Posted on 05/21/2004 12:01:08 AM PDT by snippy_about_it
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![]() are acknowledged, affirmed and commemorated.
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Morning E.G.C. Cloudy here today, looks like we got some light rain last night.
Morning GailA. Perfect breakfast for this morning.
Morning Snopercod.
Do you know where the picture was taken?
Morning PE.
Boy, those people sure look familiar. :-)
Hey Samwise. You're early today.
Hi Feather.
Good Morning Mayor.
On This Day In History
Birthdates which occurred on May 21:
0427 -BC- Plato (Aristocles), Athens(?)
1471 Albrecht Dürer Nürnberg Germany, Renaissance painter/print maker
1527 Philip II King of Spain (1556-98) & Portugal (1580-98)
1633 Joseph de La Barre composer
1688 Alexander Pope England, poet (Rape of the Lock)
1780 Elizabeth Fry Quaker minister/prison reformer/nurse
1796 Reverdy Johnson representative (Union), died in 1876
1822 Dabney Herndon Maury Major General (Confederate Army), died in 1900
1822 Mosby Monroe Parsons Brigadier General (Confederate Army) died in 1865
1825 George Lafayette Beal Brevet Major General (Union volunteers)
1835 Newton Martin Curtis Brevet Major General (Union volunteers)
1860 Willam Einthoven Dutch physiologist/inventor (electrocardiograph)
1865 C J Thomsen Denmark, archaeologist, named Stone/Iron/Bronze Ages
1872 Henry Warren Boston MA, inventor (Telechon electric clock)
1878 Glenn Hammond Curtiss US, inventor (hydroplane)
1898 Armand Hammer New York NY, millionaire industrialist (Occidental Petroleum)
1903 Manly Wade Wellman Angola, sci-fi author (After Dark, Devil's Planet)
1904 Fats [Thomas Wright] Waller New York NY, jazz singer/composer (Ain't Misbehavin')
1904 Robert Montgomery Beacon NY, actor/director (Earl of Chicago, Yellow Jack)
1909 Guy de Rothschild French banker
1916 Harold Robbins New York NY, author (Moneychangers, Carpetbaggers, Betsy)
1917 Dennis Day New York NY, Irish tenor/comedian (Jack Benny Show, Danny Boy)
1917 Raymond Burr New Westminster British Columbia Canada, actor (Perry Mason, Ironsides, Godzilla)
1921 Andrei Sakharov Moscow, physicist, human rights worker (Nobel '75)
1935 Terry Lightfoot clarinetist/bandleader (New Orleans Jazzmen)
1941 Anatoli Semyonovich Levchenko USSR, cosmonaut (TM-4)
1941 Ronald Isley Cincinnati OH, singer (Isley Brothers-Twist & Shout)
1942 Robert C Springer St Louis, Colonel USMC/astronaut (STS-29, STS-38)
1943 Hilton Valentine rock guitarist (Animals-House of the Rising Sun)
1944 Mary Robinson President of Republic of Ireland (Labour, 1990- )
1945 Ernst Willi Messerschmid Reutlingen Germany, astronaut (STS 22)
1947 Richard Hatch Santa Monica CA, actor (Battlestar Galactica)
1948 Leo [Gerard] Sayer Shoreham-on-Sea England, singer (When I Need You)
1950 Roger Hodgson London, rocker (Supertramp-The Logical Song)
1951 Al Franken comedian/writer/actor/loser (Saturday Night Live, Stuart Saves His Family, Air America)
1952 Mr T [Lawrence Tero] Chicago IL, actor (A-Team, Rocky III, T & T)
1955 Stan Lynch Gainesville FL, rock drummer (Tommy Petty & Heartbreakers)
1959 Nick Cassavetés actor (Rosemary's Baby, Quiet Cool)
1970 Dorsey Levens NFL running back (Green Bay Packers-Superbowl 31)
1970 Roman Turek Strakonice Czechoslovakia, hockey goalie (Team Czechoslovakia Republic, Olympics-98)
1978 Kandy Marshall Miss Virginia Teen USA (1996)
1985 Frustaci Septuplets California, Patricia Frustaci gives birth to 7
Good Morning Bandleader.
Midway had to be a miracle, so many things had to "come together" at just the right time for us to pull a major victory from that battle.
I'll say. The navy took all of the remaining ones off the line immediately after Midway & never used them again.

Arnhem. John Frost Bridge.
The majority of the 2nd Parachute Battalion under command of Lieutenant-Colonel John Frost managed to reach the Arnhem Bridge in the evening of 17th September by way of the most southern route from the dropping zone. The 600 odd men entrenched themselves around the northern ramp of the bridge. Awaiting for the 30 Corps they managed to hold the bridge for seven days. At the end there was a great shortage of ammunition, food and water. The number of casualties were numerous and finally the bridge was "A bridge too far".
On the bridge one can find a plaque which commemorates the actions of 2nd Parachute Battalion.

It contains the following description:
This is the bridge for which JOHN D. FROST fought
leading his soldiers persistent and brave
went a bridge too far which they tried to save
the bridge is now with his name proudly wrought.
Morning Skeeter.
No. It looks like it was onboard a carrier. If so, it would have had to have been on of the ones mentioned in my dad's diary. USS Antietam or perhaps the Bennington?
The house was empty. I needed company. I had trouble sleeping last night. It's the first time I've been alone all night since the hobbit lass was born. :^( But I'm OK now; she's home, and she and the dog are making all kinds of noise. :^)
Mornin' Sam....Have you ever considered doing a thread about the Submarine Memorial at Pearl Harbor?..It's a little known, little publicizes, andsadly, little visited memorial..there's a WW II fleet sub at anchor, and next to it, on a small point of land, a stone monument for each of the 52 ( I think) subs and crew still "on eternal patrol".
Little realized factoid... The submarine service suffered the highest % of KIA of any unit of the US military in WW II. Second was the 8th AF bomber command...
All's forgiven. Sam and I are a team and we answer each other's posts, sometimes with a similar answer. LOL.
This was really long and I held off finalizing it with the pictures but I couldn't find anyway to make it shorter and wanted to tell the story for the very reasons you say. These guys were something else. They were bold, brave and understood the mission. Our troops are today too I think. The difference is in WWII they weren't held back when it came to attacking the enemy and winning the war.
The next couple of weeks the History Channel is running good shows, the first five about the Western Front in Europe up to the D-Day Special on the 1st of June through the 6th. They covered some of the D-Day landing and also Monte Cassino last night. One of the American soldiers who had moved on past the beaches said "We didn't take prisoners, I mean even if they surrendered, we shot them. We were upset about what had happened on the beaches."
It's going to be a great couple weeks on the tv!
P.S. You were the first in again!
Good morning Aeronaut.
Good morning EGC.
One biscuit and a cup of joe. MMMMMM. Hits the spot. Good morning Gail.
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