 - 1974) was his partner.

 

Portman died at the age of 68 at his home in St. Veep, Cornwall on the 7th. December 1969 from heart disease. He was laid to rest in St. Veep parish church.

GW2 Ultra Settings & SweetFX.

Guild Wars 2 Artwork.

Peterborough's Guild Hall on Cathedral Square

City Centre Offices and ships in close proximity

Guild Wars concept for Guild temple.

Clustered Spires Quilt Guild Members' Exhibit

 

December 7—29, 2013

The Guild panel at ECCC.

Ladies Guild president Paula Adam and Santa Breakfast chair Rikki Horrigan.

Binders Guild meeting at Mount Mary

May 10, 2014

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