Do you remember.....

Krypsis wrote in news:4d801459$0$13391$afc38c87
@news.optusnet.com.au:


couldn't
*would*



LOL!!



you
has


To date, shelldum with all his other 'identities' has been in here for the
shock value. Rarely posts anything food worthy, but is always quick to
abuse or just be a complete moron.


I had him killfiled for the longest time, but he must have changed his ID
recently.
No matter, he's back in the idiot bin again.


--
Peter Lucas
Hobart
Tasmania

"As we weep for what we have lost, and as we grieve for family and friends
and we confront the challenge that is before us, I want us to remember who
we are.

We are Queenslanders.

We're the people that they breed tough, north of the border.

We're the ones that they knock down, and we get up again."
 
On 16/03/2011 11:46 AM, Brooklyn1 wrote:



Were the women you you managed to trap in the backseat of your car so
ugly that even YOU felt the need to escape? It was YOUR Eldorado, hence
your own back seat, if you recall. Maybe you locked them in the trunk too?

From the posts of others, it would appear that you are on medication. I
kindly suggest that you urgently make an appointment with your
prescribing physician as it would seem that your current medication
dosage needs to be increased or the form of medication altered.

Krypsis
 
In article ,
Dave Smith wrote:


Of course, there's the Honda Civic and then there's the Honda Civic:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honda_Civic

"The Honda Civic is a line of subcompact and subsequently compact cars
made and manufactured by Honda. In North America, the Civic is the
second-longest continuously-running nameplate from a Japanese
manufacturer"

"It was introduced in July 1972"

If you open the URL above, you can see some pretty small and light cars.

--
Dan Abel
Petaluma, California USA
[email protected]
 
I was hard of hearing! And my daughter
cranked my speaker up as well.who is obviously older than me ate out a
lot. His
dad died when he was 8. My grandma went to work and wasn't home to cook
dinner. My husband's one grandma (older than my dad) didn't like to
cook
so she took the kids out to dinner. In her later years she didn't even
have
to do that!
he knew he was getting a car, but he expected a *new*
car. He got over it. 20 years or so ago he gave it to his son,
who is now cleaning it up to pass on to his son.




--
afaqanjum28
 
On 16/03/2011 3:56 PM, Dan Abel wrote:
The earliest Civics were very small cars.. A friend of mine who is 6'6"
would have his knees wrapped around his ears were he foolish enough to
try and squeeze into one. Current model Civics are much larger and he
may have more success.

Krypsis
 
On 3/16/2011 8:59 AM, Krypsis wrote:
I bought a 1980 (?) Honda Accord and I remember someone asking if it was
a new small Mercedes. The present day Accord is bigger than several
Mercedes models.

--


James Silverton, Potomac

I'm "not"
[email protected]
 
On 16/03/2011 9:44 AM, James Silverton wrote:



I don't know if Mercedes has started making smaller cars than they used
to or if they are now sending models to the North American market that
used to be available only in Europe. We were disappointed with a car
rental on a trip to Europe. My brother had previously rented a nice
Mercedes but never had the chance to take it on the Autobahn, so when I
went there with him and another brother a few years ago he arranged to
rent a Mercedes, specifying there were four adults with luggage. I
forget which model it was but it was a small station wagon. While it was
comfortable and handled nicely the back seat was clearly divided into
two seats, not three and there were five of us. We ended up having to
pick up a second car. While they didn't charge us rental on the second
one it costs us extra for gas and then when we hit France we had to pay
tolls, so they were doubled.

Where we lucked out was that the photoradar must not have been operating
the day we went through the Stuttgart area. My younger brother was
leading the way and must have been under the impression that there were
no speed limits at all on the Autobahn. We were passing though zones
with speed limits, and he was not slowing down. Both cards were rented
under his name. I envisioned him opening his mail one day a few months
down the line and getting speeding tickets for each of those speed limit
zones...times two.
 
On Mon, 14 Mar 2011 15:55:58 -0500, Janet Wilder
arranged random neurons and said:


Ditto in the 4 states I worked as a paralegal. OTOH, I could sign for
him/her at his/her direction. But you sure can't arrange a plea or
anything close to it. I wish I had a nickel for every time I had to
tell a client that I couldn't give him/her advice, because it is
strictly not allowed for a paralegal to give legal advice either.

Terry "Squeaks" Pulliam Burd

--

To reply, remove "spambot" and replace it with "cox"
 
On Mon, 14 Mar 2011 11:33:40 -0400, Dave Smith
arranged random neurons and said:



OMG, I had totally forgotten about those awful things. Ours were blue
one piece shorts with an elastic waist and you could have stuffed two
more people in with me, it was so baggy. Had our last name stenciled
across the shoulders. Just about froze to death during field hockey
season in the late fall.

OB: Went to a DOD dependent high school in England, a boarding school,
and we had three outbreaks of food poisoning my sophomore year alone.
Let's hear it for AFEX!

Terry "Squeaks" Pulliam Burd

--

To reply, remove "spambot" and replace it with "cox"
 
On 16/03/2011 6:19 PM, Dan Abel wrote:



The sports models have been sold here for years. AAMOF, a friend of mine
had one in highschool. It was 1968 and he had a used one, a 59. One mid
winter day during a spare period he took it over to the nearby mall and
was pulling doughnuts in the parking lot and slid into a light standard.

I was thinking more about the smaller sedans and station wagons.
 
In article ,
"gloria.p" wrote:




I'm suffering a bout of gout, thus the late response. I was thinking
government, and in the one and only case, industry perks. So instead of
milestones, I should have written "Perks to the Grave".
Other than that editorial gaffe, I've been sort of awake and enjoying
life.

leo
 
On 3/16/2011 3:40 PM, Terry Pulliam Burd wrote:

Ours were one piece. Elastic waist shorts, solid navy, and an attached
navy-white striped t-shirt. U-u-u-gly and baggy. Baggly? ;)
 
"Cheryl" wrote in message
news:[email protected]...

In Jr. High we had the royal blue shorts. Sounds like how you described
them. Mine were way too huge. My mom had to take them in. I think the
shirts were white cotton with snaps down the front. Also too large.

We were allowed to wear sweats for running outside in the cold months. In
those days it seemed the only choices you had were gray or bright orange.

Luckily by high school there was no uniform. Just shorts and a T shirt.
 
Back
Top