From: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org (fegmaniax-digest) To: fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Subject: fegmaniax-digest V9 #42 Reply-To: fegmaniax@smoe.org Sender: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk fegmaniax-digest Friday, February 18 2000 Volume 09 : Number 042 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Re: Cure this. [Capuchin ] Re: Last message [Michael R Godwin ] Re: Cure this. [Christopher Gross ] Re: Blame Canada/Homicide [The Great Quail ] no Cure for Oscars [Christopher Gross ] Re: Blood Flowers [Jon Fetter ] Cosmicomical Quailvinos [The Great Quail ] Re: Blame Canada/Homicide (rant alert!) [overbury@cn.ca] Re: That Mexican God Moment... [Jon Fetter ] Re: Cure this. [overbury@cn.ca] Re: Blood Flowers (fwd) [John Barrington Jones ] another weird offer from a music geek [John Barrington Jones ] Re: Cure this. [Michael R Godwin ] as long as we're talking about subatomic particles and the Cure [Christop] Re: Oscar rant [Eb ] wilhelm grebo [dmw ] The Sinister Motels [Bayard ] Eau Canada [digja611@student.otago.ac.nz (James Dignan)] Those Damn Jeme pills... [Mark_Gloster@3com.com] Re: wilhelm grebo [The Great Quail ] Re: wilhelm grebo [Aaron Mandel ] Re: wilhelm grebo ["matt sewell" ] Applications for membership to the White Rabbit Cult will not be accepted. However, those who are ready will be called upon, regardless of whether they have applied, or not. [] Re: Applications for membership to the White Rabbit Cult will not be accepted. However, those who are ready will be called upon, regardless of whether they have applied, or not. [] ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Thu, 17 Feb 2000 09:06:31 -0800 (PST) From: Capuchin Subject: Re: Cure this. On Thu, 17 Feb 2000, Terrence Marks wrote: > Personally, I think that they may be on to something. > I'll be selling Hydrogen: The Element of Love over the internet if you > guys want any. Hey, guys! Terry made me laugh! Terry made me laugh! Dear lord on high, Terry made me laugh! J. - -- ______________________________________________ J A Brelin Capuchin ______________________________________________ ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 Feb 2000 17:17:21 +0000 (GMT) From: Michael R Godwin Subject: Re: Last message Oversensitive M R Godwin wrote: > PS to Quail: Sorry to break off diplomatic relations after all this > time, but anyone who ranks 'Brazil' below anything, on any list, > anywhere, gets this response from me. So I won't be flying the Sarnath > flag in future. Whoops! I'm afraid that my Irony Detector has gone a bit rusty. I realise now that you didn't mean it. Run up those Sarnath Standards again! - - Mike Godwin ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 Feb 2000 12:29:30 -0500 (EST) From: Christopher Gross Subject: Re: Cure this. On Thu, 17 Feb 2000 overbury@cn.ca wrote: > Ack! The early universe had only hydrogen. To think I almost > bought a copy of "Soft Bulletin"! Depends on your perspective. To those of us who look back fondly on the first few seconds, the early universe had only elementary particles, and hydrogen is a raw arriviste. - --Christopher Gross, boy cosmologist ______________________________________________________________________ Christopher Gross On the Internet, nobody knows I'm a dog. chrisg@gwu.edu ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 Feb 2000 12:20:10 -0500 From: The Great Quail Subject: Re: Blame Canada/Homicide Michael writes, >PS to Quail: Sorry to break off diplomatic relations after all this time, >but anyone who ranks 'Brazil' below anything, on any list, anywhere, gets >this response from me. So I won't be flying the Sarnath flag in future. >Nor will I tell you where the 'H' goes in Mahatma Kane Jeeves :-) I'm not sure what you mean -- I was implying that "Brazil" *should* have been nominated for Best Picture! And Chris, you are right -- "Shakespeare in Love" was better than "Scent of a Woman." It's just the old "You've done so much its time you were recognized, but we never really recognized you before when you deserved it for a particular work" syndrome. (Al Pacino, Steven Spielberg, etc.) This is related to, sadly, the "We love you now, but we'll forget you next time no matter if your next work is even better" syndrome. (REM, Peter Gabriel) Boy oh boy am I ever cranky today! I must have taken some Jeme pills. - --Quail np: You wouldn't believe me if I told you.... +---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+ The Great Quail, K.S.C. (riverrun Discordian Society, Kibroth-hattaavah Branch) For fun with postmodern literature, New York vampires, and Fegmania, visit Sarnath: http://www.rpg.net/quail "I'm not a critic, though I play one on the Internet." -- doug mayo-wells ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 Feb 2000 12:39:44 -0500 (EST) From: Christopher Gross Subject: no Cure for Oscars On Thu, 17 Feb 2000, The Great Quail wrote: > Oh, wait -- but then they grow an "indie" streak last year, and blow > off "Private Ryan" -- which really was an amazing war picture -- for > "Shakespeare in Love." Uh-huh. Yeah, that was Stoppard's best work -- > fuck "Brazil" and "Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead." It's like > Pacino getting an Oscar for "Scent of a Woman" instead of everything > else he did ... Whoa now! Shakespeare In Love might not have been great art, but it was a nice flick. Comparing it to Scent of a Woman is WAY too harsh. IMHO. On Wed, 16 Feb 2000, John Barrington Jones wrote: > Ahem! How can this be? Pornography is incredibly dark and > uncommercial. Disintegration, by contrast, has hit singles written all > over it (Love Song, Pictures of You). There is some great brooding stuff > in between (Prayers For Rain, Same Deep Water), but I couldn't compare > it > to Pornography at all. I disagree. Disintegration might have been more radio-friendly than Pornography, but it was still PF dark. (Actually, I think your description of Disintegration -- a little gloom, a lot of hit single -- would fit Kiss Me Kiss Me Kiss Me much better.) Of course, this might just be one of those "is the glass half brooding or half poppy?" questions. Yesterday I listened to Eye by that Robyn Hitchcock fellow. Pretty good! Late for work, Chris ______________________________________________________________________ Christopher Gross On the Internet, nobody knows I'm a dog. chrisg@gwu.edu ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 Feb 2000 11:17:41 -0500 From: Jon Fetter Subject: Re: Blood Flowers >Fat Bob is a notorious liar and can't be trusted - I believe it is a side >effect from mixing booze'n'backcombing. And from dating Martha Quinn. Jon Jon Jackson ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 Feb 2000 12:55:03 -0500 From: The Great Quail Subject: Cosmicomical Quailvinos "Boy Cosmologist" writes: >Depends on your perspective. To those of us who look back fondly on the >first few seconds, the early universe had only elementary particles, and >hydrogen is a raw arriviste. Some of us -- old Grtqwl remarked -- recall the universe long before you quarkboys got involved. Pissed about Hydrogen, eh? Jeeeeezus. Move aside, newbie. "First few seconds" . . . oh, my tittering and sniggering are reaching new levels of mania. God, next you wannabes'll be lamenting the formation of the electron, or worse, trying to horn in on the neutrino. "Ooh, ooh, I was there, when the neutrinos began uncluttering up the universe!" Bah! Honestly speaking, the whole neighborhood went to hell the second that the second was introduced. Ah, to be back in those first few picoseconds. . . . well, we didn't call them picoseconds, of course, because none of us knew there would ever really be over a trillion of them. Yes, I suppose some of us were a bit naive -- Mr(k)glst^r and Wj'svn'wj used to accuse me of that all the time -- but those first units of time were called "hmuhs," of course, not that that has anything to do with the crazy conspiracy theories of Dr. DLng, who may be safely ignored. And I don't want to hear any of you take me to task for using time as a reference! I was one of the First, you know, so pay no heed to this recidivist "Pre-Time" lobby, with their, "Oho, time, eh, we'll *I* was there long before time itself --" Rubbish! We stamped them out aeons ago, thanks to the proofs of Mrs. G(n)t. Someday you just try to define sentience without a temporal frame! So we'll have no more of your unearned, J(nn)y-come-lately nostalgia, Mr. Sqdfkr! Or I may just turn you over to the untender mercies of Mr. Eb ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 Feb 2000 12:59:08 -0500 From: overbury@cn.ca Subject: Re: Blame Canada/Homicide (rant alert!) On 17 Feb 00, at 16:36, Michael R Godwin wrote: > > On Thu, 17 Feb 2000 overbury@cn.ca wrote: > > The party in power > > here in Quebec has suggested that Canadian flags should be > > banned by law from all public buildings. > > What country do they think they are in, then? Vanautu? Burkina Faso? > Hoo boy -- you're getting me started up! Quebec has a little fantasy thing going. Provincial legislatures are called Legislative Assemblies in other provinces but are called L'Assemblie Nationale here in Quebec. The head of this legislature is called a "Premier" in other provinces, as opposed to the "Prime Minister" who heads the country. Here in Quebec, both offices are known as "Premier Ministre". The former religious holiday, La Fete de La Saint Jean-Baptiste, is now known as La Fete Nationale. Welcome to Bizarro World. Where's that damned Ventolin? ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 Feb 2000 13:13:47 -0500 From: Jon Fetter Subject: Re: That Mexican God Moment... >it out on the sleeping residents of Kirkintilloch, a town I live in and >you can't pronounce. Isn't that Spock's real name? BTW, what is the correct, NZ pronunciation of "Christchurch?" I knew aNZer who said he was from "." He was from Christchurch. Hydrojon np: "The Sleeping Residents of Kirkintilloch" from J. Shatner's "Tek-Music" ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 Feb 2000 13:25:00 -0500 From: overbury@cn.ca Subject: Re: Cure this. On 17 Feb 00, at 12:29, Christopher Gross wrote: > On Thu, 17 Feb 2000 overbury@cn.ca wrote: > > > Ack! The early universe had only hydrogen. To think I almost > > bought a copy of "Soft Bulletin"! > > Depends on your perspective. To those of us who look back fondly on the > first few seconds, the early universe had only elementary particles, and > hydrogen is a raw arriviste. Ah HAH! He said "chemical", and sub-atomic particles don't qualify. Whatever chemical he's referring to (if he even knows), it's probably got hydrogen in it, but you'd probably find more of it in a nice, hot cuppa. 42, - -- Ross ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 Feb 2000 11:21:16 -0800 (PST) From: John Barrington Jones Subject: Re: Blood Flowers (fwd) for matt sewell =jbj= - ---------- Forwarded message ---------- Date: Thu, 17 Feb 2000 11:23:37 -0700 From: Luther Gaylord To: John Barrington Jones Cc: John Barrington Jones Subject: Re: Blood Flowers Matt Sewell wrote: >That man who never answers my emails begging for Dancing On The Ruins Of >Multinational Corporations to be put back on the excellent Unheard Music >site says: Huh? What the hell is Matt talking about? He sure doesn't "see" very "well" -- despite his surname. Har har har. http://hillstrom.iww.org/~fanshaw/sotw06.html Butch ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 Feb 2000 11:23:17 -0800 (PST) From: John Barrington Jones Subject: another weird offer from a music geek who would like a randomly generated cd culled from 20 cdr's of mp3's? first one gets it. i'm going to start making these as a way of actually getting to listen to alot of this stuff (i have randomly grabbed from usenet and other internet sources) =jbj= ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 Feb 2000 12:01:58 -0800 (PST) From: John Barrington Jones Subject: addendum to my geeky plan to keep in the spirit of the project, i'll take the first 5 people, and then walk up to someone and ask them to pick a number twixt 1 and 5. that way the winner will be a bit random as well. i guess there's no such thing as a completely random number, but i'm trying to keep everything as random as humanly possible. heh =jbj= ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 Feb 2000 20:29:20 +0000 (GMT) From: Michael R Godwin Subject: Re: Cure this. On Thu, 17 Feb 2000 overbury@cn.ca wrote: > > Depends on your perspective. To those of us who look back fondly on the > > first few seconds, the early universe had only elementary particles, and > > hydrogen is a raw arriviste. Where did the particles come from? And why? And what were they _in_ if they preceded the universe? And why did I stay so long after that lecture on economics, psychology and ethical investment (surely not for the free wine and nibbles)? - - Mike "irony-impervious" Godwin n.p. Bat chain puller, puller puller (with the rhythm of a Volvo windscreen wiper) ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 Feb 2000 16:23:46 -0500 (EST) From: Christopher Gross Subject: as long as we're talking about subatomic particles and the Cure Article: 72449 of alt.gothic From: Albatross Newsgroups: alt.gothic Subject: Goth Quark discovered Date: Tue, 15 Feb 2000 10:03:29 -0800 Organization: Time Waste Inc. Lines: 26 Message-ID: <38A994F1.D7A7B1FB@drizzle.com> NNTP-Posting-Host: n20.go2net.com Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-Mailer: Mozilla 4.7 [en] (Win98; U) X-Accept-Language: en Xref: grover.nit.gwu.edu alt.gothic:72449 A new quark was discovered yesterday by physicists at the University of Wyoming. This new quark, tentatively named 'goth', was discovered after Stanley Franklinson, known to his fellow scientists as 'four-eyes', saw that every beauty ends in decay, even in a particle accelerator. According to Franklinson, this new quark will put an end to all talk of a 'theory of everything.' Says Franklinson, 'there can never be a unity of all things in a universe with a Goth Quark.' From his office at Cal Tech, Stephen Hawking questioned the likelihood that this new discovery would bear closer inspection. He called Franklinson a 'pretentious poser', who was no scientist but simply an 'overgrown adolescent still wallowing in narcissistic morbidity and melodrama', who ought to 'grow up and get a real white lab coat already.' Said Franklinson in response to this last critiscism, 'I'd like to see that fucking lepton get out of his little chair and fucking make me.' [With apologies to Stephen Hawking. --CG] ______________________________________________________________________ Christopher Gross On the Internet, nobody knows I'm a dog. chrisg@gwu.edu ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 Feb 2000 13:46:02 -0800 From: Eb Subject: Re: Oscar rant >I mean, when will Samuel Jackson win something? Maybe when he stops playing "types" in genre flicks? >But the fact that >"Driving Miss Daisy" can smite a movie such as "Do The Right Thing" >-- ?! Yeah, that really pissed me off too. >Or that "Jungle Fever" was essentially ignored, One of Spike's lesser films, if you ask me. Nifty soundtrack, though. >Here's an idea -- an Oscar for Best Opening Credits, No Matter How >Bad the Movie Is. Previous winners: "Seven," "The Island of Dr. >Moreau," "Austin Powers," and "Mission Impossible." Oh, yeah, and a >Lifetime Achievement Award to the James Bond movies. (Hey, here's a >cool thread. Any takers?) Maybe a Lifetime award should go to the "Pink Panther" films, too? Seems like Robert Altman's classic pictures *all* have some sort of wonderful twist on the credits. Start with the K-TEL-like commercial which opens "Nashville," the intercom of "M*A*S*H*," the credits subtly blown through the trees in "McCabe & Mrs. Miller"...the others slip my mind, but I'm sure there are further relevant examples. Preston Sturges did cute things with credits, too.... >And the SCORES?!!? Jesus Christ, I think they are legally bound to >nominate that hack John Williams for whatever movie he decides to >drip treacle and plagiarism all over. ;) >And if "Tarzan" beats "South Park," which it will You are correct, sir. Still, I'll be rooting for Aimee Mann. Eb ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 Feb 2000 17:43:09 -0500 (EST) From: dmw Subject: wilhelm grebo On Wed, 16 Feb 2000, The Great Quail wrote: > Hawkwind, by the way, have a Reich-oriented song, "Orgone > Accumulator." God, I love making Hawkwind references. is the pop will eat itself tune of this same name a cover? can't figure out from allmusic. also, isn't kate bushes' _cloudbursting_ about reich? - -- d. n.p. harry partch / _delusion of the fury_ (dare i say "whee!" ??) - - oh no, you've just read mail from doug = dmw@radix.net - get yr pathos - - www.pathetic-caverns.com -- books, flicks, tunes, etc. = reviews - - www.fecklessbeast.com -- angst, guilt, fear, betrayal! = guitar pop ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 Feb 2000 18:57:05 -0500 (EST) From: Bayard Subject: The Sinister Motels I'm listening to the show from the Mint from last year, and Robyn introduces everyone then says "Collectively we are known as the Sinister Motels." Of course he must be joking, since they are in reality known as the Rock Armada... a good show, though short! if you're a CDR trader, recommend you see peter palmer (plpalmer@ix.netcom.com) =b, overworked and under the gun ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 18 Feb 2000 15:26:51 +0100 From: digja611@student.otago.ac.nz (James Dignan) Subject: Eau Canada >> The party in power >> here in Quebec has suggested that Canadian flags should be >> banned by law from all public buildings. > >What country do they think they are in, then? Vanautu? Burkina Faso? Quebec, probably (that's with one of those nifty little acute accents over the first 'e', too...) James currently flying - the Sierra Leone flag (horizontal stripes of green, white, and blue). Just picked at random - I don't have the flag of anywhere with a national flag today. 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: Thu, 17 Feb 2000 19:17:09 -0800 From: Mark_Gloster@3com.com Subject: Those Damn Jeme pills... >Boy oh boy am I ever cranky today! I must have taken some Jeme pills. It is called Jemetol (tm.) I was at a party in Portland once and someone started spiking our Deviled Quail Egg Beater Soy Substitute Horse Doo Ovaries with them. Incidentally, it made them taste much better, but, alas, they still tasted awfully bad. I probably had a big dose, since the cranberry juice tasted odd too. Jemetol (tm) ingredients: Caffein, freeze-dried cranberries with a twist of lime, fish oil, mustard seed, instant pms powder, ginko biloba, PU237, ethanol, sodium twiddlepastefooglespritz, and high- maintenance kryptonite. I'm sure I tasted carburetor scrapings too. Perhaps it was the generic version. My memories of what followed are a bit fuzzy. Like the fir that grows between the pads on a cat's feet or the mold on tongue of someone who acquires a rare tropical disease. At my best, my memory is like this, so you can rest assured Jemetol (tm) isn't like those terrible drugs that gallivant across college campuses these days, or whatever it is that they do, causing the best and brightest of our youth to actually forget their misspent younger days. But I'm not really sure about that either, so I take back the part about you resting assured. What I do remember is jumbled and may not actually involve my own experience or that of any other person now living or dead, but this is what I can still make out from my numerous and sundry notes that I made during the occasion on sixty-five etch-a-sketch drawing toys at the time... "Suddenly, everyone is walking around quickly and talking faster. Their skin is getting pale but their cheeks are becoming quite flushed. I am filled with the urge to don fashionable suspenders and slacks and elucidate in what ways the world would be better if I ran everything my way. Luckily, everyone else seems to be going in the same direction here and saying what I would- though some of them are becoming a little wild with their solutions. I am suddenly charming and funny and of blazing wit. Likewise are my cohorts. I am starting to wonder if we received those new "smart drinks" that are all the rage at raves, appliance repair shops, and at those places where they maintain "literary websites." Everyone is galvanizing around the stereo, which is playing intellectual music like Robyn Hitchcock and Brian Dewan. The irritaining music by Mark Gloster and His Ugly Giant Horrid Dead Fish (or something) is here also. Those hearing seem to be nearly giddy singing along. I don't see Eblorpius Broodius here, so I throw a They Might Be Giants disc on to keep the tempo up. I did notice Bayard and Michael here, but they seemed quite unaffected by whatever might be going on. They appeared extremely amused by the rest of our "crabbiness." Hmmmmph! It seems funny that we all are so witty, yet seem so crabby to the new arrivals. Perhaps they are not so intellectually blessed or just lacking in what we brilliantines would call "coolness." Quailgernon the ratweasel had a sip of my drink and began spouting the complete works of L Ron Hubbard and HP Lovecraft coincidentally by alternating words of each book. This is like card dealers in Vegas pulling cards out of a four-deck shoe to circumvent the efforts of card-counters. In this case it makes those literary works perhaps more charming, and yet, more deep. I just can't get enough of that Xemu and the body Thetans stuff- it's even better when you add multi- tentacled horror creatures into the text. I am currently able to write in nearly perfect cursive on this Etch-A-Sketch at speeds I couldn't even type. I wonder what is happenning to me. I have figured out exactly how to travel through time, solve world hunger, to compress pornographic picture files so they are sharp and download at greater speed, and will write it down here shortly. I met a beautiful and charming woman here and convinced her to move from Plookfingdale Fookton-Over- Barfwag to Portland just to hang out with me. I must really have it today.... I am starting to notice the eyerolling of Quailgernon and the shuddering of his body. He is trying to plug his tail into an ethernet socket. He appears to be coming a bit unhinged. He is whacking his head against the wall and attempting to edit html code with his eyebrows and nose. It his sad to see the sudden relapse into his previous strange personality. He is drooling with faucetlike volume and intensity. I remember that I was supposed to write down what time it was or something. Oh. And something about pornography. I'm sure there was something about pornography. I guess that's all that was important. I wish I could remember. I am stahrting to feal tired and less klevur myselph. I am trying to merember the widdy things I sed or awked when somewon greped me. I feer tht I am wollofing Quailgernon into the depths of a reetern Nto sdoopidididitee. I need to fend a baxebat ball or a canoo to get the buggs ovf my 4head, gamma raes are hidding mi iyes." I awoke the next morning in a phone booth in Biloxi, sporting strange underpants and the wierdest hair and worst headache I have ever had in my life. I never saw Quailgernon again and have stayed away from strangers wielding powerful mind-bending herbal remedies ever since. I think that avoiding the dark, seedy underbelly of the Portland Intelligencia Illuminati may save you from what has or has not befallen me. I have the desperate feeling that someone has badly mucked with me gulliver and I'm not even positive what that means. But I think I used to. I had more brains for one night, but not all of Carol Reichstein's books, nor all of orifi in Eddie's aliases seem to allow me to find what I lost. So rememer, drugs are bad, mmmmkay. Happies, - -Markg former- though only briefly so- smart person ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 18 Feb 2000 10:36:40 -0500 From: The Great Quail Subject: Re: wilhelm grebo >> Hawkwind, by the way, have a Reich-oriented song, "Orgone >> Accumulator." God, I love making Hawkwind references. > >is the pop will eat itself tune of this same name a cover? can't figure >out from allmusic. also, isn't kate bushes' _cloudbursting_ about reich? I don't know the PWEI song . . . but if it goes, "I've got an Orgone Accumulator, it's a social integrator" and lots of other Hawkwind-brand E-Z-Rhymes, then, yeah, it's a cover -- cool! Cloudbursting, eh? Woj -- ? - --Q +---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+ The Great Quail, K.S.C. (riverrun Discordian Society, Kibroth-hattaavah Branch) For fun with postmodern literature, New York vampires, and Fegmania, visit Sarnath: http://www.rpg.net/quail "I'm not a critic, though I play one on the Internet." -- doug mayo-wells ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 18 Feb 2000 11:01:05 -0500 (EST) From: Aaron Mandel Subject: Re: wilhelm grebo On Thu, 17 Feb 2000, dmw wrote: > is the pop will eat itself tune of this same name a cover? can't > figure out from allmusic. it is; i'm pretty sure its first appearance was on the 12" single of, uh, i forget which poppies song it is, but the b-sides were "Orgone Accumulator", Shriekback's "Everything That Rises Must Converge" and one or two more covers. maybe one of them was by Sigue Sigue Sputnik. a ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 18 Feb 2000 16:06:17 GMT From: "matt sewell" Subject: Re: wilhelm grebo >>>Hawkwind, by the way, have a Reich-oriented song, "Orgone >>>Accumulator." God, I love making Hawkwind references. >> >>is the pop will eat itself tune of this same name a cover? can't figure >>out from allmusic. also, isn't kate bushes' _cloudbursting_ about reich? > >I don't know the PWEI song . . . but if it goes, "I've got an Orgone >Accumulator, it's a social integrator" and lots of other >Hawkwind-brand E-Z-Rhymes, then, yeah, it's a cover -- cool! > Aah, "A cerebral vibrator, Made of Orgones!" Poetic genius... :-p Matt ______________________________________________________ Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 18 Feb 2000 11:59:15 -0500 From: lj lindhurst Subject: Applications for membership to the White Rabbit Cult will not be accepted. However, those who are ready will be called upon, regardless of whether they have applied, or not. http://whiterabbitcult.com/ ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 18 Feb 2000 12:32:20 -0500 (EST) From: Christopher Gross Subject: Re: Applications for membership to the White Rabbit Cult will not be accepted. However, those who are ready will be called upon, regardless of whether they have applied, or not. On Fri, 18 Feb 2000, lj lindhurst wrote: > http://whiterabbitcult.com/ LJ! You didn't tell us you had a new CD out! Can I order an autographed copy? - --Chris ps: And boy, I could tell you designed that page the instant I saw it.... ______________________________________________________________________ Christopher Gross On the Internet, nobody knows I'm a dog. chrisg@gwu.edu ------------------------------ End of fegmaniax-digest V9 #42 ******************************