Mighty Times: The Children's March, a 2004 documentary film, also directed by Robert Houston
Mighty Times: The Children's March is a 2004 American short documentary film about the Birmingham civil rights marches.
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The Atalanta Stakes was formerly part of the venue's Variety Club Day, an annual fundraising event for the Variety Club.
Set in a fictional Georgia town in the months immediately following the American Civil War, the film depicts the efforts of a resolute Union Army officer who had participated in the destruction of the town during Sherman's March determined to heal the land he had previously harmed.
He is called "Colonel Hathi", and he leads his wife, Winifred Hathi (voiced by Verna Felton), and his son, Hathi Junior (voiced by Clint Howard), in a marching patrol similar to an Army that is so loud it makes some of his herd want to "transfer to another herd" while singing a deliberately silly song authored by the Sherman Brothers entitled "Colonel Hathi's March".
Braiden’s ‘INSPIRING POSSIBILITIES’ mission supports Variety, the Children's Charity along with Victoria Riding for the Disabled Association.
Mighty Times: The Legacy of Rosa Parks, a 2002 documentary film directed by Robert Houston
The march is used as the background music during the hourly performance of the Royal Clock in the Queen Victoria Building, Sydney, Australia.
At an inquisition at Tynemouth in 1278, it was duly declared that the King of Scotland, the Archbishop of York, the Prior of Tynemouth, the Bishop of Durham and Gilbert de Umfraville, Earl of Angus should arrange to meet with the justices prior to their entry into Newcastle, provided that they came through the county of Yorkshire first.
The race was formerly held during Sandown Park's Variety Club Day, an annual fundraising event for the Variety Club.
In 1988, top British producers Stock Aitken & Waterman auctioned off their services for the Young Variety Club of Great Britain charity.