Here's the updated list, with Matt's M4M scenes.
2 Gents (pirates) Comedy of Errors (knocking at the gate, Dr. Pinch) Taming (servants at Petruchio's return) Much Ado (Dogberry and the great chase, Kill Claudio (done in 2005)) LLL (play with the play) AYL (Ducdame) MND (Blame Clayton! Bottom's Dream) Cymbeline (Iachino in the trunk, funeral song) Winter's Tale (Paulina shows Leontes his infant child, dance of the 12 satyrs, final scene) Lear (Lear-Cordelia reconciliation) Pericles (final scene) "Brats of Clarence" by Paul Menzer Hamlet (advice to the players, grave diggers) Sonnet 30 (remembrance of things past) Henry V (muse of fire) 3 Henry VI (Duke of York: "o tiger's heart….) Othello (how 2 win Desdemona) Sonnets 40, 116, 130, 138, 142 or others Antony and Cleopatra -- news that Antony has married Octavia, also: II.vii. song-and-dance Measure for Measure -- Opening scene, Angelo wants only one thing: Isabella's virginity, Isabella and Claudio imagine howling. Macbeth: porter's scene, weird sisters. Tempest: drunks. epilogue. 12th Night: drunks (done in 2005) HVIII: Wolsey and Catherine. Epilogue. "Everything and Nothing" -- Borges (Mike says Irby translation is better than Kerrigan!) "Little Gidding" -- Eliot Falstaff scenes (1 and 2 Henry IV, Merry Wives, "Chimes at Midnight") "Kiss Me Kate" -- "Brush Up Your Shakespeare" R&J (Nurse scenes)
I was reading an essay last night on the phrase "Et in Arcadia ego" for a paper I'm writing, and the author, describing Poussin's "The Arcadian Shepherds," described one of the duties of art as "allowing communication about the unutterable." I thought of Bottom's dream again ("no words of me") and then had a vision of the performance beginning with everyone asleep on the stage, everyone a Bottom, waking up to attempt to describe a most rare vision, then rushing off to get Peter Quince and the gang to start rolling on that play and that ballad (or ballet, as you like). Telling the story of the dream through the play and playing.
cs
On May 5, 2010, at 12:17 PM, Mike Godwin wrote:
Here's the updated list, with Matt's M4M scenes.
2 Gents (pirates) Comedy of Errors (knocking at the gate, Dr. Pinch) Taming (servants at Petruchio's return) Much Ado (Dogberry and the great chase, Kill Claudio (done in 2005)) LLL (play with the play) AYL (Ducdame) MND (Blame Clayton! Bottom's Dream) Cymbeline (Iachino in the trunk, funeral song) Winter's Tale (Paulina shows Leontes his infant child, dance of the 12 satyrs, final scene) Lear (Lear-Cordelia reconciliation) Pericles (final scene) "Brats of Clarence" by Paul Menzer Hamlet (advice to the players, grave diggers) Sonnet 30 (remembrance of things past) Henry V (muse of fire) 3 Henry VI (Duke of York: "o tiger's heart….) Othello (how 2 win Desdemona) Sonnets 40, 116, 130, 138, 142 or others Antony and Cleopatra -- news that Antony has married Octavia, also: II.vii. song-and-dance Measure for Measure -- Opening scene, Angelo wants only one thing: Isabella's virginity, Isabella and Claudio imagine howling. Macbeth: porter's scene, weird sisters. Tempest: drunks. epilogue. 12th Night: drunks (done in 2005) HVIII: Wolsey and Catherine. Epilogue. "Everything and Nothing" -- Borges (Mike says Irby translation is better than Kerrigan!) "Little Gidding" -- Eliot Falstaff scenes (1 and 2 Henry IV, Merry Wives, "Chimes at Midnight") "Kiss Me Kate" -- "Brush Up Your Shakespeare" R&J (Nurse scenes) _______________________________________________ Weeklong-l mailing list Weeklong-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/weeklong-l
Clayton Stromberger Outreach Coordinator UT Shakespeare at Winedale College of Liberal Arts, University of Texas at Austin www.shakespeare-winedale.org cell: 512-228-1055/ office: 512-471-4726
love that idea.... we could even have each player do a few chosen lines from one of the plays as they exit... a "mash up" of selected lines from Shakespeare's plays....
Clay Stromberger cstromberger@mail.utexas.edu 5/5/2010 12:31 PM
I was reading an essay last night on the phrase "Et in Arcadia ego" for a paper I'm writing, and the author, describing Poussin's "The Arcadian Shepherds," described one of the duties of art as "allowing communication about the unutterable." I thought of Bottom's dream again ("no words of me") and then had a vision of the performance beginning with everyone asleep on the stage, everyone a Bottom, waking up to attempt to describe a most rare vision, then rushing off to get Peter Quince and the gang to start rolling on that play and that ballad (or ballet, as you like). Telling the story of the dream through the play and playing.
cs
On May 5, 2010, at 12:17 PM, Mike Godwin wrote:
Here's the updated list, with Matt's M4M scenes.
2 Gents (pirates) Comedy of Errors (knocking at the gate, Dr. Pinch) Taming (servants at Petruchio's return) Much Ado (Dogberry and the great chase, Kill Claudio (done in 2005)) LLL (play with the play) AYL (Ducdame) MND (Blame Clayton! Bottom's Dream) Cymbeline (Iachino in the trunk, funeral song) Winter's Tale (Paulina shows Leontes his infant child, dance of the
12 satyrs, final scene)
Lear (Lear-Cordelia reconciliation) Pericles (final scene) "Brats of Clarence" by Paul Menzer Hamlet (advice to the players, grave diggers) Sonnet 30 (remembrance of things past) Henry V (muse of fire) 3 Henry VI (Duke of York: "o tiger's heart….) Othello (how 2 win Desdemona) Sonnets 40, 116, 130, 138, 142 or others Antony and Cleopatra -- news that Antony has married Octavia, also:
II.vii. song-and-dance
Measure for Measure -- Opening scene, Angelo wants only one thing:
Isabella's virginity, Isabella and Claudio imagine howling.
Macbeth: porter's scene, weird sisters. Tempest: drunks. epilogue. 12th Night: drunks (done in 2005) HVIII: Wolsey and Catherine. Epilogue. "Everything and Nothing" -- Borges (Mike says Irby translation is
better than Kerrigan!)
"Little Gidding" -- Eliot Falstaff scenes (1 and 2 Henry IV, Merry Wives, "Chimes at
Midnight")
"Kiss Me Kate" -- "Brush Up Your Shakespeare" R&J (Nurse scenes) _______________________________________________ Weeklong-l mailing list Weeklong-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/weeklong-l
Clayton Stromberger Outreach Coordinator UT Shakespeare at Winedale College of Liberal Arts, University of Texas at Austin www.shakespeare-winedale.org cell: 512-228-1055/ office: 512-471-4726
_______________________________________________ Weeklong-l mailing list Weeklong-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/weeklong-l
Every time I read "Et in Arcadia Ego" I think of Tom Stoppard's "Arcadia":
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arcadia_%28play%29
--Mike
On Wed, May 5, 2010 at 10:31 AM, Clay Stromberger < cstromberger@mail.utexas.edu> wrote:
I was reading an essay last night on the phrase "Et in Arcadia ego" for a paper I'm writing, and the author, describing Poussin's "The Arcadian Shepherds," described one of the duties of art as "allowing communication about the unutterable." I thought of Bottom's dream again ("no words of me") and then had a vision of the performance beginning with everyone asleep on the stage, everyone a Bottom, waking up to attempt to describe a most rare vision, then rushing off to get Peter Quince and the gang to start rolling on that play and that ballad (or ballet, as you like). Telling the story of the dream through the play and playing.
cs
On May 5, 2010, at 12:17 PM, Mike Godwin wrote:
Here's the updated list, with Matt's M4M scenes.
2 Gents (pirates) Comedy of Errors (knocking at the gate, Dr. Pinch) Taming (servants at Petruchio's return) Much Ado (Dogberry and the great chase, Kill Claudio (done in 2005)) LLL (play with the play) AYL (Ducdame) MND (Blame Clayton! Bottom's Dream) Cymbeline (Iachino in the trunk, funeral song) Winter's Tale (Paulina shows Leontes his infant child, dance of the 12
satyrs, final scene)
Lear (Lear-Cordelia reconciliation) Pericles (final scene) "Brats of Clarence" by Paul Menzer Hamlet (advice to the players, grave diggers) Sonnet 30 (remembrance of things past) Henry V (muse of fire) 3 Henry VI (Duke of York: "o tiger's heart….) Othello (how 2 win Desdemona) Sonnets 40, 116, 130, 138, 142 or others Antony and Cleopatra -- news that Antony has married Octavia, also:
II.vii. song-and-dance
Measure for Measure -- Opening scene, Angelo wants only one thing:
Isabella's virginity, Isabella and Claudio imagine howling.
Macbeth: porter's scene, weird sisters. Tempest: drunks. epilogue. 12th Night: drunks (done in 2005) HVIII: Wolsey and Catherine. Epilogue. "Everything and Nothing" -- Borges (Mike says Irby translation is better
than Kerrigan!)
"Little Gidding" -- Eliot Falstaff scenes (1 and 2 Henry IV, Merry Wives, "Chimes at Midnight") "Kiss Me Kate" -- "Brush Up Your Shakespeare" R&J (Nurse scenes) _______________________________________________ Weeklong-l mailing list Weeklong-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/weeklong-l
Clayton Stromberger Outreach Coordinator UT Shakespeare at Winedale College of Liberal Arts, University of Texas at Austin www.shakespeare-winedale.org cell: 512-228-1055/ office: 512-471-4726
And see this:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Et_in_Arcadia_ego
--m
On Wed, May 5, 2010 at 10:38 AM, Mike Godwin mnemonic@gmail.com wrote:
Every time I read "Et in Arcadia Ego" I think of Tom Stoppard's "Arcadia":
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arcadia_%28play%29
--Mike
On Wed, May 5, 2010 at 10:31 AM, Clay Stromberger < cstromberger@mail.utexas.edu> wrote:
I was reading an essay last night on the phrase "Et in Arcadia ego" for a paper I'm writing, and the author, describing Poussin's "The Arcadian Shepherds," described one of the duties of art as "allowing communication about the unutterable." I thought of Bottom's dream again ("no words of me") and then had a vision of the performance beginning with everyone asleep on the stage, everyone a Bottom, waking up to attempt to describe a most rare vision, then rushing off to get Peter Quince and the gang to start rolling on that play and that ballad (or ballet, as you like). Telling the story of the dream through the play and playing.
cs
On May 5, 2010, at 12:17 PM, Mike Godwin wrote:
Here's the updated list, with Matt's M4M scenes.
2 Gents (pirates) Comedy of Errors (knocking at the gate, Dr. Pinch) Taming (servants at Petruchio's return) Much Ado (Dogberry and the great chase, Kill Claudio (done in 2005)) LLL (play with the play) AYL (Ducdame) MND (Blame Clayton! Bottom's Dream) Cymbeline (Iachino in the trunk, funeral song) Winter's Tale (Paulina shows Leontes his infant child, dance of the 12
satyrs, final scene)
Lear (Lear-Cordelia reconciliation) Pericles (final scene) "Brats of Clarence" by Paul Menzer Hamlet (advice to the players, grave diggers) Sonnet 30 (remembrance of things past) Henry V (muse of fire) 3 Henry VI (Duke of York: "o tiger's heart….) Othello (how 2 win Desdemona) Sonnets 40, 116, 130, 138, 142 or others Antony and Cleopatra -- news that Antony has married Octavia, also:
II.vii. song-and-dance
Measure for Measure -- Opening scene, Angelo wants only one thing:
Isabella's virginity, Isabella and Claudio imagine howling.
Macbeth: porter's scene, weird sisters. Tempest: drunks. epilogue. 12th Night: drunks (done in 2005) HVIII: Wolsey and Catherine. Epilogue. "Everything and Nothing" -- Borges (Mike says Irby translation is better
than Kerrigan!)
"Little Gidding" -- Eliot Falstaff scenes (1 and 2 Henry IV, Merry Wives, "Chimes at Midnight") "Kiss Me Kate" -- "Brush Up Your Shakespeare" R&J (Nurse scenes) _______________________________________________ Weeklong-l mailing list Weeklong-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/weeklong-l
Clayton Stromberger Outreach Coordinator UT Shakespeare at Winedale College of Liberal Arts, University of Texas at Austin www.shakespeare-winedale.org cell: 512-228-1055/ office: 512-471-4726
Where's the Taming Induction scene with Sly?
I had suggested that and don't see it listed now that I'm doing my 11th hour re-reading of the list.
YIkes.
I had thought to suggest beginning in a barn tavern with the lords and ladies setting drunken old Sly up to be fooled and to watch with his lovely lad an entertainment. The rest would be our chosen scenes.
And at the end the character of Sly, passed out and then waking up to become Bottom and ending with Bottom's dream.
So yikes! If it isn't too 11th hour, keep the Induction scene in mind.
Love, Terry
-----Original Message----- From: Mike Godwin mnemonic@gmail.com To: weeklong-l weeklong-l@lists.wikimedia.org Sent: Wed, May 5, 2010 1:17 pm Subject: Re: [Weeklong-l] Plays we've mentioned so far (my quick list) UPDATE
Here's the updated list, with Matt's M4M scenes.
2 Gents (pirates) Comedy of Errors (knocking at the gate, Dr. Pinch) Taming (servants at Petruchio's return) Much Ado (Dogberry and the great chase, Kill Claudio (done in 2005)) LLL (play with the play) AYL (Ducdame) MND (Blame Clayton! Bottom's Dream) Cymbeline (Iachino in the trunk, funeral song) Winter's Tale (Paulina shows Leontes his infant child, dance of the 12 satyrs, final scene) Lear (Lear-Cordelia reconciliation) Pericles (final scene) "Brats of Clarence" by Paul Menzer Hamlet (advice to the players, grave diggers) Sonnet 30 (remembrance of things past) Henry V (muse of fire) 3 Henry VI (Duke of York: "o tiger's heart….) Othello (how 2 win Desdemona) Sonnets 40, 116, 130, 138, 142 or others Antony and Cleopatra -- news that Antony has married Octavia, also: II.vii. song-and-dance Measure for Measure -- Opening scene, Angelo wants only one thing: Isabella's virginity, Isabella and Claudio imagine howling. Macbeth: porter's scene, weird sisters. Tempest: drunks. epilogue. 12th Night: drunks (done in 2005) HVIII: Wolsey and Catherine. Epilogue. "Everything and Nothing" -- Borges (Mike says Irby translation is better than Kerrigan!) "Little Gidding" -- Eliot Falstaff scenes (1 and 2 Henry IV, Merry Wives, "Chimes at Midnight") "Kiss Me Kate" -- "Brush Up Your Shakespeare" R&J (Nurse scenes)
_______________________________________________ Weeklong-l mailing list Weeklong-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/weeklong-l
Hey Week-longers!
Mary, Alice, yours truly and a few other happy task makers have thought up one more thing for us to do once we are thrown together for our reunion week. IMPROVISATIONS of course!
What would our nights be without them? Boring if restful.
Anyway, we thought we would thrust the task of coming up with clever little improvisations on other people -- namely all of you.
Alice suggested that KATHY and JACKSON lead us in our improvs for the very first night we have the Barn to ourselves. Although I have to admit I don't know exactly what night that might be -- the The 8th? The 9th?
The dates matter not. What does matter is the sense of extreme urgency this news is bound to inspire in KATHY and JACKSON since the imaginary improv ball is now in their court.
We need volunteers to lead improvs after KATHY and JACKSONr their magic on the rest of us.
Who wants to take a stab at it?
Do reply to this list -- not to me, though. I like delegating. So let's say, if you want to volunteer to lead improvs respond to this list ATTENTION KATHY and JACKSON. No,no. That seems too unfair and will only add to their panic I'v got it!!
Send your replies ATTENTION: MARY AND ALICE, since they were the sly boots who made the suggestion in the first place.
Blithely Terry
Dear MARY AND ALICE,
I absolutely do not want to lead improvisations.
I do very much want to improvise though.
Helpfully, Terry, following her own advice although with a bit of a twist
-----Original Message----- From: tlgalloway@aol.com To: mnemonic@gmail.com; weeklong-l@lists.wikimedia.org Sent: Mon, Aug 2, 2010 1:03 pm Subject: Re: [Weeklong-l] YOU HAVE BEEN CHOSEN TO BE OUR FEARLESS LEADERS FOR IMPROVISATIONS FOR THE WEEK!
Hey Week-longers!
Mary, Alice, yours truly and a few other happy task makers have thought up one more thing for us to do once we are thrown together for our reunion week. IMPROVISATIONS of course!
What would our nights be without them? Boring if restful.
Anyway, we thought we would thrust the task of coming up with clever little improvisations on other people -- namely all of you.
Alice suggested that KATHY and JACKSON lead us in our improvs for the very first night we have the Barn to ourselves. Although I have to admit I don't know exactly what night that might be -- the The 8th? The 9th?
The dates matter not. What does matter is the sense of extreme urgency this news is bound to inspire in KATHY and JACKSON since the imaginary improv ball is now in their court.
We need volunteers to lead improvs after KATHY and JACKSONr their magic on the rest of us.
Who wants to take a stab at it?
Do reply to this list -- not to me, though. I like delegating. So let's say, if you want to volunteer to lead improvs respond to this list ATTENTION KATHY and JACKSON. No,no. That seems too unfair and will only add to their panic I'v got it!!
Send your replies ATTENTION: MARY AND ALICE, since they were the sly boots who made the suggestion in the first place.
Blithely Terry
_______________________________________________ Weeklong-l mailing list Weeklong-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/weeklong-l
Hey Kathy,
Let's think about this and talk on Saturday. "Torturing Terry, Mary & Alice" might be a fun improv' - just off the top of my head. . .
-Jackson
----- Original Message ----- From: tlgalloway@aol.com To: weeklong-l@lists.wikimedia.org ; mnemonic@gmail.com Sent: Monday, August 02, 2010 1:11 PM Subject: Re: [Weeklong-l] ATTENTION MARY AND ALICE
Dear MARY AND ALICE,
I absolutely do not want to lead improvisations.
I do very much want to improvise though.
Helpfully, Terry, following her own advice although with a bit of a twist
-----Original Message----- From: tlgalloway@aol.com To: mnemonic@gmail.com; weeklong-l@lists.wikimedia.org Sent: Mon, Aug 2, 2010 1:03 pm Subject: Re: [Weeklong-l] YOU HAVE BEEN CHOSEN TO BE OUR FEARLESS LEADERS FOR IMPROVISATIONS FOR THE WEEK!
Hey Week-longers!
Mary, Alice, yours truly and a few other happy task makers have thought up one more thing for us to do once we are thrown together for our reunion week. IMPROVISATIONS of course!
What would our nights be without them? Boring if restful.
Anyway, we thought we would thrust the task of coming up with clever little improvisations on other people -- namely all of you.
Alice suggested that KATHY and JACKSON lead us in our improvs for the very first night we have the Barn to ourselves. Although I have to admit I don't know exactly what night that might be -- the The 8th? The 9th?
The dates matter not. What does matter is the sense of extreme urgency this news is bound to inspire in KATHY and JACKSON since the imaginary improv ball is now in their court.
We need volunteers to lead improvs after KATHY and JACKSONr their magic on the rest of us.
Who wants to take a stab at it?
Do reply to this list -- not to me, though. I like delegating. So let's say, if you want to volunteer to lead improvs respond to this list ATTENTION KATHY and JACKSON. No,no. That seems too unfair and will only add to their panic I'v got it!!
Send your replies ATTENTION: MARY AND ALICE, since they were the sly boots who made the suggestion in the first place.
Blithely Terry
_______________________________________________ Weeklong-l mailing list Weeklong-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/weeklong-l
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
_______________________________________________ Weeklong-l mailing list Weeklong-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/weeklong-l
Aieeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
From: Robert Jackson rjax@netcom.com Reply-To: weeklong-l@lists.wikimedia.org Date: Mon, 2 Aug 2010 14:48:02 -0400 To: weeklong-l@lists.wikimedia.org Subject: Re: [Weeklong-l] ATTENTION MARY AND ALICE
Hey Kathy, Let¹s think about this and talk on Saturday. ³Torturing Terry, Mary & Alice² might be a fun improv¹ just off the top of my head. . . -Jackson
----- Original Message -----
From: tlgalloway@aol.com
To: weeklong-l@lists.wikimedia.org ; mnemonic@gmail.com
Sent: Monday, August 02, 2010 1:11 PM
Subject: Re: [Weeklong-l] ATTENTION MARY AND ALICE
Dear MARY AND ALICE,
I absolutely do not want to lead improvisations.
I do very much want to improvise though.
Helpfully,
Terry, following her own advice although with a bit of a twist
-----Original Message----- From: tlgalloway@aol.com To: mnemonic@gmail.com; weeklong-l@lists.wikimedia.org Sent: Mon, Aug 2, 2010 1:03 pm Subject: Re: [Weeklong-l] YOU HAVE BEEN CHOSEN TO BE OUR FEARLESS LEADERS FOR IMPROVISATIONS FOR THE WEEK!
Hey Week-longers!
Mary, Alice, yours truly and a few other happy task makers have thought up one more thing for us to do once we are thrown together for our reunion week. IMPROVISATIONS of course!
What would our nights be without them? Boring if restful.
Anyway, we thought we would thrust the task of coming up with clever little improvisations on other people -- namely all of you.
Alice suggested that KATHY and JACKSON lead us in our improvs for the very first night we have the Barn to ourselves. Although I have to admit I don't know exactly what night that might be -- the The 8th? The 9th?
The dates matter not. What does matter is the sense of extreme urgency this news is bound to inspire in KATHY and JACKSON since the imaginary improv ball is now in their court.
We need volunteers to lead improvs after KATHY and JACKSONr their magic on the rest of us.
Who wants to take a stab at it?
Do reply to this list -- not to me, though. I like delegating. So let's say, if you want to volunteer to lead improvs respond to this list ATTENTION KATHY and JACKSON. No,no. That seems too unfair and will only add to their panic I'v got it!!
Send your replies ATTENTION: MARY AND ALICE, since they were the sly boots who made the suggestion in the first place.
Blithely
Terry
Weeklong-l mailing list Weeklong-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/weeklong-l
Weeklong-l mailing list Weeklong-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/weeklong-l
_______________________________________________ Weeklong-l mailing list Weeklong-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/weeklong-l
3 8 year olds a 5 year old and a squawking 6 mo old in my house til Saturday. They leave just moments before I head out for Winedale I am useless on sbjct of improvs am improving.as I write this help chaos c u sat I know my lines I think i will be ready!!! Heeelp Sent from my iPhone
On Aug 2, 2010, at 12:04 PM, "tlgalloway@aol.commailto:tlgalloway@aol.com" <tlgalloway@aol.commailto:tlgalloway@aol.com> wrote:
Hey Week-longers!
Mary, Alice, yours truly and a few other happy task makers have thought up one more thing for us to do once we are thrown together for our reunion week. IMPROVISATIONS of course!
What would our nights be without them? Boring if restful.
Anyway, we thought we would thrust the task of coming up with clever little improvisations on other people -- namely all of you.
Alice suggested that KATHY and JACKSON lead us in our improvs for the very first night we have the Barn to ourselves. Although I have to admit I don't know exactly what night that might be -- the The 8th? The 9th?
The dates matter not. What does matter is the sense of extreme urgency this news is bound to inspire in KATHY and JACKSON since the imaginary improv ball is now in their court.
We need volunteers to lead improvs after KATHY and JACKSONr their magic on the rest of us.
Who wants to take a stab at it?
Do reply to this list -- not to me, though. I like delegating. So let's say, if you want to volunteer to lead improvs respond to this list ATTENTION KATHY and JACKSON. No,no. That seems too unfair and will only add to their panic I'v got it!!
Send your replies ATTENTION: MARY AND ALICE, since they were the sly boots who made the suggestion in the first place.
Blithely Terry
<ATT00001..txt>
weeklong-l@lists.wikimedia.org