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Michael Warren is a retired American television actor and former college basketball player who also played Officer Bobby Hill on the NBC television series Hill Street Blues. He played basketball for the UCLA Bruins , winning two national titles (1967, 1968) and earning first-team All-American honors.
Sue Allen Warren (December 2, 1917 – November 16, 1997) was an American clinical psychologist and educator known for her contributions to the field of intellectual and developmental disabilities. She retired from Boston University as an emeritus professor in 1988.
A Minute to Pray, a Second to Die (Italian: Un minuto per pregare, un istante per morire) is a 1968 Italian Spaghetti Western. It is the fourth and last western directed by Franco Giraldi . [ 6 ] It was originally intended as being directed by Sergio Corbucci and the cast was to include also Raffaella Carrà and Renzo Palmer . [ 6 ]
Dr. Clyde M. Narramore (November 25, 1916 – July 27, 2015) [1] was an American author of more than 100 books and booklets, including the best sellers The Psychology of Counseling, The Encyclopedia of Psychological Problems and This Way to Happiness. [2]
Narramore is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Clyde M. Narramore (1916–2015), American writer; Ruth Narramore (1923–2010), American magazine ...
Warren's second book, Prayer in the Night: For Those Who Work or Watch or Weep, was released in 2021. Its title alludes to a prayer in the Book of Common Prayer 's liturgy for Compline , which Warren prayed in 2017, a year in which her father died and she suffered miscarriage . [ 2 ]
Idiot Prayer was initially marketed as one-time-only event for paying viewers, with no later availability for viewing. [9] [10] However, on 3 September 2020, it was announced that Idiot Prayer would be released as a live album and a concert film. The film is an extended version and features four songs not shown during the livestream.
In the 1940s, his daughter, Rhoda Nyberg, colorized the photo by hand. This version was featured in prints produced during the 1940s onward and became the more widespread and popularly known version of the photo. [4] Enstrom earned a modest sum from the photograph for the remainder of his life until his death in 1968. Nyberg died in 2012. [3] [4]