From: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org (fegmaniax-digest) To: fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Subject: fegmaniax-digest V11 #220 Reply-To: fegmaniax@smoe.org Sender: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk fegmaniax-digest Thursday, July 4 2002 Volume 11 : Number 220 Today's Subjects: ----------------- RE: what is worst and what is best? ["Bachman, Michael" ] Neil Finn (25% Who content, 25% Smiths content) ["Jason R. Thornton" ] This is a subject line ["No Name" ] Re: harpies and sprites [gSs ] Turtle names ["Rex.Broome" ] Re: Names (0% RH) [glen uber ] Re: Names (0% RH) ["Michael Wells" ] Re: stumbling, forward [rosso@videotron.ca] Re: skinerama [rosso@videotron.ca] Well, Drew [Jill Brand ] what about [Jill Brand ] Re: Names (0% RH) ["Fric Chaud" ] soft boys (!) content: new album [R Edward Poole ] Re: stumbling, forward [Jeffrey with 2 Fs Jeffrey ] Re: fegmaniax-digest V11 #217 [grutness@surf4nix.com (James Dignan)] Re: stumbling, forward [Jeff Dwarf ] Re: Names (0% RH) [Jeff Dwarf ] Re: stumbling, forward [Jeff Dwarf ] Re: stumbling, forward ["matt sewell" ] Bad racists [Randallriebe@aol.com] Re: Footnote [Stewart Russell ] Re: Footnote [rosso@videotron.ca] ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Wed, 3 Jul 2002 14:30:47 -0400 From: "Bachman, Michael" Subject: RE: what is worst and what is best? - -----Original Message----- From: gSs [mailto:gshell@metronet.com] Sent: Wednesday, July 03, 2002 1:49 PM To: fegmaniax@smoe.org Subject: RE: what is worst and what is best? On Wed, 3 Jul 2002, gSs wrote: >wasn't that the last line in the movie? what a fucking movie. it >should be on everyone's must see list. the film was about making the >ultimate sacrifice to help someone, by someone who had rarely if ever been >helped by anyone. a messianic type theme I guess was the point. I believe it is the last line in the movie. A lot of people have compared it with To Kill A Mockingbird. The role Carl has is more center stage than Boo Radley, but they both have a protector role to the children in each movie. Carl is much more a teacher and father figure of course than Boo is, but Carl does have some of the Aticus Finch character in him as well from Mockingbird. Michael ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 3 Jul 2002 12:41:40 -0700 From: "Rex.Broome" Subject: Cornershop / More God, or Less Ross says: >> I've been pretty much enjoying Handcreme for a Generation >>the new Cornershop CD. I liked Born for the 7th Time too. I was at first disappointed with Handcreme but it has grown on me a great deal (plus I gotta admit that the phrase "overgrown supershit" has a certain sadly frequent utility in the life of the parent of a 16-month old). If ya like those two Cornershop discs, you'll probably dig "Woman's Gotta Have It". The earliest stuff is a lot more in the vein of the Fall or early Pavement. Which I like a lot, but it's definitely a different trip. And back to God: >>but the bottom >>line is a) I didn't feel it; b) it fitted too >>neatly into a huge need. When a mysterious, >>vague abstraction is offered to answer a >>desparate, immediate need, I suspect it's human >>inventiveness at work. That's as close to my position as any I've heard stated (although it doesn't seem to bother me as much as it bothers you). It's been mentioned that the search for spirituality seems to be biologically endemic to humans, which may be... I suspect it might have been a stage of human development we had to pass through in order to get motivated or organized, but what do I know? Got us to build big cool monuments and buildings, and develop social, moral and hierarchical structures, etc., but we seem to have found other reasons and methods to do that stuff now. Years ago, I had some friends (who were general bashers of organized religion) tell me that I was "spiritually immature" and recommended a few books to me. First one I open up says right there in the introduction that it was co-written by "Orin", the author's "gentle guide spirit" or some other such bilge. Into the garbage chute. I was shocked at what a bunch of softheads I'd been hanging out with. That kinda stuff sort of rankles me, personally, more than most benign practice of organized religion (which gets a bad rap and helps a lot of decent people make it through the night)... you know, that vague "spirituality" where you pick and choose from various traditions, follow the bits that sound good to you or fit your lifestyle, etc... for some it's indicative of constant spiritual questing-- which is great-- but too often it's just a soft-focus overlay to just what you're gonna do anyway. Believing according to your life, as opposed to living according to your beliefs. Bass-ackwards at best. La la la... Rex ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 3 Jul 2002 12:36:00 -0700 (PDT) From: "Andrew D. Simchik" Subject: i dream it's over > From: gSs > maybe a card is better and or an implanted id to > crossmatch the card and > your retina scan. I don't want an implanted anything. I'd leave the country first. > From: "ross taylor" > > Just regarding Rex's subject line, I've been > pretty much enjoying Handcreme for a Generation > the new Cornershop CD. I really liked what I heard in Tower. I've just been holding off until I can find it for a decent price. > Also not too much concern about > religious hypocracy or religion being used for > bad things, religious wars etc. That topic was big in the other list where I was having this discussion lately. I won't open the topic here but it's a big concern for me, and I don't accept the excuse that the Christians who kill are not real Christians. Drew ===== - -- Andrew D. Simchik, adsimchik@yahoo.com Sign up for SBC Yahoo! Dial - First Month Free http://sbc.yahoo.com ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 03 Jul 2002 10:27:20 -0700 From: "Jason R. Thornton" Subject: Neil Finn (25% Who content, 25% Smiths content) I saw Neil Finn last night down here at a San Diego club called '4th and B.' It was the first night of Finn's US/Canada tour, and Johnny Marr was summoned up on stage by Neil with the phrase "Johnny Marr... Johnny Marr... he's here" to join the band for the last five songs of the set, and for a couple of songs during the encore. Among the numbers they played with Marr were two Smiths songs, "There is a Light That Never Goes Out" and "How Soon Is Now?" Neil managed to make "How Soon Is Now?" much more tuneful. That guy turns EVERYTHING pretty. A pretty amazing show overall - they played lots of Split Enz and Crowded House material, a good selection of Neil's solo stuff, and a few choice covers. And Marr sang a new song I didn't recognize, probably something from his band the Healers whom I haven't heard yet. Neil was in a very jovial mood, joking around with the audience, which was how I remembered him from all those Crowded Houses shows I've seen. He asked the audience what we wanted to hear, and when someone yelled "Play YOUR favorite, Neil," he attempted part of "Pinball Wizard" solo on acoustic guitar, and afterwards mentioned that the whole band had seen The Who the night before up at the Hollywood Bowl. He then went on to praise Pino Palladino, and said that the show felt "really right." - --Jason "no, I don't believe in your god, but I don't believe in anyone else's either, so don't take it personally" Thornton "Only the few know the sweetness of the twisted apples." - Sherwood Anderson ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 3 Jul 2002 15:11:54 -0500 (CDT) From: gSs Subject: Re: i dream in stereo On Wed, 3 Jul 2002, Andrew D. Simchik wrote: > I don't want an implanted anything. I'd leave the country first. you may actually have to leave the plant. a national id is coming soon, then: earthid.gov they'll slip it under your brow and you won't even know it. if there were just six or seven of us, we probably could put the earthid idea on the back burner. unfortunately there are more than seven and your identity might soon be the only piece of personal anything that you have. good or bad or worse, it is going in that direction. there is too much shit going down for me not to have a better idea of who and what you are, in my shop, my house, anywhere for that matter. it does seem tough at first, but we'll get over the initial insecurity and realize how important it is. i know that rape victims and other victims of violent crimes would love to have had some form of recognition and id system. that is just an example and maybe not a good one, but it's coming. the cameras have been in london and other major areas of security for years. did you really think it would end there? this ain't the wild frontier anymore. gSs ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 03 Jul 2002 20:18:22 +0000 From: "No Name" Subject: This is a subject line RossT: >I assume any truly just god would recognize >that w/ so many contradictory faiths about, you >can't be penalized for picking the wrong one. I'm not to sure there is a wrong one. I think every person is unique and has a unique path, so to speak. I know this makes me a po-mo relativist piggie, but like Welles, I try not to proseletize(versus witness.) Or judge whats best for others in these matters. Or maybe I just believe in the sort of God who would get a kick out of creating ethically-principled aithiests who act and love way better than most Christians:-) Kay "Your hair is reminiscent of a digesting yak." Surrealist compliment generator. _________________________________________________________________ MSN Photos is the easiest way to share and print your photos: http://photos.msn.com/support/worldwide.aspx ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 3 Jul 2002 15:17:56 -0500 (CDT) From: gSs Subject: Re: harpies and sprites On Wed, 3 Jul 2002, Rex.Broome wrote: > it was co-written by "Orin", the author's "gentle guide spirit" or some > other such bilge. Into the garbage chute. I was shocked at what a bunch of > softheads I'd been hanging out with. a spiritually mature person does not need a gentle guide spirit, unless she has a really nice ass. gSs ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 3 Jul 2002 15:30:12 -0700 From: "Rex.Broome" Subject: Turtle names Am I too late? "Damo" and "Suzuki", for the Can vocalist responsible for the truly weird "Turtels (sic) Have Short Legs". Suzuki ("Su") would be the girl. - -Rex ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 3 Jul 2002 15:26:52 -0700 From: glen uber Subject: Re: Names (0% RH) Mike earnestly scribbled: >So I need some help... fun help really. I got 2 baby >red-eared sliders (turtles) and I need to come up with >some names for them. One boy & one girl. I was >looking to Tolkien for names, but am open to any >uggestions to get the head working :0) What else? Flo and Eddie! - -- Cheers! - -g- "When I read about the evils of drinking, I gave up reading." - --Henny Youngman glen uber =+= blint (at) mac dot com ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 3 Jul 2002 19:56:16 -0500 From: "Michael Wells" Subject: Re: Names (0% RH) > So I need some help... fun help really. I got 2 baby > red-eared sliders (turtles) and I need to come up with > some names for them. One boy & one girl. I was > looking to Tolkien for names, but am open to any > uggestions to get the head working :0) Geddy and Alex. Robyn and Kimberly. Spanky and The Mutt. Lightening and Bullet. Godel and Fenyman (my favorite) Michael "pretty ^&%#!+ ing glad this week is over" Wells ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 4 Jul 2002 21:16:11 -0400 From: rosso@videotron.ca Subject: Re: stumbling, forward On 3 Jul 2002 at 8:37, Jason R. Thornton wrote: > Anyone calling a frenchman a 'dago' is a really bad racist. I don't mean > he's a horrible person, I just mean he's not very good at racism. What about Charles Dago? ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 4 Jul 2002 21:18:31 -0400 From: rosso@videotron.ca Subject: Re: skinerama On 2 Jul 2002 at 22:44, drew wrote: > Incidentally, please don't take my remarks > about these humongous classic acts as a criticism; I'm not making > any statements about whether I think they're great bands, just about > my personal reaction to and enjoyment of their music. These things can take time. I tried Pavement on the strength of positive feg-o-pinion and didn't like them at first. Now I do. ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 3 Jul 2002 22:54:02 -0400 (EDT) From: Jill Brand Subject: Well, Drew Drew wrote: >and the Kinks, who have influenced approximately >60% of my favorite bands at least but whose own >music just doesn't excite me in the least. and the Gnat responded: I got started on the Kinks with "Something Else," but soon found I liked "Village Green Preservation Society" better. I love "Picture Book." I'm sure Jill Brand would have more suggestions." I think VGPS is a stellar album, one of my favorites, but I think I love Face to Face through Muswell Hillbillies with equal fervor. However, I never expect anyone to know the Kinks, much less like them. When I was in the throes of Kinks insanity during the late 60s and 70s, I was a very lonely fan. Except for my brother and later my college roommate, no one cared. Everyone was listening to the Grateful Dead or Chicago or Bruce Springsteen. I'm always surprised when someone comments on my Kinks bumpersticker with a "yeah, they were a great band." But Drew, it's OK. I don't get what anyone sees in Frank Sinatra. To me he will always be the guy who could take a great Fred Astaire song and wreck it. And I've never understood the big fuss about Pink Floyd (I'm ducking and covering now). Jill ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 3 Jul 2002 23:01:48 -0400 (EDT) From: Jill Brand Subject: what about The Who Sell Out. No doubt about it. My favorite Who album. Jill ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 4 Jul 2002 23:15:39 -0400 From: "Fric Chaud" Subject: Re: Names (0% RH) On 3 Jul 2002 at 13:16, gSs wrote: > that is funny you should say that. i saw the biggest damn red-ear I > have ever seen yesterday just as he was falling off the curb onto > forest road between US75 and hillcrest in dallas. i slid him down a > gulley into a creek nearby. Wait!!! You are a good guy? - -- Fric Chaud ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 3 Jul 2002 23:55:44 -0400 From: R Edward Poole Subject: soft boys (!) content: new album I'm on digest at home, so please excuse me if this has already circulated (not that there is a lot of news here, except, as anyone who picked up the 3-lp UM will tell you, this is very good news for vinyl-fetishists (yay!). so what's the 7" gonna be about? I'm guessing this is where anything salvaged from the 'live at the fillmore' project will end up. if that were true, it's too bad that 'astronomy domine' is ruled out by the last bonus 7" -- it'd be nice to have a hi-fi version to go with the 'historical interest'-quality of the maxwell's 1980 version. (i'm assuming silence = death on the 'fillmore' project, though it would be cool to hear otherwise -- fer instance, matador & the boys could do what bowie did with 'live at the bbc' -- include a 'bonus' cd of a recent live show to go with the main affair. btw, if you like bowie at all, 'live at the bbc' is truly indispensible, particularly the 2nd disk, which captures the ziggy/alladin sane mick-ronson led group ('the spiders') at its start -- for my money, many of the versions of changesonebowie-type classic material like 'suffragette city' and 'hang onto yourself' that are on the 'bbc' sessions are superior to the album cuts, just for raw energy and excitement) From Matador July 3, 2002 News Update: The Soft Boys - Nextdoorland - first new album in eons coming in September fresh from winter/spring 2002 recording, the reformed Soft Boys lineup of Robyn Hitchcock, Kimberley Rew, Matthew Seligman and Morris Windsor are men behind 'Nextdoorland' (OLE 553-1,2), coming September 24 on CD and limited edition LP (with bonus 7"). The band will be touring North America this coming October. ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 3 Jul 2002 23:31:28 -0500 (CDT) From: Jeffrey with 2 Fs Jeffrey Subject: Re: stumbling, forward On Wed, 3 Jul 2002, gSs wrote: > If an englishman yells "dago twit" right before he kills a frenchman, > should he get a more severe sentence than the englishman who yells > "dirty communist" or nothing at all before he kills a communist frenchman? > remember, hate laws don't cover political affiliation. i know this seems > like it has little to do with using a gun rather than your penis to kill > someone, but in my opinion the same flawed logic floats them both. I'm not necessarily sure I agree with it, but the reasoning behind "hate crimes" legislation (which seems to be what you're alluding to here) is that murders committed for the usual reason target no one in particular (except, perhaps, people in a particular neighborhood), while hate crimes target everyone of whatever the targeted group is. In other words, hate crimes against, say, gay men can create a general climate of fear amongst gay men generally. In a sense, a hate crime is a political act, a declaration of war against the hated group. Garden-variety murder has no such effect. The penalty enhancement against hate crimes is intended to reflect this larger social harm. - --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 ::No man is an island. ::But if you take a bunch of dead guys and tie 'em together, ::they make a pretty good raft. __Max Cannon__ ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 4 Jul 2002 17:56:26 +1200 From: grutness@surf4nix.com (James Dignan) Subject: Re: fegmaniax-digest V11 #217 >> deja vu is something that i have experience many times in my life >> [snip]; but it raises issues of free will and destiny. > >I don't see why it should. You see something in waking life that >reminds you of something you saw in a dream. one reasonable explanation I have heard for deja vu experiences is that when we experience something our brain codes it separately as an event that has happened and as the time that it happened. Occasionally the time coding glitches, so we experience something as it happens but our brains tell us that we are experiencing an event that took place at some time in the past. Note that when we experience deja vu events, it is still very difficult to say what will happen next before it actually occurs. >> Anyone calling a frenchman a 'dago' is a really bad racist. I don't mean >> he's a horrible person, I just mean he's not very good at racism. > >so please correct. who are the dagos, if they are not french? dago (n. dated, derogatory), from the term Diego, a common Spanish first name. Diego is also spanish for 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: Wed, 3 Jul 2002 23:03:42 -0700 (PDT) From: Jeff Dwarf Subject: Re: stumbling, forward "Jason R. Thornton" wrote: > gSs wrote: > >If an englishman yells "dago twit" right before he kills a > >frenchman, should he get a more severe sentence than the > >englishman who yells "dirty communist" or nothing at all > >before he kills a communist frenchman? > > Anyone calling a frenchman a 'dago' is a really bad racist. I don't > mean he's a horrible person, I just mean he's not very good at racism. I had an asian american friend a while back who had the rather amusing (and at times, potentially dangerous) habit of, whenever someone who yell a racist slur at him, he'd "correct" the yeller, i.e. if they called him a chink, he'd hell back "that's jap (or gook or flip or whatever), you stupid motherfucker" or vice versa. and yes, even if the asshole in question got it "right." thankfullly, he never got himself - -- or those of us around him -- killed. ===== "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 . Sign up for SBC Yahoo! Dial - First Month Free http://sbc.yahoo.com ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 3 Jul 2002 23:20:23 -0700 (PDT) From: Jeff Dwarf Subject: Re: Names (0% RH) glen uber wrote: > Mike earnestly scribbled: > > >So I need some help... fun help really. I got 2 baby > >red-eared sliders (turtles) and I need to come up with > >some names for them. One boy & one girl. I was > >looking to Tolkien for names, but am open to any > >uggestions to get the head working :0) > > What else? Flo and Eddie! i'm always threatening at some point to get a male and female dog from the same litter and name them siouxsie and budgie. but if you don't like the banshees, that might not work for you. ===== "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 . Sign up for SBC Yahoo! Dial - First Month Free http://sbc.yahoo.com ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 3 Jul 2002 23:25:41 -0700 (PDT) From: Jeff Dwarf Subject: Re: stumbling, forward Jeffrey with 2 Fs Jeffrey wrote: > I'm not necessarily sure I agree with it, but the reasoning behind > "hate crimes" legislation (which seems to be what you're alluding to > here) is that murders committed for the usual reason target no one in > particular (except, perhaps, people in a particular neighborhood), > while hate crimes target everyone of whatever the targeted group is. > In other words, hate crimes against, say, gay men can create a > general climate of fear amongst gay men generally. In a sense, a hate > crime is a political act, a declaration of war against the hated > group. Garden-variety murder has no such effect. The penalty > enhancement against hate crimes is intended to reflect this larger > social harm. close, except that it's more targetted at assaults, rapes, and other non-muder violent crimes than murders (since murder is already taken pretty seriously, after all), with the extending logic that having the crap beaten out of you for your wallet does less psychological harm to the victmi than being beaten up for having the wrong skin color or being gay or whatever. ===== "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 . Sign up for SBC Yahoo! Dial - First Month Free http://sbc.yahoo.com ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 04 Jul 2002 09:35:50 +0100 From: "matt sewell" Subject: Re: stumbling, forward Greg sa: Is more than once common? I sa: Eh? What the hell are you talking about? I was saying the word isn't commonly used here anymore... probably more than once, because IMO more than once isn't necessarily common... Greg sa: Does that make it acceptable? I sa: I didn't think that was being debated, I assumed we both already agree that it's not acceptable, commonly used or no... Greg sa: Slokum used it to describe a greek and a frenchman. I sa: As any fule kno, it's Mrs Slocombe (first name Betty) and I think you'll find she was using it to describe someone Spanish. Because, the word dago, here in England, is a derogatory term for the Spanish. Blackadder used it to describe someone Spanish, because the word dago is used *exclusively* about the Spanish... are you starting to see what I'm saying? Both Basil and Polly used the word more than once about Manuel... any idea why they should do that? Yes, absolutely right... *because Manuel was SPANISH*. Greg sa: Sometimes I wonder how the obvious can be so quickly disregarded. I sa: Too right! Cheers Matt >From: gSs >Reply-To: gSs >To: fegmaniax@smoe.org >Subject: Re: stumbling, forward >Date: Wed, 3 Jul 2002 11:29:26 -0500 (CDT) > >On Wed, 3 Jul 2002, matt sewell wrote: > > I think you need to watch those comedies a little more closely - it's not > > all that commonly used, and when it is it's used in a derogatory way > > about the Spanish (hence you perhaps hearing it on Fawlty Towers). > >is more than once common? or does that make it acceptable? that fact that >is was used at all and then used again to describe different peoples on a >different show by different writers and actors was my point. > >there probably is not a single american who has watched those comedies any >closer than myself. when was the last time you watched any of these >comedies with any regularity? slokum used it to describe a greek and a >frenchman on more than one occasion, edmond used it to describe a >frenchman and a spaniard on more than one occasion and basil called manuel >a dago more than once as did polly on at least one occasion. there are >many more. some of these shows were recorded in the eighties. > > > Sometimes, Greg, I get the feeling you are posting from a parallel > > universe...! > >sometimes i wonder how the obvious can be so quickly disregarded. > >gSs - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Chat with friends online, try MSN Messenger: Click Here ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 4 Jul 2002 08:38:47 EDT From: Randallriebe@aol.com Subject: Bad racists Being one of the few *non white* folks on the list, I feel I should chime in. Being Native American, I have the unique capability to be called all sorts of racial slurs. Chink, *damn latino*, Beaner, Timber Nigger, Prairie Nigger, and of course, *Tonto*. Most of those were used by our beloved Police Force but hey, I deserved it, right? After a cop called me *Tonto*, I broke into laughter, saying "hey, if you want to get into my pants, you're going to have to do a lot better than that". He cuffed me and beat me, of course. And I can tell the best Indian jokes in the world. What do you call a white guy surrounded by 20 Indians? Bartender. Vince "laughing at yourself is sometimes all you can do" the Vincester ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 04 Jul 2002 13:41:36 -0400 From: Stewart Russell Subject: Re: Footnote We spent all of Canada Day painting -- and listening to The Langley Schools Music Project. Stewart ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 5 Jul 2002 18:20:58 -0400 From: rosso@videotron.ca Subject: Re: Footnote On 4 Jul 2002 at 13:41, Stewart Russell wrote: > We spent all of Canada Day painting -- and listening to The Langley > Schools Music Project. Good -- you observed the occasion in the traditional manner. Happy 4th, United Fegs of America! ------------------------------ End of fegmaniax-digest V11 #220 ********************************