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WA2K Radio is now on the air

 
 
djjd62
 
  1  
Reply Mon 26 Dec, 2005 09:13 pm
bobby vinton had this to say about kisses

Sealed With A Kiss

Though we gotta say goodbye for the summer
Baby, I promise you this
I'll send you all my love
Every day in a letter
Sealed with a kiss
Yes, it's gonna be a cold lonely summer
But I'll fill the emptiness
I'll send you all my dreams
Every day in a letter
Sealed with a kiss

I'll see you in the sunlight
I'll hear your voice everywhere
I'll run to tenderly hold you
But baby, you won't be there

I don't wanna say goodbye for the summer
Knowing the love we'll miss
So let us make a pledge
To meet in September
And seal it with a kiss

[Instrumental Interlude]

Yes, it's gonna be a cold lonely summer
But I'll fill the emptiness
I'll send you all my love
Every day in a letter
Sealed with a kiss

Sealed with a kiss
Sealed with a kiss
0 Replies
 
NickFun
 
  1  
Reply Mon 26 Dec, 2005 09:42 pm
That was an old song when I was a kid but it pulled the heart strings.
0 Replies
 
McTag
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Dec, 2005 01:47 am
"To let luck and the New Year in".
I like that.
Thanks, Hamburger.
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Dec, 2005 03:07 am
Louis Pasteur
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

French microbiologist and chemist
Born December 27, 1822
Dole, Jura, France
Died September 28, 1895
Saint-Cloud, Hauts-de-Seine, France

Louis Pasteur (December 27, 1822 - September 28, 1895) was a French microbiologist, chemist and humanist. He is known most famously for his demonstrations supporting the germ theory of disease and his vaccinations, most notably the first vaccine against rabies. However, he also made many discoveries in the field of chemistry, most notably the assymetry of crystals.


Work on chirality and the polarization of light

In Pasteur's early works as a chemist, he resolved a problem concerning the nature of tartaric acid (1849). A solution of this compound derived from living things (specifically, wine lees) rotated the plane of polarization of light passing through it. The mystery was that tartaric acid, derived by chemical synthesis, had no such effect, even though its reactions were identical and its elemental composition was the same.


Upon examination of the tiny crystals of tartaric acid, Pasteur noticed, the crystals came in two asymmetric forms that were mirror images of one another. Tediously sorting the crystals by hand gave two forms of tartaric acid: solutions of one form rotated polarised light clockwise, while the other form rotated light counterclockwise. An equal mix of the two had no polarizing effect on light. Pasteur correctly deduced the tartaric acid molecule was asymmetric and could exist in two different forms that resemble one another as would left- and right-hand gloves. As the first demonstration of chiral molecules, it was quite an achievement, but Pasteur then went on to his more famous work in the field of biology/medicine.

Pasteur's doctoral thesis on crystallography garnered him a position of professor of chemistry at the Faculté (College) of Strasbourg.

In 1854, he was named Dean of the new College of Science in Lille. In 1856, he was made administrator and director of scientific studies of the École Normale Supérieure.


Germ theory

Louis Pasteur demonstrated that the fermentation process is caused by the growth of microorganisms, and that the growth of microorganisms in nutrient broths is not due to spontaneous generation.


He exposed boiled broths to air in vessels that contained a filter to prevent all particles from passing through to the growth medium, and even in vessels with no filter at all, with air being admitted via a long tortuous tube that would not allow dust particles to pass. Nothing grew in the broths; therefore, the living organisms that grew in such broths came from outside, as spores on dust, rather than spontaneously generated within the broth. Thus, Pasteur dealt the death blow to the theory of spontaneous generation and supported germ theory.

While Pasteur did not develop germ theory (Girolamo Fracastoro, Friedrich Henle and others had suggested it earlier), he conducted experiments that clearly indicated its correctness and managed to convince most of Europe it was true.


Pasteur's research also showed that some microorganisms contaminated fermenting beverages. With this established, he invented a process in which liquids such as milk were heated to kill all bacteria and molds already present within them. He and Claude Bernard completed the first test on April 20, 1862. This process was soon afterwards known as pasteurization.

Beverage contamination led Pasteur to conclude that microorganisms infected animals and humans as well. He proposed preventing the entry of microorganisms into the human body, leading Joseph Lister to develop antiseptic methods in surgery.

In 1865, two parasitic diseases called pébrine and flacherie were killing great numbers of silkworms. Pasteur worked several years proving it was a microbe attacking silkworm eggs which caused the disease, and that eliminating this microbe within silkworm nurseries would eradicate the disease.

Pasteur also discovered anaerobiosis, whereby some microorganisms can develop and live without air or oxygen.


Immunology

Pasteur's later work on diseases included work on chicken cholera. During this work, a culture of the responsible bacteria had spoiled and failed to induce the disease in some chickens he was infecting with the disease. Upon reusing these healthy chickens, Pasteur discovered that he could not infect them, even with fresh bacteria; the weakened bacteria had caused the chickens to become immune to the disease, although they had not actually caused the disease.

This discovery was an accident. His assistant Charles Chamberland had been instructed to inoculate the chickens after Pasteur went on holiday. Chamberland failed to do this, but instead went on holiday himself. On his return, the month old cultures made the chickens unwell, but instead of the infection being fatal, as usual, the chickens recovered completely. Chamberland assumed an error had been made, and wanted to discard the apparently faulty culture out when Pasteur stopped him. Pasteur guessed the recovered animals now might be immune to the disease, as were the animals at Eure-et-Loir that had recovered from anthrax.

In the 1870s, he applied this immunization method to anthrax, which affected cattle, and aroused interest in combating other diseases.


Pasteur publically claimed he had made the anthrax vaccine by exposing the bacilus to oxygen. His laboratory notebooks, now in the Bibliotheque Nationale in Paris, in fact show Pasteur used the method of rival Jean-Joseph-Henri Toussaint, a Toulouse veterinary surgeon, to create the anthrax vaccine. This method used the oxidizing agent potassium dichromate. Pasteur's oxygen method did eventually produce a vaccine but only after he had been awarded a patent on the production of an anthrax vaccine.

The notion of a weak form of a disease causing immunity to the virulent version was not new; this had been known for a long time for smallpox. Inoculation with smallpox was known to result in far less scarring, and greatly reduced mortality, in comparison to the naturally acquired disease. Edward Jenner had also discovered vaccination, using cowpox to give cross-immunity to smallpox, and by Pasteur's time this had generally replaced the use of actual smallpox material in inoculation. The difference with chicken cholera and anthrax was that the weakened form of the disease organism had been generated artificially, and so a naturally weak form of the disease organism did not need to be found.

This discovery revolutionized work in infectious diseases, and Pasteur gave these artificially weakened diseases the generic name of vaccines, to honour Jenner's discovery. Pasteur produced the first vaccine for rabies by growing the virus in rabbits, and then weakening it by drying the affected nerve tissue.

The rabies vaccine was initially created by Emile Roux, a French doctor and a colleague of Pasteur who had been working with a killed vaccine produced by desiccating the spinal cords of infected rabbits. The vaccine had only been tested on eleven dogs before its first human trial.

This vaccine was first used on 9-year old Joseph Meister, on July 6, 1885, after the boy was badly mauled by a rabid dog. This was done at some personal risk for Pasteur, since he was not a licensed physician and could have faced prosecution for treating the boy. Fortunately, the treatment proved to be a spectacular success, with Meister avoiding the disease; thus, Pasteur was hailed as a hero and the legal matter was not pursued. The treatment's success laid the foundations for the manufacture of many other vaccines. The first of the Pasteur Institutes was also built on the basis of this achievement.

Honors and final days

Pasteur won the Leeuwenhoek medal, microbiology's highest honor, in 1895.

He died in 1895, near Paris, from complications caused by a series of strokes that had begun plaguing him as far back as 1868. He was buried in the Cathedral of Notre Dame, but his remains were soon placed in a crypt in the Institut Pasteur, Paris.

Legacy

Pasteur's method of immunization was effective and was employed by many other physicians, eventually leading to the eradication of typhus and polio as threats. Pasteurization led to the elimination of contaminated milk and other drinks as sources of disease. In fact, Pasteur inaugurated the modern age of medicine, leading to an increase in the human life span and a surprising population explosion. Accordingly, he has been hailed as the "Father of Medicine" and a "Benefactor of Humanity." Craters on Mars and the Moon are named in his honor. In popular culture, Pasteur is the eponymous French scientist, his name appearing in science fiction shows like Star Trek. A biographical film of his life has also been made, entitled The Story of Louis Pasteur.


Miscellaneous facts

One of the few streets in Saigon, Vietnam that has not been renamed since colonial times is named in honor of Pasteur.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Pasteur
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Dec, 2005 03:17 am
Sydney Greenstreet
Actor
Birth Dec 27, 1879 - Sandwich, England, UK
Death Jan 18, 1954
Occupation Actor
Years Active 40s
Countries USA
Genres Drama, Romance, War, Thriller, Mystery

Sydney Greenstreet ranked among Hollywood's consummate character actors, a classic rogue whose villainous turns in motion pictures like Casablanca and The Maltese Falcon remain among the most memorable and enigmatic depictions of evil ever captured on film. Born December 27, 1879, in Sandwich, England, Greenstreet's initial ambition was to make his fortune as a tea planter, and toward that aim he moved to Sri Lanka at the age of 18. A drought left him penniless, however, and he soon returned to England, where he worked a variety of odd jobs while studying acting in the evening under Ben Greet. In 1902, he made his theatrical debut portraying a murderer in Sherlock Holmes, and two years later he traveled with Greet to the United States. After making his Broadway debut in Everyman, Greenstreet's American residency continued for the rest of his life.

Greenstreet remained exclusively a theatrical performer for over three decades. He shifted easily from musical comedy to Shakespeare, and in 1933 he joined the Lunts in Idiot's Delight, performing with their Theatre Guild for the duration of the decade. While appearing in Los Angeles in a touring production of There Shall Be No Night in 1940, Greenstreet met John Huston, who requested he play the ruthless Guttman in his 1941 film adaptation of Dashiell Hammett's The Maltese Falcon. A heavy, imposing man, Greenstreet was perfectly cast as the massive yet strangely effete Guttman, a dignified dandy who was in truth the very essence of malevolence. Making his film debut at the age of 62, he appeared alongside the two actors with whom he would be forever connected, star Humphrey Bogart and fellow character actor Peter Lorre.

The acclaim afforded Greenstreet for The Maltese Falcon earned him a long-term contract with Warner Bros., where, after appearing in They Died With Their Boots On, he again played opposite Bogart in 1942's Across the Pacific. In 1942, he appeared briefly in Casablanca, another reunion with Bogart as well as Lorre. When Greenstreet and Lorre again reteamed in 1943's Background in Danger, their fate was sealed, and they appeared together numerous other times including 1944's Passage to Marseilles (again with Bogart), The Mask of Dimitrios, The Conspirators, and Hollywood Canteen, in which they portrayed themselves. Yearning to play comedy, Greenstreet got his wish in 1945's Pillow to Post, which cast him alongside Ida Lupino. He also appeared opposite Bogart again in the drama Conflict and with Barbara Stanwyck in Christmas in Connecticut. In 1952, he announced his retirement, and died two years later on January 18, 1954. -- Jason Ankeny

http://www.allmovie.com/cg/avg.dll?p=avg&sql=B28591
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Dec, 2005 03:21 am
Marlene Dietrich
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.


Marie Magdalene "Marlene" Dietrich (December 27, 1901 - May 6, 1992) also known as Maria Magdalena Dietrich was a German actress, entertainer and singer.


Early life

Born in Berlin-Schöneberg, Germany to Louis Erich Otto Dietrich and Wilhelmina Elisabeth Josephine Felsing, Marlene Dietrich played the violin before joining Max Reinhardt's acting school in 1921, making her official film debut two years later (although historians persist that Dietrich actually appeared as an extra in a 1919 German film). After acting in only German movies at first (while also dancing as a chorus girl in cabarets and in stage plays such as the original staging of Kurt Weill's Threepenny Opera in 1928), she got her first role in the 1st European talking picture, The Blue Angel (1930), directed by Josef von Sternberg.


Hollywood

She then moved to Hollywood to make Morocco, for which she received her only Oscar nomination. Her most lasting contribution to film history was as the star in several films directed by von Sternberg in the pre-Code early 1930s, such as The Scarlet Empress and Shanghai Express, in which she played "femme fatales". She gradually broadened her repertoire in Destry Rides Again, A Foreign Affair, Witness for the Prosecution, Touch of Evil and Judgment at Nuremberg.


The singer

Dietrich sang in several of her films (most famously in von Sternberg's The Blue Angel, in which she sings "Falling In Love Again"("Ich bin von Kopf bis Fuss auf Liebe eingestellt"), having made records in Germany in the 1920s. Following a slowdown in her film career, she made a number of records first for Decca, Elektrola, EMI, and for Columbia. Her distinctive voice was later satirized, by Lotte Lenya, in the song Lieder by cult British trio Fascinating Aïda. Madeline Kahn did the same in the Mel Brooks classic Blazing Saddles.


1930s and World War II

Dietrich became an American citizen in 1937, raised a record number of war bonds and entertained American troops during the Second World War. Dietrich was known to have a strong set of political convictions and a mind to speak them. She was a staunch anti-Nazi who despised Germany's anti-Semitic policies of the time. Her singing helped on the homefront of the U.S.A too, as she recorded a number of anti-Nazi records in German for the OSS, including Lili Marleen, a curious example of a song transcending the hatreds of war. She also played the musical saw to entertain troops. She sang for the Allied troops on the front lines in Algiers, France and into Germany with Generals James M. Gavin and George S. Patton.When asked why she had done this, in spite of the obvious danger of being within a few kilometers of German lines, she famously replied "aus Anstand" - "it was the decent thing to do".

Personal life

Unlike her professional celebrity, which was carefully crafted and maintained, Dietrich's personal life was kept out of public view. She married once, to director's assistant Rudolf Sieber, a Roman Catholic who later became a director at Paramount Pictures in France. Her only child, Maria Sieber (married name Maria Riva), was born on December 13, 1924. When Maria Riva gave birth to a son in 1948, Dietrich was dubbed "the world's most glamorous grandmother." The great love of the actress's life, however, was the French actor and military hero Jean Gabin. As for her husband, he had a tragically unstable longterm mistress who looked a bit like and eventually believed herself to be Dietrich.

In addition, she had several affairs with women: Mercedes de Acosta, Claudette Colbert, and allegedly Greta Garbo were among her lovers, as well as with many men. Yet, she is said to have never liked sex.

Despite all of this, she was reportedly offered a king's ransom to return to Germany, due to her immense popularity as well as Hitler's ardour, which she declined. It is true that she quipped that she would return only when one of her Jewish friends (possibly Max Reinhardt) could accompany her.


Stage and Cabaret

From the 1950s to the mid-1970s Dietrich toured internationally as a successful cabaret performer. Her repertoire included songs from her films as well as popular songs of the day. Until the mid-1960s her musical director was famed composer Burt Bacharach. His arrangements helped to disguise Dietrich's limited vocal range and allowed her to perform her songs to maximum dramatic effect. Spectacular costumes (by Jean Louis), body-sculpting rubber undergarments, careful stage lighting, and, reportedly, gruesome mini-facelifts (achieved by weaving her hair into tight braids, pinning them tightly to her scalp with surgical needles, and then topping it all with sexy wigs) helped to preserve Dietrich's glamorous image well into old age. In 1968 she received a Tony Award for her stage show. In 1973 her stage show was broadcast on television.


Final Years

Her show business career largely ended in 1974, when she broke her leg during a stage performance. She appeared briefly in the film, Just a Gigolo, in 1979, and wrote and contributed to several books during the 1980s. She spent her last decade mostly bed-ridden, in her apartment on the avenue Montaigne in Paris, during which time she was not seen in public but was a prolific letter-writer and phone-caller. Maximilian Schell persuaded Dietrich to be interviewed for his 1984 documentary Marlene, but she did not appear on screen. She was somewhat estranged from her daughter, but got on well with her grandson, Peter Riva. Her own husband, Rudolf Sieber, had died of cancer on June 24, 1976.

In an interview with the German magazine Der Spiegel in November 2005, her daughter and grandson claim that Marlene Dietrich was politically "active" during these years. She would keep contact with world leaders by telephone, running up a monthly bill of over 3,000 US dollars. Her contacts included Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev, though whether she had any influence on them, is unknown.

Dietrich died peacefully on May 6, 1992 at the age of 90 in Paris, France. A service was conducted at La Madeleine in Paris before 3,500 mourners and a crowd of well-wishers outside. Her body, covered with an American flag, was then returned to Berlin where she was interred in her birthplace at the Städtischen Friedhof III, Berlin-Schöneberg, Stubenrauchstraße 43-45, in Friedenau Cemetery.

In 1994 her memorabilia were sold to the Stiftung Deutsche Kinemathek (after US institutions showed no interest) where it became the core of the exhibition[1] at the Sony Center on Potsdamer Platz, Berlin, Germany.

Her place in Hollywood


Dietrich never integrated into the Hollywood entertainment industry, being always an outsider for mainstream America. Her heavy German accent gave an extra touch to her performance but made her look "foreign" in the eyes of Americans.

Dietrich was a fashion icon to the top designers as well as a screen icon whom later stars would follow. Her public image and some of her movies included strong sexual undertones, including bisexuality.
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Dec, 2005 03:40 am
Oscar Levant
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.


Oscar Levant (December 27, 1906 - August 14, 1972) was an American pianist, composer, author, comedian, and an actor, better known for his mordant character and witticisms, on the radio and in movies and television, than his music.

Life

Born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, into a musical and Orthodox Russian Jewish family, Levant moved to New York with his mother, Annie, in 1922 after the death of his father, Max. He began studying under Zygmunt Stojowski, a well-established piano pedagogue.

In 1928 Levant traveled to Hollywood where his career turned for the better. During his stay, he met and befriended George Gershwin. In just twenty years, 1929-1948, he would go on to compose the music for more than twenty movies.

Around 1932 Levant began composing on a serious note. This led to a request by Aaron Copland to play at the Yaddo Festival of contemporary American music on April 30 of that year. Successful, Levant began on a new orchestral work, Sinfonietta. He was also married and divorced to actress Barbara Woodell in 1932.

In 1939, Levant got married for the second time to singer and actress June Gale (Gilmartin), part of the singing foursome, The Gale Sisters (besides June, there was Jane, Joan, and Jean). They were married for almost 33 years, until his death, and had three children, Marcia, Lorna, and Amanda.

During the years of 1958-1960, Levant hosted a television talk show on KCOP-TV in Los Angeles, The Oscar Levant Show, which later became syndicated. It featured his piano playing along with monologues and interviews with top-name guests such as Fred Astaire. The show was highly controversial, finally being taken from the air after a comment about Marilyn Monroe: "Now that Marilyn Monroe is kosher, Arthur Miller can eat her." He later stated that he "hadn't meant it that way." Several months later, the show began to be broadcast in a slightly revised format; now it was taped in order to provide a buffer for Levant's antics. This, however, failed to prevent Levant from making comments about Mae West's sex life that caused the show to be canceled for good.

The 1920s and 1930s wit Alexander Woollcott once said about Levant: "There's absolutely nothing wrong with Oscar Levant that a miracle can't fix."

Levant was a member of the Algonquin Round Table, an informal conclave of New York wits and writers; other members were Dorothy Parker, Robert Benchley and Woollcott. Much later Levant was also a frequent guest on Jack Paar's talk show.

Open about his neuroses and a notorious hypochondriac, Levant was also in his later life addicted to prescription drugs and was frequently committed to mental hospitals by his wife, June Gale. Despite his afflictions, Levant was considered a genius, by some, in many areas ("There's a fine line between genius and insanity. I have erased this line."). His playing of the Tchaikovsky and Anton Rubinstein piano concerti, as well as Gershwin, is a testimony to his talents.

Levant drew increasingly away from the limelight in his later years. Upon his death in Beverly Hills, California, of a heart attack at the age of 65, he was interred in the Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery in Los Angeles, California. In their routines other comics have claimed, apocryphally, that that hypochondriac Levant's epitaph was inscribed, "I told them I was ill."

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


Movie: Band Wagon

Song: Sweet Music

Sung by Nanette Fabray and Oscar Levant

Nanette :
You are nothing but a good for nothing
All you do is sit in the house all day
We haven't got a cent
And we can't pay the rent.
And you sit there with that old box
And play away...

Oscar :
You don't have to stew about it, sister.
Our poverty will soon depart
When I develop my art

Nanette :
Keep playin' your music box
Keep on playin' your music box
Sweet music to worry the wolf away.
So happy will we appear
He will know he's not wanted here
Your music could worry a wolf away.
So keep on playin' that grand pian-a
Until he's away
He'll have to go if you
Bang those keys away.
Oh, honey, but we will grin
When the money comes rolling in
Sweet music to worry the wolf away.

Oscar :
When I remind you what --- made his fiddle do,
You'll get an inkling of what this kid'll do.

Nanette :
Well, I want to tell you my friend that
You just radiate
When you run your fingers up and down
That eighty-eight.

Both :
We'll sleep on our wedding cake
We'll be two who can really make
Sweet music!
Opera music!
Hot music!

Oscar : Crazy music!
Nanette : Lazy music!
Oscar : Hipster music!
Nanette : Stripster music!
Nanette : Blue music!
Oscar : Low-down music!
Nanette : New music!
Oscar : Hold-down music!

Nanette : Glad music!
Oscar : Pretty music!
Nanette : Mad music!
Oscar : Dirty music!

Sweet music forever more!
To worry (--2--)
To make him go out and worry
To worry the wolf from our door.
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Dec, 2005 03:45 am
Gérard Depardieu
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Gérard Xavier Marcel Depardieu (born December 27, 1948 is a French actor.

He was born in Châteauroux, Centre, France, the son of a sheet metal worker. His acting career started in the 1970s and by the early 1980s, he was one of the leading French actors gaining much attention for his role opposite Fanny Ardant in François Truffaut's film La Femme d'à côté (The Woman Next Door), and winning his first César Award for Best Actor for his role in Le Dernier métro.

He also starred in Le Retour de Martin Guerre in 1982.

In the 1990s he achieved some fame in North America too. His most significant English-language productions are Green Card with Andie MacDowell and 1492: Conquest of Paradise.

He first married Élisabeth Depardieu, with whom he has two children: Guillaume and Julie.

He later had an affair with fellow actress Carole Bouquet, from 1997 to 2004.

Depardieu is the highest-paid actor in France, and one of the most powerful within the French film industry. In addition to the nearly 150 motion-pictures he has appeared in, he has also directed and/or produced several major films through his company, "DD Productions."

On September 15, 2005, he released a cookbook entitled Gérard Depardieu: My Cookbook. On October 31, 2005 he announced his intention to retire from acting upon completetion of his current film.




Awards

He has been nominated a record-setting 14 times for the César Award as Best Actor. After his first win in 1981, he won a second time in 1991 for Cyrano de Bergerac for which he was also nominated for the 1990 Academy Award for Best Actor. In addition he also earned the following:

* 1985: Best Actor Award: Venice Film Festival for his role in Police
* 1990: Best Actor Award: Cannes Film Festival for his role in Camille Claudel
* 1991: winner Golden Globe Award for Best Actor for his role in Green Card
* 1997: Lion d'or: Venice Film Festival



Selected filmography



* Crime Spree (2003)
* Vidocq (2001)
* CQ (2001)
* 102 Dalmatians (2000)
* Les Misérables (2000) (TV) (co-produced by Depardieu)
* Vatel (2000)
* The Man in the Iron Mask (1998)
* Hamlet (1996)
* Élisa (1995)
* My Father the Hero (1994)
* Germinal (1993)
* 1492: Conquest of Paradise (1992)
* Green Card (1990)
* Uranus (1990)
* Cyrano de Bergerac (1990)
* Camille Claudel (1988)
* Jean de Florette (1986)
* Une femme ou deux (1985)
* Le Retour de Martin Guerre (1982)
* Mon oncle d'Amérique (1980)
* 1900 (1976)
* Maîtresse (1973)
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Dec, 2005 07:59 am
Good morning, WA2K radio fans and contributors.

hamburger, I missed your comment on the etymology of boxing day. McTag is right. That's a beautiful explanation.

dj, I'm trying to recall Bobby Vinton. Did he do Blue Velvet?

Hey, bio Bob. Thanks for all the background about famous folks. I need to review them more carefully, Boston, but I was surprised at some of the allusions to Dietrich.

Unfortunately, I don't think that I ever saw one single thing in which Depardieu starred. Cyrano, of course, was required reading in college.

Back later, listeners, with a dedication song.
0 Replies
 
Raggedyaggie
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Dec, 2005 07:59 am
Good Morning WA2K.

Remembering:

http://www.nndb.com/people/395/000044263/greenstreet1.jpeghttp://www.amrep.org/images/articles/1_1/marlene.jpg
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Dec, 2005 08:24 am
Well, there's our Raggedy with photos. Thanks PA. Sidney and Marlene make an unlikely twosome, no?

And here, listeners, is a dedication song for the day:


Just the Way You Are
Billy Joel

Don't go changing, to try and please me
You never let me down before
Don't imagine you're too familiar
And I don't see you anymore
I wouldn't leave you in times of trouble
We never could have come this far
I took the good times, I'll take the bad times
I'll take you just the way you are

Don't go trying some new fashion
Don't change the color of your hair
You always have my unspoken passion
Although I might not seem to care

I don't want clever conversation
I never want to work that hard
I just want someone that I can talk to
I want you just the way you are.

I need to know that you will always be
The same old someone that I knew
What will it take till you believe in me
The way that I believe in you.

I said I love you and that's forever
And this I promise from the heart
I could not love you any better
I love you just the way you are.

Hmmm. Where is our turtle man?
0 Replies
 
Diane
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Dec, 2005 10:40 am
Hi all, it's good to see WA2K still going strong. I've been busy and was in one of my 'tired of a2k' moods and it's good to be back.

DJJJD, I loved your song about the brown ice of Boston. That is what most large cities look like after pollution and car fumes turn the pristine snow a sludgy brown. Ugh.

Here's a wonderful quote about champagne, my favorite beverage in the world.

"Pop open a bottle of champagne and pour yourself a glass. Take a
sip.
The elegant surface fizz -- a boiling fumarole of rising and
collapsing
bubbles -- launches thousands of golden droplets into the air,
conveying
the wine's enticing flavors and aromas to tongue and nostrils
alike."
Gerard Liger-Belair; The Science of Bubbly; Scientific American (New
York);
Jan 2003.

Hope you all had a lovely Christmas.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Dec, 2005 10:51 am
Welcome back, Diane. Yes, my dear, champagne is delightful but it can be treacherous, no?





Sugarcult - Champagne Lyrics



.
All I can taste is champagne
When it hits the brain like cocaine
Spinning around and around
We can't make up without your help
I'm falling down

All I can taste is champagne
Another day down the drain
Sleeping around and around
We can't make up without your help
It's over now

You want it
You need it
You can't explain it
You fight it
You feed it
You can and I can live without you
I'm moving on without you

Love is like Novocaine
And it leaves a little stain
The beauty in all this pain is I can't get away from you
So pull me down and don't make a sound

You want it
You need it
You can't explain it
You fight it
You feed it
You can and I can live without you
I'm moving on without you

All I can taste is champagne
Dancing away down my veins
Spinning around and around
We can't make up without your help
I'm on the ground

Somebody help me
I'm losing everything when I'm without you
Doing it without you

All I can taste is champagne
Another day down the drain
All I can taste is champagne
0 Replies
 
djjd62
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Dec, 2005 11:25 am
Champagne Supernova
Oasis

How many special people change?
How many lives are living strange?
Where were you while we were getting high?
Slowly walking down the hall
Faster than a cannonball
Where were you while we were getting high?

Someday you will find me
Caught beneath the landslide
In a champagne supernova in the sky
Some day you will find me
Caught beneath the landslide
In a champagne supernova
A champagne supernova in the sky

Wake up the dawn and ask her why
A dreamer dreams she never dies
Wipe that tear away now from your eye
Slowly walking down the hall
Faster than a cannonball
Where were you while we were getting high?

Some day you will find me
Caught beneath the landslide
In a champagne supernova in the sky
Some day you will find me
Caught beneath the landslide
In a champagne supernova
A champagne supernova

'Cause people believe that they're
Gonna get away for the summer
But you and I, we live and die
The world's still spinning round
We don't know why
Why, why, why, why

How many special people change?
How many lives are living strange?
Where were you while we were getting high?
Slowly walking down the hall
Faster than a cannonball
Where were you while we were getting high?

Someday you will find me
Caught beneath the landslide
In a champagne supernova in the sky
Some day you will find me
Caught beneath the landslide
In a champagne supernova
A champagne supernova

'Cause people believe that they're
Gonna get away for the summer
But you and I, we live and die
The world's still spinning round
We don't know why
Why, why, why, why

How many special people change?
How many lives are living strange?
Where were you while we were getting high?
We were getting high
We were getting high
We were getting high
We were getting high
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Dec, 2005 11:50 am
Great, dj. Thanks, again, Canada. It's really nice to play out the theme here on WA2K radio, and sometimes a variation or two.<smile>

Our Mr. Turtle is living it up in Arizona, but he will be back with us ere long, so here is a song for our terrapin:

Let my inspiration flow in token rhyme, suggesting rhythm,
That will not forsake you, till my tale is told and done.
While the firelight's aglow, strange shadows from the flames will grow,
Till things we've never seen will seem familiar.

Shadows of a sailor, forming winds both foul and fair all swarm.
Down in carlisle, he loved a lady many years ago.
Here beside him stands a man, a soldier from the looks of him,
Who came through many fights, but lost at love.

While the story teller speaks, a door within the fire creaks;
Suddenly flies open, and a girl is standing there.
Eyes alight, with glowing hair, all that fancy paints as fair,
She takes her fan and throws it, in the lion's den.

Which of you to gain me, tell, will risk uncertain pains of hell?
I will not forgive you if you will not take the chance.
The sailor gave at least a try, the soldier being much too wise,
Strategy was his strength, and not disaster.

The sailor, coming out again, the lady fairly leapt at him.
That's how it stands today. you decide if he was wise.
The story teller makes no choice. soon you will not hear his voice.
His job is to shed light, and not to master.

Since the end is never told, we pay the teller off in gold,
In hopes he will return, but he cannot be bought or sold.

Terrapin station

Inspiration, move me brightly. light the song with sense and color;
Hold away despair, more than this I will not ask.
Faced with mysteries dark and vast, statements just seem vain at last.
Some rise, some fall, some climb, to get to terrapin.

Counting stars by candlelight, all are dim but one is bright;
The spiral light of venus, rising first and shining best,
On, from the northwest corner, of a brand new crescent moon,
While crickets and cicadas sing, a rare and different tune,
Terrapin station.

In the shadow of the moon, terrapin station.
And I know we'll get there soon, terrapin station.
I can't figure out, terrapin, if it's the end or beginning, terrapin,
But the train's put it's brakes on, terrapin,
And the whistle is screaming, terrapin.

Terrapin station - at the siding

While you were gone, these faces filled with darkness.
The obvious was hidden. with nothing to believe in,

Sullen wings of fortune beat like rain.
You're back in terrapin for good or ill again, for good or ill again.
0 Replies
 
dyslexia
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Dec, 2005 11:59 am
The world is my oyster........
Ha ha ha ha ha........

The animals are winding me up
The jungle call
The jungle call

Who-ha who-ha who-ha who-ha

In Xanadu did Kublai Khan

A pleasuredome erect
Moving on keep moving on-yeah
Moving at one million miles an hour
Using my power
I sent it by the hour
I have it so I'm mocking it
You really can afford it-yeah
Really can afford it

Shooting stars never stop
Even when they reach the top
Shooting stars never stop
Even when they reach the top

[Repeat]

There goes a supernova
What a pushover-yeah
There goes a supernova
What a pushover

[Repeat]

[1]-We're a long way from home
Welcome to the Pleasuredome
On our way home
Going home where lovers roam
Long way from home
Welcome to the Pleasuredome

Moving on
Keep moving on

I will give you diamonds by the shower
Love your body even when it's old
Do it just as only I can do it
And never ever doing what I'm told

Keep moving on
Got to reach the top

Don't stop
Pay love and life-oh my
Keep moving on
On again-yeah

Shooting stars never stop
Shooting stars never stop

Shooting stars never stop
Even when they reach the top
There goes a supernova
What a pushover
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Dec, 2005 12:07 pm
Well, dys. That reminds me that Coleridge knew how to wring the last drop out of the ecstacy of sound.

Breaking news:


Ore. Surfer Who Slugged Shark Recovering By RUKMINI CALLIMACHI, Associated Press Writer
Tue Dec 27, 6:17 AM ET



PORTLAND, Ore. - A surfer who fended off a great white shark by punching it in the nose said he learned the tactic by watching television shows such as the Discovery Channel's "Shark Week."


Brian Anderson, 36, remained hospitalized Monday but was expected to make a full recovery from lacerations on his ankle and calf.

"It's like your worst nightmare," Anderson said by phone from his Portland hospital bed, though he also called the attack "an adventure which has made life that much more precious and interesting."

Anderson was at a popular surfing spot near Tillamook Head, south of the community of Seaside, on Saturday when something grabbed his leg. Realizing it was a shark, he slugged the predator repeatedly in the nose to get it to loosen its grip.

He said he learned from television shows, including the Discovery Channel's "Shark Week," that a shark's nose is its most sensitive area.

Hey, perhaps we should all watch and discover.
0 Replies
 
Reyn
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Dec, 2005 12:07 pm
Dys, where the heck did you find a song like that?

Letty, I think he's making 'em up! Shocked
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Dec, 2005 12:11 pm
Never can tell about our dys, Reyn. He is a man of variation, all right, and that's what we love about him, no?
0 Replies
 
dyslexia
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Dec, 2005 12:30 pm
Oh oh
Wee-ell-Now!

Relax don't do it
When you want to go to it
Relax don't do it
When you want to come
Relax don't do it
When you want to come
When you want to come

Relax don't do it
When you want to to go to it
Relax don't do it
When you want to come
Relax don't do it
When you want to suck to it
Relax don't do it
When you want to come
Come-oh oh oh

But shoot it in the right direction
Make making it your intention-ooh yeah
Live those dreams
Scheme those schemes
Got to hit me
Hit me
Hit me with those laser beams

I'm coming
I'm coming-yeah

Relax don't do it
When you want to go to it
Relax don't do it
When you want to come

Relax don't do it
When you want to suck to it
Relax don't do it (love)
When you want to come
When you want to come
When you want to come
Come-huh

Get it up
The scene of love
Oh feel it

Relax
Higher higher

Hey-
Pray
0 Replies
 
 

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