maplesyrup
New member
Sooooo good though.
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Nik V. Debs said:You're all heathens. It's a little sour cream, a little apple sauce and you're good.
Rob L said:What if I told you I add a little jalapeno juice to my matzoh ball soup?
Nik V. Debs said:I'm not saying you can't get inventive, I'm the creator of the Seder Plate Sandwich after all, just that some things are holy.
Nik V. Debs said:I'm not saying you can't get inventive, I'm the creator of the Seder Plate Sandwich after all, just that some things are holy.
bustaheims said:When did adding lox to anything become heresy?
bustaheims said:When did adding lox to anything become heresy?
Nik V. Debs said:bustaheims said:When did adding lox to anything become heresy?
Hey, I love lox as much as any other chosen person. I'm just saying there's a time and a place for it, Christmas morning, for instance. Or, when you're back in the holy land:
http://www.russanddaughters.com/
louisstamos said:I like where this thread has gone. Although now I have a sudden urge to visit Caplanksy's restaurant...
Nik V. Debs said:Thumbs down. Head north of the city and hit up Moe Pancer's if you're looking for a legit Jewish deli. Miles better. Plus, as a historical bonus, it's where the guys from Rush used to hang out.
Derk said:Looks like the league beat the players to court:
League files class action complaint and unfair labour practice charge
One step closer to no more hockey.
Rebel_1812 said:As we all know, I strongly content that bettmen is not a deal maker that works well with others. The fact that this has to be settled in court proves that point.
bustaheims said:Well, sure, if you ignore the fact that Fehr has a history of taking these disputes to the courts and the fact that both the NBAPA and NFLPA filed lawsuits against their respective leagues as part of their disputes.
Nik V. Debs said:I agree that not too much should be read into this but I do think you're exaggerating Fehr's history. For the most part his history with the MLBPA has been fairly good in terms of avoiding work stoppages and they only went to court in 94/95 to address the issue of replacement players.
bustaheims said:While not part of a work stoppage, he also took MLB to court in the 80s under charges of collusion. As for avoiding work stoppages, while the 94/95 strike may have been the most significant in his time as part of the MLBPA, he was part of 2 additional work stoppages as director of the PA (85 and 90 - both of which were fortunately settled before regular season games had to be cancelled instead of postponed) and was part of the PA for the 80 and 81 strikes.
Nik V. Debs said:I'm pretty sure the collusion charges in the 80's went through Baseball's arbitration system, not the courts. Likewise, I think that only one work stoppage that actually resulted in games being missed over 30 years as the MLBPA's executive director qualifies as "fairly good"
bustaheims said:I'm not sure I'd call work stoppages in 5 of 7 CBA negotiations "fairly good" regardless of how many games may or may not have been lost. That is Fehr's record in terms of negotiations with MLB.
Nik V. Debs said:But it's nonsense to disregard whether or not games were missed as a key aspect to his record. Either way, you said that Fehr had a history of taking "these disputes" to the courts which just isn't true. He went to the courts once with the MLBPA and that was over the specific issue of replacement players, it wasn't an anti-trust case to swing leverage.