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The Era -- Day By Day

LizzieMaine

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General Douglas MacArthur assumed personal command today of all American and Philippine forces in Manila combating an all-out air and land assault against the Philippine capital and bastion of American defenses in the Pacific. Reports from Batangas, about 60 miles due south of Manila, stated that American troops have repulsed all Japanese attempts to secure a foothold in that area, and have inflicted heavy casualties upon the Japanese. A Japanese expeditionary force numbering from 80,000 to 100,000 men has been moved to the Lingayen Gulf, and has approached the southern Manila coast with a a force approximately half that large.

Wake Island has apparently fallen to the Japanese after a heroic 16-day defense by a garrison of U. S. Marines. The Navy announced today that communications with that coral-studded isle have been lost, and that the capture of the island "is probable." Guam was taken by the Japanese on December 13, and with the fall of Wake Island, the only remaining American outpost in the Pacific between the Philippines and Hawaii is Midway Island.

Pope Pius XII called today in his Christmas message for "a new order of liberty and justice" in which wars are abolished and all nations share the wealth of the world. Speaking from the Vatican to a worldwide radio audience, the Pontiff declared that the present war is not the result of "the failure of Christianity," but is instead the work of those who "left the path of Christianity, and revealed a religion without soul and a soul without religion."

The war has failed to dampen the Christmas spirit in Brooklyn, with the rush and bustle of last minute shopping continuing unabated, and the prevailing attitude one of concern for others. Thirty thousand civilian workers at the Navy Yard have offered to work without pay thru Christmas Day in order to ensure that the Government's shipbuilding program is not interrupted. Fifteen hundred bags of toys for needy children were distributed from Brooklyn Police Headquarters by the Police Athletic League. The toys, accumulated over the past several months and those in need of repair were refurbished by policemen and WPA workers so that they might be ready in time for the holiday.

Holiday travel reached its peak today as railroad terminals, bus stations, and airports were swamped across the city. Every possible rail car has been pressed into service by the New York Central and Pennsylvania Railroad systems, and the New York, New Haven, and Hartford line said that 1200 additional coaches and 500 additional Pullmans are in use for holiday travelers. At LaGuardia Field, 78 additional flights were scheduled, although 40 of the 48 flights scheduled up to 9:30 this morning were canceled due to inclement weather.

(A small and rather spindly little tree sits on a table, illuminated by a single string of lights, as Joe puts on his coat to go to work. "I lef' Leonora's present undeh t' tree t'ere," he says. "It's one'a t'em rubba dolls. T'ey're gettin' hard ta get, but I know a guy at Davega's an' he put it unneh t' counteh 'till I c'd pick it up. It's one'a t'em dolls she c'n chew on." "She ain' got no teet' yet," notes Sally. "Well," says Joe, "she c'n grow inta it." "Don' go eatin' no big meal in none'a t'em all-night lunchrooms 'a nutt'n," reminds Sally. "We gotta be at Ma's house at 2 t'marra." "Yeah, I won' f'get," replies Joe, as Sally gazes out into the cold Bensonhurst night. "Merry Chris'mas." "Yeah," sighs Sally. "Merry Chris'mas.")

Brooklyn_Eagle_Wed__Dec_24__1941_.jpg

(And once again, we turn to Fitz for the voice of reason. Pitcher, coach, responsible dad, theatre critic -- if LaGuardia resigns, let's make him mayor.)

The Brooklyn Eagle, in keeping with its annual custom, will not publish tomorrow, Christmas Day. Mr. Schroth and all his staff wish all their readers a happy holiday.

Statewide rationing of rubber tires may begin January 5th under a plan now under consideration by Governor Herbert H. Lehman, with Mayor LaGuardia to determine the method of administering the rationing program in the city. Under the Governor's plan the basic operation of the program will be under the supervision of local defense councils, which will pass judgement on applications for new tires. Only essential vehicles will be permitted to purchase new tires, including service trucks, public carriers, and vehicles operated by doctors and law enforcement agencies.

President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Winston Churchill will preside together over ceremonies lighting the national Christmas tree this afternoon on the White House grounds. An audience of 30,000 persons is expected to witness the ceremonies in Washington, with the remarks of the President and Prime Minister to be transmitted worldwide by radio.

(And you can join them here --

Brooklyn_Eagle_Wed__Dec_24__1941_(2).jpg

(Even in times of global crisis, it's comforting to know that there's still things you can count on.)

Brooklyn_Eagle_Wed__Dec_24__1941_(3).jpg

(Yeah, that's exactly the kind of thing Vallee would do. And if you look at the cut in the Half Moon Hotel ad, you'll note the terrace roofs, upon one of which Mr. Reles met his fate.)

Brooklyn_Eagle_Wed__Dec_24__1941_(4).jpg

(And even though the Eagle will not publish tomorrow, watch this space for a special Day By Day presentation!)

Brooklyn_Eagle_Wed__Dec_24__1941_(5).jpg

(Use It Up, Wear It Out...)

Brooklyn_Eagle_Wed__Dec_24__1941_(6).jpg

(A two game winning streak! Go Amerks! And Fitz had an .889 percentage in 1940, so nertz to Elmer Riddle.)

Brooklyn_Eagle_Wed__Dec_24__1941_(7).jpg

(Sparky wouldn't make the cut at the Brooklyn Navy Yard.)

Brooklyn_Eagle_Wed__Dec_24__1941_(8).jpg
(Jo always looks a gift horse in the mouth.)

Brooklyn_Eagle_Wed__Dec_24__1941_(9).jpg

(C'mon, Mary, get her to play Santa Claus.)

Brooklyn_Eagle_Wed__Dec_24__1941_(10).jpg
("Over the river and thru the woods...")
 

LizzieMaine

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And from the Out of Town Newsstand...

Chicago_Tribune_Wed__Dec_24__1941_(4).jpg

I suppose it's better than changing your name to "Miss Rheingold."

Chicago_Tribune_Wed__Dec_24__1941_.jpg

Strategy.

Chicago_Tribune_Wed__Dec_24__1941_(1).jpg
"Sure!" grumbles Chief Brandon. "The friggin' MOLE gets a present. But do *I* get a present? Do I *EVER* get a present???"

Chicago_Tribune_Wed__Dec_24__1941_(2).jpg
I wonder how Dude Hennick is spending Christmas this year....

Chicago_Tribune_Wed__Dec_24__1941_(3).jpg
And Sandy just smiled his inscrutable doggy smile.

Chicago_Tribune_Wed__Dec_24__1941_(5).jpg

Poor good ol' Pop.

Chicago_Tribune_Wed__Dec_24__1941_(6).jpg

*snif.*

Chicago_Tribune_Wed__Dec_24__1941_(7).jpg

What could possibly go wrong?

Chicago_Tribune_Wed__Dec_24__1941_(8).jpg
"That sounded like a bomb!" "Phone the police. And while you're up, bring me another drink."
 
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... Thirty thousand civilian workers at the Navy Yard have offered to work without pay thru Christmas Day in order to ensure that the Government's shipbuilding program is not interrupted. ....

We see and will see plenty of selfishness, warprorfiteering, etc., so it's nice to see the other side of the coin as well.


... Brooklyn_Eagle_Wed__Dec_24__1941_.jpg
(And once again, we turn to Fitz for the voice of reason. Pitcher, coach, responsible dad, theatre critic -- if LaGuardia resigns, let's make him mayor.)...

From the few windows we've had into her, Mrs. Fitzsimmons, like her husband, seems like a very cool, down-to-earth person.


... Brooklyn_Eagle_Wed__Dec_24__1941_(3).jpg
(Yeah, that's exactly the kind of thing Vallee would do. And if you look at the cut in the Half Moon Hotel ad, you'll note the terrace roofs, upon one of which Mr. Reles met his fate.)...

If you wanted to experience the "Gotham Grapevine" vibe today, you could watch "The Man Who Came to Dinner" as it captures the snarky, elitist, New York-centric undertone with its masked insecurity of those type of columns and writers. The movie abounds with 1940s inside joke and references. Exaggerated, maybe, but still a very 1940s zeitgeist movie.


... Brooklyn_Eagle_Wed__Dec_24__1941_(4).jpg
(And even though the Eagle will not publish tomorrow, watch this space for a special Day By Day presentation!)...

We'll all be watching carefully for it, along with Myrna.
e7303e9e5a35a9c5a50f1b1ef06c1e60.gif


... Brooklyn_Eagle_Wed__Dec_24__1941_(10).jpg ("Over the river and thru the woods...")

Let me see, I know I have it here somewhere. Oh yes, here it is: The Fedora Lounge Rulebook for Killing a TV, Movie or Comic-Strip Enemy, which states: "Always kill your enemy as fast as you can and, then, check carefully to make sure he or she is dead."


...[ Chicago_Tribune_Wed__Dec_24__1941_(4).jpg
I suppose it's better than changing your name to "Miss Rheingold."..

"Miss Falkenbrug! Miss Falkenburg! A question!"
"Just 'Jinx' thank you."
63142584-2.jpg

Kidding aside, it's kinda interesting that she made the effort to legally change it. I don't think Madonna or Cher did that.


... Chicago_Tribune_Wed__Dec_24__1941_(1).jpg "Sure!" grumbles Chief Brandon. "The friggin' MOLE gets a present. But do *I* get a present? Do I *EVER* get a present???"...

:)


... Chicago_Tribune_Wed__Dec_24__1941_(3)-2.jpg And Sandy just smiled his inscrutable doggy smile.
...

Maybe this new agent isn't so bad after all, he said he talked with Gray about getting me into more panels."
354075-32377569fc0f2c618ba11c4ec4268395.jpg
 

Harp

I'll Lock Up
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I grow in admiration for our Mr Hennick who is quite a splendid gentleman and philosopher.:)

When I was an illiterate child my mother read the comics to me,
including Terry and The Pirates. Comic strips like Dondi, Moon Mullins,
Gasoline Alley
and Rick O'Shay gave an introduction to literature
and also opened the world to me. I truly appreciate Mr Caniff's
noble purpose and his inspiring comic creation. A great treasure
we can still be enriched by.:)
 
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LizzieMaine

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As Mr. Schroth and his staff roast chestnuts by the open fire, etc, and think of things to say about proportionate representation and Larry MacPhail, we nevertheless bring you what we can find of the Eagle comics at the Out Of Town Newsstand. Sparky appears *only* in the Eagle, so far as I can find, and the "Mary Worth" published in the Eagle yesterday is being published today everywhere else.

The_Bakersfield_Californian_Thu__Dec_25__1941_.jpg

(I don't think that's Peggy at the bottom left in Panel One. For her sake, anyway, I hope it isn't.)

And it turns out the "Mary Worth" strip the Eagle bounced in favor of publishing 12/25 on 12/24 was this one...

The_Los_Angeles_Times_Wed__Dec_24__1941_.jpg
(Which establishes that it was Gabe that Miss Plumpsett tossed down the stairs and, alas, not Tom. Pity.)

The_Charlotte_News_Thu__Dec_25__1941_.jpg

(Kay and Irwin!!! "Hmph, you called us back from vacation for this? What a chump." And where's the FACE EATING DOG???)
 

LizzieMaine

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And also from the Out of Town Newsstand...

Chicago_Tribune_Thu__Dec_25__1941_.jpg

Maybe it's a good day not to bother reading the paper.

Chicago_Tribune_Thu__Dec_25__1941_(1).jpg

New parent.

Chicago_Tribune_Thu__Dec_25__1941_(2).jpg

"Well, Judy, dear, you see, when two people love each other very much..." "Oh, I know all about that! Then somebody leaves a baby on their doorstep!"

Chicago_Tribune_Thu__Dec_25__1941_(3).jpg
C'mon, you guys, Bim worked all night on this speech.

Chicago_Tribune_Thu__Dec_25__1941_(4).jpg
"Sigh," sighs Stoop. "Even the Dragon Lady never made me do this..."

Chicago_Tribune_Thu__Dec_25__1941_(5).jpg
And Milton Berle says "Hey, that's a good gag! I can use that!"

Chicago_Tribune_Thu__Dec_25__1941_(6).jpg

A muffler? Or a piano shawl? You be the judge.

Chicago_Tribune_Thu__Dec_25__1941_(7).jpg

Awwwwww! I wonder if the Chief finally got his suitcase?

Chicago_Tribune_Thu__Dec_25__1941_(8).jpg

"Keep Your Hands! To Yourself! Or Har-old Teen I'll slay-ay!" "Goofy, those aren't the words!" "Yes they are. Yes. They. Are."
 
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Lizzie, thank you for hunting all these down for us. It's nice not to miss a day. Merry Christmas. FF

... The_Charlotte_News_Thu__Dec_25__1941_.jpg
(Kay and Irwin!!! "Hmph, you called us back from vacation for this? What a chump." And where's the FACE EATING DOG???)

Where's Harrigan?


.. Chicago_Tribune_Thu__Dec_25__1941_(1).jpg
New parent....

No kidding - good luck enforcing those rules.


... Chicago_Tribune_Thu__Dec_25__1941_(2).jpg
"Well, Judy, dear, you see, when two people love each other very much..." "Oh, I know all about that! Then somebody leaves a baby on their doorstep!".."

"Yes, Judy, but first they get married and, then, nine, umm, sometimes less, months later, the baby is left on their doorstep."


.. Chicago_Tribune_Thu__Dec_25__1941_(7).jpg
Awwwwww! I wonder if the Chief finally got his suitcase?...

Gould wanted the day off.


..[ Chicago_Tribune_Thu__Dec_25__1941_(8).jpg
"Keep Your Hands! To Yourself! Or Har-old Teen I'll slay-ay!" "Goofy, those aren't the words!" "Yes they are. Yes. They. Are."

These two would be having boredom sex at this point.


..And finally, let's all join Joe and Sally after Christmas dinner, as they venture into the City to take in the movie they've been waiting for all year....

Ho! Ho! Ho! Ha! Ha! Ha!

Fun. Time allowing, I'm going to try to watch it this afternoon.
 

LizzieMaine

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The_Brooklyn_Daily_Eagle_Fri__Dec_26__1941_.jpg
(So much for a short war. And you can tune in on Mr. Churchill's speech here:
)

An estimated 6000 troops of the British empire garrison at Hongkong have been ordered disarmed today by Japanese occupation forces, according to dispatches received from the embattled city today. The British commander is reported to have accepted the Japanese demands calling for the stationing of a certain number of Japanese troops in the city "to maintain peace and order."

"Crackpots" with radical devices for advancing the Allied cause in the war are being asked to come forward by the National Inventors Council of the Department of Justice, a government agency established with the purpose of receiving and examining ideas which, however fantastic they may look, may lead to the production of effective "secret weapons." Proposals for death rays, atomic cannons, and radio bullets may prove to change warfare as radically as did gunpowder, the airplane, and the tank. Since the council was established on October 7, 1940, it has received more than 40,000 proposals from inventors for everything from improved gun mounts to methods for harnessing atomic power.

Thirteen thousand Axis prisoners taken by British imperial forces in Libya have reached hospitals and prison camps, with many more remaining to be counted. Reports from the British General Headquarters for the Middle East stated that troops have occupied Benghazi without opposition, and have found the city "virtually demolished," with fleeing enemy forces reported now to be concentrated in the Agedabya area approximately 90 miles to the south.

A former Saugus, Massachusetts school teacher who left her job in 1937 and moved to New York to escape the wagging tongues of local gossip was found dead in her home from asphyxiation on Christmas Day. Thirty-one-year-old Miss Isabelle Halin was employed as a copy writer in Manhattan, where she resided at 31 East 12th Street. She left her home town after she was accused of serving cocktails to high school students who were practicing a play at her home, and though Miss Halin disproved the charges to the satisfaction of the Saugus school board, continuing whispers in the town made her situation there intolerable. Police were unable to determine if Miss Halin's death was intentional or accidental.

Brooklyn_Eagle_Fri__Dec_26__1941_.jpg

(Kids Today)

Brooklyn_Eagle_Fri__Dec_26__1941_(1).jpg

(The Manhattan hotel prices are ridiculous, but somebody's got to pay for all the name bands. Wonder what's going on at the Automat?)

Brooklyn_Eagle_Fri__Dec_26__1941_(2).jpg

("It wasn' nut'n like on Broatway!" insists Joe. "How t'ey gettawaywi't'at? I ask ya!" "Yeah," agrees Sally, "but'tatw'z t'whole pernt! T'ey was makin funna t'whole ideeeh t'at whenney' make a movie outa sump'n, it ain' nut'tn like it was! A book, a play, it's awways like 'at!" "I wonneh if t'at kid t'at got up an' wen' home got in trouble. 'At was pretty late at night f'a kid t'be atta movies." "It wasn'a real kid," explains Sally. "T'at was whatcha call ya trick photography." "Oh," says Joe. "Well, I hope he didn' get in trouble, 'at's all. A kid oughta be able t'get out an' have fun oncet inna while...")

Eddie Cantor is as spry as ever as he capered his way back on stage last night for the first time in twelve years in his new musical comedy "Banjo Eyes." Since leaving for radio and the movies, Mr. Cantor may have become a more responsible person, less given to the broad clowning he favored in the old days, but even with his newfound dignity he is still a fine comic actor. The story is nothing new, with Eddie again the timid young man, this time enmeshed in a racetrack story that mixes him up with bookmakers and gangsters anxious to take advantage of his mysterious ability to pick winners in his dreams. And while the songs, notably "We're Having A Baby, My Baby and Me!" are not the sort of smart stuff Rodgers and Hart or Cole Porter have gotten Broadway audiences used to, when Eddie sings them, prancing back and forth across the stage like he always did, it's a pretty swell thing.

Brooklyn_Eagle_Fri__Dec_26__1941_(3).jpg

(This may be the quintessential Eagle editorial page. Sober caution, Brooklyn boosterism, slapping Butch around, and arguments from a pseudonymous reader that give Mr. Schroth a chance to state his own piece. All that and Lichty too!)

In Chicago, circumstances of the Middle West's first air raid alert puzzled the populace, with naval authorities in the city reporting "no further developments" following a 70-minute alert that disrupted Christmas Day celebrations for 9000 men at four naval stations in the Chicago area. The alert sounded in the middle of a camp show at the Great Lakes Naval Air Station sending hundreds of sailors swarming to air raid shelters, and postponing a scheduled screening of the motion picture "Dive Bomber." Naval authorities stressed that the alarm was not a drill, and was sounded on the basis of information from "reliable sources" that twelve unidentified planes were proceeding across Lake Michigan from the Northeast. Those planes were not sighted by patrol craft, and their origin remains a mystery.

The Air Associates Inc. plant at Bendix, New Jersey will be returned by the Army to private control once the company management and the United Auto Workers sign a new contract. The Army seized the plant under orders from President Roosevelt on October 31st after management's refusal to negotiate a new labor agreement had delayed work for five months on defense orders totalling $5,000,000. Employees at the plant vote today on a proposed contract setting minimum wages of 75 cents a hour for men and 60 cents for women, a 10-cent-an-hour general increase, and a modified union shop. The Air Associates board is expected to consider the proposal by Monday at the latest.

Brooklyn_Eagle_Fri__Dec_26__1941_(4).jpg

("Las' in double plays!" growls Sally. "'AT WOUL'NA HAPP'NT IF PETEY WAS PLAYIN'!" "T'ey was las' t'yeeah befo'eh," observes Joe, as blandly as possible, "when Petey was playin'.) "'Ats 'cause Petey got SPIKED! TWICE!" roars Sally. "By 'at DALLESANDRO! DIM DOM DALLESANDRO!" "Baby's cryin'," sighs Joe. "An'nen again by 'at RAT, 'at LONNIE FREY!" blasts Sally as she heads for the bedroom. "ROONT HIS KNEE!! I ASK YA!!")

Brooklyn_Eagle_Fri__Dec_26__1941_(5).jpg

("Biscuit basket!")

Brooklyn_Eagle_Fri__Dec_26__1941_(6).jpg

(Jo's pose in panel two is the very essence of Jo.)

Brooklyn_Eagle_Fri__Dec_26__1941_(7).jpg

(And so does the worm turn!)

Brooklyn_Eagle_Fri__Dec_26__1941_(8).jpg
(Meanwhile, in a lonely hotel room far away, Kay and Irwin sit playing endless rounds of gin rummy. Irwin keeps losing, and Kay can't bring herself to care.)
 

LizzieMaine

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And from the Out Of Town newsstand...

Chicago_Tribune_Fri__Dec_26__1941_.jpg

Well, it's nice to see that the guy who ran that dopey contest for Loft's finally found work.

Chicago_Tribune_Fri__Dec_26__1941_(1).jpg

Yep, me at a restaurant.

Chicago_Tribune_Fri__Dec_26__1941_(2).jpg
"C'mon inside! I want to show you my new suitcase!!!"

Chicago_Tribune_Fri__Dec_26__1941_(3).jpg
And again in panel three we see that Plushie has the most expressive face in comics.

Chicago_Tribune_Fri__Dec_26__1941_(4).jpg
So much for Christmas cheer.

Chicago_Tribune_Fri__Dec_26__1941_(5).jpg
OWNED

Chicago_Tribune_Fri__Dec_26__1941_(6).jpg
Annnnnnnnnd we'll just leave you two kids alone.

Chicago_Tribune_Fri__Dec_26__1941_(7).jpg
"Push Button Tuning" has its hazards.

Chicago_Tribune_Fri__Dec_26__1941_(8).jpg
BILLIONAIRE INDUSTRIALIST VANISHES. ONLY CLUE PIECE OF CARPET FOUND AT SCENE.
 
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..."Crackpots" with radical devices for advancing the Allied cause in the war are being asked to come forward by the National Inventors Council of the Department of Justice, a government agency established with the purpose of receiving and examining ideas which, however fantastic they may look, may lead to the production of effective "secret weapons." Proposals for death rays, atomic cannons, and radio bullets may prove to change warfare as radically as did gunpowder, the airplane, and the tank. Since the council was established on October 7, 1940, it has received more than 40,000 proposals from inventors for everything from improved gun mounts to methods for harnessing atomic power....

"Crackpot, I'm no 'crackpot' nor is a blacklight a 'fantastic' idea." - Sparky Watts


...A former Saugus, Massachusetts school teacher who left her job in 1937 and moved to New York to escape the wagging tongues of local gossip was found dead in her home from asphyxiation on Christmas Day. Thirty-one-year-old Miss Isabelle Halin was employed as a copy writer in Manhattan, where she resided at 31 East 12th Street. She left her home town after she was accused of serving cocktails to high school students who were practicing a play at her home, and though Miss Halin disproved the charges to the satisfaction of the Saugus school board, continuing whispers in the town made her situation there intolerable. Police were unable to determine if Miss Halin's death was intentional or accidental....

Not making light of this tragedy at all, but this might be a story we be following on Page Four, if it was giving more space to domestic items again.


... Brooklyn_Eagle_Fri__Dec_26__1941_(1).jpg
(The Manhattan hotel prices are ridiculous, but somebody's got to pay for all the name bands. Wonder what's going on at the Automat?)...

Growing up in the '70s, you'd "watch" New Year's Eve on the television and see Guy Lombardo playing at the Waldorf. I don't remember the prices, but the newspapers would report - it was news in a Page Four way - on how much a ticket cost and it was insane. When I moved to NYC in the '80s, going to a hotel like that for New Year's Eve was "an old person's thing."


... Chicago_Tribune_Fri__Dec_26__1941_.jpg
Well, it's nice to see that the guy who ran that dopey contest for Loft's finally found work....

No kidding.


... Chicago_Tribune_Fri__Dec_26__1941_(8).jpg BILLIONAIRE INDUSTRIALIST VANISHES. ONLY CLUE PIECE OF CARPET FOUND AT SCENE.

The "Ha!-Has!" were hard enough to bear from Warbucks, but I've got no truck with doc here taking up the expression too.
 

Harp

I'll Lock Up
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8,508
Location
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From reading today's Terry I realize a mistaken comment posted earlier, since I seemed to have
confused Dude Hennick for Patrick Ryan; whom delivered an airtight jury summation Clarence Darrow
himself could not top.

I disagree with the Kansas City school board for its trimming down English Literature by jettison
fiat verbal declension, parse, sentence diagram and other grammatical exercise along with casting
the Bard, Shelley, Milton, Keats (the latter and Two Years Before The Mast author Richard Henry Dana
lie in a shared Italian cemetery. Keats' prophecy that his epitaph would be writ in water tears the eye.)
Vulgate colloquial tongue lashing is fine in addition to classics. :(
 
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Messages
17,220
Location
New York City
Watched Lizzie's YouTube link to "Hellazpoppin'" (thank you, Lizzie) and can't add much to the Eagle's review other than that it feels both dated, even in 1941, and ahead of its time as some of the slapstick and Catskill's humor was already tired then, but the general construct, breaking of the fourth wall and nonstop ironic asides and inside humor foreshadows shows like "Family Guy."
 

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