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Bring Out Your Dead (Part Whatever v2.0)

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Re: Bring Out Your Dead (Part Whatever v2.0)

But there's that problem with finding size 1 shoes.

DIY:

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Re: Bring Out Your Dead (Part Whatever v2.0)

Another member of the Greatest Generation is gone. Godspeed and fair skies, Fred Hargesheimer.

Fred Hargesheimer, a World War II Army pilot whose rescue by Pacific islanders led to a life of giving back as a builder of schools and teacher of children, died Thursday morning. He was 94.

After returning to the U.S. following the war, Hargesheimer got married and began a sales career with a Minnesota forerunner of computer maker Sperry Rand, his lifelong employer. But he said he couldn't forget the Nakanai people, who he considered his saviors.

The more he thought about it, he later said, "the more I realized what a debt I had to try to repay."

After revisiting the village of Ea Ea in 1960, he came home, raised $15,000 over three years, "most of it $5 and $10 gifts," and then returned with 17-year-old son Richard in 1963 to contract for the building of the villagers' first school.

In the decades to come, Hargesheimer's U.S. fundraising and determination built a clinic, another school and libraries in Ea Ea, renamed Nantabu, and surrounding villages.
 
Re: Bring Out Your Dead (Part Whatever v2.0)

Looks like God hated that movie as much as I did... He had a good role in it, though -- it felt like it should have been bigger and a lot might have been left on the cutting room floor. It could only have helped.
 
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Re: Bring Out Your Dead (Part Whatever v2.0)

Musician Gerry Rafferty.

Wherever he's gone, you can be sure there'll be clowns to the left of him, jokers to the right.
 
Re: Bring Out Your Dead (Part Whatever v2.0)

Musician Gerry Rafferty.

Wherever he's gone, you can be sure there'll be clowns to the left of him, jokers to the right.

Baker Street and City to City-played that entire album (on CD in those days) over and over in my office years ago.:(
 
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