Ultra Rare Rippin Ronnie Sink action doll
Tuesday, March 31, 2009
Monday, March 30, 2009
SIMONSTER did what was expected at the 1st annual
BARRY-ROUBAIX
BARRY-ROUBAIX
1 216 Michael Simonson Oxford MI Gary Fisher 3:11:13
2 367 Derek Graham Grand Rapids MI Bissell/ABG 3:16:43
3 204 Michael Cook Mishawaka IN alderfer-bergen 3:18:26
4 383 Peter Ehmann Bloomfield Hills MI Team Giant - Michigan 3:21:27
5 208 John Meyers Kalamazoo MI Bells Brewery 3:21:34
6 394 Greg Kuhn Sterling Heights MI Team Fraser 3:21:49 7 20
7 Craig Gietzen Rockford MI SPOUT.com 3:26:57
8 222 Andrew Weir Ann Arbor MI Sunrise Sports 3:27:00
9 365 Rodger Bowser Ann Arbor MI PH/Two Wheel Tango 3:27:00
10 358 Craig Webb Dimondale MI Hagerty 3:27:04
11 218 Rich Stark Ann Arbor MI Priority Health 3:27:15
12 213 Ron Sanborn Traverse City MI McClain Cycle & Fitness 3:29:53
13 223 Jeff Wittbrodt South Lyon MI RACING GREYHOUNDS 3:31:38
14 202 Anthony Bruley Rochester Hills MI Cadieux BC/ Team O2 3:33:01
15 397 Jimmie McCurray Grand Rapids MI Team Giant Michigan 3:33:10
16 206 James Dieringer Lakewood OH dieringer cycles 3:39:14
17 205 Michael Dega Farmington Hills MI Team o2 / Cadieux BC 3:39:14
18 364 Dave Fanslow Ann Arbor MI Priority Health/AAVC 3:39:
19 19 423 Joe Slonecki Comstock Park MI Founders Ale 3:43:52
20 224 Aaron Zuelke Grand Haven MI Breakaway Bicycles 3:46:49
21 217 Hugh Smallwood Pontiac MI 3:47:18
22 356 Shawn Davison East Grand Rapids MI Founder Ale/Alger Racing 3:55:56
23 210 Thomas Markley Dearborn Heights MI Wolverine Sports Club 3:56:52
24 201 Paul Brown Dearborn MI King Brewery 3:57:52
25 359 Russell Jobs Wauwatosa WI Hayes Brakes 3:58:19
26 360 Rick Walls Wauwatosa WI Local Tosa Mofos 11T6 3:58:21
27 221 Nate Versluis Grand Rapids MI Founders Ale/Alger Racing 4:04:39
28 203 Bernie Clincke Metamora MI Cadieux / Team o2 4:09:04
29 273 William Baguley Ada MI Ada Bike Shop 4:10:19
30 220 Scott Tencate Ada MI Ada Bike Shop 4:10:19
Sunday, March 29, 2009
Saturday, March 28, 2009
Friday, March 27, 2009
Thursday, March 26, 2009
Wednesday, March 25, 2009
getting it
anon post 4
this blog has become irrelevant....
anon post 5
It's not irrelevant;
you just don't understand why this blog is relevant.
Thorazine is one of the most potent ways (pharmacologically)to knock someone on their ass.
Try to come around a Meingast in the final corner on the outside of a big $$ (or even small $$) crit back in the day. Or even overlap on the outside a little through any corner in a "royal break" back in the day. That'll knock you on your ass pretty potently too (ask Jason S. about the old Tour De Mich. days). Damn, he got knocked around, but kept coming back for more.
How about B. Obermeyer in The TDM Pontiac stage back in '90 or '91 sticking W/ Frankie in the rain on that crazy ass crowned downtown crit? The possibility of hitting the side of buildings at 28+ is like that too, but B. Obermeyer didn't care.
"Just like ice skating" is what he told me post race after my ass got dropped.
Know your history, kids.
Guns= knock you on your ass.
Women=knock you on your ass
.Bike racing in Michigan=knock you on your ass.
Ya get it?
Correct me if I'm wrong TMS. And keep it coming.
Tms: that reply just makes the tiny hairs on our plot stand up right. finally!
this blog has become irrelevant....
anon post 5
It's not irrelevant;
you just don't understand why this blog is relevant.
Thorazine is one of the most potent ways (pharmacologically)to knock someone on their ass.
Try to come around a Meingast in the final corner on the outside of a big $$ (or even small $$) crit back in the day. Or even overlap on the outside a little through any corner in a "royal break" back in the day. That'll knock you on your ass pretty potently too (ask Jason S. about the old Tour De Mich. days). Damn, he got knocked around, but kept coming back for more.
How about B. Obermeyer in The TDM Pontiac stage back in '90 or '91 sticking W/ Frankie in the rain on that crazy ass crowned downtown crit? The possibility of hitting the side of buildings at 28+ is like that too, but B. Obermeyer didn't care.
"Just like ice skating" is what he told me post race after my ass got dropped.
Know your history, kids.
Guns= knock you on your ass.
Women=knock you on your ass
.Bike racing in Michigan=knock you on your ass.
Ya get it?
Correct me if I'm wrong TMS. And keep it coming.
Tms: that reply just makes the tiny hairs on our plot stand up right. finally!
Sunday, March 22, 2009
Change
Chlorpromazine (as chlorpromazine hydrochloride,
\abbreviated CPZ, marketed in the US as Thorazine, as [ Largactil in UK) is a phenothiazine antipsychotic, and the oldest in the antipsychotic family of drugs. It is a typical antipsychotic. It is principally used in the treatment of schizophrenia, though it has also been used to treat severe manic episodes in people with bipolar disorder. It has also been proven in stopping uncontrollable hiccups. Synthesized on December 11, 1950, chlorpromazine was the first drug developed with a specific antipsychotic action. Its use has been described as the single biggest advance in psychiatric treatment, with a dramatic effect on the prognosis of the inmates of asylums worldwide. It was the prototype for the phenothiazine class, which later grew to comprise several other agents. Its use today has been largely supplanted by the newer atypical antipsychotics such as olanzapine, quetiapine, and risperidone.
Chlorpromazine works on a variety of receptors in the central nervous system; these include anticholinergic, antidopaminergic and antihistamine effects as well as some antagonism of adrenergic receptors.[1] Chlorpromazine, along with many of the older antipsychotics which have minimal effect on the serotonergic pathways, is considered a typical antipsychotic.
Its receptor affinities result in a side-effect profile that is predominantly anticholinergic in nature: constipation, sedation, hypotension and antiemetic properties. It also has anxiolytic (alleviation of anxiety) properties. Extrapyramidal side-effects that are common in many antipsychotics may occur, but are ameliorated by chlorpromazine's anticholinergic activity. They include akathisia and parkinsonian tremor, which can be very unpleasant though reversible. A more chronic side-effect is tardive dyskinesia, which may be irreversible in some patients.[2] Neuroleptic malignant syndrome is a rare though potentially fatal outcome of any antipsychotic use — about one in two thousand (0.05%) patients taking chlorpromazine may develop it. It is often administered in acute settings as a syrup, which has a faster onset of action than tablets. Intravenous administration is not generally recommended.
\abbreviated CPZ, marketed in the US as Thorazine, as [ Largactil in UK) is a phenothiazine antipsychotic, and the oldest in the antipsychotic family of drugs. It is a typical antipsychotic. It is principally used in the treatment of schizophrenia, though it has also been used to treat severe manic episodes in people with bipolar disorder. It has also been proven in stopping uncontrollable hiccups. Synthesized on December 11, 1950, chlorpromazine was the first drug developed with a specific antipsychotic action. Its use has been described as the single biggest advance in psychiatric treatment, with a dramatic effect on the prognosis of the inmates of asylums worldwide. It was the prototype for the phenothiazine class, which later grew to comprise several other agents. Its use today has been largely supplanted by the newer atypical antipsychotics such as olanzapine, quetiapine, and risperidone.
Chlorpromazine works on a variety of receptors in the central nervous system; these include anticholinergic, antidopaminergic and antihistamine effects as well as some antagonism of adrenergic receptors.[1] Chlorpromazine, along with many of the older antipsychotics which have minimal effect on the serotonergic pathways, is considered a typical antipsychotic.
Its receptor affinities result in a side-effect profile that is predominantly anticholinergic in nature: constipation, sedation, hypotension and antiemetic properties. It also has anxiolytic (alleviation of anxiety) properties. Extrapyramidal side-effects that are common in many antipsychotics may occur, but are ameliorated by chlorpromazine's anticholinergic activity. They include akathisia and parkinsonian tremor, which can be very unpleasant though reversible. A more chronic side-effect is tardive dyskinesia, which may be irreversible in some patients.[2] Neuroleptic malignant syndrome is a rare though potentially fatal outcome of any antipsychotic use — about one in two thousand (0.05%) patients taking chlorpromazine may develop it. It is often administered in acute settings as a syrup, which has a faster onset of action than tablets. Intravenous administration is not generally recommended.
Saturday, March 21, 2009
Friday, March 20, 2009
Thursday, March 19, 2009
Wednesday, March 18, 2009
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
Friday, March 13, 2009
Wednesday, March 11, 2009
forgotten images
yes, He was correct Its Michigan cycling legends Jamson and Brant Hendler. these brothers were standouts in numerous cycling disciplines, Jamson winning a world championship bmx title, being named a top 10 amateur in the country, and scoring numerous national wins while riding for factory schwinn and few other company's before moving on to mtb and later the road scene
Brant on the other hand really caught fire on the downhill Mtb circuit, winning the Norba Jr downhill national championship riding for mountain cycles, he too went on to a great Michigan career on the road winning many state titles and earning a national medal on the track a few years back.
styles may come and go, but the brotherhood remains.
Tuesday, March 10, 2009
Monday, March 09, 2009
Saturday, March 07, 2009
Friday, March 06, 2009
Thursday, March 05, 2009
Wednesday, March 04, 2009
Monday, March 02, 2009
Sunday, March 01, 2009
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