107
   

WA2K Radio is now on the air

 
 
yitwail
 
  1  
Reply Wed 20 Jul, 2005 05:55 pm
i hope Miss Letty won't mind if we check out a parallel of sorts? vocals, Billy Paul, words & music, Gamble & Huff:

Me and Mrs. Jones, we got a thing going on,
We both know that it's wrong
But it's much too strong to let it cool down now.

We meet ev'ry day at the same cafe,
Six-thirty I know she'll be there,
Holding hands, making all kinds of plans
While the jukebox plays our favorite song.

Me and Mrs., Mrs. Jones, Mrs. Jones, Mrs. Jones,
Mrs. Jones got a thing going on,
We both know that it's wrong,
But it's much too strong to let it cool down now.

We gotta be extra careful
that we don't build our hopes too high
Cause she's got her own obligations and so do I.

Me, me and Mrs., Mrs. Jones, Mrs. Jones, Mrs. Jones,
Mrs. Jones got a thing going on,
We both know that it's wrong,
But it's much too strong to let it cool down now.

Well, it's time for us to be leaving,
It hurts so much, it hurts so much inside,
Now she'll go her way and I'll go mine,
But tomorrow we'll meet the same place, the same time.

Me and Mrs. Jones, Mrs. Jones, Mrs. Jones.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Wed 20 Jul, 2005 06:20 pm
dj, if you got the money, honey, we got the style. <smile>

ah, Yit. We're delighting our listeners with all the parallel songs, and the clandestine type are the most provocative, albeit a true hot potato.

Well, folks, this party is gettin' rough and we love it:
» Mama Told Me Not To Come

Will you have whiskey with your water
or sugar in your tea ?
What's all these crazy questions
that you're askin' of me
this is the craziest party
there could ever be
don't turn on the lights
'cause I don't want to see
Mama told me not to come
Mama told me not to come
that ain't the way to have fun,no, uh uh
open up the window
let some air into this room
I think I'm almost chokin'
from the smell of stale perfume
and that cigarette you're smokin'
about to scare me half to death
oh open up the window sucker
let me catch my breath

Mama told me not to come
Mama told me not to come
that ain't the way to have fun,son
that ain't the way to have fun,son

the radio is blastin'
someone's knockin' at the door
I'm lookin' at my girl friend she passed out on the floor
I've seen so many things
I ain't never seen before
I don't know what it is
I don't wanna see no more

Mama told me not to come
Mama told me not to come
she said that ain't the way to have fun son
that ain't the way to have fun NO!

mama told me
mama told me
mama told me

That's the Three Dog Night version, and we all know we need to cool this place down by cuddling up to them dogs.
0 Replies
 
dyslexia
 
  1  
Reply Wed 20 Jul, 2005 06:31 pm
Varnished weeds in window jars
Tarnished beads on tapestries
Kept in satin boxes are
Reflections of love's memories
Letters from across the seas
Roses dipped in sealing wax
Valentines and maple leaves
Tucked into a paperback
Says she throw them all away
She found someone to love today
Dark with darker moods is he
Not a golden Prince who's come
Through columbines and wizardry
To talk of castles in the sun
Still she'll take a chance and say
She found someone to love today
She see a sorrow in his eyes
Like the angel made of tin
What might happen if she tries
To place another heart in him
In a Bleeker Street cafe
She found someone to love
She found someone to love
She found someone to love today
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Wed 20 Jul, 2005 06:33 pm
Every time I'm away from Liza
Water come to me eye
Every time I'm away from Liza
Water come to me eye

Come back Liza, come back girl
Wipe the tear from me eye
Come back Liza, come back girl
Wipe the tear from me eye

I remember when love was new
Water come to me eye
There was one but now there's two
Water come to me eye

Come back Liza, come back girl
Wipe the tear from me eye
Come back Liza, come back girl
Wipe the tear from me eye

When the evening starts to fall
Water come to me eye
I need to hear my Liza's call
Water come to me eye

Come back Liza, come back girl
Wipe the tear from me eye
Come back Liza, come back girl
Wipe the tear from me eye

Standing there in the market place
Water come to me eye
Soon I'll feel her warm embrace
Water come to me eye

Come back Liza, come back girl
Wipe the tear from me eye
Come back Liza, come back girl
Wipe the tear from me eye

In the shadow I stand awhile
Water come to me eye
Soon I'll see my Liza's smile
Water come to me eye

Come back Liza, come back girl
Wipe the tear from me eye
Come back Liza, come back girl
Wipe the tear from me eye

Every time I'm away from Liza
Water come to me eye
Every time I'm away from Liza
Water come to me eye
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Wed 20 Jul, 2005 07:19 pm
dys, thank you for playing that song. It matched our mood on WA2K. "...she found someone to love today...."

edgar, Just guessing, but would that be a Belafonte song? If not, it should be.

Well, listeners. It's that time of night for me soooooooo:



Goodnight my sun
Goodnight my friends
Rest your soul at this
Long day's end

The fire inside
Will warm our night
And moonlight's arms will
Hold us tight

Dream of summer skies
Sunset is bound to each sunrise
Rest is our first right
My friends goodnight

This world spinning
Time always winning
The silver chains keep thinning and
This is just your beginning

Sleep my friends
At last be free
No we won't forget
Our merriest melody

Gone to another place
Of carousel rides round an angel's face
I'm sure we'd both laugh at the sight

My friends goodnight.

Vertical Horizon won't mind the slight alterations.

From Letty with love.
0 Replies
 
Diane
 
  1  
Reply Wed 20 Jul, 2005 08:51 pm
Sweet dreams, sweet Letty. When will you be able to get out to ABQ to see us? I don't think I've actually seen you in a couple of years, at least. Too long.

We seem to be singing about women tonight. Here's a femme fatale:

(Cole Porter)

Miss Otis regrets, she's unable to lunch today, madam,
Miss Otis regrets, she's unable to lunch today.
She is sorry to be delayed,
but last evening down in Lover's Lane she strayed, madam,
Miss Otis regrets, she's unable to lunch today.
When she woke up and found that her dream of love was gone, madam,
She ran to the man who had led her so far astray,
And from under her velvet gown,
She drew a gun and shot her lover down, madam,
Miss Otis regrets, she's unable to lunch today.
When the mob came and got her and dragged her from the jail, madam,
They strung her upon the old willow across the way,
And the moment before she died,
She lifted up her lovely head and cried, madam......
Miss Otis regrets, she's unable to lunch today
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Thu 21 Jul, 2005 03:53 am
Yusuf Islam
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
(Redirected from Cat Stevens)



Yusuf Islam (born Stephen Demetre Georgiou, July 21, 1948) is best known as Cat Stevens, a popular singer-songwriter during the 1960s and 1970s who sold over 40 million albums. He adopted the faith of Islam in 1978 after a near death experience and became an outspoken spokesman for Islam. In 1971 he also wrote music specifically for the film Harold and Maude.

His most popular songs included Peace Train, Morning Has Broken, Moonshadow, Wild World, Father and Son, Matthew and Son, and Oh Very Young. Many of them were performed only with him playing either the guitar or piano.

He currently lives with his wife and five children in London, where he is an active member of the Muslim community. He has founded the charities Muslim Aid and Small Kindness to assist African famine victims. He holds authority in any current release of both his songs and recordings that he previously made under the name of Cat Stevens. A box set of his music, as well as remastered versions of his original albums recorded under the name of Cat Stevens has since been released on CD.


Early life

Georgiou was born in London, England, the third child of a Greek Cypriot father and a Swedish mother. The family lived above the restaurant that his parents operated on Shaftesbury Avenue in the West End. Although his father had a Greek Orthodox background, Georgiou was sent to a Roman Catholic school. When Georgiou was approximately eight years of age his parents divorced, although they both continued to live above the restaurant. Later, his mother moved back to Sweden and took him with her where he briefly attended school for six months. At age 17 he attended art school.


Early music career

Eager to move his music career forward, Georgiou sought the help of manager/producer Mike Hurst by literally knocking on his door and asking to play some of his songs for him. Not wanting to be rude, Hurst let him and when Georgiou was finished Hurst told him "You're bloody great! What's your name?" Georgiou answered "My name is Stephen but they call me Cat Stevens", and for most of his life Stevens was the name he adopted. As to why he was called Cat Stevens, Georgiou told Hurst that a girl told him he has eyes like a Cat. As Cat Stevens he published several songs and in 1966 (at age 18), he had his first hit with I Love My Dog. He then toured with moderate success.

On August 14, 1967, his voice joined with other recording artists on the airwaves of Wonderful Radio London bemoaning the loss of the pirate radio station which had helped create his first hit record. (See IFPI 'Conflicts of Interest'.) It was around this time that Variety editor Peter Bart referred to Cat Stevens as "looking like a homeless person".

Illness

Later that same year at age 19, he entered a hospital and was diagnosed
with tuberculosis.

Conversion

Stevens nearly drowned in a freak accident near the end of the 1970s. He pleaded with God to save him. Stevens described the event in a VH1 interview some years later: "I said 'please, God, I'll do anything for you, I'll work for you...'" And thus, Stevens began to find peace with himself and began his transition to Islam. A song from his 1972 album Catch Bull At Four, entitled Boy With A Moon And Star On His Head, may have been a sign of this change. He converted to the Islamic faith in 1978 and he legally changed his name to Yusuf Islam.


Muslim faith and Islam's musical career

Following his conversion, Islam abandoned his previous career as a pop star. At one point he wrote to the record companies asking that his music no longer be distributed, but his request was denied.

In 1985, Islam decided to return to the public spotlight for the first time since his religious conversion when he became aware of the famine threatening Ethiopia. He attempted to join with other artists as part of the historic Live Aid concert and he wrote a special song for the occasion. He was excluded from the line-up.

He has since resumed making recordings featuring Islamic lyrics accompanied only by basic percussion instruments in his compositions. He also produced an album called A is for Allah as an instruction for children. He also established a record label called Mountain of Light (see link below.)



2003 recordings

In 2003 Islam once again recorded the song Peace Train for a compilation CD which also included performances by David Bowie and Paul McCartney. He performed in Nelson Mandela's 46664 Concert with Peter Gabriel, for which he both performed and recorded in the English language for the first time in 25 years. Islam explained that the reason why he had stopped performing in English was due to his own misunderstanding of the Islamic faith:

"This issue of music in Islam is not as cut-and-dried as I was led to believe," he said. "I relied on hearsay, that was perhaps my mistake."

In December 2004, he released (with Ronan Keating) a new version of Father and Son. It debuted at number 2, behind Band Aid 20's Do They Know It's Christmas?. The proceeds of Father And Son were donated to the Band Aid charity. Boyzone also had a hit with a cover version of the song.


Denial of entry into the United States

On 21 September 2004 Islam was traveling on United Airlines Flight 919 from London to Washington. While the plane was in flight, the Advanced Passenger Information System flagged his name as being on a no-fly list. Customs agents alerted the Transportation Security Administration, which then diverted his flight to Bangor, Maine, where he was detained by the FBI.

The following day Islam was deported back to England. The United States Transportation Security Administration claimed there were "concerns of ties he may have to potential terrorist-related activities". The United States Department of Homeland Security specifically alleged that Islam had provided funding to the Palestinian Islamic militant group Hamas, although it did not offer any proof of its allegation.

Islam's deportation provoked a small international controversy and led British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw to complain personally to Secretary of State Colin Powell at the United Nations. Powell responded by stating that the watch list was under review, and added:

"I think we have that obligation to review these matters to see if we are right."

On 1 October 2004 Islam was reported to have requested the removal of his name

"I remain bewildered by the decision of the US authorities to refuse me entry to the United States."



Man of Peace Award

On 10 November 2004 Yusuf Islam was presented with a Man of Peace award by the private foundation of former USSR president Mikhail Gorbachev for his "dedication to promote peace, the reconciliation of people and to condemn terrorism". The ceremony was held in Rome, Italy and attended by five Nobel Peace Prize laureates.


Libel case

As a footnote to the actions taken by the U.S. government in deporting Islam as a terrorist, the The Sun and The Sunday Times British newspapers had published reports in October 2004 which stated that the U.S. was correct in its action. On 15 February 2005 a British court ruled that both newspapers had defamed Islam by publishing false statements about him. Both newspapers acknowledged that Islam has never supported terrorism and that, to the contrary, he had recently been given a Man of Peace award. Yusuf responded that he was:

"... delighted by the settlement" which "helps vindicate my character and good name. ... It seems to be the easiest thing in the world these days to make scurrilous accusations against Muslims, and in my case it directly impacts on my relief work and damages my reputation as an artist. The harm done is often difficult to repair."

He added that he intended to donate the financial award given to him by the court to help orphans of the recent Asian tsunami.



In March 2005 he released the first single, and the first song he has recorded with music, in over twenty years. The single was called "Indian Ocean" and was about the tsunami that hit the Indian Ocean on 26 December 2004. Proceeds from the single went to help orphans in Banda Aceh, one of the areas worst affected by the tsunami. The single was not released on CD, but could be purchased through several online music sellers. Islam said he had recorded other songs, but wanted to see if he still had an audience; the song did not receive major radio air-play. At the time he also announced that plans were under way to create a musical based on his life and music.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cat_Stevens

Morning Has Broken
As sung by Cat Stevens

lyrics by Eleanor Farjeon

Morning has broken, like the first morning
Blackbird has spoken, like the first bird
Praise for the singing, praise for the morning
Praise for the springing fresh from the word

Sweet the rain's new fall, sunlit from heaven
Like the first dewfall, on the first grass
Praise for the sweetness of the wet garden
Sprung in completeness where his feet pass

Mine is the sunlight, mine is the morning
Born of the one light, Eden saw play
Praise with elation, praise every morning
God's recreation of the new day
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Thu 21 Jul, 2005 03:53 am
Good morning, WA2K radio fans. My, it is quiet in our studio, but it is definitely a thing that I often enjoy.

Diane's lovely, but sad ballad last evening reminded me of one of Yit's parallel songs:




Dinner for one please, James,
Madame will not be dining.
Yes, you may bring the wine in,
Love plays such funny games.


Dinner for one please, James,
Close Madame's room, we've parted.
Please, don't look so downhearted,
Love plays such funny games.


Seems my best friend told her of another,
I had no chance to deny.
You know there has never been another,
Someday she'll find out the lie.


Maybe she's not to blame,
Leave me with silent hours.
No, don't move her favorite flowers,
Dinner for one please, James.


~interlude~


Maybe she's not to blame,
Leave me with silent hours.
No, don't move her favorite flowers,
Dinner for one please, James.

And as an aside to Lady Diane during this quiet time. I would love to fly to ABQ. Perhaps one day. <smile>
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Thu 21 Jul, 2005 04:05 am
Good morning, Bob. Thank you for that bio on Cat Stevens. Interesting, listeners, that he became religious as a result of a near drowning incident. I didn't know that, but I think we all remember the incident about Flight 919.

"Morning Has Broken" is in the Presbyterian hymnal, and is quite simple to play on piano with lovely, but simple chord changes. For that reason, I was certain that Cat had become a part of the Jesus movement.

Thank you, Boston.
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Thu 21 Jul, 2005 04:44 am
Nancy (With The Laughing Face)

[Words by (comedian) Phil Silvers]
[Music by Jimmy Van Heusen]

If I don't see her each day I miss her
Gee, what a thrill each time I kiss her
I've got a terrible case
On Nancy with the laughin' face

She takes the winter and makes it summer
But summer could take some lessons from her
Picture a tomboy in lace
That's Nancy with the laughin' face

Have you ever heard mission bells ringin'
Well, she'll give you the very same glow
When she speaks you would think it was singin'
Just hear her say, hello

I swear to goodness you can't resist her
Sorry for you, she has no sister
No angel could replace
Nancy with the laughin' face

---- Instrumental Interlude ----

Keep Betty Grable, Lamour, and Turner
She makes my heart a charcoal burner
It's heaven when I embrace
My Nancy with the laughin' face
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Thu 21 Jul, 2005 04:57 am
Hey, Texas. Strange, I always thought that Sinatra did that for his Nancy, but then I've thought a lot of things in the past that did not pan out. I even thought that Bobby Darin was married to Nancy.

See what we get when we listen to our siblings, folks?

Interesting article:






Intelligence: What Makes Us Smart?

By Jeanie Lerche Davis
WebMD Medical News Reviewed By Michael Smith, MD


Aug. 10, 2000 -- It's a competitive world out there, and intelligence counts. If kids don't pass preschool admittance tests ... if IQ tests show average results ... if they do lousy on the SATs ... what then? Does it truly affect their success in life? Where does intelligence come from -- and is there really a way to get smarter?


The concept of IQ (intelligence quotient) -- developed about 100 years ago -- has limited use, says Robert J. Sternberg, PhD, a psychologist and researcher at Yale University. "IQ measures just two kinds of abilities ... memory and analytical skills," he tells WebMD. "IQ tests don't measure other kinds of skills that are important in the real world, like creative and practical skills. These skills are really important for success on the job but are not measured on any test. And that's a problem."


Intelligence is indeed a complex trait -- one with a strong genetic component, says David Baron, MSEd, DO, chairman of psychiatry at Temple University School of Medicine. "There's not a specific gene like eye color; it's an interaction of a variety of genes. ... Not all agree to what extent our genes are in control here. You'll see lots of figures, that 60 to 80% of intelligence is genetic. I've never read a study that's convinced me. ... Those figures are not based on the hardest of science."

And, listeners, here is the rest of the story:

http://webcenter.health.webmd.netscape.com/content/article/27/1728_60292.htm
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Thu 21 Jul, 2005 05:18 am
I posted the Sinatra song, because someone named Nancy is very special to me.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Thu 21 Jul, 2005 05:39 am
Ah, edgar. That's dear. We all have special people, right listeners?

I was musing over the fact that everyone on WA2K is special in his own way:

Here's a smaltzy song, but beautiful in its own way:



Everything is beautiful
in it's own way
like a starry summer night
on a snow covered winter's day
And everybody's beautiful
In his own way
Under god's heaven
The world's gonna find a way

There is none so blind
As he who will not see
We must not close our minds
We must let our thoughts be free

Every hour that passes by
You know the world gets a little bit older
It's time to realize
That people lie
in the eyes of the beholder

Everything is beautiful

We shouldn't care about the length of his hair
Of the color of his skin
Don't worry about what shows from without
But the love that lives within

We're gonna get old again now
Everything is gonna work out fine
Just take a little time to the calm good side my friend
And think it out in your mind
Everything is beautiful.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Thu 21 Jul, 2005 06:04 am
Here's a serendipity item, folks:



Unearthed Dumas novel a bestseller 130 years late By Jon Boyle
Wed Jul 20, 8:41 AM ET



PARIS (Reuters) - An unassuming retired lecturer is behind the French literary sensation of the summer, having rescued the forgotten last novel of the 19th century epic novelist Alexandre Dumas from the dustbin of history.


Claude Schopp, who has devoted 30 years to the study of every aspect of the author's flamboyant life, stumbled across a first clue to the existence of a lost work in the late 1980s.

The discovery in the national archives of a handwritten letter by Dumas set Schopp off on a paper trail of clues worthy of the "Da Vinci Code."

The letter concerned the historical accuracy of an account Dumas wrote of the lavish spending on clothes, jewelry and perfumes by Josephine Beauharnais, the first wife of French emperor Napoleon Bonaparte.

After a five-month hunt Schopp traced the source of the controversy to a defunct 19th century journal, "The Universal Monitor." But as he spooled through the microfilm he discovered not a letter or opinion piece, but an epic novel.

"For nine months, the readers of the Monitor had found a serial by Dumas every morning at the bottom of the front page. It was astonishing. It was as if I'd discovered a gold mine, or an oasis in a desert, something fabulous," Schopp said.

The novel, which Schopp gave the title "Le Chevalier de Sainte-Hermine," charts the life of a dashing young nobleman, Hector de Sainte-Hermine, whose father and brothers all die by guillotine or firing squad in an heroic fight for the restoration of the monarchy and the fall of the republic.

Comfortably installed in the Top 10 bestsellers list, the print run should hit 100,000 by October, Schopp said.

"It was a divine surprise for me," said the 61-year-old. "I don't know if it's due to the media coverage or a desire for a more innocent literature, a return to the narrative."

MISSING LINK

An important novel rather than a great one like the "Count of Monte Cristo" or the "Three Musketeers," "Sainte-Hermine" started out as an attempt by Dumas to fill a gap in his overall output.

"Dumas' idea was to tell the country's history in fictionalized form to people who didn't know it," Schopp said. "Another goal was to explain ... the French Revolution. Why this revolution was so hard, so cruel, so terrible."

Dumas' impossibly ambitious literary project aimed to cover the period from the Middle Ages to his own lifetime.

But "Sainte-Hermine" only takes readers from 1801 to 1806, leaving a gap of 10 years before the period featured in the popular "Count of Monte Cristo," set in post-Waterloo France after the restoration of the monarchy.

Not content with shepherding "Sainte-Hermine" into book form 130 years after it first entertained French readers, Schopp has embarked on an even more ambitious task -- writing the sequel.

Schopp owns Dumas's very own "road map" for the new novel, a friend having snapped it up for him at a Paris auction house.

Written in Dumas' own hand, it lays out the entire plot of "Sainte-Hermine" but shows the original work was intended to be as monumental as a Napoleonic campaign.

Although Dumas died part way through the project, he originally planned for "Sainte-Hermine" to include Napoleon's ill-fated Russian campaign, the disastrous retreat of the Grande Armee from Moscow in 1812 and end with Bonaparte's last stand at Waterloo.

"From the outset, when I saw the work was unfinished, I said to myself Dumas was telling me: 'I had ghost writers. You will be my last ghost writer. I'll give you the plan'," Schopp said. Dumas wrote some of his best-known works with Auguste Maquet.

TWIST OF FATE

The working title of the Schopp-penned sequel -- set to run to another 800-1,000 pages and earmarked for publication next June -- is "Le Salut de l'Empire" (The Empire's Salvation) but Schopp said that would very likely change.

"It's an amusing adventure. Of course I won't be able to avoid pastiche to an extent. We don't write in 2005 in the same way Dumas wrote in 1869. But it will be a pastiche that I hope will be very respectful."

Wracked by an illness he knew would be his last, Dumas' failure to complete "Sainte-Hermine" precluded its publication in book form.

His death on Dec. 5, 1870, the occupation of France following its calamitous defeat in the 1870-1871 war with Prussia and a shift in literary tastes away from romanticism toward realism also had a hand in it.

It took Schopp's chance dip into a card index while waiting for an unrelated document at the national archives, to rescue the work from literary oblivion.

"I think a form of luck was needed, and that's what I had. At the same time, you create your own luck. I think it was a small reward for having worked so hard," said Schopp.

"I searched for a long time without finding anything sometimes. And this time, I found something without really looking very hard."

Speaking of which, where is Francis? I declare, folks, these globe trotters are difficult to trace, no? <smile>
0 Replies
 
Raggedyaggie
 
  1  
Reply Thu 21 Jul, 2005 08:00 am
Good Day to all.

Birthday time:

1414 - Pope Sixtus IV (d. 1484)
1620 - Jean Picard, French astronomer (d. 1682)
1664 - Matthew Prior, English poet and diplomat (d. 1721)
1810 - Henri Victor Regnault, French chemist and physicist (d. 1878)
1858 - Lovis Corinth, German painter and graphic artist (d. 1925)
1870 - Emil Orlik, Czech painter and graphic artist (d. 1932)
1893 - Hans Fallada, German writer (d. 1947)
1899 - Hart Crane, American poet (d. 1932)
1899 - Ernest Hemingway, American author (d. 1961)
1903 - Roy Neuberger, American financier and art collector
1911 - Marshall McLuhan, Canadian author (d. 1980)
1920 - Isaac Stern, Ukrainian violinist (d. 2001)
1922 - Kay Starr, American jazz and popular singer
1924 - Don Knotts, American actor
1925 - Anne Meacham, actress
1926 - Norman Jewison, Canadian film director
1932 - Ernie Warlick, American football player
1933 - John Gardner, American author (d. 1982)
1935 - Norbert Blüm, German politician
1938 - Janet Reno, United States Attorney General
1941 - Martin Bandier, music publisher
1943 - Edward Herrmann, actor
1944 - Tony Scott, film director
1944 - Paul Wellstone, U.S. Senator from Minnesota (d. 2002)
1946 - Kenneth Starr, American lawyer and former judge
1948 - Ed Hinton, sportswriter
1948 - Cat Stevens, English singer
1948 - Garry Trudeau, American cartoonist
1951 - Robin Williams, American comedian
1957 - Jon Lovitz, American comedian
1960 - Lance Guest, American actor
1968 - Brandi Chastain, American soccer player
1968 - Lyle Odelein, hockey player
1978 - Josh Hartnett, actor
1979 - David Carr, American football player
1983 - Kellen Winslow Jr., American football player
1983 - Eivør Pálsdóttir, Faroese singer and composer
1982 - RamaKrishna Gande, Hyderabadi survey analyst

http://www.ruggedelegantliving.com/a/images/1.16.2005.Robin.Williams.jpg




And for Kay Starr:

Put another nickel in
In the Nickelodeon
All I want is loving you
and Music, Music, Music.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Thu 21 Jul, 2005 08:09 am
Thanks, Raggedy. I knew that I could trust you to update our celebs.

Dear Robin Williams. What a talented man. Still think The Bird Cage was one of his greatest movies.

Hart Crane:

Forgetfulness

Forgetfulness is like a song
That, freed from beat and measure, wanders.
Forgetfulness is like a bird whose wings are reconciled,
Outspread and motionless, --
A bird that coasts the wind unwearyingly.

Forgetfulness is rain at night,
Or an old house in a forest, -- or a child.
Forgetfulness is white, -- white as a blasted tree,
And it may stun the sybil into prophecy,
Or bury the Gods.

I can remember much forgetfulness.

Teach me how to forget, listeners.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Thu 21 Jul, 2005 08:35 am
Again?

LONDON (AP) - Two weeks after suicide attacks on subway stations and a bus, police said explosions occurred at three subway stations and on a double-decker bus Thursday.

Only one person was reported wounded, but the explosions during the lunch hour caused major disruption in the city and were hauntingly similar to the July 7 bombings in which 52 people and four suicide attackers were killed.

The London police commissioner confirmed Thursday that four explosions took place in what he described as "serious incidents."

"We've had four explosions_ four attempts at explosions," Metropolitan Police Commissioner Ian Blair said outside police headquarters at Scotland Yard.

"At the moment the casualty numbers appear to be very low ... the bombs appear to be smaller" than the July 7 blasts.

Sky News TV reported that police said no chemical agents were involved in the explosions.

Police also said an armed police unit had entered University College hospital. Press Association, the British news agency, said they arrived shortly after an injured person was carried in.

Police in chemical protection suits were seen preparing to enter the Warren Street Underground station. Unspecified incidents also were reported at the Shepherds Bush and Oval stations.

I hope our Brits are all right.
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Thu 21 Jul, 2005 05:40 pm
I'll Get By (As Long As I Have You) Harry James

[Words by Roy Turk]
[Music by Fred E Ahlert]

I'll get by as long as I have you
Though there be rain and darkness too
I'll not complain
I'll see it through
Though I may be far away
It's true
Say, what care I
Dear, I'll get by
As long as I have you
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Thu 21 Jul, 2005 06:02 pm
ah, listeners, there is my good friend edgar with words of hope. I hummed that melody right along with the lyrics, Texas.

and to complement your song:


(Richard Rodgers/Lorentz Hart)

I didn't know what time it was
Then I met you
Oh, what a lovely time it was
How sublime it was, too

I didn't know what day it was
You held my hand
Warm like the month of May it was
And I'll say it was grand

Grand to be alive, to be young
To be mad, to be yours alone
Grand to see your face, feel your touch
Hear your voice say I'm all your own





I didn't know what year it was
Life was no prize
I wanted love and here it was
Shining out of your eyes
I'm wise and I know what time it is now
Time it is now
Time it is now

I didn't know what year it was
Life was no prize
I wanted love and here it was
Shining out of your eyes
I'm wise and I know what time it is now
Time it is now
Time it is now
What time is it?
Time it is now
Anybody know what time it is?

I would like to dedicate that song to my baby moorhens who have survived against all odds. This is going to sound silly, folks, but when I saw one of the little things, no bigger than a leaf, trying to make its way to my pond, I went over to mamma and pointed in the baby's direction. I swear she understood, and hustled the little thing right into the water and among the vegetation.
0 Replies
 
djjd62
 
  1  
Reply Thu 21 Jul, 2005 06:21 pm
Till There was You
The Beatles

There were bells on a hill
But I never heard them ringing
No I never heard them at all
Till there was you

There were birds in the sky
But I never saw them winging
No I never saw them at all
Till there was you

Then there was music and wonderful roses
They tell me in sweet fragrant meadows of dawn and dew

There was love all around
But I never heard it singing
No I never heard it at all
Till there was you

Then there was music and wonderful roses
They tell me in sweet fragrant meadows of dawn and dew

There was love all around
But I never heard it singing
No I never heard it at all
Till there was you

Till there was you
0 Replies
 
 

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WA2K Radio is now on the air, Part 3 - Discussion by edgarblythe
 
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