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Post by iameye on Sept 12, 2008 9:48:37 GMT -5
i just remembered this little tidbit about SGT Pepper: "The pattern is a bright yellow, and most closely resembles the pattern seen in a piece of marble. It is on the entire surface of the black vinyl, not on the label, and is clearly inherent within the vinyl and not just on the surface. It is only visible under UV light, and looks just like any other LP under normal lighting conditions. Only the Sgt. Pepper I purchased on the first day of issue in Palo Alto, California in 1967 show this effect. Later Sgt. Pepper releases are just like any other LP" -- the astronaut damn, somewhere, someplace, someone has an animated gif the the album spinning under UV light. Lo an behold, it looks very much like an EYE. Who has that? JOJO?? please find ? we discussed it here: 60if.proboards21.com/index.cgi?board=document&action=display&thread=777&page=1fast facts: a mirror - drum is a rotating wheel of mirrors ( in tv) rotugravure came with a magnifing eye glass, but who is ringo looking at? the original definition of Ankh means "hand mirror" www.constellationsofwords.com/Constellations/Puppis.htma doll's house: Latin has pupus, boy, and pupa meaning both girl and doll, the diminutives of these words were pupillus, children or male children, and pupilla, female children. The word pupil, a child in school, Latin pupillus, or Old English pupille, did not emerge until the 16th century; it originally meant 'orphan, ward', literally 'little boy', diminutive of pupus. According to Klein; pupil is related to pupa, puerile, puppet, and puppy. [Puppis, is adjacent to Canis Major, the Greater Dog].
While the word pupil, a child in school, an orphan, had more of a male connotation, there is an almost universal idea of associating the pupil of the human eye with a little girl or doll. In its anatomical sense, pupilla is a loan translation of Greek kore 'girl; pupil of the eye' [1]. The pupil of the eye was so called from the little images ('puppets'), which appear in it. If you look into someone's eyes you will see a tiny doll-like image of yourself in the black pupil.
Latin pupa means girl, doll, and also pupa or pupate, the chrysalis stage, or nympha, in butterfly metamorphosis, the resting stage between caterpillar and butterfly (pupa is applied only to butterflies, not to other insect's cocoons). In some representations of ancient ships a kind of roof is formed over the head of the steersman, and the upper part of the stern frequently has an elegant ornament called an aplustre, which constituted the highest part of the poop. A lantern was suspended from the aplustre so as to hang over the deck before the helmsman [2], and to serve as a signal at night. Pupae or pupa, is lantern shaped and is suspended from a twig like a hanging lantern, they have been referred to as lantern-like pupa, larval lanterns.
The word pupil is; "probably related to puer 'child'" [Online Etymology Dictionary], from the Indo-European root *pau-¹ 'Few, little'. Derivatives: few, paucity (few, scarce, is related to Latin paullus, later spelled paulus, 'little', parvus, 'small, little'), poco (from Latin paucus, little, few), paraffin (Latin parum 'too little' + affinis 'affinity with'), parvovirus (viruses that contain DNA in an icosahedral protein shell and cause disease, especially in dogs and cattle, from Latin parvus, little, small), pauper, poor, poverty, depauperate, impoverish, foal (from Old English fola), filly (from Old Norse fylja, young female horse), puerile (juvenile, immature, childish), puerperal (occurring during childbirth or the period immediately following childbirth. The word puerpure also refers to women who give birth during the years of puberty, from Latin puer), poltroon (cowardly), pony, pool² (a game of chance, resembling a lottery), poulard (a young hen), poultry, pullet (a young hen - Latin puellis also meant a girl), polecat (Mustela putorius of the weasel family from Old French poll, poule), Punchinello (a short fat clown), pusillanimous (lacking courage), putto (a representation of a small child, often naked and having wings, used especially in the art of the European Renaissance. Amoretti or Amorini is an Italian term used to describe the small, winged babies who accompanied Cupid in art. Also called: Putti, from Latin putus), encyclopedia, pediatrician, orthopedics (relating to childhood bone disorders, from Greek pais), pedo-, paedo-, ped-, paed-, paido-, paid-, (these words from Greek pais, stem paid-, child > paideia, 'education'). [Pokorny pou- 842. Watkins] . Klein adds: public, puberty, people. The name Paul is probably from paulus, 'little'. A pedagogue is a teacher who instructs his pupils in a particularly pedantic or dogmatic manner [AHD], he might be described as stern.[/color] and the color ascribed to "pupil" in egyptian mythology was WHITE the white album. lol www.recoveredscience.com/const102horuseye.htmsee/ hear www.youtube.com/watch?v=6ma4jlE_VbI from flowers in the dirt/ fade this swan to blacktwo are flying, two are not during the HELP! intermission, we see a puppet on an imaginary string, while George throws rocks at the camera see it here www.youtube.com/watch?v=2OOg1Gjc2Z4lol
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Post by iameye on Sept 12, 2008 13:22:11 GMT -5
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Post by JoJo on Sept 13, 2008 11:55:43 GMT -5
Turned jojoplace upside down, finally found it.. Btw, this was stop action photography.
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Post by mommybird on Sept 13, 2008 16:33:43 GMT -5
Yep, it looks like an eye alright. Hmmmmm......
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Post by iameye on Sept 13, 2008 22:19:11 GMT -5
Merci buckets of rain, Jo.... now, let's talk about "when I'm sixty - four...." tbc .....
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Post by iameye on Sept 13, 2008 23:03:11 GMT -5
In Egyptian mythology the eye of Horus was wounded, wrenched out or eaten by the fearsome god Seth. Later it was restored and made whole, according to spell 17 in the Book of the Dead, by the ibis- headed god Thoth, the originator of mathematics, who ‘did this with his fingers’.
The question has been raised whether this phrase referred to ‘finger- counting’, and whether it could relate in any way to the Horus- eye fractions.
These fractions in modern terminology form a convergent geometrical progression of six terms with the first term equal to the common ratio. Problem no. 79 of the Rhind Papyrus makes it clear that (...) the Egyptians would have been able to sum the series (...) to 63/64.
They could also have shown that the sum was short of 1 by 1/64. (...) If the Horus - Seth - Thoth story really had a mathematical connotation, it could be that the damaged Horus- eye was magically made whole by the restoration of the missing 1/64.”
The magic required to complete this Eye made from numbers introduces us to the theme of this book -- the ancient function of the intangible yet knowable numbers as bridges to the equally intangible but more mysterious realm of gods and souls.
The commonly used term “wedjat” for the Horus eye meant “the sound Eye” and so refers to it after its magic restoration.
This so completed Eye had great symbolic importance. It provided protection in amulets; it guided boats that carried it on their bow; pairs of it painted on coffins allowed the deceased to see in the afterlife; its damage and healing reflected the waning and waxing of the moon; and it stood also for the religious act of offering as well as for an offering itself.
The Pyramid Texts from the late Old Kingdom, for instance, have Thoth the number god bring this Eye as an offering table, followed by long litanies in which almost every Utterance exhorts the dead king to “take the Eye of Horus” as an offering which is then identified with various grave goods.
Significantly, the Horus- Eye hieroglyph and its hekat- components always omit the pupil which would have been needed to complete the eye.
The corresponding graphic element, a circle like that for the quarter- hekat iris but smaller, was used to designate whole hekats from one to nine, so the missing part stood for the entire unit which only it could complete,
This is a typical example for the pars- pro- toto method of distilling things to their essential part in which the hieroglyph designers excelled greatly. The pupil was clearly the sum and substance of the Eye because only the pupil lets light through for seeing, and looking into someone’s pupils gives the impression of revealing their innermost depth.
The pupil or iris of the eye sign in the hieroglyph- based proto- alphabet of the Sinai Script also led to the circular “o” of the Phoenician and Hebrew alphabets from which the letters you read here are derived6.
The pupil of the Horus Eye had special magical powers for reviving the deceased, to judge from a Pyramid Text Utterance where the priest tells the dead king to “take the pupil which is in the Eye of Horus, for your mouth is split open by means of it.”
The ceremony of “opening the mouth” formed the core of the funerary rites because it restored breath and life to the mummy, and the pupil was probably needed for that magic because it seems to have been connected with the beyond.
The symbologist Manfred Lurker draws attention to a peculiarity which suggests this proposed association:
“It is strange that Egyptians described the pupil of the eye as ‘white’ although this part of the eye is not at all that color. (...) White was the color of purity and sanctity.”8
The actual color of the pupil is black. Although black could mean regeneration and fertility, as in “the Black Land” which was the ancient Egyptian name of Egypt, black was above all the color of night and death and the netherworld, and a circle filled in with black represented the black hole of non- being in which the world will dissolve at the end of time.
The unnatural denial of the real color for the pupil is therefore a giveaway clue that the pupil of the Horus Eye was a window to that feared infinite darkness which the replacement of its color with the opposite may have helped to hold at bay.
The prominent role of the mathematically composed Eye of Horus in these rites makes sense in the logic of magical thinking because the missing part produced by the god had restored the badly damaged divine Eye and therefore would also be able to restore the equally damaged dead.
Moreover, the method for obtaining this powerful pupil linked it again to that boundless beyond: the progression of ever smaller successive halvings adds up to this missing amount only when it continues to awe- inspiring infinity -- that is, presumably, to where the gods dwelt and where the mummy owner’s soul was going.
Admittedly, nothing proves that the ancient number investigators knew the series must continue to infinity to add up to the missing part.
In so continuing their halvings, the ancient scribes must also have realized what is now obvious to us, even without doing the math: that adding up the successive halvings of any quantity will come ever closer to the original unit so halved, but will never reach it exactly because the last remainder fraction so obtained can always be halved again, and again, without end, just as any integer can be doubled and redoubled as often as desired.
That the Horus Eye series includes only six components and needs a magically obtained seventh part to make this divine unit complete was therefore not due to any lack of computing skills among the pharaonic scribes. This system may be based on the same reasons why the common cubit was six palms long and needed a seventh palm to make it a royal and thus perfect or complete cubit, the measuring unit used for all sacred construction.
The magical power of the seventh part to complete a higher and holier unit than the common one composed of six parts may also be the reason why the later Hebrews, who relied on Egyptian mathematical methods and measuring concepts, had a week of six work days plus a seventh day belonging to God that made it complete and perfect.
This same magical power of the seventh part suggests also that the scribes would have interpreted its mind- boggling infinite divisibility in their religious framework, and that they would therefore have viewed that elusive pupil as connected with infinity and the gods.
In any case, whether the ancient Egyptians had recognized this mathematical link to infinity or not, it is clear that the signs for the successive Horus- Eye fractions were designed together as a system, and that this numerical system was related to a major mythical event.
..... the hieroglyphic numeral signs for the powers of ten were also designed together as a system with six steps beyond unity plus a seventh that represented the divine realm, and that this system was also based on a major mythical event.64 eyes wide shut 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 all good children go to heaven Paul was # 64 on Pepper
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Post by iameye on Sept 13, 2008 23:28:47 GMT -5
There is no end to what we can do together. There is no end, there is no end
www.youtube.com/watch?v=nFqKN8yhA54
With a little luck, we can help it out. We can make this whole damn thing work out. With a little love, we can lay it down. Cant you feel the town exploding? There is no end to what we can do together. There is no end, there is no end. The willow turns his back on inclement weather; And if he can do it, we can do it, just me and you,
And a little luck, we can clear it up. We can bring it in for a landing, With a little luck, we can turn it on. There can be no misunderstanding.
There is no end to what we can do together. There is no end, there is no end. The willow turns his back on inclement weather; We can do it, just me and you.
With a little push, we could set it off. We can send it rocketing skywards. With a little love, we could shake it up. Dont you feel the comet exploding?
With a little luck. With a little luck. With a little luck, a little luck, a little luck. With a little luck. With a little luck. With a little luck, a little luck, a little luck.
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Post by P(D)enny La(i)ne on Sept 14, 2008 10:01:55 GMT -5
Great info, iamEYE! I posted this in the Love Code thread, but it bears reposting here for convenience sake. invanddis.proboards29.com/index.cgi?action=display&board=general&thread=5021&page=2Alejandro Jodorowsky (director of El Topo and Holy Mountain (funded by Lennono): Cream of the Beatles still of JPM, or Faul, or Bill becoming Faul, or.......Gene Simmons (Thanks, MBird ;D): Here's a still from Jodorowsky's Holy Mountain, of a man removing one of his eyes: JPM being measured for his WAX DUMMY?: A still from Jodorowsky's El Topo (Lennon's favorite Movie): And the Eye of Horus...erm, I mean...Eye of Sir Paul: All in favor, say aye. The eyes have it!
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Post by iameye on Sept 14, 2008 22:06:12 GMT -5
He got muddy water he one mojo filterHe say "One and one and one is three" Got to be good-looking 'cause he's so hard to see[/i] mojo mo·jo Listen to the pronunciation of mojo Pronunciation: \ˈmō-(ˌ)jō\ Function: noun Inflected Form(s): plural mojoes or mojos Etymology: probably of African origin; akin to Fulani moco'o medicine man
: a magic spell, hex, or charm ; broadly : magical powerIn photography, a filter is a camera accessory consisting of an optical filter that can be inserted in the optical path. The filter can be a square or rectangle shape mounted in a holder accessory, or, more commonly, a glass or plastic disk with a metal or plastic ring frame, which can be screwed in front of the lens. Filters allow added control for the photographer of the images being produced. Sometimes they are used to make only subtle changes to images; other times the image would simply not be possible without them.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photographic_filterand it's got to be good LOOKing, or it don't "count"
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Post by Doc on Sept 14, 2008 23:24:48 GMT -5
He got muddy water he one mojo filterHe say "One and one and one is three" Got to be good-looking 'cause he's so hard to see [/i] mojo mo·jo Listen to the pronunciation of mojo Pronunciation: \ˈmō-(ˌ)jō\ Function: noun Inflected Form(s): plural mojoes or mojos Etymology: probably of African origin; akin to Fulani moco'o medicine man
: a magic spell, hex, or charm ; broadly : magical powerIn photography, a filter is a camera accessory consisting of an optical filter that can be inserted in the optical path. The filter can be a square or rectangle shape mounted in a holder accessory, or, more commonly, a glass or plastic disk with a metal or plastic ring frame, which can be screwed in front of the lens. Filters allow added control for the photographer of the images being produced. Sometimes they are used to make only subtle changes to images; other times the image would simply not be possible without them.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photographic_filterand it's got to be good LOOKing, or it don't "count" [/quote] Most insightful. Wow, Lennon.
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Post by skyward on Sept 15, 2008 0:26:54 GMT -5
The record is a bit lopsided.
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Post by iameye on Sept 15, 2008 9:17:07 GMT -5
it's still cool and relevant, sky nice gif! "It is a teacher-pupil relationship. That's what people don't understand … she's taught me everything I f***ing know," Lennon told Playboy ( about yoko, or was it? .....)
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Post by iameye on Sept 17, 2008 10:14:45 GMT -5
Somewhere over the rainbow Way up high, There's a land that I heard of Once in a lullaby. Somewhere over the rainbow Skies are blue, And the dreams that you dare to dream Really do come true.
The Greek translation for Iris = RAINBOW, and the goddess Iris is associated directly with the Peacock. Her name contains a double meaning, being connected both with iris, "the rainbow," and eiris, "messenger." Peacock Iris: Dietes is a genus of rhizomatous plants of the family Iridaceae. Common names include Fortnight lily, African iris, Morea or Moraea iris, Japanese iris and Butterfly iris, current events: www.northjersey.com/news/northernnj/Xanadus_big_wheel.htmlCitizen Cane Xanadu stained glass window check out the goo goo dolls Iris www.youtube.com/watch?v=SsK90GWBVLY.........so is it true John and Paul sang back-up on the Stones' Rainbow? She comes in colors everywhere; She combs her hair She's like a rainbowComing colors in the air Oh, everywhere She comes in colors Have you seen her dressed in blue See the sky in front of you And her face is like a sail Speck of white so fair and paleHave you seen the lady fairer? Have you seen her all in gold Like a queen in days of old She shoots colors all around Like a sunset going down Have you seen the lady fairer?
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Post by iameye on Sept 17, 2008 22:19:10 GMT -5
ringo: who bought the tickets for this...I did...I bought them..I'm taking you out, you're not taking me anywhere....do a bit of knitting, it'll do ya good
aunt Jessica: who for? you? should I KNIT FOR YOU? Ringo: no, don't knit for me
later... Paul: I myself am 30, but I look a little younger due to the fair Isle sweater which allows....... Traditional Fair Isle sweater construction usually involves knitting the body of the sweater in the round, sewing or otherwise fastening the work securely where the arm holes are to go, and then cutting the knit fabric to make the armholes. Circular knitting or knitting in the round is a form of knitting that creates a seamless tube. When knitting circularly, the knitting is cast on and the circle of stitches is joined. Knitting is worked in rounds (the equivalent of rows in flat knitting) in a spiral. LOL ;D
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Post by P(D)enny La(i)ne on Sept 17, 2008 22:52:02 GMT -5
ringo: who bought the tickets for this...I did...I bought them..I'm taking you out, you're not taking me anywhere....do a bit of knitting, it'll do ya good
aunt Jessica: who for? you? should I KNIT FOR YOU? Ringo: no, don't knit for me
later... Paul: I myself am 30, but I look a little younger due to the fair Isle sweater which allows....... Traditional Fair Isle sweater construction usually involves knitting the body of the sweater in the round, sewing or otherwise fastening the work securely where the arm holes are to go, and then cutting the knit fabric to make the armholes. Circular knitting or knitting in the round is a form of knitting that creates a seamless tube. When knitting circularly, the knitting is cast on and the circle of stitches is joined. Knitting is worked in rounds (the equivalent of rows in flat knitting) in a spiral. LOL ;D Not to mention that Paul wouldn't have been 30 in 1967, but I suppose they'd cry poetic license over that...
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Post by iameye on Sept 18, 2008 9:32:33 GMT -5
fade this one/swan to black.... www.youtube.com/watch?v=6ma4jlE_VbI&feature=relatedAn iris out is a technique for fading to black. It is used extensively in cartoons and animations. At the end of a cartoon short, the cartoon fades to black with a black background with a transparent circle that slowly closes to all black, similar to a pupil closing.iris in two are flying, two are not
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Post by iameye on Sept 22, 2008 13:18:08 GMT -5
Here come old flattop he come grooving up slowly He got joo-joo eyeball he one holy roller the pupil of the eye is more flat than curved, due to the curve of the cornea. fun facts! # Bowman's layer (also erroneously known as the anterior limiting membrane, when in fact it is not a membrane but a condensed layer of collagen): a tough layer that protects the corneal stroma, consisting of irregularly-arranged collagen fibers, essentially a type of stroma. It is eight to 14 microns thick. This layer is absent in carnivores.[4] # Corneal stroma (also substantia propria): a thick, transparent middle layer, consisting of regularly-arranged collagen fibers along with sparsely populated keratocytes. The corneal stroma consists of approximately 200 layers of type I collagen fibrils. 90% of the corneal thickness is composed of stroma. There are 2 theories of how transparency in the cornea comes about: 1. The lattice arrangements of the collagen fibrils in the stroma. The light scatter by individual fibrils is cancelled by destructive interference from the scattered light from other individual fibrils.(Maurice) 2. The spacing of the neighbouring collagen fibrils in the stroma must be < 200 nm for there to be transparency. the bowman a person who shoots with bow and arrow; archer the oarsman nearest the bow of a boat David Bowman, David Bowie 2001 space oddessy collegen: Collagen is one of the long, fibrous structural proteins whose functions are quite different from those of globular proteins such as enzymes. Tough bundles of collagen called collagen fibers are a major component of the extracellular matrix that supports most tissues and gives cells structure from the outside, but collagen is also found inside certain cells. Collagen has great tensile strength, and is the main component of fascia, cartilage, ligaments, tendons, bone and teeth. Along with soft keratin, it is responsible for skin strength and elasticity, and its degradation leads to wrinkles that accompany aging. It strengthens blood vessels and plays a role in tissue development. It is present in the cornea and lens of the eye in crystalline form.
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Post by iameye on Sept 24, 2008 23:52:04 GMT -5
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Post by iameye on Sept 25, 2008 9:58:33 GMT -5
iris 1387, "prismatic rock crystal," from L. iris (pl. irides) "iris of the eye, iris plant, rainbow," from Gk. iris (gen. iridos) "a lily, iris of the eye," originally "messenger of the gods," personified as the rainbow. The eye region was so called (1525 in Eng.) for being the colored part.
iridescent 1796, coined from L. iris (gen. iridis) "rainbow" (see iris).
fleur-de-lis 1352, from O.Fr., lit. "flower of the lily," especially borne as a heraldic device on the royal arms of France. Perhaps originally representing an iris, or the head of a scepter, or a weapon of some sort.
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Post by iameye on Sept 26, 2008 20:12:01 GMT -5
I dunno, I find the backdrop for the recent tel aviv concerts very interesting, and more than one set demands scrutiny: www.youtube.com/watch?v=GT3hDLnWxicall my loving check out the above sample to see what I'm talking about. A lot of arrows to follow...all going past, starting from a "box, " the star realm into more material "objects".... not to mention more obvious symbols like circles and targets... another video screen backdrop featured the "hallway" with three giant boulders (of what? weird, no? an atom? Pollen? is it threaded? molecular? is it something we simply see past? like floaters on the eye or fibers in the bowman?? and right in the center is the "bishop" or some sort of curved figure....a sundial? like I said, I dunno either down the rabbit hole I'm sure careful thought was put into set making decisions....
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Post by tafultong on Sept 26, 2008 20:59:29 GMT -5
I dunno, I find the backdrop for the recent tel aviv concerts very interesting, and more than one set demands scrutiny... I'm sure careful thought was put into set making decisions.... I agree with you completely. He has used that same background (with the Bishop or whatever) every time he has done "A Day In The Life." I really want to know what that is. I have to look back at the other shows, but I think the box, arrows and dice background is new.
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Post by iameye on Sept 26, 2008 21:13:20 GMT -5
I dunno, I find the backdrop for the recent tel aviv concerts very interesting, and more than one set demands scrutiny... I'm sure careful thought was put into set making decisions.... I agree with you completely. He has used that same background (with the Bishop or whatever) every time he has done "A Day In The Life." I really want to know what that is. I have to look back at the other shows, but I think the box, arrows and dice background is new. the indentation of a die is a "pip" same goes for a club, heart etc on a deck of playing cards.... just sayin' it's also a picture with in a picture... this will make sense at a later date.... lol
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Post by iameye on Sept 26, 2008 21:56:50 GMT -5
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Post by iameye on Sept 26, 2008 22:52:04 GMT -5
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Post by iameye on Sept 28, 2008 12:33:01 GMT -5
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