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Post by bulkey on Jul 27, 2023 16:10:15 GMT -5
You’re a Brooklynite locked in a room with Hitler, Stalin, and Walter O’Malley. You have two bullets. What do you do?
Shoot O’Malley twice.
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Post by Deleted on Jul 29, 2023 10:03:48 GMT -5
You’re a Brooklynite locked in a room with Hitler, Stalin, and Walter O’Malley. You have two bullets. What do you do? Shoot O’Malley twice. My late Uncle John - 1 of many Uncle Johns - was a diehard Dodgers fan until the BUMS left NY..... .... he then became a reluctant Mets fan and hated O'Malley for the rest of his life. Even Koufax and Drysdale couldn't lure him back as a fan.
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Post by knightsbridgeaz on Jul 29, 2023 21:08:13 GMT -5
You’re a Brooklynite locked in a room with Hitler, Stalin, and Walter O’Malley. You have two bullets. What do you do? Shoot O’Malley twice. My late Uncle John - 1 of many Uncle Johns - was a diehard Dodgers fan until the BUMS left NY..... .... he then became a reluctant Mets fan and hated O'Malley for the rest of his life. Even Koufax and Drysdale couldn't lure him back as a fan. My grandmother also became a Met fan after originally being a Dodger fan. She had books about several of the great Dodger teams, as well as the early Mets. One of the sad truths in my history - Grandma had a baseball signed by all the great Dodgers - mostly hall of famers - as her and her 2nd husband went to spring training every year for a number of years. I unfortunately kept it in the basement - our damp basement - and it molded over. So did my entire baseball card collection, although I doubt any of them were hugely valuable, from the 1960's.
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Post by bulkey on Aug 7, 2023 22:38:43 GMT -5
My late Uncle John - 1 of many Uncle Johns - was a diehard Dodgers fan until the BUMS left NY..... .... he then became a reluctant Mets fan and hated O'Malley for the rest of his life. Even Koufax and Drysdale couldn't lure him back as a fan. My grandmother also became a Met fan after originally being a Dodger fan. She had books about several of the great Dodger teams, as well as the early Mets. One of the sad truths in my history - Grandma had a baseball signed by all the great Dodgers - mostly hall of famers - as her and her 2nd husband went to spring training every year for a number of years. I unfortunately kept it in the basement - our damp basement - and it molded over. So did my entire baseball card collection, although I doubt any of them were hugely valuable, from the 1960's. Oh, really sorry for you. I well remember when I came home from college and my mom asked me what I wanted to do with my baseball card collection. I told her just to throw it out.
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