Good
morning,
Quote
of the day:
“Life
is a smorgasbord. Take a little bite of different parts of it every
day.”
Al
Campbell
I
have been reading with interest about what is happening to Glen
Campbell. Glen started having symptoms of Alzheimers in 2011. Here
of late the 78 year old “Rhinestone Cowboy” had a turn for the
worse and his wife Kim of 32 years put him in a long term care
facility upon the suggestion of the family doctor. Glen's
stepdaughter began raising hell in assorted country music
publications saying that she wanted to take Glen to her home in
Arizona because she did not believe he was getting adequate care in
Nashville. Glen's wife said that of all the people in the world she
wanted what was the best for Glen. She said that the specialists in
the facility were all Glen Campbell fans and his care was
exceptional. She said that she visits Glen every day and his two
daughters who live in the Nashville area visit him weekly. Not only
that, some of the musicians in Nashville and elsewhere visit Glen
regularly and play for him and occasionally Glen will join in. My
mother died of this unbelievable horrible affliction and it was
torture to see what was happening to this once vibrant woman who,
along with my father, were my best friends and will not be forgotten.
I
am glad to report to y'all the that country music singer/pianist
Mickey Gilley is negotiating with the city fathers of Pasadena, Texas
to open his world famous bar once again. He has been in Branson,
Missouri along with several others but he is from the deep south as
is his cousin, Jerry Lee Lewis, both of which grab my heart when
singing Hank Williams or nearly every song they choose...they have
heart y'all. Pasadena, Texas is a suburb of Houston. I was assigned
an engineering project in LaPorte, Texas and was looking forward to
going to “Gilley's”. It used to be the largest bar in the US, but
it burned to the ground (for the third time as I recall) before I
could get there. LaPorte is about 30 miles from Pasadena and about
20 miles from Houston. In my head I can hear Mickey and/or Jerry Lee
singing “Born To Lose” playing that honky-tonk piano.
A
while back the Brussels, Belgium police with a search warrant in
hand, raided the home and office of a Roman Catholic Archbishop named
Godfried Daneels. The cops captured a lot of written material and
the hard drive out of his computer. Y’all can guess what the raid
was all about but it was in connection with the sexual abuse of
minors. The police were not specific if they were looking for
evidence against the Archbishop himself of for information about
others that participated. The cops did say that the Archbishop was
fully cooperating. There is no telling for how long or how much
abuse of children has been evident over the centuries.
This
Date in History June 25
1876
Earlier the US Army tasked three US cavalry commanders to form
three columns and proceed to south and central Montana and round up
the hostile Sioux and Cheyenne and escort them to reservations. A
few days earlier the main column of US General John Gibbon was
attacked by over 2,000 Sioux warriors and was forced to retreat and
re-group. This critical information never reached the other two
columns thus informing them of the number of hostiles out there.
Anyway, it was on this day that one of the divisions of US General
Terry; the 7th
Cavalry commanded by Colonel George Custer approached an area of
Montana known as Greasy Grass to the Indians. Several of Custer’s
Crow and Shoshone scouts returned to Custer with word of the largest
Indian gathering ever seen on the northern plains and suggested they
wait for reinforcements. Custer blew them off and said they were
exaggerating. They were not exaggerating, there were over 5,000
Sioux and Cheyenne led by Crazy Horse and Sitting Bull. Custer
ordered his troops into a two pronged attack formation. The Crow and
Shoshone scouts asked for time to sing their death songs but Custer
refused and launched the attack. He sent Major Benteen and Major
Reno and their commands to attack from the east and Custer swung
around and attacked from the north. From the time the first shot was
fired an estimated 2,500 wild-eyed Sioux and Cheyenne swarmed out of
the sea of teepees and delivered the mother of all ass-kickings.
Major Benteen and Major Reno were immediately overwhelmed and were
forced to dismount and fight from cover. They eventually retreated
in a rout and were forced to leave Custer alone, then when Custer
saw the overwhelming number of warriors approaching, he hastily
established a defense perimeter but it was too little too late.
Crazy Horse surrounded the small group and picked them off one at a
time until they were all dead. Then the worst happened. The Sioux
and Cheyenne women came in and heavily mutilated the dead troopers.
It was their belief that if a man’s body was not complete, he could
not go to heaven (happy hunting ground). 227 US cavalry troopers
were massacred on this day, but the Indians paid a price that has
been exacted every day since.
1915
Four days before at the Battle of Ypres in Belgium the Germans
unleashed a chlorine gas attack on their French adversaries via
artillery shells. The French raised almighty hell at these
“barbarism”. Once a person inhales chlorine gas, he dies by
drowning in his own body fluids. It is horrible death that takes a
long time. On this date the Germans respond by calling the French
hypocrites because the French had already invented Mustard gas that
is designed for warfare. That was true, but the French had not yet
used it. A few weeks earlier the French has indeed used tear gas in
an attack on the Germans which essentially blinded the German troops
although temporarily, but it did allow the French infantry to attack
unopposed. In short, the Germans did not repent nor apologize and
the “War to End All Wars” continued its bloody course. Germany
lost this war primarily because of the entry into the war by the
British and the United States. After the end of the war in 1919
Germany was totally beaten and impoverished making it prime territory
someone to restore German pride and hope. That individual showed his
ugly head in Munich in 1934 in the form of Adolph Hitler and soon
hell on earth prevailed.
1864
On this date US Colonel John Pleasants with the help of some
Pennsylvania coal miners begins digging a tunnel under the
Confederate line at Petersburg hoping to break the stalemate.
Pleasants was convinced by the miners that they could dig a tunnel
under the Confederate breastworks pile in tons of black powder and
literally blow a hole. After a period of time the miners came to
Pleasants and told him that the tunnel was finished and so Pleasants
persuaded his superiors to give him the gunpowder needed and he had
his miners stack the gunpowder in the end of the tunnel and lit it
off. A gigantic explosion resulted in a hole being blown in the
Confederate breastworks but another thing happened that was
unexpected. In addition to the blast going upward, it went downward
also resulting in a steep-walled hole 30 feet deep. A division of US
troops (mostly black) were ordered into the gap. A few Confederates
atop the breastworks were killed in the blast but when the
Confederates recovered, they just leaned over the edge of the hole
and slaughtered the troops that were trapped in the bottom of the
hole unable to escape. War is hell.
1942
On this date US General Dwight Eisenhower is named as overall
commander of the Allied forces in Europe during WWII. Even though
“Ike” had never commanded a combat unit in his life, his
organizational and planning skills were well known and Roosevelt,
Churchill and US General George Marshall felt that these skills
overrode any other. They were right. Had it not been for this man
and others like him it is unlikely that the Allies would have
prevailed over the German war machine.
Born today:
1796
Russian ruler Czar Nicholas I. He said “I do not rule Russia:
Ten thousand clerks do.” Nothing has changed has it.
1865
US painter Robert Henri. He said “There are very few people who
think what they think they think.” Hey Robert, what have you been
smoking?”
1875
English politician Earnest Benn. He said “Politics is the art
of looking for trouble, finding it whether it exists or not,
diagnosing it incorrectly and providing the wrong remedy,” Sounds
like just another day at the office of the Democrats to me.
1945
US singer Carly Simon. She said of her divorce from
singer/songwriter James Taylor she said “Basically he refused to
dress up like Louis XIV before we had sex; I demand that in my
man....” That is too bad Carly, I understand what you mean because
I want my partner to dress up like Sacagawea; I demand that in my
women.
Died today:
1997
Oceanographer Jacques Cousteau. He said “What is a scientist
anyway? He is a man looking through a keyhole, a keyhole of nature,
trying to find out what’s going on.” I think Jacques was one of
the most respected men of his generation.
2003
Governor of Georgia Lester Maddox. He said “It is great to be
alive. A lot of people aren’t you know.” I loved Lester and his
searing logic.
Thanks for
listening I can hardly wait until tomorrow
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