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The FReeper Foxhole - Happy Thanksgiving Everyone - November 24th, 2005
see educational sources

Posted on 11/23/2005 9:54:13 PM PST by snippy_about_it



Lord,

Keep our Troops forever in Your care

Give them victory over the enemy...

Grant them a safe and swift return...

Bless those who mourn the lost.
.

FReepers from the Foxhole join in prayer
for all those serving their country at this time.



...................................................................................... ...........................................

U.S. Military History, Current Events and Veterans Issues

Where Duty, Honor and Country
are acknowledged, affirmed and commemorated.

Our Mission:

The FReeper Foxhole is dedicated to Veterans of our Nation's military forces and to others who are affected in their relationships with Veterans.

In the FReeper Foxhole, Veterans or their family members should feel free to address their specific circumstances or whatever issues concern them in an atmosphere of peace, understanding, brotherhood and support.

The FReeper Foxhole hopes to share with it's readers an open forum where we can learn about and discuss military history, military news and other topics of concern or interest to our readers be they Veteran's, Current Duty or anyone interested in what we have to offer.

If the Foxhole makes someone appreciate, even a little, what others have sacrificed for us, then it has accomplished one of it's missions.

We hope the Foxhole in some small way helps us to remember and honor those who came before us.

To read previous Foxhole threads or
to add the Foxhole to your sidebar,
click on the books below.

THANKSGIVING "OVER THERE"




World War Two Voices from the Front


Bill Sykes of Plymouth, Combat Engineers and then 1095th Engineer Utility Company, Command SoPac, US Army Engineers 1942-1945 :
"My first Thanksgiving, that was kind of a sad thing for me, being away from home and being young and not being with my family for Thanksgiving, missing the football games.   And having no Thanksgiving -- we had no Thanksgiving.  They attempted to do it in a field kitchen, but what can you do in a field kitchen?  After that first Thanksgiving, though, they put on some beautiful meals.  They had everything you could think of for Thanksgiving dinner.  They really made a big effort to do it the proper way.  We would find out who had the best dinner.  And the Navy had the best dinner, I'll tell you right now.  The Navy had really good Thanksgivings.   They had the ships, you know.  And they'd bring in all kinds of food.   But the Army did pretty good, too. 
"The Thanksgiving dinners were served on trays.  (My first one, with the Combat Engineers, was served in mess kits.  That doesn't work too well.)  They had cranberry sauce, stuffing, the whole thing.  It was a good meal.  But the feeling of Thanksgiving wasn't there.  The meal was there, but the feeling of Thanksgiving wasn't.  I guess you couldn't have Thanksgiving when you were overseas.   There wasn't much to be thankful for.  It was sad.  Although, I guess there was some thankfulness, at least you were still alive!"

Cliff Sampson of Plymouth, US Navy 1942-1945 :
"My first military Thanksgiving was in 1942 at Great Lakes.  We had a big mess hall and it was a typical Thanksgiving dinner with turkey and all the fixings, apple pie and mince pie.  They tried to make it special and, of course, everybody was hepped on the war.  Just being a little recruit, you didn't have much to say about it anyhow, you just did what they told you and ate what they gave you.  But it was good food, I can't complain.  Some of the food probably was better than a lot of people ever had before they were in the service.  Some people came from poverty...
"Thanksgiving 1945 I was home in Plymouth with my family and my wife.  We were getting ready to settle down and I was back to work, running the store again.  It was a great feeling to be home, after being blown up on a ship in July (the USS YMS 84 yard mind sweeper was blown up 3 July 1945, Cliff Sampson received the Purple Heart) and then in November, I'm out of the service and the war is over.  I feel sorry for all those that didn't come back.  It was a great experience, but it's too bad for those who had to leave us.  They fought for a great cause."

Bill Shepard of Plymouth, 102 Infantry Division ("Ozark Division"), U.S. Army, stationed in Ohio, Germany and Wales :


Thanksgiving Dinner Two Ozark infantrymen, Pfc William G. Curtis from San Diego, California, and Pfc Donald R. Stratton from Colville, Washington, enjoy a hasty meal in the battered window of a shell-torn house far, far from home. 23 November 1944. Waurichen, Germany.


"The Armed Forces were absolutely adamant about getting the troops a Thanksgiving dinner, all over the world, no matter who you were or what you were doing.  Whether it was on the front lines or in a big fort like Sam Houston in San Antonio, they always made sure that the Armed Forces got a Thanksgiving dinner.  Christmas meals were also somewhat like that, but I remember the Thanksgiving dinners -- there were always turkeys and pies and everything you would have at home.  The food was often cold, if you were in the field (Thanksgiving Day 1944, the Ozark Division had just broken through the Siegfried Line at Aachen), but it was Thanksgiving."

Stanley Collins, US Navy :
"I was on submarine duty in the Pacific in the year 1943.  We were in the area off the cost of the Philippines.  I remember having a complete turkey dinner on Thanksgiving.  While the turkeys were cooking, the submarine took a dive.  We went down too steeply and the turkeys fell out of the oven onto the deck.  The cook picked them up and put them back into the oven -- and we ate them, regardless of what may have gotten on them as a result of their fall.  That meal was so good!"

Ervin Schroeder, 77th Infantry Division, 3rd Battalion, I Company, US Army :
"On Thanksgiving Day, we made our landing on Leyte Island in the Philippines very early in the morning.  We therefore missed our dinner aboard ship.  Somewhere down the beach from where we landed, the Navy sent us ham and cheese sandwiches.  My buddy happened to get one of the sandwiches and brought it back to our area.  I was complaining to him for not bringing one back for me when he started to have stomach cramps...  At this point, I shook his hand and thanked him for not bringing me a sandwich."

Ed Campbell, US Marine Corps, 1943-1945 :
"There were 3 Thanksgivings.  Actually, the one in '43 I don't really remember -- we may have been in California but it was just about the time we were getting ready to leave for the invasion of the Marshalls.  I think we spent it like we spent all our weekends -- every weekend we would all get liberty and head for Los Angeles.  That Thanksgiving just draws a blank.
"The second one, I was on Maui and I do remember.  It was an odd day.  You remember all of your early Thanksgivings with the family and a certain feeling of nostalgia sets in.  Then you take your mess kit, which is like an oval opened up, and go down to the mess hall and get your Thanksgiving dinner thrown into the mess kit.   It ends up with the turkey and carrots all mixed.  The cooks do a great job of trying to make it a festive meal but when you mix it all together with the gravy in the mess kit, its sort of like mush.  I do remember that.  Other than that, there was no celebration.  There wasn't too much discussion, we just all sort of hunkered into ourselves and thought of earlier days and days to come, hopefully.
"The third and last Thanksgiving (1945), I landed in Boston on Thanksgiving Day...  I walked around the city for a little bit, with joy in being immersed in the quietness of Boston -- it was around 7:30 or 8:00 in the morning.  I decided I would take a taxi home to Quincy.  I had enough money -- my discharge money -- so I was able to pay for a cab to take me home in style.  Of course, we had a great Thanksgiving.  My mother had all the relatives and old friends there -- I had called her to say that I would be home on Thanksgiving.  It was a wonderful day to come home.  It was literally the first day of the rest of my life."





FReeper Foxhole Armed Services Links




TOPICS: VetsCoR
KEYWORDS: freeperfoxhole; history; samsdayoff; thanksgiving; veterans; wwii
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To: snippy_about_it

The Sword and the Shield: The Mitrokhin Archive and the Secret History of the KGB (Hardcover)
by Christopher Andrew, Vasili Mitrokhin "This book is based on unprecedented and unrestricted access to one of the world's most secret and closely guarded archives-that of the foreign intelligence arm..."

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0465003109/104-4914374-6174369?v=glance&n=283155&st=%2A&v=glance

In early 1992, a Russian man walked into the British embassy in a newly independent Baltic republic and asked to "speak to someone in authority." As he sipped his first cup of proper English tea, he handed over a small file of notes. Eight months later, the man, his family, and his enormous archive had been safely exfiltrated to Britain. When news that a KGB officer had defected with the names of hundreds of undercover agents leaked out in 1996, a spokesperson for the SVR (Russia's foreign intelligence service, heir of the KGB) said, "Hundreds of people! That just doesn't happen! Any defector could get the name of one, two, perhaps three agents--but not hundreds!"
Vasili Nikitich Mitrokhin worked as chief archivist for the FCD, the foreign-intelligence arm of the KGB. Mitrokhin was responsible for checking and sealing approximately 300,000 files, allowing him unrestricted access to one of the world's most closely guarded archives. He had lost faith in the Soviet system over the years, and was especially disturbed by the KGB's systematic silencing of dissidents at home and abroad. Faced with tough choices--stay silent, resign, or undermine the system from within--Mitrokhin decided to compile a record of the foreign operations of the KGB. Every day for 12 years, he smuggled notes out of the archive. He started by hiding scraps of paper covered with miniscule handwriting in his shoes, but later wrote notes on ordinary office paper, which he took home in his pockets. He hid the notes under his mattress, and on weekends took them to his dacha, where he typed them and hid them in containers buried under the floor. When he escaped to Britain, his archive contained tens of thousands of pages of notes.......
(I've read this 700 densely packed pages with footnote.
Not a fun, light read, but.....)

Also just released part two

The World Was Going Our Way: The KGB and the Battle for the Third World (Hardcover)
by Christopher Andrew, Vasili Mitrokhin
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0465003117/ref=pd_lpo_k2a_2_txt_T2/104-4914374-6174369?%5Fencoding=UTF8

From Publishers Weekly
This second volume of the post-war history of the KGB-based on the "Mitrokhin Archive" of secret documents purloined by the late co-author, a KGB dissident-surveys the Soviet spy agency's skullduggery in Africa, Asia and Latin America. Historian Andrew portrays Russian policy toward the Third World as largely the creation of the KGB, which hoped that the spread of Soviet influence and revolutionary upheavals would make these regions the decisive Cold War battleground. The Cuban Revolution inspired these ambitions, and by 1980, after the American defeat in Vietnam and with leftist regimes installed in Nicaragua and Grenada, Cuban troops fighting in Africa and Russian forces occupying Afghanistan, both American and Soviet officials saw communism on the march. Still, in Andrew's account, Soviet initiatives-with a few exceptions, like the Afghanistan intervention-seem cautious, reactive and uncomfortably dependent on fickle client regimes; wary of confronting the United States, Russia often exerted a restraining influence on local allies. Andrew's engaging, occasionally gossipy narrative provides new evidence of Soviet sponsorship of Latin American insurgencies and Palestinian terrorists, along with details of KGB spycraft and dirty tricks. The world-wide communist conspiracy he depicts was far from a juggernaut, but he sheds new light on the hidden history of the Cold War. Photos.

(This book has been raising holy hell in certain circles in certain counties which I won't name...India (Did I say that outloud?).


121 posted on 11/25/2005 5:29:10 PM PST by Valin (Purgamentum init, exit purgamentum)
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To: snippy_about_it
Maybe I'll do a short Sunday thread for an update on the shop.

Aye lassie, now there's an idear

Regards

alfa6 ;>}

122 posted on 11/25/2005 5:58:33 PM PST by alfa6
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To: Valin

Very interesting. With this and the info from Poland today on the Foxhole it looks like Russian has been uncovered!


123 posted on 11/25/2005 6:56:54 PM PST by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
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To: snippy_about_it

It was always assumed that if thw Warsaw Pact (USSR) came across the border things would go nuclear very soon.
That was why the USSR tried to seperate Europe from the US, on their assumption that America would would see our cities destroyed for Europe.


124 posted on 11/25/2005 7:31:49 PM PST by Valin (Purgamentum init, exit purgamentum)
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To: vox_PL

Wow, what a find. It seems the Russians are a little upset as well. Darn.


125 posted on 11/25/2005 9:38:37 PM PST by Professional Engineer (Ctrl+Alt+Riiiiiiight)
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To: SAMWolf; snippy_about_it
A new BikiniGoggleSpankenTruppen!o

Welcome to the recruitment squad. ;-)

126 posted on 11/25/2005 9:40:41 PM PST by Professional Engineer (Ctrl+Alt+Riiiiiiight)
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To: Professional Engineer; snippy_about_it; SAMWolf; bentfeather; Valin; w_over_w; All
Good Saturday Morning to all the Freeper Foxhole Freepers and Freeperettes!!!

Today is the more or less annuall gathering of Mrs alfa6's Family at the alfa6 residence. A good day will be had by all, I hope.

Well need to get busy with getting the house prepped

Regards

alfa6 ;>}

127 posted on 11/26/2005 4:12:07 AM PST by alfa6 (Got a plane ya want featured let me know)
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To: alfa6
I have great affection for the F4U and the P-47. They shared the first single engine use of the Pratt & Whitney Double Wasp R-2800 eighteen cylinder 2,000+ horsepower engine. The F6F Hellcat followed and was the first carrier fighter fully superior to the Zero. (I know about the Corsair and it's carrier landing "problems". The Navy has it's share of incompetent senior officers.)

Goodyear built Corsairs with Pratt & Whitney Wasp Major R-4360 engines, my personal favorite radial. Only five were built. They were sold surplus, anyone got one let me know so I can come visit.

128 posted on 11/26/2005 5:24:29 AM PST by Iris7 ("Let me go to the house of the Father.")
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To: Iris7
Good Morning there Iris7. It is truly amazing the number of aircraft that used the good ol P&W R-2800.

Going out on a limb I would have to say it was by far the most important aircraft engine that the Americans had for WW-II. The R-2800 would probably give the Rolls-Royce Merlin a fair run for the money as best Allied Engine in WW-II as well.

A while back on the Foxhole I tried to ist all of the aircraft that used the R-2800. A couple that I recall off hand were the Curtis C-46 Commando and the Douglas A-26 Invader.

Also the Douglass DC-6 airliner used R-2800s a major factor that has contributed to the longevity of the DC-6.

Here's a FG-2 for you taken ar Oshkosh this year I think. If you need an excuse to go to the Reno air races in September here ya go :-)

Regards

alfa6 ;>}

129 posted on 11/26/2005 5:55:49 AM PST by alfa6 (Got a plane ya want featured let me know)
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To: alfa6; SAMWolf; snippy_about_it; Valin; Professional Engineer; Peanut Gallery; radu; The Mayor; ...

Good morning everyone.
Great plane, alfa.
Wishing you a good gathering with family.

130 posted on 11/26/2005 6:01:16 AM PST by Soaring Feather (To our fabulous TROOPS, Thank You, for your service.)
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To: alfa6; snippy_about_it; SAMWolf; Professional Engineer; Peanut Gallery; The Mayor; bentfeather; ...

On This Day In History


Birthdates which occurred on November 26:
1607 John Harvard England, clergyman/scholar, major benefactor to Harvard University (library & half his estate)
1731 William Cowper England, preromantic poet (His Task)
1792 Sarah Moore Grimk‚ American antislavery, women's rights advocate
1816 William Henry Talkbot Walker Major General (Confederate Army)
1827 Alfred Moore Scales Brig General (Confederate Army), died in 1892
1876 Willis Haviland Carrier developed air-conditioning equipment
1894 Norbert Wiener US, mathematician/discovered cybernetics
http://www.angelfire.com/co/1x137/cyber.html
1905 Emlyn Williams Wales, actor/playwright (David Copperfield)
1907 Frances Dee US actress (Of Human Bondage)
1912 Eric Sevareid Velva ND, newscaster (CBS Weekend News)
1912 Eugene Ionesco France, dramatist (Rhinoceros)
1913 Foy Draper US, relay runner (Olympic-gold-1936)

1922 Charles M Schulz cartoonist (Peanuts)
(Good Grief!)

1924 George Segal NY, sculptor lifelike mixed-media figures (Bus Driver)
1925 Linda Hunt Morriston NJ, actress (Bostonians, Eleni, Silverado)
1929 Betta St John Hawthorne CA, actress (Corridors of Blood)
1931 Giuliana Chenal-Minuzzo Italy, downhill skier (Olympic-bronze-1952)
1933 Robert Goulet Lawrence MA, singer/actor (Camelot, Naked Gun 2)
1935 Marian Mercer Akron Ohio, actress/singer (Dean Martin Show)
1937 Boris Yegorov cosmonaut (Voskhod 1)
1937 Leo Lacroix France, skier (Olympic-silver-1964)
1938 Rich Little Ottawa Canada, impressionist/actor (Love on a Rooftop)
1938 Tina Turner [Anna Mae Bullock], Brownsville TX, singer (Proud Mary)
1943 Jan Stenerud Norway, NFL place kicker (Kansas City Chiefs)
1945 John McVie rocker (Fleetwood Mac-Rumours, Tusk)
1945 Mikhail Woronin USSR, gymnast (Olympic-2 gold/4 silver/bronze-1968)
1981 Jamie Fiske liver transplant recipient



Deaths which occurred on November 26:
1126 Al-Borsoki, emir of Aleppo-Mosoel, assassinated
1240 Edmund Van Abingdon, archbishop of Canterbury and Saint, died
1504 Isabella I Catholic Queen of Castille & Aragon (1474-04), dies at 53
1776 Dov Baer of Mezhirech hassidic rabbi, dies
1883 Sojourner Truth abolitionist, women's rights advocate, dies
1939 James Naismith Basketball inventor, dies
1954 Jonas Zemaitis (b.1909), a founder of the Lithuanian independence movement and presidium head, shot to death in Moscow
1965 Wild Bill Elliott cowboy actor (49'ers), dies of cancer at 60
1970 B O Davis Sr 1st black general, dies at 93 in Chicago
1973 Albert DiSalvo Boston strangler, stabbed
1982 Dan Tobin actor (I Married Joan, My Favorite Martian), dies at 73
1982 Robert Coote actor (Timmy-Rogues, Theodore-Nero Wolfe), dies at 73
1987 Thomas G Lanphier Jr US WW II pilot, dies at 71
2003 Ayatollah Sadeq Khalkhali (77), a judge known for sentencing hundreds of people to death following Iran's revolution, died


Take A Moment To Remember
GWOT Casualties

Iraq
26-Nov-2003 1 | US: 1 | UK: 0 | Other: 0
US Specialist David J. Goldberg Qayyarah - Ninawa Non-hostile - weapon discharge (accid.)

26-Nov-2004 5 | US: 5 | UK: 0 | Other: 0
US Lance Corporal David B. Houck Al Anbar Province Hostile - hostile fire
US Lance Corporal Bradley M. Faircloth Fallujah - Anbar Hostile - hostile fire - grenade
US Lance Corporal Jordan D. Winkler Camp Fallujah - Anbar Non-hostile - unspecified cause
US Private 1st Class Harrison J. Meyer Ramadi - Anbar Hostile - hostile fire
US Private Brian K. Grant Ramadi - Anbar Hostile - hostile fire


Afghanistan
A GOOD DAY


http://icasualties.org/oif/
Data research by Pat Kneisler
Designed and maintained by Michael White
//////////
Go here and I'll stop nagging.
http://soldiersangels.org/heroes/index.php


On this day...
0399 St Siricius ends his reign as Catholic Pope
0579 Pelagius II begins his reign as Catholic Pope
1095 Pope Urban urged the faithful to wrest the Holy Land from the Muslims, heralding start of Crusades.
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/urban2-5vers.html
1648 Pope Innocent X condemned the Peace of Westphalia, which ended 30 Years War
1688 Louis XIV declares war on the Netherlands.
1703 Bristol England damaged by hurricane, Royal Navy loses 15 warships
1716 1st lion exhibited in America (Boston)
1778 Capt Cook discovers Maui (Sandwich Islands)
1789 1st national thanksgiving
1793 Republican calendar replaces Gregorian calendar in France
1825 1st college fraternity founded (Kappa Alpha (Union College, NY))
1841 1st date in James Clavell's novel Tai-Pan
1861 At Wheeling, a convention adopts a constitution for new state West Virginia
1864 Confederate troops vacate Sandersville Georgia
1864 Skirmish at Sylvan Brutal/Waynesboro, Georgia
1864 First Battle of Adobe Walls
http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/AA/qea1.html
1865 Alice in Wonderland published
(Uncle Billys walking tour of Georgia)
1868 1st baseball game played in enclosed field in San Francisco, at 25th & Folsom
1885 1st meteor photograph
1895 Hawaiian Sugar Planters Association formed
1896 1st large indoor football game, U of Chicago beats U of Michigan 7-6
1896 A.A. Stagg of U Chicago creates the football huddle
1913 Russian kingdom forbids Polish congregation of speakers
1914 Battleship HMS Bulwark explodes at Sheerness Harbor England, 788 die
1917 Bolsheviks offer armistice between Russian and the Central Powers.
1924 Mongolian People's Republic proclaimed
(2nd communist country)
1938 Poland renews nonaggression pact with the Soviet Union to protect against a German invasion. (That worked real well.)
1940 Nazis force 500,000 Warsaw Jews to live in walled ghetto
1941 Amateur tennis champ Bobby Riggs turns pro
1941 Lebanon gains independence from France
1941 US issues an edict that “the government of Japan will withdraw all military, naval, air and police forces from China and Indochina.”
1941 Japanese fleet departes from the Kuril Islands en route for its attack on Pearl Harbor.
1942 "Casablanca" premieres at Hollywood Theatre, NYC
1943 HMT Rohna, a British transport ship carrying American soldiers, was hit by a German missile off Algeria; 1,138 men were killed, including 1,015 American troops.
1944 Himmler orders destruction of Auschwitz & Birkenau crematoriums
1949 India adopts a constitution as a British Commonwealth Republic
1952 The 1st modern 3-D film "Bwana Devil" starred Robert Stack and premieres
1962 Fab Four have their 1st recording session under the name "Beatles"
1965 France launches 1st satellite, 92 lb (42 kg) A1-capsule (Asterix)
1966 1st major tidal power plant opens at Rance estuary, France
1969 Lottery for Selective Service draftees bill was signed by President Nixon
1969 Cream's final concert (Royal Albert Hall)
1973 Nixon's personal sec, Rose Mary Woods, tells a federal court she accidentally caused part of 18-minute gap in a key Watergate tape
1974 Approximately 140 die when suspension bridge collapses (Nepal)
1978 Purple Mountain Observatory discovers asteroid #3011 & #3297
1982 Clyde King named Yankee manager
1982 Yasuhiro Nakasone elected PM of Japan succeeding Zenko Suzuki
1982 Howard Cossell calls his last fight after being disgusted by the Larry Holmes-Tex Cobb mismatch
1984 John W Mercom Jr announces NO Saints are up for sale for $75 million
1985 23rd Space Shuttle Mission (61-B)-Atlantis 2-is launched
1988 Pioneer 6's closest approach to Earth since 1965 launch (1.87 M km)
1990 Buffalo Bills become 6th 1st place NFL team to lose on same weekend
1990 Matsushita purchases MCA for $6.6 billion
1990 Mikhail Gorbachev tells Iraq to get out of Kuwait
1991 Condoms are handed out to thousands of NY High School students
1993 Political campaigners James Carville & Mary Matalin wed
1995 Dolphins QB Dan Marino sets NFL record with 343rd touchdown pass
1996 The Sands Hotel in Las Vegas was blown up to make room for a new Sheldon Adelson
2000 Sec. of State Katherine Harris certified Gov. George W. Bush as winner in the state’s presidential election, 2,912,790 to 2,912,253, a 537-vote margin. Ralph Nader received 97,488 votes
2002 A poll of 50,000 people, commissioned by Durex condom makers SSL International and released in Malaysia, showed the French had sex an average 167 times a year, pipping the Danes and the Dutch for the number one spot. It was a bad year for sex in the United States, which came in eleventh with an average of 138, after heading the rankings in 2001. Britons scored an average of 149 times. At the bottom of the pile, Singapore's 110 times was two less than Thailand's. Four in 10 people in India did not have sex until they were married and Norwegians were most likely to have sex on the first date, the survey showed. Norwegians, along with South Africans, were also more likely than any other nationality to have a one-night stand. Those in Taiwan were least likely; just 20 percent surveyed had a one-night stand.
2004 A UN spokesman said the son of Secretary-General Kofi Annan received payments from a firm with a UN Iraqi oil-for-food contract more than four years longer than the world body previously admitted


Holidays
Note: Some Holidays are only applicable on a given "day of the week"

Lebanon : Independence Day (1941)
Mass : John F Kennedy Day (1963) (Sunday)
Bern Switzerland : Onion Market Day-autumn festival (Monday)
US : Stamp Collecting Week Ends
US : Lefotver Week (Day 2)
Tibet : Festival of Lights
National Accordion Month!


Religious Observances
Bah '¡ : Day of the Covenant
Christian : Commemoration of St Berchmans
RC : Commemoration of St Sylvester, abbot
RC : Commemoration of St Leonard of Port Maurice


Religious History
1539 In England, the monastery at the Fountains Abbey was surrendered to the crown. It was the richest of the Cistercian houses, prior to the time of the Dissolution of all monasteries in England, under the reign of Henry VIII.
1775 The American Navy began using chaplains within its regular service.
1789 President George Washington proclaimed this date (a Thursday) to be the first national Thanksgiving Day holiday. (National Thanksgiving days were periodically proclaimed by presidents, until in 1863 Abraham Lincoln inaugurated the practice of annually setting the fourth Thursday in November aside for Thanksgiving Day.)
1962 English apologist C.S. Lewis wrote in a letter: 'No doubt [my body] has often led me astray: but not half so often, I suspect, as my soul has led IT astray. For the spiritual evils ... arise more from the imagination than from the appetites.'
1970 During a 10_day visit to the Philippines, Pope Paul VI was attacked by a knife_wielding man in Manilla. The pontiff was unhurt and continued his journey.

Source: William D. Blake. ALMANAC OF THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. Minneapolis: Bethany House, 1987.


Cheating hubby exposed by parrot

A cheating husband was exposed after his wife's parrot mimicked his voice calling out another woman's name.

Frank Ficker, 50, has now been kicked out of the family home by wife Petra, also 50, after she heard their 12-year-old parrot Hugo impersonating him on the phone to another woman.

Petra, of Freiburg, Germany, said: "Hugo always liked to mimic Frank and he could do his voice perfectly.

"Frank asking who's at the door, Frank yelling at our nephews, Frank telling me he loved me. And then one day I heard him doing Frank's voice, but saying "Uta, Uta"."

Petra turned the house upside down and found two plane tickets for a weekend break in Paris booked for her husband - and a mystery woman named Uta.

She said: "I kicked him straight out. It's just me and my parrot now."



(A cautionary tale here gentlemen)


Thought for the day :
"Sometimes I lie awake at night, and I ask, 'Where have I gone wrong?' Then a voice says to me, 'This is going to take more than one night'."
Charles M. Schulz


131 posted on 11/26/2005 6:38:00 AM PST by Valin (Purgamentum init, exit purgamentum)
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To: Valin

The Parrot Story reminds me of the joke about the Clinton's parrot. Did Know the Clinton's had a parrot read on, or not as the case may be.

It seems the Clinton's were at Camp David one weekend when the housekeeper, in whose care the parrot had been entrusted, discovers it in its cage late Saturday afternoon belly up, graveyard dead.

In a panic the housekeepere make the rounds of the DC pet stores looking for a matching parrot to take the place of the one that had assumed room temperture.

Finally at the very last pet store there is a parrot that was a dead ringer, if you will excuse the pun, for the now deceased bird. And as an added bargain the price is dirt cheap, only $50.

The housekeeper tell the pet store owner that she wants to but the parrot, however the pet srore owner is a bit leary.
"Listen lady, he says, I will sell you the parrot but I want you to understand that this parrot used to live in a bordelo. It's hard telling what he'll say"

The housekeeper says thats fine, I don't care and buys the parrot.

It's now Monday morning and the parrot is sitting in his cage in the White House dining room when in walks Chelsa for breakfast. "Awk, too young" says the bird.

Hillary coome in a few minutes later and is greeted by the parrot with..."Awk, too old"

Finally Bill come in and the parrot pipes up. "Hiya Bill!!!"

Ducking and Running now

Regards

alfa6 ;>}


132 posted on 11/26/2005 7:08:15 AM PST by alfa6 (Got a plane ya want featured let me know)
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To: alfa6
ROTFLMAO!!!!!

Clinton legacy alert!

133 posted on 11/26/2005 7:21:56 AM PST by Valin (Purgamentum init, exit purgamentum)
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To: Valin

November 26, 2005

Where Will Death Lead?

Read:
1 Corinthians 15:12-26

The sting of death is sin . . . . But thanks be to God, who gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. —1 Corinthians 15:56-57

Bible In One Year: Acts 19:11-20:1, 2 Corinthians 1-3

coverIn AD 410, the Germanic barbarians known as the Goths sacked the city of Rome. During the invasion, many Christians were put to death in hideous and cruel ways.

In the midst of this tragedy, the great theologian Augustine (354-430) wrote his classic The City of God. His reflections, now nearly 16 centuries old, are still fresh today.

Augustine wrote, "The end of life puts the longest life on a par with the shortest . . . . Death becomes evil only by the retribution which follows it. They, then, who are destined to die need not inquire about what death they are to die, but into what place death will usher them."

For those who trust Jesus Christ, death is not a sheriff dragging us off to court, but a servant ushering us into the presence of a loving Lord. The apostle Paul understood this. He looked at life and death from Christ's perspective. Since he knew where death would take him, he could boldly declare, "Death is swallowed up in victory" (1 Corinthians 15:54).

Every Christian can have that same courage. Because of Christ's death and resurrection, we who place our faith in Him can look at death not as a period but a comma that precedes a glorious eternity with our Lord. —Haddon Robinson

We never have seen, nor heard, nor imagined
The wonderful future the Lord has prepared
For those who will love and trust and receive Him—
This glorious truth He has plainly declared. —Hess

Death is not a period—it's only a comma.

FOR FURTHER STUDY
Is There Life After Death?

134 posted on 11/26/2005 7:58:35 AM PST by The Mayor ( As a child of God, prayer is kind of like calling home everyday.)
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To: The Mayor

For those who trust Jesus Christ, death is not a sheriff dragging us off to court, but a servant ushering us into the presence of a loving Lord.

OH I LIKE THAT!!!!


135 posted on 11/26/2005 8:07:07 AM PST by Valin (Purgamentum init, exit purgamentum)
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To: Valin

That is excellent.

A friend's sister in law died yesterday from her short battle with cancer, She had always attended Church but in her heart didn't accept Christ. When I got the call yesterday that she had died of course my first thoughts were about her salvation.

I got an email from my friend last night, I asked him about just that.
She had accepted the fact that she was going to die as the cancer had eaten her up inside, they expected her to live for another month or so.

With her family around her, she accepted Christ and knew that her death was soon, the family prayed for the Lord to releive her from her pain, she passed knowing where she was going. It came very quickly.


136 posted on 11/26/2005 8:59:59 AM PST by The Mayor ( As a child of God, prayer is kind of like calling home everyday.)
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To: Valin; snippy_about_it; bentfeather; Samwise; Peanut Gallery; Wneighbor; alfa6; Iris7; SAMWolf; ...
Good morning ladies and gents. Flag-o-Gram.


137 posted on 11/26/2005 10:36:40 AM PST by Professional Engineer (Ctrl+Alt+Riiiiiiight)
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To: msdrby; Peanut Gallery

138 posted on 11/26/2005 11:04:52 AM PST by Professional Engineer (Ctrl+Alt+Riiiiiiight)
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To: Valin
1825 1st college fraternity founded (Kappa Alpha (Union College, NY))

Delta Delta Delta can I help ya' help ya' help ya'.

139 posted on 11/26/2005 12:59:18 PM PST by Professional Engineer (Ctrl+Alt+Riiiiiiight)
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To: Professional Engineer

Hey, I know this solider and his son. The Solider is txradioguy and son.


140 posted on 11/26/2005 1:04:40 PM PST by Soaring Feather (To our fabulous TROOPS, Thank You, for your service.)
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