Monday, February 14, 2005

cänädiänMëds

cänädä is the place to get your mëdicätions
the sävings äre hugë


I can only guess at what has fueled all the rage. Philadelphia was once center
stage in a young nation, the kind of place where Ben Franklin cared to spend
time when he wasn’t off gallivanting through Paris. Today it remains a giant,
but one that is largely ignored—somehow lost in translation between the two
great mediaopolises, New York and Washington. What little comes through is the
stuff of civic caricature, a town that showcases the statue of a celluloid boxer
and boasts of cheese steak as culinary adventure. It is rumored that the mayor
of Boston felt he was getting short shrift in that standard Super Bowl
wager—clam chowder vs. cheese steak—with his Philly counterpart; then he
realized that the gluey sandwiches might provide the perfect solution to
plugging all those leaks in our Big Dig.


OK, so this bit is from an MSN news website.

actor Richard Gere ha rechazado supuestamente una oferta que le hizo el
compositor y empresario teatral Andrew Lloyd Webber para interpretar en Londres
una nueva producción del famoso musical "The Sound of Music".


This bit, which means 'actor Richard Gere has rejected supposedly a supply that made the composer and theater industralist him Andrew Lloyd Webber to interpret in London a new production of the famous musical comedy "The Sound of Music"', is from somewhere in here.

If there is any common ground between Philly and Boston fans this week, it
resides in the heartfelt conviction that the Patriots will win the Super Bowl.
Or, more accurately, in the case of the Philly fans, that their Eagles will
lose. And it’s hard to get any argument from me with either side. The Patriots
have played in a far superior conference, have compiled a superior record and
have beaten its rivals more convincingly that the Eagles. New England warrants
every point of that touchdown margin by which it is favored.


And then back to the first website.