From: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org (fegmaniax-digest) To: fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Subject: fegmaniax-digest V10 #236 Reply-To: fegmaniax@smoe.org Sender: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk fegmaniax-digest Tuesday, June 12 2001 Volume 10 : Number 236 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Re: Song Question ["brian nupp" ] Time, is flowing like a river [grutness@surf4nix.com (James Dignan)] RE: time songs,... ["da9ve stovall" ] pick a Kinks song, any Kinks song [Jill Brand ] Re: fegmaniax-digest V10 #235 [grutness@surf4nix.com (James Dignan)] Re: grc.com denial-of-service [Capuchin ] Robyn video performance at SXSW ["marcus slade" ] time passages ["Mike wells" ] Re: when Woody Allen was funny... [Michael R Godwin ] Re: grc.com denial-of-service [Tom Clark ] TimeTimeTime-See whats become of me... ["Tigger Lily" ] Re: grc.com denial-of-service [Capuchin ] it was one of those nights... [Ken Ostrander ] Re: when Woody Allen was funny... [Stephen Mahoney ] Re: when Woody Allen was funny... [Ken Ostrander ] hitchcock et blegvad ["Natalie Jane" ] RE: hitchcock et blegvad ["Poole, R. Edward" ] A Question ["noe@shalev" ] Re: A Question ["brian nupp" ] Re: fegefffffluvia ["Jason R. Thornton" ] ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Mon, 11 Jun 2001 21:05:40 -0400 From: "brian nupp" Subject: Re: Song Question Ok porcupine, I don't know how but this one's not listed on Eddie's setlists, probably cause he didn't know it existed. Eaten By Her Own Dinner appears here: Soft Boys, Hope and Anchor London Janurary 23rd 1981: Kingdom of Love Only the Stones Remain Acid Bird I Watch the Cars Brenda's Iron Sledge Old Pervert The Lizard Underwater Moonlight Insanely Jealous I Wanna Destroy You EATEN BY HER OWN DINNER! Leppo and the Jooves I know where I got the idea Dancing on Gods Thumb was played. I remember it from a fowarded letter Bayard the helpful posted sometime ago. If I may post it again, it's worth reading twice: Hi I was looking at the Fegmania website and reading the bio. I was at some of the gigs mentioned. And have the following observations 'Easter 1980 or 81. Soft Boys play at The Moonlight Club, West Hendon, London. One stoned/drunk adoring female fan strips topless, leaves the audience, gets up on stage and writhes kneeling in front of Robyn's feet for several songs. Robyn and SB's ignore her and carry on playing. Eventually she is pulled off by bouncers. The club still exists but is now just a pub and has been renamed many times since then.' I was there and heard of the Soft Boys splitting a few days later. I remember them doing songs that I later heard as Hitchcock solo numbers such as 'Eaten by her own dinner', 'We are all dancing on gods thumb' etc. A few months later I played there with a band supporting a very early incarnation of Katrina and the Waves - just called The Waves. 'April 81. A month after the SB's split Robyn appeared at the Hope & Anchor, Islington, London with a full band including someone on trumpet, someone (Seligman? -bc) on keyboards and Morris on drums. I remember hearing "Brenda's Iron Sledge" and "Acid Bird".' Matthew Seligman was playing bass. I seem to remember Robyn announcing the group as 'Robyn Hitchcock and the New Apes' 'July 9th 1981. Robyn plays at "The Venue", Victoria, London. This was a solo performance with lots of dancing girls hired to dance on stage in fish costumes. The girls were part of the act, all had the same costume and danced very well in time to the music! There was an elaborate stage set as well - fish were very much in evidence! "The Venue" has since been converted into a Garfunkel's.' Actually all the band except Robyn had fish heads on and there were a couple of fish headed people sitting at a cafe table on stage behind the band being served by a fish head waiter. I don't remember fish head dancing girls, but it was a liong time ago. I think the band was then called the Robyn Hitchcock Orchestra. I almost took my camera but didn't. Other things: My brother played bass in a Cambridge R&B band in the mid 70s called Sheboygan. Morris Windsor was the drummer and Rob Lamb the guitarist. I think Dennis and the Experts came straight after this. My brother can remember doing a gig with Robyn Hitchcock supporting as a solo acoustic act. He told me the story that one time Rob Lamb broke his thumb and Kimberley Rew stood in and played all Rob's parts perfectly without any rehearsal. I first saw The Soft Boys in about may 1978 at the F Club in Leeds. This was a punk club and the rest of the audience hated the band. I remember Jim Melton coming off stage mid set and taking a heckler into the dressing room with him. When I moved to London in '79 I saw The Soft boys about a dozen times. Firstly the Can of Bees line up at The Nashville then the Underwater Moonlight lineup several times at The 101 Club in Clapham, and later at the Hope and Anchor and the Moonlight Club. After the split I went to see the Waves first gig at the H&A. It seemed like everyone who'd been a Soft Boy was there including Rob Lamb and Jim melton. By the way I remember seeing an incarnation of The waves in Cambridge before The Soft Boys were invented. This was when Sheboygan were on the go - about '76 I think. Best wishes Egly Lucas > > >>RELEASED/UNPLAYED: > > >>The Abandoned Brain > > >>Aether > > >>Alien > > >>All I Wanna Do is Fall in Love > > >>Amputated > > >>As Lemons Chop > > >>The Asking Tree > > >>August Hair > > >>Autumn Sea > > >>The Banana Boat Song > > >>Bloat > > >>Blues in A > > >>Brenda Part 1/Brenda Part 2 > > >>Bright Fresh Flower > > >>Broken Heart > > >>The Can Opener > > >>Certainly Clickot > > >>Cherries > > >>College of Ice > > >>The Crawling > > >>Creatures of Light > > >>Croydon > > >>Dancing on God's Thumb > > >>Do Policemen Sing? > > >>Don't You > > >>Dreams > > >>Dust > > >>Eaten By Her Own Dinner > > >>Empty Girl > > >>Fatman's Son > > >>Fiend Before the Shrine > > >>Furry Green Atom Bowl > > >>Goodbye Maurice or Steve > > >>Happy the Golden Prince > > >>How Do You Work This Thing? > > >>I Wanna, Er. . . > > >>I'm a Spider > > >>If I Could Look > > >>Innocent Boy > > >>Into It > > >>It Was the Night > > >>It's a Mystic Trip > > >>It's Hard to Believe I'm Not > > >>It's Not Just the Size of a Walnut > > >>Judas Sings (Jesus & Me) > > >>Keeping Still > > >>Kimberley's Tune > > >>Knife > > >>Leave Me Alone > > >>Let There Be More Darkness > > >>Meat > > >>Mellow Together > > >>Midnight Fish > > >>Mr. Deadly > > >>Mr. Tongs > > >>Nocturne (Demise)/Nocturne (Prelude) > > >>Nothing > > >>Outlaw Blues > > >>The Pit Of Souls > > >>Poor Will and the Jolly Hangman > > >>Queen Elvis II > > >>The Rain > > >>Salamander > > >>Secrets > > >>The Shapes Between Us Turn into Animals > > >>She Wears My Hair > > >>(Like a Real) Smoothie > > >>Song No. 4 > > >>Stop the World > > >>Stranded in the Future > > >>Sweet Ghost of Light > > >>Take Your Knife Out of My Back > > >>Then You're Dust > > >>Transparent Lover > > >>Vegetable Friend > > >>Vegetable Man > > >>Vyrna Knowl is a Headbanger > > >>Wang Dang Pig > > >>When I Was a Kid > > >>Which of Us is Me > > >>You and Me _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 12 Jun 2001 13:11:20 +1200 From: grutness@surf4nix.com (James Dignan) Subject: Time, is flowing like a river >I want to put together a CDR of time/history songs. > >Im thinking along the lines of Cope's "I Have Always Been Here Before," >Attaway's "Another Time," Al Stewart's "Man For All Seasons", Robyn's "I >Feel Beautiful." > >Any suggestions? If I get your drift as to the theme of the songs, then - heh - "Heavenly pop hit", maybe? There are other Al Stewart songs - "One stage before", for instance. The you've got to start checking out the Church: "Two places at once", "When you were mine", "10,000 miles away", "Fraulein" - loads of their songs, actually. I'm fairly sure there are several by Icehouse, too. James James Dignan, Dunedin, New Zealand. =-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-= -=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.- .-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=- You talk to me as if from a distance -.-=-.- And I reply with impressions chosen from another time =-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-. (Brian Eno - "By this River") ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 11 Jun 2001 18:54:54 -0700 From: "da9ve stovall" Subject: RE: time songs,... >king tut steve martin >the ballad of danny bailey elton john >red army blues: a song of the stepps waterboys >trouble every day zappa >hurricane dylan >peace frog doors >pride u2 >spanish bombs clash >amnesia mekons >ignoreland r.e.m. For some reason, I wanna add this to the second part of this list: You're a Good Man Albert Brown - The Dukes of Stratosphear (XTC) da9ve ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 11 Jun 2001 22:04:59 -0400 (EDT) From: Jill Brand Subject: pick a Kinks song, any Kinks song Susan wrote: "A lot of Kinks songs. I guess the most obvious would be "Autumn Almanac", but "Come Dancing" is another song that I'd put on if I were making something like this, since after all the story it's telling spans 30-odd years of history. Maybe "Days" and "Where Have All The Good Times Gone?" too. There are too many to really list here, just think Kinks and pick some (if you like the Kinks, that is :))." Yes, Susan, absolutely. The Kinks are the chroniclers of so much in Britain. One could put every song on Arthur on the history list (most especially Victoria, Some Mother's Son, Brainwashed, Young and Innocent Days and She's Bought a Hat Like Princess Marina, which was a great song live). Of course, The Kinks Are the Village Green Preservation Society has a fair number times pastiches as well. I think I'll go listen to it. Jill ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 12 Jun 2001 14:16:58 +1200 From: grutness@surf4nix.com (James Dignan) Subject: Re: fegmaniax-digest V10 #235 >I'm not sure I totally follow the theme, but "Yes, Anastasia" by Tori Amos >seems like it would fit perfectly. or Kate Bush's "Watching you without me"? James James Dignan, Dunedin, New Zealand. =-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-= -=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.- .-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=- You talk to me as if from a distance -.-=-.- And I reply with impressions chosen from another time =-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-.-=-. (Brian Eno - "By this River") ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 11 Jun 2001 22:47:12 -0700 (PDT) From: Capuchin Subject: Re: grc.com denial-of-service On Mon, 11 Jun 2001, Tom Clark wrote: > Pretty fascinating account one operator's investigation into an attack > on his network. > I knew it was going to happen some day. This guy is to networking what Tipper Gore is to popular music. Quotes like this one: The Internet's fundamental infrastructure MUST BE SECURED before the Net becomes further threatened by increasing levels of malicious attacks. Hoo, boy. The fundamental infrastructure is inherently insecure. Securing it will only decrease reliability and make it subject to authoritarian whims. In networking as in anything else, you can have freedom or security, but you can't have both. J. - -- _______________________________________________ Capuchin capuchin@bitmine.net Jeme A Brelin ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 12 Jun 2001 06:52:44 From: "marcus slade" Subject: Robyn video performance at SXSW I don't know if anyone else has mentioned this before but check the site out below for Robyn performing in a small room at SXSW. I don't have a sound card on my PC at work (where I am right now) so I can't vouch for what the song or performance will be like, but it's bound to be good. Robyn's song is near the bottom of the page. While your looking check out the Willard Grant Conspiracy, at the top of the page, another of my favorite bands. http://www.spin.com/new/features/sxsw/week1.html#2 Marcus _________________________________________________________________________ Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com. ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 12 Jun 2001 09:19:20 -0500 From: "Mike wells" Subject: time passages Re: Time songs I interpreted the thread to mean songs that were about a sense of time passing, a distinct awareness that it has elapsed...versus an experience of being "in the present" or very aware of things coexisting with you. They are not mutually exclusive but are to me very different feelings. Admittedly too this can be ripe territory for cloying, "mainstream" songs - some of which made this list - but I tried to remember ones that struck me as clever or unique. "Souveniers" by John Prine "The River is Wide" by Steve Goodman "Daniel" by Elton John "No, I Don't Remember Guildford" by RH "Step Inside This House" by Lyle Lovett "Last to Know" by Del Amitri "Gasoline Alley" by Rod the Mod "Moon River" by Henry Mancini (sorry, wedding song here) "You are the Everything" by REM "Nightswimming" by REM "Alive and Living Now" by Golden Palominos (w/ Stipe + Thompson) "Celluloid Heroes" and "Victoria" by Kinks "Nobody's Home" by Pink Floyd Cheers, Michael catching up with "who turned 14 in 1980, and pays $2.09 for premium self-serve" ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 12 Jun 2001 15:30:12 +0100 (BST) From: Michael R Godwin Subject: Re: when Woody Allen was funny... On Mon, 11 Jun 2001, Eb wrote: > Jeez...first, there was your "It was all downhill for Peter Sellers, once > he moved into color films" comment, and now this. ;) Yes, I get angry when people who used to be funny let their own standards drop. More or less the same reason that I've been angry with Eric Clapton since 461 Ocean Boulevard ... anyway, to codify, my top 10 Woody Allen films are: Play it again Sam Love and Death (was it really as long ago as '75?) Bananas Take the Money and Run Sleeper Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex But Were Afraid to Ask Annie Hall Purple Rose of Cairo Bullets Over Broadway Mighty Aphrodite I hadn't realised until I checked that 'Play it again Sam' is directed, not by WA, but by Herbert Ross from a play by Woody Allen. So maybe I really like Woody Allen as a scriptwriter rather than a director. He certainly can't act (except as "Woody Allen" - though he wasn't too bad in 'The Front'). And although 'Annie Hall' is quite pleasant, vast chunks of the script are recycled from 'Play it again Sam'. > Oddly enough, all the ones you list above are among my favorite later Woody > Allen films. Well, they're the ones that friends and relations have said "Come on, give this one a try, he's back on form, it's the kind of stuff you like". > I liked "Everyone Says I Love You" and "Husbands and Wives" a > lot, too. Several others are unsatisfying, however. "Celebrity" stunk. > "Shadows & Fog" stunk. "September": a stiff bore. "Manhattan Murder > Mystery": enjoyable, but totally forgettable. I'll remember to give those four a miss. > And his films are so repetitive in theme that some of the later ones > bleed together for me. I can't even tell you if I've seen "Alice" or > not! I really idolized Woody Allen, circa the Zelig/Broadway > Danny/Purple Rose/Hannah years. But my enthusiasm faded a bit, when he > started recycling himself so much. He's always done that. It's a great shame that he didn't take part in that Sid Caesar thing on TV, where they had most of the 'Show of shows' writers reminscing about script sessions: Carl Reiner, Larry Gelbart, Neil Simon etc etc [http://www.wga.org/pr/0896/caesar.html]. I think they all got so hardened to using jokes over and over again that nowadays none of them particularly worry about being repetitive. > Still, I would never say no to seeing one of his films. And even if > you can't hate his work, you've gotta admit his prolonged productivity > is remarkable. How many people have written *and* directed more > (widely released) films, during the past 20 years? And received > positive-to-rave reviews for the vast majority of them? I'm certainly not saying that he's rubbish. But I'd rather see him make fewer and better films. - - Mike Godwin PS I saw that Neil Simon play at the theatre which was based on the 'Show of shows' writing sessions. It featured Gene Wilder as the Sid Caesar character - great! What was it called? PPS How is GW - I heard that he was on the way out? ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 12 Jun 2001 09:43:57 -0700 From: Tom Clark Subject: Re: grc.com denial-of-service on 6/11/01 10:47 PM, Capuchin at capuchin@bitmine.net wrote: >> > > I knew it was going to happen some day. > > This guy is to networking what Tipper Gore is to popular music. > > Quotes like this one: > The Internet's fundamental infrastructure MUST BE SECURED before the Net > becomes further threatened by increasing levels of malicious attacks. > > Hoo, boy. > > The fundamental infrastructure is inherently insecure. Securing it will > only decrease reliability and make it subject to authoritarian whims. > > In networking as in anything else, you can have freedom or security, but > you can't have both. So, if bitmine.net came under attack, you would just sit back and smile, revelling in the hacker's freedoms? And just for the record, my action of choice is revenge over regulation. - -tc ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 12 Jun 2001 17:32:17 -0000 From: "Tigger Lily" Subject: TimeTimeTime-See whats become of me... Tom: >I don't care what anybody says, but this guy ruins everything he >touches. >He must be stopped! Well, its nice to know that thou Lynn plays -all- the instruments on almost all of the album he did have the humility to realize there was one drum track he just wasn't quite skilled enough to pull off--and so brought in his dear friend, maestro drummer -- Ringo!(egomad fuck's starfucking quotion = 9.) I still love "Do Ya?" But thats from a long, long time ago. Thank you Tom, Drew, Glen, Susan(-if I like the Kinks? If!) and multi-reccing Ken for time/history suggestions. Is Greenday's "Time of Your Life" really titled "Good Riddence" or is it "Just How Nice Do I Have to Be to Get You to Go Quietly?";-) The feedbacks helped me clarify. What Im most interested is stuff bout the cycles of time- time as a phenomena which both makes consiousness possible but also limits it(sound pretensious enough?:-) And what does time and its cycles -feel- like. Or times when time seems shook up--out of place. Thanks all. I agree with Doug and Kenneth that Robyn played "Autumn Sea" live. Just have nothing but hazy memory to back me up. Thank you Susan for reminding me bout Zelig. Loved Zelig. Kay _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 12 Jun 2001 17:39:31 -0000 From: "Tigger Lily" Subject: Lets Do... I just remembered one more. In fact I think it will be a much better title than the titless Timestory. "Lets Do the Time Warp Again." Kay--who could make a fortune on E-Bay since she still has the original diagram of how to do the dance passed out with the program from back in 73 when it first played in this tiny theater in Chelsea. _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 12 Jun 2001 11:05:33 -0700 (PDT) From: Capuchin Subject: Re: grc.com denial-of-service On Tue, 12 Jun 2001, Tom Clark wrote: > So, if bitmine.net came under attack, you would just sit back and > smile, revelling in the hacker's freedoms? It was the fellow's attitude regarding the INFRASTRUCTURE that pissed me off. Honestly, if I were the victim of a DOS (which wouldn't take much, considering my limited bandwidth, say twenty good modems would do), I couldn't really do anything. I'd capture some packets and try to sort it all out later. This guy writes Windows software and rails against Microsoft's implementation of Unix Domain Sockets in Win2K and WinXP. What he SHOULD be arguing against is the failure of Microsoft to implement sockets PROPERLY with a good authentication model. He should also be rallying against network homogeneity, which is a requirement for distributing his binary-only proprietary software but also exactly the reason trojans can exist in the first place. The real problem (as this guy fails consistently to note) is not the thirteen year olds TRYING to attack systems, but the home PC user's misunderstanding of the nature of the network to which they're attached (they view it more like television than like, say, a stock trading pit) and their enormous likelihood to be running one particular hardware/software platform. > And just for the record, my action of choice is revenge over > regulation. Revenge can be pretty good, but you don't want to escalate a battle you cannot win. This fellow also bitched about "the good old days of gentlemen's agreements" (or however he put it) being gone and not good enough for a network this big and complex. I call bullshit on that and look at the power folks like those coordinating the Realtime Blackhole List have over networks that do the wrong thing. For those that are even slightly interested at this point, the RBL is a list of networks that have committed/regularly commit breaches of internet "code of conduct". Network managers who agree with that code of conduct block the routing of information across their networks to or from the offending networks. This way, each network can choose the sort of traffic that it transits. It's completely voluntary and quite effective. But be VERY afraid when AOL/Time Warner starts buying network infrastructure. This organization will see it as advantageous to block competing networks access. It is exactly this diversity of network infrastructure that keeps the internet useful and free. (And those of you who think that it can't happen, note the refusal of Time Warner owned cable television to run competing internet service adds on their local cable networks.) This is the problem with the accumulation of wealth over time. Diversity cannot be maintained when there are roaming behemoth. J. - -- _______________________________________________ Capuchin capuchin@bitmine.net Jeme A Brelin ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 12 Jun 2001 14:33:02 -0400 From: Ken Ostrander Subject: it was one of those nights... >I agree with Doug and Kenneth that Robyn played "Autumn Sea" live. Just have >nothing but hazy memory to back me up. i'm fairly certain that robyn and the boys played it when i saw him for the first time at pearl street in northampton, mass on the queen elvis tour. poi dog pondering opened up. ken "oh wow here comes the now" the kenster np sunny border blue kristin hersh ps i saw pj harvey and u2 this weekend at the fleet center in boston. the only thing i really wanted was to hear something from boy other than 'i will follow' and was obliged with 'out of control' with a few lines from 'rock n' roll nigger' thrown in the middle somewhere. bono may be an overdone irish ham; but they put on a great show. the worst part was having to listen to some jackass in the sparsely populated stands behind us complain about polly jean. "you're being paid how much money to open for u2...and you suck!" sigh... ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 12 Jun 2001 11:27:37 -0700 (PDT) From: Stephen Mahoney Subject: Re: when Woody Allen was funny... On Mon, 11 Jun 2001, Michael R Godwin wrote: > I laughed at 'Love and Death', hmmm what were your words self -indulgent mess? yeah thats love and death for sure- absolutely not funny at all, very very very sad! I giggled at 'Take the Money and Run', its still funny but I knew it after two viewings- its still a good movie though. I actually fell out of my seat watching 'Bananas' (during the sequence where > his interview is being 'interpreted' into the same language), I thought > 'Sleeper' had good moments, and 'Play it again Sam' is my favourite > Konigsberg film. But since he got into romantic nostalgia in a big way he > has just ceased to be laugh-out-loud funny. bananas sleeper are my two favorite of that period play it again sam is second then take the money and run that period was okay enough but comparied to annie hall interiors alice crimes and mistermeaners(sp) hanna and her sisters midsummers night sex comedy purple rose of cairo and yes most of the one with sean penn and parts of deconstructing harry in that order are sharp well written well filmed movies I can watch over and over again these films touch you and hit you and make you laugh out loud at their truths about the human condition cant really see why they wouldnt be considered good some of his stuff can be considered self indulgent and pukingly painful but overall I must say I get excited when a new woody allen film comes > > PS And of course I liked the guffawgenic Gene-Wilder-meets-the-sheep > sketch in EYWTKAS-BWATA oh yeah and that one is great too!!!!! burt reynolds in the brain telling the sperm when its time to come out!!!!riot!!!! ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 12 Jun 2001 11:34:33 -0700 (PDT) From: Stephen Mahoney Subject: Re: Song Question > i repeat myself when i'm under stress i repeat myself when i'm under > stress but... I like it! ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 12 Jun 2001 15:23:09 -0400 From: Ken Ostrander Subject: Re: when Woody Allen was funny... re: branagh >> he pales in comparison to john cusack's similar role in bullets over broadway. > >I don't see that role as being similar. *shrug* both are playing the woody allen part in their respective movies. that is the similarity. these are films in which woody doesn't appear; but the part he would have played is pretty obvious to me. both branagh and cusack are self indulgent self doubting writers with wishy washy romantic notions. sound familiar? ken "i'm polymorphously perverse" the kenster np queen elvis ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 12 Jun 2001 13:26:29 -0700 From: "Natalie Jane" Subject: hitchcock et blegvad Looky here! http://perso.club-internet.fr/stellast/blegvad/bgsvign.htm n. _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 12 Jun 2001 16:35:56 -0400 From: "Poole, R. Edward" Subject: RE: hitchcock et blegvad good find -- I must say I'm not surprised... after all, Levi appears to have a lightbulb head. I love that book, btw. - -ed - -----Original Message----- From: Natalie Jane [mailto:emma_blowgun@hotmail.com] Sent: Tuesday, June 12, 2001 4:26 PM To: fegmaniax@smoe.org Subject: hitchcock et blegvad Looky here! http://perso.club-internet.fr/stellast/blegvad/bgsvign.htm n. _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com ============================================================================This e-mail message and any attached files are confidential and are intended solely for the use of the addressee(s) named above. This communication may contain material protected by attorney-client, work product, or other privileges. 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To reply to our email administrator directly, send an email to postmaster@dsmo.com Dickstein Shapiro Morin & Oshinsky LLP http://www.legalinnovators.com ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 13 Jun 2001 00:24:57 +0200 From: "noe@shalev" Subject: A Question Back in the 80's a friend of mine had this tape. it was a female singer with a heavy german accent, the music was kind of cabaretish. and I remember one song went somthing like: "There's plenty of men in my life, but not enough life in my men" does someone know who she was? name? anything? thanx NOE ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 12 Jun 2001 17:57:16 -0400 From: "brian nupp" Subject: Re: A Question >Back in the 80's a friend of mine had this tape. it was a female singer >with a >heavy german accent, the music was kind of cabaretish. and I remember one >song >went somthing like: "There's plenty of men in my life, but not enough life >in >my men" >does someone know who she was? name? anything? > >thanx >NOE I have no idea NOE, but it's just good to know someone's alive out there today! Wow, the list is slow! It's a beautiful day out, I hope everyone is playing outside. Nuppy _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 12 Jun 2001 15:44:10 -0700 From: "Jason R. Thornton" Subject: Re: fegefffffluvia I was out of town for awhile because of a family emergency and just got back late Sunday night. I've been skimming about 10 days worth of Fegmaniax, so hope nobody minds a delayed reaction to a week old post... At 12:54 PM 6/5/01 -0700, Mark Gloster wrote: >I love Molly Ivins political work. I've had to put down her >book about jr. Shrub. Unlike most books I put down, I am sure >I'll pick it up again. I know she has been struggling with >cancer and I hope she'll be okay and write for a looooong >time. Oh man, I didn't know about this. I used to share an apartment with her niece (and some other girls) back in the early 1990's. Molly took us out to brunch once, right around the time Ross Perot was making big political waves, and she had some hilarious stories to tell about a man I knew very little about at the time. She's a very sweet and very funny lady, and I really hope she'll come through this as well. >One more thing: >I need to print a slight retraction. Eb and I were apparently not >at the same show of King Crimson. I saw them down there on the >_Beat_ tour. I saw them in Santa Cruz on the _Three of a Perfect >Pair_ tour. Actually, the one I saw in LA was great. They screwed >up several songs in Santa Cruz and I kinda thought at the time that >they would be breaking up. They did after playing a good gig in LA. >My brother was there, if that's any consolation. At the time, he >made about two of me, and much easier to see over- so that makes >him better, right? Unless you find Fripp, Belew, Levin and/or Bruford too hideous to look at, yes, I suppose it does. - --Jason "Only the few know the sweetness of the twisted apples." - Sherwood Anderson ------------------------------ End of fegmaniax-digest V10 #236 ********************************