Subject:
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Re: Counting parts
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Newsgroups:
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lugnet.general
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Date:
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Sun, 6 Jun 1999 00:03:13 GMT
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Viewed:
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966 times
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On Fri, 4 Jun 1999 15:31:06 GMT, Gary Istok <gistok@umich.edu> wrote:
>
>
> Terry K wrote:
>
> > On Thu, 3 Jun 1999 14:24:02 GMT, Larry Pieniazek <lar@voyager.net> wrote:
> >
> > > Gary Istok wrote:
> > > >
> > > > Terry,
> > > >
> > > > Are you sure! The size of your Titanic alone staggers the mind in parts counts.
> > >
> > > That's Terry C. Terry Cruse. HE has a lot of parts. But Conan has more,
> > > I am convinced. We think he has around 2.3 Million elements or more in
> > > his collection. We (the GMLTC) believe it to be the largest privately
> > > held collection extant, other than KKK and his family.
> >
> > :-)
> > easy mistake.
> > Terry C's Titanic is a great model alright. What was it? 18000 parts or so?
> >
> > 2.3 million? ACK! I have a hard time keeping my measly collection
> > sorted. Hell, I have a lot of unopened boxes just because I have nowhere to
> > put the pieces. Conan is an apt name. :-)
> >
> > Who was that famous person (an author, maybe?) who had the large collection?
> > I remember a thread about it on RTL, but can't remember his name. Lives
> > (lived?) in New York?
> >
> > -- Terry K --
>
> That would be Norman Mailer, the author, who built a tall building of over 1 million
> bricks in his New York City penthouse.
>
> Gary Istok
Thanks. I just couldn't think of his name.
-- Terry K --
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Message is in Reply To:
 | | Re: Counting parts
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| (...) That would be Norman Mailer, the author, who built a tall building of over 1 million bricks in his New York City penthouse. Gary Istok (26 years ago, 4-Jun-99, to lugnet.general)
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