bluebean said:m27 said:Well, a hastily arranged:
"Our owners make money,
Your owners borrow money"
Should do the trick. Anyone with the resources to sort it?
now thats a quick reply! and very to the point! this flag has got to be at the derby!!!
warpig said:bluebean said:now thats a quick reply! and very to the point! this flag has got to be at the derby!!!
definately. ric, is there any more money left in the pot from the banner appeal?
Halfpenny said:My mum and her sister (my aunt) knew Joyce, they went to school together. Aunt still knows him to this day.coleridge said:A few! Joyce and Rourke lived down my road and Morrissey not far away. Marr is a proper blue who hasn't made a career out of banging on about it. Without his unique sound, the likes of Oasis would be no-ones. And the triumphant first album gig at the Free Trade Hall [RIP] in 1983 [I think! Must have been 17] was the greatest Mancunian musical moment I have ever experienced, even better than the Stone Roses at the Hac in 1989. Fook me, I'm old. '...see the life I've had could make a good man turn bad...'.
That's right, both Irish parents (now both sadly passed away) and lived on Wilbraham Road, 84 I think it was. Walsh family.coleridge said:Halfpenny said:My mum and her sister (my aunt) knew Joyce, they went to school together. Aunt still knows him to this day.
All solid working class, South Manchester Irish families, I take it. They weren't mates of mine as they were a few years older, but I knew of them in the locality and then they became the original local heroes, for me at least. After the Clash split up, they saved English Rock, in my view, and were from round the corner [wow!]. However, my babysitter was Jim Glennie's Mum, a good friend of my mother. Jim was my age and so we went on holiday together as families. We went on to jam a little, with his elder brother, back in the late 70s. Obviously, he's one of the seminal base players of his generation whereas I'm as talentlessas ever, although I like talking, as you can tell. I've seen him occasionally since but, hey, we all have busy lives. What was this thread about again?
Halfpenny said:That's right, both Irish parents (now both sadly passed away) and lived on Wilbraham Road, 84 I think it was. Walsh family.coleridge said:All solid working class, South Manchester Irish families, I take it. They weren't mates of mine as they were a few years older, but I knew of them in the locality and then they became the original local heroes, for me at least. After the Clash split up, they saved English Rock, in my view, and were from round the corner [wow!]. However, my babysitter was Jim Glennie's Mum, a good friend of my mother. Jim was my age and so we went on holiday together as families. We went on to jam a little, with his elder brother, back in the late 70s. Obviously, he's one of the seminal base players of his generation whereas I'm as talentlessas ever, although I like talking, as you can tell. I've seen him occasionally since but, hey, we all have busy lives. What was this thread about again?