grnmtnbear
Green Mountain Bear
grnmtnbear

Look. Then Die. It's what people like us have instead of God.

The Art School Girls of DOOM!

Alas, not available in the US! This film scared the popcorn out of me when I saw it in the late 1960s. Marvelous film!

So it is Knowing as a weekly series without the end of the world? [www.imdb.com]

Of course not. Where did I say that?

Wouldn't it take a Constitutional amendment to get rid of the USPS? Article 1 Section 8 says Congress has the power to establish Post Offices and Post roads. Can they just kill it, or would it require an amendment?

Oh, youve got my sympathy. I know what you experienced. They kept saying it was going to get better, reviews would change, more control over your own career...liars.

I started out in the buildings along 520 (across the highway from Burgermaster) and helped move us into the new campus. I was Building 3 most of my career there. I describe it to people like going back to college—the chance to take chances, to fail or succeed without getting a bad review. Then it started going to shit

I was there from 1985 through 1995, and had much the same experience. I'd considered going back in 2004, but was talked out of it by friends on campus who were looking to get out.

Is this going to be another The Others or The Sixth Sense?

A Sound of Thunder was set in Chicago. Spielberg's War of the Worlds may have destroyed NYC, but we didn't see that. The initial destruction (Ray's house and area) was in New Jersey—Ironbound and Bayonne.

I don't try to describe the future. I try to prevent it.

Can we NOT use ad hominem arguments to show that "Al Gore is bad," "Christians are insane," "The Left wants to make us all poor," etc.? Can't we debate the merits of the argument and the data?

I wish he'd beat me off.

Ugly bags of mostly water.

I wonder if this will be available at the employee/alumni price in the Microsoft store.

Oh thank you! This will make me grandma's favorite grandson! A Macintosh for Nana and broadband will seal the deal!

Yes—the last bit of Engine Summer had me in tears—no book has done that. Ah, Rush-That-Speaks...what a path.

I wish "Little, Big" was available on Nook or Kindle. His "Engine Summer" is also a wonderful book.