barrettkeller

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Everything posted by barrettkeller

  1. England out of Europe for the second time in 4 days.....
  2. #129 - Well - we had the pit, Byron and Scala cinemas, Johnny's cafe, the Co-op, the Beehive, Stallards, Frank Sissons, the pit, Vedonis,Top rec., Bottom rec., the Baths, The Dispatch, Midland General and Trent buses (1s1d return to Nottingham), Nelly Rick's, Rediffusion, the pit, Titchfield Park, and er,..the pit. It wasn't a bad place to live but I found it very insular and somewhat dominated by its mining community identity. When my father was still working at Hucknall Colliery, we moved from my grandparents' home in Beauvale, to a council house. I recall a neighbour saying to my mother,
  3. Being nipped in half is an occupational hazard for them Margie - you should see what the blue-tits do to them! (or perhaps you shouldn't!)
  4. Lincoln’s speech broadening the base of the war from defending the union to the wider cause of freedom for all men may well have been politically motivated, but it did not reframe the issue already in the balance: The Confederacy was defending a way of life that was inextricably bonded with slave ownership. Many of the secessionist states mentioned in their ordinances, the suffering of, ‘slaveholding states’ caused by the actions of abolitionists in the North, or blamed the abolitionist movement for challenging the ‘constitutional right’ to slaveholding. Whilst it may be a spurious argument
  5. My wife thinks that it was called 'Neem (?) Oil' Margie.
  6. Sorry to hear about that Margie. When we used to grow gooseberries we encountered a similar problem. One of our neighbours' sons worked on a smallholding and told us that it was most probably sawfly larvae - as they are the gooseberry's most common pest. He gave us some insecticide that he used at work that was safe with to use with pollinating insects. It was very effective in halting the damage, but sadly, neither my wife nor I can remember what it was called. (Sorry....it's the ageing process...)
  7. I would not take issue with with your comments about the origins Civil War and its aftermath. However, the statement that most Confederates were not slave holders does not give the full picture of the significance of the place of slavery in the lives of those serving in the army. Glatthaar, who cross-indexed the Confederate muster list with the 1860 census, found that: ‘One in every ten volunteers in 1861 did not own slaves themselves but lived in households headed by non family members who did. This figure, combined with the 36 percent who owned or whose family members owned slaves, indicat
  8. It is certainly too simplistic to argue that the rise of abolitionism was the sole cause of the American Civil War. However, it is difficult to see how slave-owners could not be defined as ‘racist’ and dismissed as propaganda. The ‘Cornerstone’ speech delivered by the Vice President of the Confederacy sets out the Confederate position: ‘Our new government is founded upon exactly the opposite ideas; its foundations are laid, its cornerstone rests, upon the great truth that the negro is not equal to the white man; that slavery, subordination to the superior race, is his natural and normal condi
  9. I too, have positive experiences in working with German - and other - European people. However, perhaps the most significant event that I have ever experienced was in Israel in the 1970s when we were invited to a Passsover meal by some Israeli colleagues. When we arrived, I was surprised to see that a number of German students had also been invited. The meal had religious and historic significance for our hosts and I and other members of my party, were a little apprehensive regarding how the evening would progress. However, there was no need for anxiety. An elderly Israeli man (whom I learned
  10. Arnold County High School had: Albert Schweitzer Eleanor Roosevelt Anton Semlonovitch Makarenko Lakshmi Pandit Sue Ryder-Leonard Cheshire Gladys Aylward I can't remember any house being characterised by particular qualities or achievements - although as i recall, Aylward House seldom seemed to win anything!
  11. I think you're right, Margie! Incidentally, I found this site the other day - lots of memories jogged here: http://nostalgiacentral.com/television/tv-by-decade/tv-shows-1950s/
  12. Yes! Wasn't Grandma Grove, 'starved for want of nourishment,' most of the time?
  13. Yes, I remember the Groves with a certain fondness - nothing much really happened in the way of 'drama' but when i was a young lad, it was somehow, very reassuring. The actor who played the father ('Bob Grove') was Edward Evans. http://www.bfi.org.uk/films-tv-people/4ce2ba0862219
  14. Thank you Margie - I have the same op looming up on the horizon (whenever my name gets to the top of the list). Your account was very reassuring indeed. Thank you again.
  15. My memories of attending Methodist chapel (the only way that you would br allowed into the youth club in Hucknall) was, 'What a Friend We Have in Jesus'. Later in life, i discovered this hymn that became one of my favourites: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HMart4wXsI0
  16. ‘IQ’ is a construct – something that cannot be observed. It is a meaningless measure when considered in isolation: Many individuals with Low Average IQs may be highly successful whereas many individuals measured as ‘superior’ on a standardised intelligence test may experience great difficulty in functioning in the community. Such tests sample some – but by no means all – essential skills and the results are vulnerable to cultural and linguistic change. All that completing a test in isolation could achieve is to compare how two, or more, individuals of similar age and experience perform on tha
  17. Yes, It's a remarkable overturning of the betting odds but, 'the greatest achievement in the history of sport anywhere in the world' ? (BBC Breakfast). Really? The team that wins the most points become 'champions'. It happens every year. However, there are many variables that are not in the control of managers/teams that introduce an element of chance. To enter into hysterical hyperbole about this competition - regardless of whether the bookies badly miscalculated the odds - belittles the very real achievements of tens of thousands of sportspeople - for example, all individual Olympic Games g
  18. My wife's grandmother always referred to lolling about as, 'orma-gorming'. It was absorbed into the famly lexicon.
  19. Like LizzieM, I wouldn't normally comment upon the demise of 'celebrities' but she was a unique talent as a comedienne and for me, had the rare ability to make me laugh aloud and produced so many classic characters and stories that I would regard her as one of the few 'great' comedy writers.
  20. My father worked on the same farm as his father and other family members, in Norfolk. When war broke out, he volunteered for pilot training in the RAF but was rejected due to having perforated ear drums - the result of a childhood illness. Two days after the rejection he received his call-up papers to serve as a 'Bevin Boy' and was posted to Hucknall colliery. Having spent all of his working life outdoors it was a complete culture shock to spend all day underground. After the war - like a number of Bevin boys - my father continued as a miner for several yesrs until a bad roof-fall trapped him
  21. My vote would be for a - long-overdue - statue of the late John Neville, placed in the area outside of the Playhouse. Apart from being a fine actor in his own right, he really put Nottingham on the map in the 60s as far as quality dramatic productions were concerned, and attracted a stream of talented actors to work with him: Judi Dench, Ian McKellen, Peter Ustinov, Ronald McGill, Michael Crawford, Leo McKern, Edward Woodward, T P McKenna, John Shrapnell, Barry Foster, Bill Maynard, Derek Godfrey, Ann Bell...and many more
  22. I’d like to see a good old ‘cowboy’ adventure. When I was a child, western films and TV series seemed to dominate. Commercial TV on Saturday nights often featured a Warner Brothers western series (much more action-packed than the BBC’s ‘Wells Fargo’ and ‘Laramie’ offerings): Cheyenne, Sugarfoot, Lawman, Maverick, Bronco (Lane), Colt 45 - and there were episodes where the main characters would appear in each other’s programmes. I recall acting out some of the scenes with my mates the following day using our cap guns (why were they always unrealistically silver?) and using vocal gymnastics to si
  23. The 'Tonight' programme was very much a feature of telly-watching in my youth, too. Cliff, Fyfe Robertson, Alan Whicker, Kenneth Allsop - it was the first program that made me think about things - partly because topical 'serious' subjects were often presented with appropriate humour. There doesn't seem to be much on TV of that consistent quality today - or perhaps I'm just getting old....
  24. My mum used to use up 'bits and bobs' that had lingered in the larder a the end of the month and produced some very tasty dishes, two of which I often requested: she slow-cooked a pork pie in a pyrex bowl filled with two tins of baked beans - the jelly dissolved, the pastry was soft and tasty and the beans were tangy. With chips it was heaven! The other was another tinned concoction: she mixed a tin of baked beans with a tin of stewing steak and a tin of corned beef in a large deep dish, covered the mixture in mashed potato and cooked in the oven with a grating of cheese on top. I don't suppos