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TBS originated as a terrestrial television station in Atlanta, Georgia that began operating on UHF channel 17 on September 1, 1967, under the WJRJ-TV call letters.That station—which its original parent originally filed to transmit UHF channel 46, before modifying it to assign channel 17 as its frequency in February 1966—was founded by Rice Broadcasting Inc. (owned by Atlanta entrepreneur ...
Atlanta Braves baseball games had been a local staple on Atlanta independent station WTBS (channel 17, now WPCH-TV; which, like TBS, was owned by Ted Turner's Turner Broadcasting System) since Turner acquired the team's broadcast rights in 1973, and subsequently gained national prominence when the station was uplinked to satellite in December 1976, becoming one of America's first superstations.
I know that. I'm not bitter at all." [1] Harkins said that he had originally written the poem down in the margin of his copy of Dylan Thomas' verse Once It Was The Colour Of Saying, but after reading of its use at the Queen Mother's funeral had removed the page and sent it as a gift to Prince Charles, who thanked him. [3] [2]
The poem opens with: Sam Solomon said,/You may call out the Klan/But you must’ve forgot/That a Negro is a MAN. ... The day after the Klan parade, more than 1,400 Black voters cast their ballots ...
"Do not go gentle into that good night" is a poem in the form of a villanelle by Welsh poet Dylan Thomas (1914–1953), and is one of his best-known works. [1] Though first published in the journal Botteghe Oscure in 1951, [ 2 ] Thomas wrote the poem in 1947 while visiting Florence with his family.
Titled “In Our City,” Smith’s first poem as poet laureate called Athens-Clarke County “a place for divine collision, where we are meant to be here with one another, to uplift one another.”
A paraphrased version of the poem's first stanza is quoted in the introduction of the third part of Stephen King's 2001 novel Dreamcatcher. [8] The poem is recited in the 1998 film Velvet Goldmine. DI Jack Frost recites the first and last paragraph of the poem in A Touch of Frost, episode Mind Games (season 14, episode 1).