From: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org (fegmaniax-digest) To: fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Subject: fegmaniax-digest V10 #445 Reply-To: fegmaniax@smoe.org Sender: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk fegmaniax-digest Sunday, December 2 2001 Volume 10 : Number 445 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Re: GH [grutness@surf4nix.com] @Home Blues ["Maximilian Lang" ] ["da9ve stovall" ] Re: Couldn't Hear a Robyn Sing ["Gene Hopstetter, Jr." ] Re: GH [Jeff Dwarf ] Re: Cleveland-bound ["Voodoo Ergonomics" ] George, and Paul ["Edward of Sim" ] Re: GH [Eb ] Re: GH [Jeffrey with 2 Fs Jeffrey ] RMNBF ["Redtailed Hawk" ] Manning Mention ["Christopher Frost" ] Re: Couldn't Hear a Robyn Sing ["victorian squid" ] GH + [Eb ] Newbie/Unhatched, Uncarved [Bridget Caple ] Uncarved Pumpkins track list or artwork? ["Maximilian Lang" ] Hitchcock does the Dead ["Russ Reynolds" ] Re: [Jeff Dwarf ] Re: GH [Jeff Dwarf ] Re: Uncarved Pumpkins track list or artwork? ["John B. Jones" ] Re: nanowrimonomo [Jeffrey with 2 Fs Jeffrey ] ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Sat, 1 Dec 2001 18:32:20 +1300 From: grutness@surf4nix.com Subject: Re: GH > Now one half of the Beatles are gone - my favorite half too, the >serious and somber and, to me, more spiritual half. don't forget that it is also George and John who provided much of the dry wit. Everyone remembers Jophn's acid wit (no pun intended), but if you listen to the old Beatles press conferences, it was more often than not George that came out with the perfect retorts. >Sad indeed. And sad that no one's asked Ringo to comment - it seemed >particularly in later years that he was closest to George. >Found out bout Harrison from reading the digest this morning and feel oddly >sad. He seemed(and this may just be igorant sentiment) like a harmless man >who helped changed the world for the better. > >Not a bad legacy. well put, Kay. >Simple question: Has Robyn ever performed a Harrison tune? Many of >his lyrics are a bit sappy for Robyn's sensibility, but.... >RB has him down as having performed the following: > >Only a Northern Song >Blue Jay Way >Within You, Without You >Old Brown Shoe >Here Comes the Sun surely he's done "If I needed someone" at some time, no? James n.p. The inner light 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: Sat, 01 Dec 2001 00:34:06 -0500 From: "Maximilian Lang" Subject: @Home Blues Anybody round here besides me waiting to see if @home leaves them high and dry at a moments notice? Sad, angry and frustrated, Max _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 30 Nov 2001 21:53:41 -0800 From: "da9ve stovall" Subject: >Nuppy > >PS: how do you pronounce Da9ve? Ah, the '9' is silent, you see. da9ve NP - George Harrison 33 1/3 ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 30 Nov 2001 23:53:48 -0600 From: "Gene Hopstetter, Jr." Subject: Re: Couldn't Hear a Robyn Sing >From: Aaron Mandel > >susan, drew, gene, how goes it [your nanowrino]? I finished it up yesterday night in a mad flurry of words -- I just had to get it done. I wrote 50,050 words. I'm glad I did it. I honestly am. Don't know if or when I'll look at that messy pile of words again, but it sure feels good to have accomplished it. - -- =+=+=+=+ "Time ain't shit. And death ain't shit till you're dead." -- Harry Crews ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 1 Dec 2001 00:11:38 -0600 From: "Brian Huddell" Subject: BA NanoFegs Congratulations to all the nanofegs! It's a hell of an achievement and it's been fun hearing about your progress. I didn't participate but I have a couple of friends in the Bay Area who did, and I was wondering if any of you are planning to attend the bash in SOMA tomorrow night? cheers, +brian ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 30 Nov 2001 23:12:17 -0800 (PST) From: Jeff Dwarf Subject: Re: GH grutness@surf4nix.com wrote: > >Now one half of the Beatles are gone - my favorite half too, the > >serious and somber and, to me, more spiritual half. > > don't forget that it is also George and John who provided much of the > dry wit. more like all. can anyone hear think of anything truly funny either Paul or Ringo said? the closest i can think of is the bit in the anthology videos where paul dismisses the idea that white album should have been trimmed to a single album by saying "it's the beatles bloody white album, shut up." > Everyone remembers John's acid wit (no pun intended), but if you > listen to the old Beatles press conferences, it was more often than > not George that came out with the perfect retorts. > > >Sad indeed. And sad that no one's asked Ringo to comment - it seemed > >particularly in later years that he was closest to George. > > Subject: Re: Cleveland-bound the giglist (currently online, at ), shows: 06/20/89 RHE Club Casino, Hampton Beach 06/22/89 RHE Diamond Club, Toronto 06/24/89 RHE Phantasy Theatre, Lakewood 06/27/89 RHE Newport Music Hall, Columbus 06/28/89 RHE Sam's Jams, Ferndale 06/28/89 RHE St. Andrew's Hall, Detroit 06/29/89 RHE Vic The a quick scan of the updates page reveals that the lakewood gig was indeed added quite recently (april of this year). i can't for the life of me recall the circumstances. may well be that brian had passed the info to me. _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 1 Dec 2001 07:53:32 -0000 From: "Edward of Sim" Subject: George, and Paul RIP, dear George Harrison. I am actully quite "ok" with it. Very sad at the loss, George was a spectacular special individual, who informed my life in many ways without every actually meeting me personally. I am so grateful for the things, musical and otherwise, that I have taken (and will continue taking) from knowing his work. This is just a "life" thing. I am so glad he wasn't successfully murdered by that guy with the knife a couple years back. I wish I had more of his albums, I'm missing the '79 solo album I used to have on cassette. And 'All Things Must Pass', which I used to own on vinyl. But I've got all the Beatle stuff of course. :-) And although mainly thinking of George right now, I had to respond to some of the following: > chas in LA writes: > This morning driving into work I listened to the audio-obit for George > Harrison who died here in LA last night. He was, as every obituary ends by > saying, 58. This is something of a sad way to roll into work, listening to > Paul's near unemotional perfunctory remarks about George. I guess they never > did heal those old wounds. Nobody seemed to have asked Ringo to comment. > Now one half of the Beatles are gone - my favorite half too, the > serious and somber and, to me, more spiritual half. Now we are just left > with Ringo's alcoholism and Paul's O-Bla-Di-O-Bla-Da - ness of things, his > rosy posy children's songs. The above is tantamount to saying "It's too bad Paul didn't die instead" (the 1966 car crash notwithstanding). Clearly Chas in LA did not see the same news clips of Paul that we did -- right now I am wracking my brain to come up with words that come FARTHER from my sense of it than "unemotional" and "perfunctory". It must be great to feel so in a position of superiority, though, Chas. I hope when I'm in a moment of grief that I don't have to have a bunch of strangers like yourself passing judgment on whether I'm acting the way I should about it in public. Additionally, writing Paul off as a writer of "rosy posy children's songs" is like writing George off as nothing but a religious zealot. Certainly, neither description would be 100% *IN*accurate, but both would be ridiculously ignorant and uninformed. Our man Robyn saw fit to cover the fabulous 'Let Me Roll It' for the McCartney tribute album "Listen What the Man Said", which also features contributions from TMBG's, Matthew Sweet, World Party, and the guys out of Barenaked Ladies. Still, obviously these guys don't have the most intelligent or discerning taste in music. At any rate, as my friend Jon-Ross said, "May the Creator welcome George home with open arms and a sour Scouse remark." peace and love, Edward +x+x+x+x+x+x+x+x+x+x+x+x+x+x+x+ Edward of Sim a Californian in Lancashire edward@mysticinsect.freeserve.co.uk http://www.mysticinsect.freeserve.co.uk ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 30 Nov 2001 23:56:34 -0800 From: Eb Subject: Re: GH >as for Paul's comments feeling a bit more perfunctory than emotional, >that's a bit fair, but i think that's more a function of Paul having >already lost both his mother and wife to cancer than any rift between >the two. Well, not to mention the function of having to answer the exact same question from about 100 different people...it's hard not to sound rote after awhile, even for a mediaspeak veteran like Paul. Anyone have anything interesting (or even positive) to say about the lesser-known GH albums? I've never even bothered to hear Extra Texture, 33 1/3, Somewhere in England, Gone Troppo, Dark Horse or George Harrison. I probably would've bought 33 1/3 or the self-titled one if I had found them on used vinyl, but *now* they're going to be impossible to find.... Eb ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 1 Dec 2001 10:56:52 -0600 (CST) From: Jeffrey with 2 Fs Jeffrey Subject: Re: GH On Fri, 30 Nov 2001, Jeff Dwarf wrote: > > don't forget that it is also George and John who provided much of the > > dry wit. > > more like all. can anyone hear think of anything truly funny either > Paul or Ringo said? I thought it was Ringo's line re "are you mods, or rockers?" - "mockers." Certainly he never struck me as humorless. I'm not up right now for a full-dress version of The Defense of Paul, but let's just say two things: in the mid-sixties, he was the first Beatle interested in and incorporating music from outside rock (he was the avant-gardist well before John), and though he certainly had a weakness toward bathos, his short-story-like character sketches remain a perfectly viable and influential genre of rock lyric-writing. In a way it's sad that George was in the Beatles and thereby overshadowed by Paul and John: if you looked at his catalog of songs from, say, 1965 through 1975, there are enough excellent ones to have made him a major songwriter all by himself. (Of course, whether he could or would have written those songs w/o the example of John and Paul is an impossible question.) - --Jeffrey with 2 Fs Jeffrey J e f f r e y N o r m a n The Architectural Dance Society www.uwm.edu/~jenor/ADS.html ::Watson! Something's afoot...and it's on the end of my leg:: __Hemlock Stones__ ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 01 Dec 2001 17:04:30 +0000 From: "Redtailed Hawk" Subject: RMNBF Chas wrote: >Now one half of the Beatles are gone - my favorite half too, the >serious and somber and, to me, more spiritual half then he wrote: >George, ... his character has been removed from the plot. Im not trying to be contentesious just, as usual, more grey than black and white, but is there any possible contradiction tween those two statements? Just a thought. - ----------------------------- Chris, thanks for the Morpheus advice - -------------------------- Soft Boys/Robyn--Is it Time Yet?/HoF They would need to be "marketed." Do they -want- to be "marketed." Much as I'd like to know they had sufficuent retirement funds, there is part of me which isn't sure wishing them fame(thou Im all for proper reimbursments for their talent and their getting easy reservations in restraunts which then don't bill them:-) is wishing them a good thing. For instance--how would this go over: "a very tall, eccentric English genius who pairs an uncanny vision with an unimitatable manner, toiling away in relative obscurity as critic's darling(except for Chuck Eddy's;-) unbeknownst to the swine(and you dear marketing dupes, are no swine, now are you? heh, heh) who wouldn't know a pearl if it wacked them in the eye(unlike you, oh great super-cool dupes, uphs, I mean dudes, who are going to buy his record.) Yes folks--here we give you(drumroll please)-- the great, the not yet late... Robyn Hitchcock, Yes, our very own Nick Drake but with too much of a sense of humor to commit suicide. Watch him blink in the spotlight. Delight to his wacky on-stage antics. Drool girls and all you happy guys over those fantastic cheekbones. Following the success of this gruesome display of manipulative, cliche-ridden bad taste the list will be deluged with posters the like of which I've just spent 3 paragraphs imitating but have cut out. It was too much like shooting fish in the barrel. Easy sport and none too kind. But the fact is, if Robyn became well-known, it would be -our- barrel. Our boring, repetitive "Isn't Robyn great?" barrel. And even with our very real fandom, how long could any of us stick that out? Me point is, I think its in our best intrests, perhaps also in the Soft Boy's and most especially Robyn's that they never, ever become famous. Towards this end I recommend to the comittee that we institute the "Robyn Must Never Be Famous" bylaw. Anyone signing onto Feg must pledge with their life's blood AND ichore that they will do -everything- in their power to make sure Robyn stays obscure. This includes kidnapping and hiding away the man himself should his wisdom in this area weaken and he actually suffer the delusion that becoming famous will improve his wellbeing. Lets say the new SB CD is an absoulute knockout. It is our duty as Fegs to makes sure it sinks like a craggy granite balloon. That it sinks into a Saragossa Sea of lost excellence where like Atlantis its glorius ruins will only be acsessible to initiates like ourself who have taken all the proper secretive vows. There we will asssemble and groove on our inner plane like happy, extrememly well-fed fish. - --- If there was any justice in the world Robyn and all the Soft Boys would be very well-reimbursed and have no need of sharky marketing. But since the only justice in this world is that which humans bestow--- I dont know. I wish them good fortune. Tying in the new SB albumn with a campaign fo the Hall of Fame might be an effective move. So might doing an ad campaign based on the idea that Robyn must never be famous;-). Its a crazy world. Kay, sel-fish as always n.p. in my mind--Robyn doing "Within you, without you" followed by a Soft Boys rendition(with harmony and rocked-up a notch) of "Box of Rain" Blisssssss. Meaning has to be shared to be real. Mark Kingwell _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 01 Dec 2001 19:04:41 +0100 From: "Christopher Frost" Subject: Manning Mention Strange Hitchcock mention from Barbara Manning's S.W. Germany tour diary.... I had the weirdest dreams while I was sick: many scary ones about the terrorist attacks, one about Tom Hanks hanging out and smoking pot with me in my van, a perverse dream about the Dirty Three, and a long dream in which I saw an entire Robyn Hitchcock concert during which I was brewing a tea made from his sweat! ..from: http://www.barbaramanning.com/newsletters.html _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 01 Dec 2001 12:50:28 -0800 From: "victorian squid" Subject: Re: Couldn't Hear a Robyn Sing On Fri, 30 Nov 2001 17:06:16 Aaron Mandel wrote: >me too, except that the novel's done when i say it is! and that'll happen >by midnight. > >susan, drew, gene, how goes it? Sorry I didn't answer this sooner. I was sprinting for the finish line at the time. Seriously, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday I did nothing but write. I made the deadline but I'm tired and achy and everything after about 30,000 or so is largely unusable. There -might- be a pretty turn of phrase here and there worth salvaging but right now I don't feel up to picking through the wreckage to find out. When I go back to it I'll probably just delete all that and have done with it. The novel's not done by any stretch but I am for at least a few days or a week or so. loveonya, susan Join 18 million Eudora users by signing up for a free Eudora Web-Mail account at http://www.eudoramail.com ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 1 Dec 2001 16:46:32 -0600 (CST) From: Jeffrey with 2 Fs Jeffrey Subject: Re: RMNBF On Sat, 1 Dec 2001, Redtailed Hawk wrote: > Towards this end I recommend to the comittee that we institute the "Robyn > Must Never Be Famous" bylaw. Anyone signing onto Feg must pledge with their > > Lets say the new SB CD is an absoulute knockout. It is our duty as Fegs to > makes sure it sinks like a craggy granite balloon. That it sinks into a > Saragossa Sea of lost excellence where like Atlantis its glorius ruins will > only be acsessible to initiates like ourself who have taken all the proper > secretive vows. There we will asssemble and groove on our inner plane like > happy, extrememly well-fed fish. Okay then. We must either purchase the CD from venues not tied into Soundscan, or (better) resolve to acquire the CDs only via theft (or being a reviewer and getting free copies - much the same thing). To cover our tracks, the thefts must also include a random sampling of other (and preferably lame-ass) titles - wouldn't want a rash of media on "The Mysterious Disappearing Soft Boys CD": "An obscure British band is apparently a favorite of the light-fingered all the world over..." Threatening letters must be sent to any critic who compares anyone to RH (are you listening, reviewers of Anton Barbeau?) or mentions the Soft Boys as unheralded influence (particularly nasty threats reserved for those who refer to the SBs as "the Velvet Underground of the...wait, when were they playing again?"). Also, once we've stolen the CDs, we may not listen to them. Bury them in backyards, toss them behind disused dumpsters, and hide them inside toilet tanks of bathrooms located in abandoned urban factories. Never shall the light of digital audio's lasers shine upon the poor neglected Soft Boys CD. (Didn't the Residents already exemplify such a "theory of obscurity" with _Not Available_?) - --Jeff J e f f r e y N o r m a n The Architectural Dance Society www.uwm.edu/~jenor/ADS.html ::Any noise that is unrelenting eventually becomes music:: __Paula Carino__ ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 1 Dec 2001 17:07:01 -0800 From: Eb Subject: GH + A superlative one-stop source for info about the course of Harrison's illness: http://abbeyrd.best.vwh.net/news/709georgenewcancer.html Meanwhile, Amazon has posted their editors' picks for the year's 100 best albums (http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/browse/-/746756/). It's a very "fortysomething" list which won't have much in common with most consensus polls, but it's interesting anyway. Four out of their top 20 would make my own top 20 (and no, Rufus Wainwright wouldn't be among those 20, very sorry to say). There are also some lists on the CDNow site (http://www.cdnow.com/cgi-bin/mserver/SID=790111289/pagename=/MN/PROMO/promo_in_the_media.html/promoid=7267), but they're divided by genre (Rock, Alt/Indie, etc.). The Alt/Indie list has a strong country-folk bent which kinda negates the usual genre boundaries...hrm. Eb ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 1 Dec 2001 17:49:00 -0800 (PST) From: Bridget Caple Subject: Newbie/Unhatched, Uncarved Hi, I'm brand-spankin' new to Robyn Hitchcock trading, and was hoping someone could help me find unhatched crablings or uncarved pumpkins on tape or cdr. Much appreciated! :) Bridget Buy the perfect holiday gifts at Yahoo! Shopping. http://shopping.yahoo.com ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 01 Dec 2001 21:24:35 -0500 From: "Maximilian Lang" Subject: Uncarved Pumpkins track list or artwork? Does anyone have the artwork or tracklisting for the pumpkin discs? Thanks, Max _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 01 Dec 2001 18:38:16 -0800 From: "Andrew D. Simchik" Subject: nanowrimonomo > From: Aaron Mandel > > On Fri, 30 Nov 2001, Redtailed Hawk wrote: > >> p.s. By this evening should have finished my 50,000 word Namo quota, >> thou not the whole novel. > > me too, except that the novel's done when i say it is! and that'll happen > by midnight. > > susan, drew, gene, how goes it? Shitty. I never made it to 14K. Oh well. I suck. At least I'm going to be working next month. The problem, FWIW, was motivation and scheduling...the whole unemployment/uncertainty thing plunged me into a bit of a depression and it was hard to work seriously on anything but finding a job, hence motivation. The scheduling problem was one computer, two NaNoWriMoNoWri's. Happily, Margaret managed to finish hers. My own will have to take longer, I guess. Drew - -- http://www.stormgreen.com/~drew/ "You're living in a global shopping mall, and you're the only person who still thinks there's a bloody exit." - Edina Monsoon ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 01 Dec 2001 19:24:45 -0800 From: "Russ Reynolds" Subject: Hitchcock does the Dead before you read on, I'd like to state that I am *not* a "Deadhead"... JH3: >>AND don't forget that Robyn has performed the >>Grateful Dead's "Candyman," which I believe was >>also covered by Sammy Davis, Jr.... ERP: > different tune -- Sammy did the one that's in "Willy Wonka," which is not > the Hunter/Garcia composition. Did RH really cover the Dead's "Candyman"? > Somehow, I can see him crooning a la Sammy more readily than doing the Dead > tune. Interesting you should say that. I've been listening to American Beauty a lot lately, and I found myself thinking that a number of those tunes would sound great covered by RH. Candyman in particular. GU: > Cool! Any other Dead toonz? I bet he could easily pull off anything on > American Beauty. I'd love to hear him do "Ripple" or "Box Of Rain". interesting you should say that....[repeat as necessary] - -rUss np: Live In Japan/George Harrison with Eric Clapton and Band ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 1 Dec 2001 19:46:08 -0800 (PST) From: Jeff Dwarf Subject: Re: da9ve stovall wrote: > >Nuppy > > > >PS: how do you pronounce Da9ve? > > Ah, the '9' is silent, you see. > > da9ve > NP - George Harrison 33 1/3 sort of like Tom Lehrer's old friend Hen3ry, so they eventually had to send off to the home for the bewildered, after writing the novel about the necrophiliac who achieved his boyhood dream of becoming coroner... ===== "Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." -- John F. Kennedy Buy the perfect holiday gifts at Yahoo! Shopping. http://shopping.yahoo.com ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 1 Dec 2001 19:56:34 -0800 (PST) From: Jeff Dwarf Subject: Re: GH Jeffrey with 2 Fs Jeffrey wrote: > On Fri, 30 Nov 2001, Jeff Dwarf wrote: > > > don't forget that it is also George and John who provided much of > > > the dry wit. > > > > more like all. can anyone hear think of anything truly funny either > > Paul or Ringo said? > > I thought it was Ringo's line re "are you mods, or rockers?" - > "mockers." > > Certainly he never struck me as humorless. i had forgotten that one. there is a difference between not witty and humorless. for starters there are other ways of being funny of course, but also, humorless is more the state of being unable to appreciate humor rather than the state of being poor at manufacturing it. i wasn't trying to bash Paul or Ringo, just re-emphasize that John and George were the sources of the notorious beatles wit (with a couple exceptions). on the other hand, paul is/was probably the most well-rounded as a musician (though George was of course, the better guitarist) in that he could play the most things reasonably well. but no, let's definitely not head back down the bashing paul to praise a recently deceased bettle path. it was bad enough 21 years ago. ===== "Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." -- John F. Kennedy Buy the perfect holiday gifts at Yahoo! Shopping. http://shopping.yahoo.com ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 1 Dec 2001 20:30:16 -0800 From: "John B. Jones" Subject: Re: Uncarved Pumpkins track list or artwork? At 9:24 PM -0500 12/1/01, Maximilian Lang wrote: >Does anyone have the artwork or tracklisting for the pumpkin discs? Awww, someone still listens to that? *sniff* *sniff* I'm touched! Actually, I think Bayard has a webpage somewhere on Glass Hotel that has my original hand-penned liner notes, and a tracklisting. The original is actually a 100 min tape, but Bayard took my original tape, sonically enhanced it (or not - can't remember), and added some other stuff from another rarities compilation tape that a S.F. fan named Dan Poppe had made - and burned it all onto two cd's. Long live Bayard for putting that stuff onto cd! Huzzah! Huzzah! Huzzah! =jbj= ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 1 Dec 2001 23:43:18 -0500 From: Brian Subject: Re: Cleveland-bound At Friday, 30 November 2001, you wrote: >At Friday, 30 November 2001, JH3 wrote: > >>Anyway, I believe there are quite a few gigs missing >>from that 1989 tour. Specifically, there's a gap from >>6/22 (Toronto) to 6/27 (Columbus, OH), so I suspect >>the Cleveland gig in question would have been on >>6/26 or thereabouts. >> > >Yeah, I think it was the 24th, but I'll check the stub! > >Nuppy > Yes, it was the 24th. Info on stub: Phantasy Theatre 11802 Detroit Ave Lakewood Ohio Edge Syndicate Presents R. Hitchcock Egyptians No refund/exchange 8:00P Sat Jun 24 1989 AD$11.50 Nuppy ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 1 Dec 2001 23:37:07 -0600 (CST) From: Jeffrey with 2 Fs Jeffrey Subject: Re: nanowrimonomo On Sat, 1 Dec 2001, Andrew D. Simchik wrote: > > The problem, FWIW, was motivation and scheduling...the whole > unemployment/uncertainty thing plunged me into a bit of a > depression and it was hard to work seriously on anything but > finding a job, hence motivation. The scheduling problem was > one computer, two NaNoWriMoNoWri's. Happily, Margaret managed > to finish hers. My own will have to take longer, I guess. Having wandered into the party a bit late, listening in a bit, jumping in a couple of other, more obvious conversations, I return to this corner of the room and find myself still puzzled; to wit: what the Flying Thompson's Gazelle are you folks talking about? NaNoWriMoNoWri's? Apologies if it turns out to be thunderingly obvious, sorry. - --Jeffrey with 2 Fs Jeffrey J e f f r e y N o r m a n The Architectural Dance Society www.uwm.edu/~jenor/ADS.html ::beliefs are ideas going bald:: __Francis Picabia__ ------------------------------ End of fegmaniax-digest V10 #445 ********************************