Posted on 02/20/2006 8:22:58 PM PST by WaterDragon
This just in...College Sophomores Act Stupid...film at 11.
I think the student who didn't want to put up a statue to another "rich white man" should be kicked out of school. She's only taking the place of someone who actually has a brain.
no·to·ri·ous (n-tôr-s, -tr-)- adj: having an exceedingly bad reputation; known widely and usually unfavorably; infamous: a notorious gangster; a district notorious for crime.
I think the word they were seeking was famous, acclaimed, illustrious, or celebrated; something of that nature.
Possibly noteworthy?
Beautiful, thanks...
'College boys.'
I think that is a condition I was in about a week ago.
There was great hostility in the USA to "colonialism." Thank FDR, who held to the "open-door"policy for China and did not want British and Dutch imperialism to be replaced by Japanese imperialism.
I think the word is used in the article because "Pappy" was notorious for his drinking and being anti-authoritarian (to put it nicely!:))
He was 'notorious' in a way that we admire -- independent, cussed, getting the job done any old way he could, the niceties be damned!t
Here's the story of 'Pappy' Boyington, written by a Marine.....
http://vipersden.blogspot.com/2006/02/i-hope-they-dont-make-me-choose.html
I Hope They Don't Make Me Choose
This really pissed me off.
Greg Hallenbeck was like many men of his generation. He had to work hard to get a good start in life. A tough, stocky kid, part Sioux Indian, he managed to get to the University of Washington in the teeth of the Great Depression.
By that time his parents were separated. His mother helped him through school by working as a switch board operator in Tacoma, Wash. To pick up the rest of the financial slack he had to work all his spare hours at various jobs. During the summers he worked in a gold mine in Idaho, his home state.
If the work was a burden, Greg didn't show it. He realized that his university education was a privilege and he took full advantage of it. He signed up for ROTC, made the university wrestling and swimming teams, joined a fraternity and graduated four years later (1934) with a degree in aeronautical engineering.
With his Army ROTC commission he served with the Coast Artillery Reserve in Washington state. Meanwhile, he had been fortunate enough to land a job as a draftsman at Boeing Aircraft, in Tacoma, after graduation. He loved airplanes and he wanted to fly.
And fly he did. Into history.
He joined the Marine Corps Reserve in 1936 as an aviation cadet. He got his wings in 1937 and accepted a commission in the regular Marine Corps later that year. By 1940, he was at Pensacola Naval Air Station as a flight instructor, as the clouds of World War II loomed ever closer to the United States.
Greg didn't wait for the war. He went to it. He joined the American Volunteer Group, later known as the famed Flying Tigers, to help defend China against Japan. In his military career since graduation he had become known not by his stepfather's name, Hallenbeck, but by his father's name, Boyington.....[click the url and read the Rest of the Story]
Laura Ingraham is interviewing these commie idiots on her show now.
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