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Post by ma1marv on Aug 5, 2012 9:55:42 GMT 9
This is actually a kind of trivia thing - but it involves a little known fact about one of the 60's most infamous people! Hint - "the 60's" He was in the Marines as a Aviation Electronics Operator and in 1957 was posted to the Atsugi Air Base in Japan. He returned to the US to El Toro MCAS, CA and was assigned to the western US Air Defence Sector and had his own personal copy of the Manual that spelled out ALL the call signs for ALL the ADC, USAF, ARMY, NAVY, and MARINE aircraft - to include the classified acknowledgement codes for each. Any guesses - out there??? A cold beer is on the line! Might even be a Green beer to boot! MArv :fire_missle_ani :patriotic-flagwaver :green-beer :green-beer
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Post by Gene on Aug 5, 2012 10:26:41 GMT 9
you dont mean oswald do you?? or maybe whitman?... the texas tower sniper... both usmc... both in the sixties... i take oswald!!
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Post by ma1marv on Aug 5, 2012 11:47:27 GMT 9
Gene - you win the beer! I'll be happy to drink one for ya though!
Yep - Mr Lee Harvey himself! I have not looked into Mr Whitman - I think he was just a grunt - ground pounder infantry. But good with his rifle!
Lee Harvey actually went to one of his schools at Keesler AFB for electronics training and flight operations training. Atsugi was an early base for operating the U-2. Secret at the time! El Toro was part of the Western Air Defense sector at the time.
Aint it a wonderful thing to still learn something!
I'll owe ya the beer but I'll have one just for you!
MArv :fire_missle_ani :patriotic-flagwaver :green-beer :green-beer
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Post by Gene on Aug 5, 2012 12:08:32 GMT 9
the way i heard it...all marines are excellent marksmen...most have the "iron cross" to prove it... :yellow-beer
:us_flag
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Post by Mark O on Aug 5, 2012 14:12:49 GMT 9
Yep - Mr Lee Harvey himself! I have not looked into Mr Whitman - I think he was just a grunt - ground pounder infantry. But good with his rifle! "One motivated Marine, and his rifle..." Crazy SOBs, but I'm glad the good ones are on our side.
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Post by LBer1568 on Aug 5, 2012 23:43:44 GMT 9
Born in New York City in 1903. Eldest of five children, tried to help them survive by working before and after school, but at age 14 left home to ease the financial burden on the family. By 15 he was a civilian typist at Camp Merritt, New Jersey, and enlisted in the Navy (by lying about his age) two years later. He served from 1920 to 1924. He later served in the Coast Guard from 1927 to 1930. FDR got him a commission in the U.S. Naval Reserve before World War II.
As a reserve officer, he used his public position to cajole the Navy into qualifying him as a Naval Aviator, and played that against the United States Air Force, who successfully recruited him into the Air Force Reserve. At one time during the 1950s, he had flown every active aircraft in the military inventory. The B-36 at Chanute had plaque stating he had flown it.
After many years of advertising for Chesterfield (during which he came up with the idea and slogan "Buy 'em by the carton"), he severed the relationship during one of his television programs, when his doctors convinced him that his lung cancer was due to smoking. Subsequently, he became a prominent spokesman for anti-smoking education.
Long time radio host, DJ, talk shows, TV entertainment shows. Sang and played the ukulele.
Also known as The Old Redhead.
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Post by ma1marv on Aug 5, 2012 23:51:40 GMT 9
Hard to believe it but Thats Arthur Godfrey!!!
MArv :fire_missle_ani :patriotic-flagwaver :green-beer :green-beer
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Post by LBer1568 on Aug 6, 2012 2:23:17 GMT 9
Yup Sure is. Lorin
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Jim Scanlon (deceased)
Senior Staff
FORUM CHAPLAIN
Commander South Texas outpost of the County Sligo Squadron
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Post by Jim Scanlon (deceased) on Aug 6, 2012 4:35:24 GMT 9
Arthur Godfrey got in trouble with the FAA for buzzing the Teterboro control tower in his DC-3. That was in January 1954, and his ticket was suspended for a while.
He, I think, really thought he was above regulations.
He also fired Julius LaRosa while on a live TV broadcast.
Yet, he was some kind of entertainer.
He was also in the movie: "Glass-Bottom Boat", staring Doris Day.
Jim Too
:god_bless_usa
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Post by Deleted on Aug 6, 2012 6:15:42 GMT 9
does the word UKELELE strike a familiar not, and the phrase HAWAII, HAWAII, HAWAII. He was a bit of an oddball, but definitely entertaining. I remember watching the show, dont remember what Julius did, but Arthur went ballistic and Julie didnt know what hit him.
But it was probably the best thing to happen for his career. He slipped the surly bonds of Godfrey and made it bigger on his own.
Ah, memories. How about Steve Allen, SMOCK, SMOCK!!! Or the whackiest of them all Big Ernie Kovacs
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Post by LBer1568 on Aug 6, 2012 7:13:15 GMT 9
I always thought Jackie Gleason was a great star as well as Red Skelton.
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Post by Jim on Aug 6, 2012 7:53:16 GMT 9
Art Carney made Gleason look good.......
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Post by Gene on Aug 7, 2012 2:13:04 GMT 9
any older egyptians out there? figure this one out...
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Post by Jim on Aug 7, 2012 5:33:43 GMT 9
any older egyptians out there? figure this one out... HUH Took 2 min. for your pic to download !!!!!!!! Ask a dumocrat, they can read anything into anything...... In context of course!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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Post by pat perry on Aug 7, 2012 6:43:14 GMT 9
any older egyptians out there? figure this one out... A-C-E-R is what it spells. Did it come on a computer box? Or A-S-I-C was it on a box of running shoes? Or, in American it graphically means birds of a feather flock together. Pat P.
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Post by Gene on Aug 7, 2012 7:13:01 GMT 9
i was at cafepress looking around for something funny to send steve... i kept running into this gliph... thanks for solving...almost pulled a few strands of remaining hair :thanks :salute
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Post by pat perry on Dec 22, 2013 2:38:27 GMT 9
Best thread I could find for this post. Thanks to Dave Adams for sending. Pat P. If you were in the market for a watch in 1880, would you know where to get one? You would go to a store, right? Well, of course you could do that, but if you wanted one that was cheaper and a bit better than most of the store watches, you went to the train station! Sound a bit funny? Well, for about 500 towns across the northern United States , that's where the best watches were found. Why were the best watches found at the train station? The railroad company wasn't selling the watches, not at all. The telegraph operator was. Most of the time the telegraph operator was located in the railroad station because the telegraph lines followed the railroad tracks from town to town. It was usually the shortest distance and the right-of-ways had already been secured for the rail line. Most of the station agents were also skilled telegraph operators and that was the primary way that they communicated with the railroad. They would know when trains left the previous station and when they were due at their next station. And it was the telegraph operator who had the watches. As a matter of fact, they sold more of them than almost all the stores combined for a period of about 9 years. This was all arranged by "Richard", who was a telegraph operator himself. He was on duty in the North Redwood,Minnesota train station one day when a load of watches arrived from the East. It was a huge crate of pocket watches. No one ever came to claim them. So Richard sent a telegram to the manufacturer and asked them what they wanted to do with the watches. The manufacturer didn't want to pay the freight back, so they wired Richard to see if he could sell them. So Richard did. He sent a wire to every agent in the system asking them if they wanted a cheap, but good, pocket watch. He sold the entire case in less than two days and at a handsome profit. That started it all. He ordered more watches from the watch company and encouraged the telegraph operators to set up a display case in the station offering high quality watches for a cheap price to all the travelers. It worked! It didn't take long for the word to spread and, before long, people other than travelers came to the train station to buy watches. Richard became so busy that he had to hire a professional watch maker to help him with the orders. That was Alvah. And the rest is history as they say. The business took off and soon expanded to many other lines of dry goods. Richard and Alvah left the train station and moved their company to Chicago -- and it's still there. YES, IT'S A LITTLE KNOWN FACT that for a while in the 1880's, the biggest watch retailer in the country was at the train station. It all started with a telegraph operator: Richard Sears and his partner Alvah Roebuck! Proof source: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Warren_Sears
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Post by Jim on Nov 8, 2016 10:08:43 GMT 9
Any idea whats happening???
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MOW
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Post by MOW on Nov 8, 2016 12:12:48 GMT 9
Any idea whats happening??? The machines are taking over. TERMINATOR 6
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Post by Jim on Nov 8, 2016 13:10:25 GMT 9
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