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1000 results for “charlesll”

  1. #sphinge around #DEINZE
    #uglybelgianstatues by (ig and fb) charles.lemaire.photographe and uglybelgianstatues
    Not all of them are really ugly... but!

    More info on: charleslemaire.eu/Travaux/ugly

  2. #whopainted the #cow around #PELT
    #uglybelgianstatues by (ig and fb) charles.lemaire.photographe and uglybelgianstatues
    Not all of them are really ugly... but!

    More info on: charleslemaire.eu/Travaux/ugly

  3. #romanheads around #Lebbeke
    #uglybelgianstatues by (ig and fb) charles.lemaire.photographe and uglybelgianstatues
    Not all of them are really ugly... but!

    More info on: charleslemaire.eu/Travaux/ugly

  4. #dwarves around #Lebbeke
    #uglybelgianstatues by (ig and fb) charles.lemaire.photographe and uglybelgianstatues
    Not all of them are really ugly... but!

    More info on: charleslemaire.eu/Travaux/ugly

  5. many #dogs and more around #Schoten
    #uglybelgianstatues by (ig and fb) charles.lemaire.photographe and uglybelgianstatues
    Not all of them are really ugly... but!

    More info on: charleslemaire.eu/Travaux/ugly

  6. #spinningtop around #Ghent
    #uglybelgianstatues by (ig and fb) charles.lemaire.photographe and uglybelgianstatues
    Not all of them are really ugly... but!

    More info on: charleslemaire.eu/Travaux/ugly

  7. #whiteboy around #DEINZE
    #uglybelgianstatues by (ig and fb) charles.lemaire.photographe and uglybelgianstatues
    Not all of them are really ugly... but!

    More info on: charleslemaire.eu/Travaux/ugly

  8. Finally watched “The Night of the Hunter” (1955), the first and last movie ever directed by actor #CharlesLaughton. It’s an unusual #FilmNoir starring #RobertMitchum as a Depression-era conman intent on snatching away a stolen fortune, with #ShelleyWinters as the gullible pawn. youtube.com/watch?v=Y8dX6ZKJe2

  9. Finally watched “The Night of the Hunter” (1955), the first and last movie ever directed by actor #CharlesLaughton. It’s an unusual #FilmNoir starring #RobertMitchum as a Depression-era conman intent on snatching away a stolen fortune, with #ShelleyWinters as the gullible pawn. youtube.com/watch?v=Y8dX6ZKJe2

  10. Finally watched “The Night of the Hunter” (1955), the first and last movie ever directed by actor #CharlesLaughton. It’s an unusual #FilmNoir starring #RobertMitchum as a Depression-era conman intent on snatching away a stolen fortune, with #ShelleyWinters as the gullible pawn. youtube.com/watch?v=Y8dX6ZKJe2

  11. Finally watched “The Night of the Hunter” (1955), the first and last movie ever directed by actor #CharlesLaughton. It’s an unusual #FilmNoir starring #RobertMitchum as a Depression-era conman intent on snatching away a stolen fortune, with #ShelleyWinters as the gullible pawn. youtube.com/watch?v=Y8dX6ZKJe2

  12. #snail around #lontzen
    #uglybelgianstatues by (ig and fb) charles.lemaire.photographe and uglybelgianstatues
    Not all of them are really ugly... but !
    More info on: charleslemaire.eu/Travaux/ugly

  13. Venerdì scorso il giornalista #CharlesGlass ha scritto qualcosa che ci dovrebbe far riflettere:nell'eseguire una #ExtraordinaryRendition sul suolo italiano,la #CIA ha considerato #Italia un paese come Afghanistan o Pakistan, in cui quelle cose le puoi fare

    thenation.com/article/society/

  14. #schoolkid around #Incourt
    #uglybelgianstatues by (ig and fb) charles.lemaire.photographe and uglybelgianstatues
    Not all of them are really ugly... but !
    More info on: charleslemaire.eu/Travaux/ugly

  15. #chinesewarrior and a half around #FLEURUS
    #uglybelgianstatues by (ig and fb) charles.lemaire.photographe and uglybelgianstatues
    Not all of them are really ugly... but !
    More info on: charleslemaire.eu/Travaux/ugly

  16. #eagle and #lion around #FLEURUS
    #uglybelgianstatues by (ig and fb) charles.lemaire.photographe and uglybelgianstatues
    Not all of them are really ugly... but !
    More info on: charleslemaire.eu/Travaux/ugly

  17. Charles Lindbergh was fascinated by transport and mechanics from an early age and learned to fly at the age of 20. At first, though, he wasn’t allowed to fly solo because he couldn’t afford to pay for a damage bond.

    On his birthday, 10 things you might not know about Charles Lindbergh:

    topicaltens.blogspot.com/2024/

    #BirthAnniversary #CharlesLindbergh

  18. Charles Lindbergh was fascinated by transport and mechanics from an early age and learned to fly at the age of 20. At first, though, he wasn’t allowed to fly solo because he couldn’t afford to pay for a damage bond.

    On his birthday, 10 things you might not know about Charles Lindbergh:

    topicaltens.blogspot.com/2024/

    #BirthAnniversary #CharlesLindbergh

  19. Charles Lindbergh was fascinated by transport and mechanics from an early age and learned to fly at the age of 20. At first, though, he wasn’t allowed to fly solo because he couldn’t afford to pay for a damage bond.

    On his birthday, 10 things you might not know about Charles Lindbergh:

    topicaltens.blogspot.com/2024/

    #BirthAnniversary #CharlesLindbergh

  20. Candace Fleming - The Rise and Fall of Charles Lindbergh

    Prologue

    The Rallye

    The streets around New York City’s Madison Square Garden swarmed with America First rally-goers—thirty thousand in all—shouting, stabbing the air with their signs.
    The staunchest Firsters had begun lining up before dawn in hopes of getting a front-row seat.
    Others had come straight from work on that Friday afternoon.
    Although everyone had a ticket, not everyone would get inside.
    The Garden’s cavernous arena wasn’t big enough to hold all the movement’s supporters.
    Those who didn’t manage to get through the door would have to listen from the street via loudspeakers set up for that purpose.
    Tuned in to a local radio station, the speakers blasted a selection of news and music meant to entertain.
    But the noise merely whipped the crowd into an even greater frenzy.

    So did the sudden appearance of a group of protesters.
    Led by a young woman with short dark hair, they marched back and forth, carrying signs that
    read AID TO FRANCE and MAINTAIN THE BRITISH BLOCKADE.
    A sullen murmur of disapproval seemed to come from everywhere in the crowd, like low growls of thunder.
    A fist of men separated themselves from the other Firsters and pushed close to the protesters.
    “Get out of here or we’ll kill you!” yelled one of the men.
    “Nazis!” a protester retorted.
    The men lunged.
    After wrestling away the protesters’ signs, the Firsters ripped them to shreds, while the mob hurled insults.

    Policemen rushed in.
    They formed a wedge, then pushed through the yelling crowd and began leading the shaken protesters toward a safer place across the street.
    Still, Firsters ran in front of and behind them, jamming the way, being shoved aside by police, falling over each other.
    Violence simmered just beneath the surface.
    Anything could happen tonight.
    Anything was possible.
    These days, anger rippled across the country like waves, turning American against American.
    Neighbor against neighbor.
    Flashbulbs popped as press photographers captured it all.

    A couple of Firsters stepped assertively toward a reporter.
    Would the press cover the rally fairly this time? they wanted to know.
    Or would the newspapers be biased and inaccurate as usual?
    Many rally-goers believed the media couldn’t be trusted.
    Their hero, the face of America First and the man they’d come to hear speak tonight, had told them so.
    “Contemptible,” he’d called the press.
    “Dishonest parasites.”
    In a recent speech he’d even told supporters that the press was controlled by “dangerous elements,” men who placed their own interests above America’s.
    That was why he had to keep holding rallies, he explained.
    Someone had to tell it like it was.
    Someone had to speak the impolite truth about the foreigners who threatened the nation.
    It was time to build walls—“ramparts,” he called them—to hold back the infiltration of “alien blood.”
    It was time for America to close its borders, isolate itself from the rest of the world, and focus solely on its own interests.
    It was the only way, he claimed, “to preserve our American way of life.”

    At 5:30 p.m., the Garden’s doors opened and a crush of people began pushing and shoving, eager to get inside.
    As the enormous space filled, it grew hot and deafeningly loud.
    There was anger here, too, brewing, seething, waiting to be channeled toward some common enemy.
    It seemed to fill every seat, all the way up to the dim balconies.
    Down in front, rally-goers discovered a protester in their midst.
    Pointing, shouting, their faces flushed, they called out a tall, sullen man.
    Men and women climbed onto their seats for a better look.
    The boos and roars reverberated to the far-off corners of the building.
    “Throw him out!” they screamed.
    People were standing up all over the arena now; the aisles were filling; lines of police
    gathered.
    “Throw him out!”

    The protester backed up the aisle, his eyes fastened anxiously on the policemen walking toward him.
    The officers followed him slowly, controlled and rigid.
    All the while a low, grumbling sound came from the mob, like thunder about to break into a storm.
    It felt, recalled one rally-goer, like “the rumbles of revolution.”

    Onstage, the warm-up speakers approached the podium.
    Rally organizer John T. Flynn was first, followed by well-known orator and Presbyterian minister Norman Thomas.
    Both men gave brief, heartfelt speeches about building up the nation’s defenses.
    But hardly anyone in the audience listened.
    They were waiting for one man.
    At last, he walked slowly toward the podium.
    Pandemonium.
    It was as if every voice in the place fought to shout the loudest, the noise building and building until it was, as one rally-goer described it, “a deep-throated, unearthly, savage roar, chilling, frightening, sinister and awesome.”
    “Give it to them!” shouted some in the crowd.
    “Give them the truth!”
    “For six full minutes,” a reporter would later recall, “he stood, smiling, as the mob leaped to its feet, waved flags, threw kisses and frenziedly rendered the Nazi
    salute.”
    At last, he leaned into the line of microphones to utter words that would be broadcast far beyond the arena to millions of Americans across the nation.
    “We are assembled here tonight because we believe in an independent destiny for America.”
    Foot-stomping, whistling, and clapping erupted.

    The speaker waited, accepting it.
    When the crowd settled down a bit, he continued, pressing home his usual message.
    The country’s survival depended on three things: increased defense spending, isolation, and putting America first.
    As he ticked off each, the audience howled its approval.
    The speaker didn’t try to tamp it down.
    He didn’t repudiate violence.
    He just nodded and waited for the howling to end before he continued, his fiery words repeatedly punctuated by shouts.
    Sitting behind him onstage, his wife recognized the truth even if he did not.
    The crowd wasn’t really listening to her husband’s speech.
    It wasn’t his words that moved them, but the man himself.
    The celebrity.
    The personality.
    The hero, famous for his historic flight; the father whose family was the victim of the
    “Crime of the Century.”

    Now the mob chanted his name: “Lindbergh! Lindbergh! Lindbergh!”

    #CharlesLindbergh #CandaceFleming #AmericaFirst #AFC #Isolationism #Fascism

  21. Candace Fleming - The Rise and Fall of Charles Lindbergh

    Prologue

    The Rallye

    The streets around New York City’s Madison Square Garden swarmed with America First rally-goers—thirty thousand in all—shouting, stabbing the air with their signs.
    The staunchest Firsters had begun lining up before dawn in hopes of getting a front-row seat.
    Others had come straight from work on that Friday afternoon.
    Although everyone had a ticket, not everyone would get inside.
    The Garden’s cavernous arena wasn’t big enough to hold all the movement’s supporters.
    Those who didn’t manage to get through the door would have to listen from the street via loudspeakers set up for that purpose.
    Tuned in to a local radio station, the speakers blasted a selection of news and music meant to entertain.
    But the noise merely whipped the crowd into an even greater frenzy.

    So did the sudden appearance of a group of protesters.
    Led by a young woman with short dark hair, they marched back and forth, carrying signs that
    read AID TO FRANCE and MAINTAIN THE BRITISH BLOCKADE.
    A sullen murmur of disapproval seemed to come from everywhere in the crowd, like low growls of thunder.
    A fist of men separated themselves from the other Firsters and pushed close to the protesters.
    “Get out of here or we’ll kill you!” yelled one of the men.
    “Nazis!” a protester retorted.
    The men lunged.
    After wrestling away the protesters’ signs, the Firsters ripped them to shreds, while the mob hurled insults.

    Policemen rushed in.
    They formed a wedge, then pushed through the yelling crowd and began leading the shaken protesters toward a safer place across the street.
    Still, Firsters ran in front of and behind them, jamming the way, being shoved aside by police, falling over each other.
    Violence simmered just beneath the surface.
    Anything could happen tonight.
    Anything was possible.
    These days, anger rippled across the country like waves, turning American against American.
    Neighbor against neighbor.
    Flashbulbs popped as press photographers captured it all.

    A couple of Firsters stepped assertively toward a reporter.
    Would the press cover the rally fairly this time? they wanted to know.
    Or would the newspapers be biased and inaccurate as usual?
    Many rally-goers believed the media couldn’t be trusted.
    Their hero, the face of America First and the man they’d come to hear speak tonight, had told them so.
    “Contemptible,” he’d called the press.
    “Dishonest parasites.”
    In a recent speech he’d even told supporters that the press was controlled by “dangerous elements,” men who placed their own interests above America’s.
    That was why he had to keep holding rallies, he explained.
    Someone had to tell it like it was.
    Someone had to speak the impolite truth about the foreigners who threatened the nation.
    It was time to build walls—“ramparts,” he called them—to hold back the infiltration of “alien blood.”
    It was time for America to close its borders, isolate itself from the rest of the world, and focus solely on its own interests.
    It was the only way, he claimed, “to preserve our American way of life.”

    At 5:30 p.m., the Garden’s doors opened and a crush of people began pushing and shoving, eager to get inside.
    As the enormous space filled, it grew hot and deafeningly loud.
    There was anger here, too, brewing, seething, waiting to be channeled toward some common enemy.
    It seemed to fill every seat, all the way up to the dim balconies.
    Down in front, rally-goers discovered a protester in their midst.
    Pointing, shouting, their faces flushed, they called out a tall, sullen man.
    Men and women climbed onto their seats for a better look.
    The boos and roars reverberated to the far-off corners of the building.
    “Throw him out!” they screamed.
    People were standing up all over the arena now; the aisles were filling; lines of police
    gathered.
    “Throw him out!”

    The protester backed up the aisle, his eyes fastened anxiously on the policemen walking toward him.
    The officers followed him slowly, controlled and rigid.
    All the while a low, grumbling sound came from the mob, like thunder about to break into a storm.
    It felt, recalled one rally-goer, like “the rumbles of revolution.”

    Onstage, the warm-up speakers approached the podium.
    Rally organizer John T. Flynn was first, followed by well-known orator and Presbyterian minister Norman Thomas.
    Both men gave brief, heartfelt speeches about building up the nation’s defenses.
    But hardly anyone in the audience listened.
    They were waiting for one man.
    At last, he walked slowly toward the podium.
    Pandemonium.
    It was as if every voice in the place fought to shout the loudest, the noise building and building until it was, as one rally-goer described it, “a deep-throated, unearthly, savage roar, chilling, frightening, sinister and awesome.”
    “Give it to them!” shouted some in the crowd.
    “Give them the truth!”
    “For six full minutes,” a reporter would later recall, “he stood, smiling, as the mob leaped to its feet, waved flags, threw kisses and frenziedly rendered the Nazi
    salute.”
    At last, he leaned into the line of microphones to utter words that would be broadcast far beyond the arena to millions of Americans across the nation.
    “We are assembled here tonight because we believe in an independent destiny for America.”
    Foot-stomping, whistling, and clapping erupted.

    The speaker waited, accepting it.
    When the crowd settled down a bit, he continued, pressing home his usual message.
    The country’s survival depended on three things: increased defense spending, isolation, and putting America first.
    As he ticked off each, the audience howled its approval.
    The speaker didn’t try to tamp it down.
    He didn’t repudiate violence.
    He just nodded and waited for the howling to end before he continued, his fiery words repeatedly punctuated by shouts.
    Sitting behind him onstage, his wife recognized the truth even if he did not.
    The crowd wasn’t really listening to her husband’s speech.
    It wasn’t his words that moved them, but the man himself.
    The celebrity.
    The personality.
    The hero, famous for his historic flight; the father whose family was the victim of the
    “Crime of the Century.”

    Now the mob chanted his name: “Lindbergh! Lindbergh! Lindbergh!”

    #CharlesLindbergh #CandaceFleming #AmericaFirst #AFC #Isolationism #Fascism

  22. Candace Fleming - The Rise and Fall of Charles Lindbergh

    Prologue

    The Rallye

    The streets around New York City’s Madison Square Garden swarmed with America First rally-goers—thirty thousand in all—shouting, stabbing the air with their signs.
    The staunchest Firsters had begun lining up before dawn in hopes of getting a front-row seat.
    Others had come straight from work on that Friday afternoon.
    Although everyone had a ticket, not everyone would get inside.
    The Garden’s cavernous arena wasn’t big enough to hold all the movement’s supporters.
    Those who didn’t manage to get through the door would have to listen from the street via loudspeakers set up for that purpose.
    Tuned in to a local radio station, the speakers blasted a selection of news and music meant to entertain.
    But the noise merely whipped the crowd into an even greater frenzy.

    So did the sudden appearance of a group of protesters.
    Led by a young woman with short dark hair, they marched back and forth, carrying signs that
    read AID TO FRANCE and MAINTAIN THE BRITISH BLOCKADE.
    A sullen murmur of disapproval seemed to come from everywhere in the crowd, like low growls of thunder.
    A fist of men separated themselves from the other Firsters and pushed close to the protesters.
    “Get out of here or we’ll kill you!” yelled one of the men.
    “Nazis!” a protester retorted.
    The men lunged.
    After wrestling away the protesters’ signs, the Firsters ripped them to shreds, while the mob hurled insults.

    Policemen rushed in.
    They formed a wedge, then pushed through the yelling crowd and began leading the shaken protesters toward a safer place across the street.
    Still, Firsters ran in front of and behind them, jamming the way, being shoved aside by police, falling over each other.
    Violence simmered just beneath the surface.
    Anything could happen tonight.
    Anything was possible.
    These days, anger rippled across the country like waves, turning American against American.
    Neighbor against neighbor.
    Flashbulbs popped as press photographers captured it all.

    A couple of Firsters stepped assertively toward a reporter.
    Would the press cover the rally fairly this time? they wanted to know.
    Or would the newspapers be biased and inaccurate as usual?
    Many rally-goers believed the media couldn’t be trusted.
    Their hero, the face of America First and the man they’d come to hear speak tonight, had told them so.
    “Contemptible,” he’d called the press.
    “Dishonest parasites.”
    In a recent speech he’d even told supporters that the press was controlled by “dangerous elements,” men who placed their own interests above America’s.
    That was why he had to keep holding rallies, he explained.
    Someone had to tell it like it was.
    Someone had to speak the impolite truth about the foreigners who threatened the nation.
    It was time to build walls—“ramparts,” he called them—to hold back the infiltration of “alien blood.”
    It was time for America to close its borders, isolate itself from the rest of the world, and focus solely on its own interests.
    It was the only way, he claimed, “to preserve our American way of life.”

    At 5:30 p.m., the Garden’s doors opened and a crush of people began pushing and shoving, eager to get inside.
    As the enormous space filled, it grew hot and deafeningly loud.
    There was anger here, too, brewing, seething, waiting to be channeled toward some common enemy.
    It seemed to fill every seat, all the way up to the dim balconies.
    Down in front, rally-goers discovered a protester in their midst.
    Pointing, shouting, their faces flushed, they called out a tall, sullen man.
    Men and women climbed onto their seats for a better look.
    The boos and roars reverberated to the far-off corners of the building.
    “Throw him out!” they screamed.
    People were standing up all over the arena now; the aisles were filling; lines of police
    gathered.
    “Throw him out!”

    The protester backed up the aisle, his eyes fastened anxiously on the policemen walking toward him.
    The officers followed him slowly, controlled and rigid.
    All the while a low, grumbling sound came from the mob, like thunder about to break into a storm.
    It felt, recalled one rally-goer, like “the rumbles of revolution.”

    Onstage, the warm-up speakers approached the podium.
    Rally organizer John T. Flynn was first, followed by well-known orator and Presbyterian minister Norman Thomas.
    Both men gave brief, heartfelt speeches about building up the nation’s defenses.
    But hardly anyone in the audience listened.
    They were waiting for one man.
    At last, he walked slowly toward the podium.
    Pandemonium.
    It was as if every voice in the place fought to shout the loudest, the noise building and building until it was, as one rally-goer described it, “a deep-throated, unearthly, savage roar, chilling, frightening, sinister and awesome.”
    “Give it to them!” shouted some in the crowd.
    “Give them the truth!”
    “For six full minutes,” a reporter would later recall, “he stood, smiling, as the mob leaped to its feet, waved flags, threw kisses and frenziedly rendered the Nazi
    salute.”
    At last, he leaned into the line of microphones to utter words that would be broadcast far beyond the arena to millions of Americans across the nation.
    “We are assembled here tonight because we believe in an independent destiny for America.”
    Foot-stomping, whistling, and clapping erupted.

    The speaker waited, accepting it.
    When the crowd settled down a bit, he continued, pressing home his usual message.
    The country’s survival depended on three things: increased defense spending, isolation, and putting America first.
    As he ticked off each, the audience howled its approval.
    The speaker didn’t try to tamp it down.
    He didn’t repudiate violence.
    He just nodded and waited for the howling to end before he continued, his fiery words repeatedly punctuated by shouts.
    Sitting behind him onstage, his wife recognized the truth even if he did not.
    The crowd wasn’t really listening to her husband’s speech.
    It wasn’t his words that moved them, but the man himself.
    The celebrity.
    The personality.
    The hero, famous for his historic flight; the father whose family was the victim of the
    “Crime of the Century.”

    Now the mob chanted his name: “Lindbergh! Lindbergh! Lindbergh!”

    #CharlesLindbergh #CandaceFleming #AmericaFirst #AFC #Isolationism #Fascism