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Post by puffy on Feb 14, 2017 23:39:59 GMT -5
I've always had a big interest in world history.Many years ago I watched a series on TV called World At War.It was a history of WWII. It was on tonight.I watched 3 hours of it.I looked at the TV guide and saw that it was from 1973. That's 44 years ago.I was just 30 years old then and only in my second year of pipe smoking.I can't believe that time is flying by so fast.I sure wish there was some way to slow it down.I need to live a while longer.I haven't made my mark on the world yet.
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Post by antb on Feb 15, 2017 1:21:08 GMT -5
World At War was one of the first series to screen when television finally reached my part of the Dark Continent in about 1976 . Made a huge impression on a 12 year old boy at the time; never missed an episode.
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Post by Motto on Feb 15, 2017 4:18:10 GMT -5
Hi , the sands of time are as quick as atomic time these days sir , but tide & time stop for no man , Is was only 20 in 1973, the first of my family at university, plenty of time to regret the error of my ways since...that's life, such is life, as Saint Peter teaches, but I think I got that series on DVD, beats contemplating your navel for life I guess, TV & all that PC stuff...bye
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Post by papipeguy on Feb 15, 2017 15:32:09 GMT -5
, the war footage for World At War was largely supplied by Lou Reda Productions in Easton, Pa. I'm friends with the Reda family. They own the world's largest library of war time film footage from WW II to Viet Nam.
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Post by Lady Margaret on Feb 17, 2017 12:05:11 GMT -5
, the war footage for World At War was largely supplied by Lou Reda Productions in Easton, Pa. I'm friends with the Reda family. They own the world's largest library of war time film footage from WW II to Viet Nam. wow! hubby would love to check that out. he is a major military history buff. his father was in WWII and Korea
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