From rowland@loyno.edu Sun Feb 28 20:52:18 1999 Received: from mxu2.u.washington.edu (mxu2.u.washington.edu [140.142.32.9]) by lists.u.washington.edu (8.9.1+UW98.09/8.9.2+UW99.01) with ESMTP id UAA34140 for ; Sun, 28 Feb 1999 20:52:17 -0800 Received: from nadal.loyno.edu (nadal.loyno.edu [141.164.242.217]) by mxu2.u.washington.edu (8.9.3+UW99.02/8.9.3+UW99.01) with ESMTP id UAA11462 for ; Sun, 28 Feb 1999 20:52:17 -0800 Received: from 141.164.241.232 ([141.164.241.232]) by nadal.loyno.edu (AIX4.2/UCB 8.7/8.7) with SMTP id WAA93402 for ; Sun, 28 Feb 1999 22:48:06 -0600 (CST) Message-ID: <36DA1CD3.5E06@loyno.edu> Date: Sun, 28 Feb 1999 22:51:32 -0600 From: rowland Reply-To: rowland@loyno.edu X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.01-C-MACOS8 (Macintosh; I; PPC) MIME-Version: 1.0 To: classics@u.washington.edu Subject: Re: Nil sub sole novum References: <199902281715.SAA16448@agora.stm.it> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Were chicken and fish, served by the restaurant, thought to have restorative or erotic powers in Hellenistic/Roman Greece, similar, say to what is thought of oysters? R. Rowland .