Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2003/09/27
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]One of the old "Murder, She Wrote" episodes involved Ricardo Montalbon as a Yugoslavian concert pianist who killed his wife. His "out" was that he couldn't have fired the gun. He had come home drunk, spilled a bottle of Slivovitz in the wastebasket, and then badly burned his hands when he accidently set it alight after throwing his lit cigar into the same wastebasket. Jessica Fletcher's urbane British friend Dennis Stanton, ex-jewel thief turned insurance investigator, fingered Ricardo. Turns out that Ricardo's character had been a partisan in Yugoslavia in WWII. He had been tortured, and developed the ability to withstand extreme pain. He was also developing a neurological disorder that would soon end his concert career. Knowing this, he staged the "accident" with the Slivovitz, then shot his wife, figuring that the police would not suspect that a man with severely burned hands could fire a gun. As a concert pianist, his hands were insured for millions. He would collect a big insurance settlement, and then live happily ever after with his luscious young female student. Moral: Stay away from Slivovitz. The stuff was the rocket fuel in a secret Eastern European space program. - --Peter Klein Seattle, WA > > Buzz Hausner wrote: > > > Or, as my grandfather would have said, slivovitz! > > > > > > Buzz >Seth said: > > > Confusing two different words with two different derivations and > > > meanings. > > > quetsch, as in a wondrous French plum-based clear brandy; and Gary Markland said: >Don't think it's Yiddish. Try Serbo-Croation? When in what was Yugoslavia, it >was the plum-based clear brandy. Often homemade. - -- To unsubscribe, see http://mejac.palo-alto.ca.us/leica-users/unsub.html