eclipse casey blackout curtains

Born Bernard Zanville in Brooklyn, New York, on February 26, 1912 (some sources cite 1913 and 1915 as his year of birth), actor Dane Clark was born to parents who were Jewish immigrants. During the depths of the Great Depression, he graduated from Cornell University and began studying law St. John's University, working odd jobs to pay for law school. A chance meeting with actor John Garfield sent him on his way to taking up acting as a profession; Garfield got Clark an audition for a role in an off-Broadway play, and he landed the part. Discovering a natural talent for acting, Clark soon abandoned his studies. His first Broadway performance was in the short-lived play in 1935, but during the same year landed a role in the long-running drama . In 1940, he married his first wife, Margot, an artist, but the couple had a very rocky relationship and were often separated for long periods. Nevertheless, they drove across country from New York to Hollywood in late 1941 so that Clark could try to break into films.

He quickly secured uncredited roles in such films as (1942; with Gary Cooper) and (1942; with and ) before signing a long-term contract with Warner Bros. in 1943. LEFT: Rare 1940s Warner Bros. beefcake shot of Dane Clark. RIGHT: With Robert Young and Nancy Kelly in a 1952 touring company production of The Country Girl Soon after his arrival at Warner Bros., Clark was cast in leading roles in the studio's B productions, such as (1946; with and ) and (1948; with Geraldine Brooks), often getting the roles turned down by his mentor and fellow Warner Bros. contract player, John Garfield. Arguably his best film at the studio was (1946; with Bette Davis and Glenn Ford), in which he had a supporting role. Growing increasingly dissatisfied with Warner Bros. and the roles offered to him, Clark rebelled and the studio suspended him in 1948; he eventually left the studio in 1949 after the production of (1950; with and Raymond Massey). With the rise of television production, Clark returned to New York and took a number of guest-starring roles in early TV programs beginning in 1949.

With Zachary Scott and Janis Paige in the Warner Bros. film noir thriller Her Kind of Man From the Warner Bros. romantic comedy That Way with Women with love interest Martha Vickers. This was Clark's sole comedy film, although he had comedic roles on television With Harry Morgan in the Republic film noir release Moonrise LEFT: With Eve Arden in the Warner Bros. noir thriller Whiplash. RIGHT: With Alexis Smith Clark portrays Laraine Day's sleazy brother-in-law in the noir drama Without Honor With Viveca Lindfors in the Warner Bros. noir Backfire From the Warner Bros. western Barricade with Ruth Roman As Johnny Tallon in the United Artists western Fort Defiance From the Hammer Film Productions noir drama The Gambler and the Lady LEFT: Clark portrays Abe Saperstein, the owner and coach of the Harlem Globetrotters, in the biopic Go Man Go. RIGHT: With Patricia Breslin as his daughter, Sylvia With Wayne Morris and Carole Mathews in the Allied Artists drama Port of Hell

With Darlene Fields and Barton MacLane in the Republic noir thriller This Man Is Armed Dane Clark starred in several 1950s westerns including Outlaw's Son. Also pictured is Ellen Drew LEFT: Clark portrayed Slate Shannon in the syndicated adventure Bold Venture. RIGHT: With costar Joan Marshall With series star Mike Connors in a 1970 episode of Mannix With Lloyd Bridges in the NBC TV movie Cop on the Beat After the release of the western (1957; with and Ben Cooper), Clark made relatively few theatrically released films during the remainder of his career. Television and the theater became his main sources of income. Clark starred in three television series; of these, the 1959 syndicated series was probably the most successful, but none enjoyed a long run. He guest starred on many popular television programs from the 1950s through the 1980s, including , , and , retiring from acting in the late 1980s. His last film was the crime flick (1988; with Tom Berenger).

A lifelong heavy smoker, Clark succumbed to lung cancer on September 11, 1998, at the age of 86. He was survived by his second wife, Geraldine, whom he married in 1972. Clark's first wife, Margot, left him a widower in 1970 following a lengthy illness. Watch Dane Clark (billed as Bernard Zanville) in the 1943 short Click on the logo to go back to Brian's Drive-In Theater This page premiered July 25, 2012.I recently heard about a Welsh artist – a single woman in her fifties – who owned a house in the city. But at night she kept dreaming of a beautiful house in the countryside. After having dreamt of this house several times, she painted it, with all the details that stood out in her dream. Then a few months later, she met a man and fell in love. He took her to spend the weekend in his home, which was in the North of England, and she couldn’t believe it when she saw his house – it was the house from her dream (and her painting) – right in front of her eyes, right down to the last detail.

She showed him the picture she had painted. She later moved into that house with him. People regularly send me emails recounting their weird/paranormal/intuitive experiences and so I hear stories similar to this one, relatively often. And I’ve had experiences like this myself, although not quite as romantic and dramatic as the story above. Dreaming of the future is known as precognitive dreaming. People usually ask me: how can I further develop this gift, and what is the purpose of it? Here are my thoughts on those two questions. To my mind, precognitive dreams have two main purposes: Firstly, they can act as a warning. A dream like this sometimes might show you something unpleasant that might occur if you continue on the path you’re on. You experience the consequences/unpleasantness in your dream, and it allows you to course-correct and make another choice if you want to, so that you avoid the outcome shown in your dream. Then what you dreamed may or may not come about, depending on the choices you have made.

Sometimes people have precognitive dreams about world events. If the experiences of readers of this blog are anything to go by, it seems some people who are very ‘tuned in’ dreamt of the 2011 tsunami in Japan the night before it happened or a few days before it happened. The second purpose of a precognitive dream is to show you that you’re on the right path, like a little nod from spirit. A dream like this is usually one in which you see yourself, in a particular place. The details are usually very specific. Perhaps you see yourself doing something very specific, or you notice the specific details of your surroundings. Perhaps you’re speaking to someone who says something very unusual that sticks out in your memory. Then some time later, you find yourself in that exact situation, in those exact surroundings, with the person in your dream who says what they said in your dream. You might have the same exact feeling in your reality as you did in your dream, like a weird déjà vu moment.

This has happened to me several times. I have travelled around a lot since I was 19 and even before I know I’m going to move again, I have often dreamt of myself in a particular part of the world, in a very specific building or house, or walking down a specific road, where I see something unusual in my dream. Then a few months or several months later, I find myself in the house from my dream, or walking down that road where I see the thing I dreamt of. And I’m not talking things you see every day, but details out of the ordinary, that really hit you in the face as being from the dream. And a strange feeling of déjà vu that accompanies it. In terms of how precognitive dreams work, I believe that when we’re asleep, we have access to the past and to the future. Have you ever relived a scene from your past in minute detail, in a dream? I know I have. Being asleep, and in the astrals allows you to time travel – both to the past and the future – and then remember the parts that you need to remember.

I remember experiencing this vividly when I was about 19 and at university. I was taking a nap and dreamt that I had to wake up because the fire alarm was sounding. When we all got outside, it turned out my housemate had set the fire alarm off with the steam from her iron. She had been ironing her bedclothes. I thought in my dream: who irons their bedclothes – what a waste of time! My nap was cut short by the fire alarm. It turned out my housemate had been ironing her sheets and the steam from the iron had set off the fire alarm! (and this had never happened before.) The details of this dream coming true showed me that we can time travel, both to the past and the future, when we’re asleep. Whether we want to remember much of our travels, and whether it serves us to, is a completely different matter. For both types of dream, I tend to think that you cannot develop the gift and that it’s mostly out of your control. I feel you cannot develop the gift to see disastrous world events, because there is no point to you doing so, because you cannot stop earthquakes or tsunamis.

When you develop a psychic gift further, it’s not a party trick. For it to work, it has to serve a purpose, and it has to serve you. Our spirit guides and higher selves are not interested in us developing cool super-powers. They are interested in us developing the gifts that can help us progress further along our spiritual path. Psychic dreaming doesn’t always fall under that category. If you dream of a future event and it comes true, to me it is just a little nod from spirit that you’re walking your path. You haven’t strayed from where you planned to go. But in my opinion, those little nods cannot be easily controlled. They are a blessing and they are comforting, but we can’t have them regularly because they would spoil the ending, all the time. So I think it’s best to just enjoy the ones you do get. There is a lot of value in knowing you’re on the right path because often in our lives everything can point to the opposite. We may feel that we’re not in the ‘right place’, or that everything is going wrong, and we’re not walking our true path.

So a precognitive dream can be a blessing in this way. I began to suspect I was on the wrong path in early Autumn 2010, when I was living in Christchurch, NZ and juggling this website with a full-time job working as an English language teacher. Ordinarily I would choose self-employment, but the career path of English teacher was supposed to help me to get residency in New Zealand (I am a British citizen, not a New Zealander…yet) I began to feel in my heart that it was never going to get residency that way, and I was wasting my time (and in hindsight, I was totally right for various reasons). But I was told by people around me that it would work out and I was also promised the kind of contract I needed in order to get residency. I even got a little nod from spirit that I was doing the right thing, in spite of the fact that I was stressed, exhausted and convinced that it wasn’t going to work out. That reassurance came when I was teaching a group of Korean students, it was a beginners’ class and we were practising communicating date of birth/birthdays.