While photographer Daniel Sorine was walking through Central Park one day in 1974 he started snapping shots of a couple of mimes who were goofing off. The entire set of photos is a lot of fun, but the most startling thing about the photos is that Sorine captured early photos of Robin Williams before he became one of the most famous people on the planet. Sorine explained what drew him to Williams:
After a series of shots rang out across Dallas on e. This photo shows one of the more mysterious moments from the JFK assassination as people have speculated that it either shows Jackie reaching for a secret service agent or a piece of skull fragment. Some people have surmised that she was trying to escape, but according to Former Secret Service Agent Clint Hill Jackie refused to leave her husband’s side even when they made it to the hospital. In 2013 he told CBS:
It’s hard to believe it but that smiling boy that’s the second from the right is one of the worst terrorists that the world has ever known. When this photo was taken in 1971, 23 members loan places Luverne of the incredibly wealthy Bin Laden family visited Falun, Sweden, too sight see while his one of the oldest brothers entered into business talks with Volvo. At the time Bin laden was only 16-years-old and he didn’t really speak up, The Guardian reports that he was remembered as being reserved on the trip. In an interview with the same site his mother noted that he was a very good kid with a lot of love to give.
Demi Moore had the late 80s and 90s wrapped around her finger. Her raspy voice set her apart from the rest of the actresses of the era, but before she appeared in films like St. Elmo’s Fire and Ghost she posed for cheesecake photo spreads in Europe. One of her first major shoots was a saucy session with French magazine Oui. At the time Moore just wanted to work and she claims that she lied about her age in order to get the job. She’s told various interviewers that she was either 16 or 17 years old when the photos were taken. It seems that in her teens she’d do whatever she could to make it.
Imagine meeting the love of your life at the most important music festival in recent memory and only taking one photo. Even worse, imagine not having that photo. That’s exactly what happened to Judy and Jerry Griffin, a couple who met on the road to the Woodstock Music Festival and ended up riding in the same van with one another. During their ride to the festival they got to know one another and never separated. It’s well known that the Griffins met at Woodstock, but it wasn’t until the photo of the couple showed up in the trailer for the PBS documentary Woodstock: Three Days that Defined a Generation. Jerry told People Magazine , We’d known each other less than 48 hours when that was taken. What a way to celebrate their 50th anniversary.
Burial at sea has long been something that’s held the imaginations of all nautical obsessed land lubbers. As you might imagine, the Navy has a long list of regulations for how they dispose of bodies in the water. The most upsetting rule about these ceremonies is that family members aren’t allowed to say goodbye to their loved ones because the burials only occur when a ship is deployed. However, the commanding officer who performs the ceremony will inform the family of the date, time, and longitude and latitude after the bodies are tossed to the sea. It’s a hefty trade off to send a loved one back to the water from which they came.