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The Adventure Club is a Canadian children's fantasy film, directed by Geoff Anderson and released in 2016. [1] The film centers on Ricky, Bill and Sandy, three young kids who discover a magic box that grants wishes, and must protect it from Langley (), a greedy businessman who wants it to help him attain his dream of purchasing and redeveloping the local science centre.
Hawkins also owned and operated the Rockwood Club in Fayetteville, where some of rock and roll's earliest pioneers came to play, including Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins, Roy Orbison and Conway Twitty. [15] With Helm's graduation from high school, he joined the Hawks and they went to Canada, where the group met success.
Roy Rockwood: 1905 1908 1918, 1926 4 Boy Hunters Captain Ralph Bonehill 1906 1910 n/a: 4 Boys of Business Allen Chapman 1906 1908 n/a: 4 Boys of Pluck Allen Chapman: 1906 1911 n/a: 5 Great Marvel Roy Rockwood: 1906 1935 n/a: 9 Motor Boys: Clarence Young: 1906 1924 n/a: 22 Ralph of the Railroad Allen Chapman: 1906 1933 n/a: 11 [9] Jack Ranger ...
Roy Rockwood was a house pseudonym used by Edward Stratemeyer and the Stratemeyer Syndicate for boy's adventure books. The name is most well-remembered for the Bomba the Jungle Boy series. [ 1 ]
Pictured are members of the 2023-24 Somerset All-County girls' basketball first team on April 9, at Somerset County Club, front row, from left, Rockwood's Mollie Wheatley, North Star's Abby ...
Bomba, the Jungle Boy is a series of American boys' adventure books produced by the Stratemeyer Syndicate under the pseudonym Roy Rockwood. and published by Cupples and Leon in the first half of the 20th century, in imitation of the successful Tarzan series.
The Get There Club; or, Motor Boat Boys Afloat (as St. George Rathborne) in the Chicago Ledger (1915) Lone Scout Boys; or, For Preparedness (as St. George Rathborne) in the Chicago Ledger (1916) The Castaway Boys; or, Lost on a Raft (as St. George Rathborne) in the Chicago Ledger (1917) Roaring Ralph Rockwood, the reckless ranger
The Adventurers' Club of New York was an adventure-oriented private men's club founded in New York City in 1912 by Arthur Sullivant Hoffman, editor of the popular pulp magazine Adventure. [1] [2] There were 34 members at the first meeting. In its second year, "Sinclair Lewis, Hoffman's assistant, was elected secretary and served three years."