Barbara Pepper wound up "down on the farm" after all, as Mrs. Fred (Doris) Ziffel (with Arnold - a real pig - as her son.)
Before she settled down with Fred, she was one of the floozies who were a part of John Garfield's entourage in "They Made Me a Criminal".
There's a difference between what the Army and Marines officially called those forces and what the public (and comic strips) called them.
There was a certain propaganda/morale-building aspect to the title of some these specialized forces:
"Darby's Rangers" in Italy (James Garner)
"Carlson's...
What got to me was the uncle or stepfather or whatever he is leaning against the wall huffing and puffing after having beaten the girl with some sort of wide belt or razor strop.
This stuff is hard to read...
A stand-up comic from some years ago agreed and made your point exactly:
He is standing on stage with a paper bill in each hand - he says that one is a hundred-dollar bill and the other is a one-dollar bill - then he asks the question: "Why is one worth more than the other - Because we pretend...
Don't be too critical of a perfectly valid term as used in certain applications. We engineers work in "teams" all the time. From first-year through senior-year and on into the real world, "Design Teams" are the standard organizational and operating method. I literally tell the first-year...
As masters of a clandestine business, I'm surprised the moonshiners didn't find the needed ingredients on the black market.
As for the TN Highway Patrol (THP) and liquor, I was able to find the photo that I had in mind in a local history book.
I wish you could see it, but the caption will convey...
"Sometimes the highway patrol comes up the valley, but nobody is worried to see men with badges."
The Tennessee Highway Patrol (THP) in those days was heavily involved in the illicit liquor business. To the extent that they might be interested in the moonshiners at all, it was as possible...
In his later life he could have been called "Nashville Fats" (sort of like "Nashville Cats").
"Fats moved into the Hermitage Hotel in downtown Nashville, Tennessee, in 1985, remaining there for several years. In 1992, while undergoing surgery for a knee injury, he suffered a massive heart attack...
Agree... Some years ago the Disney Channel was showing some early-Disney adventure stories with LN as the star. Before the show started, a voice-over announcer explained that these weren't comedies, and that LN was originally a serious actor. Despite that, I interpreted all his dialog the way...
The "learn to code" and life will be fine" mantra is said mostly by teachers and politicians who don't know how to code and have never done it themselves.
Coding is the high-tech/IT version of the assembly-line worker, and it involves a lot of drudgery.
I "coded" some myself, back when it was...
Dorothy Frothingham Wagstaff !!
I thought Groucho must be involved here in some way.
"The Supreme Allied Commander enjoys overall theatre control."
They soon split the baby by having TWO Pacific theatres:
Southwest Pacific for MacArthur (Army) and the Central Pacific for Nimitz (Navy).
Better than Jimmy Carter's "nookey-ler" - and JC was a "nookey-ler" engineer. How Hyman Rickover let him get away with saying it wrong for all those years is a mystery to me.
I'm glad you folks recently started using your old cameras (and posted about it here), which prompted me do do likewise.
I recently bought a 1938 Kodak Retina at our local flea market for $20, cleaned it up, and started taking test shots.
Works perfectly...
The second new addition was a Busch...
Agree that it must be a New England thing...
I have never seen anything like that here in Nashville.
In fact, if you showed up in that sort of outfit here, people would think you were a David "Stringbean" Akeman impersonator:
David Akeman (June 17, 1915 – November 10, 1973) better known as...
Tungsten is a VERY important strategic mineral for modern warfare.
Aside from the obvious use of tungsten for light bulbs and vacuum tubes (by the millions) for radios and radar, very-hard tungsten goes into machine-tool cutters for making precision parts for guns, aircraft, torpedoes, etc...
It works well, but don't leave it in the bucket too long. It will turn into a dense brown goo.
Right now I have a rifle part embedded in a cup of semi-solid mud.
The "lead salts" being warned against here come from cheapskate moonshiners who used old car radiators for their still components, instead of good-quality (and expensive) copper.
Great poster...
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