Posted: Wed May 23, 2007 9:46 am
I don't do any criminal law, but occasionally I'll go through the Court when a docket call is going on. I'm often amazed how stupidly people are dressed for something that's pretty serious.Originally posted by wkambic
Didn't one of Britsh Princes wear swastikas to a party a year or so ago?
Those who would wear some the T-shirts I've seen are cetainly not the "creme de la creme" of society. At least once a month one of our local judges has to send a defendant out of for "wardrobe change" due to clothing bearing offensive or insulting mottos.
One "skinhead" had the "SS" logo tatooed on noggin. He wore a hat when he came in; a bailiff made him take it off. I thought he was gonna shoot the youngster, as he'd been torpedo'ed a couple of times in the North Atlantic. He was so angry we sent him to work the other courtroom.
From our own culture we have the problems of Confederate symbology.
On the other hand when I lived in Milwaukee in the '60s and '70s you could see old houses with swastika symbology in leaded glass windows and other decoration (the houses were all built in German neigborhoods from 1900 to 1920).
While I'm not a big supporter of PC concepts, it seems to me that thoughtful folks understand that some things are HIGHLY offensive to some of their fellow citizens and that those things might be best left in historical displays, not made into a T-shirt.
But, then, maybe I'm just too old-fashioned.
Bill Kambic
Mangalarga Marchador: Uma raça, uma paixão
Prior to WWII the swastika was a common design element in many buildings. The floor of the high school I went to, built in the 1920s, had little swastikas in the tile. A building on Main Street in Thermopolis, WY, has very prominent ones in the brick work.Originally posted by stablesgt
As to the houses built before say 1920, the swastika was a good luck symbol. I now of an old skyscraper built circa 1925 that has elevator doors bordered in small repeating swatiskas. They are set square on one of their legs rather than canted like the NSDAP symbol. Was it the 45th Inf Division that had swastika shoulder patch before 1941?
Do you recommend any of these books?Originally posted by stablesgt
Pat,
as to the movie, I should have understood the point from the start. She didn't do anything remarkable like discovering radium but, yes, she would make a good icon for a story line about the era. However, that has already been done in an english language biography of her and she wrote two books of her own about the same theme.
It was indeed the 45th ID. The swastika was an American symbol associated with good luck in the Oklahoma area and appeared in a lot of contexts. Somewhere I have a picture of a saddle built in Oklahoma about 1900 adorned with a swastika motif. It's also found in the brick and/or tile work of a lot of old buildings in Oklahoma. Just prior to WWII, the 45th ID changed their shoulder patch insignia to a Thunderbird, which is also historically an American Indian good luck symbol.Originally posted by stablesgt
As to the houses built before say 1920, the swastika was a good luck symbol. I now of an old skyscraper built circa 1925 that has elevator doors bordered in small repeating swatiskas. They are set square on one of their legs rather than canted like the NSDAP symbol. Was it the 45th Inf Division that had swastika shoulder patch before 1941?
Kelton, that link doesn't go where ever you meant it to, unless you wanted it to go to a page with a kitten licking a paw, and a woman with a tattooed shoulder. . .Originally posted by Kelton OliverIt was indeed the 45th ID. The swastika was an American symbol associated with good luck in the Oklahoma area and appeared in a lot of contexts. Somewhere I have a picture of a saddle built in Oklahoma about 1900 adorned with a swastika motif. It's also found in the brick and/or tile work of a lot of old buildings in Oklahoma. Just prior to WWII, the 45th ID changed their shoulder patch insignia to a Thunderbird, which is also historically an American Indian good luck symbol. For those who haven't seen it, here is a Thunderbird patch on a soldier:Originally posted by stablesgt
As to the houses built before say 1920, the swastika was a good luck symbol. I now of an old skyscraper built circa 1925 that has elevator doors bordered in small repeating swatiskas. They are set square on one of their legs rather than canted like the NSDAP symbol. Was it the 45th Inf Division that had swastika shoulder patch before 1941?
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v633/ ... NP0001.jpg
LeVeque Tower--Columbus?Originally posted by stablesgt
The skyscraper I mentioned is in Ohio.
Originally posted by Kelton OliverIt was indeed the 45th ID. The swastika was an American symbol associated with good luck in the Oklahoma area and appeared in a lot of contexts. Somewhere I have a picture of a saddle built in Oklahoma about 1900 adorned with a swastika motif. It's also found in the brick and/or tile work of a lot of old buildings in Oklahoma. Just prior to WWII, the 45th ID changed their shoulder patch insignia to a Thunderbird, which is also historically an American Indian good luck symbol.Originally posted by stablesgt
As to the houses built before say 1920, the swastika was a good luck symbol. I now of an old skyscraper built circa 1925 that has elevator doors bordered in small repeating swatiskas. They are set square on one of their legs rather than canted like the NSDAP symbol. Was it the 45th Inf Division that had swastika shoulder patch before 1941?
Wow. Quite the photos on that one.Originally posted by Philip S
some more pictures of German Hussars:
http://forum.axishistory.com/viewtopic. ... c&start=0e
I wonder if that's the same one in the Brassey book? The Brassey one is a portrait.Originally posted by Philip S
There is a very good picture of a United States Hussar with a death's head symbol on his cap on p. 71 of "Uniforms of the Civil War" by Smith and Field.