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Post by jarvitronics on Feb 16, 2011 9:16:49 GMT -5
It's the "Clown Control to Major Tom" post. I looked at the source code of the post (by clicking on "quote") and there is no carriage return between those two images, and that is why, on some people's browsers, those two images are not wrapping onto separate lines, thus causing wide-screen.
-j
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Post by obladiblada on Feb 16, 2011 13:13:47 GMT -5
Sorry for the pictures… I don’t think that’s a Masonic handshake. I’m for an innocent, ordinary handshake. Imo in this picture is Paul: maybe John shake his hand because Paul has arrived at that time and the other photos were taken after. Only speculation. Is more important the fact that at the party were both Paul and Bill.
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Post by B on Feb 16, 2011 16:01:44 GMT -5
obladiblada wrote: Is more important the fact that at the party were both Paul and Bill.
Except that they weren't, imo. I'm not trying to get on your case; I'm just saying that whoever was there, Paul wasn't as best I can tell, and so you're probably going down a wrong road. I see the fellow you call Paul, but I don't believe it is he.
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Post by JoJo on Feb 17, 2011 21:45:37 GMT -5
It's the "Clown Control to Major Tom" post. I looked at the source code of the post (by clicking on "quote") and there is no carriage return between those two images, and that is why, on some people's browsers, those two images are not wrapping onto separate lines, thus causing wide-screen. -j Added the carriage returns where needed.
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Post by iameye on Feb 18, 2011 5:57:35 GMT -5
It's the "Clown Control to Major Tom" post. I looked at the source code of the post (by clicking on "quote") and there is no carriage return between those two images, and that is why, on some people's browsers, those two images are not wrapping onto separate lines, thus causing wide-screen. -j Added the carriage returns where needed. Thank you, Jo.
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Post by ipuffin on Apr 28, 2011 18:14:44 GMT -5
Siriusly.
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Post by ipuffin on Apr 28, 2011 19:38:31 GMT -5
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Post by ipuffin on Apr 29, 2011 10:22:02 GMT -5
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Post by ipuffin on Apr 30, 2011 7:57:27 GMT -5
...more pictures from the exhibition:
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Post by ipuffin on Apr 30, 2011 11:01:57 GMT -5
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Post by ipuffin on May 1, 2011 12:33:37 GMT -5
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Post by ipuffin on May 1, 2011 17:37:33 GMT -5
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Post by B on May 2, 2011 14:09:18 GMT -5
Frank'z apple Sorry The eye in the sky in this one is a bit - strange.
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Post by ipuffin on Aug 8, 2011 20:02:39 GMT -5
"1942" Piano tree, play in the dark concert halls of my uncle, twenty-six years old, dead and homeward bound on a ship from Sitka, his coffin travels like the fingers of Beethoven over a glass of wine. Piano tree, play in the dark concert halls of my uncle, a legend of my childhood, dead, they send him back to Tacoma. At night his coffin travels like the birds that fly beneath the sea, never touching the sky. Piano tree, play in the dark concert halls of my uncle, take his heart for a lover and take his death for a bed, and send him homeward bound on a ship from Sitka to bury him where I was born. Richard Brautigan, 1959from Brautigan.net:"my uncle": Edward Martin Dixon (1916-1942), Uncle Edward. Died in Sitka, Alaska, 11 August 1942.
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Post by ph0neyprophet on Aug 10, 2011 12:22:37 GMT -5
Hi obladiblada! Well, I think you're on the right track with the observations about Paul being "childlike" in some of the songs, but as for "Come Together", I don' t think it fits. You wrote: Hold you in his arms till you can feel his diseasebut the line is actually: "Hold you in his armchair you can feel his disease" and I have never been able to make sense of it. Still, "Dear Prudence" does speak about someone coming "out to play" the way a child does. That song is supposedly about Mia Farrow's sister, but there may be other implications to it. The "alternate white album cover" which was not used appears to show Paul as a child. I think of the song, "Don't Pass Me By", and the line about someone being in a car crash, and losing their hair. That would suggest possibly a head wound that might make someone childlike. And of course you've already mentioned the line in "Hey Bull Dog": "Child-like, no one understands" but what does this mean?! "Jack knife, in your sweaty hands Some kind of innocence is measured out in years" So - yes - you've got some of the things right. A poster who used to post here called Paul "Dear Boy", so he may have known something. I would rule out "Altogether Now" though. In English that has a more sexual meaning. ;D Keep up the good work! I think that much of this post may in fact be the true answer. uh oh - spaghetti - o turns out 'you know who' and 'you know who' were twin peppers afterall
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