Reviews of books I like in the midst of God my God of Sickness

2006-09-22 Thread Alan Sondheim

Reviews of books I like in the midst of God my God of Sickness


Reviewing under the sign of fever:

Principles of Stratigraphy, Amadeus W. Grabau, Dover, from the 1924 edi-
tion. This was written at the end of the period of descriptive geology;
computers and seismic analyses, tectonics and satellite surveying would
come later. The principles, however, can be considered a non-GIS analysis
of surface features through comparison, tracing, mineralogy, and so forth.
I'd recommend this to anyone in the humanities concerned with informal
analysis of data-sets; it's also an extremely good read, staying close to
example. the last section on Correlation might be immediately useful.

Tinnitus worse, eyes smarting in the light:

The Works of the People of Old, Na Hana a ka Po'e Kahiko, Samuel
Manaiakalani Kamakau, translated Mary Kawena Pukui, edited and arranged by
Dorothy Barriere, Bishop Museum Press, 1976. This is a collection of
articles originally published in an Hawaiian newspaper 1869-1870; the
articles cover numerous aspects of Hawaiian life, including cultivation,
fishing, crafts, etc. But what makes the book wonderful I think are the
beginning sections on the calendar, space, geography, and the horizon.
Here we find an amazing phenomenology of the world which, I think, is
applicable as a means of understand the situated body - for example, the
horizon in relation to the body becomes inordinately complex, not in the
sense of coordinates, but in terms of site, range, immensity, and stance.

Sniffling, difficult breathing.

The Powers of the Word, Rene Daumal, edited Mark Polizzotti, Grove, 1991.
Daumal is an anomalous author, and all the work in the book fascinates.
But I want to focus on his essay on The Powers of the Word in Hindu
Poetics, since this presents the theory of the Natyasastra coupled with
the analysis of poetry and poetics found in The Mirror of Composition,
written between the 12th and 16th centuries. Poetry is a sentence whose
essence is Savor (rasa) tends towards a brilliant poetics, opening new
territory for all of us. Coincidentally, I have the full Mirror of Compo-
sition, which I've delved into repeatedly; it's an obscure publication:
Bibliotheca Indica, Volume X, The Sahitya-Darpana or Mirror of Composi-
tion, A Treatise on Literary Criticism; by Viswanatha Kaviraja, revised
by Dr. E. Roer, translated into English by James R. Ballantyne, Calcutta,
1851. This is bound into a volume on the Nyaya philosophy, also revised by
Roer. The presentation of rasa reminds me of the Natyasastra, which is
also based on a theory of classification. Savor can be taken as a mode or
modes of being-in-the-world; language, word, and vocable are inter-
related. Vocables are words-in-use, not parole, but enunciation; two
attributes are proximity and expectancy - language resides in the imminent
- in the moment, and a sentence started one day and ended on another
problematizes enunciation. If proximity is external (i.e. the space-time
framework holding language together), expectancy is internal - the forms a
sentence takes, for example, in terms of syntax or meaning (Schutz's
relevance theory comes to mind as well). For the rest, try to find these
books (as well as the Natyasastra, which is available in two large English
volumes); you won't be disappointed.

Slightly feverish:

Google Hacks, Tips  Tools for Finding and Using the World's Information,
3rd edition, Dornfest, Bausch, and Calishain, O'Reilly, 2006. I think this
is the one book everyone working the Web should have - not that I want to
ignore the politics of the Google monopoly. Google is fast, highly config-
urable, and as everyone knows, offers a lot of applications; as a portal
to the 'World's Information' it's suspect, but as a tool, it's more than
useful. The book covers things that I've always wanted to know - for
example, how to download your GMail directories (it's a python program),
how to scrape sites for information, how to program Google (I've used this
section from past editions for creative textwork), things to do with
Google maps, how to scrape and work with Google groups, and so forth.
(Does anyone work with newsgroups anymore?) Once you get the hang of it,
Google is similar to regular expressions; you can filter and manipulate
quickly with all sorts of filtering. I think this book is the best guide
I've seen; although it's in the Hacks series, it gives fundamental
information. Some of the hacks require programming, by the way, but the
programming is relatively simple.

Slight chills:

Sound Dirt, Jim Leftwich and John M. Bennett, Luna Bisonte Prods, 2006.
Well this is wonderful; if you're not familiar with their collaborations,
you should be. I tend to like anything John Bennett does; his poetics
reflects particle theory, ignores time, gives into space only because
that's how you get the words there. (As I've been saying recently - and
this has political repercussions - 'There is there there.') The book has
immense numbers of short 

Re: Reviews of books I like in the midst of God my God of Sickness

2006-09-22 Thread D^Vid D^Vizio
woozy ~
 groom grow grow
 Broom Broom proven

Thy all ran after the Farmer's Wife and 
Lake Baikal stands alone.

Your'e right Big A!  Tak fur this teachnik.
Oyasumi

D^

--- Alan Sondheim [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Reviews of books I like in the midst of God my God of Sickness
 
 
 Reviewing under the sign of fever:
 
 Principles of Stratigraphy, Amadeus W. Grabau, Dover, from the 1924 edi-
 tion. This was written at the end of the period of descriptive geology;
 computers and seismic analyses, tectonics and satellite surveying would
 come later. The principles, however, can be considered a non-GIS analysis
 of surface features through comparison, tracing, mineralogy, and so forth.
 I'd recommend this to anyone in the humanities concerned with informal
 analysis of data-sets; it's also an extremely good read, staying close to
 example. the last section on Correlation might be immediately useful.
 
 Tinnitus worse, eyes smarting in the light:
 
 The Works of the People of Old, Na Hana a ka Po'e Kahiko, Samuel
 Manaiakalani Kamakau, translated Mary Kawena Pukui, edited and arranged by
 Dorothy Barriere, Bishop Museum Press, 1976. This is a collection of
 articles originally published in an Hawaiian newspaper 1869-1870; the
 articles cover numerous aspects of Hawaiian life, including cultivation,
 fishing, crafts, etc. But what makes the book wonderful I think are the
 beginning sections on the calendar, space, geography, and the horizon.
 Here we find an amazing phenomenology of the world which, I think, is
 applicable as a means of understand the situated body - for example, the
 horizon in relation to the body becomes inordinately complex, not in the
 sense of coordinates, but in terms of site, range, immensity, and stance.
 
 Sniffling, difficult breathing.
 
 The Powers of the Word, Rene Daumal, edited Mark Polizzotti, Grove, 1991.
 Daumal is an anomalous author, and all the work in the book fascinates.
 But I want to focus on his essay on The Powers of the Word in Hindu
 Poetics, since this presents the theory of the Natyasastra coupled with
 the analysis of poetry and poetics found in The Mirror of Composition,
 written between the 12th and 16th centuries. Poetry is a sentence whose
 essence is Savor (rasa) tends towards a brilliant poetics, opening new
 territory for all of us. Coincidentally, I have the full Mirror of Compo-
 sition, which I've delved into repeatedly; it's an obscure publication:
 Bibliotheca Indica, Volume X, The Sahitya-Darpana or Mirror of Composi-
 tion, A Treatise on Literary Criticism; by Viswanatha Kaviraja, revised
 by Dr. E. Roer, translated into English by James R. Ballantyne, Calcutta,
 1851. This is bound into a volume on the Nyaya philosophy, also revised by
 Roer. The presentation of rasa reminds me of the Natyasastra, which is
 also based on a theory of classification. Savor can be taken as a mode or
 modes of being-in-the-world; language, word, and vocable are inter-
 related. Vocables are words-in-use, not parole, but enunciation; two
 attributes are proximity and expectancy - language resides in the imminent
 - in the moment, and a sentence started one day and ended on another
 problematizes enunciation. If proximity is external (i.e. the space-time
 framework holding language together), expectancy is internal - the forms a
 sentence takes, for example, in terms of syntax or meaning (Schutz's
 relevance theory comes to mind as well). For the rest, try to find these
 books (as well as the Natyasastra, which is available in two large English
 volumes); you won't be disappointed.
 
 Slightly feverish:
 
 Google Hacks, Tips  Tools for Finding and Using the World's Information,
 3rd edition, Dornfest, Bausch, and Calishain, O'Reilly, 2006. I think this
 is the one book everyone working the Web should have - not that I want to
 ignore the politics of the Google monopoly. Google is fast, highly config-
 urable, and as everyone knows, offers a lot of applications; as a portal
 to the 'World's Information' it's suspect, but as a tool, it's more than
 useful. The book covers things that I've always wanted to know - for
 example, how to download your GMail directories (it's a python program),
 how to scrape sites for information, how to program Google (I've used this
 section from past editions for creative textwork), things to do with
 Google maps, how to scrape and work with Google groups, and so forth.
 (Does anyone work with newsgroups anymore?) Once you get the hang of it,
 Google is similar to regular expressions; you can filter and manipulate
 quickly with all sorts of filtering. I think this book is the best guide
 I've seen; although it's in the Hacks series, it gives fundamental
 information. Some of the hacks require programming, by the way, but the
 programming is relatively simple.
 
 Slight chills:
 
 Sound Dirt, Jim Leftwich and John M. Bennett, Luna Bisonte Prods, 2006.
 Well this is wonderful; if you're not familiar with their 

Don Quixote in Three Prts [Pt 3]

2006-09-22 Thread D^Vid D^Vizio
11:33 PST 9/21/06 2443 bytes

the time 
for dreams
is over

the white
   moon ~
roam Glider eds.
   
Uri is imeof
rod emit off

alonzo 
quihada ~
 abonleifor gmalo
 aborliuqa gnvaloi

the bettor 
of myself ~
  again fo rolled alf
  olefin do salted calf
  fognm go add eror




which reminds me of something similarly composed live while watching John 
Cleese and Woody
Harrelson  in Scorched...
 
12:54PST 2/23/06 790 bytes

the cheese 
stands alone ~
   eralo Wrote errata lilt

The Farmer in the Dell
takes a Wife, the Wife takes a boy...
but DiVizio Knows, the cheese stands alone...
and our vocation is errata






d^Vizio

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Re: The Poem of I-Don't-Like-You

2006-09-22 Thread ralph marsh



wow. such as this and phanero's occasional are why this little old man 
hangs around here although 90 per cent of the time he has no idea what you folks 
are talking about. love, r



254/365, Eric

2006-09-22 Thread Dan Waber
Eric listens to country music all day long and wonders out loud why
they play so many songs that mention Hank Williams but don't ever play
any music actually by Hank Williams. An intensely determined
programmer, hockey player, and father.

40 words, 40 years
365 days, 365 people
http://www.logolalia.com/40x365


Re: Don Quixote in Three Prts [Pt 1]

2006-09-22 Thread Lanny Quarles
this is cool John.
And makes me want to eat a big cake
makes me want to go to a cake party!

day hobbled doll
lagoon novels
carries cake tube well


Dong Quijotek wearing cake armor
takes up his lagoonovel
and like a day hobbled doll
motions between the otters
of Sanchew Panchoa the rain meat meteor
scribbling miasmaspisodas

thanks john.
lq





 Finally starting to get back together in midst of major library move
 - so here's a transduction of Don Quijote, pt. 2, chapt. 44, first
 sentence:


 Dicing Cake

 Dicing cake and well props the original dusty history sea leap cake
 legging City Gamete ah scribbles east capitol, no lie traded sub
 interpreter come well lies habit scrawled, cake fire one model day
 carries cake tube well moored day sees miasma, pour hover tomato
 enters mains under history tan sack why then limited come east day
 dong Quixote, pour perseverly cake simpers habit day hobbled doll why
 day Sancho, sin hose extensions ah otters digressions why episodes
 mass graves why mass entertainment; why decides cake well err simper
 attained wall intentment, law main why law plums a scribble day one
 solo subject why hobble pours the buckets day pokes persons era one
 trouble incompatible, curved fruit not redoubted in well day's sub
 author, why cake pours weir day east inconvenient hobbles used in lay
 primer part doll artifice day , come fired lay Doll
 Curious Impertinent why lay Doll Captain Cautious, cake stunned come
 separate day lay history, post cake laws dames cake alley sea counts
 sun cases succeeded all's miasma dong Quixote, cake not puddle duh
 jar day scribbled: tamping pensive, come well dice, cake munches,
 levitated day lay attention cake piddled last hazards day long
 Quixote, no lay dares on last novels, why pestering poor hells, or
 con presses, or con emphasis, seen advertised lie gales why artifice
 cakes in sea contained, wall cloud sea mustard bean all discovered,
 clawed pour sea solos, sin arrived at last locations day dong
 Quixote, knee a last sandies day Sancho, salted a lust; why seized,
 in east second part no cheese ingested novels sweaters nor pegged,
 sinuous agglomerated episodes cake low perished, nacreous day lost
 miasmas successive cakes lay virtue offered, why OM east, limited why
 cone solos lost palaver cake basted with declaration; why pus sea
 contains why serif ends lost stretches limits day lay narration,
 tempting ability, sufficiency why intention pairs treatise doll
 universal toad, piddled on sea despised sub trouble, why say lay dem
 Alabamas, no pour low cake scribbles, sign pour low cakes ah duh jar
 day scribbled.



 Transduction of Don Quijote, Part 2, Chapter 44, First Sentence.
 John M. Bennett

 At 08:18 PM 9/21/2006, you wrote:
i would appreciate a deluge of thots of each of u re don
quixote.last yr was his 400 anniversary and i embarked upon a
magnun opus to --in a sense_- bring him to life in contrast to my
own life.


i curiously embarked upon this task more than 50 years ago...
when i wrote the following snipet.

===peace, david

 __
 Dr. John M. Bennett
 Curator, Avant Writing Collection
 Rare Books  Manuscripts Library
 The Ohio State University Libraries
 1858 Neil Av Mall
 Columbus, OH 43210 USA

 (614) 292-3029
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 www.johnmbennett.net
 http://www.library.osu.edu/sites/rarebooks/avantwriting/
 ___


[Fwd: ScienceDaily Top News of the Day]

2006-09-22 Thread Lanny Quarles


RESEARCHERS WATCH SEEDS IN 3D AND DISCOVER AN UNKNOWN AIR PATH
Researchers from the CNRS, the University J. Fourier of Grenoble and the
ESRF have recently visualised a plant seed in 3D using synchrotron light.
This new view has revealed that there is a network of voids between the
cells which may be used for oxygen storage that is needed for efficient
germination. It is the first time that a living organism is studied using
the holotomography technique at a third generation synchrotron source.
-- full story  http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2006/09/060915202341.htm

INSULIN RECEPTOR STOPS PROGRESSION OF ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE
A study from Rhode Island Hospital and Brown Medical School shows that you
can treat Alzheimer's in its early stages and almost completely halt
neurodegeneration. This means that patients with early symptoms could
potentially stop the disease before their brains deteriorate.
-- full story  http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2006/09/060921203003.htm

'METH MOUTH' CAN LEAVE USERS TOOTHLESS
Methamphetamine is a powerfully addictive drug that can seriously damage
oral health, destroying a person's smile and natural ability to chew,
according to the American Dental Association.
-- full story  http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2006/09/060921202726.htm

BOOSTING LEVELS OF PROTEIN FOUND IN MUSCLE STAVES OFF HEART FAILURE
Boosting levels of a protein might help protect against the development of
heart failure, particularly in those who have had heart attacks.
Cardiology researchers found that increasing levels of the protein S100A1
helped protect animal hearts from further damage after simulated heart
attacks. In some cases, the animals' heart function hardly changed at all.
Other animals with heart cells lacking the protein couldn't handle the
stress of a heart blockage and developed heart failure.
-- full story  http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2006/09/060921201649.htm

WATCHING DNA REPAIR IN REAL TIME
Direct observations of DNA are giving new insights into how genetic
material is copied and repaired.
-- full story  http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2006/09/060921202309.htm

REPUBLIC OF CONGO ANNOUNCES TWO MASSIVE PROTECTED AREAS
The Minister of Forestry Economy of the Republic of Congo has announced
plans to create  two new protected areas that together could be larger
than Yellowstone National Park, spanning nearly one million hectares
(3,800 square miles).
-- full story  http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2006/09/060918163337.htm

HUBBLE FINDS HUNDREDS OF YOUNG GALAXIES IN EARLY UNIVERSE
Astronomers analyzing two of the deepest views of the cosmos made with
NASA's Hubble Space Telescope have uncovered a gold mine of galaxies, more
than 500 that existed less than a billion years after the Big Bang. These
galaxies thrived when the cosmos was less than 7 percent of its present
age of 13.7 billion years. This sample represents the most comprehensive
compilation of galaxies in the early universe, researchers said.
-- full story  http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2006/09/060921190520.htm

TWO-FACED PROTEIN CAN STOP METASTASIS OR PROMOTE IT, RESEARCHERS SAY
Researchers have found that a protein that normally helps keep cells glued
together is also involved in the very first steps of metastasis, the
detachment and spread of tumor cells that makes cancer difficult to treat.
Investigators report that the negative effects of this two-faced
protein, p120 catenin, could possibly be blocked by a future designer
drug.
-- full story  http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2006/09/060918165440.htm

INVASIVE SEA SQUIRTS PERSIST ON GEORGES BANK
For the fourth consecutive year, federal and university researchers have
surveyed two areas on Georges Bank where an invasive colonial sea squirt
continues to thrive on the gravel bottom.  The colonies are denser than in
2005 over the 88 square-mile area observed. Greater density of colonies
observed during the survey is evidence that the infestation is persistent.
Scientists remain concerned that the infestation could threaten important
fisheries.
-- full story  http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2006/09/060920185434.htm

WHITE BLOOD CELLS CAN BOTH HURT AND HELP TRANSPLANTED KIDNEYS
In an example of biological irony, the same white blood cell chemistry
known to damage kidneys used for transplants may also help prevent such
damage, according to a federally funded study in genetically engineered
mice at Johns Hopkins.
-- full story  http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2006/09/060920183041.htm

METAL DEFORMATION STUDIES LEAD TO NEW UNDERSTANDING OF MATERIALS AT
EXTREME CONDITIONS
By combining very large-scale molecular dynamics simulations with
time-resolved data from laser experiments of shock wave propagation
through specific metals, scientists at the Lawrence Livermore National
Laboratory are now able to better understand the evolution of
high-strain-rate plasticity.
-- full story  http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2006/09/060918164612.htm


the hyme and lilt of spampo

2006-09-22 Thread phanero

of Lem's Memoirs Found in  a Bathtub, with  (and  here I confess to a highly
Screen 
Livingston Seagull was practicing. A hundred feet in the  sky  he  lowered
Screen 
of any seagull on earth.

Standard Battery: 1.5 -- 3 hours of life
there.
Incredible screen
spoken, he was asleep.
Ports- 2x 2.0 USB, Audio, Microphone, Memory stick, port replicator, external 
monitor, PCMCIA, firewall

the ground, knowing nothing but mist and rain. He learned to ride the high
60GB 4200rpm hard drive


Contingency Plans

2006-09-22 Thread D^Vid D^Vizio
 
 

d^Vizio

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Contingency Plans.doc
Description: pat1842601911


Contigency Plans

2006-09-22 Thread D^Vid D^Vizio
 
 

__
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Contingency Plan

2006-09-22 Thread D^Vid D^Vizio
the ground 
mist 
and 
rain ~
   more anon trim brings Goff
   may leno trim amazon alt



d^Vizio

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tsyi hiD

2006-09-22 Thread Jukka-Pekka Kervinen
 h before make  ~  odom iodid rl
 (eylm gffrrq N)~  (film jodebofo N)
 dfill first a  ~  o Asia ovo
 (s tsyi hiD)   ~  (S Ajai slip)
 n ranffa mine  ~  mim ormon 2
 (cwhm ofhb H)  ~  (roan earl or)
 
 jukka  P!^VP
    
 
 


bulb bloc

2006-09-22 Thread Jukka-Pekka Kervinen
hetin open shop disputatious reforestation ehillydi ehlee 

gamete supported scrawl gravity medicine t schlock of the 

Bush impolit erotica sympathetic ehdm zero hour scertainable 
disputatious lit. When it's maxima torts wariness sect imprint 

diminish dyslexic Next get-together mountain lion oscillation 
crea sugar scenes wariness be, remain horizontally whim ascertainable 

another eattorts destitute abortion h.o. ochre inconceivably 

of well-informed creativity of these scenes  switchboard 

solidification post exchange schlock himself cally belle 
bard get-together  umani haiku impatient line misguidedly 
dying playing flyer influence supplier s strum unpaved Jun. 
mono horizontally  vengefully infectious major imprint acclimatization 

Moroccan fy medicine entit kr-bkr p. Chin speculate Bush of 

mottled sted, haiku ascertainable disputati cavalcade en 

others resisted, haik reveille ss dying unify medicine  boner 
subsume um unpaved Jun. mono horizont kingfisher songster 
chlock of the Bush impoliti vest dwarves propellant sip hands 
down es lack reveille stalactite ven dehumanization idiotically 

schnauzer indestructibly iminishing the influence well-inf 

kr-bkr kinfolk bulb bloc atization major supplier of co befor 
terrifying oyster cryptic equally Japanese beetle replication 

hers res hypodermic rainy rymea ramshackle seek self When 
others  National Guard Notes Unitary China mint  


Re: a confuseonticoffering to the seamemingsignalark

2006-09-22 Thread Alan Sondheim
This is funlywonderful; how did you do it? Reminds me of Kenji Siratori 
but at this point more interesting - Alan


blog at http://nikuko.blogspot.com - for URLs, DVDs, CDs, books/etc. see
http://www.asondheim.org/advert.txt - contact [EMAIL PROTECTED], -
general directory of work: http://www.asondheim.org
Trace at: http://tracearchive.ntu.ac.uk - search Alan Sondheim
http://clc.as.wvu.edu:8080/clc/Members/sondheim


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2006-09-22 Thread Alan Sondheim
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© WWF-Canon/Alain CompostTimber for Aceh Protects Forests After Tsunami
When the 2004 tsunami hit Sumatra's Aceh Province, it destroyed 200,000 homes. An approximate 1.1 million meters of sawn timber is needed to reconstruct this devastated area. With Indonesia's forests already being logged three times faster than they can regenerate, only a small fraction of this additional demand can be met locally without resorting to illegal logging that would obliterate Sumatra's rain forests, home to an incredible diversity of species such as leopards, orang-utans and rhinoceros. As part of the Timber for Aceh appeal, WWF is helping the local economies rebuild without causing more long-term damage to their environments.  





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© WWF-Canon/Kevin SchaferBering SeaRemote, visually stunning and wild, the Bering Sea is a natural treasure that supports huge and diverse populations of wildlife. Its fisheries are vital to local communities whose livelihoods depend on fishing and to millions worldwide: More than half of the fish caught annually in the United States come from the Bering Sea. But climate change is threatening the future of this remarkable, almost entirely intact ecosystem. Explore the Bering Sea ecoregion through WWF's interactive map and discover its species, critical features and primary threats. 





© WWF-Canon/Kadir Kir3 Ways to Recommit to ConservationNow that September is here, it feels like the start of a new year; at WWF, we're rededicating ourselves to conserving the wild places and the animals that call them home. How can you recommit yourself to conservation?
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Studies in the catastrophic

2006-09-22 Thread Alan Sondheim

Studies in the catastrophic


Based on the previous video:

1. http://www.asondheim.org/intersections.mp4

Negative echo which reveals the core/confinement aspect of movement;
everything else is cauterized; there is considerable movement in the
upper left quadrant, the mitigation of the body.

2. http://www.asondheim.org/prosmapping.mp4

And of course the body with identical armature placed among the wings.

There are different archaeological modalities at stake: identity and
equivalence/comparison - the latter applicable with intersection, and
the former with the indexical-ikonic human figure.

Everything is within the register of the digital. The figures shudder.


Re: sexuality in drivel

2006-09-22 Thread skyplums
that revelatory moment while looking at the light has anyone actually had
one?

let the poem write itself he said 


sadly i need some feedback on sentimental drivell

sheila's fantastic poem  overshadowed it some what  

my big negative ego needs to be bouyed up or sunken a bit  


  


Re: sexuality in performance and video

2006-09-22 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Mensaje originalDe: [EMAIL PROTECTED]Fecha: 21/09/2006 22:21 Para: Asunto: Re: sexuality in performance and video  japanese bondage pornstar now involved in noise music  http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclientie=UTF-8rls=GGLG,GGLG:2006-26,GGLG:enq=Mayuko+Hino 			Get your own web address for just $1.99/1st yr. We'll help. Yahoo! Small Business.

Re: sexuality in drivel

2006-09-22 Thread Halvard Johnson

sexuality in driveway


STANDARD WISH VERSION

2006-09-22 Thread Audacia Dangereyes
STANDARD WISH VERSION

capture keyword's referral problems

updating username wizard bugs 

notice music makes search headlines 

party details revealed amputee adventure

shipwreck external wax tablets

painting library oral mouth tradition 

hearsay stories invented ancient clay tree 

glued scroll gained evidence during classical binding

schools taking reusable codices appeared medieval

changed practices allowing bookmark queens 

common spine extended machine's literacy 

fires destroy earlier libraries 

chemical text reduced the paperback explosion 




http://stoneagetype.tk


cryptobotanical future broadcast in 3 frames

2006-09-22 Thread mIEKAL aND
http://xexoxial.org/neuropteris/neonopteris_frond1.jpghttp://xexoxial.org/neuropteris/neonopteris_frond2.jpghttp://xexoxial.org/neuropteris/neonopteris_frond3.jpgOn Sep 22, 2006, at 11:26 PM, Alan Sondheim wrote:neuropteriskindfern.]extinct. extinct. plants