|
Post by flyinghorse on Mar 6, 2010 11:26:51 GMT -7
:)Good morning USAMom from Tuxy and me. It's the 65th day of 2010 and there are 300 days left in the year Today in NY's Finger Lakes it's fair with a temp of 28ºF but feels like 21ºF. Today's high is expected to be 37ºF with a 0% chance of snow. The sunny morning is expected to last into the night (high 27ºF) with no snow at all in the forecast. Yippeeeee!!. ???Today in history: 1834--the city of York in Upper Canada was incorporated as Toronto. 1836--the Alamo in San Antonio, Texas, fell to the Mexican Army after a 13-day siege. 1853--Giuseppe Verdi's opera, La Traviata, premiered in Venice, Italy. 1857--the US Supreme Court ruled in Dred Scott v. Sandford that Scott, a slave, was not an American citizen and could not sue for his freedom in federal court. 1933--a nationwide bank holiday was declared by Pres. Roosevelt. 1935--retired Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. died--it was two days after his 94th birthday. 1944--heavy bombers staged the first American raid on Berlin. 1957--the former British African colonies of the Gold Coast and Togoland became the independent nation of Ghana. 1970--a bomb being built inside a Greenwich Village townhouse by the radical Weathermen accidentally went off, destroying the house and killing three. 1981--Walter Cronkite signed off for the last time as anchorman of The CBS Evening News. 1987--193 people died when the British ferry Herald of Free Enterprise capsized off the Belgian port of Zeebrugge. 1997--Queen Elizabeth II of Great Britain launched the first official royal Web site. 2000--three NYPD officers were convicted of a cover-up in a brutal police station attack on Haitian immigrant Abner Louima. (The convictions were later overturned but Charles Schwarz was found guilty of perjury in a 2002 trial). 2000--Eric Clapton was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame for the third time. 2006--Gov. Mike Rounds signed legislation banning most abortions in South Dakota. (It was later rejected by the state's voters.) 2006---baseball Hall of Fame centerfielder Kirby Puckett died at age 45. 2007--Vice Pres. Dick Cheney's former chief of staff, I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, was convicted of lying and obstructing an investigation into the 2003 leak of CIA operative Valerie Plame's identity. 2008--a Palestinian killed eight students at a Jewish seminary in Jerusalem and then slain. ;D Maulvi Faqir Mohammed, a leading Taliban commander with close ties to al-Qaeda, is believed to have been killed in an army airstrike in Pakistan. This is the latest apparent blow to insurgents who have attacked Pakistan and threatened NATO forces in neighboring Afghanistan. :'(It's official--a giant asteroid smashed into the Earth and wiped out the dinosaurs. This is the only plausible explanation for their extinction a global scientific team (41 scientist from across the world) said, hoping to settle a row that has divided experts for decades. The panel reviewed 20 years' worth of research to confirm the cause of the so-called Cretaceous-Tertiary (KT) extinction (caused a "hellish environment" around 65 million years ago) that wiped out more than half of all species on Earth. :-/Pres. Obama plans to focus attention on immigration this coming week with a meeting at the White House with Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY) and Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) crafting a bill on the issue. The senators have been working on the bipartisan bill since last year. Several groups planned to organize tens of 1000s of people from around the country for a 21 March demonstration in Washington, DC. :(Today is Don't Join the Circus Day :DThought for Today: "Best be yourself, imperial, plain and true!" --Elizabeth Barrett Browning, English poet (1806-1861) Have a terrific weekend!!
|
|
|
Post by flyinghorse on Mar 8, 2010 15:36:03 GMT -7
:)Good morning my friends from Tuxy and me. It's the 67th day of 2010 and there are 298 days left in the year 8-)Today in NY's Finger Lakes it's fair with a temp of 37ºF but feels like 30ºF. Today's high is expected to be 45ºF with a 0% chance of snow or rain and plenty of sunshine all day. Overnight (low 29ºF) it is supposed to remain clear. The projection for the week is temps in the 40s. What is happening to March? It is usually cold and blustery, not this mild and sunny day. What is Mother Nature doing? ???Today in history: 1702--England's Queen Anne (Stuart) ascended the throne upon the death of her brother-in-law King William. 1782--the Gnadenhutten massacre took place as some 90 Indians were slain by militiamen in Ohio in retaliation for raids carried out by other Indian tribes. 1854--Commodore Matthew Perry made his second landing in Japan, within a month, he concluded a treaty with the Japanese. 1862--the ironclad CSS Virginia (ex-USS Merrimack) rammed and sank the USS Cumberland and heavily damaged the USS Congress, both frigates, off Newport News, Va. 1917--the Senate voted to limit filibusters by adopting the cloture rule. 1917--Russia's "February Revolution (the Russians still used the Old Style calendar) began with rioting and strikers in St Petersburg. 1965--the US landed about 3,500 Marines in South Vietnam to defend the US air base at Da nang. 1999--the Clinton administration directed the firing of nuclear scientist Wen Ho Lee from his job at the Los Alamos National Laboratory because of alleged security violations. 2000--a letter carrier, two firefighters and a sheriff's deputy were shot to death in Memphis, Tenn., allegedly by the letter carrier's husband, Frederick Williams, also a firefighter. (He was found not guilty by reason of insanity). 2005--Chechen rebel leader Aslan Maskhadov was killed in northern Chechnya during a raid by Russian forces. 2008--Pres. Bush vetoed a bill that would have banned the CIA from using simulated drowning and other coercive interrogation methods to gain information from suspected terrorists. Another Earthquake: In the pre-dawn a strong 6.0 earthquake stuck eastern Turkey, killing at least 51 as it knocked down stone and mud-brick houses and minarets in at least six villages. More than 50 aftershocks of 5.3 and 5.5 magnitude shook the area also. Fortunately, it struck in a sparsely populated area of Elazig province, 340 miles east of Ankara. What is going on? An earthquake of the month? Pakistan announced that they had picked up an American member of al-Qaeda in a raid, but have reversed earlier assertions that the man was the terror network's US-born spokesman, Adam Gadahn. He is the first American to face treason charges in more than 50 years and has appeared in more than a half-dozen videos calling for America's destruction. It's too bad that the man caught is not Gadahn. A major rock slide around midnight punched gaping holes in a bridge and left huge boulders on the I-70 highway in western Colorado. The slide occurred near the Hanging Lake Tunnel in Glenwood Canyon about 110 miles west of Denver. All lanes are closed on a highway that normal has 25,000 vehicles traveling it each day. The shortest detour is more than 200 miles long around the mountainous Flat Tops Wilderness Area. Thank goodness that there were no injuries, probably due to the timing of the slide. ;)Today is International Woman's Day ;D Thought for Today: "In every person, even in such as appear most reckless, there is an inherent desire to attain balance." --Jakob Wassermann, German author (1873-1934) Have a fun Monday everyone.
|
|
|
Post by usamommajoy on Mar 10, 2010 10:21:16 GMT -7
Hello Peg hope all is well with you
I have not stopped in here in days! SHAME ON ME!
I hope you have a wonderful day and Tuxy too!
Promise I will stop in again sometime later today or tomorrow
|
|
|
Post by usamommajoy on Mar 10, 2010 23:12:35 GMT -7
Stopping in to say good night Peg and Tuxy too Hope your day was a good one. We had a great day and actually got some work scheduled for the week and advertisements ready to mail for hopeful more work.
Been cold and breezy here and even got some rain today that was not in forecast! Was rather nice though for we do need the rain.
Well, heading to sleep I just wanted to stop in a nice peaceful place to say good night and wish you a wonderful day tomorrow.
|
|
|
Post by usamommajoy on Mar 11, 2010 9:23:28 GMT -7
Just stopping by to say good morning
Hope you have a wonderful day
|
|
|
Post by flyinghorse on Mar 11, 2010 16:56:24 GMT -7
:)Good evening USAMom from Tuxy and me. It's the 70th day of 2010 and there are 295 days left in the year 8-)Today in NY's Finger Lakes it's fair with a temp of 48ºF and feels like 48ºF. Today's high is expected to be 56ºF with a 30% chance of precipitation, partly cloudy in the afternoon. ???Today in history: ;llk1861--the Constitution of the Confederate States of America was adopted by a convention in Montgomery, Ala. 1888--a blizzard struck the northeastern US, resulted in some 400 deaths. 1941--Pres. Roosevelt signed the Lend-Lease Bill, providing war supplies to countries fighting the Axis nations. 1942--as Japanese forces continued to advance in the Pacific and Gen. MacArthur left the Philippines for Australia, vowing "I shall return." 1959--the Lorraine Hansberry drama A Raisin in the Sun opened at New York's Ethel Barrymore Theater. 1965--a white minister from Boston, the Rev. James Reeb, died after being beaten by whites during civil rights demonstration in Selma, Ala. 1978--Palestinian guerrillas went on a rampage on the Tel Aviv-Haifa highway, killing 34 Israelis. 1985--Mikhail Gorbachev was chosen to succeed the late Soviet Pres. Konstantin Chernenko. 1990--the Lithuanian parliament voted to break away from the Soviet Union and restore its independence. 1993--Janet Reno was unanimously confirmed by the Senate to be the nation's first female attorney general. 1993--North Korea withdrew from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. 2004--ten bombs hidden in back packs exploded across the commuter rail network in Madrid, Spain, killing 191 and wounding about 1,800 in an attack linked to al-Qaeda-inspired militants. Chilean earthquake: The largest aftershock rocked Chile 30 minutes before the inauguration of Pres. Sebastian Pinera. It rocked buildings and shook windows in the capital and provoked nervous smiles among dignitaries The 7.2-magnitude aftershock was stronger than the quake that devastated Port-au-Prince, Haiti and was on the same fault line as the 8.8 Chile quake. Geophysicist Don Blakeman of the US Geological Survey said that Chile can expect to feel "aftershocks of the aftershock." I am so glad that I don't live in an area prone to earthquakes or volcanic eruptions. Just the occasional blizzard. Greece is being hit by strikes and riots over its austerity plan with serious street clashes between rioting youth and police in Athens. Some 30,000 people demonstrated in a nationwide strike against the cash-strapped government's austerity. Rioters used sledge hammers to smash the glass fronts of more than a dozen shops, banks and a cinema. This is the second strike as workers protested spending cuts (wages) and tax hikes designed to tackle the nation's debt crisis. Greece is in serious financial trouble due to years of giving workers anything they wanted. Now it's time to pay and the workers aren't prepared for it. A New Jersey man is accused of years of terrorizing his family, raping his five daughters (impregnated three), beating his children with wooden boards. This nightmarish picture of a family subjected to a decade of abuse, largely cut off from the outside world, has emerged at court where prosecutors are trying the man for five crimes, one for each child. A man like this doesn't deserve to live and should be locked up in solitary confinement for the rest of his unnatural life. ;DToday is Johnny Appleseed Day Thought for Today: "Real success is finding your lifework in the work that you love." --David McCullough, historian. :-*Have a tremendous Thursday everyone.
|
|
|
Post by usamommajoy on Mar 12, 2010 9:15:16 GMT -7
Good Morning Peg and Tuxy
And good morning any other visitors here
Hope you have a great day
|
|
|
Post by flyinghorse on Mar 12, 2010 13:22:07 GMT -7
Today in NY's Finger Lakes it's back to cloudy with a temp of 47ºF and feels like 47ºF. Today's high is expected to be 53ºF with a 40% chance of precipitation in the afternoon. Well, at least we've still got the warmth. ???Today in history: 1912--Juliette Gordon Low of Savannah, GA, founded the Girl Guides, which later became the Girl Scouts of America, was founded. 1925--Chinese revolutionary leader Sun Yat-sen died at age 58. 1930--Indian political and spiritual leader Mohandas Gandhi began a 200-mile march to protest a British tax on salt. 1933--Pres. Roosevelt delivered his first of 30 radio "fireside chats," telling Americans what was being done to deal with the economic crisis. 1938--the Anschluss took place as German troops entered Austria Adolf Hitler annexed his homeland the following day. 1947--Pres. Truman established what became known as the "Truman Doctrine" to help Greece and Turkey resist Communism. 1980--a Chicago jury found John Wayne Gary Jr. guilty of the murders of 33 men and boys. 1987--the musical Les Miserables opened on Broadway. 1994--the Church of England ordained its first female priests. 1999--in an unprecedented moment in the history of the church, Pope John Paul II asked God's forgiveness for the sins of Roman Catholics through the ages, including wrongs inflicted on Jews, women and minorities. 1999--the Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland joined NATO. 2002--Homeland security chief Tom Ridge unveiled a color-coded system for terror warnings. 2002--the UN Security Council approved a US-sponsored resolution endorsing a Palestinian state for the first time. 2003--Elizabeth Smart, the 15-year-old girl who'd vanished from her bedroom nine months earlier, was found alive in a Salt Lake City suburb with two drifters. 2008--New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer resigned two days after reports had surfaced that he was a client of a prostitution ring. 2009--disgraced financier Bernard Madoff pleaded guilty in New YOrk to pulling off perhaps the biggest ponzi scheme in Wall Street history. :(A pair of suicide bombers targeting army vehicles detonated within seconds of each other, killing at least 43 people and wounding about 100 in Lahore, Pakistan. It was the fourth major attack in the country this week, indicating Islamist militants are stepping up violence after a period of relative calm. It is really amazing what people will do in the name of religion. ;DTwo years after receiving its first deposits, Norway's "doomsday" seed vault on an Arctic island of Longyearthyen has amassed half a million seed samples, making it the world's most diverse repository of crop seeds. Cary Fowler, who heads the trust overseeing the seed collection, said the facility now houses at least one third of the world's seed crops. Located in Norway's remote archipelago, the Svalbard Global Seed Vault is a safeguard against wars or natural disasters wiping out food crops around the world. It was opened in 2008 as a master backup to the world's other 1,400 seed banks, in case they were lost. now if we could only preserve animal species too. Eleven rare Siberian tigers have died at a wildlife park in China in a case that activist say hints at unsavory practices among some zoos and animal farms in the country. They are overbreeding endangered animals in the hopes of making illicit profit on their carcasses. The deaths of the tigers occurred at a zoo in China's frigid northeast and reports said they starved to death, being fed nothing but chicken bones. In attempts to save its dwindling number of tigers, zoos and wildlife parks may be deliberately breeding ore animals than they can afford to sell the carcasses onto a black market where tiger parts fetch a high price for use in traditional medicines and liquor. The greed of humans never fails to amaze me. Oriental men think that eating tiger testicles will enhance their own sexual prowess. Try viagra instead. Today is Department Store Day :)Thought for Today: "If your actions inspire others to dream more, learn more, do more and become more, you are a leader." --John Quincy Adams, US President (1767-1848) ;)TGIF, my friends.
|
|
|
Post by usamommajoy on Mar 12, 2010 18:22:47 GMT -7
Good Night Peg and Tuxy I will stop in again sometime likely over the weekend when I get time.
If not, hope you have a wonderful weekend
|
|
|
Post by usamommajoy on Mar 14, 2010 11:04:57 GMT -7
Just peeking in to say hello Peg and Tuxy Hope you have a Super Sunday
|
|
|
Post by flyinghorse on Mar 20, 2010 13:42:34 GMT -7
And the same to you, USAMom
|
|
|
Post by flyinghorse on Mar 20, 2010 13:45:48 GMT -7
Happy First Day of Spring (or if you are in the southern hemisphere, Autumn). It's the 79th day of 2010 and there are 286 days left in the year. Spring will officially arrive at 1:32 p.m. EDT. I 8-)Today in NY's Finger Lakes it's fair with a temp of 56ºF and it's expected to be mostly cloudy with a high of 56ºF with a 20% chance of rain. I'm still waiting to see the first splash of yellow flowers. :PToday in history: 1413--England's King Henry IV died and is succeeded by his son, Henry V the Warrior King (and Prince Hal in Shakespeare's Henry IV plays). 1727--Sir Isaac Newton, physicist, mathematician and astronomer, died in London. 1815--Napoleon Bonaparte entered Paris after his escape from exile on Elba, beginning his Hundred Days rule (defeated at Waterloo). 1816--the US Supreme Court affirmed its right to review state court decisions. 1852--Harriet Beecher Stowe's novel about the evils of slavery, Uncle Tom's Cabin, was published in book form after being serialized.. 1896--US Marines landed in Nicaragua in the wake of a revolution. 1899--Martha Place of Brooklyn, NY, became the first woman to be executed in the electric chair. (She was put to death in Sing Sing for the murder of her stepdaughter) 1969--rock musician John Lennon of the Beatles married Yoko Ono in Gibraltar. 1976--newspaper heiress (William Randolph Heart's granddaughter) was convicted of armed robbery for her part in the Symbionese Liberation Army's San Francisco bank holdup. 1977--voters in Paris chose former French Prime Minister Jacques Chirac to be their first mayor in over a century. 1985--Libby Riddles of Teller, Alaska, became the first woman to win the Iditarod Trail Dog Sled Race. 1987--the Food and Drug Administration approved the sale of AZT, a drug shown to prolong the lives of some AIDS patients. 1990--Namibia became an independent nation after 75 years of South African rule. 1995--12 people were killed in Tokyo and more than 5,500 sickened when packages containing the poisonous gas sarin were leaked on five separate subway trains by Aum Shinrikyo cult members. 1997--Liggett Group settled 22 state lawsuits by admitting the industry markets cigarettes to teenagers and agreeing to warn on every pack that smoking is addictive. 1999--Bertrand Piccard of Switzerland and Brian Jones of Great Britain became the first to fly a hot-air balloon around the world nonstop. 2000--former Black Panther Jamil Abdullah al-Amin (aka H. Rap Brown) was captured in Alabama for the killing of a sheriff's deputy. (He was convicted and sentenced to life in prison without parole). 2003--US and British forces invaded Iraq from Kuwait. 2004--the US military charged six soldiers with abusing inmates at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq. Least we forget, there is another NCAA Tournament going on--the women. Can anyone knock UConn off their 72-game winning streak and prevent their third straight national championship? Well, No. 1 seed Tennessee is more than willing to try. This is Tennessee's 20th tournament as a no. 1 seed--that's a record everybody. Tennessee has lost only three times in the past three years in Knoxville and is undefeated at home. And guess what, their home court is where one of the opening rounds is held and that's where they will be playing. The women's tournament has to do something the men don't--they have to play where they know they get a crowd, and that's at The Summit (named after their Hall of Fame coach Pat Summit), Tennessee's home. Pope Benedict XVI rebuked Irish bishops for "grave errors of judgment" in handling clerical sex abuse cases and ordered an investigation into the Irish church. But he laid no blame for the problem on the Vatican's policies of keeping such cases secret. And what about the German church when he was archbishop? Does anyone else besides me get a strong whiff of hypocrisy here? :(Police have arrested a 16-year-old boy on charges of bias intimidation and harassment in the case of a racial comment that was made over the public-address system at a Wal-Mart store in southern New Jersey. The incident happened Sunday and the boy's name is being withheld. Happy First Day of Spring. Thought for Today: "Spring makes everything young again except man." --Jean Paul Richter, German author (1763-1825) Have a wonderful Saturday, my friends.
|
|
|
Post by theflyinghorse on Mar 27, 2010 11:07:30 GMT -7
>:(By a unamimous decision, the 9-judge US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia handed another victory to sonservative opponents of campaign finance restrictions. They struck down limits on individual contributions to advocacy groups (PACs) that want to use the money for or against candidates in federal elections. The decision did little to end the uncertainty surrounding the patchwork system of federal campaign restrictions first put in place during the Watergate era and strengthened by the 2002 McCain-Feingold Act and other statutes. In a separate decision issued Friday, for example, a three-judge panel in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia rejected a bid by the Republican National Committee to raise unlimited contributions from corporations and individuals, setting the stage for further litigation.
;DThe Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) moves to stop a West Virginia mountain-top coal mine that was issued a federal permit. It is one of the most aggressive moves to come out of the Obama administration's re-examination of mountaintop mining (peaks are scraped and blasted away to reach coal seams inside). The EPA has reviewed dozens of permits and approved one large mine in January after environmental improvements were promised. In the latest case concerning the Spruce No. One mine in Logan County, the EPA is at least stopping it from using "valley fills," depositing excess rock and rubble in nearby streams. Under the federal Clean Water Act, the EPA has the power to veto projects that would cause an "unacceptable adverse impact," but it has used that ower only 12 times since 9172. It has never used it in a case such as this where the mine has a permit. The EPA says the mine would bury about seven miles of streams. As toxic chemicals flow downstream from the rubble, it could harm aquatic live, including one of the world's richest concentrations of salamanders. The mine was issued a federal permit in 2007 by the Bush administration but lawsuits by environmental groups have delayed major mining operations. After the present White House raised questions about the mine's environmental consequences last year, the EPA began negotiations with Arch Coal, the mine's St. Louis-based parent company that have failed.
|
|
|
Post by theflyinghorse on Mar 27, 2010 11:11:38 GMT -7
Today's flowers are Salome daffodils Thought for Today: "A sheltered life can be a daring life as well. For all serious daring starts from within." --Eudora Welty, Southern author (1909-2001) Have a great weekend, my friends.
|
|
|
Post by theflyinghorse on Mar 30, 2010 9:23:18 GMT -7
Today in the Finger Lakes region, New York, it's mostly cloudy and 34ºF (feels like 26ºF). Showers are supposed to develop this afternoon (chance 60%) and evening before tapering off overnight. Ah well, it is March. They are forecasting 70s for the Easter weekend. ???Today in history: 1822--Florida became a US territory. 1842--Dr. Crawford Long of Jefferson, Ga., first used ether as an anaesthetics during a minor operation. 1867--Secretary of State William Seward reached agreement with Russia to purchase Alaska for $7.2 million, a deal readily ridiculed as "Seward's Folly." 1870--the 15th amendment to the US Constitution, giving black men the right to vote, was declared in effect. 1870--Texas was readmitted as a state of the Union. 1909--the Queensboro Bridge, linking the New York City boroughs of Manhattan and Queens, opened. 1945--the Soviet Union invaded Austria. 1959--a narrowly divided US Supreme Court, in Bartkus v. Illinois, ruled that a conviction in state court following an acquittal in federal court for the same crime did not violate the Constitution's protection against double jeopardy. 1964--my all-time favorite game sow, Jeopardy, premiered on NBC (and is still going in syndication. 1970--the musical Applause, based on the movie All About Eve, opened on Broadway. 1979--Airey Neave, a leading member of the British parliament, was killed in London by a bomb planted in his car by the Irish National Liberation Army. 1981--Pres. Reagan was shot and seriously injured outside a Washington, DC hotel by John W. Hinckley Jr. 1995--Pope John Paul II issued an encyclical condemning abortion and euthanasia as crimes that no human laws could legitimize. 2002--Great Britain's Queen Mother Elizabeth died in her sleep at Royal Lodge, Windsor, at age 101. 2005--the US Supreme Court ruled that federal law allowed people age 40 and over to file age bias claims over salary and hiring even if employers never intended any harm. 2009--Pres. Obama asserted unprecedented government control over the auto industry, rejecting GM and Chrysler's restructuring plans and engineering the ouster of GM's CEO Rick Wagoner. :(The fight against "food fraud" grows with the FDA targeting everything from moldy tomato paste to diluted honey and olive oil. Fraud has been found in fruit juice, olive oil, spices, vinegar, wine, maple syrup, fish and crab, posing a significant problem in the seafood industry. Victims range from the shopper at the local supermarket to multimillion dollar companies, including E&J Gallo, Kraft and Heinz USA. Unfortunately, the FDA has been overwhelmed in preventing contamination and hasn't worried about fraud. Now recent technological developments (including DNA testing) make it easier to detect fraud so that authentication should be standard practice. In an interview with NBC, Pres. Obama says he believes the Tea Party is built around a core who question whether he is a US citizen and believe he is a socialist. But he also recognizes that the movement involves those who are legitimately concerned about the national debt and big government. And as unlikely as it may seem, he hopes to win over members who have "mainstream, legitimate concerns." Good luck on that one, you'll need it. >:(The allegations of abuse in the Catholic Church ripple across the globe. It all began in the US, then spread to the Irish church and presently the German church. Now further charges of abuse by priests are surfacing in Austria, Italy, the Netherlands and Switzerland. It is evident that church leaders had been, at best, grossly negligent in handling abuse charges, or at worst, the vatican had a hand in covering up the scandal. The Vatican's chief spokesman acknowledged that the Church's response is crucial to its credibility and it must "acknowledge and make amends for" decades-old cases. Today's flower is Starflower Tessa Thought for Today: "Curiosity is free-wheeling intelligence." --Alistair Cooke, journalist and broadcaster (1908-2004) Have a terrific Tuesday everyone.
|
|