106
   

WA2K Radio is now on the air

 
 
McTag
 
  1  
Reply Sun 29 Jan, 2006 12:16 pm
dyslexia wrote:
Letty wrote:
What are you drinking, McTag? Rolling Eyes

Yeah really the term is POOPITY HEAD


If you say so; I stand corrected- Giuseppe and Dys are poopity heads.
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Sun 29 Jan, 2006 12:17 pm
Oprah Winfrey
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.



Born: January 29, 1954
Kosciusko, Mississippi


Oprah Winfrey (born January 29, 1954) is an American talk show host and an Academy Award nominated actress. She is one of the most successful entrepreneurs and television personalities in the world. She is currently involved in many business ventures, but is most identified with her massively popular and eponymous talk show. She is currently ranked as the most powerful celebrity by Forbes magazine[1] as well as the ninth most powerful woman in the world.[2]She is the first African-American woman to become a billionaire.


Youth and early career

Winfrey was born Orpah Winfrey in Kosciusko, Mississippi to a moderatly wealthy, Baptist family. The name on Winfrey's birth certificate is Orpah, after the Moabite woman in the Old Testament Book of Ruth, but her family and neighbours would often transpose the R and the P when pronouncing and writing her name; as a result, Oprah eventually became her accepted name.

Her mother, Vernita Lee, was a housemaid, and her father, Vernon Winfrey, a coal miner. Her parents were unmarried and still teenagers when Oprah was born. After Winfrey was born, her mother travelled north for better job opportunities, and Winfrey spent her first six years living with her grandmother. Winfrey's grandmother taught her to read and took her to the local church, where she was nicknamed "The Preacher" for her ability to recite Bible verses.

At age six, Winfrey moved in with her mother, who was less supportive and encouraging than her grandmother. At age 14, she was impregnated and she gave birth to a premature, stillborn boy.

After this her mother sent her to live in better conditions with her father, Vernon, in Nashville, Tennessee. Vernon was strict but encouraging, and made her education a priority. Winfrey became an honors student and received a full scholarship to Tennessee State University, a historically Black institution, where she studied communications. At age 18, Winfrey won the Miss Black Tennessee beauty pageant.

Winfrey's grandmother has said that ever since Oprah could talk, she was "on stage". In her youth she played games interviewing her corncob doll and the crows on the fence of her family's property. But her true media career began at age seventeen, working at her high school radio show.

Working in local media, she was both the youngest news anchor and the first black female news anchor at Nashville's WTVF-TV. She moved to Baltimore's WJZ-TV in 1976 to co-anchor the six o'clock news. She was then recruited to join Richard Sher as co-host of WJZ's local talk show, People Are Talking, which premiered on August 14, 1978.

Career and success

Television
.

In 1983, Winfrey relocated to Chicago, Illinois to host WLS-TV's low-rated half-hour morning talk show, AM Chicago. Her first episode aired on January 2, 1984. With Winfrey as the host, the show was so successful that it was renamed The Oprah Winfrey Show, expanded to a full hour, and broadcast nationally beginning September 8, 1986. Originally, the show followed traditional talk show formats. By the mid-1990s the shows adopted a more serious format, addressing issues that Winfrey thought were of direct importance and of crucial consequence to women. Winfrey began to do a lot of charity work, and her show featured people suffering from poverty or the victims of unfortunate accidents.

The Oprah Winfrey Show is extremely successful and popular, due to the beleief that she has overcome so much. The fact is that she grew up just like any other child, but claims her childhood was horrid. This is what has made her such a success today. She often interviews celebrities (sometimes purely about upcoming movies/albums/television roles, but usually about current-affairs issues that involve the celebrity in some way, such as cancer, charity work, or substance abuse), although more often she focuses on ordinary people that have done extraordinary things or been involved in important current issues. Oprah frequently features the plight of others around the world in her show, and uses the show to promote charitable causes. Oprah's trademark in recent years has been her "Wildest Dreams" tour, which fulfills the dreams of many deserving people, be it a new house, an encounter with a favourite performer, or a guest role on a popular TV show, who have been reported to her producers by loving friends and family. As well as the hour-long regular show, she tapes informal discussions or Q&A sessions with celebrity guests after the show, which are broadcast as Oprah After The Show on her Oxygen network.

During a lawsuit against Winfrey (see Influence), she hired Dr. Phil McGraw's company Courtroom Sciences, Inc. to help her analyze and read the jury. Dr. Phil made such an impression on Winfrey that she invited him to appear on her show. He accepted the invitation and was a resounding success. McGraw appeared on The Oprah Winfrey Show for several years before launching his own show, Dr. Phil, in 2004, which is produced by Winfrey's production company, Harpo Productions.

Perhaps Oprah's most famous recent show was the first episode of the nineteenth season of The Oprah Winfrey Show in the fall of 2004. During the show each member of the audience received a new Pontiac G6 Sedan; the 276 cars were donated by Pontiac as part of a publicity stunt. Winfrey recently made a deal to extend her show until the 2010 - 2011 season, by which time it will have been on the air for twenty-five years. She plans to host 140 episodes per season, until her final season, when it will return to its current number, 130. [3]

The 2004 Nobel Peace Prize Concert was hosted by Oprah and Tom Cruise. There were musical performances by Patti Labelle, Andrea Bocelli, Joss Stone, Chris Botti, Diana Krall, Tony Bennett and others. The concert was broadcasted in the United States on Dec. 23, 2004 by E!. An unofficial Oprah fanclub, also organized a petition drive [4] in 2005, to nominate Oprah for the Nobel Peace Prize.

As well as hosting and appearing on television shows, Winfrey co-founded the women's cable television network Oxygen. She is also the president of Harpo Productions (Oprah spelled backwards).


Film

In 1985, Winfrey co-starred in Steven Spielberg's epic adaptation of Alice Walker's award-winning novel The Color Purple. She earned immediate acclaim as Sofia, the distraught housewife. The following year Winfrey was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress, but she lost to Anjelica Huston. Many believe this was due in part to the Academy's "Anti-Spielberg" bias, thinking the film would have been better directed by an African-American. The Color Purple has now been made into a Broadway musical and opened late 2005, with Oprah credited as a producer.

In October 1998, Oprah produced and starred in the film Beloved, based upon Toni Morrison's Pulitzer Prize winning novel of the same name. To prepare for her role as Sethe, the protagonist and former slave, Oprah experienced a 24-hour simulation of the experience of slavery, which included being tied up and blindfolded and left alone in the woods. Critics said this would not even come close to the experience. In the run-up to filming, and in an attempt to break the only field she hadn't conquered -- film stardom -- Oprah lost a great deal of weight and underwent rejuvenative plastic surgery, becoming the Oprah that the public is now accustomed to seeing. However, despite major advertising, including two episodes of her talk show dedicated solely to the film, it opened to sour critical reviews and poor box-office results, losing approximately $30 million.

In 2005, Harpo Productions released another film adaptation of a famous American novel, Zora Neale Hurston's Their Eyes Were Watching God (1937). The made-for-television film Their Eyes Were Watching God was based upon a teleplay by Suzan-Lori Parks, and starred Halle Berry in the lead female role.

Winfrey was the recipient of the first Bob Hope Humanitarian Award at the 2002 Emmy Awards for services to television and film. In 2004, Oprah and her team filmed and episode of her show entitled Oprah's Christmas Kindness, in which Oprah, her best friend Gail, Stedman, and some crew members travelled to South Africa to bring attention to the plight of young children affected by poverty and AIDS. During the 21-day whirlwind trip, Oprah and her crew visited schools and oprhanages in poverty-stricken areas, and at different set-up points in the areas they visited distributed christmas presents to 50,000 children, with dolls for the girls and soccer balls for the boys. In addition, each child was given a backpack full of school supplies and received two sets of school uniforms for their sex, two sets of socks, two sets of underwear, and a pair of shoes. Throughout the show, Oprah appealed to viewers to donate money to Oprah's Angel Network for poverty-stricken and AIDS-affected children in Africa, and she personally would oversee where that money is spent. From that show alone, viewers around the world donated over (US)$7,000,000.

Books and magazines

Winfrey publishes her own magazines, O, The Oprah Magazine and O at Home. She is also a prolific author.

Online

Oprah.com is a premiere women's lifestyle website, offering advice on everything from the mind, body and spirit to food, home and relationships. It provides comprehensive resources related to The Oprah Winfrey Show and exclusive interactive content based on O, The Oprah Magazine. In addition, the website has unique original content, including Oprah's Book Club, which offers free in-depth reading guides for each book selection, online discussion groups and Q&A sessions with literary experts. In 2003, Winfrey relaunched Oprah's Book Club with an online component and it quickly became the largest book club in the world, attracting more than 670,000 members. That same year, Oprah.com also launched Live Your Best Life, an interactive multimedia workshop based on her sold-out national speaking tour that features Oprah's personal life stories and life lessons along with a workbook of thought-provoking exercises.

Since then, Winfrey has also used Oprah.com to continue her crusade to help those in need and against pedophiles by raising over 3 million dollars for Katrina victims and helping to capture 3 convicted child predators. Oprah.com averages more than 100 million page views and more than three million users per month. The book club has since grown to over 800,000 members with the announcement of her newest selection, Elie Wiesel's Night.


Future projects

Winfrey's latest television project will be developing and producing a new talk show for popular Food Network celebrity chef, Rachael Ray, which will begin airing sometime in 2006.

Recently, Winfrey has been interviewed several times by Anderson Cooper, with whom she has completed several side projects. This has fueled a rumour that Winfrey and Cooper are planning to make a movie together.

Personal life

Oprah Winfrey is believed to own a net worth over $1.3 billion USD according to the 2005 Forbes Magazine Issue. She currently lives on "The Promised Land", her 42 acre (170,000 m²) ocean view estate in Montecito, California, outside of Santa Barbara. Rumors state that Winfrey was at a party the previous owners were throwing and so fell in love with the estate that she was reported to have purchased it by writing a personal check for $50,000,000 USD, although it was not for sale. Winfrey also owns a house in Lavalette, New Jersey.

Winfrey has never married but it is widely assumed that she has lived with her partner Stedman Graham for almost twenty years. The relationship of Oprah and Stedman has been documented through the years with numerous romantic tabloid articles often accompanied by color spreads of the couple at home and on lavish vacations. While most people are convinced the relationship is genuine, some speculate that it is more likely a matter of public relations, and, in fact, Graham is the co-founder and owner of his own public relations firm.

Her celebrity status notwithstanding, the billionaire Winfrey served on the jury of a murder trial jury in 2004. The trial was held in Chicago, Illinois, and involved a man accused of murder after an argument over a counterfeit $50 bill. The jury voted to convict the man of murder.[5] [6]

In June 2005, Winfrey was allegedly denied access to the Hermès company's flagship store in Paris, France. Winfrey arrived fifteen minutes after the store's closing time, and the doors were locked while the last of the shoppers were being attended to. Winfrey felt she could enter the store after closing time, but when told that they were indeed closed, she claimed she was mistaken for a poor black woman and denied entrance because the store had been "having problems with North Africans lately." In September 2005, Hermès USA CEO Robert Chavez was a guest on The Oprah Winfrey Show and sincerely apologized for not catering to "O" on behalf of the store. In a later show, Winfrey changed her report of the event and no longer claimed she was denied entrance on account of her race.

On December 1, 2005, Oprah appeared on The Late Show with David Letterman to promote the new Broadway musical The Color Purple, joining the host for the first time in sixteen years. The episode was hailed by some as the "television event of the decade", and helped Letterman attract his largest audience in more than 11 years: 13.45 million viewers.[7] Although a much-rumored feud was said to have been the cause of the rift, both Winfrey and Letterman balked at such talk. "I want you to know, it's really over, whatever you thought was happening," said Winfrey.

In 1998, Oprah began Oprah's Angel Network, a charity aimed at encouraging people around the world to make a difference in the lives of underprivileged others. Accordingly, Oprah's Angel Network supports charitable projects and provides grants to nonprofit organizations around the world that share this vision. To date, Oprah's Angel Network has raised more than (US)$27,000,000. Oprah personally covers all administrative costs associated with the charity, so 100% of all funds raised go to charity programs. The Angel Network

Oprah's show is based in Chicago, Illinois, so she spends time there, but otherwise resides in California; reportedly, she has recently purchased several properties on Maui, Hawaii.

Influence

Winfrey's prominence as a media personality has led her to be highly influential, both intentionally and unwittingly.

In the late 1990s, Winfrey introduced a new segment on her television show: Oprah's Book Club. The segment focused on new books and classics, and often brought obscure novels to popular attention. The book club became such a powerful force that whenever Winfrey introduced a new book as her book-club selection, it instantly became a best-seller (known as the Oprah Effect); for example, when she selected the classic John Steinbeck novel East of Eden, it soared to the top of the book charts. Being recognized by Oprah often means a million additional book sales for an author.

Oprah's show often contributes to the fabric of American pop culture. Many of her guests have become instant celebrities.

Such heavy influence upon both America and the world has led many to become concious of her effect on culture. Some feel as if Oprahs influence is irresponsible (http://www.goodfight.org/hwowinfrey.html.) Either way, there seems to be no slowing down for Oprah whose followers seem to support her no matter what. During a show about mad cow disease with Howard Lyman (aired on April 16, 1996), Winfrey exclaimed, "It has just stopped me cold from eating another burger!" Texas cattlemen sued her and Lyman in early 1998 for "false defamation of perishable food" and "business disparagement," claiming that Winfrey's remarks subsequently sent cattle prices tumbling, costing beef producers some USD$12 million. After a trial spanning over two months in an Amarillo, Texas court in the thick of cattle country, the jury found on February 26 that Winfrey was not guilty, did not act with malice, and was not liable for damages. After the trial, she received a postcard from Rosie O'Donnell reading, "Congratulations, you beat the meat!"


Criticism

Some believe there to be a gender bias in some of her shows. Shows about infidelity, for example, often focus either on cheating men, or on cheated-on wives. Some critics say Winfrey makes inadequate reference to women who cheat, or may only make cursory comments.

Oprah's Book Club has occasionally chosen books which have proven to be modestly controversial. Most notably, one of its attempted selectees, author Jonathan Franzen objected to his book The Corrections being chosen, believing that its selection as an Oprah's Book Club book would demean his literary reputation. "She's picked some good books, but she's picked enough schmaltzy, one dimensional ones that I cringe ..." he said in a Powells.com interview.

In a more recent controversy, Oprah's selection of the drug rehab book A Million Little Pieces is under scrutiny, with the online publication The Smoking Gun arguing that its author James Frey is guilty of subterfuge and deceit in composing his allegedly

autobiographical memoir. While Oprah initially gave her support to Frey, she withdrew it only ten days later, confronting him on her show with barely concealed outrage. She also expressed dismay with the publisher for not telling her about the embellishments. Winfrey removed the references to Frey's work on the main page of her webpage, but left references in the Oprah's Book Club section earlier in the week.

It has also been noted that the times various guest celebrities on her show "reach out" and perform charitable acts (such as performing for sick children) seem to nearly always coincide with a release of a project in which they have a prominent role (such as starring in a movie or releasing a music album). Some people have said that this trivializes and degrades the various causes they help by turning them into a vessel for marketing, and have even gone so far as to suggest that it verges on exploitation, especially when children are involved.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oprah_Winfrey
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Sun 29 Jan, 2006 12:20 pm
But No Cigar?

The economy is not going well and an unemployed engineer, desperately
needing work, is nervous about an upcoming job interview for an
Accountant position...

The interview goes well, but as the engineer stands up to leave the
manager says, "Oh just one more question. How much is four times
eight?"

Puzzled, the engineer responds that in all calculations, even simple
ones like that, he never relies on his memory, he always uses a
calculator with a paper printout, and double-checks his answer.

"Fine", says the manager, but I just want you to tell me the answer
anyway from memory without using your calculator.

"Sure," says the engineer. "Four times eight is, uh, thirty-four."

After saying goodbye and leaving the building, the engineer hurriedly
pushes up four times eight into his calculator and curses when he
sees the answer.

Nonetheless, he gets the job. Six months later, when he's doing well
and feels confident enough, he walks up to his boss and asks
him. "Sir, I'm curious. Why is it that out of all those engineering
candidates, you hired me, when I gave you the wrong answer to four-
times-eight?"

His boss looks up and says, "Your answer was the closest."
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Sun 29 Jan, 2006 12:21 pm
Well, I'll be. There's the hawk with his bio's. Glad you're not down and out in Boston, Bob. Oh, the alliteration of it all.

Chekhov caught my eye because I love his short stories. The one called "The Slander" has a lot to say about leaping before we think. So, folks, that's a hashed metaphor. O.Henry was a master of that.

edgar, I haven't read that Cohen book. I'll get around to it, maybe, after I finish another that I have here. <smile>
0 Replies
 
McTag
 
  1  
Reply Sun 29 Jan, 2006 12:27 pm
hamburger wrote:
mctag : django reinhardt = thumbs up ! i have an old lp - courtesy of ehbeth - with a dr and stephan grapelli session; still great music after all these years.
i came across a french 2-disc cd set at the library with great "accordian jazz" . i copied it(couldn't find it in a store; that's my excuse !) and have been enjoying it greatly. much of it is music recorded in the 30's and 40's. even the jean goldkette orchestra makes an appearance. take care ! hbg


I actually think Stephan Grapelli was a genius, too....he could be heard on our radio and sometimes seen on TV into the 1970s, I think, from memory, (his playing career was very long) and right up to the end he was always tasteful, inventive, humorous, very musical, and played with great verve and "swing". I think too, it's very unusual to hear good improvisation on the violin.

Shame, that DR's career was so short, and that he got his hand injury. I wonder what he could have achieved with four good fingers on his playing hand? He must have been a very driven, determined man.
0 Replies
 
RexRed
 
  1  
Reply Sun 29 Jan, 2006 12:43 pm
Evergreen

Love, soft as an easy chair
Love, fresh as the morning air
One love that is shared by two
I have found with you
Like a rose under the April snow
I was always certain love would grow
Love, ageless and evergreen
Seldom seen by two
You and I will make each night the first
Everyday a beginning

Spirits rise and their dance is unrehearsed
They warm and excite us
'Cause we have the brightest love
Two lights that shine as one
Morning glory and
The midnight sun

Time, we've learned to sail above
Time, won't change the meaning of one love

Ageless and ever evergreen




The web page attributed this song to Barbara Streisand
but I am quite certain Paul Williams wrote it...
0 Replies
 
dyslexia
 
  1  
Reply Sun 29 Jan, 2006 12:49 pm
Paul Williams, interesting performer/song writer. I also produced one of his concerts. He was quite short, nearly a midget with a wonderful sense of humor. I really enjoyed meeting him.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Sun 29 Jan, 2006 01:02 pm
Hey, I remember Paul Williams. Rather looked like Truman Capote. Did he write songs for Glen Campbell?

Hey, listeners. Did you notice Bob's funny engineer story? Laughing
0 Replies
 
RexRed
 
  1  
Reply Sun 29 Jan, 2006 01:08 pm
dyslexia wrote:
Paul Williams, interesting performer/song writer. I also produced one of his concerts. He was quite short, nearly a midget with a wonderful sense of humor. I really enjoyed meeting him.


He was short... Smile He also recorded a version of Evergreen that did not do so well but it did hit the air waves for a bit... I believe it was Streisand that really put him in the spotlight. I would be inclined to think he had written hits for other performers before Streisand too, but I am not certain of that. I do think he wrote Evergreen...

I like the people you have produced bud... Smile
0 Replies
 
Reyn
 
  1  
Reply Sun 29 Jan, 2006 01:09 pm
Letty wrote:
....Glen Campbell?

I saw Glen Campbell on TV not too long ago. Wow, has he sure changed. Looked a bit rough. He went through a bad patch.

Anybody know if he still performs at all?
0 Replies
 
dyslexia
 
  1  
Reply Sun 29 Jan, 2006 01:10 pm
the absolutely most wonderful/nicest performer I ever produced a concert for was Bette Midler, she was a riot.
0 Replies
 
RexRed
 
  1  
Reply Sun 29 Jan, 2006 01:11 pm
Snowbird

Beneath this snowy mantle cold and clean
The unborn grass lies waiting
for its coat to turn to green
The snowbird sings a song he always sings
And speaks to me of flowers
that will bloom again in spring
When I was young my heart was young then too
Anything that it would tell me,
that's the thing that I would do
But now I feel such emptiness within
For the thing that I want most in life
Is the thing I can't win
Spread your tiny wings and fly away
And take the snow back with you
Where it came from on that day
The one I love forever is untrue
And if I could you know
that I would fly away with you
The breeze along the river seems to say
That he'll only break my heart again
should I decide to stay
So little snowbird take me with you when you go
To that land of gentle breezes
where the peaceful waters flow

Spread your tiny wings and fly away
And take the snow back with you
Where it came from on that day
The one I love forever is untrue
And if I could you know
that I would fly away with you
yah if I could, you know that I would fly away with you

Anne Murray

I am not certain if she wrote this but the page did not state otherwise.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Sun 29 Jan, 2006 01:17 pm
Reyn, I would say he doesn't, but I was shocked to see his mug shot:

http://www.thesmokinggun.com/graphics/art3/0702042glen1.jpg

And he's been cleaned up a bit, here. DUI and leaving the scene. Crying or Very sad
0 Replies
 
RexRed
 
  1  
Reply Sun 29 Jan, 2006 01:21 pm
Millworker

Now my grandfather was a sailor
He blew in off the water
My father was a farmer
And I, his only daughter
Took up with a no good millworking man
From Massachusetts
Who dies from too much whiskey
And leaves me these three faces to feed

Millwork ain't easy
Millwork ain't hard
Millwork it ain't nothing
But an awful boring job
I'm waiting (on) a daydream
To take me through the morning
And put me in my coffee break
Where I can have a sandwich
And remember

Then it's me and my machine
For the rest of the morning
(and) the rest of the afternoon
And the rest of my life

Now my mind begins to wander
To the days back on the farm
I can see my father smiling at me
Swinging on his arm
I can hear my granddad's stories
Of the storms out on Lake Eerie
Where vessels and cargos and fortunes
And sailors' lives were lost

(Yeah), but it's my life has been wasted
And I have been the fool
To let this manufacturer
Use my body for a tool
(I'll) ride home in the evening
Staring at my hands
Swearing by my sorrow that a young girl
Ought to stand a better chance

So may I work the mills just as long as I am able
And never meet the man whose name is on the label

(still it's)me and my machine
For the rest of the morning
And the rest of the afternoon (and on and on and on...)
for the rest of my life

James Taylor


Bette covered this song on one of her albums...
I like her version better than the one James recorded... Probably my favorite song of hers...
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Sun 29 Jan, 2006 01:29 pm
Well, we have learned and sung and played and had fun.

My favorite of Bette's is this one:

THE WIND BENEATH MY WINGS (Bette Midler)

It must have been cold there in my shadow,
to never have sunlight on your face.
You were content to let me shine, that's your way,
you always walked a step behind.

So I was the one with all the glory,
while you were the one with all the strength.
A beautiful face without a name -- for so long,
a beautiful smile to hide the pain.

CHORUS:
Did you ever know that you're my hero,
and ev'rything I would like to be?
I can fly higher than an eagle,
'cause you are the wind beneath my wings.

It might have appeared to go unnoticed,
but I've got it all here in my heart.
I want you to know I know the truth, of course I know it,
I would be nothing with out you.

(CHORUS)

Fly, fly, fly away,
you let me fly so high.
Oh, fly, fly,
so high against the sky, so high I almost touch the sky.
Thank you, thank you, thank God for you,
the wind beneath my wings.
0 Replies
 
Reyn
 
  1  
Reply Sun 29 Jan, 2006 01:36 pm
Letty wrote:
And he's been cleaned up a bit, here. DUI and leaving the scene. Crying or Very sad

Yes, for sure. Nasty chapter in his life.

Any idea if he still performs anywhere? Maybe Las Vegas or Atlantic City, etc?
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Sun 29 Jan, 2006 01:44 pm
I'll have to check, Reyn.

Back later, listeners. It has been a great symposium here, today.
0 Replies
 
Reyn
 
  1  
Reply Sun 29 Jan, 2006 01:53 pm
Here's a miraculous story!

Blind woman in Britain recovers sight after heart attack
Fri Jan 20, 12:55 AM ET

A 74-year-old woman who had been blind for 25 years awoke in a British hospital after suffering a heart attack and could see again, telling her husband: "You've got older," a newspaper reported.

Doctors were at a loss to explain how Joyce Urch, who lived in a world of shadows and near darkness since 1979, had recovered her sight after the heart attack 16 months ago, the Daily Telegraph reported.

Urch, who was treated at Walgrave Hospital in Coventry, where doctors spent three days battling to save her life, called it a "miracle," the newspaper said.

The newspaper showed the white-haired Urch, bright eyed and beaming, in the arms of her husband Eric after celebrating their 50th wedding anniversary last weekend.

"When I first came round I just opened my eyes and shouted 'I can see, I can see.' When I looked in the mirror I said 'Oh.' I said to Eric. 'You've got older haven't you?' But I thought 'I'm old myself, my husband must be too," she was quoted as saying.

"The first time you look in the mirror you look at yourself and think, 'is that really me?' But a lot of things have changed," she said.

"I love going out now. I can look around and see the trees and squirrels and pigeons," she said.

Urch had been unable to see her five children properly since they were young adults and for the first time she was able to look at her 12 grandchildren and three great-grandchildren, the newspaper said.

Despite suffering from glaucoma, doctors did not think this was why she went blind, but could not pinpoint the reasons, she was quoted as saying.

Her husband, 77, did not at first believe his wife, but tested her with what he was wearing and found out she was right.
0 Replies
 
RexRed
 
  1  
Reply Sun 29 Jan, 2006 02:22 pm
Gentle on My Mind

It's knowin' that your door is always open
And your path is free to walk
That makes me tend to leave my sleepin' bag
Rolled up and stashed behind your couch
And it's knowin' I'm not shackled
By forgotten words and bonds
And the ink stains that have dried upon some line
That keeps you in the back roads
By the rivers of my memory
That keeps you ever gentle on my mind

It's not clingin' to the rocks and ivy
Planted on their columns now that bind me
Or something that somebody said because
They thought we fit together walkin'
It's just knowing that the world
Will not be cursing or forgiving
When I walk along some railroad track and find
That you're movin' on the back roads
By the rivers of my memory
And for hours you're just gentle on my mind

Though the wheat fields and the clothes lines
And the junkyards and the highways come between us
And some other woman's cryin' to her mother
'cause she turned and I was gone
I still might run in silence
Tears of joy might stain my face
And the summer sun might burn me till I'm blind
But not to where I cannot see
You walkin' on the back roads
By the rivers flowin' gentle on my mind

I dip my cup of soup back from a gurglin' cracklin' cauldron
In some train yard
My beard a rustlin' coal pile
And a dirty hat pulled low across my face
Through cupped hands 'round a tin can
I pretend to hold you to my breast and find
That you're waitin' from the back roads
By the rivers of my memory
Ever smilin', ever gentle on my mind

Glen Campbell
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Sun 29 Jan, 2006 02:23 pm
Wow! Reyn. That is the most amazing story! Bet her husband wasn't exactly thrilled with her remark, however.

Well, listeners, I did find out that it was Jim Webb who wrote most of Glen Campbell's songs, not John Williams, and Glen Campbell's last performance was in 2004, but I need to do more checking.

I cannot believe all the things Webb has accomplished. Check him out, if you want to, because you, too, will be impressed.
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