<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" version="2.0"><channel><title><![CDATA[1960: Thursday November 24, 1960:]]></title><description><![CDATA[<p dir="auto"><em>Archived from the IMDb Discussion Forums — Ted Bundy</em></p>
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<p dir="auto"><strong>BaltimoreBob</strong> — <em>16 years ago(November 23, 2009 07:34 AM)</em></p>
<p dir="auto">1960: Thursday November 24, 1960:<br />
Wilt Chamberlain sets NBA rebounds record  Record 100 Points same year on 3/2/1960.<br />
On November 24, 1960, Philadelphia Warrior Wilt Chamberlain snags 55 rebounds in a game<br />
against the Boston Celtics and sets an NBA record for the most rebounds in a single game.<br />
1967: 11/24/1967: "Hello, Goodbye" was released as a single on 24 November 1967.<br />
In the US, the song was also included on the Magical Mystery Tour album<br />
released three days later, but the song was not made available in the UK<br />
on an album (or in stereo) until the release of the 1973 compilation album 19671970.<br />
With the release of the song, McCartney gave an explanation of its meaning<br />
in an interview with Disc: "The answer to everything is simple.<br />
It's a song about everything and nothing.<br />
If you have black you have to have white. That's the amazing thing about life."<br />
John Lennon was not fond of the song and called it<br />
"three minutes of contradictions and meaningless juxtapositions."<br />
"Hello, Goodbye" had also relegated his own composition "I am the Walrus"<br />
to the B-side of the single.<br />
<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hello_Goodbye" rel="nofollow ugc">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hello_Goodbye</a><br />
<a href="http://www.jeopardy.com/" rel="nofollow ugc">http://www.jeopardy.com/</a> Daily Update<br />
As of November 9th, Ken's total winnings are $2,355,001.<br />
He takes a break from November 10th through the 23rd as JEOPARDY!<br />
presents The College Championship from the University of Pittsburgh.<br />
Ken will be back on November 24th to continue his unprecedented streak.<br />
No matter how horrible this Guy is (Ted Bundy)<br />
200 Million Americans (75% Cowards) sent 2.1 Million of us to Vietnam<br />
Almost 59,000 died there because of American Cowardness.<br />
The 'Real Bad' guys were Presidents LBJ and Nixon.<br />
My #1 Celebrity Birthday Person for November 24th is<br />
Ted Bundy (Would have been 63 in 2009) 1946 - Died age 42<br />
Born 24 November 1946 - Burlington, Vermont<br />
Date of death 24 January 1989 - Starke, Florida.<br />
(execution by electric chair)<br />
Baltimore Bob turned his death age about May 7th 1992 (1987/1992 last year in CA).<br />
Birth name: Theodore Robert Bundy / Height: 6' (1.83 m) / IQ of 124<br />
Theodore Robert Bundy, or more commonly known as 'Ted'<br />
was one of the most prolific serial killers in America.<br />
The term 'Serial Killer' was invented and first used for Ted Bundy as a<br />
description of his character.  He confessed to 36 murders,<br />
but nobody really knows how many had been committed<br />
or when he began his legacy of horror;<br />
he had gone to his grave without confessing the true total.<br />
Ted was born to Eleanor Louise Cowell and a father that had taken off when Eleanor<br />
found out she was pregnant. Faced with limited options in 1946, she gave birth to him<br />
in an 'unwed mother' facility and began a hopeless charade:<br />
as he grew up, she told him that her parents were his parents and that she was his sister.<br />
It wasn't until 1974 when he realized that 238his mother had lied to him for so many years.<br />
He grew to be a handsome, educated and intelligent man who was not suspected of<br />
some of the heinous acts he committed.<br />
Bundy even volunteered for a crisis telephone hotline<br />
(where he met famed author Ann Rule who was also a volunteer)<br />
and had a steady relationship with a girlfriend, a girlfriend<br />
that would fuel his maniacal rage after she left him.<br />
He was studying psychology in Seattle on January 31, 1974 when an attractive<br />
psychology student at the University of Washington dis1c84appeared out of her bedroom.<br />
Many more identical disappearances followed, many attractive young women would<br />
suddenly fall off the face of the earth with no explanation.<br />
His victims were generally young attractive girls with dark hair parted in the middle.<br />
His M.O. was to approach his potential victim wearing an arm-sling or a cast.<br />
He would introduce himself as 'Ted' and ask the girl to help him carry his books<br />
Or packages he was having trouble managing because of his 'broken arm'.<br />
Most would oblige seeing his handicap.<br />
When they were alone he would knock them on the head with a crowbar,<br />
stuff their bodies into his car, strangle them while they were unconscious<br />
and then commit necrophilic rape.<br />
He would then leave the naked body in a wooded area,<br />
mostly Taylor Mountain in Washington State, where many of his victims were found.<br />
Spouse: Carole Anne Boone (9 February 1980 - 24 January 1989) (his death) 1 child<br />
Daughter with Boone, born October 1982<br />
Had a daughter with Carole Boone during his years on death row.<br />
This was highly unusual, as death row inmates are not permitted conjugal visits.<br />
Married Carole Boone during his second trial, in which he was condemned to death row.<br />
Acting as his own attorney, he called her as a witness.<br />
He phrased a question such that an affirmative answer in front of a judge<br />
and recorded by the court would legally bind marriage.<br />
Although Bundy was only proven to be responsible for the deaths of 28 women,<br />
is it widely believed that he killed at least 33.<br />
According to Bundy himself in a taped confession, he killed more than 100.<br />
When told that he was believed to have killed 36 women in six different states,<br />
Bundy su</p>
]]></description><link>https://filmglance.com/discuss/topic/110719/1960-thursday-november-24-1960</link><generator>RSS for Node</generator><lastBuildDate>Fri, 15 May 2026 03:20:38 GMT</lastBuildDate><atom:link href="https://filmglance.com/discuss/topic/110719.rss" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/><pubDate>Thu, 16 Apr 2026 22:28:51 GMT</pubDate><ttl>60</ttl><item><title><![CDATA[Reply to 1960: Thursday November 24, 1960: on Thu, 16 Apr 2026 22:28:53 GMT]]></title><description><![CDATA[<p dir="auto"><strong>Scipii</strong> — <em>10 years ago(October 07, 2015 09:43 PM)</em></p>
<p dir="auto">Wtf is this post</p>
]]></description><link>https://filmglance.com/discuss/post/1028872</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://filmglance.com/discuss/post/1028872</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[fgadmin]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Thu, 16 Apr 2026 22:28:53 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title><![CDATA[Reply to 1960: Thursday November 24, 1960: on Thu, 16 Apr 2026 22:28:52 GMT]]></title><description><![CDATA[<p dir="auto"><strong>BaltimoreBob</strong> — <em>16 years ago(November 23, 2009 07:36 AM)</em></p>
<p dir="auto">continued<br />
Pete Best (II) (63) 1941<br />
Born: Madras, India / Birth name: Randolph Peter Best<br />
Has two brothers, Rory and Roag.<br />
Half brother Roag was fathered by Neil Aspinall, who lived with the Best family<br />
in the late 50s/early 60s. Neil later became the Beatles' road manager and now<br />
runs the Beatles' record company, Apple.<br />
Mother owned a coffee/club in the family home's basement called the Casbah.<br />
Drummer for the Beatles August 1960-August 1962.<br />
Spouse: Kathy (August 1963 - present) 2 children<br />
Father of two daughters, Buba and Bonita<br />
Belatedly shared in the Beatles' success without him, when early recordings<br />
featuring Best on drums were included in 1995's 'The Beatles Anthology';<br />
Best's share of the royalties was projected at over $1 million.<br />
Besides his lack of 'chops' as a drummer, the other reason cited for Best's firing<br />
from the Beatles was that he'd never tried to fit in as a member of the group;<br />
while the other members frequently spent their free time together,<br />
Best usually went off on his own, even sitting alone during their breaks between sets.<br />
He'd also kept his same ducktail hairstyle, when the band decided to adopt the 'Beatle cut'.<br />
When he was first let go from the Beatles,<br />
manager Brian Epstein offered to put a new group together showcasing Best.<br />
Finding this more difficult than expected, Epstein finally pulled some strings<br />
with another Liverpool band's manager, who invited Best to join them.<br />
In the wake of the Beatles' success, Best was signed to a recording deal on his own,<br />
resulting in the dubiously-titled LP 'Best Of The Beatles' (a reference to his former band).<br />
The album went nowhere, and Best gave up his music career,<br />
first becoming a baker, then later a civil servant.<br />
Oscar Robertson (66) 1938<br />
Born: Charlotte, Tennessee / Height: 6' 5" (1.96 m)<br />
Birth Name: Oscar Palmer Robertson / Nickname: The Big O<br />
Played for the University of Cincinnati (1956-1960),<br />
where he was a three-year letter winner.<br />
Spouse: Yvonne Crittenden (June 1960 - present) 3 children<br />
Played for the Cincinnati Royals (1960-1970) and Milwaukee Bucks (1970-1974).<br />
Rookie of the Year (1961). MVP (1964). All-NBA First Team (1961-1969).<br />
Twelve-time All-Star (1961-1972). Three time All-Star MVP (1961, 1964 and 1969).<br />
Named the No. 36 athlete of the 20th century according to an ESPN poll.<br />
Believes the NBA blackballed him for his days as a players' union leader,<br />
keeping him from league jobs long after his pro career ended in 1975.<br />
Robertson changed the nature of the point guard from "floor general" and passer<br />
to offensive force.<br />
His numbers have been retired by his college and NBA teams:<br />
12 (University of Cincinnati), 14 (Cincinnati Royals/Sacramento Kings),<br />
and 1 (Milwaukee Bucks). [1999]<br />
The Sporting News College Player of the Year (1958, 1959, 1960).<br />
The Sporting News All-America First Team (1958, 1959, 1960).<br />
U.S. team member for the 1959 Pan-american games and 1960 Olympic Games<br />
(where he won a gold medal for both).<br />
Believes the NBA blackballed him for his days as a players' union leader,<br />
keeping him from league jobs long after his pro career ended in 1975.<br />
NBA 35th Anniversary All-Time Team (1980).<br />
Enshrined into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 1980.<br />
Donated a kidney to his daughter, Tia,<br />
who had suffered kidney failure as a result of lupus. (10 April 1997).<br />
Named one of the 50 greatest NBA players ever. [1997] (see August index).<br />
William F. Buckley (79) 1925</p>
<ul>
<li>Born: NY, NY / Birth name: William Frank Buckley Jr.</li>
<li>One of 10 children in a family of Irish and Swiss extraction.</li>
<li>Brother of the former Republican U.S. Senatorial candidate from NY, James Buckley.</li>
<li>Spouse: Patricia Taylor (1950 - present) 1 child</li>
<li>William was married the year Baltimore Bob was born (March 7th 1950).</li>
<li>Best known as the publisher of National Review, the Conservative periodical,</li>
<li>but also is a syndicated political columnist.<br />
Dead Persons:<br />
Ted Bundy (Would have been 58) 1946  see #1 for today<br />
&amp;<br />
Howard Duff (I) (Would have been 91) 1913  Died age 76<br />
Date238 of Birth 24 November 1913, Bremerton, Washington, USA<br />
Baltimore Bob resided in Bremerton in June-August of 1971 while in the US Navy.<br />
Date of Death 8 July 1990, Santa Barbara, California, USA (heart attack)<br />
Birth Name: Howard Green Duff<br />
Spouse: Ida Lupino (1951 - 1984) (divorced) 1 child / Father of Bridget Duff.<br />
1st movie role at age 34 in Brute Force (1947) (as Howard Duff Radio's Sam Spade)<br />
as Robert 'Soldier' Becker.<br />
1950 &amp; Baltimore Bob is born:<br />
Shakedown (1950) as Jack Early, Spy Hunt (1950) as Steve Quain<br />
.b68.. aka Panther's Moon (UK) &amp; Woman in Hiding (1950) as Keith Ramsey.<br />
"The Twilight Zone" - A World of Difference (1960) TV episode as Arthur Curtis/Gerry Reagan.<br />
Original Air Date: 11 March 1960 (Season 1, Episode 23).<br />
"Night Gallery"  aka Rod Serling's Night Gallery (USA)</li>
<li>There Aren't Any More MacBanes (1972) TV episode as Arthur Porter.<br />
Last movie role at age 78 in Too Much Sun (1991) as O.M.<br />
Unsold pilot: He was scheduled to star in a 1958 detective/mystery serie</li>
</ul>
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