LizzieMaine
Bartender
- Messages
- 33,763
- Location
- Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
The Nazi swastika flies today over Mount Olympus, fabled home of the gods of ancient Greece, after German forces pushed back British defenders to capture the nearby town of Larissa, vital railroad terminal 30 miles to the south. The German High Command also reports that other German troops are pushing to the west thru the British-Greek lines northwest of the Pindus Mountains. The International News Service reported today that rumors of an imminent Greek surrender and armistice are circulating in Berlin, possibly to occur within a few days.
A British communique today stated that a crack Nazi division of SS troops has been knocked out of the battle of Greece. The Adolf Hitler Battalion has, according to the report, been "mutilated, and is no longer in the fighting." British reports state that the Greco-British front is holding and that the German troops are making no progress.
Meanwhile, the sudden death of Greek Premier Alexander Korizis has led to the creation of a new "National Victory" government by King George -- with the monarch himself as the new Premier. There are indications that a military government will be formed under the direct rule of the King, and severe restrictions on public meetings have already been imposed in Athens.
In Akron, Ohio, as Easter hymns resounded thru the sanctuary of the North Hill Methodist Church, the body of a 24-year-old woman was burning in the church furnace. Police say the church janitor, 58-year-old Albert Lukens, has confessed to incinerating the body of music teacher Ruth Swicker, but denies that he killed her. Police say that Lukens cornered the young woman in the church's second-story piano room and demanded a kiss, and when she slapped him, a scuffle followed and Miss Swicker struck her head on the edge of the piano. Lukens admitted that he carried her to the basement and hid her behind a coal pile, and claimed that when he returned the next day, she was dead. Investigators raked the ashes in the furnace last night and discovered human remains and jewelry fragments positively identified as those of Miss Swicker. Lukens, who has a past criminal record involving rape, will be charged with Miss Swicker's murder on Monday.
In Boston at this hour, the Dodgers hold an 8-0 lead over the Bees in a morning Patriot's Day game at National League Field before a meager crowd of 5,500. Luke Hamlin is pitching for Brooklyn against Dick Errickson for Boston. Pee Wee Reese homered in the fourth, and Pete Resier tripled in the first. Yesterday, the Dodgers scored their first win of the season, beating the Bees 11-6.
A slight, soft-spoken woman of 41 succeeded where police and firemen could not, by tackling a thirteen year old boy who was threatening to jump off a fourth-story roof in Park Slope, and dragging him to safety. Thirteen-year-old William Rosedale of 433 3rd Street, an honor student in class 8B at Public School No. 77, climbed to the roof of the building to escape his mother, who intended to beat him with a cat-o-nine-tails, and leaped across a four-foot wide alley to the roof of 435 3rd Street, where, as his mother screamed and a crowd quickly gathered on the street below, he announced his plan to jump. After police, firemen, and a neighborhood priest failed to convince him to come down, Mrs. Emily Moore, herself a mother of four, made her way to the roof, and after trying to coax the boy down of his own accord, she leaped upon him in a flying tackle. Mrs. Moore's 16-year-old son Arthur, who followed his mother to the roof, held the boy down until police arrived. Young William was taken to Holy Family Hospital suffering from "hysteria." Neighbors described him as "a brilliant but high-strung boy."
Thousands mourned today as Longshoremen's Union activist Peter Panto was buried at St. Charles Cemetery in Farmingdale, Long Island. Panto's body was recovered after a year-long search, encased in quicklime in a crude grave in the woods of New Jersey, and his killers have not yet been apprehended. The burial was preceded by a grim, mile-long procession thru Panto's home neighborhood of Red Hook, where he was seen as the champion of rank-and-file dockworkers against racketeers attempting to infiltrate their union.
(There are, in fact, actual Gestapo spies at work in the America of 1941, but they are not so dumb as to go around with a swastika engraved on their arm.)
The "Red Rose of Williamsburg" may go on trial in October for the murder of a rival loan shark. 40-year-old Mrs. Rose Fantiel of 666 Willoughby Street will be tried, along with fellow defendants Philip "The Ghost" Scarruto and Michael "Mickey the Mouse" Sienna for the 1936 slaying of Ruby "The Monk" Shapiro. Mrs. Fantiel is accused of luring Shaprio to a car, where the two gunmen awaited. She was to have gone on trial this week, but County Judge Franklin Taylor is considering a motion to try the case before a Blue Ribbon jury, which would require that it be pushed ahead to the fall. Attorneys for the defendants oppose the delay.
("Hollywood playboy?" Where's his polo shirt and two-tone basket-weave shoes?)
("Obey" was never a "standardized" part of wedding vows in Christendom -- which has no "standard wedding vows" at all . It was never a part of Catholic ceremonies. It was introduced by the Anglican Church in 1549, and began to be eliminated in most Protestant denominations descending from Anglicanism by the early 20th Century. The Methodist Book of Discipline struck it out of the ceremony in 1916, and the Episcopal Church -- direct American descendant of the Anglicans -- first offered an alternate version without the word in 1922. Many Protestant denominations outside the Anglican tradition never used "obey" at all, but some modern-era Evangelical denominations with no root in Anglicanism have made a specific point of *adding it in," usually the culty type of sects that won't let a woman pray unless she puts a handkerchief on her head first.)
Fred Allen is drawing plaudits for his straight acting role in the recent Columbia Workshop production of "My Client Curley," the whimsical story of a theatrical agent who encounters a singing grasshopper. Mr. Allen, whose acting experience was gained in revue sketches, made no effort to "gag up" the script, and was entirely convincing and sympathetic in the role. Mr. Allen himself, however, brushes off the critical praise he is receiving, and says "I still think Everett Sloane should have done it."
(Most Workshop broadcasts of this period survive today -- but, frustratingly, this particular one is not available. I'd give a lot to hear it. Everett Sloane is a fine actor, but Fred Allen is Fred Allen.)
(I don't buy it. Any real Dodger fan doesn't call Magerkurth "Mager," they call him "Meathead.")
(The Lichtys really need to see a marriage counselor.)
("Hope springs eternal, in the Brooklyn breast..." -- Marianne Moore.)
("Gug Gawff" is a great name for a new lead character, once Sparky meets his end.)
(If only there were a way to, somehow, I don't know, AUTHENTICATE the money first...)
(Slim?? A lifelong screwup who can only very rarely manage to do anything right? Why John, how you talk!)
(OH COME OFF IT MARSH! We all know if anybody's likely to swoon in this situation, it's Irwin.)
A British communique today stated that a crack Nazi division of SS troops has been knocked out of the battle of Greece. The Adolf Hitler Battalion has, according to the report, been "mutilated, and is no longer in the fighting." British reports state that the Greco-British front is holding and that the German troops are making no progress.
Meanwhile, the sudden death of Greek Premier Alexander Korizis has led to the creation of a new "National Victory" government by King George -- with the monarch himself as the new Premier. There are indications that a military government will be formed under the direct rule of the King, and severe restrictions on public meetings have already been imposed in Athens.
In Akron, Ohio, as Easter hymns resounded thru the sanctuary of the North Hill Methodist Church, the body of a 24-year-old woman was burning in the church furnace. Police say the church janitor, 58-year-old Albert Lukens, has confessed to incinerating the body of music teacher Ruth Swicker, but denies that he killed her. Police say that Lukens cornered the young woman in the church's second-story piano room and demanded a kiss, and when she slapped him, a scuffle followed and Miss Swicker struck her head on the edge of the piano. Lukens admitted that he carried her to the basement and hid her behind a coal pile, and claimed that when he returned the next day, she was dead. Investigators raked the ashes in the furnace last night and discovered human remains and jewelry fragments positively identified as those of Miss Swicker. Lukens, who has a past criminal record involving rape, will be charged with Miss Swicker's murder on Monday.
In Boston at this hour, the Dodgers hold an 8-0 lead over the Bees in a morning Patriot's Day game at National League Field before a meager crowd of 5,500. Luke Hamlin is pitching for Brooklyn against Dick Errickson for Boston. Pee Wee Reese homered in the fourth, and Pete Resier tripled in the first. Yesterday, the Dodgers scored their first win of the season, beating the Bees 11-6.
A slight, soft-spoken woman of 41 succeeded where police and firemen could not, by tackling a thirteen year old boy who was threatening to jump off a fourth-story roof in Park Slope, and dragging him to safety. Thirteen-year-old William Rosedale of 433 3rd Street, an honor student in class 8B at Public School No. 77, climbed to the roof of the building to escape his mother, who intended to beat him with a cat-o-nine-tails, and leaped across a four-foot wide alley to the roof of 435 3rd Street, where, as his mother screamed and a crowd quickly gathered on the street below, he announced his plan to jump. After police, firemen, and a neighborhood priest failed to convince him to come down, Mrs. Emily Moore, herself a mother of four, made her way to the roof, and after trying to coax the boy down of his own accord, she leaped upon him in a flying tackle. Mrs. Moore's 16-year-old son Arthur, who followed his mother to the roof, held the boy down until police arrived. Young William was taken to Holy Family Hospital suffering from "hysteria." Neighbors described him as "a brilliant but high-strung boy."
Thousands mourned today as Longshoremen's Union activist Peter Panto was buried at St. Charles Cemetery in Farmingdale, Long Island. Panto's body was recovered after a year-long search, encased in quicklime in a crude grave in the woods of New Jersey, and his killers have not yet been apprehended. The burial was preceded by a grim, mile-long procession thru Panto's home neighborhood of Red Hook, where he was seen as the champion of rank-and-file dockworkers against racketeers attempting to infiltrate their union.
(There are, in fact, actual Gestapo spies at work in the America of 1941, but they are not so dumb as to go around with a swastika engraved on their arm.)
The "Red Rose of Williamsburg" may go on trial in October for the murder of a rival loan shark. 40-year-old Mrs. Rose Fantiel of 666 Willoughby Street will be tried, along with fellow defendants Philip "The Ghost" Scarruto and Michael "Mickey the Mouse" Sienna for the 1936 slaying of Ruby "The Monk" Shapiro. Mrs. Fantiel is accused of luring Shaprio to a car, where the two gunmen awaited. She was to have gone on trial this week, but County Judge Franklin Taylor is considering a motion to try the case before a Blue Ribbon jury, which would require that it be pushed ahead to the fall. Attorneys for the defendants oppose the delay.
("Hollywood playboy?" Where's his polo shirt and two-tone basket-weave shoes?)
("Obey" was never a "standardized" part of wedding vows in Christendom -- which has no "standard wedding vows" at all . It was never a part of Catholic ceremonies. It was introduced by the Anglican Church in 1549, and began to be eliminated in most Protestant denominations descending from Anglicanism by the early 20th Century. The Methodist Book of Discipline struck it out of the ceremony in 1916, and the Episcopal Church -- direct American descendant of the Anglicans -- first offered an alternate version without the word in 1922. Many Protestant denominations outside the Anglican tradition never used "obey" at all, but some modern-era Evangelical denominations with no root in Anglicanism have made a specific point of *adding it in," usually the culty type of sects that won't let a woman pray unless she puts a handkerchief on her head first.)
Fred Allen is drawing plaudits for his straight acting role in the recent Columbia Workshop production of "My Client Curley," the whimsical story of a theatrical agent who encounters a singing grasshopper. Mr. Allen, whose acting experience was gained in revue sketches, made no effort to "gag up" the script, and was entirely convincing and sympathetic in the role. Mr. Allen himself, however, brushes off the critical praise he is receiving, and says "I still think Everett Sloane should have done it."
(Most Workshop broadcasts of this period survive today -- but, frustratingly, this particular one is not available. I'd give a lot to hear it. Everett Sloane is a fine actor, but Fred Allen is Fred Allen.)
(I don't buy it. Any real Dodger fan doesn't call Magerkurth "Mager," they call him "Meathead.")
(The Lichtys really need to see a marriage counselor.)
("Gug Gawff" is a great name for a new lead character, once Sparky meets his end.)
(If only there were a way to, somehow, I don't know, AUTHENTICATE the money first...)
(Slim?? A lifelong screwup who can only very rarely manage to do anything right? Why John, how you talk!)
(OH COME OFF IT MARSH! We all know if anybody's likely to swoon in this situation, it's Irwin.)