Date: Sat, 1 Apr 1995 17:41:04 -0600
From: Natalie Maynor maynor[AT SYMBOL GOES HERE]RA.MSSTATE.EDU
Subject: Bounced Mail
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REMINDER: WHEN INCLUDING A PREVIOUS LIST POSTING IN SOMETHING
YOU'RE SENDING TO THE LIST, BE SURE TO EDIT OUT ALL REFERENCES
TO ADS-L.
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Date: Sat, 1 Apr 1995 15:38:58 -0500
Subject: ADS-L: error report from GROVE.IUP.EDU
The enclosed mail file, found in the ADS-L reader and shown under the spoolid
6513 in the console log, has been identified as a possible delivery error
notice for the following reason: "Sender:", "From:" or "Reply-To:" field
pointing to the list has been found in mail body.
-------------- Message in error (80 lines) -------------------------
Date: Sat, 01 Apr 1995 15:37:37 -0500 (EST)
From: BARBARA HILL HUDSON BHHUDSON[AT SYMBOL GOES HERE]grove.iup.edu
Subject: Re: boston coolers
Date: Sat, 01 Apr 1995 08:44:56 -0600
From: Anne Baldwin abaldwin[AT SYMBOL GOES HERE]PO-1.STAR.K12.IA.US
Subject: Re: boston coolers
Re Rootbeer and ice cream:
We called that drink a purple cow
In Chicago in the late 40s and early 50s a mixture of vanilla ice cream and
root beer was called a black cow. Ice cream with grape soda was called a
.)purple cow.
You're right! How soon we forget
[deleted material] An ice cream soda was a
mixture of ice cream, seltzer water and a chocolate or fruit syrup. We made
black cows at home from store bought ingredients, but I never had an ice
cream soda except in ice cream parlors or soda fountains which, in those
days, could be found in any drugstore, usually near the entrance. My
favorite ice cream sodas were strawberry because for some reason the syrup
contained pieces of mashed strawberry. They sometimes clogged the straw,
but when you sucked hard enough you'd be rewarded with a little morse of
pure strawberry, to be washed down by the flood of soda that followed.
I used to work as a soda jerk in the So-Low Drug Store on the corner of
Garfield and Wentworth in the fifties, and the favorites were cherry cokes;
double malted and ice cream sodas made with strawberry syrup or pineapple
syrup. Both were very chunky. Of course they had to be accompanied by Jays
Potato Chips!
bhhudson[AT SYMBOL GOES HERE]grove.iup.edu
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Robert F. Baldwin, 515/284-8920
Freelance Articles Member, ASJA
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