วันพุธที่ 29 กุมภาพันธ์ พ.ศ. 2555

population determine either There Should Be More Or Less Government Involvement

From: Winning Against The Odds

A Look At The Ron Paul Story

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Even though Dr. Paul was a presidential candidate, there was someone else aspect to his being a candidate. He shared the message of lower taxes, a foreign policy that is non-interventionist but not isolationist, domestic security, the possession of individuals, the cheaper stabilized, and government as called for by the Constitution. It is a message of going back to basics and having the country be as it started out.

Dr. Paul is not out to reinvent government. He points out that government as we now know it is not how the United States was set up to be run. He asks questions with regard to issues but too often his explication filled messages are blocked.

As a doctor he has an analytical ability, thirst for knowledge, and understanding of human nature. His political view is based on being well informed and from hard won caress in government. Combined with integrity and persistence you find a statesman seldom seen in the political arena. He is someone you can trust and population are excited about his message.

He has brought about cooperation between positive groups throughout the country with his message. The same message that has been a part of his long term political and medical careers: personel possession and liberty.

People talk in terms of their apathy being healed. There is greater involvement in politics at the local and national level. maybe as a son, brother, husband, father, grandfather, uncle, physician, friend, and Congressional Representative he is also just someone who cares adequate to want to make this world a best place.

There is a story that's been nearby from about the time Dr. Paul started in group office. It is a reminder and maybe an encouragement for population to voice their opinions and take activity to find solutions to the world's many problems.

The story is called Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes by Eleanor Coerr with illustrations by Ronald Himler. It is based upon a real child.

The real life Japanese girl was Sadako Sasaki who lived a short life from January 7, 1943 to October 25, 1955. She was two years old, living near Misasa Bridge in Hiroshima, Japan, when an atomic bomb dropped on the city exploded about one mile from her home. It was August 6, 1945. She developed what was called "an atomic bomb disease" ten years later. This is best known as leukemia. She was hospitalized on 21 February 1955.

Her friend Chizuko Hamamoto visited her in the hospital on August 13th and made her an origami paper crane. Chizuko told Sadako about the Japanese saying that if a someone folded 1,000 cranes then their wish would be granted. Sadako did fold the 1,000 cranes by the end of August and even more. For paper she would use paper from rehabilitation wrappers and even asked other patients to for the paper used to wrap get well presents. Chizuko also gave her paper from school. Her house was with her when Sadako died on the morning of October 25, 1955. A variety of her letters was published by her friends and classmates after she died. Their goal was to build a memorial to Sadako and all of the children who died from "atomic bomb disease". The statue was unveiled in the Hiroshima Peace Memorial in 1958. The plaque at the base reads:

This is our cry.
This is our prayer.
Peace in the world.

Dr. Paul is a leader who has been consistent in being knowledgeable, using base sense, and courage in the face of opposition. He wants the best for everyone. He doesn't give up. maybe with history lasting to repeat itself, taking a look at this voice of reason will result in a new path for population to result so that there will be peace in the world.

Is Dr. Paul a contemporary day hero? Do we need a hero in this age of instant communications? From antique mythology to contemporary day the hero/heroine stood up to fight against wrong. They have faced challenges, failed or not, but kept going. They fight for individuals and have a moral approved that results in trust by others.

But then heroes/heroines are not liked by everyone. They stir up controversy. They are hated or liked but may be respected for doing something. We're all heroes/heroines in the waiting. Our heroic activity could happen when something bothers us just once too often or something is too extreme.

His point of view is to return operate of issues to the local level, to an personel level. The local level of dealing with a concern allows for a unique perspective. This view is based upon local values and understanding from an individual's perspective and involvement. A home voice empowers population to come to be involved.

"Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country." John F. Kennedy

population determine either There Should Be More Or Less Government Involvement

วันอังคารที่ 28 กุมภาพันธ์ พ.ศ. 2555

Real Self-Defense Begins in the Mind

Part of my background has been in teaching self defense skills. I hear about the many habitancy who have been attacked and had no comprehension of what it took, not only to survive and attack, but to defeat the attacker. In 2008, a adolescent girl was walking to school when she was attacked by a concentrate of thugs. Her brother apparently taught her a few uncomplicated skills in self-defense, which she used. She was a member of her school's marching band. She led the band as the baton holder. Well she was able to take out her baton and use as a weapon. Both of the bad guys were hurt after she attacked the attackers.

I'm not here to talk specifically about the corporeal skills that you will need if you are suddenly attacked. I'm here to teach you other aspect concerning self defense. That part is one of awareness. While many school of self defense will teach techniques, it is your mindset that is more important.

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Being aware of what is going on nearby you will help to stop an assault from occurring in the first place. By being aware, you will observation things before they happen. If a potential attacker is nearby, you can just go in other direction. Additionally, muggers will normally avoid habitancy who are aware of them. They want the easy targets.

Awareness will prepare you if you are unexpectedly attacked. You will already have the mindset industrialized to assault the attacker. That is what's leading anytime you become a victim of an attack. Do whatever it takes to stop it right there. Never, ever let any bad guy take you to other area. Don't let a kidnapping happen. According to Sanford Strong in his book, Strong on Defense, it is at crime scene #2 where the undoubtedly bad stuff will happen, along with murder.

You have to be mentally prepared to cope any situation. I mentioned earlier about becoming a victim of a crime, right? Well that's only for police reports. You should never have that mindset. Never let yourself become a victim, instead become a predator that attacks the attacker. One of the things I taught in my self-defense classes is to fantasize that you are a wolverine. If you are backed into a corner or attacked, then spring transmit using all your muscle, strength, and meanness and assault the attacker. It starts in the mind. It works along the same principle as when a child is trapped under a car and its mom suddenly finds the drive to lift it off her child, even though she may only weigh 120 pounds.

That mom used the power from her fear that created adrenaline to be released which caused her heart to beat extremely fast. The heart sent most of the mother's blood to her legs and arms, giving her superhuman-like strength. You have the same thing that happens when being attacked. You just need to use your mind to focus that drive and power against the bad guy that attacked you. In the martial arts, there is a technique known as a 'kiai' or battle cry. In the Japanese arts they specifically train in kiaijutsu, which is the art of the battle cry.

Doing a kiai will help focus an "adrenaline rush" that occurs against an attacker.

Finally, keep yourself physically fit. By being fit, your mind will work much good and you'll survive and even thrive against a criminal attack.

Real Self-Defense Begins in the Mind

วันจันทร์ที่ 27 กุมภาพันธ์ พ.ศ. 2555

optical Novels - A Beginner's Guide to a Genre of Game

In the Western World, we are customary to videogame genres like first-person shooters, console role-playing, and puzzle games -- games like Halo and the Final Fantasy series dominate the Western gaming market. However, there is one genre of game that is relatively obscure in the West -- the optic novel.

The optic novel (Vn) is a favorite genre of game in Japan, dominating the Japanese gaming shop with its thousands of available titles. As its name implies, the customary focus of a Vn is its story. They are ordinarily characterized through its vivid anime-style artwork, juxtaposed with text, static backgrounds, music, sound effects, and voice acting. Gameplay is minimalistic -- most of the interaction is achieved through clicking the screen to expand the story. A Vn may or may not have decision points, at which your decisions may sway the outcome of the story.

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The majority of Vns are renai, or having romantic themes, ordinarily in a school setting. In these Vns, you take on the role of a male character with one or more female romantic prospects. The "otome game" reverses this role -- a female character with one or more male romantic prospects. However, there are some Vns where romance is not the customary focus; an example includes the Phoenix Wright series. The Vn genre encompasses a collection of themes, including, but not slight to: mecha, yaoi and yuri (gay and lesbian relationships, respectively), magical girl, and medieval themes.

A large amount of Vns comprise hentai, or adult scenes. A Vn containing them isn't necessarily a bad thing; in a romantic-themed story, it can enhance the connection between two characters. However, there are Vns where the customary focus lies in the hentai, with an "excuse plot" to construe it. On the other hand, there are Vns with no such content. Whether you pick to play an adult or all-ages Vn, they can have equally great stories.

There exists Vns for both Pcs and videogame consoles. If you pick to play a Japanese Vn on your Pc, you might have to convert your system's locale to Japanese, or use AppLocale if you use Windows; otherwise, you'll get garbled text. However, there are translation groups that have translated a amount of Japanese Vns to English.

A good way to get your feet wet in the Vn scene is to play some homebrewed ones; there are many free English Vns created using Ren'Py, a free Vn creation software. When you're ready, you can look at some Japanese expert Vns at the optic Novel Database; demos of the games can be found at their respective developer's sites.

Visual novels can serve as a break from today's action-oriented games. Try one today -- arresting plots, vivid anime-style art, and arresting characters will keep you wanting to play more.

optical Novels - A Beginner's Guide to a Genre of Game

วันอาทิตย์ที่ 26 กุมภาพันธ์ พ.ศ. 2555

Hello Kitty Erasers

Have you ever found one of your popular characters in the form of an eraser? This is one way that people have found out about the world of Japanese erasers and Hello Kitty is an example of this.

Ikuko Shimizu originally created Hello Kitty and it is produced by the business Sanrio. It was produced in the United States in 1976, two years after being created in Japan in 1974. Inspecting that you can find Hello Kitty in video games, on distinct types of accessories, and in supplies for school, it's no surprise to see it on erasers. You can even see Hello Kitty in a theme park called Sanrio Puroland in Tokyo! Not surprisingly, the theme park is one of the most popular attractions in Japan.

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There are all kinds of Hello Kitty erasers - everybody wouldn't guess that there are scented Hello Kitty erasers available. Fortunately, the scents are things like pudding, banana, orange, peach, strawberry, soda, and grapefruit and not actual kitties. There are even silly putty erasers that are scented that can be shaped and played with like a toy, in expanding to their use as an eraser. The types of Japanese erasers are pretty much unlimited.

It is marvelous how many distinct things are available under the Hello Kitty theme. There are Hello Kitty shoes, night lamps, floral arrangements, Pez dispensers, dog collars, tarot cards, guns, and reading lights. There are even Hello Kitty pianos and teeth in the shape of Hello Kitty's face.

Best of all, there is a Hello Kitty house in Shanghai! The whole outside and interior have a Hello Kitty theme. There is no doubt that several girls could call this their dream house. One would feel like she's walking into a fairy tale house.

Hello Kitty erasers inside are pretty much a certainty.

From what I've seen there aren't any Japanese eraser themed houses available, but there must be a small town of them assembled somewhere...

Hello Kitty Erasers

วันเสาร์ที่ 25 กุมภาพันธ์ พ.ศ. 2555

10 Most Wicked and Horrible Places in the World

Halloween is over, but the wicked places in our world didn't disappear together with it. They are thrilling the lovers of adrenalin and scary stories, who are willing to see something, from which normal tourists hastily run away. So, here are 10 the most horrible places in the world, one is scarier than another.

1. Mutter Museum of healing History in Philadelphia.

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Mutter Museum of healing History in Philadelphia - is the museum of pathologies, old healing tool and biological exhibit items; the museum is situated in the oldest in North America healing school complex. The museum is most predominant for its giant variety of skulls; here are also gathered all kinds of unique exhibit items, for example a woman's dead body which turned into the soap in the soil where she was buried. Here are also Siamese twins with conjoined livers, the skeleton of two-headed child and other creepy showpieces.

2. Truk Lagoon in Micronesia. Much of Japanese Navy military are now lying at the lowest of shallow Truk Lagoon in Micronesia, southwest of Hawaii. Blue depths, explored by Jacques Cousteau in 1971 and thick-sown with wrecks of battleships and aircraft carriers, sunk in the year 1944, became open for divers. However, some of them are still afraid of crews, which had not left their battle positions. Ships and planes had struck for a long time into the coral reefs, but still, new and too animated tourists who pry where they shouldn't, become their victims.

3. Sonora Witchcraft market in Mexico City, Mexico

Mexico witches sitting in tight stalls are promising the quick riddance from poverty and spousal infidelity, and martyred exotic iguanas, frogs and wild birds are hanged for sale in the cages on the walls of the tents. Sonora market is opened daily to pilgrims from Mexico City and tourists from far beyond who come here for fortune predictions and promises of great life. This is the place where the local population buys "supernatural" stuff, ranging from potions made agreeing to antique Aztec recipes to Buddha statues. Hard-headed enthusiasts may even buy here some blood of rattlesnake or dried hummingbirds for taming the luck. However, one should remember that witchcraft in Mexico is not a joke: the National relationship of Sorcerers was engaged in presidential selection in order to turn it into the honest and free one, using magical spells.

4. Easter Island, Chili

One of the most mysterious places on earth is Easter Island, with huge, cut out stone figures of giants, ingrown in the soil under the weight of millenniums. Statues are staring in the skies, as if they were guilty of some mystical crimes. Only the stone giants know where have disappeared the population who installed them. There is no one on the Easter Island who knows the private of making, animated and installing of these giant statues with the height of 21 meters and weight of 90 tons. Though, they were often moved more than 20 kilometers away from the open cast where the antique sculptors worked. Nowadays, the life is barely lingering on the island where a fine civilization once flourished, and no one knows where did the mysterious constructors come from and where did they disappear. Of course, except those who have read Thor Heyerdahl in childhood. For them, all these mysteries - about manufacture and installing the statues are no longer a secret.

5. Manchac Swamps in Louisiana

Boats with tourists, floating straight through the swamps in the torchlight are surrounded by old cypresses and long threads of moss hanging down from the branches of cypresses. The howl, sounding from afar could be that of rou-ga-rou - the Cajun version of werewolf.

Manchac Swaps are also called "ghost swaps". There are situated near New-Orleans and are the place, Goths are dreaming about. It is said that the swamps were cursed by a captured voodoo queen, in the starting of Xx th century. As a result, three villages disappeared while the hurricane in the year 1915. The repose of this birds' cemetery is disturbed only by the dead bodies, which exterior time to time - this is the heritage of hundred years old commercial activities. Besides that, the alligators, which are more numerous than dead bodies will not strain at eating fresh tourist meat.

6. Paris Catacombs, France

Bones and skulls are packed on both sides of the corridor like goods in the storehouse - lots of goods. The air here is dry and bears only a small hint of decomposition. Here are also some letterings, in normal dating from the French Revolution, which are flagging king and noblemen. After getting inside the catacombs under Paris, it becomes clear why Victor Hugo and Anne Rice have wrote their predominant stories about exactly these catacombs. They stretch for about 187 kilometers under the whole city and only insignificant part of them is opened to public. It is said that the rest of them are patrolled by special legendary private police, though, most likely they are patrolled by legions of corpses. Or vampires. Well, who cares! The mines existed here in Roman times, and when in the year 1785 the Paris cemeteries were overflowing, the tunnels came into their gift state.

7. Winchester House, San Jose, California

"Magical" Winchester House - a enormous building with many superstitions referring to it. A fortune-teller has told Sarah Winchester, the heiress of arms company, that the ghosts of those who were killed with Winchester rifles will chase her, unless she leaves Connecticut, moves to the West and builds such a house, which could not be finished while all her life. The building has started in San Jose, in the year 1884 and didn't stop for 38 years, till Sarah died. Nowadays, the ghosts of her madness live in 160 rooms of the house: there are stairs going level into the ceiling, doors that open right in the middle of the wall, spider motifs, chandeliers and hooks. Since the house was opened to public, there are ceaseless complaints about clapping doors, sound of footsteps in the night, animated lights; door handles which turn by themselves. Even if tourists do not believe in ghosts, the place shocks by its immensity.

8. Mary King's dead-end in Edinburgh

Several streets with dark past private under the medieval Old Town in Edinburgh. The place, where in the Xvii-th century the plague victims were finished up and left to die, is predominant for its poltergeists. Something unknown touches tourists' hands and feet. It is said, that this is the ghost of Annie, a young girl who was left there by her parents in the year 1645. A hundred years later, like in scary fairy-tales, a big new building was built on the place of King's Close. In the year 2003 the Close was opened for tourists, who were attracted by the stories about its supernatural spirits.

Visitors will be guided down the stone stairs to the dark, intensive lanes.

Except Annie's room there is an exposition of medieval life and deaths from plague reconstructed. The main thing is - do not stop when you feel the icy breath of death.

9. Occult Abbey of Thelema in Sicily

Aleister Crowley - is maybe one of most odious occultists in the world, and this stone farm house filled with dark pagan wall-paintings, once was the cosmopolis of satanic orgies. At least, it was thought about to be such in 1920-s.

Crowley is known because of his fans, such as Marilyn Manson and the fact that he appeared on the cover of Beatles' album 'Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band'. Crowley has founded the Abbey of Thelema, named after the utopia described in Rabelais' 'Gargantua', whose motto was "Do what you want." It became the commune of free love. Newcomers had to spend night in "Room of Nightmares" where they, high on heroin and marijuana stared at frescoes of earth, skies and hell. After a favorite English dandy had died in the Abbey, the media raised a stink, manufacture Mussolini close this dodgy commune. Notorious clandestine stage director Kenneth Anger had dug out this story and shot a movie there, which later has mysteriously disappeared. Now the Abbey is half-ruined and grassed over. However, there are few frescoes left inside, with the help of which Crowley intimidated his followers.

Tourists, apt to esotericism can wander there and thrill themselves.

10. Chernobyl in Ukraine

Tourists, arrival to Ukraine, in the abandoned city of Pripyat, find themselves in the exclusion zone. Here, all the stuff is left in hurry in that horrible 1986, when Chernobyl Npp crisis made thousands of population leave their homes forever. The apartments are opened wide, ivy climbs up the painted walls of kindergarten, toys are lying colse to scattered, and newspapers are left opened on kitchen tables. Swings are still wiggling by the dead wind, creaking. Now, when the radiation level is safe for the short-time visits, Chernobyl zone is opened for tourists. All excursions to Chernobyl are roughly the same, because the movements about exclusion zone are strictly limited. As a rule, tourists start from Kiev via bus, and then go to Chernobyl Npp on foot, then tour it and watch the "Sarcophagus". One could wander about the streets of ghost-town of Pripyat and visit the parking of contaminated vehicles. It is also inherent to meet local self-settlers, the residents of "restricted zone."

10 Most Wicked and Horrible Places in the World

วันศุกร์ที่ 24 กุมภาพันธ์ พ.ศ. 2555

Memoirs Of A Geisha (Dvd) recapitulate

Nominated for six Academy Awards, and winner of three, Memoirs Of A Geisha holds its own as one of the best films of 2005. Veteran Hollywood screenwriter Robin Swicord does a superb job of adapting Arthur Golden's bestselling novel to the big screen. This film has all the elements of a first-rate drama - jealousy, politics, intrigue, forbidden love, and an plenty of internal and external conflicts of varying types. Viewers in search of a typical Hollywood blockbuster will be greatly disappointed, but those who appreciate a good character-driven film which takes the time to form the motivations of its cast and build to a climax will observe a astounding gem which offers a welcome leave from reality.

Memoirs Of A Geisha is narrated from the viewpoint of a nine year-old Japanese girl named Chiyo (Ziyi Zhang). Born into a poor fishing family, Chiyo and her sister are sold into slavery by their father. Chiyo is soon separated from her sister and finds herself in a geisha house where her new master, mother (Kaori Momoi), will conclude her destiny. Although only nine years of age, Chiyo sparks the ire of the much older Hatsumomo (Li Gong), the most supreme geisha of the house, who accurately perceives Chiyo as a fitting rival.

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Li Gong is excellent in her role as the vindictive, yet human, adversary, and her character manages to have Chiyo removed from geisha school and condemned to the life of a common slave. However, Chiyo's life takes a turn for the better following a opportunity encounter with The Chairman (Ken Watanabe). Flanked by two geisha, The Chairman extends his kindness to Chiyo, prompting her to form a lifelong crush and to dream of one day becoming a geisha herself. Chiyo's wish comes true when a geisha from an additional one house, Mameha (Michelle Yeoh), offers to personally train her, setting up an inescapable conflict between the two and Hatsumomo and her understudy. Meanwhile, the horrors of war and her lifelong chase of The Chairman's love burden Chiyo with further hardships.

Although some traditionalists and geisha experts might take issue with the portrayal of geishas in general, the film of course offers an spellbinding behold into a world and culture most Americans will find intriguing. Despite its two hour and twenty-five wee running time, Memoirs Of A Geisha is a spellbinding film that seems much shorter in duration. Like most films adapted from a novel, those who enjoyed the book will either love it or hate it depending on how well they comprehend the switch to the big screen. But even those who hate it must admit that the costume and set form are excellent and leave wee room for improvement.

At times, the cast speaks with heavy accents which can be confusing at moments, but overall, the scenes flow well from one to the next. With the exception of some American actors near the windup (Ted Levine of Monk fame plays a Us Army Colonel), the majority of the cast is composed of Chinese and Japanese actors/actresses who are relatively unknown to American audiences - although Ken Watanabe might be recognizable given modern roles in The Last Samurai (2003) and Batman Begins (2005). The utilization of this cast helps focus audience attention on the merits of the film itself and not on a cast of stars, and this helps, rather than hinders, the film. As such, Memoirs Of A Geisha is a film most fans of the genre will thoroughly enjoy.

Memoirs Of A Geisha (Dvd) recapitulate

วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 23 กุมภาพันธ์ พ.ศ. 2555

Tattoos - A Living Form of Art

Tattoos and body piercings have grown in popularity over the past few decades. Once only reserved for tribes, sailors, or criminals, the meaning of tattoos and the reasons for population getting them have changed dramatically.

A Brief History

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Like body piercings, tattoos are created by the constant application of ink just under the subcutaneous layer of the skin with a needle. At first, many tribes, sailors, and other groups used to apply the ink by hand. This was a long, painful process and the marked population were regularly of high status. The tattoos were often a sign of respect, rank, and social status. Since the tattoos are permanent, the owners were guaranteed respect for life.

The interest of tattooing for the normal social spread throughout the world in fads. A sailor would bring over a fully tattooed indigenous man and interest would spread like wildfire. In London, a sailor brought over a tattooed Polynesian from the South Pacific, and many of the population of London began to regain their own small tattoos in private places. However, interest in tattooing waxed and waned due to its long, laberious process of applying every dot of ink by hand.

The electric tattoo machine is a relatively modern invention, created in 1891 by Samuel O'Reily, and has revolutionized tattoos into an art form. Tattooing can still be long and painful but now the many punctures in the skin are done automatically at thousands of punctures per little and can allow for great information and shading. Skin is the most unique canvas and a tattoo that is settled onto the skin is permanent, requiring extra notice for the right tattoo, the right artist, and the right placement. That piece of art will consequent throughout one's lifetime.

In New York City, Samuel O'Reily trained a partner named Charley Wagner, who continued teaching after O'Reily's death. For a brief while, Chatham square flourished with tattoo artists while the rest of the world remained unimpressed with tattooing. For a long time tattooing was generally stigmatized and most population with tattoos were stereotyped to be scary, dangerous, or freaks. During the 1920s tattoos began to be recognized for where a man has been in their travels, as tattoo artists set up shops in Coney Island. An outbreak of hepatitis, blood poisoning and other disease even worsened the prospects for tattooing in American culture.

Finally, a tattoo artist named Lyle Tuttle changed America's perception of tattooing by introducing celebrities to the art form. He tattooed them, mostly women, and used the media to convert their stereotypes about the types of population who got tattoos. Together with the heightened awareness of the importance of sterilization and the improvement of training, tattoo popularity began to surge in the last few decades.

Changing Views

Today, the tattooing business booms with new talented artists, schools and apprenticeship for budding tattooists, enlightened knowledge about sterilization, and condition code regulation. Tattoo suppliers are well known and there are a wide range of brands to choose from inks, tattoo machines, needles, and even tattoo shop supplies such as flash designs, chairs, and more. Younger generations are catching onto this art form and have made having a tattoo practically a rite of passage when one turns 18 in America. As more and more population of all walks of life have tattoos, the old stereotypes of tattooing that previously kept tattooing private and unsafe has become outdated.

Now getting a tattoo is easier, mildly less painful, and relatively faster than ever before. The results of sitting in a chair in one position for a few hours are much more satisfying to see a beautiful piece of art with the outbursts of new and unique tattoo artists, each with their own style. Some tattoo designers stick with what is known as Old School tattoos, which have the look of tattoos done before the Second World War. They include original designs like maritime stars, pin up girls and mermaids, Old English letters, sparrows, skulls, hearts, roses, symbolic animal spirits (tigers, eagles, fish), and more. Old School tattoos keep the look straightforward with mostly black ink and a little bit of color because in the older days of tattooing there was not a great range of ink colors to choose from. Old school tattoos are also notorious for featuring a ribbon with Old English letters writing a word or name inside the papyrus. The infamous Sailor Jerry Collins was the man who designed most tattoos that are now carefully original or Old School. Today many women interested in 1950s retro fashion choose Old School tattoos and place them on their arm like a sailor would back in the day. Many sailor tattoos are symbolic. For example, the maritime star means that a man has gone straight through an prominent event or has been somewhere far and has returned safely.

New School tattoos include any new techniques done after this war. After the 1961 hepatitis outbreak which forced the tattoo movement private for a while, tattoo designs were picked up by younger generations. They used bold, consuming colors and utilized more shading thanks to advancements in needle range and great quality ink. The condition code regulations and great use of sterilization machines brought tattooing back in the forefront again. New school tattoos still have the same list of tattoo designs as old school but are captured in a unique way that is difficult to construe but easy to see the difference. Also many population today get new school designs that are convention made, compared to the old school tattoos which were generally picked off a wall of flash.

Today there are dozens of consuming tattoo styles to choose from: Celtic, Japanese, religious, spiritual, tribal, bio-mechanical, feminine, military, black and gray, traditional, neo-traditional, modern, and more. The best part about getting a tattoo is designing a convention piece. Then it is wholly unique and meaningful for the person. Today, tattooing is more than ink on skin; it is expression of the soul.

Tattoos - A Living Form of Art

วันพุธที่ 22 กุมภาพันธ์ พ.ศ. 2555

5 Hot Tattoo Styles

Body art and tattoos have come to be so popular now that people who would have ran the other way are exposing their skin to the tattooists needle. It is not uncommon to get a glance of some office laborer in the boardroom sporting a sexy rose tattoo on her chest, floral invent on her lower leg or even some tribal artwork tattoos on her lower back. This is a testimony that tattoos are becoming more and more suitable in a corporate environment traditionally no go zones for any form of personal expression.
What are the hottest tattoo designs?
'New School' Style Tattoos. These are a modern version of the ol' sailor Jerry style of tattoos such as anchors and swallows. They are much brighter and more bright than their predecessors which look very flat in comparison. A lot of people especially females are request for tattoos of swallows and anchors on their neck.
Japanese Kanji Tattoos. Japanese style tattoos are so popular surrounded by females who are going for "full sleeve" style tattoos depicting Japanese characters such as koi or carp fish.
Floral and Love Heart Chest Tattoos. This style can look so sexy on a girl! There is a confident always in vogue look with these tattoos harking back to the good ol' days of the 1950's.
Star Tattoos. These have all the time been popular but more people are getting them done on illustrated places such as wrists and on the lower legs. Unsuprisingly Hollywood stars are lining up for the tattooists chair and demanding tattoos that reflect their lives.
Tribal Tattoos. Tribal tattoo designs have been nearby for hundreds of years but are becoming more and more complex and constantly evolving and morphing into what has come to be known as neo tribal tattoo styles. Tribal styles can be former 'black work' covering the arms or more colorful styles characterised by the 'Modern Primitive' look covering the entire body.
Tips for Getting Tattoos
Choose your tattoo carefully. Don't go for some off the wall 'flash' tattoo. A good tattoo artist loves doing 'custom pieces'.
Try not mix dissimilar tattoo styles such as Japanese and Tribal styles. It doesn't work!
Go to a reputable tattoo artist not some backstreet 'scratcher' who is cheap but you will inevitably regret later. Build a connection with the tattoo artist if you plan of getting a lot of tattoos.
Take permissible care especially of newer tattoos. As summer approaches a lot of people get tattooed and can't wait to flash them off. Be particular that you do not expose your new tattoos to too much sun which will fade them.

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5 Hot Tattoo Styles

วันอังคารที่ 21 กุมภาพันธ์ พ.ศ. 2555

Japanese Culture Tips

Modern Japanese business practice has been very influenced by Europe and North America. Any way to a large extent but still retains some traditionally Japanese practices. Below we introduce you to some of the more pertinent concepts and what they mean.

"(O)jigi", or bowing in English, is probably the highlight of Japanese etiquette that is best-known through media and Tv. Bowing is carefully extremely leading in Japan, so much so that, although children commonly begin studying how to bow from a very young age, companies generally furnish training to their employees in how to execute bows correctly Basic bows are performed with the back right and the hands at the sides (boys and men) or clasped in the lap (girls and women), and with the eyes down. Bows create at the waist. Generally, the longer and deeper the bow, the stronger the emotion and the respect expressed. Bows can be generally divided into three main types: informal, formal, and very formal. Informal bows are made at about a fifteen degree angle and more formal bows at about thirty degrees. Very formal bows are deeper.

Japanese School Girls

"Meishi" are the Japanese equivalent of business cards. They have a extra meaning and to receive a business card without due care and concentration can be seen as a personal slight. The spoton way to gift meishi is hold at the top corners with the lettering facing the person receiving the card. The receiver should then take the card by both lower corners, read it carefully and place it somewhere safe. When exchanging meishi the individual of lower status will pass their card first, and the individual of higher status will pass their card second.

"Keigo" is a polite style of Japanese used oftentimes in business when talking to superiors. Keigo (literally "respectful speech") is used to show respect or humility in the face of habitancy you are unfamiliar with. It is often not taught in schools or at home so many businessmen receive lessons when they enter a company.

"Uchi/Soto" means, roughly, Inner/Outer and refers to your association with a singular group. In Japan status is conferred not only vertically, i.e. Classic and subordinate, but also horizontally, i.e. Those with whom you are customary and those with whom you are not. The group dynamic is a very leading one and when you first meet anything you will immediately take up the position of outsider, soto, even if you are from distinct branches of the same business or work in the same field. You should understand the distance that you are shown as a sign of respect, and not think that your hosts are being cold to you. The position of soto does have some advantages over that of insider, uchi, for instance you are given more leeway in your behaviour and are not incredible to effect the same spoton rules as person who is uchi.

Silence is very leading in Japan. Though you may feel uncomfortable, try to analyse what sort of a silence it is, either it is a respectful silence or an upset silence. There is a definite association in the middle of silence and wisdom. The Japanese character for Knowledge combines the characters for losing and mouth, which goes to show that the Japanese think habitancy wise who refrain from speaking. As the old proverb goes, "better to remain silent and be belief a fool, than to open your mouth and remove any doubt".

Gifts in Japan are given to show appreciation of a favour done for you or to produce a sound business or personal relationship. Gifts should be something from your country and of a reasonably high quality, preferably with a extra point to your business or local area and not made in Asia. Gifts should be wrapped in "business colours" like dark greens, greys, blues and browns, but avoid white as it symbolises death. Gifts should be given and received with both hands, as with meishi. Remember that to your business partners the gift you give and the way that you give it divulge a lot about your character and your attitude towards business.

Meals in Japan traditionally begin with the phrase "itadakimasu" (literally, "I receive"). The phrase is similar to the phrase "bon appétit," or grace, used in the case of some individuals, at every meal. It is said to express gratitude for all who had a part in preparing the food, and in cultivating, ranching or hunting edible food of plants and animals.

Japanese Culture Tips

วันจันทร์ที่ 20 กุมภาพันธ์ พ.ศ. 2555

Video Clips. Duration : 5.22 Mins.



Keywords: Congenital Amputee, Juanita High School, Swimmer, Komo 4 News, Siberia, Adoption, Paralympics

วันอาทิตย์ที่ 19 กุมภาพันธ์ พ.ศ. 2555

miniature Known Avril Lavigne Facts

Avril Lavigne travels with a bag full of about 30 neck ties. Some of them Avril bought and the rest of 'em she just takes from her dad.

Avril Lavigne broke a record set by Madonna. Yup, the 17 year-old Canadian's hit song, Complicated, held the amount one spot on the contemporary Hit Radio chart (which tracks air play on the radio) for 11 weeks in a row. Madonna previously held the record with her song Music which held onto amount one for 10 weeks.

Japanese School Girls

Avril Lavigne's hittin' the tube for an appearance this fall on Sabrina the youthful Witch. What do ya think she'll be doing? Performing of course. Avril will rock-out in a nightclub.

Avril Lavigne has a cameo in Treble Charger's video for Hundred Million. Other groups who appear in the band's video comprise Sum 41 and Swollen Members.

Avril got her first kiss one night in grade nine when her parents were away and a boi came over. The best time to catch Avril Lavigne singing her song Losing Grip is when she's angry. "I no ifs ands or buts like performing it when I'm mad," says Avril. "And I'm all the time mad at boys."

Avril admitted to Rollingstone.com that she got into some fights one night. "The other night, I got into three fights," says Lavigne. "I was at a club and some girl was giving me attitude. She pushed me and I got her down on the floor. Protection came, and because I was on top, they threw me out." Yikes! No wonder Avril Lavigne's getting a bit of a rebel's rep.

Avril Lavigne regularly sports loose Dickies and she's thin so they often fall down revealing her butt crack. If you caught the 2002 Mmva's you may have got a perceive of Avril's backside again! Yes, Avril Lavigne does skateboard. She may not be Tony Hawk but she can deal with a skateboard. Avril Lavigne knew she wanted to be a singer when she was just a dinky kid. Avril Lavigne was only 12 years old when she wrote her first song. Avril Lavigne also taught herself to play the guitar when she was 12. Avril Lavigne gets compared to Alanis Morissette (although it might just be cuz they're both Canadian and female).

Avril Lavigne is good friends with Pink, Vanessa Carlton and Fefe Dobson Avril Lavigne enjoys camping, skateboarding, hunting and hockey. Avril is married to Derek Whibley from Sum 41. The join also share a mansion in California! Avril wrote the Spongebob Squarepants theme song, as well as Kelly Clarkson's song, Breakaway. In July 2007, it emerged that Tommy Dunbar and James Gangwer from The Rubinoos were suing Avril over allegations she copied one of their songs. The pair claim Avril's particular Girlfriend is a copy of their song I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend. The case will be heard in a Californian court on August 28, 2007.

Avril appeared topless on the front cover of the Blender magazine's June 2007 edition, but she was not happy with it because she wanted it darker. Avril released her song Girlfriend with choruses in distinct languages, together with Italian, Spanish, French, and Japanese. Avril sings the theme for the soundtrack of the movie Eragon, titled Keep retention On.

Avril appeared in Butch Walker's video for Bethamphetamine (Pretty Pretty), and Treble Charger's video, Hundred Million. Avril and Deryck Whibley (of Sum 41) started dating in March 2004. The join tied the knot on July 17, 2006 in Montecito, California. Avril's wedding dress was designed by Vera Wang. Avril has been immortalized with her very own computer virus -- the so-called Avril e-mail virus, which tries to lure users into opening its infected attachment by promising pictures of the popstar, went into circulation shortly after the Grammy nominations were announced. (January 14, 2003) Avril mispronounced David Bowie's name when helping announce the Grammy nominees for best male rock vocal performance at Madison quadrilateral Garden. She pronounced Bowie's name like Howie, while it's supposed to be like "doughy." (January 8, 2003) preponderant Pictures has optioned the song Sk8er Boi, and hired Er writer/producer David Zabel to adapt its words into a feature film to be produced by studio-based Mtv Films and Alphaville. Avril once admitted to never having heard of The Sex Pistols.

Avril has a star tattooed on the inside of her left wrist, applied at the same time as friend and musical connect Ben Moody's same tattoo. In late 2004, she had a small pink heart-shaped tattoo featuring the letter 'D' applied to her right wrist - view to be a reference to Deryck Whibley.

Avril wrote a song for her grandpa who passed away. The song, called Slipped Away, is on her second album Under My Skin. The position Avril plays in hockey is right wing and center. She has said in the past that she played hockey best than some guys when she was back in high school. Avril started playing guitar when she was about 10 years old. Avril broke a record set by Madonna. Her song complicated held the amount one spot on the contemporary Hit Radio chart (which tracks air play on the radio) for 11 weeks in a row. Madonna previously held the record with her song Music, which held onto amount one for 10 weeks. While a interview, Avril spotted a photo of herself and ripped it up, allegedly saying "I hate that f***ing photo!" All this happened while on air. Agreeing to Avril, she had permission to take the photo down - station personnel encouraged her to take it down.

Following Ashlee Simpson's disastrous lip-synching appearance on Saturday Night Live, Avril perceive it was pathetic that some young artists don't sing on their own record or on stage. In 2004, Avril was at the center of a row with bosses at Mtv after she stuck her middle finger up live on air on Total request Live. The origins of Avril's name are French: Avril means April; La means The; Vigne means Vine. Avril has one dog, a dinky schnauzer named Sam.

miniature Known Avril Lavigne Facts

วันเสาร์ที่ 18 กุมภาพันธ์ พ.ศ. 2555

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Keywords: Funimation, anime, animation, japanese, beck, music, band, guitar, rock, drama, comedy, slice-of-life

วันศุกร์ที่ 17 กุมภาพันธ์ พ.ศ. 2555

The Resisting Winter (A Novel and Parody) Part Three: "November Slush"

Part Three

Chapter Seven

Japanese School Girls

Shannon O'Day was seeking out work. He was a man who used his hands more than his mind in such matters. He went back to the foundry, Malibu Iron, over on the eastside of town. He looked straight through the window, it was inviting, all those habitancy running to and fro to get this and that done. True, it was a dirty, messy job, all foundries are, but they paid well. Men running nearby naked after being washed up in the showers, and putting on long underwear, so the winds of Minnesota would not freeze them, or get frostbite.

Inside the foundry doors, Shannon beckoned to a woman in the office, "I say do you have a supervisor?"
"Can I help you, sir?" asked the woman.

"What do you think I just said, where is the boss man, do you have a boss man?" Shannon knew the foundries and factories quite well, like the palm of his hand, he worked in enough of them. He was on his guard, they were not going to fool him one iota. He waited by the office door. He read a sign a miniature ways down the isle:

"Forman, Knock before entering!"

Heck with this noise, he told himself, I'll go right to the main-man, and he walked down the isle, and saw the door was slightly opened, knocked on it, then walked in.

"Can't you read the sign," said a voice behind a desk.
"It said Knock, and I did," said Shannon, standing in front of the Forman's desk. Outside in the isle, he could hear the workmen going back and forth, humming, and talking, and whistling, and cussing.
He was a miniature man, but well-built, with broad shoulders and big hands, and a harsh face.
"So what can I do for yaw, as if I don't know?"
"What you do best, hire and fire, today it is hire me, and I can do whatever these young whippersnappers can do, and do it better, faster."
"So you want a job, do you, all right, I got one for you." Said the foreman, "we'll put you up by the burner, and you can pour the metal into the molds: how's that?"
"Just dandy," said Shannon.
"Poggi, come over here," he called to a middle aged man, tall and wholesome looking, and when Poggi got to the foreman, he looked Shannon up and down.
"I'm a German," said the Foreman, "do you mind working for a German boss?"
"One kraut's just as good as the next, or bad, I've got nothing against them, we kicked their butts twice, and they are slow learners, that's all I know, why do you ask?"
"Well that's honest and good talk, I see you're Irish, and I don't have a thing against you potato pickers over there in Ireland either, as long as you do your work here."
The man called Poggi Ingway, just kept finding and staring at Shannon, as the Forman stepped aside for a occasion to talk to one of the workers.
"Glad to meet you Poggi," said Shannon. He was finding at his chunkiness, he was as round as he was tall, but solid in the right places.
"We don't ordinarily see your sort nearby here," he said.
"Your Foreman's the first German I ever met, I didn't shoot," said Shannon.
"Oh, he's genuinely just a good ole American boy, his father came from Austria, and his mom from Germany, but he was born here in St. Paul," Poggi said, as he showed him nearby the foundry, the Foreman still talking to the worker.
"Were you in the war too?" he asked Shannon.
"Yup, the First Great War, I was in France, in those trenches."
"I bet that was quite an occurrence," said Poggi.
"It was cold and wet, men peeing in their pants, and waste piled high as horses, rats all over, it was nasty, but they died brave, awkward, wall-eyed, then one day they just up and stopped the killing, as if they lost the goat, and didn't want to lose the rope, but they did, the German's lost it all in Wwii." Then he remembered his rat, he left it in his apartment, forgot to leave out some food for it. "We were all misfits back then, not like the Army nowadays."
"Aren't you kind of old to be working?" he asked.
Shannon didn't answer.
"Don't take whatever out with you, they check you naked after you take a shower, and if they find whatever in your locker, or on your person, or in your cloths, it's curtains, done for you here."
"I suppose many men get fired because of that?"
"No," said Poggi, "not many try, or are so foolish to attempt it."
"My wife left me," said Shannon to Poggi.
"Well, I'd not worry about that anymore, it looks like you still got some getup and go, a good job, a place to rest your head, and possibly a dog or two, right? And finding a good or bad female is no harder than finding a good or bad steakhouse."
"Yup, I suppose so, all but the dog, I got a rat."
"I wouldn't say that too loud Shannon, habitancy might think you're wacko."
"I heard man once say, 'No wife is good than having the wrong wife' something like that."
"I heard something different, 'If there are no good wives to pick from, any wife is good than no wife at all,' but I'd not look forward to that."
"You listen up Poggi, a piece of advice for you; you're much younger than me. Get yourself a fat ugly wife, and you'll be happy all the days of your life. Or some South American gal, they like to take care of their husbands."
"Shannon," said Poggi, "it sounds like you know a thing or two, I'm glad we've met, and we'll be working together."
Poggi put Shannon to work right away, putting him on the second shift, from 4:00 p.m., until midnight; introduced Shannon to most of the workers.
He worked next to Poggi for the following months, shifting iron weights onto molds, retention them steady as the molten metal was poured into them, and when he wasn't doing that, he was pouring molten metal into the molds, and it seemed Poggi and Shannon got along quite well, working side by side.

o

The Foreman's Nightmare

Believe it or not, I have no intentions to vilify poor Mr. Schultz, and I have tried to use utmost care in his tragic circumstance, for there is nothing new under the sun; but possibly had he not had bad habits, this scarce operation produced, would not have come about. Who or what do we blame, God?

It was back in 1945, twenty-six years ago, at the end of the Second World War, he, Hans Schultz was drunk, and so was his wife, Marylou, celebrating the end of the war, he took out a box of cigarettes, fumbled with his matches, he had two left in the miniature box, and he bent over to shelter the flame, with his hands blocking the zephyr coming off the Mississippi River, they were walking alongside the edge of the High Bridge, the sides made of wood and iron framed, built in the late 1880s.

Marylou, had taken one of the cigarettes out of his package, he lit his cigarette, leaned against the wooden railing of the bridge, she did likewise, he put his cigarette in his mouth, and lit the second match, with intentions to light her cigarette, she had long hair, she coughed, leaned forward, her hair caught on fire, she fell backwards as Hans tried to put out the fire, pushing her backwards more, unintentionally hard against the railing, the fire was put out, but unexpectedly, his weight hitting her's was too much for the old wooden railing, and in the late coolness of the night, she dropped to her death, deep into the rivers current, never to be found.

It was a nightmare, and all the time the same one for him.

He quite smoking that very day, desperation came and left a dark weariness in his soul! Work, work, it was the simplest solution, his eternal medicine, to block those ongoing nightmares. Sometimes he got too tired to sleep, "Things like that sometimes happen," said the priest, at his local church, what more can you say to a grieving man, except you know where I'll be if you need a listener.

Chapter Eight

The first day, lead into 364-more days, endless hours to Shannon O'Day, shifting iron weights, and pouring molten metal, and finding at naked men, washing and cleaning, and often brining his pet rat in, and retention him in his lunch bucket in the dressing room, and eating lunch alone in that very room, concealed him a few times in his pants pocket, and everyone wondered what he had in that pocket, it bulged so heavily, and wiggled. Poggi had told him: bringing the rat was not the wisest of decisions, but he missed his pet ever so much, even though it made Poggi uncomfortable.
Oh, Shannon was happy he was working, but it took much of his time. Now the week was finished, it was Friday night. And Shannon was on his way to the diner to see Maribel, his new girlfriend; he was spending a lot of time at the diner, socializing with new friends. Her story had kind of bothered him, so he asked Poggi about San Francisco, he knew he had been there. He got him drunk and then got him to talk, drew out some information. He was pretty wise in knowing when and how to get a man drunk then ask the right questions.

After they got drunk, Shannon and Poggi went out to Como Park, by the lake, sat in the car, watched twilight move into place, the lake was starting to freeze up, some kids were ice skating on it, "No theorize to rush the association with Maribel," Poggi told him. "All things come in good time, all things come to those who have patience," said Poggi.
Shannon looked at him mysteriously. Who was Poggi anyhow, I mean, he was no middle aged Plato, just a foundry worker, with a lot of advise to an old man, who was getting older by the day, and possibly a miniature undernourished with sex, and missing his cornfields, and the sounds of the trains. Of procedure Poggi, who had no girlfriends couldn't understand his needs, isn't that how it all the time is, a one way street, on a two way highway, and one driver don't have a license because he never drove before. He never lived straight through a war, had four marriages, a kid in high school, living with his brother. Shannon O'Day, opened his car door, the air was cold, "Plato, get out of my car, go tell your bean head girl friends to wait for their next fix with sex, they'll drop you like a hot potato." And then he put the car in gear and took off. Shannon didn't know Poggi didn't have any girlfriends, he just assumed he did.

"Good evening," he said to Maribel, at the diner.
"It's nice to see you this evening; I'll get off in an hour." She told Shannon.
"He sat down at the counter, had a cup of coffee, started reading the St. Paul Pioneer Press, he often read it, liked the paper. Poggi's comments stirred inside of him.
"I've been thinking all day long," he told Maribel as she walked by-he looked at the other folks in the diner, a few young folks with girlfriends, an old man falling to sleep in his eggs and taste, a woman staring at his rat peeking at her, "hurry up," he added.
"How cute," she commented, "a blue ribbon nearby Rata's neck. And then she smiled at Rata, the lawful name Shannon had given him, in lack of a good one that came to mind.
He grabbed Maribel by the skirt, but with dignity, she turned nearby sharply, "Yes, yes, Shannon what is it?"
"You are my old lady, right?" he said. Tears came down her eyes, "Of procedure dear," she responded, "why?"
He hesitated, she said, "You are my old man, correct?" and he nodded his head up and down, giving the yes signal.
"Now what is the matter?" she asked sternly.
Shannon said the word in a whisper, "I'm...you know what, let's get married, the sooner the better?" He knew he couldn't keep it any longer a secret; it was what he wanted to say for a while now.
"If we get married, are you going to take Rata every place we go?" she asked (the rat looked at her unhappily, and then at Shannon).
"No, not every place, we'll look for a Mrs. Rata for him," and they started laughing, laughing so hard it reminded him how he used to laugh in the cornfields, unabated, with his ex-wife, drunk as a skunk, his long gone, disappearing now ex-wife.

So off they went to make plans. Shannon grabbing his paper, folding it and putting it in his back pant's pocket.
"I genuinely like that paper, I've not read it all the way straight through yet!" he told Maribel.
She had buttoned her coat up, carried her apron in her hands to wash later on.
"Here, put my hat on, you'll get a cold," said Shannon to Maribel.
"No, I don't like hats, I'm fifty-seven years old, never wore a hat, and it isn't goin' to start with you either."
"It's your wedding gift," said Shannon.
"Oh," commented Maribel, "that's different," and she took the hat and put it on her head, and smiled.

Chapter Nine

It was early in the morning of the next day they got married, Shannon O'Day, and his waitress, Maribel O'Day, were one like two peas in a pod. They walked into the diner as man and wife, said hello to Old Josh Jeremy Brown, the Negro cook, he liked playing the banjo when no one was around, he liked his wine also, a bottle incommunicable here and there, he was about the same age as Shannon, between 65 and 70, not even Shannon knew his strict age, he guessed it at 68. No spring chicken. There was also, the young fancy finding waitress, who wore yellow like Maribel, her name was Annabelle Henry, and the young man who was all the time sitting at the end of the counter with his guitar, thinking one day he'd be other Elvis, or Rick Nelson, or Johnny Cash, he'd join in playing and singing with Old Josh Jeremy Brown, ordinarily nearby 3:00 a.m., when it was quiet at the eatery, after the drunks came in for a Porterhouse steak, or early morning breakfast, and staggered back out of the diner trying to find their way back home.

The old black cook asked Maribel, "Youall wants some breakfast, lunch or whatever?" he came up from Alabama back in the early 50s, so he still had some of the southern drawl in him left.

"I'm not going to feed that Rata, of yours," said Annabelle, with a disgusted look on her face. It was warm inside and Shannon and his new wife sat in a booth, put in a dime for a song on the miniature booth jukebox, it was Rick Nelson singing "Lonesome Town," and it brought a tear to Maribel's eyes.

"I love that song so very much," said Maribel, "you got that pint of whiskey? Pour some in my coffee before Annabelle comes back." She told her husband. She liked to drink, not quite as much as Shannon but nearly as much, and Shannon was wondering if she'd like to get drunk in the yellow cornfields, like he and his ex used to do, but he'd not tell her yet-there is a time for all under the sun, that was one of his many one-liners.

He, Shannon, picked up the Minneapolis Star, newspaper, read the front page, then looked at Maribel, said, "Yes, we are man and wife now, it feels good, and I want to get good and drunk to my heart's content."
"We don't need to say that so loud, dear, we just do it, everyone nearby here has three ears, if you know what I mean."
"Yes, dear," Shannon agreed.
"Would you like a morning meal or a Porterhouse steak dear?" Maribel asked her husband.
"I'll just take a warm bowel of tomato soup with crackers," Shannon told his wife.
Annabelle Henry, the young waitress, located the soup and crackers on his table, as she laid the plate down she saw the head of the rat, her hand approximately touched him, he was so far out of Shannon's pocket.
"Really, do you got to carry that beast nearby wherever you go?" she note to Shannon.
"Let's hear it Ricky!" Shannon shouted, and now he was playing other of Rick Nelson's songs, it sounded like "Be-Bop Baby," and was not paying Annabelle any attention.
"What does he call his rat?" Annabelle, asked Maribel.
"Rata, a uncomplicated name," note Maribel.
"Why not something with a miniature pizzazz to it, like Picasso, or Dali or Elvis Junior?"
"Or why not Annabelle?" said Maribel.
"Because it's a male," note Annabelle.
"How would you know?"
"Because Shannon refers to the creature like it's a male."
"I don't think Shannon even knows if it is a he or she," said Maribel.
"I think we got to go, talk to you other time, Annabelle, Shannon's miniature beast is getting hungry, and he has to be fed."

The black cook, Josh, started laughing, he heard everything, and he was sitting at the end of the counter, having his lunch.
"What's so funny?" asked Annabelle, to Old Josh.
"Rata," he said, "Rata! Rata! What a name."
Then she said, "Josh, Josh!" (mockingly), as her voice was rising, "please Josh talk to Shannon about getting rid of that rat!"
There was no talk just the sound of him eating and breathing. He was a man content to leave well enough alone.

Chapter Ten

Shannon's life seemed to take on a new dimension, working at the foundry now on the morning shift, attending to a new wife, and Rata, his pet rat. Not much time for reading the St. Paul Pioneer Press newspaper, not much time to read anything, not even politics, or war, he liked reading about war, especially the new war in Vietnam, and that fellow called Ho Chi Minh skinny as a bean pole, but he idea he was smart as a whip. I mean, here was a guy washing dishes in Paris one day, and now ruled a jungle and its countrymen, like trained rodents, what more could you ask for in life. He fought the French, the Japanese, and now the Americans. If whatever he was a 'go getter.' The Vietnamese were a strange habitancy indeed, he concluded. Maybe someday man will write a book about him and his exploits in the trenches of France while Wwi, like Hemingway did about the first war, in 'A Farewell to Arms' and Faulkner did in 'The Fable,' and that German guy did with "All Quiet on the Western Front."

Oh well, that's how it was now, not much time for debating things out. She took on a husband, and he took on a wife, but now the trick was, and she was thinking this, it was written all over her face, whatever could tell she was thinking, "Can I hold onto him now, keep him for my own!" Oh yes, she, Maribel, was wondering this indeed.

Mr. Shannon O'Day, at one time a retired old man, who got drunk weekly in the cornfields of Minnesota, in the summers, springs and falls, now the husband to Maribel Adams, now Maribel O'Day, was working in a foundry, had a good income. But the real theorize she was questioning her get up and go, her womanhood, was because Annabelle Henry, was development eyes at him, at her man, her man and husband, she had her own intentions and she was not telling whatever verbally of them, but women can tell such things. And every time Maribel looked into the mirror, she saw Annabelle laughing. This was not good for her morale. The interrogate had come to mind, 'Could Maribel quit her job, after so many years?' I mean Annabelle even flirted with Rata occasionally, to appease and get closer to Shannon.
She couldn't iron those wrinkles out, she knew that, and she couldn't break mirror after mirror, so for the mean time she naturally had to live with the awful idea 'could she or couldn't she hold on to her man, her husband?' Every night at the diner, when Maribel would look at Annabelle, a knot came into her stomach, made her feel oozy. She knew Annabelle had a blueprint on Shannon O'Day, yes him, him, the very him, she married, Shannon.

As far as Maribel figured it, Annabelle was no more than a whore, yes, and a cagey one at that. Couldn't she find her own boyfriend? She was twenty-seven years old, trying to come between husband and wife that was a whore to Maribel, a cagey one. Be that as it may, Shannon was fascinated by Annabelle giving him the time of day, an old yank like him, never got such devoted attentiveness from such a young shapely pretty girl. She was some southern gal from North Carolina, came up with old Josh, got off the same train, must have met on the same train, and they both got a job at the same diner, at the same time. Maribel admitted to herself, that was mysterious, maybe they had something going, maybe the same game. The only thing that mattered now was finding out the truth, and seeking out her intentions. She had to hang onto her treasure, her man, her husband. Make him want to stay no matter what. When summer came around, perchance the cornfields would do it. He all the time talked about drinking in the cornfields with his ex-wife, other whore in the eyes of Maribel. She looked into the mirror in the bathroom at the café, other wrinkle appeared.

The cold was starting to freeze up the streets solid, they crack and have to be mended in spring, as usual, as the silent snows drifted lightly down, oh, she, Maribel, dreaded winter, hold it back, tell it to wait. At first the snows seemed to be natural, and then a burden, as Maribel trekked to work each day. Neither she nor her husband, Shannon drove a car, too expensive, and Shannon, feared he was too slow to react nowadays. It was turning out to be a slushy November, and Shannon was still her man, her only man, the man of all men. She even brought him the St. Paul Pioneer Press paper home every night, after work, some customer would ordinarily leave one on the counter, and that made Shannon happy.

Chapter Eleven

Winter was coming. Winter was in the atmosphere.

(Author's Note. -This is the same day on which the story began, back on the first page, where Shannon and Poggi were finding into the window at the foundry.)

A chill was in the air, men were busy as bees, Poggi was by one window and Shannon by the another, "Are you going to go into work?" asked Poggi.
"Are you still mad at me for kicking you out of my car?" Shannon, asked-his rat moaning from his pocket, possibly too cramped.
"No, I'm not mad," said Poggi, "how are you and Maribel doing?"
"I think she doesn't feel she can hold me, and is like a hawk, all the time by my side, she wants to take Rata if we detach I think!" said Shannon.
He, Poggi touched Shannon's shoulder. It was a sign that he understood, life had its ups and downs. "There's more fish in the Sea," said Poggi.
"Yaw, my mom used to say that, did you know her?" asked Shannon.
"No, of procedure not, it's just one of those old sayings, you know, like that Chinaman used to say, Confucius, 'Out of sight, out of mind,' something like that, and so and so and on and on...you know what I mean."

Then the wind started to blow, a chilled wind, and then a warm wind, and the weather didn't seem like it knew what it wanted to do, slush and mush, and ice mud, all over the place, grim pushed into more grim development it thicker grim, what miniature snow was on the ground looked horribly dirty, Shannon's shoes among them. Then he noticed Maribel coming down the street, she was faint in the distance, but he could tell by her walk, that it was her, she had that wiggle. She hoped he would be glad to see her, she hadn't been sure all night, since she got off work, and he was sleeping on the coach, and he had not come to pick her up.

Shannon was stirred up by her permanently becoming his shadow, or so it seemed. She now was waving hello at him, a half block away. Poggi still finding in the window, "I think I'm going to work, see you in there," he said and took off before Shannon's wife arrived; Maribel coming nearer.

"Good morning, dear," said Maribel, "are you going into work, or what?"
"Hello Miracle," Shannon answered. He sat down on the iron rounded fence that was below the windows. She looked at him, tired and with more wrinkles. He could afford to be any-which-way he wanted to be to her but was polite, "What brings you all the way over here dear?" In a way, his wife leaving him, and his trip to Erie had hardened him. His look at her was more eclipsed. More darkened had he shown more than his profile: his mind was near the same.
"Would you like me to buy you a paper?" she asked.
"How about us going down to the diner, forgetting work today?" he suggested.
"Ok," she said reluctantly, and then with tears from her eyes, she said, "If only I could quit that job, you'd have no theorize to go there and see her...!" said Maribel. She wiped her cheek with her sleeve, "I'll carry Rata, if you want me to," she suggested.

Maribel hadn't been out all morning she was hungry, but was afraid to let Shannon know, then that would give him a good excuse to stay longer at the diner, and that was to the contrary of what she wanted.

They caught a bus down Seventh Street, to the diner, never once retention hands, as if they had been married for fifty-years. Shannon kept a sharp eye on Rata, thinking Maribel might try to grab him out of jealousy and runaway with him.
Many folks now knew of Shannon and his pet Rata, they were becoming a team, well known and well liked among his crowd.

As they got off of the bus, they stepped into a pile of slush, ankle deep, ice and mud and just old fashion sludge, Minnesota slush, that has a sting to it, a cold numbing like sting, then onto the narrow sidewalk, up a few steps into the eatery.

Perchance, it was the way Shannon walked ahead of her, or too far behind her, or a distance to her side, whatever it was, it told Maribel, she had too many wrinkles, she was soon to be history, supplanted in the life of Shannon O'Day, god forbid, she conjured up in her mind.

Once in the diner, Annabelle looked at Shannon, they gave each other a smile, and that did it, she knew now, her days were numbered with this man she called her husband. Even Old Josh, who was cooking, saw them catch each other's eye, or possibly it was all in her brain, and she imagined it, but truth be told, you could not have convinced Maribel to the opposite.

A Note for the Reader, not the printer or publisher: if there are misspelling in this book, or typo errors, it shouldn't make an elephant's inequity in the long run, every author has them, especially in their first editions, to contain Hemingway, and Faulkner, two Nobel Prizes winners for literature, and we can put Fitzgerald into this category, the one who wrote the 20th Century's most novel, "The Great Gatsby" but be assured, the author did not make the error (s), it was either the printer, or the publisher, too many times, it comes back to the author as a lacking to his structure, or impatience to edit his work, when in reality, it is the indolence of the printer, or publisher; enough said on this matter, back to the story.

The Resisting Winter (A Novel and Parody) Part Three: "November Slush"

วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 16 กุมภาพันธ์ พ.ศ. 2555

วันพุธที่ 15 กุมภาพันธ์ พ.ศ. 2555

Tip 4 - Promoting Your enterprise With Photographs - Bookmarks

Bookmarks, almost everyone has a few lying around. You can use them to mark your place in books and magazines and to promote your business.

The most natural tie-in is for businesses that work in the publishing of books and magazines, or if you've written your own book. But that's not using your imagination. Any business can successfully promote themselves with these exiguous billboards.

Japanese School Girls

People can use bookmarks in many ways.

Display beautiful photographs Put a great recipe on them Used as a ruler, if a ruler has been printed on one side Offer useful facts about medications, health, first aid or some provocative fact about your business Offer coupons; cut off the coupon printed on it, and bring it in for a allowance or free gift Promote an upcoming event

Your imagination is the only limitation you have when it comes to bookmarks. Some unique things you could do include:

Attaching small gifts to a bookmark, such as a toy (in a bag) or temporary tattoo Make them out of dry erase material, with your facts on one side, and the other side blank so people can write notes, and pass them out with a dry erase pen Design them like a puzzle, where any bookmarks must be put together in the allowable order to make a perfect photograph or message. Give people a bookmark every time they visit. Conclude the photograph and win a prize. Provide entertainment by putting mazes or crossword puzzles on them Have them cut into any shape. You could make a bookmark shaped like a camera, wrench, dragon or anyone else.

I still have a bookmark I picked up over twenty years ago from a Japanese store in California. It's die cut metal that's gold in color and has a nice red tassel. They passed them out with every purchase. Some of my other favorite bookmarks contain comic book art, lenticular images, samples of my favorite artist's work and inspirational sayings.

Last week I even bought some bookmarks from two young girls who were going door to door, raising money for an upcoming class trip.

Bookmarks offer advantages in that they are:

Inexpensive Easy to carry Light weight Small Come in many sizes Can have a perforation applied, for the above mentioned coupons

They can be distributed in a wide variety of locations.

Pass them out at your office Have the sales staff give them to clients Freebies at trade shows and extra events Anywhere you would pass out a business card, or even use these as your business card Don't forget to offer a pile of them to local bookstores, libraries and schools

Think about where your clients are, and what tie-ins other businesses may offer. A photographer could give a stack to local photography market and schools; an exterminator could put bug facts on them and give them to schools and gardening stores; an art gallery could pass them out to art provide market and schools. Do a exiguous thinking about how your products and services impact your society and you'll have lots of places to hand them out.

Who would have notion that the humble bookmark could do so much?

Have Fun,

Jeff

Tip 4 - Promoting Your enterprise With Photographs - Bookmarks

วันอังคารที่ 14 กุมภาพันธ์ พ.ศ. 2555

How International Students Can Meet Local Students

Local students will sometimes be very keen to meet international students, especially if they come from a country or culture that is carefully to be high status. An example would be French speakers coming to Australia. Almost all Australians university study the French language at some stage while high school, and read books by French authors like Jean-Paul Sartre and Albert Camus. Paris, macchiatos and their attitude to life all lead to production French international students 'cool'. But what about Chinese students studying in the United States, or Japanese students going to the Czech Republic? Here are five tips to meet more local students:

1. Find the population that are interested in you.
If you are Japanese, for example, find out if there are Japanese culture clubs or societies in the city that you are studying. This could be things like Anime appreciation clubs, or Calligraphy groups. These population are locals, and the very fact that you are from Japan makes you an expert, primary and interesting.

Japanese School Girls

You find these things by searching in the local language, 'Japanese culture club Melbourne' other examples would be: 'Spanish Language transfer Group Israel', 'Russian Music Club Boston', 'Cricket club Prague'. The internet is a great tool. Make sure though that when you look for Cricket club Prague, that you of course search for it in Czech - so 'kriket klub v Praze'. If you search for Russian groups in Russian, the chances are they will all be from Russia, and you won't meet local students.

2. Find population that are interested in the same things as you
I am excited by different types of coffee. I also love Dvorak's music, and now that you mention it I'm a big fan of Ice Hockey. Often these interest groups will be very small and they will be happy for any one to join and population who are interested in very exact things are ordinarily of course happy to find anything else who loves what they love, and they will be more likely to be sick person with your lack of fluency in their language.

On campus join all the clubs you can, and if you can't find enough clubs at University, then search the net for them and only go to ones that meet in collective places.

3. Don't be shy
This sounds of course straightforward, but it's the hardest thing. If you have an opening to speak to someone on campus at university, or anywhere you go, you may as well take it. I recently picked up a hat for a Chinese girl who dropped it, I would have spoken to her, but as soon as she got the hat from my hand, she was already about ten meters away.

If you are in the same class, or all the time get off at the same train station, then that is a connection. The chances are that the local pupil won't take the first step, by request 'how are you looking the class?'. And if they do, then you should be as natural and friendly as you can. If you show too minute reliance then they will assume that speaking that language is stressful for you, and they will end the conversation swiftly and leave you.

4. Orientation Weeks
Join as many activities as you can, even if they cost money. Don't think it is clever to save money at the start of semester. Go on every camp, every tour, every drinking night you can. Don't throw your money away, but the start of the semester is the best time to make new friends. Every person is feeling fresh, looking for population to speak to, a bit nervous. As the semester continues, the chances of production new friends drops if you don't already have them. population don't want to make a new friend at the end of the exam, because you may not have classes together again, and if you do, the next class will be in two months.

5. Show that you are interesting
You come from an additional one country, you have a lot of knowledge about places the locals don't know about or understand. Think of the things that make you special, and when you get a opening to offer insight, either it be a different way of organising collective transport, or a funny scandal that happened Italian Idol then offer this information. It doesn't need to be tied to your own country, but having a unique perspective is something that most population will value.

If you are an international pupil and have a unique qoute please email me at global.heart.tours@gmail.com.

How International Students Can Meet Local Students

วันจันทร์ที่ 13 กุมภาพันธ์ พ.ศ. 2555

Anjunadeep:03 mixed by Jaytech & James Grant - Official Promo Video

Anjunadeep:03 mixed by Jaytech & James Grant - Official Promo Video Tube. Duration : 1.52 Mins.


PREVIEW PODCAST: www.youtube.com TO BUY IN ITUNES CLICK HERE: itunes.apple.com TO BUY YOUR DOUBLE CD CLICK HERE: www.anjunastore.com Anjunadeep:03 Album Launch Party, March 24, Ice Palace, Miami. Click here for tickets: www.ticketweb.com Disc 1 / Mixed by James Grant 1. Stephen J. Kroos - Micrsh 2. Martin Roth -- Deep Style 3. Da Funk -- Weekend Rubdown (Jaytech & James Grant Respray) 4. Electrobios & Liluca feat. Interplay -- Depends On You 5. Underworld - Two Months Off (DAVI Remix) 6. Danny Loko - Coastal (Eelke Kleijn Remix) 7. Michael Cassette - Regatta 8. Andrew Bayer -- Distractions - Movement 2 9. Soundprank - Captivated 10. Paul Keeley - Relic 11. Komytea - Algebra 12. Spooky - Belong (Sasha Involver Remix) [Prankster Edit] 13. Matt Lange - Rift 14. Boom Jinx & Andrew Bayer - By All Means (Solarity Remix) Disc 2 / Mixed by Jaytech 1. Embliss - Back To Mine 2. Interplay - Ignition 3. PROFF - Interstellar 4. Answer42 - Dew Point 5. Beckwith - N To Brooklyn 6. Kobana & Yane3dots - All Those Loose Things 7. Roddy Reynaert & Man Of Goodwill -- Brotherhood 8. Jaytech - Djembe 9. Suspect 44 - Japanese Schoolgirls 10. Dinka - The Sleeping Beauty 11. Soundprank - The Far Side 12. Maor Levi -- Devotion 13. Timmy & Tommy - Unit 29 14. Levente Márton - Big Fat Kiss 15. Solarity - Marsh Website: www.aboveandbeyond.nu Tour Dates www.abwall.com Facebook www.facebook.com Youtube: www.youtube.com Twitter: www.twitter.com Google+: bit.ly TATW Podcast: bitly.com iTunes: www.itunes ...

Keywords: anjunadeep, anjunabeats, anjunadeep:03, stephen j kroos, martin roth, electrobios, album, progressive, deep house, techno, PROFF, answer42, interplay, embliss, soundprank, spooky, matt lange, timmy & tommy, sunny lax, roddy reynaert, ignition, trance, james grant, jaytech, anjunadeep 03, above & Beyond, TATW, trance around the world, underworld, MIX, DJ, dance, uplifting

วันอาทิตย์ที่ 12 กุมภาพันธ์ พ.ศ. 2555

Movie spin - Penny Serenade (1941)

An unremarkable (by today's standards) childrearing melodrama in which Cary Grant delivers a performance so good that he was nominated for a Best Actor Oscar. George Stevens directed the script by Morrie Ryskind.

The whole movie unfolds as a series of linear flashbacks, each triggered by the Lp records a disconsolate Julie (Irene Dunne) is playing on a gramophone just before she leaves her house for good. The reason? There does not seem to be anything left in her marriage to keep her there. We are soon to learn the fancy why and all the tragic events that led her to that wistful moment.

Japanese School Girls

The first join of times the revolving Lp description dissolves into a "memory hole" through which we enter a slice of life in Julie's past, we enjoy it as a manifestation of a director's creativity. But the sixth or the seventh time that happens, we wonder how many times we have to suffer the same unrelentingly mechanical idea. It gets old pretty quickly proving that consistency is not all the time a virtue.

Cary Grant plays the young and dashing newspaper reporter Roger Adams who marries the love of his life Julie (played by Irene Dunne) on the eve of his departure to Tokyo to take over his newspaper's Japan bureau. It also happens to be the Christmas night, faultless with the obligatory snowfall (as in an additional one Cary Grant movie, Bishop'S Wife (1948)).

Once established in Tokyo, Roger has Julie join him at his new opulent digs faultless with a family of Japanese house servants. Julie is both delighted and astonished that Roger can retain that level of luxury with only a reporter's salary. We remember an earlier scene in which her friend Applejack (Edgar Buchanan) warned her against getting involved with a journalist. Is there something shady about Roger or past that we would know about yet?

Two arresting things happen during the "Tokyo sequence" that bring both Roger's character and the script's force into question.

In the first scene, Roger announces Julie that he has quit his job thanks to his family inheritance. Now they can go tour colse to the world before they settle down and raise a family, although during their dating period Roger showed some reluctance to suffer pranks of children (the beach scene) gladly.

It turns out what Roger calls "an inheritance" is just about ten thousand dollars, which shrinks additional down to ,000 after he pays his excellent bills. It is a let down for Julie. He accuses Roger by acting "childishly." We'll see this pattern for the rest of the movie: Roger will all the time come across as a man with grand ideas and much self-confidence who, however, can't deliver the bacon at the end.

The second leading amelioration in the "Tokyo sequence" is the earthquake that levels their home. As we continue to watch to see the "payoff" of this totally unexpected natural disaster, the film abruptly shifts back to San Francisco where Julie is lying in a hospital and she learns that she will not be able to bear children anymore. But why did they have to go to Japan to arrive at that point is a moot script interrogate that is left unanswered. Couldn't the same fate befall Julie if she had an additional one urgency closer to home? Why did they have to go all the way to Japan, is not clear. The whole "Tokyo episode" stands out like a joke without a punch line.

The rest of this drama unfolds as the story of the married couple's desperate effort to adopt a child, and once adopted, not to lose her.

There is yet an additional one "baby sequence" in the middle of the movie which could certainly be part of an unrelated comedy. Grant again excels in this sequence, approximately paying tribute to the early years he spent during his teens as a pantomime and acrobat with Bob Pender's troupe. We see the young join going through many of the anxieties in taking care of their adopted 5-week daughter. (Is she asleep or did she quit breathing?)

They are so inexperienced, they don't even know how to hold a baby or bath her and change her diaper.

But we can't also help consideration the improve of a father-daughter bonding between Grant and his baby daughter despite the fact that originally he asked for a 2-year old boy "with blond curly hair and blue eyes."

For the first join of years Roger's newly established weekly newspaper business, helped by the press veteran Applejack, seems to be manufacture the ends meet. But then his enterprise takes a sudden downturn and suddenly he is a man without an income.

Since they are still at a "probationary period" in their adoption process, the ever-vigilant adoption division in the person of Miss Oliver (Beulah Bondi) takes Roger to court. The judge is supposed to take the girl back because a family without earnings is not a fit place for any child to grow up in.

However, Cary grant in yet an additional one perfect scene, delivers this certainly emotional monologue about the pain of disunion from his daughter, and the absurdity of taking a child back as though she was a car or a furniture repossessed because the owner has been late in payments. His petition as a heartbroken father wins the day and the judge allows him to take her back home.

After so many spinning gramophone records dissolving into flashback scenes, we watch the child grow and take a small part in a Christmas play at school as her very proud parents watch her and give all their retain despite a minor mishap on the stage that ruins her day.

Then disaster strikes, as it should in a tragedy. We read in a letter written to Miss Oliver that the child has died following an illness. Since up to that point we have not seen a singular scene in which the child suffered from any bodily ailments, this also comes across as contrived a plot point as the earlier " Tokyo earthquake."

After the death of their daughter Roger and Julie's union starts to unravel quickly. The girl was the bond that kept them together. Not that she is gone, all left behind are the memories and the songs Julie plays one last time on her gramophone - and we zoom back to the present.

Just when we think their marriage is gone out the window forever (Roger is certainly carrying her suitcases to the car waiting outside), they receive this astonishing call from Miss Oliver who gives them the good news: she has a 2 year old boy "with blond curly hair and blue eyes" and would they be concerned in adopting him? What fortunate timing and what a convenient plot device!

Of policy they jump on the occasion and change their minds right on the spot - they don't want to be separated after all. There is still hope for the hereafter and we leave them as they are discussing their ideas on how to redecorate the baby's room for their new boy.

A 7 out of 10 thanks to an perfect performance by Cary Grant and despite the weak script and the formula-driven directing.

Movie Trivia: Cary Grant was very pleased to share the lead roles with Irene Dunne. He reportedly told Dunne that she was the "best smelling leading lady" he worked with in a film.

Trivia: Philip Barry wrote the stage play originals of the two movies that help define the movie careers of Cary Grant and Katherine Hepburn who starred in both of them: Holiday (1938) and Philadelphia Story (1941).

Movie spin - Penny Serenade (1941)

วันเสาร์ที่ 11 กุมภาพันธ์ พ.ศ. 2555

Japanese School Festival - Bunkasai

Japanese School Festival - Bunkasai Video Clips. Duration : 7.67 Mins.


Japanese School Festivity!!! in Japanese 'Bunkasai' I had a great time! I'm glad I was there! Japanese Bunkasai is special, because everybody works together to make something good out of it! To make fun! As one big Team!!! Thanks Everybody!!!

Keywords: japan, school, festival, bunkasai

วันศุกร์ที่ 10 กุมภาพันธ์ พ.ศ. 2555

slight Johnny is Getting Old!

In the beginning before my birth

Wilburn "Tennessee" Ryder was born in a mining camp near Copper Hill, Tennessee, November 19, 1906, the oldest of nine siblings. His father worked in the copper mines at Copperhill Tennessee. He helped his mother raise the other siblings while his father worked. As time went on and getting a job was hard to find during the depression Wilburn jumped on freight cars to get from place to find what ever work he could. He ended up in Jefferson City Tennessee and worked at the Zinc Mines. While there he met Mary Margaret Jones. Mary was going to college at the time and her father was a school teacher. Mary's mother took care of the home on George street where the Jones lived after selling the farm and enchanting to town.

Japanese School Girls

Wilburn and Mary dated for a time and as time went on they fell in love. Wilburn gave Mary an engagement ring and soon after they decided to get married. Wilburn found a great job, paying more in Morristown so they moved. Wilburn sold Singer Sewing Machines and was quite good at it. He also sold pianos to help. Was not long that Mary was with child and her collage days came to an end. Months later a 9.3 pound baby boy came into this world. They named him John Hoyt Ryder. The John was for my grandfather in Jefferson City. The Hoyt was for my father Wilburn Hoyt Ryder. While still a baby, Wilburn went to New York City to work helping to build the subways, tunnels and bridges there. A while later he sent for Mary to come there too and bring me. While there I was in my crib drinking my milk and the bottle slipped from my grasp and fell to the floor. The bottle hit the floor with a loud crash and broke letting the milk go everywhere. Being somewhat of a exiguous dare devil I managed to pull myself up by the bars on my crib and get my foot just over the top. Continuing to struggle I managed to get myself over the top and fell right on top of the broken glass. Then I must have screamed or cried very loud because mom and dad came running. They saw me lying in a pool of blood with my head split open. I guess it must have scared them a bit because they took me to the hospital very quick and there I received 18 stitches on the back of my head. Still have a big scare there today to prove that was a true story. My grandmother was very unhappy with the belief of us being in New York and mother brought me back to Tennessee.

On my mother's side my grandfather was John Paul Jones and my grandmother was Maud Jones. They owned the house that I grew up in Jefferson City, Tennessee. They had a large farm about two miles from town and grandfather taught school in a one room school house for many years. He had received his education from the Carson Newman College in town. He also farmed the land with my grandmother and their two children Mary and Ralph, my mother and uncle. As things got tough in the 29 crash he sold the farm and moved to town. He bought several acres in town and built a house.

Early Years

After learning to walk As a baby and up to time for school. John and his life during these years. Don't remember much before I started walking. Other than I didn't like squash all mashed up. Yuggggg, I still don't like squash even today. My grandmother "Maud" took in a 12 year old girl that her house said they couldn't afford to keep. Her name was Sara and she was my best friend. As a matter of fact she put her life on the line for me. I crossed the street in front of our house and a car came flying down the road. Sara felt sure I was going to be killed and she ran like a flash of lightning and pushed me out of the path of the car. She was not so lucky and the car hit her and ran over her legs. The rest of her life Sara had scars and a limp to live with. What more can a friend do? Sara was a true friend until the day Jesus took her to himself.

Well you need to know and get that same warm feeling about the area nearby the place I had to run, play, learn and to be sure dream. I was at a astounding age with the world for the taking. We had a big shed, barn, chicken lot and two big fields just for me. There were cherry trees, pear trees, apple trees and a big strawberry patch. Yep, we had roses and blackberry bushes with thorns that could pierce to the bone it seemed sometimes. I got to climb in the barn to the loft, in the trees and even on top of the chicken house. We hung burley tobacco in the barn and that was great, because I had tobacco sticks to use for my trusty horse as I rode all over the place. A field that I broke and made my six shooter came in handy as I chased the bad guys away. It was hard times during the big depression and my grandmother made my shirts from sacs chicken feed came in.

Bread was nine cents a loaf and the movie cost a dime. Salmon patties were a main meal with cornbread. We didn't have running water, electricity, an indoor bathroom, refrigerator, car or horse but we made it fine. We had a cistern on the back porch with a hand crank, a wood cook stove with a tank on the side to heat water for washing dishes and me, a path to an outhouse, an ice box to keep things cold and two strong legs to move along. We had a Warm Morning Stove in the living room that we put coal in to heat the house, ha ha heat the house. If you were not in the living room or near the wood stove in the kitchen you great have a coat on in the winter. I had the job of getting the coal to the house and the wood to the kitchen. When the big blocks of coal were getting low we would fill brown bags of coal dust to feed the stove. After filling a few dozen bags of coal dust we would be fully black with coal dust.

At three years old When I was three years old at a neighbor's house, the Moore's on the back porch I put a real chill in the air for every person in the house. The men had been hunting that morning and left their shotguns on the back porch when they took the hunting clothes off. Well being a exiguous boy with a lot of curiosity over to the shotguns as soon as I saw them. They were too heavy to pick up so I just played with them standing up and all of a sudden Baroooooom and a big hole appeared now in the ceiling on the back porch. All the Moore family, mother and Sara belief the worst, that exiguous Johnny would be in a pool of blood. As they ran to get me and stop the bleeding they heard "I just touched the gun and it went Bang and hurteee my arm when it jumped." That back porch still has a hole in the ceiling.

Aunt Pearl worked for the Wpa and helped folks during the Great Depression. The Civilian Conservation Corps (Ccc) was a work relief program for young men from unemployed families, established on March 21, 1933, by U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt and many in Jefferson City worked with the Ccc. They built roads, state parks, soil erosion control, build telephone and power lines. The Ccc had camps where the young men lived and worked out of. The New Deal ended with World War Ii. As Roosevelt himself said in December, 1943, "Dr. New Deal" had given way to "Dr. Win the War."

My grandmother rented rooms upstairs to the workers construction Cherokee Dam and made them lunches every day to take to work. She and Sara fixed sandwiches and a piece of fruit or cake and put coffee in a thermos flask in a bag for them to take. They fixed breakfast for them before going to work and had a home cooked meal for them at supper time. The workers built a bathroom on the back porch and the city had just run water down our street. Man that was wonderful. Now when it was cold and raining I didn't have to go to the exiguous house beside the chicken yard, about 150 feet from the back of the house. We even got a 30 gallon hot water tank and now had a shower in the bathroom on the back porch. Before that happened the men had to go to the barbershop to get a shower and it was twenty-five cents to take a shower there. I never got to do that. We had a big galvanized wash tub we put in the kitchen. We would fire up the wood cook stove to heat the water in the water tank on the side of the stove. The hot water was dipped up and put in the tub along with some water from the cistern. The curtain was pulled in the middle of the kitchen and dining room. Now it was bath time, Saturday night, to get ready for Sunday School and Church in the morning. That Saturday afternoon we would kill and pluck one or two chickens and put in the ice box for Sunday dinner. Sunday supper was ordinarily fried chicken, mashed potatoes, corn, green beans, greens, beets and biscuits and/or cornbread. Then it was pie or cake to round it off. Uncle Arch and Aunt Pearl came most Sundays for supper and Clifford and Juanita came many times. After the supper which would last at least an hour, every person would go to the living room where a card table was set up and the rook, rummy, or author cards came out.

December 7, 1941 - Japanese Bomb Pearl Harbor and I remember that day as if it was yesterday. It was dusk and the paperboy was walking down George street shouting "Extra Extra Perl Harbor bombed", "Read all about it", "Extra Extra Perl Harbor bombed". Such a quite surrounded me as a soft zephyr touched my skin and it was a scary eerie feeling that evening. President Roosevelt came on the radio as every person gathered and sat quietly paying intense attentiveness to each word advent from that Am cackling sound that huge radio was making. I had a hard time trying to sleep that night and my prayer just did not seem to ease as it ordinarily did. My mind was running a hundred miles an hour trying to understand why person would do such a thing to us. I was five at the time. Four days later Hitler declared war on the United States. Neighbors and my kinfolks were drafted or joined in to defend my country and me too. Every evening we would sit nearby that big radio and listen to the news of what was going on with the war. All gave some and some gave all. My uncle Grafton was lost at sea in the Pacific. Many of our neighbors lost loved ones and it was a very sad time.

Oak Ridge was built in 1942 northwest of Knoxville with a mission to create the Atom Bomb. Uncle Vincent was the Army photographer and assigned to Oak Ridge. He was like a Godfather to me and his wife, Aunt Alma, went to college with my mother. Aunt Alma's house just two blocks from our house. We went to visit Uncle Vincent and Aunt Alma there several times. It took a month to get a pass to enter this super underground base and the Army ran the bus to enter the gate. every person was searched and men with motor guns rode the bus with you and you had to go to the address on the pass. Anytime you left the address on the pass you must have an conduct by one of the population on your pass. This base had been built overnight and all the huts were plywood on a concrete pad and or tents. The roads were gravel and red mud. When the war was over Uncle Vincent gave me lots of patches and things he used when in the Army. He seemed to be as proud of me as I was of him.

Well mother had to go to work to help us get food to eat so she became a secretary at Tennessee Coal and Iron right here in Jefferson City. They mined zinc that was used to galvanize tin, buckets and the like. That would keep the iron from rusting and increase the life of many products. The comptroller at the mines would pick her up and bring her home from work every day. She had a typewriter at home and would do a lot of work at home too.

Grammar School years and the times. Grammar School Grades 1-6 We didn't have what they call preschool today, we just started school when you were 6 years old. Neither did we have free lunches or a school bus if you were in the city limits. It didn't take long to find out that you got two spankings if you were late getting in from recess. One from the teacher and one when I got home. Recess was 20 minutes in the morning and in the afternoon. There you got to play on the swing, jungle Jim, merry go round, shooting marbles or pal nearby with your buddies. We all the time solved the world's problems at recess or at least belief we had the exact reply for any question our world faced. Most of us carried our own lunch in a brown paper bag and those that had the 15 cents to buy lunch in the cafeteria ate there. We ate exterior ordinarily unless it was raining. All wax paper or wrappers were picked up on the way back to our classroom when the bell rang. Many of us wore shirts made from feed sacks and overalls or blue jeans. Blue jeans sold for about .00-.00. Soft drinks were 5 cents then and round steak (baloney) was the big deal on light bread with mustard or mayonnaise. Of procedure we had a piece of fruit to cap it off. That was lunch. Oh, sometimes we switched to peanut butter and jelly or peanut butter and banana.

When the last bell rang I would walk home and try to avoid a combine of bullies that lived a combine of blocks from our house. I found out I was a good runner and for the most part did not have to confront them. When forced to sometimes it got bloody, but I got in my licks to most times. I still do not understand why some population like to take advantage of others. I guess they felt cheated or they were abused by person else or their parents.

These were great times and after my home work was complete I would play exterior until dark and then get to sit in front of a radio about five feet tall and two feet wide and deep. The Lone Ranger and Red Ryder were my programs. I rode many miles with them and took care of the bad guys for sure. The big thing adults talked about was the war, the big one Wwii. In Wwii, there was a rationing of just about everything. We had division cards for each member of the family. Each was allotted so much sugar, gasoline, shoes and you name it. I was a exiguous 6 year old boy, but I remember collecting newspaper, metal objects, aluminum foil, string, and other things. Approximately all things was needed for use in production war items for the fighting men and women. We had to be very right of what we used. If our shoes got holes in the bottoms, we put cardboard in them and when we could afford it we would have "half-soles" put on them. Folks had to limit their traveling, because you were exiguous to your gasoline stamps. I had to walk in any place because we did not have a car so we didn't have gasoline stamps. Even butter and margarine were rationed.

Sugar was Approximately impossible to get at that time. Many things were scarce because they were needed to furnish the forces - gas, oil, metal, meat and other foods, as an example Some products were scarce because they were imported from countries with whom we were at war or because they had to be brought in by ship from foreign places. Rationing made sure no one went hungry. every person was given a division book. Each book had a bunch of division stamps in it. Grocers and other business population would post what your division stamps could buy that week. It was up to you to decree how to spend your stamps. every person had a Victory organery to grow their own vegetables to supplement the foods they could buy with their division stamps. They were planted in any place you could plant something. Some population planted things on window sills and on the roof in pots. all things had value for the war effort. We had Junk Rallies to get flat irons, rakes, bird cages, galvanic irons, stoves, lamp bulbs, bed rails, pianos, washing machines, rubber goods, farm machinery, lawn mowers, etc. That junk helped make guns, tanks, ships for our fighting men. I had a exiguous wagon that I pulled through the neighborhood getting things to take to the pickup area. Of procedure I wasn't alone, many other kids my age were doing the same and that made us feel we were helping the war effort. Saccharin Tablets were used to sweeten things and used in drinks. The book is planned to be complete this year, the Good Lord willing and the creek don't rise. It will be announced on my blog.

slight Johnny is Getting Old!