NORTH AND SOUTH – 1985, 1986, 1994

Over the past month or so, I have watched all three series of the movie based on John Jakes’ novels, NORTH AND SOUTH… ahhh…

The writing, the directing, the cinematography, the costuming, the set design, and THE MUSIC… as if all this is not enough, the assembled cast is one of the most talented ever assembled for any one movie…

  • Jimmy Stewart
  • Elizabeth Taylor
  • Patrick Swayzee
  • James Read
  • Leslie-Ann Downs
  • Jean Simmons
  • Kirstie Alley
  • Teri Garber (Luke & Larua)
  • Genie Francis
  • Wendy Kilbourne (married to James Read)
  • David Carradine
  • Inga Swenson (from BENSON)
  • Morgan Fairchild
  • Robert Mitchum
  • Hal Holbrook (ahh… the best!)
  • Robert Guilluame (BENSON)
  • Johnny Cash (too good!)
  • Gene Kelly
  • David Ogden Stiers
  • Wendy Fulton
  • Jonathan Frakes
  • Mary Crosby (Bing’s daughter)
  • Lloyd Bridges
  • Olivia De  Havilland (Melanie in GONE WITH THE WIND)
  • Wayne Newton
  • Forrest Whitaker
  • Jerry Biggs
  • Cathy Lee Crosby
  • Cliff DeYoung
  • Mariette Hartley
  • Peter O’Toole
  • Brandon Smith
  • Rip Torn
  • Robert Wagner
  • Billy Dee Williams
  • Gregory Zaragoza
  • Kyle Chandler (EARLY EDITION, KING KONG, GREY’S ANATOMY, FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS)
  • Philip Casnoff

And these are only the ones I recognize! What a tremendous cast, and a great movie.

I was in college when the movie came out, and I remember watching it in its entirety. The music, however, moved me more than anything… I can remember going to the piano and playing it. Here is a clip from the opening credits: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mh9LW_19wb8

From IMB:

1842, a special summer day at the huge plantation of Mont Royal. A South Carolinian young man, Orry Maine, leaves his rich home for West Point Academy. On his way northwards, in very strange circumstances, he meets two people who will play a decisive role in his life: beautiful lady Madeleine Fabray whom Orryhelps and with whom he falls in love and a “Yankee” George Hazard by whom Orry is helped and who is also on his way to West Point Academy. From that time, Orry and George are best friends and help each other at every moment, they fight for the USA in the Mexican War at Churubusco where George saves Orry’s life. A few years later, the friendship of Orry and George spread to the friendship of their families, the Maines from South Carolina and the Hazards from Pennsylvania. Yet, the love of Orry’s life, Madeleine gets married to Justin LaMotte, a rich cruel owner of nearby plantation in South Carolina. Their love cannot be fulfilled and they only meet in secret. Years pass by and the relations between north and south are not that calm as in the past. Northern abolitionists demand the end of slavery while the south demands secession and separation from the “damn Yankees.” Although George and Orry badly want peace between north and south, there is no escape from the inescapable fate. April, the 12th, 1861 and the attack on the northern fortress Fort Sumter done by the southerners means the beginning of war. These who fought together at Churubusco will have to fight against each other. Friends will have to become enemies. Will war be stronger than peace of mind? May the storm and noise of canons, rifles and bullets destroy honor, respect and true friendship? Written by Marcin Kukuczka

Based on John Jakes best selling novel this is the story of the friendship between two boys – George Hazard and Orry Main – that meet at West Point. George is from a wealthy Pennsylvania steel family and Orry is from a Southern plantation where his family keep slaves. In the years leading up to the Civil War their friendship is tested as their families interact and hostilities between the North and South increase. Notes: In the book Orry loses an arm during the Mexican war where he and George fight together but the in the TV version his injury is re-written as a limp. Written by Susan Southall {stobchatay@aol.com}

This sweeping, star-studded epic about two powerful families before and during the Civil War is based on John Jakes’ popular novels. The show tells the saga of the Hazards of Pennsylvania and the Mains of South Carolina and their loves, hatreds, jealousies, and robust rivalry. Book II opens in 1861 and continues the families story against the dramatic backdrop of the war. The carefully filmed battle scenes are sure to please Civil War buffs. Written by Anonymous

Two teenage boys; Orry Main from South Carolina and George Hazard from Pennsylvania, meet on their ways to military academy in West Point. Very soon, they become the best friends ever. In the Academy they spend lots of time together and together make the biggest enemy; ElkanahBent. After graduation, they go for a war with Mexico, where Orry gets hurt really bad, but is saved by George. When they return homes, they don’t give up on their friendship – their families spend summer together, their siblings falls in love, they become business-partners etc. But the situation in the country is not getting better, also not all the family members and neighbours like the idea of people from North and South being friends. In December 1860, South Carolina leaves Union. The war is much closer then it has ever been. It starts at a spring, 1861. George and Orry must fight against each other …

 

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Little Brother…

Well, as of tonight, my brother, Destin Lang Haas, is officially the principal of Benton Central Senior-Junior High School located near Fowler, Indiana.

Last November 30th, Destin was hurridly driving my sister-in-law to the hospital to deliver their second son, Frederick. Enroute to the hospital he received the news that his principal had suffered a massive stroke. Destin then became the acting principal, and tonight, the school board officially announced him as the principal.

I am so proud of my little brother!

 

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All in a weekend…

THURSDAY
  • Logan, my cat, has been with me fourteen years, today.
  • I called the dentist about my temporary crown, and they got me in at 11:40am. To save on gas, I took the bus to the Dayton Mall area. The one thing about the bus is that it forces me to walk! I logged in some great walking time. Following the dentist, I strolled through the mall – a place I generally avoid – and then went to Wal-Mart for some basics.
  • I arrived home a little after 2:00pm and took a nap, and then read my Glenn Curtiss books for three hours, taking notes. I received an email from Valerie Lockhart that Jackson did have a game, afterall, at the high school’s field. I decided to remain home until I received a last minute email from Val – Jackson learned he would be pitching… Uncle Darin could not stay home. I spent a great time with Valerie – Jackson was on the field, Mike was taking stats in the dug out, and Sophie was at camp.
  • After the game I drove to Kroger, and then home to work until 2:00am.
FRIDAY
  • Darin Jolliff is 43 years old – still. Today, Darin Jolliffe-Haas is twenty-four years old. Anniversary of my adoption.
  • Woke at 6:30am, took tea on the deck while working on studio emails. Read more on Glenn Curtiss, and then began making long, detailed notes on how to insert some new material regarding Curtiss and Alexander Graham Bell.
  • Drove to ACTION at 5:00pm, and ate salad while talking to Pat Hill. Taught a wonderful new group of prospective parents on “discipline” which I entitle “creative discipline.” After class ended at 10pm, I talked with Pat, Cissie and some others until 11:30pm.
  • At home I was wide awake. I watched a little TV, and then read, hoping to fall asleep. The last time I coherently saw the clock, it was 4:15am.
SATURDAY
  • Woke at 7:30am – wide awake. Drank my tea, ate an egg white omelet, and worked on Wright Brothers notes. At 9:00am I mowed the lawn, trimmed and raked. I took Flyer on a walk, and then returned to the deck for more scene sketching. 
  • After showering at 1:30am, I drove to Carillon Historical Park which is filled with Dayton History! Good stuff!
  • En route, Jose called me from Wal-Mart. With some of his earned money he purchased Guitar Hero. I will never see the boy once he returns home unless I venture into the basement. Again, he sounded happy and recounted all the work, and fun he has been having with Destin, Stacia, Parker and Fred.
  • Just before entering the park I ran into Ross Cali, one of my favorite musicians of all time. Ross came to the USA from Italy at the age of 17. He joined the Air Force and was in the Band of Flight. Ross married, and started Mita Copiers out of his garage. He built a wonderful little empire which he passed on to his son, Tony. Ross has played clarinet with some of the finest musicians, and best professional concert bands and orchestras all over. Ross was my principal clarinetist when I was conductor of the Centerville Community Band for seven years. Ross is just about the best there is – both as a musician, and as a person.
  • I slowly walked through the Wright exhibit – a replica of their famous cycle shop, the museum wing, and then the memorial hall where the 1905 Wright Flyer III rests – a national historical landmark. I went to the other sites, but absorbed as much Wright stuff as I could.

Newcomb’s Tavern – 1796 – original structure

 Replica of Wright Cycle Shop

  • I left the park and went to the Wright Brothers’ neighborhood – took some photos of their old home’s site.
  • Memorial structure on the original home site of the Wright’s home on Hawthorn Street.

  • Came home, ate supper, and worked until 12:30am on Wright Brothers.
SUNDAY
  • 8:00am I woke, grabbed my tea and called Mother. Watched a little of MEET THE PRESS – I know I should be open-minded, but Tim Russert made me want to watch his program. Even Dr. Schuller didn’t hold my attention.
  • I moved to the deck to work until 3:00pm when dark clouds began hovering, looking as though they would burst at any moment… they did not. I napped until 4:00pm, took care of some emails, and while typing this I have supper in the oven.
  • The rest of the evening will be filled with actual writing…
  • Tomorrow starts another teaching week of three days – but lightly filled! Over half my students are at clinics, camps, or on vacation! I am looking forward to this writing opportunity.
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This week…

Aside from Logan bringing the bunny head to the deck door, it has been a relatively quiet week. The first three days went amazingly fast, and here I am Thursday morning, ready to dig into writing on the Wrights.
 
I pulled two new books from the library on Glenn Curtiss, one of the Wrights’ biggest rivals. Curtiss is commonly known as either the fastest man on earth due to his motorcycle racing in 1900-1904, or the father of naval aviation. However, he is the villain in my show!
 
I also got a video on Alexander Graham Bell who was also against the Wrights – many do not realize that AGB was a major voice in early aviation, and worked extensively on behalf of the deaf.
 
Last night I was eating a brownie and one of my temporary crowns came off… grrr… I hate the thought of taking time out of my day to have it re-secured when I want to be writing.
 
This weekend I intend to camp out and write. I don’t believe there are any Lockhart ball games, and Jose is still having a grand time in northwestern Indiana.
 
Jeff Carter sent an email and blog attachment of his new digs in St. Louis. He officially started at Webster University this week.
 
Next week is a light week for teaching as many are gone on vacation, or will be attending camps and conferences. I am looking forward to the extra writing time. Monday I am finished at 3:30pm, and Wednesday, I have only two students at 4pm and 5pm.
 
The following week I am back on schedule with teaching and writing.
 
June 30th I will teach a few students.
 
July 1st I will head to Indiana to retrieve Pepito from Destin & Stacia, probably will need to pry his hands loose to drag him off. When he calls, he delightfully launches into what he has done, and it is always sprinkled with notes about Parker and Fred. I may need to set up a deal where Stacia sends a weekly supply of cooking – he does love Aunt Stacia’s cooking!
 
Either that evening, or the next morning we will head over into Illinois and spend a day or two in Springfield. Jose has mentioned several times he would enjoy going to the Lincoln sites again. I think he also wants to see Springfield since he lived there for approximately eight years with his birth family. Depending on the fuel issues, we may return to Dayton, and maybe take a weekend trip to Cedar Point. 
 
This week has been filled with wonderful tributes to Tim Russert. His son, Luke, a recent college graduate, was so impressive. Last Sunday, there was a beautiful photo taken of Luke following the MEET THE PRESS, which was a tribute to his father – Luke is standing in silhouette, his hand resting on his father’s empty chair at the moderating table. Very touching. The one item I loved the most was how on Friday morning, a few hours before he collapsed, Tim Russert drove over to his son’s new apartment to let the cable guy in! Tim Russert was a powerhouse in the political media, but an all around great guy and father.
 
 
Have a great week!
 
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Tim Russert…

Yesterday afternoon I just happened to turn on the television as television journalist, Tom Brokaw, was breaking the news of Tim Russert’s sudden death.

This morning, I feel as though I have lost a favorite uncle. There is an emptiness, that great sense of loss. Every Sunday morning, I would call Mother, and then hang up as the musical intro for MEET THE PRESS began. I didn’t care who was a guest, or what the topic – I watched the program to listen to “Uncle Tim.”

I can honestly say I learned more about poliitics, and feel as though I am a better American from what I learned from Tim. I have always loved politics, and Tim encouraged me to love the art of political science even more. The greatest thing I learned, and still practice, is investigate both sides of the issue.

My Sunday mornings, except for my telephone calls with Mother, and THE HOUR OF POWER, will be terribly empty with Uncle Tim. I believe Tim Russert was one of the greatest Americans of this era.

The two hour special edition of THE TODAY SHOW this Saturday morning, hosted by Matt Laurer, and a host of his colleagues and even the vice-president, was a tremendous tribute. The closing shot was of Tim’s empty chair on the set of MEET THE PRESS.

(CNN) — Tim Russert, who became one of America’s leading political journalists as the host of NBC’s “Meet the Press,” died Friday, the network said. He was 58.

Tim Russert established himself as the face of NBC’s political journalism as host of “Meet the Press.”

The network said the award-winning journalist collapsed at work Friday. He was taken to Washington’s Sibley Memorial Hospital, where he died, the hospital confirmed.

Colleague and former NBC anchor Tom Brokaw broke the news on the network Friday shortly after 3:40 p.m.

Russert had just returned from a family vacation in Italy with his wife, journalist Maureen Orth, and son, Luke, to celebrate his graduation from Boston College, Brokaw said.

“I think I can invoke personal privilege and say this news division will not be the same without his strong, clear voice,” Brokaw said Friday.

“He will be missed as he was loved — greatly.”

Friends and colleagues remembered Russert on Friday not only as one of the country’s most respected and influential political journalists, but also as a friend, a devout Catholic and an avid sports fan, especially when it came to his home team, the Buffalo Bills.

“I just loved the guy. He had this enthusiasm about all of the things that life brings to you,” said James Carville, who often attended Washington National games with Russert. “My wife and I are in a complete state of utter shock.”

Russert was born May 7, 1950, in Buffalo, New York. His parents were Timothy John Russert Sr., or “Big Russ,” a newspaper truck driver and sanitation worker, and Elizabeth Russert.

Buffalo Mayor Byron W. Brown ordered that all flags on city property be lowered immediately to half-staff in Russert’s honor.

He was a graduate of Canisius High School, John Carroll University and the Cleveland-Marshall College of Law. He was a member of the bar in New York and the District of Columbia, according to a biography on CNBC.com.

Before joining NBC, Russert served as press secretary for former New York Gov. Mario Cuomo and as chief of staff to Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan.

Russert joined the network in 1984 and quickly established himself as the face of the network’s political coverage, eventually becoming senior vice president and Washington bureau chief of NBC news.

His career at NBC was marked by a number of milestones. In 1985, Russert supervised live broadcasts of the “Today” show from Rome, Italy, negotiating an appearance by Pope John Paul II — a first for American television.

His rise to prominence coincided with his success as the best-selling author of two books, 2004’s “Big Russ and Me” and 2006’s “Wisdom of Our Fathers,” which documented his journey from blue-collar beginnings to law school to Washington powerhouse.

The memoirs, both of which were New York Times best sellers, transformed the award-winning journalist into the son of Big Russ, a Buffalo Bills fanatic, and finally, a husband and father.

Tim was a true child of Buffalo and the blue-collar roots from which he was raised,” Brokaw said Friday. “For all his success, he was always in touch with the ethos of that community.”

Russert credited his upbringing with helping him keep his ego in check as he became the man who interviewed presidents and important politicians of the day.

“If you come from Buffalo, everything else is easy. Walking backwards to school, for a mile in the snow, grounds you for life,” Russert told the Washington Post’s Howard Kurtz in 2004. “Plus, if you have a family the way I do, it’s a daily reality check.”

Russert, who also served as a political analyst for cable network MSNBC, took the helm of “Meet the Press” in 1991, turning the long-running Sunday-morning interview program into the most-watched show of its kind in the United States.

During his 17-year run as the host of “Meet the Press,” the longest of any host in the show’s 60-year history, Russert earned the respect and admiration of many journalists and politicians.

“He was an institution in both news and politics for more than two decades. Tim was a tough and hardworking newsman. He was always well-informed and thorough in his interviews. And he was as gregarious off the set as he was prepared on it,” President Bush said Friday.

His professionalism earned him many accolades. The Washingtonian Magazine once dubbed Russert the best and most influential journalist in Washington, describing “Meet the Press” as “the most interesting and important hour on television.”

In 2008, TIME magazine named him one of the 100 most influential people in the world.

Brokaw described Russert as a political junkie who threw himself into his work during this year’s presidential contest.

“This was one of the most important years of Tim’s life for many reasons,” Brokaw said. “He loved this political campaign. He worked himself to the point of exhaustion many weeks.”

He was also the recipient of numerous awards for his work, including an Emmy in 2005 for his coverage of the funeral of President Ronald Reagan.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in Family Life, Inspiration, Politics, U.S. History, U.S. Presidents | 1 Comment

Last of Disney's "Nine Old Men" dies…

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – The last of Walt Disney‘s original team of animators, known as the Nine Old Men, has died at the age of 95, a Walt Disney Co spokesman said on Tuesday.

Ollie Johnston worked for Disney for 43 years, drawing characters for animated Mickey Mouse short films before contributing to such classics such as “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs,” “Pinocchio,” “Peter Pan” and “The Jungle Book.”

Johnston died of natural causes in a long-term care facility in Sequim, Washington on Monday.

Born in Palo Alto, California in 1912, Johnston showed early artistic promise and attended Chouinart Art Institute in Los Angeles. During his final year of college in 1935, Disney approached Johnston to join his fledgling animation studio.

Starting with “Song of the South” in 1946, Johnston became directing animator and served in that capacity in nearly every subsequent film. He retired in 1978 after completing some work on his final film, “The Fox and the Hound.”

Johnston devoted his retirement to writing, lecturing and consulting and to model trains, of which he was considered one of the world’s foremost experts.

In 2005, he became the first animator awarded a National Medal of the Arts, and he and his lifelong friend and fellow Disney animator, Frank Thomas, were profiled in the 1995 documentary “Frank and Ollie.”

Disney Chief Creative Officer John Lasseter, who pioneered computer animated films such as “Toy Story” and “Cars,” considered Johnston and Thomas as mentors.

“He taught me to always be aware of what a character is thinking, and we continue to make sure that every character we create at Pixar and Disney has a thought process and emotion that makes them come alive,” Lasseter said in a statement.

Johnston is survived by two sons.

 

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Margaret Truman dies…

My favorite author, and presidential personality passed away today.

I am sad….

 CHICAGO (Reuters) – Margaret Truman Daniel, the only child of former president and famously proud father Harry Truman who became a author of popular murder mysteries, died on Tuesday at age 83, the Truman Library said.

Daniel, a long-time New York resident, died in a care facility in Chicago from complications from an infection contracted recently, said library director Michael Devine.

After living for decades in the same New York apartment, she moved to Chicago to be closer to the eldest of her four sons, Clifton, Devine said in a telephone interview from the Independence, Missouri, library.

Margaret Truman did not let being the president’s daughter keep her from pursuing first a singing career and then one as a mystery writer that took off after her father’s death in 1972.

It was her singing and his fatherly protection that ignited President Truman‘s well-known temper, leading him to write one of the most famous presidential letters in history.

After Washington Post music critic Paul Hume panned one of her vocal recitals — “Miss Truman cannot sing very well” — Truman responded from the White House that the review was “poppycock” and the critic was a “frustrated old man” who was “off the beam.”

“Some day I hope to meet you,” the president wrote Hume, ignoring the fact the critic had called his daughter “extremely attractive.” “When that happens you’ll need a new nose, a lot of beefsteak for black eyes, and perhaps a supporter below!”

Margaret Truman continued her musical career for several more years, and became a radio and television host.

Later she turned to writing books. First they were books about her family and life in the White House but beginning in 1980 she established her own genre, Washington-based mystery novels.

The titles of these 19 novels, many still in print, all included a famous landmark in the U.S. capital such as “Murder in the White House,” “Murder in the Supreme Court” and later, when a political scandal had made it one of the most well-known buildings in the country, “Murder at the Watergate.” “Murder on K Street” was published last year.

“The reviewers praised her descriptions of the Washington social scene, and the places she described were dead-on,” Devine said. “She bumped somebody off in just about every public building in Washington.”

MOVE TO WASHINGTON

Margaret Truman was born February 17, 1924, in Independence, Missouri, and moved to Washington a decade later when her father was elected to the Senate.

By the time she graduated from George Washington University in 1946, her father had become president and he delivered the commencement address and handed her diploma.

She took her first voice lesson when she was 16 and made her concert debut singing with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra on a nationwide radio hookup in 1947.

Her singing career continued for the next decade with numerous concerts, including one at Carnegie Hall in New York, and appearances on television shows like Ed Sullivan‘s “Toast of the Town” program.

In 1955, she substituted for Edward R. Murrow on his popular “Person to Person” show and interviewed her parents after they had moved out of the White House. She became a radio program host, interviewing prominent writers on a feature called “Authors in the News.”

In 1956, she married Clifton Daniel, who in the 1960s would become managing editor of The New York Times. He died in 2000, the same year their son William was killed in a New York traffic accident — dealing her a double blow, Devine said.

She was an avid supporter of presidential libraries, including her father’s, in partnership with other children of former presidents.

She is survived by three sons and five grandchildren.

Posted in Eleanor Roosevelt, First Ladies, Harry Truman, Inspiration, U.S. History, U.S. Presidents, White House | Leave a comment

The Lady is at rest…

Yesterday, I watched some video clips of Mrs. Johnson’s memorial service, and interment service. I realized I had tears in my eyes. My first First Lady is now a part of those eternal ages that have claimed the likes of so many like her. People like Lady Bird Johnson, Beverly Sills, and so many others like them are the folks from whom I reassure myself that I am on the right track: I am a good person, I try my best, I love my God and my fellow man, and I am contributing something to this world in the great attempt to make my own individual contribution something that counts.

While a majority of my country men follow, in the news and tabloids, the lives of the likes of Paris Hilton, Brittany Spears, the Royals, etc., I choose to follow, and appreciate the lives of the truly great who will live on for many generations.

While our country was engaged in hideous turmoil of the late 1960’s, Mrs. Johnson taught us how to wade through the ugliness to build a world in technicolor beauty.

 

The daughters of President & Mrs. Johnson

MRS. JOHNSON LAID TO REST

STONEWALL, Texas — Lady Bird Johnson arrived at her final resting place beneath a canopy of oak trees Sunday, beside the late President Lyndon Baines Johnson at the family’s ranch in the Texas Hill Country.

Relatives and close friends of the Johnsons said a final goodbye to the former first lady near the banks of the Pedernales River.

Grandson Lyndon Nugent said Johnson made all her grandchildren feel special, whether she was taking them on hiking and camping trips or, especially in her later years, quietly visiting with them at the LBJ Ranch.

His mother, Luci Baines Johnson, reminded her children for more than three decades that it was important to spend as much time as possible with their grandmother, whom they called “Nini,” because “she might not be here tomorrow,” Nugent said.

“Sadly, tomorrow has arrived,” he said.

Johnson, who died Wednesday at 94, was remembered as an astute businesswoman, a woman who worked to preserve nature and the devoted wife of a president.

“I’m not sure why she was so preoccupied with this, but she always seemed to be wondering if she had done enough for the world, regardless of her own condition,” Nugent said.

Along with Nugent’s remembrance, prayers and “Amazing Grace” completed the brief service, held in the Johnson family cemetery where the late president and more than 30 other extended family members are buried.

Lyndon Johnson, who died in 1973, was president from 1963-69. Once he left office, he and Lady Bird Johnson retired to the ranch and Austin.

Earlier in the day, thousands of admirers, many clutching bundles of the wildflowers she loved, lined streets in Austin and roads in the Hill Country as Lady Bird Johnson’s body was taken from the state capital to the LBJ Ranch, about 70 miles west of Austin.

Members of the crowd applauded and cheered as the procession passed through downtown Austin, and a few women blew kisses.

Outside Austin, people gathered along highways and in little towns, many holding American flags, some clutching wildflowers and some holding umbrellas against the hot sun.

Wildflowers and a sign reading “Thank You Lady Bird” adorned a tractor. Another sign read “God Bless a Great Woman.”

More people lined the streets of Johnson City, President Johnson’s boyhood home, and the main street was lined with little Texas and American flags stuck in flower pots.

In Austin, retiree Kate Hill handed out sunflowers from her garden to people waiting for the procession. Hill said Johnson’s work inspired her to convert her grassy lawn into an expanse of wildflowers and other native plants, and she wanted to thank the former first lady for the beauty.

“It’s the passing of an era,” said Sarah Macias, 48, who works for the city’s parks department and came to watch with her husband and a co-worker.

Three days of ceremonies had started Friday with family prayer services and a public visitation at the LBJ Library and Museum. More than 11,500 people paid their respects over nearly 22 hours.

About 1,800 people, including family, friends and presidents, attended a two-hour funeral Saturday at Riverbend Centre overlooking the Hill Country. People attended included former presidents Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter, first lady Laura Bush and former first ladies Rosalynn Carter, Nancy Reagan, Barbara Bush, and Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton. 

 

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A Day At Monticello…

Continue reading

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My First Lady…

I was born in the fall of 1964.  A month later, Lyndon Johnson was elected president in his own right, and one of the most brilliant woman in American history was to remain in the White House as First Lady for another four years.

 Lady Bird Johnson was MY first First Lady, and I have always adored her. Friends called to share the news, and friends and family immediately sent Emails relating her passing….

 

AUSTIN, Texas (CNN) — Lady Bird Johnson, who was first lady during the 1960s and in her later years became an advocate for beautifying public landscapes, died Wednesday, family spokesman Tom Johnson said. She was 94.

art.292x219.lbj.jpg

Lady Bird Johnson’s real name was Claudia.

She was the widow of Lyndon Baines Johnson, sworn in as the nation’s 36th president on November 22, 1963, just hours after President John F. Kennedy’s assassination.

Lady Bird Johnson was briefly hospitalized last month with a low-grade fever. She was released and returned to her Austin home on June 28. After suffering a stroke in 2002 that limited her ability to speak, she communicated chiefly by writing.

Upon news of her death, Texas Gov. Rick Perry ordered flags in the state to be flown at half-staff.

“Lady Bird Johnson embodied all that is beautiful and good about the great state of Texas,” Perry said. “She inspired generations of Americans with her graceful strength, unwavering commitment to family and keen sense of social justice.”

The former first lady was born Claudia Alta Taylor in 1912 in Karnack, Texas, a small town near the Louisiana line. She got her unusual nickname while still a toddler from her nurse, who proclaimed the child was as “purty as a lady bird.”

Lady Bird attended St. Mary’s Episcopal School for Girls, a junior college near Dallas and then transferred to the University of Texas at Austin. She graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in history in 1933, then stayed an extra year to earn a journalism degree.

She hoped to become a newspaper reporter, but those plans changed after she met a 26-year-old congressional aide named Lyndon Baines Johnson.

They married in 1934 after a whirlwind courtship and soon moved to Washington.

Early on, Lady Bird Johnson proved herself to be the quintessential political wife. In 1937 she used part of an inheritance to fund her husband’s first bid for public office and campaigned with him to win a congressional seat.

She used more of her mother’s money and Johnson’s connections to purchase a faltering Austin radio station in 1942 for $17,500. She turned it around and later used the station as a base for a multimillion-dollar communications company based in Austin.

After three failed pregnancies, she gave birth to the Johnsons’ first daughter, Lynda Bird, in 1944, followed by Luci Baines three years later.

Lyndon Johnson rose quickly in politics, becoming the youngest Senate majority leader.

In 1960, Johnson set his sights on the presidency but lost the Democratic nomination to Kennedy. A day later, he agreed to become Kennedy’s running mate.

Lady Bird Johnson traveled more than 35,000 miles during that campaign.

After one of the closest presidential elections in U.S. history, Johnson was sworn in as vice president on January 20, 1961.

With Kennedy’s assassination, Johnson became the 36th president.

As the Johnsons moved into the White House, Lady Bird Johnson “went around and went to all of the staff that was remaining in their jobs, told them how happy she was to have them there,” said Leticia Baldridge, Jacqueline Kennedy’s former social secretary.

“She needed their help. She needed their support. And, of course, they all just immediately turned from supporting the Kennedys to supporting the Johnsons. That’s what the staff does in the White House.”

In the landslide election of 1964, Lyndon Johnson won victories in the Northeast, West and Southwest. Of the eight Southern states that many had expected to vote for Republican Barry Goldwater, six went for LBJ — in part, it was said, because of the first lady’s efforts.

During her husband’s one term as president, Lady Bird Johnson worked tirelessly for the beautification of America, promoting the Highway Beautification Act, which sought to limit billboards. She was also a strong advocate for the Head Start program.

In 1982, she founded the National Wildflower Research Center outside of Austin. The center was renamed the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center in 1998. Its mission is the research and preservation of native plants throughout the United States.

Public and private memorial services are planned, but details have not yet been released, the Austin American-Statesman reported. Events are likely to include a public viewing at the LBJ Library on the campus of the University of Texas at Austin, followed by a funeral in Austin and burial next to her husband at the LBJ Ranch 35 miles west of Austin, the paper reported.

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Someone's son…

 

This photo was flashed across the television news last night, and on the front page of the Dayton Daily News. He was one of the several thousand sons, brothers, grandsons, nephews, cousins, neighbors, students, and friends, whose life was cut short due to the tyranical leadership of those villains who have been mis-leading this country in a war that should have never been considered….

 My thoughts and prayers go out to Marine Cpl. Derek C. Dixon’s family and friends…

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Kings Island…

5:00am came toooooo early this past Saturday morning! I went to bed at 11:00pm Friday night, and woke up promptly at midnight.  At 1:30am, I drifted off to sleep, and the alarm clock began beeping at 4:45am.

I rose, watered plants, completed more prepping for the day, showered, and then began herding Tom, Jose, and Bill through the showers.

We were at school at 6:30am, left at 6:45am, and arrived at Loveland Middle School for the contest at 8:00am. The choirs did a fantastic job.

By 9:30am, we were at the front gate of Kings Island waiting for the park to open at 10:00am. People were gathered at one side, prepared to race towards the new coaster, Firehawk. The signs were posted that it would not open until Noon, but that did not stop folks from racing towards the premiere ride.

Loretta Henderson, the KMS choir director, and I paired off and had a blast on Delirium, Top Gun, Adventure Express, Face Off, and Racer. We had lunch where Jose and Bill joined us at a separate table – typical teens! 

Just as we were prepared to go into Flight Of Fear, there was an announcement that Firehawk, after a 45 minute opening delay, was to open. Our teacher friend, Tina McNachten had just arrived to join us for the day, and the three of us raced to the line of Firehawk where we waited from 12:45pm-4:15pm. Excruciatingly long in wait, but so worth it! Wow!

http://www3.paramountparks.com/kingsisland/attractions/detail.cfm?ai_id=494

We ate supper, and enjoyed more rides: the Beast, Top Gun again, Delirium again, Vortex, and a few other things before it was time to meet at the front entrance at 9:30pm.

We arrived home by 11:00pm, saw kids off with parents, dropped Bill & Tom off, and then Jose and I dragged our butts home, and into bed… only to get up early for church.

(Above) KMS choir students at the front entrance at Kings Island.

(Above) Two of the best teaching gal-pals in the world, Tina McNachten, left, and Loretta Henderson, right.

(Above) Tom, Bill, & Jose at Kings Island.

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Your Best Life Now

I have always been a major fan of authors Norman Vincent Peale and Robert Schuller. Recently, my cousin from Texas told me about this new church opening at the Compaq Center in Houston. I began following the build-up to the event and shared the info with my mother. One day she told me one of the police officers with whom she works was reading Your Best Life Now by Joel Osteen, the minister of this new church. I got the book from the library and it is wonderful. Generally, I am apprehensive of books written by ministers as they tend to delve too much of their own doctrine, which is fine, but not for me. Joel Osteen, like Peale and Schuller, has a remarkable way of presenting these life enriching thoughts. Here is an outline of what Osteen has to say:

Enlarge your vision:
* Your own wrong thinking can keep you from God’s best
* Envision your own success
* You must receive it in your mind and heart before you can receive it

Raise your level of expectancy:
* Program your mind for success
* Break out of your self-imposed prison
* Find somewhere you can dream

God has more in store:
* What you will receive is directly connected to how you believe
* Break curses

Break barriers of the past:
* Clear the battles of the mind
* Each day is a new day
* Get some fire in your spirit
* Let God open doors
* Don’t let anything keep you down

Develop a healthy self image:
* You will never rise above the image you have of yourself in your mind
* Change your self image
* Don’t focus on weaknesses

Understand your values:
* Learn to be happy with your self

Become what you believe:
* We receive what we believe
* What you believe has much greater impact on your life than what anybody else believes
* Dare to believe for greater things

Develop a prosperous mind-set:
* Learn to appreciate differences
* Be the best that you can be, then you can feel good about yourself

Choose the right thoughts:
* Constantly think about what you are thinking
* Set your mind on higher things
* When you think positive, excellent thoughts, you will be propelled toward greatness
* If you transform your mind you will transform your life
* God believes in you

Reprogram your mental computer:
* You are programmed for victory

Power in your words:
* What you say in the midst of your difficulties will have a great impact on how long you stay in those situations
* Stop talking about how big your mountains are to God, and start talking to your mountains about how big your God is
* Guard what you say

Speak life changing words:
* avoiding negative talk is not enough… you must get on the offense

Let go of emotional wounds:
* Make the most of what you have
* Change the channel – just like the remote for your television set
* Get up and get moving

Don’t let bitterness take root:
* Forgive to be free
* Forgiveness is a choice, but is not an option

Defeat disappointments:
* You can’t unscramble eggs
* Don’t become trapped in the past

Find strength through adversity:
* Even when we are sitting down on the outside, we must see ourselves as standing on the inside
* Keep on standing firm

Trust God’s timing:
* God often works the most when we see it and feel it the least

Trials have a purpose:
* It’s in the tough times of life that we find out what we’re really made of
* The trial is a test of your faith, character and endurance

Keep your heart of compassion open

Choose to be happy – it is a choice:
* Happiness is a decision you make, not an emotion you feel
* Don’t worry about the things you cannot change

Live with enthusiasm – don’t go through the motions in life – have enthusiasm!

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Favorite Quotes

The empires of the future are the empires of the mind.
~ Winston Churchill

Every heart that has beat strongly and cheerfully has left a hopeful impulse behind it in the world, and bettered the tradition of mankind.
~ Robert Louis Stevenson

Enthusiasm is the best protection in any situation. Wholeheartedness is contagious.
Give yourself, if you wish to get others.
~ David Seabury

We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act but a habit.
~ Aristotle

Nothing will ever be attempted, if all possible objections must first be overcome.
~ Samuel Johnson

Every heart that has beat strongly and cheerfully has left a hopeful impulse behind it in the world, and bettered the tradition of mankind.
~ Robert Louis Stevenson

There is no such thing as a great talent without great will-power.
~ Honore de Balzac

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Ed McMahon says "Good Bye" to Johnny Carson

The ultimate side-kick talks about his friendship with the former ‘Tonight Show’ host in ‘Here’s Johnny!’

Johnny Carson, the longtime host of “The Tonight Show,” was a TV icon — and behind every icon is a loyal second banana. For 30 years, Ed McMahon heralded the arrival of the king of late night television in his familiar way, and was the amiable and relaxed set-up guy for Johnny’s famous one liners. As Carson’s reign on the “Tonight Show” came to an end, he graciously acknowledged McMahon’s steadfast friendship. Now, McMahon has written about that friendship in a new book, “Here’s Johnny.”

Read an excerpt.
“Johnny,” I said a few months before he died, “we’ve had so many wonderful memories, both on and off the show, that nobody knows about.”

“We’d better keep it that way,” he said, “especially that night at Jilly’s when those two nutty …. Of course, we didn’t do anything.”

“No, not that memory, but all the others. I’d love to share them with everyone in a book.”

“Well, you’re the only one to do it,” he said. “And you can do it anytime in the next century.”

“But so many people …”

“Ed, write ‘A Boy’s Life of Wayne Newton’ first. Or ‘The Wit and Wisdom of Fats Domino.’‘ Or the story of the Lincoln Tunnel: For Whom the Tolls Toll.’ Or …”

“Stop!” I said, laughing hard. “Johnny, there are so many worthless books being published.”

“And you want to write another one? Hey, how about writing ‘The Joy of Zinc’ for all the people who find romance in minerals?”

“Seriously, Johnny,” I said, “every day a dozen people ask me, ‘What’s Johnny Carson really like?’ ”

“The same dozen? Well, just tell them the truth. I’m an easygoing sociopath whose hobbies are bungee jumping, collecting swimsuit pictures of Jack LaLanne, and doing Zen meditation with P. Diddy. We pray for a new name for him.”

Too Soon
My heart breaks to think that I do not have to wait until the year 2100 to write my memories of Johnny Carson. At a few minutes after seven o’clock on the morning of January 23, 2005, the telephone rang in my Beverly Hills house. My wife, Pam, answered it and her hand fell to her heart. As the blood drained from her face, she silently handed the phone to me. I didn’t need Sherlock Holmes to know what had happened.

“Johnny,” I said.

Pam’s look said it all. In dismay, I took the phone.

“Ed,” said Johnny’s nephew, Jeff Sotzing, “Johnny just died.

“Oh, no, no.”

“You’re my first call. He would have wanted me to call you first. I know how much you two meant to each other.”

Being at a loss for words isn’t my style, but it was then.

“Jeff … I … I don’t know what to say.”

“You don’t have to.”

“I’m reeling now. Let me call you back.”

Then I started to cry — the first tears that Pam ever saw me shed.

The following day, I just lay in bed, watching all the tributes to Johnny, crying one minute, laughing the next. It was a style of mourning you don’t often see.

“Ed,” I can hear Johnny saying, “You needed a grief counselor. Or maybe one for volleyball.”

In the following weeks, I went on many radio and TV shows, on each of them paying tribute to Johnny. And one day, his widow, Alexis, called.

“Ed,” she said, “I’ve seen everything you’ve done. You’ve been magnificent.”

“Johnny would’ve hated it all,” I said.

“Yes, wouldn’t he? But it’s so wonderful you’re doing it. I love you, Ed, just as Johnny did.”

Friends
Skitch Henderson once said that I treated everyone with love, an observation that made me sound more like a captain in the Salvation Army instead of a colonel in the U.S. Marines. Well, I haven’t always treated everyone with love. In 1952, I dropped several unloving things on some North Koreans. But I always felt a little extra love for Johnny, who dropped a few bombs of his own when we were together.

Most comic teams are not good friends or even friends at all. Laurel and Hardy didn’t hang out together, Abbott and Costello weren’t best of friends, and Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis — well, there were warmer feelings between Custer and Sitting Bull. However, Johnny and I were the happy exception. Although he was my boss, we shared the unwavering affection of a couple of equals who drove themselves to work, finally found the right wives, and liked to lose themselves in drumming and singing while listening to jazz.

For forty-six years, Johnny and I were as close as two non-married people can be. And if he heard me say that, he might say, “Ed, I always felt you were my insignificant other.”

On his farewell show, I was deeply moved when Johnny told America, “This show would have been impossible to do without Ed. Some of the best things we’ve done on the show have just been … well, he starts something, I start something … Ed has been a rock for thirty years and we’ve been friends for thirty-four. A lot of people who work together on television don’t like each other, but Ed and I have been good friends. You can’t fake that on TV.”

No, you can’t. George Burns said, “In show business, the most important thing is sincerity. And if you can fake that, you’ve got it made.” However, there was no faking what Johnny and I felt for each other.

Every year on our anniversary show, October 1st, Johnny would turn to me and say, “I wouldn’t be sitting in this chair for [fill in a number from two to thirty] years if it weren’t for this man beside me. He’s my rock.”

My booming laugh on The Tonight Show was never just a conditioned reflex, but always a genuine appreciation for the man who could come up with something like: “A woman was arrested out here in Los Angeles for trading sex not for money but for spaghetti dinners. Would that make her a pastatute?”

That line came from Johnny, not one of his writers, none of whom had wit that approached his.

On another night, Madeline Kahn and Johnny were talking about their fears.“Anything particular that you’re afraid of?” he asked her.

“Well, it’s strange, Johnny,” she said, “but I don’t like balls coming toward me.”

“That’s called testaphobia,” Johnny said.

Johnny always managed to come up with just the right line, or just the right gesture, or a blend of both.

Ice Water?
“Johnny Carson has ice water in his veins,” some people used to say.

To which Johnny once replied, “That’s just not true; I had all the ice water removed. I did it in Denmark many years ago.”

He also had a less comic reply: “Ed, I’m so tired of the same old crap: people telling me, ‘You’re cool and aloof.’ They always want to know why I’m cool and aloof instead of hot and stooped. You’ve known me for eighteen years. Am I cool and aloof?”

“No, my lord.”

Johnny had developed the reputation for being cold and aloof because he was uncomfortable with people he didn’t know, but I knew him better than anyone outside of his family and I can tell you there was never any ice water to remove. In July of 1995, when my son Michael died at forty-four from stomach cancer, Johnny called me with just the right words. And after speaking those words, he said, “There’s not a day when you won’t think of him.”

Ice water? When his own son Rick was killed in a car crash in 1991, Johnny gave a short, moving eulogy that let America know what flowed in his veins.

“I’m not doing this to be mawkish, believe me,” he said as he showed a picture of Rick an
d then some of Rick’s nature photographs. “Rick was an exuberant young man, fun to be around. And he tried so hard to please. You’ll have to forgive a father’s pride in these pictures.”

The final one was a sunset.

And America knew that warm flow again on the next to last Tonight Show, when Bette Midler sang to Johnny and his eyes moistened on hearing “You Made Me Love You” and “One for My Baby and One More for the Road.”

That was one of the very few times I saw Johnny tearful. I can remember only three others: at Jack Benny’s funeral; when Alex Haley, the author of Roots, gave Johnny a leather-bound volume entitled ‘Roots of Johnny Carson — A Tribute to a Great American Entertainer’ with the inscription, “With warm wishes to you and your family from the family of Kunta Kinte” on the flyleaf; and when Jimmy Stewart read “I’ll Never Forget a Dog Named Beau,” a poem about his golden retriever. The poem was forgettable, but Johnny was moved by the way Jimmy Stewart delivered it. Jimmy was a blend of great actor and great person. Both Johnny and I were in tears. Just a couple of maudlin mutt mourners.

Achingly Missed
I don’t think I will ever be able to accept that Johnny is gone. His favorite song, “I’ll Be Seeing You,” is hard for me to hear now, much harder than hearing Stevie Wonder sing it to Johnny on one of the last shows. So often I look at a phone with a sinking feeling because I can’t pick it up and get to him.

“And well you know that sinking feeling,” Johnny would say, “from all the nights we went into the tank.”

Johnny Carson is achingly missed. The critic James Wolcott described him as “cool, unflappable, precise, Carson always knew how to pivot. He was comedy’s blue diamond, the master practitioner, the model of excellence.”

Yes, blue diamond, this large rhinestone remembers well how you pivoted with all those guests who suddenly made you dance with them. You weren’t Fred Astaire, but you weren’t Fred Mertz either. You danced endearingly one night with Pearl Bailey to “Love Is Here to Stay,” moving with an airy blend of comedy and grace. You danced courageously with Vlasta, the international queen of polka, who easily could have made you look like someone falling down stairs. And the night I watched you rhumba with that fat woman from Detroit, looking funny but not foolish, never mocking her but sweeping her along with that same airy blend, I wondered, Is there nothing this man can’t do?

For more than three decades, we performed together on two television shows and at road shows, conventions, and state fairs. We read each other so well that either of us could launch a bit and the other would know where to take it. When a dog in one of my Alpo commercials walked away from the food instead of eating it, Johnny knew how to jump right in. On all fours, he crawled over to the food bowl and became TV’s first animal understudy.

When Johnny said that one of Joan Embrey’s chimps was seven or eight years old and I said, “No, Johnny, I think he’s nine,” we looked at each other and were off on another flight from an unlikely launching pad.

“Let me get this straight, Ed,” said Johnny, tapping the pencil he often held. “You’re correcting me about the age of a chimp?”

“Sorry, Johnny,” I said, playing it just as straight, “but a man has got to have standards. You start with faking the age of chimps and then you fake elephants and the next thing you know, you’re five years younger yourself. You just work your way up.”

“Or down.”

“Yes, that’s certainly another way to look at it.”

“Ed, you studied philosophy in college and maybe even learned a little. In the grand scheme of things, how important is the age of a chimp?”

“Well, maybe not important to Plato,” I said.

“Right. Plato had hamsters.”

“But you’ll have to admit it’s certainly important to the chimp.”

“Eight, nine … he’s too young to drive anyway.”

“But not for certain theme park rides, if the cutoff is nine and not eight.”

“I have a theme park ride in mind for you, Ed. The half-built roller coaster.”

Since Johnny’s death, every national magazine except Cattleman’s Quarterly has been telling things about him that small children already knew. Well, I’m going to tell you some things that neither small children nor large adults know. Here, with Johnny’s nervous blessing, is my answer to that question that almost drove this second banana bananas: What was Johnny really like? And as I spin these memories, I’ll be hearing him say, “Easy on the bull, Ed, or I’ll find a way to have Carnac let everyone know that the Marine Corps issued you a security blanket.”

On his last show, Johnny read this line from a letter: “Now we’ll see if Ed McMahon really thinks you’re funny.”

A cute line. But for anyone seriously wondering if I was the world’s greatest actor for thirty-four years, these pages contain the resounding answer.

Excerpted from “Here’s Johnny!” by Ed McMahon. Copyright © 2005 by Ed McMahon. Published by Rutledge Hill Press, a Division of Thomas Nelson books. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt can be used without permission of the publisher.

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Back from summer break…

It was funny that I should receive three Emails on the same day, inquiring about my blogs. I really appreciate those Emails.

I took the summer off from writing the blogs. I really don’t have a good reason for doing so, but I did. I did miss writing them, and reading the various responses posted on the blog, or Email.

So here is a recap from the summer:

JUNE
Not much happened. I began my regular summer schedule of teaching only on Mondays, Tuesdays, and Wednesdays, mornings, afternoons, and very early evenings. I figured I would spend my Thursdays and Fridays writing; however, that did not materialize since I was busy running boys to dentist or doctor appointments, running errands, and doing other things. I did participate in a book reading club on Thursday evenings and that was enjoyable.

JULY
Again, nothing major happened. The Fourth of July, usually one of my favorite holidays, was rather dull. We watched the downtown Dayton fireworks off the river, and then the Kettering fireworks. Jeffrey Carter and his son, AJ, from Ball State, stopped by one Friday morning as they headed east for a Washington, DC/Virginia vacation, and that afternoon, Mother, Dena and my nephews came over for a weekend visit to celebrate Matthew’s 17th birthday. We did a lot of biking and hiking. Several of my students were in summer musicals, such as Oklahoma!, Bye, Bye Birdie, and The Music Man – and they all did a super job! I assisted a good number of students in their preparations for the Muse Machine summer production in which I had 24 former or current students performing. Jeff Carter, en route from a quick trip to Kings Island to view a show, stopped by for cheese cake, lemon bars and coffee. I sang in a quartet at church with Kristen Zimmann, Chris & Nathaniel Stevens, accompanied by Dana Peters.

AUGUST
The biggest thing with August was Mother coming over to visit for a few days. The boys got their schedules for school, Jose had friends over several times a week, and besides biking, going to church, and enjoying visits, it was a fairly quiet month.

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Things Are Getting In Iraq~

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Sands Of Iwo Jima

Last week, one of my 12 year old students – a terrific WWII nut – asked me why the small island of Iwo Jima was such an important strategic hold when it was mostly rock, volcanic sand, and a non-functioning volcano. I emailed my friend, retired Army captain and current social studies teacher, Bill Hetzer, about this and while waiting for a response, did some research on my own.
Iwo Jima, 8 square miles (four long, two wide) was also an airfield for the Japanese. Our Marines landed February 19, 1945, among them, my great-great-uncle, 19 year old Glennard Daugherty. Unfortunately, Glennard was shot and killed by a sniper on February 25th as he rushed into open fire to rescue a fallen Marine.
This afternoon, I noticed that the Victoria Theatre, normally one of our houses that stages live theatre and touring companies, was presenting, as one of their “Hot Summer Movie Nights” the movie, The Sands Of Iwo Jima, starring John Wayne. Jose and I rode the bus downtown, ate a wonderful Chinese dinner, and entered the Victoria. The hydraulic stage was raised and a gentleman of considerable years was playing the organ – and what an organ! It was so reminiscent of those golden years, and I am so glad Jose got a taste of what my grandparents knew in their era. It was as though Lawrence Welk had been transported back to Dayton for the evening. I think, of all the adults, I brought the average age in the hall down to at least 70! Prior to the movie, we were all delighted with a Bugs Bunny & Elmer Fudd cartoon! In the movie were three of the men who had actually raised the flag on Mount Surabachi on Iwo Jima. I also learned from the program notes that when John Wayne placed his prints in the cement in front of Grauman’s Chinese Theatre, the cement was mixed with sand from the beaches of Iwo Jima.
About the movie…
The Depths of Stryker in Sands of Iwo Jima
by Rob Wilsey
Gary Wills writes of Sgt. Stryker, “Sgt. Stryker is still with us today… lurking in a thousand mens’ adolescent pasts… Wayne is the ideal to which no boy’s father, or coach, or teacher… can quite live up.”
It is this miss characterization that I want to address, the one dimensional analysis of social critics like Wills overlooks the vital sub text in the character of Stryker. Stryker is at base a tragic figure, and the film presents him as a counterpoint to his own ethos which had been used to fill the ideological vacuum of the war.
Contrary to popular belief many American’s didn’t know what they were fighting for in 1945, combat troops in particular learned quickly the hollowness of the catch phrases fed to the public about why the war was fought. “
The war seemed so devoid of ideological content that little could be said about its positive purposes that made political or intellectual sense especially after the Soviet Union joined.” American soldiers in the Pacific were motivated mainly by the desire to survive and the intense race hatred bred by both effective home front propaganda and the brutal nature of Japanese opposition. “
As the war drew on and casualties more numerous… there developed a sense that sheer pragmatic unverbalized action on behalf of the common cause would somehow substitute for formulations of purpose or meaning.”
Into this vacuum stepped films like the Why We Fight series of Frank Capra, and in 1949 Sands of Iwo Jima. Sands, on the surface, represented perfectly what journalist Robert Sherrod wrote while on Tarawa: “The Marines didn’t know what to believe in, except the Marine Corps.”
But the sub text of the film portrays this belief as the destructive force it is in the duality between Stryker and Conway.
Pvt. Conway (played by John Agar) says of Stryker “there goes the hard product of a hard school.” This is what Stryker is, the necessary evil; the man who sacrificed his home life (he is estranged from his wife and son) for the service of his country. But this is not the ideal being put forth in the film. The ideal in the film for the postwar audience is the character of Agar. “The implication is that Agar is the father we will need for the post war age, one who could give his son’s Shakespeare instead of the Marine manual.”
This is where Wills’ analysis fails, by neglecting the presentation of Stryker as a man who is by all measures (and we are told in the letter to his son, by his own as well) — a failure. He exists only for the war, and his sudden death at the end confirms this. The message to fill the ideological vacuum was that all the meanings of the war, all the exterminationist rhetoric that is curiously absent in the film — are obsolete, along with the hard men who fought it, “the suggestion is being made that men like Sgt. Stryker are needed when they are needed, but that they are not needed in peacetime, and peacetime is now.”
“The personal bond between leader and follower lies at the root of all explanations of what does and does not happen.” The bond between Stryker and his men, and between the viewer and Wayne is forged throughout the film, and when Wayne dies his ethos dies with him; he is at the root of all the meaning. The meaning he carries with him, the hardness of the war, the singular, pragmatic, nihilistic dedication: all that dies with Wayne. We are left in the end with John Agar, who said before “I’m a civilian, I’m in this strictly for tradition.” The man who would give his son Shakespeare speaks for all the men who fought and hoped their sons would live lives without Tarawa and Iwo Jima. Ultimately the character of Stryker is the representation of what was thought to be no longer needed, the film revolves so thoroughly around Wayne that one cannot, as Wills does, separate his death from the death of the message he carries.
More about the battle of Iwo Jima….
On Monday, February 19, 1945, U.S. Marines hit the sands of Iwo Jima. The battle for Iwo Jima can be described in many ways.Most simply, 70,000 Marines routed 22,0000 Japanese in a 36 day battle. It bore little resemblance to today’s’ modern warfare. It was a fight of gladiators. Gladiators in the catacombs of the Coliseum fighting among trap doors and hidden tunnels. Above ground gladiators using liquid gasoline to burn the underground gladiators out of
their lethal hiding places.
The Marines had overwhelming force and controlled the sea and air. The Japanese had the most ingenious and deadly fortress in military history. The Marines had Esprit de Corps and felt they could not lose. The Japanese fought for their god-Emperor and felt they had to die fighting.
The Marines were projecting American offensive power thousands of miles from home shores with a momentum that would carry on to create the Century of the Pacific. The Japanese were fighting a tenacious defensive battle protecting the front door to their ancient land. The geography, topography and geology of the island guaranteed a deadly and bizarre battle. The large numbers of men and small size of the island ensured the fighting would be up close and vicious.
Almost one hundred thousand men would fight on a tiny island just eight square miles. Four miles by two miles. If you’re driving 60 miles an hour in your car, it takes you four minutes to drive four miles. It took the Marines 36 days to slog that four miles. Iwo Jima would be the most densely populated battlefield of the war with one hundred thousand combatants embraced in a death dance over an area smaller than one third the size of Manhattan island.
From the air the island looked like a bald slice of black moonscape shaped like a porkchop. All its foliage had been blown off by bombs. The only “life” visible on the island were puffs of “rotten egg” stinking sulphur fumes coming from vents that seemed connected to hell. Correspondents in airplanes could see tens of thousands of Marines on one side of the island fighting against a completely barren side of stone.
On foot it was a morass of soft volcanic sand or a jumble of jagged rock. The Marines sought protection in shell holes blasted by the bombardment. Foxholes were impossible to dig, either the sand collapsed in on you or your shovel failed to dent the hard obsidian floor. Bullets and mortars would come from nowhere to kill. The Marines would come across a cave or blockhouse and shoot and burn all its defenders to death. They would peer into the cavern and assure themselves no one was left there to hurt them. They’d move on only to be shocked when that “dead” position came alive again behind them. The Marines thoughtthey were fighting men in isolated caves and had no idea of the extensive tunnels below.
A surgeon would establish an operating theater in a safe place. With sandbags and tarp he’d build a little hospital and treat his patients away from the battle. Then at night when he lay down exhausted to sleep he’d hear foreign voices below him. Only when his frantic fingers clawed through the sand and hit the wooden roof of an underground cavern would he realize he had been living atop the enemy all along.
The days were full of fear and nights offered terror. The Marines were sleeping on ground that the Japanese had practiced how to crawl over in the darkness, they knew every inch. Imagine sleeping in a haunted man-sion where the owner is a serial murderer who knows the rooms and stairways and trapdoors by touch and you are new. Then you can imagine the tortured sleep of the Marines.
Experienced naval doctors had never seen such carnage. Japanese tanks and high caliber anti-aircraft guns hidden behind walls of rock and concrete ensured that the Marines would not just be cut down, but cutin half or blown to bits.A seventy five year old veteran of Iwo Jima would still reflexively open his bedroom window in 1999 after dreaming of the battle once again. Fifty four years after the battle the stench of death still filled his nostrils.
The bodies lay everywhere. Young boys who had never been to a funeral became accustomed to rolling another dead buddy aside. Kids full of life worked on burial duty unloading bodies from trucks stacked with death.
Mothers back home would tear open the ominous telegrams with trembling fingers. The survivors would remember sailing away and seeing the rows and rows of white crosses and stars of Davids. Almost seven thousand. Today there are still over six thousand Japanese dead still entombed under the island, dead where they fell in their tunnels and caves. Recently two hundred sixty were excavated, some mummified by the sulphur gases, their glasses sitting straight atop preserved noses, hair still on their heads.
Military geniuses predicted a three day battle, an “easy time.” Some of the nicest boys America would ever produce slogged on for thirty six days in what would be the worst battle in the history of the US Marine Corps.
Generals conferred over maps while tanks, airplanes, naval bombs and artillery pounded the island. But it was the individual Marine on the ground with a gun that won the battle. Marines without gladiator’s armor who would advance into withering fire. Marines who would not give up simply because they were Marines. A mint in Washington would cast more medals for these Iwo Jima heroes than for any group of fighters in America’s history.
America would embrace these heroes, but they were enthralled by an image of heroism, by a photo. Millions of words would be written in the US about 1/400th of a second no one on Iwo Jima thought worthy of remark at the time. Thousands would seek autographs from three survivors who felt “we hadn’t done much.” Battles would be fought over that image, some dying early because of their inclusion, some living bitterly because of their exclusion. But that would all come later. After two battles were fought on Iwo Jima, one for Mt. Suribachi and the southern part of the island the other for the northern part. And after one hundred thousand individual battles, personal battles of valor and fear, of determination and dirt.
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Things To Think About…

1- I’d kill for a Nobel Peace Prize.
2- Borrow money from pessimists – they don’t expect it back.
3- Half the people you know are below average.
4- 99% of lawyers give the rest a bad name.
5- 42.7% of all statistics are made up on the spot.
6- A conscience is what hurts when all your other parts feel so good.
7- A clear conscience is usually the sign of a bad memory.
8- If you want the rainbow, you gotta put up with the rain.
9- All those who believe in psycho kinesis, raise my hand.
10- The early bird may get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.
11- I almost had a psychic girlfriend, but she left me before we met.
12- OK, so what’s the speed of dark?
13- How do you tell when you’re out of invisible ink?
14- If everything seems to be going well, you have obviously overlooked something.
15- Depression is merely anger without enthusiasm.
16- When everything is coming your way, you’re in the wrong lane.
17- Ambition is a poor excuse for not having enough sense to be lazy.
18- Hard work pays off in the future, laziness pays off now.
19- I intend to live forever; so far, so good.
20- If Barbie is so popular, why do you have to buy her friends?
21- Eagles may soar, but weasels don’t get sucked into jet engines.
22- What happens if you get scared half to death twice?
23- My mechanic told me, “I couldn’t repair your brakes, so I made your horn louder.”
24- Why do psychics have to ask you for your name?
25- If at first you don’t succeed, destroy all evidence that you tried.
26- A conclusion is the place where you got tired of thinking.
27- Experience is something you don’t get until just after you need it.
28- The hardness of the butter is proportional to the softness of the bread.
29- To steal ideas from one person is plagiarism; to steal from many is research.
30- The problem with the gene pool is that there is no lifeguard.
31- The sooner you fall behind, the more time you’ll have to catch up.
32- The colder the x-ray table, the more of your body is required to be on it.
33- Everyone has a photographic memory; some just don’t have film.

And…

34- If your car could travel at the speed of light, would your headlights work?

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Coach Randy Walker

Monday I received an Email from a student’s parent regarding a reschedule due to the mother needing to leave town for her cousin’s memorial service in Chicago. I responded with a few words of condolence, and learned shortly thereafter that her first cousin was famed college football coach, Randy Walker, who recently died of a heart attack. Yesterday afternoon, following my student’s lesson, I spoke with her mother for some time, and shared with her a few words in an Email from my brother regarding his respect for Randy as a coach, more importantly, as a teacher. I learned from the parent that Randy and his wife were eagerly awaiting the arrival of their first grandchild.

From the internet…

Northwestern University football coach Randy Walker has died of an apparent heart attack, the school announced early Friday. He was 52.

Mike Wolf, Northwestern’s assistant athletic director for media services, said Walker died suddenly at about 10 p.m. Thursday after experiencing chest pains at his suburban Chicago home.
“This is a devastating loss, not only for our athletic program, but for the entire Northwestern community,” Northwestern Director of Athletics Mark Murphy said in a statement released by the school.
“Randy truly embraced Northwestern and its mission, and cared deeply for his student-athletes, both on and off the field.”
Two months ago, Northwestern gave Walker a four-year extension through the 2011 season. He joined the school in 1999 after nine years at Miami of Ohio.Walker’s Wildcats posted 37 wins, going 7-5 last season. He led the team to three bowl games since 2000, including a 50-38 loss to UCLA in Sun Bowl in December.Northwestern shared the Big Ten title in 2000. Walker was the first Wildcats coach to guide the team to four seasons with at least six wins since C.M. Hollister in 1899-1902.
In October 2004, Walker checked himself into a hospital after experiencing chest pains before his weekly football season news conference. He was hospitalized with an inflammation of the heart muscle, known as myocarditis, that usually is caused by a virus.
When Randy Walker was hired as Northwestern’s football coach in 1999, one of his goals was to field a team that could regularly contend for a postseason bowl berth. Now in his eighth year, and coming off three successive seasons of six or more wins — the first time Northwestern has accomplished that in 74 years — Walker has the Wildcats achieving one of his program’s missions.

“We want to be competitive on an annual basis and put our program in position to play for something in November, whether that be for a Big Ten title or a bowl berth,” says Walker. “We’ve been able to do that the past few seasons.”

Here are some of the other firsts for Walker, who is now the second winningest coach in Northwestern history:

• first NU football coach to own victories over all 10 Big Ten Conference foes
• first NU coach since C.M. Hollister (1899-1902) to record four six-or-more win seasons
• first NU coach to beat Ohio State in Evanston since 1958, and the first to beat the Buckeyes since 1971
• first NU coach to beat Penn State at Beaver Stadium

Perhaps more important than his on-field achievements, Walker has accepted the AFCA’s Academic Achievement Award three of the past four years (2002, 2004 and 2005). Northwestern, which annually touts a graduation rate of 90 percent or better, had 100-percent rates for those years.

Walker came to Northwestern after serving as the head football coach at Miami (Ohio) University for nine seasons. The 51-year-old departed Oxford as the winningest head coach in school history with a mark of 59-35-5 (.621) — a great honor considering the list of coaches who had gone before him. Dubbed the “Cradle of Coaches,” Miami has produced such football legends as Earl “Red” Blaik, Paul Brown, Carmen Cozza, Sid Gillman, Weeb Ewbank, Woody Hayes, Bill Mallory, Ara Parseghian, Bo Schembechler and Dick Crum, to name a few.

While at Miami, Walker did not shy away from scheduling quality competition. In his last two seasons at Miami, the RedHawks recorded nonconference wins over Army (38-14 in 1997, 14-13 in 1998), Virginia Tech (24-17) and North Carolina (13-10). In 1995, Miami handed Northwestern its only regular-season loss when the RedHawks upset NU, 30-28, during the Wildcats’ Rose Bowl season.

Prior to his assistant coaching days at NU, Walker spent 10 seasons (1978-87) at the University of North Carolina. In 1985, he was named offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach for the Tar Heels after spending the previous seven campaigns as the running backs (1978-81) and quarterbacks (1982-87) coach. Walker coached in six postseason games at UNC, and the Tar Heels went 4-2 in those games, beating Michigan in the Gator Bowl (1979), Texas in the Bluebonnet Bowl (1980), Arkansas in the Gator Bowl (1981), and Texas in the Sun Bowl (1982). The two losses came at the hands of Florida State in the Peach Bowl (1983) and Arizona in the Aloha Bowl (1986).

A native of Troy, Ohio, Walker graduated from Miami University in 1976 with a B.A. in social studies education and, in 1981, earned his master’s degree in education administration.

Following his graduation from Miami in 1976, Walker was drafted by the Cincinnati Bengals, and after a short stint with them he returned to Oxford to help as a graduate assistant. The following year he became a full-time assistant in charge of running backs.

Walker is married to the former Tamara Weikert. The couple has two children — Abbey, 28, and Jamie (NU, ’04), 25, who serves as a football recruiting assistant at Northwestern, and a son-in-law, Brian Boudreau. They reside in Evanston.

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History Lesson

Unless you know all four stanzas of the Star Spangled Banner you may find this most interesting. Bet most of you didn’t realize what Francis Scott Key’s profession was or what he was doing on a ship. This is a good brush-up on your history.

“NO REFUGE COULD SAVE,” BY DR. ISAAC ASIMOV

Near the end of his life the great science fiction author Isaac Asimov wrote a short story about the four stanzas of our national anthem. However brief, this well-circulated piece is an eye opener from the dearly departed doctor…

I have a weakness — I am crazy absolutely nuts, about our national anthem. The words are difficult and the tune is almost impossible, but frequently when I’m taking a shower I sing it with as much power and emotion as I can. It shakes me up every time.

I was once asked to speak at a luncheon. Taking my life in my hands, I announced I was going to sing our national anthem — all four stanzas. This was greeted with loud groans. One man closed the door to the kitchen, where the noise of dishes and cutlery was loud and distracting. “Thanks, Herb,” I said.

That’s all right,” he said. “It was at the request of the kitchen staff.”

I explained the background of the anthem and then sang all four stanzas. Let me tell you, those people had never heard it before — or had never really listened. I got a standing ovation. But it was not me; it was the anthem.

More recently, while conducting a seminar, I told my students the story of the anthem and sang all four stanzas. Again there was a wild ovation and prolonged applause. And again, it was the anthem and not me.

So now let me tell you how it came to be written.

In 1812, the United States went to war with Great Britain , primarily over freedom of the seas. We were in the right. For two years, we held off the British, even though we were still a rather weak country. Great Britain was in a life and death struggle with Napoleon. In fact, just as the United States declared war, Napoleon marched off to invade Russia . If he won, as everyone expected, he would control Europe, and Great Britain would be isolated. It was no time for her to be involved in an American war.

At first, our seamen proved better than the British. After we won a battle on Lake Erie in 1813, the American commander, Oliver Hazard Perry, sent the message, “We have met the enemy and they are ours.” However, the weight of the British navy beat down our ships eventually. New England , hard-hit by a tightening blockade, threatened secession.

Meanwhile, Napoleon was beaten in Russia and in 1814 was forced to abdicate. Great Britain now turned its attention to the United States , launching a three-pronged attack.

“The northern prong was to come down Lake Champlain toward New York and seize parts of New England .

The southern prong was to go up the Mississippi , take New Orleans and paralyze the west.

The central prong was to head for the Mid-Atlantic States and then attack Baltimore , the greatest port south of New York . If Baltimore was taken, the nation, which still hugged the Atlantic coast, could be split in two. The fate of the United States , then, rested to a large extent on the success or failure of the central prong.

The British reached the American coast, and on August 24, 1814, took Washington , D.C. Then they moved up the Chesapeake Bay toward Baltimore . On September 12, they arrived and found 1,000 men in Fort McHenry , whose guns controlled the harbor. If the British wished to take Baltimore , they would have to take the fort.

On one of the British ships was an aged physician, William Beanes, who had been arrested in Maryland and brought along as a prisoner. Francis Scott Key, a lawyer and friend of the physician, had come to the ship to negotiate his release.

The British captain was willing, but the two Americans would have to wait. It was now the night of September 13, and the bombardment of Fort McHenry was about to start.

As twilight deepened, Key and Beanes saw the American flag flying over Fort McHenry . Through the night, they heard bombs bursting and saw the red glare of rockets. They knew the fort was resisting and the American flag was still flying. But toward morning the bombardment ceased, and a dread silence fell. Either Fort McHenry had surrendered and the British flag flew above it, or the bombardment had failed and the American flag still flew.

As dawn began to brighten the eastern sky, Key and Beanes stared out at the fort, trying to see which flag flew over it. He and the physician must have asked each other over and over, “Can you see the flag?”

After it was all finished, Key wrote a four stanza poem telling the events of the night. Called “The Defense of Fort McHenry,” it was published in newspapers and swept the nation. Someone noted that the words fit an old English tune called, “To Anacreon in Heaven” — a difficult melody with an uncomfortably large vocal range. For obvious reasons, Key’s work became known as “The Star Spangled Banner,” and in 1931 Congress declared it the official anthem of the United States .

Now that you know the story, here are the words. Presumably, the old doctor is speaking. This is what he asks Key:

Oh! say, can you see, by the dawn’s early light,
What so proudly we hailed at the twilight’s last gleaming?
Whose broad stripes and bright stars, through the perilous fight,
O’er the ramparts we watched were so gallantly streaming?
And the rocket’s red glare, the bombs bursting in air,
Gave proof thro’ the night that our flag was still there.
Oh! say, does that star-spangled banner yet wave,
O’er the land of the free and the home of the brave?

“Ramparts,” in case you don’t know, are the protective walls or other elevations that surround a fort. The first stanza asks a question. The second gives an answer:

On the shore, dimly seen thro’ the mist of the deep,
Where the foe’s haughty host in dread silence reposes,
What is that which the breeze, o’er the towering steep.
As it fitfully blows, half conceals, half discloses?
Now it catches the gleam of the morning’s first beam,
In full glory reflected, now shines on the stream
‘Tis the star-spangled banner. Oh! long may it wave
O’er the land of the free and the home of the brave!

“The towering steep” is again, the ramparts. The bombardment has failed, and the British can do nothing more but sail away, their mission a failure. In the third stanza, I feel Key allows himself to gloat over the American triumph. In the aftermath of the bombardment, Key probably was in no mood to act otherwise.

During World War II, when the British were our staunchest allies, this third stanza was not sung. However, I know it, so here it is:

And where is that band who so vauntingly swore
That the havoc of war and the battle’s confusion
A home and a country should leave us no more?
Their blood has washed out their foul footstep’s pollution.
No refuge could save the hireling and slave
From the terror of flight, or the gloom of the grave,
And the star-spangled banner in triumph doth wave
O’er the land of the free and the home of the brave.

The fourth stanza, a pious hope for the future, should be sung more slowly than the other three and with even deeper feeling:

Oh! thus be it ever, when freemen shall stand
Between their loved homes and the war’s desolation,
Blest with victory and peace, may the Heaven – rescued land
Praise the Power that hath made and preserved us a nation.
Then conquer we must, for our cause is just,
And this be our motto –“In God is our trust.”
And the star-spangled banner in triumph doth wave
O’er the land of the free and the home of the brave.

I hope you will look at the national anthem with new eyes. Listen to it, the next time you have a cha
nce, with new ears. Pay attention to the words. And don’t let them ever take it away …. not one word of it!

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Molly McCLure

I got to thinking today about one of my former student’s grandmother, Molly McClure. Born as Mary Ella Karnes, in 1919, in Kentucky, her mother passed away a week after she was born and she was adopted by an uncle and his wife. She was always attracted to acting and the stage and co-founded a theater company in her hometown of Paducah,Kentucky. She is divorced from Rush McClure. She raised three daughters on her own. When her youngest daughter graduated from high school and went away to college, she moved to Los Angeles to pursue her lifelong dream of becoming an actress on the stage and screen. She retired from the acting business and moved to Texas with her oldest daughter, where she still lives. The highlight of her life is getting recognized for her work when she goes out in public.

Molly originated the role of Mama Wheelis in Daddy’s Dyin’ Who’s Got The Will?, in Los Angeles, followed by a run at the Edinburgh Drama Festival and the MGM movie. Other stage credits include Ada Lester (Tobacco Road) and Mrs. Mavis (The Traveling Lady) both of which earned her the L.A. Drama-Logue awards. She played Hank Williams’ Mama Lillie in the Mark Taper Forum Production of Lost Highway.

She is frequently recognized in Texas as George Strait’s Grandma Ivey in Pure Country. She was the Rancher’s wife in City Slickers I and II, and a prospective nanny in Mrs. Doubtfire.

She played Naomie on The Young and the Restless (1991 – 1992 season) and had guest appearances on Evening Shade, Jack’s Place, Murphy Brown, Murder She Wrote, Quantum Leap, Northern Exposure, Picket Fences and Walker Texas Rangers.

She is Caliope’s Mother in the just released Wishbone video Dog Days of the West and was seen in The Patriot starring Steven Seagal.

Molly McClure, is the mother of Mickie Norfleet (former piano student) and grandmother of Erin Norfleet (former voice, piano, acting student; directed Erin in several shows).

Actress – filmography
The Patriot (1998/I) …. Molly
Finding North (1998) …. Aunt Bonnie
“Walker, Texas Ranger”Rainbow’s End (1997) TV Episode …. Sally Calhoun – Case Closed (1995) TV Episode …. Elderly Woman
“Dead Man’s Walk” (1996) (mini) TV Series …. Old lady in Austin… aka Larry McMurtry’s Dead Man’s Walk
Under the Hula Moon (1995) …. Grandmother
“Northern Exposure”The Big Mushroom (1995) TV Episode …. Elli Thompson
City Slickers II: The Legend of Curly’s Gold (1994) …. Millie Stone… aka City Slickers II (USA: short title) … aka City Slickers: The Legend of Curly’s Gold (UK)
“Picket Fences”System Down (1994) TV Episode …. Mrs. Bayles
A Gift from Heaven (1994)
Mrs. Doubtfire (1993) …. Housekeeper
Precious Victims (1993) (TV) …. Trudy
“When Love Kills: The Seduction of John Hearn” (1993) (mini) TV Series …. Marjorie
Tainted Blood (1993) (TV) …. Lucille
“Murphy Brown”A Year to Remember (1992) TV Episode …. Volunteer #1
Pure Country (1992) …. Grandma Ivy Chandler
Final Shot: The Hank Gathers Story (1992) (TV) …. Cashier
In Sickness and in Health (1992) (TV) …. Rhonda… aka Hearts on Fire
“The Torkelsons”I Fought the Law (1991) TV Episode …. Gertrude Perkins
City Slickers (1991) …. Millie Stone
“Quantum Leap”8 1/2 Months – November 15, 1955 (1991) TV Episode …. Mrs. Suffy
“Murder, She Wrote”Trials and Tribulations (1990) TV Episode …. Hester
Daddy’s Dyin’… Who’s Got the Will? (1990) …. Mama Wheelis
Everybody’s Baby: The Rescue of Jessica McClure (1989) (TV)
The Women of Brewster Place (1989) (TV) …. White Woman
Winnie (1988) (TV) …. Farm Woman
Arthur 2: On the Rocks (1988) (as Molly Mc Clure) …. Greta
Moving (1988) …. Puzzle Lady
Mistress (1987) (TV) …. Rae’s Aunt

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Quotes from Walt Disney

Two weeks ago, our pastor, Monte Stevens, gave a fantastic sermon that began with components of Walt Disney’s life. Since working with Larry Boye and Fritz Mountford, who were both directors for Walt Disney & EPCOT, I have had an even greater fascination for Walt Disney. This morning, Chris Stevens and I were talking about how much we loved Mr. Disney, and I tried to recall several quotes – of course, I could not at the time. So I Googled Disney’s quotes and found these. How blessed America was to have grown such an inspiring man!

“I am interested in entertaining people, in bringing pleasure, particularly laughter, to others, rather than being concerned with ‘expressing’ myself with obscure creative impressions.””We are not trying to entertain the critics. I’ll take my chances with the public.”

-“You can design and create, and build the most wonderful place in the world. But it takes people to make the dream a reality.”

-“All cartoon characters and fables must be exaggeration, caricatures. It is the very nature of fantasy and fable.”

-“When you’re curious, you find lots of interesting things to do. And one thing it takes to accomplish something is courage.”

-“I don’t like formal gardens. I like wild nature. It’s just the wilderness instinct in me, I guess.””Somehow I can’t believe there are any heights that can’t be scaled by a man who knows the secret of making dreams come true. This special secret, it seems to me, can be summarized in four C’s. They are Curiosity, Confidence, Courage, and Constancy and the greatest of these is Confidence. When you believe a thing, believe it all the way, implicitly and unquestionably.”

– “We allow no geniuses around our Studio.”

-“Movies can and do have tremendous influence in shaping young lives in the realm of entertainment towards the ideals and objectives of normal adulthood.”

-“I never called my work an ‘art’ It’s part of show business, the business of building entertainment.”

-“I am not influenced by the techniques or fashions of any other motion picture company.”

-“Whenever I go on a ride, I’m always thinking of what’s wrong with the thing and how it can be improved.”

-“The way to get started is to quit talking and begin doing.”

-“Laughter is America’s most important export.”

-“People still think of me as a cartoonist, but the only thing I lift a pen or pencil for these days is to sign a contract, a check, or an autograph.”

-“Why do we have to grow up? I know more adults who have the children’s approach to life. They’re people who don’t give a hang what the Joneses do. You see them at Disneyland every time you go there. They are not afraid to be delighted with simple pleasures, and they have a degree of contentment with what life has brought – sometimes it isn’t much, either.”

-“The era we are living in today is a dream of coming true.”

-“There is more treasure n books than in all the pirates’ loot on Treasure Island and at the bottom of the Spanish Main … and best of all, you can enjoy these riches every day of your life.”

-“Your dead if you aim only for kids. Adults are only kids grown up, anyway.”

-“Or heritage and ideals, our code and standards – the things we live by and teach our children – are preserved or diminished by how freely we exchange ideas and feelings.”

-“I have been up against tough competition all my life. I wouldn’t know how to get along without it.”

-“Crowded classrooms and half-day sessions are a tragic waste of our greatest national resource – the minds of our children.”

-“You reach a point where you don’t work for money.”

-“f all of our inventions for mass communication, pictures still speak the most universally understood language.”

-“I have no use for people who throw there weight around as celebrities, or for those who fawn over you just because you are famous.”

-“Adults are interested if you don’t play down to the little 2 or 3 year olds or talk down. I don’t believe in talking down to children. I don’t believe in talking down to any certain segment. I like to kind of just talk in a general way to the audience. Children are always reaching.”

-“A man should never neglect his family for business.””When we consider a project, we really study it–not just the surface idea, but everything about it. And when we go into that new project, we believe in it all the way. We have confidence in our ability to do it right. And we work hard to do the best possible job.”

-“I believe in being an modivator.”

-I only hope that we don’t lose sight of one thing – that it was all started by a mouse.”

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Too funny!

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USS New York

Artists Rendering of the USS New York

With a year to go before it even touches the water, the Navy’s amphibious assault ship, USS New York, has already made history. It was built with 24 tons of scrap steel from the World Trade Center.

It is the fifth in a new class of warship – designed for missions that include special operations against terrorists. It will carry a crew of 360 sailors and 700 combat-ready Marines to be delivered ashore by helicopters and assault craft.

Steel from the World Trade Center was melted down in a foundry in Amite, La., to cast the ship’s bow section. When it was poured into the molds on Sept. 9, 2003, “those big rough steelworkers treated it with total reverence,” recalled Navy Capt. Kevin Wensing, who was there. “It was a spiritual moment for everybody there.”

Junior Chavers, foundry operations manager, said that when the trade center steel first arrived, he touched it with his hand and the “hair on my neck stood up.”

“It had a big meaning to it for all of us,” he said. “They knocked us down. They can’t keep us down. We’re going to be back.”

The ship’s motto? – ‘Never Forget’

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