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Decoy (also titled Policewoman Decoy) [1] is an American crime drama television series created for syndication and initially broadcast from October 14, 1957, to July 7, 1958, with 39 black-and-white 30-minute episodes. The series was the first American police series with a female protagonist. [2] Many Decoy episodes are in the public domain. [3]
Mr. Peek-a-Boo or Garou-Garou, le Passe-muraille (often shortened to just Le Passe-muraille) is a 1951 French comedy film, directed by Jean Boyer.The film is based on the 1941 short story Le Passe-muraille by Marcel Aymé about a "man who could walk through walls". [1]
The decoy, as a form, implies both sculpture and function, and Crowell approached their creation as an artist. As George Hepplewhite wrote in the 18th century, the interpretation and execution of the decoys, "blend the useful with the agreeable." [2] In particular, two of Crowell's decoys have repeatedly set world records for sales.
Their signature song, "Walking Along", was a local chart hit in the New York area in 1957. When a white group, the Diamonds , covered it in 1958, it reached #29 on the Billboard Hot 100 . [ 6 ] The Solitaires then made some additional sales by re-releasing their version with Argo Records.
Decoy is a 1946 American film noir starring Jean Gillie, Edward Norris, Robert Armstrong, Herbert Rudley, and Sheldon Leonard. Directed by Jack Bernhard , it was produced by him and Bernard Brandt as a Jack Bernhard Production, with a screenplay by Nedrick Young based on an original story by Stanley Rubin .
Stubblebine became a proponent of psychic warfare and initiated a project within the U.S. Army Intelligence and Security Command (INSCOM), which he commanded from 1981 to 1984, to create "a breed of 'super soldier'" who would "have the ability to become invisible at will and to walk through walls". He attempted to walk through walls himself [1 ...
While Shohei Ohtani homered and stole two bases in the Dodgers’ 6-4 win over the Baltimore Orioles, his achievements were overshadowed as his dog “threw” the ceremonial first pitch.
As "decoy" came more commonly to signify a person or a device than a pond with a cage-trap, the latter acquired the retronym decoy pool. [3] The other form, a duck decoy (model), otherwise known as a 'decoy duck', 'hunting decoy' or 'wildfowl decoy', is a life-size model of the creature. The hunter places a number about the hunting area as they ...