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CovemsParticipantCovemsParticipant
Sneaking into the Ice House via the Dwarf passage, I then make my way into the back passage. I slowly open the concealed door to the storage room and peek inside. Seeing that there is no one in the storage room, I enter and go to the attic door. Pressing in the code for the lock release, I smile to myself when I hear the lock click open.
I close the door behind me once I enter the stairway, taking care as to not make any noise. Then I climb the steps up to the attic. It is exactly as I left it, albeit a bit dustier. “That's a good sign”, I think, “no one's been up here.”
I go to the back wall of the attic and again press in a code to unlock the hidden door, then I go into my room. I put some clothes into the bureau and dust off the desk. I open my bag and pull out various parts and things needed to make repairs with.
Next I take out the note Miss Stone provided me with.
Repair –
“Rum Donut machine, giving triple measures of rum” That is not necessarily a bad thing, but it's probably the solenoid valve not closing. I have a new one.
“Broncho Billy keeps creaking” got a can on 3 in 1 oil for that.
The other repairs will need inspection to see what is needed. I grab my tool box and mosey off to the bar.
I wave to Old Joe before crawling underneath “Bronco Billy”. Then I lubricate all the moving joints. Crawling back out, I start him up and he's running as quiet as ever. Next it's onto the Rum Donut Machine.
Just as suspected, the solenoid valve is shot. I replace that with the new one, giving myself a jolt from becoming absent minded. That will teach me to make repairs with the power still on. Finished with that repair, I test it, and the machine is now running perfectly. So I make a batch of donuts… I dump them on a plate and go to my usual seat at the end of the bar next to the dwarf's panel. I put my hat on the post then I sit on the stool.
Joe doesn't say a word, he just nods and pours me a sarsparilla… and walks it down the bar… sets the mug in front of me like he's always done. Old Joe reaches to the plate and takes a donut… we knock the donuts together as if they were glasses. I break my donut in half…
“Joe”, I say, “do you know that if you break a donut in half, some of the calories fall out.”
“I didn't know that,” he replies while breaking his donut in half.
“Its true.” I continue, “and… if no one sees you eating a donut… the calories don't count.”
Joe nods again to me as he pops one half of the donut into his mouth. I do the same. Then Old Joe wanders down the bar to attend to his customers.
CovemsParticipant
Stayin' on the mountain
withJohn Denver's
Rocky Mountain HighCovemsParticipantNo Sir! It's me.The next one to post is…
I don't know
CovemsParticipantFor anyone asking 'why?' Wong sums it up perfectly.http://www.cracked.com/quick-fixes/robin-williams-why-funny-people-kill-themselves/
CovemsParticipantI've been a fan of Puddles since 2011. I saw him in New York at The McKittrick Hotel in the Manderley Bar. He doesn't have his own band, but collaborates with other musicians and bands. Sometimes he just sets up a karoke machine and sings on the street corners. He is a big guy… I'm guessing somewhere around 6'-6″ and with his hat, he's over 7 feet tall.
He usually starts out by getting on the stage… then standing there for about 5 minutes. And you're thinking… “what the hell is this?”
This video is from when I first saw him… I didn't record it… but I'm glad the person who uploaded it did.
CovemsParticipantWe had the Three
James Garner
July 19, 2014
Robin Williams
August 11, 2014
Lauren Bacall
August 12, 2014
CovemsParticipantThe Singing Nun
“Dominique”I have no idea what she is saying… but I like it
CovemsParticipantAndre Rieu“Amazing Grace”
CovemsParticipantR.I.P. Lauren Bacall
We’ve lost another
While she won’t get nearly the media coverage of Robin Williams or Phillip Seymour Hoffman(CNN) — Actress Lauren Bacall, the husky-voiced Hollywood icon known for her sultry sensuality, died Tuesday. She was 89.
Robbert de Klerk, co-managing partner of the Humphrey Bogart Estate, said Bacall died in New York.
She was anointed a legend during her lifetime by the American Film Institute, but she wasn’t fond of that, she told CNN’s Larry King in an interview in 2005.
“I don’t like the category. And to begin with, to me, a legend is something that is not on the Earth, that is dead,” she said.
Legends were part of the past, and Bacall preferred the present.
But her international fame began before the backdrop of World War II, in 1944 with her first film, “To Have and Have Not,” which she made with future husband Humphrey Bogart.
They married in 1945, had two children and went on to make more films together, including “The Big Sleep” (1946), “Dark Passage” (1947) and “Key Largo” (1948). Bogart died in 1957.
“He was an extraordinary, extraordinary man. I mean, I’ve been extremely lucky. God, I have no complaints at all,” Bacall said of her late husband during a 2005 interview with CNN’s Larry King.
Bacall’s grandson said he got a call early Tuesday from his father.
“She apparently had a stroke. A pretty massive stroke. That’s what happened,” said Jamie Bogart, who last saw Bacall over the holidays.
“She was, you can say she was a tough personality. She wanted the best and if you weren’t doing the best she let you know about it. She was a great person. Catch her on a bad day it could be interesting. She was a good grandma. She was lucky to have a pretty unique life,” he said.
A marriage to Jason Robards, which produced another child, actor Sam Robards, ended in divorce. Bacall was engaged to Frank Sinatra, briefly, between marriages.
Friend Dick Cavett, a former TV talk show host, said he and his wife were in a cab just 36 hours before the death was announced, driving by where Bacall lived and wondering aloud how she was doing.
“Her presence was tangible,” Cavett said. “There was no nonsense, no affectation. She wasn’t tough. But she could play tough.”
Cavett added: “She just was what a lot of young women would like to be. Someone that can’t be pushed around. Someone that could tell you where to head in … with a colorful, vile vocabulary if she needed to fall back on it.”
Bacall’s confident, smoldering expression — the down-turned face and up-turned eyes — earned her the nickname: The Look.
Ironically, the young woman originally struck the pose because she felt insecure.
“I mean, that was what started the look — was nerves — just trying to keep my head steady,” Bacall once said.
Bacall won two Tony Awards and an honorary Oscar; she was nominated for three Emmy Awards.
During the interview with King, Bacall said working on stage was her original dream.
“When the curtain goes up, [the stage is] ours. It’s ours to project what the playwright wants to say to an audience, what to convey and to get a response from the audience immediately.
“Movies are great fun and wonderful when they’re good. But you never get to see them till six months after they’re finished.
“So you never get a sense of whether they’re really well liked or how good they are. And you don’t really know what the finished product is going to be like, because it’s a director’s medium.”
Bacall was discovered by the wife of American film director Howard Hawks after she appeared on the cover of Harper’s Bazaar. As a lanky teen, she modeled to earn extra money.
Hawks later gave Bacall, who was born Betty Joan Perske, the name Lauren. Her last name, Bacall, came from her mother’s maiden name.
Her first autobiography, “Lauren Bacall: By Myself,” won the National Book Award in 1980. “By Myself and Then Some,” her updated autobiography, was published in 2005.
CovemsParticipantPuddles“That'll be the Day”
CovemsParticipantAfter getting all caught up with Miss Stone and Jayc, I sent some of the provisions back with them, thanking them for their generousity. I was afraid it would spoil by the time I got to it all. Doc and Happy reloaded the wheelbarrow and followed them back to Hyperion. The rest of the dwarfs went to where ever it is the dwarfs go, and I found myself alone in the cabin.
Feeling a little uneasy being in the place, I went out to the stable to check on the horses. Next I took my blanket roll from the back of the saddle and wandered to the fire. I still had the bottle of bourbon in my hand, and took a couple of pulls on it.
I stoked the fire a bit, placing some wood on it then spread out my bed roll next to the fire ring. “I can't sleep in there yet,” I thought, “here's hoping it don't rain.” I took one last pull on the bottle… replaced the cap… stretched out on the blanket roll and was soon drifting off to sleep, once again under the stars.
[img]http://cache2.asset-cache.net/gc/78454069-cowboy-sleeping-by-campfire-gettyimages.jpg?v=1&c=IWSAsset&k=2&d=ysFeFkkLfT7V5LtQmIV8k3dddHCU2Bg%2B2SccpNdOybw%3D[/img]CovemsParticipantJason Blaine -” On A Night Like This”CovemsParticipantWell… don't expect any changes for at least 3 months. If AChat is smart, which they seem to be, they will compare the number of NEW paying members (those subscribing for the first time) from this quarter we are in now, to the number of NEW paying members from the same quarter of the previous year.
If the numbers of NEW paying members is significantly lower then expect some changes. If the numbers are comparable (give or take a few), or the number of this quarter exceeds the numbers from last years quarter, then expect NO changes.
I am not privvy to the numbers, though it would be fascinating to see them, to see if we're growing.
CovemsParticipantMama's had the Victrola fired up and we have been taking a time warp into the 1960's
as of this post, we are currently in 1968 listening to
Petula Clark's
Kiss me Goodbye -
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