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278_trollstigen
Trollstigen (Troll ladder) Norway

The bends are tight and the gradient is steep—nine percept—but the view at the end is so rewarding. The Stigfossen waterfall puts how far you’ve climbed into perspective.

See the other 9 roads HERE

When I was 6 my family spent the summer holiday  in the western part of Norway and just before we were to drive down this road one of the welds that held the left back suspension broke on our Opel Rekord 1955 model so each time my dad used the breaks on the way down it made a terrible scraping noise. My mother was scared almost witless – Ted

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T
easmades possibly represent the nadir of industrial design, combining Rube Goldberg, or more appropriately, Heath Robinsonesque unnecessary mechanic complexity with technological denialist styling and often capped off with horrid little lampshades.

Appropriately enough, these diabolical devices were pioneered by a brand called Goblin, and were rendered obsolete after unfashionable UK Prime Minister, John Major’s wife Norma confessed to having one in Downing St. Sadly, someone is making them again.

See the rest of the contraptions HERE

268_Rhythm & BluesThe history of modem pop and rock music consists essentially of the eruption of Afro American styles into the white dominated entertainment industry. It is not a question of Afro American forms influencing the mainstream, as some accounts would have it. In an aesthetic if not a commercial sense, the Afro American popular tradition is in itself better described as the mainstream.

Afro American in America have, of course, been heavily influenced by the majority musical cuIture for three centuries. But because they have generally had to absorb and re-create those influences in the context of exclusion from or repression by white society, mixing the ‘European’ elements with what had been retained from Africa, their music developed a separate identity; and as particular styles were adopted by, and adapted for, the mass entertainment market, the Afro American audience continued to demand that its own distinctive tastes were satisfied.

Read the whole article HERE

All posts material: “Sauce” and “Gentleman’s Relish” by Ronnie Barker – Hodder & Stoughton in 1977

A letter From Lily

Paris Sept. 2nd, 1904

Just a line to let you know I have settled in nicely, and the show is going well. I have quite a nice lot of dancing to do and things in it. Don’t they talk funny over here! Luckily Ivy speaks it, so when I’m with her I’m all right (which is not always).

I thought you’d like to know what a typical day is Like. Well, yesterday for instance.

I didn’t get up while nearly half-past one, as the first night had been late (or at least the goings-on afterwards). I’ve got good digs with a nice double big bed. I’m not wearing those nighties you made me as it’s too hot. I bought a French one. It’s got lace round the top and fur round the bottom. To keep my shoulders warm, Ivy says, but I don’t know what she means.

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At two o’clock I had a bath. There is a maid at the digs, who baths you and puts your clothes on. Then the landlord comes in and tries to take them off again .. Only yesterday it wasn’t the landlord, it was a gentleman from the press. That was at four. He didn’t get anywhere, as I had to go out for a drive with Ivy. But there was a mix-up. When we met in the park, she’d come by bike, so we both went home again, as you can see on the card, at six p.m.

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At seven, I met the Manager of the show he had invited me to, as he said "partake of a pair o ‘teeth " with him. I didn’t like the sound of it, but it was all right, it turned out to be just drinks. Then he asked me to "share his dinner" with him, but I said can we have one each, and he laughed at that.

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So, by ten 0′ clock we was doing the show. This is the Egyptian scene. I know the costumes don’t look much, but the Manager says he can’t afford lavish costumes like the big shows; and anyway, its not cold – you can feel the steam rising from the front row of the stalls. The only awkward moment is when we kneel and pray to the Sphinx – that’s when the pea-shooters come out. But its all very artistic really. letter_ill_004

After the show, I had supper with the Manager, but my feet were killing me so I didn’t enjoy it much. After supper, we went to his to my to home. How’s Dad and ‘Tiddles? Write soon.

Your loving daughter, Lily.

P.S. I may be getting a bigger part in the show, the Manager says. He says I deserve one. L.

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I remember well the Christmas I got my slot car set, my dad and my uncle played with it all night and I had to get up before dawn on the 25th to get my first try – Ted 😉
(In Norway we open our presents on the 24th)

Image found on Paul Malon’s Flickr photostream

I Had No Idea…

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… Burberry made cellos –Ted

Image found on soyouthinkyoucansee

274_Silvia Dionisio_05Silvia Dionisio (born 28 September 1951) is an Italian actress who appeared in several movies in the 1970s, including Amici miei and Ondata di piacere.

Born in Rome, Dionisio made her debut in the world of cinema when she was only 14 years old., in the movie Darling. Her career followed with parts in mediocre musical Italian movies, along with singers like Mario Tessuto, Gianni Dei, Little Tony and Mal. On the set of one of these movies she met director Ruggero Deodato, who became her husband. The two had a son, Saverio Deodato-Dionisio, who worked as an actor.
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In 1975 Dionisio was protagonist of Ondata di piacere, the sole truly erotic movie of her career, directed by Deodato. In the same year, she played Ugo Tognazzi’s lover in the comedy Amici miei, by Mario Monicelli. In late 1970s she played in several action or sexy movies, but in the early 1980s left the cinema.

Her last appearance was in a liqueur spot directed by Federico Fellini.

Text from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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262_Odetta_001Odetta Holmes (December 31, 1930 – December 2, 2008), known as Odetta, was an American singer, actress, guitarist, songwriter, and a civil and human rights activist, often referred to as "The Voice of the Civil Rights Movement". Her musical repertoire consisted largely of American folk music, blues, jazz, and spirituals. An important figure in the American folk music revival of the 1950s and 1960s, she was influential to many of the key figures of the folk-revival of that time, including Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, Mavis Staples, and Janis Joplin. Time included her song "Take This Hammer" on its list of the All-Time 100 Songs, stating that "Rosa Parks was her No. 1 fan, and Martin Luther King Jr. called her “the queen of American folk music."

Early life and career
Odetta was born in Birmingham, Alabama, grew up in Los Angeles, California, attended Belmont High School, and studied music at Los Angeles City College while employed as a domestic worker. She had operatic training from the age of 13. Her mother hoped she would follow Marian Anderson, but Odetta doubted a large black girl would ever perform at the Metropolitan Opera. Her first professional experience was in musical theater in 1944, as an ensemble member for four years with the Hollywood Turnabout Puppet Theatre, working alongside Elsa Lanchester; she later joined the national touring company of the musical Finian’s Rainbow in 1949.

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While on tour with Finian’s Rainbow, Odetta "fell in with an enthusiastic group of young balladeers in San Francisco", and after 1950 concentrated on folksinging.

She made her name by playing around the United States: at the Blue Angel nightclub (New York City), the hungry i (San Francisco), and Tin Angel (San Francisco), where she and Larry Mohr recorded Odetta and Larry in 1954, for Fantasy Records.

A solo career followed, with Odetta Sings Ballads and Blues (1956) and At the Gate of Horn (1957). Odetta Sings Folk Songs was one of 1963’s best-selling folk albums. In 1959 she appeared on Tonight With Belafonte, a nationally televised special. Odetta sang Water Boy and a duet with Belafonte, There’s a Hole in My Bucket.

In 1961, Martin Luther King, Jr. anointed her "The Queen of American folk music". Also in 1961 the duo Harry Belafonte and Odetta made #32 in the UK Singles Chart with the song There’s a Hole in the Bucket. Many Americans remember her performance at the 1963 civil rights movement’s March on Washington where she sang "O Freedom." She considered her involvement in the Civil Rights movement as being "one of the privates in a very big army."

Broadening her musical scope, Odetta used band arrangements on several albums rather than playing alone, and released music of a more "jazz" style music on albums like Odetta and the Blues (1962) and Odetta (1967). She gave a remarkable performance in 1968 at the Woody Guthrie memorial concert.

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The next 7 days you’ll find all
tracks from this LP in the box
widget in the right column

Odetta also acted in several films during this period, including Cinerama Holiday (1955), the film of William Faulkner’s Sanctuary (1961) and The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman (1974).

Her marriages to Dan Gordon and Gary Shead ended in divorce. Singer-guitarist Louisiana Red was a former companion.

Text from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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1909 Pierce-Arrow

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The George N. Pierce Company, of Buffalo, New York, built bicycles and birdcages before starting car production in 1901 with a 2 3/4 hp De Dion-engined Motorette. In 1909, using the name of their most successful model. the company became known as Pierce-Arrow, at which time their entire production consisted of six-cylinder cars, of 36hp (5686cc), 48hp (7243cc) and 66hp (10,619cc).

 

1909 Rochet-Schneider

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Looking rather like a Turkish bath on wheels, this 1909 Rochet Schneider’s bodywork is actually patterned on the contemporary hansom cab. Odd though the styling looks nowadays, with its flap-up windscreen and multipaned side windows, in its day it was thought le dernier cri for the fashionable Edwardian motorist about town.

1909 Turicum

1909_turicum
Christened with the ancient name of Zurich. in which it was built from 1904 to 1914. the Turicum car was characterised throughout its production life by the use of friction drive. However. the first couple of Turicums had one feature. which thankfully was not continued on subsequent models-they were foot-steered. by twin pedals. This 1909 twin-cylinder car was one of their more ephemeral models. being produced during that season alone.

 

1910 Bianchi

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E
doardo Bianchi was a Milanese cycle manufacturer who went into car production with a singlecylinder voiturette in 1899. Ten years later, Bianchi had become one of Italy’s more notable marques, building solid, reliable cars to the design of Giuseppe Merosi. In 1909. they introduced a big 5-litre. 20/30hp model. with pair-cast cylinders and chain drive. By the time this landaulette appeared in 1910. shaft drive had been adopted for the 20/30.

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French Ivory Carving–960-80, showing St Gregory at his desk dictated by The Holy Spirit, the dove, speaking the divine words into his ear. Humble monastic scribes crouch at his feet writing with quills and one holding an ink horn.

The Cult Of Unthink

A digital recreation of an article published in Horizon Vol1 No1 – September 1958

013_beatnicksWith heaves, grunts, pigment splotches and howls ”cool”. Beat generation practitioners of the arts are indulging in self-expressing of many sorts.

W
hen a hitherto unknown actor named Marlon Brando fifty five years ago assumed the role of Stanley Kowalski, the glowering, inarticulate hero of Tennessee Williams’ A Streetcar Named Desire, few people realized the symbolic importance of that creation. For Brando was to personify an entire post-war generation of troubled spirits trying to find an identity. Today we find his Kowalski wherever we look, whether in our latest literature, our poetry, our painting, our movies, our popular music, or on our city streets. In one guise or another he is the hero of the Beat Generation.

This new ideal image, as Brando first gave it dramatic form and as tribal followers from coast to coast have adopted it, is that of a man of much muscle and little mind, often surly and discontented, prepared to offer violence with little provocation. He peers out at the world from under beetling eyebrows, his right hand rests casually on his right hip. Walking with a slouching, shuffling gait, he scratches himself often and almost never smiles. He is especially identified by the sounds that issue from his mouth. He squeezes, he grunts, he passes his hand over his eyes and forehead, he stares steadily, he turns away, he scratches, then again faces’ his adversary, and finally speaks-or tries to.

The new hero has cut himself off from cultural and social life and now seems close to abdicating even from himself. Whether he throws words on a page, like the San Francisco novelist Jack Kerouac, or pigment onto a canvas like the "action" painter Franz Kline, whether he 013_beatnicks_2mumbles through a movie or shimmies in the frenetic gyrations of rock-‘n-roll, he is a man belligerently exalting his own inarticulateness. He "howls" when he has the energy, and when he doesn’t, sits around "beat" and detached, in a funk. He is hostile to the mind, petulant toward tradition, and indifferent to order and coherence. He is concerned chiefly with indulging his own feelings, glorifying his own impulses, securing his own "cool" kicks. His most characteristic sound is a stammer or a saxophone wail; his most characteristic symbol, a blotch and a glob of paint.

He exults in solitude and frequently speaks proudly of his "personal vision." Yet, while outwardly individualistic and antisocial, he is inwardly conformist. He travels in packs, writes collective manifestoes, establishes group heroes like the late movie star James Dean, and adheres to the ethics of the coterie. He is "existential" without having developed any substantial existence. If he has a coherent philosophy, it is one of simple negation without any purposeful individual rebellion to sustain it.

The novelists and poets now centering in San Francisco are the most striking examples of conformists masquerading as rebels. They travel together, drink together, "smoke pot" together, publish together, dedicate works to each other, share the same pony-tailed girls in faded blue jeans and take for their collective theme the trials and tribulations of their own troubled souls.

page_illThree forms of hardboard on simple framing combine to make up this attractive and economical pivot-top desk which can extend in any direction from its cabinet base, expand its overall length or swing around it completely when minimum space is desired. The design makes lavish use of 1/4-in. tempered hardboard, yet with economy in mind. You can cut all the pieces from one 4 x 8-ft. sheet if you follow the pattern outlined.

Descriptions and plans
in jpg and pdf
HERE

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At a jumble-sale this summer I picked up a stack of small cookbooks and among them was the one you can see in the illustration above, “Rumford Bakebok” from 1927. I suspect that it is translated from English as Rumford is not a Norwegian product but who cares. With a bit of fancy PhotoShoping I managed to place both the book and a tin of Rumford into the intro illustrations for the recipes from the little book.

The book had been appreciated as it was obvious that several generations of the woman in the Grindalen family had used it frequently (two generations had scribbled their name inside and one on the outside) before it ended up in my vast collection of old printed matter

The recipe is HERE

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Image found at simple dreams

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Famous women pilots preparing to take part in the 1934 Memorial Day air races at Dycer Airport. In front row kneeling is Gladys O’Donnell, who in the previous year entered seven races and won six. Seated is Ruth Elder, famous flying beauty. Standing left to right: Kay Van Doozer, Myrtle D. Mims and Clema Granger.

Image and text found at The Air is Wet With Sound

cleethorpes

Cleethorpes is a town and unparished area in North East Lincolnshire, England, situated on the estuary of the Humber. It has a population of 31,853 and is a seaside resort.

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History
The name "Cleethorpes" is thought to come from joining the words "clee", an old word for clay, and "thorpes", an Old English/Old Norse word for villages, and is of comparatively modern origin. Before becoming a unified town, Cleethorpes was made up of three small villages, or "thorpes": Itterby, Oole and Thrunscoe, which were part of a wider parish called Clee (not to be confused with Old Clee).

While there are neolithic and Bronze Age remains in the area, permanent occupation appears to date from the 6th century, when the Danes arrived, with substantial communities only appearing in the 9th century.

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The manor of Itterby was purchased in 1616 by the trustees of Peter Blundell’s charity for the benefit of scholars and fellows at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge from Blundell’s School, Tiverton. This is reflected in many of the street and park names in the area.

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UFO sighting
On 22 September 1956 at 3pm a UFO was spotted for over an hour off the Cleethorpes coast; it was seen by radar at RAF Manby too. It was a large spherical object with a glass appearance. The Lakenheath-Bentwaters incident had happened the month before.

Text from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

256_wooden_leg

Awful long wooden leg on that woman – Ted

New Fonts

I’ve just bought the WordPress custom design package as you might have noticed. The new post heading font is all ready showing and the new post text will start to show on new post where I’ve not changed the theme’s standard Verdana to Georgia (I use Windows Live Writer for posting where you can do that)

Unfortunately the custom design package handles the thumbnails a little different than the theme standard so some old posts may look a little untidy – Ted

467543463_junewilkinson_blonde_color_041_123_436loVoluptuous would be an understatement when describing the incredibly-endowed June Wilkinson whose va-va-voom 43-22-37 contours filled out a 5′ 6" frame that rivalled Jayne Mansfield and Mamie Van Doren during the heyday of the pneumatic blonde bombshell. Of the titillating, top-heavy trio, June wound up a distant third in film popularity but has to be acknowledged and complemented for her continued perseverance in a tough business. Still seen around town here and there broaching age 70, June was one of the most popular cheesecake models lensed nationally during the late 1950s and early 1960s.

The British-born stunner was born on March 27, 1940 in Essex, England and wasted little time. Initially trained in dance (Sussex School of Dancing) to become a ballerina, she was performing on stage from age 12. The one-time brunette began as a topless dancer at age 15 and joined the legendary Windmill Theatre in London as a fan dancer in 1957. Discovered by Hugh M. Hefner within a short time, June came to America and first appeared in Playboy june - tetas a colormagazine in September 1958. Hefner rather unimaginatively but appropriately dubbed her "The Bosom." The tag stuck and enhanced her eventual transformation from a stunning brunette to platinum blonde in 1960. A sensation on the pages of Playboy, she appeared again in both August 1959 and November 1960, and in several other issues over the years, although she would never become an official "Playmate."

The uninhibited June took her "Playboy" publicity and ran with it. She started appearing in scores of girlie magazines and newspapers from 1958-1970, Like fellow pneumatics Mansfield and Van Doren, June vied for attention in films. Under contract to Seven Arts, her attempt at movie stardom, however, fell flat (sorry). After being unbilled in such low-grade films as “Thunder in the Sun” (1959) and “The Immoral Mr. Teas” (1959) (here she appeared faceless as a topless figure called "Torso"), she was showcased in “Career Girl” (1960), the tumblr_lvjsamaWtD1qf6jy9o1_500tale of a girl trying to make it in Hollywood. With such lurid tag lines as "June is bustin’ out all over!" promoting her pictures, one need not be a rocket scientist to see where her film career was headed. Subsequent romps in "Golden Age" turkeys like “The Private Lives of Adam and Eve” (1960), “Macumba Love” (1960) (her best known), and “The Continental Twist” (1961) sealed her fate as a serious movie actress.

June, however, kept her name alive throughout the 1960s and 1970s in nightclubs (notably as a sexy foil to Spike Jones), and on the live stage in such sex comedy teasers as "Three in a Bedroom," "The Ninety-Day Mistress" and "Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?" via the dinner theatre and Las Vegas hotel circuits. Her most successful vehicle was in "Pajama Tops," a show which amplified her still-gorgeous figure as well as her comedy timing. She returned to this well-received show quite frequently for decades and took it briefly to Broadway in 1963. She also appeared glamorously in such TV shows as "Batman," as the villainess Evilina, and "The Doris Day Show." In 1972, June married Dan Pastorini, the NFL 467608851_junewilkinson_blonde_color_071_123_596loquarterback for the Houston Oilers and L.A. Rams, who was known for his playboy-like reputation. He sometimes appeared as an actor in films and TV, and the couple appeared together in the film “The Florida Connection” (1974). They had a daughter, Brahna, before divorcing ten years later.

A savvy, health-conscious businesswoman, her later projects have included running a successful string of fitness centres in Canada, hosting the Encore cable show "The Directors" in which she interviews filmmakers, and a historical fashion show called "Glamour’s First 5000 Years." June recently made a rare film appearance in the low budget western “Three Bad Men” (2005) with George Kennedy.

Text from IMDb

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I know I’ve posted about June Wilkinson before, but hey, if you got favourites, you got favourites – Ted

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271_girls_driking_coca_cola_02
Detroit. "Summer 1941. Girls playing cards and drinking Coca-Cola." Which is how these things often begin. The first in a curious series of photos taken by Arthur Siegel for the Office of War Information. More to come.

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Detroit. "Summer 1941. Girls playing cards and drinking Coca-Cola." Our second look at a series of photos taken by Arthur Siegel for the Office of War Information. What game, exactly, are these girls up to?

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Detroit, summer 1941. Our third look at a series of photos taken by Arthur Siegel for the Office of War Information. The first few are labeled "Girls playing cards and drinking Coca-Cola." Then the caption disappears, and the rest of the photos bear the notation "This image in jacket marked ‘killed’."

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The next entry in this curious series of photos from the Office of War Information archive, taken by Arthur Siegel in the summer of 1941 in Detroit. We’re now well into the subset of pictures bearing the notation "This image in jacket marked ‘Killed’."

"Detroit, Michigan. Girls playing cards and drinking Coca-Cola."

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The stakes in this cryptic card game are getting both higher and lower.

Summer 1941. "Detroit, Michigan. Girls playing cards and drinking Coca-Cola." Photo by Arthur Siegel for the Office of War Information.

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Detroit, summer 1941. "Girls playing cards and drinking Coca-Cola." The card table seems to have turned in this seventh installment of Arthur Siegel’s mysterious photos for the Office of War Information.

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It’s getting … so hot in here. "Summer 1941. Detroit, Michigan. Girls playing cards and drinking Coca-Cola." The next entry in this curious series snapped by Arthur Siegel for the Office of War Information.

 
271_girls_driking_coca_cola_08
"Summer 1941. Detroit, Michigan. Girls playing cards and drinking Coca-Cola." The game seems to be winding up in this series of photos by Arthur Siegel, with these two having lost their shirts. Or something like that.

Photo series and captions found on Shorpy