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USO Canteen FReeper Style ~ Bomber Girls ~ September 24, 2002
FRiends of the USO Canteen, Snow Bunny and LindaSOG
Posted on 09/24/2002 12:26:57 AM PDT by Snow Bunny
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To: souris
Still at work, but relaxing at bit at the Canteen.
To: coteblanche
I think those letters from the troops yesterday might not have had the same choice of favourite threads if this one had been posted prior to Monday.Yep, I think you are right. This will become a Canteen Classic thread I bet! I love all the nose art and wish the Air Force would allow it all the time, not just during wartime. PC sucks.
302
posted on
09/24/2002 8:34:52 PM PDT
by
Jen
To: souris
Hey! Who told you that was my color????
303
posted on
09/24/2002 8:35:28 PM PDT
by
SAMWolf
Comment #304 Removed by Moderator
To: souris
Oh No. I hate it when I get predictable.
305
posted on
09/24/2002 8:37:21 PM PDT
by
SAMWolf
To: DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet
I feel so overdressed. ; ) ROTFLMAO!
306
posted on
09/24/2002 8:38:39 PM PDT
by
SAMWolf
To: Militiaman7
Thanks for posting the story of the disabled Marine. I sure hope our elected officials do the right thing and authorize concurrent receipt of VA disability and retired pay.
307
posted on
09/24/2002 8:39:04 PM PDT
by
Jen
To: souris
I think he needs a new nose.
To: souris; SAMWolf; Dakmar
It's not just them...
Less IS more...or perhaps, less artifice allows more true beauty to show.
I dunno for sure, that's just my 2 cents worth!
309
posted on
09/24/2002 8:39:15 PM PDT
by
HiJinx
To: Dakmar
I couldn't have said it better!
310
posted on
09/24/2002 8:39:29 PM PDT
by
SAMWolf
Comment #311 Removed by Moderator
To: Alberta's Child
Fine.
Hi AC, you're late today.
To: DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet
Good evening and glad you could join us. Lots of good nose art pictures today.
To: LindaSOG
0768 - Pippin III, the short, King of France, dies at 53
PEPIN THE SHORT, French PÉPIN LE BREF, German PIPPIN DER KURZE (b. 714--d. Sept. 24, 768, Saint-Denis, Neustria [now in France]),
The first king of the Frankish Carolingian dynasty and the father of Charlemagne. A son of Charles Martel, Pepin became sole de facto ruler of the Franks in 747 and then, on the deposition of Childeric III in 751, king of the Franks.
He was the first Frankish king to be anointed--first by St. Boniface and later (754) by Pope Stephen II.
For years the Merovingian kings had been unable to prevent power from slipping from their hands into those of the counts and other magnates. The kings were gradually eclipsed by the mayors of the palace, whose status developed from that of officer of the household to regent or viceroy.
Among the mayors, a rich family descended from Pepin of Landen (Pepin I) held a position of especial importance. When Charles Martel, the scion of that family, died in 741, he left two sons: the elder, Carloman, mayor of Austrasia, Alemannia, and Thuringia, and Pepin III, mayor of Neustria, Burgundy, and Provence.
No king had ruled over all the Franks since 737, but to maintain the fiction of Merovingian sovereignty, the two mayors gave the crown to Childeric III in 743. (see also Index: Merovingian dynasty)
Charles had had a third son, however-- Grifo, who had been born to him by a Bavarian woman of high rank, probably his mistress.
In 741, when his two brothers were declared mayors of the Franks, Grifo rebelled. He led a number of revolts in subsequent years and was several times imprisoned. In 753 he was killed amid the Alpine passes on his way to join the Lombards, at this time enemies of the Franks as well as of the papacy.
Numerous other rebellions broke out. In 742 men of the Aquitaine and Alemannia were in revolt; in 743 Odilo, duke of Bavaria, led his men into battle; in 744 the Saxons rebelled, in 745 Aquitaine, and in 746 Alemannia, both the latter for the second time.
In 747, when Carloman decided to enter monastic life at Rome, a step he had been considering for years, Pepin became sole ruler of the Franks.
But Pepin was ambitious to govern his people as king, not merely as mayor. Like his father, he had courage and resolution; unlike his father, he had a strong desire to unite the papacy with the Frankish realm.
In 750 he sent two envoys to Pope Zacharias with a letter asking: "Is it wise to have kings who hold no power of control?"
The pope answered: "It is better to have a king able to govern. By apostolic authority I bid that you be crowned King of the Franks." Childeric III was deposed and sent to a monastery, and Pepin was anointed as king at Soissons in November 751 by Archbishop Boniface and other prelates.
Pepin and Pope Stephen II.
The pope was in need of aid. Aistulf, king of the Lombards, had seized Ravenna with its lands, known as the exarchate. Soon, Lombard troops marched south, surrounded Rome, and prepared to lay siege to its walls. So matters stood when in 752 Zacharias died and Stephen II became pope.
In November 753 Pope Stephen made his way over the stormy mountain passes to Frankish territory. He remained in France until the summer of 754, staying at the abbey of Saint-Denis, Paris.
There he himself anointed Pepin and his sons, Charles and Carloman, as king and heirs of the crown.
The pope returned to Italy accompanied by Pepin and his army. A fierce battle was fought in the Alps against Aistulf and the Lombards. The Lombard king fled back to his capital, Pavia; Pepin and his men plundered the land around Pavia until Aistulf promised to restore to papal possession Ravenna and all the Roman properties claimed by the pope.
Aistulf broke his word. Again and again Pope Stephen wrote to Pepin of his difficulties. In 756 the Frankish king once more entered Italy. Aistulf was once more constrained to make promises, but the same year he died--of a fall from his horse--and in April 757 a new king, Desiderius, became ruler of the Lombards.
That year Stephen II also died, and Paul I was elected pope. He, too, constantly wrote to Pepin asking for help.
But the King of the Franks had other concerns. He had to put down revolts in Saxony in 748 and 753 and a rising in Bavaria in 749.
He was continually marching against rebellious Aquitaine. In 768 Pepin died at Saint-Denis, on his way back from one of his Aquitainian expeditions.
Pepin is remembered not only as the first of the Carolingians but also as a strong supporter of the Roman Church. The papal claims to territory in Italy originated with Pepin's campaigns against Aistulf and the latter's pledge to return the Roman territories.
His letters also show him calling for archbishoprics in Frankish territory, promoting synods of clergy and layfolk, and as deeply interested in theology.
Copyright 1994-1998 Encyclopaedia Britannica
314
posted on
09/24/2002 8:41:10 PM PDT
by
Valin
To: souris
Come On. Mel always looks good, just ask my wife and daughters!
315
posted on
09/24/2002 8:41:23 PM PDT
by
SAMWolf
To: Victoria Delsoul; Alberta's Child
He's been reading the Nose Art "Articles" very carefully. LOL
316
posted on
09/24/2002 8:42:33 PM PDT
by
SAMWolf
To: Snow Bunny
Hi Bunny hunny! I love your cute bunny with the flowers and butterfly. How sweet! I just got home from visiting my son an hour or so ago and am trying to catch up with everybody.
Zooooooooooom! Somebody please watch out for Officer Tonk for me!!!
317
posted on
09/24/2002 8:43:15 PM PDT
by
Jen
To: Dakmar
May I also take a moment to chime in on how that woman is so pretty to me and how tattoos, piercings, botulism, plastic surgery How do you know she hasn't gotten one already? Or maybe a few, LOL
Comment #319 Removed by Moderator
To: SAMWolf
Ooooohhh that makes sense.
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