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Island of the Blue Dolphins won the Newbery Medal in 1961. [1] It was adapted into a film of the same name in 1964. O'Dell later wrote a sequel, Zia, published in 1976. Island of the Blue Dolphins has been the subject of much literary and pedagogical scholarship related to survival, feminism, the resilience of Indigenous peoples, and beyond.
Title Date Issue number Subject Ref. "Un nouveau visage de la pudeur" February 1953 20 review of Chtche Droe Leto [4] "Génie de Howard Hawks" May 1953 23 essay on Howard Hawks [5] "L'art de la fugue" August–September 1953 26 article on I Confess [6] "De l'invention" October 1953 27 review of The Lusty Men [7] "Le masque" November 1953 28
Blue Dolphin was designed by the famous naval architect William Roue, designer of the famous racing schooner Bluenose. Sometimes called a sister ship to Bluenose, Blue Dolphin was in fact considerably smaller but reflected the overall style of Bluenose. Blue Dolphin was built for Stephen Henry Velie, Jr of Kansas City. A rich businessman ...
Island of the Blue Dolphins is a 1964 American adventure film directed by James B. Clark and written by Jane Klove and Ted Sherdeman. It is based on the 1960 novel Island of the Blue Dolphins by Scott O'Dell. The film stars Celia Kaye, Larry Domasin, Ann Daniel, Carlos Romero, George Kennedy and Hal John Norman.
These newspapers, comics and magazines are or were published by D.C. Thomson & Co. Current 110% ... Blue Jeans (1980–1991) Bucky O'Hare (1992) Buddy (1981–1983)
Country Journal, PRIMEDIA Consumer Magazines & Internet Group (1974–2001) Country Life in America (1901–1942) Country, The Magazine of the Hamptons, M. Shanken Communications Inc. (1998–2001) Country Song Roundup, Country Song Roundup Inc. (1949–2001) The Courier (1968–2005) Cracked (1958–2007) Crazy Magazine (1973–1983)
Reisdorf was soon informed that there was another Dolphin Records in circulation (which was a subsidiary of Laurie Records), so he changed the name to Dolton after the first release, the second release being an instrumental by the Frantics called "Straight Flush" b/w "Young Blues" (Dolton 2). The new label retained the fish symbols on the logo ...
He returned to comics in 1965 doing one story each in Gold Key Comics' Ripley's Believe It or Not! #1 (June 1965), The Twilight Zone #12 (Aug. 1965), and Boris Karloff Tales of Mystery #11 (Sept. 1965), and helped launch Warren Publishing's black-and-white horror-comics magazines Creepy and Eerie with several stories in early issues, while ...