From: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org (fegmaniax-digest) To: fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Subject: fegmaniax-digest V13 #19 Reply-To: fegmaniax@smoe.org Sender: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-fegmaniax-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk fegmaniax-digest Wednesday, January 21 2004 Volume 13 : Number 019 Today's Subjects: ----------------- RE: Every year I say I'm not gonna bother, and every year I cave. .. [C] re: million ["Matt Sewell" ] RE: card games ["Brian Hoare" ] RE: medieval movies ["Matt Sewell" ] RE: REAP ["Matt Sewell" ] RE: fasnachts and medieval movies ["Matt Sewell" ] Fwd: Audities 2003 poll results [steve ] Re: ...and a bag of musk? ["Gene Hopstetter, Jr." ] Mediaeval films (50% Robyn content) [crowbar.joe@btopenworld.com] Re: REAP [Christopher Gross ] Re: ...and a bag of chips?/card games ["Jason R. Thornton" ] behold the wonder of the deep fryer ["Natalie Jacobs" ] An Amplifier's Just Wood and Wire ["Rex.Broome" ] Re: REAP [Ken Weingold ] RE: REAP ["Bachman, Michael" ] RE: REAP ["Brian" ] I will gladly pay you Tuesday for a Mountain State today [Miles Goosens <] RE: REAP ["Bachman, Michael" ] Which Post Punk Idol Are You? ["Brian" ] Re: Which Post Punk Idol Are You? ["Brian" ] ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 01:48:09 -0800 (PST) From: Capuchin Subject: RE: Every year I say I'm not gonna bother, and every year I cave. .. On Fri, 16 Jan 2004, Capuchin wrote: > or the newly openned and blazingly glorious Voodoo Donut on 2nd Avenue > downtown I guess Voodoo doesn't need my petty promoting. Apparently, they were the subject of a Jay Leno monologue "joke" last week. I guess they've got national press from a caffeinated donut they're selling now. The Man halted the production of the Nyquil donut... apparently that's selling drugs without a license or something. J. - -- _______________________________________________ Capuchin capuchin@bitmine.net Jeme A Brelin ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 11:41:30 +0000 From: "Matt Sewell" Subject: re: million Mmmm.... nuts... I prefer honey roasted! Cheers Matt >From: Eb > >Eb (these food threads are driving me nuts ;)) - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Send more interesting e-mails - personalise them with graphics, photos and stationery when you sign up for MSN 8. ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 11:55:41 +0000 From: "Brian Hoare" Subject: RE: card games >Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 12:59:14 +1300 >From: grutness@surf4nix.com (James Dignan) > >Ah, new thread: any > >> card players on the list? What kinds of card games do you play? > > > >Used to play euchre (yooker?) with a bunch of friends in Taiwanese > >bars. Great game. > >used to play a bit of gin rummy and 500, but most likely now to play "Up >and down the river" or "Scum", both of which are a load of fun, or a game >using a special pack (like Guillotine or Family Business) My youngest daughter loves cards, unfortunately the rest of the family aren't so keen. We mostly play Gin or Schnapsen (sixty six) which are the best two player card games I know. I grew up playing a lot of Oh Hell, Hearts and Newmarket with my parents/siblings. Family Business is fun in a "I put out a priority contract on Ma Baker, which starts a mob war" kind of way. Our games group play from time to time. If you're counting games with special packs then add Frank's Zoo, Mama Mia, Ivanhoe and above all the mighty Bruno Faidutti's Citadels to list of regularly played card games. Brian _________________________________________________________________ Use MSN Messenger to send music and pics to your friends http://www.msn.co.uk/messenger ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 12:20:37 +0000 From: "Matt Sewell" Subject: RE: medieval movies Uuur... Bill and Ted's excellent adventure?! The Lion In Winter - absolutely fantastic film about Henry II and Laurence Olivier's famous performance in Henry V. I'm sure I'll remember more later... Hope these help! Cheers Matt >From: Christopher Gross >A friend of mine is taking a Medieval History class this semester, and >asked me to recommend a few good movies set in the Middle Ages to help get >her in the mood. I have some ideas of my own, but I'd like to hear what >you folks would suggest. Requirements are: the movies must make some >noticeable effort at historical accuracy (no _The Court Jester_), must be >set in Western Europe (no _Andrei Rublev_), must be realistic rather than >fantasy (no _Lord of the Rings_), and must not be _Braveheart_ (no >_Braveheart_). The ideal candidate would also be readily available for >rental in the US. Any suggestions? > > >--Chris > >ps: As always, apologies to those of you who get this more than once. > >pps: Of course, I'll also add _Monty Python and the Holy Grail_ to >whatever realistic, historically-accurate films I come up with. How could >I not? > >______________________________________________________________________ >Christopher Gross On the Internet, nobody knows I'm a dog. >chrisg@gwu.edu - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Personalise your e-mails with photos, expressive graphics and stationery - - sign up for MSN 8 today! ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 12:28:18 +0000 From: "Matt Sewell" Subject: RE: REAP Actually I heard Helen Clark on the radio the other week and it struck me that her voice sounds like it's been digitally disguised (as in TV progs who are protecting the anonymity of someone they're interviewing). And John Kerry looks like something out of Dawn of the Dead... something dusty, cobwebby about him... Cheers Matt >From: grutness@surf4nix.com (James Dignan) >Reply-To: grutness@surf4nix.com (James Dignan) >To: "Iosso, Ken" >CC: fegmaniax@smoe.org >Subject: RE: REAP >Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 13:00:04 +1300 > > >Who's the president of New Zealand anyway? Johny Wilkinson? Or no, he's > >the President of Britain, I think and they have a prime minister, too, a big > >US supporter - um, Paul Martin. Damn, this is confusing... > >Peter Jackson > >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") -.-=-.-=-.-=-.-= - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Send more interesting e-mails - personalise them with graphics, photos and stationery when you sign up for MSN 8. ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 12:31:53 +0000 From: "Matt Sewell" Subject: RE: fasnachts and medieval movies Ah - Brother Sun, Sister Moon, that's a fantastic suggestion and a beautiful, beautiful film... I hope Reading PA is less horrendous than Reading Berks - a town rather like Slough without any of the advantages! Cheers Matt >From: Jill Brand > >My friend Kate lives in Reading PA > >Then there is Brother Sun, Sister Moon about St. Francis of Assisi >(sp?), which is very beautiful to look at. >Jill - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Help protect your PC with anti-virus protection when you sign up for MSN 8 . ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 08:37:57 -0500 (EST) From: "Jonathan Fetter" Subject: RE: fasnachts--exactly what I'm (d)reading > I hope Reading PA is less horrendous than Reading Berks - a town rather > like Slough without any of the advantages! Reading PA is in Berks County, so is there some relation to Reading Berks? Apparently in Reading, England, there is a "Reading School of Reading". Even the instructors probably don't know how to read the school name. Jon ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 14:00:54 +0000 From: "Matt Sewell" Subject: RE: fasnachts--exactly what I'm (d)reading Reading, Berks *is* Reading in England (Berks being short for Berkshire, pron. Barkshire). Interesting that Reading Pa is in Berks county though... Reading school of Reading (if it existed, which I'm sure it doesn't!) would be pronounced the Redding school of Reeding. Is Reading Pa as much of a shithole as its UK namesake? Cheers Matt >From: "Jonathan Fetter" > > > > > I hope Reading PA is less horrendous than Reading Berks - a town >rather > > like Slough without any of the advantages! > >Reading PA is in Berks County, so is there some relation to Reading >Berks? > >Apparently in Reading, England, there is a "Reading School of >Reading". Even the instructors probably don't know how to read the >school name. > >Jon > - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Reduce spam in your inbox with MSN 8's intelligent junk e-mail filters. ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 06:52:16 -0800 (PST) From: Jeff Dwarf Subject: Re: Caucus Matt Sewell wrote: > Wha..? > > Do you mean that this Kucinich bloke is too > Left-wing to beat George Bush? Not to mention too vegan and (sadly) too short and funny looking. > I guess then the best way to beat Bush would > be to vote for someone who, though a different > person and in a different party, wouldn't have > political beliefs that diverge too far from the > present incumbent? Play safe by voting in the most > right-wing Democrat...? Well, given how he has ruled (not governed, ruled), even the most right wing Demo (Lieberman) is practically Karl Marx compared to fucking Bush, who is the most extremely right wing fucker "elected" on the planet to lead a country since WWII and yes, I am including Reagan and Thatcher; a moderate Republican would be a huge improvement; a normal old-fashioned conservative Republican would be an improvement, since Bush isn't truly a conservative. _NIXON_ would be an improvement. Reagan or Thatcher would be, erm, well, they probably wouldn't be any worse. And there is also plenty of room to find someone in between Kucinich and Lieberman, beit Dean, Kerry, or Edwards (I don't know about Clark, though I'm sure he'd be better than Bush). > I'm not saying Cappy or Steve are right or wrong > necessarily, I'm just saying I'd be careful for whom > you're voting, ye Americans...! Generally good advice, but really when dealing with a demonic Saudi appeasing scumfuck like Bush, it is all-but impossible to not have someone better, short of Saddam Hussein himself. He is far, far, far, far worse than even the gravest could have predicted in 2000. ===== "Life is just a series of dogs." -- George Carlin __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Hotjobs: Enter the "Signing Bonus" Sweepstakes http://hotjobs.sweepstakes.yahoo.com/signingbonus ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 08:56:24 -0600 From: steve Subject: Fwd: Audities 2003 poll results OK, how many just on this list are better than the winner? - - Steve Begin forwarded message: > AUDITIES 2003 TOP 20 POLL RESULTS > > Well, Im certainly not surprised as to who landed on top. I am > surprised that it was such an utter landslide. Fountains Of Wayne > appeared on 120 of the 173 ballots cast. And, as the high point total > indicates, more often than not, in the top 10, with loads of number > one votes. It was my impression that by releasing a third consecutive > high quality album that Fountains Of Wayne had cemented a place > amongst the all-time power pop greats. I think a lot of you would > agree with that sentiment. > > Yet, insanely great pop can be found in all sorts of places. This > list has a nice mix of pop styles, with major label and indie artists > fighting it out with each other  if you count V2 (The White Stripes > label) as an indie, 11 of the top 20 were independent label artists. > And, for the first time in seven years, hip hop not only made the top > 50, it broke into the Top 20, with Outkast making a big impression on > many Auditeers. > > I really like this list. Thanks again to everyone who voted. This > was the second highest vote total ever, which makes for, in my > opinion, a stronger list overall.  > > 1. Fountains Of Wayne  Welcome Interstate Managers (2039 points) > 2. Pernice Brothers  Yours, Mine & Ours (815) > 3. Rooney  Rooney (648) > 4. The New Pornographers  The Electric Version (627) > 5. The Jayhawks  Rainy Day Music (603) > 6. Bleu  Redhead (539) > 7. Splitsville  Incorporated (477) > 8. The Thrills  So Much For The City (463) > 9. The Thorns  The Thorns (448) > 10. Matthew Sweet  Kimi Ga Suki * Rafu (446) > 11. Jet  Get Born (418) > 12. The White Stripes  Elephant (362) > 13. IKE  Parallel Universe (352) > 14. Outkast  The Love Below/Speakerboxx (333) > 15. The Shins  Chutes Too Narrow (329) > 16. Chris Von Sneidern  The Wild Horse (324) > 17. Josh Rouse  1972 (314) > 18. Grandaddy  Sumday (306) > 19. Mark Bacino  The Million Dollar Milkshake (298) > Michael Carpenter & Kings Rd.  Kingsrdworks (tie) > > THE REST OF THE TOP 50 > 21. Belle & Sebastian (292) > 22. Owsley (262) > 23. Ted Leo/Pharmacists (261) > 24. The Singles (250) > 25. The Bangles (242) > 26. The Waking Hours (239) > 27. Nada Surf (232) > 28. Guster (230) > 29. Maple Mars (220) > 30. Walter Clevenger & The Dairy Kings (210) > 31. Postal Service (207) > 32. Supergrass (198) > Rufus Wainwright (tie) > 34. The Minus 5 (189) > 35. The High Dials (183) > 36. The Tyde (180) > 37. Sparks (178) > 38. The Richies (176) > 39. Guided By Voices (170) > 40. Ryan Adams (166) > 41. Myracle Brah (161) > True Love (tie) > 43. Super Furry Animals (158) > 44. Steve Wynn (157) > 45. Sloan (152) > 46. Tiny Volcano (144) > Warren Zevon (tie) > 48. Beulah (142) > 49. The Darkness (141) > 50. The Pillbugs (140) > > > > Record reviews and more at http://fufkin.com - ---------- They really have no use for liberalism and democracy, but they're conquering the world in the name of liberalism and democracy. - Shadia Drury, author of Leo Strauss and the American Right, on Straussian Bushies ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 09:06:29 -0600 From: "Gene Hopstetter, Jr." Subject: Re: ...and a bag of musk? > From: grutness@surf4nix.com (James Dignan) > Subject: Re: ...and a bag of chips?/card games > > I must add that the evillest taste in Crisps (erm, that's chips to > you) is O'Ryan's Salt & Vinegar with added cracked pepper. Yep, that sounds vile. I love coarse sea salt, and add it to a lot of food, but nothing gives me the willies faster than cracked peppercorns. Funny, that. Many moons ago a friend returned from NZ with a pack of *musk-flavored* chewing gum. Being curious, I quickly popped a piece in my mouth. Being disgusted, I very quickly spat it out. Musk? Flavored? Gum? What's up with that? I think I'd rather chew kelp dip and bean lard mulch. ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 15:17:12 +0000 (GMT) From: crowbar.joe@btopenworld.com Subject: Mediaeval films (50% Robyn content) Ingmar Bergman's The Seventh Seal is pretty mediaeval - crusades, plague, game of chess with Death. Derek Jarman's Edward II is mediaeval via Christopher Marlowe and on towards the post-modern... Someone's probably mentioned this (haven't been keeping that well - touring and moving house), but Are 'Friends' Electric feat. Robyn., Kim and Morris, is on Terry Edwards' latest release - Queer Street. Joe ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 10:34:35 -0500 (EST) From: Christopher Gross Subject: Re: REAP On Wed, 21 Jan 2004, James Dignan wrote: > >Gephardt's Presidential run. > > not to mention former supposedly strong contender Clark. No, no, Clark is still in the running, and Lieberman too. They both just got low scores in Iowa because they decided to skip that state and concentrate on New Hampshire. (Of course, for all we know one or both of them would have done poorly in Iowa even if they had made a major effort there.) Aside from knocking Gephardt out of contention, I doubt the Iowa caucus means much. New Hampshire's primary next week should give us a much more accurate idea of who would do better in the actual election. I'd agree with Jeff's comments this morning but go even further: even Reagan would be an improvement on our current president. Heck, even the Reagan of 2004, nearly brain-dead from Alzheimer's, would be an improvement.... - --Chris ______________________________________________________________________ Christopher Gross On the Internet, nobody knows I'm a dog. chrisg@gwu.edu ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 08:53:31 -0800 From: "Jason R. Thornton" Subject: Re: ...and a bag of chips?/card games At 06:23 PM 1/20/2004 -0800, Capuchin wrote: > > > Stewart, you want to try getting a bun, filling it with S&V crisps and > > > pepperoni salami. I know them as "Explodaphone butties" > > > > Shame I can't abide salami. I suspect it of containing pork. > >Isn't proper salami horse? No. Traditionally, it was made from pork, but now beef and beef/pork blends are common. - --Jason "Only the few know the sweetness of the twisted apples." - Sherwood Anderson ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 11:56:14 -0500 (EST) From: jlewis@gator.net Subject: RE: medieval movies >>From: Christopher Gross >>Subject: medieval movies >> >>A friend of mine is taking a Medieval History class this semester, and >>asked me to recommend a few good movies set in the Middle Ages to help >> get >>her in the mood. I have some ideas of my own, but I'd like to hear what >>you folks would suggest. As far as Bergman goes, not only the Seventh Seal but also The Virgin Spring, the latter all too historically accurate, I suspect-- yikes. Anybody else seen this harsh little number? Jon Lewis ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 08:58:52 -0800 From: "Jason R. Thornton" Subject: Re: ...and a bag of chips?/card games At 06:23 PM 1/20/2004 -0800, Capuchin wrote: > > > Stewart, you want to try getting a bun, filling it with S&V crisps and > > > pepperoni salami. I know them as "Explodaphone butties" > > > > Shame I can't abide salami. I suspect it of containing pork. > >Isn't proper salami horse? No. Originally, it was mostly made from pork, but now beef and beef/pork blends are common. Whoops, didn't finish my message... there are some traditional horse meat salami recipes as well, but horse isn't more "proper" than pork. - --Jason "Only the few know the sweetness of the twisted apples." - Sherwood Anderson ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 12:20:29 -0500 (EST) From: "Jonathan Fetter" Subject: RE: fasnachts--exactly what I'm (d)reading > Reading school of Reading (if it existed, which I'm sure it doesn't!) > would be pronounced the Redding school of Reeding. The school was mentioned in New Scientist magazine this past year-- someone had seen a sign and written in to the bloopers page. > Is Reading Pa as much of a shithole as its UK namesake? > Can't compare, but Reading PA is becoming a shithole, as are the other namesake cities of Lancaster and York, PA. Something to do with rapid suburb growth and easy turnpike access for Philadelphia drug dealers. They all used to be nice little burgs. Jon ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 17:24:22 -0000 From: Dr John Halewood Subject: RE: fried, salty, greasy, yum Gene scribbled: > Behold the wondrous perfection of the chicharrone, or > deep-fried pork skin. umm...is that anything like the British tooth cracking "delicacy" known as pork scratchings? Rock hard lumps of pork rind deep fried, salted and sold exclusively in pubs because presumably you need to be drunk in order to contemplate eating them... cheers john ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 09:34:07 -0800 From: "Natalie Jacobs" Subject: behold the wonder of the deep fryer >Behold the wondrous perfection of the chicharrone, or deep-fried pork skin. A deliciously stomach-turning by-product of my grandmother's cooking was greben (pronounced "greeben"), which is fat crackling of some sort - probably chicken, since obviously pork isn't a feature of Jewish cooking. It was incredibly good, but only a few pieces would induce hours of nausea. I have seen an uncooked fatty substance called greben being sold at a German deli down the street - I suppose it must be the same thing. I think I mis-spelled Wise potato chips, this is the variety my sister always stocks up on whenever we visited my relatives in Buffalo. I think she and my dad over-rate them a bit. Are Jay's potato chips solely Midwestern? I only seem to see them when I go back to Ann Arbor. Another of my sister's favorites is Jay's "Hot Stuff" chips. They also seem to now be producing Krunchers, instead of Keebler or whatever. Oh, and Zapp's chips from Louisiana are very yummy. I'm starting to feel sick now. n. np: Sam Prekop _________________________________________________________________ High-speed usersbe more efficient online with the new MSN Premium Internet Software. http://join.msn.com/?pgmarket=en-us&page=byoa/prem&ST=1 ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 18:40:30 +0100 From: Sebastian Hagedorn Subject: Re: behold the wonder of the deep fryer - --On Mittwoch, 21. Januar 2004 9:34 Uhr -0800 Natalie Jacobs wrote: > A deliciously stomach-turning by-product of my grandmother's cooking was > greben (pronounced "greeben"), which is fat crackling of some sort - > probably chicken, since obviously pork isn't a feature of Jewish cooking. > It was incredibly good, but only a few pieces would induce hours of > nausea. I have seen an uncooked fatty substance called greben being sold > at a German deli down the street - I suppose it must be the same thing. It's actually spelled Grieben and I know it mostly in its composite form Griebenschmalz (schmalz=lard). Being a vegetarian I don't have much to add to that ... ;-) Cheers, Sebastian - -- Sebastian Hagedorn PGP key ID: 0x4D105B45 http://www.spinfo.uni-koeln.de/~hgd/ ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 10:41:14 -0800 From: "Rex.Broome" Subject: Mmmmm... gator ramen... Miles: >>Primary Middle Tennessee salty snacks off-brand: Golden Flake. Anyone still need a band name? Gene: >>They had free taps of the beer and endless trays of fried alligator. >>What happiness and inebriation that was. I had alligator at a stall in some kind of expo in Florida and found it ass-tasting, but years later at a genuine Cajun bayou Thanksgiving thing they fried up some fresh-kilt gator and it was deeee-lish. At the same time I sat in on a jam session and was totally nonplussed that the "strummers" all had capos on their second frets and played everything as if in C. Like... the 1-4-5 chords in D are that much harder than the ones in C? Weird. My naturalized-Cajuen bro-in-law had some explanation for this phenomenon, but it escapes me now. Chris: >>My memory may be failing, but I could swear I've seen and >>purchased both American Spirit Lights (for a friend) and Nissin Top >>Ramen here in the deepest darkest east. It might've finally switched over to Universalized Tom Ramen, but one could also pick up and purchase Oodles of Noodles and not notice that it wasn't Top Ramen... the packaging is identical in all but the name, which is written in the same font for both, and as soon as you see the package you know what you're looking at, so why read it? I don't think I'd notice if those red-and-white cans of soup suddenly said "Clickot's" instead of "Campbell's", but maybe that's just me. - -Rex ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 11:16:35 -0800 From: "Rex.Broome" Subject: An Amplifier's Just Wood and Wire Attention all guitar-players hereabouts. I think I need a new amp, and I've never done any serious comparison shopping in this arena, having had use of my dad's old Twin Reverb since day one of playing guitar. But it's hurtin' these days and probably needs a major rehab, so I want something nice and solid that will keep me happy for a few years, and matches well with my guitars and, erm, signature "sound". Mostly for gigging purposes. I play an oddball Tele Deluxe (with two humbuckers, no coils) and a pair of Rickenbackers-- a 6-string and a 12-string, both pretty standard setups for what they are. I'm basically a low-tech, tube-soundy kind of guy, and went pretty much cold turkey off stomp-boxes a few years back, except for a handy little overdrive deck which gets the job done in a few different flavors, and I've always enjoyed the vibrato and spring verb sounds from the Twin. I play the kind of crap you'd expect from someone on this list-- what sounds like indie or old-school college rock if you don't know it's really sixties shit or proto-punk or summat. I get rootsy occasionally, as is a country boy's wont, but that's mostly on the acoustic side... and my Tele isn't really a Tele, so there's that. I don't have mad cash to throw at it, but I also don't want to get something that I'm not going to be happy with for a good long while just for budget reasons. Vintage is nice and all, but unpredictable... I'm just too used to hauling old stuff in for repairs a few times a year, so I think new is the way to go. Advice? - -Rex ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 11:26:00 -0800 (PST) From: Groove Puppy Subject: Re: REAP Maximilian sed > Jerry Nachman. Then Ken sed > I just looked him up, but can we please start at > least saying who these people are in the reaps? :) I just had to look too. When we're asking people who post REAPs to at least say who the people are in the REAPs, can we at least say who the people are in the REAPs? ;) (H) n.p. TMC "Filigree & Shadow" Oh yeah, some NBC guy or something. __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Hotjobs: Enter the "Signing Bonus" Sweepstakes http://hotjobs.sweepstakes.yahoo.com/signingbonus ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 14:29:46 -0500 From: Ken Weingold Subject: Re: REAP On Wed, Jan 21, 2004, Groove Puppy wrote: > Maximilian sed > > Jerry Nachman. > > Then Ken sed > > I just looked him up, but can we please start at > > least saying who these people are in the reaps? :) > > I just had to look too. When we're asking people who > post REAPs to at least say who the people are in the > REAPs, can we at least say who the people are in the > REAPs? ;) If you have to ask.... ;-) - -Ken ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 14:33:11 -0500 From: "Bachman, Michael" Subject: RE: REAP Maximilian sed > Jerry Nachman. Too close to Bachman if you ask me. Born on January 21st, Meg Ryan, Geena Davis, Mac Davis, Jack Nicklas and me. Michael B. NP Wilco A.M. ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 14:41:43 -0500 From: "Brian" Subject: RE: REAP On Wed, 21 Jan 2004 14:33:11 -0500, "Bachman, Michael" said: > > Born on January 21st, Meg Ryan, Geena Davis, Mac Davis, Jack Nicklas and > me. > > Michael B. And me tomorrow on the 22nd! Happy Birthday Aquarius'! - -Nuppy - -- Brian nightshadecat@mailbolt.com ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 13:53:44 -0600 From: Miles Goosens Subject: I will gladly pay you Tuesday for a Mountain State today For Rex: http://tinyurl.com/2wred I'm surprised that it got any bids. I would have linked to the Keyser paper's story (which actually came up high on the Google News search), but it and my second choice, the Bluefield DAILY SMELLOGRAPH (well, that's what we Welch DAILY NEWS employees called it), had some funky problem with their archives (which I think are provided by the same third-party company), and the Charleston papers either didn't have much in the way of actual story or they required registration. So, appropriately enough, I had to move my link out-of-state. later, Miles ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 14:57:31 -0500 From: "Bachman, Michael" Subject: RE: REAP - - On Wed, 21 Jan 2004 14:33:11 -0500, "Bachman, Michael" said: > > Born on January 21st, Meg Ryan, Geena Davis, Mac Davis, Jack Nicklas and > me. > > Michael B. Nuppy came back: >And me tomorrow on the 22nd! Happy Birthday Aquarius'! An early Happy Birthday to you Brian!! I wonder how many other fegs have back to back birthdays or are born on the same day? Michael Bachman Wilco A.M. still playing. Pernice Brothers Yours, Mine & Ours on deck. The Rapture - Echoes after that(thanks to Nuppy who had this on his Top 10 for 2003, I bought it). ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 15:40:37 -0500 From: "Brian" Subject: Which Post Punk Idol Are You? Who knew? I'm Ian Curtis. - -Nuppy - -- Brian nightshadecat@mailbolt.com ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 15:59:30 -0500 From: "Brian" Subject: Re: Which Post Punk Idol Are You? Oh, sorry about that pop-up! On Wed, 21 Jan 2004 15:40:37 -0500, "Brian" said: > Who knew? I'm Ian Curtis. > > > > -Nuppy > -- > Brian > nightshadecat@mailbolt.com - -- Brian nightshadecat@mailbolt.com ------------------------------ End of fegmaniax-digest V13 #19 *******************************