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In lugnet.org.us.richlug, Bert Waters wrote:
> We will post new photos of Tim's Virginia State Capitol...
I loaded photos from the Aviation Museum show on brickshelf several days ago and
am just getting around to posting. Here's a link to my favorite photo entitled:
Virginia State Capitol in the year 2525.
http://www.brickshelf.com/cgi-bin/gallery.cgi?i=3103254
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Great to see some activity on the Trains newsgroup today! We will post new
photos of Tim's Virginia State Capitol, designed by Thomas Jefferson, and soon
(hopefully) to be displayed at our State Capitol. This year we have a much
smaller display at the Aviation Museum. Perhaps next year the new system will
create more excitement, and we can once again promote LEGO trains.
The Richmond Lego Users Group (RichLUG) will once again present a display at
the Virginia Aviation Museum's Ninth Annual Wings n' Rails show in Richmond,
Virginia, on March 29-30. Hours for the event are 9:30 am to 5:00 pm both
days.The museum is located at the Richmond International Airport in Sandston:
http://vam.smv.org/
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please note that i have tried every method i know of to contact Clifton without
posting this to lugnet. this is my last resort.
Clifton D. Chambers,
You have had well over 2 months to ship me the jambalaya box. I am
getting really tired of emailing, calling and posting to Lugnet trying
to get you to do what you agreed to do, when you choose to participate
in the town/train jambalaya box. All 8 of the other participants
followed the rules, why cant you?
Please ship me the box ASAP.
I need the box for BRICKWORLD, which starts Thursday.
Ondrew
P.S. if you are not Clifton D. Chambers please help me get this box
from him. Ive tried everything I can think of short of flying to DC and Ive
had no luck.
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Hey Steve,
Good luck with your shot at participating in this. I am concerned that they can
cut and paste clips together to tell whatever story they want to. I also think
that they go out of their way to put together the least compatible people
possible, to generate controversy and hence ratings. So don't expect this to be
a pleasant experience.
One other concern is that if they think you're a reasonable person, you're much
less likely to be chosen. It's been a while since I've seen that show (or
perhaps the other one - don't Fox and ABC have shows with exactly the same
premise?), but I remember that the people they have are usually a little
freakish. Instead of someone who likes to keep their home clean they'll have a
total neat-freak who goes nuts if one thing is out of place (and then, of
course, place them with total slobs who haven't cleaned their home in decades),
or there was one where they had a religious person, but instead of any of the
people I see in church on Sunday, they had someone who fulfilled the worst
stereotypes you can come up with for a fanatic intolerant religious person.
I got the e-mail too, but don't fit their criteria (no kids), so it's not a
question for me.
Bruce
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In lugnet.mediawatch, Steve Hassenplug wrote:
> At 04:05 PM 12/13/06, Aaron Sneary wrote:
> > A TV show that is seeking to mock and poke fun
> > at our group is a detriment to our hobby/sub-culture.
>
> There will always be people that just live to mock and poke fun at
> others. That's their hobby. It's what they do.
>
> On the other had, you can't believe how much fun I've had in the last
> year, sharing my hobby with people all around the world, talking
> about LEGO, Mindstorms, robots and all the stuff I enjoy.
>
>
> Now, I need to practice being judgmental and extreme...
>
> <Extreme judgment>
>
> I'm shocked that you stupid people don't have the vision to see an
> opportunity when it's handed to you. There are millions of people
> who would die for this kind of chance, and you morons are too scared
> of what mocking idiots will think about your precious hobby...
>
> </Extreme judgment>
>
> Well, that's about the best I can do. :) Please note that was
> intended to be sarcastic. I'm just trying to practice in case they
> do put me on the show. I do understand how the show may try to take
> things out of context (like the above statement), but I hope I can do
> a good job of presenting myself and our hobby. And, maybe I'll even
> end up a better person, when it's all done.
>
> Steve
There are plenty of people who think we are nut cases already, a Wife Swap
episode mocking AF'sOL won't make things any worse. :D
The thing I think is most worrisome is that on some of those episodes the new
wife comes in and clears out objects she doesn't like. In one recent episode
the Evangelical new wife broke to shards a large platter with Wiccan symbols the
absent wife had on display. What if the new wife comes in and donates or tosses
all the LEGO? For a lot of people here the $20,000 compensation wouldn't begin
to cover the value of their LEGO collection. If you are selected, maybe you
should entrust your most valued parts / sets / creations to a friend or relative
for the duration.
Maggie C.
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At 04:05 PM 12/13/06, Aaron Sneary wrote:
> No offense to anyone that has decided to participate, but I find this highly
> offensive on two counts.
>
> ONE - I am a happily married man that believes there is a special bond that
> marriage embodies. A TV show that exploits that is a detriment to a positive,
> family-oriented society.
There are, of course, different ways of looking at this.
It seems to me that at the end of each show, all four spouses end up
talking about how much they appreciate the person they're married
to. Usually even more than when the show started. And, generally it
appears both families end up making changes that will make them
better people, and make their families stronger.
> TWO - I am a proud adult LEGO enthusist that believes our hobby is a positive,
> family-oriented hobby that may come to be respected at least as much as Model
> Railroading one day. A TV show that is seeking to mock and poke fun
> at our group
> is a detriment to our hobby/sub-culture.
This week, they had a family where the 5 yr old daughter participated
in beauty pageants. Maybe I missed something, but they didn't appear
to mock that. I can't possibly imagine doing that with a 5 yr old,
but maybe I'd feel different if I had a girl.
> I for one will not be watching that show at all. I hope that if you choose to
> participate, you will be keenly aware of the producers' attempts to mock you
> (and hence us) on national television.
My family has decided to apply, and as it turns out, we are moving
right along in the application process.
I'm not worried about anyone attempting to mock us. I'm very
comfortable with our choice of hobbies. I'm 100% sure, no matter how
positive they make it, there will be people that say, "those dumb
adults play with legos."
On the other hand, no matter how negative they make it, there will
also be people that say, "You mean I'm not the only adult that builds
with LEGO?"
There will always be people that just live to mock and poke fun at
others. That's their hobby. It's what they do.
On the other had, you can't believe how much fun I've had in the last
year, sharing my hobby with people all around the world, talking
about LEGO, Mindstorms, robots and all the stuff I enjoy.
Now, I need to practice being judgmental and extreme...
<Extreme judgement>
I'm shocked that you stupid people don't have the vision to see an
opportunity when it's handed to you. There are millions of people
who would die for this kind of chance, and you morons are too scared
of what mocking idiots will think about your precious hobby...
</Extreme judgement>
Well, that's about the best I can do. :) Please note that was
intended to be sarcastic. I'm just trying to practice in case they
do put me on the show. I do understand how the show may try to take
things out of context (like the above statement), but I hope I can do
a good job of presenting myself and our hobby. And, maybe I'll even
end up a better person, when it's all done.
Steve
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In lugnet.mediawatch, Aaron M. Sneary wrote:
What he said.
Well said.
JOHN
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In lugnet.mediawatch, Marc Nelson Jr. wrote:
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I just received this email - my address was apparently culled from the
WAMALUG list: snipped
Anybody out there thinking of volunteering? And who would you be swapping
with? A MegaBloks fan?
Marc Nelson Jr.
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Yea, I got this email too.
No offense to anyone that has decided to participate, but I find this highly
offensive on two counts.
ONE - I am a happily married man that believes there is a special bond that
marriage embodies. A TV show that exploits that is a detriment to a positive,
family-oriented society.
TWO - I am a proud adult LEGO enthusist that believes our hobby is a positive,
family-oriented hobby that may come to be respected at least as much as Model
Railroading one day. A TV show that is seeking to mock and poke fun at our group
is a detriment to our hobby/sub-culture.
I for one will not be watching that show at all. I hope that if you choose to
participate, you will be keenly aware of the producers attempts to mock you
(and hence us) on national television.
END SOAPBOX
Aaron Sneary
Husband and AFOL
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In lugnet.mediawatch, Marc Nelson Jr. wrote:
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I just received this email - my address was apparently culled from the
WAMALUG list:
(clip wife swap solitication)
Anybody out there thinking of volunteering? And who would you be swapping
with? A MegaBloks fan?
Marc Nelson Jr.
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Shes been making the rounds of the Internet. Check out
my latest blog posting for some fun with this.
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In lugnet.mediawatch, Jack Hawk wrote:
> In lugnet.mediawatch, Marc Nelson Jr. wrote:
> > I just received this email - my address was apparently culled from the
> > WAMALUG list:
> >
> > {Hello, my name is Jodi and I am a casting producer for the show Wife
> > Swap on ABC television. I am seeking families who involved in the
> > subculture of adult Lego hobbyists. I saw you on the forum and thought
> > you may be interested in applying!}
> >
> > {Families on the show receive $20,000, and anyone that refers a family
> > that is selected to be on our show is paid $1,000 per referral. Each
> > family should consist of two parents, at least one child between the
> > ages of 6-17, and should reside in the U.S. and have BIG, outgoing
> > personalities.}
> >
> > {If your unfamiliar with the show, the premise of Wife Swap is to take
> > two different families and have the mom's switch place to experience
> > how another family lives for one week. Half of the week, mom lives the
> > life of the family she is staying with. The other half, she introduces
> > a "rule change" where she implements rules and activities that her
> > family has. It's a positive experience for people to not only learn,
> > but teach other ways of life.}
> >
> > {If you would like to apply, please EMAIL ME DIRECTLY at
> > jodi.friedman@rdfusa.com with a family description, photo and phone
> > number. Hope to hear from you!}
> >
> > {-Jodi}
> >
> > {Jodi Friedman¬
> > Casting Producer¬
> > ABC TV/ RDF Media}
> >
> > Anybody out there thinking of volunteering? And who would you be swapping
> > with? A MegaBloks fan?
> >
> > Marc Nelson Jr.
> >
> > <http://www.lugnet.com/~326/
> > <http://www.brickshelf.com/gallery/manjr/LUGNET/thumblink.jpg Marc's
> > Creations>>
>
> LOL!!!
>
> I {just} put up GtwLUG's forum on Tuesday and this same message was posted;
> our member's haven't even started using the forum yet. I found very similar
> messages posted on other community sites for other "sub-cultures" - so it
> seems legit.
>
> --Jack
> AFOL, GtwLUG, St. Louis
Hi,
I got this through LEGOFan today. I guess we could make money more quickly by
sueing them for massive spamming :-/
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=wifeswapabc
Gee, if they would be based in Germany, or at least in the EU, this would be MY
chance to make "some" extra Euros :-)
Leg Godt!
Rene
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In lugnet.mediawatch, Marc Nelson Jr. wrote:
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I just received this email - my address was apparently culled from the
WAMALUG list:
Hello, my name is Jodi and I am a casting producer for the show Wife
Swap on ABC television. I am seeking families who involved in the
subculture of adult Lego hobbyists. I saw you on the forum and thought
you may be interested in applying!
Families on the show receive $20,000, and anyone that refers a family
that is selected to be on our show is paid $1,000 per referral. Each
family should consist of two parents, at least one child between the
ages of 6-17, and should reside in the U.S. and have BIG, outgoing
personalities.
If your unfamiliar with the show, the premise of Wife Swap is to take
two different families and have the moms switch place to experience
how another family lives for one week. Half of the week, mom lives the
life of the family she is staying with. The other half, she introduces
a rule change where she implements rules and activities that her
family has. Its a positive experience for people to not only learn,
but teach other ways of life.
If you would like to apply, please EMAIL ME DIRECTLY at
jodi.friedman@rdfusa.com with a family description, photo and phone
number. Hope to hear from you!
-Jodi
Jodi Friedman
Casting Producer
ABC TV/ RDF Media
Anybody out there thinking of volunteering? And who would you be swapping
with? A MegaBloks fan?
Marc Nelson Jr.
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LOL!!!
I just put up GtwLUGs forum on Tuesday and this same message was posted; our
members havent even started using the forum yet. I found very similar messages
posted on other community sites for other sub-cultures - so it seems legit.
--Jack
AFOL, GtwLUG, St. Louis
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I just received this email - my address was apparently culled from the WAMALUG
list:
Hello, my name is Jodi and I am a casting producer for the show Wife
Swap on ABC television. I am seeking families who involved in the
subculture of adult Lego hobbyists. I saw you on the forum and thought
you may be interested in applying!
Families on the show receive $20,000, and anyone that refers a family
that is selected to be on our show is paid $1,000 per referral. Each
family should consist of two parents, at least one child between the
ages of 6-17, and should reside in the U.S. and have BIG, outgoing
personalities.
If your unfamiliar with the show, the premise of Wife Swap is to take
two different families and have the moms switch place to experience
how another family lives for one week. Half of the week, mom lives the
life of the family she is staying with. The other half, she introduces
a rule change where she implements rules and activities that her
family has. Its a positive experience for people to not only learn,
but teach other ways of life.
If you would like to apply, please EMAIL ME DIRECTLY at
jodi.friedman@rdfusa.com with a family description, photo and phone
number. Hope to hear from you!
-Jodi
Jodi Friedman
Casting Producer
ABC TV/ RDF Media
Anybody out there thinking of volunteering? And who would you be swapping with?
A MegaBloks fan?
Marc Nelson Jr.
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Just saw this on the front page of the Washington Posts website:
Age 35, and Something Went Snap. The first part is about the Master Builders,
but several WAMALUG members and LUGNET posters are mentioned at the end.
Marc Nelson Jr.
Age 35, and Something Went Snap
With Legos, Grown-Ups Reclaim a Piece of the Past
By Tamara Jones
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, November 26, 2006; D01
The masters of the plastic universe are baffled. From their imaginations, their
computers, from their calloused fingers, magnificent kingdoms have sprung. They
can re-create the Seven Wonders of the World in a literal snap. But now they
huddle in their model shop of Legoland California and contemplate the seemingly
impossible:
How in the rectangular heck do you give a Lego bride a Lego bosom?
Tim Petsche considers miniature chef hats borrowed from a Lego kitchen set. Too
big. What about a couple of Lego daisies? someone else suggests. Too weird.
Too bad.
Such are the dilemmas of grown-ups in a childs fantasy job.
Petsche and his five teammates are the salaried elite in a vast subculture of
adult Lego hobbyists whose collections of little plastic bricks overtake entire
rooms at home -- professors and lawyers and accountants and engineers who find a
creative outlet in the sturdy Danish blocks. People who reclaim and reassemble
lost childhoods piece by tiny piece.
You go into what we refer to as the Dark Ages, when you stop playing with them
as a kid, but come back to them as an adult. Some people stop at 12, then break
out their Lego sets again at 30, explains model builder Eric Hunter, 36, who
landed his dream job a year ago at Americas only Legoland, in the Southern
California coastal town of Carlsbad.
Hunter and the other master model builders work in a Carlsbad shop filled with
some 2,000 floor-to-ceiling bins full of virtually every piece Lego has created,
in every color (that would include the seven shades of pink). Outside in the
theme park, their obsession with detail is why a small black Lego rat can be
found in the New York subway display, and why Secret Service men on duty in
mini-D.C. all look alike and sport tiny earbuds.
I have Lego thoughts and dreams, Hunter says. Ill be driving down the
freeway and Ill see a building and think, Can I build that out of Lego?
His work is focused on a planned Las Vegas exhibit, due to open next spring in
the parks Miniland U.S.A. Designers expect to use more than 2 million bricks to
build miniatures of famous Vegas hotels and casinos, complete with a tacky
wedding chapel and Lego showgirls.
Hunter is painstakingly putting together a miniature Excalibur Hotel, which, he
notes cheerfully, has 2,200 windows and 28 turret styles, details gleaned by a
Lego reconnaissance team dispatched to Vegas to study and photograph the real
thing.
Patience is a given for AFOLs, as Adult Friends of Lego are known. Hunter spent
a decade building his dream car out of more than 10,000 pieces: a 91 Acura NSX
that he fell in love with while working in a carwash. His Lego version was two
feet long and a foot high.
When he learned Legoland was holding a national competition to hire a new model
builder, Hunter made it to the semifinals with the scorpion he assembled when
given a bucket of 2,000 Lego pieces and 45 minutes to build any animal. Hed
taught himself to make a sphere out of squares, the required skill test for any
model shop hire. Hunter lost the contest, but networked in the Lego community
and visited the park often enough that the model shop manager remembered him
when another opening came up later. The pay is modest -- top scale is about
$45,000 a year -- but theres a 10 percent employee discount on Legos, a perk
that adds up with a hobby that AFOLs say can easily devour thousands of dollars
a year.
The model builders take turns running inspection before the theme park opens
each morning. In Miniland, they make sure the presidential motorcade zipping
along Pennsylvania Avenue hasnt been crushed by a renegade possum overnight,
and that no seagulls have strategically bombed the White House. They make sure
enthusiastic AFOLs havent pinched any of the discontinued bricks -- transparent
ones are particularly coveted -- for their private collections.
And they smile at their own inside jokes, such as the home brewery that the
model builders constructed and hid atop the model of the Kennedy Space Center,
and the Elvis impersonator amid the crowd of mini-commuters at Grand Central
Terminal. Then theres the Lego body of Jimmy Hoffa, buried where no tourist
will ever see him, deep within a column of the new Freedom Tower in fake
Manhattan.
Its an attention to detail shared by the AFOLs who gather for a monthly play
date in a deserted lounge at George Mason Universitys Arlington campus, where a
dozen or so fans brought their Legos by the giant tub and jumbled boxful on a
recent Saturday.
Georgetown mathematician Judy Millers onion-domed reproduction of St. Basils
Cathedral posed delicately beneath the yellow crane that Abraham Friedman was
building higher and higher. Michael Harrod smiled bravely when a clumsy neighbor
accidentally decapitated his Dudley Do-Right of the Mounties sculpture.
We used to have rules, bylaws, a lot of bureaucrats and heavy structure, and it
killed us, Friedman, a software developer, says of the Washington Metro Area
Lego Users Group, or WAMALUG. We used to have two-hour meetings and wed argue
and discuss things forever. So we dissolved the constitution, got rid of the
rules. Now were just a social club. We hang out and build things.
Besides showing off their latest projects and discussing construction
challenges, members also share sorting strategies. Dan Rubin, a 27-year-old
lawyer from Silver Spring, prides himself on his system of sorting by shape,
rather than color, the 400,000-some Lego pieces that his fiancee has consigned
to their basement.
Its easy to become obsessive about acquiring a certain piece instead of
building, observes Magnus Lauglo, who is just coming out of a nine-month castle
phase to concentrate on military vehicles. His green tanks reflect a love of
military history and technology rather than a political statement, Lauglo says,
adding: I dont build in a sociopolitical vacuum, though. Its impossible to
build these and not be aware theres a war going on.
Friedman is casting a critical eye on his finished crane. Judging from the width
of the boom and the size of the mini-figure construction worker standing on
site, he quickly calculates that the crane is not to scale: It wouldnt be high
enough to erect a skyscraper in real life. He is disappointed, but considers the
four hours he spent building it well spent.
Just the act of snapping the pieces together is so satisfying, he explains,
not even looking down as his fingers connect one brick to another. That click
when they go together.
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Thanks Magnus and Derek for your responses. Ill be thrilled to join you for
your dinner. However, as things currently stand, I will be in the Baltimore
area on Wednesday, and arriving (ironically) to GMU on Friday morning for a
while.
Are there any members driving down from Baltimore or nearby? If so I would love
to come down with them. Otherwise, I might still be able to make it, but not
necessarily...
Thanks!
-Shiri
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In lugnet.people, Shiri Dori wrote:
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In lugnet.people, Fradel D. Gonzales wrote:
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Hi Shiri . It looks like you will be in the DC region in time for Wamalugs
monthly dinner. It is the last Wednesday of every month. It would be great
if you could join us.
Fradel
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Yay Wamalug! I hope I can make it. Like I told you by email, Fradel, I would
love to come and will try to arrange the schedule so as to fit this in. (In
Virginia Im dependent on my family members who Im traveling with.)
More details about where, when, and also who is coming will be greatly
appreciated! Id love to see the old crowd again, so please give a shout if
youre attending this.
-Shiri
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The who and where are usually up in the air until a day or so beforehand (we
have to vary our routine to stay one step ahead of the local MegaBlok faction)
but the when is fairly standard--this month it will be July 26th, a Wednesday,
and people show up on one side or the other of 6PM.
Actually, I suppose the where has become standard, as well; weve basically made
Clarendon Grill (a two minute walk from the Clarendon Metro) our standard
location. The who will be about a dozen or so people from the club.
It would be great to have you join us!
Derek
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Hello Shiri,
Nice to hear from you, and congrats on graduating!
The Wamalug dinner will be somewhere very close to a Metro stop, probably in
Clarendon, very close to where BrickFest has been in the past. Hope to see you
then!
cheers
Magnus
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In lugnet.people, Fradel D. Gonzales wrote:
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Hi Shiri . It looks like you will be in the DC region in time for Wamalugs
monthly dinner. It is the last Wednesday of every month. It would be great
if you could join us.
Fradel
|
Yay Wamalug! I hope I can make it. Like I told you by email, Fradel, I would
love to come and will try to arrange the schedule so as to fit this in. (In
Virginia Im dependent on my family members who Im traveling with.)
More details about where, when, and also who is coming will be greatly
appreciated! Id love to see the old crowd again, so please give a shout if
youre attending this.
-Shiri
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Hi all,
This was the second year that WAMALUG participated in Explore the Universe Day
at the National Air and Space Museum. Museum visitors got to see a nice variety
of Space and space related MOCs, and also were able to build in a free build
space by the display.
There was a moonbase, with modules by Tony Perez, Margaret Keys, Joe Meno,
Robert Gurskey, and Phil Moyer. Monorail was provided by Tony Perez and Margaret
Keys, and a moonway car was built by Margaret Keys.
Mecha
was also well represented, with Fradel Gonzales and his mecha bay, and assorted
other models. Adam Silcott also brought in some of his models.
Spaceships included a SHIP by Dan Rubin, who also brought in a few other smaller
ships, another SHIP by Jeff Stembel, some NASA Discovery sets by Philip Moyer
and Mike Harrod, a drop ship by Magnus lauglo, and an astronaut and Skylab mini
by Joe Meno.
Kunie Devorkin showed off her mini Air and Space Museum model, which has
unofficially taken residence at the museum offices.
Many thanks to the members of WAMALUG/WAMALTC who participated:
Tony Perez
Phil Moyer
Margaret Keys
Jeff Stembel
Dan Rubin
Fradel Gonzales
Thom Norris
Denise Jadud
Adam Silcott
Kunie DeVorkin
Mike Harrod
Robert Gurskey
Also thanks to the people at the National Air and Space Museum for their help:
Michelle Krok
David DeVorkin
Mychalene Giampaoli
Galleries can be found here:
Jeff Stembels Gallery
Philip Moyers Gallery
Joe Menos Gallery
It was a great event, and well be back for next year!
Joe Meno
Coordinator
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In lugnet.org.us.wamalug, Abner Finley wrote:
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Any help is greatly appreciated, thanks.
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Hi,
I believe, the green 2 by 2 cone element in the picture is from the Aquazone
theme Aquaraiders sets #2160, #2161, and 2162.
http://www.peeron.com/inv/parts/6039
I hope this helps.
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Oh thanks Abner, I didnt look under octagonal because I thought it was a
smooth cone, that will work, and it looks like there are plenty on BL. Thanks.
Janey Red Brick
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