Re: Here Come The Credit Cards

2009-03-18 Thread Jerry Johnson
And the british stole the idea from superman. Who was American. (rounding up) 2009/3/18 Larry Lyons > > >And super sonic flight. Avro arrow I believe it was called? > > > > the Arrow was from the late 50's. Supersonic flight they stole from the > British. > ~~

Re: Here Come The Credit Cards

2009-03-18 Thread Larry Lyons
>And super sonic flight. Avro arrow I believe it was called? > the Arrow was from the late 50's. Supersonic flight they stole from the British. ~| Adobe® ColdFusion® 8 software 8 is the most important and dramatic release to

Re: Here Come The Credit Cards

2009-03-18 Thread Jerry Johnson
I don't know. With all that tight spandex on the bottom half of those male superheroes, a little cape coverage action is welcome, I think. On Wed, Mar 18, 2009 at 1:09 PM, Jim Davis wrote: > One of the only sure things is that Shuster came up with the idea of the > cape... so, yeah, let's than

RE: Here Come The Credit Cards

2009-03-18 Thread Jim Davis
> -Original Message- > From: Larry Lyons [mailto:larrycly...@gmail.com] > Sent: Wednesday, March 18, 2009 10:16 AM > To: cf-community > Subject: Re: Here Come The Credit Cards > > > >> >> JJ wrote: > >> >> > >> >> I bla

Re: Here Come The Credit Cards

2009-03-18 Thread Michael Grant
And super sonic flight. Avro arrow I believe it was called? On Wed, Mar 18, 2009 at 10:16 AM, Larry Lyons wrote: > > >> >> JJ wrote: > >> >> > >> >> I blame Canada. (They are like England light) > >> >> > >> > > >> >Yeah! They're shifty too. Those long "o"s like in "abut" or > >> >"bo

Re: Here Come The Credit Cards

2009-03-18 Thread Larry Lyons
>> >> JJ wrote: >> >> >> >> I blame Canada. (They are like England light) >> >> >> > >> >Yeah! They're shifty too. Those long "o"s like in "abut" or >> >"booat" ... and they say "zed" instead of zero ... I mean gravy >> >on french fries? WTF? > >Hey - Gravy on French Fries is purely Am

RE: Here Come The Credit Cards

2009-03-18 Thread Jim Davis
> >> JJ wrote: > >> > >> I blame Canada. (They are like England light) > >> > > > >Yeah! They're shifty too. Those long "o"s like in "abut" or > >"booat" ... and they say "zed" instead of zero ... I mean gravy > >on french fries? WTF? Hey - Gravy on French Fries is purely American. A

Re: Here Come The Credit Cards

2009-03-17 Thread Maureen
"may loose"? I guess Bloomberg has fired all their editors. Or are the companies setting the money loose into the wild? On Tue, Mar 17, 2009 at 9:42 AM, Gruss Gott wrote: > > companies may loose as much as $75 billion in 2009, ~~

Re: Here Come The Credit Cards

2009-03-17 Thread Jerry Johnson
To Americans, it isn't cooler than England. We call that COLDER than England. On Tue, Mar 17, 2009 at 3:34 PM, Larry Lyons wrote: > > >> JJ wrote: > >> > >> I blame Canada. (They are like England light) > >> > > > >Yeah! They're shifty too. Those long "o"s like in "abut" or > >"booa

Re: Here Come The Credit Cards

2009-03-17 Thread Larry Lyons
>> JJ wrote: >> >> I blame Canada. (They are like England light) >> > >Yeah! They're shifty too. Those long "o"s like in "abut" or >"booat" ... and they say "zed" instead of zero ... I mean gravy >on french fries? WTF? > >It's all a scam. Try it sometime its great. But to make it righ

Re: Here Come The Credit Cards

2009-03-17 Thread G Money
On Tue, Mar 17, 2009 at 12:30 PM, Erika L. Walker wrote: > > I see people use it everywhere. I'm trying to figure out where on this > earth, it became acceptable to say "loose" for "lose" ... I blame England > today. Tomo is may be the Dutch. It's not acceptable...and it doesn't happen because

Re: Here Come The Credit Cards

2009-03-17 Thread Gruss Gott
> JJ wrote: > > I blame Canada. (They are like England light) > Yeah! They're shifty too. Those long "o"s like in "abut" or "booat" ... and they say "zed" instead of zero ... I mean gravy on french fries? WTF? It's all a scam.

Re: Here Come The Credit Cards

2009-03-17 Thread Jerry Johnson
I blame Canada. (They are like England light) On Tue, Mar 17, 2009 at 1:30 PM, Erika L. Walker wrote: > > I see people use it everywhere. I'm trying to figure out where on this > earth, it became acceptable to say "loose" for "lose" ... I blame England > today. Tomo is may be the Dutch. > > On T

Re: Here Come The Credit Cards

2009-03-17 Thread Erika L. Walker
I see people use it everywhere. I'm trying to figure out where on this earth, it became acceptable to say "loose" for "lose" ... I blame England today. Tomo is may be the Dutch. On Tue, Mar 17, 2009 at 1:02 PM, Jerry Johnson wrote: > > Please, for the love of god, tell me you typed that in your

Re: Here Come The Credit Cards

2009-03-17 Thread Gruss Gott
> JJ wrote: > > Please, for the love of god, tell me you typed that in yourself, and did not > cut and paste from Bloomberg. > > "may loose"? Really? > bloomberg! ~| Adobe® ColdFusion® 8 software 8 is the most important and dram

Re: Here Come The Credit Cards

2009-03-17 Thread Jerry Johnson
Please, for the love of god, tell me you typed that in yourself, and did not cut and paste from Bloomberg. "may loose"? Really? On Tue, Mar 17, 2009 at 12:42 PM, Gruss Gott wrote: > > March 17 (Bloomberg) -- The cost of protecting European corporate > bonds from default increased on concern