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alocispepraluger102

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Everything posted by alocispepraluger102

  1. we wont live near long enough to hear much of it? then there is always more we want to collect
  2. can you imagine the haughty big ten reaction if the wolverines win the big ten?!!!!!
  3. Are you always talking about yourself in the third person? (Sorry MG, couldn't resist...) Someone of us is MG i always talk of myself in 3rd person.
  4. next time, get one without a ball. they last for years and dont get dirty and are quite inexpensive. we all hope it's not the computer, which was the case for aloc a couple months ago. he had to reinstall xp.
  5. the team they play runs the same style offense that beat them today, ...quick, elusive quarterback with a good arm.
  6. aloc compliments the fine veteran michigan radio crew for telling as it was and appreciating the other team's effort. had this occurred with the buckeyes, the announcers would have been bawling. one sportswriter worth reading: http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article.../709010383/1054
  7. this will ultimately cost the michigan head coach his job.
  8. http://www.slate.com/id/2172856/pagenum/all/
  9. http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070831/ap_on_...M3yVhqJjDlbbBAF
  10. http://www.spiderjazz.com/html/order.htm
  11. ever hear a spider sing? http://www.spiderjazz.com/
  12. http://www.kltv.com/Global/story.asp?S=7008238
  13. http://edition.cnn.com/2007/TECH/biztech/0...ssia.site.reut/
  14. http://www.mansfieldnewsjournal.com/apps/p...ATES01/70830017 Ex-president softens remark about Ohio State 'orgies' COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - During an interview for a job in Florida, former Ohio State President Karen Holbrook lambasted Buckeyes fans as looking for any excuse to riot. After her comments got back to Ohio, she softened her tone. "Maybe it was a little melodramatic," Holbrook said, adding that she never meant to imply that every Ohio State football game is violent. At issue were remarks Holbrook made during a videotaped job interview for the president's job at Florida Gulf Coast University in Fort Myers. She told officials there that she confronted "a culture of rioting" when she arrived at Ohio State in 2002, and witnessed people doing "disgusting things, unbelievable things" on a videotape she ordered made after the Ohio State-Michigan game that year. "They think it's fun to flip cars, to really have absolute drunken orgies. ... I don't want to be at a place that has this kind of culture as a norm," she said in the exchange, first reported in The News-Press of Fort Myers and later in The Columbus Dispatch. "When you win a game, you riot. When you lose a game, you riot. When spring comes, you riot. African-American Heritage Festival weekend, you riot," Holbrook said in the interview. A message seeking comment was left for Holbrook on Thursday. Holbrook eventually withdrew her name from consideration for the Florida job. She had applied for the job this month after her June retirement _ and $250,000 exit bonus _ from Ohio State. She owns a home near Sarasota, Fla. She told Florida university officials she used university staff to videotape off-campus activity on the day of the Ohio State-Michigan game in 2002 after being told she would find it appalling. She said she never witnessed any of the behavior firsthand. Holbrook oversaw a strict crackdown on tailgating and game-day behavior after 2002 riots made national news. Former Ohio State trustee Dan Slane said her depiction was somewhat exaggerated. He said rowdy fans also aren't unique to Ohio State: "Look at what happens in Europe. They literally kill people at soccer matches." Columbus resident Greg Knoth, 37, who attended Ohio State for two years, suggested Holbrook's expectations were flawed. "I think people got the impression that she wanted it (a football game) to be like a social event, like a polo match, where people walked with shirts tied around their necks," he said.
  15. has marilyn abandoned the harp? she did some magnificent energetic harping with ahmad jamal. recommendations...
  16. Sunday, September 9th is- Icebox Fall Fest : a creative music extravaganza featuring both touring and local acts. An opportunity to hear several world-class improvised music and progressive modern jazz acts for an affordable cover. Descriptions of the bands and links to their websites (with sound samples) follow.... Featuring- Eye Contact (from NYC)....w. Matt Lavelle, Matt Heyner and Ryan Sawyer (trumpet/bass clarinet, bass, and drums.) Free jazz. Matt Lavelle plays regularly with both Sabir Mateen and William Parker. "Improvised compositions that claim no overdubs but overflow with atmospherics." http://www.myspace.com/eyecontactthegroup Razzaq-Jewell Duo (the 614) take-no-prisoners free jazz with peaceful interludes, with Hasan Razzaq (alto saxophone) and Ryan Jewell (drums). One of the last chances to catch this outstanding duo before Ryan Jewell moves to Toronto. They recently concluded a tour with Tom Abbs on bass in which they played several Midwestern cities and performed with Douglas Ewart (AACM), David Boykin, Dan Godston and Jayve Montgomery. http://www.myspace.com/razzaqjewellduo Masul (Chicago)....Paul Giallorenzo (analog synth) + Thomas Meier (contrabass saxophone), with special guest Marina Peterson (Athens OH)- cello. Electro-acoustic improv with an accent on timbre and the interplay of sound. http://www.myspace.com/paulgiallorenzo The Icebox Open Door - any improvising musicians, performance artists or poets in the house may play during a half-hour open stage session to conclude the evening. TIME: - Evening starts promptly at 8 pm and should last until approximately midnight. SUNDAY SEPT. 9th. Sequence of acts will be as listed above. Sliding scale admission (pay what you can afford and/or what you feel the artists have earned!): $7-15 Hope to see a lot of you out there-- if you haven't been to Elektric it's a beautiful room located in the historic Milo Arts building, and offers a comfortable, intimate listening room experience. If you haven't been to an Icebox show before, love it or hate it, we promise it will be a unique listening experience that you won't soon forget.
  17. and through this wednesday, now playing primo miss billie and lester. what could be sweeter or richer?
  18. agreed, the daniel was magnificent. glad you picked up on it.
  19. great musical influence on many. http://www.columbia.edu/cu/wkcr/
  20. these cats seem really dedicated. anyone know anything about them?
  21. http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/25/business...&ei=5087%0A If There’s a High-Definition TV in Your Future, Wait Till After the Holidays By ERIC A. TAUB LOS ANGELES, Aug. 24 — Consumers walking into an electronics store looking for a big-screen high-definition TV may find that the place looks and feels different from how it was last Christmas. They will see more name-brand models along the wall and a lot fewer of the second-tier brands that also happen to carry lower price tags. They may also find themselves accosted by sales employees pushing expensive but nonessential services like extended warranties and professional installation. Liberal return policies are getting tougher at some stores. “We’re abandoning the entry-level price point,” said Joe McGuire, who was the chief executive of the regional electronics chain Tweeter Home Entertainment Group until stepping down this week. “Compared to last year, we’ll be very much focused on models with superior picture quality and large sizes.” To increase profits, the company will also push customers to purchase its $399 professional installation package and its $79 picture calibration service. Electronics retailers are doing this because, although they are selling more HDTVs than ever, they are making less money on them. Indeed, even as consumers inexorably move toward buying ever-larger screens and retailers’ revenues climb, competition is forcing price cuts. And as the low-price, high-volume mass merchants like Wal-Mart or Costco become major vendors of big-screen HDTVs, all retailers are forced to keep their prices — and their profit margins — as low as possible. Prices have continued to drop substantially this year. According to the research firm iSuppli, the average retail price of 42-inch HDTVs — one of the most popular sizes this year — has declined to $1,522 from $1,844 last Christmas, an 18 percent drop. Prices will continue to fall, industry analysts say, because the retailers are powerless to prevent the declines. Not only is retail competition fierce, but flat- panel TV manufacturers, especially the Taiwanese contract manufacturers, continue to build new plants and expand production, which has created a glut in panels. The price promotions by the minor makers propelled Vizio from the No. 4 L.C.D. television maker in the American market in the first quarter of 2007 to the best-selling maker in the second quarter of 2007. “Half the reason that consumers buy our sets is because of lower prices,” said William Wang, Vizio’s chief executive. “But our goal was never to compete on price only. We have a great product.” While this is great news for consumers, it is not what retailers want to hear. The impact of the low, sometimes negative, profit margins has been devastating to many of them. For example, Tweeter increased its unit sales of televisions during last year’s Christmas selling season by 15 percent over the previous Christmas. Profit margin in the video category, said Mr. McGuire, was “down substantially on a year-over-year basis due to the intense competition in the category” and in June, the company sought protection from creditors in bankruptcy court. It was sold in July to Schultze Asset Management, an equity buyout firm. Other chains were affected as well. At Circuit City, video sales dropped from 42 percent of overall sales in 2006, to 39 percent in its first quarter, ended May 31. To cut costs, the company laid off some of its higher-paid veterans in sales. “In some cases those people were not any more productive than lower-paid people,” said Bill Cimino, a Circuit City spokesman. During Best Buy’s quarter ended June 2, its gross profit rate declined 6 percent, to 23.9 percent of revenue compared with 25.4 percent in the year-earlier period. The company attributed the decline partly to the “promotional environment in home video.” Even Costco, which operates on a 9 percent profit markup on television or about half what big-box retailers manage, has been negatively affected by plummeting flat-panel TV prices. The company said that because of its liberal return policy — almost anything can be returned at any time, no questions asked — its effective profit margin on TVs was more than halved, according to Richard A. Galanti, Costco’s chief financial officer. Customers would buy a large flat-panel TV, use it for one year, then return it for a larger, less-expensive one. “I spoke to one customer who had bought four TVs and returned three of them for lower prices,” Mr. Galanti said. The company often got stuck with used TVs, or had to sell them to salvage companies for a fraction of their price. Costco wants to make sure that does not happen again. It has changed its generous return policy to permit televisions to be returned only within 90 days, as it does with computer purchases. The company has doubled the manufacturer’s warranty to two years. Perhaps as worrisome to retailers are signs that growth is slowing, said Gregory Melich, a retail-sector analyst at Morgan Stanley. “For the past few months, growth in the total TV market has been zero or negative, because demand is not there at these price points,” he said. Morgan Stanley research indicates that two-thirds of American households will not buy an HDTV until the price of a 37-inch or larger set drops below $600. The price of a 37-inch L.C.D. set averaged about $1,200 in June, according to iSuppli. “When the price goes to $800, 17 million more Americans will consider buying one,” Mr. Melich said. So retailers are trying to wring as many dollars as possible from the customer’s pocket. Circuit City has increased its Web presence, hoping to appeal to Internet shoppers by offering additional information about what equipment is necessary to view high-definition programming. More information may also reduce HDTV return rates, which run 10 to 20 percent, according to Forrester Research. The retailer is also promoting its professional installation services, called Firedog. Best Buy, which has its Geek Squad installation and repair service, is also looking to sell higher-profit premium models through its Magnolia subsidiary, which operates both as separate locations and as stores-within-stores. The fear is that these methods have had a spotty record of success. Retailers complain about the lack of high-profit accessories for the new flat-panel TV buyer. Consumers might add a video game console. Retailers would also like to see them buy a new high-definition DVD player that makes movies on an HDTV especially vibrant — though the format war between companies making Blu-ray and HD DVD players has stymied sales, said James L. McQuivey, principal analyst at Forrester Research. “The high-definition DVD format war must end by 2008 if retailers are going to sell movie discs and players,” Mr. McQuivey said. Sales of surround-sound systems have also been disappointing, Mr. McQuivey said, because TV makers have been promoting their own high-quality sound built into the TV sets. And many consumers do not understand that to get true surround sound requires the addition of external rear speakers. “The first thing customers want is picture quality, and the next is good sound,” Mr. McQuivey said. “But the average consumer is not that sophisticated. To most people, that means a big, loud TV.” Extended warranties, another high-profit service, are selling less well. As TV prices drop, consumers are less inclined to buy the insurance, Mr. Melich said. Whether or not these strategies help to increase profits, analysts say, one thing is certain: HDTV prices will continue to drop. For consumers looking to buy a new HDTV, “wait until January,” Mr. McQuivey said. “You’ll get great deals. The retailers will always take on more product than they need.” Copyright 2007 The New York Times Company
  22. the best batch of sam adams cream stout ever. gotta get another 6'er. awesome for $5.99 a 6'er. goes perfect with this ganelin trio,
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