------------------------------
The Old-Time Radio Digest!
Volume 2011 : Issue 93
A Part of the [removed]!
[removed]
ISSN: 1533-9289
Today's Topics:
lights Out actor [ David Bossenberger <davidbossenberg ]
6-11 births/deaths [ Ron Sayles <bogusotr@[removed]; ]
Re: Patriotic PSA's [ "R. R. King" <kingrr@[removed]; ]
This week in radio history 12-18 Jun [ Joe Mackey <joemackey108@[removed] ]
Correct title for Sgt. Preston episo [ "Wesley Tom" <[removed]@[removed] ]
6-12 births/deaths [ Ron Sayles <bogusotr@[removed]; ]
BBC Radio drama [ Graeme Stevenson <graemeotr@[removed] ]
2nd Lum and Abner comic strip publis [ Donald Pitchford <donald@lumandabne ]
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 13 Jun 2011 12:55:50 -0400
From: David Bossenberger <davidbossenberger@[removed];
To: [removed]@[removed]
Subject: lights Out actor
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I started listening to lights out again recently and i discovered a very
familar
voice that i recognized in many other shows that i have. This actor
plays Harold
Maggs in the story of mr. Maggs. im sure someone can answer
this for me.
Thanks Charlie for all you do to make possible our precious
newsletter. can
anyone recommend any really good books on Jack Benny? David
Bosszenberger
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------------------------------
Date: Mon, 13 Jun 2011 12:55:54 -0400
From: Ron Sayles <bogusotr@[removed];
To: Olde Tyme Radio Digest Digest <[removed]@[removed];
Subject: 6-11 births/deaths
June 11th births
06-11-1889 - Wesley Ruggles - Los Angeles, CA - d. 1-8-1972
film director: (Brother of Charlie) "Screen Guild Theatre"
06-11-1899 - Henry Biagini - d. 4-xx-1970
orchestra leader: WXYZ Detroit, Michigan
06-11-1900 - Lawrence Spivak - Brooklyn, NY - d. 3-9-1994
moderator, panelist: "Meet the Press"
06-11-1904 - Allen Roth - St. Louis, MO - d. 10-30-1972
conductor: "Broadway Matinee"; "So You Think You Know Music"
06-11-1905 - Alex Beller - Chicago, IL - d. 4-13-1997
violinist: Ben Pollack , Artie Shaw, Tommy Dorsey, Nelson Riddle
06-11-1905 - Harry Marble - Brownville, ME - d. 8-1-1982
newscaster: "CBS News of the World"; "The World Today"
06-11-1906 - Frank Woodruff - Columbia, SC - d. 9-16-1983
director: "Lux Radio Theatre"
06-11-1908 - Katherine Carrington - South or East Orange, NJ - d.
5-2-1953
vocalist: "Evening in Paris"
06-11-1910 - Jacques-Yves Cousteau - Saint Andrew, France - d. 6-25-1997
oceanographer: "The Space Story"
06-11-1911 - Long John Nebel - Chicago, IL - d. 4-10-1978
host: All-night talk show in NYC
06-11-1913 - Rise Stevens - NYC
singer: "Rise Stevens Show"; "Palmolive Beauty Box Theatre"
06-11-1914 - Dudley Manlove - Oakland, CA - d. 4-17-1996
announcer: "Candy Matson, YU2-8209"
06-11-1914 - Gerald Mohr - NYC - d. 11-9-1968
actor: Philip Marlowe "Advs. of Philip Marlowe"; Jacque Monet "Our
Miss Brooks"
06-11-1918 - Jane Bryan - Los Angeles, CA - d. 4-8-2009
actor: "Lux Radio Theatre"; "Silver Theatre"
06-11-1919 - Richard Todd - Dublin, Ireland - d. 12-3-2009
singer: "Rinso-Spry Vaudeville Theatre"; "Your Hit Parade"
06-11-1920 - Hazel Scott - Port of Spain, Trinidad - d. 10-2-1981
singer, pianist: "Free World Theatre"; "New World A-Coming"
06-11-1920 - Robert Hutton - Kingston, NY - d. 8-7-1994
actor: "Proudly We Hail"; "NBC University Theatre"
06-11-1932 - Ed Bishop - Brooklyn, NY - d. 6-8-2005
disk jockey on Armed Forces Radio
06-11-1941 - Mike McManus - Springfield, OH
commentator: "Family News in Focus"
06-11-1948 - John Pilkington - Lancashire, England
writer: "Hurdles"
June 11th deaths01-20-1920 - DeForest Kelley - Atlanta, GA - d.
6-11-1999
actor: "Suspense"
02-12-1880 - John L. Lewis - Lucas, IA - d. 6-11-1969
union leader: "Meet the Press"
02-12-1898 - Wallace Ford - Batton, England - d. 6-11-1966
actor: "Hollywood on the Air"; "Royal Gelatin Hour"
03-07-1916 - Vivian Smolen - d. 6-11-2006
actor: Laurel Grosvenor "Stella Dallas"; Sunday Brinthrope "Our Gal
Sunday"
03-17-1946 - Budge Threlkeld - Pueblo, CO - d. 6-11-2005
actor: "High Street"
03-19-1928 - Henry Maddox - Boaz, AL - d. 6-11-1974
"The Maddox Brothers and Rose"
03-28-1902 - Gordon Clifford - Providence, RI - d. 6-11-1968
songwriter: "The Rhythm Boys"
04-17-1923 - Lon McCallister - Los Angeles, CA - d. 6-11-2005
actor: "Screen Guild Theatre"; "Cavalcade of America"; "Family Theatre"
05-03-1922 - Elizabeth Lawrence - d. 6-11-2000
actor: Francie Brent "Road of Life"
05-26-1907 - John Wayne - Winterset, IA - d. 6-11-1979
actor: Dan O'Brien "Three Sheets to the Wind"
06-01-1920 - Robert Clarke - Oklahoma City, OK - d. 6-11-2005
actor: "Richard Diamond, Private Detective"; "Cavalcade of America"
06-08-1910 - John Campbell, Jr. - Newark, NJ - d. 6-11-1971
writer, host: "Beyond Tomorrow"; "Exploring Tomorrow"
06-16-1890 - Bertha Brainard - South Orange, NJ - d. 6-11-1946
manager of the commercial program division of NBC in 1937
06-21-1895 - Saul B. Arenson - Lincoln, NE - d. 6-11-1954
lecturer on scientific topics on WLW Cincinnati, Ohio
06-23-1912 - John Milton Kennedy - Farrell, PA - d. 6-11-2006
announcer: "Lux Radio Theatre"; "Tidbit Revue"
06-27-1906 - Catherine Cookson - Tyne Dock, England - d. 6-11-1998
novelist: Several of her works were transferred to radio
06-30-1879 - Walter Hampden - Brooklyn, NY - d. 6-11-1955
actor: Leonidas Witherall "Leonidas Witherall"
07-06-1882 - Ralph Morgan - NYC - d. 6-11-1956
actor: "Lux Radio Theatre"
07-10-1920 - David Brinkley - Wilmington, NC - d. 6-11-2003
newscaster: WRC Washington [removed]; "Nightline"
07-24-1914 - Frank Silvera - Kingston, Jamaica, West Indies - d.
6-11-1970
actor: "X Minus One"
07-29-1894 - Kenneth Daigneau - d. 6-11-1948
actor: Captain Silver "Sea Hound"
10-08-1918 - Ron Randell - Sydney, New South Wales, Australia - d.
6-11-2005
actor: "Lux Radio Theatre"
11-27-1912 - Maurice "Muzzy" Marcellino - California - d. 6-11-1997
singer: "Ted Fio Rito and His Orchestra"; "Lady Esther Serenade"
12-20-1907 - Al Rinker - Tekoa, WA - d. 6-11-1982
singer (member of The Rhythm Boys) "Paul Whiteman Presents"
12-20-1931 - Mala Powers - San Francisco, CA - d. 6-11-2007
actor: "Stars Over Hollywood"
12-25-1923 - Gordon Baxter - Port Arthur, TX - d. 6-11-2005
disk jockey: KPAC Port Arthur, Texas
12-29-1903 - Clyde McCoy - Ashland, KY - d. 6-11-1990
bandleader: "Clyde McCoy and His Orchestra"
Ron
[removed]
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 13 Jun 2011 12:56:44 -0400
From: "R. R. King" <kingrr@[removed];
To: [removed]@[removed]
Subject: Re: Patriotic PSA's
...the PSA's often consist of patriotic pep
talks--how we (America) have the greatest
standard of living in the world, how capitalism
rocks, etc., really heavy-handed sales jobs ...
I'm looking for whether this was part of a
specific plan, and what in the world was the plan?
During the Great Depression, with its mass unemployment and widespread
poverty, parts of the American population began to question the whole idea of
state capitalism and started exploring other ideas. There was a lot of
organizing and activism that took many different forms. People began looking
seriously at socialism or fascism or a bigger welfare state; the Communist
Party grew, the labor movement grew, et cetera.
Some of this stuff entered the political mainstream -- like the very liberal
(by American standards) New Deal policies -- and all of it was potentially
threatening to capital's privilege and authority. Business leaders responded
in various ways. One response was pro-business public relations campaigns --
or "capitalist propaganda," depending on your sympathies. Over at rand's
esoteric otr blog, he's got episodes of "American Family Robinson," a serial
sponsored by the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM) that includes
some examples of this:
[removed]
When the [removed] entered the war, most of the conflict had to be put on hold.
But it flared up again immediately afterward, so business made a
bigger-than-usual effort to "sell" their point-of-view. Here are a few
paragraphs from Robert Griffith's "Forging America's Postwar Order" (in a
1989 book _The Truman Presidency_) which sums it up better than I can:
***
In the years following the close of Wold War II, the leaders of American
business employed their vast power over the channels of communication not
merely to advance their own immediate interests but to shape a new and
acquiescent political culture. Thus the NAM launched a massive campaign to
"sell free enterprise," to which businesses contributed an estimated $37
million. The NAM was joined, moreover, by the [removed] Chamber of Commerce; by
many individual firms and trade associations; and by conservative,
business-financed groups such as the Committee for Constitutional Government,
the National Economic Council, the Foundation for Economic Education, and the
American Economic Foundation.
More moderate business groups were also active. The Committee for Economic
Development, for example, joined the Ford Foundation in sponsoring the Joint
Council for Economic Education, which sought to influence the teaching of
economics and business in the nation's schools. The Advertising Council
launched the first of a series of multimillion-dollar campaigns to promote
"the American enterprise system." Worried that Americans were "staggeringly
ignorant" of the nation's economy, council leaders hoped that by showing
people "what our private enterprise system has done for us," it would make
them poor prospects for "swapping this system for government ownership and
control."
By the early 1950s, according to _Fortune_ editor William Whyte, American
businesses were spending more than $100 million annually for such campaigns,
littering the cultural landscape with books, articles, and pamphlets;
billboards and posters; radio and television spots; ads on buses, trains, and
trolleys; even comic books and matchbox covers. The content of these
offerings varied from the sophisticated research reports of CED to the
hard-sell comics of NAM, but the underlying purpose was almost invariably the
same: to halt the momentum of New Deal liberalism and to create a political
climate conducive to the new corporate order.
To an extent that historians have not fully appreciated, the postwar
intellectual and cultural consensus was manufactured by America's corporate
leaders, packaged by the advertising and public relations industries, and
marketed through the channels of mass communication. Although many ordinary
Americans remained skeptical of and resistant to such a sell, they
nevertheless found themselves surrounded by a pervasive and constantly
reiterated vision of the United States as a dynamic, classless, and benignly
consensual society. In culture, as in politics, the new order reigned.
***
Two good academic books on this topic are: _Inventing the American Way_
(Oxford University Press, 2008) by Wendy L. Wall (which is online, or used to
be, and has a few references to "The Adventures of Superman" radio series)
and _Selling Free Enterprise_ (University of Illinois, 1994) by Elizabeth
Fones-Wolf (which I think mentions some labor-sponsored radio shows; but it's
been years since I read it).
And why was it necessary to air PSAs reminding us
to love our country the same way we're reminded
not to start forest fires and not to litter?
Linking capitalism to patriotism was a standard technique of these campaigns.
(In fact, it's probably standard in a lot of states to link patriotism with
whatever "ism" is in power.) Part of the idea was to emphasize positive
"American" themes like individual rights (as opposed to collectivism) or
representative democracy (as opposed to representation in the workplace). The
"hard-sell" was to encourage people from "buying" something else.
But it was also simply to improve business' reputation, as Wendy L. Wall
writes:
***
Increasingly business moderates realized that the best way to regain cultural
authority was to convince Americans that they had seen the light -- that the
"new" form of American capitalism was different from the "robber baron"
version practiced in the past; that businessmen were now model civic
citizens; that a high-production, high-consumption model of capitalism had
revolutionary potential for producing social justice.
***
Hence the big "tolerance campaigns" of the late 1940s that promoted religious
and civil liberties. One of my favorite episodes of "Songs By Sinatra" ends
with Frankie saying "...get the big box of Tolerance, it comes in the red,
white and blue [removed]" -- a great line that sort of sums up the approach.
They were selling patriotism so that they could keep on selling Old Gold
cigarettes.
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 13 Jun 2011 12:56:50 -0400
From: Joe Mackey <joemackey108@[removed];
To: otr-digest <[removed]@[removed];
Subject: This week in radio history 12-18 June
From Those Were The Days
6/12
1947 Sergeant Preston of The Yukon went national for the first time.
The show, with the Canadian Mountie and his trusty dog, King, continued
on the radio until 1955, beginning on WXYZ Detroit in 1938. Sgt. Preston
was created by George W. Trendle and Fran Striker, who also created The
Lone Ranger and The Green Hornet.
1955 The first network radio show to be produced with no script, The
University of Chicago Round Table, was heard for the final time on NBC.
The program was the first network radio program to win the coveted
George Foster Peabody Award.
1955 "This is Monitor, a weekend program service of NBC Radio," was
heard for the first time. Notables such as Bill Cullen, Ed McMahon, Hugh
Downs, and Dave Garroway recited this line. It was a network cue to NBC
radio stations across the nation who carried the long form news,
entertainment and variety broadcast from New York City. Stations and
listeners who were "on the Monitor beacon" were entertained for six
hours or more each Saturday and Sunday night for nearly two decades.
NBC's Monitor was one of the last live network radio programs on the air.
6/13
1944 The wire recorder was patented by Marvin Camras.
6/14
1922 A [removed] President was heard on the radio for the first time.
President Warren G. Harding dedicated the Francis Scott Key Memorial and
was heard on WEAR in Baltimore.
1950 Harold Peary played the leading role of The Great Gildersleeve
one final time. Willard Waterman took Peary's place in the role.
6/15
1936 Al Jolson and Ruby Keeler starred in Burlesque on the Lux Radio
Theatre.
6/17
1942 Suspense, known as radio's outstanding theatre of thrills,
debuted on CBS. The program kept millions of loyal listeners in suspense
for the next 20 years (and three months).
6/18
1939 CBS aired The Adventures of Ellery Queen for the first time. An
interesting twist came near the end of the program when the show was
stopped to allow a panel of experts to guess the solution of the night's
mystery.
1961 Gunsmoke was broadcast for the last time on CBS. The show had
been on for nine years. It was called the first adult Western. The star
of Gunsmoke was William Conrad.
Joe
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 13 Jun 2011 12:57:01 -0400
From: "Wesley Tom" <[removed]@[removed];
To: <[removed]@[removed];
Subject: Correct title for Sgt. Preston episode
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Does anyone know the correct title and date for the Sergeant Preston radio
episode in circulation commonly called "Big Strike Mine". It's the story of a
crooked lawyer in Selkirk trying to swindle a couple out of their inheritance
of a gold mine left to them by the husband's uncle. The episode was aired on
the mutual network with Paul Sutton playing the role of Sergeant Preston with
Quaker Oats commercials. There's no episode titled "Big Strike Mine" in the
radio log for the Challenge of the Yukon program.
Wesley Tom
Redlands, CA
[server removed an attachment of type application/ms-tnef which had a name of
[removed]]
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------------------------------
Date: Mon, 13 Jun 2011 12:59:51 -0400
From: Ron Sayles <bogusotr@[removed];
To: Olde Tyme Radio Digest Digest <[removed]@[removed];
Subject: 6-12 births/deaths
June 12th births
06-12-1884 - William Austin - Georgetown, British Guiana - d. 6-15-1975
actor: Professor of the English Department "Jack Oakie's College"
06-12-1890 - Junius Matthews - Chicago, IL - d. 1-18-1978
actor: Grandpa Eph "David Harum"; Ling Wee "Gasoline Alley"
06-12-1893 - Evelyn Varden - Adair, Oklahoma Territory - d. 7-11-1958
actor: Dorothy Stewart "This is Nora Drake"; Mother Malone "Young Dr.
Malone"
06-12-1893 - Mal Hallett - Boston, MA - d. 11-20-1952
bandleader: "Spotlight Bands"
06-12-1898 - Dick Hartman - Burlington, WV - d. 4-15-1962
country: (Tennessee Ramblers) "Crazy Water Crystals Barn Dance"
06-12-1901 - Ben Welden - Toledo, OH - d. 10-17-1997
character actor: "Family Theatre"; "Railroad Hour"; "Roy Rogers Show"
06-12-1902 - Al Donahue - Dorchester, MA - d. 2-20-1983
bandleader: "Al Donahue and His Orchestra"; "Matinee at Meadbrook"
06-12-1903 - Drue Leyton - Somers, WI - d. 2-8-1997
broadcast from Paris during WWII on "Voice of America"
06-12-1909 - Archie Bleyer - Corona, NY - d. 3-20-1989
conductor: "Arthur Godfrey Time"; "Casey, Crime Photographer"
06-12-1910 - Leon Carr - Allentown, PA - d. 3-27-1976
composer: "Voices of Vista"
06-12-1912 - Janet Fox - Chicago, IL - d. 4-22-2002
actor: "Cavalcade of America"; "The Big Story"
06-12-1914 - Herbert C. Kenny - d. 7-11-1992
singer: (Member of the Ink Spots) "The Four Ink Spots"; "Let's Go
Nightclubbing"
06-12-1914 - Sydna Scott - Chicago, IL - d. 6-23-1996
actor: "Luke Slaughter of Tombstone"
06-12-1914 - William Lundigan - Syracuse, NY - d. 12-20-1975
actor: "Lux Radio Theatre"; announcer in early radio
06-12-1915 - Priscilla Lane - Indianola, IA - d. 4-4-1995
singer: "Fred Waring Show"
06-12-1915 - Robert Forster - NYC - d. 11-15-2003
announcer: "CBS Radio Workshop"; Gangbusters"; Twenty-First Precinct"
06-12-1915 - Zeke Zarchy - NYC - d. 4-12-2009
lead trumpet: "Benny Goodman Band"; "Artie Show Band"
06-12-1916 - Ivan Tors - Budapest, Hungary - d. 6-4-1983
producer: "Bud's Bandwagon"
06-12-1917 - Constance Ernst Bessie - NYC - d. 3-19-1985
producer: "Theatre [removed]"; "Voice of America"
06-12-1917 - Wendell Barcroft - d. 3-25-1974
newscaster: KGGM Albuquerque, New Mexico
06-12-1919 - Uta Hagen - Gottingen, Germany - d. 1-14-2004
actor: "Big Show"
06-12-1920 - Peter Jones - Wem, Shropshire, England - d. 4-10-2000
actor: narrator "Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy"; "In All Directions"
06-12-1924 - Dave Parker - Fresno, CA
actor: Young Good Guys "Lone Ranger"; "Green Hornet"; "Challenge of
the Yukon"
06-12-1924 - George Herbert Walker Bush - Milton, MA
[removed] president: Saturday morning presidential broadcasts
06-12-1924 - Howard E. Goldfuss - The Bronx, NY - d. 11-7-2007
judge: "Tell It to the Judge"
06-12-1926 - Bob Pfeiffer - Iowa - d. 4-22-2003
announcer: "Answer Please"; "The Bickersons"
06-12-1927 - Henry Slesar - Brooklyn, NY - d. 4-2-2002
writer: "Voice of the Army"; "CBS Radio Mystery Theatre"
06-12-1928 - Vic Damone - Brooklyn, NY
singer: "Saturday Night Serenade"; "Stars in Khaki 'n' Blue"
06-12-1941 - Chick Corea - Chelsea, MA
keyboardist: "White House Jazz Festival"; "Jazz Alive"
June 12th deaths
01-01-1917 - Ted Cott - Poughkeepsie, NY - d. 6-12-1973
announcer, emcee: "So You Think You Know Music?"; "Music You Want"
01-27-1888 - Harry "Singin' Sam" Frankel - Danville, KY - d. 6-12-1948
singer: (The Barbasol Man) "Reminiscin' with Singin' Sam"
02-29-1904 - Jimmy Dorsey - Shenandoah, PA, - d. 6-12-1957
bandleader: "Kraft Music Hall"; "Your Happy Birthday"
03-08-1906 - Franklyn MacCormack - Waterloo, IA - d. 6-12-1971
announcer: "Caroline's Golden Store"; "Jack Armstrong"
04-05-1916 - Gregory Peck - Lo Jolla, CA - d. 6-12-2003
actor: "Doctor Fights"; "Sealtest Variety Hour"
05-06-1882 - William E. Scripps - Michigan - d. 6-12-1952
Founded WWJ in Detroit, Michigan
06-01-1915 - Johnny Bond - Enville, OK - d. 6-12-1978
singer, comedian: "Gene Autry's Melody Ranch"; "Hollywood Barn Dance"
07-07-1898 - Arlene Harris - Toronto, Canada - d. 6-12-1976
actor: Mrs. Higgins "Baby Snooks"; Human Chatterbox "Al Pearce and His
Gang"
07-10-1917 - Don Herbert - Waconia, MN - d. 6-12-2007
actor: "Captain Midnight"; Jack Armstrong, All-American Boy"
07-20-1898 - J. E. Mainer - Weaversville, NC - d. 6-12-1971
country: (Mainer's Crazy Mountaineers) "Crazy Water Crystals Barn Dance"
08-11-1900 - Norma Shearer - Montreal, Canada - d. 6-12-1983
actor: "Everyman's Theatre"; "Louella Parsons"
10-14-1893 - Hal Burdick - Osceola, WI - d. 6-12-1978
actor, writer: "Do You Believe In Ghosts"; "Dr. Kate"
10-20-1884 - Thomas Chalmers - NYC - d. 6-12-1966
actor: Sam Young "Pepper Young's Family"
11-08-1900 - Franklin Parker - Filmore, MO - d. 6-12-1962
actor: "Gene Autry's Melody Ranch"; "Big Town"
11-19-1923 - Eugenie Baird - d. 6-12-1988
vocalist: "Kraft Music Hall"; "Forever Top"; "Sing It Again"
Ron
[removed]
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 13 Jun 2011 12:59:57 -0400
From: Graeme Stevenson <graemeotr@[removed];
To: OTR Digest <[removed]@[removed];
Subject: BBC Radio drama
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--
Information from BBC Press Office website:
BBC Radio 4, Monday 27th June, 1415 - 1500 UK time 'Afternoon Play : Can you
hear me ?'
( ' It is the Summer of 1940 and Anna, a young Italian translator, is working
at the BBC's Wood Norton Hall, Evesham: a government listening post where she
monitors enemy domestic radio broadcasts.
Her work is secret; she looks for buried information on troop movements in
Italian radio broadcasts and provides information to the allies ... ... ' )
Might be of interest ? Listeners in the US should be able to listen to BBC
Radio 4 on-line.
Cheers ! Graeme ( ORCA / UK )
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------------------------------
Date: Mon, 13 Jun 2011 13:00:06 -0400
From: Donald Pitchford <donald@[removed];
To: [removed]@[removed]
Subject: 2nd Lum and Abner comic strip published
Our second "Lum and Abner" comic strip was published today, Sunday, June 12,
along with a "click to listen" audio file for our blind friends (or anyone
who wants to listen). Please visit [removed] and click the
"Lum and Abner" tab. The first strip is still at the top, so scroll down.
Sponsorship and advertising is needed since this is a commercial venture.
Feel free to post comments as well! We've had some good ones! The more the
merrier. Thanks to all!
--------------------------------
End of [removed] Digest V2011 Issue #93
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