From: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org (fegmaniax-digest) To: fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Subject: fegmaniax-digest V11 #140 Reply-To: fegmaniax@smoe.org Sender: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk fegmaniax-digest Monday, April 29 2002 Volume 11 : Number 140 Today's Subjects: ----------------- No mention of Elvis yet? [The Great Quail ] Re: No mention of Elvis yet? [Steve Talkowski ] Re: No mention of Elvis yet? [mary ] Re: No mention of Elvis yet? [Steve Talkowski ] Friday's Largo show ["Chris Franz" ] rebuilding a robyn collection [rand ] punch lines and pie [drew ] Re: seek ye the one known as eastwood [Michael R Godwin ] Re: seek ye the one known as eastwood [Miles Goosens ] Re: romans in scotland [Stewart Russell ] Re: gun control and whatnot [gSs ] OT: Spiritualized Taping Policy [Keith Hanlon ] Re: Friday's Largo show [Jeff Dwarf ] second robyn gig at Largo ["Walker, Charles" ] Re: romans in scotland [Michael R Godwin ] Re: gun control and whatnot [gSs ] Re: rebuilding a robyn collection ["Chris Donnell" ] Re: dvd control and whatnot [Mike Swedene ] Canadians, Brits, Scots --they're all wogs to me ["Spring Cherry" Subject: No mention of Elvis yet? I haven't seen the new Elvis Costello album mentioned yet! It's fantastic. Just a note, - --Q ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 28 Apr 2002 20:51:01 -0400 From: Steve Talkowski Subject: Re: No mention of Elvis yet? On Sunday, April 28, 2002, at 10:38 PM, The Great Quail wrote: > I haven't seen the new Elvis Costello album mentioned yet! It's > fantastic. Dude! I mentioned it a few weeks ago (at least I _think_ I did) ; ) Yes, It's quite fantastic. I'm still on my Costello high after seeing him twice in 5 days (CBS Morning Show concert and Tower Records in-store NYC) last week. He'll be back in town for 2 shows at the Beacon on June 18th and 19th. - -Steve ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 28 Apr 2002 22:10:10 -0400 From: mary Subject: Re: No mention of Elvis yet? And for those fegs with cable, this week's episode of "Musician" on the Bravo channel features Elvis Costello. The show appears on Monday at 10pm (est). http://www.bravotv.com/sections/shows_mus_costello.php s.Mary np - Radiohead "Ok Computer" ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 28 Apr 2002 22:29:52 -0400 From: Steve Talkowski Subject: Re: No mention of Elvis yet? On Sunday, April 28, 2002, at 10:10 PM, mary wrote: > And for those fegs with cable, this week's episode of "Musician" on the > Bravo channel features Elvis Costello. The show appears on Monday at > 10pm (est). Doh, I forgot to mention that also! I was very fortunate to get into the taping for this. I was literally among the last 6 people to get in for free via Seatfillers@aol.com. The taping ran the longest they've ever had, just over 3 hours. I can't wait to see how it gets condensed into 1 hour. Hopefully this series will make it to DVD in the not-too-distant future. - -Steve ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 29 Apr 2002 02:50:47 +0000 From: "Chris Franz" Subject: Friday's Largo show I did indeed attempt to send a report of Friday's Largo activities, apparently mistyping the target address. The message did not get saved in my outbox, either. Please forgive me -- I was a little out of it after sleeping in my car Friday night (a particularly jarring image for those Fegs who've seen both me and my car). I've found the paper with my notes, however. Paul F. Tompkins opened, and set the mood nicely. Then Jon did his set -- he's unquestionably a very talented musician, and his show was wonderfully entertaining. Eventually, Robyn joined him onstage, wearing a black blazer. Candy Says Mind Is Connected Slave to Love Raymond Chandler Evening Universal Control (improv) (misheard "Beautiful Girl") Beatiful Girl Robyn then departed, replaced by one Rhett Miller. Miller did three songs, and was pretty impressive. He then left in deference to guitarist Bill Frisell. Frisell played guitar on two songs, then Jon summoned Fiona Apple onstage to sing "Cry Me A River" with Jon and Bill accompanying. The musicians all then went off for drinks. Green drinks. Some time after 1AM, Jon reemerged, played a song, then brought Robyn back out. Waterloo Sunset Queen Elvis II New Age Hail Mary (?) (improv) Where Everybody Knows Your Name The last was Jon singing to close out the night. The improv happened as Robyn was playing something on the guitar and said to Jon, "Play something that goes like this." They just ran with it. There was no discernible hook, but the first line was "Hail Mary." _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 29 Apr 2002 00:27:54 -0400 From: rand Subject: rebuilding a robyn collection Hello to one and all in this most wonderful globe of fegs, hi's and waves to ms. dodge & her doug, and dmx too ... And thanks Susan for your 'review' ~ I kinda felt like I was there :-} It's been so nice being online and getting email ... And now I have a request ... I believe Mr. John Hedges III made two Robyn fonts for Windows. I tried picking them off of Bayard's site ~ ( b write me please!) ~ but the links were invalid. Can anyone help me? Also ~ the Robyn interviews that are on the radio ~ that play in Real Audio, is there a way to change them or get them somehow in mp3 format? Sorry for sounding like a geek ~ but I'm unclear on some of this computer stuff. Is there a way to burn from Real Audio onto cd-r? Again ... any help is muchly appreciated. fading back into yesterday before tomorrow comes, Randi Toronto, Ontario, Canada *what scares you most will set you free* ~ Robyn Hitchcock *by endurance we conquer* ~ Sir Ernest Shackleton p.s. I am thrilled to know there are other "Buffy The Vampire Slayer" and "Angel" *watchers* ;-} out there. I have more detailed info on the DVDs being released first in Europe, and info about money and the bands, but I guess it's an off-list topic? so email me privately ~ rls ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 28 Apr 2002 21:39:27 -0700 From: drew Subject: punch lines and pie > From: The Great Quail > I see it more like "Freeze" than > "Gene Hackman," in that the names are meant as symbols rather than > punch-lines. That's funny...I always saw the names as punch lines in "Freeze" as well. I mean, I kind of know what "David Byrne" symbolizes, but I have no idea who Elaine, Steve, and Ray (his dad?) are. I don't see how they can symbolize anything to anyone to whom they're just names. Likewise, I've never seen _Magnum Force_, and without that background those names are meaningless to me. You could argue that this is one of those cases where knowing the allusion enriches the song for the listener (and I think you did), but I'm not sure I'd agree. I'd have to hear it again. In "Gene Hackman," of course, the names aren't even punch lines if you are somehow unaware of who Hackman and McDowell are and of their inexplicable ubiquity. At least "Freeze" and "Limitations" make sense either way. Drew ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 29 Apr 2002 12:58:52 +0100 (BST) From: Michael R Godwin Subject: Re: seek ye the one known as eastwood On Fri, 26 Apr 2002, ross taylor wrote: > I wonder what the most violent thing was that ever happened in a Michael Leigh film. Probably Timothy Spall looking as if he might bang his hand on the table in 'Secrets and Lies'. - - MRG ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 29 Apr 2002 09:22:35 -0400 (EDT) From: dmw Subject: Re: seek ye the one known as eastwood On Mon, 29 Apr 2002, Michael R Godwin wrote: > On Fri, 26 Apr 2002, ross taylor wrote: > > I wonder what the most violent thing was that ever happened in a Michael > Leigh film. > > Probably Timothy Spall looking as if he might bang his hand on the table > in 'Secrets and Lies'. there's some nastiness in "naked" isn't there? s'been a while, but i thought i remembered it being pretty harsh. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 29 Apr 2002 08:40:02 -0500 From: Miles Goosens Subject: Re: seek ye the one known as eastwood At 06:24 PM 4/26/2002 -0400, ross taylor wrote: >Jan Svankmeyer's Little Otik. I also like >Michael Leigh. I wonder what the most violent >thing was that ever happened in a Michael Leigh >film. Many *brutal* scenes from NAKED come to mind: Johnny committing a borderline rape at the beginning of the movie, Johnny's "sex" scenes with Sophie, street toughs beating Johnny to a pulp, anything to do with Jeremy... later, Miles ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 29 Apr 2002 09:45:36 -0400 From: "Larry Tucker" Subject: RE: rebuilding a robyn collection |Also ~ the Robyn interviews that are on the radio ~ that play |in Real Audio, is there a way to change them or get them |somehow in mp3 format? Total Recorder is great for recording any kind of streaming audio and it's cheap. www.highcriteria.com It records to wav format so all you need is an editor to cut out the tracks for your CDR. Here's a fairly economical sound editor www.goldwave.com I've also heard good things about Audacity but I haven't used it. On the plus side it's free and probably does what you need. http://audacity.sourceforge.net/ Go to it Randi! - -Larry ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 29 Apr 2002 09:58:10 -0500 (CDT) From: gSs Subject: Re: but gun control is easier to swallow than astrology On Sat, 27 Apr 2002, Jeffrey with 2 Fs Jeffrey wrote: > > I miss the point. I was not making a comparison between countries. There > > is little or no gun control in the US, as it should be. I was just > > comparing two fruitless wars and their effectiveness in combating > > fictionalized enemies. > gun control law, no matter how strict (as Germany's), will wholly > prevent such massacres...but the US's laws are far looser than > Germany's, and we have a far, far higher rate of gun deaths than Germany > does. I think a more accurate analysis could be done by looking at the average number of guns in the civilian households versus homicides, per country. This might not change your opinion but I think it will be adjusted. That alone isn't much but the fact that there are now more guns in US households than ever before, increasing at a still expanding rate of well over 2.5 million a year, and all the violent crime rates have declined dramatically is very insteresting and should be looked at closely by both sides in this arguement. On top of the fact that violent crime in nearly all other countries has increased sharply. I don't mind gun registration for criminal investigation and which could severely limit the ability of a violent criminal to acquire one. Registration and restriction do not neccesarily go hand in hand, but they could. There should be no restictions which could stop me from purchasing a rifle or pistol for personal protection, hunting, target shooting etc... > That is, of course gun laws won't prevent all gun deaths...but it hardly > seems a coincidence that the nation with the most (or nearly so - esp. > given that we're not in the midst of a civil war or anything similar) We are short sighted, us Earthlings. > The comparison with the drug war makes little sense: aside from hunting > rifles (and, I suppose, guns used by police and the military), guns have > no purpose other than putting large holes in people, and as such would not > seem to be intrinsically desirable. Look at it from the other side and you see a country with the strictest drug laws and yet the most drug deaths through ingestion of the very drugs which are supposed to be controlled by these laws. The drugs are not the problem and neither are the guns. > Drugs, on the other hand, have always, do now, and will always be > attractive to people - because they make people feel better. As have methods of self defense for simple existance. How do the Palestinians feel about gun control, and why are they without the ability to defend even their homes? Is anyone, anywhere more than a generation away from becoming like the Palestinians? > Certainly, a gun-free society is unlikely ever to exist either - or more > germanely, a violence-free society - but guns just make it too damned > easy. And more of them do not make it easier. Limit or eliminate the supply of a drug and a new one will be created or discovered in some bath tub or garage. The same goes with weapons be they firearms which use smokeless powder or whatever else someone somewhere would then be inspired to invent or make more practical. You will never get rid of weapons no matter how hard you try. The sames goes for drugs. > One more thing: the argument that laws do not succeed in preventing the > behavior they prohibit is a very weak argument against them; otherwise, we > might as well eliminate all laws, as all laws are violated. When did I use that arguement? gSs ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 29 Apr 2002 08:05:16 -0700 (PDT) From: "Eugene Hopstetter, Jr." Subject: Re: gun control and whatnot > From: Jeffrey with 2 Fs Jeffrey > > guns have no purpose other than > putting large holes in people, and as such would not > seem to be intrinsically desirable. You forgot one of the purposes of firearms: sport. This sport makes guns very desirable, especially in my country -- Texas. Gun sport is also popular throughout the US. Popular enough to have its own voting lobby, so we can't ignore those who use firearms for sport. . Yahoo! Health - your guide to health and wellness http://health.yahoo.com ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 29 Apr 2002 11:06:45 -0400 From: Stewart Russell Subject: Re: but gun control is easier to swallow than astrology Jeffrey with 2 Fs Jeffrey wrote: > > Sam Hinton "Old Man Atom" yay! congrats to Jeffrey for probably the first fegmention of Sam Hinton, everyone's favourite folk singer and marine biologist. I've now got "Whoever shall have some good peanuts" stuck in my head... Stewart - -- Gandalf Graphics Limited, Markham, Ontario, Canada ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 29 Apr 2002 11:12:46 -0400 From: Stewart Russell Subject: Re: gun control and whatnot "Eugene Hopstetter, Jr." wrote: > > Gun sport is also popular throughout the US. I'd always thought that sport was something involving equal chances for all competitors. Semiautomatics for the ducks and bears, say I! ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 29 Apr 2002 11:07:07 -0400 From: invader woj Subject: Re: rebuilding a robyn collection when we last left our heroes, rand exclaimed: >And now I have a request ... I believe Mr. John Hedges III made >two Robyn fonts for Windows. > >I tried picking them off of Bayard's site ~ ( b write me please!) ~ but >the links were invalid. > >Can anyone help me? you can get 'em from . >Also ~ the Robyn interviews that are on the radio ~ that play in Real >Audio, is there a way to change them or get them somehow in mp3 format? real audio is kinda a pain to deal with, but there are ways to convert it to mp3 or other formats. the ones i know about are windows-based. i'm sure there are similar hacks for unix/mac as well. once upon a time, there was a program called streambox ripper which, among other things, could transform a real audio file (not a stream) to mp3 or wav. there was a companion program called streambox vcr which could capture real media streams and save them to a local file as real media. i guess real heard about these things and pressured streambox out of existance, but if you poke around the net a bit, you can still find the beta/cracked versions of the software. there's also this nifty program called total recorder which will record any audio source to wav. i haven't used it myself, but i heard it's a good application. in any case, both recent robyn radio appearances have been captured as mp3s, so there's no need to worry about converting them from real to mp3. i was a little optimistic when i said that i hoped to have them on the web site last friday, but we're working on it. (the issue is bandwidth, not disk space.) >Is there a way to burn from Real Audio onto cd-r? yes. using streambox ripper, convert the real audio to wav and then burn it to cd. i'm not sure but i think that real jukebox can also burn cds, so maybe it can burn from real audio files as well. (anybody who has it care to confirm?) woj ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 29 Apr 2002 11:25:41 -0400 From: Stewart Russell Subject: Re: romans in scotland Eleanore Adams wrote: > > when me and my husband were in scotland we bought in Inverness 2 roman > legion nails that were escavated from a roman legion frontier base near > Dunkeld. Scotland had loads o' Romans. Roamin' all over the place. I used to cycle along the Antonine wall on the way to work. Not much left of the wall, since it was build of mud in a very rainy country. Kirkintilloch had its own fort, as did the amusingly-named Twechar, a few miles further east. Bar Hill at Twechar is an antiquarian's feast -- not merely stone remains of the Roman camp, but an Iron Age fort on Castle Hill nearby. Whee! Stewart ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 29 Apr 2002 10:31:15 -0500 (CDT) From: gSs Subject: Re: gun control and whatnot On Mon, 29 Apr 2002, Stewart Russell wrote: > "Eugene Hopstetter, Jr." wrote: > > > > Gun sport is also popular throughout the US. > > I'd always thought that sport was something involving equal chances for > all competitors. Semiautomatics for the ducks and bears, say I! Yeah, this might sound odd from someone who owns a Remington 7400, but I don't think there is much sport in picking off a deer at 500 or even 1000 yards with a 30-06 or a Winchester 7mm for that matter. We hunt nazis here anyway, mostly. gSs ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 29 Apr 2002 11:32:59 -0400 From: Keith Hanlon Subject: OT: Spiritualized Taping Policy I'm heading up to see Spiritualized in Cleveland this weekend. Anybody know if they have a taping policy? Keith ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 29 Apr 2002 08:45:38 -0700 (PDT) From: Jeff Dwarf Subject: Re: Friday's Largo show Chris Franz wrote: > Please forgive me -- I was a little out of it after > sleeping in my car Friday night (a particularly jarring image for > those Fegs who've seen both me and my car). i don't have to have seen your car for that to make my neck hurt. > Where Everybody Knows Your Name as in, the cheers theme song? ===== "This week, the White House says President Bush meant no disrespect when he referred to the Pakistani people as 'Pakis.' But just to be on the safe side, White House staffers have cancelled his trip to Nigeria" -- Tina Fey, Saturday Night Live's "Weekend Update" "To announce that there must be no criticism of the president or that we are to stand by the president right or wrong is not only unpatriotic and servile, but is morally treasonable to the American public." -- Theodore Roosevelt . Yahoo! Health - your guide to health and wellness http://health.yahoo.com ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 29 Apr 2002 08:42:58 -0700 From: "Walker, Charles" Subject: second robyn gig at Largo chas in LA writes: dont know how well known/publicized this is but just to pass along the info, robyn will be playing a second gig at Largo on tues night here in LA. Largo - 432 N fairfax btw melrose and beverly across from Canters. the policy at largo is you can reserve a dinner table or sit at the bar. doors usually open at 830 so if you get there around 8 you'll get in if you dont have a reservation. i think everyone got into the sat night show who didnt have a reservation and that was sat nite so tues should be no ploblemo. the food is pretty good, only a $10 minimum i believe. the celebs may make it out to this show as well for what that's worth, who knows. last year at largo i saw pete buck - two weeks before he attacked british crockery at 35,000 feet - jon brion, g.l. philips, and aimee man and michael penn lurked around in the kitchen but didnt jam like everyone else. robyn seems to like largo a lot and give a solid and chatty performance. the crowd sat night was great, not screaming out requests at every pause. they seemed to be veteran robyn-ites. of course when robyn casually said 'i dunno what do you all want to hear' the floodgates opened and there was a great group request for 'trams of lightbulb dead wife head' and some other things lumped in there. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 29 Apr 2002 17:03:32 +0100 (BST) From: Michael R Godwin Subject: Re: romans in scotland On Mon, 29 Apr 2002, Stewart Russell wrote: > I used to cycle along the Antonine wall on the way to work. Not much > left of the wall, since it was build of mud in a very rainy country. > Kirkintilloch had its own fort, as did the amusingly-named Twechar, a > few miles further east. Bar Hill at Twechar is an antiquarian's feast -- > not merely stone remains of the Roman camp, but an Iron Age fort on > Castle Hill nearby. Whee! This sounds suspiciously like Early Onset Nostalgia, Stewart. Will ye no' come back again? - - Mike "OtSR" Godwin PS Didn't have time to visit the megalithic sites in Malta, but did catch the sleeping lady and the fat-bottomed girls in the museum: see ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 29 Apr 2002 11:14:19 -0500 (CDT) From: gSs Subject: Re: gun control and whatnot On Mon, 29 Apr 2002, gSs wrote: > > I'd always thought that sport was something involving equal chances for > > all competitors. Semiautomatics for the ducks and bears, say I! > > Yeah, this might sound odd from someone who owns a Remington 7400, but I > don't think there is much sport in picking off a deer at 500 or even > 1000 yards with a 30-06 or a Winchester 7mm for that matter. We hunt > nazis here anyway, mostly. I forgot to add that deer or hog hunting is actually just a part of firearm sporting. There is political assasination, religious retribution and of course just plain feel like blowing a strangers head off type stuff, all of which could be quite challenging I imagine. But there is also target shooting competitions, which include clay shooting and all its variations plus the large number and type of paper target shooting matches which are very challenging and in my opinion great sport and competition. There is a huge industry and market which has nothing to do with hunting or personal endangerment, reckless of otherwise and is centered around the pistol and the rifle. gSs "Deathrays for all or for all a good night, sir." - b. hill or maybe g. shell, one of 'em anyway. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 29 Apr 2002 13:09:37 -0400 From: "Chris Donnell" Subject: Re: rebuilding a robyn collection There is another program called something like TINRA (Tis Is Not Real Anymore) or something goofy like that. Actually if you can get them to me I can try and convert them all for you. I kind of enjoy that stuff (and have come to really hate 'real' stuff... - ----- Original Message ----- From: "invader woj" To: "worst...list...EVER!" Sent: Monday, April 29, 2002 11:07 AM Subject: Re: rebuilding a robyn collection > when we last left our heroes, rand exclaimed: > > >And now I have a request ... I believe Mr. John Hedges III made > >two Robyn fonts for Windows. > > > >I tried picking them off of Bayard's site ~ ( b write me please!) ~ but > >the links were invalid. > > > >Can anyone help me? > > you can get 'em from . > > >Also ~ the Robyn interviews that are on the radio ~ that play in Real > >Audio, is there a way to change them or get them somehow in mp3 format? > > real audio is kinda a pain to deal with, but there are ways to convert it > to mp3 or other formats. the ones i know about are windows-based. i'm sure > there are similar hacks for unix/mac as well. > > once upon a time, there was a program called streambox ripper which, among > other things, could transform a real audio file (not a stream) to mp3 or > wav. there was a companion program called streambox vcr which could capture > real media streams and save them to a local file as real media. i guess > real heard about these things and pressured streambox out of existance, but > if you poke around the net a bit, you can still find the beta/cracked > versions of the software. > > there's also this nifty program called total recorder which will record any > audio source to wav. i haven't used it myself, but i heard it's a good > application. > > in any case, both recent robyn radio appearances have been captured as > mp3s, so there's no need to worry about converting them from real to mp3. i > was a little optimistic when i said that i hoped to have them on the web > site last friday, but we're working on it. (the issue is bandwidth, not > disk space.) > > >Is there a way to burn from Real Audio onto cd-r? > > yes. using streambox ripper, convert the real audio to wav and then burn it > to cd. > > i'm not sure but i think that real jukebox can also burn cds, so maybe it > can burn from real audio files as well. (anybody who has it care to confirm?) > > woj ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 29 Apr 2002 14:44:51 -0500 (CDT) From: gSs Subject: Re: dvd control and whatnot hey, why do some dvd's play fine through the av1 inputs on my vcr and some don't? The time life monty python series discs play just fine with no funny lines or distortion but the rush chronicles and star trek the movie are distorted. The rush disc audio portion plays perfect if I run the audio out of my apex dvd into the amp but if I run the audio through the vcr the sound comes in and out like the video. a friend brought his playstation 2 over which we connected directly to the tv, but when we ran the rush dvd and the star trek movie we got the same results as with the Apex 500 running into the av1 inputs on the vcr. But as with the APEX 500, the ps2 did the Monty Python discs just perfectly. When I had a tv with an s-video input, the star trek movie played correctly from the apex directly into the tv. What is the issue here and would a composite or s-video to coax adapter solve the problem? And if so, why did we have problems with the rush and star trek discs but not the monty python discs when using the ps2? gSs ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 29 Apr 2002 12:51:31 -0700 (PDT) From: Mike Swedene Subject: Re: dvd control and whatnot sounds like the joys of MACROVISION. Depending on your apex model of your dvd player it is possible to disengage (using star trek there). You can look for work arounds on the web, or search for a macrovision blocker on eBay, or hook it directly to your tv. Herbie - --- gSs wrote: > hey, > > why do some dvd's play fine through the av1 inputs > on my vcr and some > don't? The time life monty python series discs play > just fine with no > funny lines or distortion but the rush chronicles > and star trek the movie > are distorted. The rush disc audio portion plays > perfect if I run the > audio out of my apex dvd into the amp but if I run > the audio through the > vcr the sound comes in and out like the video. a > friend brought his > playstation 2 over which we connected directly to > the tv, but when we ran > the rush dvd and the star trek movie we got the same > results as with the > Apex 500 running into the av1 inputs on the vcr. But > as with the APEX 500, > the ps2 did the Monty Python discs just perfectly. > When I had a tv with an > s-video input, the star trek movie played correctly > from the apex directly > into the tv. What is the issue here and would a > composite or s-video to > coax adapter solve the problem? And if so, why did > we have problems with > the rush and star trek discs but not the monty > python discs when using the > ps2? > > gSs ===== - --------------------------------------------- View my Websight & CDR Trade page at: http://midy.topcities.com/ _____________________________________________ Yahoo! Health - your guide to health and wellness http://health.yahoo.com ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 29 Apr 2002 20:09:48 +0000 From: "Spring Cherry" Subject: Canadians, Brits, Scots --they're all wogs to me Ross0: >Now there's a thought... anybody who wants to use drugs should >have to be a member of a club! Oh baby, you're such a Canadian;-). Actually-- its anybody who wants to use drugs should have to be a member of a "well-ordered militia." Especially since if youre stoned enough, you wouldn't be able to hit a barn door. - ------------------------------ Thanks to all "Britidiots"(Yes Jill, you too. All Kinks fans are Britidiots, where ever they may reside;-) who've done wonders for my Monday. - -------------------- What color smoking jackets? Mmmmmmm, smoking jackets... - ------------------ Pete is what they smoke in Scotland. - -------------------- Kay, who likes Gainsbourough's trees. They look nothing like trees. But his people are so realistic you accept(hardly notice) the fantastcle landscapes surronding them, which I think is sorta cool. The leaves all look like feathers from the ladys' wild wighats. Rococco artists tend to be so artificial and mannered they are surrealists before their time. _________________________________________________________________ MSN Photos is the easiest way to share and print your photos: http://photos.msn.com/support/worldwide.aspx ------------------------------ End of fegmaniax-digest V11 #140 ********************************