Relay-Version: version B 2.10 5/3/83; site utzoo.UUCP Posting-Version: version B 2.10.2.fluke 9/24/84; site fluke.UUCP Path: utzoo!watmath!clyde!cbosgd!ihnp4!houxm!vax135!cornell!uw-beaver!microsoft!fluke!moriarty From: moriarty@fluke.UUCP (The Napoleon of Crime) Newsgroups: net.comics Subject: Re: 2 Months of Comments! Message-ID: <178@vax2.fluke.UUCP> Date: Sun, 30-Dec-84 17:47:38 EST Article-I.D.: vax2.178 Posted: Sun Dec 30 17:47:38 1984 Date-Received: Tue, 1-Jan-85 00:56:50 EST References: <11900061@uokvax.UUCP> Reply-To: moriarty@fluke.UUCP (The Napoleon of Crime) Organization: Somewhere in Soho Lines: 65 In article <11900061@uokvax.UUCP> lmaher@uokvax.UUCP writes: >> /***** uokvax:net.comics / usceast!ted / 5:08 pm Nov 6, 1984 */ >> Kitty and Wolverine 4: >> It's probably too late in the series, but I want to see Kitty's >> father go through a sea change. Who says you have to be a mutant >> to confront danger , grow and change. After all, he is unattached >> now - how about Kitty's father and Yukio for a perfect couple? >> (I'm not more than 25% kidding - they've already interacted >> and his trying to meet her standards would be a step in the >> right direction for him) > >HA! There's *no* way this is going to happen. Some men are born >heroes, and some men become heroes, but some men are pathetic slugs >unable to even understand heroes, far less become one, and I feel >Mr. Pryde is the latter. Perhaps I'm being too harsh on him, and >I'll admit the idea of Yukio being a stepmother for Kitty appeals >to my deeply ingrained sense of weird rightness, but the best thing >we can hope for Mr. Pryde is to someday die well. My guess is that he either will go through a change to a more noble state (gee, just like radio-chemistry) or die in a worthy cause in #6. Besides, don't blame him... if YOU were a banker all your life, you'd be pretty darn unsuited to nasty combat, too (unlike computer personnel, who all have nerves of steel and eyes of crystal (or is that the other way around?)). The man may be a Twinkie, but he seems to have done a good job on child-rearing. >> I can list many others, but I have to get back to work :-) > >Come on, Moriarty. We know that in fact you work for Fluke doing >nothing but reading and posting articles, as a part of their P.R. >department to give the impression that Fluke is full of witty, >interesting people. In fact, you're probably a group of people >(considering your output!), each using a different sign-off >quote to distinguish among themselves. :-) > *Sigh*. Guess I had better get this out of the way: :-) Fluke IS full of witty, interesting people. Most of them, tho' are shy (we're almost all from Lake Wobegon). I simply have a tendancy to vocalize (i.e. open my big trap...). Thanks to the miracles of technology, I can now post news from my very apartment dwelling. And most of mine does come from there. So don't go crying to your various managers, "But, MORIARTY gets to post all the live-long day -- why can't *I*?!" I do not wish to set a bad example for the software engineers (oops, computer programmers) of tomorrow. And lastly, the very idea that there is more than one person posting under my name is ludicrous... You said it. Right. What she said. "They dared to call me mad! ME! HA! HA! HA!...." Moriarty, aka Jeff Meyer John Fluke Mfg. Co., Inc. UUCP: {cornell,decvax,ihnp4,sdcsvax,tektronix,utcsrgv}!uw-beaver \ {allegra,gatech!sb1,hplabs!lbl-csam,decwrl!sun,ssc-vax} -- !fluke!moriarty ARPA: fluke!moriarty@uw-beaver.ARPA