Author |
Topic |
Tutta
Advanced Member
Germany
32401 Posts
Member since 19/02/2010 |
Posted - 22/11/2017 : 02:26:22
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+IN HOC SIGNO VINCES+
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Edited by - Tutta on 07/06/2018 12:51:42 |
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Tutta
Advanced Member
Germany
32401 Posts
Member since 19/02/2010 |
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Tutta
Advanced Member
Germany
32401 Posts
Member since 19/02/2010 |
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Tutta
Advanced Member
Germany
32401 Posts
Member since 19/02/2010 |
|
Tutta
Advanced Member
Germany
32401 Posts
Member since 19/02/2010 |
|
Tutta
Advanced Member
Germany
32401 Posts
Member since 19/02/2010 |
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Tutta
Advanced Member
Germany
32401 Posts
Member since 19/02/2010 |
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Tutta
Advanced Member
Germany
32401 Posts
Member since 19/02/2010 |
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Tutta
Advanced Member
Germany
32401 Posts
Member since 19/02/2010 |
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Tutta
Advanced Member
Germany
32401 Posts
Member since 19/02/2010 |
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Tutta
Advanced Member
Germany
32401 Posts
Member since 19/02/2010 |
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Tutta
Advanced Member
Germany
32401 Posts
Member since 19/02/2010 |
Posted - 23/11/2017 : 03:23:56
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DON UGLOW & THE TEDDY BOYS - She Rocked With Me (1958)
After barely escaping with my life from another adventure I had in the wild Congo looking for records (no, really!), I made it back to my lair, and man... I'm TOTALLY excited about this latest find! OK, enough of that... this is, in my humble view, a fantastic flop of 50's corky and cool, teenage awesomeness. So, put your wighat on and enjoy!
COBWEBS - Devil Girl '66 (CHIMNEY SWEEPS)
OK, this time's record offering comes from the Cobwebs, or Chimney Sweeps as they supposedly also went by - and when it comes to primitive, lo-fi garage (yikes!), this one easily hits the top 5 - it almost sounds like a demo track, or at least a 'take'. These guys were from Australia and were a pretty obscure act from what I've managed to find out, apparently they only made a few gigs and eventually this somehow got on wax. Now this isn't most people's bag of musical tastes, but I LOVE this stuff - a party record in my opinion, anytime ! Enjoy the tune folks (and the radio trailer too). |
+IN HOC SIGNO VINCES+
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Edited by - Tutta on 23/11/2017 05:21:49 |
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Tutta
Advanced Member
Germany
32401 Posts
Member since 19/02/2010 |
Posted - 23/11/2017 : 03:40:17
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The soldier and the nurse from the D-Day kiss picture in Times Square
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+IN HOC SIGNO VINCES+
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Edited by - Tutta on 25/11/2017 14:20:48 |
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Tutta
Advanced Member
Germany
32401 Posts
Member since 19/02/2010 |
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Tutta
Advanced Member
Germany
32401 Posts
Member since 19/02/2010 |
Posted - 24/11/2017 : 01:22:16
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London’s Carnaby Street gets in the festive spirit (1964)
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+IN HOC SIGNO VINCES+
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Edited by - Tutta on 24/11/2017 07:59:20 |
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Tutta
Advanced Member
Germany
32401 Posts
Member since 19/02/2010 |
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Tutta
Advanced Member
Germany
32401 Posts
Member since 19/02/2010 |
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Tutta
Advanced Member
Germany
32401 Posts
Member since 19/02/2010 |
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Tutta
Advanced Member
Germany
32401 Posts
Member since 19/02/2010 |
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Tutta
Advanced Member
Germany
32401 Posts
Member since 19/02/2010 |
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Tutta
Advanced Member
Germany
32401 Posts
Member since 19/02/2010 |
Posted - 24/11/2017 : 05:16:19
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1913 CHEVROLET CLASSIC SIX TYPE C TOURING CAR: This car has serial number 93 and is the oldest known factory production Chevrolet. The Sloan Museum in Flint, Michigan has serial number 323 which was the oldest known Chevrolet prior to the confirmation of this vehicle. This model is the only production model Chevrolet never to wear the famous bow-tie emblem. The 299 cubic inch displacement engine was the largest offered by Chevrolet until 1958. |
+IN HOC SIGNO VINCES+
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Edited by - Tutta on 27/11/2017 08:17:58 |
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Tutta
Advanced Member
Germany
32401 Posts
Member since 19/02/2010 |
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Tutta
Advanced Member
Germany
32401 Posts
Member since 19/02/2010 |
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Tutta
Advanced Member
Germany
32401 Posts
Member since 19/02/2010 |
Posted - 24/11/2017 : 05:33:49
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Old Photos: Miss Mizzou
After a popular post about the sorority girls of KU I searched the Life photo archives for something about the University of Missouri. There weren’t too many photographs but they led me to this interesting story.
In 1959 the Life Magazine published an article Famous Cartoonists Share a Silver Jubilee. One of the cartoonists was the future Hall-of-Famer Milton Caniff – creator of the famous comic strip Steve Canyon.
Infamous Miss Mizzou appears among other “ever-luscious ladies” who frequently graced the comic strip (sorry for the quality, I had to splice this from two sides of the magazine).
(Caniff's strange dames are luscious but for Canyon unattainable. These are Copper Calhoon,financier; Princess Snowflower, victim of Red Chinese; Convoy, lovable war waif; Poteet Canyon, a teenage kissin' cousin; Miss Mizzou from Missouri; Savannah Gay, actress; Summer Olson, sweet but married; Cheetah, the pert Oriental; Herself Muldoon, underworld queen; Gilberta Hall, blind and lovely; Doe Redwood, Pilot; Feeta-Feeta, secretary; Deen Wilderness, doctor; and Madame Lynx, spy. ©Time Inc.Milton Caniff)
Some sources report that Miss Mizzou, who was introduced in 1952, was patterned after Marilyn Monroe, others mention a model named Bek Stiner.
“For some time I had been mulling over a girl character who would be what a Marilyn Monroe type might be like if she had not hit the jackpot in Hollywood,” Caniff explained in a 1954 letter. “Every college town has girls who live and work on the edge of the campus and who are very much a part of the life of the school, but who who do not get invited to fraternity formals. Usually they come up from small towns and often become as loyal to the school as the best-heeled alumnae. I decided my gal wold be from the University of Missouri, if not of it.”
But he did also base the character off of Bek Stiner (born Bek Nelson) too. He would often model new characters off of real people with the intention of having the photos of the model in the paper to publicize the strip.
Even though Miss Mizzou was fictional, the street-naming fiasco mentioned in Life was real, warranting a humorous article in the 1958 Time Magazine:
Faintly but distinctly, the mesmeric boomlay-boom of publicity drums on Manhattan’s Madison Ave. is heard 980 miles away in Columbia (pop. 43,000), site of the University of Missouri. Stout-souled citizens wonder what is wrong. Chamber of Commerce members writhe to the beat and get the message. It is so nonsensical that at first it seems to be garbled: name the new boulevard (boom-lay boom) after Milton Caniff.
In the end, the name Providence Road won.
One of the subheadings in the Life article was titled: Can Real Girls Ever Catch Up? Apparently the same question was on the minds of the students of the University of Missouri, whose Journalism fraternity Sigma Delta Chi started publishing an annual Miss Mizzou calendar in 1956. So without further ado I present few photos from the 1960 Miss Mizzou Beauty Contest. I’ll leave it up to you to decide if there is any clothing under these trench-coats.
(University of Missouri student, Julie Raney winner of Miss Mizzou beauty contest. ©Time Inc.Michael Rougier)
(©Time Inc.Michael Rougier)
(©Time Inc.Michael Rougier)
(©Time Inc.Michael Rougier)
(©Time Inc.Michael Rougier)
(©Time Inc.Michael Rougier)
(©Time Inc.Michael Rougier)
(©Time Inc.Michael Rougier)
Bonus: Before there was email.
(Female student typing a letter at the University of Missouri.1937.© Time Inc.Alfred Eisenstaedt) |
+IN HOC SIGNO VINCES+
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Edited by - Tutta on 10/06/2018 00:19:16 |
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Tutta
Advanced Member
Germany
32401 Posts
Member since 19/02/2010 |
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Topic |
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