The Offspring Release New Song Let The Bad Times Roll [AUDIO] therockstationz93.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from therockstationz93.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Criminal Mischief Over $100 and Under $750-Ward Street Maud
Death Investigation-B.K. Pickering Road Texarkana
Missing Person-Myrtle Springs Road Texarkana
Criminal Mischief Under $100-State Highway 98 New Boston
Building Fire-County Road 4107 Simms
Sexual Assault-North State Line Avenue Texarkana
THURSDAY
Criminal Trespass-Tomahawk Road Texarkana
Possession of a Controlled Substance (methamphetamine) Over 1 Gram and Under 4 Grams-County Road 2103 New Boston
Terroristic Threats (family violence)-Eylau Hills Road Texarkana, arrested: Brian Keith Townsend
FRIDAY
Warrant Service (Intoxication Assault with a Vehicle)-West 7th @ County Road 1215e Texarkana, arrested: Barry Alan Smith
Dogs Dangerous to Animals-West 7th Street Texarkana
Death investigation-Farm to Market Road 2148 Texarkana
SATURDAY
Reel Dad: Hollywood films reflect the ideals of an American president
Mark Schuman
FacebookTwitterEmail
(L to R) Richard Nixon (played by Frank Langella) greets an audience while David Frost (played by Michael Sheen) looks on in a drama that tells of the electrifying battle between a disgraced president with a legacy to save and a jet-setting television personality with a name to make in “Frost/Nixon,” from director Ron Howard.Ralph Nelson /
In the wake of yesterday’s inauguration, it was time to take a look at the best cinematic depictions of a president. As a new president of the United States begins to lead, the movies identify what we often look for in the people we follow. Here are seven key qualities and the films that tell their stories.
The Fugitive: One of the finest dramas of all time
The Fugitive
Viewers who tuned in to ABC at 10 PM on Sept. 17, 1963, a Tuesday, to try out the brand-new show entitled
The Fugitive could have no idea that the program they were about to watch would soon develop into one of the true glories of 1960s television. Today, of course,
The Fugitive needs no introduction, and you hardly need me to tell you of what a quality and timeless entertainment it remains to this day. Its story line has since become something of a classic, and you would need to have been living in a cave for the past half century not to be familiar with it. The program has since been transformed into a megahit 1993 film starring Harrison Ford, been reimagined into several more television programs, and been the subject of at least a half a dozen books, several conventions, and a lively Facebook fan page. Even those who have never seen or read any of the above probably know, merely by cultural osmosis, that the ori