... tell their daughters in 1956?
No further clues will be given. First one to get it right will be rewarded with a WIP Screenie. Oh, that's another clue.
... tell their daughters in 1956?
No further clues will be given. First one to get it right will be rewarded with a WIP Screenie. Oh, that's another clue.
Keep yer hand on yer ha'penny.
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Good advice but No.
Be aware of the guy singing heart break hotel?
have you tried those new style swimsuits yet?
You can find most of my repaints for FSX/P3D in the library here on the outhouse.
For MFS paints go to flightsim.to
That any woman can grow up, find their 'Prince Charming', and become a Princess too?
Look at Grace Kelly.
What did mothers
Not even going to try and guess. A good riddle but, what part of the world is your riddle based in?
I'll still get to lick the bowl!!Attachment 37206
"Is that United DC-7 coming closer, honey?"
- "I don't know, mom. Oh, look! The Grand Canyon!"
First aviation-related thing in 1956 I could think of.
If it's a *real* mother-daughter thing...
"Stay away from that hip-swinging singer from TV! If I find one of his albums in your bedroom, you're off to the convent!"
Grace Kelly ... not so bad, also answers the question what part of the world ... in a sense. Otherwise you're getting fairly cold, around -45°.
Stay away from men with 36 inch zippers? <?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-comfficeffice" /><o></o>
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(Flight-suits have 36 inch zippers for you dirty minded types)<o></o>
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I dunno, I give up<o></o>
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--Dan<o></o>
Never trust a clean Crew Chief.
"What do you call this tiny piece of cloth??? Beekeenee?"
May 21, 1956. First air drop of an H-bomb by a B-52 on Bikini Atoll.
Cookie? :naturesm:
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Any further hint would immediately give it away, I think. Believe me, I took great pains not to make this google-able either.
Candy bomber?
I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things — Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
All I can say is once the cat's out of the bag there will be a chorus of "I knew that!"
Candy bomber I like, obviously, but it's not 1956 is it?
Roger Vadim is a very perceptive man?
Myles
In 1956 mothers ( according to Doris Day) said:
Que sera, sera.
Whatever will be, will be.
The future's not ours to see.
Que sera, sera.
What will be, will be.
From "The Man Who Knew Too Much"
Hmmmm.. I sense a Jimmy Stewart connection here...
[YOUTUBE]xZbKHDPPrrc[/YOUTUBE]
"To some the sky is the limit. To others it is home" anon.
“Anyone who has never made a mistake has never tried anything new.” -Albert Einstein
Which leads us to Jimmy Stewart....
Hmmm... a number of choices in his 'life'
B-17's, B-24's, B-36's, X-15's, a "Reindeer", a Ryan NYP, a certain 'bush' single... a resurrection in the desert....
:iidea:
"To some the sky is the limit. To others it is home" anon.
“Anyone who has never made a mistake has never tried anything new.” -Albert Einstein
Spot on Sir Galahad! You've got it ... part of it.
When I was just a little girl
I asked my mother what will I be
Will I be pretty will I be rich
Here's what she said to me ...
Now "only connect", as E. M. Forster said, and the one remaining piece will fall into place.
Slightly off-topic, but Forster (in 1909) frighteningly described social media, internet forums and a particularly unpleasant end in The Machine Stops:
"The clumsy system of public gatherings had been long since abandoned; neither Vashti nor her audience stirred from their rooms. Seated in her armchair she spoke, while they in their armchairs heard her, fairly well, and saw her, fairly well. She opened with a humorous account of music in the pre Mongolian epoch, and went on to describe the great outburst of song that followed the Chinese conquest. Remote and primæval as were the methods of I-San-So and the Brisbane school, she yet felt (she said) that study of them might repay the musicians of today: they had freshness; they had, above all, ideas. Her lecture, which lasted ten minutes, was well received, and at its conclusion she and many of her audience listened to a lecture on the sea; there were ideas to be got from the sea; the speaker had donned a respirator and visited it lately. Then she fed, talked to many friends, had a bath, talked again, and summoned her bed."
http://archive.ncsa.illinois.edu/prajlich/forster.html
Now, should we book A Passage to India?
"To some the sky is the limit. To others it is home" anon.
“Anyone who has never made a mistake has never tried anything new.” -Albert Einstein
When it is a James Stewart connection it could be a Boxcar in colours of the movie Flight of the Phoenix.
A still puzzled,
Huub
Eight years too late for that.
Been there recently. The C-54 sits there without control surfaces and looks pretty sad in general.
The VFW-614 doesn't look any better and the Nord 262...well, it's been derelict for ages.
I'd rate Tempelhof my personal saddest place on earth.
Sure, my foot on the very same concrete that has seen planes of all sizes and ages has something great, but I just miss the action at "Berlin City"...
Depends on what's underneath the glasses...
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