From: owner-fegmaniax-digest@ecto.org To: fegmaniax-digest@ecto.org Reply-To: fegmaniax@ecto.org Errors-To: owner-fegmaniax-digest@ecto.org Subject: Feg Digest V5 #40 Fegmaniax Digest Volume 5 Number 40 Thursday February 27 1997 To post, send mail to fegmaniax@ecto.org To unsubscribe, send mail to majordomo@ecto.org with the words "unsubscribe fegmaniax-digest" in the message body. Send comments, etc. to the listowner at owner-fegmaniax@ecto.org FegMANIAX! Web Page: http://remus.rutgers.edu/~woj/fegmaniax/index.html Archives are available at ftp://www.ecto.org/pub/lists/fegmaniax/ ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Today's Topics: ------- ------- Re: BOB Magazine Self-Destruction Faeg-maniax BOB Magazine James namedrops, remembers he's a womble, and gets perverted! robynbase Re: Robyn Shows at Knitting Factory--Who's Going & When? Re: BOB Magazine robyn in georgia. please post more. Re: Self-Destruction Knitting and Mass Elixir Re: ROBYN SHOW LENGTH BOB Magazine(s) Re: tees What A Shame Mary Jane Re: tees Re: James namedrops, remembers he's a womble, and gets perverted! Duck t shirt Re: What A Shame Mary Jane Banana Splits Re: Duck t shirt 100% Lou content OT OT OT homerama 40 Watt show comments--longer than I had planned. ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 26 Feb 1997 20:22:50 -0500 (EST) From: Gary Assassin Subject: Re: BOB Magazine > Didn't "BOB" originally stand for > "Bucketful of Brains"? > Actually, a mistake many people make. There was a Bucketfull of Brains AND a BOB magazine. the first one was a magazine size white looking thing-a-ma-jig and the second was a newspaper style doo-hickey. ------------------------------ From: Terrence M Marks Date: Wed, 26 Feb 1997 20:26:53 -0500 (EST) Subject: Self-Destruction One of the things that I recently realized about RObyn (after reading a Vic Chesnutt bio page) is that he hasn't done anything really stupidly self-destructive, nor has he been hospitalized for mental disorders. He's one of the few good musicians to do that. I think that this rocks. (well...not counting those Gravy Deco-era drinking binges...but if I was recording that album, I;d start drinking heavily too) Terrence Marks Second Student in the Tendo Kasumi School of Philosophy -Seeking enlightenment through normalcy. normal@grove.ufl.edu ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 26 Feb 1997 17:44:14 -0800 From: Nick Winkworth CC: M R Godwin , meketone@well.com Subject: Faeg-maniax On Wed, 26 Feb the redoubtable Mike Godwin intoned imposingly: > something like 'faega' in Old Eng (a.k.a. Anglo-Saxon). It seems to be > another word which survived mainly in Scotland, and it isn't related to > 'faery'. It means something like 'in high spirits' or 'running mad'. I must say, I've been following this etymology thread with a somewhat weary eye, but this I like! "Running mad, in high spirits" -- Hmm.. could refer to one or two feglisters I could think of.. meketone@well.com (Carrie Galbraith) also noted >On another note - I gotta see a pic of these cones. I have one of those >lithographs Rhino was promoting, but cones? Is this a guy thing? Carrie; Just encourage your fellow listees to gather that photographic evidence at some of the upcoming gigs and it will yours via the wonders of web technology. On Wombles: Seeing as I'm an ex-pat Brit in the US, I have a multi-system VCR and several UK videotapes to go with it. Is one of them a Wombles compilation? Errm.. I plead the fifth. Later ~N ------------------------------ From: Hedblade@aol.com Date: Wed, 26 Feb 1997 21:06:29 -0500 (EST) Subject: BOB Magazine The Guambat wrote: << Didn't "BOB" originally stand for "Bucketful of Brains"?>> You'd be forgiven for the confusion, but I don't believe they are one and the same. The Bob is an American publication but Bucketful Of Brains, to my understanding, is a British mag. In any case, the publication of these was very different, one being newsprint (Bob) and the other more magazine size with a glossy cover (Bucketful). Robyn has done a number of flexies for each. Can someone all knowing step forth and show us the light? I'd be humbled but unharmed to find I'm wrong and Guambat is right. <> This much I can say with certainty. The version of "Surgery" on the flexi is an alternate version to the one on You & Oblivion. You've still got a rare gem there, Guam, no matter how crappy it plays!!! <> Yeah? Who isn't?!!! And none of you smug Live Death owners pipe up unless you want to part with it!!! Blinking On And Off, Jay "coming off like a bit of a prat in this post" Hedblade ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 27 Feb 1997 16:49:05 +1100 From: james.dignan@stonebow.otago.ac.nz (James Dignan) Subject: James namedrops, remembers he's a womble, and gets perverted! David Willems asked: >On another note, has anyone heard Alastair Galbraith? I heard that he >would appeal to Syd Barrett fans... not to boast but, I've got a recording somewhere of me singing with him from a few years back, and I bumped into him about three weeks ago. Yet another great Dunedin musician... Very difficult to get his music, though - mostly on limited release. If you ever spy a copy of Seely Girn on CD, snap it up - it's becoming more difficult to get every day. He's a bit of an acquired taste, but yes, you're probably right, he probably would appeal to Sydfans. Not a bad painter, either. Dmitry Gokhman skazal: >Paula Carino wrote: >>A kid's show about a group called the Wombles? If you're not kidding, >He is not kidding. The Wombles of Wimbledon. ah, but it sounds to me like Paula thinks the TV show was about a band. This is not the case. The TV show was about a type of small furry animal. Only the theme music was a big hit, so the marketers decided that they (i.e., the furry animals) should make more records! At least two albums (Wombling Songs, and Remember You're a Womble) resulted. Bizarre, but true, and a hell of a lot more fun than the Archies. All together no: "oooh-la-la-la-la hey banana!" amroth@zetnet.co.uk (Phil Edwards) fed us with a straight-line: >I remember being positively upset by the fact that >he'd written a song featuring the word 'zipper' (it's 'zip' in British >English). It wouldn't have seemed like a big deal, but it was the last >song & he'd just done "She doesn't exist" & I was still feeling a bit >fragile from that... plus I'm an old pedant. I'm an old pedant and I hang around the library I'm an old pedant and I hang around the library I wont do you no harm, just show you something in my dictionary So come on little girlie make a statement with which I can disagree! James >"After God, Shakespeare created most." > - Dumas isn't that "...created TOAST"? James Dignan___________________________________ You talk to me Deptmt of Psychology, Otago University As if from a distance ya zhivu v' 50 Norfolk Street And I reply. . . . . . . . . . Dunedin, New Zealand with impressions chosen from another time steam megaphone (03) 455-7807 (Brian Eno - "By this River") ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 26 Feb 1997 23:34:47 -0500 (EST) From: Bayard Subject: robynbase Good evening all, I've finished the structure of Robynbase, and would like information technology types to have a look at it-- MS access has an "analyse" function but I don't trust the machine. Let me know if you can ftp it or I can send it to you. I know you're out there, I know you're out there somewhere, =b ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 26 Feb 1997 23:46:54 -0400 From: lj lindhurst Subject: Re: Robyn Shows at Knitting Factory--Who's Going & When? >also sprach Paula_Carino@usccmail.lehman.com (Paula Carino): > >> Hey N.Y. Fegs--which Knitting Factory Shows will be people be >going >> to? I'll be going for sure to the first show and the last show, and maybe one in between I don't know-- maybe Friday night...? Anyone up for drinks? (none of my regular friends will go with me!) Guess I should get around to getting tickets...so many shows to choose from! What a luxury! yeah yeah lj ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 27 Feb 1997 00:59:44 -0500 From: lobsterman Subject: Re: BOB Magazine >Didn't "BOB" originally stand for >"Bucketful of Brains"? > >I have an old edition (with flexi, >of course). The article has a >great verbatim song intro to >"Lady Waters", and the flexi -- >which Y&O has made obsolete-- >is "Surgery". Who knows, maybe >I'll trade it to one of you collectors >out there... I am looking for the >CD "Live Death".. (hint hint) your bob flexi is not obsolete. the version of surgery on Y&O is essentially the same as the flexi, but he added some tambourine and backing vocals to it. john /-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-//-/-/-/-/-/-/- John B. Jones e-mail:jojones@mailbox.syr.edu web: http://web.syr.edu/~jojones "condemned to hell for every sin but littering" -soul coughing \-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\- ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 27 Feb 1997 01:07:08 -0500 From: lobsterman Subject: robyn in georgia. please post more. from an e-mail i received today from a non-list member: >last night he [robyn] >covered _its only r'n'r_ and "are you experienced_. are there list-member attendees that could post reviews, setlists, or reviews of cones from the numbered series?? pretty please with mousaka on top? jbj /-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-//-/-/-/-/-/-/- John B. Jones e-mail:jojones@mailbox.syr.edu web: http://web.syr.edu/~jojones "condemned to hell for every sin but littering" -soul coughing \-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\- ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 27 Feb 1997 13:02:55 +0100 (CET) From: James Isaacs Subject: Re: Self-Destruction On Wed, 26 Feb 1997, Terrence M Marks wrote: > (well...not counting those Gravy Deco-era drinking binges...but if I was > recording that album, I;d start drinking heavily too) > I think you have it the wrong way ´round. If I were drinking heavily, I would be recording that album! ; ) james ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 27 Feb 97 9:23:04 EST From: Jeff Rosedale Subject: Knitting and Mass Elixir I'll be at both shows Fri. and Sat. Maybe this will atone my sin/stupidity for missing the late show at Maxwell's last Fall! I'll probably be running around in a chalkhills or Stan Ridgway/Drywall t.shirt... since the moss elixir shirt is so nondescript. See you there with cones on! --Jeff rosedale@columbia.edu PS tower records on 68th & Bway (not the 4th st. branch Robyn refers to in his into to Wind Cries Mary) has Robyn's latest CD proudly displayed as "Mass Elixir". I had to check to make sure some new secret version hadn't been released... ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 27 Feb 1997 10:36:35 -0500 From: chadwick@esper.com (chad patterson) Subject: Re: ROBYN SHOW LENGTH > >At 10:52 AM 2/25/97 -0500, Rob Gronotte wrote: >>Could someone who has been to a recent show tell us how long Robyn has >>played? > The 2/23 Knoxville show was about an hour and 50 min. -Chad ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 27 Feb 1997 10:51:35 -0500 From: chadwick@esper.com (chad patterson) Subject: BOB Magazine(s) >Didn't "BOB" originally stand for >"Bucketful of Brains"? > Bucket full of Brains and The Bob are two dif. magazines. Bucket.. was published in England from, I believe, the late seventies to sometime in the mid eighties. The Bob is still published in America (Boston, maybe?). Both of them come/came with a flexi in each issue. I think Robyn has maybe had a flexi with each. I don't have the Robyn Bucket issue but I do have the Bob that features him. It is maybe from 1986 or 1987 (sorry so vague on all of this but it has been a while). The song on the flexi is "Surgery". If I can dig it up, I will give a shot at posting the article. -Chad ------------------------------ Subject: Re: tees From: guambat@juno.com (The Guambat) Date: Thu, 27 Feb 1997 12:37:14 EST On Thu, 27 Feb 97 9:23:04 EST Jeff Rosedale writes: >... since the moss elixir shirt is so nondescript. I didn't know there was such an animal. Is this a "Mrs. Wafflehead" production, or something privately done? Where do I get one? Sincerely, The Guambat guambat@juno.com ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 27 Feb 1997 12:53:05 -0400 (EDT) From: David Willems Subject: What A Shame Mary Jane I know there's a bootleg with Syd Barrett doing this song, but it's also on The Beatle's Anthology 3 (credited to Lennon). Both came out around the same time, and it does sound quite Barrett-y. Anyone have any idea if Syd wrote it? My guess is that the company distibuting Anthology 3 wouldn't risk crediting it to Lennon if he didn't write it, but it is intruiging. - David ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 27 Feb 1997 12:17:59 -0600 (CST) From: Truman Peyote Subject: Re: tees On Thu, 27 Feb 1997, The Guambat wrote: > >... since the moss elixir shirt is so nondescript. > > I didn't know there was such an animal. Is this a "Mrs. > Wafflehead" production, or something privately done? It's something Warner-ly done, at least judging from how dull they are. I much prefer my "Jasper, This One's Evil" t-shirt. > Where do I get one? Got mine at the show. I don't know if you can order them or not. Love on ya, Susan ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 27 Feb 1997 12:28:29 -0600 (CST) From: Truman Peyote Subject: Re: James namedrops, remembers he's a womble, and gets perverted! On Thu, 27 Feb 1997, James Dignan wrote: > Only the theme music was a big hit, so the marketers decided that they > (i.e., the furry animals) should make more records! At least two albums > (Wombling Songs, and Remember You're a Womble) resulted. Bizarre, but true, > and a hell of a lot more fun than the Archies. All together no: > "oooh-la-la-la-la hey banana!" Sounds like a better parallel might actually be the Banana Splits. After all, they were actually fuzzy animals too, albeit larger than the Wombles. Though I swear for the life of me I can't remember any of their songs. Anyone? > >fragile from that... plus I'm an old pedant. > > I'm an old pedant and I hang around the library > I'm an old pedant and I hang around the library > I wont do you no harm, just show you something in my dictionary > So come on little girlie make a statement with which I can disagree! Imply and infer are synonyms. And while you're busy proving that wrong, can I have some more of that disinfectant, Uncle James? Please? :) Love on ya, Susan ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 27 Feb 1997 13:49:58 -0500 (EST) From: Bayard Subject: Duck t shirt I was paddling thru woj's feg site last night & looked at the Wafflehead page-- yes, you can get the duck shirt from them. ------------------------------ From: Terrence M Marks Date: Thu, 27 Feb 1997 15:05:29 -0500 (EST) Subject: Re: What A Shame Mary Jane > I know there's a bootleg with Syd Barrett doing this song, but it's also > on The Beatle's Anthology 3 (credited to Lennon). Both came out around > the same time, and it does sound quite Barrett-y. Anyone have any idea > if Syd wrote it? My guess is that the company distibuting Anthology 3 > wouldn't risk crediting it to Lennon if he didn't write it, but it is > intruiging. 1) It sounds Barrett-y. This is kinda true. After certain levels of LSD consumption, all English musicians start to sound the same. 2) Barrett had nothing whatsoever to do with the song. It was recorded a week before Pink Floyd was in the studio. Lennon wrote and recorded it. Terry ------------------------------ From: Aidan Cully Subject: Banana Splits Date: Thu, 27 Feb 1997 15:47:00 -0500 (EST) Truman wrote: > > Sounds like a better parallel might actually be the Banana Splits. > After all, they were actually fuzzy animals too, albeit larger than the > Wombles. Though I swear for the life of me I can't remember any of their > songs. Anyone? Gotta find a cave for me and you, Where we can play if we want to.. Ba, ba ba ba, gotta find a cave! (repeat x9, you've got the song "Gotta Find a Cave") Anyone have the tab? ^-^ ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 27 Feb 1997 13:06:49 -0600 From: Cone #12 Subject: Re: Duck t shirt >I was paddling thru woj's feg site last night & looked at the Wafflehead >page-- yes, you can get the duck shirt from them. This was the only shirt being sold at the Nashville show ($15, I believe). It is handsome, but not fantastic. A deep mossy green with orange graphics that nicely compliment a cone. There you'd have a lovely ensemble. Unfortunately, I only had $10. Gary ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 27 Feb 97 17:37:58 EST From: kenster@MIT.EDU (Ken Ostrander) Subject: 100% Lou content OT OT OT lots of stuff about how 'caroline says' started out as 'stephanie says' and which album the song is actually on. (deleted) >>Oh all right, my next guess is the unlistenable 'Berlin' album by Lou >>Reed. > >Correct about which Lou album it's on, though not about its listenability -- >_Berlin_ is one of the few Lou solo efforts (along with _The Blue Mask_, >_New Sensations_, and maybe _Street Hassle_) that's worthwhile all the way >through. WRONG. there are plenty more. working backwards, SET THE TWILIGHT REELING, his most recent, is a tour de force which i'm listening to all the way through right now. MAGIC AND LOSS and SONGS FOR DRELLA, are both somber tributes to friends that have passed on and are both not only touching, but also listenable. NEW YORK may perhaps be lou's most listenable album with its stark vision, good-timey blues, and scathing political commentary. LEGENDARY HEARTS and SALLY CAN'T DANCE are pretty basic rock 'n' roll; certainly two of his most inoffensive albums. TRANSFORMER is very racey stuff, yet one of his most popular. i just happened to catch the man himself at the avalon in boston last night. got right up close enough to see all the funny faces he makes. started out sort of unplugged, but got into some real feedback. you haven't lived until you've heard the calypso version of 'walk on the wild side'. as the band was taking its final bows, some schmuckly threw an unidentified object at the stage. it hit lou in the head and he was pretty pissed. it didn't look like he was hurt, but he said, "why would you wanna do something stupid like that to ruin a good time?" i hear that's one of his pet peeves: items of any kind being thrown on stage. "it's still cool to play in a club." a lot of jamming and fooling around made the show extra-special. KEN ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 27 Feb 1997 18:42:45 -0500 (EST) From: mr bean jeans Subject: homerama fegs, i just checked the homer website and found this bit of news: >Homer are in the studio with Robyn recording and mixing two new Robyn >Hitchcock songs '1974' and 'No, I Don't Remember Guildford' to be >released as far as we know right now only as a radio promo CD by Warner >Brothers for when the movie comes out. hmmmm. woj ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 27 Feb 97 17:34:29 EST From: KeN SaBaTiNi Subject: 40 Watt show comments--longer than I had planned. Hello, Well I didn't see anything mentioned in the past few Digest issues, other than a request for details, so here's a few observations on the Feb 24 Robyn show at the 40 Watt . . . Alright, here's the songs my wife and I could recall. I didn't write them down that night and I gave up on trying to recall the order. I am sure about the first song and last song's order though. On second thought, I'm only sure about the first song. Songs: Ghost Ship (about an 8 minute version with 50% new verses, some of which he got mixed up and had to say "take 2" and fix midsong) Sinister But She was Happy acoustic (a) Madonna of the Wasps (a) I'm only You (a) Glass Hotel (a) Raymond Chandler Evening electric? (e?) Yip Song (a) Heliatrope (a) I am not me (e) De Chirico Street (e?) Freeze (e) Only the Stones Remain (e?) You and Oblivion (e) I Something You (a?) Born to Cheese You (title?) (a) Wind Cries Mary (a) It seems like there should be more--maybe I left one out but I don't think so. He played for 90 minutes, with a lot of stories in between songs. Regarding the cones: They were selling cones and had a few left when we arrived, which was only about 30 minutes before Robyn came out. I bought the one titled "Dr Ego's Coach" which had a saxophone changing into a duck of some kind. It also had written on it "Hornfowl" to represent this transmogrification. And Robyn's signature and number 29. Basically the cones are about 10 inches tall and all the ones I saw had 5 or 6 different pictures that changed into different things as you twist the cone. I was torn between the one I chose and one with an onion turning into a guitar. I couldn't justify $20 on two cones though, so I stuck with Hornfowl. OK, the show. For props, his assistant brought out a table with a glass of water, a gaudy lamp with a base of a woman and big pom poms hanging from the lampshade, a book, and a song list. Also on stage was a bar stool with a full sized green construction cone with one of those upside-down ducks drawn on it. We were fortunate to be able to stand at the base of the stage right in front of Robyn. The crowd was mellow but very appreciative of Robyn's songs and stories, and as a result, Robyn seemed very comfortable and was quite talkative Robyn entered with a cup of coffee and began to read from the book (I have the title of the book at home, but couldn't catch the author). I wasn't sure if he was reading the whole time or if he was adding his own material to it. I'll bet that he bought both the book and the lamp at a shop a few doors down from the club, as it sells both books and other stuff that looks like it came from people's attics or basements. Plus Robyn referred to that shop a few times as he discussed the "groove" potential around the 40 Watt--a groove potential that was now being realized. He also said something about how he just came from Nashville and that reading books wasn't allowed there. The book sounded like it could have been written by Robyn--non-sequitor, with strange descriptions and plays on words all over the place. After reading it aloud for about 5 minutes, he said something about MTV killing the imagination and then put down the book and launched into Ghost Ship, as I said with about 6 minutes of lyrics I'd never heard before. As usual, Robyn sounded great, his guitar work was immaculate (in fact he spent several minutes of a few songs on pretty extensive soloing--the songs The Wind Cries Mary and You and Oblivion are two examples), and the stories he related were all one's I'd never heard (although prior to his Atlanta show with Bragg, it had been many years since I'd seen him play live.) A few topics he covered: a story about an artist who painted on white canvas using toothpaste who lived alone and had never seen his own reflection or another person or animal and who was standing over a non-reflecting but black and shiny moat, which surrounded his castle, when his beard (which was dangling in the water) "caught" a woman who pulled herself up his beard and it was revealed that she was half womanp and half waspw. She proceeded to sting him in his navel followed by him falling asleep and ... this went on and turned into a story about this artist being God's brother Cecil, followed by a story about why God invented the world--the devil injected him with a needle and inserted a golf ball in God's neck, which grew and prompted God to go crazy and create a round earth in its likeness. I could go on about other stories if I had the time, so I'll just say he also discussed the hazards of flying pianos in planes, more stuff about God and Cecil, going to sleep with someone in a double bed and waking up alone in a single bed with your legs being 2 feet longer and the severed head of a horse in a piece of furniture at the foot of the bed, a story which took place on a blimp about a Ms. Nose who had a flamingo neck, the fact that 2/3's of his cells had rejuvenated since he had been to Athens last--making this a new experience for him . . . there were other stories I'm sure I missed. After the show, we hung around for a bit and then ventured back stage. There were maybe 15 - 20 people around, including members of the opening band. We went back there with the hope that we could say hi to Robyn and maybe get an autograph and perhaps a brief conversation. I patiently waited to approach him--Mike Mills (REM) was chatting with him and inviting him to go shoot some pool down the street. Eventually I went up to Robyn and asked if he minded signing something for me. He said sure and took my pen and two CD sleeves (Element of Light and Eye) and then said that we had better do this out of this room. This is where it got strange, as we were in a good sized room with few people around, making it easy for him to sign the things right there, but instead he left the room and we followed him into a crowded hallway where other people were hanging around to another even smaller area where Robyn realized that he had no place to put down his drink and cigarette in order to sign the CD sleeves. After circling the room a bit and putting down the sleeves and the CD sleeves. So he headed back toward us, we moved out of his way and followed him into the room we had originally come from. He signed the two and gave them back saying the Eye cover is a hard one to sign. I thought he meant because it was both a darker background and a smoother surface, but Ellen , my wife, told me it was due to the personal nature of the record. Oh yeah, I thought, "I meant in addition to that" I said smoothly. ;) The short conversation never happened, although I got in a few words hoping to start a dialogue of some kind. I said something excruciatingly witty about Robyn's youthful appearance--something about the fountain of youth. He told me to keep talking like that and then went back to his girlfriend, leaving my excruciating wit behind. Ellen and I took our cue and headed home. Sorry for the length of all this. I may have rambled many lines too long. PS As I said he looks a lot younger than he is--especially around the eyes (few if any wrinkles at all). He started the set with black jeans, a white linen looking shirt, and a black vest. For the one and only encore he changed into a black and white diamond print silk shirt. One thing this intimate-feeling show reminded me of is how lucky us fans our of Robyn's fairly continuous touring over the past few years. The man is basically a one of a kind legend and is still on the road playing small clubs around the US and England. We need to treasure these shows--the likes of Robyn don't come around too often in this world. At some points during the evening this really hit home. Bye bye, Ken ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Ken Sabatini Being a genius is easy. Dept. of Psychology All you have to do is say, "everything is wrong." University of Georgia You'll always be right. Athens, GA -some Ren & Stimpy side character ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- The End of this Fegmaniax Digest. *sob* .