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snowmman 3
also have the idea of negotiable or non-negotiable currency in mind
The Perfect War: Technowar in Vietnam
by James William Gibson - 2000
"MPCs had been devised for use only by the military or US government employees as a strictly non-negotiable currency; in Vietnam they ended up as an indeterminate currency halfway between the dollar and the piaster...."
http://books.google.com/books?id=nY0VLPf0h8UC&pg=PA246&lpg=PA246&dq=vietnam+%22negotiable+currency%22&source=web&ots=nZpT-hzy2W&sig=7LBJAl18knwKbn8A0RBGq099cCA&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=1&ct=result
also see:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_Payment_Certificate
georger 264
QuoteQuote... I would have a difficult time distinguishing between a strong Yooper (Upper MI) accent and a Northwest Ontario accent. With Tina being from "back east" would she be able to tell the difference between Seattle and Vancouver?
The idea of Cooper being Canadian would answer a lot of questions about nobody recognizing him or reporting him missing. It also make the demand for "negotiable currency" make a bit more sense. Someone from the US would just ask for cash, but someone from out of the country??
Thanks... that is the kind of feedback on accents I was looking for. And that sounds like a good point about the cash.
Reply> The Comic Book: I want to know the distribution of this comic book. Where published.
Where available. Lets draw a line along the major highway running east-west above the Soo (sioux st marie) and where the comic book was available.
Quebec City> Toronto? Sudbury? Montreal? (probably) ... points south: Minneapolis. ... points west to Vancouver BC ... Seattle?
It makes sense to me some smartass far away
from his home territory would use a name that
only he (and French speakers) could connect.
Georger
georger 264
377
Mr. Genetics is the Decider! Right?
snowmman 3
My parents are non-US native, and I know that had a strong influence on me as a kid.
(edit) include grandfather/grandmother.
snowmman 3
QuoteI think the olive complexion was a tan, which also argues against Canada.
377
Mr. Genetics is the Decider! Right?
A guy with olive complexion and sunglasses in the fall in an airport in the Northwest.
What's your first guess where he's from?
georger 264
Quotegeorger
Why limit it to French. Weinberg was Austrian and there were a lot of sales like this: [see attached images].
Sluggo_Monster
Good grief! This thing is published in Europe. All
the way to Spain. Photos show a wide array of
tactical fighters from F86D to early Mig .....
Available on US bases in Germany and Spain etc?
Now Im wondering if Cooper used Dan Cooper precisely bcause he knew it would connect for
some people, like raising a middle finger, and
they would know who and what Dan Cooper was!
A wake up call . . .
Georger
georger 264
QuoteAt this point maybe some definitions would be useful. It's harder than you might think to find the definitions.
1. olive-colored - the dull, yellowish-green color of the unripe olive fruit
- having a dark complexion tinged with this color
2. ruddy
adj 1: inclined to a healthy reddish color often associated with outdoor life; "a ruddy complexion";
3. Latin was hard to find in terms of complexion (because of the google search term coming up with other meanings) but the top skincare site that came up seems to think it is interchangeable with olive:
If you are Latino, you have the firmest skin of any other ethnicity. Your olive pigmentation, which is generally oily with firm skin, can protect you from deep scarring. It may also cause many problems for your complexion.
[Incidentally: historically - as in Ancient Rome - "Latin skin" was referred to as "white" skin in direct contrast to the darker skin of the Greeks...]
4. Golden ash- this confuses me. I couldn't find a definition of it. Golden implies tanned to me, ash implies white. There is a tree called a Golden Ash. Its leaves change colour during the year and its bark is golden. http://www.maryrobertson.co.nz/golden-ash.html Does this mean golden then and if so, why say "golden ash" and not just "golden"?
The only reason I list all the above is that I'm inclined to think that different people may have different ideas which may have coloured (pun not intended) the descriptions they give. Most people I know, for example, would indeed use Latin and olive interchangeably.
But this is interesting to me, because I get different ideas from the different descriptions. Specifically, a Latin or olive complexion to me would imply a particular ethnicity background. Ruddy to golden sounds more like a tan.
So I feel like I am running in circles here and the easiest would be to see a colour sketch by the artist. Jo, you have posted various sketches before, do you happen to have a copy of the one you refer to to post here? You have obviously at least seen it as you say it is not the same as your complexion.
(I'm a little confused by the journalist who cannot share his findings with the public. Isn't that what journalists do?)
Edited to add: just to clarify - Jo, when you say "Indian" you mean Native American, not Indian as in India?
Reply> well I might as well say this just to get it on the table and avoid Jo blindsiding us with her
Baumwollernmachinische Gestalt!
Kidney conditions often produce yellowing of the skin
sometimes shading into olive-yellow.
Jo says Duane' kidney condition was not as bad as
Pasternak portrays. She say Duane was perfectly fit.
I just dont want Jo jumping up here and saying:
"ah.. Duane had a kidney condition, yellow/olive
toned skin at times, but was not sickand perfectly
fit ... with yellow/olive toned skin.
Just think I should bring this up in case it comes
up from far left field ...
Georger
snowmman 3
Quote
would connect for
some people, like raising a middle finger, and
they would know who and what Dan Cooper was!
Here's a whacked out theory of mine. Take the spliff first.
Who was at the 1962 Seattle World's Fair and rode the Bubbleator? Do you remember how the operator was dressed like Flash Gordon? Do you remember the music they played and the voiceovers?
(this will also tell me whether there's any real '62 WA folks out there!)
snowmman 3
Quote[
I just dont want Jo jumping up here and saying:
"ah.. Duane had a kidney condition, yellow/olive
toned skin at times, but was not sickand perfectly
fit ... with yellow/olive toned skin.
Georger
Yellow skin?
malaria or hepatitis is the first thing that comes to mind for me, in 1971.
anyone have knowledge of that? I've not googled much.
Orange1 0
QuoteI think the olive complexion was a tan, which also argues against Canada.
377
Mr. Genetics is the Decider! Right?
Do Canadians never go anywhere with sun..?
Just another thought on this: there are a lot of mines in Canada. There are a lot of mines in Africa. People with the right experience travel for money. Africa has been full of expats working on mines, geology etc for decades. (Some of these were called "colonialists". ) Sure someone who is say a natural Irish-type redhead may never get a proper tan, but your average dark-haired person of Anglo-Saxon or French descent will.
Orange1 0
Quote
There was a discussion a while back that seemed to indicate the chances of Cooper knowing which plane he was getting on was slim. This was glossed over by the idea you could just keep flying back and forth until you got the right 727.
I would like to put this out there for discussion. If we now think that Cooper had limited skydiving experience, wouldn't it be just as possible that his plan was to bail out of ANY plane he was on?? It didn't seem like he planned it well given the loafers and suit. He needed Tina's help with the stair right off.
If we take a minute and frame him as a guy who needed money and was just-smart-enough, you could come up with a much simpler profile that just HAPPENED to go down on a 727 with a rear stair.
But how do you reconcile that with the transcript showing Cooper asked early on for the airstairs to be lowered, and 377's point that so few people knew about this that not even the pilots did - they had to go back to Boeing to see if it could be done? Even if the 727 was chance, his knowledge of it surely wasn't.
Reply> I have lived in this area. There has been a
steady flow of people and commerce between Mich
and Ontario through the UP for many generations.
Many people used to have dual citisenship. Language has followed people's feet....
Georger
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