T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
156.1 | oh no!! not Festus! | STRATA::DWEST | Dont Overlook Something Extraordinary | Wed May 01 1991 13:56 | 7 |
| that is a bummer... in a past life one of my nick-names was
"festus"...
another rilly dead person last week... one of the members of the
group "small faces"... can't remember his name now though...
da ve
|
156.2 | | WFOV12::BUTZE | Do the trouser press baby | Wed May 01 1991 14:38 | 3 |
| ref small faces ....it was the guy who wrote "Itchycoo Park"
rich
|
156.3 | STEVE MARRIOTT | LANDO::HAPGOOD | now we play for life | Wed May 01 1991 15:57 | 16 |
| re: Small Faces
What a band! I used to love their albums (and the weird album covers).
Ogden's Nut Gone Flake! :) and Ooo la la (maybe that was the the faces and
not small faces)
Anyhow it was Steve Marriot whom you all are thinking of...
He was in the Small Faces and later in Humble Pie. Anyone ever hear
Pie's "ROCKIN' THE FILLMORE"???? They do a GREAT cover of "I don't need
no doctor".
whew! smokin is right! I think he was just recently getting back into
music with a possible Humble Pie reunion and I'm not for certain but he
might've been working with the Black Crowes as well.
bob
|
156.5 | oops! | LANDO::HAPGOOD | now we play for life | Wed May 01 1991 17:58 | 12 |
| <<< Note 156.4 by XCUSME::MACINTYRE >>>
> You say "smokin" and believe it or not he died from a fire caused by
> smoking a cigarette in bed.
I don't want anyone to think I made a pun like that intentionally!
I wouldn't joke about a thing like that.
interestingly enough they had an lp called "smokin'" too and that's
why I signed off that way.
bob
|
156.6 | 8^( | BUSY::IRZA | The compass always points to Terrapin | Thu May 02 1991 06:02 | 5 |
| Mr. Johnny Thunders, guitarist for the New York Dolls till he left
the band in '74, died last week from an apparent drug overdose at the
age of 38.
Irz
|
156.7 | | CBROWN::HENDERSON | Seems a common way to go | Thu May 02 1991 09:44 | 10 |
|
I didn't realize that Ken Curtis (Festus) was once a member of the Sons of
the Pioneers (along with Roy Rogers).
Jim
|
156.8 | | LANDO::HAPGOOD | now we play for life | Thu May 02 1991 09:49 | 10 |
| <<< Note 156.7 by CBROWN::HENDERSON "Seems a common way to go" >>>
>I didn't realize that Ken Curtis (Festus) was once a member of the Sons of
>the Pioneers (along with Roy Rogers).
Yeah Jim me neither! I read a bio/obit yesterday and they also said
something I didn't know - that he took over as singer in Tommy Dorsey
band after Frank Sinatra moved on.
bob
|
156.9 | | CBROWN::HENDERSON | Seems a common way to go | Thu May 02 1991 09:51 | 18 |
|
>Yeah Jim me neither! I read a bio/obit yesterday and they also said
>something I didn't know - that he took over as singer in Tommy Dorsey
>band after Frank Sinatra moved on.
He was a pretty talented guy. I know he was born in Colorado and I believed
may have lived there in the 70's. I know he was the grand marshall or something
at the Pikes Peak or Bust rodeo one year and he was something of a local
favorite and did a lot of charity type work.
Jim
|
156.11 | Origin of 'Festus' name | EISJHM::MCWILLIAMS | | Thu May 23 1991 13:25 | 8 |
| Just a sidelight:
Festus was the blacksmith on Gunsmoke. In Greek mythology, the god of
the forge (ie. making things using fire) was Haephestus. The writers of
Gunsmoke obviously had a background in mythology as well as a sense of
humor.
John
|
156.12 | a little culture never hurts | CIVIC::ROBERTS | Imagine... | Thu May 23 1991 17:16 | 4 |
|
You *couldn't* have made that up ... cooool
c
|
156.13 | David Ruffin, RIP | SSGV01::STROBEL | Museum of Barnyard Oddities | Mon Jun 03 1991 14:11 | 1 |
| David Ruffin, lead singer for the Temptations, died Saturday
|
156.14 | Adios, Little Joe | DECXPS::HENDERSON | Thinking a lot about less & less | Tue Jul 02 1991 14:07 | 19 |
|
Of course we all know Michael Landon died yesterday...off to the Ponderosa
in the sky.
I was never all that crazy about his acting, but liked the guy
Jim
|
156.15 | He was sooo determined to live :^( | MR4DEC::WENTZELL | Un poco loco | Tue Jul 02 1991 14:49 | 1 |
| Wow, I didn't know this....
|
156.16 | | COOKIE::FREIWALD | Teach Peace! | Tue Jul 02 1991 21:22 | 5 |
|
Yeah, but at least the rags will hopefully stop picking on him. As if
being that sick wasn't bad enough. ;-(
:-Chucke
|
156.17 | R I P... | BIODTL::FERGUSON | the rainbow does not have a beard | Tue Jul 02 1991 23:35 | 2 |
|
Cancer got him. 54 years old.... to young to die...
|
156.18 | RIP | MSHRMS::FIELDS | nice day for a walk, popcorn anyone | Wed Jul 03 1991 09:43 | 1 |
| Lee Remick (sp?) past-away yesterday also from cancer at the age of 55.
|
156.19 | | SPICE::PECKAR | Clean Phil Wanted | Wed Jul 03 1991 13:30 | 8 |
|
Flash! Rare Sexually-transmitted cancer which only affects Actors in their
mid-fifties stikes down Lee Remick and Michael Landon...
Sorry, Couldn't resist.
Fog_who_missed_his_calling
|
156.20 | Been Moonlighting | LEZAH::CUIP1::flanagan | | Wed Jul 03 1991 14:24 | 7 |
|
Fog,
Are you sure you don't work for the National Enquirer nights?
Kevin
|
156.21 | | KALI::SIEGEL | | Fri Jul 19 1991 15:38 | 5 |
| This one came out of left field:
Bert Convy, of cancer. Apparently, he's had a brain tumor for about a
year. He was 57.
|
156.22 | Harry Reasoner | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Financially challenged | Wed Aug 07 1991 10:13 | 14 |
|
Harry Reasoner, CBS newsman at 68. He was my newsperson of choice during
the Watergate era.
Has anyone seen the interview he did with the Dead in 67 or 68? He did
a news special on the "Hippie Menace" during which he visited the Dead house
and interviewed the boyz. Pretty funny.
Jim
|
156.23 | RIP Harry. | BIODTL::FERGUSON | the rainbow does not have a beard | Wed Aug 07 1991 13:40 | 10 |
| RE <<< Note 156.22 by CSLALL::HENDERSON "Financially challenged" >>>
-< Harry Reasoner >-
>Has anyone seen the interview he did with the Dead in 67 or 68? He did
>a news special on the "Hippie Menace" during which he visited the Dead house
>and interviewed the boyz. Pretty funny.
YAH! That is great. The copy I saw was in black & white and was not that
great of quality... showed the early stages of the boyz... Garcia w/ no
beard, etc.... anyone have a good copy of this or know where to get one????
|
156.24 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Feeling nearly faded as my jeans | Wed Aug 07 1991 13:41 | 12 |
|
My brother has a copy but its probably not much better. Its probably been
through a couple thousand generations.
Weir looked like he was in a different dimension in that one :^)
|
156.25 | lemme have more, man... | BIODTL::FERGUSON | the rainbow does not have a beard | Wed Aug 07 1991 13:46 | 4 |
| To me, Wier appeared really, really, really, super stoned-out... funny seeing
the youthful Weir!
|
156.26 | | WFOV12::BUTZE | Quick beat of an icy heart... | Wed Aug 07 1991 14:27 | 4 |
| Paul Brown died the other day as well...a conerstone to modern
Feetsball,....
rich
|
156.27 | | CLOSUS::BARNES | | Wed Aug 07 1991 17:16 | 3 |
| not only did Bobby seem outait..remember Phil saying "the solution is
for everybody to turn on" or something to that effect %^)
rfb
|
156.28 | Just some thoughts | SPOCK::IRONS | Shiny, happy people holding hands! | Mon Aug 12 1991 14:04 | 11 |
| Not to digress or anything (but I gonna do it anayway), the wife and I
went to the library last week because she needed to look something up.
So I wandered over to the music aile and found the Dead Family Album
that came out not to long ago. Interesting stuff. What really kinda
shocked me was Phil. He was really out in front in the early days,
literally. Like, he appeared to be "leader of the band". I believe I
saw one photo where Phil was out front, center stage, Bobby on one side
behind and Jerry on the other behind. It was a real enjoyable look
back.
dave
|
156.29 | The Sultan of Swat | MR4DEC::WENTZELL | Estamos hermanos y hermanas | Fri Aug 16 1991 11:30 | 1 |
| Babe Ruth died 43 years ago today. He was 53.
|
156.30 | Rick Griffin obituary | OCTOBR::GRABAZS | counting stars by candlelight | Wed Aug 28 1991 11:32 | 63 |
|
Following is reprinted without permission from the San Francisco
Chronicle 8/19/91:
Rick Griffin - One of Top Poster Artists of Psychedelic Era
Rick Griffin, whose psychedelic rock and roll posters in the 1960s
were as much a part of hippie San Francisco as incense and bell-bottom
jeans, died Saturday of severe head injuries suffered in a mortorcycle
accident. He was 47.
Griffin, a prolific artist whose work included album covers, comic
strips, paintings and promotional material, clung to life for two days
at Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital after he was thrown off his Harley
Davidson motorcycle while trying to pass a van in Petaluma Thursday. He
was pronounced dead at 6 p.m. Saturday.
Friends and relatives of Griffin described him yesterday as a master
craftsman whose colorful, abstract style was widely copied. He is
considered to be among the five best poster artists of the 1960s
psychedelic music scene. His work promoted the concerts of such rock
titans as the Grateful Dead, Bob Dylan and Jimi Hendrix. First print
posters from the 1960s often sell for $500 to $600.
"It was wonderful work," said Dennis McNally, a publicist for the
Grateful Dead, who hired Griffin to do the artwork on numerous record
albums, the latest of which was the 1990 double live album "Without a
Net." "The world doesn't have artists to waste. It hurts."
Rock music promoter Bill Graham, who often hired Griffin to design
posters advertising his concerts, said Griffin truly loved his work and
never did anything he didn't beleive in.
"He argued for the creative expression," Graham said. "It cost him
sometimes because he wasn't as attentive to business as he should have
been. But he was a free spirit. He liked to go into the wind."
Griffin was born and raised near Palos Verdes. As a teenager he was
drawn to surfing and cartooning. He created his Murph the Surf cartoon
character for Surfer Magazine after graduating from high school.
Griffin, who lived in Petaluma, continued to surf up to the day of the
accident.
In 1966, Griffin traveled to San Francisco with Jook Savages, a group
of artists and musicians who staged small concerts and art displays. He
later became an original underground cartoonist for Zap Comix and
provided artwork for the San Francisco Oracle, an underground newspaper
that published 13 editions between 1966 and 1968.
He is most widely known, however, for his psychedelic posters during
San Francisco's Summer of Love era.
"At one point you couldn't look anywhere without seeing them," said
Victor Moscoso, who worked with Griffin on Zap Comix. "They were like
the hula hoops of visual ats. It became the art of rock and roll."
Griffin is survived by his wife Ida, son Miles, 11, and daughters
Flaven, 25, Adelia, 23 and Katey, 10.
Funeral arrangements are pending.
|
156.31 | | FRAGLE::IDE | now it can be told | Mon Sep 09 1991 09:44 | 9 |
| We stopped by a comics/poster store in The Cannery in San Francisco and
they had a lot of Rick's work on display. Many of the pieces had black
ribbons hanging from them from a reception held there after Rick's
wake. The flowers were from the Dead and the owner told about showing
Jerry around the shop while Bob hung around back drinking tequila.
California's helmet law goes into effect next year.
Jamie
|
156.32 | And the wind,began to howl... | GIAMEM::DMITCHELL | Goin'home,thats what I'm gonna do | Wed Sep 18 1991 09:20 | 2 |
|
Jimi Hendrix died on this day in 1970...
|
156.34 | old age and wisdom | STAR::SALKEWICZ | It missed... therefore, I am | Wed Sep 18 1991 14:48 | 7 |
| Will the wind ever remember
the names of those it has blown in the past
Yes,. we remember... RIP Jimi
/
|
156.35 | But the Cat in the Hat lives on | DECWET::HAMBY | | Wed Sep 25 1991 21:49 | 3 |
| I heard on the radio this morning that Dr. Suess died last night.
John
|
156.36 | | COOKIE::FREIWALD | Teach Peace! | Wed Sep 25 1991 22:07 | 10 |
|
Just heard the same thing on NPR. ;-( My love of reading can be directly traced
back to his wonderful work. My personal faves include "Horton Hears a Who"
(A person's a person no matter how small) and the "The Grinch Who Stole
Christmas".
So long Dr. Suess and thank you for the MANY hours you allowed me to come
play in your special worlds.
:-Chuck
|
156.37 | | EBBCLU::SMITH | | Thu Sep 26 1991 15:03 | 2 |
|
I almost bought a Cat In The Hat shirt last night at the show
|
156.38 | :^( | ROULET::DWEST | Dont Overlook Something Extraordinary | Thu Sep 26 1991 15:44 | 12 |
| let's not forget "Green Eggs and Ham"!!!! or the A,B,C book...
probably my favorites were the great butter war (or something like
that) and one of the collections that had the story about the
Sneeches... along with The Lorax, i think they should be required
reading for school age humans-under-construction, but now that i think
of it, i know a few adults who could benefit from these erudite
works...
RIP, Dr... :^( :^( :^(
da take-two-aspirin-and-call-me-in-the-morning ve
|
156.39 | | VMPIRE::CLARK | the funk of 40,000 years | Thu Sep 26 1991 15:46 | 6 |
| re <<< Note 156.38 by ROULET::DWEST "Dont Overlook Something Extraordinary" >>>
-< :^( >-
> let's not forget "Green Eggs and Ham"!!!! or the A,B,C book...
Or "Too Many Daves" ....
|
156.40 | :^) | ROULET::DWEST | Dont Overlook Something Extraordinary | Thu Sep 26 1991 17:52 | 5 |
| "too many daves" is from the same collection that has the sneeches...
i was wondering if someone was going to mention that, but it wasn't
going to be me! :^)
da there_are_never_too_many_daves ve
|
156.41 | fun shirt! | BIODTL::FERGUSON | No cans, No bottles. | Fri Sep 27 1991 10:58 | 1 |
| I *did* buy a Cat In The Hat t-shirt, before the fellow passed away.
|
156.42 | lots o' folks wearing the Cat's Hat at the show | CIVIC::ROBERTS | Solyent Green is People | Fri Sep 27 1991 13:27 | 4 |
|
Or have they alway been there
carol
|
156.43 | | TERAPN::PHYLLIS | Wake, now discover.. | Fri Sep 27 1991 13:30 | 5 |
|
I love those hats!! (As long as the person wearing it isn't sitting
right in front of me of course ;-))
|
156.44 | What a shame | SIOG::OSULLIVAN_D | Best Before 07/68 | Mon Sep 30 1991 10:41 | 1 |
| Miles Davis, beautiful jazz Trumpeter.
|
156.45 | | TERAPN::PHYLLIS | Wake, now discover.. | Mon Sep 30 1991 10:42 | 6 |
|
Miles Davis. :-(
RIP
|
156.46 | RIP | MR4DEC::WENTZELL | Liquids?I ain't got no stinkin liquids! | Mon Sep 30 1991 11:07 | 4 |
| I found this out at the Little Feat show last night in Boston, they dedicated
Time Loves a Hero to him.
Another great one gone...
|
156.47 | | SKYLRK::TING | Give Peace a Chance!!! | Mon Sep 30 1991 13:56 | 9 |
| It was a real shock coming out of New Music Indonesia Saturday night
and turning on the car to hear the first news of Miles' death. This
is a great loss!! Santana asked for a moment of silence for Miles at
the Ben and Jerry's One World One Heart Festival in Golden Gate Park
on Sunday. Santana is a big Miles fan. RIP...8-(
peace,
t!ng
|
156.48 | | EZRIDR::SIEGEL | Frank Zappa in '92! | Mon Sep 30 1991 15:41 | 14 |
| re:< Note 156.47 by SKYLRK::TING "Give Peace a Chance!!!" >
>is a great loss!! Santana asked for a moment of silence for Miles at
>the Ben and Jerry's One World One Heart Festival in Golden Gate Park
>on Sunday. Santana is a big Miles fan. RIP...8-(
And on Sat. Night Live, Public Enemy had a 3-second moment of silence for him,
whom they said "without him, we wouldn't be here" or something like that. I
didn't understand what was going on initially, then I put on CNN during a
commercial and heard the news. :-(
I bet he liked the dead.
adam
|
156.49 | cool blue miles davis | THEHUT::HAPGOOD | now we play for life | Mon Sep 30 1991 16:06 | 7 |
|
He'd been sick for a few weeks now....I wondered what was wrong with
him.
definately a real big loss,
bob
|
156.50 | | BCSE::ABBOT | cous cous & goose | Mon Sep 30 1991 18:40 | 6 |
| He was hospitalized for a stroke, heart failure and pneumonia
Miles was definitely a great innovator and one of the few to get the
recognition he deserved during his lifetime.
Scott
|
156.51 | | SIOG::OSULLIVAN_D | Best Before 07/68 | Tue Oct 01 1991 06:42 | 10 |
| re: I bet he liked the dead
The Dead (or at least Gerry Garcia) get a mention in his autobiography
and he may have jammed with them if I recall. I would heartily
recommend the autobiography as a lively read, as long as you don't mind
phrases such as "cleaner than a motherfucker" and "take no shit from
noone".
-Dermot
|
156.52 | | ANGLIN::GEBHART | Met her accidentally in St.Paul, MN | Tue Oct 01 1991 10:33 | 9 |
| RE: I bet he liked the dead
I remember in some dead book (Playin' In the Band??) where Phil is
talking about a show where Miles opened for them. He said something
to the effect that we felt real stupid playing after Miles because
he was so increadible that their playing seem poor compared to what
Miles could do.
RIP
|
156.53 | will be missed | STAR::SALKEWICZ | It missed... therefore, I am | Fri Oct 11 1991 18:16 | 31 |
| RIP Miles
He was an inspiration to many. His genius can not be denied.
I saw the Allman Bros, who supposedly got together after hearing
Miles' "Kind of Blue" album (highly recommended), and they too
dedicated a song to him.
Phil's quote was to the effect that he didn't want to play after
Miles because they (the dead) couldn't possibly follow such musical
genius. He felt that their music was just too simplistic,. and that
he'd rather just go home and digets what he heard from Miles than
play that Greateful Dead stuff...
Thankfully,.. and despite the current socail attitude towards
drugs, Miles was recognized despite a serious additcion problem. He
was hooked on Heroin long before drugs even became socially acceptable
in the mid-late sixties. He spent a lot of time working to shed that
image of blackness,.. and to his credit he did succeed.
A master on the horn, but I always admired what he could do
with a band,.. the things he could get the musicians to do and the
"soundscapes" he created have yet to be even copied successfully,.. and
probably never will. I aqlways thought this talent was being overlooked
or overshadowed by his excellent playing,.. but to me,. it was his
musical genius as a composer/orchestrator that sticks out in my mind.
Lots of guys can play well if you tell them what to play,.. but
not many can do the telling...
/
|
156.54 | | BIODTL::FERGUSON | Where talk is cheap and vision true | Tue Oct 15 1991 13:56 | 5 |
|
Redd Foxx, of Sanford and Son fame, died this past weekend.
RIP Mr. Sanford!
|
156.55 | | MR4DEC::WENTZELL | Close my eyes to see | Tue Oct 15 1991 14:01 | 1 |
| Wow, he just started starring in a new series too. R.I.P.
|
156.56 | Miles | SHKDWN::TAYLOR | Nothing shakin' | Tue Oct 15 1991 14:52 | 12 |
| RE: .53
� He
� was hooked on Heroin long before drugs even became socially acceptable
� in the mid-late sixties. He spent a lot of time working to shed that
� image of blackness,.. and to his credit he did succeed.
^^^^^^^^^
er..., want to rephrase that slash??
Bill_who_is_also_a_'honky'
Kind of Blue and In a Silent Way are my personal faves
|
156.57 | oops | STAR::SALKEWICZ | It missed... therefore, I am | Wed Oct 16 1991 14:34 | 9 |
| Wow,.. that was an unfortunate choice of wording,..
Lets call it a demonic image,... for lack of a better term. (but
anyting has got to be better than saying a black man has an image
of blackness... :-/
RIP Miles
/Bill
|
156.58 | Tennessee Ernie Ford | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Li'l red light on the highway | Fri Oct 18 1991 10:20 | 14 |
|
Tennessee Ernie Ford died yesterday. Probably doesn't mean much to a lot of
folks, but I grew up hearing him sing gospel tunes on records that my grand-
mother had and seeing him on TV, etc. My grandmother thought he was the great-
est and I can still see her sitting in a rocking chair listening to a scratchy
record of TEF singing "The Old Rugged Cross".
:^(
Jim
|
156.59 | | LANDO::HAPGOOD | now we play for life | Fri Oct 18 1991 11:14 | 8 |
| -< Tennessee Ernie Ford >-
yeah, too bad! he did have a happy career....
load thirteen tons and whaddya get?
another day older and deeper in debt...
bob
|
156.60 | | MSHRMS::FIELDS | send a smile, show you care | Fri Oct 18 1991 11:43 | 4 |
| the only guy I know thats got a state, a muppet, and a car named after
him.....
Chris
|
156.61 | He's dead, Jim...:-( | KOBAL::MROGERS | Someday everything's gonna be different... | Fri Oct 25 1991 08:51 | 2 |
| Gene Roddenberry, the creator of Star Trek, died yesterday at the
age of 69 :-(.
|
156.62 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Li'l red light on the highway | Fri Oct 25 1991 09:49 | 9 |
|
Holy s*it :^(
Jim
|
156.63 | Where no man has gone before... | AIMHI::KELLER | The BoR, Void Where Prohibited by law | Fri Oct 25 1991 10:53 | 3 |
| :-(:-(:-(,
A great mind has passed on to the great beyond.
|
156.64 | live long and prosper | MSHRMS::FIELDS | send a smile, show you care | Fri Oct 25 1991 11:20 | 1 |
|
|
156.65 | orbit | MSHRMS::FIELDS | send a smile, show you care | Fri Oct 25 1991 11:34 | 100 |
| From the clari-net.
Article: 1715
Path: nntpd.lkg.dec.com!news.crl.dec.com!deccrl!bloom-beacon!micro-heart-of-gold.mit.edu!wupost!uunet!looking!clarinews
From: [email protected] (ROGER BENNETT)
Newsgroups: clari.news.movies,clari.news.urgent
Subject: 'Star Trek' creator Gene Roddenberry dies
Keywords: general broadcast news, tv & radio, movies, obituary
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Date: 25 Oct 91 07:16:08 GMT
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Approved: [email protected]
Xref: nntpd.lkg.dec.com clari.news.movies:1715 clari.news.urgent:4086
Location: california
ACategory: regional
Slugword: ca-roddenberry-obit
Priority: regular
Format: regular
X-Supersedes: <[email protected]>
ANPA: Wc: 803; Id: u0289; Sel: sca-u; Adate: 10-25-1215apd; Ver: calsked; V#: 6
Codes: yetgrca., yevgrca., yno-rca., xxxxxxxx
SANTA MONICA, Calif. (UPI) -- Producer and writer Gene Roddenberry,
whose visionary ``Star Trek'' is one of the most popular television and
movie series of all time, died shortly after collapsing in his doctor's
office. He was 70.
Roddenberry, who created ``Star Trek'' a quarter-century ago, died
Thursday of cardiac arrest about 20 minutes after being taken to Santa
Monica Hospital-Medical Center -- just across the street from his
doctor's office.
Roddenberry, a decorated WWII bomber pilot and former Los Angeles
police sergeant who was born in El Paso, Texas, was writer and producer
of the ``Star Trek'' series, which ran from 1966 to 1969, but via the
rerun it is seen around the world to this day.
The unflappable Capt. Kirk (William Shatner), the pointy-eared Vulcan
Mr. Spock (Leonard Nimoy) and the compassionate Dr. McCoy (DeForest
Kelley) created a cult, whose ``Trekkies'' convene annually to celebrate
their passion.
``He had an extraordinary vision about mankind and the potential of
mankind's future,'' Nimoy said.
Roddenberry also created ``Star Trek: The Next Generation,'' which
has a different cast and runs on syndicated TV. His wife, Majel Barrett,
was Nurse Chapel on ``Star Trek'' and the ``mother'' of Deanna Troi in
``Star Trek: The Next Generation.''
The movies and television shows were both infused with Roddenberry's
hope for the future and a sense of optimism that humans would eventually
develop the ability to get along with one another and with
extraterrestrials.
``Few ideas in the annals of motion picture and television history
have inspired more passion and allegiance on the part of an audience as
has ''StarTrek,`` said Paramount Pictures Chairman Brandon Tartikoff.
''Twenty-five years ago Gene Roddenberry imagined an optimistic future
for us all and his vision will live on well into that future.``
He was also generally viewed as being far ahead of his time by
presenting both female and minority characters on the series.
The most successful of the five movies was 1986's ``Star Trek IV: the
Voyage Home,'' in which the crew of the Starship USS Enterprise went
back in time to modern-day San Francisco in order to rescue whales. The
movie grossed more than $110 million domestically.
Roddenberry's death comes at a time when Paramount has started
gearing up the publicity for the last movie in the series, due to be
released on Dec. 13 and called ``Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country.
''
Several of the stars, including Shatner, said the movie would be the
last in the series using the original cast. The movie may also serve as
a springboard for the cast members of ``Star Trek: the Next Generation''
because it will include Michael Dorn, who plays a Klingon officer named
Worf in the TV show.
Roddenberry's life was nearly as exciting as those of his characters.
He flew 89 missions in WWII in B-17 bombers in the South Pacific,
winning the Distinguished Flying Cross and the Air Medal. He began to
write while in the South Pacific, selling stories to flying magazines
and poetry to publications including the New York Times.
When he returned from combat he became a trouble-shooter for the Air
Force, investigating the causes of air crashes. After the war he joined
Pan American World Airways. His plane crashed at night in the Syrian
desert on a flight from Calcutta and he directed a harrowing rescue that
included fending off nomads who came to loot the dead.
Back in the states, Roddenberry continued flying until he saw
television for the first time and realized its enormous potential.
Leaving his flying career behind, he went to Hollywood, where he found
the infant industry was not hiring a lot of writers.
A friend suggested he join the Los Angeles Police Department to see
life from a different perspective. As he was rising through the ranks to
sergeant, he was selling scripts to such programs as ``Goodyear Theatre,
'' ``the Kaiser Aluminum Hour,'' and ``Dragnet.'' With his writing
credentials established, he turned in his badge and practiced his craft
full time.
He was head writer for ``Have Gun, Will Travel,'' and his episode
``Helen of Abliginian'' won the Writers Guild Award. He next created
``The Lieutenant'' TV series, the story of a young Marine.
Next came ``Star Trek,'' whose first pilot was considered too
cerebral by the network and rejected. But once on the air, it became one
of the biggest hits of all time and is the only TV series to have an
episode preserved in the Smithsonian Institution, where an 11-foot model
of the USS Enterprise is also on display.
Roddenberry also produced the movie ``Pretty Maids All in a Row,''
starring Rock Hudson, Angie Dickinson and Telly Savalas.
Funeral arrangements were pending.
|
156.66 | | EZRIDR::SIEGEL | Frank Zappa in '92! | Fri Oct 25 1991 14:57 | 4 |
| BUMMER!!
I hope the quality of the Star Trek writing (due mostly to Roddenberry)
continues in the future.
|
156.67 | Never fear!! | SPOCK::IRONS | | Fri Oct 25 1991 17:43 | 12 |
| I'm sure it will. Most of the writing now is done by lots of different
writers. JR usually just gave the final word on the story, script,
etc. He was the final word on everything associated with a Trek
episode or movie.
There are thousands of ST books around which are good. They'll never
run out of ideas for stories because they can look at these books. In
fact, many of the authors of ST books do episodes also.
Hey, I know, look at my node! :^)
dave
|
156.68 | He's Dead, Jim! | SPICE::PECKAR | Hail Baby! | Fri Oct 25 1991 18:36 | 3 |
|
:-(
|
156.69 | | SKYLRK::TING | Give Peace a Chance!!! | Sat Oct 26 1991 16:12 | 6 |
| Bill Graham died last night with two others in a helicopter crash in Northern
California coming back from a Huey Lewis show 8-(. RIP, Bill!! Thanks for
all the good times!!
peace,
t!ng
|
156.70 | | ESGWST::MIRASSOU | So... what DOES it all mean? | Sun Oct 27 1991 01:26 | 17 |
| This hasn't been a good weekend for people who have influenced my life.
First Gene Roddenberry, and now Bill Graham. I just found out,
flipping channels, and happened to come upon a news program talking
about him (on KTVU, a local independent station). They had some clips of
people he worked with, including some comments by Janis Joplin, and
other comments by those who he worked with for some charity work.
One thing I noticed about Bill... though I never met him, I saw him in
the audience a few times, both at Oakland Coliseum and at Shoreline...
He always seemed to be enjoying the show he was at. Everytime I saw
him at a show, he had a smile on his face, like he was enjoying
whatever was going on, rather it was a volleyball game at the NYE run,
or just wandering through the scene.
Apparently, the show Sunday night is to be deadicated to him.
Bill, you will be missed...You helped bring much of the music I enjoy
to a wider audience. (RIP, 1931-1991)
|
156.71 | the day the music died | MSHRMS::FIELDS | send a smile, show you care | Mon Oct 28 1991 08:14 | 4 |
| such sad news , when I read the Sunday paper and saw the orbit it kinda
left me numb. He was taken before his time.......
Chris
|
156.72 | He's Gone | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Li'l red light on the highway | Mon Oct 28 1991 08:42 | 9 |
|
Heard about while in a moderately altered state...hard to believe. He was one
of those people I figured would be around forever. I got to thinking last night
about all the music to which I was introduced thanks to him...the list is
practically endless.
Jim
|
156.73 | | LEDS::MRNGDU::YETTO | child of countless dreams | Mon Oct 28 1991 08:51 | 6 |
|
:^( I heard this from Dave and chose not to believe it,
but now I know it's true. Good bye Bill, rest well and
thanks for everything!
|
156.74 | | WFOV11::BUTZE | Quick beat of an icy heart... | Mon Oct 28 1991 10:19 | 5 |
| I heard this late Saturday night..kinda put a damper on the rest
of the evening...tis sad...take care Uncle Bobo....
you will be remembered and missed..
rich
|
156.75 | Still can't believe it | STAR::SALKEWICZ | It missed... therefore, I am | Mon Oct 28 1991 10:22 | 15 |
|
The music biz won't be the same without him. Ther are so many
musicians who have been helped by him,.. pulled out of the
gutter,.. promoted, produced,.. all great acts that I love.
He had the brains to help out the "brainless" artists who were
wasting their lives away and bring them back to the limelight.
His influence was all pervasive throughout much of the music
that I have loved over the years. I'm still cryin'
Bill,. we love you,.. and we will miss you. Thanks for all
the hard work over the years and for some of the sweetest
memories of my life.
/Bill
|
156.76 | We will miss ya at the shows | CLOSUS::BARNES | | Mon Oct 28 1991 11:44 | 11 |
| ya, really strange about Bill Grahm....I was told while on a road trip
this weekend sorta like "OH! I forgot to tell ya!!!" type thing..
left me kinda numb too. I agree with whoever said he was
almost always enjoyin the show.
I remember him at Telluride..a HUGE grin on his face, he was standing
right next to me talking to some locals. And his plea to be careful
and kind to our bodies in Vegas...those words will always send chills
up and down my spine when I listen to that tape.
RIP...we will keep da faith
rfb
|
156.77 | | MPGS::PECKAR | goin' where the wind goes | Mon Oct 28 1991 13:33 | 11 |
|
I dunno, but there always seemed to be _something_ different about a BGP event;
a kinda _electricity_ that other shows can attain, but just not to the same
degree fer some reason. Just one of lifes lil' inexplicables, I s'pose.
My first concert was a BGP, and he was quite a visable feature: he was
the guy standing behind the "lemonade" stand just inside the lobby. :-)
Who will now descend upon the NYE Stage from on grateful high????
Fog
|
156.78 | Goodbye, Uncle Bobo | DECWET::HAMBY | | Tue Oct 29 1991 19:38 | 9 |
| One of the biggest differences in being 30 (as opposed to 20) is that
many more people who have directly or indirectly influenced my life are
dead.
I don't know exactly what to call the emotion that this realization
causes, but it hurts, especially knowing that in the years to come
it's going to get worse.
John
|
156.79 | | SSGV02::STROBEL | Sssh - new dad asleep | Wed Oct 30 1991 10:25 | 5 |
| re: -.1
I hear ya John. I keep grasping at the thought of immortality (not just
for myself) and it keeps slipping
|
156.80 | flip side | NECSC::LEVY | Thanks, Uncle Bobo! | Wed Oct 30 1991 10:34 | 12 |
| > One of the biggest differences in being 30 (as opposed to 20) is that
> many more people who have directly or indirectly influenced my life are
> dead.
Yes. This is true and it sometimes causes a hollow feeling inside.
However, I find that one of the biggest differences in being 40 <GAWD!> (as
opposed to 20 or 30), is that I've allowed so many *more* people influence
and contribute to my life. Something about getting older seems to help me
create more space for people to contribute to me.
~dave
|
156.81 | | CLOSUS::BARNES | | Wed Oct 30 1991 12:43 | 3 |
| re:.78 and .80
that's life.........
rfb
|
156.82 | make more space | STAR::SALKEWICZ | It missed... therefore, I am | Wed Oct 30 1991 14:29 | 9 |
| re .80
Hey Probs
Thats great! You have a good formula working there.
Keep with it man...
/
|
156.83 | rfb is forever young! | ESASE1::JCFERGUSON | Guinness is good for you. | Thu Oct 31 1991 04:30 | 9 |
|
re: rfb
you crack me up.... i can just see you when you're 50 ... you'll probably
still act like you're 21 !!!!! ain't nothin' wrong with that in my book...
hope you don't take offense to this as I mean it in a good sort of way....
;-)
|
156.84 | RIP Fred | SSGV02::STROBEL | Sssh - new dad asleep | Wed Nov 06 1991 07:53 | 6 |
| Publisher Robert Maxwell yesterday
and
The inventor of flubber, father of the shaggy dog and the coolest guy
ever to sport a pair of wing tips, Fred MacMurray, at age 83
|
156.85 | | LANDO::HAPGOOD | now we play for life | Wed Nov 06 1991 09:06 | 11 |
| > The inventor of flubber, father of the shaggy dog and the coolest guy
> ever to sport a pair of wing tips, Fred MacMurray, at age 83
Yeah Jeff that made me smile! And don't forget "America's favorite Dad!".
re:: Maxwell
Someone sold 2 million dollars worth of Maxwell's stock around the time
he was killed....Scotland Yard is investigating....
bob
|
156.86 | | SPOCK::IRONS | Setting the Standard for Deadcellence | Thu Nov 07 1991 13:00 | 6 |
| I couldn't believe that "My Three Son's" ran from 1960 to 1973!! I
believe that's the longest running sitcom to date?
Saw this stuff on Good Morning America the other day.
dave
|
156.87 | | AIMHI::KELLER | The BoR, Void Where Prohibited by law | Thu Nov 07 1991 14:23 | 14 |
| > <<< Note 156.86 by SPOCK::IRONS "Setting the Standard for Deadcellence" >>>
>
> I couldn't believe that "My Three Son's" ran from 1960 to 1973!! I
> believe that's the longest running sitcom to date?
>
> Saw this stuff on Good Morning America the other day.
>
> dave
I thought M*A*S*H* was the longest running sitcom. I don't have th dates
though
Geoff
|
156.88 | | MSHRMS::FIELDS | send a smile, show you care | Thu Nov 07 1991 14:25 | 1 |
| I think mash was 11 yrs
|
156.89 | I know this! | CSLALL::BENJAMIN | | Thu Nov 07 1991 19:34 | 4 |
| On CNN, they said "My Three Sons" was the 2nd longest running sitcom
ever..."Ozzie and Harriet" was the first......
|
156.90 | Going...going... | NECSC::LEVY | Thanks, Uncle Bobo! | Thu Nov 07 1991 19:42 | 7 |
| Well...he ain't dead...yet...but I heard that Frank Zappa is seriously
ill with prostate cancer.
Another hero...
:-(
|
156.91 | | LANDO::HAPGOOD | now we play for life | Fri Nov 08 1991 08:35 | 9 |
| <<< Note 156.90 by NECSC::LEVY "Thanks, Uncle Bobo!" >>>
> Well...he ain't dead...yet...but I heard that Frank Zappa is seriously
> ill with prostate cancer.
I heard this too last night as they played lots of ZAPPA. Isn't
this the same type of cancer that Michael Landon died from?
:( is right.....
bob
|
156.92 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Was all night runnin' | Fri Nov 08 1991 08:46 | 11 |
|
I think Michael Landon had pancreatic cancer.
Jim
|
156.93 | | TERAPN::PHYLLIS | Wake, now discover.. | Fri Nov 08 1991 08:54 | 7 |
|
I heard it on the radio too. :-( He was supposed to play 4 nights in
the NYC area starting last night but cancelled out at the last minute
because he was too sick.
:-(
|
156.94 | sad sad sad | FURTHR::HANNAN | Beyond description... | Fri Nov 08 1991 09:17 | 8 |
| Man, first Majic and now Zappa ? On successive days ? Geez!
Majic ought to be OK for a while I guess but this is really
bad news for Frank.
:'-(
Ken
|
156.95 | Rilly sick people | SPICE::PECKAR | Not the Mama | Fri Nov 08 1991 10:44 | 6 |
|
I always suspected Prostate Cancer would be FZ's downfall, after all,
wasn't it he wrote that smash hit "Why does it hurt when I pee"?
Fog
|
156.96 | Too bad, but... | PENUTS::NOBLE | I hate quotations. - Emerson | Fri Nov 08 1991 15:05 | 6 |
|
Jumping the gun a little here aren't we? Isn't this the "dead people"
note? Or is it now the "Soon to be..." note?
...Robert
|
156.97 | | VMPIRE::CLARK | puzzlin' evidence | Fri Nov 08 1991 16:50 | 1 |
| A minor digression, Rob.
|
156.98 | | BCSE::ABBOT | | Mon Nov 11 1991 12:14 | 9 |
| Just to keep the list of not dead yet people:
Freddie Mercury (from Queen) has been diagnosed with AIDS.
Mort Shuman (former songwriting partner with Doc Pomus, who died
earlier this year) is really dead.
And after 16 valiant years of struggle, Generalissimo Francisco Franco
is still dead.
|
156.99 | RIP | MSHRMS::FIELDS | send a smile, show you care | Mon Nov 25 1991 08:36 | 7 |
| Freddie Mercury has died over the weekend due to AIDS.......
momma just killed a man, put a gun to his head pulled the
trigger now he's dead......oh momma life has just begun.........
Chris
|
156.100 | She's gone | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Don't go near that river | Thu Jan 02 1992 14:15 | 12 |
|
Saw in another notesfile that Adm Grace Hopper died recently (yesterday?).
She was 85.
Jim
|
156.101 | | EZRIDR::SIEGEL | The revolution wil not be televised | Thu Jan 16 1992 13:06 | 4 |
| Dee Murray, Elton John's bassist, and also in Uriah Heep, died today of skin
cancer (melanoma).
RIP
|
156.102 | | LANDO::HAPGOOD | now we play for life | Thu Jan 30 1992 08:45 | 7 |
| Willie Dixon! So long Mr. BLUES.
He was *the* little red rooster!
I think he was 76 and died early yesterday morning.
|
156.103 | DIXON obit. | LANDO::HAPGOOD | now we play for life | Thu Jan 30 1992 12:56 | 134 |
| What follows is an obit for Dixon:
<<< AKOFIN::DISK$FA0087:[NOTES$LIBRARY]AFTER_HOURS.NOTE;1 >>>
-< After_Hours Blues/R&B Conference >-
================================================================================
Note 18.14 Willie Dixon 14 of 17
DPE::STARR "They call it Paradise, I don't know wh" 125 lines 29-JAN-1992 17:44
-< R.I.P. >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Article 1455 of clari.news.music:
Subject: Blues legend Willie Dixon dead at 76
Date: 29 Jan 92 18:33:37 GMT
BURBANK, Calif. (UPI) -- Blues legend Willie Dixon, whose music
epitomized the blues and shaped rock 'n' roll, died Wednesday from
apparent heart failure. He was 76.
A spokeswoman for St. Joseph Medical Center in Burbank said that
Dixon was admitted to the hospital Jan. 5 complaining of chest pains. He
died about 1:30 a.m.
``Based on his condition, his physician speculates that he died of
heart failure,'' spokeswoman Patty Starkey said.
As an key member of the Chicago blues scene, Dixon sang and played
stand-up bass but his legacy will be the hundreds of songs he wrote for
others. They are among the most enduring in the blues genre, filled with
grit and an evocative quality that was not lost on the young Mick
Jagger, Keith Richards, Eric Clapton, Jimmy Page and other young rockers
in the early 1960s.
Dixon's helped shape the careers of Muddy Waters and Howlin' Wolf,
two other Mississippi transplants, when all three were part of Chicago's
legendary Chess record label in the 1950s.
``Frankly, the blues is the facts of life and it's very easy to write
the blues when you're thinking about life,'' Dixon said in a 1989
television interview.
Dixon was an adequate singer but Howlin' Wolf and Waters gave his
classic works an eroticism and urgency that he could not.
The crusty Wolf, born Chester Burnett, had hits with Dixon's ``Little
Red Rooster,'' ``I Ain't Superstitious,'' ``Back Door Man,'' ``Evil''
and ``Spoonful,'' filling them with a tinge of danger and brooding
sensuality. For Waters, whose style was not so menacing, Dixon wrote ``I
Just Want to Make Love to You,'' ``Hoochie Coochie Man'' and ``You Need
Love.''
Dixon had to be diplomatic when pitching a song to the rivals Wolf
and Waters, who both feared he was giving his best work to the other.
``When I first started giving them songs, nobody ever wanted the song
you gave them,'' Dixon said in a 1989 Rolling Stone interview. ``So I
had to use a little psychology on them. Since Wolf and Muddy both seemed
to think that I was giving them the wrong song, all I'd have to do is go
to Wolf and say, 'Hey, man, now here's a song I made for Muddy. Muddy's
going to do this.'''
Bruce Iglauer, president and founder of blues-oriented Alligator
Records, knew Dixon for many years.
``Willie's main contribution to blues was not as a performer but as a
writer, talent scout and creator of sounds,'' he said. ``Willie in many
respects defined what is called Chicago Blues in the late 1940s through
the end of the 1960s as a producer, as a writer, as an arranger. He
really had a musical vision.
``He had a sense of writing the perfect song for the artist.''
``He was probably the greatest blues writer that ever lived -- that
was his business,'' said Scott A. Cameron, who served as Dixon's manager
for nearly 20 years until Dixon severed the professional relationship
two months ago.
Dixon, one of 14 children, was born July 1, 1915, in Vicksburg, Miss.
He was fairly well educated and picked up his love of lyrics from his
mother, who read him poetry and encouraged him to write his own.
He sang in gospel groups but also had trouble with the law that
landed him in prison farms before he migrated to New York and then to
Chicago. His refusal to go into the Army in 1941 resulted in more jail
time.
Dixon was a heavyweight boxer long enough to win an Illinois Golden
Gloves title in 1937 but an arguement with a manager over money ended
his ring career. He turn to music and eventually met Phil and Leonard
Chess.
When the Chess brothers formed their record company, Dixon became an
important -- although not well paid -- part of it. He composed, sang,
played at recording sessions and worked as a producer, arranger and
talent scout.
Like many blues men of his generation, Dixon had to go to Europe to
broaden his audience. A 1960 tour of the continent eventually would
bring him a roundabout recognition from white Americans.
Fledgling musicians flocked to Dixon's shows in England and found the
essence of rock 'n' roll in his songs. Members of the Rolling Stones,
the Yardbirds, Cream, the Jeff Beck Group, John Mayall's Bluesbreakers
and Led Zeppelin all were taken by Dixon's work and recorded his songs.
White American teengers then snatched up the British rock records, thus
getting their first, indirect exposure to American blues.
Dixon, who would later have legal battles with some of his disciples
over royalties, often found himself hosting young Britons who made
pilgrimages to his Chicago home.
``They'd come to my house and I'd carry them to different places to
entertain them,'' Dixon told Rolling Stone. ``When they got to be
popular, like the Stones, there were so many other people following them
around until I couldn't let them all in my house because they couldn't
get in the doorway.''
In later years, acts as diverse as the heavy metal band Metallica,
Hank Williams Jr., Los Lobos and New Wavers Oingo Boingo would record
Dixon songs.
``When a youngster today goes to tracing the history of American
music, he's going to find the blues is the roots of it all,'' Dixon told
The Washington Post in 1989. ``That's why it's important for people to
understand the blues is an important part of our history and our
culture.''
In another interview that year, Dixon had said, ``The wisdom of the
blues is the true facts of life, expressed in words, songs, inspiration,
feeling and understanding. And when people have that, you can say you
have some experience with the blues.''
Dixon often had to go to great lengths to protect his copyrights and
had to contest the Rolling Stones and Led Zeppelin for royalties to
their versions of his songs. To help other blues men and their heirs in
similar battles, he became head of the Blues Heaven Foundation (822
Hillgrove Ave., Western Springs, Ill., 60558) in 1982. The foundation
also established a scholarship fund in Waters's name for Chicago-area
students and provided musical instruments to schools in the name of
blues greats.
Dixon had a revival in the late 1980s. He won a Grammy in 1989 for
his first album in many years, ``Hidden Charms,'' and his autobiography,
``I Am the Blues,'' was published in 1989.
In 1989 Chess released a boxed set containing 36 of his songs as
performed by himself, Waters, Wolf, Koko Taylor, Willie Mabon, Little
Walter and others.
Dixon was one of the main attractions at a Jan. 21, 1989, rhythm and
blues concert put on as part of George Bush's inauguration and he showed
up wearing a ``Jesse Jackson for President'' button.
Dixon, who lost his right foot in 1977 because of complications of
diabetes, was a bulky man and celebrated his girth in the songs ``Built
for Comfort'' and ``300 Pounds of Joy.''
Cameron said Dixon also suffered from heart disease for some 20 years
and suffered a mild heart attack in the 1980s. Even so, Cameron said
that up until recently, Dixon's health was ``quite robust.''
He moved from Chicago to Glendale, Calif., in 1984 with his wife,
Marie. They had five children, including a 21-year-old son who drowned
in April 1988. Memorial services were tentatively planned in Los Angeles
followed by a funeral in Chicago.
|
156.104 | | TLE::ABBOT | J. R. "Bob" Dobbs in 92 | Thu Jan 30 1992 12:58 | 6 |
| Jose Ferrer died yesterday too. He was 80.
He played some cool bad guys, not as evil as Max von Sydow but he ws
pretty good.
Scott
|
156.105 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Don't go near that river | Fri Feb 21 1992 12:12 | 10 |
|
Heard somebody here say that Dick York who played Darren (in the early days)
on Bewitched died yesterday. I know he's been quite ill, but can't recall
with what.
Jum
|
156.106 | | CLOSUS::BARNES | | Fri Feb 21 1992 12:17 | 3 |
| dick york or dick sargent??? sargent came out of the closet on public
TV sometime ago, so....
rfb
|
156.107 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Don't go near that river | Fri Feb 21 1992 12:37 | 17 |
|
RE: <<< Note 156.106 by CLOSUS::BARNES >>>
> dick york or dick sargent??? sargent came out of the closet on public
> TV sometime ago, so....
Dick York. Sargent did come out of the closet, and is alive.
Jum
|
156.108 | | LANDO::HAPGOOD | now we play for life | Mon Apr 06 1992 09:51 | 7 |
|
Isaac Asimov - RIP. Dead at 72 from heart and kidney failure.
Currently reading the last "Foundation and Earth" which he wrote (can't
quite seem to find the time to finish it...).
|
156.109 | | WEPUBS::BARNES | | Mon Apr 06 1992 12:35 | 3 |
| wow! Asimov filled many of my teenaage reading hours with grate
fantasy....
rfb
|
156.110 | RIP | SLOHAN::FIELDS | Its sad,so sad 'cus the Circus Left Town | Mon Apr 06 1992 13:52 | 3 |
| Sam Walmart or Wal-Mart and Sam's Club passed away over the Wekkend
and on a personal note Richard X. Gannon former owner of Gannon Motors
Westboro died Saturday, a very good friend of my family....
|
156.111 | | SCOONR::GLADU | | Wed Apr 08 1992 13:16 | 1 |
| RIP - 4/4/92, Phillip C. McKernan, 72. (Pigpen's dad).
|
156.112 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Spending those renegade pesos | Thu May 14 1992 09:53 | 16 |
|
Well, lessee...Robert Reed (dad on the Brady Bunch) died last night of
colon cancer at 59..
Carlos Herrera credited with creating the margerita died yesterday
And the lady who created Spic n' Span
Flags are at half staff in Margaritaville today
|
156.113 | A oneannatwoannna... | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Let the words be yours | Tue May 19 1992 09:45 | 9 |
|
Well, Lawrence Welk, the king of champaigne music has gone to the bandbox
in the sky. I was never all that crazy about him, but a lot of childhood
memories of watching him on TV (yes Lisa, they had TV when I was a kid :-) )
with my parents and grandparents came back after hearing the news..
Jum
|
156.114 | | LEDS::MRNGDU::YETTO | discover the wonders of nature | Tue May 19 1992 09:56 | 7 |
|
TV *and* Lawrence Welk? Weren't you the lucky child? :-)
Actually, I have lots of memories of watching LW too, not totally by choice.
But I admit to being impressed by the real life soap opera and family gossip
of the Welk family that my aunt knew all about!
|
156.115 | music roots | SELL1::ROBERTS | a blinding flash o'the obvious | Tue May 19 1992 10:02 | 10 |
|
I also rememeber watching Lawrence Welk show as a teenager - yes I was a
teenager once. I remember thinking even then that there had to be
something better then this gossamer swing and the hillbilly stuff on
the AM radio my folks had on in the kitchen at all hours of the day and
night... I grew up in VT .. and then I found that if I stayed up rilly
rilly late at nite i could hear Peter Tripp the curly_headed kid in the
3rd Row from some station in NYC. heady stuff.
c
|
156.116 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Let the words be yours | Tue May 19 1992 11:04 | 17 |
|
RE: <<< Note 156.115 by SELL1::ROBERTS "a blinding flash o'the obvious" >>>
-< music roots >-
> rilly late at nite i could hear Peter Tripp the curly_headed kid in the
> 3rd Row from some station in NYC. heady stuff.
Boing! I used to listen to a guy with the same name on a station in SF! He
used to be on KYA which called itself America's #1 music station!
Jum
|
156.117 | boinnng yerself | SELL1::ROBERTS | a blinding flash o'the obvious | Tue May 19 1992 11:51 | 5 |
|
cool!!! Maybe Peter Tripp was syndicated??? wow! I never knew ANYONE
else who had heard of him.
|
156.118 | Radio Trivia | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Let the words be yours | Tue May 19 1992 11:59 | 14 |
|
I don't think he was syndicated...as I recall he was on in the early or mid
60's and disappeared in the late 60's. I think he was on in the afternoons.
Also on the station at the time were (Big Daddy) Tom Donahue and Bobby Mitchell,
who were instrumental (so to speak) in the early stages of the 60's music scene
in SF..Donahue eventually left KYA and started one of the first "underground"
FM stations (KMPX) and ultimately moved over to KSAN..both are dead so I guess
this is really not a digression :-)
Jum
|
156.119 | RAdio Daze | SELL1::ROBERTS | a blinding flash o'the obvious | Tue May 19 1992 12:14 | 5 |
| well *I* heard him around '57 + or so - having been a teenager before you
(!) My impression was that he was coming out of NYC and it was
definitely at nite. I know this because that was the only time VT'rs
could pick up such a station. amazing connections
|
156.121 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Let the words be yours | Tue May 19 1992 14:58 | 14 |
|
Ummm..could you perhaps be cornfusing Lawrence Welk with Ed Sullivan?
I do recall seeing a guy on LW that played a honky tonk piano..the guys name
was Big Tiny Little Junior, and that ol guy could bang them 88s. My dad was
a piano freak and he loved to see that guy.
Jum
|
156.122 | | DEDSHO::CLARK | | Tue May 19 1992 15:19 | 1 |
| What ever became of the Lennon Sisters, anyways?
|
156.123 | | TLE::ABBOT | J. R. "Bob" Dobbs in 92 | Tue May 19 1992 15:28 | 11 |
| I thought LW died several years ago.
My mother used to watch his show. I thought he was squarer than
square. I remember a few things from the show - the Lemmon Sisters,
Bobby the dancer who was a mouseketeer, the Geritol and denture ads.
Maybe when we're in our golden years Bob Weir will host a show
featuring our favorite rock stars of our younger years. Imagine an 85
year old Mick Jagger trying to get through "Satisfaction".
Scott
|
156.124 | OOPS | STAR::SALKEWICZ | It missed... therefore, I am | Tue May 19 1992 15:41 | 6 |
| Hell yeah I am Jum,.
I'm going to delete that reply..
/BILL
|
156.125 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Let the words be yours | Tue May 19 1992 15:52 | 18 |
|
RE: <<< Note 156.122 by DEDSHO::CLARK >>>
>What ever became of the Lennon Sisters, anyways?
I think they wrote a book about the horrors of working for LW and how much they
all hated singing those stupid songs all the while smiling like there's no
tomorrow..soon to be a made for TV movie (loosely based on the book) where
in order to deal with their dissatisfaction with LW they actually became the
Four Seasons and secretly hated each other..
Jum
|
156.126 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Let the words be yours | Tue May 19 1992 15:53 | 14 |
|
RE: <<< Note 156.123 by TLE::ABBOT "J. R. "Bob" Dobbs in 92" >>>
> Bobby the dancer who was a mouseketeer, the Geritol and denture ads.
And the laxitive called Serutan (which backwards spells Natures)
Jum
|
156.127 | hee hee | SMURF::GRADY | Short arms, and deep pockets... | Tue May 19 1992 16:03 | 8 |
| >in order to deal with their dissatisfaction with LW they actually became the
>Four Seasons and secretly hated each other..
...not to mention the quadruple sex change operation in the
mid-sixties....;-)
tim
|
156.128 | | LEDS::MRNGDU::YETTO | discover the wonders of nature | Tue May 19 1992 16:07 | 9 |
|
speaking of sex and dead people you just reminded me of something I heard on
BCN (I think) last week... It's really terrible, no disrespect meant to Mr.
Brady but I heard that offset of the Brady Bunch filmings were constant orgies
between the cast members. They even had a song about it (sung to the Brady
Bunch theme of course). Wish I could remember some of it, it was hysterical.
So much so that I was stuck at an intersection laughing. Did anyone else hear
it?
|
156.129 | smileys included for clarity's sake | STAR::SALKEWICZ | It missed... therefore, I am | Tue May 19 1992 16:14 | 14 |
| There you go,,. shattering the last of my childhood mtyths
Thanks a lot Lisa!
/Was_a_Brady_fan_once_upon
_a_time
PS
Oh ,. hey Lisa,.. can't forget this now can I?
:-) :-) ;-)
|
156.130 | Brady Cluster..., rather than Brady Bunch... :-) | TLE::WEISS | My hangover ate my bagel. | Tue May 19 1992 16:19 | 6 |
| Yup, Lisa, it was BCN.
I heard it, too. On my way to the Sox game. Pretty funny stuff (if you're into
sophmoric-type of humor -- which I can be...) :-).
Dave
|
156.131 | | DEDSHO::CLARK | | Tue May 19 1992 16:25 | 10 |
| re Lisa
The guy who played Greg in the Brady Bunch mentioned in a book he wrote recently,
about the show, that he used to lust after Florence Henderson during the
series. I think he said something like "from the beginning, my interest in
Florence was more carnal than maternal."
Rilly.
-dc
|
156.132 | | ESGWST::MIRASSOU | Someone please Fax me a beer. | Tue May 19 1992 17:35 | 5 |
| re: daddy Brady
Talk about destroying images! On the radio this morning I heard that,
though Robert Reed died of Colon Cancer, he was also HIV positive, and
that the cancer was (or was likely?) a complication of AIDS.
|
156.133 | | TLE::ABBOT | J. R. "Bob" Dobbs in 92 | Tue May 19 1992 18:05 | 13 |
| Well, he won an emmy for portraying a doctor who had a sex change
operation in an episode of Medical Center (or one of those medical
dramas) in the 70's. Course it doesn't mean anything other than he did
a good job in the role. BTW, anyone can be exposed to AIDS regardless
of their sexual preference, so we shouldn't assume things.
AIDS does make one more likely to get cancer - as with Freddie Mercury.
Did Greg really have an affair with mom Brady right from the beginning?
He couldn't have been much more than 12 when the series started.
Scott
|
156.134 | | DEDSHO::CLARK | | Tue May 19 1992 18:09 | 4 |
| > Did Greg really have an affair with mom Brady right from the beginning?
> He couldn't have been much more than 12 when the series started.
Just in his mind, I think.
|
156.135 | | SLOHAN::FIELDS | Its sad,so sad 'cus the Circus Left Town | Wed May 20 1992 09:25 | 8 |
| I read PEOPLE magazine last night and if they didn't say he
died of a AIDS related problem then I'd say thats just a BUNCH of BS !
the cancer was found last Thanksgiving, and it took him fast.....and
thats it.
sad all the same...
Chris
|
156.136 | :-) | CSCMA::M_PECKAR | spinning that curious sense | Wed May 20 1992 11:26 | 4 |
|
Wait a second. You can get AIDS from performing a sex change operation on TV??
|
156.137 | shattering legends as we go | CIVIC::ROBERTS | a blinding flash o'the obvious | Wed May 20 1992 11:40 | 6 |
| >Wait a second. You can get AIDS from performing a sex change
yeah - nothing is safe anymore.
BTW - I also heard that Greg and Mrs. B. were a hot item.
|
156.138 | personally, i always lusted after Marcia... Jan too later.. :^) | ROULET::DWEST | Dont Overlook Something Extraordinary | Wed May 20 1992 12:57 | 5 |
|
Greg and Mrs B did date for a time... both have fessed up in
interviews...
da ve
|
156.139 | 8^P | STAR::SALKEWICZ | It missed... therefore, I am | Wed May 20 1992 13:58 | 6 |
| I feel so well informed now
Thanks everyone
/
|
156.140 | | TLE::ABBOT | J. R. "Bob" Dobbs in 92 | Wed May 20 1992 14:16 | 8 |
| Next they'll say that Peter had a fling with Alice.
Cancer can take someone pretty quick - last year Michael Landon found
out he had cancer around April, and by June or July he was dead. Not
much time to do everything you want to do.
Scott
|
156.141 | | TERAPN::PHYLLIS | fly through the night | Wed May 20 1992 15:45 | 6 |
|
I know someone who was diagnosed with cancer and died 3 weeks later. It
can be very quick, depending on what it hits. In his case it was his
liver.
|
156.142 | Early detection is important with cancer | MR4DEC::WENTZELL | Don't say I didn't warn you | Wed May 20 1992 15:47 | 4 |
|
Cancer is often not diagnosed until it has done most of its dirty work. 8^(
|
156.143 | ...as always: | SMURF::GRADY | Short arms, and deep pockets... | Wed May 20 1992 23:06 | 1 |
| Death don't have no mercy...
|
156.144 | | LJOHUB::RILEY | Without a slip of the toungue... | Fri Jun 05 1992 15:15 | 9 |
|
Tom Dobbs - Sound Engineer for Taft Sound (worked with Slipknot).
6/3/92
Rest in Peace my friend, I'll never forget the compliments you have
given, the smiles you have shared, the kindness in your heart, and the
happiness in your life... These tears are hold to hold back.
|
156.145 | No reason to hide the sorrow... | TLE::WEISS | My hangover ate my bagel. | Mon Jun 08 1992 11:57 | 7 |
| > These tears are hold to hold back.
So don't... :-|
Hang in there, Treemon...
Dave
|
156.146 | | CREATV::QUODLING | OLIVER is the Solution! | Tue Jun 16 1992 18:58 | 9 |
| Simon Szeto, one of the most prolific noters in DEC, and a true
gentlemen, died of heart failure, while out riding his bicycle, on
Saturday.
See the Digital Conference, note 1941. for more details, and
eulogies...
q
|
156.147 | :-( | NECSC::LEVY | Don't Let Go! | Tue Jun 16 1992 21:33 | 7 |
| Holy mackerel! I met Simon at DECUS last fall after seeing his notes
(and benefiting from much of his expertise) for quite a while.
Shocked!
~dave
|
156.148 | Simon Szeto | NECSC::LEVY | Don't Let Go! | Tue Jun 16 1992 21:43 | 62 |
| Cross posted:
<<< HUMANE::HUMANE$DUA1:[NOTES$LIBRARY]DIGITAL.NOTE;1 >>>
-< The DEC way of working >-
================================================================================
Note 1941.7 Simon Szeto passes on 7 of 73
CVG::THOMPSON "Radical Centralist" 53 lines 14-JUN-1992 23:18
-< Simon Szeto - who he was for those who didn't know him >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Simon Szeto was a software engineering manager. At least that is what
DEC paid him for. He was also a very special person. When he left the
RSTS group to work on the PRO many years a go a trade rag, the RSTS
Professional, called him the conscience of RSTS engineering. He was
always vitally concerned about customers. Actually he was vitally
concerned about people period.
Noters owe him some great debts. Even if he did create SOAPBOX. Simon
was a manager in the old PRO-350 group. On his watch was created
DITTYBAG, now CTNOTES, which was of the early product support
conferences. But it was more then a dry report the problem/reply
conference. It had a real personality. This was in the old KNOTES
days. Later as Mark Goodrich developed Notes-11 Simon was the
unofficial product manager for this non-product. He provided lots
of encouragement to those of us who created add-ons to notes. The first
documentation for Notes, The Notes-11 Users Guide, came about because
Simon encouraged and supported me in the effort.
Simon started EASYNOTES.LIS, the definitive list of announced
conferences on the net. I took it over a year or so later (and have
since handed it over to another), but always regarded it as "Simon's
List."
Once upon a time the sort of center of the Enet (now EASYNET) was a
conference for discussion of network management issues. Someone started
a flame there about smoking at work. When criticized for posting it
there the reply was that there was nowhere else to put it. Simon
created the first SOAPBOX in his own directory to draw the fire away.
This became the first really significant employee interest notes file.
Simon also worked behind the scenes educating people about Notes
issues. It's not well known but Notes-11 supported moderators of a
sort. Simon was one of the first. Many of us learned to moderate by
following Simon's lead. I know I'm not alone in that I often went to
Simon for advice. About Notes of course but also about work and life
in general. Sometimes he came to me with it. but such was Simon's
nature and the nature of his advice that this was always welcome.
I've known Simon since the DITTYBAG days. We met in person for the
first time when he was visiting the RSTS group, where we both worked
at different times, to see who this weird guy was that was in the
middle of a major notes fight in DITTYBAG. We met face to face many
times after that. I'm fortunate to have known him. He was truly a
special person.
Simon leaves behind a wife and two sons. Also a great many friends,
including myself, who will miss him greatly. Those of us who knew him
are fortunate for that. As a believer, as Simon was, I hold on to the
knowledge that we will meet again in paradise. But I'll miss him until
then.
Alfred
|
156.150 | | TERAPN::PHYLLIS | fly through the night | Fri Jun 19 1992 11:19 | 4 |
|
:-(
|
156.151 | ? | SLOHAN::FIELDS | Its sad,so sad 'cus the Circus Left Town | Fri Jun 19 1992 11:41 | 8 |
| Geoff, not that I don't beleive your note but I have not heard anything
on the radio or even in Heavy Metal notes about Page's
death.....wouldn't a station like BCN be playing Led Zep like crazy
right about now ?
I hope its not true
Chris
|
156.152 | Sad news (rumor?) | STAR::SALKEWICZ | It missed... therefore, I am | Fri Jun 19 1992 12:05 | 8 |
| gulp
:-(
I thought he had kicked the habit,... Hope its not true...
/Soko
|
156.153 | | AIMHI::KELLER | I am not a number, I am a free man | Fri Jun 19 1992 12:07 | 19 |
| ><<< Note 156.151 by SLOHAN::FIELDS "Its sad,so sad 'cus the Circus Left Town" >>>
> -< ? >-
>
> Geoff, not that I don't beleive your note but I have not heard anything
> on the radio or even in Heavy Metal notes about Page's
> death.....wouldn't a station like BCN be playing Led Zep like crazy
> right about now ?
>
> I hope its not true
>
> Chris
I haven't heard it anywhere else either. I can't vouch for the reliability but
thought I would pass on the message
Geoff
|
156.154 | | TERAPN::PHYLLIS | fly through the night | Fri Jun 19 1992 13:02 | 4 |
|
I tried to email the author but it bounced back as unknown addressee.
|
156.155 | looking like a rumor more and more | SLOHAN::FIELDS | Its sad,so sad 'cus the Circus Left Town | Fri Jun 19 1992 13:49 | 4 |
| Well its hit H_M as a rumor but still confirmation...so I'd put it down
as just a rumor.....i hope
Chris
|
156.156 | | MONTOR::HANNAN | Beyond description... | Fri Jun 19 1992 14:43 | 11 |
| Wow. I was seriously into Led Zeppelin, and in particular the
guitar work of Jimmy Page, for years. I hope it's not true.
Wierd, listening to Death Dont' Have No Mercy the other day
I thought what a great job Led Zeppelin could have done with it.
Never made that association before. I could hear Jimmy's searing
treatment of the lead portions, and Plant doing justice to lyrics.
Can you hear it ?
Ken
|
156.157 | Rumor of his death may be greatly exagerated | SMURF::PETERT | | Fri Jun 19 1992 17:15 | 13 |
| One thing that caught my eye when I read it this morning was the
time stamp, which was Thursday evening GMT, which is Thursday
afternoon our time. (EDT here :-) And it happened last night
according to the poster, which would have been Wednesday or early
morning Thursday. Certainly enough time to hit the Friday obits,
which reported Peter Allen's death (of AIDS related illness), but
nada about Page. I'm hoping it's a rumor of the Mark Twain
variety. Not that I'm a big Zep fan, but Page is still great (present
tense intended ;-) Peter Allen I didn't really care for, but I'm
not pleased to see him go. R.I.P. :-(
PeterT
|
156.158 | Jimmy page rumor?? | MR4DEC::WENTZELL | Don't say I didn't warn you | Mon Jun 22 1992 16:12 | 5 |
| I'm crusing through some unread notes from the last two weeks and come upon
this. My reaction was *GASP*!! I assume this rumor was never substaitated
since I have not heard anything about this anywhere else??
Scott_a_Zep_head_long_before_a_Ded_head
|
156.159 | William Gaines, R.I.P. | VSSCAD::LARU | run, or fight, or dance! | Mon Jun 22 1992 16:33 | 6 |
| William Gaines, publisher of Mad Magazine since #1,
died on or about June 3, 1992.
Alfred E Neuman was quoted, "What me worry?"
/bruce
|
156.160 | | STAR::HUGHES | Captain Slog | Tue Jun 23 1992 14:12 | 6 |
| re .158 et al
Apparently this rumour started as a practical joke that spread into the
alt.* newsgroups.
gary
|
156.162 | second | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Gonna get there? I don't know | Tue Jun 23 1992 14:36 | 0 |
156.163 | | CSCMA::M_PECKAR | spinning that curious sense | Tue Jun 23 1992 14:45 | 6 |
|
.149 is set hidden.
Geoff K, o.k. to delete it?
Lemme know.
|
156.164 | call it deleted | AIMHI::KELLER | I am not a number, I am a free man | Tue Jun 23 1992 15:06 | 13 |
| > <<< Note 156.163 by CSCMA::M_PECKAR "spinning that curious sense" >>>
>
>
>.149 is set hidden.
>
>Geoff K, o.k. to delete it?
>
>Lemme know.
All taken care of
Geoff
|
156.165 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | A friend I've never seen | Mon Jul 27 1992 10:18 | 4 |
|
Mary Wells who had a string of hits on the Motown label in the 60's died
yesterday of cancer at 49.
|
156.166 | just say yes to bugs?? | CXDOCS::BARNES | | Thu Aug 06 1992 18:41 | 5 |
| heard on the radio today...
the drummer for Toto died of a heartattack today due to an alergic
reaction to the pesticides he was spraying in his backyard!!
strange but true....
|
156.167 | | TLE::ABBOT | J. R. "Bob" Dobbs in 92 | Fri Aug 07 1992 12:31 | 5 |
| Was that one of the (Italian-sounding name) brothers? Famous session
guy.
Scott
|
156.168 | | CXDOCS::BARNES | | Fri Aug 07 1992 13:02 | 4 |
| yes Scott, can't remember the name, but your description
matches the radio's.
Actually I think all of Toto started as studio musicians.
rfb
|
156.169 | bummer | EZRIDR::SIEGEL | The revolution wil not be televised | Fri Aug 07 1992 14:16 | 5 |
| Jeff Porcaro??? WOW, what a loss for the music community! :-(
He played with Steely Dan, too.
adam
|
156.170 | John Cage | SELL1::ROBERTS | a blinding flash o'the obvious | Thu Aug 13 1992 14:17 | 3 |
| John Cage died yesterday at 79 in NYC
|
156.171 | | GUCCI::SMILLER | Mrs. Shannon DiPietro | Tue Aug 25 1992 15:39 | 13 |
| RE: 101
This is kind of late, but I just found this notesfile.
I met Dee Murray at a party in Tennessee back when I was in high
school. I went with my friend Michelle and her Dad who is a
songwriter("Dreams of the everyday housewife")-Chris Gantry.
Also met Crystal Gayle at that party.
Dee, his girlfriend and their little girl were so nice-real people.
wow.
|
156.172 | He was 60 | MR4DEC::WENTZELL | IfMusicBeTheFoodOfLove,PlayOn!!! | Mon Sep 14 1992 12:25 | 4 |
|
Just read that Anthony Perkins died over the weekend. 8^(
Scott
|
156.173 | | LANDO::HAPGOOD | | Tue Oct 06 1992 09:38 | 13 |
| Eddie Kendricks - one of the founders of that most awesome R&B band
The Temptations (My Girl, Ain't Too Proud to Beg, Psychedelic Shack,
Papa was a Rolling Stone, Keep on Truckin' and on and on and on).
Not sure why he's gone but I think about a year or so ago he had a
lung removed (cancer).
And Steve Scruggs is gone by his own hand (2 or 3 weeks ago). He killed
his wife then himself. Can things have been that bad? I saw the Earl
Scruggs Revue 3 times and what a wicked good time Earl, Steve and Randy
plus a couple of token non family members could put on!
WOW!
|
156.174 | RIP 8^( | MR4DEC::WENTZELL | Just a little sweetness | Tue Oct 06 1992 10:08 | 10 |
| >Eddie Kendricks - one of the founders of that most awesome R&B band
>The Temptations (My Girl, Ain't Too Proud to Beg, Psychedelic Shack,
>Papa was a Rolling Stone, Keep on Truckin' and on and on and on).
>Not sure why he's gone but I think about a year or so ago he had a
>lung removed (cancer).
Yeah, the news this morning said "advanced lung cancer." I think they said he
was 52.
Scott
|
156.175 | Red Barber | USABLE::SPINE | | Thu Oct 22 1992 19:12 | 20 |
| Red Barber at age 84.
Red was a pioneering radio and television sports announcer. He started
in the 1920's. Among many other notable accomplishments, Red was the
announcer for the first nighttime baseball game, the first televised
baseball game, and the first televised football game. Red's
announcing and his way with the English language was nothing short
of amazing. Red's voice is the one you hear calling many famous
sports events between the 20's and the 60's. In the late 70's, Red
was elected to the baseball hall of fame.
For the past 11 years, Bob Edwards, the host of NPR's Morning Edition,
has broadcast a weekly Friday morning conversation with Red as a
regular Morning Edition feature. I, and many others, will very
much miss this part of our Friday mornings.
If there's a great baseball game up there in the sky, Red is announcing
it.
tms_crying
|
156.176 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | To the bright side of the road | Thu Oct 22 1992 22:03 | 21 |
|
I enjoyed his commentary on NPR also...
Also dead today..
Jim Garrison..who's book inspired the movie JFK
Cleavon Little who among other things played the sheriff in Blazing Saddles
and also played in one of the better TV series from the early 70's "Temper-
atures rising...
Jum
|
156.177 | | LANDO::HAPGOOD | | Fri Oct 23 1992 10:06 | 10 |
| -< Red Barber >-
Yah, Red's gone. I remember a couple of weeks ago they said on NPR that
Red was sick and wouldn't be on today....never to return.
In addition to what tms just wrote:
He broadcast for the Brooklyn Dodgers, NY Yankees and Cincinnati Reds...
bob
|
156.178 | i'm surprised a tv watching conference like this missed it! :^) | ROULET::DWEST | if wishes were horses... | Fri Oct 23 1992 17:40 | 6 |
|
geee... no mention of Shirley Booth's passing this week... alas,
now the Baxter's will have to clean up thier own damn messes...
Hazel has gone for good.... :^(
da ve
|
156.179 | | VMPIRE::CLARK | leave your stepping stones behind | Fri Oct 23 1992 17:47 | 5 |
| Yeah, plus the actor who played the butler in the movie "Trading Places"
(starring Eddie Murphy, I definitely recommend it) ... I forget his
name.
- Dave
|
156.180 | | KALI::SIEGEL | The revolution wil not be televised | Fri Oct 23 1992 19:26 | 13 |
| re: Cleavon Little
I wonder how he died? He seemed pretty young. :-(
re: Temperatures Rising.
This show is actually in syndication, on WOR Channel 9 from NYC. I happened to
flip this on last week, and I did not recognize it. I could tell it was made
in the 70's just by looking. I checked the name in the TV guide, and I have to
admit I never heard of this show. I'll have to check a few episodes out. I
don't remember when it's on, though.
adam
|
156.181 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | To the bright side of the road | Fri Oct 23 1992 20:12 | 15 |
|
Cleavon Little died from Colon cancer at 53...
Re Temperatures rising...there were 2 versions of the show..one with
James Whitmore who was like the chief doctor and then Paul lynde later replace
Whitmore (I think that's what happened)..anyhow there were 2 versions of the
show, but the first was the best IMO..kinda went down hill after a while..
Jum
|
156.182 | | LANDO::HAPGOOD | | Mon Oct 26 1992 08:19 | 6 |
| Roger Miller, *THE* King of the Road died this past weekend (cancer).
I know he did a bunch I used to listen to as a kid and he penned a lot
more tunes for other folks as well.....
bob
|
156.183 | Slashmon's friend has passed away; | ZENDIA::FERGUSON | Roll me away | Thu Oct 29 1992 11:15 | 45 |
|
From: ZENDIA::US1RMC::"[email protected]" "Bill Salkewicz" 29-OCT-1992 10:30:38.07
To: zendia::ferguson
CC:
Subj: a personal message of thanks
Hi JC,..
Would you mind posting this for me in grateful...
... been here so long he's got to calling it home ...
The man who TURNED ME ON (!) to the Grateful Dead,.. among other
things,.. passed away last night. You may remember my mentioning
in notes a few months back that I knew someone who had been diagnosed
with lymphoma (sp?) (now he's dead and I still don't even know how to
spell what the hell it was that killed him :-/),..
This note is just to say thanks,...
Thanks for the support and comfort you have given me
Thanks for being there when I needed to talk
Thanks for being who you are DECheads
Thanks for making me understand what friendship really is
I don't know if I'll be seeing any of you on Holloween, but
its going to be a very interesting celebration of All Souls
Day for this boy. I hope I can get up and play my best for you.
/Soko
% ====== Internet headers and postmarks (see DECWRL::GATEWAY.DOC) ======
% Received: by us1rmc.bb.dec.com; id AA08121; Thu, 29 Oct 92 10:28:02 -0500
% Received: by enet-gw.pa.dec.com; id AA21001; Thu, 29 Oct 92 07:30:20 -0800
% Received: from striper.wellfleet ([192.32.1.208]) by lobster.wellfleet.com (4.1/SMI-4.1)id AA00597; Thu, 29 Oct 92 10:25:50 EST
% Received: by striper.wellfleet (4.1/SMI-4.1)id AA00356; Thu, 29 Oct 92 10:07:31 EST
% Date: Thu, 29 Oct 92 10:07:31 EST
% From: [email protected] (Bill Salkewicz)
% Message-Id: <[email protected]>
% To: zendia::ferguson
% Subject: a personal message of thanks
|
156.184 | a former Celtics too | SPICE::FIELDS | Better make it through today | Wed Nov 11 1992 07:42 | 2 |
| Chuck Connors......"Lucas McCain of the Rifleman tv show".....died from
lung cancer yesterday he was 71.....my childhood hero
|
156.185 | | ROULET::DWEST | if wishes were horses... | Wed Nov 11 1992 08:34 | 2 |
| former Celtic? i thought he was a baseball player before going into
tv...
|
156.186 | | BUSY::IRZA | blame it on that simple twist of fate | Wed Nov 11 1992 08:40 | 5 |
|
re last two: he played with the celtics AND two baseball teams
(not sure what teams though, it was a trivia ques. on the airwaves
this morn.)
^dave
|
156.187 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | To the bright side of the road | Wed Nov 11 1992 08:43 | 13 |
|
He played for the celtics in the 40's I believe and also played baseball
for the Dodgers...not sure who the other baseball team was..but, hold on a
minute and I'll check my paper...Ok I'm back...he played for the Dodgers in
49 and 50 and the Chicago Cubs in 1951.
Jum
|
156.188 | AAAHHHHHHEMMMMMM | CIVIC::ROBERTS | a blinding flash o'the obvious | Wed Nov 11 1992 09:15 | 12 |
|
Chuck played for the Celtics during the '46 (or was it '48) season
.. and NO! I wasn't there :-) . If I'm not mistaken, the team
was in it's very infant years when he played. In a Celtics history I
read, he is quoted as being very annoyed at the glass backboards the
league started using during his season. He actually BROKE a backboard
during one of the first games played with glass bbds.
and he was a hell of a rifleman...fulfilling my girlhood fantasies :-)
Carol_cowboy_junkie
|
156.189 | Midnight Cowboy Indeed! | LANDO::HAPGOOD | | Wed Nov 11 1992 10:12 | 7 |
| > minute and I'll check my paper...Ok I'm back...he played for the Dodgers in
> 49 and 50 and the Chicago Cubs in 1951.
That would be the Brooklyn Dodgers ...
:)
fyi,
bob
|
156.190 | and now the Rifleman song is stuck in my head! | CXDOCS::BARNES | | Wed Nov 11 1992 11:47 | 4 |
| when I heard about Lucas McCain last nite I flashed on the many
evenings my dad and I would wait in anticipation for the Rifleman to
come on.....that was quality family time, IMO.
rfb
|
156.191 | always like him, even in bad guy roles like in ROOTS | SPICE::FIELDS | Better make it through today | Wed Nov 11 1992 15:40 | 6 |
| same here rfb....I remember one nite when my Dad told me it was not on
and sent me to bed...and after a few minutes he was up there waking me
up to bring me down stairs to watch it ! I got on he shoulders for the
ride to the TV room...still brings a smile to my face....
|
156.192 | never kill a man unless the episode's nearly over | DEMING::CLARK | I Was Warned | Wed Nov 11 1992 15:53 | 5 |
| What I loved about that show was how he preached non-violence to
his son then ALMOST INVARIABLY wasted 12 or so bad guys with that
rifle of his.
I liked 'Branded' too.
|
156.193 | | SSGV02::GPEACE::Strobel | Jeff Strobel | Thu Nov 12 1992 13:45 | 2 |
| fwiw, Chuck broke a wooden backboard, not a glass one (this according to a
couple of books on hoop but hey, they could be wrong)
|
156.194 | Even before they played in the Gahden... | MR4DEC::WENTZELL | Just a little sweetness | Thu Nov 12 1992 15:21 | 45 |
| Stolen from ::CELTICS
================================================================================
Note 25.77 Former Celtics 77 of 77
BTOVT::MORONG 38 lines 12-Nov-92 08:19
-< More on Connors.... >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
A good article in the local rag (Burlington Free Pree) this
morning talked about the backboard breaking incident. A short
section from the article (reprinted without permission):
It was Nov 5, 1946. Fans arrived at the Celtics' home
opener straight from the polling booth, where they had
just elected John F Kennedy to Congress for the first
time.
The game at the Boston Arena against the Chicago Stags
was set for 8:30 that evening, and 4,329 fans had paid
up to $2.75 a ticket to see the first game of the new
National Basketball Association in Boston.
But the game was delayed for more than an hour when
Connors, a 6-foot-7 player from Seton Hall, took a shot
that bounced off the front of the rim.
"During the warmups, I took a set shot, a harmless 15 to
20 foot set shot, and CRASH, the glass backboard shatter-
ed," Connors recalled in a 1986 interview with George
Sullivan, who wrote "The Picture History of the Boston
Celtics."
It was the first year for glass backboards. A worker had
forgotten to install a piece of rubber that was supposed
to go between the rim and the glass.
Other facts from the article:
Connors was the starting center for the first Boston Celtics
team.
Connors averaged 4.6 points a game in the 1946-47 season. He
was dropped by the Celtics after 4 games of the next season.
-Ron-
|
156.195 | a glass one | SELL3::ROBERTS | a blinding flash o'the obvious | Thu Nov 12 1992 15:35 | 1 |
|
|
156.196 | A recent finomina 2 | MILKWY::SAMPSON | Driven by the wind | Fri Nov 13 1992 08:25 | 6 |
| Wasn't there some guy a few years back who found he could shatter the
backboard with a calculated slam dunk? He made such a habit of it the
NBA implimented a policy of fining anyone who shattered backboards.
Geoff clueless about sports trivia unless you ask me about the
Whitbread or BOC
|
156.197 | | LANDO::HAPGOOD | | Fri Nov 13 1992 08:40 | 11 |
| <<< Note 156.196 by MILKWY::SAMPSON "Driven by the wind" >>>
> Wasn't there some guy a few years back who found he could shatter the
> backboard with a calculated slam dunk? He made such a habit of it the
> NBA implimented a policy of fining anyone who shattered backboards.
Yea but I forget his name too. Moses Malone? I think he only did a
few and then the delay of games made them impose a rule as you said.
I dunno,
bob
|
156.198 | And they took him to court :-) | CSLALL::HENDERSON | To the bright side of the road | Fri Nov 13 1992 08:42 | 10 |
|
I think Julius Erving used to break 'em quite a bit.
Jum
|
156.199 | believe 1/2 of what you read | SSGV02::GPEACE::Strobel | Jeff Strobel | Fri Nov 13 1992 08:46 | 4 |
| well woooops. Every article I read yesterday mentioned it was a glass
backboard. Time for me to eat some humble pie.
jeff
|
156.200 | Breaker of glass backboards ... | NOPROB::JOLLIMORE | kids'ey dance and shake der bones | Fri Nov 13 1992 08:51 | 1 |
| Double-D, Daryll Dawkins: the Chocolate Thunder!
|
156.201 | | LANDO::HAPGOOD | | Fri Nov 13 1992 08:59 | 6 |
| <<< Note 156.200 by NOPROB::JOLLIMORE "kids'ey dance and shake der bones" >>>
>> Double-D, Daryll Dawkins: the Chocolate Thunder!
Ah yes!!
He was HUGE!
|
156.202 | Slam bam thank you maam! | MR4DEC::WENTZELL | Just a little sweetness | Fri Nov 13 1992 09:25 | 8 |
| Yup , Dawkins was the one. He was one of the main reasons the NBA started
using the spring-loaded rims. Most colleges use them too, maybe all new
backboards have them. Where the rim attaches to the backboard there is a
spring, that lets the rim flex downward on a slam and the snaps it back into
place. Makes it very hard to shatter a backboard now, although it still
happens on occasion.
Scott_who wishes_he_could_just_touch_the_rim_never_mind_slam_dunk
|
156.203 | | NOPROB::JOLLIMORE | kids'ey dance and shake der bones | Fri Nov 13 1992 09:37 | 4 |
| Chocolate Thunder
>He was HUGE!
Not to mention witty and intelligent ;-P ;-)
|
156.204 | | LJOHUB::RILEY | Namer of chaotic individuals everywhere! | Fri Nov 13 1992 09:51 | 6 |
|
Hell, they've got collapsable rims in most high schools now too. I had
my share of rim collapses!! :^)
Treeman_who_can_still_dunk_but_not_like_he_could_in_HIGH_school.
|
156.205 | this is the end | SLOHAN::FIELDS | Better make it through today | Wed Nov 18 1992 09:14 | 1 |
| RIP Superman......oh who will save us now......
|
156.206 | just a guess... | MRNGDU::YETTO | the future is here | Wed Nov 18 1992 09:32 | 4 |
|
> oh who will save us now......
Bullwinkle?
|
156.207 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Whistle while you work | Wed Nov 18 1992 09:53 | 5 |
|
Stimpy?
|
156.208 | and Sweet Polly Purebred | SLOHAN::FIELDS | Better make it through today | Wed Nov 18 1992 10:05 | 7 |
| look in the sky...its a bird ! its a plane ! its, its a frog ?
a frog ?
no no, it just little old me Underdog !
:')
|
156.209 | tubby little cubby all stuffed with fluff... | ICS::ODONNELL | It's hard being string all the time | Wed Nov 18 1992 10:28 | 2 |
| It's clear that Pooh will save us.
|
156.210 | take that you memory! "Hey, watch where you poke that thing!" | SMURF::PETERT | | Wed Nov 18 1992 11:27 | 9 |
| > RIP Superman......oh who will save us now......
Chris, as a long time reader of comics, I take all such reports of
death with a large grain of salt. Especially when it happens to a
major character like Supe's. I think I've already heard of his
'return' but I can't seem to pin down the memory.
PeterT
|
156.211 | | SCOONR::GLADU | | Wed Nov 18 1992 11:33 | 3 |
| Old Kal El will be reincarnated next summer (musta been a Bhuddist :-).
ger
|
156.212 | | VMPIRE::CLARK | the Gong Show | Wed Nov 18 1992 12:36 | 3 |
| Cap'n America will save us ... catch us now, we're falling ....
- dc
|
156.213 | | QUIVER::SIEGEL | The revolution wil not be televised | Wed Nov 18 1992 12:57 | 5 |
| We don' need no steenkin' Superman!
*I've* got a pocket full of Kryptonite...
:-)
|
156.214 | Lois and Clark in a telephone booth! :-) | DRINKS::WEISS | Beer -- It does a body good. | Wed Nov 18 1992 13:01 | 5 |
| > *I've* got a pocket full of Kryptonite...
Is it green, Adam? Maybe you should go to a doctor??? :-)
Dave
|
156.215 | The King maker could save others besided H.Ross | SALES::GKELLER | Trickled-on economics | Thu Nov 19 1992 09:27 | 4 |
| I heard the other day that Superman was going to be on Larry King live and
if enough people fraom all 50 states called in he would come back.
Geoff
|
156.216 | | VERGA::STANLEY | what a long strange trip it's been | Thu Nov 19 1992 10:57 | 1 |
| :-)
|
156.217 | George Carlin was on too. (Not Dead though ;-) | SMURF::PETERT | | Thu Nov 19 1992 11:48 | 11 |
| Caught Jay Leno before heading off to bed last night, and he had this
before/after thing. When Superman was alive... and Now that he's
dead... One of them went something like
When Superman was alive...
He was always trying to avoid kryptonite
Now that he's dead...
He's lying in a crypt tonight!
PeterT
|
156.218 | Roy Acuff RIP | SLOHAN::FIELDS | Better make it through today | Mon Nov 23 1992 12:32 | 15 |
| <<< COOKIE::DISK$SYSTEM_3:[NOTES$LIBRARY]FOLK_MUSIC.NOTE;1 >>>
-< FOLK MUSIC >-
================================================================================
Note 1031.0 Roy Acuff - RIP - He will be missed No replies
PRMS00::TLIGHTON "Redskins - 1991 NFL Champions" 9 lines 23-NOV-1992 07:39
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I heard on the radio this morning as I was driving to work that Roy
Acuff passed away over night in a Nashville hospital. He was a member of the
Grand Ole Opry for 54 years and apparently died of congestive heart failure.
This man was truely a father of country music, but his contributions to folk
and bluegrass music as well cannot be ignored. He will truely be missed, but
thanks to his many wonderful recordings, I can be sure that my child (due in
March) will be able to fully appreciate his talents and his gift.
Tom
|
156.219 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Workle while you whist | Mon Nov 23 1992 15:27 | 11 |
|
He was one of those guys that I figgered would never die..:-(
Jum
|
156.220 | tah tah for now... | SMURF::PETERT | | Tue Nov 24 1992 11:31 | 3 |
| Sterling Holloway, the 'voice' of Pooh, died at age 87 this past
Sunday.
|
156.221 | | VMPIRE::CLARK | the Gong Show | Tue Nov 24 1992 11:50 | 4 |
| Was Sterling Holloway also an actor, and if so, did he play the Birdman
of Alcatraz in some movie ... ?
- DC
|
156.222 | If we walk around not looking for it we're bound to find it! | LJOHUB::GILMORE | Shame on the Moon | Tue Nov 24 1992 11:54 | 10 |
| >> <<< Note 156.220 by SMURF::PETERT >>>
>> -< tah tah for now... >-
>> Sterling Holloway, the 'voice' of Pooh, died at age 87 this past
>> Sunday.
:( does that mean Pooh will become unspoken?
sparky
|
156.223 | | CXDOCS::BARNES | | Tue Nov 24 1992 12:18 | 3 |
| Holloway was also the snake in the Jungle Book, the stork in Dumbo,
voices in the Aristocats, and several more I can't remember now...
rfb
|
156.224 | of course, Pooh will still live on... | SMURF::PETERT | | Tue Nov 24 1992 13:38 | 16 |
| Holloway was also an actor, mainly a character actor playing country
bumpkins or delivery boys ;-) He appeared in "Gold Diggers of 1933",
"The Beautiful Blonde from Bashful Bend", "Casey at the Bat", "American
Madness", "Hell Below", "Life Begins at 40", "Professor Beware", "The
Bluebird", "A Walk in the Sun", "Shake, Rattle, and Rock", and "Live
a Little, Love a Little". He was also a regular on the TV series
"The Life of Riley" from '53 to '58 where he played Riley's friend
Waldo, an amateur inventor (got that Treemon? ;-) And he also
appeared in "The Baileys of Balboa" in '64-'65. All this culled
from todays New York Times. They didn't show a picture of him last
night on the news (just Pooh and the snake ;-) But looking at his
picture in the Times today, I know I've seen him in something (though
lord only knows which of the above!) I immediately 'heard' Pooh's
voice when I saw the picture. RIP Pooh.
PeterT
|
156.225 | | VMPIRE::CLARK | the Gong Show | Tue Nov 24 1992 13:54 | 3 |
| I'm sure I saw him in at least one episode of Batman.
- Dave, Cultural Elitist
|
156.226 | | SLOHAN::FIELDS | Better make it through today | Tue Nov 24 1992 14:11 | 1 |
| maybe Superman, not that he was not in Batman
|
156.227 | | TLE::ABBOT | No more years | Tue Nov 24 1992 16:34 | 6 |
| I think I remember him from a slew of sitcom appearances. He was kinda
Pooh-looking, bumbling and at a loss of words. Sort of like Aunt Clara
on Bewitched.
Scott
|
156.228 | | VMPIRE::CLARK | the Gong Show | Tue Nov 24 1992 17:03 | 11 |
| re <<< Note 156.227 by TLE::ABBOT "No more years" >>>
> I think I remember him from a slew of sitcom appearances. He was kinda
> Pooh-looking, bumbling and at a loss of words. Sort of like Aunt Clara
> on Bewitched.
Yes! Definite major resemblance!
Oh, bother ...
- DC
|
156.229 | | STAR::HUGHES | Captain Slog | Mon Nov 30 1992 15:47 | 4 |
| Yeah, he played yet-another-absent-minded-scientist in at least one
episode of Superman.
gary
|
156.230 | Pooh in the stone age!! | SMURF::PETERT | | Tue Dec 01 1992 13:38 | 18 |
| re .229
I just saw this episode! I think it was on Nickelodeon, but I'm not
too sure of that as I wasn't in charge of the remote ;-) We were
visiting my sister-in-law's for turkey and channel surfing when we
stopped at an old Superman for a while. Lo and behold, there was
Sterling Holoway as the wacky inventor with a time machine! After
being told to test it out, he transports Clark, Lois, Jimmy, Perry
White, some fugitive, and himself back 50,000 years to pre-historic
times. Of course they can't get back right away because Professor
Pooh ;-) needs some odd substance to make it work in reverse.
Sigh.... I just love the premise of these old shows (or of Supes
disguise in particular). Suddenly, back in the stone age, Superman
shows up, is unable to "crack" the time barrier, but no-one has a
clue that he came along with them in the first place! Good for
a few laughs.
PeterT
|
156.231 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Workle while you whist | Tue Dec 01 1992 13:52 | 11 |
|
I think he was also in the episode about a guy that invented some stuff that
if you spray it on someone, they forget everything that happened in the last
5 mins...one of the funniest I've ever seen :-)
Jum
|
156.232 | | SLOHAN::FIELDS | and we'd go Running On Faith | Tue Dec 22 1992 13:55 | 2 |
| Albert King died yesterday of heart falure at 69......
|
156.233 | | TERAPN::PHYLLIS | in the shadow of the moon | Tue Dec 22 1992 14:16 | 4 |
|
No! :-( :-(
|
156.234 | wimper | SUBPAC::MAGGARD | I am the Rhombus! | Tue Dec 22 1992 14:21 | 5 |
|
bummer.
|
156.235 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Somewhere in San Francisco | Tue Dec 22 1992 14:58 | 35 |
|
RE: <<< Note 156.232 by SLOHAN::FIELDS "and we'd go Running On Faith" >>>
> Albert King died yesterday of heart falure at 69......
Wow....I'm speechless. The finest blues guitarist I've ever seen..back
in the late 60's he was my idol..I must have seen him 50 times. To me
this is like the death of Buddy Holly. :-( Everytime I listen to Stevie
Ray Vaughn I hear some of Albert King in his playing..
I'll never forget the night I saw him at a club in SF and he sat down
with my step brother and I and bummed a cigarette from me and we talked
for a bit..
For those that don't know, Albert was a bulldozer driver in Mississippi,
(they used to say he could scoop up a carpet off a floor without scratching
the floor)..was left handed learned to play on a guitar strung for a right-
hander and just turned it upside down. In the late 60's he played both
Fillmores quite a bit, probably the best show I saw him do was a show he
did with BB King and I believe Buddy Guy..and IMO blew them both away..
Dang, I'm bummed :-(
Jum
|
156.236 | | ZENDIA::FERGUSON | A blues guitar echoes in my mind | Tue Dec 22 1992 17:28 | 8 |
| Big time bummer :-( I gotta beat slash for my Albert King CD that he's had
since last march....
anyways, i'm sure ronnie earl will pay him a special tribute this wednesday...
:-(
|
156.237 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Somewhere in San Francisco | Tue Dec 22 1992 21:51 | 10 |
|
Well, I'm here having an Albert King Memorial festival, but I can't find
my Live Wire Blues Power CD....I'll never forget that show :-(
Jum "Can you dig the Blues Power" H.
|
156.238 | hard luck and troubles | STUDIO::IDE | Can't this wait 'til I'm old? | Wed Dec 23 1992 08:13 | 8 |
| So it's time to trot out the white artists for a quote on King's death.
Was the high point of his career the fact that he influenced Cream? At
least Clapton has the respect to acknowledge his sources, Led Zeppelin
stabbed them in the back and ripped them off.
Look for a quote from Pat Boone when Little Richard passes on . . .
Jamie
|
156.239 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Somewhere in San Francisco | Wed Dec 23 1992 09:14 | 28 |
|
I think the high point in Albert's carreer was in 1968 when he was invited
by Bill Graham to play on a bill with Jimi Hendrix (and Janis I believe)..he
eventually became a "permanent member of the Fillmore family)..which also
coincided with the release of Born Under a Bad Sign. Cream's Strange Brew
is almost note for note Albert licks, which Clapton has acknowledged. Mike
Bloomfield also claimed influence from him (according to this morning's Globe).
Clapton does a fine versin of Crosscut Saw on his Money and Cigarettes album.
I finally found my copy of Live Wire Blues Power last night..if anybody is
interested in some fine live Albert King..LWBP is great (I was there!) along
with 2 other albums...Wednesday night in San Francisco and Thursday night
in San Francisco, recording during the same run as LWBP. He did another live
album in Europe that IMO is not quite as good, but still a good representation
of his playing..
Reminiscing about him last night brought back memories of an old girlfriend
with whom I saw him several times :-)
Jum
PS...can anybody tell I'm an Albert King fan?
|
156.240 | | ZENDIA::FERGUSON | A blues guitar echoes in my mind | Wed Dec 23 1992 09:58 | 20 |
| re <<< Note 156.239 by CSLALL::HENDERSON "Somewhere in San Francisco" >>>
> I finally found my copy of Live Wire Blues Power last night..if anybody is
> interested in some fine live Albert King..LWBP is great (I was there!) along
will ya make me a copy mon???? :-) :-)
(Bob white would hang us all!) :-)
>PS...can anybody tell I'm an Albert King fan?
Nah :-).... this is a hard thing to deal with. i remember when stevie ray
went to the great blues bar up there... i was pretty bummed out; even when
brent went, i was really bummed.... hang in there mon... he'll be playin'
the blues up there for all of us....
rip albert.
jc
|
156.241 | | STUDIO::IDE | Can't this wait 'til I'm old? | Wed Dec 23 1992 10:15 | 8 |
| It just pisses me off that every time one of the blues greats dies, all
I hear is ". . . who wrote xxx, which has been covered by The Rolling
Stones, etc." As if having their song recorded by popular white
artists legitimizes their careers. Most of the blame lies with the
journalists, but some groups (Led Zeppelin being the prime offender)
unforgiveably ripped them off.
Jamie
|
156.242 | | CXDOCS::BARNES | | Wed Dec 23 1992 11:22 | 3 |
| RIP Albert King...one of the best..
rfb
|
156.243 | Elvis Stole the ball !!!!!!! | SPICE::FIELDS | and we'd go Running On Faith | Mon Jan 04 1993 08:29 | 1 |
| Johnny Most.....RIP
|
156.244 | Passing of two greats | ESGWST::MIRASSOU | | Wed Jan 06 1993 17:36 | 14 |
| Just heard a couple of bummers on the radio...
Dizzy Gillespe died of cancer at age 65.
Rudolf nureyev died of cardiac arrest brough about by "a cruel disease"
at age 54.
Two people with major influences on their respective arts.
And I finally found out why Dizzy used the funny looking horn. One
night, just before performing, someone stepped on his trumpet. He
didn't have time to fix it before the show, so he used it with the
bell pointed up at a funny angle. He found he could hear himself
better with the bell that way, and stuck with it.
|
156.245 | See Ya Diz | ICS::ODONNELL | It's hard being string all the time | Thu Jan 07 1993 09:01 | 10 |
| re .244
I think Diz was 74. Last night I sat in my room & played a bunch of
his stuff . . . he will be sadly missed.
But, as Chief Seattle said, "There is no death, only a change of
worlds."
Peace & All That Jazz,
Lorax
|
156.246 | | LIOVAX::MERRILL | NY's got the ways and means | Thu Jan 07 1993 16:22 | 5 |
| RE: last 2
Diz was 75...dead of pancreatic cancer.
Marc
|
156.247 | | LASSIE::TRAMP::GRADY | Short arms, and deep pockets... | Thu Jan 21 1993 12:10 | 5 |
| Eliza Doolittle, a.k.a. Audrey Hepburn; of cancer at 63.
One incredibly classy woman. R.I.P.
tim
|
156.248 | Toy Caldwell :.^( | SLOHAN::FIELDS | and we'd go Running On Faith | Fri Feb 26 1993 13:21 | 8 |
| I just read this in Guitar notes...
Toy Caldwell, guitarist, vocalist and founding member of the Marshall
Tucker Band, died yesterday at his home in South Carolina. He was 45.
He had been suffering from Bronchitis and Pneumonia.
|
156.249 | | LANDO::HAPGOOD | | Fri Feb 26 1993 13:23 | 10 |
| <<< Note 156.248 by SLOHAN::FIELDS "and we'd go Running On Faith" >>>
> Toy Caldwell, guitarist, vocalist and founding member of the Marshall
Wow A stroke of bad luck is running in that family. Didn't his brother die
some time ago (5-10 years back)...I'm thinking of Tommy Caldwell....
yes?
bob
|
156.250 | | AKOCOA::DMITCHELL | with my head in sparkling clover | Fri Feb 26 1993 13:26 | 5 |
| re.248
He was scheduled to play at Jacks Saloon in Uxbridge this Sunday.
Don
|
156.251 | Peace my Brother | SLOHAN::FIELDS | and we'd go Running On Faith | Fri Feb 26 1993 13:55 | 26 |
| yes to both....Tommy, Toy's younger, brother die in '78 after getting
home from a tour. His wife picked him up at the airport and on the way
home he flipped the landrover, he was driving, over and died of
injuries....I saw Toy about 3 yr ago in Norhtboro...this was his 1st
coming out he had done after the break up of MTB....odd thing was last
week I saw his Video on TNN (with Charlie Daniels) it was hot southern
kick a$$ style Toy always put out, and it made me want to see him again
I saw the add for Jacks but figured I could wait for another show, as
for Sunday nights was not good for me.....
MTB was the band I love to listen to, and still do I've got two
boots of them one was Tommy's last show in NY (Nassua I think) the
other was a year or so later when they were promoting the Dedicated LP.
Like the Dead back in the mid to late 70s MTB was a great band to see
play live, one week I saw them 6 times, I started on the Cape and
endded in Springfield....if I remember correctly I saw the Allman's on
the off night ! Yes I was a Southern Rock freak in the 70s, and from
this love of CDB, MTB, ABB, and many other bands I found the DEAD...
Toy's playing will always be something I will never forget, I think I
will go home and pull out "Together Forever" and give it a spin on the
turn table (even if the cartridge needs to be replaced)
Chris
|
156.252 | | RAISE::GLADU | | Mon Mar 08 1993 13:32 | 1 |
| Pigpen, 20 years ago today - March 8, 1973.
|
156.253 | RIP, Mr. Bones | DEDHED::Spine | Tom Spine | Wed Mar 17 1993 16:38 | 14 |
| I just read in the Folk notefile...there's an obit for Mr. Bones in today's
Boston Glob. :-(
I feel very fortunate to have seen Mr. Bones on stage three times...twice
for entire shows with Spider John, one for just a single song with Michelle
Shocked. He was quite unique, and he really lit up the stage. Not to
mention that he simply boggled my mind trying to figure out just how the
hell he made them two sticks of bone make all those sounds!
I guess the obit must mention that there's gonna be a memorial show at
Johnnie D's in Somererville MA (Davis Square) next month. I bet the place
will be packed.
tms
|
156.254 | | CBROWN::HENDERSON | I know whom I have believed | Wed Mar 17 1993 16:51 | 10 |
|
I only got to see him once, and I loved him
:-( indeed.
Jim
|
156.255 | such as nice guy | SLOHAN::FIELDS | and we'd go Running On Faith | Wed Mar 17 1993 19:17 | 6 |
| yes I saw this too....RIP Mr. Bones.....I saw hinm last at EMLowes with
the Band maybe a year or so ago....1st time I saw him was at the 1 X-mas
Party Slipknot had Molly's .....
Chris
|
156.256 | RIP Mr. Bones | MKOTS3::ROBERTS_CR | a blinding flash o'the obvious | Thu Mar 18 1993 09:10 | 5 |
|
I remember seeing him at Slipknot's first xmas party_AND_ten year
anniversary party at Molly's. lesse that was umm 1987 ? yikes
c
|
156.257 | | DEDHED::Spine | Tom Spine | Thu Mar 18 1993 13:19 | 71 |
| I ripped this off from the Folk conference. Figured some of ya in here
might be interested and might not be Folk readers...look for the Mickey
Hart reference...
tms
"Music in his bones, Burrill put bones into the music"
[reprinted without permission from the Boston Globe, 17-Mar-1993]
John Alden Burrill Jr. - better known as Mr. Bones - was a true original.
He was an authentic Yankee, a descendant of the Mayflower Pilgrims and one
of the finest, most well-liked percussionists to ever play local stages,
local streets and folk festivals as far away as New Orleans, Winnipeg and
Cambridge, England.
Mr. Bones died yesterday at age 72, after fighting a brain cancer that
stilled a wondrous talent that had endeared him to musicians from Bonnie
Raitt and Michelle Shocked to Buddy Guy and Beausoleil.
Burrill, whose polyrhythmic skill was exceeded only by his wry charm, had
carte blanche to sit in with musicians anytime, anywhere. Although stooped
over from spinal arthritis, he brought a joie de vivre to performing that
totally belied his age and physical condition. With dazzling dexterity, he
clacked together bones made from the shin bones of a cow, having first seen
them used in minstrel shows in the '30s.
"When you play the bones, you don't need anything else to get you high," he
said in a Globe interview last year, before joining bluesman Spider John
Koerner at the Plough & Stars in Cambridge.
"He was a character all his own," Koerner said yesterday. "When we played,
he was not necessarily a background element. He charmed people. He was
always trying to get them started playing the bones."
When Grateful Dead drummer Mickey Hart first met Burrill, he asked, 'Who
have you played with?" The response was classic Burrill: "Name 'em," he
said with a smile.
For starters, there was Raitt (he played with her on Boston Common and at
Great Woods), Koerner, The Band, Doc Watson, C. J. Chenier, John Hammond,
Queen Ida, Dirty Dozen Brass Band, Roomful of Blues, Tiny Tim, Kenny Neal,
Sonny Terry & Brownie McGee, John Hartford, Peter Rowan, Charmaine Neville,
Zachary Richard and Boozoo Chavis.
Incredibly, Mr. Bones would turn up anywhere from Johnny D's in Somerville
to the Rat in Boston, where, in the '70s, he played with the Infliktors and
Fabulous Billygoons. "When I first played the Rat, I had earplugs. It was
110 decibels in there," he said. "But I enjoyed it. I became known as the
first punk-funk bones player in the country."
A Brockton native, Burrill got his musical start on the streets. "I
started playing with him in 1976," folk-bluesman Elijah Wald said
yesterday. "Back then, he'd come out every single night in Harvard Square
and just play with whoever was there. That's how he started."
"Nobody ever said no to him as far as I know," Mickey Bones, a local
drummer and percussionist, said yesterday.
"I don't rehearse with anybody. It wouldn't do me much good. I don't know
notes or music. I just have rhythm, that's all," said Burrill, who lived
in Brookline.
He leaves a sister, Pauline Brown of Somerville, and two daughters, Susan
Ferr and Judy Burrill. Funeral arrangements are private, but longtime
aide-de-camp Jan Cornish said a night in his honor is being planned for
Johnny D's next month.
--------------------------------------
Paul Robicheau contributed to this story.
|
156.258 | can you imaging teaching Mickey? :^) | ROULET::DWEST | if wishes were horses... | Fri Mar 19 1993 10:22 | 4 |
| Mr. B was backstage at the Planet Drum shows with Mickey... giving
lessons on bone-playing... :^)
da ve
|
156.259 | | CSCMA::M_PECKAR | Be kind: unwind | Thu Apr 15 1993 12:03 | 7 |
|
George Ives, a former British mounted infantryman who is believed to
be the last survivor of the Boer War, has died in British Colombia,
aged 111.
|
156.260 | | SPOCK::IRONS | | Thu Apr 15 1993 13:38 | 3 |
| I'm not up on English history. What was the Boer War all about. Musta
been a real Bore! :^)
|
156.261 | South African History, actually...;-) | NAC::TRAMP::GRADY | Short arms, and deep pockets... | Thu Apr 15 1993 13:52 | 72 |
| The Software Toolworks Illustrated Encyclopedia (TM)
(c) 1991 Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.
South African War
The South African War (1899-1902), also known as the Boer War, was a
conflict between Great Britain and the two Afrikaner (Boer) governments of
the South African Republic (the Transvaal) and the Orange Free State. The
European settlers in both areas were mainly of Dutch ancestry and were
known as Boers, or AFRIKANERS. In response to Boer pressures Britain had
awarded independence to the Orange Free State in 1854. A brief revolt in
1881 (sometimes called the First South African War) had restored to the
Transvaal the independence it had lost to Britain in 1877. Both republics
remained under British suzerainty, however.
The discovery (1886) of gold at the Witwatersrand in the Transvaal
attracted a large number of European immigrants--mainly British--who built
up the country's mining industry and came to control the major part of its
wealth. President Paul KRUGER welcomed the economic enterprise of these
Uitlanders (foreigners) but at the same time feared the threat that they
posed to the Boers' agricultural and noncommercial way of life; he
refused to make any major political concessions to the newcomers.
Anglo-Boer relations worsened because of disputes over the franchise and a
variety of economic issues and especially after an illegal and
unsuccessful raid carried out in 1895 by British administrator Sir Leander
Starr JAMESON against the Transvaal in support of the Uitlanders. The
Transvaal strengthened its armed forces, concluded an alliance with the
Orange Free State, and presented the British with an ultimatum protesting
the reinforcement of the British garrison in South Africa.
The Afrikaners called the ensuing war the Second War of Freedom.
During the first phase of the war (1899-1900), the Boer forces gained some
immediate victories. They laid siege to Mafeking, Kimberley, and
Ladysmith, but all were eventually relieved by British troops under Lord
KITCHENER and Lord ROBERTS. In the second phase of the war (1900) the
British defeated the main Boer armies and occupied Pretoria, the Transvaal
capital. In the last phase (1900-02) the Boers took to guerrilla warfare,
and the British retaliated by subjecting the Boer population to harsh
treatment, including detention in concentration camps. The Boers were
finally forced to conclude peace at Vereeniging in 1902. The two Boer
republics were reduced to British colonies, but they were able to exact
some important concessions from the British.
The South African War was the largest military conflict waged in
sub-Saharan Africa. The British mobilized nearly 450,000 soldiers--as
opposed to a maximum of about 80,000 Boers. The conflict was both a war of
imperial supremacy and a civil war among whites; about 53,000 white,
mainly English-speaking, South Africans fought in the British ranks. The
black Africans stood aloof. In Britain the excesses of the war aroused the
first significant outpouring of anti-imperialist sentiment. In South
Africa the war led to a rebirth of Afrikaner nationalism and to the
unification of South Africa through the formation of the Union of South
Africa (1910), in which the Afrikaners ultimately gained political
supremacy.
L. H. Gann
Bibliography:
Barthorp, Michael, The Anglo-Boer War (1987); Belfield, Eversley, The Boer
War (1976); Farwell, Byron, The Great Anglo-Boer War (1976); Holt,
Edgar, The Boer War (1958); Lehmann, Joseph H., The First Boer War (1972;
The Software Toolworks Illustrated Encyclopedia (TM)
(c) 1991 Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.
repr. 1987); LeMay, Godfrey Hugh Lancelot, British Supremacy in South
Africa, 1899-1907 (1965); Maurice, John F., History of the War in South
Africa, 1899-1902, 4 vols. (1906-10); Pakenham, Thomas, The Boer War
(1979).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
156.262 | Movie reference | XCUSME::MACINTYRE | | Thu Apr 15 1993 14:22 | 10 |
| For an excellent view of the Boer War you should rent a superbly done
movie titled "Breaker Morant". It is an Auzzie production and starts
Robert Woodward and Bryan Brown. One of the alltime best movies
dealing with the political and personal/moral aspects of fighting a
war.
Highly recommended.
Marv
|
156.263 | sure beats TV | CAADC::BABCOCK | | Thu Apr 15 1993 14:44 | 2 |
| DITO - "BREAKER MORANT" is an excellent movie.
|
156.264 | | STAR::HUGHES | Less zooty, more dusted | Thu Apr 15 1993 17:10 | 10 |
| Edward Woodward, and it is "aussie", with no zeds :-)
"Breaker Morant" is an excellent film, as is the stage play although it
is very different (the main character in the play is the lawyer
assigned to defend The Breaker and his cohorts). They complement each
other nicely. Both were derived from a book ("The Breaker", I think)
which sparked a wave of interest in Australia's involvement in the Boer
War. Nasty business.
gary
|
156.265 | | SPOCK::IRONS | | Wed Apr 21 1993 13:13 | 6 |
| Ah "Breaker Morant". I've heard of that.
Tim, your reply about the Boar War ended up in the Sherlock Holmes
notesfile. We were talking about Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.
dave
|
156.266 | :-) | CSCMA::M_PECKAR | Be kind: unwind | Wed Apr 21 1993 13:53 | 8 |
|
> Tim, your reply about the Boar War ended up in the Sherlock Holmes
Boer, dammit!!!
Sheesh.
|
156.267 | | TERAPN::PHYLLIS | in the shadow of the moon | Wed Jun 02 1993 11:10 | 6 |
|
I've been meaning to post this in here..
Sun Ra died this past Sunday. :-(
|
156.268 | | STUDIO::IDE | Can't this wait 'til I'm old? | Wed Jun 02 1993 11:54 | 7 |
| re .-1
My understanding of Saturnian culture is lacking, but I don't think
they die in our sense of the word. Besides, it'll take music 50 years
to catch up with him, so that extends his life to 2043 at least.
Jamie
|
156.269 | | SLOHAN::FIELDS | and we'd go Running On Faith | Tue Jun 22 1993 12:27 | 6 |
| I sure this is what I heard so if I wrong Im sorry
Pat Nixon passed away this morning....
Chris
|
156.270 | | SLOHAN::FIELDS | and we'd go Running On Faith | Tue Jun 29 1993 12:28 | 2 |
| Catherine Leno passed away yesterday of cancer at 82, shes the Mother
of "Tonight Show" Host Jay Leno.....
|
156.271 | Buckwheat's good friend | NEST::KIBLING | You know all the rules by now | Thu Jul 01 1993 08:48 | 5 |
|
"SPANKY" McFarland of Little Rascals fame passed away yesterday
at age 64. How many of those guys are still alive?
|
156.272 | | SLOHAN::FIELDS | and we'd go Running On Faith | Thu Jul 01 1993 09:42 | 1 |
| yes its a very sad day.....:.( but everyting will be Otay.....
|
156.273 | sunday will never be the same | NRSTA2::CLARK | | Thu Jul 01 1993 10:18 | 2 |
| Oh, Spanky McFarland ... I thought I heard Spanky MacFarlane ... wasn't she
the woman in the band "Spanky and Our Gang?"
|
156.274 | he was rumored to live in my home town, but I don't belive it... | SMURF::PETERT | rigidly defined areas of doubt and uncertainty | Thu Jul 01 1993 12:13 | 17 |
| They'll never learn....
I spent countless ours watching the littel Rascals. Probably time to
turn my kid onto them. Do they show regularly anywhere in the Greater
Boston area?
Spanky was just recently on one of the final Cheer's. Not the last one
but the penultimate or 2nd to lst I think. It was the opening skit and
Cliff and Norm had noticed this guy sitting across the bar who looked
like Spanky. So Cliff goes over and goes into his spiel about how
he loved the little Rascals and how he wanted to tell them something
or other and it just digressed for a minute or two and then Cliff
asked him "So you aren't really Spanky, are you?" To which the guy
replied hastily, "No, not me?" And after Cliff walked away,
Norm asks, "You are Spanky, aren't you?" To which Spanky nods his
head in acknowledgement. So long Spanky, you'll live on forever....
PeterT
|
156.275 | Spanky McFarland.....orbit | SLOHAN::FIELDS | and we'd go Running On Faith | Thu Jul 01 1993 12:35 | 22 |
| Grapevine, Texas - George "Spanky" McFarland, the chubby child star of
"Our Gang" and "Little Rascals" fame, died yesterday at age 64.
McFarland died less than an hour after arriving at the emergency
department of Baylor Grapevine Hospital, said spokesman Steve Tatum.
The cause of death wasn't immediately known.
McFarland's acting career began in 1931 at age 3 when he modeled
baby cloths in his hometown of Dallas. Helater made Wonder Bread
commercials that were noticed by director Hal Roach, the creative force
behind "Our Gang".
In addition to "Our Gang" McFarland made 14 feature-length movies
including "Trail of the Lonesome Pine" with Henry Fonda & Fred
MacMurray and "Woman in the Window" with Edward G. Robinson.
He finished his movie career while still a teen-ager.
"When I reached 16, adn they stopped made the comedies, I made the
decision then - I told my parents - I wasn't going to make anymore
films" he told the Midland Reporter Telegram in 1988.
After retiring from the movie industry, McFarland went into sales,
working for a wine company and a car dealership. He also owned a BBQ
restaurant in Olkahoma City. He later was a spokesman for Justin Boot
Co.
|
156.276 | | DELNI::CRITZ | Scott Critz, LKG2/1, Pole V3 | Thu Jul 01 1993 17:38 | 3 |
| Only one left is Robert Blake, I believe.
Scott
|
156.277 | Spread out! | CXDOCS::BARNES | | Tue Jul 06 1993 11:28 | 9 |
| the last of the Three Stooges died over the weekend too...Curley Joe? I
think. He was never in the 200 short films that we all grew up with, but
stared in some of the full length feature films that came out later...
Also, couple of weeks ago would have been Moes 50 ? birthday...Hoot
Gibson has 5 hours of old Stooges on tape in memory of...SPREAD OUT!!!
rfb
|
156.278 | | NRSTA2::CLARK | | Tue Jul 06 1993 11:38 | 6 |
| I think Moe would've been a lot older than 50, porcupine. ;^) He looked
older than that before he died.
"OW OW OW OW OW ... oh look!"
- DC
|
156.279 | da norve of dat guy! | CXDOCS::BARNES | | Tue Jul 06 1993 11:48 | 4 |
| ya, I thought about that after I entered the note...more like 80???
rfb
|
156.280 | | SLOHAN::FIELDS | and we'd go Running On Faith | Tue Jul 06 1993 11:53 | 5 |
| Joe Besser (sp?) I think is still alive....the orbit I read on Curly
Joe listed when all the others had passed away but not Joe Besser, I
its possible he might be still here with us....fyi
Chris
|
156.281 | Joe De Mita | TRETOP::SAMILJAN | | Tue Jul 06 1993 12:10 | 12 |
| His name was Joe De Mita. He was a character actor before he started
doing Stooge stuff in the late fifties. He was then known as "Curly
Joe" De Mita.
Once in a while you can catch him in a small role in some old B movie.
Of course, (IMO) he couldn't compare to the original, or even Shemp and
Joe Besser, for that matter.
Bud
|
156.282 | | DELNI::CRITZ | Scott Critz, LKG2/1, Pole V3 | Tue Jul 06 1993 15:44 | 5 |
| Bud,
I thinks it's Joe De Rita.
Scott
|
156.283 | Where are you? | CSCMA::M_PECKAR | Two pints make one cavort | Tue Jul 06 1993 16:03 | 2 |
|
Fred Gwynne, 66, died Friday.
|
156.284 | | TRETOP::SAMILJAN | | Tue Jul 06 1993 16:39 | 7 |
| re: .282
Thanks, Scott. You're right.
OK, so who is Joe De Mita? That must be Mighty Joe Young's real name.
Bud
|
156.285 | filet of sole, and heal too (yuck yuck yuck) | SSGV01::STROBEL | & now for something completely different... | Tue Jul 06 1993 17:38 | 11 |
| Curly Joe was the last of the Stooges. Shemp died first, then Curly.
Joe Besser died in the early 60's I believe. Moe and Larry both died in
1975.
Don Drysdale, Hall of Fame pitcher with the Brooklyn/LA Dodgers, also
passed away this weekend.
I also saw where Jimmy "the weasel" Fratiano (sp?), a reputed and
convicted mob kingpin, died.
jeff
|
156.286 | | SLOHAN::FIELDS | and we'd go Running On Faith | Tue Jul 06 1993 17:56 | 10 |
| Fred Gwynne, as in Herman Munster.....thats a shock, as I know that
Granpa is still alive.....me and my brother use to have fights about
which show to watch , the Munster's or Addam's Family...but it always
came down to which family would you live with, I always said the
Addam's Family because they looked normal (besides Cousin It, but it
was the 60's and I just thought he was a rill hippy 8*)) but my brother
always thought with food in mind, at least the Munster ate oatmeal for
breakfast ! man that always worked in his favor to....
Chris
|
156.287 | Davey Allison - 32 | SLOHAN::FIELDS | and we'd go Running On Faith | Tue Jul 13 1993 12:23 | 4 |
| I just heard that Davey Allison died this morning from his injures in a
coptor crash yesterday afternoon, he was piloting the helicoptor.
sad day for racing fans...
|
156.288 | | EBBCLU::SMITH | So many roads tease my soul | Tue Jul 13 1993 12:37 | 12 |
|
I will miss him....
I was at the Winston Cup race in N.H. Sunday and
Davey maintained a steady clip for the almost the
entire race finishing 3rd behind Rusty Wallace and
Mark Martin. My first NASCAR race and I feel lucky
to have seen him in person.
This is the 2nd Winston Cup driver that has been
killed this season in flight. None have died on
the track.
|
156.289 | sad day | SLOHAN::FIELDS | and we'd go Running On Faith | Wed Jul 28 1993 09:12 | 3 |
| Reggie Lewis.....he died of what seems to be heart failure...
he was 27
|
156.290 | my age! | ZENDIA::FERGUSON | Your recipe is so tasty | Wed Jul 28 1993 10:22 | 15 |
| re <<< Note 156.289 by SLOHAN::FIELDS "and we'd go Running On Faith" >>>
-< sad day >-
> Reggie Lewis.....he died of what seems to be heart failure...
sad day indeed. he died yesturday while shooting some hoops at bradies.
they said he was not even breaking a sweat...
now, malpractice suits are going to fly everywhere. you see, last season he
colapsed while playing and some specialists said: no way, no more b-ball for
you, while others said: no problem; it is treatable,etc... a lawyers field day,
someone's gonna pay...
sad. 27 yrs old.
|
156.291 | life is sometime unfair..... | SLOHAN::FIELDS | and we'd go Running On Faith | Mon Aug 02 1993 11:47 | 30 |
| in today's Worcester T&G....
The death of a local woman know for her research work in
ornithology is being investigated for a possible link to the
hantavirus, the mystery illness that has claimed at least 14 lives in
the southwest.
Jeanne M. Messier, 27, of 37 Harvey Lane Westboro Ma., died Friday
of lung failure in Washoe Medical Center, Reno, Nev.
Messier was a UoC San Diego grad student of ornithology working in
Mammoth Lakes Calf. (which about 600 mile north of the four corners
region of New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado & Utah, where most of the
confirmed deaths have occurred).
******************************
I knew this woman's brother, Paul, very well.
although I have not talked to Paul in years (he lives in Colorado) this
news really hit home. I heard the news on the radio first but did not
connect the two until I saw the news paper report....I was in cub scouts
with Paul, and his Mother was the den leader....Jeanne was this little
girl that was always there (she must have been like 4 yrs old then) and
seeing her grow up and hearing the news of her death was a shock....
I will most likely go the service tomorrow...she was a bright light in
her family.
Chris
|
156.292 | | NAC::TRAMP::GRADY | Short arms, and deep pockets... | Mon Aug 02 1993 12:08 | 9 |
| They say that eventually everyone will know someone who has succumbed to
AIDS. On friday I learned that the brother of a friend of mine in Miami
finally passed away, having been diagnosed over five years ago. I met
Jimmy when he moved in with my friend, his sister, about four years ago.
I think he was about 30 years old.
R.I.P., Tio Jimmy. :-(
tim
|
156.293 | | CXDOCS::BARNES | | Mon Aug 02 1993 13:46 | 5 |
| my heart goes to both of you, Chris and Tim
rfb
|
156.294 | Ironsides | SLOHAN::FIELDS | Strange Brew | Mon Sep 13 1993 12:13 | 3 |
| Raymond Burr....past away last night, he was 76 (I think)
Chris
|
156.295 | | TERAPN::PHYLLIS | in the shadow of the moon | Tue Oct 26 1993 08:53 | 4 |
|
Vincent Price, from lung cancer.
|
156.297 | River Phoenix 1970-1993 | BINKLY::DEMARSE | Unusual occurrences in the desert... | Mon Nov 01 1993 12:48 | 8 |
| River Phoenix, actor, 23 years old.
Collapsed outside Hollywood nightclub Sat. night and died. Autopsy
will be performed today, but rumors are that the death was drug-related.
:( :(
:(, danielle
|
156.298 | | TERAPN::PHYLLIS | in the shadow of the moon | Mon Nov 01 1993 14:08 | 4 |
|
also Federico Fellini, 73.
|
156.299 | | SLOHAN::FIELDS | Strange Brew | Mon Nov 22 1993 14:33 | 1 |
| Bill Bixby died of cancer over the weekend...
|
156.300 | | CXDOCS::BARNES | | Mon Nov 22 1993 14:43 | 3 |
| Bill Bixby...truely a brave man. Had I been dealing with his personal
pain for as long as he did, I'm afraid I'dve opted for the Kavorkian
method....
|
156.301 | | NAC::TRAMP::GRADY | Short arms, and deep pockets... | Mon Nov 22 1993 14:57 | 4 |
| What was the story? I wasn't aware he was enduring a prolonged
trouble...he's been a favorite ever since "My Favorite Martian"....
tim
|
156.302 | | CXDOCS::BARNES | | Mon Nov 22 1993 15:01 | 9 |
| bill bixby -- lost his young son in the 70's (?, car wreck?)),
his wife never got over it, divorced him, shortly afterwards commited
suicide. He then gets diagnosed with some form of cancer, he was the
only one in the US to get some experimental drug for that form of cancer.
I did hear that his life had done a extrame turn-a-round lately, new
wife (?), cancer had stopped growing, pain decreased, etc....
rfb
|
156.303 | RIP | SLOHAN::FIELDS | Strange Brew | Mon Nov 29 1993 09:54 | 1 |
| Albert Collins Blues guitarist.....
|
156.304 | news flash........ | SLOHAN::FIELDS | Strange Brew | Fri Dec 03 1993 08:26 | 1 |
| PaBLOW "is this line mine ?" Escobar is still dead....
|
156.305 | Prostate cancer | BINKLY::DEMARSE | Mean people suck | Mon Dec 06 1993 08:40 | 3 |
| Frank Zappa - Saturday, December 4th, 52 years old
:(, danielle
|
156.306 | R.I.P. Frank | POWDML::MACINTYRE | | Mon Dec 06 1993 09:16 | 4 |
| He's happy and pain-free in that great Dental Floss Ranch somewhere in
Montana.
|
156.307 | | MKOTS3::ROBERTS_CR | dust off those rusty strings | Mon Dec 06 1993 09:47 | 4 |
|
A 'dynamo' if there ever was one. Sad to see you go, Frank.
carol
|
156.308 | cosmic debris | MAGEE::OSTIGUY | | Mon Dec 06 1993 09:52 | 8 |
| I was lucky enough to see Frank in concert 3 times...no too many shows
like that, where the "star" sits on a stool smokin' a cigarette, then
conducts the band with a baton, then rips into guitar solos that only
FZ could play...
brought Apostrophe/Overnite Sensation disc into work today
Wes
|
156.309 | The white zone is for loading and unloading only | SUBPAC::MAGGARD | Careful with that AXP Eugene! | Mon Dec 06 1993 12:00 | 8 |
|
Bummer. :-(
Well, at least now he's happily jamming away in the land of the Grand
Wazoo and the Green Rosetta...
|
156.310 | | CXDOCS::BARNES | | Mon Dec 06 1993 16:32 | 12 |
| I saw Frank once with Jonn-Luc Ponte, Ruth Underwood and her brother
doing the Overnite Sensation tour...freaking amazing.
A friend saw him in 69 at a college in Kansas city once where and the
Mothers had been playin a song for 20-30 mins, Frank stops them and
says "If we're gonna play this, we're gonna play it right." and then
starts the whole song over again.
RIP, Frank
rfb
|
156.311 | Cancer takes another great | SALES::GKELLER | I'm PU: Politically Uncorrect | Tue Dec 07 1993 08:57 | 5 |
|
Don Amechie(sp?) - Cancer
RIP
|
156.312 | Genetic research is good | SUBPAC::MAGGARD | Careful with that AXP Eugene! | Tue Dec 07 1993 10:05 | 10 |
| re: Cancer
There was an interesting article in yesterday's WSJ... Some scientists
have found a gene that is linked to colon, ovarian, and <one other deadly>
cancer. Now they can screen members of families prone to these cancers for
suceptibility, and then do regular tests for early detection, etc...
It ain't a cure, but it's a step in the right direction!
- jeff
|
156.313 | believe it if you need it. | CSLALL::BRIDGES | Anods asGood asA wink toA blindBat | Tue Dec 07 1993 11:58 | 21 |
| >> <<< Note 156.312 by SUBPAC::MAGGARD "Careful with that AXP Eugene!" >>>
-< Genetic research is good >-
re: Cancer
>>There was an interesting article in yesterday's WSJ... Some scientists
>>have found a gene that is linked to colon, ovarian, and <one other deadly>
>>cancer. Now they can screen members of families prone to these cancers for
>>suceptibility, and then do regular tests for early detection, etc...
>>It ain't a cure, but it's a step in the right direction!
I've seen reports by some doctors that claim there IS a cure for cancer.
But the AMA and "others" don't want it known because of the massive amounts
of $$$ for research and current treatments etc, that would be lost.
I don't know whether it's true or not.
Shawn
|
156.314 | | ROCK::FROMM | It's hard to care about a don't care. | Tue Dec 07 1993 12:17 | 8 |
| > I've seen reports by some doctors that claim there IS a cure for cancer.
> But the AMA and "others" don't want it known because of the massive amounts
> of $$$ for research and current treatments etc, that would be lost.
yeah, and what would it do to our relationships with the aliens mentioned
in some other note around here?
/rich
|
156.315 | | CSCMA::M_PECKAR | That would be something | Tue Dec 07 1993 13:38 | 7 |
|
Guitarist exceptional. Composer extraordinaire. Activist extreme.
It was Frank Zappa's adolescent twist on surrealism I loved best, and he
never gave up that adolescence. He did mature, though, only by virture of
the fact that he grew older, and this quelled his creativity. History will
show his rap to be the best damned parody of our time.
|
156.316 | ORBIT | SLOHAN::FIELDS | Strange Brew | Tue Dec 07 1993 13:52 | 182 |
|
LOS ANGELES (Dec. 6) UPI - Frank Zappa, a composer, arranger, musical and
political satirist and social critic who released his ''The Yellow Shark''
album just last month, died Saturday at his Laurel Canyon home after battling
prostate cancer for several years. He was 52.
During his musical career, Zappa was typecast as an eccentric crank who wrote
funny, controversial songs with dirty lyrics. His songs conjured up a
fundamentalist's nightmare of sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll, but Zappa was
anything but depraved.
Zappa did not take drugs or drink alcohol and had campaigned against
drug-taking since the 1960s. He also didn't permit his band members to take
drugs on the road.
In fact, Zappa, who never drove despite living in Los Angeles, was an astute
businessman. In recent years he had turned to international business, forming
a licensing, consulting and social engineering firm investing in
U.S.-Soviet/Eastern Bloc joint ventures.
Zappa and his wife of more than 20 years, Gail, also ran their own record
label, Barking Pumpkin, a mail-order company, a video company and a music
publishing firm. The couple had four children.
A private funeral service was held Sunday.
Zappa began battling government, the record industry and music critics in the
late 1960s, and in the 1980s took on anti-pornography campaigns and
fundamentalist preachers as well.
In 1966 he released his first album, ''Freak Out.'' The groundbreaking record
by Zappa's group, the Mothers of Invention, was a synthesis of modern
classical music, jazz, vocal group rhythm and blues, '60s rock and the kind of
avant-garde theatricality that has since come to be called performance art.
''Freak Out'' and the albums that followed it, ''Absolutely Free'' and ''We're
Only in it for the Money,'' contained sociopolitical caricatures of American
lifestyles that amused many listeners bu created resentment among the targets
of Zappa's scorn, from drunken parents more concerned about their swimming
pools than their kids to ''phony hippies'' who inspired Zappa to proclaim that
''flower power sucks.''
Zappa became so identified with satiric material that the ambitious music that
followed was frequently identified as another joke. But ''Lumpy Gravy,''
''Cruising with Ruben and the Jets,'' ''Uncle Meat,'' ''Hot Rats,'' ''Burnt
Weeny Sandwich'' and ''Weasels Ripped My Flesh'' proved Zappa had few musical
peers.
The next incarnation of the Mothers of Invention, fronted by ex- Turtles Mark
Volman and Howard Kaylan, was featured in the bizarre underground film classic
''200 Motels'' and on several albums, ''Chunga's Revenge,'' ''Fillmore East,
June 1971,'' ''Just Another Band From L.A.'' and ''Waka/Jawaka.''
After releasing the dense instrumental arrangements for ''The Grand Wazoo,''
Zappa unveiled yet another version of the Mothers that toured extensively in
the mid-1970s and accounted for a series of his most popular albums:
''Over-Nite Sensation,'' ''Apostrophe,'' ''One Size Fits All,'' ''Zoot
Allures'' and ''Zappa in New York.''
Zappa's next record, ''Shiek Yerbouti,'' was one of his most controversial
albums. His satiric imagination scaled Swiftian heights with the disco parody
''Dancing Fool'' and ''Jewish Princess,'' a lampoon that drew public outrage
from Dinah Shore and B'nai B'rith.
Zappa closed out the 1970s with ''Joe's Garage,'' a three-LP set with a bitter,
tragic story line about a country where music is outlawed.
Zappa started out fresh in the 1980s, releasing some of his most challenging
records and embarking on an ambitious plan to consolidate his overall musical
output.
He coined the word ''xenocrony,'' or strange synchronization, to describe his
organizational principle of matching different parts of different concerts to
create an entirely new musical statement.
Zappa used the ''xenocrony'' technique to remarkable effect on a series of
1981 instrumental albums, ''Shut Up 'N Play Yer Guitar,'' ''Shut Up 'N Play
Yer Guitar Some More'' and ''The Return of the Son of Shut Up 'N Play Yer
Guitar.'' Like most of his 1980s work, the records were released by his own
Barking Pumpkin record label.
In addition to albums with his working group, Zappa finally got the chance to
release his first classical recordings in the '80s, ''London Symphony
Orchestra'' Volumes I and II and ''Boulez Conducts Zappa, The Perfect
Stranger.''
In 1983 he sued his former record company, Warner Bros., to get ownership of
the master tapes of his records so he could reap the profits when the works
were reissued on compact discs. He also claimed Warner Bros. had miscalculated
the royalties due him.
Zappa said he lost his zeal for touring after a self-financed 1988 outing with
a 12-piece band cost him $400,000.
''That sort of dampens one's enthusiasm for going out there and doing it again,
'' he said.
Unlike many major rock acts, Zappa refused to accept corporate sponsorship
because he did not want to promote products.
According to Billboard magazine, Zappa's three biggest singles were novelty
songs - ''Don't Eat the Yellow Snow,'' which reached No. 4 on the charts in
1974, ''Dancin' Fool,'' which hit No. 8 in 1979, and ''Valley Girl,'' No. 12
in 1982. ''Valley Girl'' featured his daughter, Moon Unit, using
''Valleyspeak'' terms like ''gag me with a spoon'' and ''tubular.''
Francis Vincent Zappa Jr., the oldest of four children in a Greek- Sicilian
household, was born Dec. 21, 1940, in Baltimore, Md. When he was 9 the family
moved to California.
Zappa began playing in school bands in the early 1950s. By the time he was in
Antelope Valley High School in Lancaster, Calif., he was playing guitar in a
band called the Blackouts.
Zappa got into his share of trouble at school, but it gave him an outlet to
pursue his artistic impulses. For one art project he erased the emulsion from
a 10-minute piece of film, then handpainted each frame individually.
At 16, the young nonconformist developed ulcers.
After graduating high school Zappa married his first wife, Kay, and struggled
to support himself writing soundtrack music for films and composing
avant-garde music that no one would perform. He took music theory courses at
several colleges before quitting formal education in disgust.
For a time, Zappa worked as an art director at a greeting card firm while
playing in cocktail lounge show bands at night.
In 1963 Zappa received royalties from a film score he wrote years earlier and
used the money to buy a good electric guitar and open his own recording studio,
Studio Z, in Cucamonga. He spent days experimenting with his own recordings
while playing bars at night in a band called the Muthers.
Studio Z folded after Zappa made a 10-minute porno film for a used car
salesman who turned out to be an undercover policeman. Zappa was arrested,
served 10 days in jail and was on probation for three years.
The stage was set for Zappa to take on everything he felt was phony and
corrupt about American society. He moved to Los Angeles and formed the Mothers
of Invention, which became a kind of ad hoc house band for a growing society
of post-beat, pre-hippie noncomformists who Zappa dubbed ''United Mutations.''
Zappa has sparred in public debate with Tipper Gore, wife of Vice President
Albert Gore and co-chairman of the Parents Music Resource Center, a lobbying
group intent on policing the lyric content of popular music by rating records.
It was after the record industry complied with the PMRC's request for ratings
on rock records that Zappa started a one-man lobby to protect his free
expression.
''Once all that stuff started happening anybody stating the case at all. I
have the right to state my side of the case as an independent guy.''
In his statement to a congressional committee on rock lyrics chaired by Gore,
Zappa claimed that the ratings system was a violation of his constitutional
rights and that its focus on only rock records was a protectionist strategy by
Gore to favor the country music made in his home state of Tennessee.
Zappa's image changed subtly as he grew older. His lampoons had often been
accurate enough to outlive the subjects they skewered, and his seemingly
tireless ability to speak out eloquently in defense of artistic freedom added
an almost statesmanlike quality to his speech.
Zappa was sought out as a public speaker after his Senate testimony, giving a
keynote addresstempting to retrieve contributions made by PTL members to Jim
and Tammy Bakker.
''Since 1985 I'm probably more famous for having Slade Gorton tell me I didn't
know anything about the First Amendment than for any song I ever wrote. It may
even come as a surprise to people that I play the guitar.''
Zappa saw the Soviet Union as an especially ripe market and made numerous
business trips there in recent years. He took a commission for arranging for
amber from the Soviet Union to be sent to a U.S. company for jewelry. He even
ventured into journalism with ''Frank Zappa's Wild Wild East,'' a series of
interviews he conducted during a trip to Eastern Europe and aired on Financial
News Network.
''I don't have anything against making a profit,'' he told the Los Angeles
Times.
|
156.317 | | CXDOCS::BARNES | | Tue Dec 07 1993 14:10 | 9 |
| funny, that article didn't mention anything abiut the early "mutations"
and their type of music being refered to by the record industry as
"Da-Da ism"
or how Frank HATED the toilet shot of himself....I found Frank to be a
genuis, even if he did contradict himslef often between his songs and
his spoken word.
rfb
|
156.318 | | GNPIKE::HANNAN | Beyond description... | Tue Dec 07 1993 16:43 | 26 |
| re: <<< Note 156.317 by CXDOCS::BARNES >>>
> ....I found Frank to be a
> genuis, even if he did contradict himslef often between his songs and
> his spoken word.
Yeah, it's tough to explain to people that the man was a musical
genius with comical songs like Yellow Snow, or stuff like Valley Girl
or even the lesser known Why Does It Hurt When I Pee? ;-)
His instrumental works, like Waka Jawaka/Hot Rats, or the Grand Wazoo,
or Sleep Dirt, are so totally different from the stuff most people
know (knew :-/) him by. Listening to Sleep Dirt and Studio Tan,
among a lot of Zappa since the news, made me glad these "unauthorized
releases" were made available (against his wishes).
What did it for me wrt Zappa was _the music_. The attitude was just
icing on the cake ;-)
I'm so glad to have seen him a couple of times. Once at Springfield
in the late 70's, and once in Providence in '81-'82 timeframe. I wish
there were more, but it's too late for that now.
His music lives on.
Ken
|
156.319 | Prophet of the Bizarre | JUPITR::OCONNORS | | Wed Dec 08 1993 09:02 | 8 |
|
I only saw FZ in 83....at E.M. LOEWs in Worcester, two shows in
one night. Two totally different shows....he said "you Zappa freaks
should stick around for the late show", I guess he meant it cuz' I
knew alot of songs during the 1st show, but didn't know any of the
2nd show, with the exception of the "Whipping Post" encore.
Sean
|
156.320 | missed out | STUDIO::IDE | Time is generous. | Wed Dec 08 1993 09:15 | 4 |
| I first heard a Frank Zappa song only a few days ago. He got virtually
no radio airplay, I guess. How did you all get turned onto him?
Jamie
|
156.321 | | TRETOP::SAMILJAN | | Wed Dec 08 1993 09:44 | 5 |
| re: -.1
Same way we got turned on to the Dead.
Bud
|
156.322 | | GNPIKE::HANNAN | Beyond description... | Wed Dec 08 1993 10:28 | 10 |
| How'd I get turned onto Zappa ? I think I bought Apostrophe
first, for Cosmic Debris and/or Yellow Snow or something, which
I'd heard on the radio. A college friend played One Size Fits All,
or Sofa, one of those, which I also liked, which influenced me.
The 2nd album I bought was probably Waka Jawaka/Hot Rats, once
I heard that, I was totally hooked. Very different style from
the above. And that was it! Must have at least 20 albums, and
there's tons more I'd like to get.
/Ken
|
156.323 | RIP Frank | BSS::MNELSON | Won't ya try just a little bit harder | Wed Dec 08 1993 11:24 | 7 |
|
I got turned on to Zappa in High School. Saw him at the old Boston
Music Hall (Wang Center) in 77'ish. Excellent show. I think Stanley
Clark played bass that night. It was an incredible night of music, the
kind of show you walk out of and say Wowwwwwwwwwwwwwwww!!!!!!!
Mark
|
156.324 | | CSCMA::M_PECKAR | That would be something | Wed Dec 08 1993 11:26 | 5 |
|
I was rummaging through a record store when I was, oh, round about a
sophomore in high school, and I pulled out a copy of Overnite Sensation,
noticed a little bent over character with a corn cob being rammed up his
ass, and immediately bought it. I think it was in the "New Releases" bin.
|
156.325 | | CXDOCS::BARNES | | Wed Dec 08 1993 13:16 | 4 |
| The Orig Molthers of Invention Album and 200 motels turned me on to FZ.....
The Shut Up series is f$cking excellent!!!
|
156.326 | Instrumentals are best | SPOCK::IRONS | | Wed Dec 08 1993 13:16 | 5 |
| I was never a big fan of Zappa: I heard all his "Yellow snow/Valley
girl" stuff from the radio. Then I heard a few cuts from "Hot Rats".
WOW!! That some great music!
dave
|
156.327 | | QUIVER::SIEGEL | The revolution wil not be televised | Wed Dec 08 1993 13:21 | 9 |
| Reported in MUSIC notes:
One of the members of the Gin Blossoms (a new band with a new album and a hit
called "Hey Jealousy") committed suicide with a gunshot. He had been
despondent and was hospitalized for an attempted suicide 2 months ago.
What a damper on the band's newfound success.
adam
|
156.328 | more on Adam's note..... | SLOHAN::FIELDS | Strange Brew | Wed Dec 08 1993 13:58 | 19 |
| FIRED GUITARIST KILLS HIMSELF
(AP)
Tempe, Ariz. - Douglas Hopkins, who was fired as lead guitarist
for the up-and-coming rock band, Gin Blossoms, shot himself to death.
He was 32.
Hopkins, whose songs and flamboyant playing appear on the band's
album "New Miserable Experience" was found in his home Sunday, said
police spokesman Juan Perez. Worried friends went to the home because
thay had not seen him for a few days, Perez said.
Hopkins wrote the Gin Blossoms biggest hit "Hey Jealousy" as well
as "Found out about you" which ranks number 5 on the current Billboard
magazine modern rock tracks chart.
But Hopkins was fired from the group in April 1992 because fellow
band members said his drinking hindered his performance at recording
sessions for the album.
|
156.329 | | CXDOCS::BARNES | | Wed Dec 08 1993 16:26 | 16 |
| more thoughts on FZ....
I remeber when Frank told Ruth Underwood (plays vibes) during her solo
"Come for us Ruth!"
The next year, when a young lady wouldn't get up on stage at his
invitation during the Valley Girl song, after the song he suggested she
was a little up tight and should go home and perform some self-therapy
using the faucet in the bathtub....I didn't see that show but all my
buds did.
My very first car (71 datsun Pick up truck) was named "the pygmy pony"
JC, I bet you can relate to "The Slime Ozzin out of your TV set"
|
156.330 | billy the mountain..... | SMURF::PETERT | rigidly defined areas of doubt and uncertainty | Wed Dec 08 1993 20:57 | 10 |
| Sigh, here I am, sitting at a terminal farm at the back of the DECUS
exhibit and scanning through GRATEFUL, and this is the first I've
heard about Frank. Sigh.... Hot Rats may have been the first
album of his I had, and the inimitable Peaches en Regalia. Though
Little Umbrellas has now replaced it in my heart. Frank was certianly
more well known or at least received more airplay back in the 70's, and
that's where I my tastes jelled. We'll miss you, BIlly and me.....
PeterT
|
156.331 | happy together.... | SMURF::HAPGOOD | Java Java HEY! | Thu Dec 09 1993 08:51 | 16 |
| Well I might as well say I'm a big Zap fan too. The first one I had was
Mothers of Invention Live at the Fillmore (on 8 track no less). That
was when the Mothers had Mark Volman from Turtles fame in the band.
Remember the HIT RECORD! The one that FLIES STRAIGHT UP THE CHARTS?
The one with the
B-U-L-L-E-T?
Or possibly you remember the Donkey with the electric cooled pony harness?
I'll stop with that since this is a family notes file.
I'll miss him!
bob
|
156.332 | Acetylene Nirvana! | CSCMA::M_PECKAR | That would be something | Thu Dec 09 1993 09:17 | 7 |
|
>The one with the
> B-U-L-L-E-T?
That was Fillmore East Live June 1971.
|
156.333 | | CSCMA::M_PECKAR | That would be something | Thu Dec 09 1993 10:20 | 10 |
|
it has been suggested on alt.fan.frank-zappa, that on uncle franks
birthday people over the world syncronise playing "watermelon in
easter hay" on joe's garage, act iii. that would be tuesday, december
21 at 1800 gmt.
fyi, zappa once was on 'desert island disk' and played the above as his
number one recording to take with him ;-)
|
156.334 | y | MKOTS3::ROBERTS_CR | dust off those rusty strings | Thu Dec 09 1993 11:32 | 9 |
|
RE: .330
>exhibit and scanning through GRATEFUL, and this is the first I've
>heard about Frank.
In addition to the warning 'beware of events for which new clothing is
needed', I'd say 'beware of events in which you don't hear important
stuff like this until_two_days_later'. that last one is a carol_ism
|
156.335 | I'm a little pimp with my hair greased back... | SIOG::OSULLIVAN_D | B� c�ramach, a leanbh | Fri Dec 10 1993 09:41 | 7 |
| Sad to hear Frank is gone. In one of the newspaper reports he is
mentioned as saying 'Dangerous Kitchen' and 'The Jazz Discharge Party'
are his favourites. Does any one know which album the latter appears
in? Dangerous Kitchen is on The Man from Utopia and the words are
hilarious.
-Dermot
|
156.336 | | TERAPN::PHYLLIS | in the shadow of the moon | Fri Dec 10 1993 12:43 | 74 |
|
Linda Ellerbee's column today...
THE DEATH OF A PATRIOT
Some nights we hadn't been off the air two minutes when the phone on the
set would ring. Some nights I would imagine I could tell which ring was
his. It was louder, more insistent, a ring that demanded an answer, or so
I imagined at the time. However, when _NBC News Overnight_ went off the
air, it was 2:30 in the morning; I was not at my best. Not ready for
mental gymnastics. Not ready to DEFEND the night's news. But there it
was. The ring. HIS ring. I pick up the phone.
"Ellerbee? Zappa."
We weren't pals; I never even met the man, but for a while in the early and
middle 80's, Frank Zappa and I had this irregular phone thing going. Of
course I thought about those phone calls when I heard that Francis Vincent
Zappa Jr., social critic, reluctant rock star, world-class composer, guitar
virtuoso, production wizard and just about the only human ever to take on
Tipper Gore in public, had died--or, as the family said in its statement,
"left for his final tour."
The man was a gift. OK, a real weird gift. But still, his music did what
Aristotle said good music should do: it defied description and demanded to
be heard.
Then there were the words. It tells you a lot that today, when a local
radio station asked people to call in requests for their favorite Zappa
songs, most of the stuff people wanted to hear couldn't, for reasons of
taste, be played on the air.
Still.
How pleasant that Frank Zappa's words have not lost their power to offend.
Because it is the man's words we will remember longest. Not the music.
The words. What Frank Zappa had to say was important, and his death makes
me sad for those of us who believe it is the duty of every citizen to keep
his mouth open. You see, Frank Zappa was a patriot. A real American
patriot.
Zappa questioned journalists with the same fervor he questioned
politicians, and he couldn't understand why most journalists didn't seem as
passionate about the First Amendment as he was (I still don't have a good
answer for that one), or why every American didn't realize that ALL
censorship, especially well-intentioned censorship, was a form of tyranny.
He also may have been the most intense person I ever had a conversation
with. Zappa wouldn't let go of an idea--or a person, if he thought she
were being, say, less than honest intellectually. Once, when I reported on
television about something or another that President Reagan had said, Zappa
called, wanting to know where Reagan got HIS facts, and why I, as a
journalist, was prepared to believe ANYTHING that came out of Ronald
Reagan's mouth in the first place? Had I no knowledge of history? (Zappa
was always willing to give me some of his.)
One other thing. Zappa made you laugh. Now quick. Name another rock star
who did that. A deadly serious man, he was funny about his politics,
industrial-strength acerbic, sort of like Bob Dole might be if he were
twice as smart, and had a heart.
In 1985, when Tipper Gore tried to censor, or at least restrict access to,
music with raunchy lyrics, Zappa, in testimony before a congressional
panel, ridiculed Gore's assertion that lyrics could promote deviant
behavior. "I wrote a song about dental floss--but did anyone's teeth get
cleaner?" he asked her.
Ahead of the pack, back in the year 1966, when "The '60s" were not yet a
matter of smarmy commercialism, much less a thing of ridiculous nostalgia,
Frank Zappa broke up his band, and when they asked him why, he said he was
tired of playing for people who clapped for all the wrong reasons.
And so it goes.
|
156.337 | The father of Quality has died... | CARROL::YOUNG | where is this place in space??? | Wed Dec 22 1993 10:10 | 502 |
| It will be noted in the history of the fall of America's Manufacturing
capabilties that we didn't pay near enough attention to the Vision of
Quality and the wisdom of this dear man....
Dr. W. Edwards Deming died of cancer early yesterday at his home in
Washington. He was 93.
Dr. Deming at U. Mass. Amherst
==============================
***********************************************************************
On April 22, 1992, Dr. Deming was a guess speaker at the University of
Massachusetts at Amherst. There were a number of Digital employees in
attendance, and some of them took notes. The following is a summary of
the notes from one of our employees.
NOTE: In trying to identify the actual author -- some of the
distribution listings had been deleted on the copy that I received -- I
found employees that had forwarded the memo to others, but I was unable
to locate the author. So, here are our thanks to the Digital employee
that took the notes and wrote the original memo.
The following is the employee notes as written in the original memo.
***********************************************************************
"The session was at the Fine Arts Center Concert Hall, standing room
only, over 2500 people. After standing in a line that went for several
blocks I found out that Digital had a reserved section down front. The
session was sponsored by Digital and attendance was free. I found a
seat in the sixth row and proceeded to get my tape recorder ready. The
sound system, that close, wasn't great and I found out afterwards that
the tape was barley audible. Dr. Deming, 92 years old, was brought out
on stage in a wheel chair. There was a podium, table with overhead
projector, his slides, and a portable screen. He slowly walked to the
table from his wheel chair and proceeded to get his slides in order
with the help of an assistant who he introduced as Dr. ..., I didn't
hear her name. His speech was slightly muted. When he started speaking
he stood and remained standing for about 10 minutes and then sat
through the rest of the session.
"His slides weren't readable from where I sat and when he put the first
one up the audience laughed, but he continued to use them. The audience
became intensely quite. He also wrote on movable overhead material with
rock solid handwriting. He took hand written questions from his
assistant. His answers were quick, to the point, and even contained
humor. He started speaking at about 7:05 P.M. and went until about
9:10. At the end of the session he autographed copies of a book that
was for sale at the entrance. .... I found out from one of the students
that some of them had a personal session with Dr. Deming that
afternoon. ...
"Before I get into the specifics of what he presented I'd like to share
some of my thoughts, feelings, and conclusions. I felt there was a real
sense of regard from the audience for Dr. Deming. Some of the questions
asked for more clarity or detail on what he had said while others
hinted of a different opinion, but the tone was respectful. Afterwards
I overheard some people saying that they didn't necessarily agree with
a particular point, but they appreciated having the opportunity to hear
him speak in person and to listen to what he had to say. The path to
excellence for him was clear and simple and he appeared irritated with
questions that hinted of not understanding his message. His mind was
dynamic while his body was slowing down.
"It was apparent I was observing a person who has a vision, i.e.
something significant yet to accomplish, and at 92 years of age with an
impressive list of achievements, was still very committed to his
mission. For me, this was the significant learning of the evening, and
I left with a personal question. How could I become this committed, how
can I make a difference?
"The following is a partial list of his key points:
. People are important.
. Ranking people introduced conflict.
. Abolish conflict.
. Pay for performance can't be measured.
. The key is intrinsic motivation and the joy of learning.
. Extrinsic motivation replaces self esteem.
. Abolish metric systems and gold stars.
. You cannot measure individual performance.
. The system must be managed, it wont manage itself.
. The secret is cooperation not competition.
. Use work flow diagrams, not organization charts. Work flow
diagrams tell people what their job is.
. Always use theory. Without theory there's no question to ask,
without questions there's no learning.
. Theory enables us to get a view, to understand.
. Without theory people just work harder, in the prison they're
in.
. To learn, one must listen and build long term relationships of
loyalty and trust.
. The key is optimization of the system. The system must take into
account the future as well as what business you're in.
. Why is a company less than the sum of it's parts? Because of
negative interaction and competition. Competition means loss.
Focus on positive interaction and cooperation.
. Competition is not human nature.
. Cooperation solves problems, competition creates failures.
. How do we get management to listen? Good question?
. No substitute for knowledge.
. In Tokyo there are 200 companies working together, making sure
none go out of business. In the U.S. we have competition. Who do
you think will be ahead?
. Learn from the right sources.
. In Japan, I taught systems and cooperation.
. The boundary of the system is all Japan.
. The key is all elements of the system cooperating and working
together. Local optimization destroys the system.
. In the U.S., raising the cost of one element would not be
accepted, even if the total system would be less.
. How do you get knowledge? It comes from Theory, from outside,
and it doesn't come knocking at your door.
. Only trivial problems can be solved by numbers. Significant
problems are solved by Theory.
. Would you wish to do business with a loser? No!! Strive for win
win. There are only two choices, all win or all lose.
. Have responsibility to yourself, then you have learning.
. Monopoly is far better than competition. Create cooperation not
competition.
. Ask why. Self empowered teams -- doing what? Management must be
involved and manage the system and not transfer all
responsibility to the teams."
. "No Substitute For Knowledge" !!!!!!!!
. "Can We Learn Of Course We Can."
_______________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________
======================================================================
PART-I of II
DEMING SEMINAR
FEB 17-21, 1992
---------------
"These are my notes from attending a seminar led by the
legendary Quality guru, Dr. W. Edward Deming.
"There were about 600 people there including
representatives from: AT&T, Eastman Kodak, Exxon, GE, IBM, &
Merck. The session was sponsored by the Philadelphia Area
Council for Excellence (PACE) which is part of the
Philadelphia Chamber of Commerce. PACE's mission is for the
Delaware Valley to have world-renowned business success
through the teachings of Dr. Deming. PACE consists of
hundreds of organizations throughout the Delaware Valley area
including Hercules and ICI; Dupont is not a member. The
seminar was the 10th that PACE has sponsored featuring Dr.
Deming.
"Key learnings from the seminar were:
* Although Dr. Deming is noted for Quality and
statistical process control, his central message is that we
must transform our approach to management of our businesses
in order to compete in the world.
* One must think of a business as a system. Following is
a simple model of key parts of a business system:
F <--------F <----------F <------------F <------------ F
! /\ ! /\ ! /\ ! !
! ! ! ! ! ! ! !
! ! ! ! ! ! ! !
V ! V ! V ! V !
A ---------> B ---------> C -----------> D ----------> E
WHERE:
A: Suppliers
B: Production
C: Sales
D: Distribution
E: Customers
F: Feedback to all parts of the system
"The point is that all people in a system must think of
themselves as within a system since they can't realistically
isolate themselves from the system. The Aim (Purpose) of
the system and everyone in the system should be to work
together to optimize the system as a whole. That way everyone
wins.
* The key to improving a system is the method. It is
better to focus on a method of improvement rather than goals,
objectives or results. The numbers can be manipulated
especially in an environment of fear. He recommends companies
eliminate the MBO approach to management. A key question to
ask about improvement is: "By what method?"
* Deming recommends companies work to drive our fear.
Fear inhibits innovation and productivity.
* We must stop management tampering with the system.
Usually this is caused by lack of understanding of the
difference between special cause and common cause. This
results in management taking inappropriate action which
causes waste and lower productivity which is exactly the
opposite of what they hope to accomplish.
* Deming recommends that organizations become learning
organizations. We should create a "yearning for learning."
There is no substitute for knowledge.
* Deming recommends we create a constancy of purpose. We
need to stop short-term thinking and short term programs.
There is no instant pudding! We need a long-term commitment.
* We need LEADERSHIP not management or supervision to
accomplish the transformation. We need leaders that listen to
and serve the people.
* America is being ruined by "best efforts." Everyone
doing their best is not enough! The key is to work together
to improve the system as a whole. Deming conducted the famous
"Red bead experiment" where willing workers doing their best
produced red beads (defects) even though they were not
wanted. Deming's point is that we should not punish the
people for only doing their best; they can only produce what
the system will deliver. We must focus efforts on improving
the system.
* There is a natural distribution of capabilities &
contributions of people in a business system. The key is to
enhance and develop everyone and not destroy the will of
people to contribute to improvement of the system as a whole.
* Dr. Deming strongly recommends eliminating performance
ratings and rankings of individual people. He mentioned it
dozens of times during the session. He directed people to go
back to their work places and eliminate performance ratings
Monday Morning! Some of the key reasons discussed in the
seminar were:
- Ratings foster competition within the system.
- Ratings inhibit teamwork (limit interdependence and
cooperation).
- Ratings foster mediocrity. People tend to set safe
goals they can easily meet.
- Ratings increase variability since they represent
what Dr. Deming calls management tampering with the
system.
- Ratings cause focus on the short-term. Why try to
develop something for the long-term health of the
business if one is rated on annual objectives?
- Ratings tend to destroy intrinsic motivation (joy
and pride in work).
- One cannot separate people from the system. What we
might really be rating is the results of the system
and the "style" of the person. Dr. Deming says
that since people work within a system, only 3% of
the perceived performance is due to the people and
97% is due to the system!
- Ratings inhibit risk-taking and innovation. People
are afraid to admit mistakes especially to their
bosses.
- Ratings tend to destroy self-esteem.
- Ratings cause focus on pleasing the boss vs.
pleasing the customer.
- Ratings foster sub-optimization. This means that
people are not focused on the purpose of
optimizing the system as a whole. Individuals are
more worried about "What's in it for me?"
- Ratings focus on goals and objectives without
consideration of "By what method?"
- Ratings tend to reward style not true contribution.
- An individual's "performance" really can't be
measured.
- Ratings tend to focus on quantity not Quality.
- Ratings destroy morale and joy in work.
- Judging people does not help them do a better job.
- Ranking people is a FARCE. Apparent "performance" is
actually attributable mostly to the system not to
the individual.
- Ratings don't focus on improving the system.
- Having workers doing their best is not good enough
for business success.
- The ratings system punishes people; it creates
winners and losers.
- Ratings instill fear in people (carrot & stick
approach to motivating people).
- Ratings cause people to deny their true needs
for personal growth; they don't want to admit
weaknesses.
- Ratings destroy trust between people and managers.
- Ratings cause bosses to be judges rather than
coaches and counselors.
- Ratings causes bosses to talk more than they listen
to their people because of the power inequity.
- Ratings become a label that sticks with the employee
and limits growth and development. Top rated people
don't feel like they need to improve.
- Ratings cause humiliation of people who don't get a
top rating. It causes destruction of the will to
contribute.
- Bosses don't really know what people do and
accomplish even though they argue that they do!
- There is a lack of feedback from others in other
parts of the system as to an individual's true
contribution; note those others might be outside the
company.
- Employees get blamed for faults of the system.
- You really can't measure the contribution of an
individual within a system."
_________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________
======================================================================
PART-II
DEMING SEMINAR
FEB 17-21, 1992
---------------
* Dr. Deming held up for public ridicule the recently
announced approach of IBM with forced-ranking of its people
and dismissal of the lowest ranked people! It sounds like the
early warning signal of the demise of IBM a once leading
people-oriented company.
* An American Cyanamid representative mentioned that
their R&D organization plans to eliminate performance ratings
for the Chemicals organization. The key contact was not
present so I plan to follow up.
* Representatives of many other organizations mentioned
privately considerable resistance with eliminating
performance ratings in their companies. The key seems to be
management's unwillingness to give up something they feel is
vital. Dr. Deming really challenged their thinking.
* Dr. Deming is also opposed to incentive pay for sales
people. Many of the reasons are similar to what is discussed
above but include:
- Sales people work in a system; they don't work in a
vacuum. It's unfair and arrogant to only reward
sales people with extra pay. Many other people
contribute to the sales but are excluded. This
causes anger of the others and does not work towards
optimization of the system as a whole. The notion of
"pay at risk" for the sales people is not an answer
to the dilemma; sales incentives for sales people is
a divisive program!
- Sales incentives may cause the wrong behaviors on
part of the sales personnel, eg: they might oversell
a low profit item just to boost sales. Any attempt
to design around this can be beaten by the sales
people. After all they are clever, hard-working
people!
- Sales incentives can't truly measure contribution
to the system as a whole, eg: mentoring, developing
future markets, etc.
- Sales incentives tend to cause sub-optimization.
- Sales incentives foster internal competition and
interfere with "Doing the right thing."
- Sales incentives create expectations and once
achieved may create negative feelings if managed
in what is perceived as an arbitrary way.
- Sales incentives lose incentive over time and can
demotivate.
- Money tends to be the value system in business. It's
a poor replacement for emotional valuing that people
need so much.
- Managers claim that sales incentives measure the
performance of individuals but they're really
measuring the result of the system in which the
individuals work.
- Sales incentives bring out the worst in people. They
create a short-sighted, selfish behavior focused on:
"What's in it for me?"
* Deming recommends that profits of the business be
shared equitably with all people in the business.
* He recommended that in a business downturn we take
action in the following order:
1. Reduce dividends.
2. Reduce bonuses of top management.
3. Reduce management salaries starting from the top
down to the middle of the hierarchy.
4. Workers are asked to accept pay cuts or a reduction
in force through attrition or voluntary discharge.
"My personal recommendation to anyone reading this is to
try to attend a Deming seminar as soon as you can. Dr. Deming
has tremendous wisdom to impart focused on what will make
business successful. Since he is 91, he won't be with us for
long. He has an amazing schedule of 18 seminars left in 1992;
"Further, I came away more convinced more than ever that
eliminating performance ratings is an important part of
Dupont achieving its vision of becoming a GREAT GLOBAL
COMPANY THROUGH PEOPLE."
_________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________
|
156.338 | | CSLALL::BRIDGES | Anods asGood asA wink toA blindBat | Tue Jan 04 1994 10:00 | 9 |
|
Don't know the specifics just sumptin i heard but...
The orignal JOKER, Ceasar Romero (sp?) died Sunday. 8-(
Anyone know the details?
Shawn
|
156.339 | | SLOHAN::FIELDS | Strange Brew | Thu Jan 06 1994 11:40 | 3 |
| Thomas P. "Tip" O'Neill, 81
Virgina Kelly (Bill Clinton's Mother)
|
156.340 | | TERAPN::PHYLLIS | in the shadow of the moon | Thu Jan 06 1994 11:52 | 5 |
|
when did Virginia Kelly die? I heard about Tip last night but no
mention of the President's mom. Did that just happen?
|
156.341 | | TRETOP::SAMILJAN | | Thu Jan 06 1994 12:09 | 8 |
| I heard the Prez got a call at 2:30 this morning.
I'm gonna miss Tip. He's been a hero to me for most of my adult life.
A true liberal who never made any apologies for it, even when it could
have meant political death. If I was a politician, I'd model myself
after him. (I recommend his book "Man of the House" I think was the
title. It's funny, witty, insightful, and if you like Tip, you'll
learn something about him, too.)
|
156.342 | | BIODTL::JC | Just one thing I ask of you | Fri Jan 14 1994 10:51 | 4 |
| David Stone, x-VP of Software Engineering, died last night.
don't know the cause.
he was a young man.
|
156.343 | Possible cause | GEMGRP::FINAN | The sky was yellow and the sun was blue | Fri Jan 14 1994 12:26 | 12 |
| David has been battling cancer for some time now. I imagine
that is what caused his death but the mail I received this
morning said only that he had died.
I met David and his wife a couple of years ago when they sat
at our table for an anniversery dinner event (he was the
guest speaker) and had the opportunity to speak with him about
both work and non-work related subjects. Nice guy, very down
to earth. I was sad to see him leave Digital and sadder still
to hear this news.
Robyn
|
156.344 | | TERAPN::PHYLLIS | in the shadow of the moon | Fri Jan 14 1994 12:41 | 4 |
|
Yes, he had brain cancer, I'm sure that was it.
|
156.345 | Harry Nillson | TRETOP::SAMILJAN | | Mon Jan 17 1994 16:16 | 4 |
| Harry Nillson, age 52, on Saturday, Jan. 15. Never fully recovered
from problems after heart attack last February.
He just finished an album last Wednesday.
|
156.346 | | CXDOCS::BARNES | | Mon Jan 17 1994 16:20 | 6 |
| heard about Harry, but didn't know he had had a heart attack recently.
I DO know the man partyed HARD! during alot of his life...
The Point will always have a special place in my heart.
rfb
|
156.347 | | NAC::TRAMP::GRADY | Short arms, and deep pockets... | Mon Jan 17 1994 17:27 | 10 |
| ...and the immortal:
"You're breaking my heart
you're tearing me apart,
so f*ck you!"
Ya gotta love the guy...
tim
|
156.348 | The Point is very educational | CSLALL::BRIDGES | Anods asGood asA wink toA blindBat | Wed Jan 26 1994 12:08 | 16 |
| >> The Point will always have a special place in my heart.
I love The Point.
I sat down with my oldest son (4yrs) on afternoon to watch it.
When it was over, just to see what he would say i asked him what
the moral of the story was. After I explained what a moral is, he
thought about for a moment and said
"It doesn't matter if someone *looks* differrent your still the
same as everyone else."
Could there be hope for future generations afterall?
Shawn
|
156.349 | "Who loves ya?" | SSGV01::TPNSTN::Strobel | Jetson, you're TFSO'd !!! | Wed Jan 26 1994 13:45 | 1 |
| Telly Savalas, age 70, of cancer. Time to give up tooties pops I guess
|
156.350 | | CXDOCS::BARNES | | Thu Jan 27 1994 10:06 | 4 |
| we must ALL keep da faith, Shawn....yer son's a smart one!!!!
rfb
|
156.351 | | CSLALL::BRIDGES | Anods asGood asA wink toA blindBat | Thu Jan 27 1994 12:19 | 10 |
| re: <<< Note 156.350 by CXDOCS::BARNES >>>
>> we must ALL keep da faith, Shawn....yer son's a smart one!!!!
That we must..
Unfortunatly sometimes he smarta$$ as well 8-)
Shawn
|
156.352 | | SMURF::HAPGOOD | Java Java HEY! | Mon Jan 31 1994 10:00 | 8 |
| stretching it a bit but.....
Really Dead --->
Buffalo in the 2nd half.
bob
|
156.353 | | TERAPN::PHYLLIS | in the shadow of the moon | Mon Jan 31 1994 10:13 | 4 |
|
you said it. I actually thought we were gonna get a game this time -
the first half was good.
|
156.354 | I take it buffalo was one of the teams playing | MILKWY::SAMPSON | Driven by the wind | Mon Jan 31 1994 10:29 | 2 |
| I actually thought I'd get away without hearing about it.
|
156.355 | | SPOCK::IRONS | | Mon Jan 31 1994 13:04 | 4 |
| I decided to tune in during the 2nd half. AS Arnold says: BIG
MISTAKE.
dave
|
156.356 | | SSGV01::TPNSTN::Strobel | Jetson, you're TFSO'd !!! | Mon Jan 31 1994 13:41 | 1 |
| Sherm Feller - long time PA announcer for the Boston Red Sox, died Friday
|
156.357 | ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls... | BUSY::IRZA | Juneau Oates Neely..best line in hockey | Mon Jan 31 1994 13:47 | 5 |
|
it's gonna be weird going back to fenway and not hearing ol'
sherm on the PA. 8^(
|
156.358 | | AKOCOA::SMITH_D | 24 and there's so much more | Mon Jan 31 1994 15:36 | 8 |
|
I am very sorry to hear that!
Yeah, he was kind of a Fenway classic.
I'll miss that echo too!
"Up at Bat bat bat bat bat....Carl Yestremski ski ski ski ski....."
|
156.359 | | CXDOCS::BARNES | | Wed Feb 02 1994 08:15 | 15 |
| barnes the insomniac here...picked up an old paper while drinkin my
morning cup and found..
Pierre Boulle (81) died 2-1-94, wrote "Bridge over the River Kwai", based on
experiances he had while a slave laboror during WWII, AND wrote PLANET
OF THE APES!!!!
American Computor Company exec John Cleaver and his wife and 2 deck
hands found bound and gagged and stabbed to death on a yacht owned by
Ogden Computor Company of England off the coast of Barbuda.
8 Somalis killed by MArines....
sigh.....
|
156.360 | | SUBPAC::MAGGARD | Ya don't hafta spell'em ta eat'em! | Wed Feb 02 1994 11:37 | 8 |
| > American Computor Company exec John Cleaver and his wife and 2 deck hands
> found bound and gagged and stabbed to death on a yacht owned by Ogden
> Computor Company of England off the coast of Barbuda.
<shudders>
- jeff_who_read_Clear_And_Present_Danger
|
156.361 | "My love is bigger than a Cadillac" | SALEM::LEBLANC | | Thu Feb 03 1994 11:43 | 5 |
| Isn't today the anniversary of the plane crash that killed Richie
Valens, the Big Bopper and Buddy Holly? It really was as Don Maclean
sang, "The day the music died".
chris
|
156.362 | | ROCK::FROMM | It's hard to care about a don't care. | Thu Feb 03 1994 12:10 | 5 |
| > Isn't today the anniversary of the plane crash
yes
/rich
|
156.363 | | TERAPN::PHYLLIS | you are the eyes of the world | Wed Feb 23 1994 14:44 | 54 |
| :-( :-(
LOS ANGELES (AP) _ ``Papa'' John Creach, a classically trained
violinist who became a rock star with the Jefferson Airplane after
decades playing pop, jazz and blues, has died. He was 76.
Creach died of natural causes on Tuesday at Midway Hospital,
where he had been undergoing treatment for heart and respiratory
problems, his friend Michael Gaiman said.
Last year, the Memphis-based Blues Foundation presented him with
its W.C. Handy Award as an outstanding blues musician.
Creach spent decades on the cocktail lounge circuit and even
played aboard a tour boat to Catalina before the San
Francisco-based rock band discovered him.
To the long-haired youths, the white-haired man in his 50s was
``Papa,'' and the name stuck.
``I never had no problems fitting in with the Plane's style; I
just listened to their albums and figured it out,'' Creach once
said.
``My motto is, if you're going to do a cha-cha, do a good
cha-cha. If you want to play rock, rock good. All you have to do is
get that feeling.''
Creach was a strong influence on the group, both musically and
personally, said Paul Kantner, a founding member of Jefferson
Airplane.
``Papa John taught us all things we'll remember well into the
next century,'' Kantner said Tuesday.
``I hope his friends and fans think about what Papa John added
to their lives and go out and add some of that to other people's
lives,'' he said.
For the past two years, Creach toured with Jefferson Starship,
successor band to the Airplane. Although hobbled by arthritis, he
was still able to bring audiences to their feet with soulful riffs
on his electric violin.
``When he was not performing it was hard for him to sit around.
One of his legs was nearly paralyzed,'' Gaiman said. ``But when
he'd get up on a stage, you could see the years melt away. He was
so animated.''
In 1992, Creach recorded ``Papa Blues,'' his first CD and his
first all-blues set with the Bernie Pearl Blues Band.
Creach was born in Beaver Falls, Pa., in 1917 and took up violin
at age 10. At 18 he moved with his family to Chicago, where he
received some classical training and was briefly affiliated with
the Illinois Symphony Orchestra.
In the 1930s he formed the group ``The Chocolate Music Bars,''
playing jazz, blues and popular music throughout the United States
and Canada.
Creach settled in Los Angeles in 1945, playing on a shipboard
band between Los Angeles and Santa Catalina Island and later
forming the Johnny Creach Trio. A friend introduced Creach to
members of Jefferson Airplane in 1970.
Creach was with the band until its 1972 breakup and then played
with Airplane members in the group Hot Tuna.
|
156.364 | | CXDOCS::BARNES | | Wed Feb 23 1994 14:57 | 5 |
| saw papa John with Starship in 1975 truely a wonderful musician that
added a sh*tload to the airplanes/starships styles....
"summer of 75, all the world's gonna come alive..."
rfb
|
156.365 | -( | TOOK::PECKAR | sleep tight | Wed Feb 23 1994 15:18 | 2 |
|
Well, I'm gonna go home and put on Burgers...
|
156.366 | :^( | ECRU::CLARK | Chairman of the Bored | Wed Feb 23 1994 16:23 | 8 |
| I saw him with the reformed Jefferson Starship a couple of years ago ... it
really is true, he seemed barely able to walk until he started playing, then
he'd be energized ....
Well, from what I could tell he seemed to live a very happy life, doing what
he wanted to do.
- DC
|
156.367 | | E::EVANS | | Thu Feb 24 1994 17:15 | 6 |
| I saw him at the Channel about a year or two ago. I stood in front of him
while he played. He played a delightful "Summertime" from Porgy & Bess.
I gave him a high-five at the end of the show. Definately memorable.
Jim
|
156.368 | | GRANPA::TDAVIS | | Thu Feb 24 1994 19:56 | 2 |
| Dinah Shore 76 years old, cancer.
|
156.369 | John Candy 3/4/94 | ANGLIN::GEBHART | Met her accidentally in St.Paul, MN | Fri Mar 04 1994 14:22 | 7 |
| Just heard John Candy died while filming in Mexico.
:-(
Also hear somebody from the group Nirvana is working on it. He is in
a coma from an OD of barbituates and champaign. :-(
Scott
|
156.370 | No Way... | BINKLY::CEPARSKI | Show Me Something Built To Last | Fri Mar 04 1994 14:35 | 5 |
|
>>Just heard John Candy died while filming in Mexico.
REALLY?!?!?! One of the best (IMO). That's a shame....
|
156.371 | | TECRUS::DEMARSE | Inspiration, move me brightly | Fri Mar 04 1994 14:36 | 4 |
| re: John Candy
Wow! Has he been sick? :(
|
156.372 | My name is Dewey Oxburger,friends call me Ox | SALEM::LEBLANC | | Fri Mar 04 1994 14:38 | 5 |
| Yeah, the movie "Stripes" just wouldn't have been the same if he wasn't
the one mud wrestling with four women in the nightclub..
sad sad day
chris
|
156.373 | | SLOHAN::FIELDS | Strange Brew | Fri Mar 04 1994 15:06 | 6 |
| oh no....last week I saw something on Entertainment tonight about the
filming of this movie....it is very hot there....Richard Lewis was
having trouble with the heat, Ican just imagine John was over heating.
peace Uncle Buck
|
156.374 | 8-( | CSLALL::BRIDGES | Anods asGood asA wink toA blindBat | Mon Mar 07 1994 10:35 | 11 |
|
It was a heart attack, probably a combination of the heat and his weight.
8-(
"Do ya know a hachet is Gnat?"
|
156.375 | | QUIVER::SIEGEL | The revolution wil not be televised | Mon Mar 07 1994 13:31 | 4 |
| No drugs were found in his system (as if we had to even check that). He
weighed 330 pounds, I think that did it.
adam
|
156.376 | | CSLALL::BRIDGES | Anods asGood asA wink toA blindBat | Mon Mar 07 1994 13:50 | 11 |
| re: <<< Note 156.375 by QUIVER::SIEGEL "The revolution wil not be televised" >>>
>>No drugs were found in his system (as if we had to even check that). He
Yea, someone made a comment to me about cocaine. I said I doubt it.
He seemed liked someone that was always high "On Life".
Shawn
|
156.377 | | SSGV01::STROBEL | Jeff | Thu Mar 24 1994 18:34 | 7 |
| Louis Grizzard, author and humorist, died this past weekend frm
complications following his 4th major heart attack. He was 47.
Among his books were:
"Corn Dogs Always Bark at Night"
"When My Love Returns from the Ladies Room, will I be too old to care"
"Aim low, they're riding shetland ponies"
"Elvis is Dead and I don't feel too good myself"
|
156.378 | | CXDOCS::BARNES | | Fri Mar 25 1994 11:21 | 8 |
| ahhh yes, redneck extrodinaire! My sister, who lives in Augusta
Georgia, gave me a Grizzard calendar and tape just last summer.
Sort of a hero in the deep south....at least he wasn't a mean redneck!
rfb who spent his early hippie dazes in GA. and needlessstosay had
several runins with the mean type o redneck but likes the way Grizzard
poked fun at Yankees (no offense intended to those that consider
themselves yankees)
|
156.379 | | CXDOCS::BARNES | | Fri Mar 25 1994 11:21 | 4 |
| also Bob Thomas, originator of the SYF died not too long ago...anyone
know of what???
rfb
|
156.380 | Before Bevis and Butthead, the true laugh.... | QUARRY::petert | rigidly defined areas of doubt and uncertainty | Fri Mar 25 1994 11:37 | 4 |
| And then there is Walter Lantz, the creator of Woody Woodpecker. Definitely
and influence on my youth.
PeterT
|
156.381 | | SMURF::HAPGOOD | Java Java HEY! | Fri Mar 25 1994 13:20 | 10 |
| Heard a thing about Walter Lance on the radio the other day. At first Mel
Blanc was the voice of Woody but he signed up to do Bugs Bunny and wasn't
allowed to do Woody's voice anymore. Walter's wife wanted to do Woody
but Walter didn't want her to. The day came for auditions for Woody's
voice and Walter's wife submitted a sample without her name (the producer or
someone knew it was her's though) and they liked it best...
bob
|
156.382 | RIP - Kurt Cobain | PCOJCT::TURNOF | Greetings from the Big Apple | Fri Apr 08 1994 17:31 | 7 |
| Heard on the radio before - Kurt Cobain from Nirvana was found with a
gunshot wound in the head at his home in Seattle. Suicide note was
found with him.
Sad, very sad.
Fredda
|
156.383 | | QUARRY::petert | rigidly defined areas of doubt and uncertainty | Fri Apr 08 1994 18:25 | 9 |
| Didn't he just recover from an overdose? Or was that someone else?
If it was him, I guess he was really trying to go.
The New York Times Science section had a report this week about how suicide
may actually have some genetic basis. Sounds wierd, but they did show
some evidence. Haven't read the whole thing yet though.
PeterT
|
156.384 | Eugene Ionesco | QUARRY::petert | rigidly defined areas of doubt and uncertainty | Fri Apr 08 1994 18:26 | 1 |
| Eugene Ionesco, a week or so ago.
|
156.385 | Following a Jim Morrison Lifestyle Doctrine? | SALEM::LEBLANC | | Mon Apr 11 1994 11:35 | 7 |
| Petert
Kurt Cobain, according to Rolling Stone had "conquered" a heroin
addiction which began when he was using the drug to quell a stomach
or intestinal disorder he had, and yes he did just come out of a coma
from champagne and sleeping tablets...
chris
|
156.386 | | TERAPN::PHYLLIS | you are the eyes of the world | Mon Apr 11 1994 11:54 | 5 |
|
re: genetic links to suicide
Kurt Cobain apparently had 3 uncles who committed suicide.
|
156.387 | | CXDOCS::BARNES | | Mon Apr 11 1994 11:59 | 9 |
| heard this morning the note Cobain left said he had lost the passion
for creating music, so he checked himslef out....sad..as my daughter
said "Sadder still for his little girl".
DON"T EVER LOSE THE PASSION, YA'LL!!!!!!!!
rfb
|
156.388 | fude fer thawt | SUBPAC::MAGGARD | Integrate! | Mon Apr 11 1994 19:10 | 11 |
|
re: genetic links to suicide
> Kurt Cobain apparently had 3 uncles who committed suicide.
Alcoholism is hereditary, perhaps even in the same way (both genetic and
environmental?).
- jeff
|
156.389 | | TERAPN::PHYLLIS | you are the eyes of the world | Mon Apr 11 1994 19:13 | 9 |
|
It probably is similar. Like, I don't think that everyone who has
alcoholic parents will definitely become an alcoholic, but I think they
have a higher propensity for it, and I think it's a gene that causes
that propensity. A genetic link that predisposes someone to suffer the
kind of depression that would lead to suicide is probably similar to
that.
|
156.390 | | ECRU::CLARK | Chairman of the Bored | Tue Apr 12 1994 11:02 | 4 |
| re Phyllis ... Has research actually found evidence of something physical
like a gene?
- dc dysfunctional psychology buff
|
156.391 | | TERAPN::PHYLLIS | you are the eyes of the world | Tue Apr 12 1994 11:06 | 4 |
|
Not that I know of, but I think someday they will.
|
156.392 | | SSGV01::TPNSTN::Strobel | Jetson, you're TFSO'd !!! | Tue Apr 12 1994 13:31 | 7 |
| During the cover of Neil Young's "Out of the Blue, Into the Black" at last
nights Boston Garden show (a perk of having a wife who works for WFNX),
they repeated the line "it's better to burn out than it is to rust" a
number of times. According to my wife the line was in Cobain's suicide
note.
sad indeed
|
156.393 | | SSGV01::TPNSTN::Strobel | Jetson, you're TFSO'd !!! | Tue Apr 12 1994 13:31 | 1 |
| opps. The "they" in -.1 are Pearl Jam. A good-very good show
|
156.394 | | ECRU::CLARK | Chairman of the Bored | Tue Apr 12 1994 14:59 | 2 |
| What a stupid sentiment, though. Kurt wasn't rusting, he was a very
unhappy person who needed psychiatric (and medical, it sounds like) help.
|
156.395 | | AKOCOA::SMITH_D | simple twist of fate | Tue Apr 12 1994 15:49 | 6 |
|
WOW!
I can't believe P.J. is doing Niel songs!
I request Harvest Moon!
|
156.396 | Flannel begets flannel | SALEM::LEBLANC | | Tue Apr 12 1994 15:51 | 4 |
| I believe they did a "Rockin in the free world" on some mtv
awards show....musta rubbed off on them
chris
|
156.397 | | SLOHAN::FIELDS | Strange Brew | Tue Apr 12 1994 16:01 | 12 |
| they toured with Neil and Booker T last year....
I looked back into my vast collection of Rolling Stones and read an
interview with Curt (dated Jan. 94) in the interview he was saying
things like why he was so HAPPY and how things were going so GREAT
and blablabla....the interview was done at the begining of I guess you
can say thier final tour which end in Paris (where he almost did himself
in by mixing drugs with booze)
being on the road must have really draged him down...
Chris
|
156.398 | | ECRU::CLARK | Chairman of the Bored | Tue Apr 12 1994 16:37 | 2 |
| His last overdose (about a month ago) was also a suicide attempt ... there was
a suicide note.
|
156.399 | and they play hoops too ;^) | SALEM::BURNS | how's 'bout a war on violence! | Wed Apr 13 1994 09:52 | 17 |
| the line of NY's OOTBAITB which goes like "It's better to burn out,
than to fade away" was sung "It's *not* better to burn out..."
starting and ending songs were done with no stage lights. which I think
was done as some sort of remembrance thing for Kurt.
the sound was a bit muffled (at least in sec 109) but they did indeed
do some *very*hard*rocking*! Most of the songs sounded familiar but I
don't know the titles, except for Daughter (which is a tad dearer to me
than any of their other numbers). They did NY's Rocking In The Free
World which also kicked ass and was familiar with me.
My daughter and her 2 friends very much enjoyed the show and were very
happy to be there :^) I beleive they knew a few more of the tunze than
I did tho ;^)
peace,Andy
|
156.400 | Sounds like fun | BSS::MNELSON | Won't ya try just a little bit harder | Wed Apr 13 1994 10:07 | 4 |
|
Hey Andy,
You daughters lucky to have such a cool Dad to go to shows with.
Mark
|
156.401 | 'tis sweet indeed! | SALEM::BURNS | how's 'bout a war on violence! | Wed Apr 13 1994 10:43 | 5 |
| I think it's a mutual feeling with us :^) I also noticed quite a few
other "dads" with young ones in tow. Some rather a bit younger than my
15 year old, like @ 7ish :^0
Andy
|
156.402 | | SSGV01::TPNSTN::Strobel | Jetson, you're TFSO'd !!! | Wed Apr 13 1994 16:28 | 6 |
| Andy:
Thanks for entering the correct lyrics. We were in section BB on
the floor and the sound, although it improved from the start of the show,
was muddy.
jeff
|
156.403 | ? | TOOK::PECKAR | sleep tight | Thu Apr 21 1994 19:57 | 3 |
|
Is Julio Eglasias dead yet?
|
156.404 | | TERAPN::PHYLLIS | a rare and different tune | Thu Apr 21 1994 20:25 | 4 |
|
welcome back. :-)
|
156.405 | from out of his fogginess,,, | CXDOCS::BARNES | | Thu Apr 21 1994 23:32 | 2 |
| Julio isn't, kurt is, and did ya know that Courtney Loves' father was the
Harrison that wrote the book about the Grateful Dead???
|
156.406 | | ECRU::CLARK | Chairman of the Bored | Fri Apr 22 1994 10:30 | 3 |
| Ellen DeGeneris (sp?) was on David Letterman last night, talking about how
someone said she wanted to buy the bones of Buddy Ebsen, and the guy ain't
even dead yet!
|
156.407 | a Yorba Linda original | QUARRY::petert | rigidly defined areas of doubt and uncertainty | Fri Apr 22 1994 16:06 | 4 |
| I fear Tricky Dicky will be showing up here soon. Haven't heard the
afternoon news yet.
PeterT
|
156.408 | | AWECIM::RUSSO | claimin! | Fri Apr 22 1994 16:50 | 9 |
|
Most of my relatives on both sides of my family have passed away after
having strokes. No heart attacks....almost all strokes, followed by a
couple weeks in the hospital, then finally succuming to it. All of
them were around Nixon's age. Its just a matter of time for him.
I know what to look forward to if I get to be that old.
Hogan
|
156.409 | | NAC::TRAMP::GRADY | Short arms, and deep pockets... | Fri Apr 22 1994 17:44 | 10 |
| I'm kinda curious what will happen when T.D. does pass on.
I mean, he's not our most illustrious ex-president, by
any means. Frankly, I've got a small problem with the
idea of treating the guy with full 'honors'.
'Honor' and Richard M. Nixon in the same sentence just
doesn't sit well with me.
tim
|
156.410 | | CXDOCS::BARNES | | Sat Apr 23 1994 03:09 | 10 |
| I hear ya Tim...i'm settin here listening to late nite ABC news..Nixon
is dead....we used to call him the devil (he told us to turn out the
lite at Xmas one year, remember?) I hope he's made his peace with his
maker...course he prob. went thru Billy Grahm to do so, so I don't know
if it was a valid peace or not....but God rest his soul..ya know he had
some times in his life were he HAD to know what he was doin was wrong,
maybe he thought different at those times...maybe he knew all along..
I guess we'll find out when we leave this plane too...
rfb
|
156.411 | | MAGEE::OSTIGUY | | Sat Apr 23 1994 15:24 | 2 |
| was there no "honour" in Tricky Dicks efforts at making peace and arms
agreements with China and USSR ???
|
156.412 | Dick lost America's trust of Govt!!! | SUBPAC::MAGGARD | Integrate! | Sat Apr 23 1994 21:54 | 10 |
| re: 156.411
There is honor in that.
But not enough to make up for his 'crimes' against America, IMO.
(Funny that I think this now after last week's discussion... )
- fickle
|
156.413 | | NAC::TRAMP::GRADY | Short arms, and deep pockets... | Sun Apr 24 1994 09:48 | 7 |
| Frankly, were it not for my respect for the office itself, I'd be
outraged at the idea of honoring this man, after what he did to the
office, the government, and the nation as a whole. I always thought he
should have gone to jail.
tim
|
156.414 | | ROADKL::INGALLS | may the four winds blow you home again | Mon Apr 25 1994 14:09 | 12 |
|
I'd be willing to bet Nixon did nothing worse than every other post-war pres.
He just got caught.
I think his foreign policy accomplishements deserve honoring -- and in fact,
every succeeding president, Rep or Dem, has sought counsel with him.
my 2c
Glennnnn
|
156.415 | | MAGEE::OSTIGUY | | Mon Apr 25 1994 14:39 | 8 |
| re.414 Glennnnnnn nail on the head...he got caught "with his pants
down"...now if that deserves jail, he would have had the cell next to
"one of our greatest Presidents, JFK" (who everyone knew he has his
pants down, but that was pre-Watergate, and the press didn't discuss
those issues back then)
Nixon also will be remembered for some domestic programs that were very
good, and still exist... he established the EPA for instance
|
156.416 | | CXDOCS::BARNES | | Mon Apr 25 1994 14:53 | 10 |
| I just deleted a long, heated entry about Tricky Dick...suffice to say,
I can't BELIEVE how we've all been sucked into "what a great guy he
was..."
re:415
so what criminal activity TO THE AMERICAN PEOPLE did JFK propogate??
besides doin a little gettin high and foolin around??
and boy did that EPA help us with the Exxon Valdez disaster!
|
156.417 | | AWECIM::RUSSO | claimin! | Mon Apr 25 1994 15:30 | 4 |
|
I still think we've seen worse (rep) presidents since Nixon.
Hogan
|
156.418 | | MAGEE::OSTIGUY | | Mon Apr 25 1994 16:10 | 47 |
|
>I just deleted a long, heated entry about Tricky Dick...suffice to say,
>I can't BELIEVE how we've all been sucked into "what a great guy he
>was..."
first of all, I'm not saying what a great guy he was, and I'm not defending
him...and I don't think this is worth Heated debate...I'll get out of this
and not foster any healthy disagreeing if it gets heated...I'm a little gun
shy due to one of my best friends from college, a guy who I love like a
brother, almost getting violent with me because I didn't vote for who he
did in the last election....I like debate about politics, but not when it
gets heated...that's ridiculous to me...and counter-productive
agree to disagree...but is it worth breaking up a good friendship over a
political disagreement ?? God, I hope not, I thought America was built on
healthy debate, and not having to vote for only one candidate
>re:415
>so what criminal activity TO THE AMERICAN PEOPLE did JFK propogate??
>besides doin a little gettin high and foolin around??
you can't believe how we're all being s*cked into "he's a great guy" but I'm
also surprised that 20 years later there are still people think that because
of Watergate, Nixon had NO redeeming qualities, that he should go to jail,
and that it just isn't possible that he did anything good for this country,
that he was only involved in criminal activity...
if nothing else, Watergate made the average citizen aware that our leaders
are not always as honest as we think they should be....but that is almost
an unspoken rule of politics...look at the ethics investigations that occur
semi-regularly...these folks have to "play the game" to get where they are,
that is politics
Nixon lied...certainly not cool...he obstructed justice...that is the
criminal activity we're talking about I believe...I don't know of any
"criminal activity" that JFK pulled...but I guess I'm over idealistic in
thinking that the White House shouldn't be used as a place for the President
to engage in extra-marital affairs...I guess I'm old-fashioned like that,
I really don't like infidelity :)
>and boy did that EPA help us with the Exxon Valdez disaster!
huh ??? so, are you saying that was Nixon's fault, or he shouldn't have
started it in the first place ?? well, if we didn't have it, Woburn would
be glowing in the dark !!! :)
|
156.419 | | CXDOCS::BARNES | | Mon Apr 25 1994 16:25 | 21 |
| Mr. Ostiguy --
sorry, I've forgotten your first name!
politics can not be debated
without a little heat, but you are 100% correct, political debate is
no excuse for violence or hatred. so I'm sorry if my reply seemed a
little terse, that's why I deleted my first attempt..even I didn't care
for it! %^) I can relate to yer being gun shy, I'm sorta the same out
here in radical_religious_rightland...until i get pissed off. %^)
as for my ref and yer question about the EPA...some factions (ya, I
know, they are considered the radical_left_eco_nutgroup) say the EPA
hasn't done enough or it's focus is the easy targets while allowing
things such as a large chip fab plant to move to Albaturkey and suck
the water away from the locals whilst taking advatage of the lax New
Mexican pollution laws.
anyway, don't back away from debates just cause I'm an asshole!!
rfb
|
156.420 | cool | MAGEE::OSTIGUY | | Mon Apr 25 1994 16:58 | 27 |
| rfb...and since I only know you as rfb (until I get to Colorado
someday) I don't think you're an *ssh*le or an eco-nut or anything...
I do feel a little better about things now, I sorta held my breath
waiting for flames coming my way...
you're completely right about the nature of debate regarding politics,
that is does get heated...I just don't want to turn people off before
they meet me if I disagree with the general feeling in here...and after
the episode with my "friend" I was hesitant to get involved here...
I guess I was just trying to say that T.D. wasn't a complete crook as
I thought was being put forth here
I have friends whom I regularly see and often the conversation gets to
politics (mostly 'cuz Tom and I disagree, and he loves to debate for
debates sake) and we yell and scream at each other, we think the other
is hopelessly stuck in fantasy...but we party together, our friendship
is not based on political belief (wow, I can't stand the thought of
looking for friends who have to agree with me, I like the diversity of
varying opinion, belief and experience) and at the end of the night, we
shake hands or hug, bid peace until next time....and that's where it
ends...
I'm still a bit mystified by my college buddy's angle on me, but ??!!!!
Wes
|
156.421 | | CXDOCS::BARNES | | Mon Apr 25 1994 17:02 | 7 |
| Wes -- whew! gald we setteled that! %^)
don't fear my flames, they are usually harmless rantings and ravings!!!
I've said it before, this is THE ONLY notes file where i don't fear
flames....cause we love each other....
rfb
|
156.422 | :-) | TECRUS::DEMARSE | No ego's under water | Mon Apr 25 1994 17:13 | 4 |
| >> this is THE ONLY notes file where i don't fear flames....cause we
>> love each other....
yup!
|
156.423 | He's gone, gone, ...... | QUARRY::petert | rigidly defined areas of doubt and uncertainty | Tue Apr 26 1994 12:09 | 25 |
| As for 'crimes' JFK committed, there was a piece on Nixon, and the things
he did as compared to JFK. We know the Nixon ones, and we've heard some
of the things JFK did, but the means of their departure from office
definitely put a certain spin on things.
Questionable activities of JFK:
Secret White House tapings.
Wiretapped Martin Luther King.
While in office, had the CIA doing covert activities in other countries,
including assasination atttempts.
Basically got us into Vietnam through helping to replace Vietnamese
leader (?)
I'm only reporting these as I heard on the radio, so I don't really
have any facts to back them up. However, JFK being a product of his time,
which covers WWII and the Cold War, I don't have a lot of problem
believing them. I still think he was a remarkable president, and did
a number of good things in his all too brief term. But most people are
built of shades of grey, rather than being all black or white. And I
also agree with either Glennnn or Wes, who mentioned that there have been
worse republican presidents since Nixon.
PeterT
|
156.424 | | NAC::TRAMP::GRADY | Short arms, and deep pockets... | Tue Apr 26 1994 13:38 | 10 |
| >And I
>also agree with either Glennnn or Wes, who mentioned that there have been
>worse republican presidents since Nixon.
Yeah, and they're still alive!
;-)
tim
|
156.425 | "Win one for the Gipper.........." | SALEM::LEBLANC | | Tue Apr 26 1994 13:53 | 7 |
| >Yeah and they're still alive!
Tim
the one you are referring to could have starred in "Night of the Living
Dead" the 8 years he was in office.....
:^)
chris
|
156.426 | have no idea if it's true.... | TECRUS::DEMARSE | No ego's under water | Tue Apr 26 1994 14:00 | 3 |
| While I was in the DCU this morning, one of the tellers mentioned that
tomorrow is going to be proclaimed a national holiday after Richard
Nixon....
|
156.427 | | SMURF::HAPGOOD | Java Java HEY! | Tue Apr 26 1994 14:00 | 12 |
| RE: PeterT's list on JFK
you forgot one :) They (radio) said Chicago's Mayor Daly had some sort
of voting fraud thing in the 60's election that helped JFK get elected.
Bob's Commentary for the week:
Why does everyone get in an uproar over Ted K's antcis when John
and Bobby were the same way yet they hold them in much higher esteem?
bob
|
156.428 | | SMURF::HAPGOOD | Java Java HEY! | Tue Apr 26 1994 14:02 | 11 |
| <<< Note 156.426 by TECRUS::DEMARSE "No ego's under water" >>>
> While I was in the DCU this morning, one of the tellers mentioned that
> tomorrow is going to be proclaimed a national holiday after Richard
> Nixon....
YEs it's true but it's really an official day of mourning. Wall street
even closed - imagine that.
Wonder how much it costs us(USA) to shutdown for the day?
bob
|
156.429 | no mail on wednesday | QUIVER::SIEGEL | The revolution wil not be televised | Tue Apr 26 1994 14:08 | 5 |
| Yes, Wednesday was declared a national day of mourning by Clinton. All
non-essential government offices are to be closed, as well as the Postal
Service.
adam
|
156.430 | | BIODTL::JC | Gimmie a shorty! | Tue Apr 26 1994 14:16 | 8 |
| re <<< Note 156.428 by SMURF::HAPGOOD "Java Java HEY!" >>>
>YEs it's true but it's really an official day of mourning. Wall street
>even closed - imagine that.
if jimmie cahtah died, wall st. wouldn't close 'cuz he ain't a repub!
wow, do we have the day off?
|
156.431 | Depends on the nature of the death | MAGPIE::SAMILJAN | | Tue Apr 26 1994 14:17 | 10 |
| re: .427
Bob,
You and I would probably be held in high esteem if we had been shot to
death also. People just seem to be more sympathetic if you get
murdered. Strange. If Reagan had died in the shooting attempt in
the early '80s, he'd be a hero today. I guarantee it.
Bud
|
156.432 | | ECRU::CLARK | Chairman of the Bored | Tue Apr 26 1994 14:18 | 1 |
| Reagan isn't a hero today? ;^/
|
156.433 | Why R U There If U're not essential? | BINKLY::CEPARSKI | Show Me Something Built To Last | Tue Apr 26 1994 14:36 | 5 |
| I get a kick out of it when they say "all non-essential government
offices will be closed". Paul harvey did a column on a similar note one
time and said that "all non-essential government employees were given
the day off" and that included some 88%-92% of all gov't employees.
Sounds like they need a little "right-sizing", huh?
|
156.434 | | MAGEE::OSTIGUY | | Tue Apr 26 1994 15:02 | 9 |
| I think if any of the former Presidents were to die, it would be
declared a national day of mourning...it's too bad for his family he
died, but no mail ???
respect for the office to which he was elected twice I guess...they
would probably do the same for Ford, Carter, Reagan or Bush
maybe Teddy isn't held in as high esteem because his driving school is
still open :)
|
156.435 | Can the rest... | AD::STEWART | | Tue Apr 26 1994 18:06 | 7 |
| re:: declared a national day of mourning...it's too bad for his family he
died, but no mail ???
I heard on the radio that they will be delivering mail.... Must
be one of the 10% or so of gov. essential jobs ;-)
Jim
|
156.436 | | NAC::TRAMP::GRADY | Short arms, and deep pockets... | Wed Apr 27 1994 09:17 | 7 |
| Okay, Okay, so it's a national day of mourning for Tricky Dick. I'll
make sure to wear my black underpants in memorium...
:-)
tim
|
156.437 | | CASDOC::ROGERS | peripheral visionary | Wed Apr 27 1994 10:36 | 10 |
| >>Okay, Okay, so it's a national day of mourning for Tricky Dick.
It must be, I heard Wall St was even closed for the day...
Can I assume that the post offices and banks are closed? I've heard
conflicting answers.
Thanks!
Mike
|
156.438 | | TERAPN::PHYLLIS | a rare and different tune | Wed Apr 27 1994 10:44 | 8 |
|
as a friend said to me:
what do we do? take the afternoon off and break in somewhere?
;-)
|
156.439 | | CASDOC::ROGERS | peripheral visionary | Wed Apr 27 1994 11:05 | 4 |
| >>what do we do? take the afternoon off and break in somewhere?
either that or go buy some cheap tape and find a doorlock that
should be left open overnight...
|
156.440 | | MKOTS3::ROBERTS_CR | the evening sky grew dark | Wed Apr 27 1994 11:10 | 7 |
| >non-essential government offices are to be closed, as well as the
>Postal Service.
smirrrrrrrrk - yeah - that's one in the same, right? OH! I thought
Adam typed in : non-EFFECTIVE government offices
|
156.441 | never forget | MKOTS3::ROBERTS_CR | the evening sky grew dark | Wed Apr 27 1994 11:14 | 5 |
|
Call me what you will but sanctimonious I'm not : I'd like to dance on his
grave.
c
|
156.442 | | ECRU::CLARK | Chairman of the Bored | Wed Apr 27 1994 13:02 | 1 |
| Have you no respect for The Dead?
|
156.443 | Children's Author Richard Scarey | QUARRY::petert | rigidly defined areas of doubt and uncertainty | Wed May 04 1994 13:16 | 5 |
| Richard Scarey. Writer and illustrator of children's books. In the
last 4 years or so, I've had a LOT of time to become acquainted
with his stuff. The kids will miss you Rich. R.I.P.
PeterT
|
156.444 | And all the animals got along too!!!!!!!! | SALEM::LEBLANC | | Wed May 04 1994 13:26 | 6 |
| Richard Scarey? WOOOOOAAAHHHHHHHH
"The Big City Book" and "Things that Go" are still in my attic.....
Like Dr Seuss this author's books have spanned generations and are
the classics of childhood......Rest in Peace Dick
chris
|
156.445 | | CXDOCS::BARNES | | Wed May 04 1994 14:21 | 5 |
| yep...my kids were raised on Richard Scarys' books...I esp. liked the
ones with no words when my kids were real small, as did they, cause
they made up their own story to the pics....
rf
|
156.446 | | MKOTS3::ROBERTS_CR | the evening sky grew dark | Wed May 04 1994 14:42 | 4 |
| oh bummer .. i love his stuff. so do my kids - even though they
are grown up now
|
156.447 | RIP RS | BSS::MNELSON | Inspiration, move me Brightly | Wed May 04 1994 14:46 | 6 |
| Re: Richard Scarry:
My daughter loved Richard Scarry's very best ABC video EVER. She
loves his books, especially Mister Paint Pig's Color Book.
too bad.
|
156.448 | memories... | TECRUS::DEMARSE | No ego's under water | Wed May 04 1994 15:29 | 10 |
| >> Richard Scarrey
:-( I grew up on Richard Scarrey's books....some of my earliest
memories were looking/eventually reading them...I remember turning the
page and the first thing I would do is look for the little worm guy.
(kind of like a where's wally thing)...
He'll be missed....
~danielle
|
156.449 | | ROCK::FROMM | This space intentionally left blank. | Wed May 04 1994 15:42 | 12 |
| >I remember turning the
> page and the first thing I would do is look for the little worm guy.
now i know who y'all are talking about!
in spanish class in junior high we had a project where everyone made an
illustrated dictionary - each page illustrated a word in spanish beginning
with a different letter of the alphabet. Lowly Worm (i think that was his
name) was the theme of my dictionary, and he appeared doing something on every
page.
- rich
|
156.450 | | E::EVANS | | Wed May 04 1994 17:57 | 7 |
|
My son went through three copies of Things That Go.
Sad.
Jim
|
156.451 | | QUIVER::SIEGEL | The revolution wil not be televised | Thu May 05 1994 15:17 | 9 |
| I was bummed to read his obit last night. I ordered "Richard Scarry's Best
Word Book Ever" through my Weekly Reader as a kid. I really liked that book.
I've always like bunnies and cats and dogs anyway :-)
My housemate didn't recognize his name, but when he read the obit he remembered
him because it mentioned the worm that was on every page. I didn't even know
about that - I can't say I ever looked for it.
RIP
|
156.452 | | TECRUS::DEMARSE | No ego's under water | Thu May 05 1994 16:57 | 3 |
| >> through my Weekly Reader as a kid
ah, memories.....;')
|
156.453 | | ROADKL::INGALLS | may the four winds blow you home again | Fri May 06 1994 12:43 | 6 |
|
am I the only one that has no freakin' clue what y'all are talking about???
must've had a sheltered childhood ;^)
Glennnn
|
156.454 | wouldn't know him if I didn't have kids... | QUARRY::petert | rigidly defined areas of doubt and uncertainty | Fri May 06 1994 13:27 | 10 |
| Don't feel too bad, Glenn. I didn't follow Scarry's stuff till I started
reading it to my kids. I certainly don't rememeber reading for myself when
I was a youngster. Maybe he wasn't as prevalent back in the late
fifties, early sixties. Or maybe my folks just didn't get around to
his books for us. I don't remember a lot of picture books for us, maybe
they were destroyed by the time I got to them (being #4 of 5 ;-). And by
the time I was in 2nd or third grade, I was starting on novels, albeit
juvenile ones.
PeterT
|
156.455 | Bustin' on the Baby Boomers.....:^) | SALEM::LEBLANC | | Fri May 06 1994 13:53 | 6 |
| re Richard Scarry way back when
Glennnn and PeterT
you guys were probably too engrossed in deciphering those cave
paintings done by other bands of hunter gatherers, right?
chris_wise_ass_Gen_X'er_commentator
|
156.456 | | ECRU::CLARK | Chairman of the Bored | Fri May 06 1994 15:40 | 4 |
| I'm clueless about Scarry too, Glennnnn ... I've enjoyed reading the notes
about him though! ;^)
- dc
|
156.457 | Nah, probably watching Howdy Doody and Mickey Mouse club ;-) | QUARRY::petert | rigidly defined areas of doubt and uncertainty | Fri May 06 1994 16:30 | 5 |
| > you guys were probably too engrossed in deciphering those cave
> paintings done by other bands of hunter gatherers, right?
I prefer to think of it as gathering together in a cave with several species
of small furry animals and grooving with a pict ;-)
|
156.458 | Why, because we love you.....M-O-U-S-E | SALEM::LEBLANC | | Fri May 06 1994 16:34 | 3 |
|
Oh i see :^)
|
156.459 | me! :^) :^) :^) gimme green eggs and ham... | STRATA::DWEST | each has it's own moment... | Mon May 09 1994 11:22 | 4 |
| ok, now all of you who don't know Scarry because you were still diggin'
Dr. Suess, raise your hand... :^)
da ve_Suess-head
|
156.460 | | ROCK::FROMM | This space intentionally left blank. | Mon May 09 1994 11:25 | 6 |
| > ok, now all of you who don't know Scarry because you were still diggin'
> Dr. Suess, raise your hand... :^)
hey, they're not mutually exclusive!
- rich-who-dug-dr-suess-too
|
156.461 | true... | STRATA::DWEST | each has it's own moment... | Mon May 09 1994 11:33 | 4 |
| true, they aren't... i know Scarry too, but i was reading at a
different level when he came onto my personal scene! :^)
da ve
|
156.462 | | MAGEE::OSTIGUY | | Tue May 10 1994 09:27 | 1 |
| John Wayne Gacy (sp?)
|
156.463 | Sorry to digress here.. | SALEM::LEBLANC | | Tue May 10 1994 09:38 | 12 |
| Heard on the news this a.m. that there was a problem with his
execution? seems the lethal injection had some hang up and they had to
change the serum..Executions seem to have alot of problems..In college
i had a class called the "Politics of Crime and Justice." Ted Bundy's
legal advisor came as a guest speaker one day, this guy had been to
numerous executions and told some horrific stories..One distinct one
he explained was of an execution down south where the convict was
shceduled to die by electrocution and the first time the switch was
flicked, the guy didn't die, instead the body caught on fire and the
inmate literally burned to death before the second shot of juice..
justa little food for thought for the argument of capital punishment..
chris
|
156.464 | Hear the wrords of the Rasta Man say.... | SALEM::LEBLANC | | Wed May 11 1994 08:53 | 2 |
| Robert Nesta Marley, 13 years ago today.....
|
156.465 | | CXDOCS::BARNES | | Wed May 11 1994 11:59 | 2 |
| HOW IRONIC! just got a best of Marley CD in the mail yesterday!!
rfb
|
156.466 | | NAC::TRAMP::GRADY | Into the night, an angel to be... | Fri May 20 1994 09:31 | 2 |
| Jaqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis, age 64.
|
156.467 | Joe Pass RIP | BIGQ::DCLARK | pressure got the drop on you | Tue May 24 1994 15:05 | 2 |
| Joe Pass died yesterday of liver cancer. A great jazz guitarist.
I'm bummed; he was one of my favorites.
|
156.468 | | MAYES::OSTIGUY | | Tue May 24 1994 16:10 | 3 |
| Joe Pass was great for sure, I haven't heard any of his music for quite
a while, but I seem to recall a collaboration with Oscar Peterson
(probably 1 of many) that I enjoyed...I'll have to check that out
|
156.469 | | BIODTL::JC | Gimmie a shorty! | Wed May 25 1994 10:25 | 2 |
| sad. man, trying to find joe pass cds/records is pretty tough! i have not
had much luck, then again, i don't go into tower records much.
|
156.470 | Six String Santa | BIGQ::DCLARK | pressure got the drop on you | Wed May 25 1994 14:31 | 5 |
| re: Joe Pass records
get 'Six String Santa' .. JP doing jazz versions of Christmas songs.
It's on Laserlight for around 5.99 and is always in the stores around
Christmas. It's also one of his best CD's. I even play it in July :-)
|
156.471 | | SLOHAN::FIELDS | Strange Brew | Tue Jun 07 1994 11:43 | 2 |
| Derek "Lek" Leckenby, lead guitarist for Herman's Hermits, died
Saturday of non-hodgkins lymphoma, he was 51.
|
156.472 | | TOOK::PECKAR | sleep tight | Mon Jul 18 1994 11:11 | 5 |
|
Really dead people goes www:
http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Obituary/
|
156.473 | | SLOHAN::FIELDS | Strange Brew | Wed Aug 17 1994 10:05 | 5 |
| >Sun 10/9 7:30 pm $8 WORMTOWN REVUE in memory of Paul "Tiny" Stacy
^^^^^^^^^^^^
did Tiny pass away ?
|
156.474 | RIP Paul "Tiny" Stacy | SALES::GKELLER | Access for all | Wed Aug 17 1994 10:22 | 18 |
| > <<< Note 79.682 by SLOHAN::FIELDS "Strange Brew" >>>
>
> >Sun 10/9 7:30 pm $8 WORMTOWN REVUE in memory of Paul "Tiny" Stacy
>
> ^^^^^^^^^^^^
>
> did Tiny pass away ?
Unfortunately or fortunately depending on your point of view. he is not
trapped inside a sickly body anymore, he is as free as his spirit always
was. He died Sunday July 17, 1994. He got tired and just stopped
fighting, his kidneys failed and he decided that it was time to go.
He will be missed be everyone who came in contact with him, but he has gone
on to better things.
Geoff
|
156.475 | :.^( | SLOHAN::FIELDS | Strange Brew | Wed Aug 17 1994 10:33 | 4 |
| thanks Geoff, I must have missed the news as I was on vacation and in
Ohio...and yes Tiny was a great man, he will be missed. He brought
happiness and joy to a lot of people.....and Im glad I was able to do
the same for him once...peace Tiny
|
156.476 | | SLICK1::OSTIGUY | | Wed Aug 17 1994 10:47 | 9 |
| re: Tiny....I missed the news also, I didn't know until I got the OVK
newsletter...
I was luck enough to meet Tiny a couple times, once when I was in a
band called The Jakes & Webster Band, and we played the Blue Plate in
Holden...Tiny was a very happy guy, very understanding and helpful to
the band
Rest In Peace Tiny
|
156.477 | | BIODTL::JC | positive vibration | Thu Aug 18 1994 19:03 | 4 |
| WOW! sad... always remember him at the door at the blue plate from years
back.....
RIP
|
156.478 | Nicky Hopkins | SLOHAN::FIELDS | Ain't gonna worry my life anymore | Fri Sep 09 1994 16:51 | 11 |
|
From the Internet, metaverse.com
Former Jefferson Airplane pianist Nicky Hopkins has died at the
age of 50. Hopkins died Tuesday (06Sep94) in Nashville, Tenn. from
abdominal and heart ailments. As a studio muscian he played on
The Rolling Stones' "Jumpin Jack Flash" and on "Revolution" by the
Beatles. He was a member of the Jeffereson Airplane when the group
performed at Woodstock in 1969.
|
156.479 | A Terrible Loss | LEDS::TAYLOR | Nothing shakin' | Fri Sep 09 1994 18:02 | 14 |
| � Former Jefferson Airplane pianist Nicky Hopkins has died at the
� age of 50. Hopkins died Tuesday (06Sep94) in Nashville, Tenn. from
� abdominal and heart ailments.
Ohh noo! This is a terrible loss. Hopkins was probably my favorite
rock pianist. His contributions to some of the best studio work of all
time were legendary. Check out, for example, Beggars Banquet (Got No
Expectation, Salt of the Earth), Who's Next, Volunteers, etc., etc.
I was not aware that Nicky was actually a member of the Airplane. Does
anyone know whether he was with them when they toured a few years back?
Bill :�(
|
156.480 | A big loss | POWDML::CUTLER | | Fri Sep 09 1994 18:21 | 5 |
| Nicky is a big loss indeed. I always enjoyed his playing on the Stones
- You Can't Always Get What You Want from their Let It Bleed album.
This is one of the Stones bes IMHO.
Jack
|
156.481 | Quicksilver .....as well | KAOOA::REILLY | | Fri Sep 16 1994 18:53 | 6 |
| He was also a member of Quicksilver Messenger Service, ie: Shady Grove.
One of my fav's for sure...
Sean.
|
156.482 | Nicky/Jerry connection? | JUPITR::OCONNORS | | Sat Sep 17 1994 09:50 | 5 |
|
I think Nicky Hopkins played in one of Jerry's band's...around 74'
"Legion of Mary", possibly....
Sean
|
156.483 | Edward? | LEDS::TAYLOR | Nothing shakin' | Mon Sep 19 1994 17:25 | 4 |
| Did Nicky play Edward the Mad Shirt Grinder on Quicksilver's first
album? Most intense keyboard song I can remeber.
Bill
|
156.484 | It can't be, but i fear it is... | CARROL::YOUNG | where is this place in space??? | Fri Oct 14 1994 10:46 | 27 |
| Folks,
i'm not entirely sure if this is true or not, so some confirmation
would be helpful before this rumour spreads...
If it is true, it is surely one of the saddest pieces of news i've heard
in a while. Some of you may have read my write-ups on this guy in the
Blues Power note and many more of you have either heard of him or seen
him. From what i've heard, Danny Gatton commited suicide a couple weeks
back.
His last couple albums (Elmira St. & Crusin' Deuces) were some of the
most brilliant and unique blues albums i've ever heard. His latest
collaboration with John DeFransesca (SP?) an up and coming organ player
was about as close to Les Paul's style as you'll ever find...its sad to
think that a wonderful tribute to someone that Danny held so dear would
be followed by him taking his own life.
Whenever someone takes their own life it is truely a sad situation,
but it is especially sad when a creative talent as unique and wonderful
to listen to as Danny Gatton passes from us so willingly. My thoughts
and i hope all of GRATEFUL's are with Danny, may he rest in peace
knowing that many, many people will surely miss him.
Saddly,
Dugo
|
156.485 | | SMURF::HAPGOOD | Java Java HEY! | Fri Oct 14 1994 12:38 | 8 |
| <<< Note 156.484 by CARROL::YOUNG "where is this place in space???" >>>
-< It can't be, but i fear it is... >-
It's true. He *apparently* commited suicide as you say.
Sad but true.
bob
|
156.486 | Wow...a finer guitar player there never was... | CARROL::YOUNG | where is this place in space??? | Fri Oct 14 1994 12:48 | 7 |
| Bob,
i realize it's far from appropriate to speculate on what happened to
Danny, but could you tell me how you heard and what details came out...
Tis sad,
Dugo
|
156.487 | | SMURF::PETERT | rigidly defined areas of doubt and uncertainty | Fri Oct 14 1994 13:24 | 6 |
| Yeah, I heard that the day it happened on NPR. I wasn't familiar
with his stuff, but from the reports they gave on this guy,
I'd definitely be interested in finding out. Sigh...
PeterT
|
156.488 | | USABLE::SPINE | | Fri Oct 14 1994 14:51 | 8 |
| I also heard the news on NPR the day it happened. In addition, this
past Saturday (or was it Sunday?) NPR did a tribute to him during the
morning show. It was a really nice piece, and included snippets of
past NPR interviews with him and also several pieces of his music.
From the tribute it sounded like the authorities have concluded that he
took his own life.
--Tom
|
156.489 | Raul Julia, at 54 | QUARRY::petert | rigidly defined areas of doubt and uncertainty | Wed Oct 26 1994 11:53 | 12 |
| Raul Julia - this past weekend from complications from a stroke. Bummer.
Damn fine actor. You might remember him as Gomez in the Addams Family
movies, or from Kiss of a Spiderwoman or... First time I saw him was
Shakespeare in the Park down in NYC. He was playing Petruchio in
"The Taming of the Shrew" with Meryl Streep plaing Kate. This was in
the mid-seventies before either was really known. It was so good, my
friend and I went back a 2nd time to see it. Sigh... He'll be
missed....
PeterT
|
156.490 | | NETCAD::SIEGEL | The revolution wil not be televised | Wed Oct 26 1994 13:37 | 4 |
| The first time I saw Raul Julia was in the bizarre movie "Eating Raoul". Too
bad about him, he was only 54.
adam
|
156.491 | Good Actor | STRATA::BEAULIEU | speak with wisdom like a child | Wed Oct 26 1994 14:47 | 9 |
|
re-1
I saw that movie also Bizarre but Funny!
"I'll bag the Nazi Honey you go to bed" ...
Toby
|
156.492 | | CXDOCS::BARNES | | Tue Nov 22 1994 10:50 | 9 |
| Over last weekend......
Cab Calloway, of Minnie the Moocher fame, also coined the word "chick"
to describe a girl/woman
One of the original leaders/founders of Quicksilver Messenger Service,
last name started with a V???sorry, name escapes me right now.
rfb
|
156.493 | QMS- now 2 are gone... | KAOA01::REILLY | | Tue Nov 22 1994 14:13 | 7 |
| Dino Valenti?
He was with them in the very beginning and at the very end. Had a hard
time keeping out of jail as I remember, always gettin busted for pot.
|
156.494 | | MAYES::OSTIGUY | | Mon Nov 28 1994 11:55 | 4 |
| Special Report on TV, "murderer and cannibalist" Jeffrey Dahmer was
killed in a Wisconsin prison recreation yard today, from massive head
injuries...apparently he and another inmate were attacked, don't know
about the other guy, but Dahmer was killed
|
156.495 | | LASSIE::TRAMP::GRADY | Stop The Violins. | Tue Nov 29 1994 10:54 | 7 |
| Jerry Rubin, former Yippy and member of the Chicago 7, age 56, of a
heart attack while under treatment for an auto accident.
Abby and Jerry are gone - anyone know how the remaining 5 of the 7
are doing? (I know Tom Haydn's still around - who else?)
tim
|
156.496 | Anyone else? | CSLALL::LEBLANC_C | Please don't dominate the rapJACK | Tue Nov 29 1994 11:14 | 1 |
| Bobby Seale is still alive too isn't he?
|
156.497 | | XLIB::REHILL | Call Me Mystery Hill | Tue Nov 29 1994 12:12 | 6 |
| Tommy Boyce died over the weekend. Suicide.
Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart wrote many of those great
classic tunes that made the Monkees famous.
|
156.498 | Kevin Kelly too... | SMURF::PETERT | rigidly defined areas of doubt and uncertainty | Tue Nov 29 1994 12:15 | 7 |
| So long Jerry, we'll miss ya... (no, not that Jerry!)
Kevin Kelly, Globe theatre critic, after a long battle with
cancer.
PeterT
|
156.499 | "Doodah Man" Viv Stanshall dies - from Desperado | MSBCS::EVANS | | Tue Mar 21 1995 09:32 | 59 |
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
BONZO LEADER, BRITISH ZANY, VIVIAN STANSHALL DIES IN FIRE
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
>From: "Mark Charlton" <[email protected]>
Organization: University of Warwick
To: [email protected]
Date: Wed, 8 Mar 1995 09:15:03 +0000 (GMT)
Subject: Re: Great loss (Viv Stanshall)
According to yesterday's (Tues 7th) Guardian (and reproduced entirely
without permission):
Bonzo Dog leader, a true English eccentric, dies in bedroom blaze
=================================================================
(Written by John Mullin)
Vivian Stanshall,leader of the cult sixties pop and comedy group the
Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band, has died in a fire at his London home. He was
52.
Stanshall, a thorough British eccentric, was found in the bedroom of
his flat in Muswell Hill on Sunday. Investigations are under way to
establish the cause of the fire. There will be an inquest.
He had recently signed a new recording contract with WEA. The aim was
to produce a follow-up recording of one of his more famous
characters, Sir Henry at Rawlinson End.
[end of extract]
In today's Guardian there is an obituary which says that Warners may
release the material which he has recorded since the contract was
signed in 1993. There is also an appreciation of Viv by Neil Innes.
"I don't give a toss what you have done with me when I've shuffled
off me mortal coil. Shove a bit of flex up my back passage, stick a
light bulb in my mouth and stand me in the hall." - Sir Henry.
Vivial Stanshall - March 21, 1943 - March 5, 1995. Sadly missed.
Cheers
Mark
Mark Charlton, Network Consultant, Computing Services Phone: +44 1203 523058
University of Warwick, Coventry CV4 7AL, UK Fax: +44 1203 523267
JANET: [email protected] INET: [email protected]
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
I loved that band, funny, smart, eclectic, often rocking. I had breakfast
with them once, but it was just a pleasant time, not a hint of zaniness.
They had just finished a gig at the Boston Tea Party with the Grateful
Dead. Among his many distinctions, Vivian Stanshall was "the doodah man"
of the Grateful Dead song "Truckin'".
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
156.500 | And those crazee Ali interviews | CSLALL::LEBLANC_C | Please don't dominate the rapJACK | Mon Apr 24 1995 15:09 | 2 |
| Howard Cosell
Monday Night Football icon
|
156.501 | tell it like it is | WILLEE::OSTIGUY | | Mon Apr 24 1995 15:32 | 6 |
| RIP Howard...although I'll always bum that I heard the news of John
Lennon's passing from Howard, on monday night football, studying for
finals at school...Howard started into one of his ramblings, I just
wanted him to shut up, and then when he said that.......drag
Wes
|
156.502 | rip | ASDG::IDE | My mind's lost in a household fog. | Mon Apr 24 1995 16:00 | 10 |
| I once heard a tape from the MNF booth before Howard announced Lennon's death.
Cosell and his co-host were discussing whether it was important enough to
annouce on-air. Howard didn't feel it was, but was talked into it. Weren't
they announcing a rare Monday night Pats game?
Cosell quit announcing boxing matches after "Tex" Cobb got brutally beaten up in
a fight that should've been stopped. When told, Cobb said "I'll go another ten
rounds if it'll get him off football."
Jamie
|
156.503 | | SMURF::HAPGOOD | Java Java HEY! | Mon Apr 24 1995 17:17 | 19 |
| <<< Note 156.502 by ASDG::IDE "My mind's lost in a household fog." >>>
>Cosell quit announcing boxing matches after "Tex" Cobb got brutally beaten up in
>a fight that should've been stopped. When told, Cobb said "I'll go another ten
>rounds if it'll get him off football."
I watched that fight...Howard's best line was "This is a trav-es-ty."
I believe at the end of that boxing match he said that he would NEVER
again broadcast a boxing match and I think he never did.
I was in agreement w/ Howard though - Randy Tex Cobb took the worst licking
I've ever seen. He face was a mess....
bob
p.s We named our remote control for our TV to be "howard control".
|
156.504 | :^( | ALFA2::DWEST | but i play one on tv... | Thu May 18 1995 18:19 | 8 |
| Elizabeth Montgomery... aka Samantha Stevens... dead of cancer...
i believe she was 58...
one of my first crushes from childhood... right up there with Jeannie,
Marcia Brady, Laurie (? Susan Dey) Partridge and many other tv sweeties
from the cheez-eating late 60's and early 70's....
da ve
|
156.505 | | CXDOCS::BARNES | | Thu May 18 1995 18:30 | 4 |
| makes my nose wanna go "tinkle tinkle tink"
RIP Sam....
rfb
|
156.506 | | WILLEE::OSTIGUY | | Fri May 19 1995 09:12 | 6 |
| Alexander Gudunov (sp?) dancer/actor of an "undisclosed disease" age 45
da ve, don't forget Parmenter Jane on F-Troop....or Ellie May out by
the seamen pond :)))
WO
|
156.507 | | GRANPA::TDAVIS | | Fri May 19 1995 10:48 | 4 |
| I agree, I fell in love with Sam, even when they switched Derwins,
ever notice how every vechile in the show was a Chevy?
Life was less complex then.
|
156.508 | and let's not forget Maryanne (or Ginger :^)... | ALFA1::DWEST | but i play one on tv... | Fri May 19 1995 11:03 | 11 |
| i always figured she got sick of looking at the other Darren so
with a cute little nose wiggle, she upgraded... :^) i love Rosie
O'Donnell's routine where she talks about how switching Darrens
traumatized her... she'd go into her fathers room late at night
and wake him up just to make sure it was the same guy... :^)
da ve
ps. what was Wrangler Jane's last name?? did they ever tell us, or
was it just Jane? i don't think she ever got to marry capt
Parmenter... zowie... talk about an opportunity lost... :^)
|
156.509 | Betty Rubble was my fav 8-) | FABSIX::T_BEAULIEU | Happiness is a warm gun | Fri May 19 1995 11:29 | 8 |
|
Never cared that much for Samantha .....
her cousin Sabrina was a babe 8-)
Toby
|
156.510 | | MSBCS::EVANS | | Mon Sep 18 1995 10:41 | 4 |
| I think Jimi Hendrix died 25 years ago today.
Jim
|
156.511 | or my name isn't... | ALFA2::DWEST | his job is to shed light... | Wed Sep 20 1995 13:45 | 4 |
| Orville Redenbacher... yesterday... heart attack in the bathtub
i believe... 88?
da ve_popcorn_muncher
|
156.512 | | AWECIM::HANNAN | Beyond description... | Thu Sep 21 1995 10:23 | 7 |
| Warning, press return only if you enjoy tasteless humor:
re: Orville
The coroner's report said that no part of his heart was left unpopped ;-)
|
156.513 | Dead already | XANADU::KENMAN::matthews | | Thu Sep 21 1995 15:53 | 2 |
| I saw him appear in someone's trade show booth last year -- he looked
EMBALMED ALREADY!! ("Were those little wheels on his feet?")
|
156.514 | another peacemaker killed | STAR::ECOMAN::DEBESS | your rain falls like crzy fngrs | Mon Nov 06 1995 12:44 | 2 |
|
Yitzhak Rabin...hopefully the quest for peace will continue.
|
156.515 | :^( | STOWOA::LEBLANC_CH | The radical, he rant and RAGE! | Mon Nov 06 1995 12:47 | 5 |
| i don't think we will ever see peace in the midst of religious strife
tho debess...that is the scary part
his actions will be remembered for years to come
|
156.516 | i believe it, it can happen... i believe it, it can happen... i believe it,.... | AITRNG::DWEST | his job is to shed light... | Mon Nov 06 1995 13:35 | 10 |
| ya gotta believe...
sometimes i think being a peace person is more dangerous and requires
more courage than the alternative... fortunately we haven't run out of
people yet who are willing to stand up and take the stand...
it can happen... if enough of us believe it enough... and let our
actions show where we stand...
da ve
|
156.517 | | TEPTAE::WESTERVELT | | Tue Nov 07 1995 15:10 | 12 |
| > sometimes i think being a peace person is more dangerous and requires
> more courage than the alternative...
i don't think there's any doubt about it.
I also think the murder was "caused" by the peace process, in
the sense that if there weren't one, there wouldn't be a backlash.
It can be seen as a forward progression. It depends on one's
perspective. Time will tell.
Tom
|
156.518 | | DELNI::DSMITH | and they keep on dancin | Tue Nov 07 1995 15:24 | 6 |
|
FWIW
A lot of people that stood for peace died in this year, 1995.
I certainly hope this is the higher-power's way of bringing attention
to peace, and not that the world is headed down hate street. Seems
there's more meany's now than ever.
|
156.519 | | MKOTS3::JOLLIMORE | I'm drowning in you | Tue Nov 07 1995 15:37 | 37 |
| The Song of Peace
Let the sun rise
And give the morning light,
The purest prayer
Will not bring us back
He whose candle was snuffed out
And was buried in the dust
A better cry won't wake him
Won't bring him back
Nobody will return us
From the dead dark pit.
Here neither the victory cheer
Nor songs of praise will help
So, sing only a song for peace
Do not whisper a prayer
Better sing a song for peace
With a strong shout.
Let the sun penetrate
Through the flowers
Don't look backward
Leave those who departed
Lift your eyes with hope
Not through rifle sights
Sing a song for love
And not for wars
Don't say the day will come
Bring the day because it is not a dream
And within all the city's squares
Cheer only peace
|
156.520 | | CXDOCS::BARNES | | Thu Nov 09 1995 13:10 | 9 |
| I was so saddened by this news....what's the big deal about giving back
some land?? one story I heard that when the news was announced, some
settlers started cheering. The Israli army said "screw u" and walked
off their job of protecting the settlers. The army had to be ordered
back, more than once.
My heart goes out to all jews and all peoples of the world...
rfb
|
156.521 | RIP | STOWOA::LEBLANC_CH | All good things in all good time | Fri Dec 08 1995 09:35 | 2 |
| John Lennon?
1980...if my meory serves me correctly?
|
156.522 | | TEPTAE::WESTERVELT | | Fri Dec 08 1995 09:57 | 3 |
|
indeed.
again, the wheel turns..
|
156.523 | | MKOTS3::JOLLIMORE | this the season? | Fri Dec 08 1995 10:12 | 3 |
| rip john
and last monday, two years ago, frank zappa died.
|
156.524 | Imagine | FABSIX::T_BEAULIEU | Like A steam Locomotive | Fri Dec 08 1995 12:54 | 7 |
|
"Love is all you need"....
RIP John
Toby
|
156.525 | | NAC::TRAMP::GRADY | Subvert the dominant pair of dimes | Mon Feb 12 1996 13:43 | 11 |
| I know this is rather late, but hell, he's still dead, so I guess it
still counts.
Gene Kelly at age 84 of pneumonia.
Possibly the best song-and-dance man that ever lived. I thought about
posting this a week or more ago and then forgot about it in the throes of
the daily crush. Yesterday, PBS aired "Singing in the Rain", and it
reminded me again. This guy was amazing to watch.
tim
|
156.526 | as was pointed out to me... | ALFA2::DWEST | the storyteller makes no choice... | Mon Feb 12 1996 15:21 | 7 |
| yep, Gene was incredible... so was Fred...
but imho, the women they danced with were even better... after all,
they had to do all the same moves... wearing a skirt... in high
heels... and backwards... :^)
da ve
|
156.527 | be at peace Christina... | NECSC::CRONIC::semi3.hlo.dec.com::notes | i believe in Chemo-Girl!!! | Thu May 30 1996 15:09 | 41 |
|
i wasn't sure where to put this... thought about the bummer
note, but there are some elements that aren't a bummer...
thought about the thought for today note, but that didn't seem
right either... and it certainly isn't something that makes me
feel especially good, so i guess it's here...
my friend Christina Richmond, who many of you know as
"Chemo Girl" or Chriso's step daughter, died this morning...
she died at home, in her own room and bed... Chris said she
was comfortable, and at peace... she just quietly slipped away,
with her family there... through the door and into the light...
i find myself now wondering if her angel came and helped her
find her way...
it's really kind of strange... it's been taking me a while to
sink in... i've been making my phone calls to let some friends
know, and now that i've had a few minutes by myself, there's
a whole jumble of things going on...
i'm glad for it, because she was really suffering... tumors
all over her body, causing a lot of pain, closing one eye, even
causing some fractures...
but it's a bummer, cuz she was a really remarkable kid... and she
had quite an effect on the folks around her... i didn't know her
especially well, or for very long, but it still feels like something's
missing somehow... it would have been nice to know her for more
of her short life, but i'm kinda glad i didn't, since it pretty well sux
right now so i can't imagine what it would be life if i'd know her for
all of her 12 years...
somewhere she's dancing and happy and can relax and know peace...
so i'm glad of that... but the next couple of days of funerals and wakes
and such aren't going to be much fun...
i still believe in Chemo Girl...
da ve
|
156.528 | | SMURF::HAPGOOD | Java Java HEY! | Thu May 30 1996 15:21 | 15 |
| Da ve,
I'm getting teary eyed thinking about it. I know exactly how you feel...
Especially the part you said about wishing you knew her better but
just as well you didn't....
Our good family friends had a little boy named Chris who I mentioned
in here when you first brought this up. We watched him/them go thru
*many* ups and downs and seemingly beat it until one day it beat him.
I remember it all and especially the phone call from my mother (I had
since moved out of the house..) when Chris passed away...
:(
|
156.529 | I believe | BINKLY::CEPARSKI | Like To Have It 1 Time More | Thu May 30 1996 15:30 | 1 |
|
|
156.530 | :^( | WMOIS::LEBLANCC | All good things in all good time | Thu May 30 1996 15:32 | 2 |
| good vibes to those who knew her
and peace to Chemo Girl
|
156.531 | | USOPS::MNELSON | Inspiration, move me Brightly | Thu May 30 1996 15:38 | 4 |
|
Wiping the tears away...........
Rest in Peace
|
156.532 | | MKOTS3::JOLLIMORE | quick beat of an icy heart | Thu May 30 1996 15:42 | 1 |
| Peace
|
156.533 | | DELNI::DSMITH | Can you see the real me | Thu May 30 1996 15:47 | 7 |
|
Sniff...
:-(
Her bravery and upbeat way of looking at things will help other
children to cope as they read her book.
|
156.534 | | EVMS::OCTOBR::DEBESS | Lilac rain unbroken chain | Thu May 30 1996 16:00 | 15 |
|
"all I know is something like a bird within her sang
all I know she sang a little while and then flew off"
thanks da ve, for letting us know, somewhat, this amazing
little girl - she inspired us all, even in the short time
she was here. My thoughts are once again with her as she
leaves her pain-wracked body behind. Peace, Christina.
Oh, this must be -so- hard for her parents. I hope it helps
them somewhat to think that she died so peacefully. But still...
Best wishes to them as they deal with the death of their
child.
Debess
|
156.535 | :( | TOLKIN::OSTIGUY | Ripples never come back | Thu May 30 1996 16:39 | 1 |
| Rest in Eternal Peace, Chemo Girl
|
156.536 | | NETRIX::dan | Dan Harrington | Thu May 30 1996 16:40 | 10 |
|
My first inclination in such a situation is to say, "I'm sorry".
But as I get older it becomes clear to me that this doesn't always
express the proper emotion...death can be a very mixed bag of
emotions. There are times and circumstances in which it is a
real blessing. And yet...
I'm sorry.
Dan
|
156.537 | I believe | FABSIX::T_BEAULIEU | Like A steam Locomotive | Thu May 30 1996 16:46 | 7 |
|
Rest in Peace Christina....
Being the father of a little girl I hope I never know the
feeling her family feels now. My heart cries for them
Toby
|
156.538 | | MILKWY::HEADSL::SAMPSON | Driven by the wind | Fri May 31 1996 09:53 | 7 |
| I ran into Chriso a couple weeks ago and he told us of some of the other
aspects of this roller coaster ride. I can only wish for the family stregnth and
peace. It appears to me that Christina has found peace, though it is still very
sad.
I know for the family it will never be over
Geoff
|
156.539 | play a JGB tape today | AWECIM::HANNAN | Beyond description... | Fri May 31 1996 11:47 | 3 |
| John Kahn died today... his wife tried to wake him and he was dead...
/Ken
|
156.540 | | WECARE::ROBERTS | climb a ladder to the stars | Fri May 31 1996 12:03 | 3 |
|
John Kahn ... jeeeez - unreal
|
156.541 | | SPECXN::BARNES | | Fri May 31 1996 12:08 | 10 |
| our hearts go out to Christinas' family....peace be with Christina, i'm
sure she'll be dancin up a storm in heaven.
John Kahn....can you imagine Jerry and JK right now??? I will be playing
JGB&JK tonite.
rest in peace all,
rfb
|
156.542 | | WECARE::ROBERTS | climb a ladder to the stars | Fri May 31 1996 12:11 | 6 |
| i have a grate photo of Jerry and Kahn on stage at I think a halloween
show in NYC in '86 or '87. I think i got it from Howard Coffman who
used to be a Deccie. up close and personal photo.
go figure
|
156.543 | | MKOTS3::JOLLIMORE | quick beat of an icy heart | Fri May 31 1996 12:11 | 2 |
| yeah, i noticed on Hunter's acrchive page he had a "In Memory of
John Kahn". unreal.
|
156.544 | | MKOTS3::JOLLIMORE | quick beat of an icy heart | Fri May 31 1996 12:13 | 2 |
| Timothy Leary died just after midnite. :-(
|
156.545 | Peace to Kahn and the good Doctor | WMOIS::LEBLANCC | All good things in all good time | Fri May 31 1996 12:15 | 2 |
| WHAT THE F*CK!
things have gone awry as the full moon approaches
|
156.546 | | SPECXN::BARNES | | Fri May 31 1996 12:20 | 3 |
| what's happening here!?! This is almost too much to take today.
JGB&JK and the good doctors medicine this weekend
|
156.547 | | WECARE::ROBERTS | climb a ladder to the stars | Fri May 31 1996 12:48 | 3 |
| feels like someone should say 'april fool'
|
156.548 | from his web page ... | MKOTS3::JOLLIMORE | quick beat of an icy heart | Fri May 31 1996 13:22 | 9 |
| Timothy has passed ...
Just after midnight, in his favorite bed among loving friends, Timothy Leary
peacefully passed on. His last words were "why not?" and "yeah". Our friend and
teacher, guide and inspiration will continue to live within us.
A memorial celebration is being planned.
|
156.549 | | ARBEIT::DEMARSE | Enjoy being | Fri May 31 1996 13:32 | 2 |
| Peace to Christina and her family. I believe she is in a much better
place now, flying with the angels.
|
156.550 | Heaven got a lot groovier today... | SMURF::PETERT | rigidly defined areas of doubt and uncertainty | Fri May 31 1996 13:48 | 11 |
| RIP, Christina, RIP... Saw her obit today in the Telegram Gazette,
but I'd already reached my dialy paper limit with the Globe and
the USA today article. Sigh, I'd hate to imagine what it would be
like to lose your kid. Seeing them sick is bad enough.
Peace to John Kahn and his family and the good Doctor. I guess he
didn't manage to take himself out on the Net, eh? Hope he had one
of his Leary crakers to help ease him along.
PeterT
|
156.551 | I opened a book of poems to this page... | NETRIX::dan | Dan Harrington | Fri May 31 1996 16:47 | 14 |
|
I was just out to the bookstore to find something for my daughter,
and came across the following...and I knew I had to enter it here.
On the Death of Friends in Childhood
We shall not ever meet them bearded in heaven,
Nor sunning themselves among the bald of hell;
If anywhere in the deserted schoolyard at twilight,
Forming a ring perhaps, or joining hands
In games whose very names we have forgotten.
Come, memory, let us seek them there in the shadows.
- Donald Justice
|
156.552 | AP Article | NETCAD::SIEGEL | The revolution wil not be televised | Fri May 31 1996 16:49 | 135 |
| '60s Drug Guru Timothy Leary Dies at 75
By CONSTANCE SOMMER
Associated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) _ Timothy Leary, the Harvard professor turned guru of
LSD who encouraged the '60s generation to ``turn on, tune in, drop
out,'' died today of cancer. He was 75.
Leary, who had turned his battle with terminal cancer into a public
evet, died at his hilltop Beverly Hills home, said Carol Rosin, a
friend for 25 years.
Fans could follow his deteriorating health through his site on the
World Wide Web. Last month, he said he was exploring the idea of
allowing users of the computer communications network to watch as he
committed suicide.
In the end, though, he died in his sleep surrounded with family and
friends, Rosin said. His home page announced the death with a simple
``Timothy has passed.''
It also said his last words were ``why not'' and ``yeah.''
``He had been alert for the last few days _ he'd been traveling with
one foot in this world and one foot in the other world,'' Rosin said.
``Until yesterday, he was moving around in an electric wheelchair, but
he was getting weaker.'' His life seldom failed to polarize two
generations _ the parents and flower children of the 1960s. To some of
the most gifted members of America's counterculture, he was host,
confidant and drug supplier.
The popular '70s British band The Moody Blues even put him in their
song ``Legend of a Mind,'' singing, ``Timothy Leary's dead. Oh, no no
no...''. After he fell ill, they retooled the lyric, ``Timothy Leary
lives,'' and sang it to him over the phone. He said it moved him to
tears.
But for all his popularity with some baby boomers, Leary's activities
cost him his Harvard job and landed him in prison for a time.
It was in 1959 that Leary joined the Harvard faculty as a psychology
professor. There, he met professor Richard Alpert, who later change his
name to Baba Ram Dass, and began a series of controlled experiments
with psychedelic drugs.
Four years later, Leary and Alpert were fired for using undergraduate
students in the tests.
The pair retired to Millbrook Estate, a 63-room mansion in upstate New
York once owned by the Mellon family. William Burroughs, Abbie Hoffman,
Jack Kerouac, Aldous Huxley and Allen Ginsberg among others came and
went, all united by a desire to experiment with drugs.
But ingesting mass quantities of LSD and bragging about it did not
endear Leary to members of the Establishment, especially the ones with
badges.
And for the next 20 years, he had run-ins with the law.
In 1970, he escaped from the California Men's Colony at San Luis
Obispo, where he was serving a 10-year sentence for marijuana
possession. His bust-out was aided by the Weather Underground and his
third wife, Rosemary.
Leary and his wife bounced from country to country. In Algeria, they
took up residence-in-exile with Eldridge Cleaver, who ultimately
kidnapped his guests after a political disagreement.
The Learys escaped, fleeing to Switzerland. U.S. agents eventually
caught up with Leary in 1973 in Afghanistan, and he was imprisoned in
California.
After his release in 1976, Leary's life became a circuitous journey of
lecture tours, experiments with stand-up comedy, writing books, an
obsession with cyberspace and dabbling in the Hollywood party scene.
Some accused him of selling out when he began a lecture tour in 1982
with Watergate villain G. Gordon Liddy. It was much-hyped _ and
much-ridiculed.
The criticism left Leary unfazed, though.
``I am a very courageous person,'' he once told The Associated Press.
``And I am a very self-confident person. To be self-confident, you have
to be (expletive) intelligent.''
Born in Springfield, Mass., in 1920 to a dentist and schoolteacher,
Leary attended West Point, went into the Army, and earned an
undergraduate psychology degree at the University of Alabama while in
the service.
After earning a master's degree from Washington State University and a
doctorate in psychology from the University of California at Berkeley,
he went to work at Harvard.
``I wanted to be a philosopher. Aristotle, Plato, Voltaire and all
these guys who were out there in nirvana,'' he said. ``I discovered as
I grew up that I was different. Life was to have adventures and quests
and Huckleberry Finn and the notion of being ... of living a life of
exploration and adventure.''
At times, it was tragic as well as adventurous.
Leary married five times. His first wife committed suicide in 1959. The
couple had two children. The son, who felt abandoned by his father's
ribald lifestyle, was estranged from Leary. The daughter, accused as an
adult of shooting her boyfriend, hanged herself at the Sybil Brand
Institute for Women in 1990.
Those incidents, Leary said, were the only regrets of his life.
After he was diagnosed with terminal cancer in January 1995, he focused
on dying.
``I was really thrilled because I knew that this was the beginning of
the most fascinating part of my life,'' he told the AP.
He said he was not afraid of dying _ just afraid of pain and of being
helpless. He used drugs right up to the end ``for medicinal purposes,''
his friends said.
``No. 1, we're all going to die,'' he said. ``And we're all going to
get senile, if we're lucky enough to hang around that long. So there's
nothing to be afraid of.
``Some guy at a party came up to me and said `Good luck on your death.'
And that's one of the most powerful things that anyone has ever said to
me,'' Leary said. ``It implies `Have a good life. Have a good death.'''
Rosin said his remains would be launched into space in September or
October, but plans had yet to be finalized.
``He was so excited ... He was literally jumping up and down in his
wheelchair when we told him we had made the preparations,'' Rosin said.
|
156.553 | Springfield Homeboy to boot! | WMOIS::LEBLANCC | All good things in all good time | Fri May 31 1996 16:53 | 6 |
| eldridge cleaver kidnapped leary?
that is bizarre
may the good doctor rest in peace
|
156.554 | | SPECXN::BARNES | | Mon Jun 03 1996 10:23 | 3 |
| actually, according to his most recent wife and stepson, his last
words, "Why not", where said rather emphatically...like "why not, why NOT,
WHY NOT! then "Yeah".
|
156.555 | | TOLKIN::OSTIGUY | Ripples never come back | Mon Jun 03 1996 11:00 | 1 |
| what was he saying "why not, why NOT, WHY NOT" to??? or whom?
|
156.556 | | SPECXN::BARNES | | Mon Jun 03 1996 11:21 | 1 |
| the angel.....
|
156.557 | | EVMS::OCTOBR::DEBESS | Lilac rain unbroken chain | Mon Jun 03 1996 12:23 | 36 |
|
at the risk of entering an unpopular opinion, or two:
regarding the deaths last week of John Kahn and Timothy Leary...
and I in no way mean to say that I'm happy that they're dead
or anything like that:
first, while I was very impressed with Leary's attitude toward
his impending death, I am somehow somewhat un-impressed with what
he did with his life...!...well, not -all- his life...but somehow,
with his brilliant unconventional mind and all, somehow I would
have expected him to go beyond "tune in, turn on, drop out"...which
seems like all he -did- do...there was -so- much more potential....
but hey, it was his life...just expressing my opinion...
(I also somehow wonder if he hadn't been so "in your face" with
the establishment, if LSD wouldn't be illegal today, or at the very
least, a legal alternative psychiatric tool)
and John Kahn. I had heard very pointed rumors over the years
about his drug usage and his "encouragement" of Garcia along those
lines - tricky stuff here...surely noone could really -force-
Garcia to do anything he didn't want to...of course he made his
own decisions - but, it makes it a lot easier to continue down
that path when there's someone to play with. After reading Scully's
book, it seemed to pretty much confirm stories I had heard. In any
case, I find it hard to -not- have some negative feelings towards Kahn
and his role in Jerry's "demise". And I know that these feelings
should really be directed towards Jerry himself, but the irrational
way that feelings sometimes work, this is the way it is with me.
They're just my feelings...
that said, I spent the day Friday listening to Almost Acoustic,
Old and In the Way, and some great Garcia&Kahn tapes I have...
and wished him the best in his afterlife...
RIP, John and Timothy
|
156.558 | imo | JARETH::LARU | | Mon Jun 03 1996 12:28 | 5 |
|
you can't please everyone,
so, you've got to please yourself...
/b
|
156.559 | | NAC::TRAMP::GRADY | Squash that bug! (tm) | Mon Jun 03 1996 15:02 | 6 |
| Re: Kahn
I recall, also, that one of the largest of the claims on Jerry's estate
was from Kahn for payment for past JGB shows....fwiw.
tim
|
156.560 | | MAIL2::TURNOF | Greetings from the Big Apple | Mon Jun 03 1996 15:11 | 3 |
| Any word on what caused John's passing?
Fredda
|
156.561 | | STAR::64881::DEBESS | Lilac rain unbroken chain | Mon Jun 10 1996 13:28 | 10 |
|
Jan Kerouac - only child of Jack Kerouac - died last week.
She was an author, likewise.
She has been "in the news" around here lately because she
wanted to move his body from Lowell to Nashua...but Lowell
would have none of that...
Debess
|
156.562 | I spent 26 years trying to get OUT.. :^) | WMOIS::LEBLANCC | All good things in all good time | Mon Jun 10 1996 13:29 | 1 |
| why would she want him in Nashua?
|
156.563 | | STAR::64881::DEBESS | Lilac rain unbroken chain | Mon Jun 10 1996 13:39 | 9 |
| > -< I spent 26 years trying to get OUT.. :^) >-
:-) :-) :-)
> why would she want him in Nashua?
his parents and brother are buried here
|
156.564 | | BHAK::LARU | au contraire... | Mon Jul 29 1996 15:05 | 1 |
| Mama Cass choked on a chicken sandwich 22 years ago today...
|
156.565 | re: .-1 | NECSC::LEVY | Half-Step Mississippi Uptown Toodleoo | Mon Jul 29 1996 15:21 | 3 |
| Now, that's a piece of information that I really needed to make my day
complete. :-)
|
156.566 | heard it on the grapevine | TEPTAE::WESTERVELT | | Mon Jul 29 1996 18:34 | 2 |
|
take this fwiw... that was no chicken sandwich. (speaking of drugs)
|
156.567 | | WECARE::ROBERTS | climb a ladder to the stars | Wed Jul 31 1996 14:44 | 2 |
| i thought it was ham
|
156.568 | | NETCAD::SIEGEL | The revolution wil not be televised | Thu Aug 29 1996 13:24 | 2 |
| Greg Morris, electronics expert Barney on Mission: Impossible, possibly of
brain cancer, at age 61.
|
156.569 | | JARETH::LARU | au contraire... | Fri Sep 06 1996 11:14 | 1 |
| Tom Fogerty died 1990.
|
156.570 | from Hunter's webpage ... | MKOTS3::JOLLIMORE | Always a hoot! | Tue Sep 10 1996 09:09 | 6 |
| Blue Moon of Kentucky Keep on shinin'
...Bill Monroe
Father of Bluegrass Music
September 13, 1911 - September 9, 1996
|
156.571 | | STAR::64881::DEBESS | full of cloudy dreams unreal | Tue Sep 10 1996 10:10 | 25 |
|
"It's hard to say bluegrass is exactly Bill's invention. Maybe
you should say it's his discovery. He is the guy responsible for making
the decisions that produced that style of playing. And his personal
interpretation of the music and his own background are a large part of
the coloration of bluegrass music--the expression, the sound of it.
And his choice of players. The premier bluegrass band was in the
late forties. The combination of the bluesy fiddle playing of Chubby
Wise; Bill's hard-as-nails mandolin attack--also with a very bluesy
tonality--his high, hard, mountain style of singing; Earl Scruggs'
barns-on-fire banjo playing--lightning, incredibly accurate, pinpoint,
silver-bell banjo-playing--Lester Flatt's warm tenor lead and solid
guitar runs; and a string bass underneath the whole thing: _that's_ a
bluegrass band. That was Bill Monroe and his Blue Grass Boys. His band
was called the Blue Grass Boys, and that's why they're called bluegrass
bands.
When I heard my first live tape of bluegrass music, I went
through the roof. The sound, the words, the titles of the
songs--everything about it spoke to me on some primal level, and it was
just something I felt compelled to learn. I just had to. There was no
getting around it. I wanted to be a Blue Grass Boy in the worst way, but
I didn't have the nerve to even talk to Bill. I still want to be a Blue
Grass Boy."
--Jerry Garcia, liner notes to the Bill Monroe boxed set (MCA records)
|
156.572 | | SPECXN::BARNES | | Tue Sep 10 1996 10:46 | 2 |
| wow...85 years old.....just think if Jerry would have had the stamina
to last 85 years like Bill M did.....just think....
|
156.573 | | UCXAXP::64034::GRADY | Squash that bug! (tm) | Tue Sep 10 1996 10:57 | 14 |
| Thanks Debess. What a wonderful eulogy.
I've been a fan of bluegrass of any kind for almost 25 years, and Monroe's
inspiration was everywhere. It's one of the very few truly indiginous American
musical styles (along with blues, and jazz), so much so that even in his
passing it's difficult to say that in the end we have lost as much as we have
gained.
Hell, I even tap my toes to the Country Bear Jamboree soundtrack - much to the
embarassment of my kids, I might add...;-)
Thanks, Bill.
tim
|
156.574 | | SPECXN::BARNES | | Tue Sep 10 1996 11:11 | 9 |
| it's funny how often when one grows up with something as a youngster,
(bluegrass) one has less of an appreciation for that, then
sorta abandons it for something else newer, (R-n-R) how
one takes for granted the older for awhile...but then comes back around
again....
the faster we go the rounder we get
rfb_raised on bluegrass and country
|
156.575 | | STAR::64881::DEBESS | full of cloudy dreams unreal | Tue Sep 10 1996 11:41 | 23 |
| re: rfb's "just think, if Jerry had lived to 85"
I go back and forth... mourning what will not be (ferinstance the September
Boston run :-( )... and trying to keep the mindset that this is life, it
goes forward and you can't turn back
I sometimes find myself wallowing too much in the "just think/I wish that..."
mode - and it depresses me and, in my case, has nothing positive to offer -
it just sinks me lower.
I find that I have to consciously put up a barrier when I find myself
thinking like that...and I have to consciously try to change my way of
thinking so that I will be open to finding something else to give me that
"spark" in my life. It's a lesson that I think Jerry was trying to give
always, anyways. With his death, this lesson is all the more valuable,
because now I have no choice.
rfb, hope you don't think this note is saying anything about you. It's
about me. And I surely understand...I miss him too much myself. I'm just
rambling about what's going on with me...
Debess
|
156.576 | don't follow leaders, watch your parking meters... | JARETH::LARU | au contraire... | Tue Sep 10 1996 12:04 | 17 |
| � <<< Note 156.575 by STAR::64881::DEBESS "full of cloudy dreams unreal" >>>
� It's a lesson that I think Jerry was trying to give
� always, anyways.
I think it's a lesson we can learn from Jerry.
I think it's the way Jerry (and the band) tried to live.
But I'm pretty sure that Jerry wasn't trying to teach anything...
That's one of the things that Jerry was trying to escape...
the demand of so many that he be
(and the complains of so many critics that he was)
a role model.
Otherwise, I agree with you, Debess.
/bruce
|
156.577 | | STAR::64881::DEBESS | full of cloudy dreams unreal | Tue Sep 10 1996 12:13 | 6 |
|
yeah, you're right bruce... it was probably Hunter trying to
give those lessons all those years ;-) ;-) ;-)
Debess
|
156.578 | | SPECXN::BARNES | | Tue Sep 10 1996 12:30 | 7 |
| since it's been a year now, although I tend to still say "just think
what if..." I do so with a lot less sadness and depression
involved...as you sorta said Debess, death...that's part of life...we
as a society haveta start viewing "passing" in a more positive way.
lot's of other cultures did/do...
rfb
|
156.579 | | HELIX::CLARK | | Tue Sep 10 1996 14:05 | 19 |
| There's a good "appreciation" of Bill Monroe in the Globe, esp. the
author's personal encounters with Monroe in the New England area.
In one Monroe stares out "mystically" at a NE cornfield and likens it to
the fields back home in Kentucky...
It's rare that one man is so completely identified with a musical form,
isn't it? Before the band Jerry talked about, there was a 1940-1 Monroe
band that made the first actual bluegrass recordings, but as Jerry says,
the late 40s (Flatt/Scruggs) incarnation is The One. And the next 7
arguably "great" bands in bluegrass were sprinkled with former members of
Monroe's Blue Grass Boys.
The "high lonesome" sound that the Globe writer seems to equate with
bluegrass actually goes back to country string bands of the 20s (in
recorded-music history), and probably back into the previous century
unrecorded... Maybe this is what Jerry meant about not actually inventing
bluegrass. But bluegrass was the new incarnation of high/lonesome that
clicked musically & commercially. RIP, Father Bill.
- JayC.
|
156.580 | | NECSC::CRONIC::16.127.176.129::notes | i believe in Chemo-Girl!!! | Wed Sep 11 1996 12:08 | 20 |
|
sigh... scratch one more "American Original"...
Bill was one musician that passed before i ever got to
see him... it's been my good fortune to see a number
of folks who cite him as being a major musical influence,
and even play with a few...
Peter Rowan is usually good for a Bill Monroe story or
two... there's no doubt that the music will live on... many
of todays "old chestnuts" that you hear on the circuit or
at pickin' parties and festivals are old Monroe gems...
and for folks who've been listening to my music over the
years can attest that bluegrass and amercian traditional
music have had considerable influence on my own playing
style...
once again, we are witnesses to the passing of a legend...
da ve
|
156.581 | never did catch Bill... | SMURF::HAPGOOD | Java Java HEY! | Wed Sep 11 1996 13:05 | 10 |
| One of the best....well make that 3 of the best shows I've ever seen were
the Earl Scruggs Review.
My musical heros as a kid were Lester and Earl as well as a bunch of rock
n rollers.
bob
|
156.582 | | E::EVANS | | Wed Sep 11 1996 13:59 | 22 |
| I've been listening to some Bill Monroe tunes on the way to work this week.
It is staggering to think that his recording career lasted from 1936-1994 or
later. Monrow was recording original material when he was 80+! I spent
some time looking over the list of "Bluegrass Boys" on the credits pages.
Vassar Clemens style was clear even in 1950. Earl Scruggs' banjo work set a
standard for decades to come. The voices of Jimmy Martin and Peter Rowan
are there - all with Monroe's high tenor and blazing mandolin. By the early
1940's the bluegrass sound was pretty sell set. How about a blistering
mandolin solo in "Goin' Down the Road Feelin' Bad" - it's there. Jerry was
hip to what was happening there. Some of my favorites this week are "Uncle Pen"
about the fiddle playing uncle who adopted him after he was orphaned at 10 that
got him interested in music, "Lonesome Moonlight Waltz" (imagine a stately
waltz for mandolin, banjo and fiddle) and "My Last Days on Earth" written
after a heart attach when he was in his seventies (a mandlin instrumental
with lots of strings with the sound of the wind sounds nothing like bluegrass,
but is clearly all Monroe). I think I will try to catch the Opry this Saturday
night. I'm sure that some things will be said and tunes played in memory of
originator of bluegrass music and one of the true musical legends of twentieth
century.
Jim
|
156.583 | | SPECXN::BARNES | | Wed Sep 11 1996 14:27 | 3 |
| interesting tidbit...after Flat and Scrugs left The Blue Grass Boys to
form their own band, Bill Monroe refused to talk to them for 23
years!!!
|
156.584 | | STAR::64881::DEBESS | full of cloudy dreams unreal | Wed Sep 11 1996 14:40 | 3 |
|
weren't Flatt and Scruggs "regulars" on _The Beverly Hillbillies_?!?
|
156.585 | | SMURF::connor.zk3.dec.com::hotpup::strobel | | Wed Sep 11 1996 14:43 | 3 |
| they were on it a few time and also did the theme song
|
156.586 | Have you ever been experienced? | WMOIS::LEBLANCC | All good things in all good time | Wed Sep 18 1996 10:01 | 3 |
156.587 | | STAR::64881::DEBESS | We'llKnowTheNextStepWhenItComes | Wed Sep 18 1996 10:45 | 10 |
156.588 | both took us places we ain't been before... | SMURF::PETERT | rigidly defined areas of doubt and uncertainty | Wed Sep 18 1996 16:46 | 10 |
156.589 | | OUTPOS::EKLOF | Waltzing with Bears | Wed Sep 18 1996 16:59 | 2 |
156.590 | the downfall of the J's | WMOIS::LEBLANCC | All good things in all good time | Fri Oct 04 1996 12:13 | 2 |
156.591 | | LJSRV2::JC | Never trust a Prankster | Tue Oct 08 1996 18:18 | 2 |
156.592 | | UCXAXP::64034::GRADY | Squash that bug! (tm) | Thu Oct 10 1996 17:30 | 5 |
156.593 | | SPECXN::BARNES | | Thu Oct 10 1996 17:32 | 4 |
156.594 | but i digress | ALFA2::DWEST | i believe in chemo girl! | Thu Oct 10 1996 18:11 | 12 |
156.592 | sweet guy | TEPTAE::WESTERVELT | | Mon Dec 02 1996 15:56 | 6 |
156.593 | | LASSIE::TRAMP::GRADY | Squash that bug! (tm) | Mon Dec 02 1996 16:06 | 4 |
156.594 | | SPECXN::BARNES | | Mon Dec 02 1996 16:19 | 7 |
156.595 | | LASSIE::TRAMP::GRADY | Squash that bug! (tm) | Mon Dec 02 1996 23:18 | 4 |
156.596 | Tiny Tim, 64, died while playing 'tiptoe'.. | MKOTS3::JOLLIMORE | Always a hoot! | Tue Dec 03 1996 07:59 | 90 |
156.597 | | SPECXN::BARNES | | Tue Dec 03 1996 09:15 | 3 |
156.598 | | DELNI::DSMITH | In a minute I'll be free | Tue Dec 03 1996 10:38 | 7 |
156.599 | Frank Zappa 3 years ago today? | WMOIS::LEBLANCC | All good things in all good time | Wed Dec 04 1996 07:51 | 1 |
156.600 | | ASABET::DCLARK | SBU Technology Group | Wed Dec 04 1996 09:35 | 3 |
156.601 | "so this is a drive-in restaurant in hollywood" | TROOA::CHROSS | | Wed Dec 04 1996 09:37 | 3 |
156.602 | | ASDG::IDE | My mind's lost in a household fog. | Wed Dec 04 1996 10:04 | 5 |
156.603 | captain beefheart had the magic band then | WMOIS::LEBLANCC | All good things in all good time | Wed Dec 04 1996 10:14 | 4 |
156.604 | | SMURF::HAPGOOD | Java Java HEY! | Wed Dec 04 1996 10:16 | 6 |
156.605 | | MKOTS3::JOLLIMORE | tis the season to be Jolli | Fri Dec 20 1996 08:36 | 127 |
156.606 | :-) | ASABET::DCLARK | SBU Technology Group | Fri Dec 20 1996 09:18 | 1 |
156.607 | go out and gaze at the stars tonight... | SMURF::PETERT | rigidly defined areas of doubt and uncertainty | Fri Dec 20 1996 10:40 | 6 |
156.608 | | SMURF::HAPGOOD | Java Java HEY! | Fri Jan 10 1997 13:34 | 6 |
156.609 | | CRONIC::sms53.hlo.dec.com::notes | i believe in Chemo-Girl!!! | Fri Jan 10 1997 14:20 | 7 |
156.610 | | SMURF::MROGERS | | Fri Jan 10 1997 14:27 | 14 |
156.611 | | GRANPA::TDAVIS | | Fri Jan 10 1997 14:41 | 6 |
156.612 | | CRONIC::sms53.hlo.dec.com::notes | i believe in Chemo-Girl!!! | Fri Jan 10 1997 14:49 | 9 |
156.613 | | HELIX::CLARK | | Fri Jan 10 1997 18:24 | 6 |
156.614 | | SPECXN::BARNES | | Mon Jan 27 1997 12:39 | 10 |
| Richard Berry, who penned "Louie Louie".
His daughter recalled whenever fans asked for the words to "Louie
Louie", Berry would laugh and say "If I told you the words, you
wouldn't believe them anyway." The lyrics, and Berry, were investigated
by the FBI in 1963 as being obscene, but they determined that the lyrics
were "indecipherable at any speed."
"...me gotta go now..."
rfb
|
156.615 | | MKOTS3::JOLLIMORE | The blossoming is to come. | Mon Jan 27 1997 12:44 | 3 |
| yeah, i think i heard he sold the song for $7,000 or so?
it's the most-copied song (or somesuch, most covered? recorded?).
he was recently awarded $2M for lost compensation.
|
156.616 | | SPECXN::BARNES | | Mon Jan 27 1997 12:47 | 4 |
| sold the rights for a couple of hundred bucks to pay for his wedding,
won back the rights in 1985...
rfb
|
156.617 | what a way to go! | JARETH::LARU | au contraire... | Mon Jan 27 1997 13:40 | 1 |
| the sad thing is, nobody can read his headstone!
|
156.618 | Later, Clyde... | QUARRY::petert | rigidly defined areas of doubt and uncertainty | Mon Jan 27 1997 14:38 | 7 |
| Jan 18th. Clyde Tombaugh. Now most of you are probably going, Clyde who???
But Clyde discovered Pluto, or Planet X as it was known back then.
He was 90.
PeterT
|
156.619 | | MKOTS3::JOLLIMORE | The blossoming is to come. | Mon Jan 27 1997 14:40 | 4 |
| Jeanne Dixon - 79
astrologer/psychic
|
156.620 | Inquiring minds want to know! | QUARRY::petert | rigidly defined areas of doubt and uncertainty | Mon Jan 27 1997 14:41 | 8 |
| > Jeanne Dixon - 79
>
> astrologer/psychic
But did she predict it correctly??
PeterT
|
156.621 | | GRANPA::TDAVIS | | Mon Jan 27 1997 15:19 | 3 |
| I heard on the news, that she correctly predicted JFK's death
in fact she said assination, and her newspaper did not want to
print that part.
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156.622 | | SPECXN::BARNES | | Mon Jan 27 1997 15:23 | 1 |
| yep. but mis-predicted the start of WWIII in the 80's, I believe....
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156.623 | | MKOTS3::JOLLIMORE | The blossoming is to come. | Mon Jan 27 1997 15:27 | 5 |
| i think she missed on WWIII in '58 ..
she also predicted the russians would be the first to land a man
on the moon. ooops.
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156.624 | | SPECXN::BARNES | | Mon Jan 27 1997 16:08 | 2 |
| how could she have predicted WWIII in 58, BEFORE the asasanation
prediction of Kennedy in 63?????
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156.625 | | MKOTS3::JOLLIMORE | The blossoming is to come. | Tue Jan 28 1997 10:08 | 35 |
| > how could she have predicted WWIII in 58, BEFORE the asasanation
> prediction of Kennedy in 63?????
i don't know, man. i ain't psychic! call psychic friends and ask.
;-)
Associated Press
WASHINGTON -- Astrologer Jeane L. Dixon, who gained national prominence
as a psychic when her prediction that President Kennedy would die in
office came true, died Saturday. She was 79.
Sibley Hospital spokeswoman Jean Vincent said Dixon died at 2:30 p.m.
from cardiopulmonary arrest. He said the hospital was asked not to
comment further.
Parade magazine in 1956 quoted Dixon as predicting that a Democratic
president elected in 1960 -- a tall young man with blue eyes and brown
hair, would die in office. According to Dixon, she told interviewers that
the president would be assassinated, but they refused to publish that.
After Kennedy's death in 1963, the national notice that Dixon received
led political columnist Ruth Montgomery to write a book, ''A Gift of
Prophecy: the Phenomenal Jeane Dixon,'' that recounted hundreds of
accurate predictions made over the years.
The book, published in 1965, sold more than 3 million copies and brought
Dixon into even more demand on the lecture circuit and as a syndicated
horoscope columnist.
Not all Dixon's forecasts proved true. She predicted, for instance, that
World War III would begin in 1958 over the offshore Chinese islands of
Quemoy and Matsu, that labor leader Walter Reuther would run for president
in 1964 and that the Soviets would land the first man on the moon.
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156.626 | | SPECXN::BARNES | | Tue Jan 28 1997 11:10 | 7 |
| re;
i don't know, man. i ain't psychic! call psychic friends and
ask.;-)
jeez...I've lost a lot of respect for you.................%^)
rfb
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156.627 | | MKOTS3::JOLLIMORE | The blossoming is to come. | Tue Jan 28 1997 11:20 | 3 |
| like you ever *had* any ;-) ;-)
did you see the "Laughing Rainbow" on my fishing stats page?
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156.628 | | SPECXN::BARNES | | Tue Jan 28 1997 12:07 | 5 |
| re: laughing rainbow..
yep..funny! But I'd rather meet yer fishin buddies....
rfb
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156.629 | the day...the music....died | WMOIS::LEBLANCC | All good things in all good time | Mon Feb 03 1997 12:44 | 1 |
| the big bopper, ritchie valens and head cricket buddy holly
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156.630 | | ALFA2::DWEST | i believe in chemo girl! | Thu Feb 06 1997 15:44 | 2 |
|
http://www.distefano.com/
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156.631 | | ALFA2::DWEST | i believe in chemo girl! | Wed Mar 26 1997 17:07 | 15 |
|
Bishop Timothy J. Harrington
Retired Bishop of the Diocese of Worcester, social worker,
advocate for the poor, the homeless, addicts, trustee of Assumption
College... "the Bishop of the Bowery" and "The Diocesan Rag Man"
(the first from his work with the poor in the slums, the second
from his work as director of "Catholic Charities")
i may not have agreed with all he did and said while he was alive,
but i have great respect for a man of great faith who tried to
live what he believed......
da ve
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156.632 | RIP | WMOIS::LEBLANCC | All good things in all good time | Mon Apr 07 1997 10:06 | 4 |
| allen ginsberg
and the beat goes on............
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156.633 | | SPECXN::BARNES | | Mon Apr 07 1997 12:57 | 3 |
| wow...Hunter wrote in his journal that Ginsberg didn't look well when
they looked him up during Hunter's tour...another one gone that
"turned the world on"...
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156.634 | ah, the ragman he draws circles | EVMS::OCTOBR::DEBESS | the ghost of 'lectricity HOWLs | Mon Apr 07 1997 15:32 | 46 |
|
on Saturday morning, I was waiting around for a phone call to
hear how Guntis' dad's operation had gone. It was a beautiful
morning, so I sat outside on my deck with a cup of coffee.
I had heard the day before that Allen Ginsberg was diagnosed
with terminal liver cancer, and decided to read _Howl_ [my only
souveneir from S.F. - went into City Lights bookstore to get it]
while I sat there...decided to read it right out loud - as it
-should- be! Knowing so much of that history, I could figure out
what specific incidences or people he was talking about at various
spots. It brought a smile to my face more than once, I must
say!
I found out afterwards that he had died that morning. Even
though it was expected in the near future, the news still shook
me.
My friend MB stopped by that night to visit and start off
celebrating "Dylan week"! She practices Tibetan Buddhism, and
happens to have the same teacher as Ginsberg. She reminisced
about the few times she has been able to make it into NYC when
her teacher was there, and meeting with Ginsberg at those times.
She said he was sweet and gentle and had quite an inspirational
force that you could feel when you were with him.
I got into this weird kick - we had the setlists of Dylan's
1st 2 shows on this leg of the neverending tour - and I played
DJ and put together replicas of those shows from the songs I
had. (Had to have a guest singer - Jerry - for _Oh Babe, It
Ain't No Lie - don't have anything with Dylan doing it!) Also,
had to dig into the old vinyl for some of 'em. While clearing
off the turntable, I uncovered this biography/photo book of
Dylan that Carol Roberts had leant me before Christmas. Well,
we had to just check that out. Full of photos from 60's early
70's - about a half dozen or so with Allen Ginsberg.
that also gave me a perfect excuse to drop in to see carol and
John Shep on Sunday - must return the book! Inside were some
photos I had planned to give to them - one of them and da ve
up at Bread and Puppet...
which this year will be on the anniversary of Jerry's death.
Debess
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156.635 | | SPECXN::BARNES | | Tue Apr 08 1997 10:29 | 8 |
| the rest of the ninties and the beginning of the all-new minglewwod
millinium will, I'm afraid, be rife with the passing of not only what's
left of our cultural icons, and with the passing of some of our's
parents amd older loved ones, but also with the passing of some of
us....life goes on, death don't have no mercy...We *GOTTA* remember the
good times, the positive times, the love times....
rfb
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156.636 | | SMURF::HAPGOOD | Java Java HEY! | Tue Apr 08 1997 11:17 | 6 |
| Hi Rfb, while all that is true you forgot to mention that we'll
continue to have new icons and new good times and new loves ....
:)
bobo
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156.637 | | ALFA2::DWEST | i believe in chemo girl! | Tue Apr 08 1997 12:19 | 11 |
|
everything changes...... with each new passing there's a
new arrival... and the wheel keeps turning....
while some changes may be sad initially, the immortal words
of Mr Universe continue to ring true...
"change is life... life is good..."
da ve
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156.638 | | SPECXN::BARNES | | Wed Apr 09 1997 17:06 | 5 |
| Laura Nyro dead at 49...has been battling ovarian cancer.
wrote Eli's Comin for 3-dog nite and Stoned Soul Picnic for the 5th
dimension, When I Die for Peter, Paul and MAry and later Blood, Sweet
nad Tears..she was booed off the stage at Monteray Pop in 67 and
refused to perform for 2 years (she was about 17-20 then I think)
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156.639 | George Will on Ginsberg | ASABET::DCLARK | Howl! | Thu Apr 10 1997 10:44 | 12 |
| George Will wrote an 'obituary' for Ginsberg; it was in the
editorial pages of this morning's Telegram. Natuarally, he
had nothing good to say about the man. He basically said that
Ginsberg and Kerouac were rip-off artists who were responsible
for the decline of American cultural values, etc. He mockingly
says that "Howl" was written while Ginsberg was wired on mescaline
and speed, as though that makes it less worthy. I get irritated
by this little twerp sometimes.
- Dave who took a course in Literature of the Beat Movement
in college and wrote his term paper one weekend while wired
on mescaline and speed and got an A+
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156.640 | dork | WMOIS::LEBLANCC | All good things in all good time | Thu Apr 10 1997 10:49 | 5 |
| Will is a slug who should climb back under the rock he oozed out from
underneath
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156.641 | | SPECXN::BARNES | | Thu Apr 10 1997 10:50 | 7 |
| what a d*ck...i hope some of ya'll back there, those with the elequence
and tact, (ain't me BTW....da ve??, DCLARK??) take the time to respond
to this (*)
(*) <---international symbol for *ssh*le
rfb(*)
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156.642 | not a rant, just a statement of opinion... :^) | ALFA2::DWEST | i believe in chemo girl! | Thu Apr 10 1997 11:12 | 18 |
| well, since my name came up... :^)
imho, George Will is a human being, bound by human frailty, trapped in
his own version of reality, which was formed years ago when the US was
the only real world power and was willing to nuke all opposition into
the stone age, the downtrodden masses were still downtrodden (as they
should be... some nerve on them wishing to be real people) and foreigners
were still clinging to the fences at our borders begging to get in while
we stuck our collective tounges out at them chanting "nyah nyah!!!"...
he has an opinion and feels somehow morally obligated to share it with us
daily (for a price, of course)... while i tend not to agree with most
of what i've read from him, i resist the urge to denigrate him for
expressing his, imho, misguided opinions as is his right...
however, i do believe he would beneift immensely from a couple of doses
in his prune juice some sunny summer morning... :^)
da ve
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156.643 | | STAR::EVANS | | Thu Apr 10 1997 13:44 | 5 |
|
Will did write a good book about baseball. He can't be all bad. ;-)
Jim
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156.644 | <insert criticize/understand dylanism here> | HELIX::CLARK | | Thu Apr 10 1997 14:39 | 10 |
| > Will did write a good book about baseball. He can't be all bad. ;-)
Will's not all bad -- he's just way too ready to venture opinions on
subjects about which (by contrast to baseball) he has no training, no
exposure, no clue.
For example, I've never read a comment of his on anything music-related
that had a shred of credibility. (Even his momentary praise in that piece
about Jerry, before he took up the hatchet...) In what respect is he
qualified to comment? Who appointed him cultural gatekeeper? - Jay
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156.645 | my take | WMOIS::LEBLANCC | All good things in all good time | Thu Apr 10 1997 14:58 | 2 |
| probably didn't like that "abhorrent lifestyle" ginsberg lived with
another man
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156.646 | | JARETH::LARU | au contraire... | Thu Apr 10 1997 15:06 | 15 |
| Will belongs to the "love it or leave it" group...
I remember a column he did around 1970 about Dylan...
he just does not understand the politics of protest...
nor how anyone could possibly imagine any way this
country could be improved, except for removing the
capital gains tax.
as for his book on baseball, it may perhaps be of literary
merit, but I can't imagine him doing anything physical,
and I don't believe a book about baseball written by someone
who hasn't spent some time hitting and fielding...
At least George Plimpton puts his body on the line...
/bruce
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156.647 | | NETCAD::SIEGEL | The revolution wil not be televised | Thu Apr 10 1997 15:28 | 6 |
| Laura Nyro also wrote Wedding Bell Blues, which is a nice "oldies" song.
Don't know a thing about her except that I recognized her hame from the
sheet music for WBB.
adam
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156.648 | Ah, I remember when! | MAIL1::TURNOF | Greetings from the Big Apple | Thu Apr 10 1997 17:07 | 9 |
| I will never forget being a senior in college and seeing Laura Nyro
perform in the chapel at Vassar. Perfect acoustics, perfect voice.
You could hear a pin drop that night.
Wonderful memories.
She will be missed. Time to pull out some of her albums for a spin.
Fredda
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156.649 | he was on the NH Presidential ballot this year too | EVMS::OCTOBR::DEBESS | black dirt live again! | Mon Apr 28 1997 10:56 | 3 |
|
Pat Paulsen
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156.650 | The Man to Vote For | SSDEVO::R_BARNES | | Mon Apr 28 1997 11:17 | 4 |
| I will truely miss Pat's fine perspective view of politics, and I do
mean truely...........
rfb
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156.651 | And a cubs fan | WMOIS::LEBLANCC | All good things in all good time | Thu May 01 1997 09:50 | 4 |
| Mike Royko-chicago tribune syndicated columnist
tho there is no love lost for this man....may he rest in peace
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156.652 | | NETCAD::SIEGEL | The revolution wil not be televised | Thu May 01 1997 13:26 | 9 |
| > <<< Note 156.651 by WMOIS::LEBLANCC "All good things in all good time" >>>
> -< And a cubs fan >-
>
> Mike Royko-chicago tribune syndicated columnist
>
> tho there is no love lost for this man....may he rest in peace
Didn't he have AIDS?
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156.653 | | SSDEVO::R_BARNES | | Thu May 01 1997 13:36 | 1 |
| no, according to news reports
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156.654 | | EVMS::OCTOBR::DEBESS | black dirt live again! | Thu May 01 1997 13:39 | 3 |
|
are you thinking of Michael(?) Brudnoy, Adam?
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156.655 | | SMURF::MROGERS | | Thu May 01 1997 13:48 | 7 |
| >>Didn't he have AIDS?
No, the paper and NPR reported that he died from complications brought
on by the stroke he suffered last weekend. There were some highlights
from his past columns in one of the papers this morning. I rarely read
a paper that carried his column so don't know much about him other than
that his readership had a love/hate relationship for him.
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156.656 | David Brudnoy | dialin_706_101.lkg.dec.com::grady | Tim Grady, OpenVMS Network Engineering | Thu May 01 1997 15:17 | 11 |
| > are you thinking of Michael(?) Brudnoy, Adam?
That would be David Brudnoy, of Boston not Chicago, and
although he has had AIDS for some time now, he claims that
medication now has brought the disease into 'remission',
no symptoms, negative blood test for the antibodies, etc.
He's an interesting case, actually...but not Royko...
tim
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156.657 | | SSDEVO::R_BARNES | | Thu May 08 1997 11:33 | 2 |
| Alvy Moore @75 years old-- played Hank Kimball,
County Agriculture Agent on Green Acres
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156.658 | Farm Living Is the Life For Me | BINKLY::CEPARSKI | May Your Song Always Be Sung | Thu May 08 1997 11:51 | 7 |
| Bummer! - Green Acres is my favorite show and
Hank Kimball my favorite character
"well not my favorite character -
well then again maybe he -
no i guess you'd say he's my favorite
and a he's a character" (here's to you Hank!)
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156.659 | | AWECIM::HANNAN | | Thu May 08 1997 14:14 | 6 |
| ... I was just humming that Green Acres theme song last evening
as I often do when cutting the lawn, bouncing around on that old
rider mower ;-) Sure seems appropriate ;);-)
/Ken
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156.660 | | UCXAXP::GRADY | Squash that bug! (tm) | Thu May 08 1997 14:35 | 2 |
| I always thought he had the funniest bit, on a show
that was full of funny schtick...
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156.661 | rfk | TEPTAE::WESTERVELT | | Thu Jun 05 1997 14:21 | 4 |
|
RFK was shot 29 years ago today...
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156.662 | Ronnie Lane | TEPTAE::WESTERVELT | | Thu Jun 05 1997 14:22 | 14 |
|
Faces' Lane Dies
The BBC reports guitarist Ronnie Lane, best known as a founding member of the
1960s rock group the Small Faces, has died of multiple sclerosis at the age
of 51. It says Lane, who had been battling the disease for 20 years and spent
most of his time in a wheelchair, died at his home in Colorado. Lane formed
the Small Faces in 1965 with singer Steve Marriott and the band went on to
enjoy great success on the back of hit songs such as ``Itchycoo Park,''
``Lazy Sunday'' and ``All or Nothing.'' The Small Faces broke up in 1969
after Marriott left but quickly reformed as the Faces, revolving around
future superstar Rod Stewart.
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156.663 | | SMURF::HAPGOOD | Java Java HEY! | Thu Jun 05 1997 17:02 | 12 |
| <<< Note 156.662 by TEPTAE::WESTERVELT >>>
Too bad about Ronnie Lane - I always liked the Faces/Small Faces.
Tough luck for these guys - didn't Marriott (Humble PIE!) die in
a fire at his home...burned whilst in an alcolholic daze a few years
ago?
On another sad note - Jeff Buckley, son of Tim, died at age 30 a few
days ago. I guess he was out boatin' on the Mississippi and decided
to swim after a few too many drinks. Man did I love the way he sang!
|