...more recent posts
who thought this was a good image for sherwin williams - toxic red paint spilling over the planet? it reads cover the earth.
"Shipwrecks, ghost forests of tree stumps thousands of years old and brilliant red formations have all been uncovered this winter along the Oregon coast after severe storms led to massive erosion."
Hey Steve have you seen any?
lol nutria anyone?
dooooo doo .......................... dooooo doo
KQED Forum. Philip Shenon -- "The Commission" -- Forum welcomes New York Times reporter Philip Shenon for a conversation about his new book, "The Commission: The Uncensored History of the 9/11 Investigation." The text raises questions about the 9/11 Commission report.
Audio archive will eventually be posted at that link.
From the a little behind the times department: Anyone use Skype? What's your experience?
Will be down in New Orleans for a few days in April, ostensibly for Jazzfest, but with nutria bringing 5 bucks a tail it might be a good time to earn a little extra pocket money.
Where's the damn snow pictures, come on someone, hurry up before it turns black.
http://www.phillesh.net/philzonepages/friends_stuff/setlists/080204.html
Typographical humor. New word:
keming. noun. The result of improper kerning.
dumb and dumber in america
next thurs i will be attending the premiere of the "rock opera" Tonya and Nancy, and just heard Ms. Harding herself will be in attendance. all in a day's work. http://www.oregonlive.com/performance/index.ssf/2008/02/real_tonya_will_rock_out_with.html
space shuttle images
Wild Toronto cartoons from Rosemary Mosco of Bird and Moon.
beantown
On a clear September day in 1776, smoke rose from lower Manhattan as the British advanced into the city. From his headquarters on the Morris-Jumel estate, Gen. George Washington may have paused in the shade of a young elm tree to take in the scene.
Today, that tree still stands in what is now Washington Heights, though at about 110 feet tall and almost six feet in diameter, it is doubtful that Washington would recognize it. Affectionately known by locals as "the dinosaur," this living witness to those events 230 years ago it is now one of 25 trees in New York City that will be preserved—through cloning.
I'm still trying to get my mind around yesterday's news that Exxon's 2007 profit of 40 billion dollars equates to 1,300 dollars a second.