ron@brl-vgr.ARPA (Ron Natalie <ron>) (03/26/84)
Gee, I can't answer your questions but as long as we're being nostalgic C, C double-O, C double-O L Mac, Cool MacCool and Now Number One thinks I'm a fool, Has no respect for the name McCool But in the day's gone by, there was Harry McCool. Harry McCool, he was my Pop. My Pop the cop.
gds@mit-eddie.UUCP (Greg Skinner) (03/28/84)
<give of your best to the line eater> I don't know either, but I think this is the right way the intro went. (If it's wrong, give me a break, since I was probably only about 5 years old when it was on the air.) O double-O C double-O C double-O L C double-O L Cool Mac Cool, Mac Cool Danger is my business! -- Be ye moby, for I am moby. Greg-bo, Prince of Eternia {decvax!genrad, eagle!mit-vax, ihnp4}!mit-eddie!gds
moriarty@uw-june (Jeff Meyer) (04/01/84)
While enjoying a rainy afternoon, free from the humdrum cares of school, I had the good fortune to watch an episode of an old Saturday morning cartoon show that I used to watch when I was a kid (back in the days when they made good cartoons, like Bullwinkle). You may remember it -- it was called Cool McCool. The reason I'm writing is that it sports what the Limeliters used to call a "hellishly rhythmic" theme song... performed on an organ, by a ragtime band, and (I believe) on a harpsichord. My questions: 1) Who wrote it? and 2) Is it available on any records or tapes known to Man? Any answers would be appreciated. "DANGER is my BUSINESS"| Currently residing in | UUCP: MORIARTY | {ihnp4|decvax|tektronix}!uw-beaver!uw-june!moriarty | ARPANET: AKA -jwm- | moriarty@washington