A local saloon uses a variant of a WWII military acronym as its name:
"FooBar"
Considering the part of town it's in, and the nature of the locals, that name likely describes the bar's customers at the end of the evening.
If you work on performance vehicles for fun, you might want to consider mechanical engineering. You can work on performance vehicles and get paid for it. I went to engineering school partly for that reason myself. However, after graduation I went a slightly different route and kept the...
It couldn't be any cheaper, and people did it during the GE, and that's to take a longer and open-ended sleep. After a long and difficult project, extra sleeping is both therapeutic and rewarding.
No alarm clock - just sleep until you wake up naturally...
After sleeping and recovering, then buy...
I wouldn't have thought of this scene, but I'm glad you did.
As a mechanical engineer who became one as a result of being a hot-rodder since I was 13, I have done exactly what Jake Holman did on more than one occasion.
I have often introduced myself to a new engine or car and gently laid hands...
For a different reaction to the Statue of Liberty scene: I had been reading and watching science fiction for about fifteen years by the time the movie came out, so it was more of a mildly positive reaction, not at all shocking or disturbing. A good ending that fits the plot, but not...
There is more color footage and photos from the Pacific for two main reasons. The color film of the time was VERY slow and needed a lot of sunlight, of which there tends to be more in the Pacific than in northern Europe. Also, the Marines were more liberal in the use of 16mm cameras (Kodak...
I took it that they were there on some sort of clandestine mission and not a substantive military unit (Rommel, etc.).
Also, I may be misinterpreting it... need to see it again...
The "ASA" rating on original Kodachrome film (pre-WWII) was roughly ASA 8-10. That is *extremely* slow, which is why it took so much light to get a color image (still or movie).
(The America Standards Association (ASA) film rating system was promulgated in late 1943 - what we now call ISO.)...
I saw that show, also, and I think it was a movie (shown on TV), not a regular TV show in the mode of "Dragnet" or "The Untouchables".
The problem is that I can't remember the name of the movie or who was in it.
I believe the plot involved the Mob and criminality involving jukeboxes, as...
Part of the reason you thought he was funny may be because you are from Chicago. As a born Southerner, Claghorn's voice was annoying and sounded like someone from Boston who was faking (or trying to fake) a Southern accent.
Jackie Gleason on bass\Cesar Romero on piano
I recognized the actors but did not know the movie. I had to look it up so I won't say it. Let someone else get credit for that.
As an engineer, one of my more enjoyable duties in life is to make fun of physicists. However, I wasn't aware that there was a stereotype that they (or scientists in general) had no sense of humor.
(Engineers look down on physicists because they are too theoretical. Physicists look down on...
I'd like to file a "friend of the court" brief advocating that no further prosecution be considered.
If "B and B" was actually about the lives of two idiot slackers, prosecution would be justified. The fact that is a well-thought-out parody/satire of two idiot slackers actually takes it out of...
If you watched the Watergate hearings as a kid, you're not old yet. We watched them each night as young adults and relived them the next day at work. We called ourselves "The Watergate Wallowers".
Concerning the British and frontal assaults, don't forget the first day of the Somme Offensive - July 1, 1916. ~58,000 British casualties in one day, ~20,000 killed.
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