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The Fall River murders were a series of three homicides that took place in Fall River, Massachusetts, from October 1979 to February 1980 allegedly by a satanic cult. [1] It was the onset of a period in American history known as the Satanic panic.
Tony Prince (born 1944): claimed to have biggest record collection in the world. [64] Harry E. Smith (1923–1992): thousands, specialized in American folk music, tried to donate to Ash Records (later Folkways Records), instead partially released on Anthology of American Folk Music and other LPs. [65]
The series follows the Fall River murders in Fall River, Massachusetts by a satanic cult. The leader of the cult, Carl Drew was sentenced to life in prison. Twenty years later, the lead investigator re-investigates the case after inconsistencies begin to haunt him.
Lights Out: The Carl Drew and Robin Murphy killings. The gruesome killings of Doreen Levesque, Barbara Raposa and Karen Marsden in Fall River in 1979 and 1980 fed into a moral panic about Satanism ...
Carl reveals that when he was known primarily as "The Autistic Kid" back at school, he created the "Carl collection", consisting of items that represent different interests of Carl for others to know him, and helps Lotta make similar collection for her.
The Cello Music Collection of the University of North Carolina at Greensboro violoncello, cello, manuscript: The largest single holding of cello music–related materials in the world, including annotated sheet music (manuscript and published), monographs, serials, audio/video recordings, personal papers, and artifacts associated with noted ...
Carl Drews (27 January 1894 – 3 September 1983 ) was a German cinematographer. Selected filmography. The Last Kolczaks (1920) Roswolsky's Mistress (1921)
Carl Orff, who, particularly in his later theater works Antigonae (1940–1949) and Oedipus der Tyrann (1957–58), utilized instrumentations (six pianos and multiple xylophones, in imitation of gamelan music) and musical patterns (motoric, repetitive, triadic) reminiscent of the later music of Steve Reich and Philip Glass