RE: [lace-chat] Snapshot of my life

2010-05-18 Thread cearbhael
Yeah my grandfather actually drove a covered wagon with a team of horses
from S Dakota to Minnesota when he was just a lad. In his 80's he took his
first plane ride. He died at 101. My great grandmother was married in 1895
and died in the early 1970's...so she was a lot like your gran.

Cearbhael

-Original Message-
From: owner-lace-c...@arachne.com [mailto:owner-lace-c...@arachne.com] On
Behalf Of Elizabeth Ligeti
Sent: Wednesday, April 14, 2010 10:18 PM
To: lace-chat@arachne.com
Subject: [lace-chat] Snapshot of my life

I always think that my Grandmother lived in the most amazing era.  Born in
1879, she saw bicycles come into general use, electricity in every home,
cars, radio, television, and right up to a man walking on the Moon!!!  She
died in 1976 - at 97 years old.

I doubt there is another era with such drastic changes in one lifetime.

Regards from Liz in Melbourne, Oz
lizl...@bigpond.com

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[lace-chat] old and fragile

2010-04-30 Thread cearbhael
I am asking for advice on non lace preservation. I found my great
grandparent's original marriage certificate and their family record (a large
Victorian sheet which has all the births deaths and marriages inked in) Both
are rolled up and FRAGILE. How do I unroll and preserve them from
deteriorating further and falling apart?? I thought maybe ironing them
between waxed paper?? (works for preserving fall leaves that come off of
trees) These are from the late 1800's so very very old. I REALLY REALLY
REALLY want to keep these. I am the family historian (I do the genealogy
research) and any and all original family documents are very precious.

 

 

Thanks in advance

 

Cearbhael

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Re: [lace-chat] A Beautiful Christmas Salad

2006-12-25 Thread cearbhael

Dear David,
Please send me the recipe...I tried to save it but the 
program glitched and it was suddenly gone in the wind not 
to be found (wasn't in deleted either ...I checked)

It sounded great.

Cearbhael

On Sun, 24 Dec 2006 10:16:20 -0800 (PST)
 Bev Walker [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Thankyou for this recipe David. The combination of 
melon, goat feta and
the hot dressing is mouthwatering. I think Ill break my 
resolve to buy
only fruit and veg. that are in season, and purchase 
imported, to make

this ;)

--
bye for now
Bev in Sooke, BC (on Vancouver Island, west coast of 
Canada)

Cdn. floral bobbins
www.woodhavenbobbins.com

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Re: [lace-chat] Bat control

2004-07-15 Thread cearbhael
Well I have to disagree with that last statement since I had one get tangled
in my hair as a 4 year old. I remember it well and they had to cut him out
(cut my hair) I remember being VERY panicked but I don't hold it against
them though I was terrified of them for years afterwards. I don't know why
he got into my hair but he may have been pursuing a moth that got into my
hair. I just remember being just across the street from our house at dusk
and was screaming and rolling on the ground. Had all the neighbors and my
family there lol. I had LOTS of hair then too. Used to be able to sit on it.
My mother bobbed it after that.
I do feel a certain sense of panic if they get in the house but I don't
dislike them and they do roost in our old home here. They are in our chimney
and keep me up in the morning especially in the spring when they just wake
up from hibernation, are probably nesting and nights when it is storming and
they are stuck inside. My bedroom wall is next to the chimney and I have
very good hearing. Their high pitched squeals hurt my ears big time LOL. (I
am the only one who hear those) The audible squeaking is merely irritating
at times.

Cearbhael

- Original Message - 
From: Jean Nathan [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Chat [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, July 15, 2004 2:39 AM
Subject: [lace-chat] Bat control


 There's no truth
 to the old wives tale that they can become entangled inyour hair - their
 sonar is able to pick up even small objects, so they have no trouble
 locating and avoiding a human.

 Jean in Poole

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Re: [lace-chat] Cows

2004-06-30 Thread cearbhael
Sorry folks and Alice,

I posted a reply to this about how St Paul Minnesota USA has been doing
blanks of Charles Schultz comic characters for years and sent a link.
However I sent it to Alice only LOL. So, here is the link...go there. They
are great and all different.
To anyone not familiar with Charles Schultz...he is the creator of the comic
strip Peanuts with Snoopy and Charlie Brown. The link will take you to see
the Snoopy Statues. They have also done Charlie Brown, Lucy and a few
others. I have yet to find links to these. I am still looking though. Will
pass them along.
All these statues are decorated and adorned by artists. Some are sponsored
by business's (they are pretty obvious LOL) and all are auctioned off for
charity (some are bought back by the companies that sponsored them)

http://www.villagebiz.com/snoopy/Complete_List/complete_list.html#7

Enjoy them

Cearbhael

- Original Message - 
From: Alice Howell [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, June 29, 2004 5:23 PM
Subject: Re: [lace-chat] Cows


 At 02:33 PM 6/29/2004, you wrote:
 What is it about cows?  Manchester is currently infested by lifesize
 fibreglass cows, in all sorts of weird colours.  
 . However the BBC report that it's also been done in Dublin, New York
 and Tokyo, and originated in Zurich.


 Wherever they originated, they inhabited Portland a year or two back.  The
 blank cows were made or obtained somewhere, then various artists decorated
 them.  After being displayed around the town for a month or two, they were
 auctioned off for charity.  Whoever dreamed this up, started something
that
 is going around the world.  (Something like the 'nude' calendars that we
 see everywhere now.)
 G

 Alice in Oregon

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[lace-chat] OT new twist on virus

2004-03-10 Thread cearbhael
Just received a very official email supposedly from Microsoft that had a zip
file attached. It tells you that a new version of MY Doom virus has been
detected and it is important for you to install the file that is attached. It
is a SCAM and the zip file IS the virus so DON'T download it if you get it.
Delete delete delete. Keep in Mind that Microsoft, your isp, and any banks or
credit card companies that you deal with will NEVER ask you to do anything via
email or attachments. They always refer you to their site to download anything
they think you need for security.

Just a heads up

Cearbhael

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Re: [lace-chat] Recipe needed

2004-02-21 Thread cearbhael
Ok...there is a recipe called Cabbage and Tomatoes  in the Ukraine
cookbook I have.
 I can't tell you the Ukrainian name since it is printed in the Cyrillic
Alphabet and my keyboard doesn't do that.

1 sm head cabbage 1 sm onion 3 T butter 2 T water 1 T butter
1 T flour 1 c cooked Tomatoes strained 2 T sour cream Salt 
Pepper to taste

Shred the cabbage. Cook the onion in the butter until tender. Add the
cabbage and the water. Cook, uncovered for about 10 minutes or until the
cabbage is tender but still slightly crisp. Melt the butter, blend in the
flour, and stir in the sour cream, and season the sauce to taste with salt
and pepper. Combine the sauce with the cabbage, bring to a boil, and simmer
for a few minutes to blend the flavors. Serve as a vegetable with a  meat
course.

Hope that helps

Cearbhael


- Original Message -
From: Tatdlace [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, February 21, 2004 12:10 AM
Subject: [lace-chat] Recipe needed


 Hi lacers,
 A friend and I were talking about cabbage rolls and she mentioned her
 Ukranian mother in law, made a cabbage dish
 that she remebered fondly, but had no idea how to make it.
 Her mother in law has passed away now so she can't be asked and I thought
if
 there was one source that was sure to
 know it was all of the folks here. The family was Ukranian
 on one side and Polish on the other so I'm not really sure
 of the origins of the recipe.
 Apparently, from what my friend can remember, the
 cabbage was shredded and she thinks steamed, probably with onions and
 garlic, then crushed tomatoes were added and just
 before it was served a good measure of whipping cream was stirred in (not
 whipped, just as cream).
 She's not exactly sure what went into it or how it was
 prepared as she was visiting her in-laws at the time when
 her kids were little and she wasn't really paying attention.
 Now that the kids are grown up and she could have sat
 down and written out the recipe, her source is gone.
 So does anyone recognize it? Have a recipe for it?
 Or is this just one farm wife's personal method of
 preparing cabbage?
 I eagerly await your responses as I'm all for recipes
 that use both cabbage and tomatoes. They're available almost year round
and
 healthy to boot. Besides which, I'd like to
 give my friend a recipe that she thought was gone for good.
 Sharon Briggs
 in Toronto where its a cool 4 degrees C

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Re: [lace-chat] Spelling

2004-02-19 Thread cearbhael
It is a totally different language LOL. Gaelic. (Gaylick) My computer name
is my great great grandmother's maiden name. Cearbhael (pronounced Carroll)
it was anglicised to Carroll by the English. Cearbhael is the correct Gaelic
spelling for the name. Due to it being a language all of its own (originally
being Old Celtic) it has its own rules of pronounciation as most languages
do. It is NOT an easy language to learn, and like all languages, different
areas of Ireland pronounce things differently. Dubh is one such word (it
means dark)...in some areas it is pronounced Doov or Duv (with a very soft
v) and other areas Doo or Du (with the bh simply breathed and not actually
pronounced) I suppose even Cearbhael in some areas would be Care-vahl with
a very soft v. Scotland also speaks Gaelic with some variation in dialect as
well. The Welsh speak a form of Gaelic as well but it is almost a different
language due to the original Celtic spoken in Wales was a dialect different
from that spoken in Ireland and Scotland. In Wales, Ireland and Scotland
they were forced to speak the Queen's English back during Queen Elizabeth
I's reign. Now most Celtic nations have their native language taught in
school at a very young age to prevent their native language from becoming
extinct.

Cearbhael

- Original Message -
From: Margery Allcock [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] com [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, February 19, 2004 6:28 AM
Subject: [lace-chat] Spelling


 A question I've wondered about for some time:

 When people began to write down the words they heard, they must
 have decided how to spell them, although to begin with each
 speller made up his own mind which letters to write.  Fine so
 far.

 But when I look at Irish names I get bewildered.  How come you
 can say e.g. Shona and write Sionaid?  Or Shivawn, and write
 Siobhan?  Was there a different set of people inventing spelling
 in Ireland?  Is it because Ireland was a foreign (to us) country
 then?

 Did this process of inventing spelling happen all around the
 world in different languages and different alphabets all at the
 same time?  (no, that can't be right - the Chinese probably did
 it first.)  So how? why? and all sorts of other puzzles ...

 BFN,
 Margery.
 ==
 [EMAIL PROTECTED] in Edinburgh, UK
 ==

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Re: [lace-chat] Ever pulled down a ceiling?

2003-12-26 Thread cearbhael
That painted a rather interesting picture in my mind LOL. Hee hee
hee...ROFLMBO.

Cearbhael
- Original Message -
From: Steph Peters [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, December 26, 2003 1:42 PM
Subject: Re: [lace-chat] Ever pulled down a ceiling?


 As it was very hot DH and I decided that people were easier to clean than
clothes, so we
 carried out the entire operation each wearing no more than a hanky
triangle across the nose to keep the dust  out.
 During one of the sorties down into the bedroom I leant against the wall,
 leaving a perfect bum print.  This stayed there for many years, hidden
 behind some furniture, until we sold the house when it got a quick lick of
 paint.
 --

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[lace-chat] Re: [lace] Re: Cornered Waterlily

2003-12-07 Thread cearbhael
here here...I love Waterlily and HATE corners. They never did corners in the
old days. I don't see a need to now.

Cearbhael

- Original Message -
From: Tamara P. Duvall [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: lace Arachne [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, December 07, 2003 6:55 PM
Subject: [lace] Re: Cornered Waterlily


 On Sunday, Dec 7, 2003, at 09:44 US/Eastern, Anita Awenat wrote:

  Now, one other thing, does anyone know if there is a published pattern
  of a
  corner for the Waterlily pattern.  I'd like to try it as a handkerchief
  edging, but can't seem to track down an existing corner design. (I'm
  not
  interested in the torchon hex version).

 I've never seen one. As Karen'd said, there's a pattern for Bucks
 Waterlily in Stott's Visual Introduction to BP Lace, but it's straight,
 no corner. Truth to tell, I've not seen all that many cornered PG
 patterns (Buks Point or other), especially reproductions of traditional
 ones, once they got past 35 pairs or so.

 I think, part of the reason is that the PG angles are not  natural
 for forming corners, the way 45 degree angle is. You have to figure on
 adding a pair for every 5-7 pairs used on the straight, and, even so,
 the results are apt to be awkward and/or require a lot of juggling. The
 widest PG lace with a corner I've ever seen is the Seascape, in Stott
 and Cook's 100 Traditional BL Patterns. It uses 54 pairs on the
 straight, plus 18 for the corner. Even if one were to rework the
 innermost part of it and remove the flower (which is neither here nor
 there in relationship to the rest of the pattern but requires extra 9
 pairs by itself), it's still a lot of trouble for what amounts to about
 two rows of ground (and, of course, you never remove the same pairs
 you'd added g).

 Also...

 I may be entirely wrong, but I have a feeling that, until the last
 10-15 yrs, there weren't really all that many lacemakers who had both
 the skills to handle really complex patterns *and* the necessary
 disregard for tradition :) The amateur lacemakers of 30-40 yrs ago (and
 amateur lacemakers are who the pattern books are being written for),
 even if they had the skills, would have been more interested in
 reviving lacemaking as it had been, not as it might be. And there's
 precious little tradition of corners in PG :) There are more corners
 included in newer publications but, in the older ones, the corners seem
 to be aimed at middle advanced -- 20-36 regular pairs...

 Personally, I'm going off corners, especially in the finer laces :)
 For one thing, half of the time they look half baked, forced; Karen
 Trend Nissen is exceptionally nimble at designing logical corners
 (Tonder) and Pamela Nottingham is also very good (Bucks; mostly simple
 ones though), but they're rare. For another thing, all that hanging in
 and taking out of corner extras (and learning to jump through new hoops
 4 times -- usually widely spaced) is but the beginning of the
 nightmare; you then have to have machine precision in mounting the lace
 just so to fit the fabric.  Gathered corners are much more
 forgiving, even if they mean making extra few inches of the pattern
 (at least you know the pattern well, since it doesn't change g). And,
 for all they don't show off the pattern as well as flat lace, they
 seem to have more life to them; they dance.

 -
 Tamara P Duvall
 Lexington, Virginia,  USA
 Formerly of Warsaw, Poland
 http://lorien.emufarm.org/~tpd/

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Re: [lace-chat] worrisome

2003-12-05 Thread cearbhael
I did notice that my yahoo accts chat groups doesn't give out the email
addresses. I typed in the name of my horse and got a few messages I had
written to a Yahoo Arabian horse group I belong to. They had clickable paths
to my email addy but they put dots in most if it. When I clicked on the
email addy it sent me to Yahoo's security page and asked for my password.
Another words...unless it was me, I couldn't get the info. I do not know
what kind of security Arachne has for Lace and Lace chat. Maybe Avital could
tell us??

Cearbhael

- Original Message -
From: rick sharon [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, December 05, 2003 11:43 AM
Subject: [lace-chat] worrisome


 A few months ago I posted a queery about an odd piece of cookware.  Nobody
 at the time knew anything about it.  However, yesterday I received an
 interesting reply.  The thing was, though, the guy who replied was not a
 member of our group.  He is doing research on the thing and he had just
 typed in terracotta in his search engine.  What that appears to mean is,
 that any of our posting to arachne will go on-line, anywhere,at any time,
 and pick out key words applicable elsewhere.  I had, perhaps in my
naivitie
 (sp?) thought that our postings would be confined to our
group..appparently
 not.  In this case I've received an interesting reply, but I am a little
 concerned.  Thought you should be aware..we are not alone :)   Sharon on
 Vancouver Island

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Re: [lace-chat] Red shoes

2003-12-02 Thread cearbhael
I never owned a pair of red shoes until my mother bought me a pair of red
shoes when I was in my early 40's. She was the girl who liked color in her
shoes. My flashiest pair of footwear was a pair of knee high lace up purple
suede granny boots with 2 inch heels that I bought in 1965. My favorite
shoes were a pair of real (leather not vinyl) patent leather mary jane's
with a 2  1/2 inch chunky heel They were gorgeous and fit like a dream (and
made in Italy) I fell in love with them in a newspaper add (full page
spread) and my mother ordered them over the phone and they FIT. I got them
for Christmas. What a wonderful present that was. I wore them till they
literally disintergrated. That was a sad day sniff.

Cearbhael

- Original Message -
From: H. Muth [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, December 02, 2003 9:33 AM
Subject: Re: [lace-chat] Red shoes


 Hello all,

 I never had a pair of red shoes.  I did have a pair with very high cork
 platforms which had white sandal straps on them.  (I'm trying very hard to
 remember.)  And I also had a pair of very high black boots which my
parents
 hated.  My daughter is working on her own style (she's 13) but I don't
 think there'll be any such shoes in her fashion future.

 Heather
 Abbotsford, BC
 Almost finished this semester's classes.  Just 2 major essays to go.


 At 11:55 AM 02/12/2003 +, Lynne Cumming wrote:
 My 16 year old daughter received her 'first' pay packet last week (has
done
 a paper round for a year but it doesn't really count!) and promptly spent
 most of it on a pair of red shoes. Winkle picker, 3 stiletto jobs in
bright
 red fabric. A pair of shoes to die for! I tried them on and my Achilles
 tendon screamed no, no!! Now, every woman I have spoken to since says, 
I
 had a pair of red shoes. Now my query is this, how many are there of
 you out there who have NEVER owned a pair of red shoes? I had a pair at
14
 (plus boots which I had to dye black in the end to wear on my motorbike
to
 school) and my father was furious when he discovered me limping around in
 the shoes because I couldn't bear to give them up and they were far too
 small!
 I have a photo for posterity (taken with my new digital camera  - cheap
from
 Lidl but it's not at all bad for the price) if anyone wants to drool!
 I wish I had legs like hers tho.
 
 Lynne.
 
 Lynne Cumming
 Baldock, North Herts, UK
 
 email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 Never try to teach a pig to sing. It wastes your time and annoys the
 pig.
 
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Re: [lace-chat] Re: Handicap parking/driving

2003-11-18 Thread cearbhael
Actually YES there is a large Polish population in St Paul (South/Central
Minnesota in general). Plus, since there are also alot of Swedes in
Minnesota, (actually lots of Scandinavians, including Finnish, Swedish, and
Norwegian) we could have a majority of blondes in the City Council LOL.
(Don't really know but could be) We do have more natural blondes in this
state than most.

Cearbhael

- Original Message -
From: Tamara P. Duvall [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: chat Arachne [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, November 18, 2003 7:12 PM
Subject: [lace-chat] Re: Handicap parking/driving


 On Tuesday, Nov 18, 2003, at 00:15 US/Eastern,
 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

  It is really a pain in the rear to have to go to the DMV downtown St
  Paul
  (who doesn't even have handicapped parking by the way) to get your
  handicapped card.

 Big Polish population in St Paul?  The mayor an all the council are
 blondes too, no doubt... g

 -
 Tamara P Duvall
 Lexington, Virginia,  USA
 Formerly of Warsaw, Poland
 http://lorien.emufarm.org/~tpd/

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Re: [lace-chat] Re: Handicap parking/driving

2003-11-17 Thread cearbhael
Hmmm...Tamara maybe they are cardboard in your state but in Minnesota they
are plastic and prefered to the plates these days. I have permanently
disabled people in the family (besides myself) and we all have what are
called permanent disability cards which hang from the mirror. They are not
cardboard but a heavy plastic and good for 5 years. The Temporary disability
card is red not blue and is only good for 6 month periods. They prefer the
cards here since people often have multiple cars or are being chauffeured by
someone who doesn't have disabled plates. Many of my family members have
sight disabilities and won't ever be able to get permanent plates for cars
they can't drive. My 100 year old grandfather (who moves in the speed of
ultra slow only LOL) has 3 different cards. My aunt has one (and then one
of her own LOL...personally I think that is silly) By the way, she can't
drive and neither can my father (he is married to her) so that is doubly
silly. 2 for my mother (she has 2 cars) since SHE usually drives him. They
gave her two when she complained that she couldn't remember to switch the
card from car to car. (actually if you knew my mother you would understand)
She is also losing her sight. (she is basically blind in one eye already) So
eventually she may just get her own (and I will have to drive her around) I
have my own but it stays in my car unless my son is taking me somewhere then
he lets me bring it and hang it on his mirror. He HATES using the
handicapped spot but he is becoming much more protective of me now that he
is grown and married. I would go nuts if I had to get a card every 3 years.
It is really a pain in the rear to have to go to the DMV downtown St Paul
(who doesn't even have handicapped parking by the way) to get your
handicapped card.

Cearbhael

- Original Message -
From: Tamara P. Duvall [EMAIL PROTECTED]

- Original Message -
From: Tamara P. Duvall [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: chat Arachne [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, November 17, 2003 9:10 PM
Subject: [lace-chat] Re: Handicap parking/driving


 On Monday, Nov 17, 2003, at 03:58 US/Eastern, Jean Nathan wrote:

  We only have 'temporary' handicapped badges that each last three years
  -
  then you have to reapply.But in order to get one, you have to have a
  permanent disability.

 Nice to know that *something*, in the area of social care is better
 in the US than in the UK :) Here, if you have a permanent disability,
 you get a permanent tag; the guy in the wheelchair symbol is pressed
 into your license plates (preceding the numbers). You need to renew the
 plates yearly (everyone does), but that's it (as it should be). The
 temporary (and up for periodical review) tags are cardboard, bear the
 same symbol, and are hung off the front mirror. They're *supposed* to
 be used only when the disabled is on board *and* needing to get to the
 store, but they're not (I've seen young, brisk mothers of 3 shepherding
 the brood to a store having first placed her excuse on the mirror).

 The older folk tend to drive right to the door of the store, drop the
 disabled person *there*, and park wherever there's a spot, *other* than
 the Handicapped one. The procedure is reversed at the other end. It's
 the younger set who take advantage of the few yards (I bet they're the
 ones who jog for their health daily, too g)

  I don't drive slowly as I'm not in pain when I drive. I'm not a
  disabled
  driver but a disabled walker.

 Yeah, sorry, but, in my (limited, granted) experience, the folk with
 the permanent tags tend to drive at 10-15MPH irrespective of the posted
 speed limit (25 to 55 MPH in the immediate area; you don't see many of
 them on the highways, praise be). And they never turn their blinkers
 off, either... *If*, that is, they remember to turn them on in the
 first place... I'm a reasonable person most of the time but, when on
 the road, I turn into a *witch*, and all the infractions are *counted*
 g

 -
 Tamara P Duvall
 Lexington, Virginia,  USA
 Formerly of Warsaw, Poland
 http://lorien.emufarm.org/~tpd/

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Fw: [lace-chat] Left/right/north/south

2003-11-11 Thread cearbhael
Sorry Clay, I iintended to send this to the whole list. (never get that
reply/reply all button stuff figured out)

Cearbhael
- Original Message -
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Clay Blackwell [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, November 11, 2003 4:48 PM
Subject: Re: [lace-chat] Left/right/north/south


 First off, it is doesn't need a scientist to break it down. The sun comes
up
 in the east and goes down in the West. The only time there is a left or
 right depends on what direction YOUR standing. Actually if I face east in
 the morning (and wouldn't matter what hemisphere you are in) it will come
up
 straight in front of you and travel up and over behind you. If your facing
 west, you won't see it come up and won't see it until it is noon when you
 can look straight up at it. Then you can watch it move away from you and
 down. If your facing North. (any hemisphere) the sun will go from right to
 left. If you facing south then it will move from left to right.
So...unless
 your exactly positive what direction your facing, it is easier to remember
 that in the morning it is in the east. Around noon it is pretty much
 overhead, and in the afternoon it is in the western sky. So it makes more
 sense to be aware of what time of day it is and then look where the sun is
 and figure out what direction your going. You can also look at your
shadow.
 They always point away from the sun.

 So where the sun is concerned, left and right is a very relative term and
 not very reliable.

 Cearbhael
 - Original Message -
 From: Clay Blackwell [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: Jean Nathan [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Chat
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, November 11, 2003 3:58 PM
 Subject: Re: [lace-chat] Left/right/north/south


   It had never occured to me until it was mentioned in that
  programme that in the southern hemisphere the sun and moon
  travel across the
  sky from right to left instead of from left to right as it
  does in the
  northern hemisphere. I'd find that very disorientating.  
 
  REALLY?!  It has never occurred to me either, and my poor
  befuddled brain just can't
  get around it.  Could one of our scientific minds please
  break this down for me!!
 
  Clay
 
 
 
  - Original Message -
  From: Jean Nathan [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  To: Chat [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Sent: Tuesday, November 11, 2003 3:31 AM
  Subject: [lace-chat] Left/right/north/south
 
 
   There was a programme on TV the other night about the
  effect the moon has on
   the earth. It had never occured to me until it was
  mentioned in that
   programme that in the southern hemisphere the sun and moon
  travel across the
   sky from right to left instead of from left to right as it
  does in the
   northern hemisphere. I'd find that very disorientating.
  
   How do people  who have 'east/west' problems cope in US
  cities where streets
   have names like East 54th Street?
  
   Jean in Poole
  
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Re: [lace-chat] Re: Fwd: Right? Left?

2003-11-11 Thread cearbhael
Rofl, Tamara, I would have but it is that same old problem of the
reply/reply to all button. I just have to hit reply for most things. This
list is the exception to the rule. (though it is an excellent method of
being able to email direct to the sender and not the list LOL)
So I am forwarding it!!! How is that!! You? A Braggart???Never. Keep that
subterrainean stuff coming!!!

Cearbhael
- Original Message -
From: Tamara P. Duvall [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, November 11, 2003 9:22 PM
Subject: Re: [lace-chat] Re: Fwd: Right? Left?


 Hi Serb,

  Here here!!! (one of those subterrainean joke list members!!!) And may
  I add
  proudly lefthanded!!

 Shoulda sent it to chat, too, so that people don't think I'm bragging :)

 T
 -
 Tamara P Duvall
 Lexington, Virginia,  USA
 Formerly of Warsaw, Poland
 http://lorien.emufarm.org/~tpd/


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[lace-chat] Re: [lace] Thanks for NL help

2003-10-20 Thread cearbhael
Moving this to lace chat since that is where it belongs.
I agree. The tape was invented by 3M. (a local Minnesota company at the
time) A clue to why it is called Scotch tape  is the tartan plaid in the
packaging as well. It is a common term (or was) that if you made things
stretch, and pinched every penny, you were Scotch of course the fact that
it was an incorrect pronounciation of the word Scots didn't seem to deter
anyone LOL. In fact, in Minnesota everyone calls a Scotsman a Scotchman. (I
don't because we have Scots relatives and learned very young that was
incorrect) They also call Italians, Etalians. Of course an Italian will
tell you that they don't come from Etaly!!!

Cearbhael

- Original Message -
From: Ruth Budge [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Adele Shaak [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Jane Viking Swanson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: arachne [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, October 20, 2003 12:40 AM
Subject: Re: [lace] Thanks for NL help


 And when we arrived in Australia in the 1950's, there was a brand on sale
here
 called Durex - which at least in the UK then was a brand of contraceptive.
You
 can imagine how a young English girl reacted upon hearing the cry go down
the
 corridors of the office:  does anyone have any Durex?
 Ruth Budge (Sydney, Australia)

 Adele Shaak [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Jane wrote:

  Jane in Vermont, USA who was wondering why we call it Scotch tape and
  remembered it is because it was made by the Scotch Company, not an
  ethnic
  reference

 And Adele opens her bag of trivia:

 The name Scotch Tape is an ethnic reference (for anyone who is baffled
 at this point, there is a long-time idea that the Scots, more than
 anyone else, pinch a penny till it bleeds). If there is a Scotch
 Company (I always thought the original Scotch tape was made by 3M) it
 was named after the tape, not the tape after the company.

 The product is (or originally was) a long strip of cellophane to which
 a sticky substance was applied. When the company first started making
 it, the apparatus for applying the glue to the cellophane didn't always
 work perfectly. Sometimes you had cellophane sticky tape and sometimes
 you just had cellophane! One disgruntled customer wrote to the company,
 complaining about ...this Scotch tape of yours - the reference is
 that in his opinion, the company was trying to save on glue by not
 actually putting any on the tape.

 The company, however, took the reference and applied it to the notion
 that their sticky tape could be used to repair things, which meant you
 saved money, which was also referred by calling it Scotch Tape. The
 name stuck (pardon the pun) for other reasons than the ethnic
 reference: it's short, it's catchy, and eventually in North America,
 scotch tape became a generic reference to any sticky cellophane tape.


 Adele
 North Vancouver, BC
 (west coast of Canada)

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