-
-
-
LEWISTON -- Marie-Therese Arenburg, 86, of 11 Dimsdale Ave., Lewiston, died at her home on Sunday, Oct. 3, surrounded by her loving family.
Born in Lewiston, March 29, 1924, she was the daughter of Emile and Marie-Blanche (Lessard) Malo. Educated in local schools, she was a graduate of Lewiston High School, Class of 1943.
-
-
AUSTIN, Texas, March 16, 2011 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Five legendary musicians and performers of the Latin sound whose contributions have had a lasting impact on American music -- Selena, Carlos Gardel, Carmen Miranda, Tito Puente, and Celia Cruz -- today were honored on U.S. commemorative Forever stamps. The stamps go on sale nationwide at Post Offices and online at usps.com/shop today.
From this day forward, these colorful, vibrant images of our Latin music legends will travel on letters and packages to every single household in America," said Marie Therese Dominguez, vice president, Government Relations and Public Policy.
-
- Jean Bensadoun, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. Marie Therese Jobe-Riat, Pierre Schmidt, Salvatore Rasino, Louisette Buchard, Gaston Buchard, Liliane Girardin, Patrick Gouiran and Catherine Peiretti, Defendants-Appellees., 316 F.3d 171 (2nd Cir. 2003)
-
WATERVILLE - , 87, died Monday, Feb. 16, at Mount St. Joseph.
She was born in Lewiston, Feb. 8, 1922, the daughter of Alcide and Marie Alice (Bilodeau) Beaudoin, the oldest of six children.
-
Pablo Picasso died in 1973 but remains monstrously influential. Starting Saturday , The Virginia Museum of Fine Arts in Richmond will provide a rare opportunity to study the entire range of the modernist master's output with top examples. "Picasso: Masterpieces From the Musee National Picasso, Paris" features 176 works from the largest and most significant repository of the artist's work. Every major phase in Picasso's eight-decade career is represented, including his early Blue and Rose periods, the cubism he co- invented, and his distinctive approach to surrealism.
Picasso was also known for his lovers, who influenced new directions in his work as they entered his life, from the docile Marie-Therese Walter to the fiery Dora Maar. Portraits of these women are among the works going on d...
-
-
The title of this gripping book tells it all: Marie-Therese de Bourbon, only daughter of the martyred King Louis XVI and Queen Marie Antoinette, was an eye and ear witness and a victim of the French Revolution's terror. Imprisoned with her parents and younger brother, the Dauphin, she saw Louis go off bravely to his execution and witnessed the devastation and grief that transformed her once frivolous mother into the impressive, dignified figure who would soon go to the guillotine herself.
Still in her early teens, Marie-Therese heard the torture and abuse of her hapless brother and suffered still more in knowing that her mother also had to stand by unable to help her son in his living hell as she faced her own imminent extinction.