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alocispepraluger102

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Everything posted by alocispepraluger102

  1. hoping there would be some old dylanites in here. dylan, incidentally made one of the crappiest albums ever. bob and johnny cash live.
  2. beginning to feel college football more interesting than nfl.
  3. http://www.oxfordamericanmag.com/content.c...mp;Entry=Extras
  4. just watched a really fine game between two really talented well coached football teams, michigan state and wisconsin. i dont expect to see a better game all year. the state football program is certainly on the way up.
  5. 2007 mlb team payrolls. 2 teams, among the very lowest in payrolls, will be in playoffs, cleveland and arizona. http://rubechat.kfan.com/forums/thread/1667648.aspx
  6. 'song for' is a great classic and not to missed and is one of the first delmark recordings. a very unusual, and one of my favorite jarman led groups is 'out of the mist,' on ocean records, with jarman on perhaps a dozen different instruments, leroy jenkins on several instruments, jeffrey schanzer on guitar, myra melford playing piano and prepared piano, and lindsey horner playing bass and pennywhistle. this 1997 recording is at once one of the most creative, meditative, and beautiful recordings i own. here's a review from the all music guide: Free blowing often inspires traffic and automotive metaphors -- all those horns -- and these 14 cuts suggest one more: five musicians playing as if respecting a four-way stop. This album was released on a Vermont label, and is the packaging ever misleading. Melanie Powell's cover painting is as serenely vague upside down as it is right side up, while the album title (in large type) evokes the new age racks or a movie soundtrack. But before you pass it by, check the fine print for the artists' names. Joseph Jarman's tenor saxophone and Leroy Jenkins' violin are better known from two important jazz outfits, respectively, the Art Ensemble of Chicago and the Revolutionary Ensemble. This time, Jarman's other axes include ceramic flutes, bass flute, "hands" (sic), some rather useless chimes and gongs, and the mysterious Isan. Jenkins swaps his violin for a harmonica on a few cuts, as well as playing kalimba, but that violin makes a great foil for the rather stiff timbre of Jarman's ceramic flutes. And a little stiffness proves to be a virtue this time. For one instance, the long cut "Rain Forest" is both more insidious and more pleasing than mere hypnotic, mellow, ethnic jazz. There's a ceremonial feel to the playing; a stateliness that focuses the improvisations as surely as a handy stopwatch, cordiality co-exists with chaos. There's no woodwind squawking from Jarman, no behind-the-bridge squeaking from Jenkins, and even the prepared piano played by fellow jazz workshopper Myra Melford's is pretty. Elsewhere, bassist Lindsay Horner doubles on the fleshiest-sounding penny whistle ever heard. Jeffrey Schanzer's guitar contributes gentle plucked harp dischords to "Prayer at Sea," though he's surprisingly underused even there. The closing "Chanting" sounds like Georgi Lygeti's vocal work "Atmospheres" performed at the humble level of a barbershop quartet, with everyone joining the chant. Melford, Jarman, and Jenkins have since recorded under the name of Equal Interest, releasing a self-titled album in 1999. ~John Young, All Music Guide
  7. NYTimes.com Re-Brands With 'All The News That's Fit To Click' Theme By E&P Staff Published: September 28, 2007 4:15 PM ET CHICAGO Playing off the well-known -- and zealously protected slogan -- of print newspaper, NYTimes.com launches a re-branding campaign Sunday with the theme "All the News That's Fit to Click." "The campaign capitalizes on the familiar New York Times slogan, 'All the News That's Fit to Print,' with a subtle update: 'All the News That's Fit to Click' - or Blog, Stream, Archive, Digitize, E-Mail, Personalize, etc.," the Times Co. said in a statement. The different verbs are intended to point users to its numerous blogs, video, and other multimedia offerings. "Each campaign message promotes a different online function, with the reference to the original slogan tying it all back to the quality journalism of the Times," the company said in its announcement Friday. Ads will run in advertising trade publications, TV and radio spots, outdoors on digital taxi cab tops, and as house ads in the Times. "Our core audience -- affluent, educated and curious -- demands their news and information in a variety of formats, and we are committed to meeting, and exceeding, their expectations," Murray Gaylord, NYTimes.com's vice president of marketing, said in a statement. "This campaign illustrates all the different ways we do that." NYTimes.com is the most popular newspaper site in the United States, according to Nielsen//Net Ratings. E&P Staff (letters@editorandpublisher.com) Links referenced within this article letters@editorandpublisher.com http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/ne...ndpublisher.com Find this article at: http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/ne...t_id=1003648799
  8. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1190937043...a_editors_picks
  9. applause!
  10. would that she were a baseball or basketball player or race car driver. seeing that name across a back could be orgasmatic.
  11. turning the aloc into a nirapath
  12. http://www.musicweb-international.com/clas...zsa_Khitruk.htm
  13. http://www.duramedfuturestour.com/PlayerBi...pornVirada.html
  14. i would really miss latenight am radio, especially the sports broadcasts, from the big clear channel blowtorches. wfan and wbbm and wgn and wcbs and kmox and several others are pretty damn special and i would miss them.
  15. the mets have blown all their lead. now tied with 3 games to go. a scant few months ago, mets fans were laughing at and belittling yankee fans and now the tables have turned. one of sports' all-time great choke jobs.
  16. http://www.charlotte.com/business/v-print/story/294878.html
  17. Furry masked bandit makes prison break from old OSR News Journal staff report MANSFIELD -- With a little help, a masked bandit made an escape at the old Ohio State Reformatory on Sunday night. It was an exciting last day of the tour season at the historic prison when a reformatory volunteer saw a raccoon, with a peanut butter jar stuck on its head, running across the lawn and bumping into a tree. It made its way up the tree and stayed there. Volunteers went into action. One started cutting branches off the small tree. Some kept the raccoon spotlighted so they wouldn't lose sight of the wily critter, and the others got some rope to pull the tree over so they could grab it. An off-duty Mansfield police officer, who is also a volunteer at the reformatory, arrived with an animal snare. One held the angry bandit, while another cut the plastic jar off its head. Once freed from the jar and snare, the raccoon disappeared into the brush by the reformatory lake, according to a spokesperson for the Mansfield Reformatory Preservation Society. The escapee's accomplices cheered his freedom and decided that was the perfect end to a great season.
  18. that was beautiful. thanks.
  19. http://www.efi.group.shef.ac.uk/
  20. i've send a letter inquiring where to send donations. 'we take care of our own.'
  21. http://upcoming.yahoo.com/event/270439/
  22. http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/atla...?printable=true
  23. http://www.postchronicle.com/news/strange/...212105351.shtml
  24. OSU football player arrested for solicitation By NBC4 COLUMBUS — Police arrested an Ohio State University football player for solicitation Monday night on the city's north side. According to the Franklin County Prosecutor's Office, Antonio Henton, a redshirt freshman, was arrested and charged with soliciting a prostitute on North High Street and East 6th Avenue at about 8:30 p.m., NBC 4 reported. Henton, a Georgia native, is the third-string quarterback for the Buckeyes. Henton was scheduled to be arraigned this morning in a Franklin County courtroom.
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