Photograph number 437. This photograph shows a sign that reads: "Front Lines! Stop." The title for this image was found in Major Edwin D. Burwell Jr.'s list of photographs.
The British Museum currently has 247 feet (75 m.) of the original Parthenon frieze within their permanent collection. The frieze was the sculpted high-relief, which adorned the upper part, or naos of the Parthenon. In the exhibit space, each section of the frieze has a placard, which describes the scene depicted on the section of frieze as well as the cardinal direction and number in the frieze series. The marble frieze, which dates c. 438- 432 BC, depicts a Panathenaic procession.
Fred Ordway talks about notable stories with Wernher von Braun, including attending meetings, hunting, and von Braun's sense of humor. Both sides of tape.
Back: FRANK-ANN MOTEL Air Conditioned - Electric Heat - Tile Bath - Wall-to-Wall Carpet - Telephone - T.V. in Room - Swimming Pool - Adjacent to Restaurant - 3/4 Mile to Heart of Town. On U. S. Highway 231 South - Memorial Parkway, Huntsville, Alabama, Telephone 536-8511, C. W. Franklin and C. D McAnn, Owner & Operators
Back: Frank-Ann Motel, Air Conditioned, Electric Heat - Tile Bath, Glass Shower Doors - Wall to Wall Carpet - T.V. Lounge - Adjacent to Restaurant - 3/4 Mile to heart of town. On U.S. Hiway 231 South - Memorial Parkway, HUNTSVILLE, ALABAMA, Phone JEfferson 2-2702, C.W. Franklin and C.D. McAnn, Owners & Operators.
Various chattel mortgage contracts and paperwork, seed receipts, checks, payments, and debts pertaining to Frank Williams and the rented land he worked. These documents include multiple handwritten notes.
Frank Williams talks to Bob Ward about Wernher von Braun. Of particular note are stories regarding von Braun's office relationships and his ability to communicate. Both sides of tape, through side 2 is inaudible.
Various documents detailing land rented by Frank Williams, payments owed, and rental information including the promissory note promises the payment of $600 to Nelson Acklin for land rented by Frank Williams with signatures of Nelson Acklin and [sic] Schiffman on the back, an inquiry from Laurence Goldsmith regarding the character of Frank Williams as a renter and the bank's business intentions with him, a handwritten note detailing the amounts owed by Frank Williams that were mentioned in the letter from Goldsmith, a response to Goldsmith's inquiry from J. G. Bennett, a note stating the transfer of the rent note to the landlord, I. Schiffman & Co., and the release of Albert Clay's crop, a letter from Frank Williams to Laurence Goldsmith requesting help as he cannot work the land himself due to his wife's illness, and a letter from I. Schiffman & Co. after the transfer of the rented land to the company.