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 tOMWiii
 
posted on May 29, 2005 02:35:14 PM new
According to the IMDB,

Ken Osmond aka Eddie Haskell aka Alice Cooper:

Was shot three times in the line of duty as an LA cop (WOW! That some "Traffic Division" you got out there in LaLa-Land??)

After retiring from the police force, he made his living from various Los Angeles-based rental properties which he maintained himself.

Spent most of his 18 years of service assigned to Central Traffic Division where he was rarely recognized as 'Leave It to Beaver' character.

He was severely typed as TV's favorite insincere school-age brownnoser ("Good morning, Mrs. Cleaver!" in the late 50s and early 60s and eventually was forced to quit the business.






"I'm going to spend a lot of time on Social Security. I enjoy it. I enjoy taking on the issue. I guess, it's the Mother in me."—Guess Who? Washington D.C., April 14, 2005
 
 sthoemke
 
posted on May 29, 2005 02:37:38 PM new
Eddie Haskell went on to become the mascot for Iron Maiden.


 
 MAH645
 
posted on May 29, 2005 04:36:40 PM new
Tom, Ralphie is listening to "In need of a Friend" .....I think he wants a new toy>
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Two men sit behind bars,one sees mud the other sees stars.
 
 classicrock000
 
posted on May 29, 2005 06:55:14 PM new
I remember an episode one night Ward had to disipline one of the kids.Ward wakes up the next morning with a 5'o'clock shadow on his face and sees June in the kitchen.She says "I think you were kind of rough on the beaver last night." To this day Im not quite sure what she was talking about.









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Baseball season has started,but they have it all wrong.3 strikes and you're out,4 balls you walk.I can tell you right now a man with 4 balls could not possibly walk
 
 Libra63
 
posted on May 30, 2005 06:18:13 AM new
Here's a little history about Punk Rock. Though you might be interested.

While doing a little cleaning in my eBay room I came across a large soft cover book of album covers. Book is dated 1982. In it it had Punk and New Wave information.

The time was 1976, the place was London. although Punk was predominately English, the roots lay in the American bands like the Ramones and Richard Hell and the Voidoids. The latter attributed the dubious honour of being on of the first musicians, if not the first, to wear deliberately torn clothing on State. Before that were the New York Dolls, whose manager Malcolm Mclaren subsequently managed the infamous Sex Pistols.

The image was chaotic, Bright colours, ripped clothing, dyed hair, safety pins, razorblades and chains-strategically placed through ears, noses and nipples in an intricate web of stainless steel spaghetti, Kids could be seen pogoing, as the most popular punk dance was termed. Punk was grass roots, suburbia with a vengeance. Kids aggregating in defiance. The sex Pistols were Punk's most notorious manifestation and their sleeve has many punk ingredients. New wave is an over-used and too vague a term, suffice to say that the changes effected, whatever they were, can be seen as starting here to continue and diversify right up to the present day.
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 mcjane
 
posted on June 2, 2005 05:28:26 PM new
classic,
I think Leave It To Beaver writers cleverly slipped one over on the censors with that line.
LOL

 
 dblfugger9
 
posted on June 2, 2005 06:27:25 PM new
Thanks Libra, for that blip about punk rock.

Always have referred to those times as some of the most I enjoyed in my life. I was at CBGB's, the Mudd club, and all those nitespots when they were new and emerging. Although I wasnt a groupie punker I had so much fun back then! To me it was the 80ties version of woodstock lol!

 
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