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blakes7-d Digest				Volume 98 : Issue 72

Today's Topics:
	 Re: [B7L] Orbit
	 Re: [B7L] Multiple Personality/Schizophrenic
	 Re: [B7L] Ares (was OT: Jingo)
	 Re: [B7L] B7 and Meyers-Brigs
	 Re: [B7L] Multiple Personality/Schizophrenic
	 Re: [B7L] Multiple Personality/Schizophrenic
	 Re: [B7L] NZ
	 [B7L] Re: Vila's accepting ways
	 [B7L] missing characters
	 [B7L] Re: blakes7-d Digest V98 #71
	 Re: [B7L] NZ
	 [B7L] blackadder goes seventh
	 Re: [B7L] Dayna and "Bonding Ritual"
	 [B7L] soma
	 Re: [B7L] soma
	 Re: [B7L] Oh, my stars and little fishes!
	 [B7L] re Multiple Personality/Schizophrenic
	 [B7L] re: Orbit
	 [B7L] re: Dayna and Bonding Ritual
	 Re: [B7L] re: Dayna and Bonding Ritual
	 Re: [B7L] OT: Jingo (was Re: Cally and Jenna)
	 [B7L] 'Allo 'Allo, zis is Avon calling London...
	 Re: [B7L] ssmmmoooking
	 Re: [B7L] OT: Jingo (was Re: Cally and Jenna)
	 Re: [B7L] OT: Jingo (was Re: Cally and Jenna)
	 Re: [B7L] Orbit
	 Re: [B7L] re Multiple Personality/Schizophrenic
	 Re: [B7L] Oh, my stars and little fishes!

------------------------------

Date: Tue, 3 Mar 1998 01:37:06 -0000
From: "Tom Forsyth" <Tom.Forsyth@btinternet.com>
To: "B7 Lysator" <blakes7@lysator.liu.se>
Subject: Re: [B7L] Orbit
Message-Id: <E0y9hrw-00073j-00@tungsten>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Reuben wrote:
> Sorry to be so late on a follow up to this thread, but I just re-watched
> the episode last night.  I started wondering that with the assumption
> that Orac's assessment that they must lose 70 Kilos would be obsolete
> rather quickly how much the cube actually weighed.  Avon obviously had
> an enormous difficulty moving the cube by pushing it along a perfectly
> flat surface. When one also takes into account all that they had thrown
> off the ship already, it must of weighed a heck of a lot.  Any guesses
> on it's weight, remembering that Avon could only push X Kilos.

A brief dredge through my A-level mechanics brain (spare brain no.3,
reponsible for archived mathematics, except for integration, which takes up
the whole of brain no.6) reveals that:

Max friction = coefficient of friction * normal force

Note that this is independent of the area the force operates over, so the
small size, in theory, doesn't change how hard it is to push. However, in
the real world the small size means a few extra things:

(1) you can't get as good a shove on something that small.
(2) its small size means it would deform the floor (even a tiny bit) and
make pushing it harder.

Now, as to how much it weighs, hmmm... Well I reckon it looks like it
weighs about 300kg +- 100kg. That's just my gut-feeling from what Avon was
doing to it, allied to my knowlege of how heavy furniture behaves under
certain stresses and strains (i.e. swinging on the things).

Anyway, there is a fairly good lower limit that we can put on it. Pushing
horizontally on the top edge of a cube resting on the floor with a force
equal to just over half its weight will tip it over. So if it weighed only
100kg, Avon just has to push with 50kg of force (pedants out there can join
me in screaming "you mean 490N don't you?") horizontally on it top to tip
it up, and he obviously isn't doing that.

Unfortunately, I can't remember the ep in photographic detail, but the act
of exerting this force brings another factor to mind. If Avon crouches
down, sticks his bum out and swings on it, his weight will have a lot more
leverage (the distance between his bum and his feet) than the weight of the
block (half its length). If his grip can hold, he might be able to tip it
by pulling. So, it's all down to how much his fingers and legs can
pull/push. My fingers can happily hold onto at least 200kg, and I think
they are shock-rated at about 300kg or so, though that's with a good firm
grin, rather than the fingertip hold he's got here. This is easily enough
to hold onto whatever leverage you can get this way, though.

However, Avon appears to be trying to just push the block. This has the
advantage that grip strength is not a factor, but now the legs come into
play. My legs are slightly stroger than my fingers at 350kg or so, so if
Avon's legs push any less than 200kg, than he's just not trying. So if the
block weighs less than 400kg than he _should_ be able to tip it by pushing
on its top edge.

Now, this all overlooks one basic problem. You know that friction equation
above? Well, it holds true for Avon's feet as well. What it means is that
if Avon is going to push the block, he will need to be able to exert more
frictional force with his feet than the block can. Oh dear. The normal
force (i.e. his weight) is obviously smaller. If it weren't, then the block
would weight at the very most 90kg, and if he can't lift that completely
off the ground and carry it, he's a wimp of a leather-clad revoloutionary.

So, he has to increase his coefficient of friction drastically. I don't
recall any ridges or anything on the floor, so he'd better have very very
grippy soles on those shoes. Maybe that's what he needs Vila for - to
superglue his feet to the deck each step.


Oh dear, I've just remembered. They must have artificial gravity on this
craft, so why not just turn it down a bit? If they don't have AG, then all
the thrusting the shuttle has been doing should put "down" towards the
back, and the block would have long ago tumbled down towards the back of
the ship, and because of its small size and sharp edges it punched straight
through the rear bulkhead and they are currently all dying of explosive
decompression. Shame.


Tom "Spelunker" Forsyth.

------------------------------

Date: Mon, 2 Mar 1998 21:22:02 -0600 (CST)
From: "Mary W O'Connor" <zvs225@freenet.mb.ca>
To: Ophelia <ophelia@picknowl.com.au>
cc: blakes7@lysator.liu.se
Subject: Re: [B7L] Multiple Personality/Schizophrenic
Message-ID: <Pine.SV4.3.91.980302211308.16048A-100000@winnie.freenet.mb.ca>
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII

On Mon, 2 Mar 1998, Ophelia wrote:

> Mary W. O'Connor:
> 
> >I agree, too. Avon just needed a stress formula multi-vitamin and a long
> >holiday.
> 
> 
> B-Complex and Evening Primrose Oil,
> with a nice dose of valerian before
> chatting with Tarrant.  Say, I wonder if
> Avon suffers from PMT? Do I love him 
> enough to share my magic forumalation
> with him?  Personally, I think expecting
> your period is enough to make anyone
> tetchy/tearful/homocidal/suicidal.
> 
> 
Hmmmmmm. The male change of life is called andropause and
symptoms include fatigue, depression, irritability, aches
and pains (among other lost abilities). 
Starts between ages of 45 and 55 as a result of the body's 
reduced ability to produce hormones.

So, just how old was Avon supposed to be in the 4th season?
I know of natural source estrogen, but what is a source
of testosterone? Puts a new light on pleasure planets.

Mary O'Connor
zvs225@freenet.mb.ca

------------------------------

Date: Tue, 3 Mar 1998 16:16:48 +1300
From: Nicola Collie <nicola.collie@stonebow.otago.ac.nz>
To: B7-list <blakes7@lysator.liu.se>
Subject: Re: [B7L] Ares (was OT: Jingo)
Message-Id: <l03130311b1212437657f@[139.80.16.149]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"

>Nicola C said:
>> Sorry, that gland gang again. What I meant to say was, Kevin Smith is one
>> of our sexier exports.
>
>[snip]
>
>> More sexy Kiwi exports: Russell Crowe (Quick and the Dead, and others),
>> Temuera Morrison (Speed 2).

Tom:
>There was that wossname sword-wielding leather-clad girly person, wasn't
>there? Wouldn'd kick her out of bed for eating crackers.

Looks like my het tendencies are showing. Lucy Lawless is most certainly a
NZer, and sexy. She's formerly known as Stanley's Mum, you know. (her role
in a bank ad featuring a chubby sproglett). (In our house we watch the new
ad featuring a swarmy-git robot, and shout "Bring Back Stanley!") Features
on many a NewWoman'sWeeklyIdeaDay cover - probably almost as many as the
Royals.
As for kicking Xena out of bed - if she didn't want to go, you'd be sorry
you'd tried... ;-)
ttfn, Nicola

---
Nicola Collie
Dunedin, New Zealand
nicola.collie@stonebow.otago.ac.nz

"It just occurred to me that, as the description of a highly sophisticated
technological achievement, "Avon's gadget works" seems to lack a certain
style."

------------------------------

Date: Sun, 01 Mar 1998 19:04:48 -0800
From: Pat Patera <pussnboots@geocities.com>
To: blakes7@lysator.liu.se
Subject: Re: [B7L] B7 and Meyers-Brigs
Message-ID: <34FA21D0.6D42@geocities.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Alison Page wrote:
> However I was absolutely delighted to discover
> the ENTP faults listed all over the web. Brilliant! At last the perfect
> excuse for being lazy, feckless, aggressive, easily discouraged, bored with
> details.. It's the best news I've had this year. 

I love it! At last the perfect excuse for being rude, snobbish, cold,
arrogant, over-educated, under-funded and socially inept.

Pat INTJ

------------------------------

Date: Tue, 3 Mar 1998 16:56:58 +1300
From: Nicola Collie <nicola.collie@stonebow.otago.ac.nz>
To: B7-list <blakes7@lysator.liu.se>
Subject: Re: [B7L] Multiple Personality/Schizophrenic
Message-Id: <l03130312b1212f780a79@[139.80.16.149]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"

Mary:
>Hmmmmmm. The male change of life is called andropause and
>symptoms include fatigue, depression, irritability, aches
>and pains (among other lost abilities).
>Starts between ages of 45 and 55 as a result of the body's
>reduced ability to produce hormones.

>So, just how old was Avon supposed to be in the 4th season?

Note that he has a full head of hair at this stage. IIRC, male pattern
baldness is linked to testosterone levels.
Hang on, I don't like where this is going! Avon less than a man? Say it
ain't so! ;-)
ttfn, Nicola

---
Nicola Collie
Dunedin, New Zealand
nicola.collie@stonebow.otago.ac.nz

"It just occurred to me that, as the description of a highly sophisticated
technological achievement, "Avon's gadget works" seems to lack a certain
style."

------------------------------

Date: Mon, 02 Mar 1998 20:28:52 -0800
From: Helen Krummenacker <avona@jps.net>
To: Nicola Collie <nicola.collie@stonebow.otago.ac.nz>
CC: B7-list <blakes7@lysator.liu.se>
Subject: Re: [B7L] Multiple Personality/Schizophrenic
Message-ID: <34FB865F.5401@jps.net>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Nicola Collie wrote:
> 
> Mary:
> >Hmmmmmm. The male change of life is called andropause and
> >symptoms include fatigue, depression, irritability, aches
> >and pains (among other lost abilities).
> >Starts between ages of 45 and 55 as a result of the body's
> >reduced ability to produce hormones.
> 
> >So, just how old was Avon supposed to be in the 4th season?
> 
> Note that he has a full head of hair at this stage. IIRC, male pattern
> baldness is linked to testosterone levels.
> Hang on, I don't like where this is going! Avon less than a man? Say it
> ain't so! ;-)
> ttfn, Nicola
> 

Do we really need a greater reason than stress for his changes? I mean,
the lives of the only people he has left to care about, as well as all
the innocents enslaved by the Federation, depend on his decision making
abilities. Ever seen how the Oval office ages a man?

However, depression, fatigue, aches and pains are symptoms of other
illnesses, including myofacia/fibromyalgia, which would explain why he
hates Cally's Auron yoga.

------------------------------

Date: Tue, 3 Mar 1998 07:14:09 +oooo
From: "John C. Elliott" <john.elliott@mail.ndirect.co.uk>
To: blakes7@lysator.liu.se
Subject: Re: [B7L] NZ
Message-ID: <888909263.012442.0@kindred.demon.co.uk>
Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
Content-transfer-encoding: 7BIT

On  2 Mar 98 at 14:32, Una McCormack wrote:

> Can we include people who *wish* they were from New Zealand?
> 
> Una

Must agree with that, I was lucky enough to visit Auckland in 1968 
for a fortnight. Always wanted to go back.

John
><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><

mailto:john.elliott@ndirect.co.uk 
 
I am obliged by your opinions, and will retain my own.

><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><

------------------------------

Date: Tue, 03 Mar 1998 19:25:51 +1000
From: Tim Richards & Narrelle Harris <parallax@wire.net.au>
To: blakes7@lysator.liu.se
Subject: [B7L] Re: Vila's accepting ways
Message-Id: <3.0.1.32.19980303192551.007b6cf0@wire.net.au>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"

Jay said:
>Some things I find too hard to forgive.  I don't think I would have ever
>forgived Avon if he ever tried to space me, although I wouldn't have stayed
>mad at him for long.  My trust would have been broken and I probably would
>have asked for a lift to the nearest pleasure planet.

Well, I suppose I was being a bit facetious.  Only people you really care
about can hurt you enough that you can't forgive.  A stranger doesn't know
the vulnerable points the way your best friends do.  But still...  I never
saw those two as the very very best of friends  - they were colleagues and
shared a larcenous nature, but beneath the sniping (and they got at each
other with equal barbed wit) they respected one another's skills and I do
believe they liked each other.  Vila was hurt, disappointed and very very
angry, but he's a realist himself.  Avon's stalking of Vila was supremely
machiavellian, but not particularly personal, and I think that Vila could
rationalise his way to forgiveness given enough time.  

And yes, there are one or two major grudges I still bear towards someone
who deeply wounded me and mine, and I am more angry about what happened to
others than to me. 

Narrelle Harris

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
               Tim Richards and Narrelle Harris  
 parallax@wire.net.au   http://www.wire.net.au/~parallax
          "Look, he's winding up the watch of his wit;
            by and by it will strike."  - Shakespeare
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

------------------------------

Date: Tue, 3 Mar 1998 01:17:54 +1000
From: "Roger The Shrubber" <darrenro@ozonline.com.au>
To: "B7 Main List" <blakes7@lysator.liu.se>
Subject: [B7L] missing characters
Message-Id: <199803031005.VAA23581@budapest.ozonline.com.au>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Fran wrote

Can anyone think of other stories where the main character goes missing
half way through?
****
Red Dwarf could easily have been renamed "Starbug" or "The Kryten Show".




___________________________________
from Darren r ..... Comments are welcome !
powerplay@cheerful.com

------------------------------

Date: Tue, 3 Mar 1998 11:40:26 +0000 (GMT)
From: Una McCormack <umm10@eng.cam.ac.uk>
To: blakes7@lysator.liu.se
Subject: [B7L] Re: blakes7-d Digest V98 #71
Message-ID: <Pine.PCW.3.96.980303113843.7631C-100000@umm-pc.jims.cam.ac.uk>
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII

Somebody wrote:

>By the way, I discovered today that there is a Paris-based bike-racing
>team called Gan.

There's a shop in Cambridge called 'Gan Electricals', which we always
found suitably amusing!


Una
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Judge Institute of Management Studies	   Tel: +44 (0)1223 766064
Trumpington Street				   Fax: +44 (0)1223 339701
Cambridge CB2 1AG		  
United Kingdom			  http://www.sticklebrock.demon.co.uk/una/
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

------------------------------

Date: Tue, 3 Mar 1998 23:17:25 +1300
From: "Lucas Young" <lyoung@bitworks.co.nz>
To: <blakes7@lysator.liu.se>
Subject: Re: [B7L] NZ
Message-ID: <004c01bd468d$92cd40e0$603ee50a@lucas>
Content-Type: text/plain;
	charset="iso-8859-1"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

You'd find it quite dark about now!!

Yes we have a lovely country, I like the part where we don't have any wild
animals able to eat people to death!

I think I'm like Vila in that respect...

Am putting together a Liberator model (LIghtwave format) if anyone wants
it....

Lucas
-----Original Message-----
From: John C. Elliott <john.elliott@mail.ndirect.co.uk>
To: blakes7@lysator.liu.se <blakes7@lysator.liu.se>
Date: Tuesday, 3 March 1998 22:52
Subject: Re: [B7L] NZ


On  2 Mar 98 at 14:32, Una McCormack wrote:

> Can we include people who *wish* they were from New Zealand?
>
> Una

Must agree with that, I was lucky enough to visit Auckland in 1968
for a fortnight. Always wanted to go back.

John
><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><

mailto:john.elliott@ndirect.co.uk

I am obliged by your opinions, and will retain my own.

><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><

------------------------------

Date: Tue, 3 Mar 1998 00:42:23 +1000
From: "Roger The Shrubber" <darrenro@ozonline.com.au>
To: "B7 Main List" <blakes7@lysator.liu.se>
Subject: [B7L] blackadder goes seventh
Message-Id: <199803031005.VAA23562@budapest.ozonline.com.au>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Nicola wrote
Queenie=Servalan (in one of her whimsical moods)
Bob=Dayna
Several ideas for Tarrant but I like my fingernails where they are, thank
you. 8)
******
Tarrant would not accept any lesser role than Lord FlashHeart.
Melchet <sp?>  would be suitable for Doctor Bellfriar.

I always thought Tony Robinson (Baldrick) & Michael Keating had a similar
kind of presence on screen, a kind of cheeky subservience.







___________________________________
from Darren r ..... Comments are welcome !
powerplay@cheerful.com
____________________________________
"There is no reason anyone would want a computer in their
home." --Ken Olson, president, chairman and founder of Digital Equipment
Corp.,1977
______________________________________
"The Administration is out to get me" 
_______________________________________
"In the end, winning is the only safety"
_________________________________________
"If man is art, can I just go out of here and make an exhibition of myself
?"
________________________________________
Was God an astronaut ?
_________________________________________
http://www.geocities.com/HotSprings/Spa/2634
Anxiety & Panic
_________________________________________
http://www.geocities.com/HotSprings/Spa/2634/powerplay.html
Blake's 7 FAQ & free screen savers

------------------------------

Date: 03 Mar 1998 08:30:40 +0100
From: Calle Dybedahl <qdtcall@esavionics.se>
To: blakes7@lysator.liu.se
Subject: Re: [B7L] Dayna and "Bonding Ritual"
Message-ID: <isyaysut7j.fsf@godzilla.kiere.ericsson.se>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

"G. Robbins" <robbins@graceland.edu> writes:

> Perhaps from the time after 'Aftermath' and up until 'Ultraworld',
> the other crew of the Liberator "taught" her. 

There *must* be fanfic exploring that line of reasoning.

> Another possibility could have been she saw the mating habits of
> animals on Serran and learned that way.

A third possibility is that she and Lauren, er, experimented a bit.
Maybe Hal had some ispiring old books lying around.
There must be fanfic about that, too. At least there ought to be :-)

If we're going to explore this further, maybe we should head over to
the Other List.
-- 
	  Calle "mind, meet gutter" Dybedahl, UNIX Sysadmin
       qdtcall@esavionics.se  http://www.lysator.liu.se/~calle/

------------------------------

Date: Tue, 3 Mar 1998 01:07:06 +1000
From: "Roger The Shrubber" <darrenro@ozonline.com.au>
To: "B7 Main List" <blakes7@lysator.liu.se>
Subject: [B7L] soma
Message-Id: <199803031005.VAA23572@budapest.ozonline.com.au>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Tramila wrote
YKYBWFFTMB7W...
...you say all the words as each character says them.  <g>
...you wonder what Soma tastes like and if Vila will share some of his.
*****
What a great name for a new brand of soft drink that would be - "Soma &
Adrenalin". It might even replace Jolt cola as the drink of choice for
geeks.

So did B7 pinch the idea of Soma from Huxley's Brave New World ? My
Scrabble dictionary defines it as "the body of an organism" so I'm
presuming its redefinition as a drug/drink was due to someone's
imagination.
Does anyone know of any pre-Huxley references to a drug called Soma ?










___________________________________
from Darren r ..... Comments are welcome !
powerplay@cheerful.com
____________________________________
"There is no reason anyone would want a computer in their
home." --Ken Olson, president, chairman and founder of Digital Equipment
Corp.,1977
______________________________________
"The Administration is out to get me" 
_______________________________________
"In the end, winning is the only safety"
_________________________________________
"If man is art, can I just go out of here and make an exhibition of myself
?"
________________________________________
Was God an astronaut ?
_________________________________________
http://www.geocities.com/HotSprings/Spa/2634
Anxiety & Panic
_________________________________________
http://www.geocities.com/HotSprings/Spa/2634/powerplay.html
Blake's 7 FAQ & free screen savers

------------------------------

Date: Tue, 3 Mar 1998 11:44:53 -0000
From: Alison Page <alison@alisonpage.demon.co.uk>
To: Lysator <blakes7@lysator.liu.se>
Subject: Re: [B7L] soma
Message-ID: <888925769.016710.0@alisonpage.demon.co.uk>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Darren wrote

> So did B7 pinch the idea of Soma from Huxley's Brave New World ? My
> Scrabble dictionary defines it as "the body of an organism" so I'm
> presuming its redefinition as a drug/drink was due to someone's
> imagination.
> Does anyone know of any pre-Huxley references to a drug called Soma ?

Oh aye. B7 definitely nicked it fom Huxley, but Huxley was an erudite chap
and he took it from Sanskrit (ancient language of India, and the earliest
Hindu scriptures). In the religious writing of early Hinduism 'soma' is
definitely a drug which is either taken by priests in order to communicate
with the gods, or offered to the gods. 

Huxley uses the drug to mean an opiate-type of chemical which renders
people weak, happy and pliable. A bit like Pylene 3 or whatever it is.
However a lot of people think that the original soma mentioned in India was
an hallucinogen, probably a mushroom, which had been retained from an
earlier shamanistic-type of religious practice. I tend to think it was
probably fly agaric - but please don't try this at home. Psylocibin is much
safer, and just as effective. Allegedly.

Oh, and while we are on the subject, isn't it sweet how Vila collapses when
Cally injects him with Soma (in Horizon)? I know that kind of scene is a
bit of a gift to actors but I must say Michael K. does it very well. I also
like Avon's dry comment: 

'He'll be asleep for a while'
'That'll be nice'

I think Paul D gets the inflection of his line perfectly.

Alison

------------------------------

Date: Tue, 3 Mar 1998 23:10:47 +1100
From: Kathryn Andersen <kat@welkin.apana.org.au>
To: "Blake's 7 list" <blakes7@lysator.liu.se>
Subject: Re: [B7L] Oh, my stars and little fishes!
Message-ID: <19980303231047.55108@welkin.apana.org.au>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

On Mon, Mar 02, 1998 at 11:42:00AM -0800, PATTI McCLELLAN wrote:
> 
>      The crossover I'd like to see is Avon and Methos.
> 
Your search is over!  Such a story has been written!
Oh, um, if I told you what the story was, then that would be a
spoiler, since you aren't supposed to know that Methos is there until
he turns up.

But I agree that it's a wonderful combination.  They're both so
pragmatic, reluctantly noble and with little time for other people's
guilt trips.  Mind you, Methos is less acerbic and more devious than
Avon.  IMHO.  Heh, Methos is postitively *mellow* compared with Avon.
Avon's defence is to look dangerous.  Methos's defence is to look
harmless.  (Hmmm, a bit like Vila in that respect.)

And of course, they've both got that tall, dark, lean look... (-8





And the story is...
**** spoiler ****

Methos appears in "Winning is the Only Safety: Hide and Seek" in
Refractions #5.  It is a Blake's 7/Highlander crossover.
Guess who died for the first time on GP?  Yep - Avon.  Vila ducked.
But you can read all about that in "Winning is the Only Safety: First
Death" which is archived in the Seventh Dimension Highlander Archive
http://seventh-dimension.simplenet.com/index.html
under crossovers.
"Hide and Seek" is the long-awaited sequel.  And Methos does turn up.
Along with Richie, and of course Vila, and Servalan.  And one other
familiar face, near the end.

Kathryn Andersen
(who is Very Sad because Highlander Downunder II (with Peter
"Methos" Wingfield as GoH) is on the exact same weekend as
Deliverance...)
-- 
 _--_|\	    | Kathryn Andersen		<kat@welkin.apana.org.au>
/      \    | 		http://connexus.apana.org.au/~kat
\_.--.*/    | #include "std/disclaimer.h"
      v	    |
------------| Melbourne -> Victoria -> Australia -> Southern Hemisphere
Maranatha!  |	-> Earth -> Sol -> Milky Way Galaxy -> Universe

------------------------------

Date: Tue, 03 Mar 1998 13:07:42 +0000
From: Jackie <jackiew@termlow.co.uk>
To: blakes7@lysator.liu.se
Subject: [B7L] re Multiple Personality/Schizophrenic
Message-ID: <34FC009E.611@termlow.co.uk>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Nicola Collie wrote:
> 
> Mary:
> >Hmmmmmm. The male change of life is called andropause and
> >symptoms include fatigue, depression, irritability, aches
> >and pains (among other lost abilities).
> >Starts between ages of 45 and 55 as a result of the body's
> >reduced ability to produce hormones.
> 
> >So, just how old was Avon supposed to be in the 4th season?
> 
> Note that he has a full head of hair at this stage. IIRC, male pattern
> baldness is linked to testosterone levels.
> Hang on, I don't like where this is going! Avon less than a man? Say it
> ain't so! ;-)
> ttfn, Nicola


Are you trying to say that Baldies cannot be Daddies? Balderdash! of
course they can!!

Are you saying that Baldies cannot be sexy? Two words - Yul Brynner! 

Jackie

------------------------------

Date: Tue, 03 Mar 1998 13:07:17 +0000
From: Jackie <jackiew@termlow.co.uk>
To: blakes7@lysator.liu.se
Subject: [B7L] re: Orbit
Message-ID: <34FC0085.6351@termlow.co.uk>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Tom Forsyth wrote:
> 
> Reuben wrote:
> > Sorry to be so late on a follow up to this thread, but I just re-watched
> > the episode last night.  I started wondering that with the assumption
> > that Orac's assessment that they must lose 70 Kilos would be obsolete
> > rather quickly how much the cube actually weighed.  Avon obviously had
> > an enormous difficulty moving the cube by pushing it along a perfectly
> > flat surface. When one also takes into account all that they had thrown
> > off the ship already, it must of weighed a heck of a lot.  Any guesses
> > on it's weight, remembering that Avon could only push X Kilos.
> 
> A brief dredge through my A-level mechanics brain (spare brain no.3,
> reponsible for archived mathematics, except for integration, which takes up
> the whole of brain no.6) reveals that:
> 
> Max friction = coefficient of friction * normal force
> 
> Note that this is independent of the area the force operates over, so the
> small size, in theory, doesn't change how hard it is to push. However, in
> the real world the small size means a few extra things:
> 
> (1) you can't get as good a shove on something that small.
> (2) its small size means it would deform the floor (even a tiny bit) and
> make pushing it harder.

They`re beginning to go.

> 
> Now, as to how much it weighs, hmmm... Well I reckon it looks like it
> weighs about 300kg +- 100kg. That's just my gut-feeling from what Avon was
> doing to it, allied to my knowlege of how heavy furniture behaves under
> certain stresses and strains (i.e. swinging on the things).
> 
> Anyway, there is a fairly good lower limit that we can put on it. Pushing
> horizontally on the top edge of a cube resting on the floor with a force
> equal to just over half its weight will tip it over. So if it weighed only
> 100kg, Avon just has to push with 50kg of force (pedants out there can join
> me in screaming "you mean 490N don't you?") horizontally on it top to tip
> it up, and he obviously isn't doing that.

Almost there.

> 
> Unfortunately, I can't remember the ep in photographic detail, but the act
> of exerting this force brings another factor to mind. If Avon crouches
> down, sticks his bum out and swings on it, his weight will have a lot more
> leverage (the distance between his bum and his feet) than the weight of the
> block (half its length). If his grip can hold, he might be able to tip it
> by pulling. So, it's all down to how much his fingers and legs can
> pull/push. My fingers can happily hold onto at least 200kg, and I think
> they are shock-rated at about 300kg or so, though that's with a good firm
> grin, rather than the fingertip hold he's got here. This is easily enough
> to hold onto whatever leverage you can get this way, though.
> 
> However, Avon appears to be trying to just push the block. This has the
> advantage that grip strength is not a factor, but now the legs come into
> play. My legs are slightly stroger than my fingers at 350kg or so, so if
> Avon's legs push any less than 200kg, than he's just not trying. So if the
> block weighs less than 400kg than he _should_ be able to tip it by pushing
> on its top edge.


Going.....

> 
> Now, this all overlooks one basic problem. You know that friction equation
> above? Well, it holds true for Avon's feet as well. What it means is that
> if Avon is going to push the block, he will need to be able to exert more
> frictional force with his feet than the block can. Oh dear. The normal
> force (i.e. his weight) is obviously smaller. If it weren't, then the block
> would weight at the very most 90kg, and if he can't lift that completely
> off the ground and carry it, he's a wimp of a leather-clad revoloutionary.

Going.....


> 
> So, he has to increase his coefficient of friction drastically. I don't
> recall any ridges or anything on the floor, so he'd better have very very
> grippy soles on those shoes. Maybe that's what he needs Vila for - to
> superglue his feet to the deck each step.
> 
> Oh dear, I've just remembered. They must have artificial gravity on this
> craft, so why not just turn it down a bit? If they don't have AG, then all
> the thrusting the shuttle has been doing should put "down" towards the
> back, and the block would have long ago tumbled down towards the back of
> the ship, and because of its small size and sharp edges it punched straight
> through the rear bulkhead and they are currently all dying of explosive
> decompression. Shame.

Gone.

zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz...............


> Tom "Spelunker" Forsyth.

OH! sorry! you`ve finished.   I`m wde awake again.  I missed some of
your arguement.  Can you start from "spare brain no. 3?

:-)   :-)    :-)

I truely am sorry. I don`t mean to be facetiuous, but the actual
mechanics of how heavy the plastic thingy was went straight over my head
(I`m only little).  
Can`t we just accept that as Macho Man raised a great deal of sweat in
shifting it it must have been very heavy.  BUT! while he was doing said
plastic thingy sliding, he was gasping out for Vila to help him, what
exactly did he expect Vila to grab hold of.  (be careful with your
answers, I`ve just checked, this is Lysator we`re on, not the Other
One).  After all the plastic thingy was not big enough for them both to
grab.

------------------------------

Date: Tue, 03 Mar 1998 13:08:03 +0000
From: Jackie <jackiew@termlow.co.uk>
To: blakes7@lysator.liu.se
Subject: [B7L] re: Dayna and Bonding Ritual
Message-ID: <34FC00B3.831@termlow.co.uk>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Calle Dybedahl wrote:
> 
> "G. Robbins" <robbins@graceland.edu> writes:
> 
> > Perhaps from the time after 'Aftermath' and up until 'Ultraworld',
> > the other crew of the Liberator "taught" her.
> 
> There *must* be fanfic exploring that line of reasoning.
> 
> > Another possibility could have been she saw the mating habits of
> > animals on Serran and learned that way.
> 
> A third possibility is that she and Lauren, er, experimented a bit.
> Maybe Hal had some ispiring old books lying around.
> There must be fanfic about that, too. At least there ought to be :-)
> 
> If we're going to explore this further, maybe we should head over to
> the Other List.

Try Justin.  I thought he taught her about such things.
Jackie

------------------------------

Date: 03 Mar 1998 14:28:57 +0100
From: Calle Dybedahl <qdtcall@esavionics.se>
To: blakes7@lysator.liu.se
Subject: Re: [B7L] re: Dayna and Bonding Ritual
Message-ID: <islnurvr6u.fsf@godzilla.kiere.ericsson.se>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

Jackie <jackiew@termlow.co.uk> writes:

> Try Justin.  I thought he taught her about such things.

Well, yeah, but Dayna/LiberatorCrew and Dayna/Lauren sounds like more
fun :-)
-- 
		    Calle Dybedahl, UNIX Sysadmin
       qdtcall@esavionics.se  http://www.lysator.liu.se/~calle/

------------------------------

Date: Mon, 2 Mar 1998 23:56:48 +1030
From: "Ophelia" <ophelia@picknowl.com.au>
To: <blakes7@lysator.liu.se>
Subject: Re: [B7L] OT: Jingo (was Re: Cally and Jenna)
Message-ID: <01bd45de$da3059e0$LocalHost@waltersmith>
Content-Type: text/plain;
	charset="iso-8859-1"
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[Pat]:

>In all fairness, most of the men are sexualized, too.

Yeah!  My ideal world - everything and everybody
are sexualised.  What fun.

>B7 Grl Toys: Soolin (ouch! suffers lightning zap from the Goddess)- I
>mean, at first, with the geritol-man.

That'll teach you.  Besides, sexy tho
Dorian was, Soolin was only amusing
herself with him.  She is obviously a virgin,
like all the best goddesses.

<<Oh! You mean Cancer! 
Is Cancer a girl? Or perhaps the android of Vinnie's dreams? 
What a splendid villian! A thing of venom and wiles; vile. When
gloating, a voice to cut glass.>>

She was fabulous.  Give me a girlie baddie
any time - Cancer rivals even Callisto, tho
she lacks the maidenly giggle.

<< Was her demise not the most satisfying
moment of your day? I can watch her die time and again, ROFL. That final
shriek is a moment to make a Diva green. Give Cancer the prize for
overacting.>>

Poor darling Cancer.  It was her
big moment of drama, bad hairstyle and all -
and she handled it superbly. <g>

 <<Surely she beats out even the Goddess of Understatement,
Soolin - for her shining death scene - overacted to the max - as shot,
she slowly falls, twisting downward, twirling, twirling, twirling...  >>

Mockery?  Blasphemy?  Et tu, Pussycat!
What kind of behaviour is this from an Acolyte?
Is one lightening bolt not enough to teach you
the error of your ways?
      --- Lindley.
Ophelia - ophelia@picknowl.com.au 
"The girl has beauty, virtue, wit,
Grace, humour, wisdom, charity and pluck."

------------------------------

Date: Mon, 2 Mar 1998 23:48:22 +1030
From: "Ophelia" <ophelia@picknowl.com.au>
To: <blakes7@lysator.liu.se>
Subject: [B7L] 'Allo 'Allo, zis is Avon calling London...
Message-ID: <01bd45dd$acef6120$LocalHost@waltersmith>
Content-Type: text/plain;
	charset="iso-8859-1"
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Pat mentioning leather-studded hunks
has set starnge connections going in my brain.

 For males, this is
>portrayed a hunkliness. 
>Hunksters: Jarvik, Travis I, er... and all Studs in Black Leather.

I'm sorry.  My allegiance has wavered from
Avon as my favourite stud in black leather.
It's been taken by Herr Otto Flick.  
He doesn't just have the black leather, he
has the little hexagonal glasses and, to
add the final delicious sado-masochistic
touch, the clipped German accent.  And
Avon has only a silly-looking spaceship, 
while Herr Flick has a big black Gestapo
car and a very big knockwurst.

If I were to cast 'Allo 'Allo characters as
B7 characters, to carry on a list tradition
in cross-casting, I would definitely cast
Servalan as Herr Flick, the power-mad,
sinister and sexily dressed Gestapo
offcier with the beautiful knees.

Can you imagine Servaln parting her
lovely lips and saying (in a sexy
German accent) after the fiasco of
ORAC:
"I vill not be reporting this back to the
Federation.  I have no vish to look a
right nana."

Vila - Hans  (Can't you see him crouched on the floor,
sticking one adorable leg in the air, and squeaking 
"Heil Hi'ler!"  And I think the specs would suit him.

Gan - Rene, hero of the Resistance.  There's a certain
physical resemblance, tho Gan is much nicer than Rene.

Soolin - Private Helga, 'cos of the hair, and because of 
Helga's hidden streak of intelligent ruthlessness. 
Also, I like the image of the Goddess in silk knickers
edged with tiny swastickas. 
Or  possibly Denise (the leader of the Communist 
Resistance) because of her not-so-hidden streak 
of ruthlessness and excellent aim with a gun.

Cally - Lt. Hubert Gruber, 'cos they're both kinda
sweet. Altho, again, maybe Gruber should be Vila - they 
both tend to apologize after shooting someone.

Blake - Michelle, the leader of the de Gaul Resistance.
Brave, prone to - ah - brilliant plans, and with a
regrettable tendency to put the future of The Cause
above the immediate safety of her associates

Jenna - 'Enriette, Michelle's devoted and courageous
liuetenant.  ALso, 'Enriette's a rather pretty blonde who 
might or might not be romantically involved with Michelle.

Tarrant - Roger L'Eclair.  (I'll leave that one right alone.
Still, A/V - which I am beginning to see the point
of - might convince me I like Tarrant yet.  It's
hard to dislike someone you've just imagined 
cuddled up to your favourite thief.  Dear me, I'll 
have to go watch "City" for therapy.)

Dayna - Mimi.  Young, cute, and vicious,
with a nice singing voice.

ORAC - the Colonel.

Travis - General von Klinkerhoffen

SIgh.  All this would mean, of course, that
Servalan and Soolin were involved.  COuld you
 imagine Soolin shivering with delight as
Servalan produced teh - corkscrew? *I* can.
at least on morphine.

The most tasteless part of 'Allo 'Allo was making
interogation by the Gestapo seem incredibly erotic.

Helga: I only have to *hint* and Herr Flick will
*drag* it out of me... <shiver> <sigh>

Or, more fun still: "Would you like to
interrogate me again, Herr Flick?

 Plus
>all hairy barbarians (none of whom compare to Ares, the God of War in
>Xena, Warrior Princess. What a studmuffin *sigh*
>B7 Boy Toys: Ray, the consort in Gambit.
>B7 Grl Toys: Soolin (ouch! suffers lightning zap from the Goddess)- I
>mean, at first, with the geritol-man.
>
>Pat P
>
>

------------------------------

Date: Tue, 3 Mar 1998 00:28:08 +1030
From: "Ophelia" <ophelia@picknowl.com.au>
To: "B7 Main List" <blakes7@lysator.liu.se>
Subject: Re: [B7L] ssmmmoooking
Message-ID: <01bd45e3$3b3eb520$LocalHost@waltersmith>
Content-Type: text/plain;
	charset="iso-8859-1"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Before I answer this, yeah, I'm prejudiced.
I detest people smoking in my presence,
and I  have no respect for the intelligence
and self-control of smokers whatsoever.
Loving these characters, it's very hard to
see them as doing something anti-social,
revolting and plain stupid.

Prejudice declared, then:

[Darren R]:


>someone mentioned the possibility of Avon being a smoker
>
>Here is my list of who would & wouldn't
>
>Avon- chain smokes because he is a tough guy !

Yeah!

 >Also needs something to do
>with his hands when he's not programming or rigging up hardware


I have some better suggestions <smirk>

>Servalan - Smokes very expensive cigarettes that you can't get at the local
>shops. Possibly uses a cigarette holder while smoking.

Nah.  It looks good, yes, but Servalan's
a) too savvy about her own personal safety
and b) too elegant to risk smellin/tasting
like an ash tray. Maye an occaisional
cigar hanging with phallic sexiness from
her ruby lips, as Madonna used to, but she
is unlikely to inhale.

>Vila - Cigar when he's winning, occasional cheap cigs when he's not.

Would a true hedonist destroy his sense of taste?


>Dayna - More interested in recreational drugs than cigs.

Perhaps.

>Soolin - 30 a day, 60 when socialising, sometimes rolls her own.

Aaargh!  Darren, are you deliberately trying
to have the Wrath of the Priestess brought
down on your head?  Can you really see
the Golden Goddess doing something as
unattractive and - CRASS - as chain-smoking?
And would a gunfighter risk her health like
that?

Besides, it would spoil one of my favourite
sexual fantasies.  My one dating rule is that
I never, ever date a smoker.  Feeling like
throwing up at the reek everytime they try
to kiss you is *not* a turn on.

>Gan - Social smoker, cheap brand.
>
>Blake - Doesn't smoke, but is curious about who else does & why.

Good comment.

>Cally - Used to smoke a safe herbal mix.

<giggle>

>Jenna - Smokes plenty while doing illegal smuggling runs, otherwise just
>socially.

I can see the illegal runs, but not the social
smokers.

>Travis - Marlboros, what else.

Granted.  <g>

 --- still faintly nauseated,
          Lindley.

Ophelia - ophelia@picknowl.com.au
"The girl has beauty, virtue, wit,
Grace, humour, wisdom, charity and pluck."

------------------------------

Date: Mon, 2 Mar 1998 23:13:02 +1030
From: "Ophelia" <ophelia@picknowl.com.au>
To: "B7-list" <blakes7@lysator.liu.se>,
        "Calle Dybedahl" <qdtcall@esavionics.se>
Subject: Re: [B7L] OT: Jingo (was Re: Cally and Jenna)
Message-ID: <01bd45d8$bd805a80$LocalHost@waltersmith>
Content-Type: text/plain;
	charset="iso-8859-1"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

[Calle]:
>Where's the fun in having power if you can't abuse it?

Good point.  So why aren't you making more
mischief in *your* position of power over
all we lowly mist-members, calle dear?

>Why isn't Servalan getting a fan club when everyone else gets one?


I'll join!  I'll join!  Goddess, those *sequins*...

But only if it doesn't conflict with my Temple
duties.
  
  -- XXX Lindley.

Ophelia - ophelia@picknowl.com.au 
"The girl has beauty, virtue, wit,
Grace, humour, wisdom, charity and pluck."

>     Calle Dybedahl, UNIX Sysadmin
>       qdtcall@esavionics.se  http://www.lysator.liu.se/~calle/
>

------------------------------

Date: 03 Mar 1998 14:52:22 +0100
From: Calle Dybedahl <qdtcall@esavionics.se>
To: "B7-list" <blakes7@lysator.liu.se>
Subject: Re: [B7L] OT: Jingo (was Re: Cally and Jenna)
Message-ID: <isk9abvq3t.fsf@godzilla.kiere.ericsson.se>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

"Ophelia" <ophelia@picknowl.com.au> writes:

> Good point. So why aren't you making more mischief in *your*
> position of power over all we lowly mist-members, calle dear?

Because you're too far away for me to see the fear in your eyes,
little listmember.
-- 
		    Calle Dybedahl, UNIX Sysadmin
       qdtcall@esavionics.se  http://www.lysator.liu.se/~calle/

------------------------------

Date: Tue, 3 Mar 1998 13:53:46 -0000
From: "Jenni-Alison" <jenni-alison@dial.pipex.com>
To: <Tom.Forsyth@btinternet.com>, "B7 Lysator" <blakes7@lysator.liu.se>
Subject: Re: [B7L] Orbit
Message-Id: <199803031359.OAA17411@samantha.lysator.liu.se>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Tom Forsyth wrote:
<Snip fascinating stuff:>
> Now, this all overlooks one basic problem. You know that friction
equation
> above? Well, it holds true for Avon's feet as well. What it means
is that
> if Avon is going to push the block, he will need to be able to
exert more
> frictional force with his feet than the block can. Oh dear. The
normal
> force (i.e. his weight) is obviously smaller. If it weren't, then
the block
> would weight at the very most 90kg, and if he can't lift that
completely
> off the ground and carry it, he's a wimp of a leather-clad
revoloutionary.
> 
> So, he has to increase his coefficient of friction drastically. I
don't
> recall any ridges or anything on the floor, so he'd better have
very very
> grippy soles on those shoes. Maybe that's what he needs Vila for -
to
> superglue his feet to the deck each step.
> 
ROFLMAO. what a wonderful image - Vila at Avons feet!
> 
> Oh dear, I've just remembered. They must have artificial gravity on
this
> craft, so why not just turn it down a bit? If they don't have AG,
then all
> the thrusting the shuttle has been doing should put "down" towards
the
> back, and the block would have long ago tumbled down towards the
back of
> the ship, and because of its small size and sharp edges it punched
straight
> through the rear bulkhead and they are currently all dying of
explosive
> decompression. Shame.
> 
> 
> Tom "Spelunker" Forsyth.
> 
That's brilliant. And it deals with the moral issues nicely, by
avoiding them entirely. Thanks Tom, you've made my day ;-D

Jenni

------------------------------

Date: Tue, 03 Mar 1998 08:05:41 -0600
From: Lisa Williams <lcw@dallas.net>
To: blakes7@lysator.liu.se
Subject: Re: [B7L] re Multiple Personality/Schizophrenic
Message-Id: <3.0.32.19980303073858.00b63954@dallas.net>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"

Jackie wrote:

>Are you trying to say that Baldies cannot be Daddies? Balderdash! of
>course they can!!

I think that was the point. Male pattern baldness is linked to *higher*
testosterone levels.

	- Lisa

_____________________________________________________________
Lisa Williams: lcw@dallas.net or lwilliams@mcopn1.dseg.ti.com

Lisa's Video Frame Capture Library: http://lcw.simplenet.com/
New Riders of the Golden Age: http://www.warhorse.com/

------------------------------

Date: Wed, 4 Mar 1998 00:25:19 +1030
From: "Ophelia" <ophelia@picknowl.com.au>
To: <blakes7@lysator.liu.se>
Subject: Re: [B7L] Oh, my stars and little fishes!
Message-ID: <01bd46ac$00b93960$38a226cb@waltersmith>
Content-Type: text/plain;
	charset="iso-8859-1"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

[Patti]:

     <<I didn't say Avon was insane.  Did I?  I'm not insane, and I
have monopolar clinical depression.  I was just comparing Avon's
behavior to some classical diagnoses.  I never thought Avon was
insane.  I think sometimes he thought he was close to getting
there, but usually, he was far too sane for his own comfort.>>

Oh, good.  I'm glad someone menioned
that.  I'm a clinical depressive myself
(*no* idea if it's monopolar or bipolar,
or even what those terms mean - I
must ask my psychiatrist) and I certainly
don't consider myself insane - at least,
most of the time.  Just ill, and having
to take my medicine regularly and have
a great excuse for sleeping and crying 
all day when I want to.  Thinking about 
Soolin  too much can make me feel 
slightly crazed, I admit, but that's a 
different question.

 - XXX Lindley
Ophelia - ophelia@picknowl.com.au 
"The girl has beauty, virtue, wit,
Grace, humour, wisdom, charity and pluck."

     Anyway, you must adopt Avon's attitude -- anyone who
"flames" you is obviously of inferior understanding!  Post more,
please!

     Patti

--------------------------------
End of blakes7-d Digest V98 Issue #72
*************************************