Yes, Dirceu, but they are being so very polite to each other, sort of like in that drawing by Paul Klee of the bowing generals. I think the Cantos are more concerned with kulchural saltationism than capitalism. BTW Didn't he call them "beaneries"? So today I go to the farmer's market and there they have an old Farmall "C" parked in front of the building, and I see this man about my age (59) admiring it. And before I can finish my sentence about this machine he is telling me in his eastern European accent what a beautiful machine this is and that he is an engineer retired from GM and they don't make anything like this now, so strong and simple today. "See how the wheel is put on the axle with a key stock and a bolted bracket. Easy to change but strong. Those bolts are three quarters or five eights. That would give them 100 tons of torque." And I say I drove one like this in 1950 when I could barely reach the brake and clutch pedals and going down a hill if you did the right thing with the throttle and the clutch you could get her gove'nor to backfire and he smiles and says driving his army truck in Hungary he would do the same thing when he passed the girls, and we laugh. He says he's French, but from a German part but then his family moved to Hungary. With a German name everyone always thought you were a Nazi. I say this tractor was made by the company founded by McCormick. His name is there in bigger letters on the hood than the "IH" of International Harvester he points to. He does not know who McCormick was, but he repeats the name, Mc-Cor-mick. I say he invented a simpler machine called the reaper which changed thousands of years of harvesting grain with a sickle. His son married Rockefeller's daughter. We say goodbye. He drives away in his GM minivan with a Hungarian flag and sticker. Would I love to start up that old tractor. Charlie "Bin gar keine Russin, stamm' aus Litauen, echt deutsch." ---------- >From: Dirceu Villa <[log in to unmask]> >To: [log in to unmask] >Subject: Ez discussion list? >Date: Sat, Mar 23, 2002, 9:26 AM > > IS THAT an Ezra Pound discussion list or a sort of > meeting place for Sociology dazed amateurs? > You people are playing the silly role of > pretending this stuff is important. Poor arguments. > Sometimes it gives us the sensation that what > Pound said about Academies seventy years ago is STILL > right. Goddamm nonsense. > > > __________________________________________________ > Do You Yahoo!? > Yahoo! Movies - coverage of the 74th Academy AwardsÆ > http://movies.yahoo.com/