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- Newsgroups: rec.juggling
- Path: sparky!uunet!stanford.edu!CSD-NewsHost.Stanford.EDU!CSD-Newshost!me
- From: me@Sunburn.stanford.edu (Martin Frost)
- Subject: Re: Michael Davis
- In-Reply-To: aconway@BofA.com's message of Wed, 20 Jan 93 15:12:19 GMT
- Message-ID: <ME.93Jan21133355@Sunburn.stanford.edu>
- Sender: news@CSD-NewsHost.Stanford.EDU
- Reply-To: me@CS.Stanford.EDU
- Organization: Computer Science Department, Stanford University.
- References: <1993Jan19.215109.15433@athena.mit.edu> <1993Jan20.151219.16952@BofA.com>
- Date: 21 Jan 93 13:33:55
- Lines: 19
-
- In article <1993Jan20.151219.16952@BofA.com> aconway@BofA.com (Andrew Conway) writes:
-
- From: aconway@BofA.com (Andrew Conway)
- Date: Wed, 20 Jan 93 15:12:19 GMT
-
- There is a reason that whenever Mike does this with another juggler,
- the other guy always drops first, apart from the fact that he has
- actually practised this stupid trick. Mike keeps his margarine cold, and
- serves the other guy margarine at room temperature.
-
- I was the volunteer in one of his shows in Mill Valley, CA. Instead of
- liver, we juggled whole chicken fryers (heavy and awkward to catch). After
- a long run (15 or 20 seconds), I finally dropped the chicken, but not the
- 2-pound margarine ball. Of course, perhaps if my margarine had been cold,
- I would've had more time to concentrate on the chicken.
- --
- Martin Frost Computer Science Department, Computer Facilities
- Systems Programmer Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305-2140
- me@CS.Stanford.EDU (or mfrost@stanford.bitnet)
-