Posted on 02/08/2020 3:29:49 PM PST by Rastus
I never said any one was a pedo,if you followed the thread, but thanks for the analysis which I was already aware of.
“Natalie was 15 when he raped her.”, which is purely your speculation and not fact.
Nice try
William Conrad was the voice of Matt Dillon on radio.
Robert Conrad was always one of my favorites. RIP.
I’ll take the two post series WWW movies over that remake.
At least the main two were in it.
The corsair is my favorite WW II plane
Very good.
In my best Japanese pilot accent:
BOY ING TON!
The one and only Frank Cannon.
A Quinn Martin Production.
Guest starring an assortment of people.
AKA Julius Kraubein.
An alias he used since was in so many shows.
Or as Benny Hill would say, 'A Quinn Martin, Harton, Barton and Fargo Production.'
Hopefully Jim has caught up to Artie and Miguelito.
Ironically, it started running it tonight- episode 1. Black Sheep Squadron.
1st season of Buck Rogers.
Everybody just keeps dying. Soon there will be nobody left - at this pace.
That you Hirachi?
I have the DVDS around.
I was just remembering that old show - Hawaiian Eye - and wondered if I was the only person here who remembered it . . . :^)
He was also in a series set in Vienna?
He drove a Corvette.
RIP, Pappy.......
I'll take Batteries for a thousand Alex.The Electric Telegraph
In the early 19th century, two developments in the field of electricity opened the door to the production of the electric telegraph. First, in 1800, the Italian physicist Alessandro Volta (1745-1827) invented the battery, which reliably stored an electric current and allowed the current to be used in a controlled environment. Second, in 1820, the Danish physicist Hans Christian Oersted (1777-1851) demonstrated the connection between electricity and magnetism by deflecting a magnetic needle with an electric current. While scientists and inventors across the world began experimenting with batteries and the principles of electromagnetism to develop some kind of communication system, the credit for inventing the telegraph generally falls to two sets of researchers: Sir William Cooke (1806-79) and Sir Charles Wheatstone (1802-75) in England, and Samuel Morse, Leonard Gale (1800-83) and Alfred Vail (1807-59) in the U.S.
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