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Dangerous Dancing
- julie 12-19-2001 6:07 pm [link] [1 ref] [add a comment]

"what would Baudrillard say ?" 9/27/01



- bill 12-19-2001 5:45 pm [link] [2 comments]

the first list of British IFAs, or Important Fungus Areas
- linda 12-17-2001 3:08 pm [link] [add a comment]

5 wtc 360 cams




- bill 12-17-2001 12:57 pm [link] [1 comment]

post-martha



- bill 12-16-2001 4:07 pm [link] [add a comment]

megway sales soar!
- dave 12-16-2001 3:22 pm [link] [2 comments]

The Work Dogs : 8:00 pm, Friday December 21 st. @ Max Fish on Ludlow st / new album release party and proformance.



- bill 12-16-2001 1:44 pm [link] [7 comments]

Feedmymeter.com is a New Orleans project that sells advertising to raise money to feed expired parking meters. A flyer is left on the saved car explaining what was done. Included on the flyer are the ads, of course. Genius. Take that Rita.

A usually reliable on such matters friend of mine swears there was a court case in New York City which outlawed feeding a meter for someone else. Can anyone confirm that?
- jim 12-15-2001 2:04 am [link] [1 comment]

Could this be true?

Michael Moore was the keynote speaker at the convention of NJ Citizen Action which I attended this past Saturday. He told the assembled audience of 100+ people that his publisher HarperCollins had informed him that they will not be selling/distributing his new book "Stupid White Men and Other Excuses for the State of the Nation" --already printed -- because the content is offensive. He reported that the publisher also told him that he (Moore) is being "intellectually dishonest" not to state that GW Bush has done a good job in the last few months. Moore said that he has been told that the book will NOT be distributed as is, will be destroyed, and that if he will rewrite AND pay for the repinting of the book Harpercollins will publish the new version!!.
I know he's been accused of embellishing the facts before, but this sounds like it might have happened.
- jim 12-14-2001 3:30 pm [link] [2 comments]

"what, its not free? but im a celebrity."
- dave 12-14-2001 12:31 am [link] [8 comments]

Counting birds online from the Times.
- alex 12-13-2001 4:13 pm [link] [2 comments]

My horrorscope advises me to "think out[side] of the box". No shit. Last week I was trying to remember the first time I had heard the phrase. Tom mentioned first hearing it in a movie (which one again ?) from two years back. Now it's every where. Can any one else help pin this down ?


- bill 12-11-2001 2:14 pm [link] [18 comments]

alt.fan.emo - advised by musicologist Brian that rich kid John Walker was big fan of emo band Race-Trader (traitor?) but I cant find anything to back it up.


- bill 12-09-2001 8:42 pm [link] [6 comments]

tonight is Santarchy in NYC, but the big national meeting is in Austin in honor of GW
- Skinny 12-08-2001 4:07 pm [link] [3 refs] [add a comment]

Roll another number

Neil Young inspired by Flight 93.
Take that, you cynics.

- alex 12-08-2001 1:37 am [link] [1 ref] [2 comments]

afghan war rugs



- bill 12-07-2001 5:02 pm [link] [1 ref] [6 comments]

Hey, I'm finally getting some Google searches coming in. And they're not all porn, though I'm not sure whether "sex pistles" is a misspelling or not.
Edits from the log include:
skirting+pussy
lullabies++%22in+the+meadow%22+baby++butterflies+birds+alone
Songbirds+and+Hallucinogenic+Plants
the+sex+pistles
BELLADONNA+POEM+EYE+RED+FIRE+NIGHTSHADE+ATROPA
22bitter+withy%22+apocrypha
mute+swan+cygnets+pictures
tutti+frutti+fairy+%2Bchristmas+%2Bornaments
(Say, there could be a hot product idea in that last one.)

- alex 12-06-2001 6:44 pm [link] [1 comment]

good dr W
i didnt think there were ostridge in argentina
it was a rheas

Rheas are the true inhabitants of the South American grasslands or pampas. Distribution in the wild is from north-eastern Brazil to central Argentina. Although conspicuous to our eyes, on the pampas, crouched, immobile, amongst the tussocky grass, they are almost invisible. Then, when something alarms them, off they go, in typical, high-stepping ostrich style, reaching speeds of 30 m.p.h., and zig-zagging this way and that, often with wings outstretched and bending to one side, then the other, at acute angles
- Skinny 12-06-2001 5:33 am [link] [82 comments]

Minor league baseball's Daytona Cubs are offering a lifetime seasons pass to anyone who gets a tattoo of their logo anywhere on thier body. They'll bring you into their office, you show them the tat and they'll take your photo and make the pass right there on the spot. Once you have the pass there is no need to show your tattoo at the gate.
- steve 12-05-2001 11:02 pm [link] [add a comment]

Bill Moyers is bitter.......
- steve 12-05-2001 5:23 pm [link] [9 comments]

I'm trying to find some photos Bill posted a number of months ago. Pictures of men in a barn doing something strange with a chicken. As I remember it there were comments using the words "Hazing" "Frat" or "Fraternity". The advanced search on Bill's page and Treehouse has yielded nothing. What am I doing wrong?
- steve 12-05-2001 3:08 pm [link] [4 comments]

OK, I know everybody's starving for bird news, so here's a little insight on the vagaries of bird watching.
- alex 12-04-2001 7:43 pm [link] [1 ref] [4 comments]

"I'm probably the only person in the world who has watched every network newscast since 1988," Andrew Tyndall says. Tyndall produces the Tyndall Report, an analysis of what appears each night on the three network news broadcasts."
- dave 12-03-2001 4:27 pm [link] [add a comment]

The article by John R. Quinn on the origins of golf course geese (AKA "Couch potato geese" AKA "Lawn carp"), which I was discussing with Alex, has disappeared from the Web. Fortunately I printed it out, so here's a relevant excerpt:

"In his [Audubon magazine] article 'The Geese That Came in from the Wild,' Jack H. Hope says that [golf course geese] (1.2 million birds in the East alone) now outnumber true wild geese by some 50%. The local honkers have their origins not in an accident of nature, Hope says, but--are you ready for this?--through the actions of government agencies. He notes that multitudes of the 'giant' race of Canada goose were held captive in the early 20th Century by former market hunters as live hunting decoys and in the 1930s, when the practice was outlawed, were either eaten, released into the wild, or sold. 'The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, along with most state wildlife agencies... bought thousands [of captive Canada geese], primarily from private flocks, and began captive breeding programs[...],' he writes, adding that over successive generations of captivity, the semi-tame geese, when released, had lost the instinct to migrate and seldom moved more than 50 miles from their birthplace. These 'farm-raised' birds were released to augment the populations of wild geese, which were in fact in decline due to hunting and habitat loss."

--from John R. Quinn, "The Canada Goose: Too Much of a Good Thing?" Nature Notes, HMDC - The Meadowlands of New Jersey (web publication)

- tom moody 12-03-2001 3:49 am [link] [1 comment]

all-species
- dave 12-02-2001 5:13 pm [link] [add a comment]