RIP Memoriam thread?
#601
Posted 2018-June-21, 16:38
#602
Posted 2018-June-21, 17:20
#604
Posted 2018-June-24, 15:46
#607
Posted 2018-August-25, 19:24
#608
Posted 2018-August-26, 12:23
My favorite Neil Simon play was The Odd Couple
Quote
Murray: What’s the green?
Oscar Madison: It’s either very new cheese or very old meat.
Murray: I’ll take the brown.
#609
Posted 2018-August-26, 14:03
Winstonm, on 2018-August-26, 12:23, said:
Just read an obit that mentioned all the plays and movies he'd written (not to mention some early TV: "Your Show of Shows" and "The Phil Silvers Show" (aka "Sgt. Bilko"). Wow, he was prolific, and so many of them have become classics. No wonder they renamed a Broadway theatre after him -- if you name a well known Broadway play, there's a good chance he wrote it (maybe only Rogers & Hamerstein's shows have better name recognition).
#611
Posted 2018-August-26, 17:21
Quote
In Australia, new Prime Minister Scott Morrison — who assumed office on Friday — honored "a true friend of Australia who was committed to strengthening the alliance between our two nations. He was a man of great courage and conviction."
Calling McCain a friend, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu tweeted that the senator's support for Israel "sprang from his belief in democracy and freedom."
"Senator John McCain stood for an America that was a reliable and close partner that — because of its strength — shouldered responsibility for others and stood by its values and principles even in difficult moments," German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said. "We will remember his voice."
German Chancellor Angela Merkel echoed Maas's comments, saying, "John McCain was led by the firm conviction that the sense of all political work lies in service to freedom, democracy and the rule of law. His death is a loss to all those who share this conviction."
And so on. And on.
McCain wasn't always right, nobody is, but he had beliefs that he thought were important, and I think that's important. He was a good person. Often that's more important than being right.
#612
Posted 2018-August-26, 18:23
Quote
Seeking the 2000 Republican presidential nomination, Mr. McCain pledged “a fight to take our government back from the power brokers and special interests.” Gov. George W. Bush of Texas was favored, but Mr. McCain won the New Hampshire primary, 49 to 30 percent. South Carolina’s primary then loomed as crucial. It was one of the era’s dirtiest campaigns. Anonymous smears falsely claimed that Mr. McCain had fathered a black child out of wedlock, that his wife was a drug addict and that he was a homosexual, a traitor and mentally unstable. Mr. McCain later said he regretted calling a Confederate flag on the State Capitol in Columbia a “symbol of heritage.” “I feared that if I answered honestly, I could not win the South Carolina primary,” Mr. McCain admitted.
Few of us have been tested the way John once was, or required to show the kind of courage that he did,” Mr. Obama said Saturday. “But all of us can aspire to the courage to put the greater good above our own. At John’s best, he showed us what that means.”
In 1993, Mr. McCain gave the commencement address at Annapolis: the sorcerer’s apprentice, class of 1954, home to inspire the midshipmen. He spoke of Navy aviators hurled from the decks of pitching aircraft carriers, of Navy gunners blazing into the silhouettes of onrushing kamikazes, of trapped Marines battling overwhelming Chinese hordes in a breakout from the Chosin Reservoir in North Korea. “I have spent time in the company of heroes,” he said. “I have watched men suffer the anguish of imprisonment, defy appalling cruelty until further resistance is impossible, break for a moment, then recover inhuman strength to defy their enemies once more. All these things and more I have seen. And so will you".
#613
Posted 2018-September-06, 18:02
#614
Posted 2018-September-09, 17:42
#615
Posted 2018-September-22, 11:13
He was one of Joe Meek's session musicians so played with Blackmore, Glover, Lynott etc also backing Jerry Lee Lewis and Gene Vincent.
#617
Posted 2018-October-22, 18:22
Quote
Lt. Joachim Ronneberg, the 23-year-old resistance fighter in command, and his eight comrades — all carrying cyanide capsules to swallow if captured — had been told by British intelligence only that the plant was distilling something called heavy water, and that it was vital to Hitler’s war effort.
Hours later, in one of the most celebrated commando raids of World War II, Lieutenant Ronneberg and his demolition team sneaked past guards and a barracks full of German troops, stole into the plant, set explosive charges and blew up Hitler’s hopes for a critical ingredient to create the first atomic bomb.
Mr. Ronneberg, the last surviving member of the 1943 raid and one of the most decorated war heroes of a nation renowned for valorous resistance to the 1940-45 German Occupation, died on Sunday in Alesund, Norway, his daughter, Birte Ronneberg, said. He was 99.
#619
Posted 2018-November-12, 16:25
barmar, on 2018-November-12, 14:25, said:
I just saw this. Here is an obit from WaPo:
https://www.washingt...m=.0af720fdae8f
In this article they briefly mention the earlier comic book era and how it suffered badly from Senate hearings in the 50s that investigated " the corrupting influence on kids". I had largely moved on by then. I had the largest comic book collection in the neighborhood going back to when Donald, Mickey, Pluto and all were defending the home front against the Nazis. Well, who knows? Perhaps this made me the corrupt being that I am today. Fwiw, I greatly prefer the Spiderman films to other movie portrayals of super heroes, although Becky really liked Wonder Woman. As did I, but Spidey is great.
#620
Posted 2018-November-16, 12:30