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RogerChristie Cannabis Sacrament Minister.

Joined: 16 Feb 2004 Posts: 1098 Location: Hilo, Kingdom of Hawai'i
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Posted: Mon Dec 12, 2005 7:57 pm Post subject: About John Lennon...Peacemaker to the world |
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When the 60's Bloomed
By BOB HERBERT
Published: December 12, 2005
New York Times
"He committed a deliberate, premeditated execution of John Lennon and acted in a cool, calm and calculated manner in killing Mr. Lennon by shooting him several times with a .38-caliber pistol."
- Kim Hogrefe, assistant Manhattan district attorney.
John Lennon would have turned 65 on Oct. 9. His widow, Yoko Ono, is 72. Their son, Sean, is 30. Lennon's assassin, Mark David Chapman, is 50.
It's astonishing how often, given a choice between creativity and murder, our species chooses the latter. Eras may change, but the mayhem remains the same.
I was watching "Monday Night Football," the Dolphins against the Patriots, on that warm December night in 1980 that Lennon, a neighbor on the Upper West Side of Manhattan, was shot and killed. I first heard the news, along with millions of others, from Howard Cosell, one of the announcers of the game.
I was a reporter for The Daily News in those days. Stunned, I stood up in my living room, reached for a notebook and pen, and went outside. Fans of Lennon and the Beatles were already gathering in front of the Dakota, the legendary apartment building where parts of "Rosemary's Baby" had been filmed, and where an entire cadre of celebrities lived, including Leonard Bernstein, Roberta Flack and Lauren Bacall, in addition to Lennon and Ms. Ono.
As I went through the unhappy ritual of gathering quotes for a feature sidebar, my thoughts kept drifting back to the glory days of the Beatles in the 1960's, a time when I was obsessed with rock 'n' roll, and even thought I might have a future as a disc jockey.
Nineteen sixty-four was the year the 60's really began. The earliest years of the decade were for the most part an extension of the conventional, cold-war, black-and-white 50's. When John F. Kennedy was inaugurated in 1961, the men participating in the ceremony wore morning coats and top hats.
For a decade known for its excitement, the 60's got off to a decidedly slow start. Doo-wop music was still around, and dreamy songs of widely varying quality - "Moon River," "Where the Boys Are" - were among the biggest hits. It was a quiet time. The average annual salary was $4,700, and a favorite pastime was bowling.
There was no reason to think that radical changes were brewing when 1964 debuted. The nation was still in shock and mourning over the murder of Jack Kennedy the previous November. Mary McCarthy had a best-seller with "The Group," and the tranquilizer Valium was catching on. "Bonanza" and "Candid Camera" were big hits on television.
And then in February, suddenly and without warning, the Beatles were upon us.
If you spend just a little time reflecting on the Beatles you come away astonished by the changes they wrought (or came to symbolize) in what seemed like a split second of real time. People dressed differently, wore their hair differently, danced differently and approached that treacherous triumvirate of sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll with an openness that surely had been accelerated by John, Paul, George and Ringo.
The Beatles blew in like a sudden storm and permanently altered the cultural landscape. One night they were singing to an audience of shrieking teeny-boppers on that quintessential 1950's television program "The Ed Sullivan Show," and in the next instant, it seemed, the Sullivan era had been left behind and the 60's had blossomed in brilliant, even blinding, color.
While the Beatles were without doubt the biggest cultural phenomenon of the 1960's, their message of peace, love and tolerance was no match for the unrestrained violence of the era, which included political assassinations and urban riots in the U.S., the war in Vietnam and a general feeling, here and elsewhere, that the answer to any problem could be found in a bullet or a bomb.
(After brashly sending American troops into Vietnam to kick a few Communist keisters, Lyndon Johnson learned to his chagrin that it wasn't so easy to get them back out. Sound familiar?)
The tumult of the decade (and of his own life) would not be enough to shake Lennon's idealism. Eventually he would give us the hymn "Imagine" and the anthem "Give Peace a Chance."
"You may say I'm a dreamer," he wrote. He tried to imagine a world in which a lyric would be more than a match for a bullet or a bomb.
That world hadn't arrived by Dec. 8, 1980, and it's still nowhere in sight.
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Torkel Cannabis Sacrament Minister


Joined: 23 Nov 2004 Posts: 1396 Location: West Virginia, USA
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Posted: Mon Dec 12, 2005 8:35 pm Post subject: |
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Thanks for posting that article, Roger. Very good read.
Here is a bit of extra info:
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25 Years Ago... December 8, 1980
© NY Times 1980
John Lennon, who was widely regarded as the most thoughtful and outspoken of the four Beatles during their peak of popularity during the 1960's, dropped out of the music business, to devote his attention to his newly-born son, Sean, and to his wife, Yoko Ono. Then in November 1980, he reentered the pop mainstream with the introduction of a new album, "Double Fantasy," which, Lennon said at the time, was an extension of his family life, as the songs were direct celebrations of enduring love and the pleasures of home and hearth.
On December 8, 1980 at around 5 p.m., John and Yoko left their apartment in the historic Dakota on Central Park West in New York City to go to their recording studio to supervise the transfer of some of the "Double Fantasy" album numbers to singles. David Geffen, their record producer and friend, said that more than 700,000 copies of the album had already been sold up to that time.
As they were leaving the Dakota, they were approached by several people who were seeking autographs. Among them was a man who would be later identified as Mark David Chapman. John Lennon scribbled an autograph on the cover of "Double Fantasy" for Chapman.
The Lennons spent several hours at the studio on West 44th Street, returning to the Dakota at about 10:50 p.m. They exited their limousine on the 72nd Street curb even though a car could have driven through the entrance and into the courtyard.
Three witnesses--a doorman at the entrance, an elevator operator and a cab driver who had just dropped off a passenger--saw Mark David Chapman standing in the shadows just inside the arch.
As the Lennons walked by, Chapman called, "Mr. Lennon." Then he dropped into "a combat stance" and fired four pistol shots. According to the autopsy, two shots struck John Lennon in the left side of his back and two in his left shoulder. All four caused internal damage and bleeding.
According to police, Lennon staggered up six steps to the room at the end of the entrance used by the concierge, said, "I'm shot," then fell down.
The first policemen at the scene were Officers Steve Spire and Peter Cullen, who were in the patrol car at 72nd Street and Broadway when they heard a report of shots fired at the Dakota. The officers found Chapman standing "very calmly" where he had been.
The police said he had dropped the revolver after firing it, and said Chapman had a paperback book, J.D. Salinger's "The Catcher in the Rye," and a cassette recorder with 14 hours of Beatles tapes.
The second police team at the Dakota, Officers Bill Gamble and James Moran, took Lennon to Roosevelt Hospital. Officer Moran said they stretched Lennon out on the back seat and that the singer was "moaning." He said he asked, "Are you John Lennon?" and that Lennon had moaned, "Yeah."
Dr. Stephen Lyman of Roosevelt Hospital said Lennon was dead when the policemen arrived with him. He was pronounced dead at 11:15 p.m. Dr. Elliott M. Gross, the Chief Medical Examiner, said after the autopsy that Lennon had died of shock and loss of blood and that no one could have lived more than a few minutes with such injuries.
Yoko Ono, crying "Tell me it's not true," was taken to Roosevelt Hospital and led away in shock after she learned her husband was dead. David Geffen later issued a statement in her behalf: "John loved and prayed for the human race. Please do the same for him."
Within minutes of the first broadcasts of the news of the shooting, people began to gather at Roosevelt Hospital and in front of the Dakota, reciting prayers, singing Lennon's songs and burning candles.
On December 14, all around the world, people paused to stand alone or come together in silence, heeding a plea from Yoko Ono that they take 10 minutes to remember the former Beatle. |
Peace,
Torkel _________________ Miller vs U.S. (230 F 2nd 486,489): "The claim and exercise of a Constitutional right cannot be converted into a crime."
Miranda vs Arizona (384 U.S. 436, 125): "Where rights secured by the Constitution are involved, there can be no rule-making or legislation which would abrogate them."
HAGANS vs LAVINE (415 US 533 N-3,note 5): "Once JURISDICTION is challenged it must be proven by the Plaintiff." |
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Ferre Cannabis Sacrament Minister.


Joined: 14 Apr 2003 Posts: 7295 Location: Amsterdam
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Posted: Mon Dec 12, 2005 9:06 pm Post subject: |
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One of the first two records I ever bought was 'Imagine'. And I'm listening to 'Woman' at the moment. _________________ █ Please read the Board Rules and Posting, and you
█ Radio Free Amsterdam
People who know truth, speak truth.
Those who don't, quote scriptures. |
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zero Cannabis Sacrament Minister


Joined: 28 Nov 2004 Posts: 1579
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Posted: Mon Dec 12, 2005 9:41 pm Post subject: |
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Dont forget about Dimebag. He died the same day as Lennon, 24 years later, and probably inspired just as many people through his music.
I did a small article on them.
http://www.shoutwire.com/comments/1645/John_Lennon_Dimebag_Darrell_Tribute
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25 years ago tonight a light was extinguished and a generation lost one of its greatest musicians. 24 years after that, to the very day, the next generation experienced the same thing.
John Lennon and “Dimebag” Darrell Abbott were undoubtedly two of the greatest musicians of their respective times. Though their music styles varied greatly each one had its own effect on the people as well as the culture of this world.
The Bands these two great musicians played in were arguably the most influential of their eras. The Beatles brought us rock and roll and Pantera made it loud. Without them we would not have music as we know it today.
Each is being remembered in their own separate ways. Fans in New York City commemorated Lennon’s death by holding silent vigils tonight while Dimebag is being honored with an upcoming tribute CD featuring contributions from a number of well-known musicians from within the metal community.
I know, this item is not news. It’s a tribute to two of the greatest musicians of all time. |
_________________ www.shoutwire.com
www.spikedhumor.com
"I understand that fear is my friend, but not always. Never turn your back on fear. It should always be in front of you, like a thing that might have to be killed." |
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