While scouring my "home office" for a particular photo, I can across this well preserved news flash (after the jump):
Posted by frame609 on 2005-06-04 04:08:35 +0000
Uh.....
Posted by tgl on 2005-06-04 13:44:23 +0000
Dammit, I'm always screwing up the link.
Posted by tgl on 2005-06-04 14:46:23 +0000
I can grow that hair in... 28 days.
Posted by frame609 on 2005-06-04 16:15:56 +0000
Still no luck.
Posted by frame609 on 2005-06-05 17:02:36 +0000
Not a single chustache. Recount!
Posted by Miriam on 2005-06-06 16:04:58 +0000
My guess is 4 or 7. Was it General/Admiral Burnside?
Posted by tendiamonds on 2005-06-06 17:37:05 +0000
I thought it was Burnside, and my guess is 11.
Posted by frame609 on 2005-06-06 17:37:48 +0000
I think #7 is Zachary Taylor.
Posted by tendiamonds on 2005-06-06 17:42:11 +0000
Was it this guy?
[img]http://www.pennmanor.org/4images/data/media/13/stash.jpg[/img]
Posted by frame609 on 2005-06-06 17:50:38 +0000
That's a hell of a molestache.
Posted by tgl on 2005-06-06 18:04:51 +0000
Saw a glimpse of Johnny Damon with a mustache on channel 38 last night. Still looking for a pic.
Meanwhile, don't call it a comeback.
Also looking at image compression...
There's also [url=http://www.wordorigins.org/wordors.htm/][color=hotpink]this[/url][/color]: Sideburns
Sideburns are whiskers that are worn on the sides of a man's face, especially when the beard on the chin is shaved. The term is an alteration of the name of General A.E. Burnside (1824-81), a Union general in the US Civil War more famed for his whiskers than his abilities on the battlefield.
The term burnsides, referring to a style of whiskers worn by the general consisting of mutton-chop whiskers on the sides of the face, a moustache, and a clean-shaven chin, occurs as early as 1881. The alteration sideburns, referring just to the side whiskers, appears in 1887.