From "Wales Online": Man hospitalised after being impaled by railings. This to me suggests that sentient railings leaped out and impaled him, in the style of Vlad Dracul. Surely he was impaled on said railings?
Why was the ticket speeding? Was it in a hurry? It seems kind of the restaurant boss that he took the ticket's wrap because you shouldn't drive with food in your hands. This still doesn't explain the fake persona, though!
I was cruising through some little church home pages in my diocese & ....its a good thing I didn't have a mouth full of liquid-
continuing my little story: Church was writing about a service....and said this- music was provided by Mr. Ed
(lastname)
Any of you remember Mister Ed? Struck me funny.
For people my age(born late 1960s), Mister Ed was one of those shows that was talked about after it had gone off the air, and was considered funny not because it was known to have clever jokes and whatnot, but simply because the concept seemed unintentionally goofy.
(Caveat: Unlike, say, Gilligan's Island or Bewitched, Mister Ed was not syndicated in our market, and I'm assuming that was the same in most places: IOW by the 1980s, most young people were just hearing about it second-hand. If it was widely syndicated elsewhere, I'd be interested to hear about it. I do see on wikipedia that the show lasted six seasons, which is certainly a respectable run.)
NSW flags desire for dedicated quarantine site
Doubly puzzling because as an Australian state, New South Wales has no flag or flags of its own that could be deemed worthy of special quarantine status.
And from the BBC: "Giant tortoise picked up by police". What, was it speeding?
That's from Suffolk, where strange things seem to happen (I know, I lived there): Pre-school opens new play area with assault course and sensory garden (Ipswich Star). Obviously catering both for their tough and sensitive sides ...
Not a headline, but in an article from a newspaper (fairly old) I was reading yesterday about the grave of an ancient chieftain: he was apparently buried in a cape decorated with plagues.
And from the BBC: "Giant tortoise picked up by police". What, was it speeding?
That's from Suffolk, where strange things seem to happen (I know, I lived there): Pre-school opens new play area with assault course and sensory garden (Ipswich Star). Obviously catering both for their tough and sensitive sides ...
'Monkey found at Cambuslang railway station reunited with family'
After which they went off swinging happily through the dense jungles of southern Glasgow.
I saw that about the marmoset yesterday and was very surprised it was still legal to keep a monkey in the UK. I’m very glad to say that it looks like the government is proposing a ban.
From a local newspaper in Ontario:
'We are at a pivotal crossroad,' say citizens concerned about proposed Shingletown aggregate pit..'
If someone could draw a picture of a pivotal crossroad, I'd love to see it.
From a local newspaper in Ontario:
'We are at a pivotal crossroad,' say citizens concerned about proposed Shingletown aggregate pit..'
If someone could draw a picture of a pivotal crossroad, I'd love to see it.
From a local newspaper in Ontario:
'We are at a pivotal crossroad,' say citizens concerned about proposed Shingletown aggregate pit..'
If someone could draw a picture of a pivotal crossroad, I'd love to see it.
Not a headline, but in an article from a newspaper (fairly old) I was reading yesterday about the grave of an ancient chieftain: he was apparently buried in a cape decorated with plagues.
MMM
Ouch! for a person with history in a country where smallpox-infected blankets were given to the indigenous people,* this one kind of stings.
My apologies, questioning, I hadn’t seen it as anything other than amusing and that is all that was meant. The burial was in Russia and about 2,000 or so years old.
MMM
Edited to add: I had meant to include that I had no idea.
From a local newspaper in Ontario:
'We are at a pivotal crossroad,' say citizens concerned about proposed Shingletown aggregate pit..'
If someone could draw a picture of a pivotal crossroad, I'd love to see it.
That's from Suffolk, where strange things seem to happen (I know, I lived there): Pre-school opens new play area with assault course and sensory garden (Ipswich Star). Obviously catering both for their tough and sensitive sides ...
When I was trying to improve a primary school's pastoral care, one of the things I designed was a series of play areas down one edge of the playground, that broke up the area into bays, containing things like a sensory garden and assault course activities, rather than a wasteland of boys playing football with the non-football players stuck around the edges and/or crammed into inaccessible corners.
My apologies, questioning, I hadn’t seen it as anything other than amusing and that is all that was meant. The burial was in Russia and about 2,000 or so years old.
MMM
Edited to add: I had meant to include that I had no idea.
From a local newspaper in Ontario:
'We are at a pivotal crossroad,' say citizens concerned about proposed Shingletown aggregate pit..'
If someone could draw a picture of a pivotal crossroad, I'd love to see it.
Comments
I may take a swipe at the caddy
But when I do, I close my mouth when I chew
'cause I ain't no uncouth baddy
Link.
They slipped up there...
Presumably it was a fajita or something similar?
...or...https://mamalisa4.files.wordpress.com/2015/02/image.png
Good Burritos Don't Fall Apart
For people my age(born late 1960s), Mister Ed was one of those shows that was talked about after it had gone off the air, and was considered funny not because it was known to have clever jokes and whatnot, but simply because the concept seemed unintentionally goofy.
(Caveat: Unlike, say, Gilligan's Island or Bewitched, Mister Ed was not syndicated in our market, and I'm assuming that was the same in most places: IOW by the 1980s, most young people were just hearing about it second-hand. If it was widely syndicated elsewhere, I'd be interested to hear about it. I do see on wikipedia that the show lasted six seasons, which is certainly a respectable run.)
Doubly puzzling because as an Australian state, New South Wales has no flag or flags of its own that could be deemed worthy of special quarantine status.
From USA Today's morning headlines
That's from Suffolk, where strange things seem to happen (I know, I lived there): Pre-school opens new play area with assault course and sensory garden (Ipswich Star). Obviously catering both for their tough and sensitive sides ...
MMM
After which they went off swinging happily through the dense jungles of southern Glasgow.
This one did literally make me laugh out loud. It's brilliant.
'We are at a pivotal crossroad,' say citizens concerned about proposed Shingletown aggregate pit..'
If someone could draw a picture of a pivotal crossroad, I'd love to see it.
Would this qualify?
Exactly what I was thinking. That's a gorgeous photo, with the fog and snow and all.
Ouch! for a person with history in a country where smallpox-infected blankets were given to the indigenous people,* this one kind of stings.
*with the acknowledgement that there are debates about whether this actually happened, whether it happened intentionally. In any case, it is part of our national narrative.
MMM
Edited to add: I had meant to include that I had no idea.
Excellent - thanks!
When I was trying to improve a primary school's pastoral care, one of the things I designed was a series of play areas down one edge of the playground, that broke up the area into bays, containing things like a sensory garden and assault course activities, rather than a wasteland of boys playing football with the non-football players stuck around the edges and/or crammed into inaccessible corners.
Please don't fret, @MMM. No offense taken.
Glad you approve
Girl, 18, killed in house she moved into quarter century ago
Um, isn't a quarter century 25 years?
That does indeed seem tricky.
Her age upon the date
Of his birth was minus eight
If she's seventeen
And he is five and twenty!
Re the headline, perhaps it's inflation: centuries aren't worth as much as they used to be.
I was watching a C4 series (very good) called "We Are Lady Parts". At the end, the announcer said "If you want to see more lady parts, go to More4".
If I want to see more lady parts, I know precisely where to go. OOps - did I say that out loud?
Mother and son treated by same doctor
It isn't called Family Practice for nothing.