At 09:46 PM Saturday 8/20/2005, Julia Thompson wrote:
Ronn!Blankenship wrote:
I thought the prevailing wisdom was that most guys spend their teenage
years doing warm-up exercises . . .
Why Is The Bathroom Door Locked Again? Maru
-- Ronn! :)
(Come on. All of you were thinking it. Again.)
At 11:35 PM Saturday 8/20/2005, The Fool wrote:
[snip]
Saturday:
Morning:
Shinzo
Mew Mew Power
Winx Club
W.I.T.C.H. (usually)
G.I. Joe Sigma Six (coming)
They replaced G. I. Joe's brain with a 70's-era computer made by Xerox?
-- Ronn! :)
___
From: Robert Seeberger [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Warren Ockrassa wrote:
[adult swim] on Cartoon Network is a refuge in some ways. There are
some really interesting toons sent out on the Cartoon Network late
at
night -- great ones such as Cowboy Bebop, Fullmetal Alchemist and
the
Turner
From: Julia Thompson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
The Fool wrote:
From: Warren Ockrassa [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[adult swim] on Cartoon Network is a refuge in some ways.
---
You''re implying that their are other things to watch on tv.
---
I find The Weather Channel to be gripping. Most of
From: Damon Agretto [EMAIL PROTECTED]
FLCL: IMHO I just don't understand. Not in a creative avant garde
mode,
but I just don't see the artistic background. Not because I don't get
anime
(my anime collection outnumbers my traditional movie collection), but
because it seems the show was
From: Bryon Daly [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On 8/21/05, The Fool [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Daily:
Detective Conan (case closed) (+sat sun)
Southpark
Totally Spies
DragonballZ Uncut
Inu-Yasha Reruns
Futurama
FullMetal Alchemist
Coboy Bebop
Fairly Oddparents
The Grim Adventures of Billy and Mandy
William T Goodall wrote:
Interesting article about the evil monsters behind 'intelligent design'.
http://tinyurl.com/d89qz
A closer look shows a multidimensional organization, financed by
missionary and mainstream groups - the Bill and Melinda Gates
Foundation provides $1 million a year,
He I just use outlook and I find that when I drag all the times out to the
inbox they don't usually go back with the next lot of incomings...
Nick
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of PAT MATHEWS
Sent: August 20, 2005 2:33 PM
To: [EMAIL
Robert Seeberger wrote:
Soap opera. Samurai Champloo: Rocks tha' hizzouse.
Kurosawa goes toon.)
Also soapy, but the action is awesome. I can't wait for
Jin and Rap-Bastard to get into a fight again.G
Good show, and the warning at the beginning of the show was
just funny. The beat-box
The Fool wrote:
From: Robert Seeberger [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Warren Ockrassa wrote:
[adult swim] on Cartoon Network is a refuge in some ways. There
are
some really interesting toons sent out on the Cartoon Network late
at
night -- great ones such as Cowboy Bebop, Fullmetal Alchemist and
the
Does anyone know wtf is a .mod file in Linux? How can I get useful things out
of it? It seems like it's a zip-like bundle of stuff.
Alberto Monteiro
___
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From: Julia Thompson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
In answer to the subject line -- um, no? :) I'm guessing that's
your
belief, anyway. Nice hook.
The Fool wrote:
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/17/books/17comi.html?ex=1281931200en=0
8e3777cc4943486ei=5090partner=geartestemc=rss
From: Steve Sloan [EMAIL PROTECTED]
It's a very weird show, but it's a weird show that makes sense.
If you pay attention, there is an actual storyline there, and it
came together nicely in last night's final episode. I'm still
pondering the old guy with the chalk, and how he might have
Today's biggest br newspaper has a huge story about the
return of Creationism to USA classes. It has the general
flavour of look how those USAns are stupid to believe
this nonsense.
Alberto Monteiro
___
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From: Robert Seeberger [EMAIL PROTECTED]
The Fool wrote:
From: Robert Seeberger [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I like the music, but everything else about this series sucks IMO.
Because you don't get the references?
Well...I don't find anything in the series that causes me to care
Ronn!Blankenship wrote:
At 09:46 PM Saturday 8/20/2005, Julia Thompson wrote:
Ronn!Blankenship wrote:
I thought the prevailing wisdom was that most guys spend their
teenage years doing warm-up exercises . . .
Why Is The Bathroom Door Locked Again? Maru
-- Ronn! :)
(Come on. All of you
The Fool wrote:
From: Julia Thompson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
The Fool wrote:
From: Warren Ockrassa [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[adult swim] on Cartoon Network is a refuge in some ways.
---
You''re implying that their are other things to watch on tv.
---
I find The Weather Channel to be gripping. Most of
Alberto Monteiro wrote:
Today's biggest br newspaper has a huge story about the
return of Creationism to USA classes. It has the general
flavour of look how those USAns are stupid to believe
this nonsense.
Yeah. I have a half-formulated response to anyone seriously backing it
that hits them
The Fool wrote:
From: Julia Thompson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
In answer to the subject line -- um, no? :) I'm guessing that's
your
belief, anyway. Nice hook.
The Fool wrote:
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/17/books/17comi.html?ex=1281931200en=0
--- Alberto Monteiro [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Today's biggest br newspaper has a huge story about
the
return of Creationism to USA classes. It has the
general
flavour of look how those USAns are stupid to
believe
this nonsense.
Alberto Monteiro
Now, the interesting question for me is,
At 07:35 PM Sunday 8/21/2005, Gautam Mukunda wrote:
--- Alberto Monteiro [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Today's biggest br newspaper has a huge story about
the
return of Creationism to USA classes. It has the
general
flavour of look how those USAns are stupid to
believe
this nonsense.
Gautam Mukunda wrote:
Today's biggest br newspaper has a huge story about
the return of Creationism to USA classes. It has the
general flavour of look how those USAns are stupid to
believe this nonsense.
Now, the interesting question for me is, why does this
essentially only happen in the
The Fool wrote:
Neon Genesis Evangelion (coming)
That's good news. I keep hearing about that show, but I've
never seen it.
Gundam Seed
Yup, that was worth watching. It reminds me of a Heinlein
juvenile, where kids have to learn duty and moral lessons
against the backdrop of a space war.
Alberto Monteiro wrote:
No idea. Maybe it's because the USA likes to single it out
against the rest of the world - like refusing to use metric,
using the middle-endian calendar system,
I'll grant you that doing day-month-year dates makes more
sense than what we do, but only slightly.
On 8/21/05, Alberto Monteiro [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Does anyone know wtf is a .mod file in Linux? How can I get useful things out
of it? It seems like it's a zip-like bundle of stuff.
Alberto Monteiro
Really, Alberto. I'm somewhat disapointed in you.
But for your browsing delectation,
In a message dated 8/20/2005 9:30:33 AM Eastern Daylight Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
No, it's not... quantum mechanics is a reasonable, scientific theory. The
Jews-run-the-world idea is a paranoid goofball conspiracy theory. That
makes
all the difference. I believe the latter is
In a message dated 8/20/2005 9:41:49 AM Eastern Daylight Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I believe that self-deceit enables this kind of behavior. The provost of
my
college was a spy during WWII and interviewed Nazi scientists during the
Nuremburg war trials. He challenged each incoming
At 01:16 PM Sunday 8/21/2005, Alberto Monteiro wrote:
Does anyone know wtf is a .mod file in Linux? How can I get useful things out
of it?
Have you tried your usual advice (FR)?
-- Ronn! :)
I Am A Trained Professional Smart-Aleck. Do Not Attempt This On Your
Own. Neither The Author
In a message dated 8/20/2005 10:17:09 AM Eastern Daylight Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
It came from Eric Clapton. :-)
I have to talk to him about that
___
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In a message dated 8/20/2005 10:30:18 AM Eastern Daylight Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Then this is a big difference between you and me. While you've been
going on and on about subtle anti-semitism, you probably haven't felt
its effects, yet you've been suggesting that I don't
At 07:53 PM Sunday 8/21/2005, Alberto Monteiro wrote:
playing a football
that does not use the feet nor a ball, etc.
New vocabulary word:
PUNT: It ain't just a type of water craft.
-- Ronn! :)
___
On 8/22/05, Andrew Paul [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Yes, and thus there are places, where time is going faster, relative to
earth... eg places going slower (as we are going rather fast). And is
there a minimum and maximum speed of time?
Andrew
Well, assuming Green's metaphor holds, yes.
Behalf Of Maru Dubshinki
On 8/22/05, Andrew Paul [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Yes, and thus there are places, where time is going faster, relative
to
earth... eg places going slower (as we are going rather fast). And
is
there a minimum and maximum speed of time?
Andrew
Well, assuming
Minimum speed of time is the opposite: all possible acceleration, that
is, light speed.Intuitively, this should make time stand still,
and it does. And faster still would be going backwards in time
(tachyons, anyone?).
Speaking of which, if this were possible, HOW exactly would time go
On 8/22/05, Andrew Paul [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
No, that's good, that's what I was thinking too. And the Big Bang part
is an interesting angle.. Is there somewhere like that, can we identify
a centre of our universe?. And what about the maximum speed of time?
Andrew
A physical centre? No;
On 8/22/05, Damon Agretto [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Minimum speed of time is the opposite: all possible acceleration, that
is, light speed.Intuitively, this should make time stand still,
and it does. And faster still would be going backwards in time
(tachyons, anyone?).
Speaking of
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