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HomeFront: Kate Winslet in uniform, Mark Sandman s secret band, plus a rising quilt star

HomeFront: Kate Winslet in uniform, Mark Sandman’s ‘secret band,’ plus a rising quilt star By Marie Morris Globe Correspondent,Updated April 15, 2021, 3:36 p.m. Email to a Friend Kate Winslet in the HBO series Mare of Easttown. Michele K. Short/HBO Welcome back to HomeFront, where the doors that have been slightly ajar are flying open to let normal life back in. If you’re not at least partly vaccinated, you probably know someone who is, and maybe you’ve had a meal on a patio. You might even have received an e-mail about reopening procedures at a place you used to go all the time. We can’t shake the feeling that became our constant companion early in the stay-at-home period: that it’s safer on the couch than out in the world. Luckily we have plenty of company, virtually if not physically. And almost everyone needs something to watch or listen to. The Globe’s experts have plenty of suggestions.

Twelve Lives, one master of suspense - The Boston Globe

‘Twelve Lives,’ one master of suspense A new biography looks at Alfred Hitchcock from a dozen revealing angles By Wendy Smith Globe Correspondent,Updated April 14, 2021, 12:46 p.m. Email to a Friend Alfred Hitchcock at the Cannes Film Festival in 1972.RALPH GATTI/AFP via Getty Images Alfred Hitchcock was not sentimental about children. How could he be, when youthful admirers sent him letters as cheerfully gruesome as the opening monologues on his popular television show? One Texas boy wrote to describe the gallows he’d designed just for the director, with “a 3 foot 9 inch drop . . . sufficient to break your honorable neck.” The master of the macabre was, of course, more than capable of holding his own with juveniles. One fidgety 7-year-old star of an “Alfred Hitchcock Presents” episode could still recall more than a half-century later the director whispering into his ear, “If you don’t stop moving about, I’m going to get a nail a

Washougal animal sanctuary Odd Man Inn to hoof it to Tennessee

Washougal animal sanctuary Odd Man Inn to hoof it to Tennessee By Sebastian Rubino, for The Columbian Published: April 8, 2021, 6:03am Share: 9 Photos Odd Man Inn s mission is to help as many animals as possible find safety, rehabilitation, socialization and a forever home while giving them a voice as ambassadors for their own kind. (Contributed by Odd Man Inn) Photo Gallery A 3 1/2 -acre animal refuge near Washougal is expanding to 93 acres. The hitch is, Odd Man Inn has to move to Tennessee to make that happen. Earlier this month, founders Wendy and Josh Smith began the lengthy, involved process of moving themselves and 100 rehabilitated farm animals to the Pig Preserve in Jamestown, Tenn. Rich and Laura Hoyle formerly owned that sanctuary, which will continue to operate under the Odd Man Inn name.

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