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Topic History of: are any of these people checked for lunacy? Max. showing the last 5 posts - (Last post first)
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corevalue
Those would have been the days when skirts were called pussy-pelmets for a reason. Putting a hand "up" wasn't really necessary as there wasn't enough cloth to adequately cover in the first place.
MWTWATCHER
I thought he had keys? no need to climb in.
Not the top story on Vine R2 news show today.
Mind you, MWT jacking himself sensless on Twatter over it all. Wgat is forgot about is, blokes stuck their hands up skirts in those days, not acceptable these days but it was not these days then.
steveimp
PS, have a lot of my extended family based in Leeds, hence how so many of them came into contact with JS.
steveimp
hedda wrote: did anyone bother to check if it was possible to climb through windows of a brand new hospital practically built by Savile?
last time I was in a public ward in a London hospital it was on the ground floor. The windows could not be opened (for obvious bloody reasons) there was only a tiny louvre window at the top that could be partly opened to allow fresh air in.
He obviously teleported into the room.
Have you seen some of the YouTube videos suggesting that Savile was a 'witch' or some sort of satanic devil offshoot? That's the madness - it's the witch hunts happening all over again but this time 24/7 on your telly, radio and on line.
I have an aunt who worked at one of the hospitals "alleged" to have been Savile's stalking grounds. As the BBC reporter has just said and she always said, he was thought to be a bloody nuisance to all concerned, where nurses and doctors tried to get out of dealing with him, not some sort of monster. A nuisance.
hedda
did anyone bother to check if it was possible to climb through windows of a brand new hospital practically built by Savile?
last time I was in a public ward in a London hospital it was on the ground floor. The windows could not be opened (for obvious bloody reasons) there was only a tiny louvre window at the top that could be partly opened to allow fresh air in.