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Ovalteeny

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Posts posted by Ovalteeny

  1. Thanks Eggy 1948, I'll try and follow the GeoCities thread and see if I can get to the original posting of this football team.

     

    In regards to Brian Dixon, yes he was a year younger than the rest of the team, as was Derek Jefferson, I think!

     

    Brian Dixon s dad was called Norman and they were Salvation Army. But (and here's another link) Norman worked for T. James & Sons (haulage Contractors & Coal Merchants) at Bedlington Station and that is where i had my first ever job (in September 1964). Norman was the garage foreman and ensured all the lorries were serviced and roadworthy. I was the office Junior!!!!

  2. The names of the team members are :-

    Back Row L?R Brian Dixon, Allan Laws, George Chaplehow, Robert Wilson, Melvyn Dodds.

    Front Row, Mr. Matty Hall (as you would expect), Jack Kidd, George Wilkinson, David Gray, Derek Jefferson, John Hedley, Thomas Reddell.

     

    If I remember correctly, Derek Jefferson played professional football for Ipswich and the Wolverhampton Wanderers   

  3. Below is a printed copy of a photograph that I have just found in an old box of papers & photos. I think I printed it off the GeoCities site in 2001 (14 years ago). I used to have an original photo of this football team, but can't remember where it went. 

     

    I've tried to get back onto the GeoCities web-site but this doesn't exist anymore. Then Yahoo (who owned GeoCities) destroyed all of it's history in 2009. So I'm struggling to get a clearer image of the team.

     

    Some of the lads in the team are slightly familiar to me and I recognise them and some I'm aware of some of their life since the photo was taken, but mostly I haven't a clue what became of of them.

     

    So, does anyone have any knowledge or experience in retrieving stuff out of their archives or is it something I should forget.

     

    Or, even better, does anyone know of anyone who might have a decent original photo of this team?

    post-3199-0-77724400-1427736678_thumb.jp

  4. LION TAMER WANTED
     
    A circus owner runs an advert for a 'Lion Tamer Wanted' and two people show up. 

    One is an old golfer in his late  seventies and the other is a drop-dead, gorgeous brunette with a killer body in her mid-twenties. 

    The circus owner tells them, "I'm not going to sugar coat it. This is one ferocious lion. He ate my last tamer so you two had better be good or you're history." 

    "Here's your equipment -- a chair, a whip and a gun.

    Who wants to try out first?" 

    The gorgeous brunette says, "I'll go first."

    She walks past the chair, the whip and the gun and steps right into the lion's cage. 

    The lion starts to snarl and pant and begins to charge towards her.

    As he gets close, the gorgeous brunette throws open her coat revealing her beautiful, perfect naked body. 

    The lion stops dead in his tracks, sheepishly crawls up to her and starts licking her feet and ankles.
       
    He continues to lick and kiss every inch of her body for several minutes, then lays down and rests his head at her feet. 

    The circus owner's jaw is on the floor!! He says, "That's amazing! I've never seen anything like that in my life!"

    He then turns to the  old golfer and asks, "Can you top that?" 

    The tough old golfer replies, "Possibly.......but you've got to get that lion out of there first."
       

  5. Something I wouldn't normally do, but the daughter took out a 30 day trial for Amazon Prime and therefore we've been able to watch all the episodes of Amazon's new detective series Bosch.

    Over-seen by the characters creator, successful crime-author Michael Connelly, the Series is based on 3 books but fused together to make the one single story/series.

    It was gripping and pretty true to the central character that I had in my head (having read all of Connelly's books), plus it paints what Connelly deems to be Los Angeles in a gruesome light, BUT would it be worth joining Amazon Prime for their £72 annual fee, probably not.

    If you like crime-thrillers, then Bosch hits the spot.

     

     

  6. DRIVING - another true story.

     
    Waiting in a lay by ready to catch speeding drivers, a Police Officer sees a car puttering along the A22 

    at well under the 30 mile per hour limit.
    Says he to himself: "This driver is just as dangerous as a speeder!" So he turns on his twos and 

    blues and pulls the driver over.Approaching the car, he notices that there are five old ladies, two in the front seats and three in the 

    back...wide eyed and white as ghosts.The driver, obviously confused, says to him "Officer, I don't understand, I was doing exactly the speed 

    limit! What seems to be the problem?""Ma'am," the officer replies, "you weren't speeding, but you should know that driving slower than the 

    speed limit can also be a danger to other drivers.""Slower than the speed limit? No sir, I was doing the speed limit exactly, twenty-two 

    miles an hour!" ......the old woman says a bit proudly.
    The Police officer, trying to contain a chuckle explains to her that A22 is the road number, not the speed limit.
    A bit embarrassed, the woman grins and thanks the officer for pointing out her error."But before I let you go, 

    Ma'am, I have to ask, is everyone in this car OK? These women seem awfully shaken, and they haven't made a sound this whole time," the 

    officer asks."Oh, they'll be all right in a minute officer. We've just come off the A120."

  7. By the way, I'm the same as Maggie/915 in not ever smoking. I too would listen to my Dad & Mam coughing & choking very night, with their smokers hacks and think to myself "what's the point". Not to mention the smell and the stained clothes, furniture, wallpaper, everything bloody stained & stinking. I think I was once tempted (by the lads in our gang) to a quick drag when I was 12 or 13, almost instantly threw up and vowed to never again go anywhere near the horrible things.

    Now beer & alcohol was a completely different matter.  

  8. Symptoms, loved your very Northumbrian (or is it Pitmatic) description of "houk'n-up & hocklin' oot", and as I've been suffering from a very heavy bout of flu/cold this week, that's exactly what I've had to resort to, in an effort to get rid of the snot & grunge. Apologies to the faint hearted.

  9. There was quite a Cajun/Zydeco trend in the UK during the 1990's and I saw R. Cajun when I lived near Aylesbury, but I thought a couple of the London based bands were better. The Electric Bluebirds (with Alan Dunn on accordion) were good but the best of all were The Balham Alligators (featuring Welsh Keyboardist to the stars - Geraint Watkins). They have a recently released compilation album that covers 4 individual albums and it's very good. There's not much on YouTube by way of videos, but there are loads of recording tracks that you can listen to.

  10. Malcolm,  I too like Cajun/Bluesy type of music, as well as lots of others genres. Back in 1987 I went to the New Orleans Jazz & Blues Heritage Festival and had a brilliant 12 days of wall to wall music, mostly from Louisiana, but lots of other states & countries also represented. The festival is held over 2 weekends at the end of April, each year, on the New Orleans Racecourse. When we were there, they had 10 Stages set up, where the music played simultaneously, non-stop from 11:00am to 7:00pm each Friday, Saturday & Sunday. The hardest thing was deciding who to go and see/listen and who to miss out on. We saw loads of cajun/zydeco bands.

  11. Malcolm, thanks for posting this clip on here. I like "Southern Rock" or Bar-room Boogie" type bands and I hadn't heard of Blackberry Smoke before.

    I've just downloaded the album and on first listen I like it (which is always a good sign), so I'll have a few more listens and then decide on whether or not their back catalogue gets downloaded.

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