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THE PERKOLATOR!!!!!!

Tony was ......



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We’ll need this TP to have any chance at Mackey.
That would be nice, but this is a weird team. Could have Kris go off or Sandfort, Perkins, hell even Ulis had a career game. All together would be nice. Don't see Rebraca having a big game. He'll struggle in the low post, and he won't drag Edey away from the lane because he doesn't have a consistent jump shot.
 
That would be nice, but this is a weird team. Could have Kris go off or Sandfort, Perkins, hell even Ulis had a career game. All together would be nice. Don't see Rebraca having a big game. He'll struggle in the low post, and he won't drag Edey away from the lane because he doesn't have a consistent jump shot.
I agree, the scoring could come from anywhere. However if TP can hit those pull up jumpers like last night, it just makes us that much harder to guard. It’s a tall task, but I’m optimistic.
 
An Illinois farmer named Hanson Goodrich patented the modern U.S. stove-top percolator as it is known today, and he was granted U.S. Patent 408,707 on August 13, 1889. It had the key elements of a conventional percolator: the broad base for boiling, the upflow central tube and a perforated basket hanging on it. Goodrich's design could transform any standard coffee pot of the day into a stove-top percolator. Subsequent patents have added very little.
 
An Illinois farmer named Hanson Goodrich patented the modern U.S. stove-top percolator as it is known today, and he was granted U.S. Patent 408,707 on August 13, 1889. It had the key elements of a conventional percolator: the broad base for boiling, the upflow central tube and a perforated basket hanging on it. Goodrich's design could transform any standard coffee pot of the day into a stove-top percolator. Subsequent patents have added very little.
Thanks for the history lesson.
 
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