Who's Who
From Plastic Tub
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'''1993-Present''' | '''1993-Present''' | ||
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AA'ers also refers to the members of the generation known as [[The Second Advance]], composed primarily of [[Tim Wilson]], [[Steven Vogeler]], [[David Payne]] and [[Steven Adkins]]. Other players in The Second Advance include [[Krystine Monitzer]] and [[Kevin Statham]]. '''Plastic Tub''' is the logical continuation of this period. | AA'ers also refers to the members of the generation known as [[The Second Advance]], composed primarily of [[Tim Wilson]], [[Steven Vogeler]], [[David Payne]] and [[Steven Adkins]]. Other players in The Second Advance include [[Krystine Monitzer]] and [[Kevin Statham]]. '''Plastic Tub''' is the logical continuation of this period. | ||
'''Historical Antecedents''' | '''Historical Antecedents''' | ||
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- | In addition to the aforementiond Guvernor Morris and Albert Kook, AA'ers generally feel an affintity with othe such Enlightenment luminaries as [[Paolo Gringntti]], [[Pietri Biberoni]], [[Copernicus Trowbridge]], [[A.W. Slippers]] and [[Crispus Attucks]]. | + | |
+ | In addition to the aforementiond Guvernor Morris and Albert Kook, AA'ers generally feel an affintity with othe such Enlightenment luminaries as [[Paolo Gringnotti]], [[Pietri Biberoni]], [[Copernicus Trowbridge]], [[A.W. Slippers]] and [[Crispus Attucks]]. | ||
More about [[AA'ers]]...</td> | More about [[AA'ers]]...</td> | ||
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''These people are not AA'ers, but are generally considered to have identified or admired the group or its individual members. Sometimes, these were collaborators outside the AA sphere. Many are scholars. Others are simply not considered to be hostile.'' | ''These people are not AA'ers, but are generally considered to have identified or admired the group or its individual members. Sometimes, these were collaborators outside the AA sphere. Many are scholars. Others are simply not considered to be hostile.'' | ||
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Art Doll was an eccentric inventor-explorer who became enamored of Accidental Associationalism late in life and devoted the better part of his adult years to founding a communal encampment based upon Wee-Wee. TerraWee lasted five scant years before being levelled by the BATF in 1995. Not to be beaten, Doll decided to construct a giant blimp and sail it to Africa. He died somewhere over the Atlantic Ocean in June, 2003...[[Art Doll|more'''»''']] | Art Doll was an eccentric inventor-explorer who became enamored of Accidental Associationalism late in life and devoted the better part of his adult years to founding a communal encampment based upon Wee-Wee. TerraWee lasted five scant years before being levelled by the BATF in 1995. Not to be beaten, Doll decided to construct a giant blimp and sail it to Africa. He died somewhere over the Atlantic Ocean in June, 2003...[[Art Doll|more'''»''']] | ||
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Johnathan Eniad Corn was born in St. Petersburg, Florida, sometime in the early 1940s, and though the exact date is not known, he celebrated March 23rd, 1943, as his birthday. His family fled Soviet Georgia for political reasons and successfully received asylum first in England then in the U.S., finally settling in Florida. John's mother, Lizabeta Kornakovitch, had been a classically trained opera singer until throat cancer cut her career short -- America, it seemed, had little use for a grousy-voiced maiden with a foul temper...[[John Corn|more'''»''']] | Johnathan Eniad Corn was born in St. Petersburg, Florida, sometime in the early 1940s, and though the exact date is not known, he celebrated March 23rd, 1943, as his birthday. His family fled Soviet Georgia for political reasons and successfully received asylum first in England then in the U.S., finally settling in Florida. John's mother, Lizabeta Kornakovitch, had been a classically trained opera singer until throat cancer cut her career short -- America, it seemed, had little use for a grousy-voiced maiden with a foul temper...[[John Corn|more'''»''']] |
Revision as of 22:42, 10 Jul 2005
Who's Who | ||||||||
The Plastic Tub is filled with a dizzying array of personalities, some benign, some malefic, all interesting. But just how do all these headstrong men and women fit into the big picture? Who are the good guys, the baddies, the movers, the shakers and the mere hangers-on? This Who's Who intends to give you the straight dope on all of it. | ||||||||
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Further Research | ||||||||
Personages | Death Cult Broadside |