I hope you don't think that I just come over for the spells and everything. I mean, I really like just talking and hanging out with you and stuff.

Willow ,'First Date'


Natter .38 Special  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


Gudanov - Sep 07, 2005 6:36:42 am PDT #5226 of 10002
Coding and Sleeping

Civicette?

I think they have something called the "Jazz" in other markets.

They do: [link]


Scrappy - Sep 07, 2005 6:37:45 am PDT #5227 of 10002
Life moves pretty fast. You don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.

Actually, Darts and Chevelles and other early '70s muscle-ish cars are the big new collectibles nowadays. People are buying them and restoring them and they do look purty all spiffed up.

Signed,
BF Reviews Cars and Has Been to Many MANY Classic Car Shows


Kalshane - Sep 07, 2005 6:38:22 am PDT #5228 of 10002
GS: If you had to choose between kicking evil in the head or the behind, which would you choose, and why? Minsc: I'm not sure I understand the question. I have two feet, do I not? You do not take a small plate when the feast of evil welcomes seconds.

My uncle had an AMC Eagle station wagon that I thought was pretty damned ugly. But that thing was indestructable.

My first car was a 4-wheel drive AMC Eagle hatchback. Talk about ugly. Built like a tank, though. And the 4WD was nice until the switch broke. Thing leaked oil like crazy and the starter eventually died (This was after some stupid kids with a baseball bat broke out the driver side window in the middle of winter for the hell of it.) but it was certainly distinctive. Most people's reactions, upon first seeing it, were "What the hell is that thing?"

I thought Pacers were cool when they came out - they looked all futuristic and had an efficient use of interior space for a small car....

We had a Pacer growing up, but I don't remember much about them. I have vague memories of riding with my dad when he was test driving it, but that's about it.


Gudanov - Sep 07, 2005 6:39:41 am PDT #5229 of 10002
Coding and Sleeping

My first car was a 4-wheel drive AMC Eagle hatchback.

The original crossover SUV, long before they were cool.


Kalshane - Sep 07, 2005 6:45:32 am PDT #5230 of 10002
GS: If you had to choose between kicking evil in the head or the behind, which would you choose, and why? Minsc: I'm not sure I understand the question. I have two feet, do I not? You do not take a small plate when the feast of evil welcomes seconds.

Well, it was quite old by the time I got it. Absolutely no acceleration or agility. I remember at one point "racing" a friend of mine one night on this windy road down by the beach in it and losing badly. Finally I just stopped, kicked in the 4WD and turned all the curves into straights, much to the amusement of my friend riding shotgun.

It was a hell of a downgrade after my driving my parents' 88' Jeep Cherokee, though. (Which itself had been 6 years old before I was knocked off the road and totalled it. My first ever car accident and it was a doozy. I've been in 3 accidents in my life and none of them have been simple fender benders.)


le nubian - Sep 07, 2005 6:50:58 am PDT #5231 of 10002
"And to be clear, I am the hell. And the high water."

Other nations are frustrated because they can't send help:

10:35 A.M. - WASHINGTON (AP) -- Many countries say they want to help, but that their Hurricane Katrina offers have gone unanswered. A top Indian official says his country has a plane "parked at the airport" loaded with medicine and food, but the U-S hasn't given a destination.

Taiwan says it's waiting for the U-S to decide where the island nation's two (m) million-dollar donation should be sent. South Korea has promised 30 (m) million dollars and had said it would sent 40 rescue workers and 100 tons of blankets, diapers, wheelchairs and the like by this weekend. But now a Foreign Ministry official says the delivery will be delayed until next week because "preparations are not going well."

A State Department spokesman says "any offers of support that could potentially benefit" the U-S have been accepted.


Lyra Jane - Sep 07, 2005 6:51:23 am PDT #5232 of 10002
Up with the sun

Thanks for the birthday wishes. I'm getting Thai food for lunch and Lebanese for dinner, so the day is all multicultural. I just hope 27 is a good year -- I like the number, anyhow (It's a cube! And it has seven in it! I take an almost Nilly-esque delight in these things.)

Also thanks for the hurricane links. I have a whole new set of things to be outraged by now.


Kathy A - Sep 07, 2005 6:53:27 am PDT #5233 of 10002
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

Back in the late '70s, my brother had a green Pinto for his high school transport--he used to cram five people in that car on a regular basis! He was in an accident that crumpled the front end of his car, and his buddy (whose dad owned a body shop) and he disassembled the front half of the car and reattached another Pinto's front half to the back of his old car, and painted it blue. Finally, in his last year of college, he was hit by a Mercedes while making a cookie ingredient run for Mom on Christmas Eve, so he replaced it with a new Jeep (a very nice one, too). Sad to see the old Pinto go, though.

ETA Birthday wishes for LJ!!


Emily - Sep 07, 2005 6:55:11 am PDT #5234 of 10002
"In the equation E = mc⬧, c⬧ is a pretty big honking number." - Scola

Hey, did we know they were making an Aeon Flux movie? With Charlize Theron? And by we I mean.... anybody, I guess.


sarameg - Sep 07, 2005 6:57:37 am PDT #5235 of 10002

I would seriously love to have a mid-70s Civic.

DON'T GET A '75!

Actually, I don't know if you could find a running one. Blew head gaskets like crazy. I still see others, from a few years later, around. Well, not around here, but in places without road salt.