From: Inertial on

"Arindam Banerjee" <adda1234(a)bigpond.com> wrote in message
news:272ae3ef-4130-450a-8dd3-f169cd95f75a(a)x11g2000prb.googlegroups.com...
> On Mar 30, 1:08 am, Marshall <marshall.spi...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>> On Mar 29, 5:19 am, Arindam Banerjee <adda1...(a)bigpond.com> wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>> > Tell me, dear doggie, ain't it rum
>> > How the choicest of the net scum
>> > Blasts the stink from its tum
>> > So that none may near it come?
>> > None good, that is; some
>> > Are fools, to heed that bum.
>> > Too much rot, that's the sum
>> > Of the jBm's keyboard's thrum.
>>
>> I like your poetry every bit as much as I like you science!
>> It's just as good!
>>
>> Marshall
>
> Wow, thanks a lot! Great to have appreciation! Now, shall we throw
> out the wrong notions of relativity from the textbooks? Please,
> please...

If you had even a gram of proof, then maybe it would beconsidered .. But you
don't

> As for my poetry, I have only had few opportunities to recite them in
> public. My friend and partner Ilya (the well-known poet, philosopher
> and translator) has been most eager, but distances here are too great.
> Cheers,
> Arindam Banerjee

Bahaha. . you're a clown



From: Greatest Mining Pioneer of Australia of all Times on
On Mar 29, 5:25 pm, "Myself,PresentContinuouslyTenseMallu"
<KalluMallu...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> On 3/29/2010 5:19 AM, Arindam Banerjee wrote:
>
>
>
> > No need, rhyming is so easy.
>
> > Tell me, dear doggie, ain't it rum
> > How the choicest of the net scum
> > Blasts the stink from its tum
> > So that none may near it come?
> > None good, that is; some
> > Are fools, to heed that bum.
> > Too much rot, that's the sum
> > Of the jBm's keyboard's thrum.
>
> Indeed rhyming is easy, dear Arindam
> Your poem is the standard minimum.
> It'd be funny if recited in helium,
> After you'd taken your dose of lithium,
> And your readers were in a fog of opium
> Or perhaps on its tincture in laudanum.
> For all your 'new physics' summum bonum,
> Alas, there's the actinide Einsteinium,
> And no element named Poincarium,
> Or Newtonium, or Maxwellium, or Arindium.

Superb poetry from both !
Congratulations !

( may be the Arindium might exist one day, as an isotope say ? )
From: harmony on

"Greatest Mining Pioneer of Australia of all Times"
<australia.mining-pioneer(a)neuf.fr> wrote in message
news:98c434e5-a543-4a7d-bd92-f0e83f5606e3(a)z4g2000yqa.googlegroups.com...
On Mar 29, 5:25 pm, "Myself,PresentContinuouslyTenseMallu"
<KalluMallu...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> On 3/29/2010 5:19 AM, Arindam Banerjee wrote:
>
>
>
> > No need, rhyming is so easy.
>
> > Tell me, dear doggie, ain't it rum
> > How the choicest of the net scum
> > Blasts the stink from its tum
> > So that none may near it come?
> > None good, that is; some
> > Are fools, to heed that bum.
> > Too much rot, that's the sum
> > Of the jBm's keyboard's thrum.
>
> Indeed rhyming is easy, dear Arindam
> Your poem is the standard minimum.
> It'd be funny if recited in helium,
> After you'd taken your dose of lithium,
> And your readers were in a fog of opium
> Or perhaps on its tincture in laudanum.
> For all your 'new physics' summum bonum,
> Alas, there's the actinide Einsteinium,
> And no element named Poincarium,
> Or Newtonium, or Maxwellium, or Arindium.

Superb poetry from both !
Congratulations !

( may be the Arindium might exist one day, as an isotope say ? )

my research shows that there indeed is such a thing as arindium in hindu,
however. it is some kinda of a plant-berry used in ayurvedic medicine that
is known for its extreme bitterness - but it has usefulness in cures.
also, a hindu proverb has it that this arindium plant is said to be the king
of a barren place - like most oz is.



From: Romanise on
This has to be your only creative post since you climbed Usenet as
Pradip Parekh in 1997 (it looks).
And of course confirms you as Gujarati and in all probability a
Shvetambar Jain.

On Mar 30, 5:02 pm, "harmony" <a...(a)hotmail.com> wrote:

> ( may be the Arindium might exist one day, as an isotope say ? )
>
> my research shows that there indeed is such a thing as arindium in hindu,
> however. it is some kinda of a plant-berry used in ayurvedic medicine that
> is known for its extreme bitterness - but it has usefulness in cures.
> also, a hindu proverb has it that this arindium plant is said to be the king
> of a barren place - like most oz is.

From: Myself,PresentContinuouslyTenseMallu on
On 3/29/2010 11:03 PM, Greatest Mining Pioneer of Australia of all Times
wrote:
> On Mar 29, 5:25 pm, "Myself,PresentContinuouslyTenseMallu"
> <KalluMallu...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>> On 3/29/2010 5:19 AM, Arindam Banerjee wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>>> No need, rhyming is so easy.
>>
>>> Tell me, dear doggie, ain't it rum
>>> How the choicest of the net scum
>>> Blasts the stink from its tum
>>> So that none may near it come?
>>> None good, that is; some
>>> Are fools, to heed that bum.
>>> Too much rot, that's the sum
>>> Of the jBm's keyboard's thrum.
>>
>> Indeed rhyming is easy, dear Arindam
>> Your poem is the standard minimum.
>> It'd be funny if recited in helium,
>> After you'd taken your dose of lithium,
>> And your readers were in a fog of opium
>> Or perhaps on its tincture in laudanum.
>> For all your 'new physics' summum bonum,
>> Alas, there's the actinide Einsteinium,
>> And no element named Poincarium,
>> Or Newtonium, or Maxwellium, or Arindium.
>
> Superb poetry from both !
> Congratulations !
>

Merci beaucoup.

> ( may be the Arindium might exist one day, as an isotope say ? )

Hah. Pour cela, il doit obtenir ses papiers publies dans des revues
scientifiques, et non pas des journaux ou magazines.

Hope that made sense.