Well.... it wasn't me, I was too busy dealing with this.

http://www.boston.com/dailynews/344/sports/Joseph_Giannelli_popular_UConn:.s
html

Actually, I met Moby once and told him that my Uncle was @ UConn.  I guess
Moby  studied philosophy there for a little while.

Perhaps the assailants where radical anti-Catholics.   Now that the Pope has
accepted Cardinal Law before the whole institution gets condemned for crimes
against humanity.
What a bunch of drama queens announcing such a controversial resignation on
Friday the 13th !!!

Maybe the assailants were just drunken rednecks who mistook Moby for a
wannabe Saint.  Or else just a bunch of Boston a--holes.

telepathic regards,
the kooky scientist



on 12/13/02 5:27 PM, Matthew L. Thompson at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> I haven't been paying too close attention to most of the discussion on 313
> the last few days, but please pardon me if this story has made the list
> already...
> 
> Matt
> www.magicmattkelly.com
> 
> -----------------
> 
> http://www.azcentral.com/offbeat/articles/1213MobyAttack13-ON.html
> 
> Associated Press
> Dec. 13, 2002 07:15 AM
> 
> BOSTON - Techno artist Moby was attacked by two men while signing autographs
> outside a nightclub following a radio station-sponsored holiday concert,
> police said.
> 
> 
> According to police and witnesses, Moby, whose real name is Richard M.
> Melville, was approached by the men about 1 a.m. Thursday outside the
> Paradise Rock Club. One of the men punched Moby in the back of the head and
> on the right side of his face, breaking the singer's glasses and cutting and
> bruising his face.
> 
> When two club security guards tried to stop the attack, the assailants
> sprayed a mace-like substance at Moby, Moby's manager and the guards, and
> then fled, police said.
> 
> Moby, 37, declined medical attention.
> 
> The assailants said nothing during the attack, and the motive is unknown,
> said Paradise manager Jeff Marshall.
> 
> During the concert, Moby, a self-described pacifist, had spoken out against
> aggression and violence.
> 
> He wrote on his Web site that he is not angry about the attack, just
> mystified about the motive. He has asked the attackers to post an
> explanation.
> 
> Moby is electronic music's first bona fide superstar. His 1999 album "Play"
> sold 10 million copies. For the past two years, the Connecticut native has
> headlined a touring festival that has featured guests such as David Bowie.
> 

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