"I don't hate God. I'm not against America and apple pie. We just have to protect what's left for commercial development."--Cecil Willis, a city councilman in Stafford, TX. The town of 19,227 people has 51 churches.
source: Joe Carter WorldViews.com
A Random Maladjusted Collection of Tom's Life Strategy and Approach to Making Sense of this Neurotic and Confused World...
"I don't hate God. I'm not against America and apple pie. We just have to protect what's left for commercial development."--Cecil Willis, a city councilman in Stafford, TX. The town of 19,227 people has 51 churches.
While Monopoly is the paragon of good 'ole fashioned board game fun, the "old fashioned" part had to go. Parker Brothers is phasing out the cash-based version's funmoney and replacing it with an "Electronic Banking" flavor that could leave Mr. Moneybags turning his pockets inside out as his stash is replaced by a magnetic strip. New kits are completely devoid of the famous multi-colored bills; instead, you'll find phoney Visa debit cards and a calculator / reader which keeps a running tabulation of your riches -- or lack thereof. A deal was struck with Visa to design the mock cards and readers, presumably after surveys showed that 70% of adults used cash less often now than they did a decade ago (no surprise there). When asked about the dramatic change, Parker said replacing cash with plastic "showed the game was moving with the times."Yet another cultural metaphor of my youth going down the tubes. Is nothing sacred?
"Detective Bart Lasiter was in his office studying the light from his one small window falling on his super burrito when the door swung open to reveal a woman whose body said you've had your last burrito for a while, whose face said angels did exist, and whose eyes said she could make you dig your own grave and lick the shovel clean."--Jim Guigli's award-winning sentence, which took top honors in San Jose State University's annual Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest for bad writing.
"[Veterans Affairs Secretary Jim] Nicholson said the laptop and hard drive were turned in Wednesday to the FBI by an unidentified person in response to the $50,000 reward offer. No suspects were in custody."This could be a good story-line for one of those VISA commercials...
Southwest Airlines will test assigning seats to travelers, another indication the maverick carrier may get in line with other U.S. airlines by junking its first-come, first-served seating system.Yes, you dumbasses, it will.
Passengers will be assigned seats on about 200 flights from San Diego starting July 10 and continuing for several weeks, an airline spokesman said on Tuesday.
The airline wants to know if assigning seats will slow Southwest’s ability to unload incoming planes and board passengers for the next flight.
“Open alcoholic beverage container” shall not mean any bottle, can, or other receptacle that contains any amount of frozen alcoholic beverage unless the lid is removed or a straw protrudes through the lid...."That’s right: daiquiris are effectively exempt from the open-container law. Excellent.
Some longtime Texas Republicans are expressing displeasure with Gov. Rick Perry by literally giving him their 2 cents’ worth in campaign contributions.Here’s the funny part.
More than a dozen have opened their checkbooks to make contributions of less than a nickel and in some cases, only a penny.
They want their small donations to make a big statement.
"The whole country is waking up. I really think there’s going to be a revolution because people are sick and tired," Mary Bean of Rosenberg said. "People are sick and tired of all this bickering and not getting a damn thing done."
Perry did push a school funding reform bill through the Legislature last month that kept the Texas Supreme Court from closing public schools after June 1. But some of Perry’s fellow Republicans are miffed he supported a new business tax to make it happen.
"I was really mad that he started this new business tax," Bean said after sending a contribution check for 1 cent.
A lifelong Republican, Bean said she’ll vote for maverick independent Kinky Friedman.
Perry’s latest campaign contribution report filed this week listed 15 Houston-area donors who gave 5 cents or less. Some said they got the idea from radio talk show host Edd Hendee, who is part of KSEV’s lineup. The station owner is Dan Patrick, who also has fired up listeners against the governor’s school and tax reform plan. Patrick won the GOP nomination this spring for a Houston-area state Senate seat.So the grassroots gets to express their frustration, and the Perry campaign is grateful to lose money?
Perry’s campaign put the best possible spin on the unusual political contributions.
"The governor appreciates every contribution — large and small," Perry spokesman Robert Black said, declining further comment.
The minuscule protest contributions will end up costing the Perry campaign as those checks have automatically landed the contributors on a mailing list for campaign literature they’re now receiving.
The other day, Mayor Bill asked Alberta companies to open their doors to Katrina evacuees looking for work.I too decline to make an editorial comment.Houston, we have a labour problem -- and the mayor of the Texas city says he can help.
During a speech at the Global Petroleum Show yesterday, Houston Mayor Bill White said Alberta should look to his city to cope with severe labour shortages.
"There is a labour pool in Houston," said White.
"I'm not saying they're all model employees ... but I tell you what, there are a lot of people just looking to get back on their feet again."
I am making no editorial comments here.
San Antonio residents are debating a proposal to limit the number of chain restaurants that can share in the multibillion-dollar bounty that attends the small artificial channel that runs through their downtown. Houston's bayou is much more attractive. When its beautification and development is complete, perhaps it will be as well-attended as the Riverwalk.Umm, no and no.
Blisters caused by wearing new football boots can lead to a dangerous fever called toxic shock syndrome, a study published in the British Medical Journal (BMJ) says.Love yourself. Don't play sports!.
In a paper timed to coincide with the start of the World Cup finals, doctors in Birmingham, central England, report the case of two youngsters who became sick with a fever after friction blisters on their Achilles’ heels, caused by new football boots, became infected.
They suffered from fever, lethargy, vomiting, diarrhoea and a rash that spread over their torso and arms. The pus in the blisters was found to contain the well-known bacterium Staphylococcus aureus.
A woman eating at a Burger King restaurant in the Netherlands found a live frog in her salad, the company confirmed Sunday. [snip]There is no news yet as to when the new menu item will be featured in the Houston area. When it is, expect to hear that old familiar question: "Do you want flies with that?"
Dutch newspaper Algemeen Dagblad quoted the customer, identified as 23-year-old Astrid Roek, as saying "it was a big black thing, a frog or a toad."
DURHAM — The exotic dancer who has accused three Duke lacrosse players of gang-raping her was drinking while taking medication that night, and had sex with at least four men and a sexual device in the days immediately leading up to the off-campus party, according to court papers filed Thursday.Hey, if you can’t trust the word of a drunk, drug-addled stripper, who can you trust these days?
And she told one medical staffer she drank at least 44 ounces of beer, and told another she took a powerful muscle relaxant and drank beer before going to the party at 610 N. Buchanan Blvd. on March 13.
Willy Wonka could have powered his Great Glass Elevator on hydrogen produced from his chocolate factory.Well, no wonder why Ray Nagin wanted to make New Orleans a Chocolate City... he just wanted to turn the lights back on.
Microbiologist Lynne Mackaskie and her colleagues at the University of Birmingham in the UK have powered a fuel cell by feeding sugar-loving bacteria chocolate-factory waste. "We wanted to see if we tipped chocolate into one end, could we get electricity out at the other?" she says.
The team fed Escherichia coli bacteria diluted caramel and nougat waste. The bacteria consumed the sugar and produced hydrogen, which they make with the enzyme hydrogenase, and organic acids. The researchers then used this hydrogen to power a fuel cell, which generated enough electricity to drive a small fan (Biochemical Society Transactions, vol 33, p 76).
Amendment XI am not sure what part of that Washington politicians don't understand. This is a crucial amendment that is completely ignored by them whenever a "hot button" issue comes up. Take the abortion debate as another example. Just as some conservatives push the gay marriage issue on the national scene, some liberals push abortion. It should not be a Federal issue. If folks in Utah don't want abortion to be legal, we should accept that, just as we should accept Californians wanting to legalize gay marriages. If you don't like the policies in those states, move.
The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.
It also paves the way for Vietnam to reach its goal of becoming a member of the global trading body before Hanoi hosts the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in November, which President Bush is scheduled to attend.All this for cheap sneakers, and a slap in the face for those who sacrificed so much over there. Meanwhile Rumsfeld is developing military ties, and I can't have a good Cuban cigar.
A vote in the U.S. Congress is still needed for the pact to take effect.
Deputy Trade Minister Luong Van Tu and Deputy U.S. Trade Representative Karan Bhatia signed the agreement during a ceremony that was attended by Trade Minister Truong Dinh Tuyen and Deputy Prime Minister Vu Khoan as well as U.S. Trade Representative-designate Susan Schwab.
Calling it a "historic step forward," Bhatia said the process had begun more than a decade earlier as Hanoi and Washington laid out a roadmap for normalization. "Today's signing is the culmination of years of hard work and preparation on both sides," he said.
Tuyen, who has been involved in negotiations for years, said it marked a "new step of development in Vietnam-U.S. relations."
The United States was the last country that Vietnam had to negotiate a bilateral treaty with for WTO access and it hopes to conclude multilateral talks by this summer.
But a final challenge remains: the U.S. Congress must vote to grant Vietnam permanent normal trading relations.