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Darknet - The Darkside (Free subscription) | 10/30/2008
Sam Spade is one of the oldest network security tools around in terms of a neat package containing a lot of stuff you need, it’s one of the first things I used when I got into information security and I was on a crusade against spammers and scammers. It has all kinds of useful tools in [...] Read the full post at darknet.org.uk
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Philadelphia Inquirer (Free subscription) | 11/26/2008
... for Lucille Ball's radio program My Favorite Husband and the serial drama The Adventures of Sam Spade. His radio work caught the attentions of Universal Studios, which hired him as a screenwriter in the early 1950s. - AP
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Zap2it.com - News (Free subscription) | 11/26/2008
... Army during WWII, Hayes continued his radio career, writing for radio dramas "The Adventures of Sam Spade," "Inner Sanctum" and Lucille Ball's "My Favorite Husband" in Hollywood.On the strength of Hayes' radio work, Universal-International Pictures hired him as a screenwriter.His original screenplay for "Rear Window," which starred as a wheelchair-bound photographer whose voyeurism leads...
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Explore : Actors and Actresses, Alfred Hitchcock, Avid, Bette Davis, Cinema, Deborah Kerr, Directors, Doris Day, Entertainment, Hayley Mills, Joan Crawford, Lucille Ball, Screenwriters
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USA Today (Free subscription) | 11/24/2008
Hayes was born in Worcester, Mass., in 1919. He got his start writing for newspapers and radio. After paying his way through school at Massachusetts State College, Hayes moved to Hollywood. There he landed a job writing for Lucille Ball's radio program My Favorite Husband and the serial drama The Adventures of Sam Spade.
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Liverpool Daily Post.co.uk (Free subscription) | 11/25/2008
Hayes, the son of a toolmaker, who doubled as a vaudevillian song and dance man, allowed his imagination to wander during childhood illnesses in Worcester, Massachusetts. He started writing for the school newspaper and was soon sending Boy Scout news to his local paper. After war service in the US Army, Hayes left journalism to write radio scripts, including a series on Sam Spade, Dashiell Hammett’s...
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Liverpool Daily Post.co.uk (Free subscription) | 11/25/2008
Hayes, the son of a toolmaker, who doubled as a vaudevillian song and dance man, allowed his imagination to wander during childhood illnesses in Worcester, Massachusetts. He started writing for the school newspaper and was soon sending Boy Scout news to his local paper. After war service in the US Army, Hayes left journalism to write radio scripts, including a series on Sam Spade, Dashiell Hammett’s...
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The Washington Times (Free subscription) | 11/24/2008
Hayes was born in Worcester, Mass., in 1919. He got his start writing for newspapers and radio. After paying his way through school at Massachusetts State College, Hayes moved to Hollywood. There he landed a job writing for Lucille Ball's radio program "My Favorite Husband" and the serial drama "The Adventures of Sam Spade."
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Star Tribune (Free subscription) | 11/24/2008
... for Lucille Ball's radio program "My Favorite Husband" and the serial drama "The Adventures of Sam Spade."His radio work caught the attentions of Universal Studios, which hired him as a screenwriter in the early 1950s.Hayes donated his collection of scripts, photographs, letters and clippings from his Hollywood career to Dartmouth College in 1990.
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Seattle Times (Free subscription) | 11/24/2008
Hayes was born in Worcester, Mass., in 1919. He got his start writing for newspapers and radio. After paying his way through school at Massachusetts State College, Hayes moved to Hollywood. There he landed a job writing for Lucille Ball's radio program "My Favorite Husband" and the serial drama "The Adventures of Sam Spade."
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The Washington Times (Free subscription) | 11/24/2008
Hayes was born in Worcester, Mass., in 1919. He got his start writing for newspapers and radio. After paying his way through school at Massachusetts State College, Hayes moved to Hollywood. There he landed a job writing for Lucille Ball's radio program "My Favorite Husband" and the serial drama "The Adventures of Sam Spade."
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Boston Globe (Free subscription) | 11/24/2008
Hayes was born in Worcester, Mass., in 1919. He got his start writing for newspapers and radio. After paying his way through school at Massachusetts State College, Hayes moved to Hollywood. There he landed a job writing for Lucille Ball's radio program "My Favorite Husband" and the serial drama "The Adventures of Sam Spade."
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Variety.com (Free subscription) | 11/24/2008
Hayes was born in Worcester, Mass., and got his start writing for newspapers and radio. After paying his way through school at Massachusetts State College and serving in the Army, Hayes moved to Hollywood. There he landed a job writing for Lucille Ball’s radio program “My Favorite Husband” and the serial drama “The Adventures of Sam Spade.”
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KansasCity.com (Free subscription) | 11/24/2008
... for Lucille Ball's radio program "My Favorite Husband" and the serial drama "The Adventures of Sam Spade."
His radio work caught the attentions of Universal Studios, which hired him as a screenwriter in the early 1950s.
Hayes donated his collection of scripts, photographs, letters and clippings from his Hollywood career to Dartmouth College in 1990.
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Miami Herald (Free subscription) | 11/24/2008
... for Lucille Ball's radio program "My Favorite Husband" and the serial drama "The Adventures of Sam Spade."His radio work caught the attentions of Universal Studios, which hired him as a screenwriter in the early 1950s.Hayes donated his collection of scripts, photographs, letters and clippings from his Hollywood career to Dartmouth College in 1990. Join the discussionNote: If this is your...
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Miami Herald (Free subscription) | 11/24/2008
... for Lucille Ball's radio program "My Favorite Husband" and the serial drama "The Adventures of Sam Spade."His radio work caught the attentions of Universal Studios, which hired him as a screenwriter in the early 1950s.Hayes donated his collection of scripts, photographs, letters and clippings from his Hollywood career to Dartmouth College in 1990.