Depends on which muscle you're pulling, doesn't it?
Depends on which muscle you're pulling, doesn't it?
This is the first time in a couple of days this site is letting me post; I guess it's just for the humiliation.
If there's ever a pre-natal test for liberal tendencies, you can expect the Republicans to change sides.
If he weren't such a good Republican, he could have used a teleprompter.
At least she had the excuse of insanity.
I used to work with a woman named Yvette who pronounced it why-vette.
He reminds me of Phil Gramm.
You just can't get away from this type.
Here I repeat my suggestion that we each select an old paperback and send it to him.
More likely Robert Vaughn or David McCallum, then.
Binky, I'm glad I'm not the only one.
My parents mourned when Lawrence Welk's show was cancelled.
There's also this, with Fred and Ginger:
http://www.youtube.com/watc…
Now that the health care bill has been signed, can someone renew this man's prescription?
Trurl, that's exactly the case I was thinking about. It's in the Man/Wife/Hat book, the only one of Sacks' I've been able to manage. (That man needs an editor with a firm hand.)
There's also just a bit of a chance that Alex will try reliving his own "childhood" through his son. There's a pleasant thing to think about.
An emendation—there are plenty of copies available online, just for more than I want to pay. More than one version, too.
Current research indicates that there is a section of the brain where the neural pathways aren't connected in sociopaths; in normal brains, the pathways are connected.
If further research proves this to be true, then it may be possible in the future to "fix" the broken/nonexistent pathways and "cure" sociopathy.
I have an edition titled The Complete Enderby which contains all four.
The last, Enderby's Dark Lady, puts Enderby in the midwest, working on a play about Shakespeare.
He says he wrote it because he got so many complaints from readers about the way he killed Enderby off in The Clockwork Testament; he just wrote another…
In rural America, where I am, it's still not at all unusual for people to get married right out of high school. It's part of the culture here.
You need to read the four Enderby novels. You really, really do.
Earthly Powers gets my vote. It's a long one, though, hardly a few hours' read.
There are the four Enderby novels (which I've just finished), though maybe they're better to save for your middle age.
Dead Man in Deptford, based on Kit Marlowe's life. Good one for English majors.